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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Le Feuvre v Standard Bank of South Africa Limited and Others (2018/12442)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 978 (2 October 2024)
Le Feuvre v Standard Bank of South Africa Limited and Others (2018/12442)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 978 (2 October 2024)
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sino date 2 October 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBU
RG
(1)
NOT
REPORTABLE
(2)
NOT
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
Case
NO
:
2018-12442
DATE
:
2
nd
October 2024
In the matter between:
PHILLIP
MAITLAND LE FEUVRE
Applicant
and
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
First
Respondent
SHERIFF
OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
NORTH
Second
Respondent
FARHANA
CAJEE
Third
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, JOHANNESBURG
Fourth
Respondent
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
2 September 2024
Delivered:
2 October 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 2
October 2024.
Summary:
Credit agreement – consumer credit
agreement – reinstatement of agreement in default –
occurring by operation
of law –
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
–
s 129(3)(a)
– payment of 'all amounts that are overdue'
– whether ‘all amounts that are overdue’ have been
paid a factual
enquiry –
Plascon
Evans
finds application – payment
of ‘all amounts that are overdue’ entails extinguishing
all arrears owing and settling
all amounts due as and at the time of
the intended reinstatement of the loan agreement – to include
the sums by which the
arrears had increased and the subsequent
instalments which fell due between the date of the
s 129(1)
notice
and/or the issue of the summons and the date of the intended
reinstatement – arrears and ‘all amounts that are
overdue’ cannot possibly remain the same – the actual or
accrued amount of the arrears at the time of the intended
reinstatement being the relevant consideration –
The Creditor Provider
relying on the judgment granted in its favour – bound by the
terms of the said judgment when executing
same – no need for
the Bank to start the legal process afresh – only entitled to
recover the interest provided for
in the court order – other
charges in terms of the loan agreement not recoverable by the bank as
not being post-judgment
charges – Consumer entitled to recover
such charges if included as part of the post-judgment charges –
Main application
dismissed – alternative application succeeds in part –
ORDER
(1)
The
applicant’s main application is dismissed.
(2)
In the
applicant’s alternative application, judgment is granted in
favour of the applicant against the first respondent for:
-
(a)
Payment of the
sum of R316 958.52.
(b)
Payment of
a
tempore morae
interest on R316 958.52 at the rate of 10.5% per annum from 26
June 2016 to date of final payment.
(3)
Each party
shall bear his / its own costs.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J:
[1].
On 7 May 2010
default judgment was granted by this Court in favour of the first
respondent (‘Standard Bank’) against
the applicant for
payment of the sum of R1 972 697.64, together with interest
thereon at the rate of 10.5% per annum
from 4 February 2010 to date
of final payment and costs of suit on the attorney and client scale.
The applicant’s immovable
property, being Erf 239, Saxonwold
Township in Gauteng (‘applicant’s immovable property’),
was simultaneously
declared to be specially executable. The default
judgment and Standard Bank’s underlying cause of action were
based on a
home loan agreement which was concluded between the
applicant and Standard Bank during 2004, and the amount of the loan
was secured
by a continuing covering mortgage bond (‘mortgage
bond’) in favour of the bank over the applicant’s
property.
[2].
Pursuant to
the aforesaid judgment a warrant of attachment of the applicant’s
property was issued on 9 November 2010 with
a view to having same
sold in execution at a public auction. The sale in execution was
ultimately held only some six years later
on 25 February 2016. On
that date the property was sold by the second respondent (‘Sheriff’)
at the public auction
for an amount of R3 860 000 to the
third respondent.
[3].
The
applicant is aggrieved by the sale in execution of his property and
therefore launched this opposed application on 27 March
2018,
claiming declaratory relief the effect of which will be to have the
said sale reviewed and set aside. The applicant claims
that the sale
in execution was unlawful and invalid, and therefore stands to be set
aside, on the basis that he had allegedly reinstated
the credit
agreement in accordance with
section 129(3)(a)
of the
National Credit
Act
(‘NCA’)
[1]
prior
to the sale in execution. In the alternative, the applicant claims a
monetary judgment for damages allegedly suffered by
him on the basis
of unjust enrichment. It may be apposite to cite here the applicant’s
notice of motion, which, in the relevant
part, reads as follows: -
‘
Take
notice that the applicant intends making application to the above
Honourable Court … for an order in the following terms:
-
(1)
Declaring the
sale in execution by the second respondent [Sheriff] of the immovable
property, Erf Number 239 Saxonwold Township,
Gauteng Province ("the
Property") on 25 February 2016 and the subsequent transfer and
registration of the property in
the name of the third respondent, to
be unlawful and invalid due to the applicant having reinstated the
credit agreement in accordance
with
section 129(3)(a)
of the
National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
prior to the said sale in execution.
(2)
Directing and
ordering the fourth respondent [Registrar of Deeds] to forthwith
remove and/or cancel the deeds of transfer issued
in favour of or in
the names of the third respondent from the register of deeds and
restore the applicant as the registered owner
of the property.
(3)
Directing and
ordering the first respondent to pay the costs of this application. …
… ...
(4)
… … …
Alternative
Application
In
the event of the above Honourable Court dismissing the main
application, and only in such event, applicant prays for an order
against the second respondent, in the following terms:
(1)
Declaring the
balance of the judgment debt at 25 June 2016 to have been the amount
of R2 200 427.97.
(2)
Declaring that
the second respondent was lawfully authorised to deduct from the
proceeds of the sale in execution of the property
only the amount of
R2 200 427.97.
(3)
Directing the
second respondent to pay to the applicant the balance of R707 658,
together with interest thereon at the rate
of 9% per annum, from 26
June 2016 to date of payment.
(4)
Costs of suit.
(5)
Further and/or
alternative relief.’
[4].
Standard Bank
opposes the application on the basis that the credit agreement was
not reinstated as alleged and furthermore that
the relief sought by
the applicant is not competent.
[5].
The issue to
be decided in this application is therefore whether factually the
credit agreement had been reinstated as contemplated
by
s 129(3)(a)
of the NCA. Put another way, the question to be considered by me is
whether the applicant has proven that the requirements of
s 129(3)(a)
had been met and that
ipse
iure
the
credit agreement had been reinstated.
[6].
Those issues
are to be decided against the factual backdrop and the facts in the
matter as analysed later in the judgment. The facts
are to be applied
to the law and the applicable legal principles. In that regard, a
convenient starting point is
s 129(3)
of the NCA and its
interpretation. The said section presently provides as follows: -
‘
129
Required procedures before debt
enforcement
… … …
(3)
Subject to
subsection (4), a consumer may at any time before the credit provider
has cancelled the agreement, remedy a default in
such credit
agreement by paying to the credit provider all amounts that are
overdue, together with the credit provider's prescribed
default
administration charges and reasonable costs of enforcing the
agreement up to the time the default was remedied.’
[7].
Previously,
before being amended,
s 129(3)
provided that –
'a
consumer may –
(a)
at any time before the credit provider has cancelled the agreement
re-instate a credit agreement that is in default by
paying to the
credit provider all amounts that are overdue, together with the
credit provider's permitted default charges and reasonable
costs of
enforcing the agreement up to the time of re-instatement; and
(b)
after complying with paragraph (a), may resume possession of any
property that had been repossessed by the credit provider
pursuant to
an attachment order.’
[8].
The latter
reading of the said section is the one applicable during the relevant
period in this matter. The purpose and objective
of the subsection,
however, remain the same.
[9].
Nkata v
FirstRand Bank Limited
2016
(4) SA 257
(CC) is the leading authority in relation to the
interpretation and the application of the said section. In that
matter, the Constitutional
Court (per Moseneke DCJ) held as follows:
-
‘
[105]
The reinstatement occurs by operation of law. This is so because the
wording of the provision is clear that the consumer's
payment in the
prescribed manner is sufficient to trigger reinstatement.
She
may reinstate by paying to the credit provider all arrears that are
due, permissible default charges and legal costs
.
Reading in a requirement of prior notice to the credit provider, as
well as a reinstatement that does not occur automatically
against due
payment, would unduly limit the value to the consumer of the remedy
of reinstatement. It would unduly diminish the
usefulness of the
relief of reinstatement if the consumer were saddled with procedural
requirements most consumers are likely to
falter on.
[106]
… ... ….
What
are “all amounts that are overdue”?
[107]
Section 129(3)(a)
requires the consumer to pay “all amounts
that are overdue” before the credit agreement is reinstated. On
the facts
here, the mortgage bonds contained acceleration clauses
that the bank invoked, particularly in 2010, as soon as Ms Nkata fell
into
arrears. Once the acceleration clauses were invoked, the full
extent of the mortgage debt was made due and payable and not just
the
arrear instalments.
[108]
This prompts the question whether the right of reinstatement in terms
of
section 129(3)(a)
requires the debtor to pay back the full
accelerated debt or only the arrear instalments. I readily embrace
the conclusion of the
High Court that
only the arrear instalments,
and not the full accelerated debt, needed to be paid in order to
effect reinstatement
. This flows without more from the wording
and purpose of the provision. Reinstatement is predicated on “a
credit agreement
that is in default”. It is a rescue mechanism
that is available to the consumer precisely when she has fallen into
arrears
and may be liable to pay the full accelerated outstanding
debt.’ (Emphasis added)
[10].
The
simple point about this extract from
Nkata
is that a credit agreement can and will be reinstated only in the
event of a debtor having, as and at the time of the reinstatement,
paid ‘all amounts that are overdue’, which would include
‘permissible default charges and legal costs’.
Moreover,
as explained by the Court in
Pule
v Nedbank Limited and Others
[2]
,
the amount of the arrears demanded in the applicable
s 129(1)
notice
and the subsequent legal action cannot possibly remain the same for
purposes of reinstatement of the credit agreement as
contemplated in
s 129(3)(a)
of the NCA. ‘[A]ll amounts that are overdue’
clearly refers to accrued overdue amounts as and at the date of
reinstatement
and may include in the calculation the original arrear
amounts demanded.
[11].
It bears
emphasising that payment of ‘all amounts that are overdue’,
as envisaged by
s 129(3)(a)
, entails extinguishing all arrears owing
to a creditor and settling all amounts due as and at the time of the
intended reinstatement
of the loan agreement. The amounts overdue
would include the sums by which the arrears had increased and the
subsequent instalments
which fell due between the date of the
s
129(1)
notice and/or the issue of the summons and the date of the
intended reinstatement. The point is that the arrears stated in the
s
129(1)
notice cannot possibly remain the same – the actual or
accrued amount of the arrears at the time of the intended
reinstatement
being the relevant consideration.
[12].
In the present
matter it is common cause between the parties that during 2009 the
applicant defaulted on the agreement. On 29 January
2010 Standard
Bank caused a
section 129(1)
notice to be dispatched to the applicant
and on 2 March 2010 the summons was issued by the bank against
the applicant, who
failed to enter an appearance to defend. At the
time of the issue of the summons, the amount by which the applicant
was in arrears
with his bond account was the sum of R232 895.43.
Consequently, on 7 May 2010 default judgment was granted against the
applicant.
On 9 November 2010, a Warrant of execution was issued
against the applicant’s immovable property.
[13].
The applicant
alleges that by June 2012, he had ‘made good the arrears’
and he explains, with reference to a schedule
of payment, that
between the date of the issue of the summons and June 2012 he had
paid in total an amount of R247 542. This
then means, so the
applicant contends, that the account had been brought up to date and
that the credit agreement had been reinstated.
[14].
This
is denied by Standard Bank, who maintains that the account remained
in arrears throughout the period from date of issue of
summons to the
date of sale in execution of the applicant’s property. I do not
accept the applicant’s version on this
aspect of the matter for
the simple reason that, applying
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[3]
,
I am obliged to accept the version of Standard Bank, who explains,
with reference to a schedule based on their records that by
June
2012, the account was still in arrears to the tune of R812.11. This
explanation, in my view, accords with the facts in the
matter
especially if one has regard to the fact that monthly instalments due
at that time was in the region of about R15 000
per month. This
then means that between November 2010 and June 2012, the applicant,
in order to bring the account up to date, would
have had to pay, in
addition to the arrears, a total amount of about R270 000 in
monthly instalments, which, as indicated
above, amounted to over
R232 000 at the time of the issue of the summons. The simple
point of this rudimentary arithmetical
exercise is that there is
merit in the claim by Standard Bank that the account was never
brought up to date.
[15].
The applicant
also contends that there was a fundamental error in relation to the
calculation by Standard Bank, as per the schedule
referred to above,
of the arrears as and at June 2012. He argues that the arrears
amounting to R232 895.43 (claimed in the
s 129(1)
notice dated
29 January 2010) as at 31 December 2009 cannot possibly be
accurate because the aforesaid arrears had increased
from R86 062.90
at 30 September 2009 – over a period of about three months –
by approximately R147 000, when
the monthly instalments at that
time was in the region of R16 000. The arrears at 31 December
2009, so the contention on behalf
of the applicant goes, was
therefore overstated by about R81 000. This means, so the
argument is concluded, that the agreement,
on the version of Standard
Bank, had in fact been reinstated earlier than 12 June 2012 if regard
is had to this alleged overstatement
of the arrears. Moreover, at
that date the applicant alleges that he was in fact in advance by
about R80 000 and not in arrears
in the amount of R812.11. The
applicant contends that the aforegoing is also an indication of the
unreliability of the bank’s
calculation of the arrears at any
given point in time and he urges me to reject out of hand the bank’s
calculations.
[16].
At first blush
there appears to be merit in these submissions. However, the fallacy
in the argument becomes apparent from a basic
interrogation of the
numbers. At the commencement of the home loan period during July 2004
the minimum monthly instalment was the
sum of about R15 000,
which means that at December 2009 the total amount of the instalments
that ought to have been paid by
then should have amounted to R15 000
X 65 months (5 years and 5 months) = R975 000. The actual total
of the instalments
received by the bank from the applicant during
that period, according to the common cause payment history, is the
sum of R749 065,94,
which suggests that the R232 895.43 arrears
as per the schedule is almost spot on.
[17].
It is also
probable, again based on common sense and basic logical reasoning,
that the R812 arrears as and at June 2012 was calculated
on the basis
of restructured / compromised repayment plan.
[18].
All the same,
the applicant confirms that after 2012 he again fell into arrears,
and he became aware that the bank intended selling
his property
during November 2015. By all accounts the applicant’s account
was at that stage hopelessly in arrears. According
to the bank, the
total arrears at that stage amounted to R275 000. There can, in
my view, be no dispute about the aforegoing.
I also reject out of
hand the applicant’s contention that he brought the account up
to date by payment of the total amount
of R155 000. That
averment flies in the face of the objective documentary evidence in
the form of an email to the applicant
from the bank, confirming that
the said payment would be in settlement of about 50% of the arrears.
[19].
Therefore, by
the time of the sale in execution during February 2016 the
applicant’s bond account with Standard Bank was in
arrears and
had been in arrears since summons had been issued during 2010.
Standard Bank was accordingly fully within their rights
to proceed
with the sale in execution on the basis of the proceedings commenced
during 2010. There never was a reinstatement of
the credit agreement
as alleged by the applicant – at no stage did the applicant pay
to Standard Bank ‘all amounts
that are overdue’.
Section
129(3)(a)
accordingly never came into effect.
[20].
It is so, as
averred by the bank, that the only period in which the applicant’s
account was not in any arrears was during
the period 31 March 2009 to
3 June 2009. I accept as a fact that the arrears were not settled or
paid in full either during 2012
or during 2015. The evidence does not
support the applicant’s case in that regard.
[21].
For all of
these reasons, the applicant’s main claim to have the sale in
execution and the consequent transfer declared unlawful
and invalid,
should fail.
[22].
As regards the
alternative application, as alluded to
supra
,
the applicant applies against the Sherif of this Court for a
declaratory order, declaring that the balance of the judgment debt
as
and at 25 June 2016 to have been the amount of R2 200 427.97
and that the Sheriff was lawfully authorised and entitled
only to
deduct from the proceeds of the sale in execution of the property
only the said amount of R2 200 427.97. The
applicant
accordingly applies for judgment against the Sheriff for payment of
the sum of R707 658, together with interest
thereon.
[23].
The case of
the applicant is that the Sheriff was required to ensure that he
acted within the four corners of the warrant of execution
against
property. The Sheriff, so the argument on behalf of the applicant
goes, should have ensured that he was distributing the
correct
amounts to the beneficiaries, by calculating the amounts due in terms
of the Judgment. Instead, he relied on a Certificate
of Balance
issued by Standard Bank, who unjustly benefitted from incorrect
calculations and an unlawful distribution of the proceeds
of the sale
in execution.
[24].
I find myself
in agreement with these submissions by the applicant. The simple
point is that the bank, in relying on the judgment
granted in its
favour during 2010, when executing the judgment, was bound by the
terms of the said judgment. It was entitled do
so because, as I have
already found, the loan agreement had not been reinstated by the
applicant bringing the loan account up to
date. The original judgment
and the cause of action on which it was founded therefore stand and
there was no need for Standard
Bank to start the legal process
afresh. However, the flipside of the coin is that the bank was only
entitled to recover the interest
provided for in the order which was
to the effect that interest would be levied on the amount of
R1 972 697.64 at the
rate of 10.5% per annum from 4
February 2010 to date of final payment, that being 23 June 2016 (both
days inclusive), which is
the date on which Standard Bank received
payment from the Sheriff. It is trite that interest granted in favour
of a judgment creditor
is simple interest unless the judgment or
order provides otherwise. According to my calculations, interest was
payable on R1 972 697.64
at 10.5% per annum for a period of
six years and 140 days = R1 322 247.88.
[25].
I
find support for the aforegoing approach in
Bayport
Securitisation Ltd and Another v University of Stellenbosch Law
Clinic and Others
[4]
,
in which the court held as follows: -
‘
[26]
However, in
Nedbank
the court was not called upon to consider whether the statutory limit
in
s 103(5)
continued to apply to the costs of credit referred to in
s 101(1)(b)
– (g) after judgment had been granted. A
fundamental difference between the facts in that case and in this is
that after
a judgment has been granted against a consumer, usually,
save for necessary disbursements and charges allowed in terms of the
relevant
tariff, only interest accrues on the judgment debt. The
remaining charges contemplated in
s 101(1)(b)
– (g) are thus
not post-judgment charges. The judgment entered is thus for the
capital sum fixed at a particular date together
with interest. It
follows that, even had it been correctly found that
s 103(5)
found
application, it did not apply post-judgment.’
[26].
The applicant
has calculated the interest payable in terms of the 2010 judgment at
R1 061 931.08. The difference between
this calculation and
mine is explained by the fact the applicant adjusted the interest
payable as and when the capital sum was
supposedly reduced. However,
that approach is misguided for the simple reason that it is trite
that simple interest is to be calculated
at a set rate from the day
it starts running to the last date on which it is payable. In this
case, I have calculated the daily
interest rate at R567.49 per day.
[27].
The question
is, therefore, whether the interest charged by Standard Bank and
deducted from the proceeds of the sale in execution
was correctly
calculated. It would be if it accords with the aforesaid sum of
R1 322 247.88. Nowhere in their papers
do any of the
parties give any indication of the actual amount of the interest
charged by Standard Bank and deducted from the proceeds
of the sale
in execution. The bank did however attach to its answering affidavit
what appears to be a complete transaction history
in relation to the
applicant’s home loan account from inception (28 July 2004) all
the way through to 27 June 2016, when
the account was closed after
receipt of payment by Standard Bank from the Sheriff of the amount of
the net proceeds of the sale
in execution. This transaction history
appears to be common cause between the parties and from it the total
interest charges and
debited to the applicant’s account for the
period from 4 February 2010 to date of final payment, being 23 June
2016, was
the total sum of R1 311 598.17, which is in fact
R10 649.71 less than what the bank was entitled to receive in
terms
of the 2010 court order.
[28].
There is
therefore no merit in the applicant’s cause of action in
relation to the interest supposedly overcharged by Standard
Bank.
[29].
The aforegoing
furthermore illustrates a fatal defect in the applicant’s case
in that he fails to give exact details of the
alleged unlawful and
unjustified deductions from the proceeds of the sale in execution. He
failed to give details and an exact
calculation of the debits and the
totals thereof which should not have been deducted from the proceeds.
And for this reason alone,
most of his claim for a refund of further
sums based on unjust enrichment should fail. He, for example, does
not give a total in
respect of the untaxed legal costs or a sum total
for the insurance premiums, which, according to him, should be
refunded to him.
[30].
There is
however one amount which the applicant is entitled to recover in that
it is undisputed that he was not liable to pay same
and yet the bank
debited his loan account with same. And that amount is the
R316 958.52 in respect of outstanding municipal
rates and taxes,
which obviously needed to be paid before the transfer of the property
could be effected pursuant to the sale in
execution. The simple and
undisputed fact of the matter is that the conditions of the sale in
execution provided that the purchaser
– the third respondent
herein – was liable for such charges. The bank was not entitled
to claim that amount from the
applicant – this is not denied by
the bank. Accordingly, the applicant is entitled to a refund of the
said amount.
[31].
Although the
applicant applied for an order directing the Sheriff to repay any
amounts due to him, it is clear that Standard Bank
was in fact the
company which benefitted from the incorrect payment. It is common
cause between the parties that Standard Bank
in fact received from
the proceeds of the sale in execution the said amount of R316 958,52.
It would therefore be just and
fair that the bank, and not the
Sheriff, should be ordered to repay to the applicant the said sum.
[32].
I am therefore
of the view that judgment in favour of the applicant against Standard
Bank for payment of that amount, together with
interest thereon,
should be granted.
Costs
[33].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[5]
.
[34].
In this matter the applicant has been
successful in that judgment is granted in its favour on his
alternative claim for a portion
of the amount claimed. Conversely,
Standard Bank has had a measure of success in that it successfully
resisted the applicant’s
main claim. These two parties, in my
view, have had equal measure of success and it would be just to apply
the aforegoing general
rule and to order each party to bear his / its
own costs.
Order
[35].
In the result, the order which I grant is
as follows: -
(1)
The
applicant’s main application is dismissed.
(2)
In the
applicant’s alternative application, judgment is granted in
favour of the applicant against the first respondent for:
-
(a)
Payment of the
sum of R316 958.52.
(b)
Payment of
a
tempore morae
interest on R316 958.52 at the rate of 10.5% per annum from 26
June 2016 to date of final payment.
(3)
Each party
shall bear his / its own costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
2
nd
September 2024
JUDGMENT DATE:
2
nd
October
2024
FOR THE APPLICANT:
M R Webbstock
INSTRUCTED BY:
Matthew Webbstock
Attorney, Sandringham, Johannesburg
FOR
THE FIRST RESPONDENT:
W
Isaaks
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Van
Hulsteyns Attorneys, Sandown, Sandton
FOR
THE SECOND AND FOURTH RESPONDENTS:
No
appearance
INSTRUCTED
BY:
No
appearance
FOR
THE THIRD RESPONDENT:
No
appearance
INSTRUCTED
BY:
S
Suleman Attorneys, Roshnee, Vereeniging
[1]
National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
.
[2]
Pule
v Nedbank Limited and Others
2022
JDR 0844 (GP).
[3]
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd. v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984]
ZASCA 51; [1984] 2 All SA 366 (A); 1984 (3) SA 623; 1984 (3) SA 620.
[4]
Bayport
Securitisation Ltd and Another v University of Stellenbosch Law
Clinic and Others
2022
(2) SA 343 (SCA).
[5]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
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