Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 824South Africa
Matsepe and Another v Minister of Finance and Others (10139/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 824 (1 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 November 2022
Judgment
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## Matsepe and Another v Minister of Finance and Others (10139/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 824 (1 November 2022)
Matsepe and Another v Minister of Finance and Others (10139/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 824 (1 November 2022)
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sino date 1 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number
: 10139/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
01
NOVEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
KABELO
JOHN MATSEPE FIRST
APPLICANT
MOSHKATE
INVESTMENT GROUP (PTY) LTD SECOND
APPLICANT
and
MINISTER
OF FINANCE
FIRST RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF COOPERATIVE SECOND
RESPONDENT
GOVERNANCE
AND TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF THIRD
RESPONDENT
PUBLIC
PROSECUTION
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL
FOURTH RESPONDENT
GOVERNMENT
ASSOCIATION
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
At the heart of the dispute between the parties in these proceedings
is whether the
restriction in
Regulation 6(c)
of the
Municipal
Investment Regulations, promulgated
by means of Government Notice R
308 in GG 27431 of 1 April 2005 (“the Municipal Investment
Regulations”), is lawful.
The impugned regulation (“
Regulation
6(c)
”) relates to the power of municipalities to invest funds
and limits municipalities to invest funds only in investment type
deposits with banks registered in terms of the Banks Act.
[1]
The empowering provisions for the promulgation of the
Municipal
Investment Regulations are
contained in the Local Government:
Municipal Finance Management Act (“the MFMA”);
[2]
section 13, thereof.
[2]
The First Applicant, Kabelo John Matsepe, who is the sole director of
the Second Applicant,
Moshate Investment Group (Pty) Ltd, together
with the Second Applicant, are, in these proceedings, challenging the
validity of
the Regulation 6(c), insofar as it limits the powers of
municipalities to invest in banks registered in terms of the Banks
Act.
[3]
The Applicants maintain that Regulation 6(c) is invalid because it
amounts to an administrative
action which is not lawful on several
review grounds under section 6(2) of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act (“PAJA”).
[3]
Alternatively, the Applicants contend that Regulation 6(c) is invalid
because it is irrational and thus an affront to the principle
of
legality.
[4]
The Applicants contend that Regulation 6(c) is unlawful insofar as it
stipulates that
municipal investment deposits must only be with banks
registered in terms of the Banks Act. The restriction is said to be
irrational
as it prevents the Applicants from soliciting and
receiving financial gratification as a result of influencing
municipalities to
make deposits with Mutual Banks.
[5]
This application, insofar as it relates to the First Applicant, is
alleged to be a
collateral challenge to the validity of charges
which, in whole or in part rely upon the validity of
Regulation 6(c)
of the
Municipal Investment Regulations. The
First Applicant is
denying the legality of
Regulation 6(c)
and contends that this
application constitutes a collateral challenge to the validity of
that Regulation.
[6]
As will appear more clearly later in this judgment, there are
criminal proceedings
levelled against the First Applicant, which,
criminal proceedings are alleged to rely on the validity of
Regulation 6(c)
and, are thus, said to constitute coercive
proceedings against which the First Applicant is entitled to raise a
collateral defence.
The implication flowing from this contention is
that should the impugned regulation be set aside as unlawful, invalid
and unconstitutional,
part of the charges against the First
Applicant, which are premised on
Regulation 6(c)
, would fall away.
[7]
The relief sought by the Second Applicant, on the other hand, is a
direct review in
terms of PAJA or the principle of legality.
[8]
No substantive relief is sought in the papers against the
Respondents, in these proceedings,
save for costs, in the event of
opposition. However, the First Respondent, the Minister of Finance,
and the Third Respondent, the
National Director of Public
Prosecutions, have opted to oppose the application.
[9]
The First Respondent is involved in these proceedings as the
executive authority,
who in the context of protecting public funds,
is entrusted with oversight of the legislative regulation of
municipal executive
functions in accordance with the Constitution of
the Republic of South Africa, 1996 and section 168(1) of the MFMA
and, together
with the Second Respondent, the Minister of Cooperative
Governance and Traditional Affairs, is responsible for the drafting
of
the
Municipal Investment Regulations.
>
[10]
The interest of the Third Respondent in these proceedings, on the
other hand, lies therein, that
the First Applicant is an Accused
person in criminal proceedings before the High Court of this
Division.
[11]
Both, the First Respondent and the Third Respondent, are opposing the
application seeking the
dismissal of the application with costs.
The First Respondent has raised a number of points
in limine
,
which the Third Respondent is in support of. However, before
the merits and points
in limine
are considered, it is
imperative that the issue of the collateral challenge be first
determined as it can be dispositive of the
application.
[12]
Before doing so, it is apposite that a brief background of this
matter is set out, the facts,
of which, are mostly common cause
and/or indisputable.
THE
FACTUAL MATRIX
[13]
This application has its genesis in the corruption and malfeasance
alleged to have been perpetrated
by VBS Mutual Bank ("VBS"),
a mutual bank registered in terms of the Mutual Banks Act.
[4]
[14]
It is common cause that the Second Applicant had entered into a
referral agreement with VBS in
terms of which the Second Applicant
would obtain a commission on every deposit made by clients referred
to VBS by the Second Applicant.
During the subsistence of the
referral agreement, the Second Applicant referred several clients to
VBS for investment purposes
subject to a commission, such clients
included municipalities.
[15]
VBS later experienced a liquidity problem which resulted in it being
placed under curatorship
by the First Respondent. SizweNtsalubaGobodo
Advisory Services, represented by Mr Anoosh Rooplal, was appointed as
the curator
to VBS. Consequent upon the initial findings of the
curator, which revealed massive losses to VBS, the Deputy Governor of
the Reserve
Bank appointed an investigator, Adv Terry Motau SC (“Adv
Motau”), for the purposes of investigating the affairs of VBS.
Adv Motau’s investigation led to the compilation and
publication of a report titled "VBS Mutual Bank — The
great
bank heist” (“the Report”). The
investigation revealed a wide range of criminality in the conduct of
the
affairs of VBS which involved a number of persons and entities.
The Report recommended that all those who have been identified as
participating and benefiting from the so called "criminal
enterprise" in VBS, be charged and prosecuted.
[16]
During such investigation, the First Applicant, as the sole director
of the Second Applicant,
was interviewed and questioned about his and
the Second Applicant's involvement in VBS. The First Applicant's
involvement in VBS's
operations was set out in great detail in the
Report, and the First Applicant was also found to be one of the
persons who participated
and benefited from the criminality revealed
in the Report.
[17]
Pursuant to the Report’s recommendations, the First Applicant
was indicted along with thirteen
(13) others. The First Applicant is
cited as Accused ten (10) in e indictment. There are approximately
thirty-three (33) charges
levelled against the First Applicant. He
is, both personally and as the directing mind of the Second
Applicant, confronted with
a criminal indictment
[5]
based on corruption, racketeering and money laundering for having
allegedly received gratuitous payments in the amount of R35 million,
in contravention of various sections of the Prevention of Organised
Crime Act (“POCA”).
[6]
The other prescripts set out in the indictment include the Mutual
Banks Act, the MFMA, the
Municipal Investment Regulations, and
the
Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act (“PRECCA”).
[7]
Various accused are also charged with contravening PRECCA, whilst
others are charged with the common law offences of Theft and
Fraud.
[18]
The criminal proceedings are currently before the High Court of this
Division, and were initially
case managed by De Vos J, and are
presently case managed by the Deputy Judge President of this
Division, and several pre-trial
hearings are said to have already
taken place.
[19]
Confronted with a criminal indictment based on the aforesaid charges,
the First Applicant, both
personally and as the directing mind of the
Second Applicant, launches this application belatedly seeking to
challenge the validity
of Regulation 6(c), which was promulgated more
than seventeen (17) years ago.
[8]
THE
COLLATERAL CHALLENGE
[20]
In challenging the validity and legality of Regulation 6(c), in this
application, the Applicants
raises a collateral challenge to the
validity of the charges against the First Applicant, which, they
allege are in whole or in
part reliant upon the validity of
Regulation 6(c). The Applicants claim that the determination of the
collateral challenge by this
Court, will determine whether the
charges against the First Applicant, insofar as they are dependent
upon the validity of Regulation
6(c), are valid.
[21]
The Applicants submit that a collateral challenge does not constitute
review proceedings in terms
of PAJA, where a Court would have a
discretion whether or not to consider the challenge. They argue that
in a collateral challenge,
a Court is duty bound to rule on the
legality of Regulation 6(c), as the collateral challenge would
determine whether or not the
charges against the First Applicant,
insofar as they are dependent upon the validity of Regulation 6(c),
are valid charges.
[22]
The Applicants contend that the First Applicant is entitled to raise
a collateral challenge to
the legality of Regulation 6(c) due to the
presence of the served action, in the form of criminal proceedings,
against him. They
contend that the said criminal proceedings are
based
inter
alia
on the validity of Regulation 6(c), and hence, the First Applicant
has, correctly, approached Court in the manner he did –
by
means of a collateral challenge. In support of this contention,
the Applicants relied on the judgment in
Oudekraal
Estate (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
.
[9]
[23]
The Applicants submit, further, that the First Applicant raised the
collateral challenge at the
appropriate forum (being this Court) and
did not have to do so in the Criminal Court. In this regard, they
referred to the Supreme
Court of Appeal judgment in
Kouga
Municipality v Bellingan and Others
,
[10]
wherein, that Court held that a collateral challenge need not be
brought in the criminal proceedings [dealing with the charge]
but
could be brought in civil proceedings because Civil Courts [are]
“
better
versed in administrative law than a specialist Criminal Court
".
[11]
[24]
The Applicants, furthermore, contend that the criminal proceeding
against the First Applicant
are predicated on Regulation 6(c) in
that, the gist of the counts is that the First Applicant accepted
gratifications sounding
in money from Accused 1, 2 and 3 to solicit
deposits into VBS from a number of municipalities, in contravention
of the MFMA. The
said contraventions of the MFMA as referred to in
the various counts, relate to the alleged contravention of Regulation
6(c), which
preclude investment into a Mutual Bank such as VBS.
[25]
The First Respondent and the Third Respondent are attacking the
Applicants’ collateral
challenge on different grounds. The
First Respondent founds its challenge to the collateral defence on
the ground that there is
no collateral challenge in these proceedings
and in turn, that impacts on the Applicants, and in particular, the
First Applicant’s
locus standi
.
[26]
As regards the First Respondent's argument that the First Applicant
has no standing to challenge
the impugned regulation, the Applicants
contend that the First Applicant's standing to challenge the
regulation emanates from the
fact that some of the charges which have
been levelled against him are premised on the contravention of
regulation 6(c).
The contention is that, it stands to reason
that should the regulation be set aside, those charges cannot, to the
extent that they
are dependent on the contravention of Regulation
6(c), be sustained.
[27]
To the contrary, the First Respondent denies that the First Applicant
has made out a case for
a collateral challenge defence and argues
that on that basis alone, this application should not be
countenanced. The contention
is that the First Applicant, does
not meet the criteria required for a collateral defence and has as a
result, failed to establish
a collateral challenge defence, and
therefore, lacks
locus standi
, to bring these proceedings.
[28]
It is contended that, a collateral challenge may only be used if the
right remedy is sought by
the right person in the right proceedings,
and the First Applicant is not the right person, this application is
not the right proceedings,
and the challenge to the impugned
regulation is not the right remedy.
[12]
Hence, the First Applicant lacks
locus
standi,
as the attack on the impugned regulation does not comply with a
collateral challenge defence.
[29]
The First Respondent argues, further, that the impugned regulation
does not apply to the First
Applicant. The contention is that since
the impugned regulation states that a municipality may invest funds
only in investment
type deposits with banks registered in terms of
the Banks Act, it applies to municipalities, not the First
Applicant. The
First Applicant, as is argued, is not in a
position of a municipality being coerced directly or indirectly in
terms of the impugned
regulation, and the relief sought has no effect
whatsoever on the charges in the indictment.
[30]
Conversely, the Third Respondent challenges the Applicants’
claim on the ground that the
criminal charges against the First
Applicant are not premised on the provisions of Regulation 6(c).
It denies, specifically
that the charges against the First Applicant
are based on the validity of Regulation 6(c), and its determination.
[31]
The contention is that the First Applicant's reliance upon the
General Preamble on reaching the
conclusion that the charges are
based on the impugned regulation, cannot be sustained on the evidence
proffered in the Applicants’
papers. According to the Third
Respondent, the various prescripts comprising legislation and
policies that govern the conduct of
Municipalities in their practises
relating to the investment of funds of Municipalities, referred
to in the General Preamble
to the indictments, should be interpreted
and understood within the context of each individual charge preferred
against each Accused,
and in this instance, the First Applicant.
[32]
In reinforcing its argument that the charges against the First
Applicant are not predicated on
Regulation 6(c), the Third Respondent
makes the following arguments:
32.1
In the first place, the Third Respondent contends that although the
ambit of POCA as set out in the General Preamble
to the indictments,
aims to introduce measures to combat organised crime, money
laundering and criminal gang activities and to
prohibit certain
activities relating to racketeering, amongst others, it, also,
applies to individual wrongdoers like the First
Applicant. In
support of this argument, the Third Respondent refers to a decision
of the Supreme Court of Appeal where it
was held that the purpose of
the Prevention of Organised Crime Act is not only to combat the
special evils that are associated
with organised crime but that its
provisions are designed to reach far beyond organised crime and apply
also to cases of individual
wrongdoing.
32.2
Secondly, the Third Respondent argues, that in respect of the
‘enterprise', the State alleges that Accused 1 to
14 were
associated in fact and formed an enterprise as defined in section 1
of POCA and as envisaged in sections 2(1)(a) to 2(1)(f),
thereof. The
argument being that the Accused made use of various legally
registered entities to provide continuity of structure
for the
unlawful activities. These accounts, according to the Third
Respondent, were all under the control of various accused persons.
All Accused associated themselves with the enterprise. Members of the
enterprise gained overall control of the financial systems
of VBS,
thereby enriching themselves and their associates through theft of
money from the general pool of funds in VBS. The acts
of theft of
money were covered up by various fraudulent and money laundering
activities. Furthermore, members of the enterprise
received and made
corrupt payments.
32.3
Lastly, the Third Respondent argues that whilst the First Applicant
is charged with all the other accused, in terms of
POCA, it appears
clearly from the indictment that he furthered the enterprise's
affairs as set out in the predicate offences in
Counts 29, 54, 56,
58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72, 74, 76, 78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90,
92, 94, 96, 98, 100, 102, 104, 106, 108,
110, 112, 114, 185 and 186.
These predicate offences are instances where the First Applicant,
whether on his own or with others,
is charged for contravening
section 3(a) read with sections 1, 2, 24 and 26 of PRECCA and for
money laundering. A successful prosecution
in respect of the
predicate offences is not reliant on a conviction in the racketeering
offences.
[33]
The crux of the Third Respondent’s argument is that the
Applicants misconstrue the nature
of the charges as set out in the
counts referred to above. According to the Third Respondent, neither
the corruption charges nor
the money laundering charges, which form
the bulk of the charges against the First Applicant, are dependent on
the validity or
otherwise of Regulation 6(c). The nub of the charges,
is that the First Applicant received monies derived from fictitious
credits,
as gratification for soliciting investments from
Municipalities and to pay gratifications to other persons to
influence them to
deposit municipal funds into VBS. These charges
stand alone and the elements of each of these charges is clearly
defined and are
not predicated upon the provisions of the
Municipal
Investment Regulations. The
offences in particular, consist of the
receiving of monies and the paying of it to third parties, to
influence them to do or not
to do, certain things.
Legislative Authority
[34]
The
Municipal Investment Regulations provide
the legal framework
within which municipalities can invest funds. The impugned
regulation, in particular, sets out permitted investments
that
municipalities may invest money not immediately required. The
impugned regulation specifies that a municipality or municipal
entity
may invest funds only in deposits with banks registered in terms of
the Banks Act.
Discussion
[35]
It is trite that a collateral challenge to an administrative act is
available to a person where
he is threatened by a public authority
with coercive action precisely because the legal force of the
coercive action will most
often depend upon the legal validity of the
administrative act in question.
[13]
[36]
A collateral challenge would be raised where a person who is charged
with an offence, challenges
the validity of an administrative action
or a law on which the charge is based.
[14]
[37]
The Supreme Court of Appeal dealt succinctly with the question of
collateral challenge in its
judgment in
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
,
[15]
whereat that Court decided how to act if an administrative act is
invalid. That Court held that,
“
But
just as some consequences might be dependent for validity upon the
mere factual existence of the contested administrative act,
so there
might be consequences that will depend for their legal force upon the
substantive validity of the act in question. When
construed against
the background of principles underlying the rule of law a statute
will generally not be interpreted to mean that
a subject is compelled
to perform or refrain from performing an act in the absence of a
lawful basis for that compulsion.
It
is in those cases - where the subject is sought to be coerced by a
public authority into compliance with an unlawful administrative
act
- that the subject may be entitled to ignore the unlawful act with
impunity and justify his conduct by raising what has come
to be known
as a “defensive” or a “collateral” challenge
to the validity of the administrative act
”.
[16]
[38]
That Court went further to express itself as follows in paragraph 35
and 36 of that judgment
–
“
It
will generally avail a person to mount a collateral challenge to the
validity of an administrative act where he is threatened
by a public
authority with coercive action precisely because the legal force of
the coercive action will most often depend upon
the legal validity of
the administrative act in question. A collateral challenge to the
validity of the administrative act will
be available, in other words,
only ‘if the right remedy is sought by the right person in the
right proceedings’. Whether
or not it is the right remedy
in any particular proceedings will be determined by the proper
construction of the relevant statutory
instrument in the context of
principles of the rule of law.
It
is important to bear in mind (and in this regard we respectfully
differ from the court a quo) that in those cases in which
the
validity of an administrative act may be challenged collaterally a
court has no discretion to allow or disallow the raising
of that
defence: the right to challenge the validity of an administrative act
collaterally arises because the validity of the administrative
act
constitutes the essential prerequisite for the legal force of the
action that follows and ex hypothesi the subject
may not
then be precluded from challenging its validity. On the other
hand, a court that is asked to set aside an invalid
administrative
act in proceedings for judicial review has a discretion whether to
grant or to withhold the remedy. It is that
discretion that
accords to judicial review its essential and pivotal role in
administrative law, for it constitutes the indispensable
moderating
tool for avoiding or minimizing injustice when legality and certainty
collide. Each remedy thus has its separate application
to its
appropriate circumstances and they ought not to be seen as
interchangeable manifestations of a single remedy that arises
whenever an administrative act is invalid.
”
(Footnotes
excluded)
[39]
The question, in the current proceedings, is whether the First
Applicant is entitled to raise
a collateral challenge.
[40]
In answer to the question it is apposite to refer to two principles
that were crystallised in
the Supreme Court of Appeal judgment in
Kouga
Municipality v Bellingan and Others
,
[17]
namely;
40.1
The first principle is that criminal cases based on, amongst others,
legislation, a by-law in that case, would constitute
a coercive
action. In the finding of that Court, it is the enforcement of that
impugned legislation (by-law) that forms the substance
of a
substantial component of criminal charges against the Accused person.
40.2
The second principle is that a person facing such criminal charges,
is entitled to launch his collateral challenge in
civil proceedings,
that is, a separate collateral challenge in the High Court. This is
so because the High Court is the custodian
of legality, such a
custodian, as the High Court, is better suited to dealing with this
type of matter than a Criminal Court.
[18]
[41]
Emanating from the two principles, it is common cause that the First
Applicant is in the right
forum, in that he has approached the High
Court for relief. What remains in dispute is whether the First
Applicant is the
right person to approach the High Court as he did.
Although, it is common cause that the First Applicant is facing
criminal
charges, there are two questions that ought to be answered
in determining whether, in the circumstances of these proceedings,
the
First Applicant is the right person to approach this Court for a
collateral challenge,
to wit
;
41.1
The first question is whether Regulation 6(c) is applicable to the
First Applicant, that is, whether Regulation 6(c)
constitutes a
coercive action as against the First Applicant.
41.
2 The second question is whether such charges are based on Regulation
6(c), that is, whether the impugned regulation forms the
substance of
a substantial component of criminal charges against the First
Applicant.
Whether Regulation
6(c) is applicable to the First Applicant
[42]
The First Respondent’s challenge to the Applicants’
collateral defence that the First
Applicant is not the right person
for such collateral challenge, is based on two grounds, namely that:
The First Applicant does
not meet the criteria required for a
collateral challenge; and, that Regulation 6(c) does not constitute a
coercive action against
the First Applicant.
Does
the First Applicant meet the criteria required for a collateral
challenge?
[43]
From the reading of the passages referred to in paragraph [38] of
this judgment, it is quite
clear that a collateral challenge is
available only if the right remedy is sought by the right person in
the right proceedings.
Is the First Applicant the right person in the
right proceedings?
[44]
Regulation 6(c) states that a municipality may invest funds only in
investment type deposits
with banks registered in terms of the Banks
Act. The Regulation, in this sense, applies only to municipalities,
it specifically
states that ‘a municipality may invest funds’.
In addition, Regulation 2 of the Municipal Investment Regulations
(“Regulation 2”), provides that these regulations (the
Municipal Investment Regulations) apply
to (a) all the
municipalities; (b) all municipal entities; (c) all investment
managers acting on behalf of, or assisting, a municipality
or
municipal entity in making or managing investments.
[45]
Regulation 2
confirms that all the Regulations contained in the
Municipal Investment Regulations, are
applicable only to
municipalities and municipal entities. At the very least, the
Regulations apply, also, to investment managers
acting on behalf of,
or assisting, a municipality or municipal entity in making or
managing investments. It does not apply to third
parties, as the
Applicants are arguing, least of all, a person in the position of the
First Applicant. It is evident from the reading
of the Regulations
that the First Applicant is not in a position of a municipality, a
municipal entity or an investment manager
of a municipality or
municipal entity – he is not even an official of a
municipality.
[46]
The
Municipal Investment Regulations are
specific as to their
application. It is, thus, on that basis that this Court has to rule
that the
Municipal Investment Regulations, and
by extension
Regulation 6(c)
, apply only to municipalities or municipal entities.
They do not apply to other persons or entities outside the municipal
structure,
like the First Applicant.
Does
Regulation 6(c) constitute a coercive action against the First
Applicant?
[47]
According to the First Respondent, the general thread that runs
through case law is that a collateral
challenge may be allowed where
an element of coercion exists. The term “coercion”,
according to the First Respondent,
includes both direct and indirect
coercion. A form of compulsion must exist to prevent a person from
exercising their free will
to do or refrain from doing something.
This submission is, in this Court’s view, correct.
[48]
It is trite that a collateral challenge is raised as a defence to the
validity of an administrative
act when threatened by a public
authority with coercive action. This is precisely so because the
legal force of the coercive action
will depend upon the legal
validity of the administrative act in question.
[49]
The Applicants contend that the criminal charges levelled against the
First Applicant constitute
coercive action that gives rise to the
right to raise a collateral challenge. In support of this argument,
counsel for the Applicants
referred to the judgment in
Kouga
Municipality v Bellingan and Others
,
[19]
whereat, the breach of a by-law relating to the hours of trading of
liquor outlets in that municipality, was at issue.
The
municipality had sought to prosecute the Applicants therein under the
said by-law. The Applicants brought a direct review application
in
terms of PAJA to declare the by-law invalid. The Court
a
quo
declared the by-law invalid by, applying section 172(1)(b) of the
Constitution, and suspended the invalidity for a certain period
to
afford the municipality the opportunity to rectify matters. On
appeal, it was pointed out, that there was no bar to the respondents
being prosecuted during the period of suspension and that Court held,
as a result, that the substance of the relief sought by the
Applicants in that matter was a collateral challenge. The Court
remarked that –
“
The
problems associated with the relief sought by the applicants in their
notice of motion and the order granted by the court a
quo would be
avoided if a declaratory order were to be granted that the by-law in
question is invalid for the purposes of a prosecution
of any of them
based thereon. A collateral challenge to the validity of a piece of
legislation can be mounted at any time and a
court has no discretion
to disallow such a challenge
”
[20]
[50]
In the opinion of this Court, the referral by the Applicants to the
judgment in
Kouga Municipality,
in support of their submission
that the charges against the First Applicant constitute coercive
action that gives rise to the collateral
challenge raised by the
First Applicant, is misconceived.
[51]
The two matters, in this Court’s view, are distinguishable, in
that, in
Kouga
Municipality
, the by-law to which the
collateral challenge was raised, was directed at the Applicants as
the persons who were facing criminal
charges, whereas in the current
matter, the impugned regulation is not directed at the First
Applicant, as the person who is facing
criminal charges.
[52]
In the matter before this Court, the legal force of the impugned
regulation does not threaten
the First Applicant with coercive
action. There is no compulsion that is required from the First
Applicant, rather the coercive
action in Regulation 6(c) is directed
to the municipalities, and not the First Applicant. The impugned
regulation does not say
that the First Applicant must do or not do
anything. There is nothing expected from the First Respondent.
[53]
The submission by the First Respondent that a collateral challenge
cannot be a defence where
evidence is needed to substantiate the
claim or where the claimant will not suffer any direct prejudice as a
result of the alleged
invalidity, is in this Court’s view,
valid.
[54]
Consequently, it is this Court’s finding that the First
Applicant is not the right person
in these proceedings, as envisaged
in Regulation 6(c). It is quite evident that in terms of Regulation
6(c) the First Applicant
is not a person who is threatened with
coercive action, but the municipality is. The limitation of
Regulation 6(c) is directed
at a municipality or municipal entity or
an investment manager of a municipality or municipal entity. There is
no evidence on record,
none could be proffered, to the effect that
the First Respondent will suffer any prejudice if the impugned
regulation is not declared
invalid. This, is so, because as earlier
stated, the coercive action envisaged by Regulation 6(c) is not
directed at the First
Respondent.
Whether
the Charges are premised on Regulation 6(c)
[55]
The Applicants proposition is that the charges are based on
Regulation 6(c) whereas both the
First Respondent and the Third
Respondent contend that the charges are not predicated on the
impugned regulation.
[56]
In trying to persuade this Court that Regulation 6(c) forms the
substratum of the charges against
the First Respondent, the
Applicants contend that the inflow of funds into VBS indicate that
the charges relate to Regulation 6(c).
The Applicants’ attempt
to establish that the flow of funds into VBS is an indication that
the charges are predicated on
Regulation 6(c), by arguing that it is
stated, amongst others, in the General Preamble of the indictments,
that Regulation 6(c)
specifies that a municipality may deposit funds
with the banks registered in terms of the Banks Act. As such, the
contention is
that, the position of VBS and municipalities and the
flow of funds into VBS, and the alleged conflict with Regulation
6(c), is
what is part of what is laid at the door of the First
Applicant as Accused ten (10). This the Applicants reinforce by
referring
to paragraph 30 of the indictment where it is stated that:
Accused ten (10) [the First Applicant], 11, 12, 13 and 14 were part
of the solicitation of deposits by various municipalities into VBS
and influenced various municipal officials to make such investments
and reinvestments.
[57]
This Court is convinced by the argument of the Third Respondent in
response to the above submissions
of the Applicants. Indeed, in the
General Indictment, reference is not made only to Regulation 6(c).
There are a number of other
legislations, including Regulation 6(c)
and the policies referred to in the General Preamble of the
indictments, that are referred
to, and, as the Third Respondent says,
they should be read and understood as constituting the backdrop and
the context in which
the charges are formulated.
[58]
In their argument, the Applicants refer to indictment 56 as an
example to show that the charge
is based on the flow of funds
or
reinvestment
that was procured through the First Applicant, of a municipal
investment into VBS. The submission is that as far as
the First
Applicant is concerned, Regulation 6(c) is relevant to the influx of
money into VBS, and indictment 56 confirms the allegation
that where
the money comes from municipalities, it would be in conflict with
Regulation 6(c).
[59]
The First Respondent, correctly so, disputes the Applicants’
argument and contends that
challenging the impugned regulation by
collateral challenge does not assist the First Applicant, because the
charges against him,
are formulated in terms of POCA and the
Corruption Act. The sting of the case lies there, together with the
factual averments in
support of the Regulation’s language. The
Regulation stated in the General Preamble, to which the Applicants
seek to rely
on, is argued to be simply referred to as part of the
broader charges, but it is not a charge in itself.
[60]
This Court, in addition to the First Respondent’s above
submission, is, also, persuaded
by the argument of the Third
Respondent to the effect that the Applicants misconstrues the nature
of the charges as set out in
the indictment. The Third Respondent is
correct in saying that neither the corruption charges nor the money
laundering charges,
which form the bulk of the charges against the
First Applicant, are dependent on the validity or otherwise of
Regulation 6(c).
[61]
The nub of the charges, as correctly argued by the Third Respondent,
is that the Applicant received
monies derived from fictitious
credits, as gratification for soliciting investments from
Municipalities and to pay gratifications
to other persons to
influence them to deposit municipal funds into VBS. These charges
stand alone and the elements of each of these
charges are clearly
defined, and are not predicated upon the provisions of the
Municipal
Investment Regulations, in
general and specifically,
Regulation 6(c).
The offences in particular, consist of the receiving of monies and
the paying of it to third parties, to influence them to do or
not to
do, certain things, it does not have anything to do with the inflow
of money into VBS, as argued by the Applicants.
[62]
The Applicants in opposing the Third Respondent on this point, argue
that factually, the charges
related to the First Respondent deal in
the main with the procurement of investment into VBS, and that is a
Regulation 6(c)
issue. The contention is that the charges as set out
in the indictment, whether under the POCA provisions or under the
Corruption
Act, it would be unlawful activities, and that being the
case, it is contended that although in the indictment Regulation 6(c)
is not repeated again, but the preamble tells that money cannot be
invested with a Mutual Bank by the municipality and from that
flows
the charges under POCA and under the Corruption Act. The submission
is, therefore, that the Applicants’ case has been
properly made
out.
[63]
The Applicants’ submission that the charges under POCA and the
Corruption Act flows from
the fact that Regulation 6(c) is mentioned
in the General Preamble to the indictment, is without merit. In order
for the charges
to be premised on Regulation 6(c), it must be
mentioned, as an element, in each of the charges the First Applicant
is facing. A
charge is made up of certain elements and for the First
Applicant to be found guilty of any of the charges all the elements
of
each charge must be alleged and proved. Regulation 6(c) is not an
element of any of the charges levelled at the First Applicant.
[65]
For instance, charge 56, which the Applicants used as an example of
the alleged flow of money
into VBS, is the correct example, which
shows that the charge(s) is not premised on Regulation 6(c). The
charge is couched as follows
in the indictment:
“
COUNT
56: (ONLY IN RESPECT OF ACCUSED 10)
Contravening
Section 3(a) read with
Sections 1
,
2
,
24
,
25
and
26
of the
Prevention
and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act, No. 12 of 2004
, as amended.
IN
THAT upon or about 17 November 2016 and at or near Midstream in the
Ekurhuleni North Magisterial District and or Midrand in the
Johannesburg North Magisterial District, Accused 10 unlawfully and
intentionally, directly or indirectly, accepted or agreed or
offered
to accept a gratification, to wit the amount of R483 333, from
another person, to wit Accused 1, Accused 2 and Accused
3, whether
for the benefit of Accused 10 or for the benefit of another person in
order to act, personally or by influencing another
person so act in a
manner that amounts to the illegal, dishonest, unauthorised,
incomplete, or biased exercise, carrying out or
performance of any
powers, duties or functions arising out of a statutory, contractual
or any other legal obligation, to wit the
solicitation of a
reinvestment in the cumulative amount of R200 000 000 in VBS by the
Vhembe District Municipality on or about
15 November 2016 in
contravention of the provisions of the Municipal Finance Management
Act, 56 of 2003 and the making of corrupt
payments to various
municipal officials, both known and unknown to the State, in order to
obtain such deposits of monies into VBS.
”
[65]
Incidentally, the flow of money into VBS has nothing to do with the
charges which the First Applicant
is facing. The flow of money into
VBS, if any, was occasioned by the municipalities when they invested
or reinvested funds into
VBS. This was not done by the First
Applicant. As argued by the Third Respondent, the charges are that
the First Applicant received
monies and paid third parties, to
influence them to do or not to do, certain things in order to get the
municipalities to invest
or reinvest funds into VBS. It is the
municipalities who are proscribed from investing funds in Mutual
Banks, not the First Applicant.
Regulation 6(c) does not prohibit the
First Applicant from referring clients to VBS to invest their monies.
CONCLUSION
[66]
In this Court’s view, the First Respondent and the Third
Respondent are correct in their
respective submissions that there is
no collateral challenge raised in these proceedings. The Court in
Oudekraal
,
[21]
held that the right to challenge the validity of an administrative
act collaterally, arises because the validity of the administrative
act constitutes the essential prerequisite for the legal force of the
action. This was also confirmed in the judgment in
Kouga
Municipality
,
where the Court held that it is the enforcement of that impugned
regulation that forms the substance of a substantial component
of
criminal charges against the Applicant (Accused).
[67]
The Applicants have failed to prove, on a balance of probabilities,
that the defence of collateral
challenge is apposite in the
circumstances of these proceedings. Thus, the point of lack of
standing has been established. It means
that the First Applicant had
no standing to bring this application, in the first place.
There is, thus, no need for this
Court to proceed with the remaining
issues raised in the application.
[68]
It follows, also, that the application was launched out of the
prescribed time period without
any condonation. It was said that the
Second Applicant has a direct interest in the collateral challenge.
His condonation application
was, as a result, tied to the First
Applicant succeeding in his collateral challenge. As it is, the
collateral challenge
has not succeeded, the condonation application
of the Second Applicant falls also to be dismissed. This Court
cannot, thus entertain
the application which now falls to be
dismissed.
COSTS
[69]
Due to the importance and complexity of the proceedings, all the
parties had employed two counsel
– one senior and one junior.
The parties have all requested to be granted costs inclusive of costs
consequent upon the employment
of two counsel in the event of
succeeding in their respective cases.
[70]
The First Respondent and the Third Respondent are the successful
parties and are, therefore,
entitled to be awarded the costs of the
application inclusive of costs of two counsel – one senior and
one junior.
[71]
The First Respondent prays for the dismissal of the relief sought in
the notice of motion with
costs. The First Respondent submits
that in the event the application is dismissed, a cost order will be
appropriate since
no constitutional question were raised in the
application.
[72]
The Applicants argue that this application raises constitutional
questions and that in the event
they are not successful in their case
they should, on the
Biowatch
principle,
[22]
not be mulcted
with costs.
[73]
This Court is not convinced that there are constitutional issues in
these proceedings. The Applicants
in their papers make allegations in
terms of sections 22 and 35 of the Constitution, without any facts
substantiating those allegations
as to how the Applicants are to be
impacted by the said sections. In this Court’s view the
argument by the Applicants for
costs, not to be awarded against them,
was made in passing, without any facts in support of such an
application. As such, this
Court has to rule that the successful
parties are entitled to their costs.
THE
ORDER
[74]
Consequently, the following order is made:
1.
The condonation application is dismissed.
2.
The application is dismissed.
3.
The First Applicant and the Second Applicant are ordered, jointly and
severally, to pay the
costs of the application to the First
Respondent and the Second Respondent.
E.M
KUBUSHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by
e-mail.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 01 NOVEMBER
2022.
APPEARANCES
:
APPLICANTS’
COUNSEL:
ADV. E LABUSCHAGNE SC
ADV.
V MABUZA
APPLICANTS’
ATTORNEYS:
MALUKS ATTORNEYS
FIRST
RESPONDENT’S COUNSEL: ADV.
MOKOENA
SC
ADV.
N MAYET
FIRST
RESPONDENT’S ATTORNEYS: STATE
ATTORNEY
THIRD
RESPONDENT’S COUNSEL: ADV.
PD HEMRAJ
SC
ADV.
GP SELEKA
THIRD
RESPONDENT’S ATTORNEYS: STATE
ATTORNEY
[1]
Act
No 94 of 1990.
[2]
Act No 53 of 2003.
[3]
Act No 3 of 2000.
[4]
Act
No 124 of 1993.
[5]
The
counts which relate to the First Applicant, and which are relevant
to this application are: Counts 29, 55, 56, 58, 60, 62,
64, 66, 68,
70, 72, 74, 76, 78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90, 92, 94, 96, 98, 100,
102, 104, 106, 108, 110, 112, 114 and 115.
[6]
Act No
121
of 1998.
[7]
Act No
12
of 2004.
[8]
The
First Respondent, acting with the concurrence of the Second
Respondent, promulgated the Investment Regulations which was
published and became effective on 1 April 2005.
[9]
2004
(6) SA 222 (SCA).
[10]
2012
(2) SA 95 (SCA).
[11]
Ibid para 19.
[12]
In this regard, the Applicants referred to
Wade
Administrative Law 6 ed 331, as cited in
Metal
and Electrical Workers Union of South Africa v National Panasonic Co
(Parow Factory)
1991 2 SA 527
(C) 530C-D and National Industrial
Council for the Iron, Steel, Engineering & Metallurgical
Industry v Photocircuit SA (Pty)
Ltd
1993 2 SA 245
(C) at 253E-F.
[13]
Oudekraal
Estate (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others 2004 (6) SA 222
(SCA).
[14]
See
Kouga
Municipality v Bellingan and Others
2012 (2) SA 95
(SCA).
[15]
[2004] 3 All SA 1 (SCA).
[16]
Para 32
[17]
2012 (2) SA 95 (SCA).
[18]
Para 19.
[19]
2012
(2) SA 95
(SCA)
.
[20]
Ibid para 18. 12
[21]
Para 36.
[22]
The
Biowatch
principle provides that even when parties litigating against state
parties lose a case, they are generally spared an adverse
costs
award, provided the case was of genuine constitutional import. See
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC).
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