begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 900
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Tshidzumba and Others v Special Investigation Unit and Others: In re: Special Investigation Unit v Maguvhe and Others (2020/10124)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 900 (8 November 2022)
Tshidzumba and Others v Special Investigation Unit and Others: In re: Special Investigation Unit v Maguvhe and Others (2020/10124)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 900 (8 November 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_900.html
sino date 8 November 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2020/10124
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
YES
8/11/2022
In
the matter between :
In
the interlocutory application between:
NDIVHONISWANI
AARON TSHIDZUMBA
First Applicant
MBULAHENI
OBERT MAGUVHE
Second Applicant
MALESHANE
AUDREY RAPHELA
Third Applicant
and
SPECIAL
INVESTIGATION UNIT
First Respondent
JAMES
AGUMA
Second Respondent
LEAH
THABISELA KHUMALO
Third Respondent
THERESA
VICTORIA GELDENHUYS
Fourth Respondent
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN BROADCASTING
CORPORATION
(SOC) LIMITED
Fifth Respondent
In
Re
the main action between
SPECIAL
INVESTIGATING UNIT
Plaintiff
and
MBULAHENI
OBERT MAGUVHE
First Defendant
NDIVHONISWANI
AARON TSHIDZUMBA
Second Defendant
JAMES
AGUMA
Third Defendant
MALESHANE
AUDREY RAPHELA
Fourth Defendant
LEAH
TSHABISILE KHUMALO
Fifth Defendant
THERESA
VICTORIA GELDENHUYS
Sixth Defendant
SOUTH
AFRICAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION
Seventh Defendant
JUDGMENT APPLICATION LEAVE TO APPEAL
STRYDOM
J
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal
against my judgment and order handed down on 23 August 2022 in this
matter.
[2]
Section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
provides that leave to appeal may only be given where the judge
who presided over the matter is of the opinion that the appeal would
have a reasonable prospect of success or, pursuant to
section
17(1)(a)(ii)
, there is some compelling reason why the appeal should
be heard, including conflicting judgments on the matter under
consideration.
[3]
The applicants in this application are
three erstwhile directors who served on the board of the SABC and on
the Governance and Nominations
Committee (GNC) when a payment
referred to as “success fee” in an amount of
R11,508,549.12 was paid to Mr Hlaudi Motsoeneng,
who at the time
served as the Chief Executive Officer of the SABC.
[4]
On 19 August 2016 the payment to Mr
Motsoeneng was approved and payment was made during September 2016.
[5]
The applicants filed a 43 page application
for leave to appeal in which every finding of this court was
challenged and criticised
in rather strong terms. The matter was in
fact re-argued in the notice of appeal which was more in the form of
a heads of argument
with references to case law.
[6]
It is difficult to provide a summary of
points raised but in essence it was stated that this court erred in
finding that the explanation
provided for the delay in bringing the
application to lift the bar was lacking. Further that the court was
wrong in its finding
that the defences raised by the applicants
lacked merit and was outweighed by the lack of explanation for the
long delay to uplift
the bar preventing the applicants to plead. It
was further stated that because of the other proceedings pending
concerning this
payment made to Mr Motsoeneng the court should have
lifted the bar and allowed the filing of pleas,
inter
alia
, on the basis that no prejudice
was shown which the plaintiff in the action, the Special
Investigating Unit, would suffer if the
pleas were allowed. A
res
judicata
point was also raised.
[7]
This court’s judgment was premised on
the extraordinary long and unexplained delay in launching the
condonation application
which meant that the veracity of the defences
played a lesser role in coming to the conclusion of this court not to
condone the
lateness of the applicants’ application.
[8]
Nevertheless, if the defences raised had a
reasonable prospect of success the court would have granted
condonation regardless the
long delay.
[9]
The applicants argued before this court
that the defence of prescription has a strong prospect of success on
appeal. The court was
referred to the recent judgment of Modiba J in
the Special Tribunal in Case No. GP01/2021, a judgment delivered on
18 October 2022.
This was a matter in which the SABC as first
applicant and the Special Investigating Unit as the second applicant
applied for certain
relief against Mr Motsoeneng and other executives
of the SABC who approved payment to so-called music legends.
[10]
In paragraph 70 of this judgment, Modiba J
found as follows:
“
On the
authority in
Kim Diamonds,
the SIU as a representative applicant in terms of
s 4(1)(c)
read with
s 5(5) of the SIU Act is only entitled to the relief to which the
SABC is entitled. Similarly, the defences a respondent
has against
the SABC may be raised against the SIU. To demonstrate the sound
basis of this principle, it would be absurd in these
proceedings to
declare the debt to have prescribed against the SABC but not to have
prescribed against the SIU given that the SIU
is only entitled to the
relief that the SABC is entitled to. The claim having prescribed as
against the SABC, the SABC is not entitled
to any relief. Therefore,
the SIU is also not entitled to any relief in respect of the claim
arising from the impugned decisions.”
[11]
The implication of this finding is that the
SIU can only pursue claims which the SABC could have pursued. The SIU
merely step into
the proverbial shoes of the SABC, albeit that it
sues in its own name.
[12]
In my judgment I found the opposite, i.e.
that the SIU could sue in their own name and that a separate cause of
action became available
to the SIU pursuant to terms of sections
4(1)(c) and 5(5) of the SIU Act. The SIU sued the applicants in its
own name without joining
the SABC as a plaintiff.
[13]
Section 4(1)(c) provides that the SIU can
institute and conduct civil proceedings in a Special Tribunal or any
court of law for
any relief relevant to any investigation and section
5(5) determines that notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any
law and
for the performance of any of its functions under the SIU Act
the SIU may institute and conduct civil proceedings in its own name
or on behalf of a state institution in a special tribunal or any
court of law.
[14]
Consequently, an option is provided to the
SIU either to institute civil proceedings in its own name or in the
name of a state institution.
In this matter the SIU instituted
proceedings in its own name.
[15]
The interpretation of these sections
becomes important as that will determine when a prescriptive period
will start to run. In my
view, if the SIU instituted proceedings in
its own name the prescriptive period can only start to run when the
SIU became aware
of the facts from which the debt arose.
[16]
In my respectful view, the
ratio
contained in paragraph 70 of the judgment of
Modiba J is wrong and I stand by my views. Consequently, there are
now conflicting
judgments on the issue whether the SIU is bound by
the prescriptive periods which would have been applicable if the SABC
instituted
an action. For purposes of leave to appeal there may be
some compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, more
particularly
as there are conflicting judgments on this point.
[17]
The court considered whether leave to
appeal should be granted on this ground alone but it was argued on
behalf of the SIU that
even on the interpretation of Modiba J the
claim made by the SIU in this matter has not prescribed.
[18]
In paragraph 59.2 of the applicants’
notice of application for leave to appeal, it is contended that the
claim prescribed
on 19 August 2019, alternatively, on 12 and 13
September 2019, this being three years after the date when the
decision was made
to approve the payment of the success fee on 19
August 2016, alternatively, the date when the payments were made to
Mr Motsoeneng
on 12 and 13 September 2016.
[19]
It was argued on behalf of the SIU that
insofar as these dates may be relevant dates, in the context of
reasoning adopted by Modiba
J, the claim has not prescribed because
section 13(1)(e) of the Prescription Act expressly provides when the
creditor is a juristic
person and the debtor is a member of the
governing body of such juristic person, as is the case in this
matter, the completion
of prescription is delayed by a period of one
year from the date the debtor is no longer a member of the governing
body. It is
common cause that the applicants were all members of the
SABC’s governing body.
[20]
It was shown by the SIU that if the date of
resignation of the three applicants are considered, and the extra
year is added in terms
of section 13(1)(e), then the claims have not
prescribed. It was not in dispute that the summons in this matter was
issued on 26
March 2020, a date, on this calculation, well before the
claim prescribed.
[21]
To counter this argument, it was argued on
behalf of the applicants that
section 77
of the
Companies Act 71 of
2008
, remains applicable which in subsection (7) determines that
proceedings to recover any loss, damage or costs for which a person
is or may be held liable in terms of this section may not be
commenced more than three years after the act or omission that gave
rise to the liability.
Section 77
deals,
inter
alia,
with a claim by a company against
directors who breach their fiduciary duties owed to the company.
[22]
In my view this argument does not assist
the applicants for two reasons:
22.1
The claim of the SIU is not made pursuant to the terms of the
Companies Act. As
was found in the judgment of this court, the SIU’s
case against the applicants was instituted,
inter alia
,
pursuant to a breach of fiduciary duties in terms of sections 50 and
57 of the Public Finance Management Act read with the
ss4(1)
,
2
(2)
and
5
(5) of the
Special Investigating Units and Special Tribunals Act
74 of 1996
.
Sections 50
and
57
placed fiduciary duties on the
applicants in their capacity as office bearers of the SABC to act
with fidelity, honesty, integrity
and the best interests of the SABC
in managing its affairs.
Section 4(1)(c)provides
that the SIU can
institute and conduct civil proceedings in any court of law for any
relief,
inter alia,
relevant to any investigation in its own
name. The SIU is a creditor in its own right and the debt vis-à-vis
the SIU could
only become due when the SIU became aware of the
existence of the debt.
22.2
Even if
section 77
of the
Companies Act was
applicable this does not
assist the applicants.
Section 5
of the
Companies Act which
deals
with inconsistencies between any provision of the
Companies Act and
a
provision of any other legislation determines that if such
inconsistency presents itself the
Public Finance Management Act 1 of
1999
prevails in the case of such inconsistency.
[23]
The PFMA does not provide for a three year
prescriptive period as
section 77
does, which would mean that the
Prescription Act would be the applicable act to determine
prescription pursuant to a claim made
in terms of the PFMA.
[24]
Accordingly, it is this court’s view
that there is no reasonable prospect that another court would find
that a claim made
by the SIU against the applicants prescribed.
[25]
On behalf of the applicants was also raised
a
res judicata
point.
This was raised in a context that an order for repayment of the R11m
was already made by another court. This point raised
is also without
merit as the first requirement for
res
judicata
would be that the order was
made against the same parties which in this instance it was not.
[26]
In my view all other points made, including
the point relating to rule 35(14) is without merit and needs no
further consideration.
[27]
The court exercised a discretion as far as
the condonation application was concerned and a court of appeal will
not lightly interfere
with a lower court’s exercise of this
discretion.
[28]
In my view, the applicants have failed to
show that there is a reasonable prospect that another court would
come to a different
decision as the one I have come to.
[29]
Accordingly, the application for leave to
appeal is dismissed, with costs.
RÉAN
STRYDOM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
31 October 2022
Date
of judgment:
08 November 2022
Appearances:
On
behalf of the Applicants:
Adv. P. Cirone
On
behalf of the 1
st
Respondent:
Adv. G. Mamabolo
sino noindex
make_database footer start