Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 199South Africa
Drakensberg Farms (Pty) Ltd and Another v South African Reserve Bank and Others (2022-014624) [2025] ZAGPPHC 199 (19 February 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Drakensberg Farms (Pty) Ltd and Another v South African Reserve Bank and Others (2022-014624) [2025] ZAGPPHC 199 (19 February 2025)
Drakensberg Farms (Pty) Ltd and Another v South African Reserve Bank and Others (2022-014624) [2025] ZAGPPHC 199 (19 February 2025)
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sino date 19 February 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
Number: 2022-014624
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
19 February 2025
In
the matters between:-
DRAKENSBERG
FARMS (PTY) LTD
FIRST APPLICANT
KHUMALO
MZILIKAZI GODFREY
SECOND APPLICANT
and
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN RESERVE BANK
FIRST REPONDENT
THE
MINISTER OF FINANCE
SECOND RERSPONDENT
THE
DEPUTY GOVERNOR OF
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN RESERVE BANK
THIRD RESPONDENT
THE
GOVERNOR OF THE SOUTH
AFRICAN
RESERVE BANK
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
THE
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
FIFTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
BOTHA,
AJ
Introduction
1
This
is an application in which the Applicants apply to the court to
review and set aside a Notice of Forfeiture published in the
Government Gazette No 45955 of 25 February 2022, wherein the amount
of $354 000 (R 5 029 632.00 at the time) was forfeited to the
State.
The said amount of money was deposited by the Second Applicant
(Khumalo) into the ABSA bank account of the First Applicant
(
Drakensberg). The Applicants claim the following relief in the Notice
of Motion:
[1]
1.1
Reviewing and setting aside the decision taken by the Third
Respondent to forfeit to the State the money
listed in the Notice of
Forfeiture 855 of 2022, published in the Government Gazette No 45955
of 25 February 2022, signed by the
Third Respondent on 18 February
2022, a copy of which is attached to the Founding Affidavit marked
"FA 21".
1.2
Declaring the Notice and Order of Forfeiture 855 of 20221, published
in the Government Gazette No 45955
of 25 February 2022 to bne
invalid.
1.3
Declaring Regulation 22D (b)of the Exchange Control Regulations 1961
(as promulgated by Government Notice
R 1111) as amended, mader in
terms of Sec 9 of the Currency and Exchanges Act, 9 of 1933 ( The Act
and the Regulations) to be inconsistent
with the Constitution and
invalid.
1.4
Declaring sewc 9(2)(d)(iii) of the Act to be inconsistent with the
Constitution and invalid.
1.5
Declaring Regulation 22C of the Regulations to be inconsistent with
the Constitution and iunvalid.
1.6
Cost of the Application, including the cost of two counsel.
2
All
the Respondents except the Fifth Respondent opposed the application
Relevant
background facts
3
3.1
Khumalo ( Second Applicant) established a game farm/reserve in the
province of KwaZulu Natal. The game
reserve was owned by Mawela
Properties (Pty) Ltd and the Mawela Trust (of which Khumalo was one
of the two trustees, his wife being
the other trustee), was the sole
shareholder in Mawela Properties.
[2]
3.2
As from 2008 up to 2011 the SARB (First Respondent) attached and
forfeited assets to the State, by reason
of contraventions of the
Exchange Control Regulations by
Khumalo and companies associated to
him, inter alia the afore mentioned Mawela Properties. These
attachments and forfeitures were
judicially challenged by Khumalo but
were unsuccessful.
[3]
3.3
As a direct result of the actions of the SARB, Mawela Properties was
liquidated. Khumalo then erected
the First Applicant as a special
purpose vehicle to purchase the Game Reserve out of liquidation. An
agreement of sale was conducted
with a purchase price of R 37
million.
[4]
3.4
Initially, since inception m 2015, Khumalo was the only director of
Drakensberg. Later in 2017, a Siyabonga
Khumalo became the second
director. Initially Khumalo stated under oath that he is the sole
shareholder in Drakensberg, as a matter
of fact he testified that his
wife (Dr Khumalo) was in no way connected to Drakensberg Farms, she
was not a director, nor was she
a shareholder of Drakensberg
Farms.
[5]
Much later, in the
supplementary founding affidavit, Khumalo said that his wife is the
sole shareholder.
[6]
3.5
The Game Reserve was apparently not intended to generate its own
income. It had to be funded and the
costs of maintaining the farm
whilst in liquidation were funded by Khumalo through other entities
like the Mawela Trust and Mawenzi
Management Services (Pty) Ltd.
These costs are known as
sec 89
costs in terms of the
Insolvency Act
24 of 1936
.
[7]
3.6
Drakensberg Farms was placed on terms to produce the guarantee during
January 2017 but granted an extension
provided that Drakensberg
continue to pay the
sec 89
costs. The liquidator cancelled the
agreement of sale on 6 February 2017, the reason being that
Drakensberg defaulted on its payment
obligations.
3.7
The liquidator proceeded to put the reserve on auction and obtained a
bid that was much lower than the
purchase offer made by Drakensberg.
This offer to buy also did not materialised as there was
non-compliance by the prospective
buyer.
3.8
During August 2018, another offer was made to the liquidator to
purchase the game reserve, but the liquidator
rejected the offer.
Meanwhile, over and above the
sec 89
costs, the reserve incurred
additional costs and expenses to the amount of approximately R 4.4
million by April 2019. These additional
costs consisted mainly of
employees' salaries and costs for security to safeguard the rhino
population on the reserve.
3.9
At this point, just to take a step back, it is common cause that
during the period January 2010 to July
2018, Khumalo (second
applicant) exceeded his SDA (single discretionary allowance) to the
tune of R 22 658 000.73, comprising of
overseas spending on his
credit card.
3.
10 Khumalo was informed by FinSurv that there exist
reasonable grounds that he contravened
Regulations 3(1)
,
10
(1)(c) and
19
read with
Regulation 22
of the Exchange Control Regulations. He
was invited to make written representations, inter alia as to why the
amount of R 18 million
should not be repatriated to the RSA and
further administrative action should not be initiated
[8]
.
3.11
The deadline for these representations was 11 September 2018. He was
also informed that if he was unable to meet the deadline
or required
assistance to do so, he should notify a designated employee of
FinSurve.
[9]
3.12
Khumalo ignored the invitation to make representations, nor did he
request assistance or an extension of
time.
3.13
Back to the sec 89 costs. On 2 April 2019, Khumalo transferred the
amount of US $354 000 from his offshore
account in either the UK
[10]
or from a Swiss bank
[11]
into
the ABSA account of Drakensberg Farms.
3.14
On 3 April 2019, the SARB issued a blocking order i.t.o. Reg 22A
and/or Reg 22 C of the
Exchange Control Regulations on
the ABSA
account by reason of Khumalo exceeded his SDA supra.
[12]
3.15
On 2December 2021, FinSurv addressed a letter to Khumalo and to the
attorneys of Drakensberg informing them
of the SARB's view that the
US$354 000 paid into Drakensberg's account is money that may be
forfeited to the State i.t.o.
sec 22B.
There was again an invitation
extended to make a representation as to why a forfeiture should not
take place. A schedule of the
exceeded SDA was also attached, showing
the exceeded amount as R 22 658 173.74
[13]
3.16
Again, Khumalo did not make use of the opportunity to make
representations or to ask for assistance.
3.17
As a result, on 18 February 2022, the amount of US $354 000, standing
to the credit of Drakensberg Farms
in the ABSA account, was declared
forfeited to the State by the Third Respondent. The official date of
the forfeiture is 25 February
2022 being the date of the notice in
the Government Gazette. Khumalo was informed on the same date.
[14]
Issues
to be determined
4
In
terms of paragraph 5 of the Joint Practise Note the court is required
to determine whether:
[15]
4.1
There is a basis to effect the Drakensberg Farms Forfeiture against
Drakensberg Farms.
4.2
Drakensberg Farms was afforded administrative procedural fairness
underpinning the administrative decision
in accordance with the
Regulations and the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act No 3 of
2000 ("PAJA")
4.3
The application should have been made within 90 days as is provided
for in Regulation 22D(b) of the
Exchange Control Regulations, 1961
(as promulgated by Government Notice R1111), as amended, made in
terms of Section 9 of the Currency
and Exchanges Act 9 of 1933 ("the
Act")("the Regulations") or 180 days as is provided
for in the letter addressed
to the Second Applicant by the First,
Third and Fourth Respondents on 25 February 2022, to which the
Drakensberg Farms Forfeiture
was attached and PAJA.
4.4
Section 9(2)(d)(iii) of the Act and Regulation 22C and Regulation
22D(b) of the Regulations are inconsistent
with Section 22,
Section 25, Section 33, Section 35 and Section 36 of the Constitution
insofar as they permit the forfeiture of
clean assets and then limit
the review of such administrative action and justified under Section
36 of the Constitution or invalid.
5
I
regard it prudent to start with the issue formulated in 4.3 above as
it might serve to curtail this judgment.
5.1
The Applicants argued that the Application is governed by PAJA
5.2
Section 7(1) of PAJA states that any proceedings for judicial review
in terms of sec 6(1) must be instituted
without unreasonable delay
and not later than 180 days after the date on which proceedings with
regard to internal remedies as
contemplated in sub sec 2(a) have been
concluded.
5.3
Sec 7(2)(a) of PAJA states that, subject to para (c), no court or
tribunal shall review an administrative
action in terms of the act
unless any internal remedy provided for in any other law has been
exhausted. Para (c) provides that
in exceptional circumstances and on
application by the person concerned, a court or tribunal may exempt
such person from the obligation
to exhaust any internal remedy.
5.4
The Notice or Order of Forfeiture was published on 25 February 2022
and the Applicants thus argue that
they have 180 days to institute
the review proceedings.
5.5
The First, Third and Fourth Respondents contend that PAJA is not
applicable in this instance, but that
the matter is governed by
Regulation 22D(b) read with
sec 9(2)(d)(iii)
of the
Currency and
Exchanges Act.
5.6
Regulation
22D(b) stipulates that in the case of a decision to
forfeit money or goods to the State under
Regulation 22B
(as in the
instant case) a person who feels aggrieved by the said decision, may
at any time but not later than 90 days after the
date of publication
of the said notice, ( in this case the date is 25 February 2022 )
institute action in a competent court for
setting aside of such
decision.
5.7
The Applicants argue that the SARB had given them the option to
utilise PAJA to review and set aside
the forfeiture in the covering
letter dated 25 February 2022.
[16]
5.8
The Applicants used the term "legitimate expectation"
during the hearing of this matter. This
was the first time that that
particular term was used. Nowhere in the Founding affidavit, the
Replying affidavit or in the Heads
of Argument was this argument
raised. It appears to be an afterthought. In any event, it is trite
that the law does not protect
every expectation but only those which
are legitimate. One of the requirements of an expectation to be
legitimate is that the representation
must have been a competent and
lawful one to make by the decisionmaker, otherwise it may happen that
a created expectation may
give rise to an illegality.
[17]
8.9
Mr Badenhorst, for the Applicants, argued that PAJA is the umbrella
legislation, and that
Regulation 22
is the foundation. The court
asked the question if the SARB was competent to give the Applicants
the option of the PAJA path. Mr
Badenhorst argued that PAJA gave the
SARB a choice to stick to the 90 days as in the regulations or to use
PAJA and therefor, he
argued, the application is proper before court.
5.10
Mr Luderitz, for the First, Third and Fourth Respondents, argued that
in terms of the Statute (Currency and
Exchanges Act) a review is time
barred and there is no power conferred on a court to grant an
extension of time and that means
that the review should be governed
by the Act and the Regulations and not PAJA.
Sec
9(2)(d)(iii) reads:" any person who feels aggrieved by any
decision to forfeit and dispose of such money or goods may,
within a
period prescribed by the regulations, which shall not be less than 90
days after the date of the notice published in the
Gazette and
referred to in subparagraph (ii), institute legal proceedings in a
competent court for the setting aside of such decision,
and the court
shall not set aside such decision unless it is satisfied-
(aa)
that the person who made such decision did not act in accordance with
the relevant provision of the regulation; or
(bb)
that such person did not have grounds to make such decision; or (cc)
that the grounds for making of such decision no longer
exist"
5.11
The relevant regulation is Reg 22D (b). It states that
"action"
may be instituted in a competent court.. The controlling section in
the act is sec 9(2) and Regulation 22D (b) must be interpreted
in the
context of sec 9(2) which states
"legal
proceedings"
to be instituted which can either be action or application. To drive
the point home, review proceedings can be brought by way of
action
also. In this regard see the Constitutional Court in
Mamadi
and Another v Premier of Limpopo and Another
[18]
5.12
Mr Luderitz therefor argued that the specific timeperiod in the
Regulations must prevail over the timeperiod
provided for in PAJA.
In
the case of
Rustenburg
Platinum Mines v The CCMA
[19]
it was held that:
"
.... PAJA requires that proceedings for judicial review be instituted
without unreasonable delay and, in any event, not later
than 180 days
after exhaustion of internal remedies or after the person became
aware of the action challenged and the reasons for
it(s 7(1) ). That
is a longer period than the six weeks sec 145(1) affords. However, as
both the CC and this Court have emphasised,
labour disputes require
speedy resolution, and the Legislature gave clear effect to this
special imperative ins 145(1) by requiring
a labour disputant to act
quickly. The Constitution does not require that the legislation
enacted to give effect to the·
right to administrative justice
must embody any particular time periods. This is therefore a question
on which the Legislature
may be expected to legislate differently in
different fields, taking into account particular needs"
5.13
During the hearing I was referred by Mr Luderitz to two cases of this
division which are exactly on point.
They are Evergrand Trading (PTY)
LTD v SARB and Another
[20]
and
Yanling International Trade CC v SARB
[21]
.
Both cases held that where forfeiture orders are involved, the
matters are governed by the Act read with the Regulations to the
exclusion of PAJA. Unless I can find that the two judgments are
clearly wrong, I am bound to follow them and apply them.
5.14
The Notice and Order of Forfeiture was published in the Government
Gazette on 25 February 2022. If this review
is governed by the Act
and the regulations, the 90 days expiry date would be more or less
towards the end of May 2022 and therefore
be out of time. If governed
by PAJA, the 180 days would have expired near the end of August 2022.
The Application was launched
on 16 August 2022 and thus within the
180- day period.
5.15
Mr Dewrance, for the Second Respondent, indicated to the court during
the hearing that the Second Respondent
mainly challenge the
constitutionality aspects that were attacked by the Applicants. He
furthermore aligned him with the arguments
of the other respondents.
Findings
6
Considering
the above I find as follows:
6.1
The SARB was not competent to represent to the Applicants that PAJA
was applicable.
6.2
I cannot find any basis to criticise the judgments in Evergrand
Trading (PTY) Ltd and Yanling International
Trade CC as wrong and
therefore I am bound to follow.
6.3
In light of the finding in 6.2 above, the other issues for
determination are moot and of academic interest
only.
ORDER
The
order of this court is as follows:
1)
The application is dismissed.
2)
The Applicants are ordered to pay the cost of the Respondents,
jointly and severally which
cost to include the cost of counsel on
scale B
Acting
Judge of the High Court, Gauteng
[1]
CL 02-2
[2]
FA-
para40
[3]
SARB
v Khumalo 2010 (5) SA 449 (SCA)
[4]
FA para 57
[5]
FA para 61
[6]
Supplementary founding affidavit paras 6 and seven
[7]
FA para 55
[8]
Record paras 4-4.3 of item 3; paras 6-6.1 of item 3.
[9]
Record para 8 of item 3
[10]
FA
par 70
[11]
Supplementary
affidavit par 18
[12]
FA
annexure FA 18
[13]
FA
annexure FA 19
[14]
FA
annexures FA 20 and FA 21
[15]
CL 16-16
[16]
FA annexure FA 21
[17]
Hauptfleisch v Caledon District Council 1963 (4) SA 53 (C)
[18]
{CCT 176/21)[2022ZACC 26] ( 6 July 2022)
[19]
2007
(1) SA 576
(SCA) at para [27]/588 D-E
[20]
2022 JDR 2827 GP
[21]
2023 JDR 0456 GP
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