Heygi and Another v Minister of Police NO and Others (25328/2016; 25329/2016) [2018] ZAGPPHC 283 (23 January 2018)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Exceptions — Pleadings — Exceptions to counterclaims — Plaintiffs' exceptions to counterclaims by third and fifth defendants alleging personal liability under Companies Act — Plaintiffs contending counterclaims fail to sustain a cause of action and do not comply with rule 18(4) — Court finding that counterclaims sufficiently plead personal liability of directors for reckless conduct under sections 22 and 218(2) of Companies Act — Exceptions dismissed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerned two identical exceptions raised by the plaintiffs, David Heygi and Helen Heygi, against counterclaims delivered in two related actions heard in the Gauteng Division, Pretoria. The proceedings were interlocutory in nature and were confined to determining whether the impugned counterclaims were excipiable on the basis that they failed to disclose a cause of action and failed to comply with the pleading requirements of Uniform Rule 18(4).


The plaintiffs (husband and wife) were the claimants in the main actions, instituted against six defendants. The defendants included the Minister of Police (first defendant) and an arresting police officer (second defendant), as well as four private individuals (third to sixth defendants) who had laid criminal charges against the plaintiffs. The exceptions determined in this judgment related only to counterclaims advanced by the third defendant (Joanna Grace Elliott) and the fifth defendant (Grant Stanton).


Procedurally, the plaintiffs had instituted actions claiming substantial damages (approximately R58 million) arising from alleged unlawful arrest, detention, malicious prosecution, defamation, and injuria. The defendants delivered pleas, and the third and fifth defendants also delivered counterclaims. The plaintiffs excepted to specified paragraphs of those counterclaims, contending that reliance on section 22 read with section 218(2) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 could not found personal liability for directors or prescribed officers. The court dealt with both exceptions together because they were materially identical and raised the same legal issue.


The general subject-matter of the dispute, as presented for purposes of the exceptions, was whether the pleaded allegations concerning reckless or fraudulent trading by corporate entities, coupled with the plaintiffs’ alleged participation as directors and/or prescribed officers, were sufficient to found a claim for personal liability under the Companies Act and to meet the required standard of pleading.


2. Material Facts


The judgment was decided at exception stage. Accordingly, the court approached the matter on the basis of the facts as pleaded in the counterclaims and assessed whether, on any reasonable interpretation, those pleaded facts could sustain a cause of action. The court did not resolve factual disputes on the merits, and the material facts were those relied upon in the pleadings as necessary to assess excipiability.


In the third defendant’s first counterclaim (repeated against both David and Helen Heygi), it was pleaded that the plaintiffs were prescribed officers of Tshisnyama Trading (Pty) Ltd (“Tshisanyama”) and directors of Fish Boss (Pty) Ltd (“Fish Boss”). It was further pleaded that on or about 29 July 2013, Fish Boss concluded a written sale agreement with Sexy Alien (Pty) Ltd (“Sexy Alien”) in terms of which a fast-food franchise business was sold. On the same date, Fish Boss concluded three franchise agreements with Tshisanyama. The third defendant pleaded that, pursuant to these agreements, she (acting on behalf of Sexy Alien) paid R1.6 million into a bank account under the control of the plaintiff(s) and delivered a delivery vehicle to Fish Boss.


The third defendant further pleaded that, during negotiations leading to the conclusion of those agreements, the plaintiffs made fraudulent misrepresentations intended to induce the conclusion of the agreements, rendering them void ab initio, and that damages were suffered. In addition, and centrally for the exceptions, the counterclaim pleaded that during the period July 2013 to May 2014 the business of Fish Boss and Tshisanyama was carried on recklessly, with gross negligence, with intent to defraud creditors, and/or for a fraudulent purpose, supported by pleaded particulars such as diversion of funds for personal purposes, abandonment of claims, failure to appoint competent staff, lack of intention to comply with contractual obligations, defective performance without remedial steps, continued trading and incurring of debts, and abandonment of the business. It was pleaded that the plaintiff(s), as directors and/or prescribed officers, were knowingly a party to that conduct and were therefore liable in terms of section 22 read with section 218(2) of the Companies Act. The counterclaim also pleaded a cession dated 27 May 2014 in terms of which Sexy Alien ceded its rights against the plaintiffs to the third defendant, and it quantified damages at R2 666 185.00.


The fifth defendant’s counterclaim (also repeated against both plaintiffs) similarly pleaded that the plaintiffs were prescribed officers of Tshisanyama, and that on 24 August 2014 another company, Stanton Marketing (Pty) Ltd (“SM”), concluded a written franchise agreement with Tshisanyama. It was pleaded that SM paid R500 000 into Tshisanyama’s bank account. The counterclaim then pleaded, in terms materially mirroring the third defendant’s formulation, that during July 2013 to May 2014 Tshisanyama’s business was conducted recklessly, with gross negligence, with intent to defraud, and/or for a fraudulent purpose, on the basis of particulars that echoed those in the third defendant’s counterclaim. The fifth defendant pleaded that the plaintiff(s) were knowingly parties to such conduct and were therefore liable to SM in terms of section 22 read with section 218(2). A cession was pleaded, dated 23 June 2016, in terms of which SM ceded its claim against the plaintiffs to the fifth defendant, with the damages claimed quantified at R500 000.00.


The plaintiffs’ exceptions targeted the paragraphs in each counterclaim asserting that, because the plaintiffs were knowingly party to the conduct, they were personally liable under section 22 read with section 218(2). The plaintiffs’ pleaded complaint, as distilled by the court, was that these statutory provisions did not create personal liability for directors or prescribed officers and that the counterclaims therefore lacked averments necessary to sustain a cause of action and were inadequately pleaded under Rule 18(4).


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the third and fifth defendants’ counterclaims, as pleaded, disclosed a cause of action against the plaintiffs personally by relying on section 22 read with section 218(2) of the Companies Act 71 of 2008, given that section 22 is framed as a prohibition on how a company may conduct its business.


Closely connected to that was whether, on a proper interpretation of the counterclaims read as a whole, the pleadings contained sufficient averments (express or implied) to establish a statutory contravention attributable to the plaintiffs as directors and/or prescribed officers, and whether this met the pleading standard required by Uniform Rule 18(4).


The dispute before the court was predominantly one of law (statutory interpretation and the legal sufficiency of pleaded facts), and of the application of law to pleaded facts (whether the pleaded participation by directors/prescribed officers could, if proved, fall within the reach of section 218(2)). It did not require the court to make factual findings on the truth of the allegations or to exercise a merits-based value judgment concerning the underlying commercial conduct.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began by restating the established approach to exceptions. For an exception to succeed, the pleading must be excipiable on every reasonable interpretation, and the excipient bears the burden because the pleader is entitled to a benevolent (charitable) interpretation. The pleading must be read as a whole, and express averments may carry implied allegations; the court may therefore read the pleading in a manner that gives effect to what is reasonably conveyed by its factual allegations.


Against that framework, the court identified the sole permissible basis advanced in the plaintiffs’ exceptions as the contention that sections 22 and 218(2) do not create personal liability for directors or prescribed officers. The court treated the exception as directed at that question, and not at the adequacy of the pleaded factual particulars beyond the statutory-liability issue.


In analysing the Companies Act framework, the court referred to the content of section 22(1), which prohibits a company from carrying on business recklessly, with gross negligence, with intent to defraud, or for a fraudulent purpose. The court then noted other statutory provisions relevant to director conduct, particularly section 76(3) (which sets out directors’ duties to act in good faith and in the best interests of the company, with proper purpose, and with appropriate care, skill and diligence) and section 77(3)(b) (which provides for director liability for loss, damages, or costs sustained by the company as a consequence of the director having acquiesced in the carrying on of the company’s business despite knowing it was being conducted in a manner prohibited by section 22(1)). The court further emphasised section 218(2), which provides that any person who contravenes any provision of the Act is liable to any other person for loss or damage suffered as a result of that contravention.


Applying these principles to the counterclaims as pleaded, the court held that the third and fifth defendants had pleaded that the relevant entities’ businesses were conducted in a manner prohibited by section 22, that the plaintiffs (as directors and/or prescribed officers) were knowingly parties to such conduct, and that loss was suffered as a result. On that pleaded foundation, the court concluded that the counterclaims relied on the Companies Act provisions concerning the personal liability of directors in circumstances where they were parties to or acquiesced in prohibited conduct. On the court’s reading, a proper interpretation of section 218(2) permitted personal liability where the pleaded conduct constituted a contravention of the Act and caused loss.


The court additionally held that the factual allegations pleaded by the third and fifth defendants implied alleged conduct by the plaintiffs in breach of section 76 of the Companies Act, which (if proved) could also found a claim under section 218(2). In this respect, the court reiterated that it is not necessary for a pleader to refer to specific statutory sections by number, provided the pleading formulates the case clearly; it is sufficient to plead facts from which the applicability of the statutory provisions may be inferred. The court found that the counterclaims met this standard.


The plaintiffs sought, in heads of argument, to broaden the scope of the exceptions by challenging the nature and sufficiency of particular factual allegations (for example, suggesting that a pleaded “diversion of funds” could have been legitimate, such as payment of salaries, and asserting a lack of particularity). The court rejected this approach as impermissible because it went beyond the case the defendants were called upon to meet on exception. The exception, as framed, was confined to the legal proposition that the cited Companies Act provisions could not ground personal liability, and the plaintiffs could not expand that by argument into a different exception directed at factual detail and particularity.


On the court’s evaluation, once the counterclaims were read benevolently and as a whole, they contained sufficient averments to support a statutory basis for personal liability under the Companies Act. The counterclaims were therefore not excipiable on the ground advanced.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the plaintiffs’ exceptions to the third defendant’s first counterclaim and to the fifth defendant’s counterclaim in both matters under case numbers 25328/2016 and 25329/2016.


The dismissal of the exceptions was accompanied by an order that the exceptions were dismissed with costs.


Cases Cited


Nel and Others NNO v McArthur and Others 2003 (4) SA 142 (T) at 149F–G.


Rabinowitz v Van Graan and Others 2013 (5) SA 315 (GSJ) at 316I.


First National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others 2001 (3) SA 960 (SCA) at 965D.


Legislation Cited


Companies Act 71 of 2008, sections 22, 76(3), 77(3)(b), and 218(2).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 18(4).


Held


The court held that, when read as a whole and interpreted benevolently as required at exception stage, the counterclaims pleaded sufficient facts to sustain claims premised on contraventions of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 and to invoke section 218(2) as a basis for personal liability where the plaintiffs, as directors and/or prescribed officers, were alleged to have been knowingly party to prohibited conduct.


The court further held that the plaintiffs’ attempt in argument to challenge the adequacy and particularity of the factual allegations went beyond the scope of the exceptions as pleaded, which were confined to the proposition that sections 22 and 218(2) could not found personal liability.


Accordingly, the exceptions were dismissed with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A pleading will only be set aside on exception if it is excipiable on every reasonable interpretation; the pleader is entitled to a charitable reading of the pleading, and the pleading must be read as a whole, including reasonable implied allegations arising from express averments.


In assessing whether a cause of action is disclosed, it is sufficient for a party to plead facts from which the applicability of statutory provisions may be inferred; it is not essential to cite specific statutory provisions by number if the pleaded facts clearly formulate the claim.


Where a contravention of the Companies Act is pleaded, and loss is pleaded to have resulted from that contravention, section 218(2) may operate to impose liability on the contravening person, including in circumstances where directors and/or prescribed officers are alleged to have knowingly participated in or acquiesced in conduct prohibited by the Act (including conduct addressed by section 22(1) and conduct impliedly inconsistent with directors’ duties under section 76(3), as discussed in the judgment).

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[2018] ZAGPPHC 283
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Heygi and Another v Minister of Police NO and Others (25328/2016; 25329/2016) [2018] ZAGPPHC 283 (23 January 2018)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBERS: 25328 and 25329/2016
In
the matters between: -
HEYGI,
DAVID (Case No
25329/2016)
Plaintiff
HEYGI,
HELEN (Case No 25328/2016)
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
N.O.
First
defendant
GOBOZI,
MZWANEl.
Second
defendant
E
ELLIOTT, JOANNA
GRACE
Third
defendant
HATTINGH,
CHRISTOPHER
ROBIN
Fourth
defendant
STANTON,
GRANT
Fifth
defendant
STANTON,
CAROL
Sixth
defendant
JUDGMENT
ON EXCEPTIONS
Murphy
J
1.
This judgment concerns two identical exceptions raised by the two
plaintiffs, David and Helen Heygi, against counterclaims filed
by the
third and fifth defendants in actions against the same six defendants
under two distinct case numbers. The two plaintiffs
are husband and
wife. In the interests of convenience, I will at times refer to them
respectively as David and Helen. Their causes
of action and their
exceptions to the counterclaims of the third and fifth defendants
concern the same facts and legal issues.
It is thus convenient to
deal with the two identical exceptions by way of a single judgment.
2.
The plaintiffs sue the first and second defendants (the Minister of
Police and the arresting police officer) for damages arising
out of
their alleged unlawful arrest, detention and malicious prosecution
for fraud, as well as for defamation and
injuria.
They sue the
third to sixth defendants (the complainants who laid charges against
them with the police) for damages arising out
of alleged malicious
prosecution; and sue the third and fifth defendant's additionally for
alleged defamation. The plaintiffs seek
damages in a cumulative
amount of approximately R58 million.
3.
The defendants have filed their pleas. The third and fifth defendants
ha e also filed counterclaims to which the plaintiffs have
filed
exceptions. This judgment is concerned exclusively with the two
exceptions taken by the plaintiffs to the first counterclaim
of the
third defendant and the counterclaim of the fifth defendant and not
with any of the other exceptions to other counterclaims
or the pleas
of
defendants.
4.
The third defendant's first counterclaims against both David and
Helen are identical. They record that David and Helen were prescribed

officers of Tshisnyama Trading (Pty) Ltd ("Tshisanyama")
and directors of Fish Boss (Pty) Ltd ("Fish Boss").
On or
about 29 July 2013, Fish Boss entered into a written sale agreement
with another company Sexy Alien (Pty) Ltd ("Sexy
Alien") in
terms of which Fish Boss sold to Sexy Alien a fast food franchise
business. On the same day Fish Boss entered into
three franchise
agreements with Tshisanyama. Pursuant agreements the third defendant,
acting on behalf of Sexy Alien, paid R1,6
million into a bank account
under the control of the plaintiff and delivered a delivery vehicle
to Fish Boss. The third defendant
alleges that during the course of
the negotiations preceding and leading to the conclusion of the
agreements the plaintiffs made
various fraudulent misrepresentations
intended to induce the conclusion of the agreements and thus that the
agreements are void
ab initio.
She claims damages in an amount
of R2 666 185.
5.
Paragraphs 16-19 of the third defendant's counterclaims read as
follows:
"16.
During the period July 2013 to May 2014, the business of the entities
(Fish Boss and Tshisanyama) were carried on:
16.1
recklessly; or
16.2
with gross negligence; or
16.3
with the intent to defraud creditors of the entities; or
16.4
for fraudulent purpose;
since:
(i)
funds of the entities were diverted from the entities to plaintiff
for personal purposes ;
(ii)
valid and enforceable claims of the entities against the plaintiff
and/or h r husband were abandoned without any benefit received
in
respect thereof;
(iii)
Tshisenyama failed
to
appoint competent and able staff to
manage an direct the day-to-day running of its affairs;
(iv)
the entities had no true intention of complying with their
contractual obligations under the franchise agreements;
(v)
the entities took no steps to remedy their defective performance ;
(vi)
the entities continued to trade and incur debts, and actively opposed
attempts to hold them accountable; and/or
(vii)
without due and proper authorization being given, Tshisanyama and/or
Fish Boss abandoned its business.
17.
The plaintiff, as director and/or prescribed officer of the various
entities, was . knowingly a party to the conduct in respect
of the
entity of which the Plaintiff was a director and/or prescribed
officer. In consequence thereof , the plaintiff is liable
to Sexy
Alien in terms of section 22 read with
section 218(2)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.
18.
As a result of the foregoing fraud or recklessness or gross
negligence, Sexy Alien suffered damages in the amount of R2 666

185,00 ......
19.
On 27 May 2014, Sexy Alien in writing ceded its right to its claim
against the plaintiff to the third defendant. .. ."
6.
The fifth defendant's counterclaims
against David and Helen are also identical. These allege that David
and Helen were prescribed
officers of Tshisanyam and that on 24
August 2014, another company, Stanton Marketing (Pty) Ltd ("SM')
entered into a written
franchise agreement with Tshisanyama in
respect of which t paid an amount of R500 000 into the bank account
of Tshisanyama. Paragraphs
7-10 of the counterclaim read:
"7.
During the period July 2013 to May 2014, the business of Tshisanyama
were (sic) on:
7.1
recklessly; or
7.2
with gross negligence; or
7.3
with the intent to defraud creditors of the entities; or
7.4
for fraudulent purpose;
since:
(i)
funds of Tshisanyama were diverted from Tshisanyama to plaintiff
wife... .for... personal purposes;
(ii)
valid and enforceable claims of Tshisanyama against the plaintiff
husband
were abandoned without any benefit received in respect thereof;
(iii)
Tshisanyama failed to appoint competent and able staff to manage an
direct the day-to-day running of its affairs;
(iv)
Tshisanyama had no true intention of complying with its contractual
obligations under the franchise agreements;
(v)
Tshisanyama took no steps to remedy its defective performance;
(vi)
Tshisanyama continued to trade and incur debts, and actively oppos d
attempts to hold it accountable; and/or
(vii)
without due and proper authorization being given, Tshisanyama
abandoned its business.
8.
The plaintiff, as director and/or prescribed officer of Tshisanyama,
was knowingIy a party to the conduct of Tshisanyama. In
consequence
thereof. the plaintiff is liable to SM in terms of
section 22
read
with
section 218(2)
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.
9.
As a result of the foregoing fraud or recklessness or gross
negligence, damages in the amount of R500 000. suffered
10.
On 23 June 2016, SM in writing ceded its right to its claim against
the plaintiff to the fifth defendant...."
7.
The
plaintiffs filed identical exceptions to paragraph 17 of the first
counterclaim of the third defendant and to paragraph 8 of
the
counterclaim of the fifth alleging that the counterclaims fail to
sustain a cause of action and fail to comply with the requirements
of
rule 18(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court. The relevant paragraphs of
the counterclaims aver that the plaintiffs, as directors
and officers
of the entities, were knowingly parties to the conduct of the
relevant entities and in consequence thereof were liable
to Sexy
Alien and SM respectively in terms of section 22 read with section
218(2) of the Companies Act.
[1]
8.
Section 22
of the
Companies Act provides
:
"(1)
A company must not carry on its business recklessly, with gross
negligence, with intent to defraud any person or for any
fraudulent
purpose.
(2)
if the Commission has reasonable grounds to believe that a company is
engaging in conduct prohibited by subsection (1). or is
unable to pay
its debts as they become due owing and payable in the normal course
of business, the Commission may issue a notice
to the company to show
cause why the company should be permitted to continue caring on its
business, or to trade, as the case may
be.
(3)
If a company to whom notice has been issued in terms of subsection
(2) fail within 20 business days to satisfy the Commission
that it is
not engaging in in conduct prohibited by subsection (1), or that it
is able to pay its debts as they become due and
payable in the normal
course of business, the Commission may issue a compliance notice to
the company requiring it to cease carrying
on its business or
trading, as the case may be."
9.
Section 218(2)
of the
Companies Act provides
:
"Any
person who contravenes any provision of this Act is liable to any
other person for any loss or damage suffered by that
person as a
result of that contravention."
10.
The exceptions note that the third and fifth defendant fail to allege
any other basis upon which the plaintiffs are liable and
aver that
the contention that
sections 22
and
218
(2) of the
Companies Act
create
personal liability on the part of directors or prescribed
officers of a company is not sustainable. Consequently, the
plaintiffs
allege that the counterclaims fail to set out a cause of
action, fail to comp! with
rule 18(4)
and lack the averments
necessary to sustain a cause of action.
11.
For
an exception to succeed, the pleading must be excipiable on every
interpretation that can be reasonably attached to it, the
pleader
being entitled to a benevolent interpretation .
[2]
A charitable test is used on exception, especially in deciding
whether a cause of action is established. The pleadings must be
r ad
as a whole. Averments expressly made in pleadings may carry implied
allegations, and the pleading must then be so read.
12.
The sole basis for the plaintiff's exceptions to the third and fifth
defendants'
counterclaims
is the contention that
sections 22
and
218
(2) of the Companies not
create personal liability on the part of directors or prescribed
officers. This they maintain renders the
claims excipiable for
lacking in averments necessary to sustain a cause of action and fall
foul of
rule 18(4).
0c
m; line-height: 150%">
13.
Section 22(1)
of the
Companies Act provides
that a company must not
carry on its business recklessly, with gross negligence , with intent
to defraud any person or for any
fraudulent purpose.
Section 76(3)
requires directors to act in the bet interest of the company, in good
faith, with proper purpose and with the degree of diligence,
skill
and care
to
be expected of a reasonable director in the
position of the director concerned.
Section 77(3)(b)
of the
Companies
Act in
turn provides that a director of a company is liable for any
loss, damages or costs sustained by the company direct or indirect

consequence of the director having acquiesced in the caring on of the
company's business despite knowing that it was being conducted
in
manner prohibited by
section 22(1).
And
section 218(2)
of the
Companies Act pro
ides that any person who contravenes any provision
of the Act will be liable to any other person for any loss or damage
suffered
by that person as a result of that contravention.
14.
In their counterclaims the third and fifth defendants plead that the
business of the companies were conducted in a manner prohibited
by
section 22
of the
Companies Act and
the plaintiffs, as directors and
prescribed officers, were knowingly a party to such conduct; and as a
result of such conduct the
damages claimed were suffered.
15.
It is clear from the facts pleaded that the third and fifth
defendants rely provisions in the Act dealing with the personal

liability of directors in circumstances where they were a party to or
acquiesced in the conduct of the relevant companies. They
plead a
contravention of
section 22
of the
Companies Act, and
on a proper
interpretation of
section 218(2)
directors are personally liable if
section 22(1)
is breached. In addition to the express reliance on
section 22
, the facts plead d by the third and fifth defendants imply
alleged conduct on the part of the plaintiffs in breach of
section 76
of the
Companies Act, which
has resulted in damages. It is not
necessary for a pleader to refer to specific sections in a statute
provided that the pleading
formulates the case clearly. It is
sufficient if the facts are pleaded from which the conclusion can be
drawn that the provisions
of the statute apply. The defendants have
done this. The alleged conduct, if proven, will be in contravention
of
section 76
of the
Companies Act and
will found a claim in terms of
section 218(2)
, which imposes liability on any person who contravenes
any provision of the Act and who by so doing causes another to suffer
a
loss.
16.
In their heads of argument the plaintiffs seek to broaden the scope
of the exception by challenging the nature and content of
the conduct
alleged in 16 of the third defendant's counterclaim and paragraph 7
of the fifth defendant's counterclaim. Thus, for
example, they refer
to paragraph 16(i) and state that it relates to diversion of funds
from the various entities to the plaintiff
for her personal purposes
and complain that there are no allegations that such funds were
diverted for any illicit purpose and,
as such, any diversion thereof
could have been Iegitimate e.g. payment of salaries. They further
complain that the defendants have
not adequately particularised the
manner in which the contravention of the
Companies Act has
occurred.
The approach of the plaintiffs is impermissible. The argument
advanced by the plaintiffs in their heads is not the case
the
defendants were asked to meet in the exception, which is clearly
limited to the question of the liability of directors and
the
allegation that the cited provisions do not give rise to personal
liability.
17.
In the premises, there is no merit in the exceptions against the
third and fifth defendant's claims in reconvention.
18.
Accordingly, the exceptions filed by the plaintiffs against the first
counterclaim of the third defendant and the counterclaim
of the fifth
defendant under case umbers 25328/2016 and 25329/2016 are dismissed
with costs.
JR
Murphy
Judge
of the High Court
Date
heard: November 2017
For
the plaintiff: Adv N Riley
Instructed
by: Ryan D Lewis Attorneys
For
the defendant: Adv CJ Bresler
Instructed
by: Bouwer & Olivier Inc
Date
of judgment:
[1]
Act 71 of 2008
[2]
Nel
and Others NNO v McArthur and Others
2003
(4) SA 142
(T) at 149F- G;
Rabin
witz v Van Graan and Others
2013
(5) SA 315
(GSJ) at 3161; and
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
2001
(3) SA 960
(SCA) at 965D.