Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 22South Africa
Shivambu v Chairpersons of the Joint Committee on Ethics and Members Interests and Others (22223/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 22 (1 February 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Shivambu v Chairpersons of the Joint Committee on Ethics and Members Interests and Others (22223/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 22 (1 February 2024)
Shivambu v Chairpersons of the Joint Committee on Ethics and Members Interests and Others (22223/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 22 (1 February 2024)
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sino date 1 February 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Urgency –
Interim
interdict
–
Pending
outcome of review proceedings – Registrar’s
investigation of complaints levelled against applicant –
Alleged breach of ethics code – Recommendation to impose
penalty against applicant – Self-created urgency –
Took no action to challenge decision despite knowledge of ethics
committee's conclusion – No plausible explanation
why
application was filed six months after receiving decision –
Application struck off roll.
In the High Court of
South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
Case
No: 22223/23
In
the matter between:
NYIKO
FLOYD SHIVAMBU
Applicant
and
THE
CHAIRPERSONS OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE
ON
ETHICS AND MEMBERS INTERESTS
First
Respondent
SPEAKER
OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
Second
Respondent
CHAIRPERSON
OF THE NATIONAL COUNCIL
OF
PROVINCES
Third
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF MEMBERS’ INTERESTS
Fourth
Respondent
Heard:
13 December 2023
Delivered
(electronically): 01 February 2024
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI
J
Introduction
[1]
This is an urgent application in which the applicant seeks an
interdict against the respondents.
The application is divided into
two parts, Part A and Part B. In Part A, the applicant seeks an order
to the effect that pending
the finalisation of Part B of this
application, the decision of the Joint Committee on Ethics and
Members' Interests ('the Ethics
Committee') to accept the fourth
respondent's report and recommendations and the decision of the
National Assembly to adopt the
report of the Ethics Committee on the
complaints against the applicant, be suspended pending the hearing of
Part B.
[2]
In Part B, the applicant seeks an order that the National Assembly’s
decision to adopt the
report of the Ethics Committee on a complaint
preferred against the applicant be reviewed and set aside. The
applicant also seeks
an order in Part B that the report of the Ethics
Committee against the applicant be reviewed and set aside and that
the second
respondent be directed to refer the complaint to the
fourth respondent for proper investigation. This court is only
enjoined to
decide Part A of the applicant’s application.
[3]
The applicant's application is premised on the fourth respondent's
investigation of two complaints
levelled against the applicant.
Pursuant to that investigation, the fourth respondent submitted her
report to the Ethics Committee
which, in turn, compiled a report in
which it found that the applicant breached the Code of Ethical
Conduct and Disclosure of Members'
Interests ('the Ethics Code'). The
Ethics Committee submitted its report to the National Assembly with a
recommendation to the
house to impose a penalty of a reduction of 9
days salary against the applicant. On 28 November 2023, the National
Assembly adopted
the Ethics Committee's report and subsequently
issued a penalty against the applicant in terms of the
recommendations of the Ethics
Committee. The implementation date of
the penalty was scheduled to take effect on 15 December 2023.
[4]
The applicant brought this application urgently, contending that the
adoption of the fourth respondent's
report by the Ethics Committee
and the National Assembly has exposed him and the political party
that he represents, the EFF, to
immediate and detrimental harm, which
will not be reversible by a court order at a hearing in due course.
As a result, he sought
an order in Part A that the decision by the
two parliamentary institutions to accept the fourth respondent’s
report be suspended.
Background
Facts
[5]
This case involves two complaints lodged against the applicant by two
members of Parliament. On
16 October 2018, Ms Karlsen, a member of
Parliament, as she then was, lodged a complaint ('the first
complaint') against the applicant
with the Ethics Committee. In her
complaint, she alleged that the applicant breached the Parliamentary
Code of Conduct by not declaring
specific interests or benefits that
the applicant allegedly received from VBS Mutual Bank through his
brother's company, Sgameka
Projects.
[6]
In addition, Ms Karlsen alleged that the applicant breached the
Parliamentary Code by not declaring
a financial conflict of interest
that arose due to the alleged benefits or interests when the matters
concerning VBS Mutual Bank
were discussed and decided by Parliament's
Standing Committee on Finance. This complaint was premised on a
newspaper article in
the Daily Maverick of 11 October 2018 in which
it was alleged that the EFF and its Deputy President Floyd Shivambu
benefited financially
from the VBS Mutual Bank scandal. The said
article also alleged that the applicant received about R10 million
rand through Sgameka
Projects owned by his younger brother, Brian
Shivambu, and that the EFF allegedly received R1.3 million through
VBS Bank. This
complaint alleged that the applicant did not declare
his financial interest for 2015, 2016, and 2017 and should have
recused himself
from the Standing Committee on Finance meetings,
which considered the matter.
[7]
On 17 October 2018, the fourth respondent, the acting Registrar of
members’ interests, informed
the applicant of the said
complaint and invited the applicant to provide her with a written
response to Ms Karlsen’s allegation
within seven working days.
The fourth respondent also notified the applicant that if he did not
provide the requested written response,
the Ethics Committee would
investigate the complaint against him.
[8]
According to the applicant, when he received the fourth respondent's
letter, to his knowledge,
the report on which Ms Karlsen's complaint
was predicated had been taken on judicial review. On 21 November
2018, the applicant
responded to the fourth respondent's office and
expressed his discomfort in engaging on a report that he believed was
the subject
of ongoing legal proceedings. Notwithstanding, he
explained to the fourth respondent that he had not received any
payments from
VBS and, thus, he did not have any conflict of interest
relating to VBS Bank, as alleged in Ms Karlsen's complaint.
[9]
The applicant further reiterated that he did not receive any money
from VBS Bank or have any conflict
arising from VBS-related matters.
He appealed to the fourth respondent to await the outcome of the
judicial review against the
report underpinning Ms Karlsen's
complaint. The applicant also invited the fourth respondent to
commence with their investigation
process should any issue remain
unresolved by the judicial review application.
[10]
Pursuant thereto, and in response to the applicant's assertions, the
fourth respondent consulted with the
department at the South African
Reserve Bank to confirm whether a judicial review had indeed been
filed. The fourth respondent
was advised that only Mr Msiza had
applied to review a select part of the report pertaining to himself.
Upon perusal of Mr Msiza's
notice of motion, the fourth respondent
avers that she noted that it related only to the adverse finding
against Mr Msiza. The
fourth respondent subsequently informed the
Ethics Committee that the matter that formed the focal point of the
complaint before
it was not sub-judice. In the interim, Parliament
was dissolved shortly before the elections in May 2019, and the
investigation
into this complaint did not proceed.
[11]
Meanwhile, on 17 October 2019, Mr John Steenhuisen, a member of
Parliament, also complained to the Ethics
Committee ('the second
complaint'). Mr Steenhuisen alleged that the applicant breached the
Parliamentary Code of Conduct. This
complaint (the second complaint)
was premised on news reports in the Daily Maverick dated 6 and 12
October 2019, which alleged
that the applicant benefited from
payments made by Lawrence Mulaudzi into the account of a company
called Grant Azania (Pty) Ltd
owned by the applicant's brother, Mr
Brian Shivambu, which funds were then utilized to pay expenses
related to the applicant's
wedding.
[12]
The report also alleged that the applicant failed to disclose the
receipt of money from Sgameka Projects,
Brian Shivambu, in his 2017
and 2018 disclosure of member's interests. In addition, the report
alleged that the applicant utilised
the savings of vulnerable VBS
depositors and municipalities funneled through Sgameka Projects to
fund his extravagant lifestyle
and political aspirations.
[13]
Similarly, on 21 October 2019, the fourth respondent provided the
applicant with a copy of Mr Steenhuizen's
complaint and again
afforded him an opportunity to respond to the allegation within seven
working days of receiving the letter,
failing which the Ethics
Committee would investigate the complaint. In the sixth Parliament,
the Ethics Committee decided to revive
Ms Karlsen's first complaint,
which had laid dormant, and to combine both complaints against the
applicant. The Ethics Committee
accordingly instructed the fourth
respondent to investigate the complaint against the applicant.
[14]
On 12 July 2021, the fourth respondent recommended to the Ethics
Committee that the provisional liquidators
of VBS be subpoenaed in
terms of section 14(2)(a) read with section 14(2)(b) of the Powers,
Privileges and Immunities of Parliament
and Provincial Legislatures
Act 4 of 2004, to provide information to the Ethics Committee which
related to the applicant. The Ethics
Committee agreed, and the
provisional liquidator of VBS, Mr Anooshkumar Rooplal, subsequently
provided an affidavit, which included
a bank statement revealing
payments to the applicant.
[15]
The affidavit by the provisional liquidator revealed that the
applicant received a total of R180,000 from
Sgameka Projects,
computed as follows:
18 August 2017 –
R100 000
24 August 2017 –
R30 000
26 August 2017 –
R50 000
[16]
As none of the above-mentioned payments were declared in terms of the
Ethics Code, on 17 April 2023, the
fourth respondent recommended to
the Ethics Committee that a finding be made on the available evidence
in terms of the Ethics Code
that the applicant breached item 10.1.1.1
of the Ethics Code for failing to comply with the requirements of the
provisions for
disclosing financial interest in respect of the R180
000 that was paid to him in 2017 by Sgameka Projects (Pty) Ltd.
[17]
On 17 April 2023, the Ethics Committee deliberated on the matter and
found that the applicant breached the
Ethics Code in failing to
comply with the requirement to disclose his financial interests. On
25 April 2023, the Ethics Committee's
decision was communicated to
the applicant by email. The applicant was also notified that the
committee intended to deal with the
issue of the penalty/sanction at
its next meeting, and it afforded the applicant an opportunity to
present written representations
on this issue.
[18]
The applicant averred that neither the fourth respondent nor the
Ethics Committee invited him or his brother,
Brian Shivambo, to
tender any explanation for the three payments. Furthermore, the
applicant asserted that the fourth respondent
and the Ethics
Committee never provided him with the documents they sought to rely
on in considering the allegations against him
to afford him an
opportunity to assess, challenge, or respond to them. The applicant
asserted that he was denied participation
in the investigation, even
though it was against him. According to the applicant, this is the
fundamental premise of his application.
[19]
The applicant further stated that on 14 June 2023, he wrote to the
fourth respondent and explained that he
did not receive her letter of
25 April 2023. In response, the fourth respondent forwarded him the
said correspondence on the same
day. Applicant avers that he was
“horrified” to receive this correspondence in which the
fourth respondent disclosed
to him for the very first-time what
information she and the Ethics Committee had relied upon in their
investigation against him.
[20]
According to the applicant,
the
correspondence of 25 April 2023 was not an opportunity for him to
explain the three payments or to argue why he should not be
found
guilty of breaching the Ethics Code. Instead, the fourth respondent
wrote to inform him that the Ethics Committee had only
considered
that he did not disclose the three payments from Sgameka Projects,
and that the committee had already found him guilty
of breaching the
Ethics code.
[21]
On 19 June 2023, the applicant responded to the fourth respondent's
letter and explained that the funds (mentioned
above) his brother
paid into his bank account were a personal transaction between him
and his brother. The applicant further explained
that his brother
extended a loan to him. In support of this assertion, his brother
deposed an affidavit in which he confirmed that
the three payments
were made pursuant to a loan he made to the applicant. The applicant
asserted that he used the funds that his
brother loaned him for
payments towards his wedding expenses.
[22]
In that correspondence, the applicant appealed to the fourth
respondent to place his explanation before the
Ethics Committee and
to request the Ethics Committee to reconsider its decision against
him. Notwithstanding, the fourth respondent
and the Ethics Committee
did not heed the applicant's request. Instead, on 2 October 2023, the
fourth respondent wrote to the applicant
and informed him that the
Ethics Committee had met and decided to recommend to the National
Assembly that a penalty of 9 days reduction
in the applicant's salary
be imposed. The report of the Ethics Committee was subsequently
tabled on 2 October 2023 and was adopted
by the National Assembly on
28 November 2023. A penalty of 9 days' salary reduction was
authorised against the applicant.
[23]
According to the applicant, the conduct of the investigation against
him was grossly unfair as he was denied
the right to know what
allegations he was facing prior to the decision of his alleged guilt.
More so, even if the fourth respondent
and the Ethics committee were
under the impression that the payments were a gift of some kind, the
applicant asserted that the
Ethics Code equally did not require its
disclosure in this case, as the payments were from his brother. From
the applicant's point
of view, item 9.3.6 of the Ethics Code
expressly excludes gifts from a family member from the categories of
gifts that should be
disclosed.
[24]
The applicant thus sought an urgent interim order in this court,
which suspends the Ethics Committee's decision
to accept the fourth
respondent's report and the National Assembly's decision to adopt the
Ethics Committee's report against him.
Pursuant to the grant of that
order, the applicant believes that his political party, the EFF, will
enjoy a free and fair opportunity
to participate in the elections
without the burden of a report that is likely to be set aside on
review. Meanwhile, the respondents
implored the court to strike the
matter from the roll as they submitted that this matter is not
urgent, and that this application
has no merit.
Submissions
by the Parties
[25]
At the hearing of this matter, Mr Sangoni, the applicant's Counsel,
submitted that the decision taken by
the Ethics Committee, which the
National Assembly adopted, impacts negatively on the applicant and
his political party. Mr Sangoni
submitted that the conclusion of the
Ethics Committee, which the National Assembly adopted, has a broader
impact as it carries
a stigma of corruption. Counsel further
submitted that this matter is urgent, and that the applicant's cause
of action crystallized
on 28 November 2023, when the National
Assembly adopted the decision of the Ethics Committee.
[26]
Mr Sangoni contended that the Ethics Committee and the National
Assembly's decision are causing the entrenchment
of a false public
narrative that the EFF's deputy president is being penalized for
failing to disclose VBS funds to parliament.
This narrative, the
contention proceeded, will have a detrimental and irreversible impact
on the applicant and the EFF. Counsel
further submitted that the
decision of the Ethics Committee and the National Assembly is
unlawful as it is procedurally and substantively
unfair. To this end,
Counsel contended that the fourth respondent failed to allow the
applicant to respond to the allegation that
he was found guilty of.
The allegation also does not constitute a breach of the Ethics Code.
[27]
If the respondents are permitted to uphold and execute the decisions,
despite the pending review application,
Counsel argued, the decisions
will retain their legitimacy and are reasonably likely to influence
voters in the imminent national
elections. According to Mr Snagoni,
the problem with the decision of these bodies transcends the
deduction of the applicant’s
salary. Counsel implored the court
to suspend the decision of Parliament pending the review application
in Part B of this application.
[28]
Mr Jamie, the respondents' Counsel, submitted that there is no
urgency in this matter and that the urgency
alleged by the applicant
is self-created. Mr Jamie submitted that the relief sought by the
applicant in this matter is fundamentally
misconceived, and the
decision of the two bodies of Parliament cannot be suspended as the
events have already occurred. When the
applicant launched the
proceedings on 6 December 2023, it was already impossible to give
effect to the relief sought in Part A.
[29]
Expanding further on this argument, Mr Jamie asserted that the Ethics
Committee had already taken a decision
on 2 October 2023 to recommend
to the National Assembly that the applicant's salary be docked by 9
days. This was the end of the
process for the Ethics Committee, and
at which stage it was rendered functus officio in respect of the
applicant. As such, Counsel
contended that this court cannot suspend
the decision of the Ethics Committee at this stage.
[30]
Supplementing the contention above, Counsel contended that the
National Assembly decided to adopt the report
and the recommendation
of the Ethics Committee to dock the applicants' salary by 9 days, on
28 November 2023. At that point, it
became functus officio. Given
that the National Assembly has already taken the decision, this court
cannot suspend the decision
of the National Assembly.
[31]
The only matter that could be notionally suspended, Counsel argued,
was the implementation of the sanction,
namely the docking of the
applicant's salary for 9 days. However, this differs from the relief
the applicant seeks in his notice
of motion. Mr Jamie implored the
court to strike the matter off the roll with costs for want of
urgency or to dismiss the application
with costs, including the costs
of two Counsel.
Issues
to be decided.
[32]
From the above discussion, this court is enjoined to determine
whether the applicant was correct in bringing
this application on an
urgent basis as envisaged in Rule 6(12)(b) of the Rules of Court. If
the matter is urgent, whether the applicant
has made out a case for
granting an interdict against the respondents pending the review
application in Part B of this application.
Applicable
Legal principles and Discussion
[33]
As discussed above, Mr Jamie took issue with the urgency of this
application. Counsel argued that this matter
is not urgent and must
be struck from the roll. It is trite that where an application is
brought based on urgency, the rules of
court permit a court to
dispense with the forms and service usually required and dispose of
it as it deems fit. (Rule 6(12)(a)).
Where the application lacks the
requisite element or degree of urgency, the Court can, for that
reason, decline to exercise its
powers under Rule 6(12)(a). See
Commissioner, South African Revenue Services v Hawker Air Services
(Pty) LTD
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006 (4) SA 292
(SCA) para 9. In other words, where the
facts indicate that the urgency is self-created, an applicant will
not be entertained,
and the application will be struck from the roll.
(see
W.M.W v S.W
(26912/17) [2023] ZAGPJHC 710 (15 June
2023)).
[34]
In terms of Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court, an applicant
is, in law, required to set out the circumstances
which justify the
hearing of an application on an urgent basis and the basis on which
it contends that it would not obtain substantial
redress at a hearing
in due course. Thus, Rule 6(12)(b) requires two things of an
applicant in an urgent application: firstly,
the applicant must
explicitly state the circumstances that he avers render the matter
urgent and, secondly
,
why he claims that he would not be
afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
(Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin (t/a Makin’s Furniture
Manufacturers)
1977 (4) SA 135
(W) at 137F;
Karino Homeland
Distribution (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service
(21279/2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 329
(27 December 2023)) at
para 16.
[35]
The applicant's grounds of urgency in this application are set out in
paragraphs 61 to 70 of his founding
affidavit. In summary, the
applicant avers that the National Assembly's action against the
applicant for complaints which arose
about five years ago comes at a
critical time in the country's political space. The applicant
contends that politicians and their
political parties are campaigning
in preparation for the imminent national elections. Furthermore, the
adoption of the report by
the National Assembly gave rise to an
immediate mainstream media and social media tirade against the
applicant and the EFF based
on findings that the applicant
contravened the Ethics Code requirements to disclose the funds.
[36]
The applicant further contends that the decision and the penalty
which was imposed against the applicant
will affect the public
perception of the applicant and the EFF and inevitably influence how
some people vote in the elections.
If the impugned decisions are
suspended, their legitimacy will be maintained, and they will not
affect the applicant's good name
until this court assesses their
lawfulness in Part B. To this end, the applicant implored this court
to exercise its discretion
to hear this matter urgently and grant the
relief sought in the notice of motion.
[37]
I have considered the submissions of the parties, and I am of the
view that this matter is not urgent. If
anything, the urgency that
the applicant pleaded was self-created. The following reasons bear
out this finding. The fourth respondent
notified the applicant on 25
April 2023 of the decision made by the Ethics Committee, which found
the applicant guilty of contravening
the Ethics Code of Conduct. I am
mindful that the applicant contended that he did not receive this
correspondence. However, on
19 June 2023, the applicant became aware
of the Ethics Committee's decision. The correspondence of 25 April
2023 was brought to
his attention. Despite his knowledge of the
Ethics Committee's conclusion, the applicant took no action then to
challenge the decision
in court notwithstanding his allegation that
it impacted his reputation and that of his political organisation.
[38]
Notably, on 3 October 2023, the applicant's political party released
a media statement advising that the
applicant intends to take
Parliament to court to overturn the Ethics Committee's “irrational
and opportunistic conclusion
and sanction”. Furthermore, on 05
October 2023, the applicant's legal representative wrote a letter to
the fourth respondent
in which they apprised the fourth respondent of
the alleged irregularities that allegedly underpinned the fourth
respondent and
the Ethics Committee's investigation. In that
correspondence, the applicant's legal representative demanded that
the applicant
be provided with certain documents by 10 October 2023,
failing which the applicant would launch urgent proceedings. The
applicant's
attorney sought an urgent undertaking from the National
Assembly that it would suspend all further processes related to the
complaint
against the applicant by the close of business on 6 October
2023, failing which he would launch urgent court proceedings.
[39]
On 11 October 2023, the fourth respondent provided the applicant with
all the documents the applicant requested.
The fourth respondent also
dismissed the applicant’s concerns regarding the unfairness of
the investigation. Notwithstanding,
the applicant took no action to
impugn the decision of the Ethics Committee. Instead, the
applicant took two months to bring
this application on an urgent
basis with truncated timelines and on the same grounds set out in the
letter of 05 October 2023.
[40]
In my view, if the applicant wanted to bring this application
urgently, since the decisions of the two Parliamentary
institutions
allegedly damaged his reputation, the applicant could have done so
immediately upon receipt of the registrar's rejection
of his plea on
11 October 2023. The applicant filed his urgent application on 06
December 2023, exactly two months after he threatened
to institute an
urgent court application. His application was predicated on the same
grounds enunciated in his correspondence of
05 October 2023.
[41]
Crucially, the applicant approached the court on the same allegations
as contained in his attorney's letter
dated 05 October 2023. As
correctly stated by the respondent's Counsel, the urgency was clearly
self-created. The applicant was
aware of the finding against him at
least since 14 June 2023. The applicant did nothing to challenge the
decision in court despite
various threats made in correspondences as
explained above. The decision to approach this court on an urgent
basis, based on the
same grounds that were in effect three months
prior to the institution of the application, was ill-conceived.
[42]
Upon perusal of the applicant's application, the only issue that I
thought could support his case for urgency
was the imminent
implementation of the sanction. However, at the hearing of this
application, Mr Sangoni informed the court that
this was not the
basis of the applicant's application. The court was further informed
that the applicant is mainly concerned with
the damage to his
reputation and that of his political organisation. As a result, the
applicant believes that he will not be afforded
substantial relief at
the hearing in due course as the investigation and findings of the
Ethics Committee are detrimental to him
and the EFF and will harm
their preparations for the coming elections.
[43]
This submission, in my view, lacks validity and is unsustainable. It
is important to note that the EFF is
not a participant in this case.
This court cannot be expected to issue an order in favour of or
against an individual or organization
that is not cited or involved
in these proceedings.
[44]
Furthermore, the applicant alleges that the foundational premise of
his urgent application is that he was
allegedly not afforded an
opportunity to tender an explanation in respect of the payments
received, that he was not provided with
the documents relied on for
making the finding, and that he was not afforded an opportunity to
challenge or respond to the allegations
against him. The respondents,
conversely, disputed that the applicant was not afforded an
opportunity to respond when the investigation
was done. The
respondents referred the court to the relevant documents forwarded to
the applicant's personal email address relating
to the investigation
of the matter. In my view, the issue pertaining to the alleged
non-compliance with the
audi alteram partem
principle is a
matter that will be dealt with in Part B of this application.
[45]
I am further of the view that the urgency the applicant pleaded in
his application is self-created. The applicant
knew of the decision
of the Ethics Committee in June 2023 and threatened in October 2023
to bring an urgent application but failed
to do so. The applicant
could not provide a plausible explanation why the application was
filed in December 2023, six months after
receiving the decision of
the Ethics Committee and two months after initially planning to file
this urgent application.
[46]
In my view, the matter was brought on an urgent basis in unwarranted
circumstances. More so, I am of the
view that the applicant will be
afforded substantial redress in due course when Part B of the
application is heard.
[47]
Given all these considerations, this matter falls to be struck off
the roll.
Furthermore, nothing was
presented to warrant a departure from the norm that costs follow the
event.
Order
[48]
In the result, the following order is granted:
48.1
The application is struck off the roll and the applicant is ordered
to pay the costs of this application,
including the costs of two
Counsel where so employed.
LEKHULENI
JD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
Mr F
Sangoni
Instructed
by:
Ian
Levitt Attorneys
75
Maude Street
Sandown
Johannesburg
For
the Respondents:
Mr
Jamie SC
Mr M
Vassen
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney
22
Long Street
Cape
Town
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