Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 672South Africa
B v M :In re: M v B and Another (21/45131) [2022] ZAGPJHC 672 (7 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 September 2022
Headnotes
and that the plaintiff’s claim be dismissed with costs on a punitive scale. The plaintiff seeks dismissal of the exception with costs.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## B v M :In re: M v B and Another (21/45131) [2022] ZAGPJHC 672 (7 September 2022)
B v M :In re: M v B and Another (21/45131) [2022] ZAGPJHC 672 (7 September 2022)
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sino date 7 September 2022
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
21/45131
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
07 /09/2022
In the matter between:
M
[....] 1 B [....]
Excipient
And
J
[....] P [....] M [....] 2
Respondent
in re:
J
[....] P [....] M [....] 2
Plaintiff
And
M
[....] 1 B [....]
First Defendant
THE SHERIFF FOR THE
DISTRICT OF
RANDBURG
SOUTH WEST
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
Olivier, AJ:
Introduction
[1]
The excipient is the first defendant in an
action instituted by the plaintiff (respondent in this exception
application). The second
defendant is the Sheriff for the district of
Randburg South West. For considerations of practicality and/or ease
of reference and
clarity, I shall refer to the parties herein as in
the main action.
[2]
The first defendant, an adult female, and
the plaintiff, an adult male, are former spouses. One child was born
of the marriage,
on 1 June 1993. The marriage was dissolved on 20
September 1995. The settlement agreement concluded between the
parties was made
an order of court.
[3]
The settlement agreement provided for the
maintenance obligations of the plaintiff. At the time of the divorce,
the plaintiff was
already in arrears in respect of his maintenance
obligations. The settlement agreement provided for payment of past
and future
maintenance for the child, and for other expenses,
including educational and medical.
[4]
On 6 April 2021 the Registrar of this Court
issued a writ of execution against the plaintiff’s movables in
the amount of R
2 154 461.81. The debt arises from the plaintiff’s
alleged failure to meet his obligations in terms of the settlement
agreement.
She approached the Registrar with an affidavit, to which
was attached a schedule setting out certain amounts, drawn from
source
documentation in her possession. The source documentation was
not presented to the Registrar.
[5]
On 21 September 2021 the plaintiff caused a
combined summons to be issued to set aside the warrant of execution.
[6]
The first defendant raises an exception
against the formulation of the plaintiff’s claim, alleging that
it fails to disclose
a cause of action. She seeks that the exception
be upheld and that the plaintiff’s claim be dismissed with
costs on a punitive
scale. The plaintiff seeks dismissal of the
exception with costs.
[7]
The first defendant raises a point in
limine, which must first be considered.
Point
in limine
[8]
The essence of the preliminary point is
that the only way to challenge a writ of execution is by way of
application proceedings
in terms of Rule 45A of the Uniform Rules of
Court (“the Rules”). The first defendant calls the action
proceedings
launched by the Plaintiff a tactic of delay.
[9]
It
is trite that any party initiating litigation must make an election
whether to proceed either by way of action, or by application.
Critical to this decision is whether the litigant anticipates a
bona
fide
dispute
of fact to arise which will require oral evidence to be led. If such
a dispute is anticipated, a trial action should be
instituted.
[1]
[10]
A litigant runs the risk that should a
matter be initiated by way of an application, and the court finds
that she or he should have
foreseen that a material dispute of fact
will arise at the time the application was brought, the court may
dismiss the application
with costs. A litigant must therefore
consider her or his options carefully.
[11]
The plaintiff submits that such disputes of
fact exist in this case and that the only way to resolve them is by
way of trial. The
plaintiff disputes the veracity of the claim, the
amount of indebtedness, the computation of the claim, the
reasonableness and
legality of the alleged expenses, and more. He
contends that it is not a liquidated sum and cannot be ascertained
without leading
evidence.
[12]
According
to D.E. van Loggerenberg, “[t]he proper procedure for setting
aside a writ is by application to set it aside, at
least where no
facts are in dispute …”.
[2]
The statement from the learned author implies that if there are facts
in dispute, the challenge to the writ of execution can be
launched as
action proceedings.
[13]
The first defendant submits that the
plaintiff did not plead any dispute of fact and that he has also not
made out a case that there
are any disputes of fact. It appears to me
from the particulars of claim that there are disputes of fact.
[14]
It is my view that a challenger to a writ
of execution may bring the challenge by way of action proceedings,
provided he anticipates
a dispute of fact at the time that the
litigation is launched. The point
in
limine
is accordingly dismissed.
Relevant legal
principles
[15]
Exceptions are regulated by Rule 23(1). The
function of an exception is that if a pleading does not disclose a
cause of action,
it disposes of the case, in whole or in part. It
raises a substantive question of law which may have the effect of
settling the
dispute between the parties. To assess whether a
pleading lacks the necessary averments to sustain a cause of action,
it is necessary
to consider the contested pleading (in this case the
particulars of claim).
[16]
The
legal principles applicable to exceptions were set out very recently
by Van Oosten J in
Vayeke
Sivuka & 328 Others v Ramaphosa and Others
,
with reference to Supreme Court of Appeal jurisprudence:
[3]
[4] In the recent
judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Luke M Tembani and
Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and Another
(Case
no 167/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 70
(20 May 2022), the general principles
relating to and the approach to be adopted in regard to adjudicating
exceptions were summarised
as follows (para14):
‘
Whilst
exceptions provide a useful mechanism ‘to weed out cases
without legal merit’, it is nonetheless necessary that
they be
dealt with sensibly (Telematrix (Pty) Ltd v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
[2005] ZASCA 73
;
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) para 3). It is
where pleadings are so vague that it is impossible to determine the
nature of the claim, or where pleadings
are bad in law in that their
contents do not support a discernible and legally recognised cause of
action, that an exception is
competent (Cilliers et al Herbstein &
Van Winsen The Practice of the High Courts of South Africa 5ed Vol 1
at 631; Jowell v
Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998 (1) SA 836
(W) at
899E-F). The burden rests on an excipient, who must establish that on
every interpretation that can reasonably be attached
to it, the
pleading is excipiable (
Ocean Echo
Properties 327 CC and Another v Old Mutual Life Insurance Company
(South Africa) Ltd
[2018] ZASCA 9
;
2018
(3) SA 405
(SCA) para 9). The test is whether on all possible
readings of the facts no cause of action may be made out; it being
for the excipient
to satisfy the court that the conclusion of law for
which the plaintiff contends cannot be supported on every
interpretation that
can be put upon the facts (
Trustees
for the Time Being of the Children’s Resource Centre Trust and
Others v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2012] ZASCA 182
;
2013 (2) SA 213
(SCA);
2013 (3) BCLR 279
(SCA);
[2013] 1 All SA 648
(SCA) para 36 (
Children’s
Resource Centre Trust
)).’
[5] In adjudicating this
exception, the court is enjoined to accept the facts pleaded by the
plaintiffs as true and not to have
regard to any other extraneous
facts or documents (
Pretorius and Another v Transport Pension Fund
and Another
2019 (2) SA 37
(CC) para 15). Only primary factual
allegations that are necessary for the plaintiff to prove (facta
probanda) in order to support
his right to judgment of the court,
must be pleaded and a plaintiff is not required to plead secondary
allegations (facta probantia)
upon which the plaintiff will rely in
support of the primary factual allegations (
Trope v South African
Reserve Bank and Another and Two Other Cases
1992 (3) SA 208
(T)
210G-H, quoted with approval in
Jowell
). But, as Vally J
pointed out in
Drummond Cable Concepts v Advancenet (Pty) Ltd
(08179/14) [2018] ZAGPJHC 636;
2020 (1) SA 546
(GJ)
(para 7):
‘
The
question that arises from this legal requirement is, what facts are
necessary to ensure that the cause of action has been disclosed?
The
answer depends on the nature of the claim - a claim arising from a
breach of contract requires different facts from a claim
based in
delict.’
[17]
The purpose
of pleadings is to bring clearly to the notice of the Court and to
the opposing party in an action the issues upon which
reliance is to
be placed.
[4]
[18]
In order to
sustain a cause of action, a party must set out a clear and concise
statement of the material facts upon which it relies
for its claim
with sufficient particularity to enable the other party to understand
the case it has to meet and to reply thereto.
[5]
[19]
If a
pleading lacks an essential material fact without which there would
be no foundation in law for the claim being made, the pleading
is bad
in law on the basis that it does not disclose a cause of action, and
it would be excipiable.
[6]
[20]
The pleading must contain every fact which would
be necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if traversed, in order to
support his
right to judgment (the material facts, known as
facta
probanda
). The
facta
probanda
necessary for a complete and
properly pleaded cause of action does not comprise every piece of
evidence which is necessary to prove
each fact. A plaintiff is
required to plead the material facts, not conclusions that (if
proved) will disclose a cause of action.
[21]
It
is also a fundamental principle that when considering whether an
exception should be upheld the pleadings are considered as a
whole
and one does not read paragraphs in isolation.
[7]
[22]
Where pleadings are bad in law in that
their contents do not support a discernible and legally recognised
cause of action, an exception
is competent.
If it does not
have that effect the exception should not be entertained.
[23]
The defect must be apparent
ex
facie
the pleading, meaning that no
external facts may be raised or considered.
[24]
Should a court uphold an exception, the
respondent is usually afforded an opportunity to remedy the defective
pleading by making
an appropriate amendment, provided that it is
capable of remedy. If not, then the claim must be dismissed.
Exceptions
[25]
The first defendant raises an exception against the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim
on the basis that it fails to disclose a cause
of action. The specific objections are not numbered.
[26]
The first defendant complains that the plaintiff makes a bald denial
in his particulars
of claim that he owes any maintenance at all to
the first defendant or that he is liable to refund any amount to the
first defendant
in terms of the court order, which even if taken as
true, fails to disclose a cause of action. The plaintiff pleads the
existence
of the settlement agreement, which contains specific and
determined amounts of payment, but fails to plead that the amounts in
the writ are incorrect.
[27]
The first defendant submits further that the plaintiff’s claims
that the debt is
in dispute, that the writ issued is incompetent in
part or at all, that the writ is faulty, that the writ was issued
based on an
affidavit by the first defendant, and that reliance was
placed on a schedule based on source documentation, do not evince a
cause
of action.
[28]
A further objection is that the plaintiff
has not set out his claim with sufficient particularity. He merely
contends that he is
entitled to contest the veracity of the
defendant’s claim, the computation of the amounts, the nature
of the claim (which
the first defendant says has no merit as the
nature of the claim is the court order), and the possibility that
certain amounts
other than maintenance have become prescribed, and
the reasonableness and legality of expenses which the first defendant
is alleged
to have made.
[29]
The
plaintiff does not plead the necessary allegations to meet any of the
established grounds on which a writ of execution may be
set aside.
D.E. van Loggerenberg identifies them as the following:
[8]
a.
Where the writ had not been issued in
conformity with the judgment;
b.
Where the wrong person is named in the writ
as a party;
c.
Where the amount payable under the judgment
can be ascertained only after deciding a further legal problem;
d.
Where the debt in respect of which the
judgment was obtained has been extinguished before obtaining
judgment, or where payment of
the debt has been tendered;
e.
Where the judgments upon which the writ is
based have been set aside;
f.
Where it is proved that an attachment is in
material respect faulty on formal grounds.
[30]
The applicability, or otherwise, of the
Maintenance Act 99 of 1998
was raised neither in the notice of
exception, nor during oral argument by either counsel.
Plaintiff’s
particulars of claim
[31]
From the prayers, it is evident that the plaintiff
is seeking that the writ be set aside. The Plaintiff submits that the
cause of
action appears clearly from the factual allegations made in
the particulars of claim.
[32]
The plaintiff raises four specific grounds. For
purposes of convenience, the grounds and the first defendant’s
objections
are discussed simultaneously.
First ground: dispute
about the existence, and amount, of the debt
[33]
The plaintiff contends that the
lis
between the parties has not been finally resolved in the judgment
dated 20 September 1995, being the settlement agreement. Further
judgment is required to resolve the dispute on the existence and the
amount of the judgment debt.
[34]
He submits further that neither the
judgment nor the writ possesses the degree of liquidity or certainty
with respect to the amount
of money which the plaintiff was ordered
to pay in respect of educational expenses, and medical and dental
expenses in terms of
clauses 2.4 and 2.6 of the settlement agreement.
These amounts can neither be ascertained
ex
facie
the settlement agreement, nor are
the amounts capable of prompt and quick ascertainment. The settlement
agreement provides merely
a method of calculation but it is dependent
on a court in further proceedings to determine the amount payable. If
the first defendant
relies on a schedule to determine the outstanding
amount, this, in itself, needs to be ventilated at a trial by way of
the discovery
process as well as oral evidence. The actual supporting
documents on which the schedule is allegedly based were not presented
to
the Registrar, and it contains no breakdown of the alleged
expenses.
[35]
The first defendant submits that no case is
made out by the plaintiff that there exists a dispute about the debt
that needs to be
determined at a subsequent hearing. The first
defendant contends that the quantum is capable of easy ascertainment
and constitutes
a liquidated sum in money. The settlement agreement
provides in clear terms for payment of R 750 per month as
maintenance, while
the sum of R 27 750 as arrear maintenance is
clearly stated in the settlement agreement. Payment of school fees
and tertiary education
is easily ascertainable from the agreement and
capable of prompt and quick ascertainment. The plaintiff does not
plead what future
intervention or proceedings are required, to
establish the amount owing.
Second ground: demand
for payment
[36]
Plaintiff claims that no demand for payment
was made and that the warrant was therefore issued without cause. The
first defendant
was required to satisfy the Registrar that demand had
been made to the plaintiff for payment of expenses in specific
amounts since
the judgment does not settle the amounts payable. The
plaintiff contends that no debt for payment of tertiary education
becomes
due prior to demand being made. According to the plaintiff
the settlement agreement specifically provides that in the event that
the first defendant makes payment in respect of any of the
plaintiff’s obligations the plaintiff shall refund the first
defendant forthwith on demand (clause 2.6). The plaintiff claims that
the purpose of the demand was to make the plaintiff alive
to the
intention to claim the amount from him. The warrant of execution
presented the plaintiff with a
fait
accompli
.
[37]
The first defendant submits that the
service of the writ is the demand. The settlement agreement, which
was made an order of court,
provides in unequivocal terms and
language that the agreement would be a judgment debt –
accordingly, it can be executed
on. The first defendant disputes that
Clause 6 of the settlement agreement refers to a demand, submitting
that presumably the Plaintiff
is referring to a
mora
notice, but this is not provided for in the agreement.
Third ground: prima
facie case
[38]
The plaintiff avers that the first defendant
failed to present the Registrar with
prima
facie
evidence of the existence of the
judgment debt in the amount claimed, because she presented none of
the supporting documents she
claimed to have used to compile her
schedule and to determine the amount of the plaintiff’s alleged
indebtedness to her.
According to the particulars of claim, the
source documents have not been made available to the plaintiff, at
the date of the issue
of summons, despite a request for inspection
from the plaintiff’s attorneys.
[39]
The first defendant submits that no facts are pleaded by the
plaintiff in this respect,
and that the affidavit to the Registrar
and her confirmation therein that the schedule of the debt is based
on source documentation
under her control and which she has verified,
was sufficient to satisfy the Registrar that a proper case had been
made out and
to issue the writ.
Fourth ground: waiver
[40]
The plaintiff pleads an express waiver by
the child of any further maintenance against him –
specifically, that on or about
her 18
th
birthday, and at the house of the first defendant, she told the
plaintiff in the presence of the first defendant that she wanted
nothing more to do with him and did not need his money. The plaintiff
submits that this constitutes waiver, which the plaintiff
accepted.
Notwithstanding, the first defendant claims maintenance until 2019.
The plaintiff argues that this is an issue for trial,
which impacts
significantly on the value of the purported claim of the first
defendant. If the waiver is found to be valid, no
claim can exist on
behalf of the child after the date of waiver. Clause 6 reads as
follows: “This agreement constitutes the
full and final
settlement of all claims between the parties. Save in respect of the
obligations towards the minor child, this Agreement
shall not be
capable of alteration or waiver or be subject to estoppel unless
reduced to writing or is ordered by a competent Court.”
The
settlement agreement does not explicitly state when the obligation to
pay maintenance terminates.
[41]
The first defendant submits that the
settlement agreement expressly excludes waiver unless done so in
writing. In other words, oral
variation is impermissible. Waiver must
be properly pleaded, but the Plaintiff alleges no written variation.
There is also a common
law presumption against waiver.
Evaluation
[42]
In
respect of the first and third points, the plaintiff’s position
is that the settlement agreement (which was made a court
order) does
not give rise to a judgment debt sounding in money, and that the
first defendant could never make out a
prima
facie
case for the issuing of the writ. The plaintiff relies on
Dezius
v Dezius
where it was held that maintenance orders are not money judgments or
an order
per
se
insofar as they fall within a special category in which such relief
is competent.
[9]
[43]
First
defendant’s counsel brought to the attention of the court the
very recent judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
SA
v JHA
,
[10]
which he argues is authority that a maintenance obligation in a
consent paper incorporated in a divorce order is a judgment debt,
subject to a prescription period of thirty years, and executable.
Both counsel made submissions on the relevance of this case to
the
present application.
[44]
I do not intend to deal with it
exhaustively. There are indeed differences between that case and the
present case, as pointed out
by plaintiff’s counsel. For
example, in
JHA
there is no record of any disputes pertaining to the amounts claimed,
or that the maintenance obligation of the appellant terminated
upon
the children reaching majority. However, these differences are not
necessarily relevant.
[45]
Although
the primary question was whether a maintenance order is a judgment
debt for purposes of prescription, Smith AJA held that
it will depend
on the determination of the question whether maintenance orders
possess the essential nature and characteristics
of civil
judgments.
[11]
After
considering both Constitutional Court and Supreme Court of Appeal
jurisprudence, the learned acting judge of appeal concluded
that a
maintenance order was indeed a civil judgment, an enforceable court
order, dispositive of the relief claimed, definitive
of the rights of
the parties, and capable of execution without any further proof.
[12]
And further:
Its
decision, either by way of a reasoned judgment or by agreement
between the parties, disposed of the lis which was in existence
between the parties at that point in time. An application for
variation of that order thus introduces a new lis, the party applying
for such an order contending that circumstances have changed to such
an extent that they justify a reconsideration of the original
decision. Thus, the matter is res judicata on the facts which were
before the court that made the original maintenance order.
[13]
[46]
The import of Smith AJA’s judgment is
that a maintenance order is a civil judgment debt, which is
enforceable without any
proof. It is definitive of the rights of the
parties, to the extent that it decides a just amount of maintenance
payable based
on the facts in existence at that time, and final and
enforceable until varied or cancelled. This impacts negatively on the
plaintiff’s
argument that the first defendant had not made out
a prima facie case to the Registrar, as it is executable without any
further
proof.
[47]
The plaintiff cannot deny the terms of the
settlement agreement as this is settled between the parties. He is
bound by them, but
so too is the other party to the agreement. The
agreement as it stands has provisions dealing with demand and waiver.
[48]
On the face of it,
the condition that alteration or waiver should be reduced to writing
does not apply in respect of the obligations
towards the child. The
plaintiff pleads waiver by the daughter upon her reaching majority.
The agreement does not stipulate when
the maintenance obligations
end. This could arguably be a point that could influence the extent
of his liability.
[49]
On
the issue of demand, the recent judgment of Siwendu J in
VDB
v VDB
in this division is potentially relevant.
[14]
It concerned an application by the applicant, who was in maintenance
arrears, to order the respondent to first furnish a notice
to the
applicant if she intends at any time to make application to any Court
on an
ex
parte
basis for an order issuing a warrant of execution against the
applicant in respect of maintenance arrears.
[50]
A
deduction had been made from the
applicant’s retirement annuity, without notice, in terms of a
writ of execution issued out
of the Maintenance Court, in terms of
the
Maintenance Act 99 of 1998
, following an
ex parte
application by the first respondent, after presenting a schedule
which purported to show arrear maintenance.
[51]
Siwendu J concluded that the
applicant was not entitled to notice or demand:
[w]here
there is a pre-existing Maintenance Court Order, there is no
mechanism to resolve a dispute about the quantum owing before
the
issue of a writ nor a requirement for a notice before the issue of
such a writ.
[15]
[52]
In the present case the
writ
was issued by the Registrar of this Court, in terms of the settlement
agreement which had been made an order of court. As far
as I can see
there is no mention in the judgment that the settlement agreement had
a clause requiring demand to be made first,
as there is in the
present case.
[53]
The plaintiff raises some potentially
arguable points relating to waiver and notice, but these on their
own, taking into consideration
the judgment in
JHA
,
are not sufficient, in my opinion, to found a cause of action. The
plaintiff disputes not only the amounts he must pay; he denies
owing
maintenance or that he is liable to refund the first defendant at all
in terms of the court order. Although he is not required
to set out
in detail the evidence he would present at trial, he should set out
the material facts on which he bases his denial
of liability. It is
incumbent on a plaintiff to plead a complete cause of action which
identifies the issues which the plaintiff
seeks to rely upon and on
which evidence will be led. It is insufficient to give what
essentially amounts to a blank denial of
liability.
[54]
The first defendant’s exception on
this ground is valid. I take the view that the claim should not be
dismissed, nor that
the particulars of claim should be struck out at
this point. I intend to grant the plaintiff 20 (twenty) days within
which to amend
his particulars of claim. Should he not do so, the
particulars of claim will be struck out.
Costs
[55]
Costs should follow the result. First
defendant seeks costs on an attorney-client scale. I do not consider
there to be sufficient
justification to award punitive costs.
THE FOLLOWING ORDER
ISSUES:
a.
First Defendant’s exception is
upheld.
b.
Plaintiff is afforded 20 (twenty) days from
the date of this order to amend his particulars of claim.
c.
In the event of Plaintiff failing to amend
the particulars of claim within 20 (twenty) days, the particulars of
claim will be struck
out.
d.
Plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs of
the exception.
M
Olivier
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Local Division
Johannesburg
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
and/or parties’ representatives by email and by
upload
to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
16h00 on
7 September 2022.
Date of hearing: 23 May
2022
Date of judgment: 7
September 2022
On
behalf of Excipient/First defendant
: R.
Cohen
Instructed
by
: Glynnis Cohen Attorneys
On
behalf of Respondent/Plaintiff
: L.
Posthumus
Instructed
by
: JNS Attorneys
[1]
See
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155 (T).
[2]
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
Volume 2, D1-605 [RS 17, 2021]. See too
Mears
v Pretoria Estate & Market Co Ltd
1906 TS 661
;
Reinhardt
v Ricker and David
1905 TS 179.
[3]
ZAGPJHC
446 (30 June 2022) at paras [4]--[6].
[4]
Durbach
v Fairway Hotel (Pty) Ltd
1949
(3) SA 1081
(SR) at 1082;
Minister
of Agriculture and Land Affairs & Another v De Klerk &
Others
2014 (1) SA 212
(SCA) at para [39].
[5]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Slabbert
[2010]
2 All SA 471
(SCA) at para [11].
[6]
Baliso
v Firstrand Bank Limited t/a Wesbank
2017
(1) SA 292
(CC) at 303D-E.
[7]
See
Nel
and others NNO v McArthur
2003(4) SA 142 (T) at 149F.
[8]
Supra
note 2. See too
Le Roux v Yskor Landgoed (Edms) Bpk
1984 (4) SA 252 (T), which sets out the most
common grounds.
[9]
2006
(6) SA 395
(T) at 402F—H.
[10]
2022
(3) SA 149 (SCA).
[11]
Para
[14].
[12]
Paras
[15]—[19].
[13]
Para
[19].
[14]
VDB
v VDB and Others
(22/11181) [2022] ZAGPJHC 271 (20 April 2022).
[15]
Para
[25].
sino noindex
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