Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 566South Africa
Tuhf Limited v Esselen Street Hillbrow CC and Others (44393/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 566 (12 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Tuhf Limited v Esselen Street Hillbrow CC and Others (44393/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 566 (12 August 2022)
Tuhf Limited v Esselen Street Hillbrow CC and Others (44393/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 566 (12 August 2022)
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sino date 12 August 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
CASE
NO
:
44393/2020
NOT REPORTABLE’
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
TUHF
LIMITED
Applicant
and
ESSELEN
STREET HILLBROW CC
First
Respondent
266
BREE STREET JOHANNESBURG (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
10
FIFE AVENUE BEREA (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
68
WOLMARANS STREET JOHANNESBURG (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
HILLBROW
CONSOLIDATES INVESTMENTS CC
Fifth
Respondent
MARK
MORRIS FARBER
Sixth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI J:
[1]
This is an opposed application for money judgment and other relief in
terms of which the applicant, TUHF Limited (TUHF) implores
this court
to order all the respondents to pay, jointly and severally the one
paying the other to be absolved, the sum of R9 349
073.89 with
interest accumulates at the rate of 2.50% above the commercial banks’
prime rate plus 1% per year, calculated
daily and compounded monthly
in arrears from 1 February 2020 to date of payment, both dates
included. The other relief related
to exercise of cession of rental
from the tenants of Waldorf Heights (the immovable property) owned by
the first respondent.
[2]
In an alternative to [1] above, TUHF prays that the
respondents be ordered to pay, jointly and severally, the
one paying the others be absolved, the sum of R9 198 953.
70 with interest calculated at the rate of 2.50% above
the commercial banks’ prime rate plus 1% per year,
calculated daily and compounded monthly in arrears from 1 November
2020 to date of payment, both dates included.
[3]
TUHF also seeks that the respondents be ordered to pay the costs on
an attorneys and client scale as agreed to in terms of the
loan
agreement.
[4] TUHF is a public
company with limited liability which carries out its business from
Johannesburg. It is the successor- in-title
of a non-profit company,
Trust for Urban Housing Finance an association incorporated in terms
of section 21 of the Companies Act,
1973, with registration number
1993/00217/08.
[5] The applicant
converted to a private company (registration number: 2007/025898/07),
which subsequently converted to a public
company on 4 November 2014.
[6] The First Respondent
is 28 Esselen Street Hillbrow Close Corporation without the chosen
domicilium citandi et executandi
within the area of
jurisdiction of this Court.
[7] The Second Respondent
is 266 Bree Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd, a private company with a
chosen
domicilium citandi et executandi
within the are of
jurisdiction of this Court.
[8] The Third Respondent
is 10 Fife Avenue Berea (Pty) Ltd, a private company with a chosen
address within the area of jurisdiction
of this Court.
[9] The Fourth Respondent
is 68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd, a private company with
the chosen address of service of
the process within the area of
jurisdiction of this Court.
[10] The Sixth Respondent
is Mr Mark Farber (Mr Farber), an adult male business man with the
chosen address for service of the process
within the area of
jurisdiction of this Court.
[11] All respondents are
related parties and are controlled by the Mr Faber as an ultimate
beneficial owner. The sixth Respondent
is the sole director or member
of the first to the fifth respondents. Mr Farber is the sole
shareholder of the second, third and
the fourth respondents.
[12] Mr Farber
represented the first to the fifth respondents in their dealings with
TUHF.
[13] The second, third,
fourth, fifth respondents and Mr Farber concluded written unlimited
suretyship agreements for the first
respondents’ indebtness in
favour of the applicant.
BACKGROUND
[14] The application
arises as a result of the alleged breach of the deeds of suretyship
warranties contained in the deeds of suretyship
agreement which was
concluded between the parties on 19 October 2016 to 2 November 2016.
[15] The loan agreement
provided that the first respondent would be in breach thereof in the
event that the First Respondent caused
an event of default and failed
to remedy it. The applicant is, in such event entitled to accelerate
and declare all amounts owing
in terms of the loan agreement
immediately due and payable.
[16] In terms of the loan
agreement the first respondent would trigger an event of default,
inter alia
, if:-
16.1. any written
warranty made by the first respondent or any surety is breached; and
16.2. the first
respondent or any surety, breached or repudiated or evidences an
intention to repudiate any of the provisions of
the loan agreement or
the security to which it is a party, and fails to remedy any such
breach within any applicable notice or
cure period calling upon it to
do so.
[17] As security for and
in respect of the due and punctual performance by the first
respondent
of its obligations of whatsoever nature in terms of the loan
agreement, the first respondent would:-
17.1 register a mortgage
bond over an immovable property for an amount of R14 971 050. 00
together with an additional 30% provision
for contingent costs (“the
mortgage bond”)
17.2 ensure that the
sureties pass in favour of the applicant written unlimited suretyship
agreements
[18] In terms of the
suretyship agreements the sureties warranted that the suretyship
agreements would in all respects be valid
and binding (“the
warranty”)
[19] In terms of the
mortgage bond the parties agreed, amongst others, that in the event
of a default, the first respondent ceded
it right to rental income at
the immovable property and the applicant may recover and receive all
rent income and fruits from the
immovable property (“the
cession provision”).
[20] On 2 March 2020, due
to the alleged events of default arising in terms of the loan
agreement the applicant issued an application
under case number
7843/2020 in this court (“the first application”).
APPLICANTS CASE
[21] TUHF avers that on
26 August 2020 in answer to the first application, the respondents
filed a supplementary answering affidavit
(“supplementary
answering affidavit”) in terms of which the respondents
declared under oath,
inter alia
, that the suretyship
agreements passed by the second, to fifth respondents are void in
terms
of section 45(6) of the Companies Act 2008 (“the
Companies
Act&rdquo
;) and not complaint with
section 46
of the
Companies Act.
[22] The respondents
declaration under oath, that the suretyships agreements are void, so
avers the applicant, constitutes an event
of default in terms of the
loan agreement and mortgage bond that arose after the launch of the
first application (“the
new events of default”).
[23] The applicant
contends that due to the new events of default, it is by virtue of
the cession provision in the mortgage bond,
entitled to take cession
of the rental income at the immovable property (“the cession”),
which cession the first respondent
has unlawfully and intentionally
refused to facilitate.
[24] The applicant seeks
an order in terms of the notice of motion.
RESPONDENTS CASE
[25] The respondents
contend that the present application is a pure abuse of the court
process. They contend that the applicant
seeks to exit its
relationship with the respondents at all costs to the extent of
designing the alleged breaches to the loan agreement
to suit its
(TUHF) agenda.
[26] The respondents
contend that the applicant’s
modus operandi
has resulted
in the incurrence of extraordinary legal costs, which the respondents
furthermore contend that the applicant seeks
to outspend the
respondent in this and related litigations.
[27] They contend that
this court process must be stayed, alternatively dismissed on the
following grounds:
27.1.
The matter is
lis
pendens
because:
27.1.1. the first Waldorf
Heights application is between the same parties
as
those in the present matter;
27.1.2. the first Waldorf
Heights application is based on the same cause of
action as in the present
proceedings, being the loan agreement and
mortgage bond thereto,
and
27.1.3. the first Waldorf
Heights application is for the same relief s in the
present
matter, save that in this application, in the alternative the
relief sought in the
first Waldorf Height application, the applicant
seeks
payment of the capital sum and penalty fees from a later date
to that sought in the
first Waldorf Heights application.
[28] The respondents
furthermore contend that the validity of the second to fifth
respondent’s deeds of suretyship is pending
for decision in the
first Waldorf Heights application. They pray that the court should
stay the present application.
[29] It is furthermore
contended by the respondents that the applicant has waived its rights
on the alleged breach warranty concerning
the validity of the deeds
of suretyship in as much as it was aware, alternatively ought
reasonably to have been aware, that the
second to fifth respondents
would not satisfy the solvency and liquidity test after executing the
deeds of suretyship.
[30] The respondents
contend that the short payments made by the first respondent
under the loan agreement-
which were made after the first Waldorf Heights application was
instituted in March 2020, were made as
a consequence of COVID –
relief expressly being granted to the first respondent. The
respondents argued that this raises
genuine disputes of fact.
ISSUES FOR
DETERMINATION
[31] The issues for
determination are summarized as follows:-
31.1.
whether the matter is
lis pendens
due to the first application;
31.2. whether there is a
dispute of fact;
31.3.
whether the validity of the suretyship agreements require
determination before this
application may proceed;
31.4. whether
Rule
46A
of the Uniform Rule is applicable to this application;
31.5. whether the
applicant is engaged in the abuse of the court process.
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
APPLICATION THEREOF TO FACTS AND REASONS
Lis Pendens
[32] In order to
appreciate the issues raised in [31] above, it is important to have
regard to the applicable legal framework pertaining
to all the issues
raised
Lis Pendens
.
[33]
Our law is trite that if an action is already pending between the
parties and the plaintiff brings another action against the
same
defendant on the same cause and in respect of the same
subject-matter, whether in the same or in a different court, it is
open to the defendant to take the objection of
lis
pendens
,
that is, that another action concerning the identical subject-matter
has already been instituted. The court, in its discretion,
may stay
one action pending the decision on the other.
[1]
The cause of action must be identical.
[34] A
defence of
lis
pendens
is
based upon the existence of a pending earlier action. The
requirements of a plea of
lis
pendens
are
the same with regard to the person, cause of action and
subject-matter as those of a plea of
res
judicata
,
[2]
which in turn are that the two actions must have been between the
same parties or either successors in title, concerning the same
subject-matter and founded upon the same cause of complaint.
[3]
[35]
In order to decide what matter is in issue, the pleadings of the
earlier case should be consulted and not the evidence led.
[4]
[36]
The actions may be in the same court or in different courts. A plea
of
lis
pendens
is
valid although the two actions are pending in the same court.
[5]
To bring two actions in one court on the same matter is
prima
facie
vexatious
and the court will generally put the plaintiff to an election.
[6]
[37]
There is also authority that the commencement of the second action is
prima
facie
vexatious
when the two suits are brought in different court of the same
country, where the remedy and the procedure in both are
practically
the same.
[7]
[38]
Lis
pendens
is
not, however, an absolute bar. It is a matter within the discretion
of the court to decide whether an action brought before it
should be
stayed pending the decision of the first action, or whether it is
more just and equitable that it should be allowed to
proceed.
[8]
[39]
Consideration of convenience and fairness are decisive in determining
whether the court will decide that the
lis
which
was first to commence should be the one to proceed.
[9]
[40]
The onus of proving the requisites for the
lis
pendens
defence
rests with the respondents.
[10]
In
Nestle
(SA) (Pty) Ltd v Mars Incorporated
[11]
in
dealing with the features of
lis
pendens
and
res
judicata
court
held that:-
“
[16]
The defence of
lis
alibi pendens
shares
the same features in common with the defence of
res
judicata
because
they have a common underlying principle which is that there should be
finality in litigation. Once a suit
has
been commenced before a tribunal that is competent to adjudicate upon
the suit must generally be brought to its conclusion before
that
tribunal and not be replicated (
lis
alibi pendens
).
By the same token the suit will not be permitted to be revived once
it has been brought to its proper conclusion (
res
judicata
).
The same suit, between the same parties, should be brought only once
and finally.
[17] There is room for
the application of that principle only where the same dispute,
between the same parties is sought to be placed
before the same
tribunal (or two tribunals) with equal competence to end the dispute.
In the absence of any of those elements there
is no potential for a
duplication actions …”
[41] Based on the
principles set out in this judgment on
lis alibi pendens
, the
question is whether or not the respondents have discharged the onus
on establishing the requisites for
lis pendens
and whether
this court should exercise its discretion and stay the proceedings.
[42] In order to
determine the issue, it is relevant to look at the pleadings in the
first application. The first application was
based on breach of the
loan agreement due to the respondents’ alleged failure to pay
rates and taxes. The current application
is based on breach of the
warranty provisions in the deeds of suretyship, in that the
respondents now allege that the suretyship
agreements are invalid or
alleged to be non-compliant with
section 45
of the
Companies Act,
2008
.
[43] The respondents
contend that the present application is based on the same cause of
action. They contend that the first application
was based on the same
loan agreement, the same mortgage bond and the same various deeds of
suretyship. I do not agree with this
submission. It is so that the
same loan agreement, the same mortgage bond and the same various
deeds of suretyship are used in
both applications. However, the
causes of action are distinguishable in that in the first
application, the action was based on
the alleged breach of loan
agreement by failure to make payments for municipal utilities, rates
and taxes. In the current application,
the cause of action is based
on the breach suretyship warranty condition because of the contention
that the deeds of suretyship
are allegedly invalid due to
non-compliance with section 45 of the
Companies Act 2008
based on the
alleged failure by the respondents themselves to comply with the
liquidity and solvency requirements before security
could be provided
to the first respondent.
[44] The exercise of this
court’s discretion, I am of the view that it is in the interest
of justice and fairness
that the present
application should not be stayed on the
grounds
of
lis
alibi pendens
.
Consequently, the respondents have failed to discharge the onus of
proving all the requisites to succeed with the defence of
lis
pendens
.
Dispute of fact
[45]
The respondents contend that there is a dispute of fact such that the
application cannot be decided on the papers. In order
to consider
this argument it is important to state that the legal principles on
the dispute of fact in the motion proceedings are
trite.
[12]
Motion proceedings are decided on papers filed by the parties. In
cases where there is a factual dispute which can only be resolved
through oral evidence
[13]
; it
is appropriate that action proceedings should be used unless the
factual dispute is not real and genuine.
[14]
[46]
In
Stellenbosch
Farmers’ Winery Ltd v Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd
[15]
,
the court held that where there is a dispute of fact, the final
relief should only be granted in notice of motion proceedings
if the
facts as stated by the respondent together with the admitted facts in
the applicant’s affidavit justify such an order.
[47] This rule applies
irrespective of where the onus lies. Where a factual dispute exists
or arises before the hearing of an application
and the applicant does
not seek the matter to be referred either to oral evidence on a
specific issue which is in dispute or to
trial, the court has a
discretion to either dismiss the application or direct that oral
evidence be heard or that the matter goes
to trial.
[48] In the present
application, there is no dispute that the proceedings commenced as a
result of the repudiation of the warranty
provisions in the
suretyship agreements. This led the
applicant
to invoke the provisions of the loan agreement mainly the breach of
the warranty provision by approaching this court and
seeking an
appropriate relief. The relief sought finds support in terms of
clause 18.1 of Common Terms Module of the loan agreement
which
describes an event of default,
inter alia
as breached by any
written warranty made by the fist respondent or any surety.
[49] To aver that the
written warranty given by the respondents as sureties for the
fulfilment of all obligations by the first respondent
is invalid on
any alleged ground, does in my considered view, amount to the breach
contained in the loan agreement. It is for this
reason that the
contention of the alleged dispute of fact cannot be sustained.
[50] The averment that
there is a dispute of fact which renders the application to be
dismissed is therefore without factual merit
and is rejected. The
alleged factual dispute related to the Covid -19 relief is also
irrelevant to the present application.
[51] It should be
accepted by this court that TUHF advanced money to the first
respondent and security provided backed by the security
warranties
contained in the loan agreement would have been one of the
considerations. It is against the provisions of the loan
agreement
for the respondents to challenge suretyship agreements validity based
on the alleged failure by them and not TUHF to
comply with the
solvency and liquidity test in terms of
sections 45
of the Companies
Act, 2008.
The attempt by the
respondents to avoid the contractual obligations on security
warranties, which included the deeds of suretyship
is misplaced.
[52] More importantly,
when TUHF contracted with the respondents, they did so in good faith
with the understanding that the respondents
complied with all their
internal procedures, which without doubt, implied that the respective
boards of all the respondents ensured
that the insolvency and
liquidity test required in terms of the
Companies Act had
been
complied with.
[53]
Section 20
of the
Companies Act 2008
and the Turquand principle which is part of our
law, preclude the respondents from escaping liability under an
otherwise
valid contract solely on
the grounds that some internal formality or procedure was not
complied with. This is understandable because
the internal procedures
or formalities are with the control of the respondents and not TUHF
in this instance. It follows that the
deeds of suretyship are valid
and enforceable.
Rule 46A of the
Uniform Rules
[54] The respondents aver
that Rule46A of the Uniform Rules is applicable in this application.
They contend that notice of motion
is not in accordance with Form 2A
of Schedule 1 to the Rules; notice of proceedings has not been given
to persons who will be affected
by the sale of Waldorf Heights and
that this application is not supported by all the information set out
in rule 46A (5).
[55] Rule 46A deals with
execution against residential property which is the judgment debtor’s
primary residence. Rule 46A
(1) and (2) provide as follows:-
“
(1)
This rule applies whenever an execution creditor seeks to
execute
against the residential
immovable property of a judgment debtor
(2)
(a) A court considering an application under this rule must
(i) establish
whether the immovable property which the
execution
creditor intend to execute against is the primary residence of the
judgment debtor; and
(ii) consider
alternative means by the judgment debtor of
satisfying
the judgment debtor’s primary residence.
(b) A court shall
not authorize execution against immovable property which is the
primary residence of a judgment debtor unless
the court, having
considered all relevant factors, considers that execution against
such property is warranted.
(c) The registrar shall
not issue a writ of execution against the residential immovable
property of any judgment debtor unless a
court has ordered execution
against such property.”
[56] The rule does not
apply to legal persons such as the first respondent for a logical
reason that a company can never be resident
of the property it owns.
It is apparent to me that the first respondent acquired Waldorf
Heights as a business venture. The property
has several floors and is
rented to tenants as residential units.
[57] Rule 46A does not
find application on commercial properties such as the one owned by
the first respondent. The tenants enjoy
separate rights and
privileges which are covered by their lease agreements with the first
respondent. Our common law accords protection
to them in that whoever
in the future by way of sale of the property through private treaty
or as part of execution of a judgment,
Purchases the property,
the owner is required to honour the obligations of the seller
contained in the lease. This is in accordance
with the common law
principle of “
Huur gaat voort Koop”
meaning lease
takes precedent over sale. The proposition that individual tenants
need to be advised of the judicial proceedings
between the parties in
this application has no legal support.
ABUSE OF COURT
PROCESS
[58] The respondents
contend that TUHF is engaged in the abuse of the court process in
order to put undue pressure on the respondents
in the second
respondent’s dispute with TUHF in relation to the Metro Centre
matter.
[59]
The definition of the meaning of abuse of court process was used with
approval by our courts. In the Australian High Court
judgment of
Varawa
v Howard South Co Ltd
[16]
the definition of ‘abuse of process’ was stated in the
following terms:
“…
the
term ‘abuse of process’ connotes that the process is
employed for some purpose other than the attainment of the
claim in
the action. If the proceedings are merely a stalking – horse to
coerce the defendant in some way entirely outside
the ambit of the
legal claim upon which the Court is asked to adjudicate they are
regarded as an abuse for this purpose …”
[60]
The court in
Phillip
v Botha
[17]
adopted the definition of the Australian High Court definition of the
“abuse of process” where the litigant clearly
stated that
the purpose of litigation was not a civil redress but to show that
the law applied equally to all citizens. The court
correctly held
that the proceedings amounted to abuse of process. There is therefore
support in our law that no litigant should
be allowed to engage in
the abuse of court process.
[61] In the instant case,
there is no evidence of abuse of court process. The litigation was
initiated as a consequence of the repudiation
of securities and
warranties contained in the loan agreement, mortgage bond and deeds
of suretyship. It follows that the
defence of abuse of court
process must accordingly fail.
ORDER
[62] The following order
is made:
62.1.
28 ESSELEN STREET HILLBROW CC
,
266 BREE STREET JOHANNESBURG (PTY) LTD
,
10 FIFE AVENUE BEREA (PTY) LTD
,
68 WOLMARANS STREET JOHANNESBURG (PTY)
LTD
,
HILLBROW
CONSOLIDATED INVESTMENTS CC
, and
MARK
MORRIS FARBER
(“
the
Respondents
”
) pay, jointly and
severally, the one paying the others to be absolved, the sum of
R9,198,953.70
with
interest calculated at the rate of 2.50% above the commercial banks’
prime rate plus 1% per year, calculated daily and
compounded monthly
in arrears from
1 November 2020
to date of payment, both dates included;
62.2.
The Applicant is with immediate effect authorised to take cession of
any rental amounts payable by every tenant occupying
the immovable
property known as Waldorf Heights (“
Waldorf Heights’
tenants
”) to
28 ESSELEN STREET HILLBROW CC
(“
the
First Respondent
”),
alternatively
to the
Respondents,
further alternatively
to its duly
authorised agent (“
the cession
”);
62.3.
The Respondents sign all documents necessary to facilitate the
cession in 0 above, failing which the Sheriff is authorised
to sign
all documents necessary to give effect to the cession;
62.4.
The Respondents furnish the Applicant, within 15 days of this order,
with the names and contact information of the Waldorf
Heights’
tenants together with: -
62.4.1.
Copies of any written lease agreements concluded between the Frst
Respondent,
alternatively
the
Respondents,
further
alternatively
its
duly authorised agent, and the Waldorf Heights’ tenants;
62.4.2.
Particularity in respect of the terms of any implied and/or oral
terms of any lease agreement concluded with the Waldorf
Heights’
tenants; and
62.4.3.
Particularity and copies of any existing property management mandates
for the management of and rental collection at the
Waldorf Heights;
62.5.
The Applicant may take steps necessary for purposes of collecting
rental amounts from the Waldorf Heights’ tenants;
62.6.
The immovable property at:
ERF [...] JOHANNESBURG
TOWNSHIP
REGISTRATION DIVISION
I.R., THE PROVINCE OF GAUTENG
MEASURING 495 (FOUR
HUNDRED AND NINETY-FIVE) SQUARE METRES
HELD by Deed of
Transfer number [...]
(hereinafter
referred to as the “immovable property”)
be
declared executable, and the Applicant is authorised to issue Writs
of Attachment calling upon the Sheriff of the Court to attach
the
immovable property, to sell the immovable property in execution;
62.7.
The Respondents be ordered to pay a penalty fee equal to 5% (Five
Percent) plus VAT of the
monthly outstanding instalment amount
in arrears and unpaid by the First Respondent within 2 (Two) days of
an Instalment Payment
Date
as from
10
November 2020
, to date of payment in full of 62.1 above,
both dates included
;
62.8.
Cost on attorney and client scale.
ML SENYATSI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE
APPLICATION HEARD
:
27
October 2021
DATE
REVISED JUDGMENT DELIVERED
: 12
August 2022
APPEARANCES
Counsel for the
applicant:
Adv A. Botha SC
Adv E. Eksteen
Instructed
by:
Schindlers
Attorneys
Counsel
for the first respondents:
Adv
G Wickins SC
Adv
M De Oliveira
Instructed
by:
Gavin
Simpson Attorneys
[1]
See
Cilliers, Loots, Nel: Herbstein & Van Winsen: The Civil Practice
of the High Courts of South Africa, 5
th
Edition,
Juta, Volume 1 at p310
[2]
See
Mark & Kantor v Van Diggelen
1935 TPD 29
AT 37; Van As v
Appollus 1993(1) SA 606 (C) at 608J- 609a
[3]
See
Pretorius v Barkley East Divisional Council
1914 AD 407
at 409;
Milford’s Executor v Edben’s Executor
1917 AD 682
; Le
Roux v Le Roux 1967 (1) SA 446 (A)
[4]
See
Marks & Kantor v Van Diggelen supra at 33
[5]
See
Mark v Kantor supra at 29
[6]
See
Osman v Hector 1933 CPD 503
[7]
See
Osman v Hector supra at 508
[8]
See
Michael v Lowenstein
1905 TS 324
at 328; Les Marquis (Pty) Ltd v
Marchand
1989 (2) SA 651
(T) at 658D; Yekelo v Bodlani
1990 (3) SA
970
(T) AT 973d; Friedrich Kling GmbH v Continental Jewellery
Manufacturers; Guthmann v Wittenauer GmbH v Continental Jewellery
Manufacturers
1993 (3) SA 76
(C) at 83 D
[9]
See
Van As v Appollus supra 610D
[10]
See
Dreyer v Truckers Land and development Corporation (Pty) Ltd
1981
(1) SA 1219
(T) at 1231; Sikatele v Sikatele [1996] 1 Alll SA 445
(Tk)
[11]
[2001]
4 All SA 315
(A) at [16] to [17]
[12]
See
Stellenbosch Farmers Winery Ltd v Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd 1957
(A) SA 234 (C) at 235
[13]
See
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd [1984] 2 All
SA 366 (A)
[14]
See
Soffiantin v Mould [1956] 4 All SA 171 (E)
[15]
Supra
at 235 E-G
[16]
[1911] HCA 46
;
(1911)
13 CLR 35
at 91
[17]
1999
(2) 555 (SCA) at 565E
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