Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1465South Africa
Nuance Investments (Pty) Ltd v Maghilda Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (13759/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1465 (18 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 December 2023
Headnotes
the appeal of Nuance and found that: the agreements were null
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nuance Investments (Pty) Ltd v Maghilda Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (13759/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1465 (18 December 2023)
Nuance Investments (Pty) Ltd v Maghilda Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others (13759/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1465 (18 December 2023)
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sino date 18 December 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case
no:
13759/2019
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
DATE 18 December 2023
In the matter between:
NUANCE
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MAGHILDA INVESTMENTS
(PTY) LTD First
Respondent
JONATHAN BRUCE SANDLER
N.O. Second
Respondent
GEOFFREY ALAN WEST
N.O. Third
Respondent
ANTHONY DE AGUIAR N.O.
Fourth
Respondent
THE REGISTRAR OF
DEEDS, PRETORIA Fifth
Respondent
INVESTEC BANK LTD
Sixth Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
and/or parties’ representatives by email and by
upload to
CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be on 18 December
2023.
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE
TO APPEAL
JUDGMENT
OLIVIER AJ:
INTRODUCTION
1.
The dispute between the parties (to whom I
shall refer as they are in the main application) can be traced back
to 2007 when the
applicant, Nuance Investments (“Nuance”),
as purchaser, concluded a Sale Agreement, a Development Agreement,
and a
Lease Agreement, with the first respondent, Maghilda
Investments (“Maghilda”) and the Sanjont Trust (“Sanjont”
– second to fourth respondents are cited as its trustees) in
respect of certain portions of a property known as Elandsdrift
in the
Magaliesburg area (“the property”).
2.
It later emerged that the agreements were
void
ab initio
for non-compliance with several statutory requirements.
3.
In the execution of the Sale Agreement,
Nuance paid, as purchase consideration, to Maghilda an amount of
R17,343,214.00 in respect
of Portion 6 of the property, and to
Sanjont the total amount of R42,656,786.00 in respect of Portion 39
of the property.
4.
The transfer of ownership in Portion 4,
Portion 6 and Portion 39 to Nuance occurred on 13 May 2008; a first
mortgage bond was registered
over the three portions in favour of
Investec Bank Ltd (B 4[....]8) (“the Investec Bond”).
Simultaneously, a second
bond (B4[....]8) (“the Bond”),
was registered in the Deeds Office in favour of both Maghilda and
Sanjont over the three
portions as security for the remaining
payments as contemplated by the Sale Agreement.
5.
During 2012 Nuance instituted an action in
the Pretoria High Court against Maghilda and Sanjont, relying on
unjustified enrichment
as the cause of action, for repayment of the
purchase consideration against re-transfer of Portion 6, Portion 39
and Portion 4
of the property on the basis that the agreements were
null and void. The High Court in Pretoria found in favour of Sanjont
and
Maghilda, but on 1 December 2016, the Supreme Court of Appeal
upheld the appeal of Nuance and found that: the agreements were null
and void from the outset and had no legal force and effect; the claim
of Nuance for the repayment of the purchase consideration
had not
been extinguished through prescription; against transfer of the
relevant portions of the property, free from the Investec
Bond,
Maghilda and Sanjont had to repay the purchase considerations made by
Nuance Investments to them, plus interest. No mention
was made of the
Bond.
6.
The Supreme Court of Appeal order is as
follows:
1. The appeal is upheld
with costs including costs of two counsel.
2. The order of the court
a quo is set aside and replaced with the following orders:
2.1 It is declared that
(a) the purported sale agreement dated 21 November 2007 is null and
void from the outset with no legal force
and effect; (b) the
purported incidental development agreement dated 21 November 2007 is
null and void from the outset with no
legal force and effect; (c) the
purported lease agreement dated 15 January 2008 is null and void from
the outset with no legal
force and effect.
3. The special plea of
prescription raised by the First to Fourth `Defendants is dismissed.
4. Against the transfer
of the Remaining Extent of Portion 6 of the Farm Elandsdrift 527 JQ
to the First Defendant, free from any
mortgage bond held by Investec
Bank Ltd, the First Defendant is ordered to pay an amount of
R17,343,214 to the Plaintiff; together
with interest on the amount of
R17,343,214 at the prescribed rate of 9% per year calculated from the
date of demand herein (which
is 23 June 2009) to the date of payment
thereof;
5. Against the transfer
of the Remaining Extent of Portion 4 of the Farm Elandsdrift 527 JQ
and the Remaining Extent of Portion
39 of the Farm Elandsdrift 527 JQ
to the Second to Fourth Defendants jointly, free from any mortgage
bond held by Investec Bank
Ltd, the Second to Fourth Defendants
jointly are ordered to pay an amount of R42,656,786 to the Plaintiff;
together with interest
on the amount of R42,656,786 at the prescribed
rate of 9% per year calculated from 23 June 2009 to the date of
payment thereof.
6. The counter-claim of
the First to Fourth Defendants is dismissed.
6.1 The First Defendant
and the Second to Fourth Defendants, jointly in their capacities as
trustees of the Sanjont Trust, are ordered
to pay the costs hereof
jointly and severally, the First Defendant paying the Second to
Fourth Defendants to be absolved and the
Second to Fourth Defendants
jointly paying the First Defendant to be absolved, with such costs to
include the costs of two counsel.
7.
Maghilda and Sanjont unsuccessfully applied
to the Constitutional Court for leave to appeal against the findings
and order of the
Supreme Court of Appeal on the issue of
prescription. It was around this time that the respondents launched
proceedings against
the applicant, claiming some R500 million as
damages based on fraudulent misrepresentations and non-disclosures,
and a further
claim for some R49,5 million as unjustified enrichment.
8.
In ongoing correspondence following the SCA
order, the applicant’s attorneys requested that the respondents
consent to cancellation
of the Bond. The respondents refused; they
insisted that the Bond provided security for any debt and that debts
owed on account
of damages and enrichment must be discharged before
consent to cancel the Bond would be provided.
9.
In this court the applicant sought a
declarator that the Bond is void, alternatively voidable; that the
Bond be set aside; and that
the Registrar of Deeds be ordered and
authorised to cancel the Bond. This would require, in part, a
consideration of the scope
of the debts and obligations covered by
the Bond, including whether the Bond covers claims for damages and
unjust enrichment. This
involves the interpretation of the Bond.
10.
The applicant faces a Catch-22 situation:
the Registrar of Deeds will not register transfer until the
respondents give their consent,
but they will consent only if their
claims for damages and unjustified enrichment have been discharged.
This caused a stalemate
with regard to the implementation and
carrying into effect of the 2016 SCA Order and is the primary reason
why the application
was brought.
11.
I ruled in favour of the applicant and made
the following order:
1.
The second covering mortgage bond B
4[....]8 (“the Bond”) registered in favour of the First
Respondent and Second to
Fourth Respondents jointly in their
capacities as trustees of the Sanjont Trust, in respect of the below
properties all registered
in the name of the Applicant, is declared
void ab initio, is set aside and is ordered to be cancelled by the
Registrar of Deeds,
namely:
a.
The Remaining Extent
Portion
6
(a portion of Portion 1) of the Farm
Elandsdrift No. 527, Registration Division JQ, Province Gauteng,
registered in favour of the
First Respondent;
b.
The Remaining Extent
Portion
4
(a portion of Portion 1) of the Farm
Elandsdrift No. 527, Registration Division JQ, Province Gauteng,
registered in favour of the
Second to Fourth Respondents jointly in
their capacities as trustees of the Sanjont Trust; and
c.
The Remaining Extent
Portion
39
of the Farm Elandsdrift No. 527,
Registration Division JQ, Province Gauteng, registered in favour of
the Second to Fourth Respondents
jointly in their capacities as
trustees of the Sanjont Trust.
2.
The Fifth Respondent (The Registrar of
Deeds) is ordered and authorised to cancel the Bond in respect of
Portion 6, Portion 4 and
Portion 39 against registration of transfer
by the Applicant of Portion 6 in the name of the First Respondent and
of Portion 4
and Portion 39 in the names of the Second to Fourth
Respondents jointly in their capacities as trustees of the Sanjont
Trust.
3.
The First Respondent and the Second to
Fourth Respondents jointly in their capacities are trustees of the
Sanjont Trust are ordered,
upon demand by or on behalf of the
Applicant, to sign all necessary documents, take all steps and do all
things necessary to enable
the Fifth Respondent to pass transfer of
Portion 6 into the name of the First Respondent and of Portion 4 and
Portion 39 into the
names of the Second to Fourth Respondents jointly
in their capacities as trustees of the Sanjont Trust.
4.
In the event of the First Respondent and/or
the Second to Fourth Respondents jointly in their capacities as
trustees of the Sanjont
Trust failing to comply with the provisions
of prayer 3 above, the Sheriff of this Court is authorised and
instructed, on behalf
of the Applicant, to sign all necessary
documents, take all steps and do all things necessary to enable the
Applicant to pass transfer
of Portion 6 into the name of the First
Respondent and Portion 4 and Portion 39 into the names of the Second
to Fourth Respondents
jointly in their capacities as trustees of the
Sanjont Trust.
5.
The First Respondent and the Second to
Fourth Respondents, jointly in their capacities as trustees of the
Sanjont Trust, are ordered
to pay the costs of this application,
jointly and severally, the First Respondent paying the Second to
Fourth Respondents to be
absolved and the Second to Fourth
Respondents jointly paying the First Respondent to be absolved.
12.
The respondents seek
leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Appeal, alternatively to the Full Court of this
division, against the whole of the judgment
and order.
THE GROUNDS OF APPEAL
13.
The respondents base their application for
leave to appeal on three grounds: findings pertaining to
res
judicata
, findings under the heading
“access to court”, and findings in relation to the
obligations secured by the bond.
First ground: Res
Judicata
14.
In the SCA, the respondents had sought
cancellation of the bond on the ground of invalidity, as part of its
counterclaim. They argued
in this court that the matter was now
res
judicata
because their counterclaim was
dismissed by the SCA, meaning that the question of cancellation of
the Bond had been decided by
the SCA.
15.
The applicant submitted that it was
pursuing a different cause of action. The respondents never sought
declaratory relief, as the
applicant was doing in the present case.
The relief sought by the applicant relates to the implementation of
the SCA order and
seeks to compel the respondents to consent to the
cancellation of the Bond. It was argued that neither the High Court
nor the Supreme
Court of Appeal gave any final judgment on the
validity of the Bond on any of the factual grounds now being relied
upon by the
applicants in this application.
16.
In
essence, the test for
res
judicata
is whether the cause of action and the relief sought is the same as
in the earlier matter. “Cause of action” is ordinarily
used to describe the factual basis, the set of material facts that
gives rise to the legal right of action of a creditor or claimant
and, complementarily, the corresponding debt or obligation of the
debtor or defendant.
[1]
17.
T
he
respondents argue that I adopted too strict a test in determining
whether the same cause of action existed. They rely on
Tradax
Ocean Transportation SA v MV Silvergate
,
referred to by the Constitutional Court in
Ascendis
Animal Health (Pty) Limited v Merck Sharp Dohme Corporation and
Others,
in support of their view that current law demands a less stringent
exaction of the “same cause of action” requirement:
“
cause
of action
”,
they say, should be understood as referring not to the cause of
action in the strict sense but to “the same matter
in
issue”.
[2]
18.
The respondents submit that if this more
expansive test is adopted by another court, there is a reasonable
prospect that such court
would conclude that the issue is
res
judicata
.
Second
ground: “
Access to Court”
19.
The applicant complained that the respondents were attempting to deny
it access to court.
The respondents argued that the applicant was
precluded from approaching this court for the relief it seeks on the
basis that the
applicant had not raised this relief in the 2012
action. The applicant raised various points in reply, but the essence
of its argument
is that the relief was necessitated by the
“obstructive conduct” of the respondents by not giving
effect to the outcome
of the 2012 High Court action and/or
implementing the 2016 SCA order.
20.
I found that the application was necessary to get clarity on whether
the respondents were
justified in refusing to consent to the
cancellation of the Bond. The respondents argue that in doing so I
implicitly dismissed
the defence raised by them that the applicant
had made an election. The respondents argue that in 2012 the
applicant had a choice
between two directly opposite causes of
action, the first being to proceed with a claim to cancel the Bond,
and the second being
not to do so. When it proceeded in the 2012
action, the applicant elected not to proceed with relief to cancel
the Bond and abided
that election until 2019 when it sought to undo
that election. The applicant was fully aware of the Bond and its
consequences.
21.
According to the respondents, the applicant had the right of access
to court in relation
to applying to court to cancel the Bond but
squandered it. It made an election then and is now bound by it. There
is, therefore,
no access to court issue.
Third ground:
Interpretation of the Bond
22.
One of the questions for determination was whether the Bond secured
only indebtedness or
obligations in accordance with the Sale
Agreement, or whether it extended beyond the Sale Agreement to
include other debts or obligations,
including claims for damages and
unjustified enrichment.
23.
Which debts or obligations are secured by
the Bond is a matter of interpretation, which requires a
determination by the court through
application of the rules of
interpretation.
24.
The
respondents relied on
Panamo
Properties 103 (Pty) Limited v Land and Agricultural Development Bank
of South Africa
in support of their interpretation.
[3]
25.
In
Panamo
the Land and Agricultural Development Bank (“the Bank”)
and Panamo had entered into an agreement in terms of which
the Bank
would lend Panamo money to buy land to develop a township on it. They
concluded a mortgage bond over the property which
was duly
registered. The bond secured any existing or future debts that Panamo
might owe to the Bank. In the preamble to the bond,
the passing of
the bond referred to an undertaking by Panamo to pass a “continuous
covering bond as security for [Panamo’s]
liability towards the
Bank for whatsoever reason”.
[4]
(This wording is broadly similar to that used in the Bond.)
26.
The
SCA found that the loan agreement was invalid, unenforceable and
void, due to non-compliance with statutory formalities.
[5]
27.
The
next question was whether the voidness of the loan agreement rendered
the bond invalid? The Bank contended that the bond in
its favour
remained valid and constituted real security for a possible
enrichment claim.
[6]
(In the
present case, the respondents submit that the Bond secures both a
damages and an enrichment claim.) After referring to
the authorities
that, as a general principle of law, an unenforceable principal
obligation renders an accessory obligation unenforceable
the court
stated as follows:
[25] That does not mean
that a principal obligation must exist before a mortgage is entered
into: it may be given as security for
a future debt or as a covering
bond. But when enforcement of the bond is sought it must be in
respect of a valid obligation. And
when determining whether an
obligation is secured by a bond, one must have regard to its
particular terms.
28.
The respondents argue that the present case
and
Panamo
appear to be almost on all fours and that this court was bound to
follow it as SCA authority. The respondents are partially correct
–
this court is bound by the law on which the decision is based, but
not bound by either the application of the law to the
facts, or
obiter dicta
.
29.
I then proceeded to consider which debts or
obligations were secured by the Bond. Paragraph 1 of the Bond, which
sets out the cause
of the debt, is important. It provides that the
Bond covers every indebtedness or obligation of whatsoever cause or
nature, whether
now existent or yet to arise, which the Mortgagor
will from time to time and for the time being owe to the Mortgagee or
either
of them pursuant to the provisions of the Sale Agreement. The
applicant’s case was that any debt/obligation arising from
delict and/or enrichment was not secured by the Bond, as it was not
pursuant to the Sale Agreement. The respondents’ case
was that
the Bond was a continuing covering security for all and any sums
owing or would be owing or claimable from whatever cause
arising. The
respondents relied on several provisions in the Bond with similar
wording to that in
Panamo
.
Much depended on the meaning of “pursuant to the provisions of
[the Sale Agreement]”.
30.
It
is unnecessary for me to restate here the specifics of each side’s
submissions; these are set out in my written judgment,
along with my
analysis of the respective submissions. I found that the Bond did not
cover claims for unjust enrichment and damages.
In coming to this
conclusion, I adopted the approach formulated by Wallis JA in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[7]
and endorsed by the Constitutional Court in
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty) Ltd.
[8]
31.
Both
Endumeni
and
Trinity
Asset Management
should be read in conjunction with the later judgment in
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
[9]
where the Constitutional Court held the following:
[65] This approach to
interpretation requires that ‘from the outset one considers the
context and the language together, with
neither predominating over
the other’. In Chisuse, although speaking in the context of
statutory interpretation, this court
held that this ‘now
settled’ approach to interpretation is a ‘unitary’
exercise. This means that interpretation
is to be approached
holistically: simultaneously considering the text, context and
purpose.
[66]
The approach in Endumeni ‘updated’ the previous position,
which was that context could be resorted to if there
was ambiguity or
lack of clarity in the text. The Supreme Court of Appeal has
explicitly pointed out in cases subsequent to Endumeni
that context
and purpose must be taken into account as a matter of course, whether
or not the words used in the contract are ambiguous.
A court
interpreting the contract has to, from the onset, consider the
contract’s factual matrix, its purpose, the circumstances
leading up to its conclusion, and the knowledge at the time of those
who negotiated and produced the contract.”
[10]
32.
It is possible to make out a case in
support of either side’s interpretation of the Bond if one were
to cherry-pick excerpts
from the Bond – but this would not be
the proper approach to adopt. The court’s duty is to look
beyond individual excerpts
to the Bond as a whole to determine which
debts and obligations it covers. A piecemeal approach would run
counter to the approach
mandated by the Constitutional Court.
33.
The provisions of the Bond must be
interpreted in a unitary manner, with due consideration to the
wording, the background, and the
other relevant factors identified by
the courts. A unitary interpretation requires that the provisions be
interpreted in a sensible
way that gives effect to the whole of the
contract, and not only parts of it.
THE TEST FOR A
SUCCESSFUL LEAVE TO APPEAL APPLICATION
34.
The old test was whether there was a
reasonable prospect that another court ‘might’ come to a
different conclusion to
that of the court of first instance. Section
17(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act now provides that leave to appeal
may only be
granted where the judge concerned is of the opinion that
‘the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success’ (s 17(1)(a)(i)), or that
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should
be heard,
including conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration (s
17(1)(a)(ii)).
35.
The
Land Claims Court in
Mont
Chevaux Trust
held
obiter
that
the wording of this subsection raised the bar of the test that must
be applied to the merits of the proposed appeal before
leave should
be granted.
[11]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Notshokovu
v S
confirmed this view:
[12]
It is clear that the
threshold for granting leave to appeal against the judgment of a High
Court has been raised in the new Act.
The former test whether leave
to appeal should be granted was a reasonable prospect that another
Court might come to a different
conclusion. The use of the word
‘
would'
in the new statute indicates a measure of
certainty that another Court will differ from the Court whose
judgment is sought to be
appealed against. (Footnotes omitted.)
36.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal has explained that the prospects of success
must not be remote, but there must exist a
reasonable
chance of success
.
An Applicant who applies for leave to appeal must show that there is
a
sound
and rational basis
for the conclusion that there are prospects of success.
[13]
An Applicant must convince the Court on
proper
grounds
that he has prospects of success on appeal and that those
prospects
are not remote
,
but have a
realistic
chance of success
.
More is required than a
mere
possibility of success
,
or that the case is
arguable
on appeal
,
or that the case
cannot
be categorised as hopeless
.
[14]
(My emphasis.)
SHOULD LEAVE BE
GRANTED?
37.
Mr
Bham SC referred me to several decisions regarding the interpretation
of instruments in the Gauteng Division where the court
a quo granted
leave to appeal to higher courts.
[15]
Nel
v De Beer and Another
is a recent example where the SCA rejected the High Court’s
interpretation of an agreement in favour of its own
interpretation.
[16]
38.
I have considered the submissions. In my
view the required threshold has been met; there are reasonable
prospects of success in
terms of
s
17(1)(a)(i).
39.
I am satisfied that the argument made by
the respondents in respect of the third ground is a sufficient basis
on which to grant
leave to appeal. I need, therefore, not consider
the first two grounds. The legal principles of interpretation which I
have set
out above, are clear. However, as submitted by respondents’
counsel, different courts may reasonably come to different
conclusions
when applying these principles to particular instruments.
There are reasonable prospects of success.
40.
Which court should hear the appeal?
Section
17(6) of the Superior Courts Act provides:
(6)(a) If
leave is granted under subsection (2)(a) or (b) to appeal against a
decision of a Division as a court of
first instance consisting of a
single judge, the judge or judges granting leave must direct that the
appeal be heard by a full
court of that Division, unless they
consider —
(i) that the
decision to be appealed involves a question of law of importance,
whether because of its general application
or otherwise, or in
respect of which a decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal is
required to resolve differences of opinion; or
(ii) that the
administration of justice, either generally or in the particular
case, requires consideration by the Supreme Court
of Appeal of the
decision, in which case they must direct that the appeal be heard by
the Supreme Court of Appeal.
41.
It
is peremptory for a court to direct that the appeal be heard by a
full court of the Division, unless either of the two exceptions
is
present. The Supreme Court of Appeal should consider only those
matters that are truly deserving of its attention.
[17]
I do not think that this matter requires consideration by the SCA;
the exceptions are not applicable. A full court of this Division
is
adequately placed to consider the appeal.
I MAKE THE FOLLOWING
ORDER:
1.
Leave to appeal against the judgment and
the order is granted to the Full Court of the Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg.
2.
The costs of this application are to be
costs in the cause in the appeal.
M.
Olivier
Judge of the High
Court (Acting)
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Date of hearing:
9
November 2023
Date of judgment:
18 December
2023
On
behalf of the Applicant
:
C.A.C.
Korf
Instructed by
:
VFV
Attorneys
On
behalf of Respondents
:
A.
E.
Bham SC (with T. Dalrymple)
Instructed
by
:
Knowles
Husain Lindsay Inc
[1]
See
Duet
and Magnum Financial Services CC (in liquidation) v Koster
[2010] 4 All SA 154
(SCA) at para [23];
Evins
v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
1980 (2) SA 814
(A) at 825F-H.
[2]
Ascendis
Animal Health (Pty) Limited v Merck Sharpe Dohme Corporation and
Others
2020 (1) SA 327
(CC) at para [115];
Tradax
Ocean Transportation SA v MV Silvergate
properly
described as MV Astyanax and Others
1999
(4) SA 405
(SCA) at para [54].
[3]
2016
(1) SA 202 (SCA).
[4]
At
para [32].
[5]
At
paras [21] & [22].
[6]
At
para [23].
[7]
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at para [18].
[8]
Trinity
Asset Management (Pty) Ltd v Grindstone Investments 132 (Pty) Ltd
2018 (1) SA 94 (CC).
[9]
2021
(6) SA 1 (CC).
[10]
At
paras [65] - [66]: original footnotes omitted.
[11]
The
Mont Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen
2014
JDR 2325 (LCC).
[12]
Notshokovu
v S
[2016] ZASCA 112
(7 September 2016).
[13]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
[2021]
ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021).
[14]
S
v Smith
2012 (1) SACR 567
(SCA).
[15]
IPA
Foundation (NPC) v South African Pharmacy Council (leave to appeal)
2023
JDR 3552 (GP)
;
San Ridge Rental Property (Pty) Limited v The Municipal Manager:
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others
2022
JDR 1294 (GJ)
;
Minister of Police and Another v Miya (leave to appeal)
2022
JDR 3504 (GP)
.
[16]
2023 (2) SA 170 (SCA).
[17]
Kruger
v S
2014 (1) SACR 647
(SCA) at para [3].
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