Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1048South Africa
ITS Time Group (Pty) Limited v Tyulu and Others (2023/085264) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1048 (19 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 September 2023
Headnotes
two separate meetings, the first one with the bulk tanker drivers, and the second one with the energy advisors at the second respondent’s Randfontein depot.
Judgment
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## ITS Time Group (Pty) Limited v Tyulu and Others (2023/085264) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1048 (19 September 2023)
ITS Time Group (Pty) Limited v Tyulu and Others (2023/085264) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1048 (19 September 2023)
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sino date 19 September 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case number:
2023/085264
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
19.09.23
In
the matter between:
ITS
TIME GROUP (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Applicant
And
MAGCINABIWE
XAMELA TYULU
First
Respondent
VULA
OIL
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
SETSHABA
SEBEKO
Third
Respondent
COMPANIES
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY COMMISSION
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
PULLINGER,
AJ
[1] This is one of the
unusual cases where the costs of an urgent application are ventilated
before the Urgent Court. I decided
to hear this matter because
I had read the papers and the issues are clear and straightforward.
It is unnecessary to trouble
another judge in due course. This would
be waste of judicial resources and unnecessarily increase the costs.
[2] Before me were two
intertwined questions, defined by Mr Antonie SC, who appeared
with Ms Ndlovu for the applicant
as follows:
[2.1] First, should this
application have been brought as one of urgency?
[2.2] Second, should the
respondent pay the costs of the urgent application considering that
the substantive relief had been conceded?
[3] The material facts
are as follows:
[3.1] Mr Khanya Solani
(“Mr Solani”) is the sole shareholder and director of the
applicant.
[3.2] He is the
non-executive chairman of the second respondent and, formerly an
employee of the second respondent, an issue which
has bearing on the
outcome of this matter.
[3.3] The applicant is
the beneficial owner of 70% of the issued shares in the second
respondent. It has advanced a shareholder
loan of some
R8 million to the second respondent.
[3.4] The first
respondent was the sole director of the second respondent, prior to
the relief sought in this application being
conceded by him (an issue
to which I refer more fully below). He is also the owner of 30%
of the issued shares in the second
respondent.
[3.5] There is a written
agreement between the applicant, the first respondent and the second
respondent styled “
Nominee Agreement
” which
affords, in particular, the applicant the right to appoint directors
to the board of the second respondent (“the
Nominee
Agreement”).
[3.6] On 31 July 2023, Mr
Solani met with the first respondent to advise that the applicant
would be taking over the day-to-day
running of the second
respondent’s business. The context in which this
conversation took place is comprehensively traversed
in the
applicant’s founding affidavit, but is not material to the
issue before me.
[3.7] On 1 August 2023,
Mr Solani transmitted an email to the first respondent proposing a
turnaround plan for the second respondent's
business. The email
records:
“…
Attached is the process
that I am going to be managing as part of the business turnaround
efforts.
Your role and that of
Sechaba we will discuss when we are in the office, like I stated to
you last night I rather consult and engage
with you rather than
dictate what you should do.”
[3.8] Some ten days
later, and on 11 August 2023, the first respondent replied to Mr
Solani. The material parts of the email
record:
“
I am not in
agreement with your proposal and how you have conducted things. As
the managing director of Vula Oil I have decided
to take the
following steps in an attempt to save the business due to its
financial woes.
1. Terminate your role as
the Chief Financial Officer with immediate effect, unfortunately this
is due to a lack of transparency
in your role which is crucial and I
do not agree with the plan you submitted to turn the business around.
Please bare [
sic
] in mind as the sole director I have
taken all the risk being surety for the company’s debts and I
am left exposed, therefore,
I will handle the finances of the Company
to ensure stability and mitigate my personal exposure to debt. You
have stated
that you cannot be a director due to conflict of interest
and I remain the only director of the Company who is obligated to
uphold
the directors [
sic
] fiduciary duty to the Company.
2. …
3. In an effort to save
the business I have decided to commence with the process of putting
the Company under business rescue with
an aim to facilitate
rehabilitation due to it being financially distressed.”
[3.9] On 19 August 2023,
the first respondent held two separate meetings, the first one with
the bulk tanker drivers, and the second
one with the energy advisors
at the second respondent’s Randfontein depot.
[3.10] During these
meetings, the first respondent advised the attendees that he would be
restructuring the second respondent’s
business, and that there
would be inevitable retrenchments effective as at 25 August 2023.
[3.11] The applicant
states, in regard to the aforegoing, that:
“
[t]his naturally
caused anxiety and unrest within the business of [the second
respondent] and unnecessarily exposes [the second
respondent] to
legal reprisal as a consequence of [the first respondent’s]
failure to follow due process applicable to retrenchments.
In
my view, there was no basis to threaten staff retrenchments.”
[3.12] On 21 August 2023,
the applicant called upon the first respondent to appoint a further
director, one Mr Sibeko, to the second
respondent’s board.
[3.13] By virtue of the
materiality of this letter to the issue before me, I reproduce the
content of the letter. It provides:
“
1 I refer you to
the Nominee Agreement entered into with Its Time Group (Pty) Ltd
(“ITG”), duly signed by you on 1
August 2021 (“the
Nominee Agreement”).
2 The Nominee
Agreement prescribes,
inter alia
:
2.1 “Its Time
shall be the owner of 70% (seventy) of the issued shares in [Vula]”
clause 4.2.2);
2.2 “Magcinaviwe
shall, on behalf of Its Time hold the Its Time shares in a nominee
capacity. The Its Time shares shall
be held by Magcinaviwe on
behalf of Its (clause 4.2.3).
2.3 In the event that
Its Time is required to appoint a director or directors to represent
the Its Time shares, Its Time shall
on the written notice to
Magcinaviwe undertake to forward the details and secure the
appointment of any person nominated by Its
Time to the board of
directors of [Vula]” (clause 5.1).
3 ITG is most
concerned, having regard to various factors, including your recent
conduct, that you are no longer acting in
the interests of ITG nor in
accordance with your duties to ITG. ITG now requires that a
director be appointed to represent
its interests on the board, whilst
also acting in the best interests of Vula as a company.
4 ITG has identified Mr
Setshaba Sibeko (Identity number 8110015830085) (“Mr Sibeko”)
as a suitable candidate to
be appointed as a director of Vula. Mr
Sibeko has agreed to and has accepted the proposed appointment.
5 ITG hereby gives
its notice (as per clause 5.1 of the Nominee Agreement) for you to
take the necessary steps to formalize
the appointment of Mr Sibeko as
a director of Vula within 3 (three) business days of receipt of this
notice.
6 I attach for
your ease, the necessary documentation required by CIPC, duly signed
by Mr Sibeko and Mr Solani (where applicable).
Should Vula
and/or CIPC require any further documentation from Mr Sibeko or ITG
to give effect to the above, please let us
know prior to the
above-mentioned deadline. Should you fail to do so, the
attached will be considered to be sufficient and
ITG will await your
timeous compliance with this notice.
7 Please note that
your recent emails to Mr Solani have been forwarded to our attorneys
for their comment and advice. You
can expect to receive a
substantive response to your mails from our attorneys in due course.
8 In the interim
ITG’s and Mr Solani’s rights remain reserved.”
[3.14] On 23 August 2023,
the first respondent replied to the aforesaid letter stating:
“
I acknowledge
receipt of your correspondence.
I shall revert regarding
the directors appointment next week, latest 30 August 2023.”
[3.15] In response to the
aforegoing, the applicant’s attorneys wrote to the first
respondent. Again, and given the
materiality of this letter, it
is reproduced in full. It records:
“
1 We represent
Its Time Group (Pty) Limited (“our client”).
2 We refer to our
client’s letter to you dated 21 August 2023 in which our client
exercised its rights under clause
5 of the Nominee Agreement and gave
you notice to take the necessary steps to formalize the appointment
of Mr Setshaba Sibeko
(“Mr Sibeko”) as a director of
Vula Oil (Pty) Limited within three business days.
3 You have refused
to comply with our client’s instruction. Instead, in an
email addressed to our client on 23
August 2023, you advised that you
would only revert on this issue by latest 30 August 2023.
4 Our client is of
the view that your refusal to appoint Mr Sibeko constitutes a dispute
or disagreement (“the dispute”)
as contemplated in
clauses 8.1 and 8.2 of the Nominee Agreement which states that:
4.1 “
8.1
Any dispute, disagreement or deadlock that may arise between the
parties, shall be referred to an independent mediator,
who is an
expert in the field pertaining to the dispute, and who shall resolve
such dispute within 48 (forty-eight) hours of the
dispute arising.
”;
and
4.2 “
8.2
The decision of the mediator shall be final and binding on the
parties subject to the following:
8.2.1 The mediator
shall only be empowered to adjudicate on matters which do not pertain
to remuneration and/or monetary consideration;
8.2.2 The mediator
shall be impartial and shall have an unfettered discretion in making
any ruling or adjudication.
”
5 Clause 8.2.1
does not apply to the dispute and the mediator must be an expert in
the legal field given the nature of the
dispute.
6 Having regard to
the time constraints within which the dispute must be resolved in
terms of the Nominee Agreement, we propose
that one of the
undermentioned senior legal experts be approached to conduct the
mediation proceedings:
6.1 Advocate Azhar Bham
SC;
6.2 Advocate Nazeer
Cassim SC; or
6.3 Advocate Terry Motau
SC.
7 Please advise us
of the order of your preference so that we may approach them in such
a manner as to ascertain their respective
availability. Please
advise us of your choice in this regard within three hours of receipt
of this letter.
8 Our client’s
rights remain reserved.”
[3.16] In the interim,
the second respondent terminated Mr Solani’s employment.
[3.17] The first
respondent did not respond to the applicant’s request for a
mediation.
[3.18] Thus, by
25 August 2023, when this application was launched, the
factual scenario facing the applicant was the
following:
[3.18.1] Mr Solani’s
employment had been terminated summarily and without any process
being followed;
[3.18.2] The second
respondent's employees had been advised that a restructuring of the
business would take place, and that there
would be retrenchments;
[3.18.3] The first
respondent had failed to respond to the demand that there be a
mediation; and
[3.18.4] The first
respondent had, for no apparent reason, told the applicant that he
would revert on the appointment of a further
director to the board of
the second respondent's business by 30 August 2023.
[4] It is in the context
of these facts that the applicant, on 25 August 2023, launched this
application by way of an urgent application.
The application
was one for specific performance of the first respondent’s
obligations under the nominee agreement.
I find, in the context
of what I have recorded above, that the applicant was entitled to an
urgent hearing.
[5] The application was
served on the first respondent by a candidate attorney in the employ
of the applicant’s attorneys
at 18h08 on 25 August 2023.
[6] On 28 August 2023, at
17h56, the first respondent transmitted an email to the applicant’s
attorneys. The email provides,
inter alia
:
“
Please note that
Setchaba has been appointed as director this morning, as requested”
[7] The first
respondent’s email was met with a letter from the applicant’s
attorneys on 29 August 2023, recording that:
“
1 …
2 You allege in your
email that you have now appointed Mr Sibeko as a director of [the
second respondent] in belated compliance
with our client’s
demand dated 20 August 2023 and in capitulation to the relief sought
in the urgent application.
3 As the aforementioned
will have a material impact on the urgent application and serve to
obviate the necessity for the parties
to incur any costs of
opposition, please furnish us with the necessary documentation
evidencing the appointment of Mr Sibeko as
a director as well as the
appropriate confirmation from CIPC with regard thereto.
4 Please note that until
such time as we have received satisfactory confirmation of your
allegation, the urgent application will
proceed as per the notice of
motion and be heard on 5 September 2023.
5 …”
[8] On 30 August 2023,
the applicant’s attorneys received a letter from the first
respondent’s attorneys, dated 28 August
2023, providing the
necessary documentary evidence of Mr Sibeko’s appointment as a
director of the second respondent. The
two material annexures
to that letter are the resolution of the second respondent’s
board dated 28 August 2023 and the COR
39 form of the same date.
[9] Unbeknown to the
applicant, the reason that the first respondent had indicated that he
would revert by 30 August 2023
was his alleged uncertainty
as to the validity and binding effect of those provisions of the
nominee agreement empowering the applicant
to nominate a further
director to the board of the second respondent's business. The
first respondent appointed attorneys
and sought the opinion of
counsel in relation to the validity and binding effect of those
provisions. Regrettably, this was
not conveyed to the
applicant’s attorneys.
[10] The first
respondent, ably represented by Ms Chanza, resisted the hearing
of this matter before the urgent court and any
order that would
require the first respondent pay the costs of the application.
[11] I have already
addressed the reason that the costs argument was entertained by me.
The incurrence of further costs in
the context of what I stated
above is unjustifiable. Similarly, I have already addressed the
facts that rendered the relief
claimed by the applicant urgent at the
time that this application was launched.
[12] Ms Chanza
raised four discrete points in opposition to an order that the first
respondent be directed to pay the costs
of the application:
[12.1] First, Ms Chanza
argued that the applicant could have waited until 30 August 2023
before launching the application;
[12.2] Second, that the
applicant's attorneys could have replied to the first respondent’s
email of 23 August 2023 enquiring
as to the reasons why he
wanted to wait until 30 August 2023 to revert to the
applicant's demand;
[12.3] Third, it was
argued that the demand for mediation was premature in circumstances
where there was no dispute between the
parties; and
[12.4] Fourth, that the
applicant's conduct in launching the urgent application was
unreasonable in the circumstances.
[13] I do not agree with
Ms Chanza’s submissions.
[14]
The
first respondent, as the sole director of the second respondent,
stands in a fiduciary position
vis-à-vis
the second respondent directly and the shareholders indirectly. In
Corporate
Governance, An Essential Guide for South African Companies
[1]
, the authors state the proposition thus:
“
Shareholders’
interests have traditionally been granted primacy in the management
of a company. Thus, the principle
duty of directors, it has
been contended, is the maximisation of shareholder returns (profit).
The board is elected by shareholders
to represent their
interests, and directors remain accountable to shareholders
collectively for the results produced during their
tenure.”
[2]
[15] It was, therefore,
in the context of this application, impermissible for the first
respondent to not address the reasons for
his failure to immediately
comply with the Nominee Agreement and make the applicant wait for
some future date before he would revert
on the question of whether he
would act upon the contractual obligations in the Nominee Agreement.
[16] Any doubts that the
first respondent may have had regarding his obligations under the
Nominee Agreement could have been resolved
expeditiously under the
mediation clause. It is noteworthy, in this context, that the
first respondent signed the Nominee
Agreement without demur on 15
December 2021 and therefore agreed to any remedial measures which
could have been taken before the
launching of any court proceedings.
[17] The first respondent
failed to respond to a request for mediation on the ostensible basis
that there was no dispute between
the parties. But, it is plain that
where a director is required to act positively in accordance with an
agreement, but remains
silent and ignores the demand, there is a
dispute.
[18]
En passant
,
it appears that the first respondent doubted the enforceability of
the clause 5 of the Nominee Agreement, thus and in his mind,
there
was an impasse between the parties. This is the apparent reason
that he sought legal advice.
[19] This position must
be distinguished between an "
arbitral dispute
" and a
dispute as contemplated in the mediation clause. The mediation
clause is far wider. It contemplates that
any impasse should be
resolved expeditiously between the parties and a three hour time
limit for the appointment of a mediator
is set.
[20] It is difficult, in
these circumstances, to agree with the proposition that the demand
for the mediation and then the subsequent
launching of the urgent
application was premature.
[21] But, not only did
the first respondent not give reasons for his conduct as aforesaid,
he proceeded to advise the second respondent's
employees of his plans
for restructure and retrenchments. This is strongly indicative
that the first respondent would not
accede to the demand to comply
with his contractual obligations. This inference is supported
by the intimation that he would,
as sole director of the second
respondent, pass a resolution placing the second respondent under
supervision and in business rescue
as contemplated in Chapter 6 of
the
Companies Act, 2008
.
[22] It is, in the
totality of these circumstances, clear that the applicant was
constrained to approach the Court for the relief
sought. His
application was neither premature nor unnecessary.
[23] This gives rise to
the question of reasonableness. Ms Chanza, on behalf of
the respondent, advanced the proposition
that the (un)reasonableness
of the applicant's expeditious launch of its urgent application is a
reason to deprive it of costs
in circumstances where it had been
successful.
[24]
It
is long established that, as a general rule, a successful party is
entitled to a costs order.
[3]
The general rule will only be departed from where there are
good grounds to do so.
[4]
Good
grounds have been considered to be,
inter
alia
,
unconscionable or excessive demands, nominal damages, failure to
limit or curtail proceedings and costs of misconduct or improper
conduct. None of these considerations apply in this case.
[25]
In
supplementary heads of argument filed on behalf of the first
respondent, reliance is placed on Laggar
[5]
for the proposition that this matter ought not to have been argued
before the urgent court, and Mancisco
[6]
for the proposition that a successful litigant may be deprived of its
costs.
[26]
In
relation to Laggar, Cleaver J’s rationale for hearing a costs
argument in the urgent court is substantially the same as
mine.
[7]
As previously mentioned, this is an unusual case which departs from
the norm on grounds of pragmatism. It would seem
to be a waste
of judicial resources and unnecessarily increase the parties’
costs to have held a further hearing regarding
the costs.
[27] Turning now to the
majority decision in Mancisco.
[28] The judgment may be
difficult to follow because the learned Deputy Judge President
referred to “
applicant
” and “
respondent
”
(in the manner in which they were referred to
a quo
), and the
judgment read without being mindful of this fact can lead to an
incorrect understanding of the decision.
[28.1]
The
appellant (i.e. the respondent
a
quo
)
appealed against the merits of the judgment and order of the court of
first instance.
[8]
It did
not succeed on appeal. The appeal court varied the terms of the
costs order granted by the court of first instance
[9]
to accord with its findings on the merits.
[10]
In this regard, no controversy arises as this is, in effect, an
application of the “
costs
follows the event
”
principle.
[11]
[28.2]
The
appellant argued that its opposition before the court
a
quo
was reasonable, and it ought not pay the respondent’s costs on
various grounds.
[12]
[28.3]
But,
as the learned judge pointed out, the appellant was incorrect in that
belief and unnecessarily put the applicant to costs,
in circumstances
where it must have been foreseen that the respondent would have been
successful in the court
a
quo
.
[13]
[29] The decision in
Mancisco does not assist the respondent in this case.
[30] In the course of
considering the question of “
reasonableness
” as a
ground to deprive a successful litigant of its costs, I found some
authority in support of this proposition. Courts
have deprived
successful litigants of their costs but, in very specific contexts,
as the brief survey that follows demonstrates.
[31]
In
Pilot Freight
[14]
, Kairinos AJ
held:
"74. The
application for the winding up of the Respondent on the merits can
therefore not succeed since the Respondent
has set out defences,
which if proved at trial would constitute good defences in law and I
cannot on the fact set out in the affidavits
find that they are
not
bona fide
.
75. Lastly there is the
issue of the costs of the application. Ordinarily the costs
would follow the result and this would
mean that the Applicant would
pay the Respondent’s costs occasioned in opposing the
application.
76. However in the
present matter, the Respondent appears to have played its cards very
close to its chest and from its conduct
lured the Applicant into
launching an ultimately unsuccessful application for liquidation. I
say this since it appears that
when the Applicant launched the
application for the winding up of the Respondent, it did so in the
belief that the capital amount
outstanding and interest thereon had
been settled at the meeting on 9 October 2012. Indeed the
Respondent appears to have
made payments of R50 000.00 per month
thereafter, apparently in accordance with such agreement. When
the payments were
no longer made, the Applicant sent a demand in
terms of
section 345(1)(a)
of the old Act to the Respondent affording
the Respondent twenty-one days to appropriately respond thereto. The
Respondent
did not at that stage or at any stage prior to the
delivery of its answering affidavit raise the issue that the parents
of the
deponent to the answering affidavit, who purportedly had
represented the Respondent at such meeting, had not been authorised
to
conclude the purported settlement agreement. No doubt had
this issue been raised the Applicant would not have proceed by way
of
a liquidation application. In the circumstances it would be
appropriate to order that the Applicant pay the Respondent’s
costs in opposing the application from the date when the Respondent
delivered the answering affidavit and each party to bear its
own
costs in respect of all costs occasioned by the application prior to
the date that the answering affidavit was delivered. To
avoid
any confusion the costs prior to the delivery of the answering
affidavit are also to include the costs occasioned by the
preparation
of the answering affidavit." (Emphasis added)
[32] No such similar
considerations of the applicant not being completely open with the
first respondent arise in this matter.
[33]
In
Zhongji
[15]
the Supreme Court
of Appeal dismissed an appeal without ordering the unsuccessful
respondent to pay the costs of the appeal under
peculiar
circumstances concerning jurisdiction in an arbitration. The
court said:
"[38] The process
of arbitration must therefore be respected. Zhongji
Construction’s application to the high court
was accordingly
premature and perhaps unnecessary. In
Geldenhuys and
Neethling v Beuthin
Innes, CJ said:
‘
Courts of Law
exist for the settlement of concrete controversies and actual
infringements of rights, not to pronounce upon abstract
questions, or
to advise upon differing contentions, however important. And I
think we shall do well to adhere to the principle
laid down by a long
line of South African decisions, namely that
a declaratory
order cannot be claimed merely because the rights of the claimant
have been disputed
, but that such a claim must be founded upon an
actual infringement.’ (My emphasis.)
Kamoto came perilously
close to infringing Zhongji Construction’s right to arbitration
under the main agreement. Nevertheless,
the relief which
Zhongji Construction sought in the high court related to an abstract
or ‘academic’ question of the
kind to which Innes CJ
referred. The application ought to have been dismissed for this
reason alone. The arbitration
must first be given the
opportunity to have run its course before the court considers any
application relating thereto.
[39] In all the
circumstances of the matter, it is inappropriate to mulct Zhongji in
the costs of this appeal." (Emphasis
added; footnotes
omitted)
[34] As I have already
found, the applicant’s application was neither premature nor
unnecessary given the facts known to the
first respondent at the time
it was launched. There was nothing abstract about the relief
claimed, nor was its importance
to the applicant as the majority
shareholder in the second respondent. Accordingly, the
principle in Zhongji does not find
application in this matter.
[35] In the
circumstances, there is no reason to depart from the ordinary rule
that the successful party is entitled to the costs
of its
application.
[36] In the result, the
following order is made:
"
The first
respondent is to pay the applicant's costs of the application,
including the costs consequent upon the employment of two
counsel.
"
A
W PULLINGER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be
10h00
on
19 September 2023
.
DATE
OF HEARING:
5 September 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
19 September 2023
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
M M ANTONIE SC
N NDLOVU
ATTORNEY
FOR THE APPLICANT:
WERKSMANS, JOHANESBURG
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
J
CHANZA (MS)
ATTORNEY
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
TSHEPO MOHAPI ATTORNEYS
[1]
Ramani
Naidoo
et
al
,
Lexis Nexis, 3
rd
edition, 2018
[2]
Supra
at 164/5
[3]
Vassen
v Cape Town Council
1918 CPD 360
at 370-371; Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v De Swart
1969 (1) SA 655
(O) at
659 (D)
[4]
Niewoudt
v Joubert
1988 (3) SA 84
(SE) at 88H; Joubert t/a Wilcon v Beacham
and Another
1996 (1) SA 500
(C) at 502 D – F, citing
Demolition and Construction Co Ltd v Kent River Board [1963] 2
Lloyds LR 7 at 15
[5]
Laggar
v Shell Auto Care (Pty) Ltd and Another 2001 (2) SA 136 (C)
[6]
Mancisco
& Sons CC (in liquidation) v Stone
2001 (1) SA 168
(W)
[7]
Supra
at [4]
[8]
At
172 A – D
[9]
At
185 F
[10]
At
180 C – D and 179 F
[11]
At
180 G/H
[12]
At
180 H – I
[13]
At
182 F
[14]
Pilot Freight (Pty) Ltd v Von Landsberg Trading (Pty) Ltd 2015 (2)
SA 550
[15]
Zhongji Development Construction Engineering Company Limited v
Kamoto Copper Company Sarl
2015 (1) SA 345
(SCA)
sino noindex
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