Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 764South Africa
Momoco International Limited v GFE-MIR Alloys and Minerals SA (Pty) Ltd (55273/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 764 (2 June 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: the recognition and enforcement of a foreign arbitral award section in terms of section 16 r/w section 18 (1) (a) (ii) of the International Arbitration Act 15 of 2017-
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 764
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Momoco International Limited v GFE-MIR Alloys and Minerals SA (Pty) Ltd (55273/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 764 (2 June 2023)
Momoco International Limited v GFE-MIR Alloys and Minerals SA (Pty) Ltd (55273/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 764 (2 June 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_764.html
sino date 2 June 2023
FLYNOTE:
ARBITRATION
– Foreign award –
Enforcement
–
Award in China for payment of goods delivered – Respondent
contending that payment would aid tax evasion and be contrary
to
public policy – No illegality in relation to the underlying
agreement or the award – Refusal to pay for the goods
purchased
following the award was not just unreasonable, but contrary to public
policy in itself – Award made an order of
court –
International Arbitration Act 15 of 2017, s 18(1)(ii).
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 55273/2021
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
MOMOCO
INTERNATIONAL LIMITED
APPLICANT
And
GFE-MIR
ALLOYS AND MINERALS SA (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Momoco International
Limited v GFE-MIR Alloys and Minerals SA (Pty) Ltd
(Case
No:
55273/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 620 (2
June 2023)
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives via e-mail, by being uploaded
to
CaseLines and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand- down
is deemed to be 10h00 on 2 June 2023.
Summary:
the
recognition and enforcement of a foreign arbitral award section in
terms of section 16 r/w section 18 (1) (a) (ii) of the International
Arbitration Act 15 of 2017-
public
policy
Held:
the recognition and enforcement of such foreign arbitral awards not
contrary to public policy of the Republic
Order:
Para 40 of this judgment.
JUDGMENT
MUDAU,
J:
[1]
This
is an application for the recognition and enforcement of a foreign
arbitration award. The application arises out of an award
made on 12
June 2020, in arbitration proceedings between the applicant, Momoco
International Limited (Momoco) and the respondent,
GFE-MIR Alloys and
Minerals SA (Pty) Limited (GFE), held in Beijing, People’s
Republic of China. GFE resists the application.
In terms of the
award, GFE was ordered to:
a.
pay
the applicant $ 1 088 488.63 together with interest from 27 January
2014 until 26 November 2018 at a rate of 3.00%;
b.
compensate
the applicant for its attorney fees of $ 65 500;
c.
pay
the arbitration fee of RMB 236 521 in full; and
d.
pay
the arbitration fees for the counterclaim in the amount of $ 21
776.3.
The
parties
[2]
Momoco
is a British incorporated company, duly registered and incorporated
in terms of the laws of England and Wales, United Kingdom.
Momoco was
the claimant in the arbitration proceedings. GFE is a South African
company, duly registered and incorporated in terms
of the laws of the
Republic of South Africa.
[3]
The
arbitration was an international arbitration as contemplated by
Article 1(3) of the Model Law
[1]
because
at the time of the conclusion of the arbitration agreement, the
parties had their places of business in different countries
.
Factual
Background
[4]
The
background facts leading to the arbitration proceedings, which form
the basis of this application are largely common cause between
the
parties and clearly set out in Momoco’s founding affidavit. The
applicant is an international trading entity that imports
and exports
various goods. The respondent specialises in the manufacture and
marketing of alloys and associated products for the
steel, foundry
and light metals industries. During the period 2011 to 2014, the
applicant concluded numerous sale agreements with
the respondent in
terms of which the respondent ordered and the applicant supplied
cored wire (either 9mm or 13mm) to the respondent
for an agreed
price
.
[5]
In
each instance, the agreements were concluded by the respondent
sending an order to the applicant for a specified amount of cored
wire. The order was on a prescribed order form and was sent by email.
A written agreement was thus concluded on the terms set out
in each
sales confirmation in the following manner: the applicant accepted
the order and communicated the acceptance to the respondent
by
sending a duly signed sales confirmation via email. The
respondent then signed the sales confirmation form and sent it
back
to the applicant by email
.
[6]
The
applicant delivered the cored wire to the respondent by sea freight
in accordance with the sale agreements. However, the respondent
failed to make payment of the agreed purchase considerations in terms
of the sale agreements. Despite demand, the respondent has
refused to
pay the purchase considerations due to the applicant. There is no
dispute that the respondent has breached the supply
agreements by
failing to settle the outstanding amount for the sales concluded in
terms of the 16 sales confirmation. Consequently,
a dispute arose
between the applicant and the respondent
.
[7]
It
is common cause that the relief the applicant seeks is primarily
premised on the recognition and enforcement provisions of the
International Arbitration Act,
[2]
(the
Act) which provides for the incorporation of the UNCITRAL Model Law
and the New York Convention
[3]
and
gives effect to the obligations of the Republic of South Africa under
the New York Convention. The Model Law, in its amended
form, is
attached to the International Arbitration Act as Schedule 1 and forms
part of South African domestic law
.
[8]
The
parties concluded written arbitration agreements and agreed that the
applicable law would be the laws of the People's Republic
of China.
Clause 9 of the various agreements is an arbitration agreement as
defined in the Model Law, which is common cause between
the parties
.
[9]
Clause
9 of each of the sales confirmation provides for dispute resolution
mechanisms between the parties. Disputes include issues
relating to
interpretation, the parties' respective rights or obligations,
breach, or any matter arising out of the agreement.
In terms of the
clause, all disputes shall be settled amicably through friendly
negotiation failing which, the dispute shall then
be submitted to the
China International Economic and Trade Arbitrations Commission
(CIETAC), for arbitration in accordance with
its rules. It was agreed
that Chinese law shall be applicable, and that an arbitral award is
final and binding upon both parties.
By agreeing to
arbitration, parties waived their rights
pro
tanto.
[4]
In
due course, the respondent failed to pay the applicant the agreed
contract price in terms of the sale agreements and consequently,
a
dispute arose between the parties arising from the execution of each
of the sale agreements. Attempts to resolve the dispute
amicably were
unsuccessful
.
[10]
Consequently,
on 10 November 2017, the applicant submitted the dispute to
arbitration to CIETAC. The applicant subsequently amended
its
specific claims to be that the respondent make payment of the
remaining 16 sales confirmations. On 15 May 2018, the CIETAC
Court of
Arbitration served the arbitration notice, the arbitration rules, and
register of arbitrators of CIETAC on both parties
respectively by
express mail and delivered the arbitration application and related
evidentiary materials submitted by the applicant
to the respondent.
Article 25 (2) of the rules provides – “unless
otherwise agreed by the parties or provided
by these Rules, the
arbitral tribunal shall be composed of three arbitrators
”
.
[11]
GFE
appointed Mr Lu Song to act as arbitrator. Momoco did not appoint
anyone to act as arbitrator and accordingly, in terms of article
27 (1) of the CIETAC rules, the chairman of CIETAC appointed Mr
Tsang Tao to act as arbitrator. The parties did not jointly
appoint
the third and presiding arbitrator and accordingly, in terms of
article 27 (4) the chairman of CIETAC appointed Mr
Song Dihuang
to act in that capacity. There is no dispute that the arbitral panel
was duly and lawfully appointed. In sum, the
arbitrators had to –
(i) interpret the agreement; (ii) by applying Chinese law; (iii) in
the light of its terms; and
(iv) all the admissible evidence
.
[12]
On
15 January 2019, the arbitration was heard. Both parties were
represented in the proceedings. Subsequently, on 12 June 2020,
the
arbitral award was granted and served on both parties. The arbitral
award is final as contemplated in clause 9 of the agreements.
However, despite knowing the outcome of the arbitration and the
award, the respondent has not complied with the award. The respondent
resists to pay in accordance with the arbitral award for reasons
dealt with below
.
[13]
In
this case, GFE neither challenges the lawfulness of the establishment
of the arbitral tribunal, nor the fairness of the proceedings
before
it, nor the lawfulness or validity of the grant of the award.
Further, the respondent does not dispute that the arbitral
award
constitutes a "foreign arbitral award” as defined in
section 14 (d) of the Act because it was given in the
People's
Republic of China.
The
defence
[14]
GFE
alleges that Momoco is a dormant entity, which does not trade, nor
owns any significant assets. In its answering affidavit,
GFE points
out that at the instruction of Momoco, the purchase price for the
cored wire was required to be paid to a bank account
outside the
United Kingdom. GFE alleges that the deponent to Momoco’s
founding affidavit, Ma, “the owner, and controller
of the
applicant had disappeared and only reappeared during October 2015”
when he demanded payment of the outstanding invoices
from the
respondent and the group of companies
.
[15]
Essentially,
the defence is that the applicant is guilty of tax evasion in that it
has failed to declare the income generated from
its sales of copper
wire to the respondent to the United Kingdom tax authorities. GFE
contends that there is a real risk that if
were to be ordered to make
payment in the future to Momoco outside the United Kingdom, and into
Momoco’s bank account in
Hong Kong, then such payment would be
viewed as an offence under the regulations to the UK Criminal Finance
Act, 2017 referred
to as the Corporate Criminal Offence (CCO)
Regulations. This would result in it being seen as aiding and
abetting the applicant
to evade tax in the United Kingdom. The
respondent also argues that the enforcement of the award would
involve it in a breach under
the Prevention of Organised Crime
Act
[5]
(POCA).
[16]
GFE
also alleges that there are individuals it claims are involved in the
applicant's operation who "were fined for customs
fraud"
and that it has reported the applicant for "suspected of tax
evasion" to the customs authorities in the United
Kingdom.
However, the Supreme Court of Appeal cautioned in
Knoop
NNO v Gupta (Tayob Intervening)
[6]
that
“[t]he drawing of inferences from the facts must be based on
proven facts and not matters of speculation
”
.
[7]
[17]
GFE’s
position to date remains the same. Until such time as the applicant
can demonstrate to it that it is not evading tax,
and that there is
no substantial risk of GFE being prosecuted based on complicity, it
will not pay. Section 1 of POCA relied upon
defines “unlawful
activity” as “any conduct which constitutes a crime or
which contravenes any law whether such
conduct occurred before or
after the commencement of th[e] Act and whether such conduct occurred
in the Republic or elsewhere”.
Statutory
framework
[18]
Section
6 (Chapter 2) of the Act provides that “[t]he Model Law applies
in the Republic subject to the provisions of this
Act”. On
international arbitration agreements, the transitional provisions
(section 20(1)) of the Act provides that -
“
Chapter
2 of this Act applies to international commercial arbitration
agreements whether they entered into force before or after
the
commencement of Chapter 2 of this Act and to every arbitration under
such an agreement, but this section does not apply to
arbitral
proceedings which commenced before Chapter 2 of this Act came into
force
.”
[19]
On
the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards section 16
of the Act provides as follows -
“
(1)
Subject
to section 18 an arbitration agreement and a foreign arbitral award
must be recognised and enforced in the Republic as required
by the
Convention, subject to this Chapter
.
(2)
A
foreign arbitral award is binding between the parties to that foreign
arbitral award, and may be relied upon by those parties
by way of
defence, set-off or otherwise in any legal proceedings
.
(3)
A
foreign arbitral award must, on application, be made an order of
court and may then be enforced in the same manner as any judgment
or
order of court, subject to the provisions of this section and
sections 17 and 18.
(4)
Article
8 of the Model Law applies, with the necessary changes, to
arbitration agreements referred to in subsection (1)
.
”
[20]
Section
17 of the Act makes provision that a party seeking enforcement of a
foreign arbitral award must produce the original foreign
arbitral
award and the original arbitration agreement in terms of which the
award was made, both authenticated for use in the high
court, or
certified copies of the award and the agreement and sworn
translations of those documents. In this matter certified copies
of
the original sale confirmations, incorporating the arbitration
agreements are attached to the applicant's founding affidavit
as
annexures FA3 to FA32. A copy of the original and authenticated award
is also attached to the applicant's founding affidavit
as FA1 as well
as a sworn translation thereof, which is attached as FA2. The
authenticity of the arbitral award or the arbitration
agreements is
not in issue.
[21]
Section
14 of the Act defines a court as “any Division of the High
Court referred to in section 6(1) of the Superior Courts
Act, 2013
(Act No. 10 of 2013), or any local seat thereof…”.
Article 35 of the Model Law provides that: “An
arbitral award,
irrespective of the country in which it was made, shall be recognised
as binding and, upon application in writing
to the competent court,
shall be enforced subject to the provisions of this article and of
article 36.”
[22]
Section
18 of the Act set out the grounds upon which a party opposing an
application for enforcing a foreign arbitral award may
rely in the
following terms -
“
(1)
A court may only refuse to recognise or enforce a foreign arbitral
award if-
(a) the
court finds that-
“…
(ii) the
recognition or enforcement of the award is contrary to the public
policy of the Republic”.
[23]
GFE
assails the application and opposes it on a limited ground, that is,
section 18(1)(a)(ii). GFE contend that this court is precluded
from
making the award an order of court if the recognition or enforcement
is contrary to the public policy of the Republic. Counsel
for GFE
submitted that the court should refuse to make the award an order of
court so that the order does not contravene the law
relating to
schemes evading income tax on the basis that it is public policy that
companies must fully declare their trading affairs
to the
authorities.
[24]
According
to GFE, after Momoco launched this application, GFE obtained an
expert accountants’ report from Smith and Williamson
dated 11
March 2022, in which they opined that there is no sufficient evidence
to support the conclusion that Momoco was engaging
in a reportable
tax scheme as might be understood by United Kingdom law, although
Momoco had failed to file appropriate accounts
which have
implications for its tax compliance status. With this advice, on
GFE's own version, there is no finding of any tax evasion
by Momoco.
The “tax evasion” defence was raised and considered by
the arbitral panel but found to be irrelevant to
the dispute.
[25]
In
its Preamble, POCA makes plain that the rapid growth of organised
crime, money laundering and criminal gang activities nationally
and
internationally is an international security threat. It recognises
further that “organised crime, money laundering and
criminal
gang activities infringe on the rights of the people as enshrined in
the Bill of Rights”. POCA was enacted inter
alia “to
introduce measures to combat organised crime, money laundering and
criminal gang activities; to prohibit certain
activities relating to
racketeering activities; to provide for the prohibition of money
laundering and [to create] an obligation
to report certain
information; to criminalise certain activities associated with gangs;
to provide for the recovery of the proceeds
of unlawful activity; for
the civil forfeiture of criminal property that has been used to
commit an offence…”. Sections
4-8 of POCA deal with
offences relating to proceeds of unlawful activities.
[26]
Section
5 of POCA that GFE relies upon provides that -
“
Any
person who knows or ought reasonably to have known that another
person has obtained the proceeds of unlawful activities, and
who
enters into any agreement with anyone or engages in any arrangement
or transaction whereby-
“
(a) the
retention or the control by or on behalf of the said other person of
the proceeds of unlawful activities is facilitated;
or
(b) the
said proceeds of unlawful activities are used to make funds available
to the said other person or to acquire property
on his or her behalf
or to benefit him or her in any other way, shall be guilty of an
offence
.”
[27]
At
the risk of repetition, in the present case, there is no illegality
in relation to the underlying agreement or the award. None
was
suggested. Nor is there any suggestion that the main transaction
agreement with an arbitration clause was concluded with the
intention
of committing an illegal act requiring public policy considerations.
On the application of international law, section
233 of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act, 1996 makes plain
that “[w]hen interpreting any legislation,
every court must
prefer any reasonable interpretation of the legislation that is
consistent with international law over any alternative
interpretation
that is inconsistent with international law”. On the contrary,
compliance with an order of this court enforcing
the arbitral award
cannot constitute an unlawful activity as defined in section 1 of
POCA. Accordingly, I find that reliance on
POCA by GFE is misplaced
and has no bearing, regard being had to the facts as the underlying
agreement is commercial in nature,
which is recognised in
international law.
[28]
The
only source of an arbitrator's power is the arbitration agreement
between the parties.
[8]
As
Momoco’s counsel also submitted, with which I agree, the tax
issue has no bearing on the legality of the agreement, the
underlying
causa for the award or the arbitral award itself. If there have been
contraventions abroad, that is a matter for those
authorities but not
for this court. In
Seton
Co v Silveroak Industries Ltd,
[9]
it
was held that a court is not entitled to refuse recognition of
foreign arbitral awards on grounds of fraud in circumstances where
the party resisting the recognition of the award has not exhausted
the remedies available to it in a foreign jurisdiction or proper
forum
.
[29]
As
Vieyra J concluded in
Commissioner
of Taxes Federation Rhodesia v McFarland
[10]
,
the courts of the Republic have no jurisdiction to entertain legal
proceedings involving the enforcement of the revenue laws of
another
state, and that “[t]he imposition of a tax creates a duty that
is not to be likened to any other debt. The fiscal
power is an
attribute of sovereignty”.
[11]
As
counsel for Momoco submitted, as I also find, whether the applicant
complied with the relevant provisions of the legislation
in the
United Kingdom like the Companies Act, 2006 , the
Finance
Act, 2004
or
is guilty of a breach of the Criminal Finance Act, 2017 are
matters for the United Kingdom authorities to investigate
and
address. GFE concedes as much.
[30]
GFE
is a party to an international arbitration agreement in which the
parties choose the substantive law which is to apply, the
place where
a tribunal is to sit, who the arbitrator is to be, as well as the
applicable procedural law.
[12]
The
right of parties to arbitrate their disputes before a tribunal of
their own choosing has long been part of our common
law.
[13]
It
is a firmly established principle of the law of arbitration that
awards are final.
[14]
It
is only in exceptional, recognised instances that courts will not
give effect to arbitral awards. Failure to pay for goods purchased
and delivered several years ago is nothing but breach of contract
.
[31]
Generally,
public policy requires contracting parties to honour obligations that
have been freely and voluntarily undertaken. As
the Constitutional
Court reminds us in
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees, Oregon Trust And Others
[15]
that
“public policy demands that contracts freely and consciously
entered into must be honoured”.
[16]
Furthermore,
the principle of
pacta
sunt servanda
gives
effect to the “central constitutional values of freedom and
dignity”.
[17]
In
sum, courts recognise that generally, public policy requires
that contracting parties honour obligations that have
been freely and
voluntarily undertaken. In
Telcordia
Technologies,
[18]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal (per Harms JA) stressed the need, when
considering the confirmation of arbitral awards, for adherence
to the
principle of party autonomy, requiring a high degree of deference to
arbitral decisions, which is a worldwide tradition
.
[32]
The
defence put up is dilatory. The award made is not in conflict with or
deviating from the terms of the various sale confirmations.
It is
crucial to economic development; the necessity to do simple justice
between individuals
[19]
and
commercial transactions generally that individuals be able to trust
that all contracting parties will be bound by obligations
willingly
assumed. Accordingly, GFE failed to establish any basis either as a
matter of fact or law to substantiate the contention
that enforcing
the arbitral award will be against public policy.
[33]
In
sum, on a proper reading of the Act, the refusal to pay for the goods
purchased purportedly in terms of section 18(1)(a)(ii)
following the
award is not just unreasonable, but contrary to public policy in
itself. It follows then that the applicant must
succeed.
[34]
I
turn now to consider the question of costs. As for costs associated
with the main application, there is no reason why I should
not follow
the normal rule of awarding the costs in accordance with the result.
Counsel in each of the applications asked for an
order in their
favour with costs and that the costs of two counsel be allowed
.
Reserved
costs
[35]
On
1 March 2023, Motha AJ removed this application and reserved the
question of costs. The matter was not ripe for hearing. The
relevant
chronology is as follows. On 26 September 2022, the Taxing Master set
security for costs in the amount of R350 000.00
in favour of GFE and
provided his
allocatur
in
that regard. On 7 November 2022, security for costs was provided by
Momoco. Subsequently, on 5 December 2022, GFE demanded an
increase in
the security in the sum of R3 023 000.00 on, inter alia, the ground
that the amount of R350 000.00 was no longer adequate
.
[36]
In
response, on 20 December 2022, Momoco delivered a notice in terms of
Rule 30A disputing GFE's entitlement to additional security
and
contended that the latter's notice was irregular and did not comply
with the rules of court. On 13 February 2023, the Taxing
Master
informed the parties that a taxation date had been allocated for 27
February 2023. In response to the set down, Momoco served
a new
notice in terms of Rule 30A on GFE. Due to Momoco's second notice and
the Rule 30/30A application, the taxation did not proceed
and was
postponed
sine die
,
on the basis that Momoco's complaint was required to be resolved
first
.
[37]
It
is common cause that prior to the launching of the Rule 30/30A
application, on 14th and 16th of February 2023 respectively, GFE's
attorney of record wrote to Momoco's attorney of record and inter
alia, requested that the main application be removed from the
roll,
as the issue concerning the additional security for costs required
resolution first. It is common cause that on 17 February
2023, and as
a direct response to the aforementioned, Momoco's attorney of record
wrote to the Taxing Master, advising the latter
that the assessment
of security for costs was premature and irregular, and furthermore
requested that the matter be removed from
the taxation roll on 27
February 2023
.
[38]
On
1 March 2023 and at the hearing of the main application, counsel for
Momoco abandoned the Rule 30/30A application. Motha AJ deprecated
Momoco’s conduct and found it as “very opportunistic and
completely unacceptable” as the issue of taxation could
have
been heard on the date as previously set for that purpose, and the
main application could have been proceeded with on 1 March
2023.
[39]
It
is common cause that on 24 April 2023, Momoco offered additional
security for costs in the amount of R700 000.00, which DFE
accepted.
It is also common cause that
the respondent was entitled to security for costs and the registrar
could increase same in terms of
rule 47(6). Momoco’s Rule 30
and/or Rule 30A application, being interlocutory in nature, of
necessity was required to be
disposed of first, before the main
application could proceed. It is of no surprise therefore that on 1
March 2023, Momoco indicated
to the court that it was abandoning the
application. By then, Momoco had already scuppered the hearing before
the Taxing Master
for additional security on 27 February 2023. The
damage and inconvenience to DFE was already done. DFE is entitled to
reserved
costs
.
[40]
Order
a.
It
is declared that the arbitral award by the China International
Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (handed down in Beijing,
Peoples Republic of China) in the matter between Momoco International
Limited and GFE-MIR Alloys and Minerals SA (Pty) Limited
dated 12
June 2020, is made an order of court
.
b.
The
respondent is directed to pay the applicant's costs, including the
costs of two counsel.
c.
The
respondent, GFE-MIR Alloys and Minerals SA (Pty) Limited is entitled
to the reserved costs
of the removal
of the main application, which costs shall include the costs
associated with the withdrawal of the Rule 30/30A application
on 1
March 2023.
T
P Mudau
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date
of Hearing: 2 May 2023
Date
of Judgment: 2 June 2023
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicants:
Adv.
D Fine SC. and Adv. M Salukazana
Instructed
by:
Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc.
For
the Respondents:
Adv.
H Van Eeden SC and Adv. H.J Fischer
Instructed
by:
Spellas
Lengert Kubler Braun Inc.
[1]
The
UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration adopted
by the United Nations Commission on International Trade
Law on 21
June 1985, as amended by the said Commission on 7 July 2006 and as
adopted in Schedule 1 of Act 15 of 2017.
[2]
15
of 2017.
[3]
Convention
on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 10
June 1958 published in 330 U.N.T.S. 38 (1959), No.
4739.
[4]
Telcordia
Technologies Inc. v Telkom SA Ltd
[2006]
ZASCA 112
[2006] ZASCA 112
; ;
2007
(3) SA 266
(SCA)
at para 48.
[5]
121
of 1998.
[6]
2021
(3) SA 88
(SCA).
[7]
Id
at para 19.
[8]
Hos+Med
Medical Aid Scheme v Thebe Ya Bophelo Healthcare Marketing &
Consulting (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2007]
ZASCA 163
;
2008
(2) SA 608
(SCA)
at para 30.
[9]
2000
(2) SA 215 (T)
.
[10]
1965
(1) SA 470
(W).
[11]
Id
at 473H.
[12]
Seton
Co
n
11 above at 229.
[13]
Benjamin
v Sobac South African Building and Construction (Pty) Ltd
1989
(4) SA 940
(C)
at
967.
[14]
See
Seton
Co
n
11 above; see also
Kollberg
v Cape Town Municipality
1967
(3) SA 472
(A)
at
481F.
[15]
[2020]
ZACC 13
;
2020
(5) SA 247
(CC);
2020
(9) BCLR 1098
(CC).
[16]
Id
at para 83.
[17]
Id.
[18]
Telcordia
Technologies
n
4 above at para 4.
[19]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007]
ZACC 5
;
2007
(5) SA 323
(CC)
[2007] ZACC 5
; ;
2007
(7) BCLR 691
(CC).
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mombeeg (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Rotek Industries SOC Ltd (2021/15418) [2023] ZAGPJHC 268 (27 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 268High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Mombeeg (PTY) Limited v Eskom Rotek Industries SOC Limited (2021/15418) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1014 (15 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 1014High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Mogomotsi v Mogale City Local Municipality (A2024-140407) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1218 (24 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1218High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
MC Carthy (Pty) Limited v Olinsky (41796/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1164 (13 October 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1164High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Mogano v Passenger Rail Agency Of South Africa (2013/43052) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1069 (26 September 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1069High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar