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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 844
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## H v B (2016/10540)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 844 (31 October 2022)
H v B (2016/10540)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 844 (31 October 2022)
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sino date 31 October 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2016/10540
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED.
31
October 2022
In
the matter between:
H
[....], J [....] E
[....]
Applicant / Plaintiff
(formerly
B [....])
and
B
[....], A
[....]
Respondent / Defendant
JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
1.
The parties were required to deliver their properly completed
Financial Disclosure Forms (“
FDFs
”) as far back as
September 2019. The defendant failed to do so and was afforded an
extension until 25 March 2020. Despite
this further directive the
defendant still failed to deliver his FDF which resulted in the
plaintiff bringing an application to
compel compliance.
2.
Until then, the only explanation offered by the defendant for
failing
to serve his FDF was that he required documents from the plaintiff
before he could do so. In an earlier judgment the court
gave reasons
for rejected this explanation; in short the FDF does not require the
party making disclosure to deal with the other
party’s finances
save in relation to the standard of living both parties enjoyed
during the marriage (para 3.2) and any other
circumstances which
could affect the matter, including any agreement made between them-
and these had been dealt with by the plaintiff
under oath on 19
September 2019.
3.
The defendant then delivered an unsigned FDF on 1 June followed
at
the eleventh hour by a signed FDF on 29 June 2020.
4.
This court
found that the defendant had failed in material respects to complete
the FDF. Because of the defendant’s persistent
failure to
properly complete his FDF, the court made the following order on 12
September 2022:
[1]
2.
The defendant shall by no later than Friday 30 September 2022 serve
and file a completely
new Financial Disclosure Form (“FDF”)
which shall;
a.
be in legible printed letters
b.
contain all annexures;
c.
be complete in all respects and in particular provide the details
required in
para 3 and a proper answer to para 4.1
d.
be duly deposed to
e.
be uploaded onto CaseLines
3.
In the event that the defendant fails to comply with para 2 hereof by
30 September 2022 he
shall show cause on 12 October 2022 at 10.00 in
open court why he should not be held in contempt of court and if so
found to be
in contempt of court why he should not be incarcerated
until such time as he duly completes the FDF
DEFENDANT
IN CONTEMPT OF COURT FOR FAILING TO DELIVER A PROPERLY COMPLETED FDF
AND COSTS OF 26 OCTOBER 2022 HEARING
5.
On 12 October the court considered the FDF which the defendant
had
delivered in purported compliance with the order of 12 September.
After hearing the defendant I was satisfied that the failure
to
deliver
inter alia
a legible FDF or to deal with his actual
expenditure needs (as opposed to writing down what he would like to
be able to incur as
expenditure) was wilful and
mala fides
.
I
then held him to be in contempt of the court order of 12 September
2022 and ordered that:
“
2.
The Defendant, Andre B [....] shall by no
later than 25 October 2022:
2.1
Serve and file and upload load to case lines, a legible copy of his
Full Financial Disclosure Form, together
with all supporting
documentation. The Full Financial Disclosure Form and supporting
documentation shall be duly commissioned and
signed by the Defendant;
2.2
Serve and file a hard copy of the aforesaid Full Financial Disclosure
Form on the Plaintiff’s attorney
of record;
2.3
In the Full Financial Disclosure Form provide 12 months bank
statements in respect of any and all bank accounts
in his name and in
which he has an interest in, including but not limited to:
2.3.1
The ABSA account of D [....] B [....] – with account number
[....].
2.4
The Defendant shall in respect of the Investec Bank Account [....],
attach to his Full Financial Disclosure
Form, 12 months bank
statements, failing which a document from Investec to confirm that
this account was closed more than 12 months
ago and that there are no
amounts standing to its credit. The Defendant shall in addition to
the above, file a statement in the
Full Financial Disclosure Form,
providing full details of the financial institution or other
institutions and account number/s
regarding where the proceeds in
respect of any credits to the account/s were transferred.
3.
A warrant of arrest in respect of the Defendant, Andre B [....] is
to
be issued forthwith, committing him to imprisonment for contempt of
Court for a period of 5 days.
4.
The warrant of arrest is only to be executed on 26 October 2022,
should the Defendant fail to comply with the provisions in paragraph
2 hereof.
5.
The Defendant shall return to Court on 26 October 2022 at 09h30 to
confirm his compliance with paragraph 2 of this order.
6.
On 26 October 2022 the defendant claimed that he had complied
with
the court order, albeit at the eleventh hour. The plaintiff informed
the court that save for the ABSA account in the name
of D [....] B
[....] the defendant had at face value complied with the requirements
of the FDF and the court order.
7.
The defendant contended that there was no more money in the
ABSA
account and that he had received an email on 25 October 2022 from his
brother’s firm of attorneys, who will be referred
to as XY
Attorneys, stating that
“
We confirm that
our client is not a party to the matter and that you and Me. H
[....], also the Plaintiff and Defendant, (furthermore
the Applicant
and Respondent respectively; hereinafter referred to as “the
parties”) have not provided our client with
sufficient and/or
relevant documentation to place our client in a position to:
3.1 Respond to any
application which has been brought by any party which resulted in our
client’s account held at ABSA Bank
number [....] being frozen.
3.2 Provide a
background to his fundamental rights that are being infringed upon
due to having no notice of the proceedings in the
aforesaid matter or
divulge any information without having a negative impact on himself
and any other interested party.
8.
The defendant confirmed that his brother did not provided him
with an
affidavit contending that the ABSA account was not controlled by the
defendant albeit that it was in the name of his brother
nor did the
email deal with that at all. the defendant did not himself file an
affidavit under oath setting out the attempts he
may have allegedly
made to obtain the bank statements from his brother.
Furthermore
the defendant did not dispute that he had previously informed the
court that the ABSA account was used to transfer the
proceeds of the
sale of one of his properties and that he, not his brother, had
directed payments out of that account.
9.
The defendant however contended that he had never said when
the
account was originally opened or that it was always under his
effective control.
10.
The plaintiff was satisfied that she could secure the ABSA bank
statements by
way of subpoena at trial stage.
11.
The question of whether the warrant of arrest issued against the
defendant should
be executed against him in terms of para 4 of the
order of 12 September 2022 because he has de facto control of the
ABSA account
and therefore can obtain the statements from his brother
as required in terms of para 2.3 of that order remains open.
12.
The court has indicated that it intends holding over this issue until
the ABSA
accounts have been produced and whether it is evident, from
the transactions reflected after the proceeds of the sale of the
defendant’s
property were transferred into it, that the
defendant’s brother was operating the account for and on behalf
of defendant
or otherwise under the defendant’s de facto
control during the preceding 12 months.
If
that is not the case then the warrant of arrest and detention that
was issued in terms of para 3 of the order of 12 September
2022 will
be withdrawn, otherwise the warrant will be executed if the
defendant, given a further opportunity to do so, shows cause
why it
should not be executed.
13.
The reasons for making the orders of 12 September 2022, including
finding the
defendant to be in contempt of court are contained in a
judgment delivered on the following day and therefore need not be
repeated.
The judgment is reported in SAFLII as H v B
[2022] ZAGPJHC
823 (13 September 2022).
14.
Since the defendant had failed to complete the FDF until the very
last moment
and then still failed to provide any evidence under oath
that the ABSA account was not under his control over the past 12
months,
he must pay the plaintiff’s costs for the hearing on 26
October 2022. The reason provided in the judgment of 13 September
for
the costs of bringing the contempt of court proceedings to be taxed
on the attorney and client scale remain pertinent to the
costs
incurred on 26 October 2022.
OUTSTANDING
PRE-TRIAL ISSUES
15.
The defendant claims that the plaintiff has not delivered copies of
her discovered
documents. It is unnecessary to enter into a debate as
to whether this was in fact done or at least attempted. The plaintiff
has
undertaken to do so.
16.
The defendant also claims that plaintiff’s discovery is not up
to date
since some two years has passed since it was produced. This
is correct. However the reason for this is directly attributable to
the defendant’s delaying tactics to trial sooner.
17.
I therefore direct that both parties must deliver an updated
supplementary discovery
affidavit to which copies of the additional
discovered documents must be produced.
18.
There are however cost consequences. The need for updating the
plaintiff’s
discovery affidavit as requested by the defendant
is due to him delaying the matter being trial ready when it could
have been at
least two years ago.
He
must therefore bear the costs of updating the discovery affidavits
and producing the extra documents so discovered which otherwise
would
have been unnecessary had he not, through his stratagems, delayed the
trial.
These
costs will also be on the attorney and client scale because they have
been occasioned by the same conduct which resulted in
him being
required to pay punitive costs for the reasons set out in the
reported judgment of 13 September 2022.
CONDUCT
OF ATTORNEY IN WRITING LETTER TO PRESIDING JUDGE AND DEPUTY JUDGE
PRESIDENT ON EVE OF HEARING
19.
The court has already referred to the email of 25 October 2022 to the
defendant
from the attorneys representing his brother, who I have
referred to as XY Attorneys.
20.
However the email was not only addressed to the defendant. It was
emailed to
both my registrar and to the secretary of the Deputy Judge
President shortly after 16h30 on the day before the hearing of 26
October.
The hearing was concerned with the issue of whether the
warrant of arrest issued was to be executed on the defendant if he
failed
to comply with the court order of 12 September.
21.
It is evident that my registrar and the secretary of the Deputy Judge
President
were forwarded the email so that the Deputy Judge President
and I would read its contents.
22.
The gist of the email from XY Attorneys was that neither the
defendant nor the
plaintiff had provided the defendant’s
brother with sufficient or relevant documentation to enable him to
respond to any
application which had been brought that had resulted
in “our
client’s account held at ABSA Bank number
[....] being frozen
”.
This
is the same account into which the proceeds of the sale of the
defendant’s property were transferred and out of which
he
claimed he had made payments, averring that there was no more money
left in the account after making these payments. All of
this was
stated by the defendant in open court on 22 August 2022.
23.
As a result of these statements it was put to the defendant that,
since there
was no more money in the account, there could be no
prejudice if an order was made freezing any sum that might still be
there.
The defendant agreed and did not contend that the account was
no longer operated by him or on his behalf by his brother, as one
would have expected if that was the case; the defendant was
apparently a practicing advocate at the Pretoria Bar for some twenty
years..
The
following order was
inter alia
made on 22 August 2022;
1.
The account of Mr D [....] B [....], held at the following financial
institution:
ABSA Bank
Account Number: [....]
Branch Code: 632 005
Is frozen and no
further funds shall be withdrawn from the aforesaid account as of
date of this order and until the Court determines
otherwise. “
24.
Subsequently an amount of over R20 000 was found standing to the
credit
of the account and apparently was attached by the plaintiff.
25.
The proceedings of 22 August 2022 the proceedings at were recorded.
These are
the proceedings at which the defendant admitted
transferring the proceeds of the sale of his property into an account
held in his
brother’s name and over which he had control and
therefore had an interest.
26.
The email of 25 October 2022 from XY Attorneys added that the
defendant’s
brother had not been provided with all the relevant
facts “
despite our previous submissions that our client is
an interested party considering his account has been frozen”
The
concluding remarks in the attorney’s email are significant. A
director of the firm who signed the emailed letter confirms
that:
“
4.3
In light of the above factors, it is our instructions that no
information shall be provided to you and therefore
your request is
hereby denied with respect”.
4.4
Our client has not been served in any manner herein, directly or
indirectly, through the Sheriff or electronically,
or in the
alternative in another form of personal manner to present any
information, documentation or the like”
The
reference in para 4.3 of the letter to a request made by the
defendant is presumably to a request contained in the defendant’s
letter to his brother of 23 October 2022 which is mentioned in para 1
of the attorney’s letter. Despite forwarding the letter
to the
court, XY Attorneys did not attach the defendant’s letter of 23
October to which it was allegedly responding.
27.
The first observation is that there is no reason for such a letter to
be written
on behalf of the defendant’s brother to the
defendant. There is no reason to believe that the defendant would not
have conveyed
to his brother the information he provided to the court
on 22 August about using the account in question to transfer the
proceeds
of the sale of his house and then to have effected payments
out of that account.
That
being the case, then the point was not there being insufficient
information to deal with the issue but whether or not the brother
denies lending his name to enable the defendant to conceal the
proceeds of the sale of his property, as alleged by the plaintiff,
by
transferring the amount into an account under his brother’s
name.
28.
Furthermore it is evident from these facts that the brother would
have to explain
why he enabled the use of his name to an account so
that the proceeds of the sale of the defendant’s property would
not go
directly into any account bearing the defendant’s name
or which could be traced back to the defendant by reference to his
identity number.
It
is difficult to conceive that this would have passed unnoticed by the
attorneys if the defendant had informed his brother about
what he had
told the court on 22 August and his brother had informed the
attorneys of these facts before writing the letter of
25 October. The
attorneys’ letter confirms that they were aware that the ABSA
bank account had been frozen by an earlier
court order.
There
is no suggestion that there was any animosity between the brothers or
that they were not speaking to each other. The attorney
could simply
have picked up the phone and spoken to the defendant regarding the
operation of the ABSA account bearing their client’s
name. This
is another reason why no reason appears to exist for writing the
letter to the defendant. A phone call would have resolved
everything.
29.
The next observation is that the letter fails to address the issue on
which
the attorney should have obtained instructions; namely whether
their client was lending his name to an account which was, or had
in
fact been, operated and controlled by the defendant.
This
is the only issue of concern in respect of an FDF. Para 2.3 of the
FDF requires a party to disclose details of all personal
bank
accounts held at any time in the last 12 months “
and which
were either in your own name or in which you have had an interest”
irrespective of whether the account is overdrawn or not.
The
FDF also requires that all bank statements covering the previous 6
months are to be attached for each account. The court order
in the
present case extended the period for the ABSA account to 12 months
because the FDF was supposed to have been completed by
25 March 2020
in terms of the original extension granted. In retrospect, it ought
to have been longer bearing in mind the opportunity
to have used the
intervening period to transfer the proceeds of the sale out of the
ABSA account into other accounts which, if
it did occur, could have
been picked up in the narration contained in the bank statement for
the relevant payments.
30.
The court must therefore ask why the letter was addressed to the
defendant as
it serves no purpose, since a phone call could have
settled that, and which does not address the issue which would
immediately
arise between them, namely whether or not the brother
agrees that he lent his name to an account in which the defendant has
an
interest (as contemplated in para 2.3 of the FDF).
31.
Without an acceptable explanation the conclusion is that the letter
was to serve
an ulterior purpose; namely to try and influence the
court, or in the belief that pressure could be put on the presiding
judge
seized with a matter by addressing the letter also to the
Deputy Judge President in the hope that he may ask the presiding
judge
to explain.
32.
This is not the first occasion that an attorney has sought to put in
a letter
what should be contained in an affidavit or should be said
in open court where assertions can be properly tested and be subject
to consequences if incorrect.
33.
Practicing attorneys are expected to know that if their client wishes
to challenge
any matter presently before a court they are to do so by
way of affidavit, not an epistle to the judge or the Deputy Judge
President.
If the client is not a party to the proceeding in respect
of which his or her rights are affected then a non-joinder
application
is to be brought, or if assets attached then an
interpleader.
34.
There is nothing which presents itself in the present case to suggest
that the
defendant could not have obtained an affidavit from his
brother dealing with the issue of whether the latter lent his name to
an
account operated by the defendant, save of course the defendant’s
own admission, or statement against interest in open court,
that this
had occurred.
35.
Accordingly, it appears that the letter although ostensibly written
to the defendant
was intended to influence the presiding judge
outside the procedures provided under substantive and adjectival law.
Furthermore,
by addressing the Deputy Judge President it appears that
the intention was to interfere extra-curially with the independence
of
the court and its presiding judge.
Without
an acceptable explanation the conclusion is that the attorney hoped
to avoid putting the client’s version on oath
where it could be
tested and have further consequences if incorrect- but rather to
write a letter in the hope that the defendant
would be able to
contend that he cannot be in wilful default or
mala fide
by
failing to provide the ABSA bank statements.
36.
The issue however is straight forward. The defendant admitted that he
had used
the ABSA account in the manner described earlier and for
that reason had an interest in the account albeit not opened in his
name.
This triggered his obligation to make the disclosures and
provide the statements required at least by para 2.3 of the FDF. It
was
for him and his brother to explain under oath why that was not
possible; not for an attorney to write an extra-curial letter which,
particularly by reason of its careful wording of what is said and
what is avoided, can have no detrimental consequences to the
brother.
37.
It is for these reasons that the court is concerned about;
a. whether the writing of
a letter between a party to proceedings and one who is not, which is
sent to the presiding judge and the
leadership of that court during
the course of litigation and which may reasonably be expected by a
litigating attorney to influence
the presiding judge in the decision
he or she is to make in court, constitutes unprofessional conduct and
whether it is unprofessional
conduct in such circumstances not to
have complied with the rules of court by filing an appropriate
affidavit with or without a
suitable application.
b. whether the
responsible attorney at the firm did consult with the defendant or
ought to have and whether an adequate consultation
was held to
establish the facts, before writing a letter claiming that details
were unknown and whether the true purpose of the
letter was to inform
the defendant of his brother’s position or to address the
presiding judge and the Deputy Judge President
in order to
extra-curially influence the outcome of court proceedings which were
in progress. If there had been any communication
between the
attorneys and the defendant then one would have expected this to be
disclosed, and if not, why there was not an attempt
to do so before
sending composing the letter in the fashion it was and sending it by
email to the court.
ORDER
38.
The court accordingly orders that:
1. The issue whether the
warrant of arrest issued against the defendant should be executed
against him in terms of para 4 of the
order of 12 September 2022
because he has de facto control of the ABSA account and therefore can
obtain the statements from his
brother as required in terms of para
2.3 of that order is postponed until such time as the ABSA accounts
have been produced and
it can be discerned whether or not the
transactions from the time when the proceeds of the sale of the
defendant’s property
were transferred into it, reflect that the
defendant’s brother was operating the account for and on behalf
of defendant or
otherwise under the defendant’s de facto
control.
2. The plaintiff and
defendant are to update their respective discovery affidavits by
filing on or before 23 November 2022 a supplementary
discovery
affidavit to which copies of all additional documents attached;
3. The defendant is
liable to pay to the plaintiff the costs of the hearing on 26 October
2022 and the costs of the plaintiff’s
supplementary discovery
affidavit and the production of copies of such discovered documents
on the attorney and client scale payable
within in 30 days of
taxation or agreement of the amount.
4. The next case manages
to be held on 20 January 2023 at 09h30 at which it is the intention
of the court to certify the matter
trial ready unless there is good
reason why it ought not to.
5. The Chief Registrar of
the Court is directed to furnish a copy of this judgment to the
Director of the Legal Practice Council,
Gauteng for consideration of
what is set out herein regarding the conduct of one or more of the
practitioners at the firm of attorneys
representing the defendant’s
brother and responsible for writing the letter of 25 October 2022 and
emailing it at the eve
of the hearing to the court.
SPILG,
J
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
31 October 2022
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Adv. R Andrews
HJW Attorneys
FOR
DEFENDANT:
In person
[1]
The
reasons for the order are contained in the judgment of 13 September
2022 reported as H v B
[2022] ZAGPJHC 823
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