Case Law[2025] ZAKZDHC 44South Africa
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Another v Kruger (D10552/2023) [2025] ZAKZDHC 44 (18 July 2025)
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## National Director of Public Prosecutions and Another v Kruger (D10552/2023) [2025] ZAKZDHC 44 (18 July 2025)
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Another v Kruger (D10552/2023) [2025] ZAKZDHC 44 (18 July 2025)
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sino date 18 July 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: D10552/2023
In
the matter between:
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
First
Applicant
PROVINCIAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second
Applicant
and
GAVIN
DYKES KRUGER
Respondent
In
re the matter between:
GAVIN
DYKES KRUGER
Applicant
and
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
First
Respondent
PROVINCIAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second
Respondent
PETER
STAUDE
Third
Respondent
MURRAY
HECTOR MUNROE
Fourth
Respondent
MICHAEL
EDWARD DEIGHTON
Fifth
Respondent
RORY
EDWARD WILKINSON
Sixth
Respondent
KAMLASAGRIE
SINGH
Seventh
Respondent
SAMANTHA
SHUKLA
Eighth
Respondent
Coram
:
Reddi
AJ
Heard
:
04 June 2025
Judgment
:
18 July 2025
ORDER
The
following order Is granted:
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs
to include the costs occasioned by the employment of two
counsel on
scale C.
JUDGMENT
REDDI
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an opposed application for leave to appeal the order I
granted on 23 December
2024, declaring invalid and setting aside the
First Applicant's decision, in terms of s 2(4) of the Prevention of
Organised Crime
Act, 1998 (POCA), to authorise the Respondent's
prosecution on a charge in terms of s 2(1)(e) of POCA.
[2]
Mr VS Notshe appeared for the Applicants in the main and the present
applications,
while Mr J Marais appeared for the Respondent on both
occasions. Both counsel and I arranged for the application for leave
to appeal
to be heard on 02 May 2025 in Durban. However, the matter
could not proceed on the agreed date as the file went missing and had
to be reconstructed. I am grateful to the Respondent's attorneys for
completing the tedious task of reconstructing the file. The
application was later heard on 04 June 2025, in Pietermaritzburg,
where I acted from 19 May 2025 to 20 June 2025. I am most grateful
to
Mr Notshe and Mr Marais for agreeing to argue this matter in
Pietermaritzburg.
Basis
of the application for leave to appeal
[3]
In the notice of application for leave to appeal, dated 27 January
2025, the Applicants
indicate that they are seeking leave to appeal
the whole of the judgment and order delivered on 23 December 2024 on
the following
six grounds of fact and law:
That the court
a quo
had:
(i)
failed to properly apply the applicable test regarding the First
Applicant's
decision, to wit, whether she had the powers that she
exercised and whether she had exercised them for the purposes for
which they
were conferred;
(ii)
ignored the fact that the legislature had not designated any
procedure or requirements
for exercising that power. Therefore, the
existence of a watertight case is not a requirement for the
authorisation of a prosecution
by the First Applicant;
(iii)
went beyond the test for rationality and traversed the reasonableness
test;
(iv)
overlooked that POCA seeks the essentials of the charge. It requires
the authorisation
of a charge, which is a valid charge if it contains
all the essentials;
(v)
should have considered that the provisions of s 2(2) of POCA are
still subject to
the safeguards of a fair trial; and
(vi)
There is a reasonable prospect of success on appeal.
I
shall consider each of these grounds shortly.
Requirements
of leave to appeal
[4]
The rationale for needing litigants to obtain leave to appeal was set
out in
Dexgroup
(Pty) Ltd v Trustco Group International (Pty) Ltd
,
[1]
where Wallis JA said this: 'The need to obtain leave to appeal is a
valuable tool in ensuring that scarce judicial resources are
not
spent on appeals that lack merit.'
[5]
Leave to appeal from a decision of a High Court is governed by s
17(1) of the Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the Act), which provides
the following:
'Leave to appeal may only
be given where the judge or judges concerned are of the opinion
that-
(a)
(i) the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii) there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
(b)
the decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of
section 16(2)(a); and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues in the
case, the appeal would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties.'
At
the core of s 17(1)(a) lies the requirement of the applicant having
to demonstrate that, should the application be granted, there
is a
reasonable likelihood that another court would arrive at a different
decision. Alternatively, proof of some compelling reason
countenancing the appeal must be proffered. Absent either of these
discrete requirements, there would be no basis to grant leave.
[6]
Before the Act came into force, the test in an application for leave
to appeal was
whether there were reasonable prospects that an appeal
court might conclude differently from that of the lower court. The
advent
of the Act has modified the test and, arguably, raised the
threshold for granting leave to appeal.
[2]
[7]
In
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
,
[3]
the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) referred to what it had said in
Caratco
(Pty) Ltd v Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
,
[4]
that even if the court is unconvinced that there are prospects of
success, it must nevertheless explore if there is a compelling
reason
to entertain the appeal. According to the SCA, compelling reasons
would Include an important question of law or a subtle
matter of
public importance that may impact future disputes. But,
Ramakatsa
also embraced what had been expressed in Caratco, that 'here too the
merits remain vitally important and are often decisive'.
[5]
[8]
Ultimately,
Ramakatse
has clarified that if a reasonable prospect of success is
established, leave to appeal should be granted. Likewise, leave
should
be granted if there are other compelling reasons why the
appeal should be heard. However, the prospects of success must not be
remote, and the applicant must show that there exists a sound,
rational basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of
success.
[6]
The
application
[9]
The facts of this matter bear brief mention. In July 2022, the
respondent, a chartered
accountant, was charged with the third to
eighth respondents in the High Court of South Africa, KwaZulu-Natal
Division, Durban,
on 26 counts, including a charge of contravening s
2(1)(e) of POCA. The allegations against the respondent were linked
to his role
as the engagement partner in Deloitte & Touche, the
company appointed to render audit services to Tongaat Hulett
Developments
(Pty) Ltd (THD) and Tongaat Hulett Limited (THL) for the
financial years 2015 to 2018.
[10]
The charge under POCA alleges that the respondent and the third to
eighth respondents had participated
in the conduct of an enterprise
and received or retained property derived, directly or indirectly,
through a pattern of racketeering
activities conducted within THL or
THD via the acts of fraud listed in counts 3 to 21 of the indictment.
[11]
The respondent contended that the First Applicant's decision to issue
the s 2(4) POCA authorisation
was irrational as it was based on
information that did not allow for her to objectively conclude that
reasonable and probable cause
existed that he had committed the
alleged racketeering acts of which he is accused. My analysis of the
matter led me to conclude
that the First Applicant's decision to
issue the POCA authorisation had been irrational.
Grounds
of appeal
[12]
I turn now to the first ground on which I am alleged to have erred.
The Applicants contend that
I did not properly apply the applicable
test in determining whether the First Applicant had had the powers
she exercised and whether
she had exercised them for the purposes
they had been conferred.
[13]
This contention is without basis, as even a cursory reading of my
judgment would indicate that
I viewed rationality as the constituent
component of the assessment. Moreover, supported by the authority of
Scalabrini
Centre, Cape Town & Others v Minister of Home Affairs &
Others
[7]
and
Democratic
Alliance v President of the Republic of South Africa & Others
,
[8]
the judgment also specified that ignoring relevant factors and
considering incorrect material or the unfair presentation of such
material were shortcomings in the decision-making process that would
render the First Applicant's decision irrational.
[9]
[14]
The legal principles articulated above are commonplace,
well-established in our law, and ubiquitous
and, consequently, need
no further re-examination or reconsideration by another court.
[15]
With these fundamental principles being the foundation of my
analyses, concluded that the principle
of legality would be offended
if the information on which the First Applicant based her decision
were to be misleading or incorrectly
represented the available
evidence.
[10]
This is a
logical corollary to my application of the basic principles. The
approach adopted in the context is incontrovertible.
[16]
The Applicants' second ground of appeal alleges that the court
required the existence of a watertight
case for the authorisation of
a prosecution by the First Applicant, despite the legislature not
having designated any procedure
or requirements for exercising that
power. I have difficulty with this ground as nowhere in the judgment
is there any suggestion
that the court set as a prerequisite for
establishing rationality the existence of a watertight case. On the
contrary, the judgment
referred with approval to the helpful advice
provided by Gorven J's statement in
Booysen
v Acting National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others
,
[11]
regarding not setting any requirement for the level of disclosure or
the detail necessary for a rational decision.
[12]
[17]
The third ground of appeal the Applicants raise is that in assessing
whether the s 2(4) of POCA
authorisation was valid, I went beyond the
test for rationality and traversed the reasonableness test. This
ground, too, is baseless.
In the initial review proceedings, the
Applicants' counsel had submitted that the Respondent was attacking
the reasonableness and
not the rationality of the First Applicant's
decision. This argument was rejected by the court
a
quo
,
which, in the process, confirmed that rationality and not
reasonableness must be assessed when looking at the decisionmaker's
actions.
[13]
[18]
The fourth and fifth grounds of appeal are linked and will be dealt
with together. The Applicants
contend that the court
a quo
'overlooked that POCA seeks the essentials of a valid charge (sic).'
It requires the authorisation of a charge, which 'is a valid
charge
if it contains all the essentials.' They contend further that the
court
a quo
should have considered that the provisions of s
2(2) of POCA are still subject to the safeguards of the fairness of
the trial.
[19]
Nothing more needs to be said about these two grounds, but that both
are nonissues which
conflate the question of the trial's
fairness with the issuing of the authorisation. The Respondent's
challenge related to the
First Applicant's decision to issue a s 2(4)
authorisation when there was no rational basis. The Applicants, by
raising the essentials
of a charge and the s 2(2) fair trial
safeguard, seem to have adopted the position that the First
Applicant's decision-making can
be without circumspection so long as
the fairness of the trial is protected. This approach is
objectionable and does not align
with the established legal
principles.
[20]
The Applicants' Notice of Leave to Appeal indicates that they seek to
appeal on both legal and
factual grounds. However, a close reading of
the notice reveals that the grounds relied on are solely legal or
have the semblance
of being such. I say this because the Notice seems
to focus more on non-issues instead of directly raising issue with
the legal
principles relied on by the court
a quo.
[21]
Respondent's counsel submitted that there can be no appeal on the
legal principles based on the
unassailable position adopted by the
court concerning the applicable principles. Therefore, the
application of the principles to
the evidence would be the sole
determinant of the leave application. The court agrees.
[22]
However, the Applicants have not engaged with the facts. Respondent's
counsel submitted that
the reason for this failure seems
self-evident: no factual disputes arose and the approach adopted by
the court
a quo
, on the facts, was demonstrably justified in
the absence of any meaningful factual disputes.
[23]
Listed below are my factual findings, which have been summarised in
the Respondent's heads of
argument as follows:
(a)
not only was there a paucity of evidence to indicate back-dating, but
such evidence as there
was indicated that the Respondent, himself,
had enquired about the availability or whereabouts of Sale
Agreements;
(b)
the First Applicant's inference of a conspiracy arising from neutral
remarks in the minutes,
was not justified;
(c)
that reliance upon the THD recognition criteria was plainly wrong;
(d)
that the information before the First Applicant contained no evidence
to indicate any kind
of special relationship between the Respondent
and Tongaat Hulett employees;
(e)
that the Applicants did not meet the threshold to find that there was
a type of conspiracy
as contemplated in the Act;
(f)
that there was no challenge to the factual circumstances relied upon
by the Respondent
to demonstrate that the Respondent wanted to hide
anything from the internal and external audit teams;
(g)
that the First Applicant had made no attempt to explain how she had
arrived at her decision,
something which she could clearly not
justify on the basis of inaccurate, misleading and incorrect
information in the White Report;
(h)
that
prima facie
it was hard to fathom the basis of the First
Applicant's decision, and that became even more difficult in the
absence of a basic
explanation by her.
[24]
The First Applicant's approach to dealing with these facts was a
terse statement that she had
authorised the prosecution and had
relied on the Memorandum in doing so. This is hardly adequate in the
circumstances.
[14]
[25]
The factual findings were the premise for my conclusion that it is
impossible to find a decision
to be anything but irrational where it
was founded on misleading and inaccurate evidence.
[26]
The correctness of my approach, in investigating the means that led
to the First Applicant's
decision to issue the s 2(4) POCA
authorisation, finds support in the decisions of the SCA and the
Constitutional Court. In
Scalabrini
Centre, Cape Town & Others v Minister of Home Affairs &
Others
,
[15]
for instance, the SCA said this:
'As the Constitutional
Court has explained, a failure to take into account relevant
considerations in the process of making a decision
can render it
irrational where: (1) the factors are relevant; (2) the failure to
consider the material concerned is rationally
related to the purpose
for which the power was conferred; and (3) ignoring relevant facts is
of a kind that colours the entire
process with irrationality and thus
renders the final decision irrational.'
In
Democratic
Alliance v President of the Republic of South Africa &
Others
,
[16]
Yacoob ADCJ emphasised the importance of evaluating the means used to
achieve the purpose when he said the following:
'The conclusion that the
process must also be rational in that it must be rationally related
to the achievement of the purpose for
which the power is conferred,
is inescapable and an inevitable consequence of the understanding
that rationality review is an evaluation
of the relationship between
the means and the ends. The means for achieving the purpose for which
the power was conferred must
include everything that is done to
achieve the purpose. Not only the decision employed to achieve the
purpose, but also everything
done in the process of taking that
decision, constitute the means towards the attainment of the purpose
for which the power was
conferred.'
[27]
Yacoob ADCJ stated further that a failure to consider relevant
material constitutes part of the
means to achieve the purpose for
which the power was conferred. 'If that failure had an impact on the
rationality of the entire
process, then the final decision may be
rendered irrational and invalid by the irrationality of the process
as a whole.'
[17]
[28]
According to the learned acting deputy chief justice, deciding the
issue necessitated a three-stage
enquiry by the court faced with an
executive decision which ignored certain factors.
[18]
The enquiry involves a consideration of: (i) whether the factors
ignored are relevant; (ii) whether the failure to consider the
material concerned (the means) is rationally related to the purpose
for which the power was conferred; and (iii) if the answer
to (ii) is
negative, whether ignoring the relevant factors taints the entire
process with irrationality, so rendering the final
decision
irrational.
[19]
[29]
Based on the issues that needed consideration, my analysis in the
present matter revealed that
the memorandum on which the First
Applicant relied, contained information that was misleading,
inadequate and inaccurate. The memorandum
was the instrumentality of
the rhyme and rhythm test and gave support to it. However, because it
was patently misleading, the memorandum
called for the consideration
of something more by the First Applicant when deciding whether to
issue the s 2(4) authorisation.
The reason is self-evident: the
factors which demanded further consideration were of such relevance
and significance that ignoring
them coloured the First Applicant's
decision-making process with irrationality, thus rendering her final
decision irrational.
[30]
Based on the provisions of
s 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
,
for leave to be obtained, an applicant must demonstrate that the
envisaged appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success
or that
there is some compelling reason why the appeal should be heard. The
applicant must, therefore, discharge a meaningful onus.
[31]
In weighing the grounds of appeal indicated in the Notice of Appeal
against the preceding discussions,
it is clear that the Applicants
have not mounted any consequential challenge to the well-established
legal principles applied by
the court a quo. In addition, they have
failed to address the facts. Their focus has been elsewhere, leading
to a failure to discharge
the meaningful onus which vested in them.
[32]
Having dispassionately considered my judgment and having given due
consideration to the parties'
submissions, I am not persuaded that
any basis exists to justify granting the Applicants' application for
leave to appeal.
Order
[33]
As the result, the following order shall issue:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs
occasioned by the employment of two
counsel on scale C.
REDDI
AJ
CASE
INFORMATION
APPEARANCES:
First
and Second Applicants' Counsel: VS Notshe SC
S Cele
First
and Second Applicants' Attorney: The State Attorney
(KwaZulu-Natal)
Mr MP Pillay (Snr. Ass.
State Attorney)
6
th
Floor,
Metlife Building
391 Anton Lembede Street
Durban
Email:
ManoPillay@justice.gov.za
LungiDlamini@justice.gov.za
Tel: (031) 365 2535/59
Ref: 119/25311/23/K/P10
Respondent's
Counsel:
J Marais SC
W Lombard
Respondent's
Attorneys:
Norton Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc
3 Pencarrow Crescent,
Pencarrow Park
La Lucia Ridge
Durban
Email:
Craig.Woolley@nortonrosefulbright.com
Laura.Steele@nortonrosefulbright.com
Tel: (031) 582 5814
Ref: KRU124/CW
[1]
Dexgroup
(Pty) Ltd v Trustco Group International (Pty) Ltd
2013 (6) SA 520
(SCA) para 24.
[2]
Public
Protector of South Africa v Speaker of the National Assembly and
Others
[2022] ZAWCHC 222
para 14.
[3]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
5
[2021] JOL 49993
(SCA) para 10.
[4]
Caratco
(Pty) Ltd v Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
(2020) ZASCA 17; 2020 (5) SA 35 (SCA).
[5]
Ibid, para 2.
[6]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
6 (2021) JOL 49993
(SCA) para 10. See also
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha and Another
[2016] ZASCA 176
para 17, and
Fairtrade
Tobacco Association v President of the Republic of South Africa
(21688/2020)
ZAGPPHC 311(24 July 2020) at para 6.
[7]
Scalabrini
Centre, Cape Town & Others v Minister of Home Affairs &
Others
2018 (4) SA 125
SCA.
[8]
Democratic
Alliance v President of the Republic of South Africa & Others
2013 (1) SA 248
(CC).
[9]
Paragraphs 27 and 28 of the judgment.
[10]
Ibid at para 29.
[11]
Booysen
v Acting National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others
2014 (2) SACR 556
(KZD) para 38.
[12]
See paragraph 58 of the judgment.
[13]
See paragraphs 61- 63 of the judgment.
[14]
See paragraphs 57, 59, 61 and 63 of the judgment.
[15]
Scalabrini
centre, Cape Town & others v Minister of Home Affairs &
Others
2018 (4) SA 125
SCA, para 51.
[16]
Democratic
Alliance v President of the Republic of South Africa & Others
2013 (1) SA 248
(CC), para 36.
[17]
Ibid at para 39.
[18]
Ibid.
[19]
Ibid.
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