Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1023South Africa
SG Coal (Pty) Ltd v Beryl Coal (Pty) Ltd (05174/2022 ; 007819/2022 ; 38877/2022 ; 040604/2022 ; 022339/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1023 (11 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 September 2023
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 1023
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## SG Coal (Pty) Ltd v Beryl Coal (Pty) Ltd (05174/2022 ; 007819/2022 ; 38877/2022 ; 040604/2022 ; 022339/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1023 (11 September 2023)
SG Coal (Pty) Ltd v Beryl Coal (Pty) Ltd (05174/2022 ; 007819/2022 ; 38877/2022 ; 040604/2022 ; 022339/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1023 (11 September 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_1023.html
sino date 11 September 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
Case number:
05174/2022
In
re the matter between:
Case number:
007819/2022
SG
COAL (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
BERYL
COAL (PTY) LTD
Respondent
AND
The matters between:
Case number:
022339/2022
INCEKU
MINING (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
BERYL
COAL (PTY) LTD
Respondent
AND
In the matter between:
Case
number:
040604/2022
SG
COAL (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
And
BERYL
COAL (PTY) LIMITED (In Business rescue
First
Respondent
KURT
ROBERT KNOOP N.O.
Second
Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
Third
Respondent
JOHANNES
ZACHARIAS HUMAN MULLER N.O.
Fourth
Respondent
MAC
MOSES BALOYI N.O.
Fifth
Respondent
JIMMY
BALOYI N.O.
Sixth
Respondent
INCEKU
MINING (PTY) LIMITED
Seventh
Respondent
BERYL
PARTNERS SA (PTY) LTD
Eighth
Respondent
AND
In
the matter of:
Case number:
38877/2022
(Pretoria)
INCEKU
MINING (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
And
BERYL
COAL (PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
KURT
ROBERT KNOOP
Second
Respondent
KURT
ROBERT KNOOP N.O.
Third
Respondent
REABETSWE
KGOROEADIRA
Fourth
Respondent
FORTUNATE
RAMASHIDIZA
Fifth
Respondent
THE
COMPANIES AND INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
COMMISSION OF SOUTH AFRICA
Sixth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Wepener, J:
[1] Inceku Mining (Pty)
Limited (“Inceku”) a registered company doing business in
South Africa, which has a claim against
Beryl Coal for the sum of
R123 000 000 for services rendered.
[2] Beryl Coal (Pty)
Limited (“Beryl Coal”) is a company registered in the
Republic of South Africa and doing business
in the coal mining
industry.
[3] SG Coal (Pty) Limited
(“SG Coal”) is a registered Company doing business in
South Africa and who instituted liquidation
proceedings against Beryl
Coal.
[4] Kurt Robert Knoop
N.O.(“Knoop”) is a business rescue practitioner appointed
as such in the business rescue proceedings
of Beryl Coal.
[5] The Master of the
High Court (“the Master”) is sited in these papers as the
official with authority who can appoint
liquidators.
[6] Johannes Zacharias
Human Muller N.O. (“Muller”) is a joint provisional
liquidator appointed by the Master in the
provisional liquidation of
Beryl Coal.
[7] Mac Moses Baloyi N.O.
(“M. Baloyi”) is a joint provisional liquidator appointed
by the Master in the provisional
liquidation of Beryl Coal.
[8] Jimmy Baloyi N.O.
(“J. Baloyi”) is a joint provisional liquidator appointed
by the Master in the provisional liquidation
of Beryl Coal.
[9] Beryl Partners SA
(Pty) Limited (“Beryl Partners”) is a company duly
registered in terms of the laws of South Africa
and which is a
shareholder of Beryl Coal.
[10] Reabetswe
Kgoroeadira (“Kgoroeadira”) is a director of Beryl Coal.
[11] Fortunate
Ramashidiza (“Ramashidiza”) is a director of Beryl Coal.
[12] The Companies and
Intellectual Property Commission of South Africa (“the
Commission”) is a body established by
law. It took no part in
the proceedings.
[13] All of the
aforementioned parties joined or were joined in one or other capacity
in the various applications that were launched
and which served
before me.
[14] Before me are
several applications including an application for consolidation of
two applications for the liquidation of Beryl
Coal. Difficulties
regarding what was before me and what was not arose when by counsel
submitted draft orders after the hearing.
In its covering letter,
Beryl Coal refers to the letter of the Deputy Judge President only
referring three case numbers for hearing
to me, i.e. 038877, 022339
and 040604.
[15] This cannot be
correct as Beryl Coal itself submitted a draft order seeking the
dismissal of the application to consolidate
case 022339 and case
9197. At the very least, case 9197, as referred to in case 022339,
was also before me.
[16] Also, in concise
heads of argument Inceku indicated that case 9197 was indeed before
me. It also argued that application fully
without any objection that
it was not before me for determination. I consequently find that the
after the fact email surprising
considering all the matters that were
argued before me. The email by Beryl Coal’s attorneys also
states that “the application
was not argued”. It does not
say that the matter was not before me.
[17] After I reserved
judgment and completed the bulk of my judgment, a notice of
application in case number 9197 was filed by Beryl
Partners. Therein
it seeks that the judgment must be stayed or reserved further “while
final adjudication and determination”
is made of an application
to amend a document which features in the matter. All the matters
that were downloaded under case number
05174 (the current
proceedings) were before me and I shall deal with those matters which
were argued and with the new application
after it is heard.
[18] I, consequently hold
that the application to consolidate case numbers 022339 and 9197 is
properly before me. In it, Inceku
seeks to consolidate and
application by it for the liquidation of Beryl Coal with a similar
application by SG Coal.
[19] There was also a
matter launched in the Pretoria High Court (38877/2022) but which was
transferred to this court and uploaded
under the main case number of
this matter, i.e. 005174. That matter is also before me and was
argued fully.
[20] The application
(case number 040604) in which SG Coal sought to set aside the final
liquidation of Beryl Coal in terms of section
354 of the Companies
Act
[1]
served before me on all
versions. However, SG Coal did not appear to move for the order and
it was the intervening parties and
Beryl Coal who could participate
in this application. But not a word was said about it save that
Inceku submitted that although
the application is before me for
purposes of dealing with the return day of the provisional
liquidation application, the application
to set aside the initial
order was not. This appears to be correct and no party sought relief
pursuant to section 354 of the Companies
Act. Although not submitted
by Beryl Coal, Beryl Partners or Knoop, the papers indicate that
Beryl Partners had launched an application
in terms of section 345 of
the Companies Act for the setting aside of the liquidation order of
Beryl Coal granted on 17 October
2022 in favour of SG Coal. I am in
no position to grant this relief in the absence of submissions before
me as to why a liquidation
order, on the face of it issued validly in
2022, should now be set aside. The onus to prove the requirements set
out in section
354 of the Companies Act is on the party seeking that
relief. I must assume that the relief was abandoned, at least before
me,
and it calls for no order.
[21] Jabula Plant Hire
(Pty) Limited (“Jabula”) also instituted liquidation
proceedings against Beryl Coal. During September
2021, D&R Mining
(Pty) Limited (“D&R”) was granted leave to intervene
in liquidation proceedings of Beryl Coal,
instituted by Jabula. Both
claims were settled and I need not refer to the terms of thereof,
save to indicate that upon reaching
the settlement agreement, the
application for liquidation was postponed sine die. It is common
cause that there is an amount for
the payment of interest and costs
outstanding at the time of this hearing.
[22] On 26 July 2022, SG
Coal instituted liquidation proceedings against Beryl Coal and on 19
October 2022 the court granted a final
liquidation order. Thereafter,
and in terms of section 149(2) of the Insolvency Act
[2]
the parties applied to court and obtained a variation of the final
liquidation order to become a provisional liquidation order
with a
return date, which is now before me. In the time that followed, Beryl
Coal also settled SG Coal’s claim. The terms
of the settlement
that are relevant and will be referred to below. Probably because of
that settlement, SG Coal did not appear
before me on the return day
of the rule nisi when these matters were argued, and the order in SG
Coal’s favour, should be
discharged.
[23] Inceku, who did not
have knowledge of the pending liquidation applications brought by SG
Coal and others, issued an application
for liquidation of Beryl Coal
during June 2022. This application is pending before me
[24] The provisional
liquidators, appointed by the Master, are Muller, M. Baloyi and J.
Baloyi referred to hereinbefore. They have
gone a long way in the
performance of their duties and have filed reports from which some
material and uncontested facts which
are relevant to this application
can be gleamed.
[25] Inceku, on becoming
aware of the liquidation application by SG Coal, applied to court for
a consolidation of its application
with that of SG Coal. There was no
substantive argument put forward why the application by Inceku, to
consolidate its claim with
that of SG Coal, must not be granted at
this hearing.
[26] Also appearing and
represented by the same counsel as counsel for Beryl Coal, was Beryl
Partners, a shareholder of Beryl Coal.
Beryl Partners obtained a
court order placing Beryl Coal in business rescue on 7 March 2022.
The relevance of this conduct appears
from the provisions of section
129(2) of the Companies Act.
[3]
The section reads as follows:
“
(2) A
resolution contemplated in subsection (1) -
(a) may not be adopted if
liquidation proceedings have been initiated by or against the
company”
[27] The question argued
before me was that the proceedings launched by Beryl Partners to
place Beryl Coal in business rescue was
null and void or invalid due
to the fact that, at the time when that occured, liquidation
proceedings against Beryl Coal were pending
and instituted by
creditors being SG Coal, D&R and Jabula, all being being
applicants in such liquidation proceedings.
[28] Inceku submitted
that the placing of Beryl Coal in business rescue was not competent,
and Inceku’s application for liquidation
was lawful and not
prohibited by the provisions of section 129 of the Companies Act, as
the business rescue proceedings are a nullity.
A declaration of
invalidity of those proceedings, allows for Inceku to proceed with
its application for liquidation unhindered.
The questions are
therefor: first, were there liquidation proceedings pending against
Beryl Coal when the business rescue proceedings
were initiated? If
so, the business rescue proceedings are a nullity and void and falls
to be set aside. Second, does the initiation
of the business rescue
proceedings fall to be impugned for lack of compliance with the legal
prescripts and if so, it similarly
falls to be set aside.
[29] The main issue that
crystallised during argument was the validity of the business rescue
proceedings. If set aside, Inceku
has an undisputed claim for more
than R5 000 000 against Beryl Coal. Despite the amount
having been tendered by Beryl
Coal, no payment had been made when
this matter was heard. That admitted claim is consequently due and
payable to Inceku. The disputed
portion of the claim is then
irrelevant for purposes of determining whether it has a valid claim
to bring liquidation proceedings.
[30] Beryl Coal did not
make submissions other than the submissions regarding the existence
or otherwise of the liquidation applications
when the resolution was
passed, and the validity of the business rescue proceedings. I
consequently need only answer the questions
posed above. In addition,
if it is found that the business rescue proceedings fall to be set
aside, does Inceku have the right
to step into the shoes of SG Goal
as liquidating creditor? SG Coal did not appear on the return day and
the order for the liquidation
obtained by it, falls to be discharged.
[31] I requested all
parties to submit their suggested draft orders to me and neither
Beryl Coal, Knoop or Beryl Partners asked
for relief in terms of
section 354 of the Companies Act.
[32] The result is that
if it is found that any of the earlier liquidation proceedings were
still pending at the time the business
rescue proceedings were
initiated, the latter would be void. In addition, if the initiation
of the business rescue proceedings
was unlawful, those proceedings
fall to be set aside.
[33] If the business
rescue proceedings fall away, the liquidation application launched by
Inceku, has no bar and it can step into
the shoes of SG Coal as
liquidating creditor. As a point of departure, Inceku argued that the
placing of Beryl Coal in business
rescue, was void or stands to be
set aside because it was done in direct contravention of the Act
being in contravention of section
129. If it is found that there were
indeed liquidation proceedings pending against Beryl Coal at the time
of the initiation of
the business rescue proceedings, the latter will
be prohibited and thus unlawfully embarked upon and be void.
[34] Relying on
Lutchman
N.O. and Others v African Global Holdings and Others,
[4]
Inceku submitted that the
business rescue proceedings fall to be set aside. Several reasons
were advanced. In order to consider
these reasons, it is apt to refer
to what Meyer AJA (as he then was) said in
Lutchman
in relation to an
application to place a company in business rescue. It was held that
the business rescue proceedings must be issued,
served on the company
and the Commission and all reasonable steps must have been taken to
identify the affected persons.
[5]
Only proper compliance with the provisions of section 131(6) will
trigger a suspension of the liquidation proceedings. These
requirements
are not merely procedural steps but substantive
requirements that call for strict compliance.
[6]
A failure to comply results in a conclusion . . .
“
that the business
rescue application was not ‘made’ within the meaning of
section 131(6) of the Companies Act, and the
suspension of the
liquidation proceedings, . . . was not triggered in terms of the
section.”
[7]
[35] The first attack on
the business rescue application is that the application was not
served on Beryl Coal. The return of service
shows that it was served
on a respondent being “the employees of the respondent”.
It was so served, according to the
return, pursuant to Rule
4(1)(a)(iii).
[8]
The Sheriff’s
intention is clear. He wanted to, and did serve, the document for
attention of the employees of an undisclosed
party. There is no other
return of service amongst the papers and I find that there was a
failure to serve Beryl Coal with the
application and thus a failure
make application as required by section 131(6) of the Companies Act.
This is a failure to comply
with a substantive requirement and not
merely a point in limine. This is also not a standalone ground.
[36] There is also a
requirement that affected persons must be informed of the
application.
[9]
It is common
cause, and it was not contested, that there was no notification to
the South African Revenue Services (“SARS”)
of the
application. It was submitted by Beryl Coal that it could not be said
that SARS was an affected person. The submission must
fail. On its
own showing the financial statements attached to the application for
business rescue show that SARS is indeed a creditor
of Beryl Coal.
Although there are other allegations of a failure to notify affected
persons, I am of the view that the failure
to notify SARS, which is
clearly a creditor for many millions of Rands, suffices to conclude
that there was a significant failure
resulting in the business rescue
application not having been made within the meaning of section 131(6)
of the Companies Act as
set out in
Lutchman
.
Inceku raised a number of difficulties with the notices or lack
thereof to creditors. But a serious omission was pointed out and
it
results in a failure to comply with the requirement of notification
to be sent to creditors.
[37] In addition, the
trigger of the business rescue proceedings, was at a time when
liquidation proceedings were pending against
it and thus invalid.
[38] The result is that
the application for the liquidation of Beryl Coal initiated by
Inceku, is properly before me and, in the
absence of any argument or
allegation of non-compliance by it, it is entitled to seek the
liquidation of Beryl Coal. Its entitlement
has the consequences as
set out in Fullard v Fullard
[10]
.
Despite Beryl Coal’s complaint that there was not proof that
SARS was a creditor, I find that there is clear and sufficient
proof
on the papers of this fact. In the papers before me, Beryl Partners
(the shareholder in Beryl Coal) states that one of the
liabilities of
Beryl Coal, with reference to the latter’s financial
statements, that there is a debt of more than R5 900
000 for deferred
tax as well as an amount in excess of R41 000 000 in respect of
unpaid value added tax. Beryl Coal’s
apparent surprise about
the argument raised by Inceku, should consequently be removed by the
contents of the very papers filed
by its shareholder in order to seek
the initiation of business rescue proceedings against it.
[39] Inceku also raised
the issue of the inadequacy of the email addresses used to inform
creditors of the business rescue proceedings.
Having found that a
major creditor was omitted from the notification process, I need to
deal with the manner of notification to
the others.
[40] Based on both or
either of these two cogent reasons, the liquidation proceedings
instituted by any party was not suspended
nor did it stand in the way
of a creditor launching an application for the liquidation of Beryl
Coal.
[41] In addition to the
failure of Beryl Coal to pay its indebtedness to Inceku, there are
concerning matters highlighted by the
provisional liquidators of
Beryl Coal. Firstly, the report that approximately R283 000 000
worth of assets have disappeared
from Beryl Coal within a period of
less than 6 months. Secondly, they also reported that Beryl Coal is
selling coal to Cain Coal
at highly discounted prices that make no
commercial sense and is causing enormous damage to Beryl Coal.
Thirdly, Beryl Coal’s
right to mine on immovable property was
cancelled.
[42] There is a second
bow to the Inceku’s string. It argues that if the order for
business rescue is set aside, on the basis
of non-compliance as I
have found it should be, the liquidation applications brought by D&R
and Jabula, as well as SG Coal,
were all pending at the time when the
business rescue was sought and there was no moratorium on those
liquidation applications
as provided for in section 133(1) of the
Companies Act. Beryl Coal submitted that the applications for
liquidation by those three
parties have run their course and are no
longer alive to cause a bar by Beryl Coal to be placed in business
rescue.
[43] Section 129(2)(a) of
the Companies Act expressly prohibits the adoption of a resolution to
place a company in business rescue
if liquidation proceedings have
been initiated against the company. At the time of the adoption of
the business rescue resolution,
three applications for liquidation
were pending. First, the D&R application, second Jabula and
thirdly, SG Coal. This is common
cause. Beryl Coal submits that those
applications were not pending as all three those creditors were
settled and no claims by them
remained. This submission is not
correct. All three the applications for liquidation were alive,
despite a settlement of the debts.
Both interest and costs were still
owing in the D&R matter and the matters were postponed sine die.
In my view, these applications
remained alive especially if regard is
had to the settlement agreement which provides, in essence that the
agreement did not constitute
a novation of rights of D&R and that
should Beryl Coal fail to comply with the terms of the agreement, D&R
should be entitled
to elect in its discretion between enforcing its
rights in terms of the settlement agreement, or its rights in
relation to any
other cause of action or proceedings it may have had
prior to the conclusion of the agreement, including, in particular,
SG Coal’s
liquidation application. (I was advised that SG Coal,
D&R all had similar provisions). The very fact that the
provisional order
obtained by SG Coal is only discharged now, at the
request also of Beryl Coal in a draft order submitted by it, shows
that the
provisional order was pending until now. The other two
liquidation applications by D&R and Inceku remain pending and
have not
been withdrawn.
[44] In the circumstances
I conclude that Inceku’s claim to become the liquidating
creditor in the place of SG Coal, has no
bar and its claim against
Beryl Coal justifies the latter’s liquidation.
[45] Beryl Partners
sought the following relief after the matter was argued: amending the
return of service referred to earlier
in this judgment to now read
like Annexure A annexed to its notice of motion; alternatively,
condoning the non-compliance by Beryl
Partners with the rules
regarding service of process.
[46] It is immediately
apparent that the relief is contradictory. The first is to file a new
document in the place of the existing
return of service, and the
second is an admission that the original return of service is indeed
flawed but should be condoned.
I have found that the return of
service is flawed and can find no reason why condonation should be
granted to accept the flawed
return of service, contrary to the
findings of
Lutchman
above. The result is that
the relief sought is to introduce a new return of service. The
evidence tendered by Beryl Partners to
overcome it’s difficulty
is, in my view, insufficient. The Sheriff, Mr Timm, who furnished the
original return of service
was reluctant or refused to file an
affidavit in support of Beryl Partners’ contention that the
original return of service
was incorrect. In my view, that is fatal
to this application. Whatever the intention of the parties were, the
return of service,
rendered by Mr Timm, is the return that has to be
considered. His refusal to change the return or support the
application by Beryl
Partners speaks volumes. There is no acceptable
evidence before the me that shows that Mr Timm intended anything else
than that
which is stated in the return of service, which is prima
facie evidence of the facts therein stated. Section 43(2) of the
Supreme
Court Act
[11]
provides
that “the return of the Sheriff . . . of what has been done
upon a process of court, shall be prima facie evidence
of the matters
therein stated.” Beryl Partners seeks to change the prima facie
evidence of Mr Timm without Mr Timm being
willing himself to do so. I
have great difficulty to come to the assistance of Beryl Partners and
to amend prima facie evidence
of a person who is unwilling or unable
himself to do so and to explain his conduct.
[47] In the
circumstances, the application regarding the return of service by
Beryl Partners falls to be dismissed.
Orders
1. The application by
Beryl Partners to place Beryl Coal in business rescue is struck from
the roll. Beryl Partners is ordered to
pay the costs of Inceku, such
costs to include the costs of two counsel.
2. The separate
applications for liquidation brought against Beryl Coal by Inceku and
SG Coal are hereby consolidated and the existing
provisional order of
liquidation replaced with an order placing Beryl Coal in provisional
winding up at the instance of Inceku
as liquidating creditor.
3. The date on which the
winding up is to commence is the date of deemed commencement consent
of the winding up application sought
by SG Coal in case number
2022-007819.
4. The return date of the
provisional winding up application is 31 October 2023.
5. The costs of the
consolidated applications, including the costs previously reserved,
are costs in the winding up.
6. Beryl Partners is
ordered to pay the reserved costs of 25 January 2023 under case
number 2022-040604, which costs include the
costs of two counsel.
7. The interim interdict
of 13 July 2023 under case number 2022-058266 (Pretoria) is
discharged.
8. The order for
liquidation of Beryl Coal, obtained by SG Coal, is discharged.
9. The business rescue
proceedings initiated by the adoption of a Board resolution in terms
of section 129 on 25 August 2022, are
set aside.
10. The application
by Beryl Partners, to amend or condone the return of service, is
dismissed with costs.
Wepener J
Heard: 1 August
2023 and 11 September 2023
Delivered: 11 September
2023
For the Inceku Mining
(Pty) Limited:
Adv P.G. Cilliers SC
With him:
Adv B. Steyn
Instructed by:
J.W. Botes Incorporated.
For the Beryl Coal (Pty)
Limited, Beryl Partners SA (Pty) Limited
and K.R. Knoop (and K.R.
Knoop N.O.): Adv M.V.R. Potgieter SC
With him:
Adv L.V.R. van Tonder
Instructed by: Smit
Sewgoolam Incorporated
For the Joint Provisional
Liquidators:
Adv J. Hershenson
With him:
Adv R. de Leeuw
Instructed by: Schabort
Potgieter Attorneys Incorporated
[1]
Act 71 of 2008.
[2]
Act
24 of 1936.
[3]
Act 71 of 2008.
[4]
2022 (4) SA 529 (SCA).
[5]
Lutchman
para
28.
[6]
Lutchman
para
39.
[7]
Lutchman
para
42.
[8]
“
.
. . by delivering a copy thereof at the place of employment of the
said person, guardian, tutor, curator or the like to some
person
apparently not less than sixteen years of age and apparently in
authority over him. . . .”
[9]
Regulation 124 of the Company Regulations of 2011.
[10]
1979
(1)
SA
368
(T).
[11]
Act 10 of 2013.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
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
South African Local Authorities Pension Fund v SOS Media Productions (Pty) Ltd t/a Black Door (10870/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1285 (9 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1285High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Municipal Workers Union v Imbeu Development and Project Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (A2022-061733) [2024] ZAGPJHC 212 (4 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 212High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v Lucic (2022/6034) [2023] ZAGPJHC 768 (6 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 768High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Board of Sheriffs v Cibe (000219/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 583 (21 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 583High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar