Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 841South Africa
Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board of Control v Love and Others (7793/2015) [2024] ZAGPJHC 841 (26 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board of Control v Love and Others (7793/2015) [2024] ZAGPJHC 841 (26 August 2024)
Attorneys Fidelity Fund Board of Control v Love and Others (7793/2015) [2024] ZAGPJHC 841 (26 August 2024)
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sino date 26 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 7793/2015
1. REPORTABLE: NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
3. REVISED: YES
26/08/2024
In the matter between:
ATTORNEYS
FIDELITY FUND BOARD
OF
CONTROL
Applicant/First
Respondent
and
RODNEY
ADRIAN LOVE
First
Respondent/Applicant
THE
MINISTER OF JUSTICE OF THE
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Second
Respondent
THE
LAW SOCIETY OF THE NORTHERN
PROVINCES
PRETORIA
Third
Respondent
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed
to be 14h00 on 26 August 2024.
JUDGMENT –
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
S VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN AJ
[1]
The parties will, for the sake of
convenience, be referred to as follows:
1.1
the applicant as “the Fund” or
“Board” as may be convenient; and
1.2
the first respondent as “Love.”
[2]
The Fund applies for leave to appeal
against the whole of my judgment and order in the above matter
delivered on 18 January 2024.
I point out that in its application for
leave to appeal, I am referred to as “S Nieuwenhuizen AJ,”
which is incorrect.
I am actually “S van Nieuwenhuizen AJ.”
The use of the initial has become necessary due to at least 2 other
van Nieuwenhuizens’
also being appointed as acting judges from
time to time.
[3]
The orders subject to the appeal read as
follows:
”
1
The period within which the Applicant had to lodge its claim with the
Fund is herewith extended until 7 October 2013;
2
The late
filing of the Applicant’s heads of argument is hereby condoned.
3
The First
Respondent is ordered to pay the Applicant’s costs including
the costs of 2 counsel where employed;
4
No order of costs is
made in respect of the Second Respondent’s costs.
”
[4]
The Fund contends that there are reasonable
prospects of success on appeal and another court may find that I
erred in the following
respects:
“
(a)
at paragraph 87.2 of the judgment that “the
case
concerns an application to, and the failure by, the Fund to extend
the time period
”
in that on an
objective assessment of the facts there was neither an application
nor a failure”;
(b)
at paragraph 87.3 of the judgment that “
Love’s
attorney requested the Fund to extend the period of notice…under
section 48(2) of the [Attorneys] , since on
an objective assessment
of the facts, there was no such application
”
;
(c) at paragraph 87.4
of the judgment that the letter concerned contained grounds in
support of the extension application, since
on an objective
assessment of thereof , none of the contents related to such an
extension being justified on the grounds that the
notice concerned
was lodged as soon as was practicable as required by section 48(2);
(d) in sub-paragraph
87.4.7 of the judgment that the Fund was “expressly requested
to extend the time periods applicable to
the filing of a claim”
since there was no such express request”;
(e) in sub-paragraph
87.4.8 of the judgment that there was a request for the Board to
consider;
(f) in paragraph 90 of
the judgment that the Board failed to exercise the discretion
conferred upon it by section 48(2) of the Attorneys
Act in that on an
objective assessment of the facts the Board was not called upon to do
so and the jurisdictional facts for the
exercise of such a such a
discretion were not established;
(g) in paragraph 98 of
the judgment that the purported failure of the Board to exercise a
discretion in terms of section 48(2) of
the Attorneys Act in this
matter constituted any violation of PAJA;
(h) in paragraph 99 of
the judgment that had the Board considered the purported request for
an extension it would have had to grant
the request for an extension;
(i) in paragraph 103
of the judgment that the claimant submitted his claim as soon as was
practicable and, in doing so, ignoring
the unanimous and express
findings of fact of the SCA in SCA Appeal case no 170/2020
((170/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 44
(14 April 2021)) at paragraphs 29 to 33
thereof, which were as follows:
“
[29]
Having notified the Fund of his claim, he gave evidence on 24 July
2014 at an enquiry arranged by the Fund. In
response to a question by
the Fund’s representative he said that on 15 May 2012, the date
on which Mr Pavoncelli undertook
to pay the R10 million as well as Mr
Love’s attorney and client costs in the action against Turnbull
and Associates, it was
quite clear to him that the R10 million was
not in the trust account.
[30] At
the Fund’s enquiry when asked to explain what the Fund
suggested was a two year delay in making a claim
against the Fund, he
said that he relied on legal advice and that although he had
suspicions that the R10 million had been stolen,
it was only on
receipt of Turnbull and Associates’ business bank statements
that he had evidence of the theft. This was the
tenor of his evidence
at the trial. As appears hereafter this is a flawed explanation.
[31] Mr
Love’s version is that the R10 million had to remain in the
trust account until signature of the agreement
for the purchase of
shares in Sword Fern. By June 2011 negotiations had broken down.
No written agreement was ever signed.
A demand to repay the R10
million was ignored.
[32] On 31
October 2011, Mr Love sued Turnbull and Associates for the R10
million. It is clear from the particulars
of claim that he knew that
the R10 million was no longer in trust. In his alternative claim he
alleged that the R10 million had
been paid to Mr Pavoncelli. There is
no evidence why these allegations were made at this point in time. On
15 May 2012
Mr Pavoncelli undertook to pay the R10 million
to Mr Love. The only reasonable inference to be drawn from this
undertaking is that
Mr Pavoncelli had misappropriated the R10 million
from the trust account. At his meeting with the Fund, Mr Love said
that when
he got the undertaking it was clear that the R10 million
was not in the trust account. On 22 November 2012 Mr Love
was
given copies of the trust account which confirmed that the R10
million had been paid out of the trust account in 2011. On 28
November
2012 and in the affidavit Mr Love signed in the provisional
sentence proceedings he said that Mr Pavoncelli gave him the
undertaking
to pay the R10 million ‘because he has personally
misappropriated the R10 million as will appear from what is said
hereunder’. At
the trial Mr Love said that he gave no
mandate to release the R10 million from the trust account, yet the
money had been withdrawn
in 2011. He also admitted that the R10
million was withdrawn from the trust account within a space of two
months. This he knew
from the trust account bank statements.
[33] There
was no need for Mr Love to wait until September 2013 when he got the
copies of the bank statements of Turnbull
and Associates’
business account before notifying the Fund of his claim. How the
Trust money was spent is irrelevant to his
claim. From what is set
out above it is apparent that Mr Love knew in October 2011 or at
the latest 28 November 2012 that
there had been a wrongful dealing or
appropriation by Turnbull and Associates, alternatively Mr
Pavoncelli, of the money entrusted
to them in the sense of them
having been required by Mr Love to keep the money in the trust
account until the happening of some
known future event. This
event did not occur. [my emphasis]
(j) In paragraph 106
of the judgment that Love did not know before 2 September 2013 that
his monies had been stolen, a finding that
is in direct conflict with
the unanimous and express findings of five appeal court judges and
was res judicata in this application;
(k) ) In paragraph 112
of the judgment that it was objectively established that
Love submitted [h]is claim as soon as
was practicable;
(l) In paragraph 183
of the judgment that the learned judge was entitled to review the
Board’s purported failure to extend
the time period for the
submission of Love’s claim and in ordering that the time period
for the submission of Love’s
claim be extended to 7 October
2013, and
in effectively
overturning the implied finding of the SCA that the Fund was not
liable to Love in any amount.”
[5]
On a conspectus of all the grounds raised
in the application for leave to appeal, it would appear to me that it
is a fairly superficial
attempt to deconstruct all the building
blocks on which my judgment rests.
[6]
Whether or not a section 48(2) application
under the Attorney’s Act was as a matter of fact before the
Fund rests on a proper
understanding and interpretation of the
application and my conclusions in this regard. I have dealt
extensively in my judgment
with the reasons why such a finding should
follow and do not repeat same here.
[7]
A fundamental pillar to the application
which, if correct, would also permit my judgment to be overturned,
are the allegations that,
in paragraphs 103 and 106 of my judgment, I
made findings on matters the merits of which had already been
considered by the Supreme
Court of Appeal in effectively infringing
on the principle that:
“…
.where
a court has come to a decision on the merits of a question in issue,
that question, at any rate as a causa petendi of the
same thing
between the same parties cannot be resuscitated in subsequent
proceedings.”
[1]
[8]
It was contended in the heads of argument
and in the argument itself that the SCA had already considered and
determined the merits
as to whether Love could not have submitted his
claim within the three-month period stipulated in section 48(1) of
the Attorneys
Act 53 of 1979, and the SCA found that there was no
reason for Love not to have lodged notice of his claim within that
three-month
period.
[9]
Although the SCA was not dealing at the
time with section 48(2) of the Attorneys Act, it was submitted that
the effect thereof is
such that a notice was not lodged as soon as
was practicable as required by section 48(2) of the Attorneys Act,
which is the cause
of action, I had to determine.
[10]
Based on the aforesaid reasoning, it was
argued that the issues and findings I made in the paragraphs
specifically referred to conflict
with the SCA decision and that I am
bound by same.
[11]
Reliance
was placed on
Mineral-Loy
(Pty) Ltd v Highveld Steel and Vanadium Corporation Limited
,
[2]
where
the court opined as follows:
[3]
“
The principle
of res judicata, has been the subject of judicial scrutiny over
centuries and was once again revisited in African
Farms
Townships v Cape Town Municipality
1963 (2) SA 555
AD. At 564 C
- E,
res judicata
is defined as follows:
"
In
regard to
res judicata
the
enquiry is not whether the judgment is right or wrong, but simply
whether there is a judgment.
(Dig.
36. 1.65 para. 2;
Z H[u]ber,
supra
; Sande;
De
Diversis Regulis ad L.
207;
Voet,
44.2.1).
Referring to the rule
in
Dig.
50.17.207,
De Villiers, C.J., in
Bertram v
Wood, supra
at p. 180, held the
following:
'The meaning of the
rule is that the authority of
res judicata
induces a
presumption that the judgment upon any claim submitted to a competent
court is correct, and this presumption, being
juris et de
jure
, excluded every proof to the contrary. The presumption is
founded on public policy which requires that litigation should not be
endless and upon the requirements of good faith which, as said
by
Gaius (Dig.
50.17.57), does not permit of the
same thing being demanded more than once."
[15]
In essence
the principle prevents a party from having a proverbial
"
second
bite at the cherry
"
.
[16] In the present
matter, the extended application of res judicata, to wit issue
estoppel applies. Issue estoppel has been
explained by the Supreme
Court of Appeal in Hyprop Investments Ltd v NSC Carriers &
Forwarding CC
2014
(5) SA 406
(SCA)
at
para [14] as follows
:
"Brand JA pointed
out that the plea of res judicata - that the matter has already been
decided - was available where the dispute
was between the same
parties, for the same relief or on the same cause (in Voet's
words,
idem actor, idem res et eadem causa petendi)
. The
requirements have been relaxed over the years and where there is not
an absolute identity of the relief and the cause of action,
the
attenuated defence has become known as issue estoppel - borrowing the
term from English law. The relaxation and the application
of issue
estoppel effectively started in the
Boshoff
matter
where Greenberg J referred to Spencer-Bower's work on Res
Judicata. In Smith v Porritt Scott JA explained
the
evolution of the defence as follows:
'Following the
decision in Boshoff v Union Government
1932 TPD 345
the ambit of
the exceptio rei judicata
has over the years been
extended by the relaxation in appropriate cases of the common- law
requirements that the relief claimed
and the cause of action be the
same
(eadem res and eadem petendi causa) in both the
case in question and the earlier judgment. Where the circumstances
justify
the relaxation of these requirements those that remain are
that the parties must be the same (idem actor) and that the
same issue (eadem quaestio) must arise. Broadly stated, the
latter involves an inquiry whether an issue of fact or law
was an
essential element of the judgment on which reliance is placed. Where
the plea of res judicata is raised in the absence of
a commonality of
cause of action and relief claimed it has become commonplace to adopt
the terminology of English law and to speak
of issue of estoppel.
But, as was stressed by Botha JA in
Kommissaris van
Binnelandse lnkomste v Absa Bank Bpk
1995 1) SA 653
(A) at 669D,
670J - 671B, this is not to be construed as implying an abandonment
of the principles of the common-law in favour
of those of English
law; the defence remains one of res judicata. The
recognition of the defence in such cases will however
require careful
scrutiny. Each case will depend on its own facts and any extension of
the defence will be on a case-by-case basis
...Relevant
considerations will include questions of equity and fairness not only
to the parties themselves but also to others
...."
[12]
It was further submitted by the Fund that,
in the present matter, it does not matter whether the test as quoted
above is the more
relaxed test, known as the “issue estoppel
approach” or the traditional approach to the concept of
res judicata
.
It was specifically submitted that, even if the court were to find
that there “is not an absolutely identity of relief in
the
cause of action,” the issue of fact or law that was enquired
into by the learned judge
a quo
“was an essential element of the judgment on which reliance was
placed,” i.e. the aforementioned judgment of the SCA.
Hence, it
was submitted that the issues referred to, already having been
determined, there was no room for a finding on the same
facts under
the rubric of section 48(2) of the Attorneys Act. This was of course
never expressly pleaded given that the factual
defence raised by the
Fund was that at no stage a claim under section 48(2) of the
Attorney’s Act was lodged.
[13]
It was further submitted that it would
follow that I should not have found:
13.1
in paragraph 99 of my judgment, that, had
the Fund considered the purported request for an extension, it would
have had to grant
the request for an extension, since clearly that
would have had to entail a finding that the notice had been lodged as
soon as
was practicable, notwithstanding that it was lodged at a date
significantly later;
13.2
in paragraph 112 of my judgment, that it
was objectively established that Love submitted his claim as
soon as was practicable;
and
13.3
in paragraph 183 of my judgment, that I was
entitled to review the Fund’s purported failure to extend the
time period for
the submission of Love’s claim in ordering that
the time period for the extension of Love’s claim be
extended
to 7 October 2013, since that necessarily entailed a finding
that a notice had been lodged as soon as was practicable,
notwithstanding
that it was lodged at a date significantly later
contrary to the findings of the SCA.
[14]
Hence, it was submitted that, based on the
aforesaid, there are reasonable prospects of success in an
application for leave to appeal
as contemplated in
section
17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
and that I should
grant leave to appeal on the aforesaid grounds.
[15]
Several other submissions follow from the
Fund’s heads of argument which I do not have to deal with given
the conclusion I
ultimately arrive at.
[16]
Mr Marcus, appearing on behalf of Love,
submitted that
section 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act imposes
a
higher standard for granting leave to appeal than under the previous
statute. He relied on the well-known dictum in the SCA to
the
following effect:
“
[10]“I am
mindful of the decisions at high court level debating whether the use
of the word ‘would’ as opposed
to ‘could’
possibly means that the threshold for granting the appeal has been
raised. If a reasonable prospect of success
is established, leave to
appeal should be granted. Similarly, if there are some other
compelling reasons why the appeal should
be heard, leave to appeal
should be granted. The test of reasonable prospects of success
postulates a dispassionate decision based
on the facts and the law
that a court of appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion
different to that of the trial court. In
other words, the appellants
in this matter need to convince this Court on proper grounds that
they have prospects of success on
appeal. Those prospects of success
must not be remote, but there must exist a reasonable chance of
succeeding. A sound rational
basis for the conclusion that there are
prospects of success must be shown to exist.
”
[4]
[17]
He submitted that the application for leave
to appeal does not meet the aforesaid test inasmuch as the Fund made
out no case whatsoever
that there are any reasonable prospects of an
appeal court overturning the following findings:
17.1
the Fund was subject to a statutory duty to
exercise its discretion in terms of
section 48(2)
to consider
17.2
Love’s request for an
extension;
17.3
the Fund failed to do so;
17.4
the failure was unlawful.
[18]
He contended that the Fund’s heads of
argument addresses the matter in a most cursory fashion and without a
sustainable basis.
[19]
As to whether the matter was
res
judicata
, he submitted that the SCA
decided an entirely different cause of action, i.e. section 48(1) of
the Attorneys Act.
[20]
He
countered the res judicata/issue estoppel argument with the majority
decision in
National
Sorghum Breweries Ltd (t/a Vivo African Breweries) v International
Liquor Distributors (Pty) Ltd
[5]
and
relied on the following requirements for a plea of
res
judicata
to succeed:
“
[2] The
requirements for a successful reliance on the exceptio were,
and still are: idem actor, idem reus, eadem
res and eadem causa petendi. This means that
the exceptio can be raised by a defendant in a later suit
against a plaintiff who is 'demanding the same thing on the same
ground' (per Steyn CJ in African Farms and Townships
Ltd v
Cape Town Municipality
1963
(2) SA 555
(A)
at
562A); or which comes to the same thing, 'on the same cause for the
same relief' (per Van Winsen AJA in Custom Credit
Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Shembe
1972
(3) SA 462 (A)
at
472A - B; see also the discussion in Kommissaris van Binnelandse
Inkomste v ABSA Bank Bpk
1995
(1) SA 653
(A)
at
664C - E); or which also comes to the same thing, whether the 'same
issue' had been adjudicated upon (see Horowitz v Brock
and Others
1988
(2) SA 160
(A)
at
179A - H).
[3] The fundamental
question in the appeal is whether the same issue is involved in the
two actions: in other words, is the same
thing demanded on the same
ground, or, which comes to the same, is the same relief claimed on
the same cause, or, to put it more
succinctly, has the same
issue now before the Court been finally disposed of in the first
action?
[4] In my view, the
answer must be in the negative. The same thing is not claimed in the
respective suits, nor is reliance placed
on the same ground or cause
of action. What was claimed in the first suit was restitution in the
form of repayment of the purchase
price previously paid by
the claimant. Such a claim is not one for damages but is
a 'distinct contractual remedy'
(see Botha JA in Baker
v Probert 1985 (3) 429 (A) at 439A - B). In the second suit
damages were claimed, which is in
its very essence clearly
distinguishable from restitution. The same thing is not claimed in
the respective suits, the issue now
under consideration has not been
finally laid to rest.
”
[21]
As to whether the doctrine relied upon is
classified as
res judicata
or issue estoppel, Mr Marcus submitted that it is an essential
requirement for the application that the same issue has been finally
decided in previous litigation within the same parties. In substance,
he submitted that in the present matter neither the cause
of action
nor the issue being decided were the same.
[22]
He sought to deconstruct the argument of
the Fund on the basis that the SCA only dealt with section 48(1)(a)
of the Attorneys Act
and that the requirements for this cause of
action are different from the requirements set out in section 48(2)
of the Attorneys
Act.
[23]
His
strongest counter argument to the submissions put forward by the Fund
was that, if the Fund’s approach was correct, section
48(2)
would have no purpose because it would never be possible for a
claimant who has lodged a claim outside the time period of
three
months, after they became aware of the theft, to show that it was not
reasonably practicable to lodge the claim within that
time period.
For this he relied on the fundamental concept of interpretation that
every word must be given a meaning.
[6]
[24]
He also submitted that there is a
fundamental difficulty with the Fund’s approach inasmuch as the
fact that it overlooks that,
when I granted the order of substitution
in terms of section 8 of PAJA and section 172 of the Constitution, I
exercised a discretion
in the true sense. He elaborated on this on
the basis that, when a court exercises its remedial discretion under
section 172 of
the Constitution and grants an order of substitution,
it exercises a discretion in the true sense. As explained by the
Constitutional
Court, it is a discretion that may only be interfered
with on appeal if it is satisfied that the discretion was:
“
not
exercised judicially, or that it had been influenced by wrong
principles or a misdirection on the facts, or that it had reached
a
decision which in the result could not reasonably have been made by a
court properly directing itself to all the relevant facts
and
principles.”
[7]
[25]
He also relied on the more recent decision
in the Constitutional Court in the
Central
Energy Fund
matter, where Rogers J held
that:
“
[P]
ut
simply, the appellants must show that the high court’s remedial
order is clearly at odds with the law
.”
[8]
[26]
He submitted that the Fund did not come
close to meeting this test inasmuch as no error or misdirection on
the part of the court
was identified other than the contrary factual
findings made by the SCA in deciding an entirely different cause of
action and a
different issue.
[27]
I am not persuaded that there are
reasonable grounds for leave to appeal, given the unique facts
underpinning my decision as well
as the fact that the SCA decision
deals with a different statutory cause of action. I am not persuaded
that there is a prospect
that another court could reasonably come to
a different conclusion as to the various building blocks underpinning
the judgment.
[28]
Hence the following order is made:
28.1
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed with costs such costs to include the costs of senior
counsel and junior counsel.
For taxation purposes the scale of such
costs as between part and party should in my view be scale “C”.
S VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN AJ
Date application for
leave to appeal heard: 2 May 2024.
Date judgment reserved: 2
May 2024
Date judgment delivered:
26 August 2024
Representation for the
applicant (respondent in the main matter)
Counsel:
G
Oliver
Instructed
by:
Brendan
Müller Inc
Applicant’s/First
Respondent’s Attorneys
B
J Müller
Egham
Road
Egham
Road Chambers
Wynberg
Tel
: 021 762 5700
Fax
: 021 762 5702
Mobile
: 083 407 6197
Email
: brendan@bmullerinc.co.za
Ref:
BJM/SLF/FF-Love-0015
c/o
Madhlopa & Thenga Inc
54
Seventh Avenue (Off Jan Smuts Avenue)
Parktown
North
Gauteng
Tel:
011 442 9045
Fax:
011 788 0131
Email:
selo@madhlopa.co.za
(Ref:
Sello Matsepane)
Representation for
respondent (applicant in the main matter)
Counsel:
Instructed
by:
Gilbert
Marcus SC
Nick Ferreira
Malherbe
Rigg & Ranwell Inc
650
Trichardt Road
Beyerspark,
Boksburg
P
O Box 26873, East Rand 1462
Docex
4, Boksburg
Tel:
011 918 4116
Email:
brian@mrr.co.za
c/o
Jordaan & Wolberg Attorneys
86
Hamlin Street
Waverley,
Johannesburg
P
O Box 46041, Orange Grove 2119
DX
80, Johannesburg
Tel:
011 485 1990
Fax:
086 685 8460
Email:
matt@jwlaw.co.za
Ref:
MR SMITH/ac/J3392
[1]
African
Farms and Townships v Cape Town Municipality
1963 (2) SA 555
(A), at 564; see also
Rail
Commuters Action Group v Transnet
2006 (6) SA 68
(C), at 74;
Molefe
v Regent Insurance Company (Pty) Limited
[2007] ZAGPHC 162
;
[2008] 1 All SA 158
(W), at 160;
Herbstein
and Van Winsen:
The
Civil Practice of the High Courts of South Africa
5
th
ed, vol 1, pp 609–612
[2]
Jacobson
v Havinga t/a Havingas
2001 (2) SA 177
(T), at 181; see also
Herbstein
and Van Winsen
,
op cit
at 610–511
[3]
2016 JDR 0936 (GP), at paragraphs 14–16
[4]
See
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
(Case
No. 724/2019)
[2021]
ZASCA 31
(31
March 2021
[5]
2001(2) SA 232 SCA
[6]
National
Credit Regulator v Opperman and Others
2013 (2) SA 1
(CC), at para 99 (minority judgment of Cameron J,
citing
Wellworths
Bazaars Ltd v Chandlers Ltd and Another
1947 (2) SA 37
(A), at 43,
bearing
in mind that the majority judgment does not differ on this point.
)
[7]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Ltd and Another
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC), para 88, as well as paras 30, 82, 88 and 92
[8]
Central
Energy Fund Soc Ltd and Another v Venus Rays Trade (Pty) Ltd and
Others
2022 (5) SA 56
(SCA), para 43
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