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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 135
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## Dancing Beauty and Hair (Pty) Ltd v Northern Centre Shareblock and Another (19633/2021)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 135 (21 February 2022)
Dancing Beauty and Hair (Pty) Ltd v Northern Centre Shareblock and Another (19633/2021)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 135 (21 February 2022)
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sino date 21 February 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO.: 19633/2021
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
REVISED:
Yes
Date:
21/02/22
In
the matter between:
DANCING
BEAUTY AND HAIR (PTY) LTD
Applicant
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER [....])
and
NORTHERN
CENTRE SHAREBLOCK (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER [....])
URBAN
REAL ESTATE (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER [....])
In
re:
NORTHERN
CENTRE SHAREBLOCK (PTY) LTD
First Applicant
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER [....])
URBAN
REAL ESTATE (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER [....])
and
DANCING
BEAUTY AND HAIR (PTY) LTD
Respondent
(REGISTRATION
NUMBER [....])
JUDGMENT
CORAM:
Q LEECH AJ
1.
The applicant applies for leave to appeal. The
applicant was the respondent in the main application.
2.
In the main application, I found that the
applicant was in unlawful occupation of the property known as
Republic Place, situate
at Shop 11, Republic Place, Hill Street,
Ferndale, Randburg and described as Erf [....], Ferndale Township,
Registration Division
I.Q., Gauteng. The first respondent owns the
property and the second respondent is responsible for letting the
property.
3.
I granted an order evicting the applicant from the
property. The order was granted on 9 December 2021. The applicant was
required
to vacate the property on or before 1 January 2022.
4.
The applicant served by email an application for
leave to appeal “against the order”
on
23 December 2021
. The application for leave
to appeal was served within the fifteen (15) day time period provided
for in Rule 49(1)(b). However,
the applicant failed to upload the
application to the electronic filing system within that period and
only did so on 12 January
2022. The application for leave to appeal
was not lodged within the prescribed time and accordingly the right
to appeal lapsed
when the filing date was missed (Rule 49(1)(b) of
the Uniform rules of Court, read with
section 18(5)
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
Modderfontein
Squatters, Greater Benoni City Council v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty)
Ltd (Agri SA and Legal Resources Centre, Amici
Curiae); President of
the Republic of South Africa and Others v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty)
Ltd (Agri SA and Legal Resources Centre,
Amici Curiae)
2004 (6) SA 40
(SCA),
para. 46; and
Panayiotou
v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd and Others
2016
(3) SA 110
(GJ)
, para. 14 and 15. Cf.
M
Fihrer & Son (Pty) Ltd v Willemse
1993
(2) SA 713
(T)
, 718 H - 719 A).
5.
The applicant applied for condonation for the late
filing. The court has the inherent jurisdiction to grant condonation
(
Moluele and Others v Deschatelets, NO
1950 (2) SA 670
(T)
, 675
- 676). “The basic principle is that the Court has a
discretion“ (
Melane v Santam
Insurance Co Ltd
1962 (4) SA 531
(A)
,
532 C) and it is for the applicant who seeks such condonation to
satisfy the Court that it should exercise its discretion in his
favour” (
Yunnan Engineering CC and
Another v Chater and Others
2006 (5) SA
571
(T)
, para. 22 and 26). See too
United
Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd v Hills
1976 (1)
SA 717
(A) at 720E–G
.
6.
The court will grant condonation when necessary in
the interests of justice (
Moluele
supra,
675) and
the discretion is to be exercised judicially upon a consideration of
all the facts (
Melane
supra,
532
C). The
discretion is not constrained by any rule of thumb which “would
only serve to harden the arteries of what should be
a flexible
discretion” (
Melane
supra,
532 E).
7.
As stated in
Suidwes-Afrikaanse
Munisipale Personeel Vereniging v Minister of Labour and Another
1978 (1) SA 1027
(SWA)
,
1038 C, the court "has an inherent right to grant condonation
where principles of justice and fair play demand it to avoid
hardship
and where the reasons for strict non-compliance with such time limits
have been explained to the satisfaction of the Court”
(
Suidwes-Afrikaanse Munisipale Personeel
Vereniging v Minister of Labour and Another
1978
(1) SA 1027
(SWA)
, 1038 C). “In
essence it is a matter of fairness to both sides” (
Melane
supra,
532).
8.
The factors that are “usually relevant are
the degree of lateness, the explanation therefor, the prospects of
success, and
the importance of the case” (
Melane
supra,
532 C - D). Other factors
are “the nature of the default or negligence, if any, which led
to non-compliance, the degree
of hardship which will be caused to the
party in default if condonation is refused, and any hardship or
substantial injustice which
may possibly be caused to the other party
if relief is granted” (
Moluele
supra,
677).
9.
In terms of
Rule 49(1)(b)
, “the court may,
upon good cause shown, extend the aforementioned periods of fifteen
days”. As held by the full court
in
General
Accident Insurance Co South Africa Ltd v Zampelli
1988
(4) SA 407
(C)
, at 411 C:
“
'Good
cause shown' has now, it seems, been accepted to mean that not only
must the applicant seeking the indulgence of condonation
for the late
filing of heads of argument in an appeal - for an indulgence it
undoubtedly is - give a reasonable and acceptable
explanation for his
failure to comply with the Rules, but must also show that he has what
Berman J in Ajam v Francke (supra) has
described as 'fair prospects
of success' in the appeal or what in Louw v Louw (supra) the Court
referred to as 'reasonable prospects
of success' (see also
Saloojee
and Another NNO v Minister of Community Development
1965
(2) SA 135
(A) at 141H). He must also give an acceptable explanation
of any delay in applying for condonation (see Saloojee's case supra
at
138H).”
10.
In the context of an application for leave to
appeal, which was refused by the full court but granted on
application to the Supreme
Court of Appeal, the full court in
High
School Ermelo and Another v The Head of Department and Others
[2007] ZAGPHC 165
;
[2008] 1 All SA 139
(T), para. 9:
“
The
application for condonation cannot succeed. We are aware that
usually, a court adopts a robust attitude by granting the
condonation,
so that the matter is disposed of; for example, in an
appeal. However, care must be taken not to create an impression that
an application
for condonation is a mere formality. An applicant must
still make out its case. It is a requirement that for an application
for
condonation to succeed, an applicant must show reasonable
prospects of success;
in
casu,
there
are none. Secondly, the explanation for the delay is not reasonable;
the cause thereof was gross ineptitude on the part of
the applicants'
legal representatives in putting in an obviously fatally defective
notice of application for leave to appeal …
Finally, in
considering any possible prejudice to the applicants, we took into
account the fact that the main application is about
to be heard.”
11.
As explained in
Melane
supra,
at 532 D - E, the factors “are
interrelated: they are not individually decisive, for that would be a
piecemeal approach incompatible
with a true discretion, save of
course that if there are no prospects of success there would be no
point in granting condonation
… What is needed is an objective
conspectus
of
all the facts. Thus a slight delay and a good explanation may help to
compensate for prospects of success which are not strong
…”.
12.
In
Melane,
the
prospects were - in the opinion of the court - so remote as to
unappreciable, and on weighing that important factor with others,
refused condonation. Although it was stated in
Lipschitz
NO v Saambou-Nasionale Bouvereniging
1979
(1) SA 527
(T)
at 529 D - E that the
prospects of success consideration does not necessarily enter into an
application under
Rule 49
(1), the circumstances in which it may not
arise are limited and not present in this matter.
13.
The applicant briefly addresses some of the usual
factors. The applicant emphasises the short delay, which is
incorrectly calculated
in the application but not to a material
degree, proffers an explanation for the delay, alleges there is no
prejudice to the respondents
and claims good prospects of success.
14.
The applicant attempts to explain the inability to
file the application for leave to appeal, which I had some difficulty
in understanding.
However, my understanding of the explanation is, in
summary, that the applicant’s attorney was unable to operate
the electronic
filing system on 23 December 2021 without the presence
of support staff who were not in attendance as their offices had
closed
on 15 December 2021. The applicant’s attorney abandoned
any attempt to file the application until the support staff returned.
The support staff returned to the office on 12 January 2022, and the
application was filed.
15.
The applicant’s detailed explanation is that
the offices of the applicant’s attorneys closed on 15 December
2021 and
the employees were due to return on 12 January 2022.
However, the attorney responsible for the matter, Mr Mantsha,
remained in
the office attending to the training of law students who
were “working as interns until 23 December 2021.” Mr
Mantsha
appears to have been unfamiliar with the electronic system
and enlisted the assistance of one of the interns. Mr Mantsha and the
intern together contacted and obtained guidance from a legal
secretary but experienced certain technical difficulties during the
“
video call
”
.
Mr Mantsha and the intern were ultimately unable to create a new
section and upload the application for leave to appeal. The perceived
necessity for a new section was not explained.
16.
The applicant “submits” that the
reason for this inability is that "the date was frozen”
and the application
could not be uploaded until the date was
“unfrozen" by a secretary on 12 January 2022. In another
part of the founding
affidavit, the applicant states that Mr Mantsha
and the intern “were not sanctioned” to add a new section
“for
the purposes of uploading the notice of appeal”.
However, in a couple of places the applicant attributes the inability
to
a “misunderstanding" or “misinterpretation”
of the electronic system.
17.
Despite the order of eviction which required the
applicant to vacate the premises on 1 January 2022, the applicant's
attorney deferred
any attempt to file the application until their
offices reopened and the support staff returned to work. I can infer
that the applicant’s
attorney wilfully decided to do so knowing
that the application for leave had to be lodged before the order
would be suspended
and there is no indication of any attempt by the
applicant's attorney to inform the respondents’ attorney of
their difficulties
or to seek their support for a condonation
application. The applicant only sought condonation on 26 January
2022, one clear day
prior to the hearing of the application.
18.
The respondents initially opposed the application
but did not file an answering affidavit. The parties thereafter
addressed the
issue in their heads of argument. However, at the
hearing of the matter, I was informed that the respondents withdrew
their opposition
.
19.
Although the explanation for the delay has certain
unsatisfactory features, I am aware of the cautionary note that a
court should
not make an issue of condonation where the parties have
not done so (
Ardnamurchan Estates (Pty)
Limited v Renewables Cookhouse Wind Farms 1 (RF) (Pty) Ltd and others
[2021] 1 All SA 829
(ECG), para. 35) and the
unsatisfactory features must be weighed against the short period of
the delay, partly during an established
holiday period, and the
absence of any prejudice to the respondents.
20.
In my view, the respondents were not brought under
the impression that the applicant did not intend to pursue the
application for
leave to appeal. The delay was not inordinate and the
applicant communicated an intention to apply for leave to appeal
within the
prescribed period prior to the date of the eviction by
serving the application on the respondents' attorneys - there was no
suggestion
that the application for leave to appeal was not received
- and failed only to file the application. The respondents did not
file
an affidavit and did not contend for any prejudice.
21.
However, as discussed below, the applicant has
placed a defective application for leave to appeal before the court
and in my opinion,
if those defects are overlooked, the application
does not have any prospect of success on the grounds of appeal set
out in the
application. As the setting out and merit of the grounds
of appeal were the main issues, counsel were requested to
simultaneously
address the condonation and the application for leave.
22.
I address each ground of appeal below. I
ultimately find that each ground of appeal is bad in law. I
nevertheless address the merit
of each ground of appeal. I do so in
the event that I am wrong in finding that the grounds of appeal are
defective and in order
to provide some assistance in the event that
the applicant proceeds with the matter. As I find that the
application for leave is
defective and there is no appreciable
prospect of success or compelling reason, condonation is refused. In
my view, the absence
of any prospect or reason outweighs the
considerations mentioned above. As stated in
Melane
supra,
there would be no point in
granting condonation, if there are no prospects of success and there
can be no hardship to the applicant
(
Moluele
supra
).
23.
The main reasons for the order can be summarised
as follows:
23.1.
The lease agreement was common cause.
23.2.
The failure to pay the full rental was common
cause.
23.3.
The impossibility of performance due to the
Covid-19 pandemic was not established on the papers and a reduction
of rental was precluded
by the written lease agreement.
23.4.
The alleged oral agreements to pay an amount less
than the full rental were not established on the papers and precluded
by the terms
of the written lease agreement, as was the oral
agreement to extend the lease.
23.5.
A separate oral agreement of lease, was not
established on the papers and the probabilities are that the parties
would not have
replaced the written lease agreement with an oral
lease agreement.
23.6.
The fact that the applicant was afforded notice to
remedy the breach, failed to do so and the respondents cancelled the
lease
was common cause.
24.
In order to grant leave the court must be of the
opinion that the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success
there
is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard
(Superior Courts Act, No. 10 of 2013, section 17).
25.
The applicant sought leave to appeal on seven
tersely stated grounds without any elaboration. The applicant’s
heads of argument
mentioned only six of the grounds of appeal and in
a number of instances the content of the application for leave to
appeal was
merely repeated and unsupported by any process of
reasoning. Counsel for the applicant elaborated on only three of the
grounds
of appeal in oral argument.
26.
In
Songono v Minister
of Law and Order
1996 (4) SA 384
(E)
,
at 385 G - 386 B, it was held that the provisions of Rule 49 of the
Uniform Rules of Court are peremptory and the grounds of appeal
are
required to notify the court of the points that will be raised. The
grounds of appeal are bad if, amongst others, they provide
no value
to the court or fail to specify clearly and in unambiguous terms
exactly the case the applicant intends to pursue. The
court must be
fully and properly informed and it is not for the court to have to
guess at the
applicant
’
s
case. As stated in
National Union of
Metalworkers of South Africa v Jumbo Products CC
[1996] ZASCA 87
;
1996
(4) SA 735
(A)
at 739 G, the application
for leave to appeal
“
should not place
the onus on the Court to glean this case”.
27.
The application for leave to appeal is required to
“indicate in what way and why it is contended that the Court
a
quo
erred, either in its findings of
fact or its conclusions of law or its application of the law to the
facts” (
NUMSA supra,
at
739 B - G
). The
grounds of appeal must meaningfully define the bases of the intended
appeal (
Hing and Others v Road Accident
Fund
2014 (3) SA 350
(WCC)
,
para. 4).
28.
The application for leave to appeal in this matter
fails to comply with these established principles in setting out the
grounds
of appeal. The application for leave to appeal states as an
example that the court “erred by not finding that the
[respondents]
did not make out a case for a final interdict”
and as another example that the court “erred by not finding
that the
[applicant] had a valid lease agreement”. In the
context of a final interdict for eviction in which the written lease
agreement,
oral variations and extensions to the written lease
agreement, and a separate oral lease agreement are in issue, these
grounds
of appeal “are so widely expressed that it leaves the
appellant free to canvass every finding of fact and every ruling of
the law made by the court
a quo
”
(
Songono
,
supra
at 385 G), and are of no value to
the court.
29.
The first ground of appeal is that the order is
unconstitutional as it violates the applicant’s rights in terms
of section
22 of the Constitution. This constitutional issue is not
developed in the application for leave to appeal and, in the context
of
a commercial lease between juristic persons which specifically
provides for cancellation and eviction in the event of a failure
to
pay the agreed rental, the mere statement that the order violates
such a right provides no value to the court. The court is
neither
fully nor properly informed and required to guess at the applicant’s
case. This task is made more difficult by the
absence of any inkling
of the case in the applicant’s papers and argument.
30.
Counsel for the applicant merely submits in the
heads of argument delivered in the application for leave to appeal
that the order
infringes section 22 of the Constitution because it
deprives the applicant of its “rights of freedom to trade
without any
justification”, which does not meaningfully define
the basis of the intended appeal. The submission is unsupported by
any
process of reasoning which may guide the court (see
Caterham
Car Sales & Coachworks Ltd v Birkin Cars (Pty) Ltd and Another
[1998] ZASCA 44
;
1998 (3) SA 938
(SCA)
,
para. 37). And this ground of appeal was not addressed in oral
argument.
31.
Section 22 provides that “[e]very citizen
has the right to choose their trade, occupation or profession freely.
The practice
of a trade, occupation or profession may be regulated by
law.“ And section 36 provides that “[t]he rights in the
Bill
of Rights may be limited only in terms of law of general
application to the extent that the limitation is reasonable and
justifiable
in an open and democratic society based on human dignity,
equality and freedom, taking into account all relevant factors …”.
32.
The applicant failed to raise the point in its
answering affidavit. The only reference to section 22 of the
Constitution in the
main application is found in the final paragraph
of the heads of argument filed by the applicant. In that paragraph,
counsel merely
quotes section 22. It is trite that the issue
must be raised in the papers (
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development & others v Southern
African Litigation Centre & others
2016
(3) SA 317
(SCA)
, para. 24). And, “[i]t
has been held that constitutional points are to be raised
particularly so that it can be dealt with
properly” (
Transnet
Limited v Vusa-Isizwe Security Services (Pty) Limited
2014
JDR 1006 (GSJ)
, at page 30, referring to
and quoting with approval from
Prokureursorde
van Transvaal v Kleynhans
1995 (1) SA
839
(T) at 849
A
-
B
). In my view,
the issue was not properly raised in the main application and I am
not satisfied that the applicant will be permitted
to do so on
appeal.
33.
Furthermore, I understand that only citizens, and
accordingly natural persons, may be bearers of the right set out in
section 22
of the Constitution, and not juristic persons (see
South
African Citizenship Act
88
of 1995
). The applicant made no attempt to persuade me that
section
22
should be extended to juristic persons. In particular, the
applicant made no attempt to persuade me that
City
of Cape Town v Ad Outpost (Pty) Ltd and Others
2000
(2) BCLR 130
(C)
was wrongly decided.
34.
The contention that there is no justification for
the order - which is founded on law of general application and
generally accepted
as reasonable and justifiable - was a bare
submission tagged onto the ground of appeal in the heads of argument.
As the Constitutional
Court held in
Beadica
231 CC and Others v Trustees, Oregon Trust and Others
2020
(5) SA 247
(CC),
at
para.
83
, “the principle of
pacta
sunt servanda
gives effect to the
'central constitutional values of freedom and dignity'. The
Constitutional Court has further recognised that
in general public
policy requires that contracting parties honour obligations that have
been freely and voluntarily undertaken.
Pacta
sunt servanda
…
gives expression
to central constitutional values.” I accordingly fail to
appreciate the reasoning for the submission that
the enforcement of a
lease agreement deprives the applicant of any rights it may have
“without any justification”.
The contract provided that
justification. There was no attempt to address any of the issues
relevant to such a submission and the
papers do not contain the facts
required to do so.
35.
In my view, this ground of appeal is defective,
purports to raise an issue that was not canvassed on the papers or
during the hearing
in the main application, and in respect of which
the applicant has not satisfied me that it has a reasonable prospect
of success
on appeal.
36.
The second ground of appeal is that the court
erred in stating that the applicant’s personal knowledge is of
little value
without some indication at least from the context, of
how that knowledge was acquired. As stated above, the applicant is a
juristic
person, and I referred to the knowledge of the deponent to
the answering affidavit in the main application.
37.
The point is not developed in the application for
leave to appeal. The application for leave to appeal does not seek to
inform and certainly does not specify the case the
applicant intends to pursue. The applicant places the onus, and the
burden, on
the court to attempt to meaningfully define this ground of
appeal. The
applicant
’
s
heads of argument did no more than restate this ground of appeal
without any process of reasoning and counsel for the applicant
did
not address this ground of appeal in oral argument. There is no
indication whether the applicant contends that I erred in law
or
fact.
38.
The statement in the judgment is a quotation from
President of the Republic of South
Africa and Others v M & G Media
Ltd
2011 (2) SA 1
(SCA) para. 38
, and
accordingly the restatement of that principle is not an error in law.
The statement was made in the context of a finding that
the denials
raised by the applicant to the opening paragraphs of the founding
affidavit did not raise genuine disputes of fact.
The applicant
placed this ground of appeal in that context by referencing the
relevant paragraphs of the judgment (para. 6 and
7). The application
of the principle to any of those findings of fact is not specifically
challenged by the applicant and the applicant
does not address the
impact of the statement on the findings of fact that informed the
order against which leave to appeal is sought.
The applicant fails to
subject this aspect of the judgment to any critical analysis.
39.
The allegations in the
opening
paragraph
s include,
amongst others, that the deponent to the respondents’ founding
affidavit is a director of both respondents, the
respondents had
resolved to bring the application and appointed the attorneys of
record, the citation of the respondents and that
the respondents are
duly registered companies with their registered addresses at the
places stated in the founding affidavit, and
the nature of the second
respondent’s business.
40.
The allegations were not genuinely disputed
because
inter alia
the
denials were bare, the applicant provided no evidence in support of
the denials, the deponent to the answering affidavit did
not provide
any indication as to how he acquired the personal knowledge that the
applicant's allegations are allegedly incorrect
and the denials were
incongruous with the allegations concerning the interactions between
the applicant and the respondents. The
applicant makes no attempt to
indicate on which aspect I should have arrived at a different
conclusion or why or what the conclusion
should have been.
41.
The applicant’s heads of argument reframed
this ground of appeal as the question “[w]hether the
[applicant’s]
personal knowledge is of little value in respect
of the lease agreement” (para. 15.2). In the context of a
written lease
agreement, oral variations and extensions to the
written lease agreement, and a separate oral lease agreement, the
reframing of
the ground of appeal in this overly broad manner
provides no assistance to the court. I cannot fathom out the meaning
of the phrase
“in respect of the lease agreement”, stated
as it is in a vacuum of detail. The question posed by counsel was not
further
addressed in the heads of argument or oral argument, and the
onus was placed on me
to glean
the
applicant's case. I am not prepared to do so. It is not for the court
to have to guess at the applicant
’
s
case. The applicant is required to specify clearly and in unambiguous
terms exactly the case the applicant intends to pursue,
and the court
must be fully and properly informed.
42.
In an unrelated part of the heads, counsel states
that “giving no consideration, no weight, and very little
weight to the
[applicant’s] evidence
inter
alia,
in respect to force majeure,
being Covid-19 pandemic have prevent him to comply fully with the
terms of the lease agreement and
having unpreccedented (sic) negative
effects to his businesses” was a misdirection. I address this
statement in the context
of the fourth ground of appeal below. I
nevertheless mention here that the deponent to the applicant’s
affidavit in the main
application neither mentioned nor demonstrated
an unprecedented negative effect on the applicant's business. Counsel
made this
statement without reference to the papers. The deponent
merely alleged that the Covid-19 pandemic prevented full compliance
with
the lease. As stated below, the mere allegation that the
applicant was prevented is insufficient to establish a defence
founded
on objective impossibility.
43.
In my view, this ground of appeal is defective and
I am satisfied that the applicant has no prospect of success on this
ground of
appeal, as a separate and distinct ground of appeal.
44.
The third ground of appeal is that the court erred
in failing to consider that the lease agreement “is terminated”
and
accordingly that the non-variation clause is ineffective. The
applicant did not develop this ground of appeal beyond this bare
statement in the application for leave to appeal, and the context is
not provided. The onus was, once again, placed on the court
to glean
the applicant
’
s case from the papers.
45.
The heads of argument merely repeated this ground
of appeal without elaboration, and this ground was not addressed in
oral argument.
However in another part of the heads, this ground of
appeal is coupled to the contradictory statement that I erred in
finding that
the lease agreement was lawfully terminated (para. 17
and 17.1) and the list of “points and grounds” on which
the application
is said to be centred poses the question whether the
lease agreement was lawfully terminated (para. 15.3). In other words,
the
applicant effectively contends in the heads of argument that the
lease was not terminated. The point the applicant wishes to contest
on the basis that I erred in both failing to consider that the lease
terminated and accordingly the non-variation clause was ineffective,
and in finding that the lease terminated cannot be divined from the
papers. The heads of argument instead of assisting the court
to
understand this ground of appeal, only serve to render it ambiguous.
46.
I can only speculate that the applicant is
referring to the fact that the non-variation clause was referred to
in assessing the
contention that the written lease agreement, which
terminated, was superseded by an oral lease agreement. As stated in
the judgment,
at the hearing of the main application, I was invited
by counsel for the applicant to consider whether a separate oral
lease agreement
was concluded that would take effect on the
termination of the written lease which contained the non-variation
clause. Although
the applicant did not state when the oral lease
agreement was concluded, it could only have been concluded during the
subsistence
of the written lease agreement (as it would take effect
on termination of the written lease agreement). In that context, I
stated
in paragraph 25
(
with
the necessary emphasis) that:
“
[T]he
probabilities are such that an oral lease agreement was not
concluded, and particularly so as the parties had concluded a
comprehensive written lease agreement which was due to terminate by
the effluxion of time at the end of the month in which the
discussions referred to above took place,
the
written lease precluded oral agreements
,
the parties had previously concluded a written addendum to cater for
the reduction in the rental, the [applicant] was in breach
or alleged
by the applicants to be in breach for failing to pay the agreed
rental and at the material time the arrears were substantial
as the
applicants had reversed the reduction granted under the addendum.”
47.
The fact that the parties had gone to the trouble
to include and abide by a non-variation clause in the written lease
were facts
which, in my view, supported the finding that the
conclusion of such an oral lease is improbable. I remain of that
view. Furthermore,
the conclusion to which I arrived is supported by
a number of other facts which the applicant does not seek to contest
and, in
my view, the conclusion is undisturbed by the removal of the
fact that the written lease agreement contained a non-variation
clause
from the rationale.
48.
I reiterate that the oral agreement for which
applicant
’
s counsel contended was
neither pleaded nor supported by the applicant
’
s
evidence.
The document on which counsel
relied
to argue for an oral lease agreement
records a discussion that
a
new
written lease would be signed. The new written lease that was
contemplated was not concluded. And the deponent to the answering
affidavit, who wrote the email, does not allege that an oral
agreement was concluded instead
.
49.
Counsel for the applicant did not vigorously
pursue this argument during the application for leave to appeal and
instead sought
to rely on a new submission that the written lease
agreement continued on a monthly basis as an alternative to the oral
lease agreement.
I understood the contention to be that if the
written lease was not properly cancelled and an oral replacement was
not concluded,
the written lease agreement would continue on a
monthly basis after the termination of the lease period. This new
point is not
contained in the papers or the application for leave to
appeal or counsel’s heads of argument, save under the overly
broad
ground of appeal that the court erred in failing to find that
the applicant had a valid lease agreement The applicant is not
permitted to endlessly raise new points in this manner.
50.
In addressing this point in oral argument, counsel
for the applicant relied on the terms of the written lease agreement.
Counsel
could not, however, refer me to the relevant clause of the
lease which provided for a monthly lease. The relevant clause is 4.1
of the written lease agreement and the material part provides as
follows (with my emphasis):
“
If
the Lessee should
after
expiration of the Lease
remain
in occupation of the Premises, then:
…
4.1.2 the other terms and
conditions of this Lease shall remain applicable to the Lessee, read
with the necessary changes, save
that this Lease shall be
deemed
to have been entered
into for a month at a time only.
51.
The term applies in the event that the applicant
remains in occupation after “expiration” of the written
lease agreement,
and deems the parties to have entered into a monthly
lease on more or less the same terms. The language of expiration read
in the
context of a lease that provides for termination and
cancellation in other clauses, indicates that the deemed position is
triggered
by remaining in occupation after the expiry of the lease
period provided for in the written lease. And does not apply in the
event
of cancellation or a dispute about the validity of the
cancellation. This is partly confirmed in another term of the lease
(clause
22), which provides that the conversion to a monthly lease
after cancellation is at the lessor's discretion. The communication
of the exercising of that discretion must be contained in writing.
There was no suggestion that this was done. The applicant made
no
attempt to grapple with the logical absurdity of an interpretation
that deems a monthly lease to have been concluded in the
event of the
applicant holding over after the respondents have cancelled the
written lease agreement or the difficulty presented
by the term which
expressly provides for the continuation after cancellation.
52.
The term on which reliance was placed (clause 4.1)
is specifically framed as a deeming provision. In other words, a
position that
is deemed to exist unless the contrary clearly appears
from the facts. The common cause facts of this matter demonstrate
that the
respondents had no intention of entering into a monthly
lease and the applicant cannot foist that position on them by
unlawfully
remaining in occupation. The purpose of the term in
question is to provide certainty through an express term in
circumstances which
may establish a tacit relocation of the lease. In
the absence of such circumstances, the term does not apply. In my
view, this
is confirmed by another term of lease which
expressly provides for the payment of rental in
the situation where the right to remain in occupation is disputed for
whatsoever
reason (clause 20.5), which is the case in this matter.
53.
In my view, this ground of appeal is defective and
the applicant has not satisfied me that it has a reasonable prospect
of success
on appeal. This disposes of both the third and fifth
grounds of appeal. The latter ground being that I erred in not
finding that
the applicant had a valid lease agreement.
54.
The fourth ground of appeal is that I erred in not
finding that the
Covid-19
pandemic
is a
force majeure
which
prevented the applicant from making payment of the full rental amount
and accordingly the applicant was not in breach of the
lease
agreement. In the context of the matter and the judgment, this ground
too is defective. In order to be of some value to the
court, the
application for leave to appeal must indicate in what way and why the
court erred. The issue raised in this ground of
appeal was the main
issue in the application and the relevant facts, the
law
and the application of the law
to the facts
was addressed in detail in the judgment, despite the dearth of
material provided by the applicant
.
The application for leave to appeal makes no
attempt to address the judgment and, to make matters worse, in oral
argument counsel
for the applicant simply restated the few facts
available without pointing out in what I erred in arriving at the
conclusion in
the judgment. In the absence of the “what and
why”, a court is constrained to
revisit
and subject its own reasoning to critical analysis without the
assistance of the very party who is attempting to persuade
the court
that it erred. This places the onus and a burden on the court to
ferret out a potential error in its own reasoning. In
my view, such a
situation is unacceptable and delays the administration of justice.
55.
In essence, I found
inter
alia
that:
55.1.
The
applicant had the onus.
[1]
55.2.
The
allegation and its consequences were serious and accordingly there
was a heightened demand for the evidence before the court
will find
the allegation established.
[2]
55.3.
The
circumstances which resulted in the alleged impossibility were
material
[3]
and
the alleged impossibility must be decided on the facts.
[4]
55.4.
The
applicant
’
s
allegations are bald. Th
e
applicant
does not set out the circumstances which resulted in the alleged
objective impossibility and which entitle it to a reduction
in
rental.
[5]
55.5.
The
assertions by the applicant are no more than bare conclusions. The
constituent probative facts that may establish those conclusions.
[6]
55.6.
The
applicant provides no evidence to support the allegation that the
payment of the agreed rental was objectively impossible.
[7]
55.7.
The
mere
ipse
dixit
of
the deponent to the answering affidavit that the applicant was
prevented from performing in full is generally insufficient and
particularly so in the context of this matter.
[8]
56.
The only relevant authority referred to in the
heads of argument filed by the applicant clearly indicates the facts
required in
order to embark on an enquiry into objective
impossibility. The papers are devoid of such facts and application
for leave to appeal
does not mention any specific errors in relation
to the facts. I, accordingly, pressed counsel for the applicant to
indicate the
facts which should persuade me that there is a
reasonable prospect of success on appeal. Counsel could only refer to
two facts:
The existence of the Covid-19 pandemic, and the “lockdown
rules”. On a general level those facts were not in issue,
and
were accepted by the respondents and contained in the judgment.
57.
The issue is whether those facts are sufficient to
establish objective impossibility. As stated in the judgment, the
court was not
provided any particularity and certainly no evidence on
which to assess the impact of the pandemic and the "lockdown
rules"
on the business of the applicant, and in that context, I
stated that:
57.1.
The
following can be discerned from the papers. The lease records that
the property may be used for the sole purpose of conducting
a hair
salon. … The unforeseeable circumstances that allegedly
prevented performance are limited to the Covid-19 pandemic.
In the
answering affidavit, the applicant does not refer to the
“
lockdown
rules
”
mentioned
in the heads of argument. However, in the replying affidavit, the
respondents state that the applicant was
“
statutorily
required to refrain from economic activity
”
in
terms of the regulations under the National
Disaster Management Act
57 of 2002
from 15 March 2020 to 19 June 2020, after which the
applicant could resume operations. The date when the applicant did so
and what
its experiences were, are not explained.
[9]
57.2.
The
applicant does not explain the nature of the impact of the Covid-19
pandemic on the business of a hair salon in general or with
specific
reference to the business of the applicant. The applicant does not
make the statement contained in the heads of argument
that as a
consequence of the pandemic, the applicant could not afford to comply
with the payment obligations and there is no evidence
to support the
contention. In any event, if the applicant could not afford to pay,
an assessment of the reasons is required as
the financial
circumstances may be self-created. Although the applicant does state
that it could not ‘comply fully’,
the financial position
of the applicant is not set out and the applicant made some payments
and made arrangements to liquidate
the outstanding arrears.
[10]
57.3.
The
applicant neither alleges nor presents any evidence of the period of
the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on its business.
The period
during which the applicant was allegedly prevented from performing in
full is of particular importance as the parties
concluded an addendum
to the lease agreement, in June 2020, which provided for a
conditional reduction of the rental and certain
other charges for the
months of April to July 2020. … However, the reduction and
deferment could be reversed if the applicant
failed to comply with
the lease in the subsequent period. As stated above, the applicant
fell into arrears in August 2020 and the
reduction was reversed some
time later in March 2021. In response, the applicant reiterates
inter
alia
that
the pandemic prevented compliance, presumably the applicant means
that compliance was prevented for the entire period in which
it
remained in arrears. In my view, the pandemic could not be described
as unforeseen once the parties had concluded the addendum
and had
done so ‘by reason of the problems caused by the Coronavirus
(sic) and to assist the Lessee’ (addendum, clause
1).
[11]
58.
Counsel resorted to contending that I should take
judicial notice of the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and the
regulations under
the National
Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002
on
the businesses of hair salons in general and the applicant in
particular. In subsequent paragraphs counsel states that “giving
no consideration, no weight, and very little weight to the
[applicant’s] evidence
inter alia,
in respect to force majeure, being
Covid-19 pandemic have prevent him to comply fully with the terms of
the lease agreement and
having unprecedented negative effects to his
businesses” was a misdirection.
59.
It may be permissible to take judicial notice that
the pandemic and regulations had a negative impact on businesses
specifically
mentioned in the regulations. However, in my view, this
dose not assist the applicant in establishing objective impossibility
and
misses the point for
inter alia
the
following reasons which are set out in the judgment:
59.1.
A
change in commercial circumstances which causes compliance with the
contractual obligations to be difficult, expensive or unaffordable,
is generally insufficient
(
Unibank
Savings and Loans Ltd (Formerly Community Bank) v Absa Bank Ltd
2000
(4) SA 191
(W)198 D - E
;
Johannesburg
Consolidated Investment Co v Mendelsohn & Bruce Limited
1903
TH 286
;
Hansen,
Schrader and Co v Kopelowitz
1903
TS 707
;
Matshazi
v Mezepoli Melrose Arch (Pty) Limited
[2020]
3 All SA 499
(GJ) at para. 40.5).
[12]
59.2.
As the
authorities mentioned above indicate, events of the nature
contemplated in this matter usually cause a reduction in customers
or
have some other effect that causes revenue to reduce, and in the
context of the business concerned, the rental is considered
by the
lessee to be unaffordable. The inability to afford the agreed rental
is ordinarily subjective and depends on the means of
the lessee
concerned. The applicant presents no facts or evidence which
demonstrate that the pandemic was the direct cause, rendering
the
payment of the agreed rental unaffordable and its payment objectively
impossible.
[13]
59.3.
A
further difficulty is that, in order to avoid the cancellation, the
applicant must demonstrate an entitlement to a reduction in
the
agreed rental to the level of the paid amount. The amount to which
the agreed rental should be reduced requires evidence because,
“
[i]n
every case a value judgment, based on objective criteria, will be
required to establish whether it is just that the bargain
should, to
the extent still possible, be upheld and the obligations of the
parties adjusted
“
(
World
Leisure Holidays (Pty) Ltd v Georges
2002
(5) SA 531
(W), para. 10). The applicant does not indicate the extent
of the reduction which it claims or how it should be determined and
provides no objective criteria. I cannot exercise a value judgment in
the absence of facts and evidence.
[14]
And
the applicant does not demonstrate that it paid the reduced amount.
60.
A
further hurdle in the path of the applicant’s prospects on
appeal is that although the entitlement to a reduction of rental
may
be founded on an implied term, “the parties may override the
implied terms (
Bischofberger
v Vaneyk
1981
(2) SA 607
(W), at 611A) and, accordingly, ‘agree that the risk
of impossibility of performance is to fall upon the debtor'
(
Oerlikon
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Johannesburg City Council
1970
(3) SA 579 (A), 585 B).
”
[15]
61.
As
stated in the judgment, “the [applicant] does not allege such a
term or indicate that such a term is compatible with the
express
terms of the lease, which overwhelmingly exclude claims by the
[applicant]. In particular, the lease provides that ‘[t]he
Lessee shall not be entitled to claim from the Lessor any remission
of rental or any other charges payable in terms of the Lease
for any
reason whatsoever and nor shall the Lessee in any circumstances have
any claim against the Lessor for damages or otherwise
be entitled to
withhold or defer payment of rental and other charges for any reason
whatsoever' (clause 13.3). In my view, this
express term precludes a
claim for a reduction of rental.
[16]
62.
The applicant did not address any of these
difficulties.
63.
In my view, this ground of appeal is defective and
the applicant has not satisfied me that it has a reasonable prospect
of success
on appeal.
64.
I have addressed the fifth ground of appeal above.
65.
The sixth ground of appeal is that I erred in
finding that the respondents had made out a case for a final
interdict. The sixth
ground of appeal is defective for the reasons
stated above. The application for leave to appeal provides no
indication as to which
requirement is in issue. I was required to
attempt to glean the case the applicant intends to pursue from other
material. I am
none the wiser after attempting to do so. The heads of
argument merely state one of the
“
points
and grounds
”
to be whether the
respondents had satisfied the requirements of a final interdict and
that I erred in finding that the respondents
had satisfied those
requirements. The heads of argument proceed to state that the
statement that the respondents had met "the
requirement"
for a final interdict constituted a “misdirection”,
without any elaboration or process of reasoning.
And counsel for the
applicant did not address this ground of appeal in oral argument.
66.
The heads of argument set out authorities stating
the requirements for a final interdict and the principle that an
application for
final relief must be determined by reference to
Plason-Evan Paints Ltd v Van Riebeek
Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A).
There is no attempt to apply those authorities to the judgment. The
applicant does not indicate which issues were not decided
on an
application of
Plascon-Evans
and
should have been decided differently. A reason for that could be that
Plascon-Evans
provides
the mechanism to resolve opposing versions and, on the material
issues, there were no disputes of fact and certainly no
genuine
disputes.
67.
The authorities provide that the acceptance of the
version set out by the respondent in applications for final relief is
required
“in the event of conflict” (
Ngqumba
en 'n Ander v Staatspresident en Andere; Damons NO en Andere v
Staatspresident en Andere; Jooste v Staatspresident en Andere
1988 (4) SA 224
(A)
at
260 I;
Buffalo Freight Systems (Pty) Ltd
v Crestleigh Trading (Pty) Ltd and Another
2011
(1) SA 8
(SCA), para. 20). It is "undesirable to attempt to
settle
disputes of fact
solely on probabilities disclosed by the affidavit
evidence” (
DA Mata v Otto, NO
1972 (3) SA 858
(A)
, 865
H, emphasis added). A matter can be determined on the basis of the
probabilities in the absence of real, genuine and
bona
fide
dispute of fact, and it follows
that a court can do so where the facts are common cause
(
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008
(3) SA 371
(SCA), para. 12
;
Truth
Verification Testing Centre v PSE Truth Detection CC and Others
1998
(2) SA 689
(W)
at 698 H - J). A decision on
the probabilities implies the rejection of a version, which is not
required on common cause facts (cf
NDPP
v Zuma
2009 (2) 277 (SCA), para. 26)
68.
As mentioned above, I applied
Placon-Evans
to the denials raised against the
allegations in the opening paragraphs of the founding affidavit and
found that those denials did
not raise genuine disputes of fact and,
for the reasons stated, I could have regard to the facts stated by
the respondents. The
applicant does not dispute the stated legal
position or its application to the facts in respect of those denials.
69.
The defence of objective impossibility of
performance was not established due to the absence of facts on
material issues and the
couple of facts on which the applicant relied
were common cause. The applicant in fact received the benefit of the
respondents’
setting out of the regulations under the National
Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002
. I was not satisfied that those
undisputed facts established objective impossibility.
70.
The
contention that a separate oral agreement was concluded was neither
pleaded by the applicant nor supported by material facts.
It was not
the applicant’s version that a separate oral agreement was
concluded. Counsel argued for that agreement at the
hearing of the
matter based on an email attached by the respondents which was common
cause. I found that the email did not establish
an oral contract of
lease.
[17]
The
applicant faced an added difficulty regarding the authority to
conclude the contract.
[18]
Counsel
did not press the argument in respect of an oral lease agreement with
any enthusiasm in the application for leave to appeal
and instead
pivoted to rely on a monthly lease. I dealt with that contention
above.
71.
In my view, this ground of appeal is defective and
the applicant has not satisfied me that it has a reasonable prospect
of success
on appeal.
72.
The seventh ground of appeal is that I erred in
not finding that the respondents failed to comply with the lease
agreement as the
respondents had failed to issue a certificate of
arrears. The point raised in this ground of appeal is not contained
in the papers
and was not raised at the hearing of the main
application. The application for leave provides no indication how I
erred in relation
to a point that was not raised in the papers and
does not correspond with the terms of the lease agreement in this
matter
.
73.
The point is raised in this application because,
as I was informed by counsel for the applicant, this court in another
matter granted
leave to appeal on the question “[w]hether the
applicant was required by the terms of the lease agreements to issue
a certificate
on the outstanding arrears before terminating the lease
agreement or before taking any legal action against any of the
Respondents
and whether the respondents have complied with the terms
of the lease agreements” (para. 15(1)(d)).
74.
The judgment in the application for leave to
appeal in that matter was placed before me. The judgment merely
states in respect of
a number of grounds of appeal that the
applicants have reasonable prospects of success. The judgment does
not set out the reasons
for that conclusion.
75.
The main judgment was not placed before me. It
nevertheless appears from the judgment in the application for leave
to appeal that
the facts of the matter before the learned Judge were
materially different to the present matter. The only similarity to
which
counsel for the applicant could refer was that the respondents
in the application for leave to appeal before me were the respondents
in that application, and a lease agreement was in issue. There was no
indication that the terms of the lease were similar. The
ground of
appeal underlying the stated question suggests that the terms were
different. The ground of appeal in that matter was
that “[t]he
Applicant failed to meet
the lease
requirement of issuing a certificate on the outstanding arrears
before
terminating
the lease agreement or
before
taking any legal action
against
any of the Respondents” (para. 11(4)) (emphasis added).
76.
The corresponding term in this matter provides
that “[a] certificate issued by [the second respondent] as to
any amount allegedly
owing by the Lessee to the Lessor howsoever
arising shall be prima facie evidence of the amount owing”
(clause 20.3, part
B). The applicant neither pleaded nor referred to
this term in the answering affidavit. There is no indication in the
language,
context or purpose of the lease that the respondents are
required to issue a certificate and required to do so before
terminating
the lease. The term is permissive. The term permits the
respondents to prove the applicant’s indebtedness by means of a
certificate.
The certificate serves only as
prima
facie
proof. The respondents are free
to prove the indebtedness by any other means, if they so choose. In
this matter, the failure to
pay the full rental was not in dispute,
the applicant admitted it was in arrears and the “reconciliation
of the [applicant’s]
account”, which sets out the
arrears, was not disputed. The extent of the arrears is, in any
event, irrelevant for the purposes
of the eviction application.
77.
The written lease agreement provides for the
conditions under which the respondents may cancel (clause 20.1 and
clause 22). The
relevant conditions are: None payment of the agreed
rental or other charges, notice and failure to remedy. The
respondents satisfied
those conditions. There is no suggestion in any
of the terms of the lease that cancellation and the right to
“re-enter and
repossess the Premises” (clause 20.1) and
to “compel ejectment” (clause 20.4) are subject to the
prior issuing
of a certificate of arrears.
78.
Counsel for the applicant nevertheless states in
the heads of argument that I erred “by finding that Applicant
did not comply
with the lease agreement”. I assume counsel
intended to state that I erred in finding that the applicant had
complied. I
point out that the respondents’ compliance with the
lease agreement was not in issue in the main proceedings.
79.
Counsel for the applicant proceeds to state in the
heads of argument that “[t]he [respondents] failed to provide
the [applicant]
with a certificate of arrears
as
required by the agreement
”
and
replicates the ground of appeal in the matter mentioned above by
stating that “the [respondents] failed to meet
the
lease requirement of issuing a certificate on the outstanding arrears
before
terminating
the lease agreement or
before
taking any legal action
against
the [applicant]” (my emphasis). Counsel states “[t]hat
the [respondents] did not have a clear right to evict
the [applicant]
without providing with certificate on the outstanding arrears.”
There is no process of reasoning in the heads
and there was no
attempt to provide any reasoning in oral argument to substantiate the
contention that the respondents were required
by the agreement to
provide a certificate and required to do so before terminating the
lease. And I am not persuaded that the applicant
has a reasonable
prospect of success on this ground of appeal.
80.
The sole reason provided by counsel for the
applicant in pursuing leave to appeal on this ground was that leave
had been granted
in the matter mentioned above. This, counsel
maintained, constituted compelling circumstances under
section
17(1)(a)(ii)
of the
Superior Courts Act, No. 10 of 2013
. I mention
the granting of leave to appeal for compelling reasons is not
mentioned in the application for leave to appeal or the
heads of
argument, other than in the quotation of the whole of
section 17
, and
not motivated. The focus in both documents is on “a reasonable
prospect of success”.
81.
“
In order to be granted leave to appeal in
terms of
s 17(1)(a)(i)
and
s 17(1)(a)(ii)
of the
Superior Courts Act
an
applicant for leave must satisfy the court that the appeal would
have a reasonable prospect of success or that there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard. If the court is
unpersuaded of the prospects of success, it must still enquire
into
whether there is a compelling reason to entertain the appeal. A
compelling reason includes an important question of law or
a discrete
issue of public importance that will have an effect on future
disputes. But here too, the merits remain vitally important
and are
often decisive. [The applicant for leave] must satisfy this court
that it has met this threshold” (
Caratco
(Pty) Ltd v Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
2020
(5) SA 35
(SCA)
, para. 2). “The
merits of the appeal remain vitally important and will often be
decisive” (
Minister of Justice and
Constitutional Development v Southern Africa Litigation Centre
2016
(3) SA 317
(SCA) at 330
C
).
82.
In my view, the granting of leave to appeal in
another case between different parties on different facts, and on a
point that was
not raised in the papers in the matter before me, and
has no prospect of success, does not constitute a compelling reason.
83.
Accordingly, this ground of appeal is defective,
purports to raise an issue that was not canvassed on the papers or
during the hearing
in the main application, and in respect of which
the applicant has not satisfied me that it has a reasonable prospect
of success
on appeal or which constitutes a compelling reason
.
84.
In the premises, I make the following order:
(1)
The application for condonation is dismissed.
(2)
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
(3)
The applicant shall pay the costs of both
applications.
Q
G
LEECH
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa,
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
28 January 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 21 February
2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE
APPLICANT:
M. Mantsha
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Lugiusani Mnantsha Inc.
COUNSEL
FOR THE
FIRST
AND SECOND
RESPONDENTS:
M. Beckenstrater
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Vermaak Mashall Wellbeloved
Inc.
[1]
J
udgment,
para. 30
.
[2]
J
udgment,
para. 31
.
[3]
J
udgment,
para. 28
.
[4]
Judgment,
para.
30
.
[5]
Judgment,
para. 28.
[6]
Judgment,
para. 35.
[7]
Judgment,
para. 30.
[8]
Judgment,
para. 35.
[9]
Judgment,
para. 32.
[10]
Judgment,
para. 33.
[11]
Judgment,
para. 34.
[12]
Judgment,
para. 36.
[13]
Judgment,
para. 37.
[14]
Judgment,
para. 38.
[15]
Judgment,
para. 39.
[16]
Judgment,
para. 39.
[17]
Judgment,
para.
23.
[18]
Judgment,
para.
24.
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