Cosira Developments (Pty) Ltd v Sam Lubbe Investments CC t/a Lubbe Construction and Others (09/20062) [2011] ZAGPJHC 110; 2011 (6) SA 331 (GSJ) (9 September 2011)

80 Reportability
Contract Law

Brief Summary

Contract — Specific performance — Locus standi — Applicant sought specific performance of agreements for the sale of immovable properties from the seller, but lacked privity of contract as a successive purchaser — Court held that the applicant did not have the necessary locus standi to enforce the agreements against the original seller, as the interest was deemed too remote and not direct.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter was an application for specific performance in which the applicant sought to compel implementation of alleged contractual obligations said to arise from two agreements for the sale of immovable property. The relief was framed primarily as declaratory and mandatory orders compelling steps leading to transfer and registration of property, but the court approached the dispute on the basis that it was, in substance, an application for specific performance.


The applicant was Cosira Developments (Pty) Ltd. The first respondent was Sam Lubbe Investments CC t/a Lubbe Construction, and the second respondent was Samuel Mandla Lubbe (the court treated the identity and correct description of the successful tenderer/purchaser as disputed but ultimately assumed, without deciding, that it could be ascribed to the first and/or second respondent, collectively referred to as “Lubbe”). The third respondent was The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality, a local authority and the registered owner of the properties.


Procedurally, the application generated substantial interlocutory activity and voluminous papers. The municipality initially indicated it would abide the decision of the court, but later filed an answering affidavit eleven months after the application was launched, accompanied by a condonation application. The applicant opposed condonation and filed further affidavits. Shortly before the hearing, the applicant also brought an application to refer the matter to trial due to factual disputes. At the hearing, certain interlocutory matters were dealt with by concession, and the court determined that it was unnecessary to reach the referral-to-trial question because a dispositive legal issue could be decided on the undisputed facts, namely locus standi.


The general subject matter concerned successive sales of municipal land arising from a tender process conducted under municipal procurement/alienation procedures, and whether the successive purchaser (the applicant) could compel transfer and performance where the original seller (the municipality) had not transferred the properties and where the applicant’s rights arose only from agreements concluded with the initial purchaser.


Material Facts


The third respondent municipality owned three adjacent vacant stands in Bedfordview, described as erven 1798 and 1799 Bedfordview Extension 361, and erf 798 of the farm Elandsfontein 90. The properties bordered the N3 motorway on their eastern boundary.


During 2002 the municipality invited tenders to purchase and develop the properties, and the tender process was conducted in accordance with section 79(18) of the Local Government Ordinance 17 of 1939 (Gauteng) and the municipality’s alienation policy. The municipality accepted a tender submitted by an entity described as “Lubbe Building Contractors CC”, which acceptance was communicated by letter dated 20 October 2003. Although there was a dispute about the identity of the tenderer and eventual purchaser, the court found it unnecessary to decide that issue for purposes of the dispositive point.


In June 2005, Lubbe (as purchaser) and the municipality (as seller) concluded two written agreements of sale on identical terms: one in respect of erven 1798 and 1799, and one in respect of erf 798, for a total purchase consideration of R1,050 million (“the June 2005 agreements”). These agreements included obligations on the purchaser to commence development within six months of transfer and complete development within eighteen months thereafter.


Separately, the applicant and Lubbe had been negotiating since 2004 for Lubbe to sell the same properties to the applicant. This culminated in an agreement in November 2004 which, on the applicant’s version, was superseded by two agreements concluded in August 2005 (“the August 2005 agreements”). These August 2005 agreements, drafted by the conveyancing attorneys engaged for the municipal transfers, were (save for the purchaser’s name) identical to the June 2005 agreements and recorded a purchase price of R1,050 million. The applicant relied on these August 2005 agreements as the contractual foundation for the relief sought.


A further factual feature emerging on the papers (raised in reply) was an alleged oral “undertaking” that Lubbe would gain an additional payment of R303,000, characterised by the applicant as “commission” or “a finder’s fee”. The judgment noted that this gave rise to additional contentions, but the court did not find it necessary to determine those matters given the dispositive nature of the standing point.


Implementation did not occur in respect of either set of agreements. The properties remained registered in the municipality’s name, and no development took place. The applicant attributed delay and non-performance to unfulfilled undertakings by Lubbe and the conveyancers to effect transfer into the applicant’s name.


Legal Issues


The central legal question the court determined was whether the applicant, as a successive purchaser under the August 2005 agreements (between the applicant and Lubbe), had the necessary locus standi to seek specific performance against the municipality as the original seller under the June 2005 agreements.


This was primarily a question of law, turning on the existence (or absence) of a contractual nexus (privity of contract) between the applicant and the municipality, and whether the applicant had a sufficiently direct and substantial legal interest to enforce performance.


Although the papers raised numerous factual disputes (and the applicant sought a referral to trial on that basis), the court held that it could decide the locus standi issue on the undisputed facts and that this issue was decisive. The judgment also addressed, on an assumed basis, the court’s discretion to grant or refuse specific performance, which involves application of legal standards to the facts and an evaluative judgment, although the dispositive finding remained the absence of standing.


Court’s Reasoning


The court approached locus standi by reaffirming the general principle that a litigant must show a direct, actual, and existing legal interest in the subject matter to obtain standing. Relying on the articulation of the standing requirement, the court emphasised that the interest must not be remote; it must be a direct interest in the right sought to be enforced.


On the facts, the court analysed the legal relationships created by the two sets of contracts. The June 2005 agreements created contractual rights and obligations between Lubbe and the municipality. The August 2005 agreements created contractual rights and obligations between Lubbe and the applicant. The court treated these as entirely distinct agreements reflecting separate transactions, even if they concerned the same properties and were identical in wording.


The court held that the applicant’s attempt to enforce performance against the municipality encountered a fundamental difficulty: no contractual relationship existed between the applicant and the municipality. The court indicated that a common and practical method to connect successive transactions would have been a tripartite agreement involving the original seller, the initial purchaser, and the successive purchaser. Such an agreement would have established privity between the municipality and the applicant. While the possibility of a tripartite agreement was raised, the applicant itself explained that it was considered but discarded because it would have required complicated internal municipal procedures if the applicant were to be made a party to the municipal agreements.


Given the admitted absence of such a tripartite agreement (and in the absence of any other mechanism creating privity, such as cession), the court concluded that the applicant’s interest—arising from the August 2005 agreements—did not confer standing to enforce the municipality’s contractual obligations under the June 2005 agreements. The court therefore found that the applicant lacked locus standi to bring the application against the municipality, and that this deficiency was sufficient to dispose of the main application without resolving the extensive factual disputes.


In addition to the dispositive standing finding, the court addressed further reasons why, even if the applicant had been entitled to claim specific performance, the court would have refused specific performance in the exercise of its discretion. The court reiterated that specific performance is not granted as of right and is subject to judicial discretion. On the municipality’s version (and on the court’s assessment of the context), compelling transfer and performance in the manner sought would have frustrated the municipality’s black empowerment policy and its plans for future development of the properties, thereby offending public policy.


The court further reasoned that in awarding the tender and contracting with Lubbe, the municipality exercised a delectus personae, meaning the identity of the contracting party mattered. This, in the court’s view, prevented a sale by Lubbe to the applicant without a municipal resolution and, in any event, without compliance with the applicable procedures (the judgment noted that these procedures were “now regulated” by the Municipal Finance Management Act, 2003). The court added an additional consideration: granting specific performance would effectively sanction a transaction that would be invalid absent compliance with section 79(18) of the Local Government Ordinance, as confirmed by authority cited from the Supreme Court of Appeal.


Finally, the court’s approach to the referral-to-trial application followed from its determination that standing was decisive on the established facts; it was therefore unnecessary to refer the matter to trial to resolve factual disputes that could not affect the outcome on locus standi.


Outcome and Relief


The application was dismissed.


As to costs, the applicant (as the unsuccessful party) was ordered to pay the first and second respondents’ costs, including the costs of two counsel. The applicant was also ordered to pay the third respondent municipality’s costs, including the costs of two counsel, but with an important limitation: the applicant’s liability for the municipality’s costs was confined to the costs incurred in respect of the hearing. This limitation was made to account, in fairness to the applicant, for the municipality’s belated filing of an answering affidavit and the additional costs that stance change caused, even though it did not affect the hearing itself.


Cases Cited


Cabinet of the Transitional Government for the Territory of South West Africa v Eins 1988 (3) SA 369 (A)


Vandenhende v Minister of Agriculture, Planning and Tourism, Western Cape and Others 2000 (4) SA 681 (C)


Ntai and Others v Vereeniging Town Council and Another 1953 (4) SA 579 (A)


Louis Botha Motors v James & Slabbert Motors (Pty) Ltd 1983 (3) SA 793 (A)


Aquatur (Pty) Ltd v Sacks and Others 1989 (1) SA 56 (A)


Benson v South African Mutual Life Assurance Society 1986 (1) SA 776 (A)


Fick v Woolcott and Ohlsson’s Cape Breweries Limited 1911 AD 214


Ferndale Crossroads Share Block (Pty) Ltd and Others v Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others 2011 (1) SA 24 (SCA)


Legislation Cited


Local Government Ordinance 17 of 1939 (Gauteng), section 79(18)


Municipal Finance Management Act 56 of 2003


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the applicant, as a successive purchaser under agreements concluded with the initial purchaser (Lubbe), lacked locus standi to compel performance against the municipality because there was no privity of contract between the applicant and the municipality and no tripartite agreement (or equivalent mechanism) had been concluded to create enforceable rights as between them.


The court further indicated that, even assuming an entitlement to specific performance, it would in its discretion have refused to order specific performance because such an order would frustrate the municipality’s empowerment policy and development plans, would disregard the municipality’s delectus personae in contracting through a tender award, and would risk sanctioning an arrangement said to be invalid without compliance with statutory municipal disposal procedures.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A party seeking relief must establish a direct and substantial (actual and existing) legal interest in the subject matter to have locus standi; a remote, purely commercial, or derivative interest does not suffice.


In the context of successive sales, contractual enforceability remains governed by privity of contract: absent a mechanism that creates rights against the original seller (such as a properly concluded tripartite agreement), a successive purchaser does not acquire standing to enforce the original seller’s obligations under the first sale agreement.


Specific performance is a discretionary remedy; even where a valid contract exists between the litigating parties, a court may refuse specific performance where broader considerations (including public policy and the implications of municipal procurement/alienation requirements) make such relief inappropriate.


Where a municipality disposes of property pursuant to a tender process, the identity of the contracting party may be material (delectus personae), and changes to the contracting counterparty (or outcomes functionally equivalent to a substitution) may require municipal authorisation and compliance with statutory procedures, failing which the enforceability of the transaction may be undermined.

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[2011] ZAGPJHC 110
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Cosira Developments (Pty) Ltd v Sam Lubbe Investments CC t/a Lubbe Construction and Others (09/20062) [2011] ZAGPJHC 110; 2011 (6) SA 331 (GSJ) (9 September 2011)

IN
THE SOUTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT
(JOHANNESBURG)
REPORTABLE
CASE
NO: 09/20062
DATE:09/09/2011
In the matter
between
COSIRA
DEVELOPMENTS (PTY ) LTD
.......................................
APPLICANT
and
SAM LUBBE
INVESTMENTS CC
T/A LUBBE
CONSTRUCTION
..............................................
1
ST
RESPONDENT
SAMUEL
MANDLA LUBBE
..................................................
2
ND
RESPONDENT
THE
EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
…....................................................................
3
RD
RESPONDENT
Contract –
specific performance – successive sales of immovable properties
– tripartite agreement not concluded
- privity of contract
between second purchaser and seller – second purchaser
(applicant) lacks locus standi to claim for
specific performance
against seller.
Specific
performance – nature of – court’s discretion in
ordering – factors affecting – public policy
- in
circumstances of this matter order for specific performance not
appropriate.
J
U D G M E N T
VAN
OOSTEN J:
[1]
This application concerns specific performance, sought by the
applicant, of alleged contractual obligations embodied in two

agreements of the sale of immovable properties.
[2]
A brief summary of the events that led to the conclusion of the
agreements relied upon by the applicant, is the following. The
third
respondent, a local authority (the council), is the owner of three
vacant stands in Bedfordview, described as erven 1798
and 1799
Bedfordview Extension 361, and erf 798 of the farm Elandsfontein 90.
The three erven (the properties) are adjacent to
each other and
border the N3 motorway on its eastern boundary.
[3]
During 2002 the council invited tenders to purchase and develop the
properties. The tender process was conducted in accordance
with s
79(18) of the Local Government Ordinance 17 of 1939 (Gauteng) (the
LGO) and the council’s alienation policy. Although
scarce
information concerning the council’s hs been revealed in the
papers before me, it can safely be accepted, as I was
informed in
argument, that the policy promotes the black economic empowerment
requirements, as legislated by the national government.
I will return
to this aspect in due course.
[4]
The tender submitted by an entity described as “Lubbe Building
Contractors CC” was accepted by the council, and
this was
conveyed to the successful tenderer in a letter, dated 20 October
2003. The relevant part of the letter, reads as follows:
Please
be informed that the 26
th
Corporate Affairs Committee resolved as
follows:
1.
That in terms of the provisions of s 79 (18) of the Local Government
Ordinance 17 of 1939 as amended and the Councils’ Alienation
Policy,
the
tender received from Messrs Lubbe Building and Contractors CC to
purchase
and develop [the properties] for a total amount of R1 050 000,00
VAT
exclusive) BE ACCEPTED subject to the following conditions…
I
pause to mention that the identity and correct description of the
tenderer and eventual purchaser pursuant thereto, were hotly
disputed
in the papers before me. In the view I take of this matter it is
unnecessary to determine this issue. Suffice to say that
I will
assume in favour of the applicant (without deciding) that that
identity should be ascribed to the first and/or the second
respondent
and I shall, for ease of reference, collectively refer to them as
“Lubbe”.
[5]
In June 2005 Lubbe having been awarded the tender, as purchaser and
the council, as seller, concluded two agreements of sale,
the one in
respect of the erven 1798 and 1799 and the other, on identical terms,
in respect of erf 798, for a total purchase consideration
of R1 050m
(the June 2005 agreements). These agreements apparently superseded a
prior agreement which had made provision for the
composite sale of
all three erven which, according to the conveyancing attorneys, had
to be re-drafted to provide for two separate
agreements as the erven
resorted under different registration authorities. Of relevance at
this stage is that both the June 2005
agreements provide for an
obligation on the purchaser to commence with the development of the
properties within six months from
the date of transfer of the
properties and to complete such development within eighteen months
thereafter.
[6]
The applicant and Lubbe had since 2004 been involved in negotiations
for the sale of the properties by Lubbe to the applicant,
which
culminated in the conclusion of an agreement of sale, on 10 November
2004. This agreement, the applicant states, was superseded
by two
separate subsequent agreements which were both concluded in August
2005 (the August 2005 agreements). Those agreements,
as were the
earlier June 2005 agreements, were drafted by the attorneys
instructed by the council to attend to the registration
of transfer
of the properties pursuant to the June 2005 agreements. The August
2005 agreements are except for the names of the
purchaser identical
to the June 2005 agreements and seem to have been produced by a
process of simply
copying and
pasting
. In terms of the August
2005 agreements Lubbe sold the properties to the applicant for a
total purchase price of R1 050m. These
are the agreements relied upon
by the applicant for purposes of this application. An interesting
revelation concerning the purchase
price agreed upon in the August
2005 agreements emerged as late as in the applicant’s replying
affidavit, which is that Lubbe,
in terms of an oral “undertaking”
by the applicant, stood to gain an additional payment in the sum of
R303 000 which
the applicant states was regarded as either
“commission” or “a finder’s fee”. This,
it is hardly
surprising, provided fertile earth for a number of legal
contentions, which in the view I take of this matter, are unnecessary
for me to consider any further.
[7]
The applicant over an extended period of time unsuccessfully
attempted to obtain implementation of the August 2005 agreements.

Neither was there implementation of the June 2005 agreements: the
properties are still registered in the name of the council and
no
development has taken place.
[8]
This brings me to the present application. The applicant having
meticulously set out the history of “many years of unfulfilled

promises and undertakings” by both Lubbe and the conveyancing
attorneys acting for the council to affect transfer of the
properties
in its name, now, in an amended notice of motion, seeks relief,
firstly, for a declarator that Lubbe is bound by and
in terms of the
August 2005 agreements, secondly, directing Lubbe to take transfer of
the properties from the council and, thirdly,
directing Lubbe and the
council “to do all things necessary” to “give
effect” to the August 2005 agreements.
In the alternative the
applicant seeks an order directing Lubbe and the council “to do
all things necessary” and “sign
all necessary
documentation” in order to cause registration of the properties
to be effected into the applicant’s name.
Although the nature
and form of the relief sought call for comment, it is not necessary
in the view I take of the matter, to do
so, and I will consequently
determine the issues before me on the plain basis of an application
for specific performance which
is in accordance with the premise on
which the arguments before me were presented.
[9]
The application eventually expanded into a formidable bundle
extending into almost 500 pages. Substantially contributing to
the
paper trail was the council’s belated filing of an answering
affidavit after it had initially decided to abide the decision
of
this court. The council’s answering affidavit was filed eleven
months after the launching of this application, in April
2011, and
was accompanied by an application for condonation for the late filing
thereof. By then the applicant had already filed
its replying
affidavit in the main application. The applicant opposed the
council’s condonation application and in any event
proceeded to
file a replying affidavit to the council’s answering affidavit.
The day before the hearing of this application
the applicant filed a
substantive application in which it seeks an order referring the main
application for trial. That application
is similarly opposed.
[10]
At the commencement of the hearing before me three interlocutory
applications were pending: firstly, by the applicant for a
further
amendment to the notice of motion, secondly, by the council for
condonation for the late filing of its answering affidavit
and,
thirdly, by first and second respondents for striking out certain
portions in the applicant’s replying affidavit. The
first and
second interlocutory applications were conceded and I ruled that the
third interlocutory application as well as the application
for a
referral to trial be argued as part of the argument on the main
application.
[11]
A myriad of factual disputes and legal conundrums arise from the
facts of this matter. The factual disputes, which undoubtedly
exist,
lie at the heart of the application for the referral of this
application for trial. A number of legal issues however, arise
from
the undisputed facts of this mater. In the view I take of the matter
it will not be necessary to consider the application
for a referral
for trial as at least one of those is capable of determination
without having recourse to evidence. It concerns
the question whether
the applicant has the necessary
locus
standi
to claim the relief it
seeks. As will become apparent later in the judgment the outcome of
this issue is decisive of the matter
and these are my reasons.
[12]
The general rule that a person who claims relief from a court must
establish an interest in that matter in order to acquire
the
necessary
locus
standi
to seek relief is well-established. The interest, Rabie ACJ pointed
out
in
Cabinet of the Transitional Government for the Territory of South
West Africa v Eins
1988
(3) SA 369
(A) at 388A-I, with reference to earlier judgments of the
then Appeal Court, must be direct and not therefore not too remote or

as it has also been referred to, an actual and existing interest in
the matter.
[13]
Applied to the facts of this matter the question arising is whether
the August 2005 agreements for the purchase of the subject
matter of
the June 2005 agreements, gives the applicant, as the successive
purchaser, a sufficient legal interest or
locus
standi
to enforce such agreement as against the original seller. I have not
been referred to nor have I been able to find any direct authority
on
the question of
locus
standi
in successive sales agreements. Some useful guidance may be derived
from reviewing the nature of contractual relationships giving
rise to
a direct interest or
locus
standi
in
situations akin to successive sales. In contracts for the benefit of
a third person (
stipulatio
alterii
)
it is only the acceptance of the offer by the third person that will
bring the new contact between the offeror and third person
into being
(AJ Kerr
The
Principles of the Law of Contract
6
th
Ed p 88). The legal consequences of a cession are well-known: a
non-party to a contract becomes a party to the rights thereto by
way
of cession. Negotiable instruments afford a further example: it is
only by negotiation of the instrument that a third party
acquires
rights thereto. Likewise, it has been held that a purchaser of
immovable property has no
locus
standi
in
the registered owner’s application for the rezoning of the
property: the interest of the purchaser is commercial or financial

and not legal (See
Vandenhende
v Minister of Agriculture, Planning and Tourism, Western Cape and
Others
2000
(4) SA 681
(C) 691J
).
And a
landlord may, in evicting a tenant, evict his tenant’s
subtenant without joining that sub-tenant in the proceedings
as the
sub-tenant has no legal interest in and is not a privy to the
contract between the landlord and the tenant (See
Ntai
and Others v Vereeniging Town Council and Another
1953
(4) SA 579
(A))
.
It is a well-entrenched principle, where there have been successive
sales, that the implied warranty against eviction in each sale
is
actionable only as between immediate parties to each of the
successive sales: the warranty binds a seller to the purchaser to

whom he has sold and to no one else (See
Louis
Botha Motors v James & Slabbert Motors (Pty) Ltd
1983
(3) SA 793
(A) 800G-801B). Finally, the nature of a “direct and
substantial interest” also arises in the context of joinder:
see
Aquatur
(Pty) Ltd v Sacks & Others
1989
(1) SA 56
(A) at 62A-F)
.
[14]
Against this background I turn now to the agreements we are concerned
with in this matter: it must be pointed out that the
June 2005
agreements and the August 2005 agreements are entirely distinct
agreements providing, in effect, for two separate transactions.
The
relationship between parties in all respects is governed by the
agreements and is therefore contractual. No contractual relationship

exists between the applicant and council. A practical and often used
way of linking the transactions would have been by way of
a
tripartite agreement, which would have created a contractual
relationship between the original seller (the council) and the
successive purchaser (the applicant). In the present matter, although
the possibility of the conclusion of a tripartite agreement
did
arise, nothing further happened. The applicant states that a
tripartite agreement was considered prior to the conclusion of
the
August 2005 agreements but discarded as it would have necessitated “a
complicated lengthy internal procedure…if
the applicant was to
be made a party to the agreements already entered into (
ie
the
June 2005 agreements)”. It follows that in the absence of
privity of contract between the applicant and the council I
am driven
to conclude that the applicant does not have the necessary
locus
standi
to bring the present application against the council (see
Wessels’
Law of Contract in South Africa
2
nd
Ed para 4610) and that the application for this reason alone, must
fail.
[15]
I wish, in conclusion, to deal briefly with the further reasons for
holding against the applicant. The grant or refusal of
specific
performance, it is well-settled, is entirely a matter for the
discretion of the court (
Benson
v SA Mutual Life Assurance Society
1986 (1) SA 776
(A) 781H). On the assumption that the applicant would
have been entitled to specific performance, I in the exercise of my
discretion
would not have ordered specific performance it because it
would have frustrated the council’s black empowerment policy as

well as its plans for future development of the property, and thus
offended public policy. The council in awarding the tender to,
and in
consequence contracting with Lubbe, exercised a
delectus
personae
(See
Fick v
Woolcott and Ohlsson’s Cape Breweries Ltd
1911
AD 214
230), which prevented a sale by Lubbe to the applicant without
a council resolution and, in any event I should add, without
compliance
with the appropriate procedures, now regulated by the
Municipal Finance Management Act, 2003. Finally, there is this
additional
consideration: an order for specific performance would
have resulted in this court sanctioning a transaction which in the
absence
of compliance with the provisions of s 79(18) of the LGO, is
invalid, as was recently held by the SCA in
Ferndale
Crossroads Share Block (Pty) Ltd and Others v Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality and Others
2011
(1) SA 24
(SCA) [21] and [22].
[16]
It remains to deal with the costs of this application. The applicant,
as the unsuccessful party, must bear the costs of the
application.
Much was made by counsel for the applicant of the council’s
change in stance and its belated entry into the
fray. The contention
is not without merit as it resulted in an extended paper trail
including, as I have alluded to, an application
for condonation. It
however, did not have any bearing on the hearing of the matter. In
the exercise of my discretion I have decided,
in fairness to the
applicant, that some allowance in respect of the extra costs
resulting from the council’s belated entry
into the
proceedings, should be made. The most practical and just manner of
achieving this, in my view, is to limit the applicant’s

liability for the council’s costs to the costs incurred in
respect of the hearing of this matter, as is reflected in the
order I
propose to make. As for the rest, the parties are in agreement that
the employment of two counsel was justified.
[17]
In the result the following order is made:
The
application is dismissed.
The
applicant is ordered to pay:
the
first and second respondents’ costs of the application,
including the costs of two counsel.
the
third respondent’s costs of the application, such costs:
to be limited to the
hearing of the matter, and
to include the costs
of two counsel.
_________________________
FHD VAN
OOSTEN
JUDGE OF
THE HIGH COURT
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT
…....
ADV T
NEL
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
..................
BICCARI
BOLLO MARIANO INC
COUNSEL
FOR FIRST
AND
SECOND RESPONDENTS
.............
ADV
P PAUW SC

....................................................................
ADV
R COHEN
FIRST
AND SECOND
RESPONDENTS’ATTORNEYS
...............
BS
FRIEDMAN ATTORNEYS
.
COUNSEL
FOR THE THIRD
RESPONDENT
...........................................
ADV
JR PETER SC

...................................................................
ADV
C GEORGIADES
THIRD
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEY
S
.
...........................................
NOZUKO
NXUSANI INC
DATE OF
HEARING
...............................
11
AUGUST 2011
DATE OF
JUDGMENT
….......................
9
SEPTEMBER 2011