Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 463South Africa
Tshisevhe Gwina Ratshimbilani Incorporated v Gijima Holdings (PTY) Ltd (41445 /2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 463 (11 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 July 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Tshisevhe Gwina Ratshimbilani Incorporated v Gijima Holdings (PTY) Ltd (41445 /2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 463 (11 July 2022)
Tshisevhe Gwina Ratshimbilani Incorporated v Gijima Holdings (PTY) Ltd (41445 /2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 463 (11 July 2022)
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sino date 11 July 2022
FLYNOTES:
EXCEPTION
IN CLAIM FOR LEGAL FEES
Exception
– Whether particulars disclosing cause of action –
Claim for legal fees – Written mandate –
Amendments of
particulars of claim to clarify reasons for deviating from capped
fee – Exceptions dismissed –
Uniform Rule 28.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 41445 /2020
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED. NO
11 July 2022
In the matter between:
TSHISEVHE
GWINA RATSHIMBILANI INCORPORATED
Plaintiff
/ Applicant
(Registration Number:
2011/006563/21)
And
GIJIMA
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
(Registration Number:
1998/021835/07)
Defendant/ Respondent
Coram:
Nichols AJ
Delivered:
11 July 2022 – This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives
via
email, by being uploaded to
Caselines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 12h00 on 11 July 2022.
JUDGMENT
NICHOLS AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is a matter in which the plaintiff, Tshisevhe Gwina
Ratshimbilani Inc, a law
firm, instituted action against its
erstwhile client, Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd, for outstanding legal
fees. For ease of reference,
I shall refer to the parties as the
plaintiff and defendant respectively.
[2]
The defendant raised exceptions to the plaintiff’s particulars
of claim as disclosing
no cause of action and being vague and
embarrassing. The plaintiff instituted a formal application in terms
of rules 28(1) and
28(4) to amend its particulars of claim following
delivery of the defendant’s notice of objection to its notice
of intention
to amend its particulars of claim. The defendant opposes
this application to amend the particulars of claim.
[3]
The parties have agreed that I adjudicate and determine the merits of
both the plaintiff’s
application to amend its particulars of
claim and the defendant’s exceptions. Amendments that have the
effect of rendering
pleadings excipiable, or which do not cure
excipiable pleadings will not be allowed.
[1]
I
shall therefore consider the applications holistically; approach the
application for leave to amend as if on exception and if
the
particulars of claim incorporating the amendments are not excipiable,
the application for leave to amend must be granted, and
the
exceptions dismissed.
The issues
[4]
The main issue for determination is whether the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim,
as sought to be amended, discloses a cause of
action, which has been pleaded with sufficient particularity and
clarity to sustain
its cause of action for the payment of legal fees
in terms of the written mandate concluded by the parties.
The pleadings and
notices
[5]
The plaintiff’s amended particulars of claim allege:
(a)
A written mandate between the parties regarding the provision of
specific professional legal services
to the defendant in relation to
a specific and described scope of work. A copy of the written mandate
is annexed to the particulars
of claim and the material express terms
of the written mandate are set out in the particulars of claim.
(b)
In accordance with these material express terms, the plaintiff
alleges that it agreed to perform the
due diligence investigation
aspect of the scope of works for a capped fee of R850 000. Fees
would be payable immediately upon
presentation of an invoice. It
would be entitled to increase its fee if requested to carry out
additional tasks or if forced to
spend more time on the matter due to
unforeseen factors beyond its control and such increased fee was
discussed with the defendant.
(c)
That the plaintiff was in fact required to charge an increased fee
due to unforeseen factors beyond
its control. These factors included,
inter alia, an increase in the scope of services; outstanding
information from the target
group; and information being provided to
it in separate data rooms. These factors resulted in the provision of
additional professional
legal services and the concomitant increase
in legal fees beyond the capped fee amount for the due diligence
investigation.
(d)
That in accordance with the written mandate, the plaintiff kept the
defendant abreast of these developments
as they occurred and the fact
that it would result in the unavoidable and necessary increase in its
legal fees. Further that the
defendant raised no objection in this
regard.
(e)
Its tax invoice dated 28 August 2020, for R1 103 454.21
(incl vat), included the increased
fee amount in respect of the due
diligence investigation. It was presented for payment to the
defendant and dishonoured by non-payment.
A copy of this invoice is
annexed to the particulars of claim and represents the amount claimed
from the defendant.
(f)
That it complied with its obligations in terms of the written mandate
by, inter alia, rendering
its professional legal services to the
defendant in accordance with the scope of work described in the
agreement; describing the
professional legal services rendered with
sufficient particularity in the narrative and descriptions in its tax
invoice dated 28
August 2020; and further informing the defendant of
the factors that necessitated the resultant increase in the fee.
[6]
The purpose and effect of the amendments, as explained by the
plaintiff, are to clarify
the reasons for the plaintiff’s
deviation from charging the agreed capped fee for the due diligence
investigation aspect
of the scope of works for the professional legal
services rendered, and to position such deviation within the terms
and conditions
of the written mandate.
[7]
The defendant has advanced essentially the same grounds for both the
exception that
the particulars of claim, do not disclose a cause of
action and the exception that the particulars of claim are vague and
embarrassing.
It was contended that the exceptions, which where they
overlap on the same point but seek different outcomes, are to be
treated
in the alternative. It argued that where the particulars of
claim allege sufficient material to support the elements of a cause
of action, but certain portions of that material are conclusions
instead of factual allegations, then the particulars of claim
will be
excipiable.
[8]
The defendant’s notice of exception on the ground that the
particulars of claim
lack averments to sustain a cause of action was
delivered on 5 February 2021. The relief sought is for the
plaintiff’s claim
to be struck out.
[9]
The defendant contends that the plaintiff broadly alleges compliance
with the written
mandate when a deviation is envisaged but fails to
allege the specific facts, terms, and conditions that are required
for compliance
with clause 5.5 of the written mandate, which
regulates the manner in which a party may deviate from the agreed
fixed fee. Mr Clark,
who appeared on behalf of the defendant, argued
that legal services involving an increase in fees could only be
performed after
discussion with the defendant and provided such
discussion, resulted in newly agreed written arrangements.
[10]
Paragraph 17 of the amended particulars of claim, is specifically
attacked as failing to disclose
facts necessary to sustain a cause of
action in compliance with clause 5.5 of the written mandate. Mr Clark
contends that the bald
averment of compliance with clause 5.5 amounts
to a legal conclusion as opposed to facts that disclose a cause of
action. Accordingly,
Mr Clark submitted that the amendment will not
cure the defect to the particulars of claim raised by the defendant’s
exception
that the particulars of claim do not disclose a cause of
action.
[11]
The defendant’s notice in terms of rule 23(1)(a) to remove
cause of complaint was delivered
on 5 February 2021. This notice
informed the plaintiff of the defendant’s intention to except
on three identified grounds,
which each assert that the particulars
of claim are vague and embarrassing. It afforded the plaintiff an
opportunity of removing
these causes of complaint within 15 days.
This notice is a precursor to an exception
.
[2]
[12]
The defendant’s exception pursuant to this precursor was
delivered on 6 April 2022 subsequent
to the institution of the of
plaintiff’s application to amend its particulars of claim. It
avers that the plaintiff’s
notice of intention to amend failed
to remedy the identified causes of complaint and it is an exception
upon the grounds set out
in the defendant’s notice dated 5
February 2021. The relief sought is for the particulars of claim,
alternatively such portions
thereof that relate to charges
contemplated by clause 5.5 of the written mandate to be struck out
with the plaintiff to pay the
costs.
[13]
Although the defendant’s exception asserts that the proposed
amendment will not remove
its causes of complaint and the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim will remain vague and embarrassing, it does not
specify
the grounds for this assertion vis-à-vis the proposed
amended particulars claim.
[14]
However, I am enjoined to consider exceptions sensibly since they
provide a useful mechanism
to weed out cases lacking legal merit.
[3]
Therefore,
pursuant to the approach that I have adopted, to consider the
application for amendment as if on exception, I shall consider
the
defendant’s notice of objection to the plaintiff’s
application to amend, since the objections from paragraph 6
to 11
encapsulate the defendant’s specific contentions that the
amended particulars of claim will remain vague and embarrassing.
These paragraphs read as follows:
‘
6.
in proposed paragraph 16 of the plaintiffs notice of intention to
amend, to be inserted by
paragraph 3 of such
notice, the plaintiff alleges, insofar as is material, that:—
"16
the overrun constituted a deviation from the assumption set
out in
paragraph 5.7 of the agreement and resulted in the carrying out of
additional tasks by the plaintiff, an increase in the
actual time
spent by the plaintiff and ultimately an increase of the plaintiff’s
fees, due to unforeseen factors or factors
beyond the plaintiff's
control, as envisaged by clause 5.5 of the agreement which additional
tasks, inter alia, consisted of the
following ....",
whereafter,
in proposed sub-paragraphs 16.1 to 16.5, the matters alleged to be
envisaged under clause 5.5 of the agreement are set
out
;
7.
proposed sub-paragraphs 16.1 to 16.5 does not profess to set out all
of the relevant matters
but, by use of the words "inter alia",
only some of them;
8.
accordingly, the amendment will introduce vague and incomplete
allegations;
9.
in proposed paragraph 22 of the particulars of claim, to be inserted
by paragraph 7 of the
plaintiff's notice of intention to
amend, the plaintiff alleges that it complied with its obligations in
terms of
the agreement by, inter alia, rendering its professional
legal services to the defendant in accordance with the scope of works
described in the agreement, as set out with sufficient particularity
in the descriptions in the invoice
attached as annexure "TGR4", and further informing the
defendant of the overrun and the resultant increase in the estimated
fees;
10.
the proposed paragraph 22 of the particulars of claim:-
10.1 by use of
the words "inter alia" does not allege all of the matters
relevant to the claim by the plaintiff
that it duly complied with its
obligations; and
10.2 fails to
allege, as is required, that the fees were incurred in accordance
with newly agreed arrangements concluded between
the parties; and
11. accordingly,
if the amendment is granted, the particulars of claim will be
excipiable
alternatively,
vague and embarrassing.’
[15]
Mr Clark argued that even if granted, the proposed paragraphs 16 and
22 still have the effect
of rendering the particulars of claim
excipiable, alternatively vague and embarrassing. He contended that
the purpose of the capped
fee was to reduce the defendant’s
legal costs. This Court is entitled to interpret the written mandate,
on exception because
the entire mandate is before the court. Such
exercise does not require additional evidence and from a plain
interpretation of clause
5.5, it is clear, he argued, that the
particulars of claim do not set out the factual requirements required
to sustain a cause
of action based on an overrun.
[16]
He concluded by contending that the defendant would be prejudiced if
the amendment is granted.
It will be forced to face a trial where the
plaintiff has no claim, alternatively has evaded demonstrating the
weakness of its
claim by its vague and embarrassing particulars of
claim.
[17]
Miss Olivier, who appeared for the plaintiff, argued that the nub of
defendant’s objections
to the plaintiff’s particulars of
claim are matters to be determined by evidence that do not pertain to
cause of action and
do not render the particulars of claim
excipiable. She contended that the defendant has incorrectly
interpreted the written mandate
and is now asking this Court to
adjudicate upon and interpret clause 5.5 to determine whether a
contract exists between the parties.
It was submitted that the
exception on cause of action does not raise as a ground that a
discussion and then written agreement
was required for there to be
compliance with clause 5.5. Accordingly, the necessary averments have
been pleaded to sustain a cause
of action.
[18]
Miss Olivier highlighted that neither the notice to remove the cause
of complaint nor the exception
on the ground of the particulars of
claim being vague and embarrassing identify or raise any prejudice.
She argued that the issue
of prejudice was only addressed in response
to query by this Court. Even then, the only prejudice raised was that
the defendant
would be obliged to run the trial. She submitted that
this hardly counted as proper or serious prejudice.
[19]
She contended that the defendant is simply trying to delay filing a
plea and the finalization
of the claim because it has no defence to
the claim. The issues of whether there has been proper compliance
with the provisions
of clause 5.5 is a matter for evidence.
The law and discussion
[20]
The relevant portions of rule 28 provide as follows:
‘
28(1)
Any party desiring to amend a pleading or document other than a sworn
statement, filed in connection with any proceedings,
shall notify all
other parties of his intention to amend and shall furnish particulars
of the amendment.
(4) if an objection
which complies with sub-rule (3) is delivered within the period
referred to sub-rule (2), the party wishing
to amend may, within 10
days, lodge an application for leave to amend.
[21]
It is trite that a party may seek to amend its pleadings at any time
before judgment has been
granted in a matter. The party seeking an
amendment bears the onus of showing that it is made bona fide and
there is an absence
of prejudice.
[4]
The
tendency of our courts is to allow an amendment unless it is mala
fide or the amendment will cause an injustice to the other
party that
cannot be cured by an appropriate order for costs.
[5]
A
court considering an application for an amendment has a discretion
whether to grant or refuse the application and must exercise
this
discretion judicially.
[6]
[22]
As mentioned at the outset, amendments that have the effect of
rendering such pleading excipiable
or where it does not cure an
excipiable pleading, will not be allowed. I turn therefore to
consider the relevant principles governing
exceptions, which are
relevant to an assessment of the grounds of objection to the
amendments sought, and the exceptions.
[23]
The starting point is the court must accept as correct the
allegations contained in the particulars
of claim, incorporating the
proposed amendment, and determine whether those allegations are
capable of supporting a cause of action
in respect of the plaintiff’s
claim.
[7]
[24]
The defect on the pleadings must appear ex facie the pleadings and no
extraneous facts may be
adduced to show that the pleading is
excipiable.
[8]
The
onus rests on the excipient to show that the pleading is excipiable
on every possible interpretation that can reasonably be
attached to
it.
[9]
[25]
It is common cause that the plaintiff is a law firm and that it seeks
payments of its alleged
outstanding fees pursuant to the written
mandate concluded between the parties. The issue between the parties,
as far as the exceptions
are concerned, turns on the interpretation
of the written mandate and particularly clause 5.5 of the mandate.
The defendant contends
that the amended particulars of claim
discloses no cause of action alternatively is vague and embarrassing.
[26]
The defendant is therefore required to show that the plaintiff’s
claim is bad in law on
the pleadings as sought to be amended, and
further that clause 5.5 of the written mandate cannot reasonably bear
the meaning and
interpretation contended for by the plaintiff.
[10]
[27]
The factual requirements for a cause of action have been
authoritatively stated as the facts
required by a plaintiff, which it
would be necessary to prove, in order to support its right to
judgment.
[11]
The
relationship between an attorney and his client is one of
mandate.
[12]
In
Mucavele
v Health MEC Mpumalanga
[13]
,
Legodi JP commented on the longstanding norms and practices for the
conclusion of a valid and enforceable mandate. These are that
a
client should be informed of the scope of work to be undertaken by
the attorney, the fee amount, hourly rate, payment terms and
what
would happen when a mandate is terminated.
[14]
Unless
agreed to otherwise, the attorney is not entitled to payment of his
fees and/or disbursements until he has performed his
mandate or until
his services have been terminated.
[15]
[28]
A plaintiff is required to allege in the pleadings the material facts
upon which it relies.
[16]
For
a claim based on a written agreement, the plaintiff is obliged by
reference to all the clauses upon which it relies for its
cause of
action, to set out the terms that it relies upon to found its claim
against the defendant.
[17]
An
exception can only be granted where no cause of action is made out on
every interpretation emanating from the pleading being
excepted
against. It is for the excipient to satisfy the court that the
conclusion of law pleaded by the plaintiff cannot be supported
by any
reasonable interpretation of the particulars of claim.
[18]
[29]
In this matter, a copy of the written mandate is annexed to the
particulars of claim. It runs
to 13 pages and sets out in detail the
scope of work to be undertaken by the plaintiff, the fee for its
services and the hourly
rates of the attorneys working on the
transaction. The amended particulars of claim also specifies the
material express terms from
the written mandate in paragraphs 8, 9,
11, 12 and 13.
[30]
The allegations regarding the plaintiff’s compliance with the
terms of the written mandate
and the defendant’s breach have
been pleaded in a lucid and logical fashion. The plaintiff has set
out the reasons for its
deviation from the capped fee amount and
these facts are prima facie in accordance with the written mandate
entitling it to claim
the legal fees sought. The nature of the legal
services provided is apparent from the narrative to the tax invoice,
as are the
details of the attorneys who rendered the services and the
time spent by each. The plaintiff’s detailed allegations in the
amended particulars of claim are amplified by the factual averments
reflected in the annexures.
[31]
I am accordingly, of the view that the defendant has not shown that
the plaintiff’s claim
is bad in law. It has not dispelled, on
exception, that the facts pleaded do not bear the meaning contended
for by the plaintiff
which is that its cause of action is based on
the written mandate; and that in order to claim fees over and above
the agreed capped
amounts, it was required to inform the defendant of
the unforeseen factors requiring additional legal services and that
such factors
would result in an increased legal fee.
[32]
An exception is a pleading and the excipient is bound by the terms in
which it is framed or by
the issues it raises.
[19]
The
exception that the amended particulars of claim does not disclose a
cause of action is premised on the basis that clause 5.5
required the
plaintiff to discuss any increase in the fees with the defendant at
the earliest opportunity, and thereafter proceed
with the work on the
basis of newly agreed arrangements.
[33]
Those averments are set out in the amended particulars of claim. The
argument that clause 5.5
required a new written agreement setting out
the terms of the new arrangements was advanced for the first time in
argument before
this Court. Regardless, a plain reading of clause 5.5
in the context of the pleadings as a whole does not support the
defendant’s
argument that the only possible interpretation is
the parties were required to conclude a new written agreement setting
out the
terms of the new arrangements.
[34]
Exception proceedings are not the correct proceedings for the
defendant to advance and ventilate
that argument since it is apparent
that evidence will be required for a proper determination of that
issue and whether or not the
parties intended a new written agreement
was required before the plaintiff could perform the additional legal
services or claim
its fees for those additional legal services.
[20]
Those
issues are more appropriately to be determined by the trial court on
evidence before it.
[21]
[35]
An exception on the ground that a pleading is vague and embarrassing
involves consideration whether
it lacks particularity to the extent
that it is vague; and whether the vagueness causes embarrassment to
the extent that the excipient
is prejudiced.
[22]
The
excipient must show a real point of law or real embarrassment and not
mere conjecture of vague and embarrassment in order for
the exception
to be upheld.
[23]
An
exception that a pleading is ambiguous cannot succeed unless, on
every interpretation possible, no cause of action is disclosed.
[24]
The
onus is upon the excipient to show both vagueness amounting to
embarrassment and embarrassment amounting to prejudice.
[25]
[36]
The dicta of Heher J in
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones
[26]
is apposite, where the court held:
‘
When the lack
of particularity relates to mere detail, the remedy of the defendant
is to plead to the averment made and to obtain
the particularity he
requires: (i) either by means of discovery/inspection of document
procedure in terms of the Rules; or (ii)
by means of a request for
particulars for trial of those particulars which are strictly
necessary to enable the defendant to prepare
for trial…
[a] an exception that
the pleading is vague and embarrassing may only be taken when the
vagueness and embarrassment strikes at the
root of the cause of
action as pleaded; whereas (b) Rule 30 may be invoked to strike out
the claim pleaded when individual averments
do not contain sufficient
particularity; it is not necessary that the failure to plead material
facts goes to the root of the cause
of action. It is therefore
incumbent upon a plaintiff only to plead a complete cause of action
which identifies the issues upon
which the plaintiff seeks to rely,
and on which evidence will be led, in intelligible and lucid form and
which allows the defendant
to plead to it. The attacks mounted by the
defendants that the particulars of claim are vague and embarrassing
cannot found on
the mere averment that they are lacking in
particularity. This might, depending on the circumstances, allow an
application in terms
of Rule 30. An allegation that a pleading is
vague and embarrassing is far more serious than a complaint about
particulars. Furthermore,
in approaching these exceptions, I shall
bear in mind the following general principles: (a) minor blemishes
are irrelevant; (b)
pleadings must be read as a whole; no paragraph
can be read in isolation; (c) a distinction must be drawn between the
facta probanda,
or primary factual allegations which every plaintiff
must make, and the facta probantia, which are the secondary
allegations upon
which the plaintiff will rely in support of his
primary factual allegations. Generally speaking, the latter are
matters for particulars
for trial and even then are limited. For the
rest, they are matters for evidence;…’
[27]
[37]
This reasoning may be applied to the defendant’s contentions
that the amended particulars
of claim are vague and embarrassing. The
defendant’s criticism of paragraph 16 and 22 are without merit.
The additional factual
averments sought are firstly evident from the
pleadings and the annexures to the pleadings. Secondly, where it
contends that they
are not, the failure to plead those factual
averments does not strike at the root of the cause of action when the
amended particulars
of claim are considered holistically. The factual
averments sought do not constitute the primary factual allegations
required to
sustain a cause of action. They are, properly considered,
the
facta probantia, which
are secondary allegations upon
which the plaintiff will rely in support of its primary allegations.
[38]
I am of the view that the specific particularity required by the
defendant does not affect its
ability to plead to the averments in
the amended particulars of claim. It has not advanced any reason that
may be considered as
constituting serious prejudice thereby entitling
it to an expungement of the entire or part of the amended particulars
of claim.
The defendant retains its recourse in terms of the Uniform
Rules of Court to seek further particularity to enable it to prepare
for trial.
Conclusion and Order
[39]
I am mindful that the primary object of allowing an amendment is for
the proper ventilation of
the dispute between the parties in order to
determine the real issues between them so that justice may be
done.
[28]
[40]
Having considered the pleadings as a whole, I am of the view that the
plaintiff has pleaded a
complete cause of action, which identifies
the issues it seeks to rely on, and on which evidence will be led.
The defendant’s
exceptions that the amended particulars of
claim do not disclose a cause of action and /or are vague and
embarrassing are without
merit. The defendant has not established
that it would be seriously prejudiced if its exceptions are not
upheld.
[41]
In the result, I make the following order:
(a)
the plaintiff’s application for leave to amend the particulars
of claim dated 1 April 2021, is
granted with costs.
(b)
the plaintiff is directed to file the amended particulars of claim
within ten days of the date of this
order.
(c)
the defendant’s exceptions are dismissed with costs.
T
NICHOLS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
Date
Heard:
12 August 2021
Counsel for plaintiff
:
Adv Olivier
Attorney for the
plaintiff:
Tshisevhe Gwina Ratshimbilani Inc
Sandhurst
Ref: P
Tshisevhe/R Adams/MAT3093
Email:
p.tshisevhe@tgrattorneys.co.za
r.adams@tgrattorneys.co.za
Counsel for the
defendant:
Adv Clark
Attorney for the
defendant:
Brian Kahn Inc
Johannesburg
Ref: B
Kahn/ K Reddy/kr/G970
Email:
brian@briankahn.co.za
keri@briankahn.co.za
[1]
YB
v SB
2016 (1) SA 47
(WCC) para 11.
[2]
Hill
NO v Brown
(3069/20)
[2020] ZAWCHC 61
(3 July 2020) para 8.
[3]
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd v Advertising Standards Authority SA
(459/2004)
[2005] ZASCA 73
;
[2006] 1 ALL SA 6
(SCA) (9 September 2005) para 3.
[4]
Krische
v Road Accident Fund
2004 (4) SA 358
(W) at 363.
[5]
Ascendis
Animal Health (Pty) Ltd v Merck Sharp Dohme Corporation and Others
2020 (1) SA 327
(CC) para 89;
Affordable
Medicines Trust v Minister of Health
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3) SA 247
(CC) at 261C–D.
[6]
YB
v SB
2016 (1) SA 47
(WCC) para 9.
[7]
Stewart
and Another v Botha and Another
2009(6) SA 310 (SCA) para 4.
[8]
Barnard
v Barnard
2000(3) SA 741(C) para 10.
[9]
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Limited v Perry NO and others
2001
(3) SA 960
(SA) at 965 C-D.
[10]
Trustees,
Bus Industry Restructuring Fund v Break Through Investments
CC & others
2008 (1) SA 67
(SCA) para 11.
[11]
McKenzie
v Farmers’ Cooperative Meat Industries Ltd
1922 AD 16
at 23;
Evins
v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
1980
(2) 814 A at 825G.
[12]
Mort
NO v Henry Shields-Chiad
2001
(1) SA 464
C.
[13]
Mucavele
v Health MEC Mpumalanga
(3352/2016)
[2022] ZAMPMBHC 33 (16 May 2022).
[14]
Mucavele
ibid
at para 8.
[15]
Goodricke
& Son v Auto Protection Insurance Co Ltd (in Liquidation)
1968
(1) SA 717
(A) at 722-723.
[16]
Minister
of Safety & Security v Slabbert
[2009]
ZASCA 163
[2010] 2 ALL SA 474
SCA para 11.
[17]
Imprefed
(Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission
1993
(3) SA 94
(A) at 107 B-H.
[18]
Trustees
for the time being of the Childrens’ Resources Centre Trust &
Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd & Others
(Legal Resources Centre
as Amicus Curiae)
[2013]
1 ALL SA 648
(SCA) para 36.
[19]
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998
(1) SA 836
(W) at 898F – 899A.
[20]
Gordon
Lloyd Page and Associates v Riviera & another
2001
(1) SA 88
(SCA) 95J;
Picbel
Groepvoororgfonds (in liquidation) v Somerville & others
2013
(5) SA 496
(SCA) para 39.
[21]
Gordon
Lloyd Page and Associates v Riviera & another
2001
(1) SA 88
(SCA) at 95J;
[22]
Steve’s
Wrought Iron Works and Others v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan
Municipality
para
24.
[23]
South
African National Parks v Ras
2002
(2) SA 537
(C) at 542.
[24]
South
African National Parks
ibid
at 540.
[25]
Francis
v Sharp and others
2004
(3) SA 230
(C) at 240.
[26]
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998
(1) SA 836 (W).
[27]
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998
(1) SA 836
(W) at 902C-903A.
[28]
YB
v SB
2016 (1) SA 47
(WCC) para 11.
sino noindex
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