Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 637South Africa
Phumo and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions (2024-104694) [2025] ZAGPPHC 637 (9 June 2025)
Headnotes
at First National Bank (FNB), account number 6[...] in the name of Women Against Poverty and Hunger (Pty) Ltd with registration number 2022/79340107. 2. The amount of R244 039.69 and accrued interest held at Capitec, account number 1052213979 in the name of Women Against Poverty and Hunger. 3. An amount of R4 228.50 and accrued interest held at Capitec, account number 4[...] in the name of Women Against Poverty and Hunger. 4. An amount of R13 722.85 and accrued interest held at Capitec, account number 1[...] in the name of Kelebogile Precious Phumo, ID Number: 8[...] 8
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Phumo and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions (2024-104694) [2025] ZAGPPHC 637 (9 June 2025)
Phumo and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions (2024-104694) [2025] ZAGPPHC 637 (9 June 2025)
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sino date 9 June 2025
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO:
2024-104694
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE 09 JUNE 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the reconsideration application of:
KELEBOGILE
PRECIOUS PHUMO
First Applicant
WOMEN
AGAINST POVERTY AND HUNGER (PTY)(Ltd)
Second
Applicant
and
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Respondent
In
re the preservation order of:
1.
An amount of R1 273 049.40 and accrued interest
held at First
National Bank (FNB), account number 6[...] in the name of Women
Against Poverty and Hunger (Pty) Ltd with registration
number
2022/79340107.
2.
The amount of R244 039.69 and accrued interest
held at Capitec,
account number 1052213979 in the name of Women Against Poverty and
Hunger.
3.
An amount of R4 228.50 and accrued interest
held at Capitec, account
number 4[...] in the name of Women Against Poverty and Hunger.
4.
An amount of R13 722.85 and accrued interest
held at Capitec, account
number 1[...] in the name of Kelebogile Precious Phumo, ID Number:
8[...] 8
JUDGMENT
IN THE RECONSIDERATION APPLICATION
LABUSCHAGNE
J
ORDER:
[1]
The
ex parte
preservation order granted on 18 September 2024
is discharged.
[2]
The NDPP is directed to pay the
costs of the application and
reconsideration application on an attorney and client scale, Scale A.
JUDGMENT
[3]
This is an application for reconsideration, on an urgent basis, on a
preservation of property
order granted in terms of section 38 of the
Prevention of Organised Crime Act, 121 of 1998 (POCA) against
positive bank balances
in various bank accounts which are set out
supra in the headpiece.
[4]
The NDPP contends that the bank accounts’ credit balances are
as a result of
a multiplication scheme operated by the first
applicant and her company, the second applicant.
[5]
The NDPP contends that there is no urgency of the matter as, during
May 2025, the applicants
requested the NDPP to hold over the exchange
of pleadings pending discussions. The NDPP agreed to this and
was then, out
of the blue, met with an urgent application for
reconsideration.
[6]
The applicants in turn contend that the preservation of property
order has expired and/or
lapsed on three grounds:
6.1
The applicants contend that the ex
parte order was never
properly served on the applicants in terms of section 39(1)(a) of
POCA, as the address upon which such notice
was served is not the
registered address of the second applicant and no service was
effected upon the first applicant.
6.2
The applicants further contend that the notice
of the order contained
in the Government Gazette pertains to an order dated 18 September
2023. The notice as published in
the Government Gazette is
therefore invalid and was not published in terms of section 39(1)(b)
of POCA.
6.3
The applicants thirdly contend that, even
if both subsections (a) and
(b) of section 39 of POCA have been met, the respondent has not given
the notices “
as soon as practicable”
as required
by the Act but instead waited until January 2025 to give notice
(which notices are faulty).
[7]
The upshot of the applicant’s approach is that the preservation
order has lapsed in
terms of section 40 of POCA.
[8]
In answer to the NDPP’s challenge to the urgency of the
application, the applicants
contend that they cannot trade as a
result of the expired preservation order.The urgency is then self-
evident.
THE
EX PARTE
ORDER
[9]
On 18 September 2024 Ledwaba DJP granted an
ex parte
court
order in Chambers, preserving the property identified in the
headpiece above and prohibiting any dealing with the property
(paragraph 2 of the preservation order).
[10]
The order provided that the NDPP must, in terms of section 39 of
POCA:
“
5.1
Cause notice of this order in the form set out in annexure “A”,
together with documents
supporting the application, to be served by
the sheriff on Women Against Poverty and Hunger (Pty) Ltd and
Kelebogile Precious Phumo,
being the director of Women Against
Poverty and Hunger (Pty) Ltd, at No. 5[...] N[...] R[...] Road,
Kempton Park, Johannesburg,
Gauteng Province.
5.2
Cause notice of this order, and the forms set out in annexure “A”,
to be published
in the Government Gazette as soon as practicable
after the order was granted.
6.
In the event the sheriff has not been able to serve on Women Against
Poverty
and Hunger (Pty) Ltd, publication in the Government Gazette
will be regarded as sufficient service.”
[11]
The facts of this matter establish that the aforesaid address set out
in the
ex parte
court order is not the address of the
applicants. Further, service by means of publication in the
Government Gazette is marred
by the fact that the wrong year (2023)
was used with reference to the date of the court order published in
the Government Gazette.
[12]
Despite the order being granted on 18 September 2024, the applicants
only became aware of it through
service that was effected at a
different address on 10 January 2025. This occurred when
service took place at the business
address of the second applicant.
[13]
The NDPP clearly did not appreciate that it advanced a wrong factual
address as the address for
service upon an affected party in
preservation proceedings.
[14]
The preservation order provides in paragraphs 10 and 11 for
reconsideration. The
order reads:
“
10.
Any person who is affected by the order may on good cause shown,
apply for reconsideration.
Such application shall be made:
10.1
In instances where the person is able to justify the application on
grounds of urgency, upon three
days’ notice (or such shorter
period as the court may determine on good cause shown);
10.2
In other instances, upon at least seven days’ notice to the
applicant and all other persons identified
in this order as being
persons who may have an interest in the property.
11.
Such an application must be made not later than eight days after the
person applying for
reconsideration becomes aware of the existence of
the order, or within such further period as the court may consider
reasonable,
bearing in mind the underlying objectives in Chapter 6 of
POCA.”
URGENCY
The Applicants’
request for pleadings to be held in abeyance during May 2025 and the
acceptance thereof prima facie removes
the urgency of this matter.
However, the ex parte order has has the continuing effect of
preventing the applicants accessing
and operating their
respective aforesaid accounts.That is where the urgency remains
despite the cease fire arrangement. While
this is not to be seen as a
legitimate means of hoodwinking the NDPP into a false sense of
security, ie that urgent proceedings
have been staved off, the
conduct of the NDPP is not beyond reproach , as will appear below. I
am satisfied that urgency remains
insofar as the constitutional
rights of the applicants’ are impacted adversely.
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
[15]
Although section 38 does provide for the NDPP to approach the court
on an
ex parte
basis for a preservation order, that does not
relieve the NDPP from a normal burden imposed on every applicant who
approaches the
court for an
ex parte
order. Applying to
court for an order
ex parte
should only be invoked when there
is some good cause or reason for the procedure, such as genuine
urgency, or when the giving of
notice would defeat the very object
for which the order is sought (see
NDPP v Braun and Another
2007
(1) SACR 326
(C) at paragraphs [20] and [21]).
[16]
Further, an
ex parte
applicant has a duty of utmost good
faith. This requires that material and correct facts be placed
before the court.
Where facts have been misstated, even
bona
fide
, this does constitute breach of the duty to verify facts
before placing them before court for purposes of obtaining an
ex
parte
order (see
Schlesinger v Schlesinger
1979 (4) SA 342
(W)).
[17]
The fact that the NDPP obtained an order providing for service on the
wrong address is not without
consequences. In this instance it
has caused a substantial delay in notifying affected parties of the
preservation of property
order and thereby constitutes a breach of
the duty of utmost good faith.
[18]
Whilst I appreciate that the mere existence of a mistake made in a
bona fide
manner should be capable of correction, if properly
explained, such correction must take place within a time period that
reflects
an appreciation by the NDPP of the draconian effects of an
ex parte
preservation order on the constitutional rights of
the public. In this instance, a delay of some four months ensued,
which is not
explained by the NDPP. The court has not been
apprised as to when it ascertained the correct address for service
and why
it took so long to obtain it. This raises the spectre of a
lack of appreciation by the NDPP of the need to respect
constitutional
rights with prompt and transparent attempts to correct
such error. More troubling, is the spectre of indifference by
the
NDPP once the
ex parte
order has been granted.
[19]
While I make no positive finding in respect of these concerns, the
lapsing of time before proper
service has taken place underpins the
order granted in this matter. In
National Director of Public
Prosecutions v Lethopa and Others
(2023/132147) [2025] ZAGPPHC
249 (11 March 2025), Modiba J set aside forfeiture proceedings where
the delay in publication of the
ex parte
preservation order
was two months.
[20] In
the
ex parte
application the NDPP undertook to serve the
preservation order as required by section 39. In the
Lethopa
matter
Modiba J stated the following in similar circumstances at
paragraph [64]:
“
[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 it took more
than two months 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.”
[21]
The NDPP contends that the applicants were running a multiplication
scheme in breach of the FAIS
Act, the Banks Act and FICA. As
the order that I grant in this matter does not deprive the NDPP of
the right to again pursue
its remedies as set out in Chapter 6 of
POCA, I do not intend going into the detail of the facts of this
matter, save to comment
that the NDPP did not provide the supporting
source documents necessary to establish its factual averments.
The report by
the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) inspector
is not annexed. The absence of confirmatory affidavits on
factual
issues means the application for preservation and forfeiture
falls short of establishing the facts necessary for Chapter 6 relief.
[22]
Nevertheless, the basis of the order that I have granted is to be
found in the procedural failures
by the NDPP and their impact on the
constitutional rights of the applicants.
[23]
It suffices to state that the
ex parte
preservation order
cannot stand in the face of a four month delay in notifying the
applicants of a court order and publishing it
(even defectively) in
the Government Gazette.
[24]
The applicants have argued for a punitive cost order against the NDPP
due to the egregious nature of
the violation of constitutional rights
and the duties of the NDPP to the court in the
ex parte
proceedings. I agree. Such considerations also
informed the decision of the court in the aforesaid matter in
Lethopa
.
[25]
A breach of constitutional rights is inherently urgent.
Although the
ex parte
court order would stand until set aside,
it is apparent on the facts that it was at risk of being set aside
after passing of even
a two month period from granting of the court
order without proper publication and service. In light thereof
I do not intend
holding the applicant to the time periods imposed by
sec 39 of POCA or the periods set out in the
ex parte
court
order for reconsideration. While the applicant purported to
execercise their powers to seek a reconsideration in terms of
rule
6(12)(c). The legality of the continued existence of the ex parte
court order is a matter for the High Court to determine
and, on the
facts of this matter, it does so on the basis of urgency.
[26]
In the premises I grant the order set out supra, including a punitive
cost order against the NDPP.
LABUSCHAGNE
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES:
ADV
A KOTZÉ
For the Applicants
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MASEYA ATTORNEYS
81 Tortelduif Drive
Birch Acres
Kempton Park
1619
ADV S CHIKUNI
For the NDPP
INSTRUCTED
BY:
THE STATE ATTORNEY,
PRETORIA
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