Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 98South Africa
Spagni v District Magistrate, Cape Town and Others (21791/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 98 (24 March 2022)
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## Spagni v District Magistrate, Cape Town and Others (21791/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 98 (24 March 2022)
Spagni v District Magistrate, Cape Town and Others (21791/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 98 (24 March 2022)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
Case
number: 21791/2021
In
the matter between:
RICCARDO
PAOLO
SPAGNI
Applicant
and
THE
DISTRICT MAGISTRATE, CAPE TOWN
First respondent
THE
MINISTER OF
POLICE
Second respondent
THE
ACTING DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
WESTERN
CAPE
Third respondent
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Fourth respondent
THE
MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Fifth respondent
THE
MINISTER IN THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
AND
CO-OPERATION
Sixth respondent
REASONS
DELIVERED ON 24 MARCH 2022
VAN ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
On 22 March 2022 I granted an order in the
following terms:
1.1.
The third and fourth respondents’
application in terms of Rule 30(1) is dismissed.
1.2.
The third and fourth respondents jointly
and severally, the one paying, the other to be absolved, shall pay
the applicant’s
costs occasioned by the application in terms of
Rule 30(1) on the scale as between party and party, such costs to
include the costs
of two counsel.
2.
I indicated that the reasons for the order
would follow. These are the reasons.
The applicant’s
pending criminal trial
3.
The applicant is a dual South African and
Italian citizen. He was arrested in South Africa on 13 September
2012, facing various
charges relating to fraud, forgery and uttering.
4.
The applicant’s trial commenced in
the Regional Magistrate’s Court in Cape Town on 22 August 2019.
It was thereafter
postponed on a number of occasions and for a
variety of reasons. It was finally postponed for further hearing on
24 March 2021.
The applicant did not appear at court on that day, and
his attorney advised the court that he had been unable to contact his
client
and did not know his whereabouts.
5.
The trial was postponed to 19 April 2019 to
enable the investigating officer to locate the applicant. This proved
unsuccessful as,
unbeknownst to the court, his attorney and the
fourth respondent (“the NPA”), the applicant had
travelled to the United
States on 21 March 2021. The applicant and
his wife travelled from South Africa to Bermuda, where they
quarantined before entering
the United States on 14 April 2021.
6.
The applicant was subsequently arrested in
Nashville, Tennessee, on 21 April 2021 pursuant to an application for
provisional arrent
transmitted by the South African office of
Interpol to its counterparts in the United States, prior to the
filing of a formal extradition
request under the relevant
legislation. He remains in Nashville, within the jurisdiction of the
Nashville court, although he has
since been released on bail subject
to stringent bail conditions.
The warrant review
7.
On 22 December 2021 the applicant
instituted an application in this Court under the abovementioned case
number, seeking orders that
two warrants of arrest issued against him
be declared invalid and unconstitutional, and that they be reviewed
and set aside (“the
warrant review”).
8.
The first warrant had been issued against
the applicant by the first respondent (“the magistrate”)
on 19 April 2021,
and the second, which was an “amplified”
warrant, on 21 September 2021. These warrants were issued to secure
the applicant’s
attendance at court so as to allow his trial to
proceed.
9.
The magistrate has not opposed the warrant
review.
10.
The warrant review was brought as one of
urgency, and was to be heard on 23 February 2022. The applicant set
it down on the urgent
roll together with an application launched on 8
October 2021 (under case number 17224/2021) for the review and
setting aside of
an extradition request dated 21 September 2021
submitted by the third respondent (“the ADPP”) to the
Central Authority
for Extradition and International Mutual Assistance
in the United States of America (“the extradition review”).
The
reason for the urgency was that the extradition inquiry in the
United States was to commence on 3 March 2022. The inquiry has since
been postponed to 7 April 2022.
11.
The extradition review was argued on 23
February 2022, but no judgment has yet been delivered. The Court did
not hear the warrant
review on that day.
The
application in terms of Rule 30(1)
12.
On 7 January 2022 the respondents caused a
notice in terms of Rule 30(2)(b) to be served, notifying the
applicant that the warrant
review constituted an irregular step and
calling upon him to remedy such irregularity within then days of
service of the notice.
13.
The applicant did not take any steps to
withdraw the warrant review.
14.
On 23 February 2022 the third and fourth
respondents (“the respondents”) delivered an application
in terms of Rule 30(1)
(“the irregular step application”),
seeking the following relief:
14.1.
Declaring that the applicant’s
warrant review constituted an irregular step and that it be set
aside;
14.2.
Directing that the applicant pay the
respondents’ costs on an attorney and client scale.
15.
The irregular step application is aimed at,
so the respondents submit, setting aside “
an
ill-conceived attempt by the Applicant effectively to supplement an
existing judicial review application under the guise of an
‘independent, self-standing and separate’ review
application
”.
16.
As mentioned earlier, the warrant review
was not argued together with the extradition review on 23 February
2022. It stood over
to 25 February 2022 on the urgent roll. On that
day, the parties indicated in chambers that they were in agreement
that the Rule
30(1) application should be argued first so as to pave
the way for the further conduct of the litigation if necessary. The
application
was eventually argued on 4 March 2022.
17.
I shall deal with the parties’
contentions in the course of the discussion below.
Does
the warrant review constitute an irregular step?
The
provisions of Rule 30
18.
Rule 30(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court
provides as follows:
(1)
A party to a cause in which an irregular step has been taken by any
other party may apply to court to
set it aside.
(2)
An application in terms of subrule (1) shall be on notice to all
parties specifying particulars of the
irregularity or impropriety
alleged, and may be made only if—
(a)
the applicant has not himself taken a further step in the cause with
knowledge of the irregularity;
(b)
the applicant has, within ten days of becoming aware of the step, by
written notice afforded his opponent
an opportunity of removing the
cause of complaint within ten days;
(c)
the application is delivered within fifteen days after the expiry of
the second period mentioned
in paragraph (b) of subrule
(2).
(3)
If at the hearing of such application the court is of opinion that
the proceeding or step is irregular
or improper, it may set it aside
in whole or in part, either as against all the parties or as against
some of them, and grant leave
to amend or make any such order as to
it seems meet.
(4)
Until a party has complied with any order of court made against him
in terms of this rule, he shall
not take any further step in the
cause, save to apply for an extension of time within which to comply
with such order.
19.
Rule 30 applies only to irregularities of
form and not to matters of substance (
Graham
and another v Law Society, Northern Provinces and others
2016
(1) SA 279
(GP) at par [40])
.
20.
In
SA
Metropolitan Lewensversekeringsmaatskappy Bpk v Louw NO
1981 (4) SA 329
(O) at 333H the Court stated the object of Rule 30(1)
as follows: “
I have no doubt that
Rule 30(1) was intended as a procedure whereby a hindrance to the
future conducting of the litigation, whether
it is created by a
non-observance of what the Rules of Court intended or otherwise, is
removed
.”
21.
Proof of prejudice is a prerequisite to
success in an application in terms of Rule 30(1) (
Afrisun
Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v Kunene NO and others
1999
(2) SA 599
(T) at 611C-F).
22.
Rule
30(3) gives a court very wide powers,
inter
alia
to make any order it deems fit. The court has a discretion and it is
not intended that an irregular step should necessarily be
set aside.
The discretion must be exercised judicially on a consideration of the
circumstances and what is fair to both sides.
The court is entitled
to overlook in proper cases any irregularity which does not work any
substantial prejudice to the other party
(
Trans-African
Insurance Co Ltd v Maluleka
1956
(2) SA 273 (A)
at 276F-H).
23.
I agree with the respondents’
submission that the provisions of Rule 30(1) are applicable to
applications, depending on the
circumstances of each case. This much
is clear from the authorities to which I have been referred. I did
not understand the applicant’s
counsel to submit differently
(at least in oral argument), but they sought to differentiate the
authorities cited by the respondents
in support of their case from
the present matter. I shall refer to these authorities later.
24.
It is against this background that the
respondents’ irregular step application falls of be determined.
The
grounds upon which the respondents’ irregular step application
is based
25.
I fully understand that the respondents’
case is not that an applicant may never launch an independent and
self-standing review
application based on information uncovered in
the Rule 53 record of another review application. Such a stance would
clearly be
untenable. Their case is that, in the particular
circumstances of this matter, the warrant review constitutes an abuse
of process
and an irregular step as it was brought solely to remedy
the oversight that had occurred in the failure to supplement the
founding
papers in the extradition review with a challenge to the
warrants.
26.
The respondents submit that “
the
irregularity and/or impropriety (as contemplated in Rule 30(2) and
(30)) is illustrated clearly by the procedural background
to this
application
”. They argue that,
properly scrutinised and as a matter of form, the warrant review,
despite being presented as a separate
application, is in fact a
belated attempt at supplementing the relief sought in the extradition
review. The circumstances relied
upon by the respondents are as
follows.
26.1.
The extradition review was instituted on 8
October 2021.
26.2.
On 19 October 2021, the ADPP delivered the
Rule 53 record in the extradition review. The record included the two
warrants that form
the subject of the warrant review.
26.3.
The applicant delivered a supplementary
founding affidavit on 22 October 2021, amplifying his case in light
of the contents of the
Rule 53 record, but did not raise the alleged
defects in the warrants.
26.4.
On 15 December 2021 the ADPP delivered an
answering affidavit in the extradition review.
26.5.
On 22 December 2021, despite having been
aware since 19 October 2021 of the warrants and the facts upon he now
relies, the applicant
instituted the warrant review on an urgent
basis.
26.6.
As to urgency, the respondents point out
that, although the applicant states that the warrant review was
brought within four days
of his becoming aware of the defects in the
warrants, this cannot be true because the warrants were included in
the Rule 53 record
which had been at the applicant’s disposal
since 19 October 2021. The applicant’s statement was thus not
only aimed
at misleading the court, but also shows that the warrant
review was simply an attempt to supplement the extradition review –
the alleged defects in the warrants having been previously overlooked
by the applicant’s legal team.
26.7.
Had this not been the case, and had the
applicant genuinely believed that a challenge to the warrants
required a self-standing review
application, one would have expected
him to launch the warrant review at about the same time as
supplementing his papers in the
extradition review. Any alleged
urgency in relation to the warrant review is thus self-created.
26.8.
The true objective of the warrant review,
brought on an urgent basis, is gleaned from the founding affidavit in
that review, where
the applicant states that he ADPP relies on the
allegedly unlawful warrants for the purposes of the extradition
request. The purpose
of the warrant review is thus to impugn the
extradition request – a purpose underscored by the fact that
the warrant review
was brought as a matter of urgency, to be heard
together with the extradition request.
26.9.
The applicant sought to have the warrant
review and the extradition review heard simultaneously so as to
remedy its remissness in
supplementing the latter case in accordance
with Rule 53(4).
27.
The applicant denies that its application
constitutes an irregular step, and argues that the respondents seek
to set aside, as an
irregular step, a notice of motion and founding
affidavit displaying no formal defects and which raise a
constitutional challenge
to the lawfulness and validity of the two
warrants. The basis for the irregular step relief, which would have
the effect of nullifying
the constitutional challenge, is that the
applicant was entitled to and should have amended and supplemented
his extradition review
in terms of Rule 53(4) following receipt of
the Rule 53 record in that application.
28.
The applicant argues that the irregular
step application is in itself an abuse of process and that, instead
of providing an answer
to the allegations levelled against the
validity of the warrants, the respondents seek to delay and evade
scrutiny of the warrants
on the basis of a technical application.
The
warrant review does not constitute an irregular step
29.
Having considered the circumstances in
which the warrant review was brought in context of the purpose of
Rule 30, I am of the view
that the warrant review does not for the
reasons cited by the respondents constitute an irregular step.
30.
As already stated, Rule 30 relates to
irregularities of form and not to matters of substance. In support of
its argument that Rule
30 should be applied in the present case, the
respondents referred to various authorities. None of these are
comparable to the
present matter, particularly in relation to the
issue of irregularities of form:
30.1.
In
Eniram
(Pty) Ltd v New Woodholme Hotel (Pty) Ltd
1967 (2) SA 491
(E) the court found that Rule 30 was applicable where
an application was brought as one of urgency, but no reasons of
urgency were
set out in the supporting affidavits. It is clear from a
reading of that judgment that, in addition, the Rule was invoked
because
no formal notice of motion had been delivered at the time
that the Rule 30 application was instituted. In the present matter
there
are allegations of urgency – whether they have merit
falls to be determined at the hearing of the warrant review.
30.2.
In
Bester NO
and others v Target Brand Orchards (Pty) Ltd and others
(22593/2019)
[2020] ZAWCHC 183
183 (21 December 2020) the Court
considered a Rule 30 application in which one of five cited
defendants in an action alleged
that the combined summons was
irregular in that the actions instituted against each of the
defendants were not linked to each other.
The application was
dismissed, but there was no suggestion that Rule 30 could not be
invoked in respect of a summons and particulars
of claim. The same
must, axiomatically, apply to a notice of motion and founding
affidavit. This merely states a principle already
accepted.
30.3.
In
Sacerdote v
Stromberg
(34218/18) [2019] ZAGPPHC 114
(27 February 2019) application was made to set aside a notice of
motion and founding affidavit as
an irregular step on the basis that
there was no personal service of the application by the Sheriff. The
application was dismissed
as there was no prejudice to the applicant
as a result of the irregular service.
30.4.
In
Van
Deventer and another v Biggs and others
(3323/2013) [2014] ZAECPEHC 48 (7 August 2014) the Court set aside a
summons on the basis,
inter alia
,
that the plaintiff should have followed the provisions of Rule 53
given the nature and effect of the relief sought. The matter
had its
origins in an arbitration award or expert determination, and the
Court was of the view that the relief subsequently sought
in the
summons should have been sought via Rule 53. The plaintiff had thus
approached the court in an incorrect manner. This seems
to me to be
akin to a case where, for example, an applicant for the liquidation
of a company approaches the court by way of action
instead of
application. There is a defect in the form in which the matter is
brought to court, and the incorrect form of proceedings
may be set
aside under Rule 30.
30.5.
In
Vlok NO and
others v Sun International South Africa Ltd and others
2014 (1) SA 487
(GSJ), a matter dealing with an exception to
particulars of claim to the effect that the proceedings should have
been brought on
motion and not by way of action, the court noted at
para [114] that “
the kind of
objection is more appropriately raised by way of objecting to the
regularity of the proceedings in terms of Rule 30
than by taking
exception to the legal competence of the cause of action. ‘You
should have advanced this cause of action on
motion, not by summons’
is not a challenge to the legal competence of the cause of action; it
is instead an objection to
the procedural step taken by the opposing
litigant
”.
31.
The warrant review does not suffer from a
defect or defects of form such as those considered in these
authorities, or any other
defect that renders it an irregular step as
contemplated by Rule 30, whatever the applicant’s motives were
as contended for
by the respondents having regard to the relief
sought and the timing of the application.
32.
As the applicant points out, the warrant
review was brought in relation to different decisions (the warrants)
taken by a different
decision-maker than the one involved in the
extradition review (the magistrate as opposed to the ADPP). The
magistrate is not a
party to the extradition review. The warrant
review does not seek any relief in relation to the extradition
request. As such, I
cannot find that it constitutes an abuse of
process as contended for by the respondents. If the launch of the
warrant review did
in fact amount to an attempt belatedly to bolster
the extradition review, such attempt has failed now that the
extradition review
has been heard.
33.
Rule 53(4) permits an applicant to amend
their notice of motion and supplement their founding affidavit after
having sight of the
materials considered by a decision-maker. New
grounds of review arising from the record, which the applicant was
unaware of when
launching the application, may be included in a
supplementary founding affidavit and new relief may be sought by way
of an amended
notice of motion. As the applicant points out, this is
a right, not an obligation (although, of course, the applicant may
only
rely on such new relief and new matter in that particular review
application if incorporated in terms of Rule 53(4)).
34.
The applicant’s right to amend and
supplement logically relates to the decision sought to be reviewed
and set aside, taken
by the relevant decision-maker. The applicant
submits that Rule 53 does not make provision for a “supplemented”
challenge
to the decisions of other decision-makers who are not
parties to the original litigation.
35.
Whilst this is apparent from a reading of
Rule 53, I am not sure that the applicant is correct in arguing that
the decision of a
different decision-maker can never be incorporated
into an already instituted review application where the invalidity of
another
decision appears from the Rule 53 record, and where the facts
and circumstances overlap to such a degree that such a course would
be sensible. I think that a joinder application would be necessary,
and that consequential amendments to the notice of motion would
have
to be made as a result of the joinder (and not because of Rule
53(4)). After the filing of the Rule 53 record in relation
to the
different decision the applicant would again be entitled to amend the
notice of motion and supplement the founding papers
in terms of Rule
53(4) as applied to the new decision. This may be cumbersome but it
is not wrong.
36.
Clearly, an applicant may also simply
institute a separate application for review in respect of the other
decision, as the applicant
did in the present case. What irked the
respondents was the fact that the applicant wanted to have the
warrant review determined
as a matter of urgency together with the
extradition review, giving rise to the suspicion and contention that
the warrant review
was not properly set down and was an abuse as it
was an irregular and belated attempt at supplementing the extradition
review.
The circumstances upon which the respondents rely for this
contention appear to me, however, effectively to constitute a dispute
as regards the alleged urgency of the warrant review, and if the
applicant was untruthful in relation to the reasons for urgency
set
out in his founding affidavit, this should be dealt with at the
hearing of the warrant review itself.
37.
That urgency is the real complaint is
emphasised by the fact that the respondents have no objection to the
warrant review being
heard on the semi-urgent roll or on the normal
opposed motion roll in due course. The respondents would also not
take issue with
a separate warrant review being brought on the
example posed in their heads of argument: the applicant could be
concerned that,
on his return to South Africa, he may be arrested and
detained pursuant to one or both of the warrants. In that case, his
recourse
would be to launch a warrant review, which would
“
self-evidently not be urgent
”
given that the applicant is in the United States, and these is no
immediate risk of his arrest and detention in South Africa.
38.
Another complaint levelled by the
respondents against the warrant review on the basis that its true
purpose is to bolster the extradition
review is that, in the context
of the extradition treaty, the warrant of arrest is not presented to
the United States as a self-standing
document that stands to be
challenged on its own merit.
38.1.
The respondents argue that Article 9
of the extradition treaty requires the extradition request to be
supported by a copy of the
warrant or order, “
if
any
”, issued by a judge or other
competent authority. The issue of a warrant of arrest is thus not a
prerequisite for the valid
extradition request, but need only be
included in support of such request if it has been issued.
38.2.
Therefore, without an order setting aside
the extradition request, there is no reason to believe that the
United States authorities
would not proceed with the extradition
inquiry simply on the basis that the warrants have been set aside by
a South African court.
This is particularly the case where the
warrants have not been executed because the applicant absconded.
39.
The respondents’ argument in this
regard appears to me also to point to a dispute in relation to the
alleged urgency of the
warrant review rather than to a defect in the
form thereof. It is an issue that can be addressed at the hearing of
the warrant
review. The applicant was entitled to launch an urgent
application subject to him being able to make out a case for urgency.
The
respondents are entitled to challenge the urgency of the
application in opposition to such application. Insofar as the
respondents
allege that the attack on the warrants should have been
incorporated into the extradition review, they may deliver a notice
in
terms of Rule 6(5)(d)(iii) in opposition to the warrant review on
that basis.
40.
The fact that the warrant review does not
seek relief consequent to the setting aside of the warrants does not
take the matter further.
If it does confirm the respondents’
allegation that the warrant review was simply brought to bolster the
applicant’s
case against the extradition request, then so be
it. The warrants did not feature in the extradition review, which has
been heard
and which will be determined on its own facts. As the
respondents point out, an order declaring the warrants invalid will
not and
cannot alter the effect of a judgment in the extradition
review. The absence of consequential relief is a matter that can be
raised
in opposition to the warrant review, and what the applicant
does with the result in that review in due course will have to be
considered
at the hand of the circumstances then prevailing.
Prejudice
41.
As to prejudice, the applicant is correct
in stating that nothing is stated as regards prejudice in the
respondents’ founding
affidavit in the irregular step
application.
42.
In the replying affidavit, and also in
argument, the respondents describe their prejudice as having to deal
with two applications
(even though the alleged defects in the
warrants could be gleaned from the Rule 53 record in the extradition
review) and having
to file two sets of Rule 53 records. I do not
think that this constitutes prejudice. Had the warrant review been
brought either
by way of an amendment and supplementation of the
extradition review or as a separate application just after receipt of
the Rule
53 record, the magistrate as decision-maker would in any
event have had to deliver another Rule 53 record dealing specifically
with the issue of the warrants. Having to deal with both applications
would simply have been the result of the litigation, whichever
form
it took.
43.
The respondents allege further prejudice to
the effect that, apart from additional costs, the respondents would
be distracted and
hampered in the effective presentation of their
case in the extradition review. They would not have the opportunity
of addressing
the alleged defects in the warrants in the course of
the extradition review. The hearing of the warrant review would also
be prejudicial
to the Court’s proper and orderly determination
of the extradition review. I think that any prejudice in this respect
has
fallen away as a result of the extradition review having been
heard in the absence of a challenge to the warrants. The applicant
and the respondents presented their respective cases against the
extradition review as it stood, without reference to the warrants,
and it is unclear what prejudice the separate hearing of the warrant
review would give rise to as regards the case to be determined
in
relation to the extradition review.
44.
As mentioned earlier, too, a finding in
favour of the applicant in the warrant review cannot alter any
judgment given in the extradition
review. There can thus be no
prejudice to the respondents in dealing with the warrant review as a
separate application for review
insofar as their involvement in the
extradition review is concerned.
Conclusion
45.
There may well be issues in relation to the
urgency upon which the warrant review application was brought, apart
from the merits
thereof and the respondents’ complaint as
regards the motive with which it was brought.
46.
These issues are not currently before me. I
agree with the applicant’s counsel that they are best raised in
opposition to
the warrant review, and left for the Court determining
the fate of that application.
Costs
47.
The parties have each labelled the other’s
case an abuse of the process of Court, and have sought costs on the
scale as between
attorney and client. I do not regard either of the
applications as constituting an abuse.
48.
Punitive costs orders should generally be
reserved for litigants who are guilty of dishonesty or fraud or some
other conduct which
is to be frowned upon by the Court. In the
present case, the parties have been assisted by their legal
representatives in the conduct
of their respective cases, and they
were no doubt advised that each such case was arguable. The
applications raised matters of
importance to the parties and I do not
think that either side acted maliciously.
49.
In the circumstances, I declined to grant
an order of costs on the scale as between attorney and client when I
granted the order
on 22 March 2022.
P. S. VAN ZYL
Acting Judge of the
High Court
HEARING DATES:
25 February 2022, 4 May 2022 & 9 May 2022.
Appearances:
For
the applicant
: J. de Waal SC, M.
Bishop, G. Kerr-Philips and S. Webb, instructed by Hanekom Attorneys
For
the third and fourth respondents
: I.
Jamie SC, A. Christians and L. Stansfield, instructed by the State
Attorney
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