NDPP v Sharma and Others (2427/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 82 (28 April 2022)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Leave to appeal — Application for leave to appeal against judgment regarding authority of directors during business rescue proceedings — Third defendant sought leave on grounds including lack of standing of directors to oppose proceedings without approval of Business Rescue Practitioners — Court emphasized the heightened standard for granting leave to appeal under Section 17 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, requiring reasonable prospects of success or compelling reasons — Application for leave to appeal filed late without sufficient explanation for delay — Court found no compelling reasons to grant condonation or leave to appeal, upholding the original judgment.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns an application for leave to appeal, coupled with a request for condonation for late filing, brought in the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein. The application was determined by Mbhele AJP and was heard on 25 February 2022 and delivered on 28 April 2022.


The party seeking leave to appeal was the third defendant, Islandsite Investments 180 (Pty) Ltd. The opposing party in the leave application was the National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP), cited in the main proceedings as the applicant. Although the broader matter involved multiple cited defendants and respondents, the judgment addressed the narrower procedural and authority dispute arising from Islandsite’s attempt to litigate in the main proceedings while it was under business rescue.


The procedural history relevant to this judgment was that Musi JP delivered an earlier judgment on 11 August 2021 making two operative findings: first, that BDK Attorneys lacked authority to act for the third defendant in the proceedings; and second, that the directors and/or shareholders of the third defendant lacked standing to oppose the proceedings without approval of the business rescue practitioners. Islandsite sought leave to appeal against that order, but it did so more than four months after the order, well outside the period prescribed by the Uniform Rules.


The dispute in this leave application thus fell within the general subject-matter of (i) appeal procedure (leave to appeal and condonation) and (ii) company law under business rescue, particularly the allocation of authority between a company’s board of directors and its business rescue practitioners in relation to litigation decisions.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause, and treated by the court as the operative procedural fact, that the judgment sought to be appealed was delivered on 11 August 2021, and that Islandsite only brought its application for leave to appeal in December 2021, more than four months later. The court noted that the precise filing date was unclear on the papers, but it could be gleaned that the leave-to-appeal application was signed on 15 December 2021 and the affidavit in support of condonation was signed on 18 December 2021.


The court proceeded on the basis that Rule 49(1)(b) required an application for leave to appeal to be delivered within 15 court days from the date of the order. Against that procedural benchmark, the court regarded Islandsite’s application as substantially late and therefore dependent on a proper showing for condonation.


As to Islandsite’s explanation for the delay, the court summarised it as resting mainly on two propositions. The first was an asserted uncertainty as to whether the Musi JP order, despite its final effect, was appealable. The second was that it was only after the Constitutional Court decision in Shiva Uranium (Proprietary) Limited and Another v Mahomed Mahier Tayob and Others CC/305/20 [2021] ZACC 40 (delivered on 9 November 2021) that Islandsite believed it became clear that the earlier judgment was “incorrect and wrong in law” and that leave to appeal should be pursued.


The court treated as material the further chronology that, even accepting Islandsite’s reliance on the Constitutional Court decision as the triggering event, Islandsite still lodged its leave and condonation papers more than five weeks after that decision. The court found that the papers did not adequately explain why that additional delay occurred.


On the merits (for purposes of assessing prospects of success), the court accepted as central the context that the third defendant was a company in business rescue and that the earlier order effectively required that opposition and litigation decisions on behalf of the company had to be authorised or approved by the business rescue practitioners, with the implication that attorneys could not act on instructions lacking such authority. The court also considered, as part of its evaluation of the litigation-authority question, that engaging in litigation may carry not only potential legal costs but also reputational risk, brand damage, and diversion of management resources, which the court regarded as relevant to whether such decisions fall within day-to-day management.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine were, first, whether Islandsite had made out a proper case for condonation for the late filing of its leave-to-appeal application in light of the requirements for explaining non-compliance with the rules, including explaining both the delay and any delay in seeking condonation.


Second, the court had to determine whether leave to appeal should be granted under section 17 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, which required Islandsite to demonstrate that the contemplated appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success (or that another compelling reason justified an appeal), and that the statutory requirements for leave were met.


Third, because the merits were advanced as showing strong prospects, the court had to consider the substantive company-law question raised by Islandsite: whether, during business rescue, the directors/shareholders of the company could litigate on behalf of the company (including opposing proceedings) without the approval or authority of the business rescue practitioners, or whether such actions fall within the authority of the practitioners and are void without approval.


These questions involved a mixture of procedural application of law to fact (condonation and leave thresholds applied to the chronology and explanation provided) and interpretive application of statutory provisions under the Companies Act 71 of 2008 to the functional classification of litigation decisions (governance versus management within the business rescue framework). The characterisation of litigation as implicating day-to-day management also entailed an evaluative judgment by the court, grounded in the statutory scheme and the practical implications of litigation.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the application by identifying the governing statutory standard for leave to appeal in section 17 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013. It emphasised that the Act has raised the threshold for granting leave to appeal: it is not sufficient that a party has an arguable case or a mere possibility of success, but the applicant must show real prospects that another court would come to a different conclusion. The court relied on authority indicating that the use of “would” in section 17 suggests a more stringent, certainty-oriented standard than the earlier test.


The court further noted that any discretion in a leave-to-appeal inquiry must be exercised consistently with section 17(1), and that the applicant bears a “heavy onus” to demonstrate why another court would differ. The court also referred to prior judicial commentary cautioning that “compelling reasons” for an appeal under section 17(1)(a)(ii) should not be invoked for flimsy reasons, and require careful scrutiny against the facts of the particular case.


Turning to condonation, the court treated it as a significant and independent obstacle to Islandsite’s application given the extensive delay. It invoked established principles that condonation is not granted merely for the asking and requires a full, detailed, and accurate account of the causes of delay. It relied on authority holding that an applicant must explain not only the delay in complying with time periods, but also any delay in seeking condonation once non-compliance is realised, and that prospects of success are an important factor but not necessarily decisive. The court stressed that where there has been flagrant disregard of rules, condonation may be refused irrespective of prospects.


Applying those principles, the court found Islandsite’s explanation inadequate. The deponent did not explain how it was realised that the earlier judgment was appealable and why it was necessary to await the Constitutional Court decision in Shiva Uranium v Tayob before deciding to appeal. The court further found no adequate explanation for why the application was still only brought more than five weeks after the Constitutional Court judgment, despite that judgment being presented as the event that clarified the need to appeal. In the court’s assessment, the application did not sufficiently account for the disregard of time limits prescribed by the rules.


Although the court considered that prospects of success were relevant, it reiterated that they could not be the sole determinant where the applicant had not properly explained its failure to comply with the rules. Nonetheless, the court proceeded to assess the merits to determine whether any reasonable prospect existed that an appeal would succeed.


On the merits, the court considered the statutory structure of company management under business rescue. It referred to section 66(1) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008, which ordinarily vests management authority in a company’s board, but it treated this as operating subject to the business rescue provisions. It relied particularly on section 137(2), which provides that during business rescue each director continues to exercise functions as director subject to the authority of the practitioner, and must exercise management functions in accordance with the practitioner’s directions to the extent reasonable. The court also referred to section 137(4), which renders void any action purportedly taken on behalf of the company that requires practitioner approval unless approved by the practitioner.


Islandsite sought to rely on the Supreme Court of Appeal decision in Tayob v Shiva Uranium (Pty) Ltd [2020] ZASCA 162 (8 December 2020) for the proposition that directors do not always require practitioner approval, particularly where issues fall outside the practitioner’s authority and are more properly characterised as governance matters. The court accepted the core holding from Tayob that section 137(2)(a) must be read in context with Chapter 6, and that only director functions that fall within the ambit of the practitioner’s authority are subject to the practitioner’s approval. The court noted that Tayob treated the practitioner’s “management control” under section 140(1)(a) as relating to being in charge of the company and running it, particularly on a day-to-day basis, and that Tayob distinguished certain governance-type decisions as falling outside that ambit.


However, the court held that litigation decisions on behalf of a company are not merely technical legal steps but involve substantial risk and practical consequences, including financial exposure, reputational effects, brand harm, and management distraction. On that basis, the court characterised the decision to litigate as a matter that implicates the company’s day-to-day management and its rescue trajectory, rather than a governance decision reserved exclusively to directors. The court further observed that, given that the practitioners bear responsibility for rescuing the company, litigation decisions with such implications should not be undertaken without the practitioners’ knowledge and authorisation.


In light of that classification, the court concluded that the earlier Musi JP order—requiring practitioner approval for opposition to be mounted and for attorneys to act—was not shown to be wrong, and that Islandsite had not established reasonable prospects that an appeal would succeed. The court therefore was not persuaded that any of the asserted grounds of appeal, whether singly or cumulatively, met the section 17 threshold.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the third defendant’s application for leave to appeal. In doing so, it effectively refused the attempt to obtain condonation for late filing because the leave application could not succeed in the absence of an acceptable explanation for delay and because the merits did not disclose reasonable prospects of success.


The court ordered that the application for leave to appeal was dismissed with costs.


Cases Cited


Mothuloe Incorporated Attorneys v The Law Society of the Northern Province 2017 JDR 533 (SCA); The Mont Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen and 18 Others (Land Claims Court of South Africa Case No LCC 14R/2014, judgment delivered 3 November 2014) (unreported); Van Heerden v Cronwright & Others 1985 (2) SA 342 (T); The School Governing Body Grey College, Bloemfontein v Deon Scheepers and Others (Bloemfontein High Court Case No 2612/2018, judgment delivered 17 January 2019) (unreported); Shiva Uranium (Proprietary) Limited and Another v Mahomed Mahier Tayob and Others CC/305/20 [2021] ZACC 40; Darries v Sheriff Magistrate’s Court, Wynberg and Another [1998] ZASCA 18; 1998 (3) SA 34 (SCA); Uitenhage Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service 2004 (1) SA 292 (SCA); Tayob v Shiva Uranium (Pty) Ltd [2020] ZASCA 162 (8 December 2020); Tayob v Shiva Uranium (Pty) Limited 2020 JDR 2672 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, section 17; Companies Act 71 of 2008, sections 66(1), 137(2), 137(4), and 140(1)(a).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 49(1)(b).


Held


The court held that Islandsite failed to provide a full and satisfactory explanation for the extensive delay in bringing its application for leave to appeal, including failing to explain why it was necessary to wait for the Constitutional Court decision in Shiva Uranium v Tayob and failing to explain the additional delay after that decision.


The court further held that, even considering the merits, Islandsite did not demonstrate reasonable prospects of success as required by section 17 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013. In particular, the court accepted that, in business rescue, directors’ powers are exercised subject to the authority of the business rescue practitioner in matters falling within the practitioner’s day-to-day management control, and that deciding to litigate on behalf of the company is a management decision with significant practical implications requiring practitioner authorisation.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Section 17 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 imposes an elevated threshold for leave to appeal: an applicant must show that an appeal would have reasonable prospects of success (or that another compelling reason justifies the appeal), not merely that the case is arguable or that success is possible.


Condonation for non-compliance with procedural time limits is discretionary and is not granted as a formality. An applicant must provide a full, detailed, and accurate explanation for the delay and any further delay in seeking condonation. Prospects of success are an important factor in condonation, but they are not necessarily decisive, particularly where there has been substantial or unexplained non-compliance.


Under Chapter 6 of the Companies Act 71 of 2008, directors continue to perform their functions during business rescue, but subject to the authority of the business rescue practitioner in relation to matters that fall within the practitioner’s management control. Actions taken on behalf of the company that require practitioner approval are void unless approved. In determining whether practitioner approval is required, the relevant inquiry is whether the decision falls within the practitioner’s ambit of management authority, understood as control of running the company, particularly on a day-to-day basis.

About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Free State High Court, Bloemfontein
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Free State High Court, Bloemfontein
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAFSHC 82
|

|

NDPP v Sharma and Others (2427/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 82 (28 April 2022)

IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE STATE
DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case No.: 2427/2021
Reportable: YES/NO
Of interest to other
Judges: YES/NO
Circulate to
Magistrates: YES/NO
In the matter between: -
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Applicant
and
IQBAL
MEER SHARMA
1
st
Defendant
NULANE
INVESTMENTS 204 (PTY) LTD
2
nd
Defendant
ISLANDSITE
INVESTMENTS 180 (PTY) LTD
3
rd
Defendant
KURT
ROBERT KNOOP N.O.
4
th
Defendant
JOHAN
LOUIS KLOPPER N.O.
5
th
Defendant
ISSAR
GLOBAL LIMITED
1
st
Respondent
ISSAR
CAPITAL (PTY) LTD
2
nd
Respondent
TARINA
PATEL-SHARMA
3
rd
Respondent
CORAM:
N. M.
MBHELE, AJP
HEARD
ON:
25 FEBRUARY 2022
DELIVERED
ON:
28 APRIL 2022
This
is an application for leave to appeal brought by the 3
rd
Defendant (Islandsite Investments 180 (Pty) Ltd) on a judgment
delivered by Musi, JP.
[1] This is an
application for leave to appeal against the judgment of Musi, JP that
was delivered on 11 August 2021, in which the
following order was
made:

1.
BDK Attorneys do not have authority to act on behalf of the third
defendant in these proceedings.
2.
The directors and or shareholders of the third defendant have no
standing to oppose these proceedings
without the approval of the
Business Rescue Practitioners.”
[2] The application for
leave to appeal is sought on approximately 14 grounds. To avoid
prolixity I shall not repeat same herein.
[3] Leave to appeal is
governed by Section 17 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the
Act). Subsection 17(1)(a) – (c) reads
as follows:

(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges
concerned are of the opinion that-
(a)
(i)   the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii)   there
is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments on the
matter under consideration;
(b)
the
decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of section
16 (2)
(a)
;
and
(c)
where the decision sought to be
appealed does not dispose of all the issues in the case, the appeal
would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between
the parties. ”
[4] It is generally
accepted that the existing provisions of the Act raise the standard
to be met by an applicant in a leave to
appeal.
The
test for granting leave to appeal is whether there are any reasonable
prospects of success in an appeal. It is not whether a
litigant has
an arguable case or a mere possibility of success.
[1]
[5]
In
The
Mont Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen and 18 Others
[2]
said the following:
"It is clear that
the threshold for granting leave to appeal against a judgment of a
High Court has been raised in the new
Act. The former test whether
leave to appeal should be granted was a reasonable prospect that
another court might come to a different
conclusion, see
Van
Heerden v Cronwright & Others
1985 (2) SA 342
(T) at 343H
.
The use of the word "would" in the said new statute
indicates a measure of certainty that another court will differ from

the court whose judgment is sought to be appealed against."
[6] It is clear from the
above authorities that in leave to appeal applications a judge’s
discretion has to be exercised in
conformity with section 17(1). The
Act places a heavy onus on the applicant to show why another court
would come to a different
conclusion. It is no longer about the
applicant having an arguable case, it must be clear at the time of
granting leave to appeal
that prospects of success are real and not
fanciful.
[7]
Musi, JP remarked as follows in
The
School Governing Body Grey College, Bloemfontein v Deon Scheepers and
Others
:
[3]

Whether
there is a compelling reason why the appeal should be heard will
depend on the facts of a particular case. There must be
a strong
reason for granting leave to appeal on this ground. Some reasons may
be compelling whilst others may not be. The Court
should give careful
and proper consideration to the reason advanced before categorizing
it as compelling. Section 17(1)(a)(ii)
should therefore not be
invoked for flimsy reasons.”
[8]
The third defendant brought its application for leave to appeal in
December 2021, more than 4 months from the date of the judgment.
It
is not clear on which date the application for leave to appeal was
filed, all I could glean from the papers is that the application
for
leave to appeal was signed on 15 December 2021 while the affidavit in
support of the application for condonation of the late
filing of the
application for leave to appeal was signed on 18 December 2021. In
terms of Rule 49(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules, the
third defendant had
to file an application for leave to appeal within 15 court days from
the date of the order.
[9] The explanation
given by the third defendant for the delay can be summarised as
follows:
(a)
The uncertainty whether Musi, JP’s judgment (the main
judgment), although having the final effect,
was appealable;
(b)
It was only after the judgment of the
Constitutional
Court in
Shiva
Uranium (Proprietary) Limited and Another v Mahomed Mahier Tayob and
Others
[4]
that it became clear firstly that the main judgment was incorrect and
wrong in law and that leave to appeal should have been applied
for,
and therefore should be applied for. The
Tayob
judgment above was delivered on 9 November 2021 and the condonation
application was filed after Saturday 18 December 2021.
[10] Mr. Hellens, on
behalf of the third defendant, submitted that the interests of
justice demand that condonation and leave to
appeal be granted as the
reason for lateness is not so poor and that the merits are so strong
that this court should grant the
application.  He contended,
further, that the issue to be determined on appeal  is so
important that it requires the
Supreme Court of Appeal to provide
clarity on the roles of Business Rescue Practitioners and the board
of directors of a company
under business rescue.
[11] In
Darries
v Sheriff Magistrate Court, Wynberg and Another
[5]
the following remarks were made:

Condonation of the
non-observance of the rules of this court is not a mere formality. In
all cases, some acceptable explanation,
not only of, for example, the
delay in noting the appeal, but also, where this is the case, any
delay in seeking condonation, must
be given. An appellant should
whenever he realises that he has not complied with a rule of court
apply for condonation as soon
as possible. Nor should it simply be
assumed that, where non-compliance was due entirely to the neglect of
the appellants’
attorney that condonation will be granted. In
applications of this sort the applicants’ prospects of success
are in general
an important though not decisive consideration. When
application is made for condonation it is advisable that the petition
should
set forth briefly and succinctly such essential information as
may enable the Court to assess the appellant’s prospects of

success. But appellant’s prospect of success is but one of the
factors relevant to the exercise of the court’s discretion,

unless the cumulative effect of the other relevant factors in the
case is such as to render the application for condonation obviously

unworthy of consideration. Where non-observance of the Rules has been
flagrant and gross an application for condonation should
not be
granted, whatever the prospects of success might be.”
[12] It is well
established that
condonation
is not to be had merely for the asking: a full, detailed and accurate
account of the causes of the delay and their effects
must be
furnished so as to enable the Court to understand clearly the reasons
and to assess the responsibility. It must be obvious
that, if the
non-compliance is time-related then the date, duration and extent of
any obstacle on which reliance is placed must
be spelled out.
[6]
[13] Ms. Ragavan, the
deponent of the third defendant’s affidavit, fails to explain
how she came to the realisation that the
main judgment was appealable
and that there was a need to apply for leave to appeal. It is,
further, not clear why it became necessary
for the third defendant to
wait for the Constitutional Court decision in
Tayob
before the
decision to appeal could be taken. There is, further, no
explanation why  the leave to appeal and condonation

applications were  lodged over 5 weeks  after the Tayob
judgment was delivered, the very judgment that is said to have
been
the Damascus moment for the third defendant.
[14] Prospects of success
on merits cannot be the only determining factor when  considering
an application for condonation.
The applicant in a condonation
application must still explain to the court why there was flagrant
disregard of the rules of court.
The third defendant failed to give
reasons why the rules of court could not  be adhered to.
[15] Mr. Hellens
contended that the directors of third defendant do not require the
authority of the Business Rescue Practitioners
(the practitioners) to
litigate on behalf of the company as the process of litigation would
require understanding of historical
matters which the practitioners
have no knowledge of. He finds support in the Supreme Court of Appeal
judgment of
Tayob v Shiva uranium (Pty) Limited 2020 JDR 2672 SCA
par. 25.
[15]
Section 66(1)
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
provides as follows:

66. (1) The
business and affairs of a company must be managed by or under the
direction of its board, which has the authority to
exercise all of
the powers and perform any of the functions of the company, except to
the extent that this Act or the company’s
Memorandum of
Incorporation provides otherwise.”
[16]
Section 137(2) of the Act provides as follows:

(2)
During a company’s business rescue proceedings, each director
of the company:
(a)
Must continue to exercise the functions of director subject to the
authority of the practitioner.
(b)
Has a duty to the company to exercise any management functions within
the company in accordance
with the express instructions or directions
of the practitioner to the extent that it is reasonable to do so.
Section
137(4):

If
during a company’s business rescue proceedings the board or one
or more directors of the company purports to take any action
on
behalf of the company that requires the approval of the practitioner
that action is void unless approved by the practitioner.”
[17] In
Tayob
v Shiva Uranium (Pty) Ltd
[7]
the court remarked as follows in paragraphs 24 and 25:

[24]
Section 140(1)
(a)
of the Act provides:

During a company’s
business rescue proceedings, the practitioner, in addition to any
other powers and duties set out in this
Chapter—
(a)
has full management control of the company in substitution for
its board and pre-existing management.’
The word ‘management’
is not defined in the Act. Consequently, it must be ascribed its
ordinary meaning, that is, to
be in charge of or to run a company,
particularly on a day-to-day basis. To appoint a substitute
practitioner (who will then be
in full management control of the
company) is rather a function of governance and approval thereof is
not in my view a management
function.
[25]
As I have said, the court a quo based its decision to dismiss the
applicants’ application essentially
on the provisions of s
137(2)
(a)
of the
Act. It provides that during a company’s business rescue
proceedings, each director of the company must continue to
exercise
the functions of a director, ‘subject to the authority of the
practitioner’.
[8]
Subsection 137(2)
(a)
must, of course, be read with the provisions of Chapter 6 of the Act
and those of s 140 in particular. They circumscribe the ambit
of the
authority of the practitioner. Any function of a director that falls
outside of that ambit, cannot be subject to the approval
of the
practitioner. It follows that s 137(2)
(a)
only affects the exercise of the functions of a director in respect
of matters falling within the ambit of the authority of the

practitioner. As I have shown, the appointment of a practitioner does
not fall within the powers or authority of a practitioner.”
[18] In
Tayob
the
SCA found that the functions of directors that do not fall within the
ambit of the authority of the practitioner do not require
the
practitioner’s approval.  It follows that the
practitioner’s authority is required on issues relating to the

day to day management of the company.
[19] Litigating on behalf
of a company is a risky exercise which is not only limited to legal
costs, it extends to issues like reputational
risk, brand damage and
diversion of management resources. It is an exercise that cannot be
embarked upon without the knowledge
and authorisation of someone
responsible for day to day management of the company’s affairs.
[20] Mr. Hellens
submitted that the third defendant was not insolvent when it was
placed under business rescue. The decision to
place it under business
rescue followed the South African banks’ decision not to extend
its services to the third defendant.
The decision by the banks casts
a spotlight on the reputation and brand equity of the third
defendant.  It is clear that the
decision to litigate has far
reaching implications for a company under business rescue and that it
requires authorisation of the
practitioner whose responsibility is to
rescue a company that is facing extinction. In the circumstances of
the current matter
the decision to litigate on behalf of the third
defendant cannot be categorised as a governance issue that falls
exclusively in
the terrain of the directors.
[21]
Having
considered the merits of the application for leave to appeal, I am
not persuaded that there would be reasonable prospects
of success on
appeal.
CONCLUSION:
[22]
Having concluded that none of the grounds of appeal enjoy reasonable
prospects of success, whether taken singly or cumulatively,
the
application for leave to appeal must fail.
[23] I make the following
order:
1. The application for
leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
___________________
N.M. MBHELE, AJP
Appearances:
For the Applicant/3
rd
Defendant:   Adv. Hellens SC
with Adv. Joubert
Instructed by BDK
Attorneys
Bloemfontein
For the
Respondent/Applicant:     Adv. G. Budlender SC
with Adv. B. Somaru
Instructed by NDPP
Bloemfontein
[1]
Mothuloe
Incorporated Attorneys v The Law Society of the Northern Province
2017 JDR 533 (SCA) at para 18
[2]
Unreported judgment of the
Land
Claims Court of South Africa Case    No LCC 14R/2014
delivered on 3 November 2014
[3]
The
School Governing Body Grey College, Bloemfontein v Deon Scheepers
and Others: Unreported Judgment of Bloemfontein High Court
Case no
2612/ 2018 delivered on 17 January 2019.
[4]
CC/305/ 20[
2021]
ZACC 40
[5]
Darries v Sheriff Magistrate’s Court, Wynberg and Another
[1998] ZASCA 18
;
1998 (3) SA 34
(SCA) at 40H-41E.
[6]
Uitenhage
Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service
2004
(1) SA 292
(SCA) para 6.
[7]
Tayob v Shiva Uranium (Pty) Ltd [ZASCA] 162 delivered on 8 December
2020.