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The table below lists the judgments of the Constitutional Court of South Africa delivered in 2018.. The members of the court at the start of 2018 were Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng, Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo, and judges Edwin Cameron, Johan Froneman, Chris Jafta, Sisi Khampepe, Mbuyiseli Madlanga, Nonkosi Mhlantla and Leona Theron.
Pages in category "South African racehorse owners and breeders" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
From 1905 until about 1920 the horses could be registered with the horse-breeders' association of Transvaal. [6] A breeders' association, the Kaapse Boerperd Breeders' Society of South Africa, was formed in 1948. [7] A separate association, the Boerperd Society of South Africa, formed in 1973. It became the Historiese Boerperd Breeders Society ...
This repeal was interpreted by the Appellate Division, in the leading case on the sources of South African insurance law, Mutual & Federal v Oudtshoorn Municipality, to mean that the Roman-Dutch law of insurance was restored. South African insurance law is governed mainly by Roman-Dutch law as its common law. Nevertheless, the courts have ...
The National Horseracing Authority of Southern Africa, known as the National Horseracing Authority for short (NHA or NHRA), formerly the Jockey Club of Southern Africa is the Southern African equivalent of the American and British Jockey Clubs, whose main purposes are to prevent malpractice in horse racing and to regulate the thoroughbred horse racing industry in Southern Africa.
Sea Cottage (1962–1987) was a Champion South African bred racehorse. [1] He was the first equine athlete inductee into the South African Hall Of Fame in 2019, [2] and was a Champion in each year that he raced (1964-1967). He was foaled at the Birch Brothers Vogel Vlei Stud in Dordrecht, South Africa. [3]
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The first South African company legislation was the Companies Act [3] of 1926, which was based on the Transvaal Companies Act, [4] which was in turn based on the British Companies (Consolidation) Act 1908. The next major South African legislation in this area was the Companies Act [5] of 1973, which remained in force until 31 April 2011.