Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 335South Africa
Valditime (Pty) Ltd and Another v ABSA Bank Ltd (2021/39886) [2023] ZAGPJHC 335 (14 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 October 2021
Headnotes
judgment granted by Twala J on 8 March 2022 under case number 39886/2021. The respondent (Absa) opposes the application, but concedes that the amounts in which the judgment was granted in respect of two claims were incorrect. To this end, Absa has abandoned the judgment for the amounts in excess of the amounts due to it and, consents to rescission in respect of the amounts not due to it.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 335
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Valditime (Pty) Ltd and Another v ABSA Bank Ltd (2021/39886) [2023] ZAGPJHC 335 (14 April 2023)
Valditime (Pty) Ltd and Another v ABSA Bank Ltd (2021/39886) [2023] ZAGPJHC 335 (14 April 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_335.html
sino date 14 April 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or
witnesses
have
been redacted from this document in compliance with the law and
SAFLII
Policy
####
#### REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case No: 2021/39886
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
14.04.23
In the matter between:
VALDITIME
(PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
RUDOLPH CORNELIUS
JOHANNES
VAN
DER WESTHUIZEN
Second
Respondent
and
ABSA BANK LTD
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Valditime (Pty) Ltd and Others v ABSA Bank Ltd
(Case No:
2021/39886) [2023] ZAGPJHC 335 (14 April 2023)
JUDGMENT
ENGELBRECHT,
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application for rescission of the
summary judgment granted by Twala J on 8 March 2022 under case number
39886/2021.
The respondent (Absa) opposes the application, but
concedes that the amounts in which the judgment was granted in
respect of two
claims were incorrect. To this end, Absa has
abandoned the judgment for the amounts in excess of the amounts due
to it and,
consents to rescission in respect of the amounts not due
to it.
RELEVANT FACTS
[2]
The indebtedness of the first applicant
(Valditime) stems from loan and overdraft facilities held under
account numbers [...] and
[...], respectively. The indebtedness
is secured by mortgage bonds over immovable properties owned by it.
Prior to
the institution of the action that led to the grant of the
summary judgment, certain of the mortgaged properties were sold and
the mortgage bonds cancelled. The remaining mortgaged
properties were declared executable when summary judgment was granted
against the applicants.
[3]
The second applicant (Mr Van der Westhuizen) is
liable to Absa as surety and co-principal debtor for Valditime’s
indebtedness
to Absa.
[4]
Absa
instituted action
against the applicants in August 2021, and the applicants filed and
served a notice of intention to defend.
However, they failed to
file a plea within the prescribed period. A plea was delivered
on 21 October 2021, pursuant to delivery
of a notice of bar on 14
October 2021. In their plea, the applicants denied every
substantive allegation by way of a bare
denial.
[5]
Absa applied for summary judgment and the matter
was set down for hearing on 8 March 2022. The applicants did
not oppose the
application and summary judgment was granted.
[6]
The applicants allege that the failure to oppose
the summary judgment application was the result of the matter
“
falling through the cracks”
,
proverbially speaking, in circumstances where an employee of the
applicants’ attorney failed to attend to various matters,
including the case involving the applicants. The attorney is
said only to have obtained notice of the summary judgment two
days
after it was uploaded to CaseLines.
[7]
Moreover, the applicants contend that they are not
indebted to the respondent in the amount claimed, on account of
alleged payments
in excess of R8 million allegedly made prior to the
grant of summary judgment and on the basis of an alleged dispute
concerning
the punitive interest rate to be applied. The
applicants also rely on an alleged agreement reached with Absa, which
Absa
is alleged to have acted in breach of. The applicants contend
that the judgment was erroneously sought or granted in the
circumstances.
THE REQUIREMENTS FOR
RESCISSION
Introduction
[8] Rule 42(1) of the
Uniform Rules of Court provides:
[9]
“
The court
may
,
in addition to any other powers it may have, mero motu or upon the
application of any party affected, rescind or vary:
[10]
(a) an order or judgment erroneously sought or
erroneously granted in the absence of any party affected thereby”.
[11]
The
purpose of Rule 42(1)(a) is to “
to
correct expeditiously an obviously wrong judgment or order
”
,
and the court does not have a discretion to set aside an order in
terms of the sub rule where one of the jurisdictional facts
does not
exist.
[1]
[12] An application for
rescission under 42(1)(a) must thus satisfy four requirements.
12.1.
First
, the
applicant must be a party affected by the judgment;
12.2.
Second
, the
judgment must have been granted in the absence of such a party;
12.3.
Third
, the
judgment must have been erroneously sought or granted; and
12.4.
Fourth
, if
the above three criteria are met, the applicant must also satisfy the
court that it should exercise its discretion in favour
of granting
the rescission.
The
first requirement: affected party
[13]
The applicants are obviously parties affected by
the judgment. As a consequence of the grant of summary judgment
against them,
they are bound to make payment in the amounts reflected
in the judgment, and certain properties owned by Valditime have been
declared
executable.
[14]
The first requirement is met.
Second requirement:
absence
[15]
Plainly, the applicants were absent on the day in
question. They were also absent in the sense of not having
indicated any
intention to oppose the summary judgment application.
[16]
The second requirement is met.
Third requirement:
order erroneously sought and granted
[17] The meaning of a
rescindable error under rule 42(1)(a) has been explained in several
judgments.
17.1.
In
Freedom
Stationery (Pty) Ltd v Hassam
,
[2]
the Supreme Court of
Appeal held that:
“
when
an affected party invokes Rule 42(1)(a), the question is whether
the party that obtained the order was procedurally entitled
thereto.
If so, the order could not be said to have been erroneously granted
in the absence of the affected party.
An applicant or plaintiff
would be procedurally entitled to an order when all affected parties
were adequately notified of the
relief that may be granted in their
absence. … [T]the failure of an affected litigant
to take steps to protect
his interests by joining the fray ought to
count against him
.”
[3]
17.2.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal held in
Lodhi
2 Properties Investments CC and Another v Bondev Developments (Pty)
Ltd
[4]
that:
“…
in a
case where a plaintiff is procedurally entitled to judgment in the
absence of the defendant the judgment if granted cannot
be said to
have been granted erroneously in the light of a subsequently
disclosed defence. A Court which grants a judgment
by default
like the judgments we are presently concerned with, does not grant
the judgment on the basis that the defendant does
not have a defence:
it grants the judgment on the basis that he defendant has been
notified of the plaintiff’s claim as required
by the Rules,
that the defendant, not having given notice of an intention to
defend, is not defending the matter and that the plaintiff
is in
terms of the Rules entitled to the order sought. The existence
or non-existence of a defence on the merits is an irrelevant
consideration and, if subsequently disclosed, cannot transform a
validly obtained judgment into an erroneous judgment.”
17.3.
Further, in
Van
Heerden v Bronkhorst
,
[5]
the Supreme Court of
Appeal held that the error must be unknown to the judge:
“
Generally,
a judgment is erroneously granted if there existed at the time of its
issue a fact of which the court was unaware, which
would have
precluded the granting of the judgment and which would have induced
the court, if aware of it, not to grant the judgment
.”
[6]
17.4.
And
in
Zuma
v Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture
,
[7]
the Constitutional Court
confirmed that an applicant seeking to demonstrate that an order was
erroneously sought or granted must:
“
show
that the judgment against which they seek a rescission was
erroneously granted because ‘there existed at the time of
its
issue a fact of which the Judge was unaware, which would have
precluded the granting of the judgment and which would have induced
the Judge, if aware of it, not to grant the judgment
”
.
[8]
[18] In the
circumstances, there are four elements to a rescindable error:
18.1.
First
, the
error must be procedural in nature;
18.2.
Second,
the
court must have been unaware of the procedural error at the time
judgment was granted (in other words, an applicant for rescission
may
not rely on a fact known to the presiding officer);
18.3.
Third
, the
error must be such that had the court been aware of the error, the
court would not have the granted the judgment; and
18.4.
Fourth
, even
if there is a procedural error, the court must consider whether the
applicant for rescission took adequate steps to protect
its
interests, notwithstanding the error.
[19] The error relied on
by the applicant in the present case is not a procedural one: there
is no allegation that the absence of
the applicants from court or in
the sense of not having noted opposition to the summary judgment
application was the consequence
of any procedural error on the part
of Absa. At best for the applicants, it is because an employee in
their attorney’s office
did not comply with her duties.
[20] The explanation is
questionable given the fact that the responsible attorney on record,
who signed the plea and who had access
to the case by way of
CaseLines, is not the one said to have failed in his duties.
Moreover, the version relied on constitutes
hearsay in circumstances
where no confirmatory affidavit confirms the version presented to
explain the default.
[21]
Mr
Horn, for Absa, placed reliance on the judgment in
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Food Mills (Cape).
[9]
There, the defendant gave
notice of intention to defend an action; the plaintiff applied for
summary judgment, but due to a filing
error in the offices of the
defendant’s correspondent attorney, the application did not
reach the defendant’s attorney
of record. The Supreme
Court of Appeal held that:
[10]
“
I have
reservations about accepting that the defendant’s explanation
of the default is satisfactory. I have no doubt
that he wanted
to defend the action throughout and that it was not his fault that
the summary judgment application was not brought
to his attention.
But the reason why it was not brought to his attention is not
explained at all. The documents were
swallowed up somehow in
the offices of his attorneys as a result of what appears to be
inexcusable inefficiency on their part.
It is difficult to
regard this as a reasonable explanation. While the Courts are
slow to penalise a litigant for his attorney’s
inept conduct of
litigation, there comes a point where there is no alternative but to
make the client bear the consequences of
the negligence of his
attorneys.”
[22] The reasoning
applies with equal force in the present case. Moreover, the
explanation, such as it is, underscores that there
is no procedural
error. There is certainly no procedural error that, in my view,
would have stood in the way of the grant
of the order.
[23]
It
must be emphasized that the considerations on which the applicants
rely to assert a rescindable error are more in the nature
of putting
up a defence,
i.e.
their reliance on an
alleged agreement between Absa and the applicants and alleged
payments made by the Valditime said to have diminished
the
liability. Even if I were to treat the allegations as a
subsequently disclosed defence, that would not assist the applicants,
as appears from the
Lodhi
judgment I have already
referred to. On top of that, the reliance on the alleged
agreement and the allegation that payments
were not taken into
account have been persuasively and definitively dealt with in the
answering affidavit. On the application
of the trite principles
enunciated in
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd,
[11]
I
must accept the version put forward by Absa. That version
(supported by documentary evidence) reflects that, after the date
of
the alleged agreement the applicants rely on, there was further
engagement and that, in fact, no agreement was reached in the
terms
relied on. the version presented by Absa, not responded to by
way of a reply, also asserts that the alleged payments
(insofar as
they were indeed reflected as deposits into the relevant accounts)
were brought into account in the calculation of
the liability of the
applicants at the time summary judgment was sought. This is
borne out by the statements reflecting the
relevant payments that
were indeed made into the account.
[24]
From
the answering affidavit filed on behalf of Absa, we know nonetheless
that there was an error in the interest calculation, and
therefore
the amount in respect of which judgment had been sought. This
was not an error that the applicant relied on, but
it is one that is
before this Court. That fact activates the ability of this
Court to consider whether there is a rescindable
error.
[25]
Absa
submits that “
the
present case constitutes one where summary judgment taken in the
absence of the applicants, stands to be varied in the manner
contended for by the respondent. This is so because the
respondent’s allegations concerning the applicants’
indebtedness to it stand uncontested. There is nothing left for
the trial court to adjudicate”
.
[12]
[26]
For
this proposition, Absa relies on the judgment in
Mostert
v Nedbank Ltd
[13]
together
with the factual allegations concerning interest rate calculation set
out in the answering affidavit and summarized in
the heads of
argument:
[14]
“
37
The agreed interest rate applicable to the facility under account
number [...] (Claim 1) is the respondent’s prime interest
rate
per annum applicable from time to time plus 1.5%. Should the
first applicant fail to pay any amount on due date, penalty
interest
of 2% above the agreed rate would be charged in terms of clause 6.2
of schedule A to the facility letter.
38.
Whilst preparing the answering affidavit, it appeared that the
incorrect rate of interest
was
charged on account number [...] and that penalty interest in excess
of the agreed rate was charged from time to time.
This has been
corrected in the recalculation attached to the answering affidavit.
39. In the result, an
adjustment of R2 518 047.10 was made in respect of the
amount due as at 12 May 2021. The correct
outstanding amount
due on that date was R8 720 425.89. The respondent
has abandoned judgment for the difference
between the amount in
respect of which judgment was granted for Claim 1, namely
R11 233 877.10 and the aforesaid amount
of R8 720 425.89.
The difference is R2 513 451.21. Alternatively, the
respondent has consented
to rescission in part of the judgment
obtained in respect of Claim 1 to the extent of R2 513 451.21.
40. The agreed
interest rate applicable to the facility under account number [...]
(Claim 2) is the respondent’s prime rate
interest rate
applicable from time to time. The facility was already in existence
when the facility letter (annexure “POC8”
to the
particulars of claim) was issued. The interest rate previously
applicable to the facility was the respondent’s prime
interest
rate plus 1.5%. It is for this reason that the rate which was applied
to the facility remained prime plus 1.5% instead
of the newly agreed
rate of prime.
41. Annexure “AA10”
to the answering affidavit takes this fact into account. On the
second last page of recalculation
of this account, the amount due as
at 7 May 2021 (being the date stated in the particulars of claim) is
reflected as R1 450 663.12.
42. The respondent has
abandoned judgment for the difference between the amount in respect
of which judgment was granted for Claim
2, namely R1 783 745.10 and
the aforesaid amount of R1 450 663.12. The difference is R333 081.98.
Alternatively, the respondent
has consented to rescission in part of
the judgment obtained in respect of Claim 2 to the extent of R333
081.98.”
[27] Plainly, if the
Court had known of the fact of the wrong interest rate calculation,
the orders would not have been granted
in the terms that they were.
Fourth requirement:
discretion to be exercised
[28]
Rule 42(1)(a) postulates
that a court “
may
”
—
i.e., not “
must
”
—
rescind or vary
an order if the applicant meets the other requirements. The
Constitutional Court has explained that Rule 42(1)(a)
is merely an
empowering provision that affords the court a discretion.
[15]
It does not compel the
court to grant the rescission if all the jurisdictional requirements
are met.
[29]
In
Chetty
,
[16]
it was held that the
discretion is “
influenced
by considerations of fairness and justice, having regard to all the
facts and circumstances of the particular case
”
.
[17]
[30]
As discussed hereinabove, the applicants, who are
affected parties, were absent when summary judgment was granted.
Although the
case made out in the founding papers does not provide
the basis for rescinding the judgment, the version put up by Absa
casts a
new light. It would be unfair and unjust to let a
situation prevail where a judgment reflects incorrect levels of
indebtedness.
The question is, what options are available to
this Court in the circumstances?
[31]
Mr
Horn referred me to the judgment of my sister Fisher AJ (as she then
was) in
Conekt
Business Group (Pty) Ltd v Navigator Computer Consultants CC; In Re:
Navigator Computer Consultants CC v Conekt Business
Group (Pty)
Ltd,
[18]
which
dealt with an application in terms of Rule 31(2)(b) for the
rescission of a judgment taken by default. On the facts
of that
case, the applicant in question had made out a defence for only part
of the judgment. The question arose whether
the judgment could
be rescinded in part.
31.1.
Fisher AJ recorded the existence of a line of
cases holding that Uniform Rule 31(2)(b) does not permit of setting
aside a part of
the default judgment.
31.2.
However,
she pointed out that Fleming DJP in
Revelas
and Another v Tobias
[19]
considered
that Uniform Rule 31(2)(b) authorizes “
qualified
or conditional orders”
because
under the rule the Court is entitled to rescind a default judgment
“
on
such terms as to it seems meet”
.
He also brought into account the consideration that the Court enjoys
inherent jurisdiction to govern matters in the interests
of effective
administration of justice.
31.3.
Regard
was had to the reasoning in the Namibian case of
SOS
Kinderdorf International v Effie Lentin Architects,
[20]
to the
effect that
“
The
Rules of Court constitute the procedural machinery of the Court and
they are intended to expedite the business of the Courts.
Consequently, they will be interpreted and applied in a spirit which
will facilitate the work of the Courts and enable litigants
to
resolve their differences in as speedy an inexpensive manner as
possible. … There is no reason why this pattern should
be
deviated from where a plaintiff already obtained a default judgment
in respect of more than one but separate claims, and the
defendant
shows a defence to some of the plaintiff’s claims, or to a part
of the claim, which is divisible from the whole.
For example,
where a plaintiff is granted default judgment in respect of the
payment of a sum of money as well as delivery of certain
goods, and
the defendant can show a bona fide defence to one or the other, there
is no reason why the plaintiff should not be entitled
to judgment in
respect of the claim which defendant cannot defend. The
essential question is whether the claim or claims
in respect of which
default judgment has been given is divisible”
.
The learned judge came to the conclusion that a Court will not assume
that its powers are curtailed in the absence of a
clear statement to
the contrary.
31.4.
Fisher
AJ observed:
[21]
“
The
aforementioned pronouncements of Flemming DJP and Levy J,
notwithstanding their wide interpretation of the rule, appear to
accept that, for a partial rescission to occur, the judgment should
be capable of being divided into discrete parts so that the
part in
respect of which there is a possible defence can be discerned. Thus,
if a defence is made out which is not capable of quantification
in
this way or which cannot be dealt with on the basis that it can be
related in some manner to a distinct part of the judgment,
it would
appear that a partial rescission would not be permissible. This would
be the case even if it were apparent that there
was no defence to the
entire claim. The rationale behind this is probably the
impracticability of such an approach in circumstances
where there is
no delineation in relation to how the partial defence would relate to
the claim. What then of a situation where
a defence of this nature is
established to what appears to be a proportionately small part of the
judgment? It is likely that,
in such a case, a court would have
resort to the relatively wide powers afforded by Rule 31(2)(b) to
impose such “such terms
as to it seem meet” so as to
achieve a situation where the respective rights of the parties were,
in some manner, accommodated.”
31.5.
Ultimately, she considered that the judgment could
be rescinded in part.
[32]
It must, of course, be observed that the
exposition given by Fisher AJ related to Uniform Rule 31(2)(a), and
not to Uniform Rule
42. Rule 31(2)(a) does not find application
in the present instance, since the applicants had indeed given notice
of intention
to oppose and had filed a plea. The question that
arises is whether the principles can be applied to an application
under
Uniform Rule 42(1)(a). Uniform Rule 42(1)(a) does not
employ the same words as Uniform Rule 31(2)(a), but the
considerations
expressed in
SOS
Kinderdorf
apply with equal force in
the interpretation and application Uniform Rule 42(1)(a). The
error that has been identified is
capable of calculation, and the
amount discernable in light of the updated certificate of balance.
I consider it appropriate
to exercise my discretion to rescind the
order in part. The rescission, coupled with the necessary
variation, serves the
purpose of correctly reflecting the
indebtedness without the need for burdening a trial court.
[33]
In adopting this approach, I take note of the
reliance by the applicants on
the constitutional right to
access to court. Section 34 of the Constitution of the Republic
of South Africa Act 108 of 1996
(Constitution) provides in the
relevant part that “
Everyone has the right to have any
dispute that can be resolved by the application of law decided in a
fair public hearing before
a court”
. In the present
case, the parties have had an opportunity to present their versions
before this Court. Absa put up
a version that presented a clear
and substantiated answer to the allegations of the applicants.
The applicants elected not
to file a reply and challenge the facts
and evidence put up by Absa. If parties do not make use of the
opportunity presented
to them through the rules of court, they cannot
be heard to say that they want a future opportunity to raise their
facts.
In the context of this case, justice is best served by
dealing with the matter once and for all, and not to burden this
Court with
a trial where, on the facts available, there will be no
triable issue between the parties.
COSTS
[34]
As I have explained, it is not the facts relied on
by the applicants that give rise to the partial rescission order that
I make.
Nonetheless, had it not been for the applicants
launching the rescission application, the re-calculation would
probably never have
been done. In the circumstances of the
case, I consider it inappropriate to make a costs order.
ORDER
[35]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
35.1.
In respect of the order of Twala J of 8 March 2022
under case number 39886/2021 (the Order) -
35.1.1.
paragraph 1 of the Order is rescinded, save to the
extent of R8 720 425.89 of the amount, in respect of which
amount such
order remains in force and effect;
35.1.2.
paragraph 2 of the order is varied by the
substitution for the figure of “
R11 233 977.10
”
with the figure of “
R8 720 425.89
”
35.1.3.
Paragraph 3 of the Order is rescinded, save to the
extent of R1 450 663.12 of the amount, in respect of which
amount such
order remains in force and effect.
35.1.4.
Paragraph 4 of the order is varied by the
substitution for the figure of “
R1
783 745.19”
with the
figure of “
R1 450 663.12
”
.
35.2.
There is no order as to costs.
MJ Engelbrecht
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be
on 14
April
2023.
Heard
on : 13 April 2023
Delivered:
14 April 2023
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
R
Orr
For
the 1
st
& 2
nd
Respondent:
N
J Horn
[1]
Van der
Merwe v Bonaero Park (Edms) Bpk
1998
(1) SA 697
(T) at 702H.
[2]
2019 (4) SA 459 (SCA).
[3]
Ibid para 25.
[4]
2007
(6) SA 87
(SCA) at para 27.
[5]
[2020] ZASCA 147
para 10.
[6]
See also
Daniel
v President of the Republic of South Africa
2013
(11) BCLR 1241
(CC) para 6:
“
The
applicant is required to show that, but for the error he relies on,
this Court could not have granted the impugned order.
In other
words, the error must be something this Court was not aware of at
the time the order was made and which would have precluded
the
granting of the order in question, had the Court been aware of it.”
[7]
2021 JDR 2069 (CC).
[8]
Zuma
,
supra, para 62, citing with approval
Nyingwa
v Moolman NO
1993
(2) SA 508
(Tk) at 510D-G.
[9]
2003
(6) SA 1
(SCA).
[10]
At
para 12.
[11]
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 634H – 635C (per Corbett JA).
[12]
Respondent’s
heads of argument para 44.
[13]
2014
JDR 0760 (KZP) at paras 31 and 33.
[14]
Footnotes
omitted.
[15]
Zuma
,
supra, para 53.
[16]
Chetty
v Law Society, Transvaal
1985
(2) SA 756 (A).
[17]
Ibid at 761D-E.
[18]
2015
(4) SA 103 (GJ).
[19]
1999
(2) SA 440
(w) at 447.
[20]
1993
(2) SA 481 (NM).
[21]
At
para 33.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Happy Valley Holiday Hotel and Pleasure Resort 1972 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Nakoseni Property Developers (Pty) Ltd and Others (9066/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 98 (2 February 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 98High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Petroleum Industry Association v Fuel Retailers' Association (28818/2014) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1301 (13 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1301High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Adv. Motala N.O. K.C.W. v Road Accident Fund (42353/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1323 (15 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1323High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Property Owners Association v City of Johannesburg (2022-010023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1347; [2024] 1 All SA 432 (GJ) (22 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1347High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Gqwede (576/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 274 (15 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 274High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar