Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 303South Africa
Klaase N.O and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (18916/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 303 (9 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
9 October 2024
Headnotes
in the name of the trust. 2. The application is opposed by the first respondent, the National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP). The second respondent is the curator bonis appointed in terms of the preservation order (and subsequently in terms of the forfeiture
Judgment
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## Klaase N.O and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (18916/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 303 (9 October 2024)
Klaase N.O and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (18916/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 303 (9 October 2024)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No.:
18916/2022
In
the application between:
WILLEM
KLAASE N.O.
(In
his capacity as trustee for the time being of the
WELBELOON
BOERDERY TRUST IT1365/2008)
First
Applicant
MARTHA
KLAASE N.O.
(In
her capacity as trustee for the time being of the
WELBELOON
BOERDERY TRUST IT1365/2008)
Second
Applicant
MARGA
KLAASE N.O.
(In
her capacity as trustee for the time being of the
WELBELOON
BOERDERY TRUST IT1365/2008)
Third
Applicant
WILBUR
PAUL KLAASE N.O.
(In
his capacity as trustee for the time being of the
WELBELOON
BOERDERY TRUST IT1365/2008)
Fourth
Applicant
ALBERTO
KLAASE N.O.
(In
his capacity as trustee for the time being of the
WELBELOON
BOERDERY TRUST IT1365/2008)
Fifth
Applicant
BRIAN
PHILLIPUS KLAASE N.O.
(In
his capacity as trustee for the time being of the
WELBELOON
BOERDERY TRUST IT1365/2008)
Sixth
Applicant
ELTON
SMITH N.O.
(In
his capacity as trustee for the time being of the
WELBELOON
BOERDERY TRUST IT1365/2008)
Seventh
Applicant
and
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
First
Respondent
HENDRIK
VORSTER HATTINGH N.O.
Second
Respondent
PETER
MASKELL AUCTIONEERS CC
Third
Respondent
ANYONE
WHO MAY HAVE BOUGHT THE FARM
KNOWN
AS DE LA RAY FROM THE AUCTION
Fourth
Respondent
THE
DEEDS REGISTRAR: CAPE TOWN
Fifth
Respondent
In
re
:
In
the application between:
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
Applicant
and
WILLEM
KLAASE N.O.
First
Respondent
MARTHA
MAGRIETHA KLAASE N.O.
Second
Respondent
ALBERTO
OSCAR KLAASE N.O.
Third
Respondent
MARGA
DIANA KLAASE N.O.
Fourth
Respondent
WILBUR
PAUL KLAASE N.O.
Fifth
Respondent
BRIAN
RUSSELL PHILLIPUS KLAASEN N.O.
Sixth
Respondent
Date of hearing: 27
August 2024
## JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON 9
OCTOBER 2024
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON 9
OCTOBER 2024
GORDON-TURNER, AJ:
# Introduction
Introduction
1.
This
is Part B of an application by the six trustees (
the
trustees
)
of the Wellbeloon Boerdery Trust (
the
trust
).
In Part B, they seek an order in terms of section 53(3) of the
Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (
POCA
)
rescinding the forfeiture order granted by default on 20 June 2024,
in terms of section 48
[1]
read
with sections 50 and 53
[2]
of
POCA, for the forfeiture of an immovable property, being a farm
situated in Piketberg, Western Cape (
the
property
)
held in the name of the trust.
2.
The application is opposed by the first
respondent, the National Director of Public Prosecutions (
NDPP
).
The second respondent is the
curator
bonis
appointed in terms of the
preservation order (and subsequently in terms of the forfeiture
order). The second, third, fourth
and fifth respondents were
joined to the application for purposes of the relief sought in Part A
to interdict the transfer of the
property pending the determination
of Part B – which interdictory relief was granted on 23 April
2024. The second to
fifth respondents did not participate in
either part of the proceedings.
3.
On
20 January 2023, prior to the grant of the forfeiture order, the NDPP
was granted a preservation order,
ex
parte
,
in terms of Section 38 of POCA on the basis that there are reasonable
grounds to believe that the property is ‘proceeds
of unlawful
activities’.
[3]
The
NDPP alleged that, in their application to the Department of Rural
Development and Land Affairs (
the
Department
)
for the Land Redistribution for Agricultural Development grant (
the
LRAD
grant
),
the trustees had acted unlawfully by making misrepresentations to the
Department, resulting in the award of the grant to the
trust. The
award was applied, among other things, to the acquisition of the
property.
4.
The subsequent forfeiture order was granted
on the grounds that there was evidence on a balance of probabilities
that the property
was the proceeds of the trustees’
misrepresentations.
5.
Relying on section 48(2) of POCA and the
fact that the trustees had not entered into an appearance in terms of
section 39(3) to
oppose the granting of a forfeiture order, the NDPP
did not give the trustees notice of its forfeiture application. The
forfeiture
order was granted by default in the absence of the
trustees.
6.
The trustees contend that the wording of
section 53(3) of POCA affords them the right to apply for rescission
of the forfeiture
order. That section provides that “
Any
person whose interest in the property concerned is affected by the
forfeiture order or other order made by the Court under subsection
(1) may, within 20 days after he or she has acquired knowledge of
such order or direction, set the matter down for variation or
rescission by the court”
.
7.
The
applicants seek an order
[4]
that:
“
The
forfeiture order granted by this court by default and in the absence
of the applicants be rescinded, forthwith, to enable the
applicants
to file their opposing papers in the preservation and forfeiture
applications for reconsideration of both the preservation
order, and
further adjudication of the forfeiture application, if necessary.”
8.
The issues that require determination are:
8.1.
Do
the trustees enjoy the right to apply for rescission in terms of
Section 53(3) of POCA?
[5]
8.2.
Have the trustees made out a case for the
grant of rescission?
8.3.
Are the trustees now entitled to have the
preservation order reconsidered?
# The preservation order
The preservation order
9.
The preservation order granted on 20
January 2023 identified the property (giving its description as on
the title deed), defined
the prohibitions against dealing in any
manner with the property, appointed the second respondent as
curator
bonis
and defined his powers and
duties, and made provision for persons holding an interest in the
property to apply for payment of reasonable
living expenses. The
property being so preserved, and at risk of being forfeited to the
state, was only the land and the
improvements thereon. Farming
implements and equipment and stock were not part of the defined
property.
10.
Of
importance to this rescission application, the preservation order:
[6]
10.1.
Directed that the NDPP had to cause the
notice of motion, supporting affidavits and the preservation order in
prescribed form (collectively
referred to as
the
relevant process
) to be served by the
Sheriff on the first to sixth applicants, and, as soon as practicable
after grant of the preservation order,
to publish it in the
prescribed form in the Government Gazette;
10.2.
Provided that “
Any
person who has an interest in the property and who intends opposing
the application for an order forfeiting the property to
the State or
applying for an order excluding his or her interest from a forfeiture
order in respect of the property, must enter
an appearance to defend
in terms of section 39(3) of the POCA.
”;
10.3.
Provided that such notice of intention to
defend must be delivered to the NDPP, in the case of any person
identified for service
in terms of the order (i.e. the first to sixth
applicants), within 14 calendar days of service, and for any other
person, 14 calendar
days after publication of the order in the
Government Gazette.
11.
The
Sheriff’s returns of service
[7]
reflected that he served the notice of motion, supporting affidavits
and the preservation order (collectively referred to as
the
relevant process
)
upon the first to sixth applicants at two addresses in Vredenburg and
one in Saldanha on 16 and 17 February 2023 handing
a copy
of the relevant process to “
ms
M Wilschutt, Tenant
”,
“
ms
S Jordaan, Sister-in-law
”
and “
ms
E Titus, Occupant
”.
12.
The Sheriff’s returns of service do
not state that he explained the nature and exigency of the relevant
process to Mesdames
Wilschutt, Jordaan and Titus. This may be
explained by the fact that the notice of motion and founding
affidavits run to
348 pages, and the preservation order is 10 pages
in length.
13.
On 24 February 2023, the NDPP caused a
notice in terms of section 39 of POCA advising of the preservation
order to be published
in the Government Gazette No. 48105.
14.
The first applicant explains that during
the period that the preservation order was secured and served, the
applicants were involved
in civil litigation concerning the property
instituted by the Special Investigating Unit (
SIU
),
represented by the State Attorney. The applicants were
represented in that litigation by Blackburn Attorneys in Paarl.
15.
The application for the preservation order
included a supporting affidavit by a senior special investigator in
the Asset Forfeiture
Unit (
AFU
)
of the NDPP, Mr Ricardo Rhoda (
Rhoda
).
Rhoda explained that one of his duties is to liaise with other
law enforcement agencies, including the SIU regarding cases
involving
the implementation of chapters 5 and 6 of POCA. He set out
details of the SIU’s investigation into the grant
awarded by
the Department to the trustees. He concludes that the
acquisition of the property was fraudulent, and for the
sole benefit
of a limited number of individuals including the first and sixth
applicants.
16.
Upon receipt of the relevant process from
Mesdames Wilschutt, Jordaan and Titus, the applicants referred the
papers to Blackburn
Attorneys for advice.
17.
During March 2023, while the applicants
were awaiting advice from Blackburn Attorneys, the
curator
bonis
and an auctioneer (of the third
respondent) visited the property and inspected it. The
curator
bonis
showed the first applicant his
letters of curatorship and explained that he was in control of the
property. The first applicant
contends that he informed the
applicants that they need not worry, that they could continue their
farming activities as usual and
he would return in due course. The
curator bonis
did not return to the property. These allegations were baldly
denied.
18.
As required in terms of paragraph 14 of the
preservation order, on 6 April 2023, the
curator
bonis
delivered an interim report to
the Registrar of the High Court, to the Master and to the AFU, in
which he recommended that ‘the
Respondent’ (which is
understood as a reference to the trust or the trustees) remain in
residence on the property and carry
on farming activities, that ‘the
Respondent’ was to ensure that the property was adequately
maintained and insured
and that the rates and other municipal
expenses relating to the property are continuously paid up to date.
He had asked
the Registrar of Deeds in Cape Town to record the
conditions of the preservation order against the title deed of the
property.
19.
None of the applicants delivered notice of
appearance to defend.
# Events after service of
the preservation order
Events after service of
the preservation order
20.
On 4 May 2023, the NDPP launched the
forfeiture application, without giving any notice to the applicants.
The forfeiture order
was granted in their absence on 20 June
2023, in terms of section 53(1) read with section 50 of POCA.
21.
On 11 July 2023, the applicants were
arrested on fraud charges and taken to police holding cells. The
first applicant explained
that his son, Hamilton Klaase (
Hamilton
),
contacted Blackburn Attorneys on their behalf. According to the first
applicant, Hamilton advised the applicants that Blackburn
attorneys
had responded to him that they could not assist the applicants as
they do not deal with criminal cases. Neither
Hamilton nor any
attorney at Blackburn Attorneys deposed to a confirmatory affidavit.
22.
The first applicant further explained that
the applicants were then represented by an attorney from Legal Aid
South Africa in their
bail applications, and were released on R3000
bail each. The criminal case was transferred to the Specialised
Commercial
Crimes Court in Bellville (
SCCC
)
for an appearance on 17 July 2023. The applicants appointed
attorney Martin Green (
Green
)
of Andre Reid Attorneys to represent them in the criminal case. Green
is their attorney of record in these proceedings.
23.
The first applicant contends that the
applicants were unaware at all times that the preservation order and
the relevant process
that had been served on them were connected with
a criminal case – this position is maintained regardless of the
express
and repeated reference throughout the preservation order to
POCA, and despite the facts that the applicant cited in the order is
the NDPP, and that there is express reference in the supporting
affidavits to fraud on the part of one or more of the applicants.
24.
During the applicants’ first
consultation with Green in mid July 2023, they furnished him with the
relevant process served
by the Sheriff in February 2023. They
reported to Green that Blackburn attorneys, who also had copies of
the relevant process,
had not reverted to them with any ‘update’.
Green had a ‘quick glance’ at the papers and
afforded
his view that the “
purpose
of the preservation application papers appears to be to preserve the
farm pending the outcome of the criminal case
”.
He asserted that the preservation application was not part of his
mandate as he had been appointed to represent the
applicants in the
criminal case only. Green deposed to an affidavit confirming
the contents of the first applicant’s
founding affidavit
“
insofar as they relate to me
”.
Neither affidavit explains why no steps were taken to apply for
rescission of the preservation order under section
47(1) of POCA, nor
why Green, who is the attorney of record for the applicants in the
present rescission application, now has a
mandate in regard to the
POCA proceedings whereas he had none previously.
25.
The first applicant explained that “
in
view of Green’s tentative opinion and advice and non-response
from Blackburn Attorneys
”, the
applicants took no further steps.
26.
Green
continued to represent the applicants in the criminal proceedings in
the SCCC, which were postponed for trial until June 2024.
Both
Green and the applicants, so they say, had the impression that the
preservation of the property was linked to the conclusion
of the
criminal proceedings
[8]
–
this impression appears to be the pretext for remining supine about a
potential forfeiture order, as the criminal proceedings
were not then
imminent. However, this alleged ‘impression’ is
inconsistent with the first applicant’s contention
that the
applicants were unaware at all times that the preservation order was
connected with a criminal case.
27.
The applicants’ purported
misapprehension about the import of the preservation order simply
does not bear the test of scrutiny.
The preservation order had
attached to it an annexure “
B”
headed “
Notice in Terms of Section
39 of the Prevention of Organised Crime Act, 121 of 1998 (POCA)
”.
The notice was addressed to all persons who may have an interest in
the property which was described in detail in
the annexure.
Those persons were cautioned that if they have an interest in the
property they should understand that it is
“
now
at risk
”. They were advised
to obtain legal advice on whether their interest could be protected
and, if so, on how to protect
it. The notice further alerts the
reader that the NDPP would apply to this Court within 90 days of
publication of the notice
for a forfeiture order and that if they
intend to oppose the application for a forfeiture order or to apply
for an order excluding
their interest from a forfeiture order, they
must enter an appearance in terms of the order, failing which, they
would not be given
notice of the application for the forfeiture order
or entitled to appear at the hearing, and in such a case, the Court
may grant
a default order forfeiting the property to the State under
section 53 of POCA.
28.
Even if Green neglected to explain the
aforegoing to the applicants (he does not say so in his confirmatory
affidavit), then the
other attorneys retained by the applicants,
namely Blackburn Attorneys in Paarl, were in a position to advise the
applicants on
the import of the preservation order. Those
attorneys were already alive to the role played by the SIU to which,
as explained
above, extensive reference was made in the founding
papers for the preservation order. Blackburn Attorneys knew
that the
SIU civil litigation concerned the property. If no
advice on the order had been given to the applicants, then the Court
would
have expected the applicants to file an affidavit from the
responsible attorney at Blackburn Attorneys confirming that fact, but
this was not done.
29.
On 28 February 2024, the applicants learned
from Hamilton, who was working as a manager on a neighbouring farm,
that the property
had been advertised for sale on auction.
30.
The applicants instructed Green to
investigate. The next day, 29 February 2024, Green
contacted the
curator bonis
who
apparently confirmed that an advertisement for sale by auction
existed, but did not provide a copy as promised. On 7 March
2024, Green contacted the auctioneers mandated to arrange the public
auction for the sale of the property (third respondent), who
supplied
a copy of the advertisement. Green reported back to the
applicants on the same day. The first applicant maintains
that
the applicants and Green did not know the basis of the sale as they
had only the preservation order. As the preservation
order
clearly spelt out the NDPP’s intention to apply for a
forfeiture order in relation to the property, the purported failure
to make any connection between a forfeiture order and the sale of the
property is remarkable.
31.
Green endeavoured on 11 March 2024 to
procure an undertaking to postpone the sale of the farm pending the
outcome of the criminal
case, which was refused by the NDPP.
The applicants then applied to interdict the auction of the farm.
Their application
was dismissed on the grounds of self-created
urgency, and because this rescission application had not yet been
instituted.
32.
The applicants contend that they only
acquired actual knowledge of the existence of the forfeiture order
which had been granted
on 20 June 2023 during the hearing of
the interdict proceedings on 13 March 2024. The NDPP’s
legal representatives
provided a copy of the forfeiture application
and the forfeiture order to the applicants’ legal
representatives that day.
33.
The present application was instituted on
22 March 2024, that is within 20 days of the date upon which the
applicants allege they
acquired actual knowledge of the forfeiture
order.
34.
The applicants contend that, had they
received full advice from Blackburn Attorneys, and had Green not
misconstrued the effect of
the preservation order when advising them
in July 2023, they would have known of the [risk of a] forfeiture
order earlier and would
have instituted the rescission application at
an earlier time.
# The relief sought under
section 53(3)
The relief sought under
section 53(3)
35.
There
is a paucity of reported cases concerning rescissions under section
53(3) of POCA. I intend to follow the approach of
Miller J in
the matter of
Hoffman
v NDPP
,
[9]
in which the learned judge held:
“
[7]
This application is obviously brought in terms of Section 53(3) of
the Act which provides
for the rescission or variation of forfeiture
orders granted by default. Section 53(4) of the Act provides
that the Court
may, upon good cause shown, vary or rescind the
default order or give some other direction on such terms as it deems
appropriate.
[8]
Section 53 falls within Chapter 6 of the Act. Section 37(1) of
the Act provides
that all proceedings under Chapter 6 of the Act are
civil proceedings. Section 62 of the Act makes the provision of
the Uniform
Rules of Court insofar as they are not inconsistent with
the provisions of the Act applicable to proceedings under Chapter 6
of
the Act. I can think of no good reason why the phrase ‘upon
good cause shown’ as used in Section 53(4) of the
Act should be
interpreted any differently from the way such phrase has been
interpreted in relation to the rescission of default
judgments in
terms of rule 31(2)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[9]
In
Grant v Plumbers (Pty) Ltd
1949
(2) SA 470
(O) at 476-7 it was held that the applicant in an
application for rescission must:
(a)
give a reasonable explanation of his/her default and that if it is
shown that his/her negligence
was wilful or due to gross negligence
the Court should not come to his assistance;
(b)
the applicant must be bona fide and not merely intending to delay;
and
(c)
must show that he/she has a bona fide defence.
”
36.
Before
deliberating whether these criteria have been met, there are two
issues that require consideration. First, the NDPP
argued that
the applicants had failed to apply for condonation by their failure
to bring the rescission application within 20 days
from the date upon
which they acquired knowledge
[10]
of the forfeiture order, that is, 20 calendar days from 13 March
2024. The founding affidavit in this rescission application
was
deposed on 19 March 2024 and the papers appear to have been issued
the same day. Accordingly, this application was launched
within
the 20 day period contemplated by section 53(3). The need to
condone late filing of the rescission application therefore
does not
arise. That is not to say that the trustees are relieved of
their obligations to explain their default of appearance
at the
forfeiture application, and to show that, at least
prima
facie
,
they have prospects of success in defending the grant of a forfeiture
order, if given an opportunity for it to be reconsidered.
37.
The second issue raised by counsel for the
applicants was whether the legislature intended to limit the right to
apply for rescission
of the default forfeiture order in terms of
section 53(3) only to persons who filed a section 39 notice
after being served
with the preservation order and its accompanying
application papers (which the present applicants did not do).
Mr Titus submitted
that the use of the words “
any
person
” in section 53(3) clearly
indicates that the legislature intended the provisions of this
sub-section to apply to all persons
whose interests are affected by
the default forfeiture order which was granted in their absence, and
that the fact that the applicants
in this matter were served with the
preservation order does not deprive them of this right. The
NDPP did not raise an express
challenge to the applicants’
locus standi
in respect of section 53(3) of POCA: their point was framed as one of
failure to seek condonation, which I understood to mean a
failure to
afford a reasonable explanation for the trustees’ default of
appearance at the hearing of the forfeiture application.
While
Mr Titus’ submissions on the interpretation of section
53(3) of POCA are persuasive, I do not consider it necessary
to make
a finding thereon. Instead, I assume in favour of the trustees, that
they enjoy standing, and focus instead on the extent
to which they
have satisfied the requirements for a rescission order.
# Explanation for default
Explanation for default
38.
The applicants contend that the forfeiture
order was granted in their absence by reason of the following:
38.1.
The NDPP did not serve the forfeiture
application papers upon them to enable them to exercise their right
to appear at Court on
the date of the hearing as contemplated in
section 53(1). This submission may have had some force if the
applicants were
ignorant of the preservation order. That is not
the case. The preservation order was duly served and
pertinently alerted
the applicants to the risk that a forfeiture
order could be granted. Furthermore, the statutory provisions
permitted the
NDPP to dispense with serving the forfeiture
application papers upon those persons, such as the applicants, who
did
not
enter appearance to defend after receiving the preservation order.
38.2.
The
applicants complain that the Sheriff and the curator
bonis
did not explain the nature and exigency of the preservation order to
them and that there was no personal service of the preservation
order. On the latter issue, personal service was not required,
and the form of service effected by the Sheriff complied with
Uniform
Rule 4(1)(a)(ii).
[11]
The
complaint about explaining the preservation order is neutralised by
the first applicant’s evidence that the applicants
furnished
copies of the preservation order and the preservation application
papers to their two sets of attorneys. There
is no evidence
that the applicants addressed any questions to the curator
bonis
about the import of the preservation order or that he failed to
satisfy their queries. There is no merit in this complaint.
38.3.
The applicants complained that there was no
citation of the trustees in the preservation application and the
preservation order.
It is correct that the headings to the
papers in the preservation application cite only the NDPP as the
applicant in those
ex parte
proceedings. However, it is not correct that the preservation
order does not cite the applicants / trustees. Paragraph
17 of
the preservation order specifically provides that the NDPP had to
cause the sheriff to serve upon each of them, for which
purpose their
names and addresses were specified in the order.
38.4.
Finally, the applicants complain they did
not receive the expected assistance or guidance from Blackburn
Attorneys and therefore
could not engage with the contents of the
preservation order and the accompanying application. This
complaint is not compelling,
for reasons set out below.
39.
The
common law requires 'sufficient cause' to be shown before a
default judgment may be set aside. The phrases 'good cause'
and
'sufficient cause' have been held to be synonymous and
interchangeable.
[12]
40.
The
absence of ‘wilful default’ does not appear to be an
express requirement under the common law. It is, however, clear
law
that an enquiry whether sufficient cause has been shown is
inextricably linked to or dependent upon whether the applicant acted
in wilful disregard of Court rules, processes and time limits. While
wilful default may not be an absolute or independent
ground for
refusal of a rescission application, a display of wilful neglect or
deliberate default in preventing judgment being
entered would sorely
co-exist with sufficient cause.
[13]
41.
Wilful
default is characterised by indifference as to what the consequences
would be rather than of wilfulness to accept them.
[14]
In
this regard Murray CJ states:
“
A
defendant may be most unwilling to suffer a judgment to be entered
against him and the consequences of such a judgment are such
that he
cannot in fact be indifferent to them, particularly if (as in the
present case) he has placed a plea and counterclaim on
record. The
true test, to my mind, is whether the default is a deliberate one -
ie when a defendant with full knowledge of the
set down and of the
risks attendant on his default, freely takes a decision to refrain
from appearing.
”
42.
Moseneke
J expressed it as follows:
[15]
“
[8]
Before an applicant in a rescission of judgment application can be
said to be in 'wilful
default' he or she must bear knowledge of the
action brought against him or her and of the steps required to avoid
the default.
Such an applicant
must deliberately, being free to do so, fail or omit to take the step
which would avoid the default and must appreciate
the legal
consequences of his or her actions
.
[9]
A decision freely taken to refrain from filing a notice to defend or
a plea or from
appearing, ordinarily will weigh heavily against an
applicant required to establish sufficient cause. However, I do
not agree
that once wilful default is shown the applicant is barred;
that he or she is then never entitled to relief by way of rescission
as he or she has acquiesced. The Court's discretion in deciding
whether sufficient cause has been established must not be
unduly
restricted. In my view, the mental element of the default,
whatever description it bears, should be one of the several
elements
which the court must weigh in determining whether sufficient or good
cause has been shown to exist.”
(my underlining)
43.
The narrative of events set out further
above renders the applicant’s explanation for their default in
appearing at the hearing
of the forfeiture application
unsatisfactory. It amounts to this: “W
e
knew about the preservation order served upon us, but two sets of
attorneys neglected to advise us to oppose the forfeiture
application
”.
44.
Mr Titus, counsel who appeared on behalf of
the trustees, submitted that they had relied on their lawyers for
expert guidance, that
POCA proceedings are complex and specialist in
nature, that the evidence was that Blackburn Attorneys did nothing to
assist, and
Green struggled to comprehend the issues. Counsel
submitted that the applicants were not sophisticated and should not
be
punished for the ineptitude or negligence of their attorneys.
44.1.
I am not persuaded by counsel’s
characterisation of the applicants. The main protagonist at all
times has been the first
applicant, the second to sixth applicants
being members of his immediate family who apparently benefitted from
the steps he took
on their behalf.
44.2.
The first applicant was sufficiently
knowledgeable to put in motion the process to obtain the LRAD grant,
including appointing one
Ralph Damonse (
Damonse
),
a business planning agent, to assist the trustees.
44.3.
The SIU procured an affidavit from the
first applicant during an interview held on 27 May 2015, a copy of
which was attached to
the preservation application papers. In
that affidavit he describes his attempts during 2006 to apply for
funding for a different
farm but later he heard about the property
becoming available. Correspondence addressed to him by the
Department concerning
his earlier unsuccessful application was
attached to the preservation application papers.
44.4.
In his 2015 affidavit the first applicant
states that he was given Damonse’s details and contacted him.
The applicant
addressed a businesslike letter on a trust letterhead
to Damonse on 19 November 2007 appointing him as
facilitator and
business planning agent for the trust’s land
project. The letter of appointment spelled out seven tasks
assigned to
Damonse, including ensuring that the trust’s
application and business plan complied with the Department’s
requirements.
44.5.
The first applicant stated in his 2015
affidavit that he approached 135 different people to join in the
application for the LRAD
grant. When it became expedient to do
so, he persuaded some of them to resign to facilitate the approval of
the grant.
He attended the meetings convened by Damonse
regarding the development of the business plan which would form part
of the application
for the grant. Once he started farming on
the property, he sold certain substandard farming implements.
He subsequently
established a company with his neighbour called
“
Welbeloon Potatoes (Pty) Ltd
”
which plants potatoes and sells them to Simba.
44.6.
Based on the contents of his own
affidavits, the first applicant is demonstrably literate,
intelligent, resourceful, accomplished
in organisational skills, and
commercially astute.
45.
It is difficult to accept that the first
applicant did not understand the caution in the preservation order to
enter an appearance
to defend. However, it remains possible
that, absent legal advice, he and the other applicants did not
appreciate the legal
consequences of their actions in failing to do
so.
46.
At all relevant times, the applicants were
represented by at least one set of the two firms of attorneys.
No confirmatory
evidence has been adduced from Blackburn Attorneys
concerning their alleged failure to advise the applicants, or
regarding any
possible misunderstanding of the process. It
would have been astounding had they so attested given that Blackburn
Attorneys
are or were representing the applicants in defending an
action brought on or about 1 June 2017 under WCHC case number 9724/17
by
the SIU (
the SIU action
).
46.1.
In the SIU action the plaintiffs are the
SIU and the Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform (
the
Minister
), and the defendants are the
six applicants in this application, plus Damonse.
46.2.
The plaintiffs pray for orders setting
aside of the award of the LRAD project grant to the trust,
alternatively an order declaring
the award to be invalid, as well as
orders for payment of the sum of R6 323 940.00 and interest
thereon.
46.3.
The particulars of claim set out that the
SIU, authorised by virtue of Proclamation R8 of 2011 published in
Government Gazette 34031
dated 18 February 2011 (
the
proclamation
), conducted an
investigation of the LRAD Project grant to the trust. In
February 2016, based on evidence obtained during
its investigation,
the SIU concluded that the six applicants in this matter (the first
applicant and his five family members) were
the only real
beneficiaries of the LRAD Project grant and that the other 44
applicants / beneficiaries would play no active or
direct role in the
founding operations.
46.4.
Those beneficiaries simply constituted a
“
rent-a-crowd
”,
which was included in the business plan submitted to the Department
for the sole purpose of persuading the Department to
approve the
grant and to increase the amount of the grant by an additional
R4 890 688.00.
46.5.
Contrary to what was alleged in the
business plan, most of the 44 beneficiaries had no intention of
working on the farm, and/or
had alternative employment and would not
have been able to work on the farm, and/or would not have been able
to work on the farm
as they were not staying near the farm and had no
transport to get to it. Furthermore, save for the six trustees,
almost
all the other applicants / beneficiaries had no previous
experience of farming. They were housewives, pensioners, and/or
people
who were unfit to work on a farm, and/or people working as
general workers in other industries, and/or people who worked as
drivers
or in workshops. Very few of the other applicants or
beneficiaries were ever involved in small scale farming or commercial
farming, or came from a history or background of farming activities
involving subsistence farming, or had any particular work experience
in the agricultural sector and/or relevant experience necessary to
successfully conduct farming activities. Some beneficiaries
were employed as government employees or employees at public entities
and were therefore disqualified from being applicants / beneficiaries
of an LRAD Project grant.
46.6.
It was never intended that the other
applicants or beneficiaries would contribute in the form of their own
labour (“
sweat equity
”).
False ‘sweat equity’ records had been submitted to the
Department to create an impression of such contributions.
46.7.
These misrepresentations, so it is alleged
in the pleadings, were known by the trustees to be false and untrue
and were made with
the intention to induce the Department to award
the LRAD Project grant, without any belief in their truth, and/or
recklessly and
carelessly.
46.8.
In summary, the plaintiffs in the SIU
action aver that the LRAD Project grant awarded to the Trust was
occasioned by fraudulent
misrepresentations, alternatively was
occasioned by negligent misrepresentations, contrary to the legal
prescripts and stipulations
contained in the Land Reform –
Provision of Land and Assistance Act 26 of 1993 (
the
LRLA Act
) and the LRAD programme.
47.
The pleadings in the SIU action are in the
possession of the applicants’ attorneys, Blackburn Attorneys,
as they represent
the applicants. The allegations in the pleadings
regarding misrepresentations made by the applicants were echoed in
the founding
papers for the preservation order – which the
applicants provided to both their sets of attorneys.
48.
I
have reservations about accepting that the trustees’
explanation of their default is satisfactory. Their failure to
enter an appearance to defend once the preservation order was served
upon them is attributed to what appears to be inexcusable
incompetence on the part of two firms of attorneys, one of which was
engaged in civil litigation pertaining to the property directed
at
setting aside the award that enabled the trust to acquire the
property (the SIU action), and the other in criminal litigation
pertaining to fraud, also related to the property. It is
difficult to regard their explanation as reasonable.
As
Jones AJA put it, with reference to other Appellate Division
authority, in
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd trading as Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
:
[16]
“…
While
the Courts are slow to penalise a litigant for his attorney’s
inept conduct of litigation, there comes a point where
there is no
alternative but to make the client bear the consequences of the
negligence of his attorneys (
Saloojee
and Another NNO v Minister of Community Development
).
[17]
Even if one takes a benign view the inadequacy of this explanation
may well justify a refusal of rescission on that account
unless,
perhaps, the weak explanation is cancelled out by the defendant being
able to put up a
bona
fide
defence
which has not merely some prospect, but a good prospect of success
(
Melane
v Santam Insurance Company Ltd
).
[18]
”
49.
A
caution has also been sounded by Miller JA in
Chetty
v Law Society, Transvaal
:
[19]
“…
But
this is not to say that the stronger the prospects of success the
more indulgently will the Court regard the explanation of
the
default. An unsatisfactory and unacceptable explanation remains
so, whatever the prospects of success on the merits.
In the
light of the finding that the appellant’s explanation is
unsatisfactory and unacceptable it is therefore, strictly
speaking,
unnecessary to make findings or to consider the arguments relating to
the appellant’s prospects of success.
Nevertheless, in
the interests of fairness to the appellant, it is desirable to refer
to certain aspects thereof.
”
50.
In fairness to the applicants / trustees,
and notwithstanding my grave reservations about their explanation for
default of appearance,
I intend to consider the defences that they
indicated would be mounted against the forfeiture application, should
they be afforded
an opportunity to file full papers in opposition
thereto as prayed.
51.
I
am mindful that while the applicants must show that they have a
substantial defence, they are not required to show a probability
of
success; they need only show that they enjoy a
prima
facie
case or that there are triable issues. They are not required to
deal fully with the merits, but the grounds of defence must
be set
out with sufficient detail to enable the court to conclude that there
is a
bona
fide
defence.
[20]
52.
The applicants contend that they have three
bona fide
defences for purposes of these proceedings:
52.1.
The material non-disclosure of a fact which
should have been disclosed in
ex parte
proceedings;
52.2.
The special defence of
lis
alibi pendens
; and
52.3.
A defence against the merits of the
allegations of misrepresentation in their application (i.e. to the
Department for the LRAD grant).
# Alleged material
non-disclosure and the defence oflis alibi pendens.
Alleged material
non-disclosure and the defence of
lis alibi pendens
.
53.
It is convenient to consider these defences
together, as both pivot on the fulcrum of the SIU action.
54.
In regard to the alleged material
non-disclosure and breach of the
uberrimae
fides
rule, the trustees allege that
prior to institution of the preservation application, the SIU and the
Department had already instituted
a civil action for the recovery of
funds allegedly derived from unlawful activities committed by the
applicant, and had obtained
an interim interdict restraining and
prohibiting the applicants from encumbering and disposing of the
property. The trustees
complain that the NDPP failed to
disclose these facts in the
ex parte
preservation application, and submit that this a material
non-disclosure and that it vitiates the preservation order rendering
it susceptible to being rescinded
mero
motu
.
55.
The civil action in question is the SIU
action referred to above.
56.
The interim interdict in question was
sought by the SIU and the Minister on or about 11 August 2017 under
WCHC case number 14408/2017.
The relief sought was a
rule
nisi
pending a return day calling upon
the six trustees (who are also the defendants in the action), to show
cause why an order should
not be made pending the finalisation of the
action ‘to be instituted’ from directly or indirectly
encumbering, alienating,
selling, transferring or disposing of the
property, and calling upon the Registrar of Deeds to show cause why
it should not be
interdicted and restrained from giving effect to
such orders. Neither party dealt with the fate of the interim
interdict
proceedings, and no more can or need be said about them,
save that if such interdict remains in force, it was complemented by
the
terms of the preservation order.
57.
The
applicants submit that the NDPP’s failure to allude to the SIU
action (and the related interdict proceedings) is a breach
of the
duty upon an applicant in
ex
parte
proceedings, who bears a duty of utmost good faith to disclose all
material facts within his knowledge which may influence the
court in
making its decision, and that once an order is made where material
facts have been kept back, whether wilfully or
mala
fide
or negligently which might have influenced the decision of the court
whether to make a decision of not, the court has a discretion
to set
the order aside with costs on the grounds of non-disclosure, which
discretion does not compel dismissal or setting aside
of the
application even if the non-disclosure was material.
[21]
58.
The applicants contend that the cause of
action in the SIU action is alleged fraudulent misrepresentation by
the first applicant,
which they state to be the same cause of action
in the forfeiture proceedings. They submit that the purpose of
the forfeiture
order and the SIU action is the same, namely, to
recover monies disbursed by the Department. They submit that
the special
defence of
lis alibi pendens
is available to them against the NDPP for prosecution of both the
preservation and the forfeiture applications, that the State
should
not be permitted to do forum shopping while there are pending
proceedings, just to frustrate them, and that the institution
of the
preservation and forfeiture applications is an abuse of process. The
applicants submit that the SIU action, having been
instituted first,
must be adjudicated before the forfeiture application – and
that this did not occur because the NDPP failed
to disclose to the
court the existence of the SIU action which “
is
based on the same facts as the current proceedings.”
59.
The
NDPP observed that Chapter 6 of POCA provides for a two stage process
to forfeit property to the state. By operation of section
48(1) of
POCA,
[22]
an application for a
forfeiture order can only be made if a preservation of property order
is in place in regard to that property
– this is the first
stage. Section 40 of POCA provides that the preservation order
expires 90 days after its publication
in the Government Gazette
unless an application for a forfeiture order is pending in respect of
the property subject to the preservation
order, or unless there is an
unsatisfied forfeiture order in force, or unless the preservation
order is rescinded before the period
expires. The application
for a forfeiture order must perforce be brought before the expiry of
the 90 day period – this
is stage two. Stage one is generally
brought
ex
parte;
stage
two is not brought
ex
parte
,
but an order may be granted by default pursuant to section 53 of
POCA. Stage two affords the Court an opportunity to consider
any relevant additional or new material. If the forfeiture
order is being sought by default, the Court may grant such an
order,
but it also enjoys the discretion to make such order as the Court
considers appropriate in the circumstances or to make
no order.
[23]
In a sense, the hearing of the forfeiture application operates
as a ‘return day’ of the preservation order.
60.
It
is common cause that the existence of the SIU action and of the
interim interdict was not made known to the Court
[24]
hearing the preservation application. The NDPP explained that
the non-disclosure arose because at the time the preservation
application was instituted on 9 November 2022 the NDPP was
not aware of the SIU action, and that it only came to the
NDPP’s
attention shortly before the filing of the forfeiture application.
61.
However, on the ‘return day’,
i.e., when the forfeiture application was heard before Henney J,
the NDPP disclosed
the existence of the SIU action by way of a
detailed practice note from its counsel dated in April 2023, to which
the summons and
particulars of claim in the SIU action were attached.
The Court’s attention was directed to the relief ought in
the
SIU action. Counsel for the NDPP, Mr Getye (who appeared in
this rescission application also), submitted in his April 2023
practice note that the relief sought in the SIU action is a claim
in
personam
sounding in money, while the
relief sought in the section 48 proceedings is a claim
in
rem
for forfeiture of the property to
the State.
62.
Mr Getye reported in the said practice note
that the legal representatives of the plaintiffs in the SIU action
(the State Attorney)
had advised that if the section 48 forfeiture
order was granted, the SIU action would be withdrawn, hence no
prejudice would be
suffered by the respondents (who are the
applicants in this recession application). However at the
hearing of this application,
both Mr Titus and Mr Getye advised me
that the SIU action is set down for hearing on 17 October 2024.
63.
Regarding
material non-disclosure in
ex
parte proceedings,
th
e
learned authors Ndzengu and Von Bonde have pointed out
[25]
that the original rule as developed in
Schlesinger
[26]
was developed by the SCA
[27]
by adding two additional aspects, namely the reasons for
non-disclosure and the consequences of setting aside the provisional
order.
“
[29]
It is trite that an
ex parte
applicant
must disclose all material facts that might influence the Court in
deciding the application. If the applicant fails in
this regard and
the application is nevertheless granted in provisional form, the
Court hearing the matter on the return day has
a discretion, when
given the full facts, to set aside the provisional order or confirm
it. In exercising that discretion the later
Court will have regard to
the extent of the non-disclosure; the question whether the first
Court might have been influenced by
proper disclosure; the reasons
for non-disclosure and the consequences of setting the provisional
order aside.”
64.
To my mind, the first issue to be
considered is whether the non-disclosure was material. The
applicant’s case, in effect,
is that the non-disclosure was
material because it concealed from the Court (Ralarala AJ) that the
applicants were able to raise
the dilatory defence of
lis
alibi pendens.
65.
Wallis
JA explains
[28]
the plea thus:
“
As
its name indicates, a plea of
lis alibi
pendens
is based on the proposition that
the dispute (lis) between the parties is being litigated elsewhere
and therefore it is inappropriate
for it to be litigated in the court
in which the plea is raised. The policy underpinning it is that
there should be
a limit to the extent to which the same issue is
litigated between the same parties and that it is desirable that
there be finality
in litigation. The courts are also concerned
to avoid a situation where different courts pronounce on the same
issue with
the risk that they may reach differing conclusions.
”
66.
The
three requirements for a successful reliance on a plea of
lis
pendens
are that the litigation is between the same parties; that the cause
of action is the same; and that the same relief is sought in
both.
[29]
Regarding the
requirement of ‘same parties’, a defendant can raise the
plea of
lis
pendens
even though it is the plaintiff in the other proceedings on which the
plea is based.
[30]
As
for the requirement of the same cause of action, this could be
relaxed if the circumstances justified doing so, such as
when the
central issue would be the same in both proceedings.
[31]
Similarly, the requirement that the relief claimed has to be
the same could be relaxed where the circumstances supported
doing so,
each case depending on its own facts.
[32]
67.
Counsel
for the applicants submitted that although the plaintiffs in the SIU
action (the SIU and the Minister) differ from the applicant
in the
forfeiture application (the NDPP), they are all organs of state, and
accordingly the same party – the State - is litigating
against
the applicants in both matters (both of which are civil
[33]
matters).
68.
Amorphously categorising these litigants as
‘the State’ is an oversimplification in my view.
68.1.
The
SIU’s standing in the SIU action derives from
Section 4(1)(c)
of the
Special Investigating Units and Special Tribunals Act 74 of
1996
.
[34]
The Minister’s
standing in the SIU action is a function of the fact that the
Department, which falls under his authority,
disbursed sums to the
trust by reason of the misrepresentations made to it.
68.2.
The NDPP’s standing in the forfeiture
application derives from its mandate under Chapter 6 of POCA, which
affords the
NDPP exclusively the standing to bring Chapter 6
proceedings, the purpose of which is articulated in the preamble to
POCA:
“
AND
WHEREAS no person should benefit from the fruits of unlawful
activities, nor is any person entitled to use property for the
commission of an offence, whether such activities or offence took
place before or after the commencement of this Act, legislation
is
necessary to provide for a civil remedy for the preservation and
seizure, and forfeiture of property which is derived from unlawful
activities or is concerned in the commission or suspected commission
of an offence.
69.
There is an overlap in the issues to be
decided or that have been decided in the SIU action and in the
forfeiture application respectively.
Both require findings to
be made regarding alleged misrepresentations by the trustees to the
Department and how these influenced
the Department to act. The
NDPP needed also to persuade the Court, on a balance of
probabilities, that the trust derived,
received or retained the farm
from or in connection with the fraudulent activities of the first
applicant and/or second to sixth
applicants, i.e. that the property
is the proceeds of unlawful activities namely the fraud perpetrated
by the applicants.
70.
There is no dispute that the property was
acquired by means of the grant awarded by the Department. There
is no dispute that
the grant was awarded pursuant to representations
made by the trustees in its application and business plan submitted
to the Department.
71.
The dispute turns on the truthfulness of
the representations so made. That iisue, it seems to me, is the
same in both sets
of proceedings.
72.
This brings me to the question if the
relief sought is the same, or if this is a case where the ‘same
relief’ requirement
of a
lis
pendens
plea should be relaxed.
72.1.
The SIU and the NDPP have distinct
mandates: although their common focus is the LRAD grant to the trust,
their respective objectives
are not identical.
72.2.
The SIU (with the Minister) is directing
its attention in the SIU action to setting aside the LRAD award or
having it declared invalid
and to recovering the monies disbursed to
the trust, in excess of R6 million.
72.3.
The NDPP has directed its attention to
forfeiting to the State an asset which is the proceeds of crime, for
the purpose of deterring
the particular crime and preventing further
criminal activity as contemplated in the preamble to POCA quoted
above.
72.4.
The
proceeds of sale of the forfeited property are uncertain in quantum
and are likely to be for less than R6 million on a forced
sale.
[35]
The sale proceeds will be paid
[36]
into the Criminal Assets Recovery Account
[37]
(
the
Account
).
72.5.
However,
the Department could not call for payment to it from the Account of
such amount as may be required to satisfy any judgment
granted in its
favour in the SIU action
[38]
.
73.
The relief sought, to my mind, is not the
same. Even if I were to regard the parties as the same in both
sets of proceedings
(about which I have reservations), taking account
of the distinct statutorily prescribed mandates of the SIU and the
NDPP respectively,
this is not a proper case in which to relax the
requirement that the relief sought should be the same.
74.
In my view, a plea of
lis
pendens
would not avail the applicants
if they were afforded an opportunity to file opposing papers. That
being so, the NDPP’s
failure to disclose the SIU action at the
time of moving for the preservation order is not a material
non-disclosure, nor is it
likely to have influenced the Court to
refuse the preservation order at the hearing in January 2023.
75.
Even if I am mistaken in both these
conclusions, it is clear that the same material made available to me
– Mr Getye’s
April 2023 practice note and the attached
SIU summons - was made available to the Court hearing the forfeiture
application on the
‘return day’ of the preservation
order. The facts concerning the applicants’ first two
defences (material
non-disclosure and
lis
pendens
) were then known. In
these circumstances, the elements of
lis
pendens
and the materiality of
the non-disclosure were already able to be considered by the Court at
the time the forfeiture order
was moved.
75.1.
Mr Getye’s April 2023 practice note
specifically highlighted the non-disclosure at the first stage, and
spelt out the differences
in the relief sought in the two sets of
proceedings.
75.2.
The
Court
[39]
would have been
cognisant of its powers under section 53 of POCA to make no order at
all or to make orders other than a forfeiture
order, such as:
75.2.1.
postponing the forfeiture application so
that service of the forfeiture application could be effected on the
applicants, or
75.2.2.
postponing the forfeiture application until
after the SIU action had been determined, and / or
75.2.3.
setting aside the preservation order.
75.3.
Henney J’s Order commences with
the words “
Having read the
documents filed of record, having heard counsel for the applicant
[the NDPP]
and
having considered the matter, ...”.
There
is no reason to believe that Henney J excluded from consideration the
question whether the first Court (Ralarala AJ) might
have been
influenced by proper disclosure, the reasons for non-disclosure and
the consequences of setting the preservation order
aside.
75.4.
None of the alternative orders mooted above
were granted, and instead the Court granted the forfeiture order.
The non-disclosure
point is now moot.
75.5.
In these circumstances, even if rescission
were granted and the applicants were afforded the opportunity to file
opposing affidavits,
the prospects of the Court setting aside the
preservation order and the forfeiture order on the basis of material
non-disclosure
are remote, as are the prospects of the Court staying
the forfeiture application until the SIU action is determined.
# The applicants’
defence on the merits
The applicants’
defence on the merits
76.
In regard to the merits of the forfeiture
proceedings, the applicants contend that, for purposes of the
rescission application they
are not required to engage with all the
averments set out in the preservation and forfeiture application
papers, and need only
do so once given leave to file opposing papers
upon the grant of a rescission order. The applicants broadly
deny the specific
allegations made against them and contend that they
have evidence to rebut the NDPP’s version.
77.
The founding affidavit in the preservation
application was deposed by Gcobani Bam, a deputy director of
public prosecutions
with the NDPP. His affidavit set out the
misrepresentations made to the Department as to monetary
contributions that each
of the 49 proposed beneficiaries would make
to the farming enterprise on the property, and in relation to the
beneficiaries’
purported qualifications. Mr Bam’s
founding affidavit in the forfeiture application provided further
details of the
alleged misrepresentations. They are the same as
those pleaded in the SIU action, summarised in paragraphs 46.4
to 46.6
above.
78.
The applicants did not fully address these
allegations in the rescission papers (nor did they refer to or annex
their plea filed
in the SIU action).
79.
They confined themselves to the alleged
misrepresentations about the employment status of members of the
Klaase family (i.e., the
six applicants / trustees), the experience
of the beneficiaries in farming activities, and the value of the
Klaase family livestock.
80.
The first applicant averred in his founding
affidavit in the rescission application that:
80.1.
He and the second applicant (his wife)
disclosed the employment status of the Klaase family members,
including their salaries, and
that this appears from disclosure form
“
Vorm 1: Verklaring deur
Aansoekers
” a copy of which he
attached to his affidavit.
80.2.
The same disclosure form reveals the lack
of experience of the beneficiaries, and the fact that save for the
Klaase family and two
others with limited experience, no others had
farming experience.
80.3.
The discrepancy regarding the value of
livestock was an unintended typographical error and is not material.
81.
The two page disclosure form attached to
the first applicant’s founding affidavit lists only twenty
beneficiaries. It
records the average income per family, which
in seven instances was nil, but it does not record salaries per
beneficiary. The
form recorded that ten beneficiaries had
limited technical agricultural experience, and ten had none. It says
nothing about the
other 29 beneficiaries.
82.
Mr Titus submitted that the evidence put up
in the rescission application (described above) was only a ‘glimpse’
or
a ‘sample’ of what the applicants would be able to
show, if given the opportunity to file papers, and to go further
would be burdening the court. He submitted that they only
needed to make out a
prima facie
case, that what they had adduced showed that there are triable
issues, and that the applicant’s prospects of success were
strong and should compensate for the applicants’ weak
explanation for their default of appearance at the hearing of the
forfeiture application.
83.
It is so that in the rescission papers, the
applicants are not expected to comprehensively address the NDPP’s
papers in the
preservation and forfeiture applications, which run to
444 pages (excluding the April 2023 practice note with its
annexures). However,
for reasons that follow, what the
applicants have advanced falls short of addressing the cardinal
issues so as to set up a
prima facie
case.
84.
The LRAD programme covers farm acquisition
costs or costs for acquiring shares for the qualifying beneficiaries
who are primarily
persons that are unable to make a significant own
contribution and require a top-up grant to cover the farm purchase.
To
qualify for an LRAD grant, applicants must make a so-called
‘own contribution’ to the farming project (the amount of
which affects the size of the grant on a sliding scale). An
‘own contribution’ can be in the form of free labour
called ‘sweat equity’, valued at R5 000.00, but the
business plan must show evidence that that the applicant intends
to
devote a significant amount of own labour towards the establishment
and operation of the project. The individuals applicants
must
be black South African citizens of African, Coloured or Indian
descent (i.e., from previously disadvantaged communities) over
18
years of age. They must be willing to work on or near the land
concerned, operate or work on it and be committed to use
the grant to
purchase land for agricultural activities.
85.
The application made by to the Department
by the first applicant and Damonse recorded that the number of
persons who would benefit
from the project would be forty-nine adults
from five households: twenty-five women, seventeen youths, seven
pensioners and twenty
unemployed people, and that each would
contribute R13 000.00 as ‘sweat equity’. They
recorded, among other
things, that the applicants had employment
experience of different aspects of small scale farming and commercial
farming activities,
and that the majority had worked most of their
lives in the agricultural sector. In all, a picture was sketched of a
feasible and
potentially successful farming enterprise.
86.
The first applicant’s founding
affidavit simply did not address the allegations (confirmed by his
own 2015 affidavit supplied
to the SIU) that beneficiaries signed up
to become ‘silent partners’ of the Klaase family, and
that the Klaase family
always intended to buy out the other
beneficiaries of the trust who were not willing and interested in the
farming as soon as the
farm reached beyond the breakeven point. He
had thereby admitted to undermining the purpose of LRAD grants, which
is to discharge
the Department’s responsibility to redistribute
productive commercial agricultural farmlands to previously
disadvantaged
individuals.
87.
In my view, the applicants’ founding
affidavit did not adequately set out a
bona
fide
defence against the
allegations of fraud. Their prospects of success are poor.
88.
The applicants have not demonstrated good
cause for rescission.
89.
In the result, the application is dismissed
with costs.
GORDON-TURNER AJ
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Applicants:
Adv Madoda Titus
Instructed
by:
Mr Martin Green
Andre Reid Attorneys
Counsel
for the First Respondent:
Mr M Getye
Instructed
by:
Mr A Kondlo
State Attorney
[1]
“
48
Application for forfeiture order
(1)
If a preservation of property order is in force the National
Director, may apply
to a High Court for an order forfeiting to the
State all or any of the property that is subject to the preservation
of property
order.
(2)
The National Director shall give 14 days notice of an application
under subsection
(1) to every person who entered an appearance in
terms of section 39 (3).
(3)
A notice under subsection (2) shall be served in the manner in which
a summons whereby
civil proceedings in the High Court are commenced,
is served.
(4)
Any person who entered an appearance in terms of section 39 (3) may
appear at the
application under subsection (1)-
(a)
to oppose the making of the order; or
(b)
to apply for an order-
(i)
excluding his or her interest in that property from the operation of
the order;
or
(ii)
varying the operation of the order in respect of that property, and
may adduce
evidence at the hearing of the application.
”
[2]
Section
53 of POCA provides for forfeiture orders to be granted by default,
and for variation or rescission of such default orders
as follows:
“
53
Forfeiture order by default
(1)
If the National Director applies
for a forfeiture order by default and the High Court is satisfied
that no person has appeared
on the date upon which an application
under section 48 (1) is to be heard and, on the grounds of
sufficient proof or otherwise,
that all persons who entered
appearances in terms of section 39 (3) have knowledge of notices
given under section 48 (2), the
Court may-
(a)
make any order by default which the
Court could have made under sections 50 (1) and (2);
(b)
make such order as the Court may
consider appropriate in the circumstances; or
(c)
make no order.
(2)
The High Court may, before making
an order in terms of subsection (1), call upon the National Director
to adduce such further
evidence, either in writing or orally, in
support of his or her application as the Court may consider
necessary.
(3)
Any person whose interest in the
property concerned is affected by the forfeiture order or other
order made by the Court under
subsection (1) may, within 20 days
after he or she has acquired knowledge of such order or direction,
set the matter down for
variation or rescission by the court.
(4)
The court may, upon good cause shown,
vary or rescind the default order or give some other direction on
such terms as it deems
appropriate.
”
[3]
The
preservation application was based on section 38(2)(b) of POCA which
provides:
“
(
2)
The High Court shall make an order referred to in subsection (1) if
there are reasonable
grounds to believe that the property concerned-
(a)
...;
(b)
is the proceeds of unlawful activities;
...”
Section 1 of POCA
contains the definition:
“
'unlawful
activity'
means conduct which
constitutes a crime or which contravenes any law whether such
conduct occurred before or after the commencement
of this Act and
whether such conduct occurred in the Republic or elsewhere.
”
[4]
Notice
of Motion, prayer 1.
[5]
Section
47(3) of POCA, on which the trustees did not rely, also provides for
rescission.
That section provides:
“
(3)(a)
Any person affected by an order in respect of immovable property may
at any time apply for the rescission
of the order.
(b)
A High Court which made an order in respect of immovable property:
(i)
may, if it deems it necessary in the interests of justice, at any
time rescind
the order; or
(ii)
shall rescind the order if the relevant preservation of property
order is
rescinded.
(c)
If an order in respect of immovable
property is rescinded, the High Court shall direct the registrar of
deeds concerned to cancel
any restriction endorsed by virtue of that
order on the title deed of the immovable property, and that
registrar of deeds shall
give effect to any such direction
.”
[6]
Record
in the forfeiture application, page 384.
[7]
Record
in the forfeiture application, pages 388 to 391.
[8]
This
view is mistaken: a forfeiture order (following upon a preservation
order) can be obtained even if no crime is in issue.
Section 50(4)
of POCA provides that “
The
validity of an order under subsection (1) is not affected by the
outcome of criminal proceedings, or of an investigation with
a view
to institute such proceedings, in respect of an offence with which
the property concerned is in some way associated.”
[9]
[2010]
JOL 25001
(Tk) at paragraphs [7] to [9].
See also
Stemele and
Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions (3428/2015)
[2017] ZAECPEHC 44 (14 September 2017)
at paragraph [15].
[10]
This
judgment assumes in favour of the applicants that actual knowledge
is required, and constructive knowledge would not suffice.
The
possibility of constructive knowledge was not canvassed in the
affidavits or in submissions by the parties’ respective
counsel.
[11]
Section
62(2) of POCA makes the provision of the Uniform Rules of Court
insofar as they are not inconsistent with the provisions
of the Act
applicable to proceedings under Chapter 6 of the Act.
Uniform Rule 4(1)(a)(ii)
provides:
“
4(1)(a)
Service of any process of the court directed to the sheriff and
subject to the provisions of paragraph(a) any document
initiating
application proceedings shall be effected by the sheriff in one or
other of the following manners:
(i)
...;
(ii)
by delivering a copy thereof at the
place of residence or business of the said person, guardian, tutor,
curator or the like to
the person apparently in charge of the
premises at the time of delivery, being a person apparently not less
than sixteen years
of age. For the purposes of this paragraph when a
building, other than an hotel, boarding-house, hostel or similar
residential
building, is occupied by more than one person or family,
'residence' or 'place of business' means that portion of the
building
occupied by the person upon whom service is to be
effected
;”
[12]
Silber
v Ozen Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
1954
(2) SA 345
(A)
at 352H - 353A.
[13]
Harris
v Absa Bank Ltd t/a Volkskas
2006 (4) SA 527
(T) at para [6] (full bench).
[14]
Neuman
(Pvt) Ltd v Marks
1960
(2) SA 170
(SR)
at 173A.
[15]
Harris
v Absa Bank Ltd t/a Volkskas
supra,
at paras [8] and [9].
[16]
2003
(6) SA 1
(SCA) at paragraph [12].
[17]
1965
(2) SA 135 (A).
[18]
1962
(4) SA 531
(A) at 532C-F.
[19]
1985
(2) SA 756
(A) at 769D.
See
also
Harris v Absa Bank Ltd t/a
Volkskas
supra, at 532 H to I.
[20]
Stemele
and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions
supra,
at para [19].
[21]
Schlesinger
v Schlesinger
1979
(4) SA 342
(W) at 348 F to H.
And see:
Thint
(Pty) Ltd v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others:
Zuma and Another v NDPP and Others
2009
(1) SA 1
(CC) at paragraph 102;
National Director of
Public Prosecutions v Basson
2002 (1) SA 419
(SCA) at para
[21];
NDPP
v Braun,
unreported judgment of the
WCHC, Case no 220/2006, delivered on 20 September 2006, in which
Traverso DJP set aside a preservation
order by reason of a material
non-disclosure in an
ex parte
preservation application;
And see the judgment of
Bozalek J when the NDPP successfully applied
on notice
for
the same relief, in
NDPP v Braun and another
2007 (4) SA 72
(C).
[22]
The
wording of section 48(1) appears in footnote 1.
[23]
The
wording of section 53 appears in footnote 2.
[24]
Ralarala
AJ.
[25]
The
Duty of Utmost Good Faith in Asset-Forfeiture Jurisprudence –
Some Lessons to Learn
Obiter,
2013 at 384 to 385.
[26]
See
footnote 21.
[27]
Phillips
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
2003 (6) SA 447
(SCA) at para [29].
[28]
Caesarstone
Sdot-Yam Ltd v World of Marble and Granite
2000
CC and Others
2013 (6) SA 499
(SCA) at para [2].
[29]
Ibid
at para [12].
[30]
Ibid
at
para [23].
[31]
Ibid
at para [24].
[32]
Ibid
at paras [21 to [22].
[33]
Section
37(1) of POCA provides that Chapter 6 forfeiture proceedings are
civil not criminal.
[34]
“
4
Functions of Special Investigating Unit
(1)
The functions of a Special
Investigating Unit are, within the framework of its terms of
reference as set out in the proclamation
referred to in section 2
(1)-
(a)
...;
(b)
...;
(c)
to institute and conduct civil
proceedings in a Special Tribunal or any court of law for-
(i)
any relief to which the State
institution concerned is entitled, including the recovery of any
damages or losses and the prevention
of potential damages or losses
which may be suffered by such a State institution;
(ii)
any relief relevant to any
investigation; or
(iii)
any relief relevant to the
interests of a Special Investigating Unit;
”
[35]
The
curator
bonis’
report of 6 April 2023 included the third respondent’s report
on 29 March 2023, assessing the open market value
of the
property to be R6 500 000.00, and the forced sale value as
R3 900 000.00.
[36]
Section
57(1) of POCA.
[37]
Established
in terms of section 63 of POCA.
[38]
Section
69A read with section 68 of POCA provides for Cabinet to allocate
money standing to the credit of the Account to specific
law
enforcement agencies or to institutions, organisations or funds
established with the object to render assistance in any manner
to
victims of crime (and to allocate monies for the administration of
the Account).
[39]
Henney
J.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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