Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 49South Africa
Moodley N.O and Others v Public Investment Corporation SOC Limited and Others (3609/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 49 (9 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
9 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Moodley N.O and Others v Public Investment Corporation SOC Limited and Others (3609/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 49 (9 March 2023)
Moodley N.O and Others v Public Investment Corporation SOC Limited and Others (3609/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 49 (9 March 2023)
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sino date 9 March 2023
FLYNOTES:
SPECIFICITY AND SUBPOENA DUCES TECUM
CIVIL
PROCEDURE – Subpoena duces tecum – Specificity –
Use of “all” in reference to documents
and
communications – Determiner “all” could be
sufficiently specific if the thing or class of things to
which it
relates was clearly enough defined – Complete absence of
such specificity in subpoenas makes them non-compliant
with the
requirement – Uniform Rule 38(1)(a)(iii).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case no. 3609/2023
Before: The Hon. Mr
Justice Binns-Ward
Hearing: 7 March 2023
Judgment: 9 March 2023
In the matter between:
AMINA
MOODLEY N.O.
First
Applicant
GAAMIEM
COLBIE
N.O.
Second
Applicant
3
LAWS CAPITAL SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Third
Applicant
SAGARMATHA
TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED
Fourth
Applicant
SEKUNJALE
CAPITAL (PTY) LTD
Fifth
Applicant
and
PUBLIC
INVESTMENT CORPORATION SOC LIMITED
First
Respondent
GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES PENSION FUND
Second
Respondent
AYO
TECHNOLOGIES SOLUTIONS LIMITED
Third
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR, HIGH COURT (W. CAPE DIVISION)
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD J:
[1]
The
plaintiffs in case no. 9141/2019, the Public Investment SOC Limited
Corporation (the PIC) and the Government Employees Pension
Fund (the
GEPF), respectively, have brought an action against Ayo Technologies
Solutions Ltd (Ayo) for payment of the sum of almost
R4,3 billion,
which was the subscription price paid by the PIC, in its capacity as
the GEPF’s investment manager, for shares
in Ayo at the time of
the latter’s listing on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange.
Three causes of action are pleaded in
the particulars of claim,
namely (i) that the PIC’s decision to invest in Ayo fell
foul of the principle of legality
and falls to be reviewed and set
aside (a ‘self-review’, in other words), that the person
or persons purporting to
represent the PIC in entering into the
transaction had lacked authority to do so and (iii) that the
transaction had been induced
by material misrepresentations by the
persons representing Ayo.
[2]
One
of the pleaded issues in the action, bearing on the third of the
forementioned causes of action, is the use by Ayo of the funds
generated by the transaction. It is the plaintiffs’ case
that it had been represented by Ayo that the funds would be
applied
in furtherance of the strategy to grow Ayo’s position in the
information and communications technology sector. The
forecast
achievement of significant market share growth pursuant to the
indicated strategy had played a material role in the representations
made to the PIC to Ayo in support of the private placement of the
shares at a price of R43 per share. The PIC alleges that
that
the funds were used instead, at least in material part, to settle the
outstanding liabilities of certain of Ayo’s related
companies.
[3]
In
paragraph 15.9 of their particulars of claim in the action, the
plaintiffs have pleaded the following allegation:
‘
In
the course of … negotiations, AYO omitted to disclose to the
PIC that (“the undisclosed facts”):
9.
AYO did not intend to use the entire proceeds of the private
placement for the
purposes reflected in the pre-listing statement but
intended to divert certain of the funds to related party companies to
facilitate
the repayment of existing debts and/or for alternative
purposes.
’
[4]
The
plaintiffs in the action, who are the first and second respondents in
the application currently before me, caused subpoenas
duces
tecum
to be issued and served on Ms Amina Moodley, who is a director of 3
Laws Capital South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Sagarmatha Technologies
Ltd,
and on Mr Gamiem Colbie, who is a director of Sekunjalo Capital (Pty)
Ltd. Those companies are related companies to
the defendant,
Ayo. The subpoenas required the recipients to produce to the
registrar certain ‘
documents
and communications
’
in relation to dealings between the companies of which they are
directors and Ayo.
[5]
Ms
Moodley and Mr Colbie and the three companies on whose boards of
directors they serve have applied in the current proceedings,
in case
no. 3609/2023, for the setting aside of the subpoenas. The
application was set down for hearing by me on the same
day as the
commencement before me of the trial in the action. I heard
argument immediately before the commencement of the
trial and
reserved judgment. The trial has proceeded in the meantime.
[6]
A
number of complaints were advanced in the applicants’
supporting affidavits but, at the hearing, the argument advanced by
Mr
Katz
SC
focussed on the alleged over-broadness and lack of specificity of the
subpoenas. In this regard, the applicants’
counsel
stressed the requirement of specificity in rule 38(1)(a)(iii).
Owing to the conclusion to which I have come on the
application, this
is the only issue I need to address determinatively. I should
mention, however, that there was also a dispute
between the
applicants and the respondents as to whether one of the subpoenas
served on Ms Moodley had called on her to produce
documentation
related to a company known by the acronym AEEI (of which she is not a
director) rather than 3 Laws Capital.
Mr
Katz
agreed, however, that the court could decide the application on the
basis that Ms Moodley had been served with a subpoena
in respect
of the documentation of 3 Laws Capital, as contended by the
first and second respondent. It is accordingly
not necessary
for me to determine that dispute.
[7]
The
material part of each of the three subpoenas was identical save, of
course, for the mention of the name of the relevant related
company.
I shall use the wording of the subpoena served on Ms Moodley in
respect of 3 Laws Capital South Africa (Pty) Ltd
for illustrative
purposes. It called on her, as recipient, to produce the
following documents:
‘
All
documents and communications in relation to all transactions and
agreements between the Defendant and 3 Laws Capital South Africa
(Pty) Ltd entered
[?into]
or
considered from November 2017 to date.
’
To contextualise the
dates mentioned in the subpoena, it bears noting that the agreement
in terms of which the PIC subscribed for
the shares in Ayo was
concluded in December 2017. A prelisting statement, as required
in terms of the rules of the Johannesburg
Stock Exchange, had been
issued on 13 December, and a preceding draft prelisting statement had
been under consideration by relevant
employees and executives of the
PIC in the weeks preceding that.
[8]
Rule
38(1)(a) of the Uniform Rules of Court provides as follows in
relevant part::
‘
Procuring
Evidence for Trial
(1)(a)(i)
Any party, desiring the attendance of any person to give evidence
at
a trial, may as of right, without any prior proceeding whatsoever,
sue out from the office of the registrar one or more subpoenas
for
that purpose, each of which subpoenas shall contain the names of not
more than four persons, and service thereof upon any person
therein
named shall be effected by the sheriff in the manner prescribed by
rule
4.
(ii)
….
(iii)
If any witness is in possession or control of any deed, document,
book, writing, tape
recording or electronic recording (hereinafter
referred to as a 'document') or thing which the party requiring the
attendance of
such witness desires to be produced in evidence, the
subpoena shall specify such document or thing and require such
witness to
produce it to the court at the trial.
’
[9]
In
their answer to the application, the plaintiffs contended that the
material sought to be obtained through the subpoenas was relevant
in
the action by reason of the allegation in para 15.9 of the
particulars of claim quoted above. In answer to a question
directed from the bench, Mr
Maleka
SC confirmed, as I expected he would, that the agreements or
transactions related to the pleaded allegation in para 15.9 could
be
only agreements or transactions in terms of which funds raised
through the PIC’s subscription for the shares in Ayo were
diverted or channelled, for any purpose not concerned with Ayo’s
growth strategy, from Ayo to the three related companies
concerned.
It is quite clear, however, if regard is had to the wording of the
subpoenas, that their reach extends well beyond
that. In fact,
their reach is unlimited.
[10]
Mr
Maleka
also conceded, quite reasonably, that the pleader of paragraph 15.9
of the particulars of claim (they were drafted by different
counsel)
must have had certain already identified transactions in mind in
order to be able to plead the allegation concerned.
Indeed, the
identity of at least some of the transactions concerned appears to
have emerged in the inquiries that have recently
been undertaken into
various aspects of the investment by the PIC into Ayo. There
was so the so-called ‘Mpati Commission’,
being the
Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of Impropriety
regarding the Public Investment Corporation, presided
over by a
former president of the Supreme Court of Appeal, the Hon. Lex Mpati,
and another undertaken by the Johannesburg Stock
Exchange. The
subpoenas could, and in my view should, have specified that it was
any documents related to those identified
transactions that was
required. The reach of the subpoenas could legitimately have
been extended by reference also to any
other transactions in terms of
which funds raised by the private placement were channelled from Ayo
to the company concerned.
[11]
As
long as the transactions were identified, either specifically or with
reference to reasonably clear defining criteria, I do not
consider
that the breadth of the direction implicit in the use of the word
‘
all
’
would have been objectionable. The use of the determiner ‘
all
’,
to which Mr
Katz
took exception on the grounds that it was the very antithesis of
specificity could, in my view, be sufficiently ‘specific’
in the relevant context if the thing or class of things to which it
relates is clearly enough defined or identified. It is
the
complete absence of such specificity in the impugned subpoenas that
makes them non-compliant with the requirement of rule 38(1)(a)(iii).
[12]
It
is readily conceivable that there could have been any number of
agreements or transactions of all manner of types between Ayo
and its
named related companies during the 5-year period involved that have
no connection or relevance whatsoever to the issues
involved in the
action, yet the plain tenor of the subpoenas requires any
documentation related to them to be produced. It
might be
argued that that is an unbusinesslike construction of the subpoenas
and that the recipient might be expected to understand
that relevance
was implied. But even on that approach, the subpoenas would
still be objectionable because the effect would
be to leave it to the
recipient’s judgment to determine what was relevant or not.
The appeal court has made it clear
that such a situation is
unacceptable;
Beinash
v Wixley
[1997] ZASCA 32
;
1997 (3) SA 721
(SCA) at 735G-H.
[13]
It
has been remarked that, as a matter of judicial policy, courts should
be cautious about upholding applications to set aside subpoenas
and
be exacting in their scrutiny of them. The rationale for that
policy was explained in the following way in
Beinash
supra,
at 734-5:
‘
Ordinarily,
a litigant is of course entitled to obtain the production of any
document relevant to his or her case in the pursuit
of the truth,
unless the disclosure of the document is protected by law. The
process of a subpoena is designed precisely to protect
that right.
The ends of justice would be prejudiced if that right was impeded.
For this reason the Court must be cautious in exercising
its power to
set aside a subpoena on the grounds that it constitutes an abuse of
process. It is a power which will be exercised
in rare cases, but
once it is clear that the subpoena in issue in any particular matter
constitutes an abuse of the process, the
Court will not hesitate to
say so and to protect both the Court and the parties affected thereby
from such abuse. (
Sher
and
Others
v Sadowitz
1970 (1) SA 193
(C);
S
v Matisonn
1981 (3) SA 302
(A).)
’
[14]
‘
Abuse
of process
’
is a term that bears with it the stigma of conscious misuse of the
court’s processes. I do not think that the
judgment in
Beinash
should be read to suggest that it is only in cases of that sort that
a court will be persuadable to set aside a subpoena.
A court
will also do so in other less opprobrious circumstances, such as when
the subpoena is prejudicially non-compliant with
the rules of court,
or when it calls for the production or documents or things that are
not relevant to the issues in a case, or
where the material might
more reasonably be obtained from a party to the proceedings (say
though discovery) than from a third party.
Those situations can
occur even where there is no intention by the procurer of the
subpoena to abuse the court’s process.
Where they do
occur, the court will intervene irrespective of the procuring party’s
bona fides.
[15]
The
setting aside of the subpoenas will not affect the plaintiffs’
ability, if they were so advised, to issue fresh subpoenas
in a more
directed and rule-compliant form. That can be done at any stage
of the trial when it is still open to the plaintiff
to lead its own
evidence or cross-examine the defendant’s witnesses. I
mention this because another of the applicants’
complaints was
that the time allowed between the service of the subpoenas and the
required production of the documents was so short
that compliance
would impose on them unfairly. Whether the time allowed is
unfairly tight or not cannot be decided in the
abstract. It
might be if the volume of material is vast and the documents are
difficult to collate. It would not be
if the documentation was
limited and readily available. It would be for the recipient to
explain in the given circumstances
of the case why he or she did not
have sufficient time to be able to produce what was demanded by the
subpoena.
[16]
It
follows from my finding that the subpoenas are non-compliant that an
order will be made setting them aside. Mr
Katz
submitted that the applicants should be awarded their costs inclusive
of the fees of two counsel. Mr
Maleka
,
hoping for a more propitious outcome for the plaintiffs than has
eventuated, also asked for the costs of two counsel if the
applications
were dismissed. His contention was based on other
considerations, however; namely, that the team engaged by the
plaintiffs
was heavily engaged in the final preparation for the trial
when the urgent application to set aside the subpoenas imposed
disruptively
on their time. Had the plaintiffs’
opposition prevailed, the argument might have carried the day.
Comparable
exigencies did not apply in respect of the applicants’
position. I am not persuaded that the issues involved
reasonably
necessitated the engagement by the applicants of more than
one counsel. A cogent argument could be made to the taxing
master
that the engagement of senior counsel for the purpose was
reasonable, but that is not a matter for my determination.
[17]
An
order will issue in the following terms:
1.
The
subpoenas
duces
tecum
served on the first and second applicants in relation to the action
in case no. 9141/2019 are set aside.
2.
The
first and second respondents shall be liable, jointly and severally,
to pay the applicants’ costs of suit.
A.G. BINNS-WARD
Judge of the High
Court
APPEARANCES
Applicant’s
counsel:
A. Katz SC
K.
Perumalsamy
B.
Prinsloo
Applicant’s
attorneys:
Hanekom Attorneys Inc.
Cape
Town
’
First and Second
respondents counsel:
V. Maleka SC
P.
Ngcongo
D.
Wild
E.
van Heerden
First and Second
respondents’ attorneys:
Gwina Attorneys Inc
Sandton
Dunster
Attorneys
Cape
Town
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