Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 88South Africa
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Madhoe and Others (D3146/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 88; 2025 (1) SACR 377 (KZD) (2 December 2024)
Headnotes
by the person in question, to all realisable property held by such a person whether it is specified or not, and also to property which, if it were to be transferred to such person after the
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## National Director of Public Prosecutions v Madhoe and Others (D3146/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 88; 2025 (1) SACR 377 (KZD) (2 December 2024)
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Madhoe and Others (D3146/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 88; 2025 (1) SACR 377 (KZD) (2 December 2024)
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sino date 2 December 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO.: D3146/2023
In the matter between:
THE NATIONAL DIRECTOR
OF
PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
Applicant
and
NAVIN
MADHOE
First
Defendant
ASWIN
NARAINPERSHAD Second
Defendant
MMAMONNYE NGOBENI
Third
Defendant
THOSHAN PANDAY
Fourth
Defendant
ARVENDA PANDAY
Fifth
Defendant
PRIVISHA PANDAY
Sixth
Defendant
SEEVESH MAHARAJ
ISHWARKUMAR Seventh
Defendant
KAJAL ISHWARKUMAR
Eighth
Defendant
TASLEEM RAHIMAN
Ninth
Defendant
VIJAYANTHY MADHOE
First
Respondent
LEESHA NARAINPERSHAD
Second
Respondent
MOSESENYANE LUCAS
NGOBENI Third
Respondent
THOSHAN PANDAT N.O.
Fourth
Respondent
CALANDRA TRADING 592
CC Fifth
Respondent
BORWA ICONS TRADING &
PROJECTS CC Sixth
Respondent
KASEEV PETROLEUMS
(PTY) LTD Seventh
Respondent
KASEEV TRADERS CC
Eighth
Respondent
NIRVASH NARAINPERSHAD
Ninth
Respondent
ABOOTHALIB SHEIK AHMED
Tenth
Respondent
SYNERGY PETROLEUM
(PTY) LTD Eleventh
Respondent
GURUS & IDOLS
TRADING & PROJECTS CC Twelfth
Respondent
PRIVISHA SUMMURJEETH
N.O.
Thirteenth Respondent
USHIA RAMLOCHAN N.O.
Fourteenth Respondent
JUDGMENT
Olsen J:
[1] This
is the extended return day of a provisional restraint order and
associated
rule nisi
made on 29
th
March 2023 in
terms of s 26(3)(a) of the Prevention of Organised Crime Act, 121 of
1998 (the “Act”). The applicant
is the National Director
of Public Prosecutions. Nine defendants and fourteen respondents are
cited. The defendants are the accused
persons in a prosecution which
has been instituted by the State. The trial has not yet commenced. It
is the applicant’s case
that a successful prosecution will
result in a confiscation order or orders.
Legislative
Background.
[2]
In terms of section 18 of the Act when a defendant is convicted of an
offence the
court may at the request of the prosecution
“
enquire into any
benefit which the defendant may have derived from –
(a)
that offence;
(b)
any other offence of which the defendant has been convicted at the
same trial;
(c)
any criminal activity which the Court finds to be sufficiently
related to those
offences,
and, if the Court finds
that the defendant has so benefitted, the Court may, in addition to
any punishment which it may impose in
respect of the offence, make an
order against the defendant for the payment to the State of any
amount it considers appropriate
and the court may make any further
orders as it may deem fit to ensure the effectiveness and fairness of
that order.”
[3]
In terms of section 18(6) of the Act, a court deciding the
application for a confiscation
order or orders may refer to the
evidence and proceedings at the trial, such further oral evidence as
the Court may deem fit, and
statements produced by the prosecution
and the defence contemplated respectively by ss 21(1)(a) and 21(3)(a)
of the Act.
[4]
Restraint orders may be made by the High Court on application by the
National Director of
Public Prosecutions. The purpose of such an
order is to protect property so that it is available to meet a future
confiscation
order when it appears to the court that there are
“reasonable grounds for believing” that a confiscation
order may
be made against the defendant concerned.
[5]
In terms of s 26(1) of the Act a restraint order prohibits any person
from dealing in any
manner with any property to which the order
relates. Section 26(2) deals with the property to which the order may
relate. It is
extremely wide. It may relate to specified realisable
property held by the person in question, to all realisable property
held
by such a person whether it is specified or not, and also to
property which, if it were to be transferred to such person after the
restraint order is made, would become realisable property in the
hands of such person. Section 14 of the Act defines realisable
property as any property “held” by a defendant and any
property held by a person who has received an affected gift
from the
defendant. A court hearing an application for a restraint order makes
its decisions concerning the scope of the order
without the benefit
of all the evidence and information which will be available to the
court ultimately charged with the duty of
making a confiscation
order.
[6]
In terms of section 26(3) of the Act the High Court may make a
provisional restraint order
and simultaneously grant a rule nisi
calling upon the defendant or defendants to show cause why such an
order should not be made
final. As already mentioned, a provisional
order in the present matter was made in March 2023. At this stage of
the proceedings
a decision must be made as to whether that order
should be made final, and as to whether such a final order should be
on modified
terms.
The Parties.
[7]
The applicant’s founding affidavit was attested to by a Mr
Richard James Chinner who
brought the application on the authority of
the applicant. As he states in his affidavit, the nine defendants are
the nine accused
in the criminal proceedings where it is alleged that
they associated “to form and conduct a racketeering enterprise
and participated
in racketeering activities including fraud, forgery,
corruption, money laundering, extortion, bribery and defeating the
ends of
justice”. All of this was done, according to the State,
with the purpose of “capturing and manipulating the supply
chain management (SCM) system of SAPS KZN”.
[8]
The first three defendants comprise the Police component of the
enterprise. I will refer
to them collectively as the Madhoe
defendants. The remaining defendants are Mr Thoshan Panday (the
fourth defendant), his personal
assistant and other members of what
may conveniently be referred to as the (wider) Panday family. I will
refer to them collectively
as the Panday defendants.
[9]
The respondents are persons who are or may be affected by the
provisions of the restraint order,
given their relationships with or
connections to one or more of the defendants. On the applicant’s
case each respondent is
affected by the restraint order for one or
more of the reasons that she, he or it is related to a defendant by
marriage, is a recipient
of an affected gift, or holds realisable
property on behalf of a defendant.
The alleged crimes and
the provisional order.
[10]
There is no need for the purposes of the present proceedings to go
into any detail concerning
the alleged criminal activities of the
Panday defendants. (My reasons for saying that will follow.) The
charges of money laundering
aside, the case relied upon by the
applicant is that through a course of conduct reflected in the other
charges (fraud, forgery,
corruption, extortion, bribery and defeating
the ends of justice), contracts came to be concluded between the
business interests
of the Panday parties and SAPS which resulted in
the latter paying various amounts to the former totalling R47 346 598
(hereafter
“R47 million”). The evidence to support this
contention is set out in near consummate detail in an affidavit
attested
to by Colonel Philip Herbst, a member of SAPS attached to
the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation who is seconded to
the
National Prosecuting Authority. His affidavit runs to some 200
pages to which are annexed some 1600 pages of annexures comprising
exhibits and affidavits of State witnesses.
[11]
Colonel Herbst’s affidavit also describes the money laundering
charges. The
money received from SAPS was moved around, on the
applicant’s case for the purpose of laundering it as
contemplated in section
4 of the Act. It is the applicant’s
case that the amount received through each of these transactions
constitutes the proceeds
of the further crimes of money laundering.
Details of these transactions are provided in the affidavit of
Colonel Herbst. According
to the applicant this has the effect of
elevating the proceeds of all the crimes which are the subject of the
indictment to an
amount of R165 575 730.00 (hereafter “R165
million”).
[12]
Insofar as the identification of property subject to the restraint
order is concerned, the provisional
order adopts the method of
defining the property by stating it in the widest terms, and then
providing for what shall be excluded
in paragraph 1.2 of the order.
The restricting provision which is material to the principal issue
raised by the defendants and
respondents is contained in paragraph
1.2.3 of the order. It provides for the exclusion of
“
such realisable
property as the
curator bonis
may certify in writing to be in
excess of R165 575 730 which has been calculated to be the proceeds
of unlawful activities of the
defendants which must still be adjusted
to take into account
1.2.3.1
the value of money as calculated in terms of sections
15 and 20 of
the POCA and
1.2.3.2
interest at the legal rate.”
[13]
Each of ss 15 and 20 of the Act makes provision for the adjustment of
the value of any
property at any time to take account of fluctuations
in the value of money between that time and the date of the
confiscation order.
[14]
The issues I am called upon to decide are those raised by the Panday
parties and
the Madhoe parties. I will deal with their contentions
separately, although there is some overlap. Before doing so I must
deal
with the procedure adopted by the defendants and respondents in
presenting their cases.
The variation
applications
[15]
The fourth, fifth, sixth and ninth defendants, together with the
fifth and sixth
respondents, launched an application to vary the
provisions of the provisional order. This was said to be done in
terms of s 26(10)
of the Act. The seventh and eighth defendants, and
the seventh, eighth and eleventh respondents did likewise. All of
these defendants
and respondents fall within the category I have
referred to as the Panday parties. In their applications the
principal relief sought
is the amendment of the provisional order so
that it limits the amount or value to be restrained to R47 million.
In both applications
relief is also sought releasing certain
respondents from the operation of the provisional order altogether.
[16]
Certain of the Madhoe parties, that is to say the first and third
defendants and
the first and third respondents, launched similar
variation applications directed also at the provisional order. They
sought the
discharge in its entirety of the provisional order insofar
as it relates to the first and third defendants and the first and
third
respondents. In the alternative they sought to have the
provisional order amended by reducing the amount of realisable
property
subject to the provisional restraint in the case of the
first defendant to R89 105, and in the case of the third defendant to
R20
962.
[17]
The applicant has objected to these variation applications from the
outset upon the
basis that there is no provision in the Act for the
amendment of a provisional order. In my view the objection was well
taken.
In terms of s 26(10)(a) of the Act, the court which has made a
“restraint order” may on application by a person affected
by the order vary it or rescind it if it is satisfied on both of two
requirements, namely
(a) that the
operation of the order will deprive the applicant of the “means
to provide for his or her reasonable living
expenses and cause undue
hardship for the applicant”; and (not “or”),
(b) the hardship
suffered by the applicant outweighs the risk that the restrained
property might be destroyed, lost, damaged,
concealed or transferred.
The scope for variation
of a restraint order under s 26(10)(a) is therefore restricted.
[18]
Section 26 of the Act is part of chapter 5, which contains its own
definitions
section. The term “restraint order” is
defined as an order made in terms of s 26(1). A provisional restraint
order
is not made in terms of s 26(1). It is made in terms of s
26(3).
[19]
In response to the applicant’s objection to the variation
applications
the parties who launched the first of them (lead by the
fourth defendant, Mr Thoshan Panday), delivered an answering
affidavit
very late in the day. In it the fourth defendant requested
that his affidavit in the variation application should be taken to be
an answer in the main application. In the second of the Panday
variation applications a request was made that the founding affidavit
be regarded as an answer in the main application, and a similar
request was made with regard to the variation applications brought
by
the Madhoe parties.
[20]
The applicant complains that the allegations made in the founding
affidavits
in the variation applications do not speak directly to any
of the allegations made in the founding papers which generated the
provisional
restraint order. There is no reference to any of the
paragraphs in the founding papers. It was not therefore possible for
the applicant
to discern the precise scope of the challenge to the
allegations made in the original founding papers.
[21]
In my view the product of the approach followed by the various
applicants
for variation orders is properly described as a mess. The
variation applications were not competent and must be dismissed.
[22]
However at the hearing I requested counsel for the applicant to
address
the issues raised by the applicants in the variation
applications upon the footing that their affidavits in those
applications
should be regarded as their answering affidavits in the
application for confirmation of the
rule nisi
and the
consequent final restraint order. The matter was argued on that
footing.
[23]
I requested that the matter should proceed in that fashion for the
following
reasons.
(a)
The defendants and respondents had a right to deliver affidavits
challenging every
aspect of the applicant’s case, or some
aspects of it; which if successfully done would have resulted in the
first instance
in an order discharging the rule nisi, and in the
second with the issue of a final order in a modified form.
(b)
As undesirable as it would have been, it would have been the right of
the defendants
and respondents to deliver such answering affidavits
in the form which their founding affidavits took in the variation
applications.
(c)
Having chosen that course those defendants and respondents would have
had to shoulder the burden of the inadequacies of their answers to
the case made against them. Factual allegations in the applicant’s
papers not clearly challenged would be taken to be correct.
Inferences from such facts not clearly challenged would be taken to
be fairly drawn.
(d)
In short, whilst the course adopted by these defendants and
respondents made
life difficult for the applicant and, for that
matter, for the court, the parties ultimately prejudiced are the
defendants and
respondents themselves.
[24]
Before proceeding further I must say something about the manner in
which
a proposed amendment by the State to a provisional restraint
order was dealt with in
National Director of Public Prosecutions
vs Wood and others
2022 (2) SACR 245
(GJ), a most informative and
helpful decision of a full court. It was held at paragraph 275 that s
26(10)(a) of the Act did not
apply to provisional restraint orders.
However the court accepted that a provisional restraint order can
nevertheless be amended,
like any other provisional order. I
respectfully agree with that proposition. Here the variation
applications were squarely founded
on s 26(10) of the Act. If they
had not been brought on that basis, the question would arise as to
when and in what circumstances
defendants and respondents in such
proceedings can seek a variation of a provisional restraint order. I
suggest that such relief
would only be granted in exceptional
circumstances. To approach the matter otherwise would be to open the
gates to multiple applications
and hearings in advance of the hearing
for which the Act does provide, ie upon the occasion of the
application for the confirmation
of a provisional order. There are no
exceptional circumstances in this case, and it has not been argued
that there are. Neither
is there any room for speculation on my part
as to what might constitute such exceptional circumstances.
The Panday Parties
[24]
The Panday parties do not dispute that the state has achieved the
threshold
for the grant of a restraint order. It is therefore
conceded that there are “ reasonable grounds for believing that
a confiscation
order may be made against” the defendants. As a
confiscation order can only follow a conviction, the Panday
defendants concede
that, notwithstanding their claimed innocence,
there are reasonable grounds for believing that the prosecution will
result in guilty
verdicts. That concession extends equally to the
charges of money laundering.
[25]
The threshold criteria having been met, the court has a discretion
with
regard to the grant of a restraint order, and as to the terms
and extent of such an order. But the court may not “frustrate
those criteria when it purports to exercise its discretion”.
(See
NDPP v Rautenbach and Others
2005 (4) SA 603
, para 27.)
[26]
The principal relief sought by the Panday parties is that the rule
should
be confirmed subject to an amendment to the cap on the value
of property which may be restrained, so that it may not exceed the
sum of R47 million. The proposed cap of R47 million represents the
amount of money actually paid by SAPS in terms of the contracts
allegedly unlawfully concluded, principally in connection with the
provision of accommodation for members of SAPS during the 2010
World
Cup. It is argued that the benefit to the defendants could not
conceivably exceed that amount, as it is that money, and no
more,
which was moved around amongst the members of the enterprise. It is
argued that the applicant cannot add amounts which were
involved in
the money laundering transactions to the sum of R47 million in order
to increase that figure to R165 million, because
it was only money
forming part of the R47 million that was allegedly laundered.
[27]
The applicant has presented its case upon the basis that the
defendants
will ultimately be liable jointly and severally for the
full amount of all benefits if a confiscation order is made. The
Panday
parties have not objected to that approach; it remains built
into the relief they seek. One assumes that they accept the
proposition
that if the state proves the participation of each of the
defendants in a single racketeering enterprise, then each benefit
enjoyed
by the enterprise is one enjoyed by each of the defendants.
Whether that is the correct approach, and whether it might be
ultimately
sanctioned, will be a matter for the court which may be
asked to make a confiscation order. Such an order may be regarded as
justified
by the defendants’ “common involvement in the
alleged offences at issue, their collective benefit and the need to
serve
the legislative purpose of POCA.” (I quote from paragraph
263 of the judgment in
Wood,
and refer to paragraphs 259 to
263 of that judgment in support of my view that the applicant’s
approach involving capping
the value of the restraint, and regarding
the liability of the defendants as joint and several, should be
maintained in the final
restraint order.)
[28]
It bears repeating that the Panday parties have not contended that
the
applicant cannot at this stage assert, as it has, that the
various transfers of monies which elevate the cap from R47 million to
R165 million amounted to money laundering. They provide no evidence
on the subject.
[29]
The modification which the Panday parties claim should be made to the
cap would result in no account being taken of the changes in the
value of money which have occurred since the crimes were allegedly
committed. As far as I can see the argument in support of that
approach, made in Mr Thoshan Panday’s affidavit, is that a
confiscation order will be confined to the profit made by the
enterprise which will never reach R47 million even if the trial is
much delayed. That argument loses sight of the fact that it is the
gross proceeds of crime, not the net proceeds, which will
be
taken into account if and when a confiscation order is considered.
(See
S v Shaik and Others
[2008] ZACC 7
;
2008 (2) SACR 165
(CC) at para 60.)
The curator has calculated that, taking into account CPI rates over
the years from January 2010 to July 2023,
the then (in July 2023)
present-day value of R47 million was in excess of R94 million. I
asked counsel for the Panday parties during
the course of argument to
explain the basis upon which it was contended that these inflationary
changes can be disregarded. His
answer was that the applicant’s
case had not been presented on that basis. That is obviously
incorrect. The order granted
in March 2023 (quoted earlier in this
judgment) makes specific provision for the inflationary adjustments
provided for in the Act.
(The curator’s calculation just
mentioned was provided in Mr Chinners replying affidavit to Mr
Panday’s belated answering
affidavit in the main application.)
[30]
It should be observed that according to the latest curator’s
report
delivered to this court the value of property presently under
restraint does not reach the figure of R94 million, and that it is
the contention of the Panday parties that they have made a full
disclosure of all property which is liable to be restrained. Upon
the
assumption that any future increase in the value of the property
currently restrained will be reflected in future changes in
the value
of money, and in the light of the fact that the provisions of ss 15
and 20 of the Act cannot be disregarded, it is arguable
that the
reduction in the base cap from R165 million to R47 million sought by
the Panday parties raises a moot issue. Nevertheless
the question
remains as to whether the applicant is entitled to add to the sum of
R47 million each of the various amounts which
were laundered.
[31]
Section 19(1) of the Act provides that the
“
value of a
defendant’s proceeds of unlawful activities shall be the sum of
the values of the property, services, advantages,
benefits or rewards
received, retained or derived by him or her at any time, whether
before or after the commencement of this Act,
in connection with the
unlawful activity carried on by him or her or any other person.”
It is clear that once an
amount has been received, it matters not whether it has been retained
by the receiver.
[32]
I think that the argument for the Pandy parties amounts to this. In
the
case of money laundering the amount of money in question is
already the proceeds of crime, liable to be treated as such when a
confiscation order is considered. Its character does not change. It
does not take on a second incarnation as a benefit of crime.
A
difficulty with the argument is that in terms of s 19(1) the value of
“advantages” is amongst the “sum of the
values”
which together make up the value of a defendant’s proceeds of
crime. The offence of money laundering is established
by s 4 of the
Act. In terms of s 4 money laundering involves an arrangement or
transaction
“
which has
or is likely to have the effect –
(i)
of concealing or disguising the nature, source,
location, disposition
or movement of the said property or the ownership thereof or any
interest which anyone may have in respect
thereof or
(ii)
of enabling or assisting any person who has committed
or commits an
offence, whether in the Republic or elsewhere –
(aa) to avoid
prosecution; or
(bb) to remove or
diminish any property acquired directly, or indirectly, as a result
of the commission of an offence, ….”.
The “advantage”
which is sought to be obtained or achieved through money laundering
is implicit in the definition. The
question as to how such an
advantage may be valued for the purposes of a confiscation order may
prove to be complex. But that the
proceeds of money laundering need
to be taken into account, and that they are intended to be taken into
account, is apparent from
the Act as a whole, and from the fact that
the penalty for money laundering is potentially a fine not exceeding
R100 million or
imprisonment for a period not exceeding 30 years. It
is not without significance that the statutory crime of money
laundering is
created by the Act itself.
[33]
The court dealing with the question of the confiscation order in this
case, assuming it arises, will be in a better position to attribute a
value to the advantages accruing in the present cases of
money
laundering than the court is at present, where it is dealing merely
with a restraint order in contemplation of what might
be done at a
later and ultimately final, and better informed, stage of proceedings
under the Act.
[34]
Counsel for the applicant have argued that money laundering involves
the receipt of the funds concerned by one person from another, and
that the money constitutes to its full value the proceeds of
the
crime in the hands of the recipient. They argue that whilst counting
the laundered sum at its face value may result it being
counted more
than once, that is a permissible outcome under the Act. (See
Shaik
and Others v S
[2006] ZASCA 106
;
[2007] 2 All SA 150
(SCA) para 25.) There is merit
in the argument, which carries the advantages of recognising the
crime of money laundering as independently
generating a liability
under the provisions of the Act, whilst avoiding an esoteric enquiry
into the value of the advantage of
laundered money over the original
proceeds of crime.
[35]
In my view at this stage of proceedings, where a restraint as opposed
to confiscation is at issue, the court should ordinarily allow the
applicant the benefit of the face value of laundered money.
In my
view this approach is consistent with what Cameron JA had to say
about the Act in paragraphs 67 and 68 of the judgment in
National
Director of Public Prosecutions vs Elran
2013 (1) SACR 429
(CC).
“
[67]
The second reason POCA-like legislation is indispensable is the
intricacy and complexity of modern law-breaking.
No longer is
economic crime committed only through romantically imaginable methods
like piracy, highway robbery and smuggled contraband.
All that, if
not past, is now of comparatively lesser importance. Most modern
crime is committed through infinitely more sophisticated
means –
indirect and electronic. More importantly even, it is then concealed
through those same means. The internet, electronic
communication and
the arcane recesses of the international banking system have enabled
criminals to outsmart even the smartest
of law enforcement systems.
[68]
Hence, here and elsewhere, the indispensable response has been asset
forfeiture legislation. Follow the money.
Seize the profits. Target
the spoils of criminality. This is what POCA does. As in other
democracies, it creates broad, new categories
of offences. These
include offences relating to racketeering activity, dealing in the
proceeds of unlawful activities (money laundering,
assisting another
to benefit from the proceeds of unlawful activities and acquisition,
possession or use of proceeds of unlawful
activities) and criminal
gang-related activities. It targets the proceeds of unlawful
activities by enabling confiscation of their
proceeds upon a criminal
conviction, as well as restraint orders and realisation of property
after a confiscation order has been
made. In addition, civil recovery
of property is made possible through preservation and forfeiture
orders.”
[36]
I accordingly conclude that the request by the Panday parties for a
reduction
in the cap on the value of restrained property should be
denied.
[37]
In their affidavits in support of their variation applications
already
dealt with, the Panday parties have sought to have the
property of the fifth, sixth and the eleventh respondents excluded
from
the operation of the restraint order. Certainly in the case of
the fifth and the eleventh respondents the case is sought to be made
that it is not established that they are or were the recipients of
affected gifts. I do not propose to go into the arguments for
and
against that proposition.
[38]
In my view the argument advanced by counsel for the applicant with
regard
to each of these respondents (companies in each case), that
they are parties which hold property on behalf of defendants, is
correct,
and the relevant allegations in the founding papers
supporting the argument stand uncontradicted by the defendants.
[39]
In the case of the fifth respondent (Calandra Trading 592 CC) the
fifth
defendant is its sole member, but she has concluded a contract
in terms of which the fourth defendant is entitled to deal with the
fifth respondent’s main asset, certain immovable property
registered in its name. In the case of the sixth respondent (Borwa
Icons Trading and Projects CC) the applicant’s uncontradicted
case is that the respondent holds its property for the fourth
defendant.
[40]
In the case of the eleventh respondent (Synergy Petroleum (Pty)
Limited),
of which the seventh defendant is the sole director, the
case is a little less clear as there is uncertainty as to whether it
owns
property. In his affidavit in his variation application the
seventh defendant says that the eleventh respondent “has no
realisable
assets”. That is not quite the same thing as saying
that it has no assets, a significant point because the applicant’s
case is that whatever it holds, the eleventh respondent holds on
behalf of the seventh defendant, which would render its property
realisable.
[41]
I conclude that the fifth, sixth and eleventh respondents should
remain
subject to a restraint order.
The Madhoe Parties
[42]
The Madhoe parties who launched variation applications are the first
and third defendants. It is unnecessary for the purposes of this
judgment to go into any great detail concerning the applicant’s
case against these defendants for reasons which will become apparent.
[43]
The first defendant, Mr Navin Madhoe, was at the material time a
member
of SAPS holding the position of Section Head: Acquisition
Management attached to Supply Chain Management Services, KZN.
According
to the applicant’s founding papers he manipulated the
supply chain management processes under his control intentionally to
advantage the Panday defendants and the companies through which they
concluded contracts with SAPS, by eliminating any competition
they
would or might be confronted with but for his manipulations of the
system to their profit, and at the expense of SAPS. This
was done
with criminal intent. For example, contracts which ought to have been
subjected to a competitive process were divided
up into tranches of
R200 000 in order to bypass the processes which the law required to
be followed. In the specific case of accommodation
for members of
SAPS during the course of the 2010 World Cup the first defendant
deliberately delayed his departments submission
to the National
Office for so long that at National level there was no option but to
endorse the proposal of the award of very
substantial contracts in
that regard to the Panday interests, notwithstanding that no
competitive process had actually been followed.
These courses of
conduct resulted in the payment to and on behalf of the Panday
parties of amounts totalling the sum of R47 million.
Details of the
first defendant’s conduct in this regard are fully set out in
the applicants founding papers.
[44]
The precise manner in which gratifications which have been tracked
down
by the applicant’s staff, totalling R89 000.00, were paid
to the first defendant are also fully set out in the founding papers.
[45]
The third defendant is Ms Mmamonnye Ngobeni who was at the material
time
a Lieutenant General in the service of SAPS and the Provincial
Commissioner of Police, KZN. The principle accusation with which
she
is confronted is that she deliberately obstructed, and sought to put
an end to, the investigation which culminated ultimately
in the
prosecution of the Panday defendants. In her case the gratification
for this service identified by the deponents to the
applicant’s
founding affidavits was some R20 000.00.
[46]
The case against each of the first and third defendants is dealt with
in the
applicant’s founding papers in fine detail. Each asks
that the
rule nisi
insofar as it relates to them and their
spouses (in the latter case as respondents) should be discharged.
That outcome would be
justified only by a conclusion that with regard
to them, the applicant has failed to pass the threshold of the
existence of reason
to believe that a confiscation order will be made
against them. However the detailed evidence comprising the intended
State case
against them has not been challenged in any meaningful
manner. Their responses to the evidence against them amount to
little
more than bare denials.
[47]
In the case of the first defendant the high-water mark appears to be
his assertion that the contract for the accommodation of SAPS members
during the World Cup was actually executed or signed off at
National
level. With regard to the “gratifications” amounting to
some R89 000.00 the first defendant had this to say.
“
I deny that these
were gifts and I record that like SAPS use service providers for
accommodation and purchasing goods likewise I
did so by utilising the
same service provider in my personal capacity and duly paid for the
services rendered.”
Nothing is said beyond
that. No evidence of payment is tendered.
[48]
In relation to the “gratification” asserted against her,
the third defendant made much the same sort of statement saying that
her staff secured for her the use of the “reputed service
provider for my husbands surprise birthday party…”. As
in the case of the first defendant, the third defendant offered
no
evidence to support her contention that she paid the amount in
question. As is the case with the first defendant the benefit
received by the third defendant emanated from the Panday parties. The
third defendant states more than once that she came too late
on the
scene to be party to the conspiracy with the Panday interests alleged
by the applicant. She protests her innocence, without
dealing with
the allegations against her that she persistently attempted to put a
stop to the investigation of the relationship
between SAPS and the
Panday interests.
[49]
During the course of the argument I asked the attorney who
represented the
first and third defendants (and their spouses)
whether he intended to persist in the contention that the threshold
for a restraint
order against his clients had not been achieved by
the applicant. He answered in the affirmative. However,
notwithstanding my invitation,
he declined to argue the point, saying
at one stage that he had left his notes on the topic in his office.
[50]
In the circumstances there is no need for me to say any more than
that
I am satisfied on the papers that the threshold was clearly met
in relation to both the first and third defendants, and that their
explanations for the “gratifications” which the
investigators were able to identify are insubstantial, weak, and
cannot
prevail in these proceedings.
[51]
The first and third defendants also raised a contention that because
each of them is married in community of property, they only own one
half of the estates which, through the inclusion of their spouses
as
respondents, are subject to the restraint provisions in the
provisional order. In making this submission they overlook the
central feature of marriages in community of property, that the
community estate is indivisible whilst the marriage subsists unless
a
court orders otherwise in terms of
section 20
of the
Matrimonial
Property Act, No. 88 of 1984
.
[52]
The applicant’s founding papers illustrate that, accepting the
facts stated therein as true, there was a symbiotic relationship
between the Madhoe defendants and the Panday defendants which on
the
probabilities was indispensable if the project was to achieve the
success which it did. I agree with the submission of the
first and
third respondents that the gratifications which the applicant has
identified are paltry. But I reach that conclusion
not measuring it
against their then incomes as employed SAPS officers, but measuring
it against the vital roles that each played
according to the
applicant’s founding papers. The applicant’s case that
this was a joint enterprise which generated
a return of R47 million
extends also to the first and third defendants, and their alternative
prayer that the operation of the
restraint against them and their
spouses should be restricted to the known gratifications cannot be
granted.
[53]
However, in my view the contention of the applicant that the joint
enterprise
insofar as it relates to money laundering also included
the first and third defendants, whilst it may reasonably possibly be
true,
seems not to be supported by the available evidence. The
transactions giving rise to the money laundering charges involved the
Panday parties. It is a central feature of the applicant’s
argument that the money laundering activities themselves generate
separate identifiable proceeds of crime, and that there is a clear
distinction between what might be termed the primary crimes
generating the sum of R47 million, and the subsequent crimes of money
laundering which lift the restraint claimed to R165 million.
No
evidence is tendered of the participation of the first and third
defendants in money laundering activities. The same goes for
the
second defendant, who was a Captain in SAPS serving under the direct
command of the first defendant. The second defendant (and
his wife,
the second respondent) made no application to vary the provisional
order and has not opposed the confirmation of the
rule nisi
.
Although it will be cold comfort to them, in my view in the
case of the Madhoe parties the base sum under restraint should
be R47
million, and not R165 million.
Costs
[54]
In my view none of the defendants has achieved any success in
opposing
the confirmation of the provisional restraint order in its
original form. The adjustment I propose to make to the order is not
the product of the case made by, and the submissions made on behalf
of, the defendants affected by the adjustment.
[55]
The request from the applicant is that the failure of the opposition
to the confirmation of the provisional order justifies an award of
costs against the defendants in the restraint application, by
which I
understand the applicant to mean the entire application. In my view,
properly viewed, the restraint application is one
which seeks a
benefit for the applicant which cannot be secured otherwise than
through a restraint order, even if there is no opposition
to it by
the affected defendants and respondents. In those circumstances I
take the view that the only costs for which the opposing
defendants
should be held liable are those occasioned by their opposition.
The Order
[56]
I make the following order:
1)
The applications to vary the provisional restraint order are
dismissed with costs.
2)
Subject to the variation of paragraph 1.2.3 of the order by
the insertion after the figure “R165 575 730” of the
following:
“
in the case of
the fourth to ninth defendants (inclusive), and in excess of R47 346
590 in the case of the first, second and third
defendants,”
the provisional
restraint order made on 29
th
March 2023 is
confirmed.
3)
The costs of the applicant occasioned by the opposition to the
confirmation, or unqualified confirmation, of the provisional order
on the part of the first and third to ninth defendants (inclusive)
shall be paid by those defendants, their liability being joint
and
several. Such costs shall include the costs of two counsel, senior
counsel’s fees to be taxed on scale C and those of
junior
counsel on scale B.
_____________
Olsen J
Case Information:
Date of
Argument:
25 July 2024
Date of
Judgment:
2 December 2024
Counsel for the
Applicant:
G J Marcus SC with K Saller
Instructed
by:
State Attorney
6
th
floor,
Metropolitan Life Building
391 Anton Lembede Street
Durban
Ref:
119/0020768/2023/P/P37
Email:
HNitesh@justice.gov.za
sdevilliers@npa.gov.za
Counsel for the 1
st
& 3
rd
Defendants
and 1
st
&
3
rd
Respondents:
R Maniklall
Instructed
by:
Ravindra Maniklall & Company Inc
Suite 301, African Palms
9 Palm Boulevard, Gateway
Umhlanga Ridge
Ref: Mr
Maniklall/cm/S51/NM/MN/AFU
Emil:
rmcattorneys@gmail.com
Counsel for the 4
th
to 9
th
Defendants
and 4
th
to 8
th
and 10
th
to 14
th
Respondents:
R Bhana SC
Instructed
by:
Kershnie Govender Attorneys
39 Umhlanga Rocks Drive
Durban North
Ref: K Govender/T099
Email:
kershnie@law.co.za
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