Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 700South Africa
Minister of Police v Chauke (59344/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 700 (23 August 2023)
Headnotes
the purpose of the Act was to put a stop to persistent and ungrounded legal proceedings. In this regard,
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of Police v Chauke (59344/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 700 (23 August 2023)
Minister of Police v Chauke (59344/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 700 (23 August 2023)
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sino date 23 August 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
no. 59344/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED. YES
DATE:
23/08/23
SIGNATURE
In
re:
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Applicant
and
DAVID
CHAUKE
Respondent
(Id
no. 7[...])
JUDGMENT
The
judgment and order are published and distributed electronically.
VAN
NIEKERK PA, AJ
INTRODUCTION:
[1]
Applicant seeks relief in the Applicant’s Notice of Motion
against the Respondent
in the following terms:
“
1.
Directing and interdicting the respondent from:
1.1
instituting any further legal
processes against the applicant for proceedings and/or disputes
and/or causes of action of a similar
nature and/or the extent that
any of the disputes pursued by the respondent is related to and/or
emanates from any of the issues
and/or any of the claims already
adjudicated and finalised by Courts generally (including the
Constitutional Courts), particularly
under case numbers 18231/2009,
10482/2010 and lately 6209/2020 in the above Honourable Court and
belatedly dismissed by the Constitutional
Court under case numbers
CCT140/2021 as set out below;
1.2
instituting any legal proceedings
against the applicant and/or any of its representatives in their
personal and/or professional
capacity for any disputes emanating from
the claims under case numbers 18231/2009, 10482/2010 and 6209/2020
(and the related applications
for leave to appeal), without first
obtaining the permission of that Court, or any inferior Court or any
Judge thereof or that
inferior Court, and that any such permission
not be granted unless the Court or Judge is satisfied that the
proceedings are not
an abuse of the process and there is a prima
facie ground for the proceedings.
2.
Declaring and ordering that:
2.1
the respondent prior to instituting any new proceedings and/or
continuing with the existing
cause of action and/or any of the claims
emanating from or factually similar to the claim and/or issues under
case numbers 18231/2009,
10482/2010 and 6209/20, be required to:
2.1.1
first obtain a written leave of the relevant Court, or any inferior
Court or any Judge thereof, to institute or
proceed with such
specified legal proceedings, but
2.1.2
that prior to seeking the leave of the relevant Court, or any
inferior Court of any Judge thereof or that inferior
Court, to
institute or proceed with any legal proceedings (including the
existing proceedings);
2.1.2.1
inform on written notice to the Deputy Judge President
or person in
charge in the inferior Court that, prior legal proceedings have been
instituted to declare him a vexatious litigant
and that, he is
restrained from institution of certain legal proceedings against the
applicant or its representatives;
2.1.2.2
within a time to be specified by that Court, or any inferior
Court or
any Judge thereof or that inferior Court, furnish a written notice
setting out in full, his basis for seeking such leave
to the Deputy
Judge President or the person in charge in the inferior Court; and
that
2.1.2.3
upon but not prior to obtaining written permission from
the Deputy
Judge President or the person in charge in the inferior Court, the
respondent initiate correspondence with the applicant
and/or its
representatives to inform the applicant and/or its representatives of
his intention to seek such leave to institute
legal proceedings
against the applicant and/or its representatives and to request the
applicant and/or its representatives to those
intended proceedings,
to make submissions to the relevant Deputy Judge President or the
person in charge in the inferior Court,
in response to the
respondent’s intention to seek such leave.
2.1.3
That, in the event of the relevant Deputy Judge President or the
person in charge in the inferior Court, granting
leave to the
respondent to institute or proceed with any legal proceedings
(including this application) that the respondent is
ordered to and
hereby required to provide security for legal costs for the
respondents or defendant’s in those proceedings,
in the amount
and form to be determined by the Registrar”.
[2]
At the hearing of the matter Applicant presented a draft order in the
same terms as
the Notice of Motion, with the further provision of a
declaratory order in terms whereof Respondent is declared a vexatious
litigant
in terms of to the provisions of Section 2(1)(b) of the
Vexatious Proceedings Act 3 of 1996 (“the Act”).
Considering
the nature of the relief framed in the Notice of Motion
and the averments contained in support thereof, I am of the view that
the
inclusion of the declaratory order in the proposed draft order
declaring the Respondent to be a vexatious litigant in terms of the
Act in circumstances where such relief was not initially included in
the Notice of Motion does not prejudice the Respondent as
it is a
logical
sequitur
of the proceedings instituted against the
Respondent should the Applicant be successful in the relief prayed
for.
[3]
Section 2(1)(b) of the Act reads:
“
If,
on an application made by any person against whom legal proceedings
have been instituted by any other person or who has reason
to believe
that the institution of legal proceedings against him is contemplated
by any other person, the court is satisfied that
the said person has
persistently and without any reasonable ground instituted legal
proceedings in any court or in any inferior
court, whether against
the same person or against different persons, the court may after
hearing that other person or giving him
an opportunity of being
heard, order that no legal proceedings shall be instituted by him
against any person in any court or any
inferior court without the
leave of that court, or any judge thereof, or that inferior court, as
the case may be, and such leave
shall not be granted unless the court
or judge or the inferior court, as the case may be, is satisfied that
the proceedings are
not an abuse of the process of the court and that
there is prima facie ground for the proceedings
”.
[4]
The relief which Applicant applies for is declaratory and
interdictory in the final
sense, and the requirements for such relief
are trite law, namely the establishment of a clear right, actual or
reasonably apprehended
injury, and the lack of a satisfactory
alternative remedy.
[1]
[5]
Section 21(1)(c)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
confers
jurisdiction on the High Court the power to “…
in its
discretion, and at the instance of any interested person, to enquire
into and determine any existing, future or contingent
right or
obligation, notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any relief
consequent upon the determination.”
This
section clearly confers on the High Court the power to issue a
declarator framed in the terms which the Applicant applies
for.
[6]
On analysis of Section 2(1)(b) of the Act the jurisdictional
requirements to make
an order that a person may not institute legal
proceedings against another person without prior leave of the court
been obtained
are the following, namely:
(i)
the court must be satisfied that the said person has persistently and
without
any reasonable grounds instituted legal proceedings in any
court or any inferior court; and
(ii)
the court must be satisfied that the proceedings instituted in terms
of Section 2(1)(b)
of the Act are in itself not an abuse of the
process of court;
and
(iii)
there must be
prima facie
grounds for the proceedings (this is
clearly a reference to the proceedings in terms of Section 2(1)(b) of
the Act.
[7]
Section 2(1)(b) of the Act which is similar to Section 2(1)(c) of the
Act, requires that
the Court must first be
satisfied that the person against whom relief is sought under the Act
persistently and
without reasonable grounds instituted legal
proceedings, whereafter the Court must be satisfied that the
proceedings requesting
such relief in itself does not constitute an
abuse of the process of Court and that there are prima facie grounds
for the proceedings.
The first enquiry clearly relates to an
evaluation of the available factual evidence on the issue of
persistent and unreasonable
institution of legal proceedings, and the
second enquiry requires the exercise of a value judgment based on a
consideration of
the available information which may assist the Court
to exercise its discretion afforded in terms of Section 2(1) of the
Act.
[8]
The provisions of Section 2(1) of the Act place a limitation on
the right of
access to court enshrined in terms of Section 34 of the
Constitution.
[2]
In
Beinash
& Another v Ernest & Young & Another
[3]
it was held that the purpose of the Act was to put a stop to
persistent and ungrounded legal proceedings. In this regard,
the court held that:
“
[15]
In order to evaluate the constitutionality of the impugned section,
it is necessary to have regard to the
purpose of the Act. This
purpose is “to put a stop to persistent and ungrounded
institution of legal proceedings”.
The Act does so by
allowing a court to screen (as opposed to absolutely bar) a “person
[who] has persistently and without
any reasonable ground instituted
legal proceedings in any Court or inferior court”. This
screening mechanism is necessary
to protect at least two important
interests. These are the interests of the victims of the
vexatious litigant who have repeatedly
been subjected to the costs,
harassment and embarrassment or unmeritorious litigation and the
public interest that the functioning
of the courts and the
administration of justice proceeding unimpeded by the clog or
groundless proceedings
”.
In such judgment it was
held that the provisions of Section 2(1) of the Act is not
unconstitutional and that the limitation serves
as an important
purpose relevant to Section 36(1)(b) of the Constitution.
[9]
It was held that vexatious claims include claims that are “
frivolous,
improper, instituted without sufficient ground, to serve solely as an
annoyance to the defendant
”
[4]
.
“
Legal
proceedings
”
in the context of Section 2(1) of the Act includes procedures
permitted by the rules of court to facilitate the conduct
of all
types of litigation, including all steps relating to the execution of
a judgment, and all matters ancillary to the legal
process
[5]
.
[10]
In the Applicant’s Founding Affidavit the history of litigation
between Respondent and
Applicant is set out comprehensively and
provides a full factual background in support of the relief claimed
against Respondent.
Respondent filed an “
Opposing Affidavit
”
which does not dispute any of the averments relating to the history
of the litigation between the parties but can only be
described as a
barely comprehensible attempt at a re-visitation to issues which are
res judicata
, more fully referred to hereunder. The
factual background to the history of litigation between the parties
as set out in
the Applicant’s Founding Affidavit may therefore
be accepted as facts that are common cause between the parties and
should
be evaluated in order to determine whether or not Respondent
persistently and without good cause instituted legal proceedings
against
Applicant.
[11]
The history of litigation between the parties commenced during 2009
when the Respondent instituted
action against the Applicant and the
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development (as it then was)
under case no. 09/18231
in the Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg,
claiming damages in the exorbitant amount of six billion rands,
following a successful
appeal against a conviction and sentence of
inter alia
corruption of which the Respondent was found guilty
in 2007. The summons issued by Respondent against the Applicant
and the
respective Minister referred to
supra
was materially
defective and in 2011, during a hearing of an exception against such
summons the matter was postponed by Acting Judge
Bashall who directed
and requested that the Respondent (plaintiff in that action) obtain
assistance from a Law Clinic.
[12]
However, during 2010 and before the matter under case no. 09/18231
was dealt with by Bashall
AJ, Respondent issued another summons
against Applicant and the Minister of Justice and Constitutional
Development under case no.
10/10482 on the same cause of action as
the matter under case no. 09/18231. This resulted in the
Applicant (defendant in
those actions) raising various special pleas
to such claim and on 15 April 2014 Windell J. upheld one of the
special pleas and
dismissed the Respondent’s claim in totality.
[13]
Respondent filed an application for leave to appeal against the
judgment of Windell J, which
application for leave to appeal was
dismissed. During May 2014 the Applicant applied for leave to appeal
against the decision of
Windell J under case no. 20172/14 to the
Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”), and in this application
Respondent, without
providing any rational reasons therefore, joined
two additional respondents being the President of the Republic of
South Africa
as well as the Judge President of the South Gauteng High
Court. This application for leave to appeal was dismissed
by the SCA on 21 July 2014 and Respondent was ordered to pay the
Applicant’s costs. Following the dismissal by the SCA
of
that application, which effectively was a dismissal of the claims
instituted by the Respondent against the Applicant, the Respondent
petitioned the Constitutional Court (“CC”) under case no.
143/14 and in this application for leave to appeal Respondent
joined
the President of the SCA as a respondent. This application for
leave to appeal was dismissed by the CC on 30 June
2014, which
effectively brought to finality a claim which persisted for 5 years.
[14]
Some 4 years later, during 2018, Respondent launched motion
proceedings in the Gauteng Division
of the High Court, Johannesburg,
under case no. 10/10482 as well as 09/18231 which applications were
based on the same
causae
of action and claimed relief similar
to the relief finally disposed of by the SCA and CC under case no.
20172/14 and 143/14 referred
to
supra
respectively. In
these applications the Respondent in his capacity as the Applicant
now joined the Applicant to this application
in his capacity as
Respondent together with 15 other respondents including virtually
every Government Department, and escalated
the claim from R6 billion
to R300 billion. On 24 November 2018 Mashile J. dismissed such
application with costs on the basis that
the actions dating from 2009
and/or 2010 referred to
supra
have been finalised by Windell J
in 2014. Additional to this application of the Respondent, Respondent
launched an application
to rescind the 2014 judgment of Windell J on
the basis that it was granted in error and induced by fraud.
This application
was also dismissed with costs by Mashile J who then
made an order barring the Respondent to approach the court again on
the same
claim prior to paying the Applicant’s costs.
[15]
Unperturbed, and during December 2018, the Respondent approached the
CC under case no. 303/18
for direct access claiming the following
relief:
“
1.
That the decision order of Justice Mashile on the 27
th
/11/2018
heard on the 26
th
of November 2018 should be
reviewed and set aside as on the grounds for appealing the orders.
(sic)
2.
That the decision of Justice Bashall dated 11 August 2011 on case
18231/2009
should be stayed on the court roll.
3.
That the decision of Justice Lamont (Burochowitz) on roll 2683/18,
10/2012 should
stayed on the roll and be varied.
4.
That the decision of Justice Mashile heard on the 27/11/2018 and
judgment delivered
on the 29
th
/11/2018 should also be
varied;
5.
That the judgement decision of Justice Windell dated the 15
th
of April 2014 should be nullified and set void including an
interlocutory application for a leave to appeal thereof in whole;
6.
That the decision in the corum of per Navsa JJA Swain in the Supreme
Court of
Appeal of South Africa on case 20172/2014 should be
nullified and set void in whole”. (sic)
”
[16]
The Respondent’s application for direct access referred to
supra was dismissed by the CC
on 4 February 2019. During July
2019, having been dismissed by the CC, Respondent petitioned to the
SCA effectively seeking
an order setting aside the order of the CC
and again seeking to have the orders of Mashile J and Windell J
referred to
supra
set aside. In this application for
direct access to the CC Respondent joined the Chairman of Capitec
Bank, The Minister of
Finance, The Governor of the SA Reserve Bank,
The National Credit Regulator, and The Ombudsman for Banking Services
as additional
respondents and included an additional claim for 8
billion United States Dollars for a so-called “
research
fund
”.
[17]
Needless to say, this application was also dismissed by the SCA which
then prompted the Respondent
to again petition the CC to appeal the
order of the SCA. In this petition to the CC, the President of
the SCA, the Judge
President of the South Gauteng High Court, Judges
Windell, Lamont, Burrowchowitz, Bashall, Van der Merwe and Mashile
were all joined
as respondents. This application was also dismissed
by the CC.
[18]
Having been dismissed by the SCA on four occasions, and the CC on
three occasions, during January 2020 the
Respondent launched a new
application to this court under case no. 6209/2020 wherein Respondent
joined 33 parties (mostly referred
to
supra
) and claiming the
amount of R9 572 164 914.15 (Nine Billion Five Hundred
and Seventy Two Million One Hundred and
Sixty Four Thousand Nine
Hundred and Fourteen Rands and fifteen cents) for loss of an
industrial and home theatre system allegedly
removed by members of
the South African Police Services from the Respondent’s
residence during 2007, and for damages of R6 500 000 000,00
(Six Trillion Five Hundred Billion Rands) following the Respondent’s
alleged unlawful arrest in 2007. This action is
again based on
the same cause of action repeatedly being dismissed, being the
alleged unlawful arrest and detention of the Respondent.
This action
suffered the same fate as the previous actions instituted by the
Respondent being dismissed on exception stage, and
was again appealed
by the Respondent without success to both the SCA and the CC.
[19]
It must be remarked that the history as set out
supra
is but a
condensed account of the plethora of litigation instituted by the
Respondent and does not include the history of procedures
initiated
by Respondent in various other quasi-judicial forums against the
Applicant, or all interlocutory procedures employed
since 2009.
[20]
The legal proceedings instituted by Respondent all have the following
salient features namely:
(i)
claims are so exorbitantly quantified
that it can only draw and inference or irrationality and/or malice;
(ii)
there is a consistent failure to
disclose a discernable cause of action duly formulated in terms of
the provisions of either Rule
18 and/or Rule 6 of the Uniform Rules
of Court;
(iii)
persons and/or institutions and/or
entities which have no interest in the matter are joined as parties
without any rational reason
therefore, and judges who have made
any finding unfavourable to the Respondent at any stage have been
joined in subsequent
proceedings. It must be noted that not once did
any judge find merit in any legal proceedings instituted by
Respondent;
(iv)
there is a repetitive institution of
proceedings based on the same purported cause of action which is
repeatedly dismissed either
directly or by implication in the High
Court, the SCA and the CC resulting in Respondent thereafter simply
instituting new proceedings
where the alleged
quantum
of damages is increased, and additional parties are joined as
respondents without any sense of rationality.
[21]
In summary, the history of the Respondent’s institution of
various actions and applications,
primarily against the Applicant, is
in my view the proverbial textbook example of vexatious proceedings
and without any doubt display
a pattern of persistent litigation
without any reasonable grounds. In the Founding Affidavit, the
deponent further explains
how the Respondent continues to
proverbially bombard the Applicant’s offices with substantial
volumes of email correspondence
on a regular basis, at times daily.
As of necessity, these documents have to be attended to by personnel
employed by the
Applicant. In this regard it is to be noted
that Respondent sent correspondence by way of email to the Registrar
of this
court, which purports to be a copy of a “
Practice
Note
” shortly before this matter was to be heard. In such
email the Respondent included as co-recipients
inter alia
the
NASA Mars Mission, various Judges of this Division (both Johannesburg
and Gauteng), the Registrar of the Deputy Judge President
of this
Division, and Mr Bill Gates.
[22]
Considering the aforesaid, in my view the Applicant has illustrated a
clear right to the relief claimed.
The prejudice to Applicant
who is required to expend valuable resources in dealing with the
irrational conduct of the Respondent
is real and on-going, and this
consideration also applies to various Judges of this Division, the
SCA and the CC who are proverbially
dragged into the litigation
initiated by Respondent. This court, the SCA and the CC are
forced to expend resources and time
to repeatedly deal with the
Respondent’s relentless irrational efforts at litigation.
I am of the view that the various
claims instituted by the Respondent
falls squarely within the description of vexatious claims referred to
in the authority of
Cohen v Cohen & Another
quoted
supra
.
[23]
It is further clear that the Respondent will not desist in his
irrational institution of proceedings
unless an order issue
preventing the Respondent from doing so. There is no
alternative remedy available to the Applicant
save the remedy awarded
to Applicant in terms of the provisions of Section 2(1) of the Act.
There is no basis to find that the
institution of this application
constitutes an abuse of the process of Court, and there are clear
prima facie grounds for these
proceedings.
[24]
Lastly, it needs to be noted that Khumalo J declared the Respondent a
vexatious litigant against
the Reserve Bank on 21 January 2023 under
case number 57818/2020. Respondent launched an “Application for
review’’
to the Constitutional Court against this order
and in that application irrationally joined applicant in these
proceedings as a
respondent and claims monetary relief against
applicant being damages similar to that claimed in the actions
referred to
supra
.
[25]
In the result, I am of the view that the Applicant has satisfied the
requirements of Section 2(1)(b)
of the Act and I therefore make an
order in the following terms:
1.
The respondent is declared a vexatious litigant
pursuant to the provisions of section 2(1 )(b) of the Vexatious
Proceedings Act
3 of 1956.
2.
The respondent is interdicted from:
2.1.
instituting any further legal processes against the
applicant for proceedings and/or disputes and/or causes of
action of a
similar nature and/or to the extent that any of the
disputes pursued by the respondent is related to and/or emanates from
any of
the issues and/or any of the claims already adjudicated and
finalised by Courts generally (including the Constitutional Court),
particularly under case numbers 18231/2009, 10482/2010 and lately
6209/2020 in this Court and belatedly dismissed by the Constitutional
Court under case numbers CCT 140/2021 as set out below;
2.2.
instituting any legal proceedings against the applicant
and/or any of its representatives in their personal and/or
professional
capacity for any disputes emanating from the claims
under case numbers 18231/2009, 10482/2010 and 6209/2020 (and the
related applications
for leave to appeal), without first obtaining
the permission of that Court, or any inferior Court or any Judge
thereof or that
inferior Court, and that any such permission not be
granted unless the Court or Judge is satisfied that the proceedings
are not
an abuse of the process and there is a prima facie ground for
the proceedings.
3.
It is ordered that:
3.1. the respondent
prior to instituting any new proceedings and/or continuing
with the existing cause of action and/or
any of the claims emanating
from/or factually similar to the claim and/ or issues under case
numbers: 18231/2009, 10482/2010 and
6209/20, be required to:
3.1.1. first obtain
a written leave of the relevant Court, or any inferior Court
or any Judge thereof, to institute
or proceed with such specified
legal proceedings; but
3.1.2. that prior
to seeking the leave of the relevant Court, or any inferior
Court or any Judge thereof or that inferior
Court, to institute or
proceed with any legal proceedings (including the existing
proceedings):
3.1.2.1. inform on
written notice to the Deputy Judge President or person in
charge in the inferior Court that, prior
legal proceedings have been
instituted to declare him a vexatious litigant and that, he is
restrained from institution of certain
legal proceedings against the
applicant or its representatives;
3.1.2.2
within a time to be specified by that Court, or any inferior Court or
any Judge thereof or that inferior Court, furnish
a written notice
setting out in full, his basis for seeking such leave to the Deputy
Judge President or the person in charge in
the inferior Court, and
that
3.1.2.3 upon
but not prior to obtaining written permission from the Deputy Judge
President or the person in charge in the
inferior Court, the
respondent initiate correspondence with the applicant and/or its
representatives to inform the applicant and/or
its representatives of
his intention to seek such leave to institute legal proceedings
against the applicant and/or its representatives
and to request the
applicant and/or its representatives to those intended proceedings,
to make submissions to the relevant Deputy
Judge President or the
person in charge in the inferior
Court, in response to the
respondent’s intention to seek such leave.
3.1.3. That, in the
event of the relevant Deputy Judge President or the
person in charge in the inferior Court, granting
leave to the
respondent to institute or proceed with any legal proceedings
(including this application) that the respondent is
ordered to and
hereby required to provide security for legal costs for the
respondents or defendant's in those proceedings, in
the amount and
form to be determined by the Registrar.
4. In this
order, the phrases "Court and/or inferior Court" shall mean
any Division of the High Court
of South Africa or in any
Magistrate Court contemplated in section 166(d) and (e) of the
Constitution of the Republic of South
Africa, 1996.
5.
No application and/or action instituted by the
respondent in any Court or inferior Court shall have any force prior
to strict compliance
with paragraphs 2 and 3 above
6.
The Registrar is directed to cause a copy of this order
to be published in the Government Gazette, as contemplated in section
2(3)
of the Act.
7.
The respondent shall pay the costs of this application.
P A VAN NIEKERK
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances:
For the Applicant:
ADV. M M MOJAPHELO
ADV G MAMABOLO
Instructed by:
STATE
ATTORNEY-PRETORIA
For the Respondent:
IN PERSON
[1]
Sanachem
(Pty) Ltd v Farmers Agri-Care (Pty) Ltd
[1995] ZASCA 2
;
1995 (2) SA 781(A)
at 789 B
- C
[2]
Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa, Act no. 108 of 1996
[3]
1999
(2) BCLA 125 (CC)
[4]
Cohen v
Cohen & Another
2003 (1) SA 103
CPD
[5]
Absa
Bank Ltd v Dlamini
[2007] ZAGPHC 241
;
2008 (2) SA 262
(T) at 25
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