Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 309South Africa
Imperial Group Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Sime Darby Hudson & Knight (Pty) Ltd (28897/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 309 (11 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 April 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Contract – services rendered in terms of written agreement – plaintiff claiming amounts invoiced in terms of the agreement – defendant disputes amounts claimed, pleads set-off and counterclaims for damages from goods damaged, shortages and ‘stock variances’ – defendant bears the onus to prove his counterclaim and the amounts thereof – factual dispute re ‘stock variances’ – decided in favour of plaintiff –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Imperial Group Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Sime Darby Hudson & Knight (Pty) Ltd (28897/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 309 (11 April 2023)
Imperial Group Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Sime Darby Hudson & Knight (Pty) Ltd (28897/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 309 (11 April 2023)
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sino date 11 April 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
28897/2017
DATE
:
11
th
april 2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
IMPERIAL
GROUP HOLDINGS (PTY) LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
SIME
DARBY HUDSON & KNIGHT (PTY) LIMITED
Defendant
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
: 19 and 20
September 2022
Closing Argument
:
14 October 2022
Delivered:
11
April 2023 – 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 11 April 2023.
Summary:
Contract – services rendered in terms of written agreement
– plaintiff claiming amounts invoiced in terms of the agreement
– defendant disputes amounts claimed, pleads set-off and
counterclaims for damages from goods damaged, shortages and ‘stock
variances’ – defendant bears the onus to prove his
counterclaim and the amounts thereof – factual dispute re
‘stock variances’ – decided in favour of plaintiff
–
Judgment granted in
plaintiff’s favour – conditional claim in reconvention
dismissed.
ORDER
(1)
Judgment is granted
against the defendant in favour of the plaintiff for: -
(a)Payment
of the sum of R4 470 174.57;
(b)Payment
of interest on the amount of R4 470 174.57 at the
applicable legal interest rate of 10.50% per annum from date
of
demand, being 17 July 2017, to date of final payment; and
(c)
Costs of suit on the
scale as between attorney and client, including the costs consequent
upon the employment of two Counsel (where
so used).
(2)
The defendant’s
conditional claim in reconvention is dismissed with costs on the
scale as between attorney and client, such
costs also to include the
costs consequent upon the employment of two Counsel (where so
employed).
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
The plaintiff, Imperial Group Holdings (Pty)
Limited (‘Imperial’), is a logistics company, providing
transport, warehousing,
storage and other related logistics services
to its customers. The defendant, Sime Darby Hudson and Knight (Pty)
Limited (‘Sime
Darby’), which is a producer and a bulk
distributor of edible and tropical fats and oils, was, during the
period from about
2014 to 2017, one such customer of Imperial. Sime
Darby supplies the fats and oils it produces, including industrial
ingredients,
pastry fats, industrial margarines, shortenings and
frying oils, to a number of customers all over South Africa. And it
was assisted
in such distribution of its products by Imperial, with
whom it had contracted – in terms of and pursuant to a written
agreement
– to be supplied by Imperial with logistics services.
[2].
In this defended action,
which came before me in the Commercial Court of this Division,
Imperial claims from Sime Darby the total
amount of R4 470 174.54,
which it alleges is in respect of invoices relating to logistics
services rendered during the
period from
November
2016 to September 2017.
[3].
Imperial’s claim is resisted by Sime Darby
on the basis that they hold Imperial accountable and liable, as they
are entitled
to do in terms of the contract between the parties, for
shortages, losses, damages and stock variances that occurred during
the
warehousing and during the transportation of their products by
Imperial. During the period
from
May 2016 to February 2017, so Sime
Darby alleged, there were a substantial number of stock losses and
damages in the Imperial warehouse,
which were entirely due to the
conduct of Imperial and that of its personnel. Sime Darby in fact
invoiced Imperial for these losses,
which they initially calculated
at a total sum of R4 703 355.63, of which total, Imperial
acknowledged liability only
for the sum of R1 343 315.87.
[4].
In issue in this action is a
calculation of the amount owing by Sime Darby to Imperial in respect
of services rendered by the latter
to the former pursuant to and in
terms of the written agreement between them. That calculation is to
be done by applying the provisions
of the agreement to the facts of
the matter and by calculating what sums, if any, are to be set off
against such amount due to
Imperial. That calculation is to be done
and the issues to be decided against the factual backdrop of the
matter, the facts being
by and large common cause as set out in the
paragraphs which follow, and which facts are gleaned from the
evidence led during the
trial on behalf of both parties, as well as
from the documentary evidence introduced via the medium of these
witnesses. In that
regard, there were two witnesses called on behalf
of Imperial, namely its divisional financial director, Mr Sean
Brown (‘Mr
Brown’), and its Operations Director, Mr
Gustav Mertz (‘Mr Mertz’), whereas Sime Darby called
its Logistics
Manager, Mr Barry Donald, as its only witness.
[5].
A convenient starting point
for a discussion of the factual matrix in the matter is the written
agreement, concluded between the
parties during February 2014, which
regulated the contractual relationship between them at the relevant
time during the period
from November 2016 to September 2017, when
Imperial rendered the services in question to Sime Darby. It should
be borne in mind
that during the period from April 2017 to September
2017, Imperial purported to exercise a lien over Sime Darby’s
stock in
its possession at its Warehouse or Warehouses then.
[6].
In terms of the agreement
between the parties for the provision of logistics services by
Imperial to Sime Darby, the latter was
granted a credit facility by
Imperial in the amount of R3 million, and the maximum insurance cover
granted, in respect of goods
in transit was for an amount of R850 000
per full load. And ‘goods’ were defined as anything ‘to
be handled,
conveyed or stored by Imperial’.
[7].
The other material
provisions of the agreement were the following:
(a)
In terms of clause
3.1 of the Standard Terms, payment of the ‘rates’ charged
by Imperial for its services, was to (‘shall’)
be made
within thirty days from date of Imperial’s monthly statements.
And, in terms of clause 3.2 ‘[a]ll payments
to [Imperial] [was
to] be without delay, deduction or set-off and no amount may be
deferred or withheld by reason of any claim
or counterclaim’.
(b)
In the event that
Sime Darby did not pay any amount on the due date, then the total
amount in respect of all contracts would (‘shall’)
immediately become due, owing and payable irrespective of due dates
for payment of such amounts.
(c)
Apart from any lien
Imperial may be entitled to exercise over the goods, Sime Darby
agreed that all goods and documents relating
to a contract which came
into the possession or under the control of Imperial, on Sime Darby’s
behalf, are pledged to Imperial
as security for all monies due to it
by Sime Darby.
(d)
Imperial accepted the
risk of the goods ‘during transit’ at the cost price
thereof, limited to the amount of R850 000
per load, and the
risk during warehousing at the cost price thereof, subject to the
proviso that Imperial would only be liable
in respect of damages to
or losses of the Goods as a result of Imperial’s wilful conduct
or negligence. Such liability was
accordingly to be on the basis of
delictual liability.
(e)
Clause 5.2 provided
that all undisputed claims for damages to the goods whilst in
Imperial’s possession, would be payable
to Sime Darby within
sixty days from the date of receipt of Sime Darby’s tax invoice
for such damages / losses. Furthermore,
unless the delivery note on
delivery of the goods was endorsed accordingly, Imperial would not
(‘shall not’) be liable
for damages or losses of the
Goods during transit. And any claim for damages / losses not lodged
in writing within thirty days
of its occurrence, would have lapsed
automatically.
(f)
In terms of clause
5.5 of the Standard Terms, Imperial could (‘may’)
exercise a lien over all such goods in its possession
in respect of
any overdue payments by Sime Darby which lien would only be capable
of being relinquished by payment to Imperial
of the amount due and
not through the furnishing of security. During the exercise of such
lien, Imperial was not to bear any risk
in respect of such Goods.
[8].
With those provisions of the
agreement in mind, I now turn to deal with the calculations on behalf
of the parties. As already indicated,
in its particulars of claim,
Imperial claims the total sum of R4 470
174.54,
and in support of that amount, a ledger card of sorts as at 30
September 2017 is attached, being a schedule of transactions
–
mainly debits / invoices – for the period from 07 April 2016 to
21 September 2017.
[9].
The individual invoices
would have represented the final stages in the transactions before
payment. The process which would have
been followed up to that point
in summary is as follows. Sime Darby would initiate the process by
issuing a written instruction,
usually via email, to Imperial for the
collection of stock. The stock would be collected from Sime Darby’s
packaging sites
and transported to Imperial’s warehouse. The
industry term for this process is ‘inbound transport’.
The stock
would then be stored at the warehouse of Imperial pending a
further instruction from Sime Darby that the Goods are to be
delivered
to its customers. The transporting of the goods from the
warehouse to Sime Darby’s customers is termed ‘outward
transport’.
[10].
Sime Darby utilised the SAP
system to manage its stock and it would issue an instruction for the
collection of goods from the packing
sites to Imperial’s
warehouse by issuing a ‘stock transfer order’. On arrival
of the stock at its warehouse,
Imperial’s staff would confirm
the stock by conducting its own stock count. Thereafter, Imperial
would issue a ‘goods
receipt note’ or a ‘GRN’
on the system, referred to as a ‘101 transaction’,
whereafter the system
would reflect an increase of the stock in
Imperial’s possession. In the event that there was a
discrepancy between the stock
transfer order and Imperial’s
verification, Imperial would inform Sime Darby of the discrepancy via
email.
[11].
A similar process was
followed for the delivery of stock to customers. Sime Darby would
instruct Imperial to deliver stock to its
customer via email. Sime
Darby would then issue a ‘sales order’ or an ‘SO’
on the system, which would trigger
the delivery of certain of the
stock to the customer of Sime Darby. Imperial would then issue a
‘delivery note’ on
the Sime Darby’s SAP system,
referred to as a ‘601 transaction’. The details in the
delivery note included the
description of the stock to be delivered,
the quantity of pallets to be delivered as well as the name and
address of the customer.
Once a delivery note was issued, the system
would reflect a decrease in the quantity of stock held by Imperial on
behalf of Sime
Darby. Imperial separately produced its own delivery
note, which was not given to Sime Darby and it served as Imperial’s
internal check.
[12].
It bears emphasising that
the only stock control transactions processed by Imperial on Sime
Darby’s SAP system were the ‘101’
(goods received)
and the ‘601’ (goods issued) transactions, which were
transactions Imperial verified by reference
to their own records.
What is more is that, in certain instances, these transactions would
also be processed by employees of Sime
Darby, which ideally should
not have happened and which explain to a great extent the disputes
between the parties.
[13].
Part of the difficulty in
this matter, which gave rise to the dispute between the parties
relates to the SAP system and the fact
that Imperial’s access
to it was limited to generating goods receipts, delivery notes and
invoices. Most, if not all of the
other transactions on the system
were generated and processed by transaction codes by employees of
Sime Darby. All the same, on
delivery, the customer would sign the
delivery note as acknowledgment of receipt of its stock and this
would be the so called ‘proof
of delivery’ or ‘POD’.
PODs were sent to Sime Darby by Imperial, together with their
invoices, on a bi-weekly
basis. These invoices and Sime Darby’s
liability to pay them are the subject of this action.
[14].
Sime Darby, as already
indicated, disputes liability for the amount claimed by Imperial and
they do so on the basis that certain
sums, representing damages as a
result of damage to their stock, stock shortages and failure by
Imperial to provide them with POD’s
in respect of certain
alleged deliveries to their customers, should be set off against any
claims by Imperial. The total sum of
the amount to be set off,
according to the Sime Darby, is calculated as follows: R3 387 204.33
in respect of stock damaged
during the period from 7 April 2015 to 30
July 2017, which also includes invoices rendered by Sime Darby for
what they term ‘stock
take variances’ and ‘missing
PODs’. In support of this averment that Imperial owes them
R3 387 204.33,
Sime Darby attached to their plea a
statement dated 30 April 2018, which is in fact a list of the
invoices which were rendered
to Imperial by Sime Darby in respect of
these stock shortages. Additionally, Sime Darby claims an amount of
R153 548.52 which
relates to claims over the period from January
2015 to November 2016 arising from the fact that Imperial did not
provide them with
PODs, which means that they were not able to
invoice their customers. A similar claim for an amount of R91 003.68
is made
by Sime Darby also in respect of the period from February
2015 to June 2017, with some undated individual claims. The grand
total
claimed by Sime Darby is the sum of R3 631 756.53.
[15].
As regards the period
between April 2017 to September 2017, during which period Imperial
exercised a lien over Sime Darby’s
stock, Sime Darby contends
that Imperial cannot and should not be rendering invoices for that
period as it did not render any logistics
services to it during that
period, but was instead was holding onto the stock in the exercise of
its lien. The total amount of
those invoices, being R1 163 073,
so Sime Darby avers, should also be deducted from the amount claimed
by Imperial, which
means that an amount of R4 794 829.53
stands to be set off against the claim of Imperial, in effect wiping
out their
claim.
[16].
When the matter was argued
before me on 14 October 2022, Mr Motau SC, who appeared on
behalf of Sime Darby, acknowledged
that R153 548.68, referred to
supra and which relates to ‘missing PODs’, as well as the
total of R91 003.68,
relating to disputed deliveries, were
duplications as these amounts were already included in the amount of
R3 387 204.33,
as per annexure ‘B’ to
defendant’s plea, being a schedule of damages arising from
damaged stock, stock shortages
and so called ‘stock variances’.
This then means that I need only consider whether Sime Darby is
entitled to have set
off that amount or any portion thereof against
Imperial’s claim of R4 470 179. 57.
[17].
Mr Motau also conceded,
rightly so, in my view, that the remainder of Sime Darby’s
counterclaim and related amounts, notably
the claim for damages
relating to the ‘holding over’ of their goods by Imperial
during the lien period, are inconsistent
with the interpretation of
the agreement and/or is not supported by the evidence. These claims
were therefore not pursued.
[18].
The question remains whether
the R3 387 204.33 or any portion thereof can and should be
set-off against Imperial’s
claim. A large portion of this
claim is based on what is referred to as ‘stock variances’,
which are disputed
by Imperial. These stock variances arose from Sime
Darby’s reconciliation of the stock held on their behalf by
Imperial at
their warehouses and this exercise they did, from time to
time, based on ‘MB51’ reports, which they compiled with
reference
to their SAP system, which did not correlate to the records
of Imperial and which the latter disputed all along. So, for example,
in an email dated 3 March 2017 from Imperial’s Mr Mertz to Sime
Darby, the following was stated:
‘
Thank
you for your mail.
Please
note that we do not accept this result and will not accept an invoice
raised against us. We have no input into areas of your
system and
question the integrity of the system at this stage. In order to try
and resolve these variances and to understand the
issues I suggest
you and your team do a recon of your system.
At
every stock count, we supply you with our count. The December count
was confirmed and we will use our count as our opening stock.
-
Please supply
the capture of the December 2016 count (MB52 after count) that
matches what we counted.
-
In order to
bring some sanity to this, please supply the MB51 movement report
from after the count up to this count. The simple
methodology of
opening count plus receipts minus despatches to get to the closing
stock before this count
-
MB52 before
January 2017 count should match MB52 count after previous count plus
all movement for the month to this count (MB51]).
If our opening
stock agrees (SAP and our count) and we can account for all receipts
and despatches, then our closing stock should
agree. If we then have
variance based on this, we will investigate these and if found that
there are stock that we cannot account
for we will take
responsibility for those.’
[19].
This extract from the
communiqué from Imperial to Sime Darby, in my view, captures
the essence of Imperial’s case relative
to the amounts claimed
from them by Sime Darby. Imperial also demonstrates, by way of an
example, that Sime Darby’s MB51
report is inaccurate in that
they had processed a 1296 negative adjustment for a particular
product (Crispa Gold 20L), whereas,
based on attached supporting
documentation (GRNs, tax invoices and DO’s), the reconciliation
required no adjustment. This
example alone generated an incorrect
negative adjustment of R473 260.
[20].
The total ‘stock
variances’, so the case on behalf of Imperial goes, is based on
the MB51 reports, which, in turn, are
based on Sime Darby’s own
figures as per the SAPS system, which are not supported by the facts
in the matter. This was the
evidence of Mr Brown and Mr Mertz, and it
was not gainsaid by Sime Darby. This then means that Sime Darby has
failed to present
evidence in support of their claims, which, in
turn, translates into their claims having to be rejected.
[21].
In effect, what Imperial
avers is that Sime Darby plucked figures out of the air and processed
those as part of their stock control
reports in any given period. In
his witness statement, Mr Brown stated that the relevant MB51 report
contained thirteen transaction
types, which transaction codes were
not known to Imperial. Moreover, so the testimony of Mr Brown went,
for the period between
August 2016 and February 2017, a net inflow of
1470 transactions or 9437 items of stock were represented in the
report by the unknown
transaction codes. At an average price of say
R375 per item of the most common product line of all the stock items
handled by Imperial,
this represents R3 538 875 of stock
that has appeared (or was ‘plucked out the of the air’)
as stock that
Imperial should have had in the warehouse according to
the SAP system.
[22].
The point about Mr Brown’s
uncontested evidence is that very little, if any reliance can and
should be placed on Sime Darby’s
calculations. It is not
supported by the facts in the matter and was at variance with the
documentary evidence.
[23].
That, in my view, spells the
end for the case of Sime Darby. Without these items, there would not
be stock shortages and there would
also not be a claim by Sime Darby
that Imperial did not properly deal with the stock.
[24].
The first question to be
considered, that being whether the total amount R3 387 204.33
stands to be set off against Imperial’s
claim, should therefore
be decided in favour of Imperial. In my view, it is immaterial
whether or not these sums fall to be set
off on the basis of any
particular provision of the contract. The point is simply that Sime
Darby has not made out a case nor presented
any credible evidence,
supported by documentation, that it has a valid claim for these sums.
That, in my view, is a factual issue
to be decided on the basis of
the evidence before me. Imperial’s liability, save for
liability for damages to or losses of
the Goods during transit and/or
liability arising from breach of the agreement, was always to be
delictual liability to be determined
in accordance with normal legal
principles for determining delictual liability. Moreover, under no
circumstances was Imperial to
be liable for any indirect,
consequential, special and/or punitive damages.
[25].
Imperial denies Sime Darby’s
complaints in respect of the stock shortages. It did so not for the
first time during February
2017, when it pointed out to Sime Darby
that its claims for stock shortages were based on transactions
recorded on its SAPS system
over which Imperial and its staff had
very little control. Imperial did not accept Sime Darby’s
assertion that there were
shortages based on their reconciliation,
which, in turn was not based on Imperial’s system. Imperial
made extensive enquiries
in their endeavour to understand how Sime
Darby arrived at the amounts of the shortages. They were concerned
that transactions
were processed on the Sime Darby’s side, as
per the so-called MB51 Report, which had not been agreed upon and
which were
not supported by the physical stock takes compared to the
‘101’ and the ‘601’ transactions. According
to
the evidence, none of these queries were addressed at all let
alone addressed adequately. The point made by Imperial then and
during
the hearing of the matter was that there was no legal basis
for any of the supposed shortages.
[26].
As for the period from April
to September 2017, when Imperial exercised a lien over Sime Derby’s
stock, the latter also claims
damages in the amount of R1 094 166.38
for refining costs incurred in its attempt to salvage approximately
R5 000 000
worth of stock. Imperial contends that, in terms
of the agreement between the parties, it was authorised to exercise
the lien and
during that period it bore no risk in respect of the
Goods. I find myself in agreement with that contention. Clause 5.5 of
the
agreement states that Imperial shall not be liable for any risk
in respect of goods. The expiry of the stock constitutes a risk
in
respect of the stock. Accordingly, Sime Darby cannot hold Imperial
liable for the refining of the stock. In any event, the undisputed
evidence of Mr Brown was that these invoices related to all services
rendered to Sime Darby, including warehousing costs, logistical
services and other related costs. And this would be specifically in
terms of the agreement between the parties.
[27].
In sum, the point is simply that, for the most
part, Imperial’s liability (if any) to Sime Darby for damages
as a result of
damaged and/or lost goods and/or shortages would be
based on delict and Sime Darby would bear the onus to prove such
losses and
the other elements of the delict on a balance of
probabilities. Sime Darby has failed to discharge that onus, which
would have
required It to prove
inter
alia
the quantum of its damages. And
its claims fall to be rejected.
[28].
That brings me to the next
question whether Imperial was entitled to invoice Sime Darby during
the period from April to September
2017, when Imperial was exercising
its lien over Sime Darby’s stock. The total amount for the
invoices that were rendered
to Sime Darby in respect of the lien
period was R1 878 404.40. Of that amount, warehousing costs
amount to the sum of
R1 308 478.00 and the remaining
R294 043.42 being for other related costs within the lien
period.
[29].
Mr Van der Merwe, who appeared on behalf of
Imperial with Ms Reddy, submitted that Sime Darby should be held
liable for these charges.
For the period in question, that is from
April to September 2017, so the argument goes, the contract was still
in force. In terms
of the contract, Imperial was entitled to claim
the warehousing fee. To earn the warehousing fee, the plaintiff has
to keep the
goods in its warehouse – that it did. This is not a
case where the plaintiff acquires a lien over the defendant’s
goods,
as would for instance a repairer of a car, and then claims
storage fees for the period that he retains the car under the lien.
Imperial does not make such a claim. It claims the warehousing fee
under the contract, not its costs to store the goods.
[30].
I find myself in agreement with these submissions.
Moreover, Sime Darby was invited to provide security as a replacement
for Imperial’s
lien during June 2017, but it was not until 22
September 2017 that it requested Imperial to allow it to take
possession of its
goods, without tendering replacement security,
which request was acceded to by Imperial. Sime Darby is therefore
liable to pay
the invoices raised after April 2017.
[31].
Imperial is therefore
entitled to a judgment in its favour against Sime Darby, as well as
to an order dismissing the claim in reconvention.
Costs
[32].
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
[1]
.
[33].
I can think of no reason why I should deviate from
this general rule
in casu
.
Furthermore, in terms of the agreement between the parties, in the
event of Imperial instituting legal action it, Sime Darby is
liable
for Imperial’s costs on the scale as between attorney and
client. I therefore intend ordering costs on said scale
in favour of
Imperial against Sime Darby.
Order
[34].
In the result, the order which I grant is as
follows: -
(1)
Judgment is granted
against the defendant in favour of the plaintiff for: -
(a)Payment
of the sum of R4 470 174.57;
(b)Payment
of interest on the amount of R4 470 174.57 at the
applicable legal interest rate of 10.50% per annum from date
of
demand, being 17 July 2017, to date of final payment; and
(c)
Costs of suit on the
scale as between attorney and client, including the costs consequent
upon the employment of two Counsel (where
so used).
(2)
The defendant’s
conditional claim in reconvention is dismissed with costs on the
scale as between attorney and client, such
costs also to include the
costs consequent upon the employment of two Counsel (where so
employed).
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Local
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
19
th
and
20
th
September 2022
CLOSING ARGUMENT ON:
14
th
October 2022
JUDGMENT DATE:
11
th
April
2023
FOR THE PLAINTIFF:
Advocate H A Van der
Merwe, with Advocate K Reddy
INSTRUCTED BY:
J L Badenhorst
Attorneys, Brackenhurst, Alberton
FOR THE DEFENDANT:
Advocate Terry Motau
SC
INSTRUCTED BY:
Snyman Attorneys,
Melrose Arch, Johannesburg
[1]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455
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