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[2010] ZAGPJHC 88
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Firstrand Bank Limited t/a First National Bank v Seyffert and Another and Similar Cases (212862/2010) [2010] ZAGPJHC 88; 2010 (6) SA 429 (GSJ) (11 October 2010)
SOUTH GAUTENG HIGH
COURT, JOHANNESBURG
CASE No 212862/2010
DATE: 11 OCTOBER 2010
FIRSTRAND BANK LTD t/a FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
v
SEYFFERT AND ANOTHER AND SIMILAR
CASES
WILLIS J
2010 September 21;
October 11
Credit
agreement
—Consumer credit agreement—Debt
review—Notice to terminate review is competent, once review
referred by debt counsellor
to magistrates’ court—
National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
,
s 86(10).
A
notice to terminate a debt review in terms of
s 86(10)
of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
is competent, once a debt review has
been referred by a debt counsellor to a magistrates’ court for
determination. (Paragraph
[14] at #.)
Annotations:
Reported cases
Southern Africa
;ansa
ABSA
Bank Ltd v Prochaska t/a Bianca Cara Interiors
2009
(2) SA 512
(D){ref}: referred to
;ansa
Aktiebolaget
Hässle and Another v Triomed (Pty) Ltd
2003
(1) SA 155
(SCA) ([2002]
4 All SA 138){ref}:
referred to
;ansa
BMW
Financial Services (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Donkin
2009
(6) SA 63
(KZD){ref}: referred to
;ansa
BMW
Financial Services (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Mudaly
2010
(5) SA 618
(KZD){ref}: referred to
;ansa
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
1976
(2) SA 226
(T){ref}: referred to
;ansa
eTV
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Judicial Service Commission and Others
2010 (1) SA 537
(GSJ){ref}: referred
to
;ansa
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v Dhlamini
2010
(4) SA 531
(GNP){ref}: referred to
;ansa
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v Maleke and Three Similar Cases
2010
(1) SA 143
(GSJ){ref}: referred to
;ansa
Gruhn
v M Pupkewitz & Sons (Pty) Ltd
1973
(3) SA 49
(A){ref}: referred to
;ansa
Jaftha
v Schoeman and Others; Van Rooyen v Stoltz and Others
[2004] ZACC 25
;
2005
(2) SA 140
(CC)
(2005 (1) BCLR 78){cons}:
considered
;ansa
Munien
v BMW Financial Services (SA) (Pty) Ltd and Another
2010
(1) SA 549
(KZD){ref}: referred to
;ansa
National
Credit Regulator v Nedbank Ltd and Others
2009
(6) SA 295
(GNP){ref}: referred to
;ansa
Nedbank
Ltd v Mortinson
[2005] ZAGPHC 85
;
2005 (6) SA
462
(W) ([2006]
2 All SA 506){ref}:
referred to
;ansa
Noah
v Union National South British Insurance Co Ltd
1979
(1) SA 330
(T){ref}: referred to
;ansa
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Hales and Another
2009
(3) SA 315
(D) ([2009]
2 All SA 416){ref}:
referred to
;ansa
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Kruger; Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
v Pretorius
2010 (4) SA 635
(GSJ){crit and not foll}: criticised and not followed
;ansa
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Panayiotts
2009
(3) SA 363
(W){ref}: referred to
;ansa
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Saunderson and Others
2006
(2) SA 264
(SCA)
(2006 (9) BCLR 1022
;
[2006] 2 All SA 382){cons}:
considered.
England
;anen
R
v Secretary for the Home Department, Ex parte Daly
[2001] UKHL 26
;
[2001]
3 All ER 433
(HL){ref}: referred to.
Unreported
cases
Changing
Tides 17 (Pty) Ltd NO v Erasmus
(WCC
case No 18153/09, 12 November 2009){appr}: approved
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Evans
(ECP case
No 1693/10, 31 August 2010){ref}: referred to
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Fillis and Another
(ECP
case No 1796/2010, 17 August 2010){ref}: referred to
Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Mbele
(GSJ case
No 20839/2009, 28 June 2010){ref}: referred to
FirstRand
Bank v BL Smith
(SGJ case
No 24205/08, 5 December 2008){ref}: referred to
SA
Securitisation (Pty) Ltd v G Matlala
(GSJ
case No 6359/2010, 29 July 2010){crit and not foll}: criticised and
not followed
SA
Taxi Securitisation (Pty) Ltd v Nako and Others
(ECB
case No 19/2010, 8 June 2010){ref}: referred to
Wesbank,
a Division of Firstrand Bank Ltd v Martin
(WCC
case No 13564/09, 13 August 2010){ref}: referred to.
Statutes
The
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
,
s 86(10):
see
Juta’s
Statutes of South Africa 2009/10
vol
2 at 1-586.
Four
similar applications for summary judgment. The facts appear from the
judgment of Willis J.
HM
Viljoen
for
the applicant in case Nos 21862/2010; 23132/2010; 23380/2010.
JH
de V Botha
for
the applicant in case No 009987/2010.
CG
Grové
(attorney)
for the respondents in case No 21862/2010.
SS
Cohen
for
the respondents in case Nos 23132/2010; 23380/2010; 009987/2010.
Cur
adv vult.
Postea
(October
11).
Willis J:
[1] These are four similar
applications for summary judgment. During the course of the first
week of September, while I was sitting
in motion court, I became more
acutely aware than ever before of a problem that has vexed various
judges sitting in different divisions
around the country concerning
the interpretation of the provisions of s 86 (10) of the National
Credit Act 34 of 2005 (the NCA).
I therefore invited counsel
appearing in these matters to prepare full heads of argument and to
argue these matters before me on
21 September 2010. I am much
indebted to counsel for their well-presented arguments.
[3] In each instance:
(i) the applicant is a registered
credit provider in terms of the NCA;
(ii) the applicant seeks recovery of a
debt secured by a mortgage bond registered over immovable property;
(iii) the respondents are spouses;
(iv) the respondents are in occupation
of the property;
(v) the property is situated in a
comfortably affluent or ‘middle-class’ area;
(vi) the respondents have raised no
substantive defence other than to invoke the requirements of the NCA;
(vii) the respondents claim that the
matter is subject to debt review in terms of Ch 4 of the NCA;
(viii) the applicant claims to have
given notice of termination of that review in terms of s 86(10) of
the NCA;
(ix) the agreement upon which the
applicant relies is a credit agreement in terms of the NCA;
(x) there is no indication that the
applicant provided credit recklessly;
(xi) there is no indication that the
applicant imposed exploitative burdens on the respondents.
[3] In respect of the affidavits
resisting summary judgment filed by each of the respondents, counsel
for the applicants levelled
a number of criticisms. With varying
degrees of intensity, these criticisms are justified. The affidavits
of the respondents have
been cryptic to the extent of coyness. These
affidavits are laconic, if not supine, with regard to the real
possibility of extrication
from financial difficulties which the
respondents face. Even where the respondents presented some
acceptable evidence as to the
fact that they had referred the matter
to a debt counsellor, and in some instances annexed that person’s
recommendations,
in no such instance does the proposal make any
economic sense at all. Indeed, the proposals are devoid of economic
rationality.
In making this observation as to economic rationality I
have in mind no ideological commitment but consistency with
mathematical
laws. Ordinarily, ‘bond repayments’
constitute the largest single item in any salaried household’s
monthly budget.
It is all very well, for example, to propose that the
monthly repayments be halved for a few years and then massively
increased
thereafter, but where a family is salaried, or even
deriving income from a small business, in the absence of further
explanation,
this does not make sense. Assume, notionally, that a
family, earning a salary, is currently unable to make a monthly bond
repayment
of R5000 per month. A proposal to reduce that repayment to
R2500 per month for four or five years and then increase it to
R10 000
per month thereafter (to take into account, inter alia,
interest accruals) has no apparent logic to it. Without some
indication
of where the extra R7500 is to come from in a few years’
time, the proposal is bereft not only of reasonableness but also
economic feasibility. Furthermore, in non-Islamic systems of
money-lending, the inability even to service interest while it is
ticking away, will normally indicate a fatal flaw in the proposal.
1
Of course, there will be exceptions
but it is the exceptions that need explanation.
[4] The conundrum that arises from s
86
(10)
i
s this: may a debtor,
who has made an application for debt review in terms of s 86
(1)
of the NCA, by the
simple expedient of making such an application, indefinitely
frustrate the enforcement of a debt to which he
or she has no real
defence and where no serious effort is being made to enter into some
sensible arrangement for the rescheduling
or re-arrangement of his or
her debt (as is provided for in the NCA)?
[5] Section 130(3) of the Act prevents
a court from determining a matter in respect of a credit agreement to
which the NCA applies
if it is ‘pending before’ the
National Consumer Tribunal or ‘during the time that the matter
was before a debt
counsellor, alternative dispute resolution agent,
consumer court or the ombud with jurisdiction’. The most common
defence
in otherwise hopeless cases for respondents attempting to
resist summary judgment in this division is that the matter is
‘before’
a debt counsellor and awaiting debt review in
terms of the provisions of the NCA.
[6] Section 86(10) of the Act provides
that a credit provider:
‘
may
give notice to terminate the review in the prescribed manner to—
(a)
the consumer;
(b)
the debt counsellor; and
(c)
the National Credit Regulator,
at any time at least 60
business days after the date on which the consumer applied for the
debt review’.
[7] Section 88(3) of the NCA prevents
a credit provider from enforcing ‘by litigation or other
judicial process any right
or security’ under the credit
agreement in question until debt review has been completed but this
subsection is, in express
terms, rendered subject to the provisions
of s 86(10) of the NCA. Each of the cases therefore turns on what one
is to make of the
provisions of s 86(10) of the NCA.
[8] I was referred, by counsel, to the
following cases in particular which have dealt with the
interpretation of this subsection:
ABSA Bank Ltd v Prochaska t/a
Bianca Cara Interiors
;
2
Changing Tides 17 (Pty) Ltd NO v
Erasmus
;
3
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v
Kruger; Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Pretorius
;
4
SA Taxi Securitisation (Pty) Ltd v
Nako and Others
;
5
SA Securitisation (Pty) Ltd v G
Matlala
;
6
Wesbank, a Division of Firstrand
Bank Ltd v Martin
;
7
FirstRand Bank v BL Smith
;
8
BMW Financial Services (SA) (Pty)
Ltd v Mudaly
;
9
Firstrand Bank Ltd v Evans
.
10
[9] Although I was referred to a
number of other cases, the following were the object of special
focus:
Jaftha v Schoeman and Others; Van
Rooyen v Stoltz and Others
;
11
Nedbank Ltd v Mortinson
;
12
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v
Saunderson and Others
;
13
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v
Hales and Another
;
14
Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v
Panayiotts
;
15
BMW Financial Services (SA) (Pty)
Ltd v Donkin
;
16
National Credit Regulator v Nedbank
Ltd and Others
;
17
FirstRand Bank Ltd v Maleke and
Three Similar Cases
;
18
Munien v BMW Financial Services
(SA) (Pty) Ltd and Another
;
19
Firstrand Bank Ltd v Mbele
;
20
Firstrand Bank Ltd v Fillis and
Another
;
21
FirstRand Bank Ltd v Dhlamini
.
22
[10] I have benefited much from
reading these judgments as well as the learned academic articles to
which some of these judgments
refer. I share the general frustration
of my judicial colleagues around the country at the lack of clarity
that features at least
in the parts of the NCA with which one is
concerned in cases of the kind now before me. A court is forced to go
round and round
in loops from subsection to subsection, much like a
dog chasing its tail. Indeed, the language used in the Act from time
to time
suggests that foreign draftspersons rather than South African
lawyers had a strong hand in preparing the text.
23
Nevertheless, it is clear from reading
s 3 of the NCA, which sets out the purposes of the Act, that it
pursues varied objectives
which must be held in balance. Certainly,
the NCA is designed to protect consumers but it was not intended to
make of South Africa
a ‘debtors’ paradise’. Indeed
a ‘debtors’ paradise’ will not last for long. Very
soon, credit
would not be available to ordinary people. Sight must
not be lost of the fact that among the purposes of the Act is the
‘development
of a credit market that is accessible to all South
Africans’. It should be remembered that access to responsibly
granted
credit, on fair and reasonable terms, is an important means
of social upliftment for ordinary citizens. It also needs to be borne
in mind that responsibly granted credit has a ‘multiplier
effect’ in an economy. For example, money lent to build a
house
is used not only to pay the wages of the builders but also to buy
materials (and, in so doing, pays the wages of those who
produced the
materials). These payments by the borrower who is building a house
find their way back into the banking system as
deposits and are lent
out again. Thus the system multiplies, depending on the reserve
ratios that the banks, either voluntarily
or by regulation, maintain.
In other words, money-lending not only creates wealth but jobs as
well. It is inconceivable that it
could have been the intention of
the legislature to facilitate the wholesale evasion of debt under the
banner of ‘consumer
protection’. Moreover, s 86(5)
(b)
requires that, when it
comes to debt review, consumers and credit providers are to act in
good faith towards one another.
[12] It may, furthermore, be salutary
to reflect on the fact that money-lenders (credit providers), have,
since time immemorial,
pursued three objectives in the conduct of
their business:
to recover the money lent (credit
provided);
to recover their costs and expenses in
operating their business; and to make a profit.
If any one of these objectives is
systematically put at risk, the business of providing credit comes to
an end. No amount of ‘progressive’
rhetoric will alter
these self-evident truths. From time to time, there are those who
fulminate against the making of a profit,
whether by money-lending or
otherwise. Those who do so should take the trouble to read Karl
Marx’s
A Critique of
the Gotha Programme
in
which he declaims against those who fail to understand the necessity
for profit in a viably functioning economy.
[13] A plain reading of s 86(10),
especially when read together with s 86(11) of the NCA, makes it
clear that the giving of notice
by a credit provider to a consumer to
terminate a process of debt review does not necessarily terminate
that process of debt review
but may have this consequence. In plain
English, a ‘notice’ denotes an intention, a preliminary
step towards a consequence,
rather than the consequence itself.
24
In the particular context with which
one is now concerned, it all depends on the extent to which the
parties show good faith to
one another, have sensible, fair and
reasonable proposals and actively engage with one another to find
realistic solutions to a
particular consumer’s problems.
Providing incentives for good sense and fairness on all sides will go
a long way to achieving
the objectives of the Act.
[14] How does one provide such
incentives? It seems that one need not search too hard. The
principles are provided in a well-known
case dealing with what is
required in affidavits resisting summary judgment:
Breitenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
25
The important principle set out in
that case is this: the defence must not be set out so baldly, vaguely
or laconically that a court
hearing an application for summary
judgment is left with the impression that the respondent is being
merely opportunistic, or at
least, lacking in conviction.
26
As I said in another context, the
defence must not be ‘flimsy’.
27
Where a debtor wishes to avoid summary
judgment after proper notice has been given in terms of s 86(10), the
court would want to
see active, serious, sensible and reasonable
proposals having been mooted by the consumer and not an
opportunistically supine attitude.
Conversely, a credit provider who
appears to be adopting a recalcitrant attitude may expect to be
deprived of the expeditious and
inexpensive remedy of summary
judgment. It follows that, in my respectful view, to the extent that
Kathree-Setiloane AJ over emphasised
the protection of the consumer
as a purpose of the NCA in justifying her conclusions in the cases of
Standard Bank of South
Africa Ltd v Kruger; Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Pretorius
and
SA
Securitisation (Pty) Ltd v G Matlala
,
she was clearly wrong. In particular,
I disagree with her that, by reason of the provisions of s 129(2) of
the NCA, a notice to
terminate in terms of s 86(10) of the NCA is
incompetent once a debt review has been referred by a debt counsellor
to a Magistrate’s
Court for determination.
28
Section 129(2) merely exonerates a
credit provider from having to notify a consumer that he or she has a
right to approach a debt
counsellor, alternative dispute resolution
agent, consumer court or ombud with jurisdiction where the consumer
has already taken
such steps.
[15] I am mindful of the fact that s
129(1)
(b)
,
read together with s 130 of the NCA prevents a credit provider from
commencing any legal proceedings before meeting certain requirements,
including the giving of a notice in terms of s 86(10). It seems clear
enough that a credit provider is prevented from enforcing
a credit
agreement where:
there has not been compliance with
certain procedural formalities (section 130(1));
a court has determined that the
credit agreement was reckless (section 130(4)
(a)
;
a court has declared a consumer to be
over-indebted in terms of the Act (section
83
(3)
(b));
the credit agreement has been
suspended or is subject to an order re-arranging the debt or an
agreement to that effect has been
entered into (s 130(4)
(e)
and s 130(3)
(c)
(ii)).
None of these considerations apply in
the cases before me. As may have become apparent from paras [5], [6]
and [7] above, questions
do, however, arise as to whether and when a
matter is ‘pending’ before the National Consumer Tribunal
(s 130(3)
(b)
)
or is ‘before’ a debt counsellor, alternative dispute
resolution agent, consumer court, or ombud with jurisdiction
(s
130(3)
(c)
(i)).
[16] As Lord Steyn said in
R
v Secretary for the Home Department, Ex parte Daly
,
29
‘
(i)n law, context is
everything’. This was approved by the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
Aktiebolaget Hässle
and Another v Triomed (Pty) Ltd
.
30
Indeed, Eloff J (as he then was) said
of the very word ‘pending’ in the case of
Noah
v Union National South British Insurance Co Ltd
31
that its meaning depends much upon its
context. It seems to me that, in context, the words ‘pending’
in s 130(3)
(b)
(and also in s 130(4)
(c)
)
and ‘before’ in s 130(3)
(c)
denote a certain immediacy to the
events rather than merely a formal referral having been made. As
Eloff J noted, ‘pending’
in the
Oxford
English Dictionary
is
defined, inter alia, as ‘about to happen; to be imminent’.
32
The word ‘before’, in
plain English, means ‘in front of’.
33
In other words, it is not good enough
for a consumer, being pursued for a debt for which he or she has no
substantive defence to
adopt, as so often happens in this division, a
‘catch-me-if-you-can’ attitude.
[17] I am fortified in this view by
reference to two considerations. The first is that it is trite that,
even where a defendant
fails to satisfy a court that he or she has a
bona fide defence to an application for summary judgment, the court
has a discretion
not to grant summary judgment.
34
The evolution of our common law
principles has thus entailed that, when it comes to applications for
summary judgment, a court must
take a holistic, rational and fair
approach to each matter before it. Summary judgment need therefore
not be granted where a consumer
deserves a fair opportunity to
reorganise his or her financial affairs on a sensible basis. Respect
for an important purpose of
the NCA — consumer protection —
is therefore not necessarily undermined by an application for summary
judgment, even
though the consumer may have invoked the provisions of
Part D of Ch 4 relating to debt review. It all depends on the facts
and
circumstances of the particular case. The second consideration
which strengthens my view that the debt review mechanisms of the
NCA
do not provide a safe haven for pirates and dilatory sunbathers is
that, in terms of s 130(4)
(c)
of the NCA, the court has a discretion
to adjourn proceedings where there is a pending debt review in terms
of Part D of Ch 4 of
the Act. In other words, there is, in my
respectful view, much to commend the approach of Binns-Ward J in the
Changing Tides
case
where the hearing of the application for summary judgment was
adjourned on certain appropriate terms and conditions. A prospective
debt review is not, ipso facto, a bar to obtaining summary judgment.
In summary, where a credit provider has given a consumer proper
notice in terms of s 86(10) of the NCA, a court hearing an
application for summary judgment upon a credit agreement, may,
depending
on the contents of the affidavit resisting summary
judgment:
grant the application; or
dismiss the application; or
adjourn the application on appropriate
terms and conditions.
Active endeavours to exchange serious,
sensible and reasonable proposals to resolve a consumer’s debt
problems will be among
the factors which will weigh heavily with a
court in deciding which order to make.
[18] The respondents are all
‘clutching at straws’. In each case, summary judgment is
appropriate. Mindful of the provisions
of s 26(1) of the Constitution
which enshrines the right of access to adequate housing, the
provisions of the Prevention of Illegal
Eviction from and Unlawful
Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 which elaborate thereupon, and the
decisions in the cases of
Jaftha
v Schoeman
and
Standard
Bank v Saunderson
, I
consider that, although it would be right to grant the applicants
summary judgment for the debts due to them, it would be an
appropriate exercise of a discretion not to make orders that the
immovable property in question be declared to be specially
executable.
After all, among the clear purposes of the NCA is to
afford a debtor a reasonable opportunity to discharge a debt on terms
that
may be less onerous than may otherwise be the case. For the
applicants, the recovery of the debt may take a little longer without
the order declaring the immovable properties specially executable but
at least the respondents will have the opportunity first
to explore
ways of settling their debt without losing their homes. The
Jaftha
and
Saunderson
cases are not, of course,
directly in point but they do indicate a wariness about persons
losing their homes.
[19] In view of the fact that these
are clearly test cases, I consider it appropriate not to make any
costs orders.
[20] The following orders are made:
In case number 21862/2010 (
First
National Bank v Seyffert
)
summary judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff against the
defendants, jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be
absolved, for:
Payment of the sum of R219 715,69;
Interest on the aforesaid sum
calculated at the rate of 9% per annum from 12 May 2010 to date of
payment.
In case number 23132/2010 (
First
National Bank v Buitendach
)
summary judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff against the
defendants, jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be
absolved, for:
Payment of the sum of R731 217,72;
Interest on the aforesaid sum
calculated at the rate of 8,75% per annum from 29 May 2010 to date of
payment.
In case number 23380/2010 (
First
National Bank v Saunders
)
summary judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff against the
defendants, jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be
absolved, for:
Payment of the sum of R927 350,14;
Interest on the aforesaid sum
calculated at the rate of 7,5% per annum from 5 June 2010 to date of
payment.
In case number 09987/2010 (
Nedbank
v Petersen
) summary
judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff against the
defendants, jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be
absolved, for:
Payment of the sum of R777 011,18;
Interest on the aforesaid sum
calculated at the rate of 9,4% per annum from 1 February 2010 to date
of payment.
Attorneys
for the applicant in case Nos 21862/2010; 23132/2010; 23380/2010:
Charl
Cilliers Inc
.
Attorneys
for the applicant in case No 009987/2010:
Nam-Ford
Inc
.
Attorneys
for
the respondents in case No 21862/2010:
Smit
&
Grové
.
Attorneys
for the
respondents in case Nos 23132/2010; 23380/2010; 009987/2010:
Taitz
& Skikne
.
1
In Islam, lending at interest is
‘haraam’ (forbidden). Other than acts of charity or
works of mercy, Islamic systems
of money-lending are rendered
economically functional by, for example, the charging of fees,
leasing, joint venture or profit-shares.
2
2009 (2) SA 512
(D).
3
WCC case No 18153/09, 12
November 2009.
4
2010 (4) SA 635
(GSJ).
5
ECB case No 19/2010, 8 June
2010.
6
GSJ case No 6359/2010, 29 July
2010.
7
WCC case No 13564/09, 13 August
2010.
8
SGJ case No 24205/08, 5 December
2008.
9
2010 (5) SA 618
(KZD).
10
ECP case No 1693/10, 31 August
2010.
11
[2004] ZACC 25
;
2005 (2) SA 140
(CC)
(2005 (1)
BCLR 78).
12
[2005] ZAGPHC 85
;
2005 (6) SA 462
(W) ([2006]
2
All SA 506).
13
2006 (2) SA 264
(SCA)
(2006 (9)
BCLR 1022
;
[2006] 2 All SA 382).
14
2009 (3) SA 315
(D) ([2009]
2
All SA 416).
15
2009 (3) SA 363
(W).
16
2009 (6) SA 63
(KZD).
17
2009 (6) SA 295
(GNP).
18
2010 (1) SA 143
(GSJ).
19
2010 (1) SA 549
(KZD).
20
GSJ case No 20839/2009, 28 June
2010.
21
ECP case No 1796/2010, 17 August
2010.
22
2010 (4) SA 531
(GNP).
23
See,
for example, the wording of s 88(3)
(b)
(i).
24
See
The
Oxford English Dictionary
.
25
1976 (2) SA 226
(T).
26
At 229A.
27
eTV
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Judicial Service Commission and Others
2010 (1) SA
537
(GSJ) at 547C.
28
See
the
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd
at
para [26].
29
[2001] UKHL 26
;
[2001] 3 All ER 433
(HL) at 447
a
.
30
2003 (1) SA 155
(SCA) ([2002]
4
All SA 138)
at para [1].
31
1979 (1) SA 330
(T) at
332B–333D.
32
At 332B.
33
See
The
Oxford English Dictionary
.
34
See
Gruhn
v M Pupkewitz & Sons (Pty) Ltd
1973
(3) SA 49
(A) at 58D.