Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 157South Africa
Saleh v South African Reserve Bank and Another (1843/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 157 (2 January 2024)
Headnotes
at First Rand Bank Limited and ABSA Bank Limited, respectively, had been forfeited to the State and would be disposed of by deposit to the National Reserve Fund.[2]
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Saleh v South African Reserve Bank and Another (1843/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 157 (2 January 2024)
Saleh v South African Reserve Bank and Another (1843/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 157 (2 January 2024)
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sino date 2 January 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
[REPORTABLE]
Case
Number: 1843/2022
In the matter between:
GAMAL
ABDEL WAHAB E MOSELHY SALEH
Plaintiff
And
SOUTH
AFRICAN RESERVE
BANK
First Defendant
MINISTER
OF
FINANCE
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
Andrews AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an opposed interlocutory application instituted
by the First Defendant who raises
an exception against the
Plaintiff’s Particulars of Claim on the basis that it lacks the
necessary averments to sustain a
cause of action.
Background
Facts
[2]
The
Plaintiff received a Forfeiture Notice from the First Defendant
(“SARB”) dated 03 August 2022, in terms of Regulation
22B
of the Exchange Control Regulations of 1961 (“ECR”).
[1]
The Plaintiff was advised in terms of the copy “Staatskoerant”
attached thereto, dated 2 August 2022, that amounts
of R1 011 862.59
and R77 431.92 held at First Rand Bank Limited and ABSA Bank
Limited, respectively, had been
forfeited to the State and
would be disposed of by deposit to the National Reserve Fund.
[2]
[3]
On or about 28 October 2022 the Plaintiff instituted
action against the Defendants. According
to the Particulars of
Claim, the Plaintiff alleged that the decision as set out in
paragraph 2 above, individually and collectively
is wrongful and
unlawful, and in violation of Plaintiff’s proprietary and/or
other rights to the monies forfeited to the
State. Additionally, it
is averred that in accordance with ECR 22D(b), the impugned
decision(s) fall to be set aside on grounds
set out in section
9(2)(d)(i) and/or (iii) of the Currency Exchanges Act, 1933.
[4]
In further amplification, the Plaintiff averred that the
decision to freeze Plaintiff’s
bank accounts, and
subsequently declare funds forfeited to the State is
premised on the wrong allegation and/or erroneous
belief, and/or
suspicion that Plaintiff trading as G A W E M, contravened the
provisions of the Exchange Control requirements in
that he is alleged
to have, in and during the period 24 November 2014 to 16 February
2016, made advance payments in excess of R1m
to foreign suppliers in
respect of which goods to the value of approximately R74 000.00
was, in turn, not cleared through
Customs and/or not within the
period prescribed by law. The advance payments, according to the
Plaintiff was made by Jamal and
Brothers CC, a juristic entity
separate and distinct from Plaintiff, which entity has no rights or
claims to any of the monies
declared forfeited to the State. The
Plaintiff furthermore alleged that it cannot, as a matter of fact
and/or in law be held liable
under the ECR for any violation thereof
which may have been committed by Jamal Brothers CC.
[5]
The Plaintiff is seeking the following relief against
the First and/or Second Defendant
as amended include the following:
(a)
An order under Exchange Control Regulation 22D(b) setting aside the
decision to declare Plaintiff’s monies forfeited
to the State;
(b)
An order directing First Defendant to repay to Plaintiff the
aggregate sum of R1 089 294.51 plus interest at
the
prescribed legal rate
a tempora morae
to date of payment, both
days included. And/or, an order directing the First Defendant to take
all necessary steps to recover the
aforementioned sum of
R1 089 294.51 plus interest from the National Revenue Fund
under the administrative control and/or
authority of the Second
Defendant;
(c)
Costs of suit on Attorney-client scale if this action is defended;
(d)
Such further and/or alternative relief as this Court deems fit.
Grounds
of Exception
[6]
The First
Defendant takes exception to the Plaintiff’s Particulars of
Claim on the grounds that it lacks the necessary averments
to sustain
a cause of action. The grounds of exception are set out in the
Notice of Exception can be abridged as follows:
[3]
(a)
The Plaintiff has failed to describe GAWEM properly or at all, and
cited the incorrect registration number for Jamal and
Brothers
Fashions CC, the incorrect number being 2006/025108/23.
(b)
The Particulars of Claim lack a cause of action because in terms of
section 22A of the ECR, the Treasury may attach any
money or goods
which are reasonably suspected to constitute a contravention,
or which money or goods would not have been
obtained had there not
been a contravention, or by any person who has benefited or been
enriched as a result of such contravention,
or in possession of any
person.
(c)
The Plaintiff is the sole member of Jamal and Brothers Fashions CC.
The attempt by the Plaintiff to rely on the separate
juristic
personality of Jamal and Brothers Fashions CC is bad in law because
the ECR extend beyond the person suspected of the
contravention to
include those who benefitted from the contravention or those who are
in possession of the funds.
[7]
The relief sought by the Excipient include that:
(a)
The First Defendant’s exception(s) is/are upheld;
(b)
The Plaintiff’s claim is dismissed;
(c)
Further and/or alternative relief; and
(d)
Costs of the exception on the scale as between attorney and client.
Plaintiff’s
grounds of opposition
[8]
The salient grounds upon which Plaintiff submitted that
the exception falls to be dismissed
include
inter alia
that
the:
(a)
exception fails to comply with Rule 23(3) in that the notice does not
“clearly and concisely” state the grounds
on which the
Particulars of Claim is excipiable;
(b)
causes of action as pleaded are recognised in law and
(c)
exception taken is bad in law on the merits.
Issues
for determination
[9]
The issues for determination can be summarised as
follows:
(a)
Whether there has been compliance with Rule 23(3);
(b)
Whether the Excipient is permitted to anchor its exception on points
of law and
(c)
Whether the Particulars of Claim make the necessary averments to
sustain the Plaintiff’s causes of action?
Legal
Principles
[10]
The
test for an exception is firmly established in our law. It is trite
that exceptions are raised in an attempt to avoid the leading
of
unnecessary evidence at the hearing of the action.
[4]
An overview of the applicable general principles distilled from case
law is succinctly set out in
Living
Hands (Pty) Ltd NO and Another v Ditz and Others
[5]
,
where Makgoka J, encapsulated the general principles applicable to
exceptions.
‘
[15]
Before I consider the exceptions, an overview of the applicable
general principles distilled from case law is necessary:
(a)
In considering an exception that a pleading does not sustain a
cause of action, the court will accept, as true, the allegations
pleaded by the plaintiff to assess whether they disclose a cause of
action.
(b)
The object of an exception is not to embarrass one’s opponent
or to take advantage of a technical flaw, but to dispose
of the case
or a portion thereof in an expeditious manner, or to protect oneself
against an embarrassment which is so serious as
to merit the costs
even of an exception
[6]
.
(c)
The purpose of an exception is to raise a substantive question of law
which may have the effect of settling the dispute
between the
parties. If the exception is not taken for that purpose, an
excipient should make out a very clear case before
it would be
allowed to succeed.
[7]
(d)
An excipient who alleges that a summons does not disclose a cause of
action must establish that, upon any construction of the
particulars
of claim, no cause of action is disclosed.
[8]
(e)
An over-technical approach should be avoided because it destroys the
usefulness of the exception procedure, which is to weed
out cases
without legal merit.
[9]
(f)
Pleadings must be read as a whole and an exception cannot be taken to
a paragraph or a part of a pleading that is not
self-contained.
[10]
(g)
Minor blemishes and unradical embarrassments caused by a pleading can
and should be cured by further particulars.
[11]
’
Legal
Framework
[11]
Rule 23(3) states that:
‘
Whenever
an exception is taken to any pleading, the grounds upon which the
exception is founded shall be clearly and concisely stated’
[12] The
Plaintiff identified the subsequent shortcomings in the Notice of
Exception by the First Defendant:
[12]
:
(a)
No mention is made of the
facta probanda
to be pleaded for a
claim based on ECR 22D(b) read with ECR 22B, nor for a claim based on
unjust enrichment, in other words, the
Excipient failed to identify
what facts were not pleaded;
(b)
The Notice of Exception does not specify which essential factual
averments are lacking to sustain a claim based on ECR
22D(b) read
with ECR 22B, nor for a claim based on unjust enrichment, in other
words, that the Excipient failed to make the submission
that they
pleaded insufficient facts;
(c)
The Notice of Exception is essentially a restatement of what is
pleaded;
(d)
The Excipient failed to cite any authority that supports the
submission that the
facta probanda
and
facta probantia
is irrelevant;
(e)
The
Plaintiff highlighted that the grounds on which the Excipient roots
its Exception is based on points of law.
[13]
The Plaintiff contended that the Excipient was required to present a
factual challenge to the Particulars of Claim..
[13]
It was
argued that the non-compliance with the prescriptive provisions of
Rule 23(3) will be fatal to an exception unless condonation
is
applied for and granted. In this regard, it was contended that the
Excipient did not make any application for condonation as
envisaged
in
Evergrand
Trading (Pty) Ltd
[14]
.
[14] It
is trite that the Excipient is to specify why it avers that the facts
pleaded by the Plaintiff are
insufficient. The Excipient therefore
bears the onus to make out a clear case before it would be allowed to
succeed. In other words,
could the facts pleaded by the Plaintiff
result in a judgment being granted against the Defendant as
enunciated in
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Perry NO and Others
[15]
where the following was held:
‘
It
is trite that an exception that a cause of action is not disclosed by
a pleading cannot succeed unless it be shown that ex facie
the
allegations made by a Plaintiff and any other document upon which his
or her cause of action may be based, the claim is (not
may be) bad in
law. “An exception sets out why the excipient says that the
facts pleaded by a plaintiff are insufficient.
Only if the facts
pleaded by plaintiff could not, on any basis, as a matter of law,
result in a judgment being granted against
the cited defendant, can
an exception succeed. Only those facts alleged in the particulars of
claim and any other facts agreed
to by the parties can be taken into
account”.’
[15]
The Excipient, contended that its Exception was succinct and to the
point, and that the Plaintiff
ought to have filed an irregular step
notice, which was not done. It is trite that in terms of Rule 30 of
the Uniform Rules of
Court, a party to a cause in which any other
party has taken an irregular step may apply for the Court to set
aside such step.
The Excipient made this submission without having
raised it in the Notice of Exception. As a result, I consider it
unnecessary
to address this point in the course of this judgement.
[16]
The
question therefore to be answered is whether the Excipient has
explicitly and concisely stated the grounds upon which the exception
is founded. I am mindful that in matters where the exception is based
on an absence of a cause of action, the court is beholden
to deal
with the exception sensibly and reasonably, not in an over-technical
manner as set out in the guidelines formulated in
Number
Two Piggeries (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality In re: City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
v
Number Two Piggeries (Pty) Ltd
[16]
.
The
court is required to evaluate, whether upon reading of the pleadings
in its entirety the claim has been formulated in a manner
that
allows the Defendant to ascertain clearly what the case against it is
and should enable the Defendant to plead to it.
[17]
[17]
A
substantial portion of the Excipient's Notice of Exception seems to
be a paraphrased restatement of the key allegations found
in the
Plaintiff's Particulars of Claim, specifically paragraphs 4.1 to 4.5,
in order to support the claim that the Particulars
of Claim do not
contain the necessary averments to maintain a cause of action in
accordance with ECR 22D(b) read with ECR 22B.
[18]
The Excipient has framed the Notice in a manner that seeks to set out
the legislative framework of the ECR in an endeavour to illustrate
the basis for which it alleges that the Plaintiff’s claim lacks
a cause of action. It is manifest that upon a plain reading
of
paragraphs 4.2 and 4.4 of the Exception, that the interpretation of
the import and legal effect of Regulations 22A and 22C of
the ECR is
recorded as dealt with in paragraphs 4.1 and 4.3.
[18] The
authorities reaffirm the trite legal principle that interpretation of
statutes is a matter of law
and not fact, and as such that
responsibility rests with the courts to determine.
[19]
It is an established legal principle, that conclusions of law need
not be pleaded.
[20]
The
contents of paragraphs 4.2, 4.4 of the Exception and paragraph 4.5 of
the Exception which reads:
‘
The
attempt by the Plaintiff to rely on the separate juristic personality
of Jamal and Brothers Fashion CC is not only bad in law
because the
Exchange Control Regulations extend
beyond the person suspected of
the contravention to include those who benefitted from the
contravention, or those who are simply
in possession of the funds,
but also the plaintiff is the sole member of Jamal and Brothers
Fashion CC. A copy of a CIPC dated
6 December 2022 is attached marked
annexure “E1”.’,
viewed
in isolation, may appear to be non-compliant with the prescripts of
Rule 23(3)
, as secondary allegations are encapsulated in support,
which ordinarily ought to be matters for evidence as conclusions of
law
need not be pleaded. However, it is evident that these secondary
submissions are made, in my view, to carry the points of law upon
which the exception is grounded; which cannot be made in a vacuum as
will be demonstrated later in this judgment. This court is
cognizant
that pleadings must be read as a whole and that no paragraph is to be
read in isolation. Caution has been expressed regarding
an
excessively technical approach that renders the exception procedure
ineffective and should be avoided. The contextual framework
to
support the averment that the Plaintiff’s Claim lacks a cause
of action, appears to have informed the manner in which
the Excipient
has chosen to couch the Notice of Exception. However, the style
chosen by the Excipient, does not, in my view,
render the Notice of
Exception to be defective when applying the approach envisaged in the
guiding principles on exceptions.
[19]
It is
important to mention, however, that the Excipient seeks to reference
the CIPC printout that constitutes extraneous evidence,
which is not
envisaged in
Rule 23(3).
[21]
In my view, this annexure does not advance the case of the
Excipient for the purposes of the exception as the Court is to
have
regard to the pleadings as it stands. The said attachment is a matter
of evidence and may be introduced at a later stage.
It is trite that
where an exception is taken the court will look only to the pleadings
excepted as it stands and not to facts outside
those stated in
it.
[22]
Therefore, the
veracity of the allegations made in the impugned pleadings is to be
accepted. Put simply, the court is called upon
to adjudicate and
assess the facts as per the pleadings. Consequently, the CIPC
printout falls to be struck out and will
be ignored for the purposes
of this application.
[20]
It was argued that a different consideration is applied in respect of
an exception raised on a Plaintiff’s
Particulars of Claim
vis-a-vis
a Plea. Where a pleader raises a point of law that
can be destructive of the case then a special plea can be raised.
In
casu
no plea has yet been filed. The Plaintiff argued that the
door is effectively not closed on the Excipient if the objectionable
grounds
are sustainable, as recourse may be had by way of raising a
special plea, which could potentially be dipositive of the matter. If
the grounds are sustainable, then the recourse is to raise a plea or
a special plea.
[21]
Whilst it is so that a special plea may be raised, the question to be
answered at this stage
is whether Particulars of Claim, as it stands,
has been formulated in such a way as to enable the Excipient to plead
to it.
Introduction
of new grounds
[22]
It is a fundamental legal principle that deficiencies in the Notice
of Exception cannot be cured by
way of amplification at the hearing,
and neither can it raise any new ground of exception in its Heads of
Argument which was not
raised in its formal Notice of Exception. The
court is also precluded from evaluating the Heads of Argument in
regard to factual
admissions that are not supported by the pleadings.
It is furthermore trite, that the Excipient cannot expand its grounds
of exception
through submissions in Heads of Argument.
[23]
The Plaintiff argued that the Excipient introduced a new ground in
the Heads of Argument that
was not pleaded, extending it beyond the
realm of
Rule 23(3).
The Excipient in its Heads of Arguments make the
following submission:
‘
While
it is not conceded that the plaintiff did not partake in a
contravention of the Regulations, the plaintiff has in any event
not
pleaded that the money concerned was acquired by him bona fide for
reasonable consideration as a result of a transaction in
the ordinary
course of business’
[23]
[24]
The question to be answered is whether this point is contained in the
Notice of Exception or does it
extended beyond the realm of
Rule
23(3)
if regard is had to paragraph 4.2 of the Notice of Exception
wherein the following is stated:
‘
4.2
This means that an attachment can take place regardless of
wrongdoing by a specified person or entity and the mere possession of
the funds concerned
would
be sufficient where there is a reasonable
suspicion of a contravention
of the
Exchange Control Regulations,
just
as is the case at hand,
among other things (this is not a concession that
the plaintiff did not partake in the contravention of the
Exchange
Control
Regulations)…’
[24
]
[25]
It is apparent that the portion not contained in the Notice of
Exception is the following:
“
that
the money concerned was acquired by him bona fide for reasonable
consideration as a result of a transaction in the ordinary
course of
business”.
[25]
[26]
The pivotal consideration is whether this constitutes an expansion of
the grounds or should it be regarded
as an amplification of the
ground contained in para 4.2. In light of the conclusion to which I
have come, I am not persuaded that
this averment constitutes a new
ground, or expansion of the ground pleaded. Though it is trite that
grounds are to be concisely
set forth, I am of the view, that same
amounts to amplification as the Plaintiff alleges that he seeks
relief based on two causes
of action pleaded namely:
(a)
relief under the ECR; alternatively,
(b)
at common law based on unjustified enrichment which will be dealt
with later in this judgment.
[27]
The Plaintiff argued that the Excipient's reliance on the principle
of subsidiarity, which was introduced
in the Heads of Argument, is
not a recognised ground of exception. This contention extends beyond
the grounds of exception specified
in the Notice of Exception. The
Excipient explained that the subsidiarity principle was invoked
because of the submissions made
by Plaintiff in Heads of Argument
pertaining to unjust enrichment. The Excipient challenges the
Plaintiff’s alternative common
law claim in terms of the
principle of subsidiarity on the basis that if there is a legislative
or statutory remedy or mechanism
provided, a litigant cannot rely on
the common law remedy. It is the Excipient’s view, that the
Plaintiff is essentially
relying on this remedy on the premise that
if it is not successful with the statutory remedy, the court is
called upon to read
in that the Plaintiff has a common law remedy.
[28]
In
My
Vote Counts NPC v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
[26]
provides
guidelines on the court’s approach to the principle of
subsidiarity:
‘
The
principle of subsidiarity is a well-established doctrine within this
Court’s jurisprudence. The essence of the principle
was
captured by O’Regan J in Mazibuko, where she held that—
“
where
legislation has been enacted to give effect to a right, a litigant
should rely on that legislation in order to give effect
to the right
or alternatively challenge the legislation as being inconsistent with
the Constitution.”
[27]
[29]
The
judgment of
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs
[28]
as
referenced in an article ‘
Adjudicative
subsidiarity, the “horizontality simpliciter” approach
and personality rights: Outlining an integrated
and constitutional
reading strategy to the law of personality’,
endorses
the approach that ‘
expressly
enacted legislation “cannot be thoughtlessly circumvented”
to establish a cause of action in terms of the
common law or
customary law.’
[29]
[30]
As indicated previously, the Excipient is confined to the pleaded
grounds of exception as the substance
of the exception was amplified
in the Excipients Heads of Argument. The legal principle pertaining
to subsidiarity was not specifically
mentioned but could be implied
because the Excipient raises a point of law to support its contention
that no cause of action has
been pleaded. This court acknowledges
that the Excipient is required to provide clear and concise
justifications for exempting
particulars of claim, and that these
assertions should establish factual grounds. However, the Excipient
merely outlines the statutory
provisions that support the Excipient's
choice to publish the declaration of forfeiture. The law is clear
that where legislation
has been enacted to give effect to that right,
a litigant should rely on that legislation. This court is attentive
not to go outside
the legislative provisions upon which the Plaintiff
places reliance. It is trite that in dealing with an exception,
pleadings are
to be looked at as a whole. Therefore, I am of the view
that subsidiarity principle is a consideration to be ventilated at
the
trial, if regard is had to the legislative framework upon which
the Plaintiff places reliance read together with the quoted
authorities
on point.
[31]
Counsel for the Excipient argued in his address that the court should
contemplate the provision of
alternative relief. Counsel for the
Plaintiff argued that no alternative relief exists and that
alternative relief in the case
of an exception is not permitted in
law and is a deviation of the trite rules governing exceptions which
is to either to uphold
the exception on the grounds of no cause of
action or dismiss the exception and direct that the Defendant files
its plea.
[32]
It is trite
that an Excipient is obliged to confine his complaint to the stated
grounds of its exception.
[30]
The Excipient has to stand or fall by the Exception as formulated in
its notice filed.
[31]
In
applying the entrenched legal principles, I am not inclined to
consider any alternative relief that was not pleaded with particular
particularity, as the Excipient does not state what alternative
relief should or could be granted by the Court. Doing so would
be
contrary to the established legal principles regarding exceptions.
[33]
In addition, Counsel for the Plaintiff also challenged the submission
made on behalf of the Excipient
during argument that the Plaintiff
has not challenged the constitutionality of the Regulations. This
too, was not pleaded in the
Notice of Exception. Consequently, this
Court, will for the purposes of this judgment not deal with these
submissions as it was
not raised as a ground of exception in the
Notice of Exception.
[34]
It was
argued that the Plaintiff’s submission in its Heads of Argument
that “
[t]he
factual averment raised by First Defendant’s Counsel in her
heads at par 13 may be raised as a defence in a Plea, namely,
that
the money declared forfeited was not acquired bona fide”,
are
to be regarded as a concession of the taint.
[32]
The Plaintiff however contended that this is not an admission.
In this regard, the Plaintiff illuminated the wording in the
Particulars of Claim namely:
’
18.3
Plaintiff cannot, as a matter of fact and/or law, be
held liable under the
Exchange Control Regulations for
any violation
thereof which
may
(my
emphasis)
have
been committed by Jamal and Brothers CC’
[33]
[35]
It is prudent to reiterate that the court shall consider only the
pleadings excepted as it stands.
Heads of Argument are not pleadings.
In any event, it is not incumbent on the court dealing with an
exception to analyse any defences
raised.
The
Exchange Control Legislation
[36]
The
Constitutional Court in
South
African Reserve Bank and Another v Shuttleworth and Another
[34]
explains
the purpose and historic origin of the ECR. The matter of
Yan
Ling International Trade CC v South African Reserve Bank
[35]
is instructive with regards to the ECR. It is the Plaintiff’s
contention that an Exception cannot be looked at through the
lens of
the law. It is therefore apposite to consider the substance of
the exception within the context of the ECR as the
primary ground on
which the Excipient roots its exception is based on points of law.
[37]
It is trite
that the purposes of an exception is to raise a substantive question
of law which may have the effect of potentially
settling the dispute
between the parties.
[36]
The Court was referred to the relevant provisions encapsulated in
Section 9(1)
to
9
(2)(c)
[37]
;
9(2)(d)(i)(aa) to (cc) read with 9(2)(d)(iii)(aa) to (cc)
[38]
of the Currency Exchanges Act
[39]
,
as amended, to demonstrate that the Plaintiff can as a matter of law
be held liable by merely being in possession of the funds
which are
tainted. It was argued that even in instances where money is not
tainted, funds can be recuperated by way of attachment
of funds. The
Excipient submitted that it was incumbent upon the Plaintiff to make
the averment that the money is not tainted in
light of the fact that
the Plaintiff is challenging forfeiture. In amplification, the
Excipient submitted that it was peremptory
for the Plaintiff to have
done so because it is a requirement that flows from the ECR.
[38] The
Excipient further contended that the Plaintiff has failed to plead
that the money concerned was
acquired by him
bona fide
for
reasonable consideration as a result of a transaction in the ordinary
course of business as required in Section 9(2)(b)(i)(cc)
of the
Currency and Exchanges Act. Section 9(2)(d)(i)(aa) to (cc) read
with 9(2)(d)(iii) (aa) to (cc) of the Currency and
Exchanges Act sets
out the basis upon which an aggrieved person may challenge a
forfeiture notice.
[39]
The Plaintiff argued that Regulation 22D provides a remedy in the ECR
for a person aggrieved by the
attachment or forfeiture of funds and
challenges the forfeiture of the money on the basis of the provision
of Regulation 22D(d).
The Plaintiff argued that the minimum factual
requirements have been satisfied, and as such, he is entitled to the
relief specified
in Regulation 22D(b), which stipulates the
following:
‘
22D.
Review of, or institution of actions in connection with, attachment
and forfeiture of certain money or goods, and certain orders.
- Any person who feels himself aggrieved by the attachment of any
money or goods under paragraph (a) of regulation 22A (1) or the
issue
or making of an order under the provisions of paragraph (b) or (c) of
regulation 22A or sub-regulation (2) of regulation
22C or any
condition imposed thereunder may:
(a)
…
(b)
in the case or 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 ninety 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.’
[40]
The Excipient contended that the court should not be delayed by a
trial in the fullness of time
as there is no cause of action. It
would therefore be prudent to dissect the Particulars of Claim in
order to establish whether
a cause of action has been disclosed on
the law and whether the facts pleaded by the Plaintiff bear out the
law upon which reliance
are placed.
Has
a cause of action been disclosed?
[41]
The
primary ground of exception relied upon by the Excipient pertains to
the averment that the Particulars of Claim lack a cause
of
action.
[40]
The Plaintiff
submitted that the Particulars of Claim pleads two distinct causes of
action to sustain his claim for repayment of
R1 089 294.51.
The Excipient’s contention is that the facts as pleaded
in the Particulars of Claim is not
sufficient as it does not bear out
a cause of action in terms of the Regulations.
[42]
The
accepted legal principle is that a litigant is required to plead
material facts that are necessary to support his right to judgement.
The question remains whether all the
facta
probanda
have been pleaded. It is however, possible that pleading material
facts is inadequate to sustain a cause of action. Furthermore,
if a
litigant bases its cause of action on legislative provisions, it is
limited to relying on the mandatory prescripts of the
statute. Should
this be the case, would this preclude the Plaintiff from advocating
for an alternative common law remedy, as is
the situation
in
casu
,
thus requiring a deviation from the principle of subsidiarity?
[41]
[43]
It
is trite that a Defendant must know the case he needs to meet and
plead to it. If regard is had to the test on an exception this
court
is to determine whether on all possible readings of the facts, no
cause of action may be made out. It is trite, as previously
stated
that it is for the Excipient to satisfy the court that the conclusion
of law from which the Plaintiff contends cannot be
supported on every
interpretation that can be put upon the facts.
[42]
[44]
The matter
of
McKenzie
v Farmers’ Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
[43]
clearly defined meaning of a “
cause
of action”
.
‘…
every
fact which would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if
traversed, in order to support his right to judgment of the court.
It
does not comprise every piece of evidence which is necessary to prove
its fact, but every fact which is necessary to prove.’
[45]
It has been
said that a charitable test is used on exception, especially in
deciding whether a cause of action is established. The
pleader is
entitled to a benevolent interpretation.
[44]
Furthermore, the court should not look at a pleading “
with
a magnifying glass of too high power.’
”
[45]
Although the approach on exception should not be overly technical and
that regard is to be had to the pleadings, and should
be
read as a whole; it is pellucid that the claim should be formulated
in a way that allows the Defendant to ascertain clearly
what the case
against it is to enable the Defendant to plead on it as elucidated in
Number
Two Piggeries (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
In re: City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Number
Two
Piggeries (Pty) Ltd
[46]
.
[46]
The
Excipient contended that because Section 22A of the ECR permits
the Treasury to attach any money or goods which on reasonable
grounds
is suspected to constitute a contravention, or which money or goods
would have been obtained had there not been a contravention,
or by
any person who has benefited or been enriched as a result of such
contravention, or in possession of any person.
[47]
[47]
Additionally, the Excipient contended that an attachment, based on
the provisions of Section 22A of
the ECR, can take place regardless
of wrongdoing by a specified person or entity. The Excipient
submitted that it was incumbent
upon the Plaintiff to make the
averment that the money is not tainted in light of the fact that the
Plaintiff is challenging forfeiture,
which is a peremptory
requirement that flows from the ECR. This beggars the question as to
whether the absence of the averment
regarding the taint of the funds
renders the Plaintiff’s Particulars of Claim expiable.
[48]
The matter
of
Singh
v South African Reserve Bank
[48]
clarifies
situations in which SARB suspects that a person has contravened the
provisions of the Regulations. Regulations 22A and
22C of the ECR
permits the SARB to issue a so called “blocking order”
which prevents that person from withdrawing funds
from an impugned
bank account. The court explicated in
Singh
(supra)
that
Regulation 22A allows for the issue of a blocking order in respect of
funds tainted by the contravention, while Regulation
22C applies to a
blocking order in respect of funds which are as yet untainted:
‘
[16]
It is common cause that in terms of regulation 22A and/or regulation
22C the SARB is empowered to issue what is known as a
‘blocking
order’ in terms of which any person can be prohibited from
withdrawing or causing to be withdrawn any funds
standing to the
credit of that individual’s account. The decision to issue a
blocking order is issued where there are reasonable
grounds to
suspect that a person may have contravened the regulations. Further,
in terms of regulation 22B, the funds blocked may
be forfeited to the
State.
[17]
In terms of regulation 22A the SARB can issue a blocking order
relating to tainted funds and in terms of regulation 22C untainted
funds can be blocked.’
[49]
It follows
that the mere possession of funds would be sufficient where there is
a reasonable suspicion of a contravention of the
ECR. It is trite
that the ECR extend beyond the person suspected of the contravention
and includes those who benefited as well
as those who are in
possession of the funds. The matter of
Francis
George Hill Family Trust v SA Reserve Bank
[49]
is
instructive on this point where the court held:
‘
It
is apparent from the aforesaid provisions that the person in whose
possession monies are found need not himself have committed
any
contravention of the regulations 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 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 regulations.'
[50]
Money which are not tainted may be used to recuperate the difference
between funds attached and the
amount actually involved. It is
however apposite to note that this is not the facts of this case as
there was no decision by SARB
to recover a shortfall.
[51]
The
judicial relief being relied upon by the Plaintiff is based on
Regulation 22D(b) of the ECR. In amplification, it was illuminated
that the Plaintiff was informed of his right to institute such a
claim within 90 days as per MSG1 attached to the Particulars of
Claim
dated 3 August 2022.
[50]
The Plaintiff expressly pleaded reliance on Regulation 22D in the
Particulars of Claim wherein the following averment is made:
’
17.
In accordance with Exchange Control Regulation 22D(b), the impugned
decision(s)
fall to be set aside on grounds set
out in section 9(2)(d)(i) and/or (iii) of the Currency
Exchanges Act, 1933.’
[51]
[52] The
Plaintiff further submitted that the conclusion of law has also been
pleaded:
’
19.
In the premises, Plaintiff is entitled to judgment setting aside the
impugned decision(s) and
an order directing First and/or Second
Defendant to pay Plaintiff the sums forfeited to the State as per
paragraphs 2.1 and 2.2
of the Notice marked MGS1, together with
interest thereon at the prescribed legal rate as from the date on
which the funds concerned
are withdrawn from Plaintiff’s Absa
Bank and First National Bank respectively for purposes of payment to
the National Revenue
Fund.’
[52]
[53]
In
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank and Two Other Cases
[53]
it was stated:
‘
A
bare reference to a statute or set of regulations, without specifying
the particular section or regulation on which reliance is
placed or
the facts which enable the section or regulation to be identified
cannot in my view suffice, and that must be so whether
the statute or
regulation on which reliance is placed are the only facts relied upon
to fix the defendant with liability or whether
they are but one of
the factors to be considered in conjunction with any other facts on
which reliance is placed.’
[54]
[54] As
previously stated the Plaintiff has averred, that his claim is
predicated on Regulation 22D(b) and
that Regulation 22A as well as
Regulation 22C respectively are irrelevant in the context of this
matter. The Plaintiff submitted
that no reliance is placed or
pleaded on Regulation 22A and 22C respectively; and more particularly
the Plaintiff is not challenging
the blocking of the accounts.
Although the Plaintiff submitted that he does not challenge the
blocking of the funds, the relief
sought relates to the decision to
declare the Plaintiff’s monies forfeited and the repayment of
the funds which were forfeited.
[55]
The empowering provision is encapsulated in the Notice, namely
Regulation 22B made under Section 9
of the Currency and Exchanges
Act. The Plaintiff has placed reliance on Regulation 22B as is borne
out by the Particulars of Claim:
‘
5.
On or about 2 August 2022, the
First and/or Second Defendant, represented
by its
delegate, being the Deputy Governor of the First
Defendant, acting pursuant to powers granted by
the provisions of
Exchange Control Regulations 22B made
under
section 9
of the
Currency and Exchanges Act 9 of 1933
as amended,
published or caused to be published in Government Gazette No. 47181 a
general notice
and order of forfeiture
to the State if money owned by the Plaintiff.’
[56]
Regulation 22B
deals with the forfeiture and disposal of money or
goods in respect of which orders have been issued or made. The Notice
in the
Government Gazette clearly was issued by the Treasury in
keeping with
Regulation 22B
in respect of which the Plaintiff was
informed about the forfeiture to the state of the money referred to
in paragraph (a), (b)
or (c) of
Regulation 22A
(1). The Plaintiff, in
challenging the forfeiture, makes the averment that he was the
depositor of the funds and is entitled to
the benefits of ownership
of the funds and submitted that the decision was unlawful and in
violation of the Plaintiff’s proprietary
rights to the money
forfeited to the State.
[57]
The authorities are clear that a person can as a matter of law be
held liable under the Regulations,
by merely being in possession of
the funds which are tainted. It is furthermore manifest, in terms of
the Regulations, that money
can be attached even if a person is
innocent. The guiding principle which is of seminal importance is
that it is the money that
must be tainted, not just the hands in
which the money is held. Moreover, it is irrelevant whether the bank
accounts were in existence,
the Regulations permit funds from another
source to be attached.
[58]
In my view,
the Plaintiff’s reliance on
Regulation 22D
in isolation
is a narrow approach and fails to consider what was stated in
Trope
(supra
)
[55]
that a bare reference to a statute or set of regulations, without
specifying the particular section or regulation on which reliance
is
placed or the facts which enable the section or regulation to be
identified cannot suffice. Even if reliance is placed on
Regulation
22B
, no reference to the particular section or subsection is made. It
is evident that the provisions are interrelated and as such
Regulation 22B
deals with the Notice and also refers to the
provisions set out
inter
alia
in
Regulations 22A
(1)(a), (b) or (c);
Regulation 22C
(2) and (3). The
legislative provisions are not being challenged, only its
applicability.
[59]
To answer the question whether Particulars of Claim, as it stands,
has been sufficiently formulated
to enable the Excipient to plead to
it; I am therefore of the view that the facts as pleaded by the
Plaintiff do not bear out the
law as earlier demonstrated. This void
in the Particulars of Claim, in my view, cannot be regarded as a
minor blemish that can
be cured by Further Particulars as the pleader
is to plead with particular particularity.
[60]
I am therefore of the considered view that the Plaintiff has failed
to plead the necessary and essential
averments as required in the
Regulations to sustain a cause of action based on the legislative
provisions relied upon. The Plaintiff
has failed to deal with the
peremptory requirement that the money was acquired by the Plaintiff
for reasonable consideration as
a result of a transaction in the
ordinary course of business as envisaged in
Section 9(2)(b)(cc).
[61]
Even if I am wrong, the Plaintiff contended that the impugned
decision falls to be set aside on grounds set
out in
Section
9(2)(d)(i)
and/or (iii) of the
Currency and Exchanges Act, 1933
. It
is however evident that
Section 9(2)(d)(iii)
of the
Currency and
Exchanges Act stipulates
that “
the court
shall
not
set aside such decision unless it is satisfied –…
that the person who made such decision did not act in
accordance with the relevant provisions of the regulation or …that
such person did not have grounds to make such decisions
.
(my
emphasis)” The failure by the Plaintiff to make the peremptory
assertions when it is specifically pleaded that the impugned
decision
falls to be set aside on grounds set out in
Section 9(2)(d)(i)
and/or
(iii) of the
Currency and Exchanges Act as
pleaded, renders the
Plaintiff’s Particulars of Claim excipiable on this basis alone
as there has been non-compliance with
the statutory provision invoked
by the Plaintiff.
Alternative
Relief common law relief
[62]
The Plaintiff made the following averments in the Particulars
of Claim:
‘
13.
The action to which this Particulars of Claim relates and its
Combined
Summons is an “action
contemplated by Exchange Control Regulation
22D(b).
14.
…
15.
The decisions referred to in para 12 above, individually and
collectively, are wrongful
and unlawful, and in violation of
Plaintiff’s
proprietary
and/or other rights to the monies forfeited to the State.
16.
And/or alternatively, the decision to
declare Plaintiff’s monies
forfeited to the State and/or the forfeiture itself constitutes
unjust enrichment of the State by way of a deposit in the National
Revenue Fund at the expense of
the Plaintiff who is impoverished by reason
of the loss of the monies standing to his credit in the two bank
accounts mentioned in MGS1
at
paragraphs 2.1 and 2.2 in circumstances where the
State’s enrichment is unjustified in fact
and/or in
law.’
[56]
[63]
The Excipient contended that the Plaintiff has already approached the
Court with regards to the remedies
distilled in the
Exchange Control
Regulations and
has pinned its colours to the mast, proverbially
speaking, and as such cannot isolate paragraph 16 of the Particulars
of Claim,
as the claim is rooted in statutory enrichment to the
benefit of the Reserve Bank. Additionally, the Excipient contended
that the
alternative claim of unjust enrichment is merely an
afterthought intended to compensate r for the shortcomings on the
main action.
It is the Excipient’s contention that the
Plaintiff is creating an artificial distinction that there is a
common law claim.
[64]
The Plaintiff conceded that the express prayer for the alternative
relief is absent but submitted that
he is entitled to plead a claim
and amend his Particulars of Claim. Moreover, it was argued that
further and/or alternative relief
could be granted for the unjust
enrichment claim as an averment necessary for that claim was pleaded.
The
Plaintiff however mooted that it is not a ground, or basis for the
Excipient to contend that a cause of action was not pleaded.
The
Plaintiff argued in this regard that the applicable legal principle
is that a court is to accept all the facts pleaded as correct.
[57]
The Plaintiff contended that the Excipient has failed to identify all
the possible readings of the facts that there is no cause
of action
and as such, submitted that the Plaintiff is entitled to the unjust
enrichment claim upon which the Plaintiff’s
alternative claim
is rooted, which common law remedy is recognised in our law. It was
argued that it is for the trial court to
determine whether the
Plaintiff pleaded sufficient facts for unjust enrichment.
[65]
It is trite that a party stands or falls by what has been pleaded.
The matter of
Number Two Piggeries (supra)
deals with
the failure to plead an averment in the alternative:
‘
It
follows that averments in the pleading which are contradictory and
which are not pleaded in the alternative are patently vague
and
embarrassing; one can but be left guessing as to the actual meaning
(if any) conveyed by the pleading’
[58]
[66]
The Notice of Exception did not challenge the alternative claim for
unjust enrichment. It is pellucid
that there is no relief sought by
the Plaintiff in the alternative, despite the Plaintiff’s
amendment to its pleadings subsequent
to the filing by the excipient
of the Notice of Exception in December 2022. The Plaintiff has
conceded this deficiency in the pleadings.
It is apparent that this
deficiency in Plaintiff’s Particulars of Claim cannot be cured
by a simple averment that the forfeiture
itself constitutes unjust
enrichment of the State. More particularly, its claim does not seek
such relief.
[67]
Moreover, the earlier question posed namely, whether the Plaintiff
would be precluded from pleading
an alternative common law remedy
would culminate in a departure from the principle of subsidiarity,
and would be a matter for consideration
for the trial court as it
extends beyond the scope of this exception as was earlier mentioned.
Discussion
[68]
It
is trite is that an exception can be taken where pleadings are vague
and embarrassing or lacks averments which are necessary
to sustain an
action or defence.
[59]
The
failure to seek relief in the alternative renders the Particulars of
Claim excipiable on the basis that it is vague and embarrassing.
The
question to be answered is therefore whether this court could deal
with the ground of vagueness and embarrassing if it was
not
specifically pleaded, bearing in mind, as earlier mentioned that an
Excipient is obliged to confine his complaint to the stated
grounds
of its exception.
[69]
The
Excipient illuminated what it termed, as an obvious ambivalence or
contradiction in the Particulars of Claim where it is stated
that the
“
Plaintiff
is the depositor of the funds held in the two banking accounts…”
[60]
Plaintiff
goes on state that the “
Plaintiff
is entitled to the benefits of ownership of the funds held in the two
banking accounts…”
[61]
Later
the Plaintiff avers:
‘
The
advance payment(s) referred to by the First Defendant as disclosed to
Plaintiff during the investigation by First Defendant
and referred to
in para 18.1 above was not made by the Plaintiff but by Jamal
Brothers Fashions CC (registration no. 2006/002518/23),
a juristic
entity separate and distinct from Plaintiff, which entity has not
rights or claims to any of the monies declared forfeited
to the State
as per the Notice in MGS1’
[62]
[70]
The
Excipient submitted that the Plaintiff incorrectly avers that he
cannot as a matter of fact and/or law be held liable under
the ECR
for any violation which have been committed by Jamal and Brothers
CC.
[63]
The Plaintiff
contended that the Excipients reference to this being the high
watermark of the Excipient’s claim is dispelled
by the case
authorities relied upon by the Excipient as it can at best be
regarded as vague and embarrassing and not that there
is no cause of
action disclosed.
[64]
[71]
The Plaintiff conceded that there is indeed a problem with the
pleadings by virtue of the following
submission:
‘
Despite
the above, at best this court
may
opine that the absence of an express averment of the kind mentioned
in para 13 of the heads filed by First Defendant’s Counsel
renders the POC vague and embarrassing. However, since this is not a
ground raised in the exception, it is of no moment here.’
[65]
[72]
Although the court indicated that alternative relief would not be
considered which was not pleaded
with particular particularity, it is
apparent that there appears to be other deficiencies in the
Plaintiff’s Particulars
of Claim that may render the pleadings
as it stands to be vague and embarrassing. Ordinarily an exception
could be raised on the
grounds of it being vague and embarrassing.
This court cannot however consider these grounds as it does not form
the basis of the
exception
in casu
and is enjoined to deal
with the grounds of exception as pleaded. To do so would be
prejudicial and a misapplication of the legal
principles on
exception. The door has not been shut as there are other legal
remedies available to deal with the highlighted deficiencies.
Conclusion
[73]
It is pellucid that the Plaintiff had to bear out a cause of action
in terms of the Regulations as
relief is sought in terms of ECR. This
court is mindful that the defences raised is not to be evaluated at
the stage of an exception.
The overarching consideration ultimately
is whether Particulars of Claim, as it stands, has been formulated in
such a way as to
enable the Excipient to plead to it.
[74]
The exception is distilled in the referenced legislation which are
interrelated and sufficiently supported
by case law as demonstrated
earlier in this judgment. As such, it is manifest that the facts as
pleaded by the Plaintiff does not
align with the applicable law.
Regard is to be had to the purport, object and entire context within
which the Plaintiff has pleaded.
Therefore, in considering the
pleadings in its entirety I am not persuaded that the Particulars of
Claim contains the averments
necessary to sustain his cause of action
under ECR 22D(b) read with ECR 22B and
Section 9(2)(d)(i)
and (iii)
as is it currently pleaded
.
In the circumstances, on a plain
reading of the law, I am not satisfied that the Plaintiff has
disclosed a cause of action on the
law as the Particulars of Claim as
it stands, has not be formulated in such a way as to enable the
Excipient to plead to it insofar
as the main relief is concerned.
[75]
I pause here to mention that this court is mindful that the purpose
of an exception is to weed
out matters without legal merit. The
merits or demerits of this matter cannot be considered at the stage
of exception and I make
no findings in this regard, based on the
pleadings as it stands.
[76]
Furthermore, I am of the view that a dismissal of the action
at this stage would be premature
with concomitant far-reaching
consequences. There appears to be a number of issues that require
thorough ventilation in a trial
in due course. This view is
furthermore predicated on the relief sought as it is currently
framed, which includes the setting aside
of the decision to declare
funds forfeited, the publication of the forfeiture and the
publication of such declaration as envisaged
by ECR 22D(b), which is
interwoven with the second prayer for the recovery of the funds which
is under the administrative control
and/or authority of the Second
Defendant. Moreover, it is for the trial court to decide whether the
common law alternative relief
for unjust enrichment is sustainable
and/or whether the expressly enacted legislative or statutory remedy
or mechanism provided
may be circumvented to establish a cause of
action in terms of the common law.
[77]
The onus rests on the Excipient to show that the pleading is
excipiable on every possible
interpretation that can reasonably be
attached to it. I am satisfied that the Excipient has
discharged the onus. I am therefore
satisfied that the exception
falls to be upheld on the main relief sought.
Costs
[78]
The Excipient contended that costs on an attorney and
client scale is warranted as SARB
had to incur significant costs in
defending a matter where the Plaintiff failed to have regard to the
ECR, the Currency Exchanges
Act and the jurisprudence in this regard.
It was argued that SARB has been significantly prejudiced.
[79]
Ordinarily, costs follow the result. It is trite
that the matter of costs remains
in the unfettered discretion of the
court. In the exercise of my discretion, I am not inclined to grant
costs on a higher scale.
Order
[80]
In the result, the Court, after hearing the submission
on behalf of the respective parties
and having considered the
documents filed on record makes the following orders:
(a)
The exception is upheld with costs.
________________________
P
ANDREWS
Acting Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Western
Cape Division, Cape Town
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for the
Plaintiff:
Prof. Fareed Moosa
Instructed
by:
Moosa & Pearson Inc.
Counsel for the First
Defendant:
Advocate T Govender
Instructed
by:
Macrobert Incorporated
Heard
on
01
November 2023
Delivered
02 January 2024 – This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email.
[1]
Index: Annexure “MGS 1”, page 12,
‘
Notice
and Order of Forfeiture in terms of the provision of
Regulation 22B
of the
Exchange Control Regulations, 1961
…
In
compliance with the provisions of Exchange Control Regulation 22B
(3)(b), kindly find attached hereto a copy of the Notice
and Order
of Forfeiture (Notice No. 1193 of 2022), published in Government
Gazette number 47181 on 2022-08-02.
Kindly
note that in terms of the Exchange Control Regulation 22D, any
person who feels aggrieved by a decision under Exchange
Control
Regulation 22B to forfeit monies to the State, may, at any time, but
not later than 90 days from the date of the publication
of the
Notice and Order of Forfeiture in question, institute an action in a
competent court for the setting aside of such decision.’
[2]
Index: Staatskoerant, 2 Augustus, No. 47181, pages 13 - 14.
‘
Notice
and Order of Forfeiture
Notice
of Forfeiture to the State of money in terms of the provisions of
Exchange Control Regulation 22B made under
Section 9
of the
Currency
and Exchanges Act, 1933
…in respect of:
Mr
Gamal Abdel Wahab El. Moselhy Saleh
…
.
of:
…
Be
pleased to take notice that:
1.
The Minister of Finance has, by virtue of the provisions of
Exchange Control Regulation 22E delegated all the functions and/or
powers conferred upon the Treasury by the provisions of the
Exchange
Control Regulations [with
the exception of the functions and/or
powers conferred upon the Treasury by Exchange Control Regulations
3(5) and (8), 20 and
22 but which exception does not include the
functions and/or powers under
Exchange Control Regulations
22A, 22B
, 22C and 22D], and assigned the duties imposed thereunder
on the Treasury, to, inter alia, the Governor or the Deputy Governor
of the South African Reserve Bank.
2.
By virtue of the functions, powers and/or duties vested in
me, in my capacity as the Deputy Governor of the South African
Reserve
Bank, in terms of the delegation and assignment of the
functions, powers and/or duties referred to in 1 above, I hereby
give
notice of a decision to forfeit to the State the following
money and I hereby declare and forfeit to the State the following
money, namely:
2.1
the amount of R1 011 862.59 being capital standing
to the credit of Mr Gamal Abdel Wahab El. Moselhy Saleh, in account
number…, held with FirstRand Bank Limited, together with any
interest thereon and/or other accrual thereto.
2.2
The amount of R77 431.92 being capital standing to the
credit of Mr Gamal Abdel Wahab El. Moselhy Saleh, in account
number…,
held with Absa Bank Limited, together with any
interest thereon and/or other accrual thereto.
3.
The date upon which the money specified in 2 above is hereby
forfeited to the State is the date upon which this Notice of
Forfeiture
is published in this Gazette.
4.
The money specified in 2 above shall be disposed of by
deposit to the National Revenue Fund.
5.
This Notice also constitute a written order, as contemplated
in Exchange Control Regulation 22B, in term of which the money
specified
in 2 above is hereby forfeited to the State… ’
[2]
[3]
Excipient’s Heads of Argument, para 10, pages 8 – 9.
[4]
Number
Two Piggeries (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
In re: City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v
Number Two
Piggeries (Pty) Ltd
(2081/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 274 (21 April 2022)
‘
[6]
The law pertaining to exceptions is trite. The aim of exception
procedures
is to avoid the leading of
unnecessary evidence
and to dispose of a case wholly or in part in
an expeditious and cost effective manner…’
[5]
(42728/2012) [2012] ZAGPJHC 218;
2013 (2) SA 368
(GSJ) (11 September
2012) at para 15; See also
Merb
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Matthews
2021
ZAGP JHC 693 (16 November 2021), at para 8;
Number
Two Piggeries (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
In re: City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v
Number Two
Piggeries (Pty) Ltd
(2081/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 274 (21 April 2022) paras 6 – 12
[6]
Barclays
Bank International Ltd v African Diamond Exporters (Pty) Ltd
(2)
1976 (1) SA 100 (W).
[7]
Van
der Westhuizen v Le Roux
1947
(3) SA 385
(C) at 390.
[8]
Fairoaks
Investments Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Oliver
[2008] ZASCA 41
;
2008 (4) SA 302
(SCA) at para
[12]
.
[9]
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) at para 3 where Harms JA distils the general
approach to exceptions as follows:
‘
Exceptions
should be dealt with sensibly. They provide a useful mechanism to
weed out cases without legal merit. An over-technical
approach
destroys their utility. To borrow the imagery employed by Miller J,
the response to an exception should be like a sword
that cuts
through the tissue of which the exception is compounded and exposes
its vulnerability.’
See also
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
, Second Edition (Juta), D1-294 [SERVICE
4, 2017],
H v Fetal Assessment Centre
2015 (2) SA 193
at
1998B.
[10]
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998 (1) SA 836
(W) at 902 J.
[11]
Jowell
(supra) at 900 J; See also
Purdon
v Muller
1961
(2) SA 211
(A) at 214 e – 215.
[12]
Index: First Defendant’s Exception, paras 1 - 3, pages 20 -
21.
[13]
Index: First Defendant’s Exception, para 4, pages 21 - 23.
[14]
(54068/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 739 (3 October 2022) para 57.
[15]
[2001] 3 All SA 331
para 6.
[16]
(2081/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 274 (21 April 2022), para 12 ‘
If
the exception is based on an absence of a cause of action the court
should deal with the exception sensibly and not in an over-technical
manner. Although one should not be overly technical and read the
pleading as a whole the claim should be formulated in a way
that
allows the defendant to ascertain clearly what the case against it
is and should enable the defendant to plead to it.’
[17]
Number
Two Piggeries (Pty) Ltd (supra)
at para 12.
[18]
Index: Exception, pages 20 – 23.
[19]
KPMG
Chartered Accountants (SA) v Securefin Ltd and Another
2009
(4) SA 399
(SCA) para 39.
[20]
The approach to an exception was considered by McCreath J in the
decision of
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank
192 (3)
SA
208(T) at 211, which was cited with approval by Heher J in the
decision of
Jowell
v Bramwell Jones and Others
1998
(1) SA 836
(W), where the court laid out the following general
principles regarding exceptions:
"(a)
minor blemishes are irrelevant;
(b)
pleadings must be read as a whole; no paragraph can be read in
isolation;
(c)
a distinction must be drawn between the facta probanda, or primary
factual allegations which every plaintiff must make, and
the facta
probantia, which are the secondary allegations upon which the
plaintiff will rely in support of his primary factual
allegations.
Generally speaking, the latter are matters for particulars for trial
and even then are limited. For the rest, they
are matters for
evidence;
(d)
only facts need be pleaded; conclusions of law need not be pleaded;
(e)
bound up with the last-mentioned consideration is that certain
allegations expressly made may
carry with them. implied allegations and the pleading must be so
read: cf Coronation Brick (Pty) Ltd v
Strachan Construction Co (Pty) ltd
1982 (4) SA 37
1 (D) at 377,
3798. 3790- -H.' at
9021 – 9030
"
[21]
Index, CIPC, Annexure “E1”, page 26.
[22]
In
Baliso
v FirstRand Bank Ltd t/a Wesbank
[22],
it was held that ‘
[w]here
an exception is taken a court looks only to
the pleadings excepted to as it
stands, not to facts outside those
stated in it’.
[23]
First Defendant’s / Excipient’s Heads of Argument, para
13, page 13.
[24]
Index: First Defendant’s Exception, para 4.2. page 22.
[25]
Excipient’s Heads of Argument, para 13.
[26]
(CCT121/14)
[2015] ZACC 31
(30 September 2015) at para
[27]
Mazibuko
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2009] ZACC 28
;
2010 (4) SA 1
(CC);
2010 (3) BCLR 239
(CC) at para
73. See also
Mbatha
v University of Zululand
[2013] ZACC 43
; (2014) 35 ILJ 349 (CC);
2014 (2) BCLR 123
(CC),
where Jafta J stated:
“
[W]here
legislation has been passed to give effect to a right in the Bill of
Rights, a litigant is not permitted to rely directly
on the
Constitution for its cause of action.”
[28]
2004 7 BCLR 687 (CC).
[29]
Visser
CJ ‘
Adjudicative
subsidiarity, the “horizontality simpliciter” approach
and personality rights: Outlining an integrated
and constitutional
reading strategy to the law of personality’
2022
De Jure Law Journal, pages 129 – 130:
‘
Building
upon the first substantive proposition, the second substantive
proposition, as originating from the judgment of
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) v Minister of Environmental Affairs, develops
this line of reasoning further by determining that such
expressly
enacted legislation “cannot be thoughtlessly circumvented”
to establish a cause of action in terms of the
common law or
customary law’
[30]
TSI
Communications CC v Omega M Projects
(2022/13169)[2023]ZAGPJHC
1081 (27 September 2023) at para 7.
[31]
Inkin v
Borehole Drillers
1949
(2) SA 366
(A) at 373;
Alphina
Investments Ltd v Blacher
2008
(5) SA 479
(C) at 483D;
TSI
Communications CC and Omega M Projects
(Case
no. 13169/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC (27 September 2023) para 7 ‘
The
trite principle of our law is that an excipient is obliged to
confine his complaint to the stated grounds of his exception.’.
[32]
Plaintiff’s Heads of Argument, para 65, page 15.
[33]
Index: Particulars of Claim, para 18.3, page 9.
[34]
2015 (5) SA 146
(CC) at paras 53 – 54.
[1]
‘
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.
[2]
This dominant purpose may also be gleaned from the
uncontested evidence of the then Director-General of Treasury, Mr
Kganyago.
He explained that the 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 currency 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).’
[35]
[2023] ZAGPPHC 79 (13 February 2023) at paras 3 -5.
‘
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”).
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”.
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.’
[36]
Van
der Westhuizen v Le Roux
1947
(3) SA 385
(C) at 390; see also
Merb
(Pty) Ltd v Matthews (supra
),
where Mairer-Frawley quoted with approval from Makgoka J’s
decision in
Living
Hands (supra) as follows:
‘
8…(c)
The purpose of an exception is to raise a substantive question of
law which may have the effect of settling the dispute
between the
parties. If the exception is not taken for that purpose, an
excipient should make out a very clear case before
it would be
allowed to succeed...art
[37]
‘
(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 good
have been transformed by any person, and –
…
(cc)
by which the offender, suspected offender or any other
person has been benefitted 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 with 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 authorise
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.’
[38]
‘
(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.’
[39]
Act
9 of 1933.
[40]
Index: First Defendant’s Exception, para 5, page 23.
[41]
Uniform Rule
18(4)
provides
:
“Every pleading shall contain a clear and concise statement of
the material facts upon which the pleader relies for his
claim,
defence or answer to any pleading, as the case may be, with
sufficient particularity to enable the opposite party to reply
thereto.” ;
See
also,
Alphedie
Investments (Pty)Ltd v Greentops (Pty)Ltd
1975 (1) SA 161
(T) at 161H;
McKenzie
v Farmers’ Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922 AD 16
at 23;
Evins
v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
1980 (2) SA 814
(A) at 838E-F.
[42]
Theunissen
v Transvaalse Lewende Hawe Koop Beperk
1988
(2) SA 493
(A);
Lewis
v Oneanate (Pty) Ltd and Another
[1992] ZASCA 174
;
1992 (4) SA 811
(A) at 817;
TSI
Communications CC v Omega M Projects
(2022/13169)[2023]ZAGPJHC
1081 (27 September 2023) at paras 3 – 4;
H
v Fetal Assessment Centre
2015
(2) SA 93
(CC) at 199B
‘
The
test on an exception is whether, on all possible readings of the
facts, no cause of action may be made out. It is for the
excipient
to satisfy the court that the conclusion of law from which the
plaintiff contends cannot be supported on every interpretation
that
can be put upon the facts.’
[43]
McKenzie
v Farmers’ Co-operative Meat Industries Ltd
1922
AD 16
at 23
.
[44]
First
National Bank Southern Africa v Perry NO and Others (supra)
at 972 I – J;
Britz
v Coetzee
1967 (3) SA 570
(T) at 571A-B ‘
While
the court should endeavour to look benevolently instead of
over-critically at a pleading, it should, however, not push that
benevolence to the length of upholding a summons, which as it stands
discloses no cause of action, by altering its language,
by reading
into it what is not there, and ignoring what is, and by thus making
for the plaintiff a cause of action which he has
not himself put
up.’
[45]
Kahn
v Stuart and Others
1942 CPD 386
at 391.
[46]
See fn 1
Number
Two Piggeries (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
In re: City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v
Number Two
Piggeries (Pty) Ltd (ibid),
para
12.
[47]
Section 22A states as follows:
‘
Attachment
of certain money and goods, and blocking of certain accounts. –
(1) Subject to the provisions of the proviso to
sub-paragraph (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;
(ii)
any money or goods, notwithstanding the person in whose
possession it is –
(aa)
which the Treasury on reasonable grounds suspects to be involved in
a contravention
of any provision of
these regulations or in a failure to comply with any such provision,
or which the Treasury on reasonable grounds suspects to be
involved in any act or
omission which the Treasury so suspects to constitute a
contravention of any such
provision or a failure to comply with any such provision;
(bb)
which have been obtained by any
person or are due to him, whether
by virtue of
any
personal right or otherwise, and which would not
have been obtained
by him or would not have been due to him if any such contravention
or failure or any such act
or
omission had not been committed;
(cc)
by which any person
has been benefited or enriched as a result of any
such
contravention or failure or any such act or omission,
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 held
in
credit in that account, and shall, in the case of money attached,
deposit such money in an account referred to in subparagraph
(i),
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;
(iii)
any money or goods, notwithstanding the person in whose
possession it may be, into which money or goods referred to in
subparagraph
(i) or (ii) have been transformed, including any
personal right obtained with money or goods referred to in
subparagraph (i)
or (ii), or, in the case of such money or any part
thereof which has been deposited into any account, an equal amount
of money
which is held in credit in that account and shall, in the
case of money attached, deposit such money in an account referred to
in subparagraph (i), 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 concerned 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;
(iv)
any money which is held in a blocked account referred to in
regulation 4 and which the Treasury on reasonable grounds suspects
to be money –
(aa)
in respect of which a
contravention or act or omission referred to in
subparagraph (i) has been committed;
(bb)
which has been involved
in a contravention or failure or act or
omission referred to in subparagraph (ii)(aa);
(cc)
which has been
obtained by any person or is due to him as referred
to in subparagraph (ii)(bb);
(dd)
by which any person has
been benefited or enriched as referred to in
subparagraph (ii)(cc);
(b)
if the Treasury on reasonable grounds suspects that money
referred to in paragraph (a) has been deposited in any account and
if
it has not been attached under the said paragraph (a), issue or
make an order in such manner as it may deem fit in or by - 24 -
which any person is prohibited to withdraw or cause to be withdrawn,
without the permission of the Treasury and in accordance
with such
conditions (if any) as may be imposed by the Treasury, any money in
that account or not more than an amount determined
by the Treasury,
or to appropriate in any manner any credit or balance in that
account, notwithstanding who may be the holder
thereof;
(c)
in the case of goods referred to in paragraph (a) which have
been left in the possession of the person concerned, issue or make
an order in such manner as it may deem fit in or by which any person
is prohibited to deal, without the permission of the Treasury
and in
accordance with such conditions (if any) as may be imposed by the
Treasury, in any manner determined by the Treasury with
the goods
attached or any part thereof.
[48]
[2023]
ZAGPPHC 112; 2020/35964 (20 February 2023).
[49]
1990 (3) SA 704
at pages 710G – H, read with 711D.
[50]
Index: Exception, page 12.
[51]
Index: Particulars of Claim, para 17, page 8.
[52]
Index: Particulars of Claim, para 19, page 10.
[53]
1992 (3) SA 208 (T).
[54]
Page 211E-G.
[55]
At para 9.
[56]
Index: Exception, Particulars of Claim, paras 13, 15 – 16,
page 8.
[57]
Merb
(Pty) Ltd v Matthews
2021
ZAGPJHC 693 (16 November 2021), para 8 ‘…
(a)
In considering an exception that a pleading does not sustain a cause
of action, the court will accept, as true, the allegations
pleaded
by the plaintiff to assess whether they disclose a cause of
action…’.
[58]
At para 8
[59]
Rule
23 of Uniform Rules of Court, See also
Children’s
Resource Centre Trust and Others v Pioneer Food Pty Ltd and Others
2013 (2) SA 213
(SCA) at para 36.
[60]
Index: Exception Paragraph 9 of the Plaintiff’s Particulars of
Claim, page 7.
[61]
Index: Exception Paragraph 10 of the Plaintiff’s Particulars
of Claim, page 7.
[62]
Index: Particulars of Claim, paras 18.1 – 18.3. page 9.
[63]
Index: Exception, Particulars of Claim, para 18.3, page 9.
[64]
Number
Two Piggeries (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
In re: City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v
Number Two
Piggeries (Pty) Ltd (ibid)
para
8:
‘
In
Trope v South African Reserve Bank the following was said about an
exception relying on the allegation that the
pleading
was vague and embarrassing:
“
An
exception to a pleading on the ground that it is vague and
embarrassing involves a two-fold consideration. The first is whether
the pleading lacks particularity to the extent that it is vague. The
second is whether the vagueness causes embarrassment of
such a
nature that the excipient is prejudiced (Quinlan v MacGregor
1960
(4) SA 383
(D) at 393 E – H). As to whether there is
prejudice, the ability of the excipient to produce an
exception-proof plea is
not the only, nor indeed the most important,
test – see the remarks of Conradie J in Levitan v Newhaven
Holiday Enterprises
CC
1991 (2) SA 297
(C) at 298G – H. If
that were the only test, the object of pleadings to enable parties
to come to trial prepared to meet
each other’s case and not to
be taken by surprise may well be defeated. Thus, it may be possible
to plead to particulars
of claim which can be read in any one of a
number of ways by simply denying the allegations made; likewise, to
a pleading which
leaves one guessing as to its actual meaning. Yet
there can be no doubt that such a pleading is excipiable as being
vague and
embarrassing – see Parow Lands (Pty) Ltd v Schneider
1952 (1) SA 150
(SWA) at 152F – G and the authorities there
cited. It follows that averments in the pleading which are
contradictory, and
which are not pleaded in the alternative are
patently vague and embarrassing; one can but be left guessing as to
the actual meaning
(if any) conveyed by the pleading.”
.’
[65]
Plaintiff’s Heads of Argument, para 66, page 15.
sino noindex
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