Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 224South Africa
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Lethopa and Others (2023/132147) [2025] ZAGPPHC 224 (11 March 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – application for forfeiture of preserved assets in terms of section 48(1) of POCA – whether preserved property comprising bank accounts are instrumentality of an offence and funds held therein are instruments of offences and thus susceptible to an order for forfeiture in terms of section 50(1) of the Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 – whether the application constitutes an abuse of process warranting a punitive cost order against the National Director of Public Prosecutions – when it is, courts should not hesitate to deprecate such abuse to vindicate violated constitutionally entrenched property rights.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## National Director of Public Prosecutions v Lethopa and Others (2023/132147) [2025] ZAGPPHC 224 (11 March 2025)
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Lethopa and Others (2023/132147) [2025] ZAGPPHC 224 (11 March 2025)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2023-132147
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
11 MARCH 2025
In
the matter between:
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Applicant
And
EDWIN
THABO LETHOPA
First
Respondent
BROUGH
CAPITAL (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
ZIPPYKIND
PARTNER (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
VERTEX
LEGAL (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
CRABY
SYSTEMS (PTY) LTD
Fifth
Respondent
GNEDCCI
INSTITUTE (PTY) LTD
Sixth
Respondent
FUR
GROUP (PTY) LTD
Seventh
Respondent
SUPERSTAR
BETS (PTY) LTD
Eighth
Respondent
HOLISTIC
SUPERBET SHARED SERVICE (PTY) LTD
Ninth
Respondent
1111
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Tenth
Respondent
EDWIN
THABO LETOPA (PTY) LTD
Eleventh
Respondent
CELEBRYT
INTERNATIONAL (PTY) LTD
Twelfth
Respondent
NTC
CAPITAL (PTY) LTD
Thirteenth
Respondent
NTC
GLOBAL TRADE FUND (PTY) LTD
Fourteenth
Respondent
ET
BATAUNG (PTY) LTD
Fifteenth
Respondent
THABO
LETOPA (PTY) LTD
Sixteenth
Respondent
ARBITRAWALLET
(PTY) LTD
Seventeenth
Respondent
NTC
PROPERTY INVESTMENT (PTY) LTD
Eighteenth
Respondent
K2023806767
(SOUTH AFRICA) (PTY) LTD
Nineteenth
Respondent
THE
KOULEHAE SACCO TRUST
(IT002956/2022)
Twentieth
Respondent
VENTEL
MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
Twenty-First
Respondent
ARBITRAWALLET
(PTY) LTD
Twenty-Second
Respondent
BATEE
TOURS (PTY) LTD
Twenty-Third
Respondent
VENTEL
PROPERTY (PTY) LTD
Twenty-Fourth
Respondent
MIDDELVLEI
TENACRES PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Twenty-Fifth
Respondent
LODE
YETHEMBE MINING (PTY) LTD
Twenty-Sixth
Respondent
THE
BATAUNG LEMATHIYANE
FAMILY
TRUST (IT002297/2012)
Twenty-Seventh
Respondent
ZIPPYKIND
PARTNER (PTY) LTD
Twenty-Eighth
Respondent
MPHO
NGOZWANE
Twenty-Ninth
Respondent
Summary:
Civil
procedure – application for forfeiture of preserved assets in
terms of section 48(1) of POCA – whether preserved
property
comprising bank accounts are instrumentality of an offence and funds
held therein are instruments of offences and thus
susceptible to an
order for forfeiture in terms of
section 50(1)
of the
Prevention of
Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998
– whether the application
constitutes an abuse of process warranting a punitive cost order
against the National Director
of Public Prosecutions – when it
is, courts should not hesitate to deprecate such abuse to vindicate
violated constitutionally
entrenched property rights.
JUDGMENT
MODIBA J:
Introduction
[1]
Orders
for civil forfeiture provided for in section 50(1) of the Prevention
of Organized Crime Act
[1]
(POCA) are a laudable mechanism for preventing perpetrators of crime
from benefitting from their ill-gotten gains. However, such
orders
have a draconian effect on those who have an interest in forfeited
property because they are only alerted that the property
in which
they have an interest has been judicially attached when a
preservation order is served or when they read about it in the
Government Gazatte (if they ever get to read the publication). This
is so particularly because in the most cases, POCA forfeiture
orders
are preceded by an application for preservation of property targeted
for forfeiture, granted
ex
parte
and in camera.
[2]
Orders for forfeiture are also granted on a lower quantum of
proof than that applicable in criminal cases and without respondents
being charged or even convicted of a criminal offence. Yet, they do
not only deprive respondents of their property, but they also
visit
upon them the stigma of criminal wrongdoing, effectively reversing
the constitutionally entrenched presumption of innocence.
They may
also constitute arbitrary deprivation of property. Therefore, orders
for forfeiture inflict substantial prejudice.
[3]
Although there are safeguards provided for in POCA and given
meaning by our courts when interpreting its provisions, preservation
and forfeiture applications can be used as a
weapon in terrorem
.
Where they are so used, courts should not hesitate to deprecate such
abuse.
[4]
The NDPP sought [on 12 December 2023] and was granted an order [the
following
day] preserving the funds held in the bank accounts that
appear in schedule A to the notice of motion dated 27 March 2024 (the
preserved assets) on the basis that the bank accounts are an
instrumentality of an offence and the cash held therein are
instruments
of offences referred to in schedule 1 of POCA namely,
fraud and money laundering. Most of the respondents are the account
holders.
The first respondent, Thabo Edwin Letopa (Mr Letopa) is
central to the NDPP’s case against the respondents. It is
common
cause that he controls the entities that are cited as the
respondents. The fourteenth respondent NTC Global Trade Fund (Pty)
Ltd
(NTC) is equally central to the NDPP’s case because she
alleges that deposits Mr Letopa took from members of the public were
paid into a bank account held in its name.
[5]
The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) had placed a soft block on the
respondents’
ban accounts. It was due to lapse on 13 December
2023. This is what prompted the NPA to apply for the preservation
order on an
urgent basis.
[6]
A liquidation application against NTC is pending. The NDPP intends
considering
claims submitted by its creditors, including
claimant who are victims of crimes allegedly committed by NTC when
the preserved
funds have been forfeited to the state.
[7]
It is largely on the same basis the NDPP obtained a preservation
order
that she seeks an order for the forfeiture of the preserved
assets. She specifically relies on the following grounds:
(a)
non-compliance
with section 7(1) of the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services
Act
[2]
(FAIS Act) by Mr Letopa
and NTC;
(b) non-compliance
with the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) foreign exchange
regulations by Mr Letopa and the implicated
entities;
(c) operation
of a Ponzi scheme by Mr Letopa and the implicated entities.
[8]
In this judgment, unless otherwise specified, all references to
statutory
provisions are to the FAIS Act.
[9]
The respondents deny all the above allegations. They contend that the
forfeiture application is nothing but a rehash of the allegations in
the preservation application. The NDPP fails to establish the
allegations. Even if she had established the allegations, they [the
allegations] do not sustain the grounds on which the NDPP relies.
Therefore, the respondents further contend, the NDPP has failed to
make out a case for forfeiture.
[10]
Before I consider the grounds on which the NDPP seeks an order for
forfeiture
as well as the respondents’ basis for opposition, it
is appropriate that I elaborate on the NDPP’s allegations.
Thereafter,
I determine the NDPP’s points
in limine
and
outline the applicable legal principles. Lastly, I determine the
question of costs.
The NDPP’s
allegations
[11]
The NDPP
alleges that the National Prosecuting Authority’s
[3]
(NPA) Asset Forfeiture Unit (AFU) s investigated the affairs of the
respondents after the National Consumer Council (NCC) received
a
tipoff from an anonymous caller, alerting it that Mr Letopa operates
a website with the following
URL
https://trade.momentumsecurities.co.za
(the
website). The website mimics that of the well-known Momentum
financial services entity (Momentum). Consumers are
lured to invest
through the website under the belief that they are investing
with Momentum while in fact, they are paying
money into banking
accounts owned or controlled by Mr Letopa. Mr Letopa owns multiple
companies. In some of these companies he
is a sole director. He
masquerades as a financial service provider through these companies,
taking deposits from the public in
contravention of the law.
[12]
AFU solicited assistance from the Financial Sector Conduct Authority
(FSCA) to investigate the affairs of Mr Letopa. Wendy Serfontein (Ms
Serfontein) of the FSCA conducted the investigation and made
the
following findings:
(a) on 10 July
2014, Mr Letopa applied to be granted a license as an authorised
financial services provider (FSP). On 25 September
2014, the
application was rejected because he did not meet the fit and proper
requirements set out in the FAIS Act;
(b) on 15 November
2023, Ms Serfontein conducted a search on the FSCA records and found
that Mr Letopa is not an authorised
FSP or a representative of an
FSP. She also found that NTC is not and was never an authorised
FSP;
[13]
AFU requested SARB to investigate whether Mr Letopa’s companies
were authorised to offer financial services to members of the public.
The scope of the SARB investigation included all cross-border
transactions in the name of Mr Letopa, other individuals and/or his
entities for the period 01 November 2022 to 17 November 2023. SARB
decision to put a soft block on bank accounts associated with Mr
Letopa followed this investigation.
[14]
The FSCA has made the following further findings on which the NDPP
relies
in the forfeiture application. Upon investigating persons and
entities referenced in Ms Serfontein’s report, she [Ms
Serfontein]
found that:
(a)
Willie
Marius Venter (Mr Venter) is linked to two companies that lodged
applications for FSP licences on 30 November 2023. The first
is the
seventeenth respondent, Arbitrawallet (Pty) Ltd (Arbitrawallet). The
second is Coin Link (Pty) Ltd (Coin Link). Coin
Link is not party to
these proceedings. Mr Venter is a 33.3% shareholder in Arbitrawallet
and a director in Coin Link. He provided
the e-mail address
m[...]@arbitrawallet.net
[presumably to FSCA];
(b) Mr Venter was
previously linked to Transferme (Pty) Ltd, an authorised FSP, as a
representative until 1 March 2023;
(c)
Sakhile
Matsimela was linked as a director and 33.3% shareholder in
Arbitrawallet. Matsimela provided the e-mail address
s[...]@voxitrade.com
,
linking him to Voxitrade Exchange Inc (Voxitrade);
(d)
Voxitrade
Exchange Inc,
Index Venture Partners (Pty) Ltd (Index Venture)
and Outsource Compliance Services (Pty) Ltd (OCS)
were
authorized as FSPs. It is unclear from the founding affidavit how
Index Venture and OCS are linked to the respondents. Apart
from
Arbitrawallet, these entities are not cited in these proceedings.
[15]
AFU also requested the Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC) to
investigate
Mr Letopa. A bald averment is made in the founding
affidavit that the FIC report pointed out that Mr Letopa was involved
in unlawful
activities. The particulars of such activities are
not set out. Since the NDPP does not specifically rely on the
findings
of the FIC in the same way she relies on the FCSA and SARB
findings, which she particularised in her founding affidavit, I
entertain
the FIC bald finding no further in this judgment.
[16]
It is against the background set out above that the NDPP alleges
that:
(a) Mr Letopa
contravened section 7(1) which prohibits acting or offering to
act as an FSP without an FSP licence issued in
terms of section 8.
Section 7(1) also prohibits acting as a representative of an FSP
without being appointed as a representative
of an authorised FSP in
terms of section 13;
(b) Mr Letopa contravened
SARB Regulations, with specific reference to the Exchange Control
Regulation (ECR) 2(4)(a) and/or 2(2(4)(b)
read with ECR 22 in that:
(i)
his inward funds were reported under the incorrect category and/or
the funds were used for
another purpose;
(ii)
the website of Arbitrawallet advertised that it traded in "...
buying, selling and exchanging
Foreign currency including US dollars”
and also “offers investment opportunities in foreign currency
and crypto arbitrage".
Abitrawallet is not authorised to buy,
sell and exchange foreign currency;
(c) from the evidence
gathered, it can be safely accepted that there are reasonable grounds
to believe that Mr Letopa and his multiple
companies committed fraud
and money laundering.
The NDPP’s
points in limine
[17]
The NDPP has attacked the respondents’ opposition on the
following
points in limine.
(a) NTC is not authorised
to oppose this application;
(b) a confirmatory
affidavit was not filed on behalf of the 29th respondent;
(c) the respondents did
not seek condonation for the late filing of their section 39 notice.
[18]
The respondents thrifted through all these points in limine. Their
opposition
is unassailable.
Alleged lack of
authority to oppose the application on behalf of NTC
[19]
The NDPP contends that NTC is not authorised to oppose this
application
either because it has been placed in business rescue or
liquidation proceedings are pending against it. Therefore, the NDPP
further
contends, if it is in business rescue, then its business
rescue practitioner ought to have deposed to an affidavit on its
behalf
and not Mr Letopa.
[20]
The NDPP raises two conflated issues; namely, the authority to depose
to an affidavit and the authority to oppose the application.
Conflated as the two issues are, the complaint based on any of them
is unsustainable and falls to be dismissed.
[21]
The NDPP failed to follow the procedure set out in uniform rule 7(1)
to impugn Letopa’s authority to oppose this application on
behalf of NTC. Letopa did not need to be authorised to depose
to an affidavit on behalf of NTC. It is sufficient that he has
personal knowledge of the facts on which NTC relies.
## No confirmatory
affidavit deposed to by the twenty ninth respondent
No confirmatory
affidavit deposed to by the twenty ninth respondent
[22]
The respondents undertook to deliver a
confirmatory affidavit on behalf of the twenty ninth respondent.
They subsequently duly delivered it. Therefore, the point
in
limine
that a confirmatory affidavit has not been filed by the
twenty ninth respondent has been purged.
## No condonation for the
section 39 notice
No condonation for the
section 39 notice
[23]
The NDPP contends that the respondents failed to
deliver a notice in terms of section 39(4)(a) of POCA within 14
days of service
of the order but instead waited for publication of
the order in the Government Gazette, which the NDPP contends is not
applicable
to them. The NDPP contends that the respondents had to
apply for condonation for the late filing of their notice but failed
to
do so.
[24]
The respondents deny this. They correctly contend that they could not
have been expected to deliver a notice in terms of
s 39(4)(a)
of POCA within 14 days of service of the preservation order as such
service did not occur. The NDPP put up no proof
that the preservation
order was duly served on them.
[25]
The respondents delivered their section 39(5) notice on 4 March
2024 in accordance with section 39(4)(b) of POCA, being within
14 days after the date upon which the NDPP published notice
in the
Government Gazette. I therefore find that, the respondents complied
with section 39 of POCA. In any event, the NDPP
did not set
aside the respondents’ section 39 notice as an irregular
proceeding. It is apparent from the papers filed that
the NDPP
investigated the respondents’ version as set out in the notice.
Subsequent to that investigation, it instituted
the forfeiture
application. The forfeiture application is fully ventilated and ready
for hearing. The NDPP’s success in this
application does not
lie in merely attacking the section 39 notice as she seeks to do.
Even if she did, the respondents’
answering affidavit has been
filed and until it too has not been set aside as an irregular step.
Therefore, this court ought to
have regard to it, particularly
because the respondents’ constitutional rights to be presumed
innocent and not to be arbitrarily
deprived of their property is
implicated.
Applicable legal
principles
[26]
The applicable legal principles are elaborately set out in the
respondents’
heads of argument. The NDPP took no issue with
them.
[27]
Chapter 6 of POCA provides for civil forfeiture of property.
When she seeks an order for forfeiture of
preserved assets, the NDPP is required to bring an application in
terms of section 48(1)
by giving 14 days’ notice of the
application to persons who filed a section 39(3) notice after being
served with a preservation
order or in the case of non-parties, after
the preservation order was published in the Government Gazette. In
terms of section
48(4)(a), such persons may inter alia, oppose the
application.
In terms of section 50(1)
of POCA, the court will grant the forfeiture order if it finds on a
balance of probabilities that the
preserved property is an
instrumentality of an offence referred to in schedule 1.
[28]
When
confronted with applications for forfeiture, courts have grappled
with the contours of the powers they derive from section
50(1) of
POCA. They have observed that a forfeiture order is a
unique
remedy used to combat organised crime. It is not punitive but
remedial. Its purpose is to remove the incentive for crime
and not to
punish the offender.
[4]
It rests
on the legal fiction that the property and not the person with an
interest in the property has contravened the law.
Hence,
charging that person or securing his or her criminal conviction is
not a prerequisite for the granting of a forfeiture order.
[29]
Courts
have consistently observed that orders for civil forfeiture are
draconian because they allow forfeiture of property on the
basis that
it is an instrumentality of a criminal offence, without the owner
being charged or convicted and; the quantum of proof
is lower than
that applicable in criminal proceedings. Therefore, casting the net
too wide may result in arbitrary deprivation
of property thus
seriously encroaching into entrenched constitutional rights and
yielding an unjust outcome.
[5]
[30]
Although
section
50(1) is couched in peremptory terms, to stifle its potentially
draconian effect by ensuring that an order for civil forfeiture
does
not result in arbitrary deprivation of property, courts have resorted
to
the
standard of proportionality. A court seized with an application in
terms of section 48(1) of POCA is required to strike a balance
between the laudable societal quest to combat organised crime on the
one hand, and unwarranted interference with individual rights
to
property on the other. Forfeiture orders must be weighed against the
purpose they serve.
[6]
[31]
The approach to determining whether a
proper case is made for an order for forfeiture to be granted has
become trite. It is as follows:
(a) first, it must be
established that the preserved property is an instrumentality of an
offence;
(b) then, a
proportionality enquiry is embarked upon to weigh the severity of the
interference with individual rights to property
against the extent to
which the property was used to commit a criminal offence, bearing in
mind the nature of the implicated offence.
[32]
In
Mahomed
, the court held that when determining
whether preserved assets are an instrumentality of an offence and
thus liable to civil forfeiture,
the following questions should be
asked - whether the implicated offence is a crime that:
(a)
renders conventional criminal penalties inadequate;
(b)
requires extraordinary measures for its detection, prosecution and
prevention;
(c)
warrants the extraordinary measures akin to those appropriate to
organised crime as
envisaged in POCA;
(d)
has some rational link, however tenuous, with racketeering, money
laundering and criminal
gang activities.
[33]
Negative
answers to these questions would be an important indication that
forfeiture may be disproportionate.
[7]
A
n
additional consideration in the proportionality analysis is whether
the crime in relation to which the property was used is subject
to
asset forfeiture provisions. If it is, it is a relevant and important
factor whether subjecting the property to forfeiture under
POCA would
be redundant or doubly punitive.
Furthermore,
forfeiture must be rationally connected to the purpose of chapter 6
of POCA. There must be a reasonably direct link between the
property
subject to forfeiture and the crime committed. Further, the property
must play a reasonably direct role in the commission
of the offence.
[8]
[34]
The
purpose of POCA, is to supplement criminal remedies in appropriate
cases and not to merely serve as a convenient substitute.
Therefore,
having perpetrators of crime criminally charged and sentenced should
be the first resort in combating crime.
[9]
[35]
In
terms of section 37 (2) of POCA, factual disputes stand to be
resolved according to the seminal Plascon Evans rule.
[10]
[36]
The
NDPP
must make out her case in her founding affidavit in such a way that
the
respondents are informed of the case to meet
.
[11]
This
is not a technical requirement, when a party is facing the prospects
of being deprived of their property without being convicted
of a
criminal offence, a case the respondent is required to answer must be
clearly set out.
[12]
##
Whether the NDPP makes
out a case for forfeiture
## Non-compliance with
the FAIS Act
Non-compliance with
the FAIS Act
[37]
The NDPP alleges that Mr Letopa and his
companies have contravened section 7(1). This provision provides as
follows:
“
(1) …a
person may not act or offer to act as a-
(a)
financial
services provider, unless such person has been issued with a licence
under section 8; or
(b)
a
representative, unless such person has been appointed as a
representative of an authorised financial services
provider under
section 13.”
[46]
Section 1 defines an FSP as any person,
other than a representative, who as a regular feature of the business
of such person furnishes
advice, or furnishes advice and renders any
intermediary service, or renders an intermediary service.
[47]
Section 1 defines an intermediary service
as:
“…
subject
to subsection (3)
(b)
, any act other than the furnishing
of advice, performed by a person for or on behalf of a client or
product supplier-
(a)
the
result of which is that a client may enter into, offers to enter into
or enters into any transaction in respect of a financial
product with
a product supplier; or
(b)
with
a view to-
(i) buying,
selling or otherwise dealing in (whether on a discretionary or
non-discretionary basis), managing,
administering, keeping in safe
custody, maintaining or servicing a financial product purchased by a
client from a product supplier
or in which the client has invested;
(ii) collecting
or accounting for premiums or other moneys payable by the client to a
product supplier in respect
of a financial product; or
(iii) receiving,
submitting or processing the claims of a client against a product
supplier;”
[48]
In terms of section 1(2),
a
financial product excludes any financial product exempted from the
provisions of the FAIS Act by the registrar by notice in
the Government
Gazette, taking into consideration the extent to
which the rendering of financial services in respect of the product
is regulated
by any other law.
[49]
The NDPP obtained a preservation order
based on the allegations set out earlier in this judgment. While the
allegations were found
to have established a basis for the
preservation order to be granted, they are insufficient to sustain a
forfeiture order for reasons
set out below.
[50]
It is common cause that except for the
second respondent Brough Capital (Pty) Ltd, the respondents are not
authorised FSPs or representatives
of FSPs. The mere fact that Letopa
is not a registered FSP does not constitute non-compliance with
section 7(1). The allegation
that Letopa misrepresented that he is a
FSP is not established. The allegation was made by an anonymous
caller to the NCC. All
that the NDPP established, based on the
evidence by Ms Serfontein is that Mr Letopa and NTC are not a
registered FSP or authorised
representatives. The fact that Mr Letopa
and NTC are not registered FSPs does not sustain a finding that they
misrepresented to
members of the public that they are so authorised.
Not a single affidavit by a person to which he made such a
misrepresentation
was filed.
[51]
Further, the NDPP has not put up any
evidence to establish that Mr Letopa, or any of the respondents
operated the website or received
payments from the website. The
allegation also emanates from the report by an anonymous caller to
the NCC. The NDPP has therefore
failed to prove that Mr Letopa and
the NTC lured members of the public to make deposits into bank
accounts of companies controlled
by him on the guise that they were
investing with Momentum.
[52]
The respondents’ version is that NTC
raises capital by issuing debentures which a debenture holder
acquires for a fixed cost
through the Arbitrawallet platform,
Arbitrawallet.net subject to the applicable terms and conditions.
D
ebenture holders
earn 1% interest per annum on the value of the debentures held.
NTC does not use the amounts paid by later
debenture holders to repay earlier debenture holders. It uses funds
raised `by issuing
debentures to trade in cryptocurrencies through a
separate legal entity and to invest in various other business
endeavours. Profits
generated are paid as an additional return to
debenture holders based on the value of the debentures that they
hold. A debenture
holder is entitled to sell their debentures back to
the NTC in accordance with the terms of the debenture agreement.
[53]
I accept the respondents’ version
based on the Plascon Evans rule. Nonetheless, the NDPP’s case
suffers from the following
serious impediments:
(a)
the NDPP is required to make out its case
in its founding affidavit so that it is clear what case the
respondents are required to
meet. There, it makes out no case that
Letopa and the companies controlled by him issued debentures in
contravention of section
7(1).
(b)
Since the NDPP’s case is not based on
the issuing of debentures, it may not rely on the respondents’
version to establish
a case for forfeiture. The respondents set
out their version in their section 39(3) notice. Notwithstanding that
the NDPP
enjoyed more than 90 days prior to bringing this application
to investigate whether the issuing of debentures by the respondents
constitutes breach of section 7 (1) read with the definitions of
financial product and intermediary service in section 1(1) and
1(2)
of FAIS Act, it persists with the allegations that led to the
granting of the preservation order without proof of such allegations
but more importantly, without investigating whether the respondents’
business activities constitute non-compliance with the
FAIS Act.
(c)
The fact that the respondents were not
called to answer to a case based on the issuing of debentures simply
means that they have
not been afforded an opportunity to rely on any
defences that are available to them, such as that provided for in
section 1(2).
It could well be that the issuing of debentures falls
within exempted financial products in terms of section 1(2). It is
not for
this court to conjure up a case for the NDPP.
(d)
contravention of section 7(1) is not an
offence referred to in schedule 1 of POCA
Alleged non-compliance
with Exchange Control Regulations
[54]
The respondents correctly contend that the
NDPP has provided no evidence to establish that they have contravened
ECR 2(4)(a) and/or
2(2)(4)(b) read with ECR 22 [of the SARB Exchange
Control Regulations]. The high-water mark of her case is a
screenshot of
the Arbitrawallet website advertising that it traded in
“
…
buying, selling and
exchanging Foreign currency including US dollars
”
,
which she asserts constitutes a contravention of the SARB exchange
control regulations. The respondents’ version that
Arbitrawallet
has never bought, sold, or exchanged foreign currency,
including US dollars and that its website reflects an earlier idea
for the
Arbitrawallet business which it never pursued for various
commercial reasons is not far-fetched that this court is unable to
reasonably
accept it.
## Alleged Ponzi scheme
Alleged Ponzi scheme
[55]
The
Ponzi
scheme
allegations are also not established. The NDPP has not furnished any
evidence to prove that any of t
he respondents use funds from
later debenture holders to repay earlier debenture holders.
[56]
Mr Letopa alleges that the business model
and the use of
irredeemable profit-sharing
debentures has been patented. He furnished NDPP with financial
statements of NTC for the year ended
31 August 2023, which reflect
that the company has total equity and liabilities of R91 516 519.
Its bank statement reflects
that it holds a bank account in its
own name and makes regular payments to debenture holders.
[57]
The respondents have provided a detailed
account of their business activities which the NDPP does not dispute.
Their version is
as follows:
(a)NTC
is a property holding company. Its approved financial statements for
the year ended 31 August 2023 reflects that it has total
equity and
liabilities of R26 912 420. It acquires immovable properties which it
owns, rents, or sells to generate a profit. It
owns a commercial
property in Centurion that it acquired for R4 million and a
residential development in Vosloorus that it
acquired for
R12 million. It made an offer to acquire a residential
development in Southdale for R6 million. The offer
fell through
because of the preservation order.
(b)
Middelvlei Tenacres is a property
development company. Its approved financial statements for the year
ended 31 August 2023 reflect
that the company has total equity and
liabilities of R7 622 779. It develops properties owned by NTC
Property.
(c)
Arbitrawallet acquired Brough on 7
September 2023 for R1 250 000. Brough is a pension fund and
asset manager. It holds
a FAIS FSP licence. It generates revenue by
earning fees associated with providing these services to its clients.
(d)
Lode Yethembe Mining is a Wibank-based coal
mining company. It has a prospecting right and has applied to the
Department of Mineral
Resources for a mining right in respect of
certain coal resources.
(e)
Superstar Bets develops software for sports
betting. It was acquired for a purchase consideration of R12 million
of which R3.2 million
has been paid. Its financial statements
for the year ended 31 August 2023 reflects that the company has total
equity and liabilities
of R915 271.
(f)
Ventel Management acquired shares in a
contract mining company based in the Northern Cape for R1 million.
It has also won a
tender to provide mining services in the diamond
industry. Its approved financial statements for the year ended 31
August 2023
reflect that it has total equity and liabilities of R15
684 638.
(g)
Zippykind Partner buys motor vehicles
through lay buys, pawning and instalment takeovers. Its approved
financial statements for
the year ended 31 August 2023 reflect that
it has total equity and liabilities of R47 803 460.
(h)
Carby Systems is a software provider to
Zippykind. The software facilitates the transactions that Zippykind
engages in. Its approved
financial statements for the year ended 31
August 2023 reflect that the company has total equity and liabilities
of R272 506.
(i)
Vertex Legal develops and provide software
for lawyers. Its approved financial statements for the year ended 31
August 2023 reflect
that it has total equity and liabilities of R413.
(j)
Gnedcci Institute is a chamber of commerce
and business forum. It negotiates opportunities on behalf of small
business owners and
provides accounting training for non-accounting
executives.
(k)
Holistic Superbet Shared Service (Holistic)
is a procurement company. If a company in the group needs equipment,
then Holistic procures
the equipment and lease the equipment to that
company. Its approved financial statements for the year ended 31
August 2023 reflect
that the company has total equity and liabilities
of R25 480 868.
(l)
1111 Holdings is the intellectual property
company. Any trademark or patent associated with any of the
respondents is registered
in this company. An example would include
the software that Carby Systems provides to Zippykind. Its approved
financial statements
for the year ended 31 August 2023 reflects that
it has total equity and liabilities of R33 475 888.
(m)Celebryt
International is an events management company. It has signed
contracts with musicians. It hosts music functions. It
also owns
Alphapac Media, which is an artist management company. Its approved
financial statements for the year ended 31 August
2023 reflect that
the company has total equity and liabilities of R213 684.
(n)
Fur Group is a business whose existence
precedes NTC. It was initially envisaged that Fur Group would be a
private equity company.
However, this did not materialise, and Fur
Group has not made any investments.
(o)
NTC Capital is a company that was started
before NTC. It is a private equity company that owns investments in
two farms. One is
a cattle farm, and one is a sheep farm. NTC Capital
also has an investment in a software company called Mbumbatel which
provides
voice over IP software. Its approved financial statements
for the year ended 31 August 2023, reflects that the company has
total
equity and liabilities of R10 325 803.
(p)
ET Bataung’s provides administrative
services including processing invoices and payments, payroll
management and accounting
services to other companies in the group.
Its approved financial statements for the year ended 31 August 2023
reflect that the
company has total equity and liabilities of R58 161.
(q)
Arbitrawallet provides a digital eWallet
system via an app. Arbitrawallet created this software. Its approved
financial statements
for the year ended 31 August 2023 reflect that
the company has total equity and liabilities of R41 633 233.
(r)
NTC Employees Administration has contracts
with employees that provide labour to the various companies in the
group. It serves as
a labour broker within the group.
(s)
Batee Tours is a shuttle company. It
provides shuttle services and airport transfers. It gets business by
word of mouth and referrals
from travel agencies. Some of the
Zippykind vehicles are used in its business. Its approved financial
statements for the year ended
31 August 2023, reflect that the
company has total equity and liabilities of R356 132.
(u)
Ventel Property is a newly formed property
company. Its purpose is to make an offer to buy properties at an
auction. However, this
fell through because of the preservation
order.
(v)
Ventel Management is a management company
whose sole purpose is to provide management services to companies in
the group.
[58]
The companies work in tandem as part of the
group, sourcing and providing services to each other. The companies
have their own bank
accounts. Commercial arrangements between the
companies are on commercial terms and are documented. They derive
funds from the
debentures. No evidence has been provided that NTC
used money raised from earlier debentures to pay later debenture
holders. According
to the respondents, to date, R476 139 461.32
has been raised through the debentures. This amount can be verified
against
the debenture certificates issued to debenture holders. It
equates to the NDPP’s own calculation of R484,825,443.71
credited
to NTC’s account. NTC has paid out R212,930,431.77 to
debenture holders. Collectively, R160,597,692.75 has been preserved
by the NDPP. The balance of R104 million has been applied in
acquisitions and investments in and through other companies in
the
group. An amount of $104,843,691.00 is held in a brokerage account of
NTC that has not been preserved by the NDPP.
Whether the preserved
assets are instruments of the offence of fraud and money laundering
[59]
To
succeed in this application, the NDPP must establish that the
preserved assets are an instrumentality of a scheduled offence
in the
sense that they played a part in the commission of the offence.
[13]
What I find most startling about the NDPP’s case is that she
seeks a forfeiture order on the premise that the preserved assets
are
instruments of the crimes of fraud and money laundering which are
crimes referred to in schedule 1 of POCA. Yet, she makes
no
allegations to sustain such a finding. She relies on the alleged
contravention of section 7(1) and the SARB exchange control
regulations. Her allegations do not even begin to meet the elements
of fraud and money laundering. She may have formulated her
case in
this manner because fraud and money laundering are scheduled in POCA
whereas non-compliance with section 7(1) is not. Although
contravention of the SARB exchange control regulations is listed in
item 33 of schedule 1 of POCA and while operating a Ponzi scheme
may
fall within some of the offences scheduled in POCA such as money
laundering, as already found, no evidence is presented to
sustain a
finding that the preserved assets were acquired as a result of these
or any offence. The NDPP’s case is incoherent
and completely
devoid of any merit.
[60]
I must accept the respondent’s
version that the respondent entities transferred funds and made
payments to one another for
commercial purposes and in the ordinary
course of business. The NDPP did not seriously dispute it and it is
not far-fetched.
[61]
For all the above reasons, I must find that
the NDPP has failed to establish that the preserved assets are
instrumentalities of
the offences of fraud and money laundering and
that she presented no evidence to establish that the respondents
contravened section
7(1) of POCA and the ECR and that they operated a
Ponzi scheme. Embarking on the proportionality exercise will
therefore serve
no purpose. Her application in terms of section 48
(1) of POCA must fail.
Costs
[62]
The respondents complain that the NDPP
abused the court process and acted unconstitutionally when it
warranted that it would respect
the safeguards in POCA to limit the
prejudice those affected by the preservation order sought and granted
in their absence and
which would have adverse impact on their right
to deal with their property and to be heard. It undertook to serve
the preservation
order on the respondents as soon as possible as
required in terms of section 39(1) of POCA and publish it in the
government gazette
within 14 days of it being granted as required in
terms of section 39(3). Doing so would afford anyone who wanted to
participate
in the forfeiture proceedings and anyone with a
legitimate interest in the property who wanted to exclude their
interest in the
property from forfeiture, an opportunity to do so at
forfeiture stage of the proceedings. Therefore, the Court did not
need to
be concerned about the infringement of their rights at the
preservation stage.
[63]
It follows that if the NDPP did not
progress the preservation proceedings to forfeiture stage, she would
effectively deny parties
affected by the preservation order an
opportunity to exercise their right to oppose the application for an
order for forfeiture
in order to vindicate their property rights.
[64]
The NDPP failed to fulfil her undertaking
to serve the preservation order and application on the respondents.
She also did not publish
the preservation order in the Government
Gazette, as required by section 39(3) of POCA as took more than two
months to do so. As
a result of these failures, the rights of
respondents and those of other persons affected by the preservation
order were infringed
in a manner not contemplated by the POCA. These
undertakings were incorporated in the preservation order and were
thus binding
on the NDPP. By failing to fulfil them, she breached the
preservation order and acted unconstitutionally.
[65]
The respondents submit that the NDPP’s
conduct is so egregious and abusive of the court process and of the
statutory scheme
in POCA that it cannot be tolerated and ought to be
deprecated by setting aside the preservation order and dismissing the
application
for forfeiture, with punitive costs.
[66]
The respondents have demonstrated that the
NDPP breached the preservation order by failing to comply with both
of these safeguards:
she did not
serve
notice of the preservation order together with the documents filed in
support of the application on the respondents, nor did she
publish
the preservation order in the Government Gazette timeously.
[67]
I am satisfied that the conduct of the NDPP
complained of warrants a punitive cost order against her (in her
official capacity).
T
he NPA is an organ of state, established
in terms of the constitution. It enjoys extraordinary and
wide-ranging constitutional and
statutory powers, the exercise of
which inevitably will potentially encroach on the constitutional
rights of others. It is for
that reason that the constitution imposes
on it as an organ of state the duty to act in accordance with the law
and to promote,
respect and fulfil constitutional rights. This
includes the duty to respect court orders.
[68]
The
NDPP’s conduct in obtaining a preservation order
ex
parte
and in camera but failing to fulfil the terms of the order aimed at
securing the respondents’ right to present a version
in a
section 39 notice and oppose the present application, failing to
properly investigate the allegations against the respondents
as well
as findings made by FAIS and SARB and bringing a forfeiture
application which is not supported by facts calls for deprecation
by
this court. Her conduct falls short of the heightened standard
imposed on public litigants as principal agents of the constitution
to fulfil procedural requirements and to tread carefully when dealing
with rights.
[14]
Although court recently applied this standard when considering a
personal cost order against a public official, I have not been
advanced with any reason why the principles should not equally apply
to a state institution such as the NDPP, were her institution
did not
only fail to meet the heightened standard in litigation but where the
litigation is not supported by fact, constitutes
an abuse of process
and where the respondent’s constitutional rights are
implicated.
[69]
All these considerations warrant the award
for costs on a punitive scale against the NDPP.
[70]
In the premises, the following order is
made:
Order
[1] The application is
dismissed with punitive costs.
[2] Such costs shall be
inclusive of the costs of two counsel were so employed.
[3] The preservation
order granted by this court on 13 December 2023 under the above case
number is set aside.
LT MODIBA
JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appearances
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv
W DL Phahlane, assisted by Adv S Chikuni
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney, Pretoria
Counsel
for Respondents:
Adv
G Wickins, assisted by SC Adv T Scott
Instructed
by:
Smit
Swegoolan Inc, Saxonwold
Date
of Hearing:
13
November 2024
Date
of Judgment:
11
March 2025
MODE OF DELIVERY:
This judgment is handed
down electronically by transmission to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, uploading on Case
l
ines
and release to SAFLII. The date and time for delivery is deemed to be
11 March 2025 at 10h00.
[1]
Act
121 of 1998.
[2]
Act 37 of 2002.
[3]
An organ of state which is responsible for public prosecutions and
for matters incidental to instituting criminal proceedings,
headed
by the NDPP (Section 179 of the Constitution).
[4]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Mohamed NO
[2002] ZACC 9
;
2002 (4) SA 843
(CC) par 15.
[5]
Prophet
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
at paragraph [38].
[6]
Prophet
footnote 6
at
paragraph [123] to [127].
[7]
Mahomed
at
paragraph [124-126].
[8]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Seevnarayan
2004
(2) SACR 208
(SCA) par 44.
[9]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Van Staden
2007
(1) SACR 338
(SCA) par 7;
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Kleinbooi
[2008] 2 All SA 455
(C) 463C, 464F.
[10]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984
(3) SA 623 (A)
at
634E - 635C. See also
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Braun
2009
(6) SA 501
(WCC) par 38;
National
Director of
Public
Prosecutions v Bosch
2009
(2) SACR 547
(KZD) par 30
[11]
Janse
van Rensburg v The National Director of Public Prosecutions
2007
JDR 0177 (SCA) par 23-24
[12]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v RO Cook Properties (Pty) Ltd;
National Director of Public Prosecutions v 37 Gillespie
Street
Durban (Pty) Ltd; National Director of Public Prosecutions v
Seevnarayan
2004
(2) SACR 208
(SCA) par 44.
[13]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Ro Cook Properties (Pty)
Ltd; National Director of Public Prosecutions
v 37 Gillespie Street
Durban (Pty) Ltd and Another; National Director of Public
Prosecutions v Seevnarayan
2004 (2) SACR 208
(SCA)
at
paragraphs [53] and [59].
[14]
Public Protector v
South African Reserve Bank
2019
(6) SA 253
(CC) AT PARAGRAPH 155 And
Zuma
v Office of the Public Protector
(unreported,
SCA case no 1447/2018 dated 30 October 2020) at paragraphs
[39]–[41].
sino noindex
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