Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 375South Africa
DV8 Technology Group (Pty) Ltd v Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/8025) [2022] ZAGPJHC 375 (1 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## DV8 Technology Group (Pty) Ltd v Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/8025) [2022] ZAGPJHC 375 (1 June 2022)
DV8 Technology Group (Pty) Ltd v Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022/8025) [2022] ZAGPJHC 375 (1 June 2022)
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sino date 1 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022/8025
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
In
the matter between:
DV8
TECHNOLOGY GROUP (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MOBILE
TELEPHONE NETWORKS (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
NATIONAL
HEALTH LABORATORY SERVICE
Second Respondent
HUAWEI
TECHNOLOGIES SOUTH AFRICA
(PTY)
LTD
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
The applicant seeks
interim interdicts against the second respondent, an organ of state,
and the first respondent, a party to a
service level agreement with
the second respondent, to interdict them from allowing any party
other than the applicant to provide
subcontracting services to the
second respondent in respect of a tender awarded to the first
respondent, pending mediation or arbitration
of a dispute between the
applicant and the first respondent, and a review of the second
respondent’s decision to reject the
applicant as a
subcontractor to the first respondent.
The applicant was
nominated as a subcontractor in terms of an agreement between the
applicant and the first respondent. When the
agreement was cancelled,
the possibility of the applicant being nominated and accepting
appointment as a subcontractor of the first
respondent fell away and
the application became moot.
The applicant never
had any rights to enforce against the second respondent, and could
not obtain an interdict against the second
respondent in order to
enforce perceived rights against the first respondent.
Order
[1]
In this matter I make the following order:
1.
Part A of the application is dismissed;
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the application
incurred by the first and second respondents, such costs to include
the costs of two counsel in respect of each of these respondents.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
DV Technology Group (Pty) Ltd (“
DV8 Technology”
)
seeks to interdict -
3.1
the first respondent, the National
Health Laboratory Services
(“
NHLS”
) from appointing or allowing any other
service provider other than DV8 Technology from rendering services as
a partner and/or subcontractor
of Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd
(“
MTN”
) or in any like capacity in respect of
tender number RFB103/20/21 (“
the 2021 tender”
),
and to interdict
3.2
the second respondent, MTN, from appointing
or allowing any other
service provider, save for DV8 Technology, from rendering services as
a subcontractor of the NHLS,
pending the outcome of a
dispute
[1]
between DV8
Technology and MTN that was referred to mediation or arbitration, and
Part B of the application in terms of which DV8
Technology seeks to
have reviewed and set aside a decision by the NHLS to reject the
nomination of DV8 Technology as MTN’s
subcontractor in respect
of a tender, or alternatively, and if it is found that no decision
was taken, then an order that the NHLS’s
failure to take a
decision is declare unconstitutional, invalid and unlawful, and is
reviewed and set aside, and directing the
NHLS to consider the
nomination of DV8 Technology by MTN as MTN’s subcontractor in
respect of the tender.
[4]
The application is opposed by the first and second respondents, MTN
and
NHLS, referred to collectively as “
the respondents.”
No relief is sought against the third respondent and it is cited
because of its possible interest in the matter.
[5]
The application was launched as an urgent application and set down as
a special motion for two days. Urgency was not conceded by the
respondents but it was submitted that a judgment be given on the
merits so that it need not be necessary for another Judge to also
read the papers.
[6]
DV8 Technology’s claim against MTN is contractual and its claim
against the NHLS is said to be based on public law principles.
Background
[7]
The
application involves the activities of the NHLS,
[2]
MTN, and two related firms, namely DV8 Technology and DV8 Consulting
(Pty) Ltd (“
DV8
Consulting”
).
There is an overlap of directors, shareholders and personnel between
DV8 Consulting and DV8 Technology.
[8]
In 2016 the
NHLS awarded a tender issued in 2015 (“
the
2015 tender”
)
to DV8 Consulting and the parties entered into a service level
agreement (the “
2016
SLA”
)
in terms of which the NHLS appointed DV8 Consulting to render
Multi-Protocol Label Switching Wide Area Network
[3]
(MPLS WAN) services to the NHLS for a period of three years.
[9]
On 29 March
2019, the President of the Republic of South Africa caused a
proclamation
[4]
to be published
in terms of which the President referred various matters in respect
of the affairs of the NHLS for investigation
to the Special
Investigating Unit (“
SIU”
).
[5]
The SIU was tasked to investigate,
inter
alia
,
any unlawful, irregular or unapproved acquisitive act, transaction,
measure or practice having a bearing upon State property and
the
unlawful or improper conduct by any person which has caused or may
cause serious harm to the interest of the public or any
category
thereof, in respect of the procurement of or contracting for goods,
works or services by or on behalf of the NHLS in relation
to,
inter
alia
,
the provisions of multi-protocol label switching wide area network
services to the NHLS for a period of three years in terms of
the 2015
tender.
[10]
The SIU was also to investigate any unlawful or improper conduct by
the employees or officials
of the NHLS or applicable service
providers, or any other person or entity in relation to the
allegations set out. This would then
involve investigations,
inter
alia
, into the activities of DV8 Consulting and into the
activities of
inter alia
any of its officers, directors,
shareholders, or employees, whether acting on behalf of DV8
Consulting or on behalf any other entity
such as DV8 Technology. In
short, the SIU investigation focused on both DV8 Consulting and DV8
Technology, as well as the NHLS
and many others. To date no report
has been published.
[11]
The 2016 SLA led to litigation between the NHLS and DV8 Consulting
when the NHLS issued
a new tender in March 2019. DV8 Consulting
contended for an option that would enable it to extend the 2016 SLA
for a further two
years, until 2021. The company obtained an interim
interdict in May 2019 to prevent the NHLS from awarding the 2019
tender and
compelling the NHLS to continue to perform in terms of the
2016 SLA, pending -
11.1
arbitration proceedings in which DV8
Consulting sought a declaratory
order that the service level agreement have been extended until 2021,
11.2
and a review and setting aside of
the 2019 tender in terms of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000
, and / or the
principle of legality.
[12]
As a result of the interim interdict the 2016 SLA would remain in
place pending the outcome
of the arbitration and the review
application.
[13]
In September 2019 the arbitrator handed down an award dismissing DV8
Consulting’s
claim in the arbitration proceedings. The 2019
tender was subsequently withdrawn and the review application was
settled on the
basis that DV8 Consulting would withdraw its review
(Part B of its application) against payment of its costs.
[14]
There was therefore no 2019 tender and no new appointment of a
service provider.
It was then agreed that DV8 Consulting would
continue to render services on a month to month basis until a
new service provider
had been appointed.
The
Co-Operation Agreement of December 2019 between DV8 Technology and
MTN
[15]
In December
2019 DV8 Technology and MTN entered into a written agreement styled a
Co-Operation Agreement (“
the
co-operation agreement”
)
in terms of which the parties agreed to submit one or more tenders
relating to multiprotocol label switching and other
telecommunications
service to the NHLS
[6]
with MTN as the lead bidder
[7]
and contractor, and with DV8 Technology as a partner. The parties
were to co-operate
[8]
to prepare
tender presentations and to secure a Prime Contract, defined
[9]
as a contract entered into between one or both of the parties and the
NHLS.
[16]
It was
agreed
[10]
that MTN shall be
the prime contractor in relation to the NHLS tender and the parties
would use their best efforts to produce a
tender incorporating the
scope of work required by NHLS, and to work towards the acceptance of
DV8 Technology as nominated sub-contractor
for a portion of the scope
of work. Unless otherwise agreed, DV8 Technology shall also be MTN’s
exclusive small medium micro
enterprise partner
[11]
in regard to the eventual tender and all future related opportunities
or services that may be required by NHLS from MTN. Future
opportunities shall be pursued jointly and MTN shall have the right
to include other parties where neither MTN nor DV8 Technology
has the
capability to enhance the scope as required by NHLS or any potential
customer.
[17]
In clause
3.2 of the co-operation agreement under the heading “
Recordal”
it is recorded that the parties “
are
currently working together in relation to a tender that was awarded
by NHLS to DV8”
.
DV8 is defined
[12]
as “
DV8
Technology Group (Pty) Ltd”
and this statement is patently false as DV8 Consulting had been
awarded the tender referred to in paragraph 3.2 and not DV8
Technology.
DV8 Technology had never been awarded a tender by the
NHLS and never stood in a contractual relationship to the NHLS.
[18]
This confusion between the identity of DV8 Technology and of DV8
Consulting runs like a
thread through the papers. The untrue
allegation that DV8 Technology was a party to the 2015 tender was,
for instance, repeated
in a letter on behalf of DV8 Technology to MTN
on 26 October 2021 two years later during the war of words that
preceded the launching
of this application.
[19]
The
co-operation agreement was signed and concluded on 3 December
2019 and was intended to “
continue
indefinitely”
[13]
but was terminable by either party upon the giving of 90 days’
written notice of termination after the expiry of the indefinite
contract period.
[14]
The
termination of the co-operation agreement “
shall
not affect any Prime Contract, which shall be terminated in
accordance with its terms.”
[15]
[20]
In April 2021 the NHLS issued a new tender to supersede the 2016
tender. MTN was appointed
as the main contractor and on 29 June 2021
the NHLS gave notice to DV8 Consulting of the cancellation of the
month to month arrangement
that had been in place since 2019. MTN
took over from DV8 Consulting at the end of July 2021. The NHLS and
MTN entered into a service
level agreement early in 2022 (“
the
2022 SLA”
).
[21]
The legal relationship between the NHLS and MTN is solely governed by
the 2022 SLA.
[22]
On 26 October 2021 DV8 Technology’s attorneys addressed a
letter to MTN making the
allegation that the third respondent had
been appointed by MTN in breach of the co-operation agreement and
requesting undertakings
from MTN. No undertakings were forthcoming.
[23]
On 10
January 2022, MTN wrote to the NHLS to seek approval of the
appointment of nine Exempted Micro Enterprises
[16]
and Qualifying Small Enterprises
[17]
as per the Central Supplier Database,
[18]
among them a QSE identified as “DV8.” MTN and the NHLS
both believed the firm being nominated was the firm that had
been a
party to the 2015 tender and the 2016 SLA.
23.1
MTN believed it was nominating DV8
Technology, the company it had a
co-operation agreement with and that was described as the firm to
which a previous tender was
awarded by the NHLS, and that was already
assisting MTN in fulfilling its obligations under the 2021 tender;
23.2
the NHLS believed the nomination referred
to DV8 Consulting, the firm
that had been providing services on a month to month basis and that
was a party to the 2015 tender
and the 2016 SLA, and that was being
investigated by the SIU.
[24]
The NHLS rejected the nomination. On 19 January 2022 MTN informed DV8
Technology of the
rejection.
[25]
DV8 Technology’s attorneys demanded
inter alia
that the
third respondent cease all work on 21 January 2022 and on the 25
th
MTN’s attorneys responded that the third respondent was not a
sub-contractor.
The
termination of the co-operation agreement between MTN and DV8
Technology
[26]
MTN purported to cancel the co-operation agreement by giving 90 days’
notice in writing
on 31 January 2022. The letter was however
addressed to “
DV8 Technologies (Pty) Ltd”
and DV8
Technology responded in writing on 2 February 2022 to say that the
“
notice is defective and/or invalid as it is addressed to
the wrong entity which is unknown to us.”
It must have been
obvious however that MTN intended to refer to DV8 Technology and
nobody else.
[27]
A letter was then sent to DV8 Technology, accurately described, on
the same day and it
is common cause that the co-operation agreement
came to an end ninety days later. The validity of the termination
cannot be disputed.
The
effect of the termination
[28]
If clause 4 of the co-operation agreement were to be interpreted
literally it would have
meant that the co-operation agreement could
never be terminated by giving 90 days’ written notice of
termination in terms
of clause 4.1, because notice may only be given
after the expiry of the contract period which is an indefinite period
in terms
of clause 2.2.4. If notice could only be given at the end of
infinity, the co-operation agreement could only be terminated
consensually
and not upon 90 days’ notice.
[29]
This is not
a sensible interpretation and it is common cause between the parties
that the co-operation agreement was indeed terminated
by giving 90
days’ notice. When interpreting
[19]
the co-operation agreement it is clear that it was the intention of
the parties that either party would be able to cancel the
co-operation agreement on notice, and be able to so at any time. It
was not a right that accrued only after the expiry of a certain
period of time.
[30]
What is in dispute is the interpretation of clause 4.2 of the
co-operation agreement in
terms of which termination “
shall
not affect any Prime Contract, which shall be terminated in
accordance with its terms.”
[31]
The termination of the co-operation agreement has no effect on the
continued existence
of any Prime Contract between MTN and NHLS. It is
common cause that DV8 Technology is not a party to any multi-party
Prime Contract
with the NHLS and MTN. Clause 4.2 has no bearing on
DV8 Technology’s rights. Had DV8 Technology been a party to a
Prime Contract,
the Prime Contract would have survived the
termination of the co-operation agreement because of clause 4.2 but
this never happened.
[32]
DV8 Technology’s right to be nominated and all its other rights
flowing from the
co-operation agreement were thus terminated. If DV8
Technology had a claim against MTN arising out of the termination of
the co-operation
agreement, such a claim would be a claim for damages
or for specific performance.
[33]
No such claim or cause of action is identified in the affidavits. DV8
Technology’s
stated cause of action is the alleged failure by
MTN to nominate it and its failure to use its best efforts to secure
the appointment
of DV8 Technology as a subcontractor, before the
valid termination of the co-operation agreement.
The
requirements for an interim interdict
[34]
The requirements for an interim interdict are –
34.1
a
prima facie
right, though open to doubt, coupled with the
balance of convenience favouring the applicant,
or
a clear
right that makes consideration of the balance of convenience
irrelevant;
34.2
a reasonable apprehension of imminent harm; and
34.3
the absence
of a suitable alternative remedy.
[20]
[35]
In the
absence of
mala
fides
a
court will be hesitant to grant an order against an entity exercising
statutory powers.
[21]
[36]
The NHLS rejected the nomination of what it believed was DV8
Consulting, an entity it had
been involved with since 2016 in a
relationship under investigation by the SIU. In reality the entity
being nominated was DV8 Technology,
but this was a related entity,
the same individuals were involved, and those individuals were also
under investigation. No finding
of
mala fides
can be made.
A
prima facie right
[37]
DV8 Technology does not have a clear right or a prima facie right as
against either of
the respondents. The facts set out by DV8
Technology together with the facts set out by MTN and the NHLS (such
as the termination
of the co-operation agreement, the SIU
investigation, and the confusion caused by the role of DV8 Technology
in the 2015 tender)
do not establish a
prima facie
right.
The
balance of convenience
[38]
If one were to postulate the existence of a
prima facie
right
though open to some doubt, the balance of convenience would not
favour DV8 Technology. It seeks orders that would seriously
inhibit
the services provided to patients by the NHLS and would cause
prejudice to MTN and all subcontractors appointed or to be
appointed
as a result of the 2021 tender and the 2022 SLA.
38.1
MTN is permitted to subcontract to
third parties. In terms of the
Preferential Procurement Regulations of 2017 all subcontractors must
be approved by the NHLS. The
2022 SLA refers to eight subcontractors
approved by the NHLS.
38.2
DV8 Technology also insists on an
exclusive appointment, excluding
all other actual or potential subcontractors.
[39]
The interim orders sought would prejudice MTN, the NHLS, the public,
the eight approved
subcontractors, other possible future
subcontractors, and possibly other ancillary service providers at
least until such time as
the review application and the arbitration
were finalised, yet be aimed at relief that would have no practical
effect because the
co-operation agreement between MTN and DV8
Technology was terminated. MTN can not be compelled to accept DV8
Technology as its
subcontractor.
Harm
and causation
[40]
The harm allegedly suffered by DV8 Technology arose not from its
nomination or the rejection
of the nomination, but from the lawful
termination of the co-operation agreement.
[41]
Any harm suffered by DV8 Technology as a result of the termination
can not be laid at the
door of the NHLS nor should the NHLS be
prevented from continuing with its activities because of a dispute
between MTN and DV8
Technology that has nothing to do with the NHLS.
The
accrued rights
[42]
It is argued on behalf of DV8 Technology that the right it seeks to
enforce against MTN
is the right to be nominated as a subcontractor
and the right to insist that MTN use its best efforts to procure the
acceptance
of the nomination by the NHLS. The submission loses sight
of the fact that because the co-operation agreement has been
terminated,
and validly terminated as DV8 Technology can not dispute
the termination, any acceptance of DV8 Technology as a subcontractor
will
be without any effect as the co-operation agreement in terms of
which it was to function as subcontractor to a main contractor,
MTN,
no longer exists.
[43]
The right to be nominated ended when the co-operation agreement came
to an end.
DV8
Technology’s rights against the NHLS
[44]
DV8 Technology never had any rights to enforce as against the NHLS.
It never entered into
a contract of any kind with the NHLS, and the
NHLS was not a party to the co-operation agreement. There is no
status quo
to preserve pending a review application, and DV8
Technology has no public law rights to enforce against the NHLS. It
can also
not enforce perceived contractual rights against MTN by
seeking an interdict against the NHLS
[45]
DV8
Technology did not submit a tender and has no standing to challenge
the 2021 tender.
[22]
[46]
DV8 Technology claims that if urgent interim relief were not granted,
the NHLS would not
be able to function as DV8 Technology would not be
able to provide services. There is no substance to this argument as
it has and
never had any right to provide such services. If it did
provide such service, it did so in the guise of DV8 Consulting and
without
the knowledge of the NHLS. There is therefore no evidence of
public harm.
[47]
From the NHLS’s point of view DV8 Consulting was nominated and
rejected by the NHLS.
The NHLS did not knowingly take a decision
involving DV8 Technology and there is nothing to review. The decision
taken by the NHLS
involved DV8 Consulting and DV8 Consulting is not a
party to this application. Nor is there any ground for a mandamus –
there
is no decision on DV8 Technology required from the NHLS.
[48]
The co-operation agreement having been terminated, it is no longer
possible for the NHLS
to approve DV8 Technology as a subcontractor of
MTN as there is no extant contractual relationship between MTN as
main contractor
and DV8 Technology. The relief sought is moot.
[49]
The NHLS is not obliged to consider a nomination which is impossible
to make at this point
in time. DV8 Technology has no right to be
considered, whether a clear right or a prima facie right.
[50]
The fact that DV8 Technology qualifies for nomination as a
subcontractor to contractors
that contract with entities such as the
NHLS because of its status as a QSE, does not entitle it to
nomination in this instance.
It merely makes nomination possible. DV8
Technology’s status as a QSE is not infringed on the facts of
this matter.
Non-joinder
[51]
MTN argues that its subcontractors ought to have been joined to the
application as they
have a direct and substantial interest in the
relief sought. DV8 Technology relies on an exclusive right to be
appointed as MTN’s
subcontractor.
[52]
Joinder
must be evaluated from the point of view of the potential effect of
the order on the parties not joined, rather than the
subject matter
of the litigation.
[23]
The
test is always whether the party to be joined has a direct and
substantial interest,
[24]
in
other words a legal interest rather than a mere financial interest.
[53]
If the interim interdict were granted, the eight subcontractors
identified in the 2022
SLA would no longer be allowed to render their
services. They have a direct and substantial interest and their
non-joinder is fatal
to the application. This is not a matter where
their non-joinder can perhaps be rectified by a rule
nisi
.
Urgency
[54]
The matter is not urgent. In October 2021 DV8 Technology already knew
of the alleged breach
and on 19 January 2022 the rejection of
the nomination of DV8 Technology was communicated to it. The
application was then
launched on 25 February 2022, four months
after the alleged breach of the co-operation agreement, and weeks
after the dispute
was referred to mediation.
[55]
The parties were however
ad idem
that I should deal with the
whole application and not merely with the aspect of urgency.
Conclusion
[56]
For all the reasons set out I make the order set out in paragraph 1
above.
J
MOORCROFT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
1 JUNE 2022
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
C
C BESTER
M
SETHABA
S
MHLONGO
INSTRUCTED
BY:
FLUXMANS
INC
COUNSEL
FOR FIRST RESPONDENT:
T J B BOKABA SC
K S PHUROE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
WERKSMANS ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR SECOND RESPONDENT:
B ROUX SC
I CURRIE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
CLIFFE
DEKKER HOFMEYR INC
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
23-24 May 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
1 June 2022
[1]
The dispute so declared related to information
and undertakings sought in a letter of 7 February 2022.
[2]
The NHLS is an organ of state established in
terms of the
National Health Laboratory Service Act, 37 of 2000
. It
is said to be the largest diagnostic pathology services in South
Africa and it provides services to 80% of the population.
It plays a
central role in health care and specifically in the country’s
epidemiology surveillance and response activities.
[3]
A multi-protocol label switching network directs
data traffic within a telecommunications network more efficiently
than the older internet protocol (IP) techniques.
[4]
Proclamation No. R18 of 2019 of 29 March 2019
published in
Government
Gazette
42338.
[5]
Established by Proclamation No. R118 of 31 July
2001.
[6]
Clauses 2.2.8, 2.2.12
[7]
Clause 5.1.
[8]
Clause 5.2.
[9]
Clause 2.2.15.
[10]
Clause 6.
[11]
Clause 7.
[12]
Clause 2.2.6.
[13]
Clause 2.2.4.
[14]
Clause 4.1.
[15]
Clause 4.2.
[16]
EME’s.
[17]
QSE’s.
[18]
The CSD. See also the Preferential Procurement Regulations of
2017 adopted by the Minister of Finance in terms of
s 5
of the
Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act, 5 of 2000
.
[19]
See
Glenn
Brothers v Commercial Agency Co Ltd
1905
TS 737
at 740 – 741;
Bastian
Financial Services
(
Pty
)
Ltd
v General Hendrik Schoeman Primary School
2008
(5) SA 1
(SCA)
[2008] ZASCA 70
; ,
[2008]
4 All SA 117
(SCA) paras 16–19;
KPMG
Chartered Accountants
(
SA
)
v
Securefin Ltd
2009 (4) SA 399
(SCA),
[2009]
2 All SA 523
(SCA)
para 39;
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
2 All SA 262
(SCA),
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA ) para 18
.
[20]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
;
Webster
v Mitchell
1948 (1) SA 1186
(W) 1189;
National
Treasury v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC) paras 43 to 47.
[21]
Molteno
Brothers v South African Railways
1936
AD 321
at 329 to 331;
Gool
v Minister of Justice
1955
(2) SA 682 (C)
.
[22]
Compare
Giant Concerts CC v
Rinaldo Investments (Pty) Ltd
2012 JDR 2298 (CC).
[23]
Collin
v Toffie
1944
AD 456
at
464;
Tshandu
v Swan
1946
AD 10
at 24–5;
Home
Sites (Pty) Ltd v Senekal
1948
(3) SA 514
(A) 521;
Amalgamated
Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
1949
(3) SA 637
(A) 657;
Transvaal
Agricultural Union v Minister of Agriculture and Land Affairs
2005
(4) SA 212
(SCA) 226F–227F;
Burger v Rand Water Board
2007 (1) SA 30
(SCA);
Haroun
v Garlick
[2007] 2 All SA 627
(C);
Gordon
v Department of Health, KwaZulu-Natal
[2008] ZASCA 99
;
2008
(6) SA 522
(SCA)
; City
of Johannesburg v SALA
(2015)
36 ILJ 1439 (SCA).
[24]
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Blue Moonlight
Properties 39 (Pty) Ltd
2011
(4) SA 337 (SCA)
359D;
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v Swartland Municipality
2011
(5) SA 257 (SCA)
259E–260A;
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides 74 (Pty) Ltd
2012
(6) SA 294 (SCA)
317A;
Judicial
Service Commission v Cape Bar Council
2013
(1) SA 170
(SCA) 176H–I;
In
re BOE Trust Ltd and Others NNO
2013
(3) SA 236 (SCA)
241H–I;
Absa
Bank Ltd v Naude NO
2016
(6) SA 540
(SCA) 542I–543C;
South
African History Archive Trust v South African Reserve Bank
2020
(6) SA 127
(SCA) para 30;
115
Electrical Solutions (Pty) Ltd & Another v City of Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality & Another
[2021] JOL 50031
(GP)
para
76.
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