Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 989South Africa
Strarfield-Ward and Others v Suluhisho Africa Proprietary Limited and Others (2024/104051) [2024] ZAGPJHC 989 (3 October 2024)
Headnotes
and extraordinary nature allowed in in cases where a person requires protection against unlawful or threatened interference with one’s rights. Of great significance is that an interim interdict does not involve a final determination of these rights, nor does it affect their final determination.
Judgment
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## Strarfield-Ward and Others v Suluhisho Africa Proprietary Limited and Others (2024/104051) [2024] ZAGPJHC 989 (3 October 2024)
Strarfield-Ward and Others v Suluhisho Africa Proprietary Limited and Others (2024/104051) [2024] ZAGPJHC 989 (3 October 2024)
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sino date 3 October 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024-104051
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
03 OCTOBER 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
ANTHONY
STRARFIELD-WARD
First
Applicant
LYNETTE
ELSA RATTOS
Second
Applicant
DARREN
SMITH
Third
Applicant
ROBERT
CHRISTOPHER GEORGE
Fourth
Applicant
and
SULUHISHO
AFRICA PROPRIETARY LIMITED
First
Respondent
RETHABILE
STEEL AND VANADIUM
INVESTMENT
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
Second
Respondent
SIFISO
ABEL MUSUNDWA
Third
Respondent
DR
MOLUPE HENDRIK TSOLO
Fourth
Respondent
LEHLOHONOLO
LAWRENCE KONYANA
Fifth
Respondent
ORIEL
GIFT SANDAMELA
Sixth
Respondent
ALLAN
EDWARD WENTZEL
Seventh
Respondent
THE
COMPANIES AND INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
COMMISSION
Eighth
Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e mail and publication
on CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
10h00 on
03 October 2024
JUDGMENT
Matjele, AJ
1.
A joint venture agreement (JVA) was concluded
between two companies, one registered in South Africa namely,
Rethabile Steel And
Vanadium Investment Proprietary Limited (second
respondent) and another registered in Jersey, United Kingdom, called
Amplico Resources
Management Limited (Amplico). This JVA was housed
in a company called Suluhisho Africa Proprietary Limited (first
respondent),
registered in South Africa in 2022. The purpose of this
incorporated JVA was for holding of shares in certain investee
companies
that operate in the importation of liquid natural gas and
the energy sector.
2.
Anthony Strarfield-Ward and Lynette Elsa Rattos,
the first and second applicants, are directors of first respondent on
behalf of
Amplico. They together with the third and fourth applicants
are directors of Amplico, and also allegedly its equal shareholders,
who ‘housed’ their business interests in this entity.
Their individual shares or beneficial interest in Amplico, and
therefore in the first respondent, is questioned by first to sixth
respondents who rely on Amplico’s company secretary, Glen
Q
Nominees Ltd’s letter dated 2
nd
December 2016. The seventh respondent is the
chairperson of the first respondent. The eighth respondent has been
added for their
interest as the regulator of companies in South
Africa. No order is sought against seventh and eighth respondents.
3.
The applicants brought an application on
the Friday, 13
th
September 2024. The matter was rolled over to
Tuesday, 17
th
September
2024, when the ruling on urgency was made, followed by arguments on
the merits of this application. The matter was then
adjourned
sine
die
, judgment reserved.
Urgency
4.
As already indicated, on the 17
th
September 2024, I ruled that there was a case made
on urgency. The reasons are as follows. In a nutshell the respondents
argue that
the applicants have delayed in instituting the
proceedings. They aver that the applicants have known of the
intention to remove
them for some time. It is then argued that as a
result thereof they created their own urgency. Nothing was said
regarding whether
the applicants were to have substantial redress in
future.
5.
Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules regulates urgent
applications. To the extent relevant, it provides:
5.1.
‘
(a) In urgent applications the court or a
judge may dispense with the forms and service provided for in these
rules and may dispose
of such matter at such time and place and in
such manner and in accordance with such procedure (which shall as far
as practicable
be in terms of these rules) as to it seems meet.
5.2.
(b) In every affidavit or petition filed in
support of any application under paragraph (a) of this sub-rule, the
applicant shall
set forth explicitly the circumstances which he avers
render the matter urgent and the reasons why he claims that he could
not
be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.’
6.
The
applicants therefore have to explicitly set out the circumstances
which they aver render the matter urgent. They must make out
a case
justifying the particular departure from the day and time periods.
[1]
More importantly, it is trite that the applicants must state the
reasons why they claim that they cannot be afforded substantial
redress at a hearing in due course.
[2]
The
question of whether a matter is sufficiently urgent to be enrolled
and heard as an urgent application is underpinned by the
issue of
absence of substantial redress in an application in due course.
7.
In casu, the envisaged meeting of the first
respondent in the absence of the applicants has far-reaching
consequences, as even the
so-called ‘independent reviewer’
whose decision is final, would have been appointed by one
shareholder, second respondent,
which renders him or her as
potentially biased. The applicants fear they may not get the true
value of Amplico’s shares which
they estimate at about R36
million and loans to first respondent to the value of R4,5 million,
among others. Based on that and
the fact that if that meeting
continues, as planned and purposed, Amplico or its shareholders, will
not have substantial redress
in due course. The rules allow the court
to come to the assistance of such litigants.
8.
The requirement of ‘absence of substantial
redress’ is not equivalent to the ‘irreparable harm’
that is
required before the granting of an interim relief. It is a
lesser requirement, in that though he may obtain redress in an
application
in due course, but that redress may not be substantial.
In this case, once the shareholders meeting is held and it takes
resolutions,
and such are implemented, recourse from a subsequent
legal process may be of less assistance to the applicants who would
not be
in a position to protect their prima facie interests when no
longer in the board of directors.
9.
Applicants also have a duty to explain the
reasons for any delay. The reasons for the delay averred by the first
to sixth respondents
in bringing the application urgently were
explained by applicants, as follows. Firstly, on 1 September 2024,
when respondents held
a meeting which fell on a Sunday and two other
days fell on a weekend between 1 September and 11 September, the
latter being the
date this application was launched. Secondly, the
inevitable logistical difficulties of coordinating four parties who
in different
jurisdictions in order to obtain consensus. Thirdly,
three of the applicants travelling to remote locations between 2 and
9 September
2024 with limited access to the internet, but still
availing themselves in the circumstances. Fourthly, the receipt of a
notice
on 7 September stating that the meeting would be held on 18
September 2024 and presumably no longer on 14 September 2024. I find
the explanation plausible, in the circumstances.
10.
Even
if there was delay, if the applicants cannot be afforded substantial
redress at a hearing in due course, that on its own is
sufficient to
prove urgency.
[3]
In the
circumstances, I am satisfied that the matter is sufficiently urgent
to be enrolled and heard as an urgent application.
Interim Interdict
11.
An interim interdict is a provisional order
preserving or restoring the status quo pending the determination of
rights of the parties.
It is a remedy of a summary and extraordinary
nature allowed in in cases where a person requires protection against
unlawful or
threatened interference with one’s rights. Of great
significance is that an interim interdict does not involve a final
determination
of these rights, nor does it affect their final
determination.
Factual
Matrix
12.
From the arguments of both counsel and affidavits
it is clear that the net asset value of first respondent is
eighty-two million,
four hundred and eighty thousand Rands (R
82,480,000), which places the applicants’ beneficial interest
at thirty-eight million,
six hundred and eighty-three thousand, one
hundred and twenty Rands (R 38,683,120). The underlying assets
of first respondent,
among others, a fifty-one percent (51.55%)
interest in Volco Power (Pty) Ltd valued at one hundred and sixty
million Rands (R160,000,000).
The said Volco Power is presently in
the process of obtaining two hundred and ten million Rands (R
210,000,000) investment from
South African Energy Fund.
13.
It is not in dispute that to-date Amplico has
advanced loans, among others, to the first respondent to the
tune of four million
five hundred and seventy-four thousand and
twenty Rands (R 4,574,020).
14.
It is a fact that Amplico, incorporated in Jersey,
in terms of the Companies (Jersey) Law 1991, has been deregistered
since the
28 March 2024, even though the applicants indicate they
only knew in July 2024, and such knowledge brought to the attention
of
the first respondent on the 2
nd
August 2024. Technically, this shareholder of the
first respondent does not exist at the moment. The applicants allege
that its
deregistration was not deliberate, and they are in the
process of reinstating its incorporation, and have presented
correspondence
between them and the company registry in Jersey, dated
6 August 2024.
15.
From the founding affidavit there is a somewhat
different picture that is painted regarding this dissolution, other
than it being
a mistake. Amplico’s company secretary, Private
Wealth and Family office (Glen Q) is the one that attended to its
dissolution,
clearly under the impression that a pending deal with
African Earth Investment Group (AEIG) PCC cell company registered in
Mauritius
had been implemented. The deal involved, among others,
transferring Amplico’s shares in the first respondent
(Suluhisho)
to AEIG, in which all four applicants would together with
one Dr. Voster would be directors. In fact, they were already
temporarily
acting as directors in the said entity pending the
finalization of the deal. It would seem registration in Jersey,
United Kingdom,
was no longer necessary for them had the deal went
through. This was a strategic move, among others, for tax purposes.
There is
also a recorded dispute between the third applicant and Glen
Q prior to the dissolution.
16.
Glen Q deregistered Amplico under the
provisions of articles 145-150 of the Companies (Jersey) Law, 1991,
under the heading: ‘summary
winding-up’.
17.
The dispute has been triggered by this dissolution
of Amplico, which led to the 2nd to 6th Respondents’ intention
to invoke
clause 14.3.1 of the Memorandum of Incorporation (MOI) the
1st respondent, which reads as follows:
"In
the event of a Shareholder being
sequestrated
or
liquidated
or
placed under judicial management
, whether provisionally or
finally, voluntarily or compulsory,
such Shareholder shall be
deemed to have offered all or part of its shares and loan account
claims
against the Company to the
remaining Shareholders
pro rata at the fair valuations thereof as determined by an
Independent Reviewer for the time being of the Company, acting as an
expert and not as an arbitrator, whose decision shall be final and
binding on the deemed Offeror and on the Offerees on the following
terms and conditions...” [my emphasis]
18.
The effect of this MOI clause, if invoked
successfully, means Amplico loses its shares, loans and interests in
the first respondent,
to the
second
respondent. And an independent reviewer will then be appointed by
first respondent to determine the fair valuation of such
shares,
loans and other interests. Based on that determination the
“defaulting shareholder” is compensated accordingly,
in
terms of the final deemed offer determined by the said reviewer.
19.
The applicants argue that this clause does not
apply to the present circumstances, or put differently, dissolution
does not constitute
liquidation, sequestration or judicial management
(or present-day equivalent: business rescue), of the company.
20.
The provisions of articles 145 to 150 of the
Companies (Jersey) Law, 1991, therefore needs gleaning into, to
determine if they fall
within what clause 14.3.1 of MOI of 1st
Respondent anticipated, or not.
21.
These articles, under chapter 2 of the said law
deal with ‘summary winding up’ of a company that:
“
(a)
has no liabilities;
(b)
has liabilities that have already fallen due or that fall due within
6 months after the commencement of the winding up, that
it will be
able to discharge in full within 6 months of the commencement of the
winding up;
(c)
has liabilities that will arise more than 6 months after the
commencement of the winding up that it will be able to discharge
in
full as they fall due; or
(d)
has a combination of the liabilities mentioned in sub-paragraph (b)
and (c).”
[4]
22.
Though on face value it would seem to fall under
the three categories in clause 14.3.1, namely “being
sequestrated or
liquidated or placed under judicial management,
whether provisionally or finally, voluntarily or compulsory”,
what is glaringly
common with all scenarios in article 145 to 150 is
that the company is able to settle its liabilities, or has none.
23.
In the
circumstances, without burdening this judgment with detail, article
150 explains how the dissolution happens in respect of
the above
scenarios. For instance, if there are no liabilities and assets the
company is summarily dissolved, and if there are
assets and no
liabilities, such assets will be distributed among its members per
memorandum of articles, and the company be dissolved.
The company is
dissolved on the registration of that statement by directors of the
company stating that each director or the liquidator,
has made full
enquiry into the company's affairs, and is satisfied that the company
has no assets and nor liabilities.
[5]
24.
Using
the restrictive interpretation principle of ‘
eiusdem
generis
’
(of
the same kind), which postulates that association can only be applied
to things of a definite genus or category. This genus
refers to
‘common quality’ or ‘common denominator’.
[6]
When
I read clause 14.3.1, it is referring to situations of financial
distress, in its purposive and contextual interpretation.
It is not a
scenario where the company is in trouble with its creditors or has
liabilities it is unable to manage, essentially
facing bankruptcy
that may spill over to the business of first respondent. It cannot be
interpreted to include the dissolution
contemplated by the Jersey law
above. I am not convinced that they are of the same genus. In any
event that’s for the next
forum to decide.
25.
The applicants instead want to invoke Clause 7.1
of the JVA, which provides for dispute resolution via arbitration in
the event
of any dispute or difference arising between the parties to
the joint venture concerning their respective entitlements and
obligations
in terms of the first respondent and the JVA.
26.
The applicants seek an interim interdict
prohibiting and restraining the first to sixth respondents, from 1)
holding of a shareholders'
meeting of the first respondent for the
purpose of removing the first and second applicants as directors of
first respondent; 2)
implementing any forced sale of the applicants'
interest in the first Respondent, pending the outcome of arbitration;
3) conducting
themselves in a manner which portrays second
respondent, as its sole shareholder; and the first and second
respondents be ordered,
within 14 days of grant of this order, to
submit their dispute to arbitration.
27.
I will
now deal with the legal requirements for an interim interdict. The
legal requirements for interim interdicts stated in the
age-old
decision of Innes CJ in
Setlogelo
vs Setlogelo
[7]
remain
relevant even today, having been confirmed as such by the
Constitutional Court in
National
Treasury & Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance
[8]
.
These requirements are to be applied in a way that promotes the
objects, spirit and purport of the Constitution, thus cognisant
of
the normative scheme and democratic principles underpinning the
Constitution.
28.
These
legal requirements for an interim interdict are:
[9]
28.1.
a ‘prima facie’ right even if it is
open to some doubt;
28.2.
a reasonable apprehension of irreparable and
imminent harm to the right if the interdict is not granted;
28.3.
the applicant must have no other available remedy;
and
28.4.
the balance of convenience must favour the
granting of the interdict.
Prima facie right
29.
The
right can be prima facie established even if it is open to some
doubt. The proper approach is to consider the facts as set out
by the
applicant together with any facts set out by the respondent which the
applicant cannot dispute, and to decide whether, with
regard to the
inherent probabilities and the ultimate onus, the applicant should on
those facts obtain final relief at the trial
or whatever dispute
resolution forum. The facts set up in contradiction by the respondent
should then be considered, and if they
throw serious doubt on the
applicant's case he cannot succeed. In essence, the application is to
be decided on the applicant's
version unless the respondent raises
facts that throw serious doubt on the applicant's case.
[10]
30.
In this case, the applicants argue that as
shareholders of the dissolved Amplico, whose reinstatement is
underway, they are its
beneficial owners of the 46,5% stake in the
first respondent. The first to sixth respondents argue that removal
of first and second
applicants from directorship can be done without
explanation, as they are there at the behest of shareholders and not
directors
in perpetuity, and accordingly there is no right to
protect. Secondly, they argue that applicants have not proven their
beneficial
interest in Amplico contrary to Glen Q Nominees Ltd’s
letter of 2
nd
December
2016 indicating that applicants among others hold shares in another
entity called Seluous Capital Ltd, with no explanation
how that
company relates with Amplico.
31.
It is
my view that what the respondents are seeking is the establishment of
a clear right,
[11]
which is
not a requirement for the purposes of this application, but a final
interdict. The fact that loans were advanced to first
respondent by
Amplico through the applicants, and that the first and second
applicant are in its board, nominated by the said Amplico,
their
allegations that all four applicants each hold 25% of Amplico’s
shares is proof enough of a ‘prima facie’,
even if open
to doubt it is sufficient.
Irreparable and
imminent harm.
32.
There
must be a reasonable apprehension that the continuance of the alleged
wrong will cause irreparable harm to the applicant.
This is an
objective test and may be phrased as follows: ‘whether a
reasonable person, confronted by the facts, would apprehend
the
probability of harm.’ Where the applicant brings a vindicatory
or quasi-vindicatory interdict, then the harm is presumed
until
proven otherwise.
[12]
33.
The
Constitutional Court in
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty)
Ltd
[13]
stated
that:
‘
When
the facts are unclear, the interdicting court must weigh prospects,
probabilities and harm. But when the respondent, who is
sought to be
interdicted, has a killer law point, it is just and sensible for the
court to decide that point there and then. The
court is in effect
ruling that, whatever the apprehension of harm and the factual rights
and wrongs of the parties’ dispute,
an interdict can never be
granted because the applicant can never found an entitlement to it.’
34.
The applicants argue that the intended
shareholders meeting, originally set on the 14
th
or 18
th
September 2024, may set in motion a sequence of
events prejudicial to the applicants in respect of their invested
four million five
hundred and seventy-four thousand and twenty Rands
(R 4,574,020) in loans, their two years of 'sweat equity' and shares
in first
respondent. They fear that reviewer to be appointed by first
respondent in the absence of first and second applicants may not be
independent and fair to them in evaluation of their interests. This
is besides not agreeing that clause 14.3.1 of MOI has been
triggered.
35.
The respondents argue that there is no imminent
harm as the reviewer in terms of clause 14.3.1 is independent,
namely: PSG due to
be appointed as such by them per correspondence,
failing agreement, SAICA to appoint one to give effect to the deeming
provision.
Also, their emphasis is that the applicants have no locus
standi since Amplico, the other shareholder with the second
respondent
does not exist anymore. They also have to prove their
beneficial interest in Amplico before they can be entertained.
36.
My view in respect of this requirement is that
there is imminent harm that decisions taken in the absence of the
first and second
applicants as directors have potential of being
harmful. Two meetings called by the seventh respondent as the
chairperson of first
respondent, with the intention of helping the
shareholders finding each other were honoured by the second to sixth
respondents.
Instead, they called their own meetings held over
weekends, where they appointed third respondent (Musundwa) to chair
the said
meetings, to the exclusion of the seventh respondent
(Wentzel), a non-executive director and chairperson of first
respondent. There
is nowhere in the papers they question the
competency of these applicants and the seventh respondent, nor make
allegations of any
misconduct on their behalf. It appears to this
court that the only reason they are hurrying to invoke the deeming
provision is
due to the dissolution of Amplico, which does not even
fall within any of the categories in clause 14.3.1 of MOI, as stated
above.
37.
Also, from the previous meetings of first
respondent it is clear that the dissolution of Amplico after its
shares within the first
respondent are transferred to a Mauritian
Cell company called AEIG had always been on the cards, and part of
the discussions. It
is upon the AEIG transaction deal with Amplico
failing, that the applicants also realise their company secretary in
UK has already
deregistered Amplico. This also was communicated, and
so is the intended voiding of this deregistration. The ‘
bona
fides
’
of the respondents’
actions are therefore questionable. There is possible irreparable and
imminent harm if the respondents
are allowed to proceed with their
intended shareholders meeting.
No other available
remedy.
38.
This
is linked to the irreparable harm element above. Here the Court must
carefully use its discretion in order to decide whether
the interim
interdict needs to be granted. Where the injury envisaged will be
irreparable if allowed to continue, an interdict
will be the only
remedy. On the other hand, if there is some other satisfactory remedy
it follows that the injury cannot be described
as irreparable.
[14]
39.
The respondents have argued that the applicants if
the applicants are not satisfied with the outcome of the valuation by
an independent
valuer, they can still institute a claim for damages
for compensation for any loss they may have suffered. This is
questionable
in light of the fact that clause 14.3 is clear that such
decision is final. In respect of removal as directors, respondents
argue
that first and second applicant can have recourse in terms of
section 71(9)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
which refers to a
director still having a right in terms of common law or otherwise for
damages as a result of loss of office,
or suffering any loss as a
result of loss of any other office as a result of being removed as a
director.
40.
The applicants argue that there is no alternative
recourse, other than approaching the court, as all other efforts via
correspondence
and between the attorneys have failed to bring about a
solution. They state that after communication, the respondents do the
opposite,
hence meetings of the 1
st
and 7
th
September 2024, one of which Dr. Tsolo (the fourth
respondent) acknowledged its irregularity and unlawfulness, thereby
retracting
the resolutions taken therein, but then setting another
identical shareholders’ meeting inviting the applicants, who
feel
that as a minority shareholder they were not going to be heard,
but overruled and outvoted by respondents who are determined to
trigger clause 14.3 of MOI.
Balance of Convenience
41.
In
deciding the balance of convenience, the consideration was set out as
follows:
[15]
‘The court
must weigh the prejudice the applicant will suffer if the interim
interdict is not granted against the prejudice
the respondent will
suffer if it is …’
42.
In
Transvaal
Property & Investment Co Ltd and Reinhold & Co v SA Townships
Mining & Finance Corp Ltd and The Administrator
[16]
:
'No
doubt the remedy by way of interdict has been said to be unusual, . .
. it is also described as discretionary. . . . It seems
to me,
however, that, apart from cases of interim interdicts, where
considerations of prejudice and convenience are of importance,
the
question of discretion is bound up with the question whether the
rights of the party complaining can be protected "by
any other
ordinary remedy".”[my emphasis]
43.
Both the MOI of the first respondent and JVA seem
valid and binding upon the parties. Applying the above, I am of the
view that
the applicants stand to suffer prejudice were the court not
grant the interdict, as compared with the respondents, were the
interdict
to be granted. The route taking the matter to arbitration
in terms of JVA would not be prejudicial to the respondents. Their
desired
implementation of clause 14.3 of MOI can still be raised in
that forum. And I also do not see them suffering any prejudice with
first and second applicants continuing as directors of first
respondent pending the outcome of such arbitration.
44.
From the argument of the respondents’
counsel, they are directors of first respondent and thereby owing
their fealty and fiduciary
duty to it, as they have been in the past
while Amplico existed. Indeed, no misconduct, incompetency or
delinquency allegations
have been raised against them. The balance of
convenience favours the status quo remaining pending determination of
all relevant
issues at arbitration in terms of the JVA.
45.
In this case, the applicants have satisfied the
requirements for the granting of an interim relief. I do not have a
discretion but
to grant the relief that they seek.
46.
The relief sought is directed mainly against the
second to sixth respondents. It would be unfair to saddle the first
respondent
with the costs of the application. The second respondents
should pay those costs.
Order
47.
In the result I make the following order, that:
1.
The rules relating to
forms, service, notice and time periods are dispensed with and this
application is heard as an urgent application
as provided for in Rule
6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
2.
Pending the outcome
of the dispute resolution process referred to in paragraph 3 below,
the first to sixth respondents are interdicted
and restrained from:
2.1.
convening a
shareholders meeting of the first respondent for the purpose of
removing the first and second applicants together with
the current
chairperson, the seventh respondent, as directors of the first
respondent.
2.2.
Taking action
designed to cause the removal of the first and second applicants
together with the current Chairperson (seventh respondent)
as
directors of the first respondent.
2.3.
implementing or
processing any forced sale of the applicants’ interest in the
first respondent.
2.4.
Taking any steps or
action or conducting themselves in a manner which portrays the second
respondent as a sole shareholder of the
first respondent.
3.
The applicants and
the first and second respondents are ordered, within 14 days of
granting of this order, to submit their dispute
to arbitration in
accordance with the provisions of clause 7 of the Joint Venture
Agreement entered into between Amplico Resource
Management Limited
and the second respondent in December 2022.
4.
The Second Respondent
is directed to pay the costs of this application, including costs of
two counsel on scale B.
LMA
MATJELE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicants
L
Siyo & M Nchabeleng instructed by Stuart Hodgkinson Attorneys
For
the First and Second Respondents
N
Stein instructed by Tinley Incorporated Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
17
September 2024
Date
of Judgment:
03
October 2024
[1]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin
1977 (4) SA 135
(W); IL&B
Marcow Caterers (Pty) Ltd v Greatermans SA; Aroma Inn (Pty) Ltd v
Hypermarkets (Pty) Ltd
1981 (4) SA 108
(C) at 113E–114B.
[2]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd And Another V Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd And Others (11/33767) [2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September
2011).
[3]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd And Another V Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd And Others (11/33767) [2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September
2011);
Rule 6(12) Uniform rules.
[4]
Article 145 of
Companies
(Jersey) Law, 1991.
[5]
Article 145 of
Companies
(Jersey) Law, 1991.
[6]
Article 145 of
Companies
(Jersey) Law, 1991.
[7]
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
.
[8]
2012
(6) SA 223
(CC) or
2012 (11) BCLR 1148
(CC) paras 45-47.
[9]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
;
National
Treasury & others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance
2012
(6) SA 223
(CC);
2012 (11) BCLR 1148
(CC) para 41;
The
Director-General, Department of Home Affairs and another v Islam and
others
[2018]
ZASCA 48
para 14.
[10]
D Harms
Civil
Procedure in the Superior Courts
(June
2019 – Service Issue 65) para A5.8; DE van Loggerenberg &
E Bertelsmann
Erasmus:
Superior Courts Practice
(2019
– Revision Service 9) at D6-17 – D6-19.
[11]
Masstores
(Pty) Ltd v Pick ‘n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd
[2016] ZACC 42
,
2017 (1) SA 613
(CC);
2017 BCLR 152
(CC) PARA 79.
[12]
Masstores
(Pty) Ltd v Pick ‘n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd
[2016] ZACC 42
,
2017 (1) SA 613
(CC);
2017 BCLR 152
(CC) PARA 79.
[13]
Masstores
(Pty) Ltd v Pick ‘n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd
[2016] ZACC 42
,
2017 (1) SA 613
(CC);
2017 BCLR 152
(CC) PARA 79.
[14]
DE van Loggerenberg & E Bertelsmann
Erasmus:
Superior Courts Practice
(2019
– Revision Service 9) at D6-21 – D6-22. See also D Harms
Civil
Procedure in the Superior Courts
(June
2019 – Service Issue 65) para A5.11.
[15]
D Harms
Civil
Procedure in the Superior Courts
(June
2019 – Service Issue 65) para A5.10. See also DE van
Loggerenberg & E Bertelsmann
Erasmus:
Superior Courts Practice
(2019
– Revision Service 9) at D6-20 – D6-21
[16]
1938
TPD 512
at
521.
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