Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 786South Africa
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Mogotlane and Others (2023-028928) [2025] ZAGPPHC 786 (1 August 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 August 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## National Director of Public Prosecutions v Mogotlane and Others (2023-028928) [2025] ZAGPPHC 786 (1 August 2025)
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Mogotlane and Others (2023-028928) [2025] ZAGPPHC 786 (1 August 2025)
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sino date 1 August 2025
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Discovery –
Procedural
rules
–
Application
to compel compliance with notice – Failed to file answering
affidavits in main application – Failed
to follow correct
procedure which is required to enforce compliance with rule –
Procedural rules must be followed strictly
– Rules do not
provide for a general or generic application to compel –
Procedurally defective – Lacking
a foundation in rule 30A –
Not preceded by necessary notice – Application dismissed –
Uniform Rules 35(12)
and (14).
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
2023 – 028928
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE
1 August 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
A
pplicant
and
LESETJA
DAVID MOGOTLANE
10
th
Defendant
THOMAS
DUMASI MARIMA
11
th
Defendant
PIETER
JOHANNES JACOBS
34
th
Defendant
MAMOHUBA
HELEN MODIBA
35
th
Defendant
TSHEPO
EDWIN MODIKWE
36
th
Defendant
SEJABATI
CYNTHIA MODIKWE
12
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
J Vorster, AJ.
[1]
On 28 April 2023, the applicant obtained a provisional restraint
order in terms of
section 26
of the
Prevention of Organised Crime
Act, 121 of 1998
, against 71 defendants and 12 respondents. The
provisional order has since been confirmed against most of these
defendants and
respondents, except those listed in the headnote
above.
[2]
On Monday, 28 July 2025, when the matter was called, Mr Hills
appeared on behalf of the 34
th
defendant and informed me
that his client was no longer opposing the confirmation of the
provisional restraint order. Mr Wilson,
who appeared for the
applicant, confirmed this arrangement. As such, my order at the end
of this judgment will confirm the order
against the 34
th
defendant.
[3]
In addition, the provisional order will also be confirmed against the
11
th
and 35
th
defendants, who did not take part
in the proceedings, and who do not oppose the confirmation of the
provisional order.
[4]
In respect of procedure, I mention that the application was not
argued on Monday, 28 July, but
stood down for argument on Thursday,
31 July 2025. As a motion court roll is a continuous roll, and as the
application merely stood
down (it was not postponed), it remained
enrolled before me and there was no need to extend the provisional
restraint order –
it remained operative.
[5]
There is a dispute between the parties as to what exactly serves
before me. The applicant contends
that it is the extended return date
of the provisional restraint order, whilst Mr Sekwakeng, who appeared
for the 10
th
and
36
th
defendants
and the 12
th
respondent
(
the opposing parties
),
submitted that his clients’ application to compel compliance
with a
rule 35(12)
and (14) notice served before me.
[6]
The opposing parties have never filed answering affidavits in the
main restraint application.
Instead, on 11 October 2023, they
delivered a notice in terms of uniform
rule 35(12)
and (14) calling
on the applicant to make available a large number of documents for
their inspection. The applicant failed to respond
to this notice, and
on 23 November 2025, the opposing parties launched an application to
compel compliance with their
rule 35(12)
and (14) notice. After doing
so, the opposing parties took no further steps to prosecute this
application to finality.
[7]
It appears that the applicant initially failed to respond to the
application to compel, but that
at some stage earlier in 2025
uploaded an opposing affidavit. When the matter came before me, the
opposing parties contended that
the opposing affidavit was never
served on their attorney of record, and that they only recently
became aware thereof. The applicant’s
counsel conceded that the
state attorney was unable to produce evidence of service.
[8]
Under these circumstances, counsel for the opposing parties, Mr
Sekwakeng, submitted that the
application should be removed from my
roll so that the opposing parties could file their replying
affidavit.
[9]
I was unwilling to accede to this request. My unwillingness is the
result of my view that there
is, in truth, no proper application to
compel capable of being removed from the roll, and that to allow an
application that cannot
succeed to be removed or postponed will
result in a waste of judicial resources.
[10] I
asked Mr Sekwakeng to identify the specific rule on which the
application to compel was based. He was,
understandably, unable to do
so. To understand my findings, it is necessary to briefly reflect on
rule 35(12)
and the judicial pronouncements dealing with a failure to
comply with this rule.
[11]
Rule 35(12)
provides as follows:
“
(a)
Any party to any proceeding may at any time before the hearing
thereof deliver a notice in accordance
with Form 15 in the First
Schedule to any other party in whose pleadings or affidavits
reference is made to any document or tape
recording to -
(i)
produce such document or tape recording for inspection and to permit
the party requesting
production to make a copy or transcription
thereof; or
(i)
state in writing within 10 days whether the party receiving the
notice objects to the production of the document or tape recording
and the grounds therefor; or
(iii)
state on oath, within 10 days, that such document or tape recording
is not in such party’s
possession and in such event to state
its whereabouts, if known.
(b)
Any party failing to comply with the notice referred to in paragraph
(a) shall not, save with
the leave of the court, use such document or
tape recording in such proceeding, provided that any other party may
use such document
or tape recording.
”
[12]
What is apparent, is that
rule 35(12)
does not have its own sanction
for non-compliance. However, a defaulting party may be compelled to
comply by means of a
rule 30A
application.
[1]
In
Caxton
and CTP Publishers and Printers Limited v Novus Holdings Limited
,
[2]
the Supreme Court of Appeal confirmed this approach as follows:
“
However,
'a party who gives notice under
rule 35(12)
may not be content with
just the negative sanction provided by the rule'. So said Ponnan JA
in Centre for Child Law v The Governing
Body of Hoërskool
Fochville and Another, who went on to state that '[i]n that event it
is to
rule 30A
that such a party must turn'.
”
[13]
The opposing parties’ application to compel is not an
application in terms of
rule 30A.
It was also not preceded by a
rule
30A
notice.
[14]
In
Centre
for Child Law v Hoërskool Fochville and Another
,
[3]
the
following relevant findings in respect of the purpose of court rules,
and a failure to bring an application within the ambit
of a specific
rule, was made:
“
In general
terms, the rules exist to regulate the practice and procedure of the
courts. Their object is to secure the 'inexpensive
and expeditious
completion of litigation before the courts' and they are not an end
in and of themselves. Ordinarily, strong grounds
would have to be
advanced to persuade a court to act outside the powers provided for
specifically in the rules. Here, having given
notice in terms of
rule
35(12)
that has not been complied with, it was for the School to give
notice in terms of
rule 30A
that it intended, after the lapse of 10
days, applying for an order that its rule 35(12) notice be complied
with. That the School
did not do. Nor did it apply to court in terms
of
rule 30A
to compel production of the documents sought. That, in
and of itself, may have been fatal to the application (see Universal
City
Studios v Movie Time
1983
(4) SA 736
(D)
).
In Universal City Studios Booysen J was urged, despite the fact that
the procedure laid down in
rule 30(5)
(the predecessor to
rule 30A)
had not been followed, to nevertheless order compliance with the
rule
35(12)
notice. He declined, stating that -
'a party who
deliberately chooses not to claim relief of a particular nature,
should in general, even if it were competent, not
be granted such
relief under the general prayer of alternative relief'.
”
[4]
[15] In
my judgment, the opposing parties’ application to compel is not
catered for in the rules. The rules
do not provide for a general or
generic application to compel. On this basis alone, the application
to compel is irregular and
should be dismissed. If I were to remove
the application from my roll, the result would be that a different
court will be seized
with an application that is not recognised in
the uniform rules. Saddling a different court with such an
application will amount
to a waste of scarce judicial resources.
[16]
The opposing parties had sufficient time to prepare answering
affidavits. It is well established that a notice
in terms of
rule
35(12)
does not interrupt the time for the filing of a subsequent
affidavit. This principle was confirmed in
Caxton
and CTP Publishers and Printers Limited v Novus Holdings Limited
,
[5]
where the following was said:
“
[84]
Finally, it is necessary to deal with Caxton's quest to be afforded
sufficient time within which to file its replying
affidavit in the
main application. It goes without saying that Caxton's replying
affidavit is considerably long overdue. Caxton
deliberately elected
not to file its replying affidavit pending the outcome of its
application to compel the production of the
documents it sought from
Novus.
[85]
There is nothing in the language of
rules 35(12)
and
30A
to suggest
that once a demand has been made for the production of the documents
to which the
rule 35(12)
notice relates, the party seeking such
documents is excused from complying with the timeframes prescribed in
terms of Uniform
Rule 6(5)(d)(ii)
[66]
or 6(5)(e),
[67]
as the case may be. In
Potpale Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mkhize,
[68]
Gorven J rightly
observed that the delivery of a notice in terms of
rule 35(12)
or
(14) does not suspend the period referred to in
rule 26
or any other
rule. Whilst there is much to be said for the view expressed by the
learned Judge, sight should however not be lost
of the fact that it
is open to the court, in the exercise of its discretion, to extend
the time periods prescribed in terms of
the rules whenever a proper
case therefor has been made out by the party seeking such indulgence.
Indeed, this is what Uniform
Rule 27
itself contemplates.
[86]
It is as well to remember that the manifest purpose of discovery is,
as was stated in Durbach v Fairway Hotel,
Ltd, 'to ensure that before
trial both parties are made aware of all the documentary evidence
that is available. By this means
the issues are narrowed and the
debate of points which are incontrovertible is eliminated'.
Accordingly, discovery assists the
parties and the court in
discovering the truth, and, in doing so, helps towards a just
determination of the case. This also saves
costs.
[87]
As the time for the delivery of Caxton's replying affidavit has long
come and gone, it made perfect sense
therefore for Caxton to ask for
leave to deliver its replying affidavit only once it has had the
opportunity to inspect and copy
the documents that Novus is required
to produce in terms of this judgment. And given the voluminous nature
of the documents involved,
it is eminently reasonable and fair that
it be afforded a reasonable period within which to do so. This will
be reflected in the
order made below. Similarly, it is only fair that
Novus should be afforded a reasonable period of time within which to
produce
the documents sought. This, too, is catered for in the order
below.
”
[17]
The application to compel, even if it was regarded as a proper
application, does not include an order to
condone the late filing of
answering affidavits. The time for filing answering affidavits lapsed
in 2023 already.
[18]
During argument, the opposing parties’ counsel submitted that
my views in respect of the application
to compel, and the possible
dismissal of the application for procedural reasons, would amount to
judicial overreach. In this regard,
he invited my attention to the
judgment in
Van
Der Nest NO v Minister of Police
,
[6]
where the following was said:
“
[21]
It
is trite that courts adjudicate issues outlined by the parties in
their pleadings, as was found by this Court in Fischer and
Another v
Ramahlele and Others. It is for the parties to identify the dispute
and for the court to determine that dispute and that
dispute alone.
In some cases, the parties may expand the issues for determination by
the way they conduct the proceedings. In others,
the court may, mero
motu, raise a question of law that emerges fully from the evidence
and is necessary for the decision of the
case, subject to the
proviso: no prejudice will be caused to any party by its being
decided.
[22]
It is, however, also trite that a court can also raise an issue mero
motu where: raising it is necessary
to dispose of the matter, and it
is in the interests of justice to do so, which depends on the
circumstances at hand. Where a point
of law is apparent on the
papers, but the common approach of the parties proceeds on a wrong
perception of what the law is, a court
is not only entitled but is in
fact also obliged, mero motu, to raise the point of law and require
the parties to deal with it.
”
[19]
I am also mindful of what was said in
Magistrates
Commission and Others v Lawrence
,
[7]
concerning
the function performed by a Judge when adjudicating matters:
“
At
the outset it may be important to restate certain basic tenets: (i)
in exercising the judicial function, judges are themselves
constrained by the law; (ii) judgments should be confined to the
issues before the court; (iii) courts should avoid deciding matters
that are not relevant; (iv) it is not for a court to create new
factual issues; and (v) courts must distinguish between allegation,
fact and suspicion.
”
[20] In
my judgment, the difference between the approach that I adopt, and
what was referred to in
Van Der Nest
and
Lawrence
, is
that the issue that I raised concerns procedure, and not the
substance of the application. Put differently: I am enforcing
the
uniform rules – nothing more.
[21] In
my judgment, the application to compel must be dismissed for
procedural reasons, and the application to
confirm the provisional
restraint order against the opposing parties must therefore proceed
on an unopposed basis.
[22] In
respect of the restraint application, I am satisfied that the
requirements in
sections 25
and
26
of the
Prevention of Organised
Crime Act, 1998
, have been met. In this regard, there is pending
criminal prosecution against the defendants, there are reasonable
grounds to believe
that a confiscation order may be granted, and the
criminal proceedings have not been concluded.
[23] In
respect of costs, it must follow the event, and the opposing
respondents will be ordered to pay the costs
of the application to
compel and also the costs incurred by the applicant to have the order
against them confirmed. Such costs
to be taxed on scale B.
[24]
Consequently, the following order is made:
[24.1] The 10
th
and 36
th
defendants’ and the 12
th
respondent’s, application to compel compliance with the notice
in terms of
rule 35(12)
and (14) dated 11 October 2023 is dismissed
with costs, such costs to be taxed and paid on scale B.
[24.2] The
provisional restraint order issued in terms of
section 25
of the
Prevention of Organised Crime Act, 121 of 1998
, on 28 April 2023, as
extended from time to time, is hereby confirmed and made final
against the 10
th
, 11
th
, 34
th
, 35
th
and 36
th
defendants, and the 12
th
respondent.
[24.3] The 10
th
and 36
th
defendants, and the 12
th
respondent,
shall jointly and severally pay the applicant’s costs
occasioned by the proceedings to have the provisional restraint
order
against them confirmed, such costs to be taxed on scale B.
J VORSTER, AJ.
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Date
heard:
31 July 2025.
Judgment
date: 1 August 2025.
Appearances
:
For
the applicant (NDPP)
:
Counsel:
J Wilson
Instructed
by: State Attorney
For
the 34
th
defendant
:
Appearance:
J Hills (attorney)
Attorney:
Hills Attorneys Inc.
For
the 10
th
and 36
th
defendants and 12
th
respondent
:
Counsel:
MD Sekwakeng
Instructed
by: Abram
Madira Attorneys Inc.
[1]
Machingawuta
and Others v Mogale Alloys (Pty) Ltd and Others
2012
(4) SA 113
(GSJ) at [2] – [8].
[2]
2022
JDR 0431 (SCA) at [20].
[3]
2016
(2) SA 121
(SCA) at [17].
[4]
Footnotes
omitted from the quoted passage.
[5]
2022
JDR 0431 (SCA). Footnotes omitted from the quoted passages.
[6]
2025
JDR 1489 (SCA).
[7]
2022
(4) SA 107
(SCA) at [78].
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