Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1992South Africa
Maluleke v Maluleke and Others (122735/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1992 (1 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 December 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Maluleke v Maluleke and Others (122735/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1992 (1 December 2023)
Maluleke v Maluleke and Others (122735/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1992 (1 December 2023)
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sino date 1 December 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 122735/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
1
DECEMBER 2023
In
the matter between:
JOSEPH
MALULEKE
Applicant
and
JOSEPH
MALULEKE
First Respondent
THE
MAGISTRATE
N.O.
Second Respondent
THE
MAGISTRATES
COMMISSION
Third Respondent
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Fourth
Respondent
In
re:
JOSEPH
MALULEKE
Applicant
and
THE
MAGISTRATE
N.O.
First Respondent
THE
MAGISTRATES
COMMISSION
Second Respondent
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Third
Respondent
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Fourth Respondent
NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER OF POLICE
Fifth Respondent
OFFICE
OF NATIONAL HEAD:
DPCI
Sixth Respondent
CAPTAIN
MPHOFA PATRICIA MAGETSE
Seventh Respondent
JUDGMENT
NGALWANA
AJ
[1]
This application, styled “
Application to anticipate the
court order”
, seeks an order reconsidering the order of
Dlamini J dated 24 November 2023, and substituting it with an order
dismissing the First
Respondent’s urgent application with costs
on attorney and client scale, including the costs of counsel.
[2]
Dlamini J had on the said date granted an order interdicting the
Second Respondent,
and/or any magistrate, from continuing with an
examination of the First Respondent then scheduled for 27 November
2023 as contemplated
in a subpoena issued in terms of
section 205
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act, 1977
, and from performing any act
incidental to such subpoena, pending review and setting aside of the
subpoena.
[3]
The application before Dlamini J had been launched on an urgent basis
on 21 November
2023, calling on the respondents in that case to file
answering papers by 16h00 on 23 November 2023. The notice of motion
informed
the respondents that the application would be heard at 14h00
on 24 November 2023 after the First Respondent had filed his replying
affidavit by 09h00 on that day.
[4]
No answering papers were filed, and the matter served before Dlamini
J in the morning
session on 24 November 2023 and the Learned Judge
granted the relief sought. The applicants complain that the First
Respondent
stole a march on them by moving the application in the
morning when the notice of motion said it would be moved in the
afternoon
on that day. The First Respondent’s retort to this is
that the senior Judge’s office had at 12h15 on 23 November 2023
posted on CaseLines a note to the parties’ legal
representatives which read as follows:
“
Your
matter will be heard tomorrow at 11h00.
Kindly ensure
that you file your Compliance Affidavit, Draft Court Order and all
outstanding affidavits to be exchanged by latest
tomorrow morning at
09h00.
Also file your
Practice Notes and Short Heads of Arguments for the Court.”
[5]
The application before me is said to “
anticipate”
the order of Dlamini J, reconsider and set it aside. It was launched
on 26 November 2023, directed the respondents to file answering
papers by 18h00 on the same day, and informed them that the
applicants would file their replying papers by 08h00 on the day of
the intended hearing on 27 November 2023. There is no prayer that the
matter be heard as one of urgency, or that the rules pertaining
to
service periods be relaxed.
[6]
In the supporting affidavit, it is submitted that the application is
brought in terms
of rule 6(8) of the uniform rules. Still, nothing is
said about urgency under the rubric “
nature of this
application”
. That discussion appears later in the
supporting affidavit under “
urgency”
where the
first respondent says, in relevant parts,
“
42. I am
advised that rule 6(8) entitles any person against whom an order was
granted
ex parte
to anticipate the return day upon delivery of not less than
twenty-four hours’ notice.
43. I am further advised that
notwithstanding the remedy afforded in terms of rule 6(8), urgent
applications are not free for taking
and thus a person approaching
the court on urgent basis is required to demonstrate the urgency for
her matter to be entertained
under truncated time periods in terms of
rule 6(12) read with the Practice Directive of this Court”.
[7]
The grounds for urgency advanced appear to be that the order of
Dlamini J, in the
absence of the applicants, “
is very
detrimental to the administration of justice because it restrains
[investigators of serious crime] from continuing with
their work
pending the review application…”
. The applicants
allege that “
[i]nvestigations of serious crimes such as the
one allegedly committed by Mr Nsele [the First Respondent’s
client] are, by
their very nature, a priority and thus urgent for
good administration of justice. The longer the investigation reaches
its finality,
the more likelihood of evidence being extinguished.
This is more so, especially if the subject of investigation has
become aware
of it”
.
[8]
This is a novel approach to the reconsideration of orders. Firstly,
the order of Dlamini
J was not obtained
ex parte
. The First
Respondent invited the applicants to file answering papers. That they
did not do so did not turn the nature of that
application into an
ex
parte
application. So, rule 6(8) would seem to be the wrong horse
for the applicants to have saddled in this race for the reversal of
Dlamini J’s order. Secondly, there was no rule
nisi
for
the applicants to
anticipate”
. An interim interdict was
granted pending determination of the First Respondent’s review
of the impugned subpoena. Third,
what the applicants will have this
court do is sit as an urgent court of appeal or review, in
circumstances where urgency is not
even sought in the notice of
motion. An urgent court cannot, to my mind, validly set aside an
order of another urgent court on
the grounds advanced in this case.
Fourth, the usual approach in the circumstances raised by the
applicants is to approach the
same Judge who made the order for a
reconsideration of his order under rule 42. Counsel for the
applicants expressly disavowed
that approach when that lifeline was
thrown her way. Fifth, in any event, even if urgency were sought in
the notice of motion,
the fact that the crime being investigated is
regarded by the applicants as “
priority”
or
“
serious”
does not, without more, render the
application urgent. More is required. The applicants advance no
plausible facts that tend to
show that the information or evidence
sought from the First Respondent (to which he claims legal privilege
as being communication
as an attorney with his client) is in imminent
danger of dissipation. Sixth, in the absence of facts tending to show
that the information
sought is in imminent danger of dissipation, I
am not satisfied that the applicants cannot obtain substantial
redress in due course.
If they should successfully resist the review
application, then they can pursue the information. If they should not
succeed in
resisting the review, then they were not entitled to the
information in the first place.
[9]
In the result, this application founders for lack of urgency and for
procedural misstep.
It is not necessary to deal with the merits of
it. Those can be pursued in the review application.
[10]
There is no reason why costs should not follow the cause.
Order
In the result, I make the following
order:
1.
The application is struck off the roll for
lack of urgency.
2.
The applicants are to pay the costs of this
application on a party and party scale.
V NGALWANA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
Delivered: This judgement was
prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is
handed down electronically
by circulation to the Parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 01 December 2023.
Date
of hearing: 28 November 2023
Date
of judgment: 01 December 2023
Appearances:
Attorneys for the
Applicants:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
Counsel for the
Applicants:
M Rantho (082 453
0757)
Attorneys for First
Respondent:
Maluks Attorneys
Counsel for First
Respondent:
N Manaka (071 622
7240)
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