Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 115South Africa
Siantha (Pty) Ltd v Khumalo and Others (107/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 115 (4 March 2022)
Headnotes
Rescinding and setting aside of a court order, application for rescission is brought in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) of the Uniform Rules of Court, alternatively the common law.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Siantha (Pty) Ltd v Khumalo and Others (107/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 115 (4 March 2022)
Siantha (Pty) Ltd v Khumalo and Others (107/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 115 (4 March 2022)
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sino date 4 March 2022
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case no: 107/2020
REPORTABLE: No
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: No
REVISED.
4 MARCH 2022
In the matter between:
SIANTHA
(PTY)
LTD
Applicant
And
KHUMALO
First Respondent
BEAR
RIDGE TRADING 26 (PTY)
LTD
Second Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
Case
Summary
: Rescinding and setting
aside of a court order, application for rescission is brought in
terms of Rule 42(1)(a) of the Uniform
Rules of Court, alternatively
the common law.
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI J
A. INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an opposed application for rescission of judgment obtained on
1 July 2020
and other related reliefs stated in the notice of motion.
B. BACKGROUND
[2]
Mr Peter Presto Fakude (“Fakude”) is the sole director of
the applicant.
Together with Mr James Ziba Khumalo, First Respondent,
they are co-directors of the second Respondent Bear Ridge Trading 26
(Pty)
Ltd. The parties are therefore related in in this litigation.
These are common facts to all of them.
[3]
On the 1
st
of July 2020, Second Respondent was ordered to
vacate the premises situated at Erf 10632 Kgaswane Street, Mtembu
Village, Springs
by the court. Second Respondent had to be out of the
premises by 23 July 2020.
[4]
Applicant in this action seeks not only to rescind the judgment that
ordered the eviction
but also to be granted leave to intervene in the
eviction application, leave to file its answering papers within 15
days of granting
of the order, granting leave to intervene and of
course the costs of the application by First Respondent on attorney
and client
scale.
[5]
Applicant brings the application in terms of Rule 42 (1)(a) of the
uniform rules of
court, alternatively the common law.
[6]
It is also common fact that the first respondent, who was applicant
in the eviction
application is also a majority equity holder in the
second respondent with 51% equity.
[7]
Third Respondent, a local municipality is cited by virtue of its
interest in the eviction
and no cost order is sought against it.
[8]
Applicant contends that its
locus standi
in the action arises
from it having direct and substantial interest in the order which is
being sought to be rescinded. It furthermore
contends that it is
substantially affected by the order.
[9]
The equity of Applicant in Second Respondent is 49% . Applicant
contends therefore
that its shares will be rendered worthless should
the rescission order not be granted, as First Respondent will be at
liberty to
use the liquor license designated for the physical
premises of Second Respondent. It furthermore argues that First
Respondent will
be able to conduct his own business to the exclusion
of Applicant despite the latter having paid R2 million for equity in
Second
Respondent.
[10]
it is apparent from the paper that there has been a fallout between
the director of Applicant
and First Respondent which has led to
litigation between them.
[11] Applicant contends
that when it acquired 49% equity in Second Respondent the decision to
do so was informed by the value of
the immovable property which First
Respondent stated to the Applicant that it was owned by the Second
Respondent. Second Respondent’s
financials presented to
Applicant showed the immovable property as a property of Second
Respondent. The property was valued at
R2.5 million according to the
valuation provided to Applicant. This persuaded Applicant to pay R2
million in exchange for 49% equity
in Second Respondent.
[12]
The liquor license used for the benefit of the Second Respondent was
issued to the Bootleggers
CC and was applicable to the physical
address of 10632 Kgaswane Street Kwa – Thema Springs, Gauteng
which is the business
address of the Second Respondent.
[13]
Applicant contends that First Respondent competes directly with
Second Respondent’s premises
and sells alcohol in contravention
of the liquor license operative on the adjacent property.
Consequently, this led to fallout
between the director of Applicant
and First Respondent regarding management of Second Respondent.
[14]
Applicant bought 49% equity in Second Respondent, not from First
Respondent but from one Mr. Skosana.
The latter, it would appear from
the papers, had a fallout with First Respondent. This led to the sale
of his share in Second Respondent
to Applicant.
C. APPLICANT’S
CASE
[15]
Applicant contends that its shares would be rendered worthless should
the order evicting the
Second Respondent not be granted. It contends
furthermore that the First Respondent would be at liberty to use the
liquor license
designated for the physical premises of Second
Respondent and that First Respondent will conduct his own business
thereby by-passing
Applicant despite that the Applicant paid R2
million for shares in the Second Respondent.
[16]
Applicant avers that the value of shares during its purchase was
informed by the value of immovable
property which it avers First
Respondent presented to the Applicant to be owned by the Second
Respondent. It contends that the
financials presented to it showed
the immovable property as assets of Second Respondent.
[17]
It is Applicant’s case that it has a defence in the eviction
application in that,
inter alia,
as rental had been agreed to
and no minutes of meeting of director was attached to the eviction
application regarding the rental
that was agreed to be payable.
[18]
It contends that First Respondent is of the view that as a 51%
shareholder in the Second Respondent
he incorrectly believes that he
can unilaterally make all decisions in respect of the Second
Respondent.
[19]
Applicant avers that the eviction application that was granted on 1
July 2020 was obtained without
its knowledge. According to the
evidence adduced on its behalf by its director Mr Fakude, he became
aware of the eviction on 24
July 2020 when he was advised by an
employee of the Second Respondent of the order served on the premises
on 22 July 2020.
[20]
First Respondent had also instituted liquidation application against
the Second Respondent on
21 May 2020.
[21]
Applicant concedes that there was an order given on 10 March 2020 for
the Applicant to intervene
in the eviction application. The director
of Applicant states that the intervention Application could not be
formally issued because
of the lockdown regulations owing to Covid-19
pandemic. The director of the applicant contends that the court
dies
was suspended due to the lockdown regulations.
[22]
Consequently, Applicant seeks to have the eviction order rescinded so
that it can intervene in
the application.
[23]
The Applicant also criticizes First Respondent and accuses him of
being a delinquent director
by acting the way he did.
D. FIRST
RESPONDENT’S CASE
[24] First Respondent
contends that the Applicant does not have
locus standi
in the
rescission application. The basis of the contravention is that the
Applicant does not have a substantial and direct interest
in the
subject matter of the Application for eviction but only has an
interest in the financial health of Second Respondent. He
contends
furthermore that a financial interest is not a substantial and direct
interest for the purpose of intervening in an application.
[25]
First Respondent furthermore contends that Applicant has failed to
give notice in terms of Section
165 of the Companies Act 2008 (“the
Act”) that it intended to act on behalf of the Second
Respondent, since the dispute
started during September 2019.
[26]
During February 2020 Applicant canceled an urgent application against
First Respondent in its
own name and joined its director as an
Applicant in the proceedings seeking an order that it was entitled to
set in motion the
process envisaged in section 165 of the Act within
30 days. The application was struck from the roll with costs. The
Application
for rescission should be dismissed with costs on this
special plea so contends the First Respondent.
[27]
First Respondent avers that the eviction application was on the roll
on 10 March 2020 for hearing. The set
down notice was emailed to the
Applicant’s attorney. Applicant’s attorney appeared in
court and sought postponement.
[28]
The postponement was granted and the court ordered the Applicant to
bring the intervention application
within 20 days of the court order.
The due date for the intervention was 30 March 2020.
[29]
First Respondent concedes that the Covid-19 lockdown had a delaying
effect on the intervention application.
He maintains, however, that
the court and legal office re-opened on 1 May 2020. When no
intervention application was forthcoming
from Applicant by June 2020,
the eviction application was set down. The explanation provided by
the Applicant on why the intervention
application has not been sought
in the merits, so contends Respondent is not good enough.
[30]
The cost order that was issued against Respondent in the urgent
application, which was struck
from the roll with costs, remain
unpaid. Consequently, so avers First Respondent, Applicant is barred
from bringing the rescission
application.
[31]
Although the immovable property was stated in Second Respondent’s
financials as an asset
of the business, this was an error and the
financials were inaccurate. Mr. Fakude was well aware of the
inaccuracy of the financials.
[32]
When the dispute arose between the erstwhile shareholders of Second
Respondent, Mr Skhosana and
First Respondent, Mr. Skhosana sold his
shares to Applicant. Frist Respondent contends that Mr. Fakude was
intimately involved
in the process of the sale and the discussions
between Mr. Skhosana, himself and the parties were represented by the
attorneys.
[33]
First Respondent avers that the business was worth R4 million without
the immovable property. He contends
that the sale of the shares makes
no reference to the immovable property as being part of the assets to
be transferred to the Applicant.
[34]
The First Respondent denies ever trading from the adjacent property
and states that he rented
the adjacent property to Mr. Perry Mike,
who trades as “The Grand Café”.
[35]
He contends furthermore that after the sale of the shares by Mr.
Skhosana to the Applicant, he
approached the Applicant’s
director and informed him that the property would no longer be
available to rent to the Second
Respondent. Mr. Fakude was not in
agreement that rent should be paid by the Second Respondent and this
led to the breakdown of
the relationship which led to the eviction of
the Second Respondent.
E.
ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION
[36]
The issues that require to be determined can be summarized as
follows:
(a)
Whether the Applicant has any direct and substantial interest in the
subject matter of the
eviction;
(b)
Whether good cause has been established by the Applicant to have the
eviction order set
aside and
(c)
Whether the Applicant has made a case in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) of
the Uniform Rules
of Court.
F.
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND REASONS
The requirements for
direct and substantial interest in the subject matter of the
application.
[37]
To be able to succeed in an intervention application Applicant must
show that it has direct and
substantial interest in the subject
matter of the litigation.
[38]
This principle is regulated by Rule 12 of the Uniform Rules which
provides as follows:
“
Any
person entitled to join as a plaintiff or liable to be joined as a
defendant in any action, may, on notice to all parties, at
any stage
of the proceedings, apply for leave to intervene as a plaintiff or a
defendant. The court may upon such application make
such order,
including any order as to costs, and give such directions as to
further procedure in the action as to it may seem to
meet.”
[39]
The applicant seeking to join as already stated, must show it has a
‘direct and substantial’
interest in the subject matter
of the application.
[1]
The
question of joinder should depend on the manner and to the extent to
which the court order may affect the interests of third
parties. The
law is therefore settled on this requirement and that is the
intervening party must demonstrate a legal interest.
[2]
[40]
Applicant, in its attempt to show that it has, some right. Which will
be affected by the eviction
order relies on SA Riding for the
Disabled Association N. Regional Land Claims Commissioner
[3]
where the Constitutional Court held as follows on the principle:
“
[10]
If the applicants show that it has same
right which is affected by the order issued, permission to intervene
must be granted. For
it is a basic principle of our law that no order
should be granted against a party without affording such a party a
pre-decision
hearing. This is so fundamental that an order is
generally taken to be binding only on parties to the litigation.
[11]
Once the applicant for intervention shows a direct and substantial
interest in the subject matter
of the case, the court ought to grant
leave to intervene. In Greyvenouw CC
[4]
this principle was formulated in these terms:
‘
In
addition, when, as this matter, the applicants base their claim to
intervene on a direct and substantial interest in the subject-matter
of the dispute, the court has no discretion: it must allow them to
intervene because it should not proceed in the absence of parties
having such legally recognized interest.’”
[41]
In the instant case, Applicant has no legal interest in the sense
that it is not affected by
the eviction order. The order affects
Second Defendant who occupies the premises and not Applicant. The
fact that Applicant paid
Mr. Skhosana some R2 million to buy his
equity in Applicant creates no legal interest at all, but financial
one. It follows therefore
that Applicant has no legal basis to join
in the litigation and its application for leave to join must fail on
this basis.
[42]
The approach adopted by the constitutional court in the SA Riding
case is applicable in case
where legal interest has been established,
which is not the case in the instant case as Applicant is only a
shareholder. Were the
financial interest to be allowed as a
consideration for intervention, this would lead to unintended
consequences for instance,
in case of publicly listed companies with
unlimited number of shareholders, they may potentially intervene in
litigations brought
against the company they hold securities in. This
will in my view, defeat the separate legal personality of a company
from its
shareholders which is a principle well recognized in our
law.
[43]
Section 165(2)
of the
Companies Act No:71 of 2008
provides as
follows: -
“
A
person may serve a demand upon a company to commence or continue
legal proceedings, or take related steps, to protect the legal
interests of the company if the person-
(a) is a shareholder
or a person entitled to be registered as a shareholder, of the
company or of a related company;
(d)
has been granted leave of the court to do so, which may be granted
only if the court is satisfied that it is necessary or expedient
to
do so to protect a legal right of that other person”.
This
derivative action can only be taken by following
the
process set
out in this section and
with leave of the court. Applicant in the instant case has failed, as
correctly submitted on behalf of First
Respondent, to initiate such
steps. Applicant has therefore no locus standi to intervene in these
proceedings.
Whether
applicant has shown good cause for setting aside of the eviction
order in terms of common law
[44]
Applicant states in its case that its application is based on the
common law principles of rescission
of the eviction order. Applicant
must show that it has good cause. The test to establish good cause
has three requirements namely:
(a)
Applicant must show that it was not in willful default;
(b)
Has a bona fide defence to the eviction application and
(c)
The application for rescission is bona fide.
[45]
Applicant contends as already stated, that it was not in willful
default. The issue of whether
Applicant was in willful default or not
is irrelevant since the eviction order did not concern it but
concerned Second Respondent.
There was no need to cite Applicant in
the eviction. It must however, be noted that Mr. Fakude, the director
of Applicant was aware
of the litigation. This is so because
Applicant when it sought to bring the intervention application, the
court that postponed
the eviction hearing, ordered Applicant to
launch the intervention application within 20 days from 10 March
2020. Applicant contends
that the lockdown regulations owing to
Covid-19 pandemic caused the delay in launching its application. It
may well have had challenges
to launch the application as ordered by
court within the time frame stipulated. It may well be that indeed
the court offices were
closed after the order was issued. It cannot
however be denied that as of 1 May 2020, court offices were
functional and the opportunity
was therefore made available for the
intervention application to be launched. Applicant failed to launch
the intervention application
at the opportune time. It also fails to
explain why the application was not launched from 1 May 2020 until
the eviction order was
obtained on 1 July 2020. Applicant has failed
to take this court into its confidence and its explanation that it
tried to launch,
the application in May 2020, is not supported by any
evidence. What is common course is that this application was
commissioned
on 21 August 2020. I need no make any pronouncement on
this issue as Applicant had no role to play in the eviction
application.
[46]
For completion sake I will restate the factors that Court should have
to assess whether an Applicant
was in willful default or not. The
approach was summed up as follows by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Mulaudzi
v Old Mutual Life Insurance Company (South Africa) Limited
.
[5]
“
A
full detailed and accurate account of the causes of the delay and
their effect must be furnished so as to enable the court to
understand clearly the reasons and to assess the responsibility.
Factors which usually weigh with this court in considering an
application for condonation include the degree of non-compliance the
explanation therefor, the importance of the case, a respondent’s
interest in the finality of the judgment of the court, the
convenience of this court and the avoidance of unnecessary delay in
the administration of justice.”
[47]
There must also be a full explanation for the entire period of the
delay.
[6]
Applicant has referred
to the delays relating to the lockdown regulations caused by the
Covid-19 pandemic in general terms. It
has not prioritized and fully
appraised this court on the steps it took especially after 1 May 2020
when the office of the registrar
of this court became functional on
what it did to issue the intervention proceedings as ordered by court
on 10 March 2020. It is
for this reason that its application for
rescission must fail.
[48]
One of the requirements for good cause is that the Applicant must
have a bona fide defence to
the order it seeks to rescind. As already
stated, the eviction order concerns Second Respondent and not
Applicant. As to what defence
can Applicant put up in an action where
it has not sought to invoke
section 165(2)
of the
Companies Act 71 of
2008
, boggles one’s mind. It is not the party to the action and
therefore cannot offer any defence.
[49] It should have
remembered that the issue relating to the alleged transfer of the
immovable property, dates back as far as 2008.
There is no
explanation protested on the papers as to what steps were taken by
anyone and especially First Respondent to invest
its rights for the
entire period since the purchase of shares by other Mr. Skhosana and
by the Applicant as stated already, those
rights could only be
enforced by the Second Respondent against the First Respondent and
not anyone else including the Applicant
in this application.
[50]
For completion sake, I will also consider I will also consider
whether the Applicant has been
bona fide in bringing this
application. It should be remembered that the parties in this
litigation were previously involved in
other litigations. Applicant
brought an application for a declaratory order under case number
41577/2010 in which it sought that
Second Respondent was entitled to
the transfer of the property based on the alleged undertaking to do
so by First Respondent. That
application did not see the light of day
after First Respondent provided an answer thereto and the urgent
interdict application
was withdrawn. The application was eventually
withdrawn as Part B thereof was never pursued. There is therefore,
contrary to what
Applicant avers, no pending application to seek the
transfer of the property. In any event, that application can, as
already stated,
be launched by Second Respondent as Applicant has not
invoked the provisions of section 165(2) of the Act to act on behalf
of the
Second Respondent.
The requirements
for rescission of judgment in terms of rule 42 (1)(a)
[51]
It is important, for completeness sake, to consider the requirements
of Rule 42(1)(a) of the
Uniform Rules of Court as Applicant claims to
rely thereon for its application.
[52]
Rule 42(1)(a) which regulates the variation and rescission of orders
provides as follows:
“
(1)
The court may in addition to any other
powers it may have, mero motu or upon the application of any party
affected, rescinded or
vary.
(a)
An order or judgment erroneously
sought or erroneously granted in the absence of any party affected
thereby.”
[53]
Applicant submits in its heads of argument that the judgment was
granted in error because had
the court granting the eviction order
had not known about the circumstances under which Applicant failed to
launch its intervention
application it would not have granted the
order. This cannot be so because court had no evidence to support the
contention by Applicant.
In fact, there was no error in the eviction
order based on the evidence before court. The rescission application
on this ground
must therefore fail.
[54]
The principles applicable in consideration of a rescission
application have been restated by
our court on numerous accusation.
In
Kgomo
v Standard Bank South Africa
,
[7]
the court held that the following principles apply to the rescission
under Rule 42(1)(a):
“
(a)
The rule must be understood against its
common law background;
(b)
The basic principle at common law is that once a judgment has been
granted, the judge becomes
functus officio, but subject to certain
exceptions of which Rule 42(1)(a) is one;
(c)
The rule caters for a mistake in the proceedings;
(d)
The mistake must be the one which appears on the record of
proceedings or one which subsequently
becomes apparent from the
information made available in an application for rescission of
judgment;
(e)
A judgment cannot be said to have been granted erroneously in the
light of a subsequently disclosed defence which was not known or
raised at the time of default judgment;
(f)
The error may arise either in the process of seeking the judgment or
in the
process of granting default judgment on the part of the court
and;
(g)
The application for rescission is not required to show over and above
the error that there
is good cause for the rescission as contemplated
in Rule 32(2)(b).”
[55]
In
Lodhi
2 Properties Investments CC v Bondeu Developments (Pty) Ltd
[8]
the court held that:
“
In
any event, a judgment granted against a party in his absence cannot
be considered to have been granted erroneously because of
the
existence of a defence on the merits which had not been disclosed to
the judge who granted the judgment. In support of their
contention to
the contrary the applicants relied on authorities such as Nyingwa v
Moolman NO
1993 (2) SA 508
(TK) and Stander v Absa Bank
1997 (4) SA
873
(E) to the effect that in an application for rescission of a
default judgment in terms of Rule 42(1)(9) a court may in certain
circumstances have regard to facts of which the judge who granted the
judgment was aware in order to determine whether the judgment
had
been granted erroneously.”
[56]
Mr. Swanepoel on behalf of the First Respondent submitted that it is
inconceivable that a judgment
can be set aside in terms of Rule
42(1)(a) on the ground that the court may have not given an eviction
order if it knew what was
in the Applicant’s attorney’s
mind. I agree with the submission by Ms. Swanepoel. It should be
borne in mind that Applicant
avers that its attorney intended to
deliver an intervention application and did not do so, but if he had,
then the application
would have set out a defence. This is highly
unlikely and such contention by Applicant cannot be allowed to be a
ground to rescind
the eviction order in terms of Rule 42(1)(a).
[57]
There has not been suggestion of any mistake by the court which
granted the eviction order. On
the contrary, the eviction order was
not defended and in any event, the only party which would have been
entitled to defend the
eviction was Second Respondent and not
Applicant.
[58]
I know deal with the issue of costs on a punitive scale. The punitive
costs order will only be
considered favorably in special cases such
as dishonesty, fraud or where a party against whom the costs are
ordered was vexatious,
malicious or frivolous. The court has
discretion on whether or not to order costs on a punitive scale. It
has been submitted on
behalf of First Respondent that Applicant was
vexatious by not pursuing its declaratory application sixteen months
after bringing
the application. It should be remembered that every
citizen of the Republic has the right to have his/her dispute
adjudicated in
court. Accordingly, I find no persuasive reasons why a
punitive cost order should be imposed.
[59]
Having considered the evidence and submissions made on behalf of the
Applicant, I am of the view
that the Applicant has failed to make out
a case for rescission of the eviction order.
ORDER
[60]
The following order is made:
(a)
Leave to intervene in the proceedings by Applicant is refused;
(b)
The application for rescission of the eviction order is dismissed.
(c)
The Applicant is ordered to pay the costs of suit.
M.L. SENYATSI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Heard:
5 October 2021
Judgment:
4 March 2022
Plaintiffs’
counsel: Adv. M
Reineke
Instructed
by:
Pandor Attorneys,
Naturena, Johannesburg
rashaad@pandorlaw.co.za
Defendant’s
counsel: Ms A.E. Swanepoel
Instructed
by:
Alice Swanepoel Attorneys,
Boksburg
c/o Jacques Swanepoel
Attorneys, Johannesburg
alice@aliceattorneys.co.za
.
[1]
See
Henry
Viljoen (Pty) Ltd v Awerbush Brothers
1953 (2) SA 151
(O); Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
B1-102 Footnote where the collection of authorities is made:
Brauer
v Café Liqour Licensing Board
1953 (3) SA 752
(C) at 107A;
National
Director of Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) at 308 C
[2]
See
Astral
Operation Ltd and Others v The Minister of Local Government
Environmental Affairs and Development Planning and Another
and
Inter-Clay
2009: ZAWCHC: 11
May 2010 at para [21].
[3]
2017(5) SA 1 (CC) at 5 A-D.
[4]
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
2004 (2) SA 81
(SE) at 89 B - C
[5]
2017 (6) SA 520
(SCA) at para
[6]
See
Uitenhage Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service
2004 (1) SA 292
(SCA)
[2003] ZASCA 37
par 6.
[7]
2016
(2) SA 184 (GP)
[8]
2007 (6) SA 87
(SCA)
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Siyakhula Sonke Empowerment Corporation (PTY) Ltd and Another v Redpath Mining (South Africa) (PTY) Ltd and Another (2022/650) [2022] ZAGPJHC 468 (15 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 468High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Sithole v Lempe and Others (A3004/2021; 1269/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 207 (28 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 207High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Sithole N.O. and Another v Giannakis and Others (17987/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 191 (30 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 191High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Sithole and Others v S (A18/2022 RC72/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 294 (4 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 294High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar