Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 512South Africa
Dr LJ Faul and Associates NO 14 Incorporated and Others v Medicross Healthcare Group (Pty) Ltd (28795/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 512 (8 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dr LJ Faul and Associates NO 14 Incorporated and Others v Medicross Healthcare Group (Pty) Ltd (28795/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 512 (8 August 2022)
Dr LJ Faul and Associates NO 14 Incorporated and Others v Medicross Healthcare Group (Pty) Ltd (28795/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 512 (8 August 2022)
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sino date 8 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO. 28795/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
8
August 2022
In
the matter between:
DR
LJ FAUL AND ASSOCIATES NO 14 INCORPORATED
First
Applicant
(Registration
Number: 1995/009634/21)
DR
CHRISTIAAN HARMSE
Second
Applicant
DR
ANNE VAN DER SPUY
Third
Applicant
DR
HERMANN ECKHARD HAMBROCK
Fourth Applicant
DR
KEVIN PATRICK O’HARE
Fifth
Applicant
DR
NICHOLAAS JOHANNES GROBBELAAR
Sixth
Applicant
DR
HAROLD PLIT
Seventh
Applicant
DR
PAULINE MWIMBA SIAME
Eighth
Applicant
and
MEDICROSS
HEALTHCARE GROUP (PTY) LTD
Respondent
(Registration
Number: 1992/002328/07)
JUDGMENT
NOCHUMSOHN
AJ
1.
This is an application in which the Applicants seek an
order for payment from the Respondent to the First Applicant only, of
R1
913 005.34 plus interest thereon at the rate of 10,25% per annum
calculated from 1 March 2019 to date of payment.
2.
Pertinently, no relief is sought in favour of the Second
to Eighth Applicants, inclusive.
3.
The First Applicant is an incorporated professional
company carrying on business as a medical practice. The Second to
Eighth Applicants
are doctors and members of the First Applicant.
4.
The Respondent is the Medicross Healthcare Group (Pty)
Limited, with whom the First Applicant only, had entered into a trio
of agreements,
which form the subject matter of this litigation.
5.
The first of the trio of agreements, comprised an
Administration Agreement, in terms of which the entire administration
of the First
Applicant’s practice and all functions ancillary
thereto was contracted by the First Applicant to the Respondent for
payment
of a monthly fee. The monthly fee is not an issue in dispute
before me.
6.
The second of the trio of agreements comprised a
Financing and Loan Agreement, concluded on the same day as the
Administration Agreement.
In terms of this agreement, the
Respondent would lend to the First Applicant, on a monthly basis, the
aggregate amount payable
by the First Applicant to the practitioners,
in terms of their consultancy agreements with the First Applicant.
7.
The third in the trio of agreements, comprised a cession
of book debts, in which the First Applicant ceded to the Respondent
in securitatem debiti,
all
claims as continuing covering security for the due payment of all
sums of money which the First Applicant may owe to the Respondent.
8.
The three agreements, although executed as separate
instruments, are inextricably linked. In fact, the execution of
the Financing
and Loan agreement and the Cession Agreement are listed
as being conditions precedent to the Administration Agreement under
clause
3 thereof (Caselines 01-43). All three were
contemporaneously signed by the parties, and together they constitute
the matrix
of the contractual relationship. The Administration
Agreement cannot survive without the other two agreements, and vice
versa.
9.
Under the Administration Agreement, the Respondent was
given and took total control of the business of the First Applicant.
This
included not only logistical, financial and accounting control,
but the First Applicant actually gave the Respondent control of
its
bank account, The Respondent “swept” the bank account
monthly, and applied the credit balance to the medical practitioners
consultancy fees and practice over heads, and advanced any deficit on
a month to month basis, as it was obliged to do under the
Financing
and Loan Agreement.
10.
The Administration Agreement was terminable at the
instance of either party on the giving of 90 days written notice.
11.
On 13 November 2018, the Respondent gave such written
notice, thereby terminating the Administration Agreement, with the
effective
date of termination being 28 February 2019. The trio
of agreements remained binding until that day.
12.
The Respondent failed to pay the consultancy fees to the
First Applicant for the months of January 2019 and February 2019,
which
the First Applicant claims, pursuant to the Financing and Loan
Agreement. The cause of action is primarily for payment of
such
consultancy fees, under the Financing and Loan Agreement. It is
common cause between the parties that the quantum of
this portion of
the claim is R1 159 713.84. This concession was very specifically
clarified by me with Counsel for both Parties
at the commencement of
argument.
13.
The balance of the cause of action constitutes a variety
of claims, in the total sum of R 753 291.50, which I do not need to
deal
with in this judgement as such amount has been unconditionally
tendered by the Respondent to the First Applicant. These two
amounts total the amount of R1 913 005.34 as sought in the
Amended Notice of Motion.Although the papers are prolix and entail
a
multitude of disputes, these all dissipated to the extent that
ultimately the only issue for determination was the interpretation
of
Paragraphs 3 and 4 of the Financing and Loan Agreement, in the
context of whether the obligation for the Respondent to pay such
consultancy fees remained binding for the last two month of the
contract, being January and February 2019.
14.
In open court, at the commencement of the hearing Adv
van der Berg SC for the Applicants, and Advocatess Stockwell SC and
Posthumus
for the Respondent, unanimously agreed and conceded that if
I interpret the clauses to mean that the consultancy fees are payable
by the Respondent to the First Applicant for the months of January
and February 2019, then the undisputed quantum of such payment
would
be R 1 159 713.84. As such it became unnecessary for me to deal with
the many factual disputes in the papers pertaining to
the quantum of
the claim
15.
An examination of the Financing and Loan agreement,
reveals the following:
15.1.
“
Consultancy Agreement” is defined to mean
the agreements entered into between the First Applicant and ‘the
practitioners’,
in terms of which the practitioners have
undertaken to provide medical services to patients of the First
Applicant;
15.2.
Loan accounts are defined to mean the loan accounts
referred to in clause 3;
15.3.
Practitioners are defined to mean the persons listed in
annexure “A” to such agreement, who are both shareholders
of
the First Applicant, and have entered into consultancy agreements;
15.4.
In the preamble, it is recorded that “
the
company [
the First Applicant
]
may require financing in order to pay the consultancy fees payable to
the practitioners in terms of the consultancy agreements.
Medicross has agreed to lend and advance sufficient amounts to the
company so that the company can pay the aforementioned consultancy
fees
”
;
15.5.
Under the heading “
THE
LOAN”
, paragraph 3 of the agreement
reads as follows:
“
3.1
Medicross
agrees to lend and the Company agrees to borrow, on a month to month
basis, the aggregate amount payable by the Company:
3.1.1
to the practitioners in terms of the consultancy agreements, for the
relevant month; and
3.1.2
in respect of all materials, consumables and injections used by the
practitioners in rendering medical services
in terms of the
consultancy agreements, for the relevant month.
3.2
A loan account in the books of the Company will be opened in the name
of Medicross and credited,
from time to time, with all amounts lent
and advanced to the Company in terms of clause 3.
3.3
In the event that the Company is unable to make payment of the full
amount of the monthly
consideration due to Medicross in terms of the
administration agreement, the loan account in the books of the
Company will be increased,
from time to time, with all amounts owing
by the Company to Medicross in terms of the administration
agreement.”
16.
In its plain and ordinary meaning, paragraph 3.1, as
read with paragraph 3.1.1. can only mean that the Respondent agreed
to lend
to the First Applicant, who agreed to borrow, on a
month-to-month basis, the aggregate amount payable by the First
Applicant to
the practitioners in terms of the consultancy
agreements, for the relevant month. In the Founding Affidavit, the
First Applicant
alleged that it had not paid the consultancy fees to
the Second to Eighth Applicants for months of January and February
2019 (Caselines
01-11, paragraph 19.5).
17.
One possible escape for the Respondent lay in the fact
that only three of the Applicants met the definition of
“
practitioners”
.
Only three of them were listed in annexure “A” to
the Financing and Loan Agreement. There is no evidence
reflecting that the remaining Applicants had also entered into
consultancy agreements. Whilst this defence was raised in
both
in the Respondent’s Answering Affidavit, and in Mr Stockwell’s
Heads of Argument, he completely abandoned this
defence during the
course of his argument. ..
18.
As such, the fact that not all the Applicants meet the
definition of “
practitioners
”
,
became a non-issue, and it would be wrong to non-suit the First
Applicant on this ground
19.
Paragraph 3.2 of the Financing and Loan Agreement
specifically provides that a loan account would be opened in the
books of the
First Applicant, in the name of the Respondent and
credited with all amounts lent and advanced in terms of clause 3.
20.
Paragraph 4 of the Financing and Loan Agreement created
a mechanism for the Respondent to hold security from the First
Applicant,
for all amounts to be loaned by the Respondent to the
First Applicant.
21.
Paragraph 4, under the heading “
Cession
of Book Debt and Waiver of Claim”
of
the agreement reads:
“
4.1
It is recorded
that the Company has ceded all amounts owing to it, arising out of or
in connection with the practice (“the
book debts”) to and
in favour of Medicross, in securitatem debiti, as continuing covering
security for the due payment of
all sums of money which the Company
may now or at any time hereafter owe to Medicross, and for the due
performance of every obligation
which the Company may now or at any
time hereafter owe to or become bound to perform in favour of
Medicross, arising out of this
agreement and/or the administration
agreement.
4.2
If, on
termination of this agreement
and/or the administration agreement
,
the aggregate values of the loan accounts exceeds the face value of
the book debts ceded by the Company to Medicross in terms
of the
above mentioned deed of cession, then Medicross
hereby
waives its claim against the Company for that portion of the loan
accounts which exceeds the face value of the book debts
ceded
.”
{my emphasis}
22.
In a simple interpretation of paragraph 4, the First
Applicant ceded its book debt to the Respondent,
in
securitatem debiti
for the due payment of all
monies which the First Applicant would owe to the Respondent.
However, to the extent that the loan debt
on termination exceeded the
value of the book debt so ceded, the Respondent clearly was at risk.
23.
To this end, under paragraph 4.2, if on termination of
the Financing and Loan Agreement or the Administration agreement, the
loan
accounts exceeded the book debts, then the Respondent waived its
claim for the excess.
24.
There is no evidence of either the value of the loan
account or the quantum of the book debt, as at 28 February 2019. I
am
thus unable to determine the amount of the excess between the two.
Neither am I called upon to make such determination. The
applicability of the waiver of such excess portion (if there was an
excess) is thus incapable of determination and becomes a red
herring.
This is so because the quantum was not in issue, having been agreed
upon by Counsel for the parties.
25.
Such waiver, under paragraph 4.3, was conditional upon
the Applicants not being in breach.
26.
Whilst the papers are replete with suggestions that the
Applicants were in breach, Mr Stockwell did not raise this in
argument.
After the lunch adjournment and before handing the
floor to Mr van der Berg for reply, I asked Mr Stockwell if he wanted
to address
me on the alleged breaches. Mr Stockwell abandoned
this line of argument, leaving me to conclude that if indeed, there
is
an excess, then the waiver is intact.
27.
Although I make no firm ruling, I merely observe that if
judgment is granted as sought, any right of clawback for repayment of
the
loan, would be limited to the value of the book debt as at 28
February 2019. There is no evidence before me of such value.
I
am not called upon to make any determination in this regard.
28.
Mr Stockwell drew my attention to the judgment of Wallis
JA in
Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v
Endumeni Municipality 2012 (4) 593 SA at paragraph 18 page 603
,
which reads:
“
[18]
Over the
last century there have been significant developments in the law
relating to the interpretation of documents, both in this
country and
in others that follow similar rules to our own. It is
unnecessary to add unduly to the burden of annotations
by trawling
through the case law on the construction of documents in order to
trace those developments. The relevant authorities
are
collected and summarised in Bastian Financial Services (Pty) Ltd v
General Hendrik Schoeman Primary School. The present
state of
the law can be expressed as follows: Interpretation be it
legislation, some other statutory instrument, or contract, having
regard to the context provided by reading the particular provision or
provisions in the light of the document as a whole and the
circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence. Whatever the
nature of the document, consideration must be given to the
language
used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and syntax; the
context in which the provision appears, the apparent
purpose to which
it is directed and the material known to those responsible for its
production. Where more than one meaning
is possible each
possibility must be weighed in the light of all these factors.
The process is objective, not subjective.
A sensible meaning is
to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike
results or undermines the apparent purpose
of the document. Judges
must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as reasonable, sensible
or businesslike for the
words actually used. To do so in regard to a statute or
statutory instrument is to cross the divide
between interpretation
and legislation; in a contractual context it is to make a contract
for the parties other than the one they
in fact made. The
‘inevitable point of departure is the language of the provision
itself’ read in context and
having regard to the purpose of the
provision and the background to the preparation and production of the
document.”
29.
Applying
Endumeni
,
Mr Stockwell argued that to give meaning to the enforceability of the
loan agreement, in relation to the claim, it is to be interpreted
and
viewed in the wider context of the full trio of the agreements, as
read with a fourth agreement which was signed between the
First
Applicant and the Respondent on 28 February 2019.
30.
Before dealing with this fourth agreement, I repeat that
the trio of agreements are all inextricably linked. The
effective
date of cancellation of the Administration Agreement is
effectively also the date on which the Financing and Loan Agreement
came
to its end. Ergo, to my mind, the Respondent was obliged to
perform in terms thereof up until 28 February 2019. This entails that
the Respondent was not entitled to refuse to advance consultancy fees
for January and February 2019. Distilled in this way, I can
find no
valid reason as to why the Respondent should be excused from
performing up until the effective date of cancellation of
the trio of
agreements.
31.
That said, there was a fourth agreement concluded on or
about 27 February 2019, styled the “Exit Agreement”. It
sought
to regulate the cessation of the relationship, and it embodies
specific provisions pertaining to the termination of the contractual
relationship between the parties, foreshadowed by all of the
agreements. The Respondent sought refuge in this agreement.
The
main thrust of its argument in this regard was that the First
Applicant had not dealt with the payment of consultancy fees
for
January and February 2019, in the Exit Agreement. Mr Stockwell
argued that it was not the intention of the Respondent
to advance
further funds, on loan account, to meet the obligation under
paragraph 3 of the Financing and Loan Agreement.
Mr Stockwell
argued that the silence on this point, in the Exit Agreement, should
be taken to novate such obligation.I find this
argument
unmeritorious. Surely, the contrary applies in that if was the
intention of the Parties that the Respondent be excused
from
performing for the months of January and February 2019 (just as it
had historically done in all prior months from inception
of the
relationship), then such a provision should have specifically been
written into the Exit Agreement.
32.
I pause to mention that whilst there was lengthy debate
in the papers, as to whether or not the Exit Agreement was binding,
during
the course of argument, after I indicated that I would uphold
the estoppel raised by the Respondent in relation to the alleged
non-authority of Dr O’Hare to bind the First Applicant to its
terms, Mr Van der Berg conceded that the Exit Agreement is binding.
Hence, the issue of the alleged estoppel also became a non-issue.
33.
In making such concession, Mr van der Berg argued that
the terms of the Exit Agreement were of no moment and did not serve
to take
the First Applicant’s case any further. In
response to Mr Stockwell’s submissions
via-a-vis
novation in relation to the exit arrangements, Mr van
der Berg contended that the Exit Agreement does no more than add to
the trio
of agreements, rather than substitute, novate or supersede
such agreements.
34.
Mr Stockwell based his argument upon paragraph 18.1 of
the Exit Agreement, which reads:
“
This
agreement constitutes the sole record of the agreement between the
parties in relation to the subject matter hereof. Neither
party shall
be bound by any express, tacit or implied term, representation,
warranty, promise, or the like not recorded herein.
This agreement
supersedes and replaces all prior
commitments,
undertakings or representations
,
whether oral or written, between the parties in respect of the
subject
matter hereof
.”
(
my
emphasis
)
35.
I do not see how the above paragraph serves to release
the Respondent from the binding provisions of paragraphs 3 and 4 of
the Financing
and Loan Agreement. Such paragraphs were far more
than mere
prior commitments
,
undertakings
or
representations
foreshadowed
under paragraph 18.1 of the Exit Agreement. The Financing and
Loan Agreement was one of the three fundamental
agreements upon which
the entire contractual arrangement hinged, for the whole duration of
the agreement.
36.
Paragraph 18.1 of the Exit Agreement cannot be read to
overwrite the anchor contract in its notice period. I find that this
clause
is intended to supersede and replace prior commitments and
discussions pertaining to the exit mechanisms preceding the signature
of the Exit Agreement. It does not exonerate the Respondent from its
contractual obligations under the Financing and Loan Agreement.
It
would be abusive of the trio of Agreements to find that this is the
case. Paragraph 4.2 of the Financing and Loan Agreement
specifically speaks to termination of the Administration or Financing
and Loan Agreement. I do not believe that clause 18.1 of
the Exit
Agreement effectively removes the obligations created in paragraphs 3
and 4 of the Financing and Loan Agreement.
37.
As referenced above, had it been the intention of the
parties to remove such obligations, the Exit Agreement would have
spoken to
such removal. On the contrary, it did not, but
remained deathly silent on the point. To read such removal into
the
Exit Agreement, would be to manufacture a new agreement for the
parties, which they did not create. This is the very danger
that Wallace JA warned against in
Endumeni
supra
, where
he said “
Judges must be alert to, and
guard against, the temptation to substitute what they regard as
reasonable, sensible or businesslike
for the words actually used.”
38.
In bargaining for this position, Mr Stockwell argued
that in relation to the exit provisions, the four agreements were
inextricably
linked and indivisible. When I pointed out to Mr
Stockwell that paragraph 31 of his Heads of Argument stated the
contrary
position, he advised that his Heads were incorrect in this
respect.
39.
Mr Stockwell’s starting point in linking all four
agreements, commenced with the Administration Agreement. He
drew my
attention to paragraph 6.1 thereof, under which the
Respondent and First Applicant would form a management committee, who
would
meet once per month to review the administration services. He
referred to paragraph 7.2, under which, upon termination, the
First
Applicant would pay to the Respondent all outstanding amounts due in
terms of clause 11. Clause 11 merely speaks to the administration
fee
and has no bearing upon the loan obligation created in paragraph 3 of
the Financing and Loan Agreement.
40.
Mr Stockwell referred me further to paragraph 18.3 of
the Administration Agreement, under which the First Applicant
undertook to
write off all bad debts in accordance with the bad debt
protocol annexed to the Consultancy Agreement. He then drew my
attention
to the mechanisms created in the Consultancy Agreement, to
which the Respondent was not a party, for the writing off of bad
debts.
Such mechanisms provided for monthly reconciliation accounts
for each practitioner, whose consultancy fees would be reduced by all
debt write-offs, in respect of the patients treated by them.
41.
The dynamic of this argument was to demonstrate that in
the final analysis, it would not be possible for the First Applicant
to
owe any one of its practitioners any amount in excess of the book
debt applicable to the patients of that practitioner. I do not
see
how this argument advances the Respondent’s case.
42.
Mr Stockwell was attempting to give credence to the
supposition that the enforcement of the consultancy fees for the
determination
period, would make no commercial or rational sense.
43.
Even if this is true, it is superfluous because
the Respondent did indeed agree to the very specific and unequivocal
contractual
regime in the so-called trio of agreements. As such, the
Respondent is bound to the terms of the Agreement until the effective
date of termination. The Respondent was well able to regulate its
position differently within the notice period. It did not do so.
It
is not for this court to change the terms of an agreement.
44.
Notably, the Respondent has not filed a
conditional counterclaim for repayment of the loan, the quantum was
admitted as being common
cause during the hearing, and there was no
information put before me as to the value of the book debt verses the
value of the loan
account as at date of termination.
45.
Had a counterclaim been instituted, I may then have been
able to take cognisance of the quantum of any clawback. There may
possibly
then have been room for argument of the commercial dynamics,
if the right of clawback had equalled or exceeded the quantum of the
consultancy fees. Absent evidence of this, it would be
speculative and indeed reckless, to delve into those potential
assumptions
and attempt to re-write the agreement.
46.
To my mind, the question of divisibility, is a
non-issue. Whether the agreements are divisible or indivisible,
they interlink
and there is no room for the argument that the Exit
Agreement constitutes the sole treaty of the exit arrangements. From
a further plain read of paragraph 2.2 of the Exit Agreement, it
records that the parties had entered into the Financing and Loan
Agreement in order for the Respondent to advance funds to the First
Applicant. There is nothing in this agreement which serves
to
short-change the plain and ordinary meaning of the Financing and Loan
Agreement, or to diminish from any of the rights and obligations
created thereunder in the twilight months of the contract.
47.
Accordingly, the Respondent accepted the risk that the
loan obligation under the Financing and Loan Agreement may exceed the
security
held under the cession. The First Applicant thus
submitted that the Respondent remained liable to pay the consultancy
fees
during the determination period, regardless of whether it held
sufficient security. I am in agreement with this notion.
48.
The termination notice was given on 13 November 2018,
under which notice, the Administration Agreement would terminate upon
28 February
2019. Accordingly, the First Applicant submitted
that both parties were liable to comply with the contractual
obligations
until 28 February 2019, including the payment of
consultancy fees up until such date. There is no reason to find
to the contrary.
49.
In the Respondent’s Fourth Affidavit, where it
removed its claim to legal fees, it increased its tender to pay to
the Applicant
the sum of R753 291.50.
50.
Curiously, such tender was made unconditionally. As
such, the Respondent should have paid such amount unconditionally.
To
date such tender stands, leaving the Respondent liable to pay to
the First Applicant, the R753 291.50, which on its own version
was unconditionally owing. The failure alone, to have paid such
amount unconditionally, renders the Respondent liable for
the
Applicant’s costs of these proceedings.
51.
Having considered the case in the context of all the
submissions, I find that the arguments presented for the Respondent
against
all of the evidence and concessions made, do not support the
ousting of its liability to pay the consultancy fees for the final
two months of the contact, being January and February 2019. The
terms of the Exit Agreement do not displace such liability.
52.
Finally, on the issue of interest, the Respondent’s
attorneys held an amount in trust which had been paid to them by the
First
Applicant, in order to secure control of its bank account.
Such amount was sufficient to cover the tendered amount. The
First Applicant unreasonably refused to consent to such trust deposit
being held in a separate interest-bearing account under Section
86(4)
of the Legal Practice Act. The effect of this refusal
disentitles the First Applicant to interest upon the tendered
amount.
53.
Accordingly, I make the following order:
53.1.
The Respondent shall pay to the First Applicant, the sum
of R1 913 005.34, plus interest at the rate of 10,25% per annum,
which
interest is to be calculated only upon the amount of R1 159
713.84, from 1 March 2019, to date of payment.
53.2.
The Respondent is ordered to pay to the First
Applicant’s costs on the scale as between party and party,
which costs are to
include to the costs of senior counsel.
NOCHUMSOHN,
G
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
On
behalf of Applicants:
Advocate P van
der Berg SC
E-mail:
pvdberg@law.co.za
Instructed
by:
Mashabane
Liebenberg Sebola Inc
Per:
Theunis Liebenberg and Phyllis Lombaard
E-mail:
theunis@tli.co.za
and
phyllis@tli.co.za
On
behalf of the Respondent:
Advocate R Stockwell SC
Advocate I.L.
Posthumus
E-mail:
rstockwell@adv21.co.za
ian@adv21.co.za
Instructed
by:
Whalley
and Van Der Lith Inc
Per: Barry Ven Der
Lith
E-mail:
barry@wvl.co.za
Date
of Hearing: 05 August 2022
Date
of Judgment: 08 August 2022
This
judgment was authored by Nochumsohn AJ and is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties / their legal
representatives,
by email, and uploading to the electronic file of
this matter on Caselines. The date of this Judgment is deemed
to be 08
August 2022.
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L.G v J.G (32377/2012) [2023] ZAGPJHC 450 (28 April 2023)
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