Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 79South Africa
Yanling International Trade CC v South African Reserve Bank [2023] ZAGPPHC 79; 56220/21 (13 February 2023)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPPHC 79
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Yanling International Trade CC v South African Reserve Bank [2023] ZAGPPHC 79; 56220/21 (13 February 2023)
Yanling International Trade CC v South African Reserve Bank [2023] ZAGPPHC 79; 56220/21 (13 February 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2023_79.html
sino date 13 February 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case No: 56220/21
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 13/2/2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
YANLING
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
CC
Applicant
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN RESERVE
BANK
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail.
The date
for the handing down of the judgment shall be deemed to be
13 February 2023.
JUDGMENT
LG
KILMARTIN, AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application by the Applicant,
Yanling International Trade CC, for the review and setting aside of a
decision taken by
the Respondent, the South African Reserve Bank, to
forfeit an amount of R266 207.00 of the Applicant. The
Respondent
alleges that, based on investigations carried out by the
Financial Surveillance Department (“FinSurv”), it had
reasonable
grounds to believe that the Applicant had committed and/or
was a party to certain acts or omissions which constituted
contraventions
of the Exchange Control Regulations (“the
Regulations”), promulgated in terms of section 9 of the
Currency and Exchanges
Act, 9 of 1933 (“the Currency Act”).
[2]
The Applicant denies that it contravened
the Regulations and contends that an official document published by
the Respondent titled
“
Currency
and Exchanges Manual for Authorised Dealers
”
dated 8 July 2021 (“the SARB manual”) makes provision for
the transfer of funds for the purpose that the Applicant
did, namely
for obtaining cutting dies and moulds in an amount not exceeding
R100 000.00.
THE RESPONDENT AND
PURPOSE OF EXCHANGE CONTROL REGULATIONS
[3]
By way of background, the Respondent is the
central bank of South Africa and was established in terms of section
9 of the Currency
and Banking Act, 31 of 1920. It is recognised
in section 223 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa
(“the
Constitution”) and is governed by the Constitution
and South African Reserve Bank Act, 89 of 1990 (“the SARB
Act”).
[4]
Section 3 of the SARB Act details the
Respondent’s legislative objectives, and it enjoins it to do
the following:
“
In
the exercise of its powers and the performance of its duties the Bank
shall pursue as its primary objectives monetary stability
and
balanced economic growth in the Republic, and in order to achieve
those objectives the Bank shall influence the total monetary
demand
in the economy through the exercise of control over the money supply
and over the availability of credit
”.
[5]
The primary object of the Respondent, which
is set out in section 224(1) of the Constitution, “
is
to protect the value of the currency in the interest of balanced and
sustainable economic growth in the Republic
”.
Exchange controls are government-imposed limitations on the purchase
and sale of foreign currencies. They are
used to ensure the
stability of an economy and prevent exchange rate volatility.
[6]
Both
parties referred the Court to the matter of
South
African Reserve Bank and Another v Shuttleworth and Another
[1]
where
the Constitutional Court explained the purpose of exchange control in
the following terms:
“
Here
we are dealing with exchange control legislation. Its avowed purpose
was to curb or regulate the export of capital from the
country. The
very historic origins of the Act, in 1933, were in the midst of the
1929 Great Depression, pointing to a necessity
to curb outflows of
capital. The Regulations were then passed in the aftermath of the
economic crises following the Sharpeville
shootings in 1960. The
domestic economy had to be shielded from capital flight. Regulation
10’s very heading is “Restriction
on Export of Capital”.
The measures were introduced and kept to shore up the country’s
balance of payments position.
The plain dominant purpose of the
measure was to regulate and discourage the export of capital and to
protect the domestic economy.
...
[T]he exchange control system is designed to regulate capital
outflows from the country. The fickle nature of the international
financial environment required the exchange control system to allow
for swift responses to economic changes. Exchange control provided
a
framework for the repatriation of foreign currencies acquired by
South African residents into the South African banking system.
The
controls protected the South African economy against the ebb and flow
of capital. One of these controls, which we are
here dealing
with specifically, served to prohibit the export of capital from the
Republic (unless certain conditions were complied
with).”
RELEVANT BACKGROUND
FACTS
[7]
The Applicant imports and exports
commodities and, in 2016, entered into an agreement with a
manufacturer called GNC Company Limited
(“GNC”) in Hong
Kong (“the agreement”). According to the Applicant, GNC
agreed to design and produce wrapping
boxes required by the Applicant
based on precise specifications required by it.
[8]
The Applicant alleges that, in order to
produce the wrapping and paper boxes, GNC needed to acquire specific
moulds and cutting
dies.
[9]
The Applicant further alleges that in terms
of the agreement: (i) it would pay the costs of the design, moulds
and the cutting dies
upon receipt of the invoice issued by GNC; (ii)
the cost of the design, moulds and cutting dies would be specified
separately from
the costs of the actual wrapping and paper boxes; and
(iii) the purchase price for the designs, moulds and cutting dies
would be
denominated in United States dollars.
[10]
As a result of the agreement, the Applicant
entered into a series of foreign exchange transactions, in terms of
which it engaged
Standard Bank, in its capacity as an authorised
dealer of the Respondent, with the purpose of having the necessary
funds remitted
to GNC in Hong Kong. The funds that were
remitted to Hong Kong came from the Applicant’s business
account at Standard
Bank.
[11]
Regulation 1 defines an “
authorised
dealer
” as
inter
alia
, in respect of any transaction in
respect of foreign exchange, a person authorised by the Treasury to
deal in foreign exchange.
Most commercial banks who have been
authorised by FinSurv are authorised dealers.
[12]
The authorised dealers administer exchange
control transactions within the parameters provided for in the
exchange control rulings
(which are now contained in the SARB
manual). The SARB manual contains the permissions and
conditions applicable to transactions
in foreign exchange that may be
undertaken by authorised dealers and must be read in conjunction with
the Regulations.
[13]
The Applicant relies on p144 of the SARB
manual where the following is stated under the heading “
B.14
Miscellaneous transfers”
:
“
A(i)
Authorised Dealers may approve applications by South African business
entities and/or individuals for the remittance abroad
of the payments
mentioned below against the production of documentary evidence
confirming the amounts involved.
(W)
Mould payments
(i).
Payments in respect of the design and/or manufacturing of moulds not
exceeding R100 000. A copy of the underlying agreement
must be viewed
and the Authorised Dealer should, prior to effecting the payment, be
satisfied that:
(a)
the mould is manufactured by the
foreign supplier;
(b)
it is only for a once-off design and
manufacturing of the mould; and
(c)
the mould is required to manufacture
goods to be imported by the applicant.”
[14]
The Applicant entered into two transactions
concerning the purchase of 14 000 USD on 18 December 2015 and 15 500
USD on 5 May
2016. Invoices from GNC reflecting the price paid
for 3 moulds to a value of 11 400 USD and 4 moulds to the value
of
14 000 USD were attached to the founding papers.
[15]
After the Applicant entered into the
foreign currency purchases set out above, the amounts were remitted
to the Hong Kong account
of GNC. The Applicant alleges that
thereafter: (i) the boxes were designed; (ii) the moulds were
acquired, and (iii) the
wrapping boxes were made, and imported into
South Africa.
[16]
On 1 March 2019 the Respondent issued a
blocking order in respect of the Applicant’s account with FNB.
[17]
On 19 March 2019, the Respondent instructed
FNB to release an amount of R322 235.00.
[18]
On 23 March 2019, the Respondent received
an email from FNB confirming that the amount of R266 407.65 had
been blocked in its
SARB Suspense Blocked account number 9[...]
[19]
On 22 September 2020, the Respondent
addressed correspondence to the Applicant querying discrepancies
between export of capital
and goods actually received.
[20]
On 27 November 2020, the Applicant made
written representations to the Respondent.
[21]
On 24 March 2021, the Respondent delivered
correspondence in which it summarised the basis for the Respondent’s
suspicion
that there had been a contravention of the Regulations and
invited the Applicant to make written representations as to why the
forfeiture should not be made. The Respondent stated that the
aforesaid representations must be submitted by no later than
23 April
2021.
[22]
On 26 April 2021, after the deadline had
come and gone, the Applicant requested an extension of the time to
deliver its written
representations.
[23]
On 26 April 2021, the Respondent granted
the Applicant’s request for an extension until 29 April 2021,
subject to the condition
that no further extensions of time would be
granted.
[24]
On 5 May 2021, after the final deadline had
passed, the Applicant delivered written representations to the
Respondent, denying that
it had contravened the Regulations.
[25]
On 25 May 2021, the Respondent’s
officials recommended forfeiture to the Respondent’s Deputy
Governor in the amount
of R266 407.00.
[26]
On 4 June 2021, the Respondent published
the forfeiture decision in the Government Gazette.
[27]
The application for review was launched on
9 November 2021, over 5 months after the publication of the
forfeiture decision.
ISSUES REQUIRING
ADJUDICATION
[28]
According to the Applicant:
[28.1]
the Regulations were not contravened as the
funds were transferred for purposes permitted by the SARB manual;
[28.2]
the Respondent cannot explain how it
quantified the amount forfeited, which renders the decision
irrational, arbitrary and capricious;
and
[28.3]
the Respondent ignored the Applicant’s
representations (which it is common cause were submitted late)
despite being in possession
thereof.
[29]
The Respondent disputes all of the above
contentions and raised four preliminary points, namely:
[29.1]
the application was brought outside of the
90-day deadline contained in the Currency Act, together with the
relevant provisions
of the Regulations, and no condonation for the
delay can be sought;
[29.2]
even if the 180-day period in PAJA applied,
the Applicant unreasonably delayed commencing proceedings and has not
applied for condonation,
nor justified that it should be granted;
[29.3]
the application did not comply with Rule
41A; and
[29.4]
the Applicant admitted to contravening the
Regulations as alleged by the Respondent, on its own version.
[30]
The questions arising for determination
are:
[30.1]
whether the 90-day deadline contained in
the Currency Act and Regulations applies;
[30.2]
if the 90-day deadline is applicable,
whether the Currency Act and the Regulations allow for a delay that
exceeds a 90-day time
period to be condoned;
[30.3]
if the 180-day time period under PAJA is
applicable, whether the Applicant has brought its review application
within a reasonable
time, and if not, whether the Applicant’s
delay should be condoned;
[30.4]
whether the Applicant complied with its
obligations under Rule 41A and, if not, the consequences for such
non-compliance; and
[30.5]
lastly, whether or not the Respondent’s
forfeiture decision is invalid and unlawful, on the basis that:
[30.5.1]
the impugned decision is irrational,
arbitrary and capricious; and/or
[30.5.2]
the Respondent unfairly ignored the
Applicant’s representations.
SECTION 9 OF THE
CURRENCY ACT AND RELEVANT REGULATIONS
[31]
Sections 9(1) and 9(2) of the Currency Act
provides as follows:
“
9
Regulations
regarding currency, banking or the exchanges
(1)
The
Governor-General may make regulations in regard to any matter
directly or indirectly relating to or affecting or having any
bearing
upon currency, banking or exchanges.
(2)
(a) Such regulations may provide that the Governor-General may
apply any sanctions therein set forth which he thinks fit
to impose,
whether civil or criminal.
(b)
Any regulation contemplated in paragraph (a) may provide
for-
(i)
the
blocking, attachment and obtaining of interdicts for a period
referred to in paragraph (g) by the Treasury and the
forfeiture and disposal by the Treasury of any money or goods
referred to or defined in the regulations or determined in terms
of
the regulations or any money or goods into which such money or goods
have been transformed by any person, and-
(aa)
which
are suspected by the Treasury on reasonable grounds to be involved in
an offence or suspected offence against any regulation
referred to in
this section, or in respect of which such offence has been committed
or so suspected to have been committed;
(bb) which
are in the possession of the offender, suspected offender or any
other person or have been obtained by any
such person or are due to
any such person and which would not have been in such possession or
so obtained or due if such offence
or suspected offence had not been
committed; or
(cc) by
which the offender, suspected offender or any other person has been
benefited or enriched as a result of such
offence or suspected
offence-
Provided
that, in the case of any person other than the offender or suspected
offender, no such money or goods shall be blocked,
attached,
interdicted, forfeited and disposed of if such money or goods were
acquired by such person bona fide for reasonable
consideration as a result of a transaction in the ordinary course of
business and not in contravention of the regulations; and
(ii)
in general, any matter which the State President deems necessary for
the fulfilment
of the objectives and purposes referred to in
subparagraph (i), including the blocking, attachment, interdicting,
forfeiture and
disposal referred to in subparagraph
(i)
by the Treasury of any other money
or goods belonging to the offender, suspected offender or any other
person in order to recover
an amount equal to the value of the money
or goods, recoverable in terms of the regulations referred to in
subparagraph (i), but
which can for any reason not be so recovered.
(c)
Any
regulation contemplated in paragraph (a) may authorize any
person who is vested with any power or who shall fulfil
any duty in
terms of the regulation, to delegate such power or to assign such
duty, as the case may be, to any other person.
(d)
Any regulation contemplated in
paragraph (a) shall provide-
(i)
that
any person who feels aggrieved by any decision made or action taken
by any person in the exercise of his powers under a regulation
referred to in paragraph (b) which has the effect of
blocking, attaching or interdicting any money or goods, may lodge
an
application in a competent court for the revision of such decision or
action or for any other relief, and the court shall not
set aside
such decision or action or grant such other relief unless it is
satisfied-
(aa) that
the person who made such decision or took such action did not act in
accordance with the relevant provisions
of the regulation; or
(bb)
that
such person did not have reasonable grounds to make such decision or
to take such action; or
(cc) that
such grounds for the making of such decision or the taking of such
action no longer exist;
(ii)
that the Treasury shall cause a
notice to be published in the Gazette of any decision to
forfeit and dispose of any money
or goods blocked, attached or
interdicted in terms of the regulations referred to in paragraph (b),
and that a notice of such
decision shall be sent simultaneously with
publication thereof in the Gazette by registered mail to
any person who is,
according to the Treasury, affected by such
decision or, if no address of such person is available, that such
notice shall be so
sent to the last known address of such person; and
(iii)
that 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 provisions of the regulation;
or
(bb) that
such person did not have grounds to make such decision; or
(cc) that
the grounds for the making of such decision no longer exist.
”
[32]
In terms of:
[32.1]
Regulation 2(4)(a): “
No
person other than an authorised dealer shall … use or apply
any foreign currency or gold acquired from an authorised dealer
for
or to any purpose other than that stated in his application to be the
purpose for which it was required
”;
and
[32.2]
Regulation 2(4)(b): “
No
person other than an authorised dealer shall ... do any act
calculated to lead to the use or application of such foreign currency
or gold for or to any purpose other than that so stated
”.
[33]
Regulation 10(1)(c) under the heading
“
RESTRICTION ON EXPORT OF CAPITAL”
and prohibits a person, except with
permission granted by the National Treasury, to “
enter
into any transaction whereby capital or any right to capital is
directly or indirectly exported from the Republic
”.
[34]
Regulation 12(1) under the heading “
GOODS
PURCHASED OUTSIDE THE REPUBLIC”
provides as follows:
“
Whenever
a person in the Republic has purchased goods in any country outside
the Republic and has paid for or made a payment on
account of such
goods, but the said goods have not been consigned to the Republic
within four months from the date on which such
payment was made, such
person shall within fourteen days from the date of expiry of the said
period of four months report in writing
to the Treasury or to an
authorised dealer that the goods have not been consigned to the
Republic and the Treasury may thereupon
order such person to assign
to the Treasury or to a person authorised by the Treasury his right
to the said goods
”.
[35]
Regulation 22A is titled “
ATTACHMENT
OF CERTAIN MONEY AND GOODS, AND BLOCKING OF CERTAIN ACCOUNTS
“
and Regulation 22A(1)(a)(i) provides that:
“
(1)
Subject to the provisions of the proviso to subparagraph (i) of
paragraph (b) of section 9(2) of the Act, the Treasury may
in such
manner as it may deem fit—
(a)
attach—
(i)
any money or goods, notwithstanding
the person in whose possession it is, in respect of which a
contravention of any provision of
these Regulations has been
committed or in respect of which an act or omission has been
committed which the Treasury on reasonable
grounds suspects to
constitute any such contravention, or, in the case of such money or
any part thereof which has been deposited
in any account, an equal
amount of money which is kept in credit in that account, and shall,
in the case of money attached, deposit
such money in an account
opened by the Treasury with an authorised dealer for such purpose,
and may, in the case of goods attached,
leave such goods, subject to
an order issued or made under paragraph (c), in the possession of the
person in whose possession such
goods have been found or shall
otherwise keep or cause it to be kept in custody in such manner and
at such place as it may deem
fit…
”
[35]
Regulation 22A permits the attachment and blocking of money in
respect of which a suspected contravention of the Regulations
has
been committed. “
Blocking
”
means that the financial institution at which the account is held is
prohibited from letting the account holder deal with
the money in the
account.
[36]
Regulation 22C under the heading “
RECOVERY
OF CERTAIN AMOUNTS BY TREASURY
”,
permits the recovery of further money, apart from that which has been
forfeited if there is a shortfall compared with the
quantum involved
in the contravention.
[37]
The initial blocking order was based on Regulation 22A “
and/or
”
Regulation 22C of the Exchange Control Regulations.
[36]
The
difference between the Regulation 22A and 22C was explained as
follows by McCreath J in the matter of
Francis
George Hill Family Trust v South African Reserve Bank and Others
:
[2]
“
It
is apparent from the aforesaid provisions
[i.e.
Regulation 22A]
that the person in whose
possession moneys are found need not himself have committed any
contravention of the regulation or have
been involved, or be
suspected of having been involved, in any such contravention.
It is the money which
is to be attached in respect whereof a contravention of any provision
of the regulations must have been committed,
or in respect whereof
some act or omission has been committed which is suspected to
constitute such a contravention. Or it may
be money which is
suspected to have been involved in any such contravention, or
suspected to have been involved in any act or omission
which is
suspected to constitute any such contravention. It is therefore the
money which must be "tainted".
…
It
is apparent from the aforegoing provision
[i.e.
Regulation 22C]
that even money which is
not involved or suspected of having been involved in a contravention
of the relevant regulations may be
attached, if it is required to
enable the Treasury to recoup the difference between the amount
attached under reg 22A and the amount
actually involved or suspected
to have been involved in the contravention or suspected contravention
of the latter regulation….
”
[37]
Regulation 22B is titled “
FORFEITURE
AND DISPOSAL OF MONEY OR GOODS ATTACHED OR IN RESPECT OF WHICH ORDERS
HAVE BEEN ISSUED OR MADE
”. After
the blocking of money, the Respondent must either return the money to
the original possessor or forfeit it. Regulation
22B deals with the
procedures necessary to obtain forfeiture. In this regard:
[37.1]
the blocking order is a prerequisite to the
forfeiture order;
[37.2]
the forfeiture order deprives the erstwhile
owner of property of such property;
[37.3]
a blocking order requires reasonable
suspicion that a contravention was committed in respect of the money
sought to be blocked;
and
[37.4]
a forfeiture order requires the decision
maker to be satisfied that reasonable grounds exist that the money
was connected with or
involved in the contravention.
[38]
Regulation 22D provides a remedy for
inter
alia
a person aggrieved by the
attachment or forfeiture of money and reads as follows:
“
REVIEW
OF, OR INSTITUTION OF ACTIONS IN CONNECTION WITH, ATTACHMENT AND
FORFEITURE OF CERTAIN MONEY OR GOODS, AND OF CERTAIN ORDERS
22D.
Any person who feels himself aggrieved by the attachment of any money
or goods under paragraph (a) of regulation 22A(1) or
regulation
22D(1) or the issue or making of an order under the provisions of
paragraph (b) or (c) of regulation 22A(1) or sub-regulation
(2) of
regulation 22C or any condition imposed thereunder may –
(a)
in the case of an attachment under
paragraph (a) of regulation 22A(1) or of regulation 22C(1) or the
issue or making of an order
under paragraph (b) or (c) of the said
regulation 22A(1) or regulation 22C(2), bring an application in a
competent court for the
review of any such attachment or order in
which other appropriate relief is asked;
(b)
in the case of a decision under
regulation 22B(1) or 22B(1), read with regulation 22C(3), to forfeit
to the state such money or
goods, at any time but not later than 90
days after the date of publication of the said notice institute an
action in a competent
court for the setting aside of any such
decision, and any such court may set aside any such attachment or
order or decision, as
the case may be, on the grounds set out in the
provisions of paragraph (d)(i) or (iii) of section 9(2) of the Act.
”
WHETHER THE
APPLICATION IS GOVERNED BY THE CURRENCY ACT OR PAJA
[39]
The first question which arises is whether
the review application was filed timeously and, if not, whether
condonation can and should
be granted. This requires a finding on
whether the application is subject to the 90-day period in Regulation
22D(b) under the Currency
Act or the 180-day period under section 7
of PAJA.
[40]
At
the commencement of the hearing, I was referred to the judgment of
Ceylon AJ in this Court in the matter of
Evergrand
Trading (Pty) Ltd v South African Reserve Bank and Another
[3]
,
dated 30 September 2022 (“the
Evergrand
judgment”), where this very issue was decided. Ceylon AJ
found that an application to review a forfeiture decision
is governed
by the Currency Act, read with the Regulations, and not PAJA.
In this regard the following was stated in paragraph
[63] of the
Evergrand
judgment:
“
[63]
In the view of this Court, it would still be necessary to ascertain
which piece of legislation regulates the condonation in
cases like
the present. This Court is persuaded by the submission of the Reserve
Bank in this regard, which
[has]
been
denied, but not refuted by Evergrand. This Court agrees that
the system applicable to instances where forfeiture orders
are
involved is regulated by the
[Currency]
Act read with the Regulations.
Therefore, any review concerning forfeiture decisions must be
instituted at any time but not
later than the 90-day period.
The said time limitation has been imposed by the legislature and is
therefore applicable in
this matter under the current circumstances,
and which prevails over the 180-day period allowed for in PAJA.”
[41]
This Court would only be justified in
departing from the finding in
Evergrand
if it is clearly wrong.
[42]
As the heads of argument filed before the
hearing were prepared before the
Evergrand
judgment was handed down, the parties’ counsel were provided
with an opportunity to file supplementary heads of argument
on the
impact of the
Evergrand
judgment
on the outcome of this matter. Such heads of argument were duly
filed on 31 January 2023 as directed by the Court
on 22 November
2022.
[43]
The Respondent’s counsel drew a
distinction between “
ordinary
”
administrative action (to which PAJA applies) and a forfeiture
decision under the Regulations (which was described by him
as
sui
generis
) which he contended is subject
to the provisions of the Currency Act and the Regulations promulgated
thereunder, as was found to
be the case in
Evergrand
.
[44]
The Respondent’s counsel submitted
that the
Evergrand
judgment
confirms that the Court is obliged to dismiss the application on a
preliminary basis, without adjudicating upon the merits.
[45]
The Applicant’s counsel submitted
that Regulation 22D provides a remedy for two different categories of
conduct: The first
remedy is provided for a person aggrieved by the
attachment (or blocking) of either tainted or untainted money (which
remedy is
dealt with in Regulation 22D(a)) and the second remedy is
provided for a person aggrieved by a decision to forfeit tainted or
untainted
money under Regulation 22B (which remedy is dealt with in
regulation 22D(b)).
[46]
According to the Applicant, the first
remedy provided, i.e. that relating to the attachment (or blocking)
of money, is that of an
application for review and there is no time
limit provided in the regulations for the bringing of such an
application. However,
the second remedy provided, relating to a
notice to forfeit is to “
institute
an action
”
(emphasis added) not later than 90 days after the date of publication
of the notice of forfeiture.
[47]
It was further contended on behalf of the
Applicant that the clear wording of the Regulations demonstrates that
drafter of the Regulations,
deemed it necessary to draw a distinction
between:
[47.1]
motion proceedings and action proceedings;
[47.2]
the remedy required to deal with an
attachment and a remedy required to deal with a forfeiture; and
[47.3]
remedies that had to be exercised within a
given time period and those that did not.
[48]
According to the Applicant, the notice in
the Government Gazette stated that the money had been forfeited in
terms of Regulation
22B and the Applicant then had a choice to either
exercise its rights under Regulation 22D(b) (i.e. to “
institute
an action
” within 90 days
from the date of publication of the notice of forfeiture) or launch
an “
application
”
for review under PAJA which provided for a 180-day time limit.
According to the Applicant, the provisions of Regulation
22D(b) and
the 90-day time limit would only apply where action proceedings were
brought.
[49]
The question which arises is whether the
Applicant’s restrictive interpretation of the word “
action
”
in Regulation 22D(b), which would exclude “
application
proceedings
”, is a correct and
sensible interpretation, having regard to the context.
[50]
In
the matter of
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[4]
the Supreme Court of Appeal (“the SCA”) summarised the
legal principles of interpretation as follows:
“
[18]
…Interpretation is the process of attributing meaning to the
words used in a document, be it legislation, some other
statutory
instrument, or contract, having regard to the context provided by
reading the particular provision or provisions in the
light of the
document as a whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming
into existence. Whatever the nature of the document,
consideration must be given to the language used in the light of the
ordinary rules of grammar and syntax; the context in which
the
provision appears; the apparent purpose to which it is directed and
the material known to those responsible for its production.
Where
more than one meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in
the light of all these factors. The process is objective,
not
subjective. A sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that
leads to insensible or unbusinesslike results or undermines
the
apparent purpose of the document. Judges must be alert to, and guard
against, the temptation to substitute what they regard
as reasonable,
sensible or businesslike for the words actually used. To do so in
regard to a statute or statutory instrument is
to cross the
divide between interpretation and legislation; in a contractual
context it is to make a contract for the parties
other than the one
they in fact made. The 'inevitable point of departure is the language
of the provision itself', read in context
and having regard to the
purpose of the provision and the background to the preparation and
production of the document.
”
[51]
Regulation 22D refers specifically to the
fact that a court may set aside “
any
such attachment or order or decision, as the case may be, on the
grounds set out in the provisions of paragraph d(i) or (iii)
or
section 9(2) of the Currency Act
.”
[52]
Section 9(2)(d)(iii) of the Currency Act
specifically provides that:
“
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 provisions
of the regulation; or
(bb)
that such person did not have grounds to make such decision; or
(cc)
that the grounds for the making of such decision no longer exist.
”
(Emphasis
added)
[53]
Regulation 22D(b) is the regulation
referred to in section 9(2)(d)(iii) of the Currency Act and must be
interpreted in the context
thereof. It is significant that the
section itself refers to “
legal
proceedings
” (i.e. legal
proceedings of any nature which would include action and application
proceedings) and is not limited to “
action
proceedings
”. It was
therefore clearly not the intention of the legislator that a person
be restricted to bringing action proceedings
under the Currency Act
when he/she feels aggrieved by a decision to forfeit money. The
use of different terminology in Regulation
22D(b) cannot limit a
person’s rights described in the empowering section of the
Currency Act.
[54]
In
Rossouw
& Another v FirstRand Bank Ltd
[5]
the Court stated that it is generally impermissible to use
regulations created by a Minister as an aid to interpret the
intention
of the Legislature in an Act of Parliament, notwithstanding
that an Act may include the regulations.
[55]
Having said that, read in the context of
section 9(2)(d)(iii), the word “
action
”
in Regulation 22D(b) is not used in the sense of distinguishing
between action
proceedings
and application
proceedings
.
If this was the case, Rule 22D(b) would leave a party no option but
to proceed with the issuing of summons despite section
9(2)(d)(iii)
referring to any legal proceedings. In my view, the use of the words
should be understood in the context of section
9(2)(d)(iii) which
refers to “
legal proceedings
”,
and therefore the use of the word “
action
”
should be interpreted widely to include the taking of formal legal
steps and instituting legal proceedings (which would
include
application and action proceedings). This, in my view, would be
the most sensible interpretation.
[56]
In paragraph 16 of the supplementary heads
of argument of the Applicant, the following was stated (footnote
summited):
“
16.
In this instance, the first blocking order was issued on the 1
st
of March 2019. There was a further blocking order of sorts on
the 19
th
of March 2019. The Applicant did not challenge any of the
blocking orders. It did not exercise the remedy provided
under
Regulation 22D(a). Only once the Respondent took a decision to
forfeit the funds,
did the
Applicant institute legal action
.
”
(Emphasis
added)
[57]
The word “
action
”
used in paragraph 16 of the Applicant’s heads of argument is
also used in the wide sense (as it brought a review application
and
not action proceedings). This is illustrative of the fact that
the word could be used in that sense in Regulation 22D(b).
[58]
In light of the above, I do not agree with
the Applicant’s restrictive interpretation of the word “
action
”
in Regulation 22 D and that the application would fall outside of the
ambit of Regulation 22D(b) as it does not constitute
action
proceedings brought by way of summons.
[59]
The Court in
Evergrand
also clearly considered the review application to fall within the
ambit of section 9(2)(d)(iii) and Rule 22D(b) otherwise it would
not
have found that the application was subject to the 90-time limit in
that Regulation.
[60]
It
was also pointed out by the Respondent’s counsel that the
Constitutional Court confirmed in the matter of
Mamadi
and Another v Premier of Limpopo Province and Others
[6]
that review proceedings can be brought by way of action proceedings.
Hence, this is another basis upon which one can conclude
that the
reference to “
action
”
would also not exclude review proceedings. There would, in my
view, be no reason for the legislator to impose a 90-day
limit on
review proceedings brought by way of summons and not the same limit
on review proceedings brought by way of application.
[61]
In the Respondent’s heads of
argument, I was also referred to
section
3(5) of PAJA which provides that “
[w]here
an administrator is empowered by any empowering provision to follow a
procedure which is fair but different from the provisions
of
subsection (2), the administrator may act in accordance with that
different procedure
”. There was
no challenge to the validity of section 3(5) of PAJA but this section
justifies the procedure under the Currency
Act and the 90-day
deadline being applicable.
[62]
The
Respondent’s counsel pointed out that, sensibly, and
consistently with this 90-day statutory time period, the Regulations
require the Reserve Bank to hold off on disposing of forfeited assets
for that same 90-day period after a notice of forfeiture
is published
and, if a review application is instituted within that period, the
Reserve Bank may not dispose of those assets until
final judgment has
been granted in that application.
[7]
[63]
The
Respondent’s counsel further argued that, because the
legislature chose to design a 90-day time limitation, the specific
time period in the Regulations will prevail over the general time
period provided for in terms of PAJA. In this regard, the Court
was
referred to the matter of
Rustenburg
Platinum Mines Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration
[8]
(“the
Rustenburg
case”) where Cameron JA (as he then was) expressly recognised
that the legislature may need to regulate time periods for
the
institution of review proceedings differently in relation to
different fields because the type of prejudice that may arise
is
varied. The following was stated in this regard:
[9]
“…
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 concerned became
aware of the action challenged and the reasons
for it (s 7(1). That
is a longer period than the six weeks s 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 in s 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
”.
(Emphasis
added)
[64]
The
Applicant’s counsel submitted that the
Rustenburg
case is of no assistance and pointed out that the decision in that
case was overturned in the matter of
Sidumo
and Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others
.
[10]
Although the decision of the SCA in
Rustenburg
that PAJA was appliable to arbitration awards was overturned by the
Constitutional Court, the bolded portion above was not stated
to be
incorrect.
[65]
In
the
Evergrand
judgment, the Court held that “
any
review concerning forfeiture decisions must be instituted at any time
but not later than the 90-day period
”
referred to in the Exchanges Act and Regulations
[11]
and that the effective date upon which the 90-day period commences is
the date of publication of the forfeiture notice.
[12]
[66]
The
court in the
Evergrand
judgment reasoned that the 90-day time limit “
has
been imposed by the legislature and is therefore applicable …
and … prevails over the 180-day period allowed for
in
PAJA
”
[13]
and that an application for review of a forfeiture order is regulated
by the Currency Act and the Regulations promulgated thereunder
and no
by PAJA.
[14]
[67]
Having regard to the relevant authorities
and the recognition by the SCA in the
Rustenburg
judgment that the legislator may need to regulate the time periods
for the institution of review proceedings differently in relation
to
different fields, I am of the view that the
Evergrand
decision on the applicability of the 90-day time period in the
Currency Act and the Regulations, as opposed to the 180-day time
period in PAJA, is correct.
CAN CONDONATION BE
GRANTED UNDER THE CURRENCY ACT?
[68]
Our
appellate courts have recognised that the question of whether
condonation for a delay will be availing will depend on the nature
and type of decision concerned. The Respondent’s counsel
referred to the matter of
Gqwetha
v Transkei Development Corporation Ltd and Others
[15]
where the SCA found that a delay in bringing a review of the
respondent’s dismissal of an employee ought not to be condoned.
The following was stated in this regard:
[16]
“
[24]
Whether there has been undue delay entails a factual enquiry
upon which a value judgment is called for in the light of
all the
relevant circumstances including any explanation that is offered for
the delay. A material fact to be taken into account
in making that
value judgment – bearing in mind the rationale for the rule –
is the nature of the challenged decision.
Not
all decisions have the same potential for prejudice to result from
their being set aside.
[25]
The challenged decision in the present case was a decision to dismiss
the appellant for complicity in financial irregularities.
A
decision of that kind will necessarily have immediate consequences
for the ordinary administration of the organisation, and for
other
employees who will be called upon to perform the functions of the
dismissed employee or even replace her.
Moreover,
p
ersonnel
decisions that are susceptible to review are no doubt made by
any large organisation on a regular and ongoing basis,
and some
measure of prompt certainty as to their validity is required. The
very nature of such decisions speaks of the potential
for prejudice
if they were all to be capable of being set aside on review after the
lapse of any considerable time
.”
(Emphasis
added)
[69]
It was argued by the Respondent’s
counsel that forfeiture decisions, by their very nature, require a
degree of promptness
in finalisation and certainty and that their
late review instantiates a unique type of prejudice, being prejudice
to the national
fiscus. I agree with this reasoning. The
wording of section 9(2)(d)(iii) and Regulation 22D(b) are peremptory
and proceedings,
hence, must be instituted within the 90-day time
period.
[70]
In
the matter of
Mohlomi
v Minister of Defence
[17]
the Constitutional Court confirmed that a court has no inherent power
to grant condonation to a litigant beyond the statutory time
period.
Hence, unless there is a provision in the statute concerned expressly
conferring a discretion on the Court to condone non-compliance,
it
cannot do so.
[18]
There
is no provision in the Currency Act or the Regulations providing the
Court with a discretion to condone non-compliance
with the 90-day
time period to institute proceedings.
[71]
It is common cause that:
[71.1]
the forfeiture notice was published on 4
June 2021;
[71.2]
the 90-day time limit prescribed by the
Regulations therefore expired on 3 September 2021;
[71.3]
the review application was only launched on
9 November 2021 (i.e. over 2 months later).
[71]
Absent authority being conferred on the Court to grant condonation
for non-compliance with the 90-day time period, it cannot
do so.
[72]
Where
a review application is filed out of time and a Court has no power to
grant condonation, the Court cannot entertain the merits
of the
application. In this regard, I was referred to the matter of
Asla
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality.
[19]
[72]
In the circumstances, the application falls to be dismissed. As
far as costs are concerned, they must follow the result.
ORDER
:
In
the circumstances, I grant an order in the following terms:
1.
The application is dismissed; and
2.
The Applicant is ordered to pay the costs
of the application.
LG KILMARTIN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
Hearing
date:
22 November 2022
Judgment
date:
13 February 2023
Counsel
for the Applicant: Adv R Mastenbroek
Applicant’s
Attorneys:
KWP Attorneys
Counsel
for the Respondent: Adv M Stubbs
Respondent’s
Attorneys: Bowman Gilfillan
[1]
2015
(5) SA 146
(CC) at paras [53] to [54] at 169 F/G – 170 D.
[2]
1990 (3) SA 704
(T) at pp 710 E/G and 711.
[3]
(54068/2020)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 739 (3 October 2022).
[4]
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at [18].
[5]
2010 (6) SA 439
(SCA) at para
[24].
[6]
(CCT176/21)
[2022] ZACC 26
(6 July 2022).
[7]
Regulation
22B(3).
[8]
2007 (1) SA 576
(SCA) at para
[27] at 588 D/E.
[9]
The
Rustenburg
case, para [27] at 588 E.
[10]
2008 (2) SA 24 (CC).
[11]
The
Evergrand
judgment, para [63].
[12]
The
Evergrand
judgment, para [64].
[13]
The
Evergrand
case, para [63].
[14]
The
Evergrand
case, para [83](a).
[15]
2006
(2) SA 603 (SCA).
[16]
The
Gqwetha
judgment at
paras
[24] to [25] at 613 A/B to 613 E.
[17]
[1996] ZACC 20
;
1997 (1) SA 124
(CC) at para 11, at
129 C – 130 B/E, and para 17, at 132 E/F to 133 D.
[18]
M
v MEC for Health: Mpumalanga
[2021]
ZAMPMBHC 21 at para [20].
[19]
Asla
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality
2017 (6) 360 (SCA), para [12] at 366 B to H.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
International Version Trading and Projects (Pty) Ltd v South African Revenue Service (6012/21) [2024] ZAGPPHC 92 (17 January 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 92High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
International Pentecost Holiness Church In re: MBS v BMS and Another (63920/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 296 (5 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 296High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Yan v Mahlangu and Others (2020/19368) [2022] ZAGPJHC 833 (24 October 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 833High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Chinese Association Gauteng (TCA) v Henning and Others (EQ2/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 590 (28 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 590High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
South African Reserve Bank v JAG Import Export (Pty) Limited (2022-007728) [2025] ZAGPPHC 1213 (24 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 1213High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar