Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 624South Africa
Elsys (Pty) Ltd t/a Electrosystems v BTS Electrical and Mechanical Services (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation) and Another (21/59086) [2023] ZAGPJHC 624 (5 June 2023)
Headnotes
of the terms of the agreement, which was accepted by the arbitrator in the preliminary hearing.[10]
Judgment
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## Elsys (Pty) Ltd t/a Electrosystems v BTS Electrical and Mechanical Services (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation) and Another (21/59086) [2023] ZAGPJHC 624 (5 June 2023)
Elsys (Pty) Ltd t/a Electrosystems v BTS Electrical and Mechanical Services (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation) and Another (21/59086) [2023] ZAGPJHC 624 (5 June 2023)
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sino date 5 June 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH-AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 21/59086
Heard on: 6 March 2023
Judgement on: 5 June
2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
05.06.23
IN THE MATTER BETWEEN:
ELSYS
(PTY) LTD t/a ELECTROSYSTEMS
APPLICANT
and
BTS
ELECTRICAL AND MECHANICAL SERVICES (PTY) LTD (in liquidation)
FIRST
RESPONDENT
TERRY
MAHON, N.O.
SECOND
RESPONDENT
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral Citation
:
Elsys (Pty) Ltd t/a Electrosystems v BTS Electrical and Mechanical
Services (Pty) Ltd and Terry Mahon N.O.
(Case No: 59086/2021)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 624 (05 JUNE 2023)
JUDGMENT
Strijdom AJ
INTRODUCTION
1. In this matter
the applicant (the respondent in the arbitration), (‘Elsys’)
applied to this court for orders
in terms of section 13 and 33 of the
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965 (‘the
Arbitration Act&rsquo
;):
1.1
reviewing
and setting aside the arbitration award (‘the award’)
handed down on 3 November 2021
[1]
by the second respondent, the arbitrator, in favour of the first
respondent (the claimant in the arbitration) (‘BTS’);
1.2
removing
the arbitrator in relation to the arbitral disputes between Elsys and
BTS.
[2]
2. This review does
not affect those claims which Elsys had not disputed, which
consequently do not fall to be reviewed and
set aside, i.e.:
2.1 R 166 878.90;
2.2 R 21 823.00;
2.3 R 16 491.42;
and
2.4 R 319 388.17.
3. BTS instituted
arbitration proceedings against Elsys in 2016.
4.
In terms of
the award, the arbitrator has directed Elsys to pay BTS the following
sums, which are subject to review
[3]
,
excluding interest and costs:
4.1 R 9 517 084.77;
4.2 R 196 222.50;
4.3 R 16 437.22;
4.4 R 1 638 988.78;
4.5 R 4 993 152.99;
4.6 R 47 464.01;
4.7 R 81 479.08;
4.8 R 20 441.14;
4.9 R 200 000.00;
and
4.10 R 1 173 342.10.
5.
BTS has
counter-applied for the award to be made an order of court.
[4]
6. Elsys opposed
the counter-application and its opposition is based on the review.
7. The arbitrator
has filed a notice of intention to abide.
The Review:
8. The review is
based on three (3) grounds:
8.1 the arbitrator
misconducted himself in relation to his duties as arbitrator;
8.2 the arbitrator
conducted a gross irregularity in the conduct of the proceedings; and
8.3 the arbitrator
exceeded his powers.
9. It was submitted
by the applicant that regarding each of the grounds above, the
arbitrator:
9.1 based his award
on matters other than BTS’s pleaded case, i.e., he ignored
BTS’s pleadings and based his findings
on matters that were not
covered by the pleadings when he was obliged to determine the claims
on BTS’s pleaded case;
9.2 treated the
parties differently by preventing Elsys from introducing further
limited evidence and documents, after having
allowed BTS to rely on
evidence of a single factual witness, Mr Ivan Pretorius (‘IP’),
who had testified outside the
contents of his single page witness
statement, which was in its terms, only confirmation of the evidence
of another witness (who
was not led in evidence on the merits of the
claim); and
9.3 in doing so,
the arbitrator treated Elsys unfairly and committed a gross
irregularity.
10. In the arbitration,
the first respondent (BTS) was the claimant and the applicant (Elsys)
the defendant. The dispute was referred
to arbitration in October
2016. The first respondent (as claimant) sought an award for payment
for the supply of goods and services
to the applicant (as defendant).
11. The disputes between
the parties concerned two (2) unrelated projects and three (3)
categories of claims arose for consideration:
11.1 The Boskrans claim
(claim 27, as it appears in the first respondent’s statement of
claim); and
11.2. The claims relating
to the ADM works, which, in return comprised:
11.2.1 the
measured works (where a bill of quantities is applicable); and
11.2.2 the remaining (or
ad hoc
) claims (claims 9 to 26, as they appear in the first
respondent’s statement of claim). These claims are considered
to be
of an
ad hoc
nature, because they related to goods and
services, not included in a bill of quantities.
12. The applicant
instituted a counter-claim which was ultimately withdrawn.
13. The issue in this
matter is whether the award is one which should be reviewed and set
aside in terms of one or more of the grounds
in
section 33
of the
Arbitration Act.
>
14.
Section 33
(1) of the
Arbitration Act provides
as follows:
‘
33 Setting aside
award
(1) Where –
(a) any
member of an arbitration tribunal has misconducted himself in
relation to his duties as arbitrator or umpire;
or
(b) An arbitration
tribunal has committed any gross irregularity in the conduct of the
arbitration proceedings or has exceeded
its powers; or
(c) An award has
been improperly obtained, the court may, on the application of any
party to the reference after due notice
to the other party or
parties, make an order setting the award aside.’
15.
The onus
rests upon the applicant in this regard.
[5]
16.
Wrong
findings on the correct dispute are not reviewable. In
Palabora
Copper (Pty) Ltd v Motlokwa Transport & Construction (Pty) Ltd
[6]
it was held as follows:
‘
It suffices to say
that where an arbitrator for some reason misconceives the nature of
the enquiry in the arbitration proceedings
with result that a party
is denied a fair hearing or a fair trial of the issues, that
constitutes a gross irregularity. The party
alleging the gross
irregularity must establish it. Where an arbitrator engages in the
correct enquiry, but errs either on the facts
or the law, that is not
an irregularity and is not a basis for setting aside an award. If
parties choose arbitration, courts endeavour
to uphold their choice
and do not lightly disturb it. The attack on the award must be
measured against these standards.’
17. The parties had no
written contract between them containing a dispute resolution clause
when the alleged disputes arose.
18.
In the
absence of a written contract containing a dispute resolution clause,
the written arbitration agreement, comprising the minutes
of the
first pre-arbitration agreement held on 24 October 2016, read with
the AoA rules, governs the disputes between the parties,
and may be
regarded as the parties’ written arbitration agreement. The
parties agreed that the Association of Arbitrator’s
Rules for
the conduct of arbitrators 2013 edition (‘the AoA rules’)
will be applicable to the arbitration.
[7]
19. After the
commencement of the arbitration, but before any evidence had been
led, the parties agreed to separate out an issue
for determination
first i.e., the terms of the agreement between them.
20. On 6 November 2017,
the arbitrator issued an interim award in which,
inter alia
,
he stated:
‘
9.1 The claimant’s
case is summarized in paragraph 4 of its Heads of Argument as
follows:
[8]
‘
4. The claimant’s
case, as evidenced in the statement of claim (and witness statement
of Grant) is simple. In respect of both
contracts:
4.1 The claimant
was a supplier and not a sub-contractor in the sense contended for by
the defendant.
4.2 The claimant
tendered as per a bill of quantities (‘BOQ’) and was
subsequently provided with a purchase order.
4.3 The claimant
supplied and delivered in accordance with the purchase order and the
BOQ. To the extent that the BOQ was
re-measurable, quantities may
have increased and the defendant is liable in accordance with the
rates in the BOQ, subject to the
CPA.
4.4 Where
deliverables, whether in the nature of goods and equipment or related
services, fall outside the relevant BOQ, such
deliverables were
supplied in accordance with separate agreements, on an
ad hoc
basis, concluded between the claimant and the defendant.’
‘
18. In view of
what is set out above, I make the following award:
18.1 The separate
issue is decided in the claimant’s favour and the contractual
terms between the parties are as contended
for by the claimant and
not as contended for by the defendant in paragraph 1.8 and 3.12 of
the amended Statement of Defence…’
21.
On 26
January 2018, following a request by Elsys for an interpretation of
the interim reward, the arbitrator clarified his interim
award by
identifying the BOQ which forms part of the AMD agreement as ‘The
BOQ was that contended for by the claimant.’
[9]
22.
It was
submitted by Elsys that the arbitrator was obliged to determine the
disputes on the basis of the parties’ pleaded cases,
with the
proviso that any claims which fell outside the R76 million BOQ, were
simply not before him unless they had been pleaded
as ‘separate
agreements, on an
ad
hoc
basis, concluded between the claimant and the defendant.’ This
was part of BTS’s summary of the terms of the agreement,
which
was accepted by the arbitrator in the preliminary hearing.
[10]
23. BTS contended that it
was never asked to pick a bill of quantities, it supplied goods and
delivered work on the basis of rates
in a bill of quantities. These
are rates that were taken into consideration when AECOM measured the
works and it was common cause
that AECOM measured only with reference
to a bill of quantities and that every item that appears in
certificate 31 also appears
in the bill of quantities.
24. In the clarification,
the arbitrator does not identify the ‘correct’ bill, nor
does he say that the R76 million
bill of quantities is the ‘correct’
bill.
25.
BTS, in its
pleadings, relied on a bill of quantities that was varied.
[11]
26. From the evidence it
is clear that the BOQ had been replaced, supplemented and amended
from time to time, but at all times,
there was only one BOQ.
27. The arbitrator found
that Elsys was misdirected as far as its point on the correct or
applicable BOQ was concerned and it transpired
that Ms Kelly’s
investigations were largely fruitless.
28. No purpose would have
been served by taking into account the Scott Schedule that was
prepared for purposes of illustrating the
differences between what
Elsys perceived was the ‘correct’ and the ‘incorrect’
BOQ’s. This is clear
from paragraphs 33 and 34 of the final
award and the applicant’s contention to the effect that the
arbitrator found in favour
of Elsys without any evidence or basis to
do so, is incorrect.
29. Ms Kelly’s
investigations in my view were indeed fruitless and pointless in
circumstances where in fact, the arbitrator
did not restrict or
confine the Elsys’ case to the BOQ that Elsys insisted should
be applicable.
30. I concluded that this
ground for review lacks merit and do not support the relief sought in
the notice of motion.
31. In respect of claims
1 – 8 it was contended by Elsys that the arbitrator was not
empowered to consider a claim for payment
for the measured works
other than the claim as pleaded by the first respondent and that the
BTS has led no evidence to support
the factual averments upon which
its claims were based. It was further argued that the arbitrator did
not have regard to the pleadings
or the pleaded basis for the
measured works claims.
32. To prove its case,
BTS relied on the evidence of Mr Pretorius who provided a first-hand
account of what happened ‘on-site’,
the evidence of Ms
Kelly as to the correctness and accuracy of AECOM’s
measurements, with reference,
inter alia
, to certificate 31,
the evidence of Mr O’Reilly and the numerous concessions by
Elsys’ factual witnesses.
33.
It is
apparent from evidence (mostly notably, the cross examination of Mr
Martyn that Malawi Engineering did not take or have contractual
responsibility for any part of BTS’s scope of work. It was
common cause that Malawi Engineering did not submit any claim
for
payment. Malawi Engineering was responsible, at the request of the
TTM JV to provide additional labour, not as a replacement
for
BTS.
[12]
Both Messrs Robert
and Martyn van Beek confirmed that BTS was not ‘de-scoped’
in favour of Malawi Engineering or any
other third party.
[13]
34. BTS contended that it
was entitled to payment of the full amount claimed towards the
measured works, and that it ought to have
been awarded
R 11 284 315.16
(inclusive of VAT) in respect of the measured works.
35. The arbitrator
awarded a lessor amount. It is clear from the final award that the
arbitrator applied his mind to the evidence
of the experts and
factual witnesses. The arbitrator also took in consideration and
determined Elsys’ alleged entitlements
towards deductions
(Malawi Engineering, remedial works).
36. There is no room for
a finding that the arbitrator found in favour of BTS, without
evidence or without BTS having additional
evidence.
37. The arbitrator was
entitled to take into consideration all evidence that was adduced,
irrespective of the party who adduced
it.
38. Claim 9 comprised two
claims. The first claim of R 166 878.90 towards the cable
calculations was conceded, with payment
withheld pending the
determination of a counter-claim, which was withdrawn and there can
be no objection to this being awarded.
39. On the second claim,
the applicant accepted that the first respondent provided a new
racking design. It disputed the quantum
of the claim.
40. Mr Robert van Beek
testified that R 196 222.50 would, according to the applicant,
represent a reasonable price for this
work. This was a concession
made by the witness. In my view the arbitrator was entitled to take
evidence into consideration, which
included concessions of this
nature, although it was not pleaded.
41. The first respondent
could not have known, when it prepared a statement of claim, that
this concession would be made in evidence
and as such, the suggestion
that the arbitrator strayed beyond the disputes on the pleadings is
incorrect. The dispute was and
remained contractual, as pleaded. If
the applicant is of the view that the arbitrator made an incorrect
assessment of the evidence,
or drew a wrong inference, this is not a
ground for review.
42. It was submitted by
the respondent that claims 15 and 16 (R1 638 988.78 and R
4 993 152.99 towards additional
labour and overtime) were
correctly awarded.
43. Mr Martin van Beek
testified that the applicant received the claims, added a mark-up and
asked AECOM to approve it for payment.
The obvious inference to draw
from the evidence of Mr Van Beek was that the applicant would not
have claimed from CMC (via AECOM)
if the work in question had not
been done by agreement and unless the applicant was satisfied with
the value of the first respondent’s
claim.
44. The arbitrator found
for the first respondent on the basis of concessions made under
cross-examination. There could be no basis
on which to suggest that
these concessions ought to have been foreshadowed and pleaded by the
first respondent. This complaint,
in my view, is also without merit.
45. The final award on
claim 20 (the sum of R 81 479.08) related to labour (hours)
costs in respect of switching and commissioning
in the medium voltage
sub-station. The applicant admitted that the first respondent was
instructed to provide the labour, but denied
the hours spent.
46. Mr Robert van Beek
testified that the applicant should only be liable for
R 12 000.00 in
respect of this claim. He conceded that a qualified electrician was
required to attend to this work, that the
applicant did not have such
a person available, and therefore requested the first respondent to
attend this work.
47. The arbitrator was
entitled taking concessions made by the witness into consideration,
and in doing so, it does not mean that
disputes were enlarged or that
non-pleaded disputes were determined.
48. Claim 22 was for
payment of R 4 170 638.07, in respect of the QC Officer.
49. Mr Robert van Beek
conceded the applicant’s obligation to remunerate the first
respondent, but took issue with the quantum
claimed. He indicated
that the applicant would be liable for approximately R 200 000.00
just for the QC packs in respect of
the applicant’s free-issue
materials. He testified that a calculation – or a comparison –
ought to be done with
reference to the initial budget for QC packs
and the increase in the project. He was unable to do so and the
applicant did not
instruct Ms Kelly to attend to such an exercise.
50. Having regard to the
uncontested evidence of,
inter alia
, Mr Pretorius as to the
extent of the work done in this regard, and the vague complaint that
these costs are ‘too much’.
I am of the view there can be
no valid objection to the arbitrator taking concessions made by the
witness into consideration.
51. In respect of the
final award on Boskrans, claim 27, the defendant in its amended
statement of defence, admitted in principle
an amount of
R 1 173 342.10,
which in turn was made up of: [a] R 319 388.17; and [b]
R 853 953.93. These
amounts have been uncontroversial from even before the disputes were
submitted to arbitration. They are
referred to as ‘payable’
by the applicant in the schedule
[14]
.
From this, the applicant sought to deduct
R 432 256.07 as the
cost incurred to allegedly attend to defects (or ‘punch-list
items’).
52. This amount is made
up of what Mr Martin van Beek said is ‘actual costs’
incurred by the applicant and includes
the labour costs, per hour,
for ‘normal’ and ‘overtime’ hours of eight
employees of the applicant, together
with their living, travel and
accommodation expenses and the cost of materials.
53. The first respondent
argued that the labour component fell to be disregarded on the basis
that this is not a cost incurred by
the applicant, because the
employees were not paid for their work, per hour. Instead, they
earned salaries and their salaries would
be (and had been) paid,
irrespective of whether they were deployed at Boskrans or not:
53.1 ‘normal’
hours amounted to R 177 660.00; and
53.2 ‘overtime’
hours amounted to R 46 001.00.
54. As far as the
accommodation, travel and living expenses were concerned, it was
accepted by the applicant that these employees
were not on site, only
for purposes of the outstanding punch-list items.
55. It was submitted by
the first respondent that the award on the Boskrans claim ought to be
as follows:
55.1 R 1 173 342.10
on the basis of the deduction being disallowed
in toto
.
56. All the relevant
evidence were taken into consideration by the arbitrator and he found
in favour of the first respondent on
this claim. Even if the
arbitrator was wrong in his assessment of the evidence, this is not a
ground for review.
57. It was submitted by
the applicant that a final award was issued, without evidence of how
invoices were compiled and submitted.
58.
The date of
invoices would ordinarily determine the date on which payments were
due. It was not the case of any party, that payment
must be excused
until and unless an invoice was delivered
[15]
.
The fact that evidence was not adduced of how invoices were compiled
was irrelevant to the issues and the determination of the
disputes
between the parties. This does not constitute a reviewable
irregularity.
59. It was submitted by
the applicant that it was precluded from leading evidence of further
witnesses which would have been succinct,
and which was supported by
witness statements together with a limited number of documents.
60. The arbitrator
required Elsys to make a substantive application to introduce the
further witness statements which it did, and
BTS was provided with an
opportunity to answer the application. The respondent elected not to
respond to Elsys’ affidavit
and argued that it would be
prejudiced as it had closed its case.
61. The arbitrator found
against Elsys and refused to permit it to lead the further evidence.
62. It was contended by
the applicant that the arbitrator considered himself in the same
position as a judge confronted with an
application to make late
discovery or introduce documents at a late state which have not been
discovered.
63. All that this court
must determine is whether the failure to lead the evidence amounts to
a gross procedural irregularity or
not.
64. It was submitted by
the applicant that the respondent was allowed to lead the evidence of
Mr Pretorius ‘off-script’
without any advance warning to
the applicant, thus being allowed to present its case as fully as it
required. Conversely the applicant,
having at least provided
supplementary and further witness statements, was denied to present
its case fully as it required.
65. It was further argued
that the fact that the respondent had closed its case, does not carry
with it any further hurdles, and
the applicant invited it to re-open
its case if it wished.
66. The witness statement
of Mr Pretorius confirmed what Mr Francois Grant stated in his
witness statement. Mr Pretorius was regularly
on site and to the
extent that Mr Grant was not, Mr Pretorius was able to confirm what
Mr Grant’s witness statement contained.
67. Elsys’ expert,
Ms Kelly, testified subsequent to BTS’s expert, Mr Robert
O’Reilly and prior to Elsys’
factual witnesses and the
close if its case.
68. A number of issues
had arisen from the earlier evidence of,
inter alia
, Ms Kelly
and her suggestion that there was ‘no evidence’ that the
relevant work had been done. It was, against this
background, that Mr
Pretorius testified on issues and topics that were addressed by Ms
Kelly and contained in the witness statements
presented on behalf of
the applicant.
69.
The
evidence of Mr Pretorius was led by agreement. It was led on the
understanding that his evidence-in-chief would be transcribed
to
effectively ‘replace’ a witness statement and that the
hearing would, thereafter, adjourn to enable the applicant
to fully
prepare for his cross-examination
[16]
.
The applicant was afforded no less than 2 months in which to consider
the evidence of Mr Pretorius. Given the agreement between
the parties
regarding the evidence of Mr Pretorius, there was no application to
‘allow’ the evidence and no such application
was argued,
or granted.
70. The applicant
indicated that it wished to introduce further witness statements and
additional documents, after the first respondent
had closed its case
and both the applicant’s Ms Kelly and Mr Robert van Beek had
testified.
71.
The
arbitrator disallowed the introduction of further witness statements
and related documents by the applicant, after its application
for
leave to do so had been considered, and after having heard
comprehensive argument on the issue
[17]
.
72. The interlocutory
application was something to which the arbitrator retained a wide
discretion. The arbitrator clearly took
the applicant’s
argument in support of the application into account and found it to
lack merit.
73.
With regard
to the provisions of
section 33(1)(a)
, the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Total
Support Management (Pty) Ltd and Another v Diversified Health Systems
(SA) (Pty) Ltd and Another
[18]
held as follows:
[21] ‘Because the
submission to arbitration did not provide otherwise, the parties were
precluded by the provisions of clause
30.12.3 of the agreement from
appealing against the decision of the second respondent. The
appellants can challenge the second
respondent’s award only by
invoking the statutory review provision of section 33(1)(a) and (b)
of the Act. Proof that the
second respondent misconducted himself in
relation to his duties or committed a gross irregularity in the
conduct of the arbitration
is a prerequisite for setting aside the
reward. The onus rests upon the appellants in this regard. As appears
from the authorities
to which I have referred, the basis on which an
award will be set aside on the grounds of misconduct is a very narrow
one. A gross
or manifest mistake is not per se misconduct.’
74.
As a
general proposition, wrong findings on the correct dispute are not
reviewable. It was held in
Telcordia
[19]
and in
Palabora
Copper (Pty) Ltd v Motlokwa Transport & Construction (Pty)
Ltd
[20]
.
‘
It suffices to say
that where an arbitrator for some reason misconceives the nature of
the enquiry in the arbitration proceedings
with the result that a
party is denied a fair hearing or a fair trial of the issues, that
constitutes a gross irregularity. The
party alleging the gross
irregularity must establish it. Where an arbitrator engages in the
correct enquiry, but errs either on
the facts or the law, that is not
an irregularity and is not a basis for setting aside an award. If
parties choose arbitration,
courts endeavour to uphold their choice
and do not lightly disturb it. The attack on the award must be
measured against these standards.’
75. On a conspectus of
the evidence before me, the applicant failed to discharge the onus to
prove that the arbitrator erred, whether
in his findings of fact, or
in the application of the relevant legal principles. As already
stated in
Telcordia
supra
, even if I consider the
arbitrator to have been materially wrong in one or more of his
findings, it is not a basis for review.
76. I further concluded
that the applicant does not illustrate that the arbitrator
misconducted himself in relation to his duty
as arbitrator or that he
exceeded his powers.
77. In the result the
following order is made:
77.1
The review application is dismissed with costs;
77.2
The award made by the arbitrator is made an order of court (counter
claim) with costs, which include the costs of two councel
(senior and
junior).
STRIJDOM JJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
Paul Strathem, SC
Instructed
by:
Hewlett
Bunn Inc.
For
the Respondent:
Adv
A J Daniels, SC and Adv de Villiers-Golding
Instructed
by:
Cox
Yeats Attorneys
[1]
CaseLines:
04 – 247 – 287 FA
[2]
Section
33(1)
and
13
(2) of the
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
[3]
CaseLines:
04 – 285 to 286
[4]
CaseLines:
04 – 613 AA and
section 33(1)
of the
Arbitration Act
[5
]
Total
Support Management (Pty) Ltd and Another v Diversified Health
Systems (SA) (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2002] ZASCA 14
;
2002 (4) SA 661
(SCA)
[6]
2018
(5) SA 462 (SCA)
[7]
CaseLines:
04 – 330 to 331
[8]
CaseLines:
04 - 212
[9]
CaseLines:
04 – 244 to 246
[10]
CaseLines: 04 - 212
[11]
CaseLines:
04 – 80 paragraph 8.2.1
[12]
CaseLines:
04 – 725 BTS 5.5
[13]
CaseLines:
04 –
729 BTS 5.6
[14]
CaseLines:
04 - 806
[15]
CaseLines:
04 – 240 and 04 - 245
[16]
CaseLines:
04 - 779
[17]
CaseLines:
04 - 756
[18]
2002
(4) SA 661 (SCA)
[19]
2007
(3) SA 266 (SCA)
[20]
2018
(5) SA 462
(SCA)
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