Case Law[2025] ZASCA 31South Africa
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Victor N.O and Others (756/2023) [2025] ZASCA 31; 2025 (1) SACR 561 (SCA) (31 March 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (POCA) – funds kept in bank accounts of company and directors the proceeds of an unlawful investment scheme and the instrumentality of certain offences – National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP) having obtained preservation of funds order against company and its directors in terms of s 38 of POCA – preservation order reversed on reconsideration –appeal noted but lapsed– company placed under final winding-up – NDPP and liquidators both seeking to exercise their powers in respect of disputed funds – whether appeal should be reinstated.
Judgment
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## National Director of Public Prosecutions v Victor N.O and Others (756/2023) [2025] ZASCA 31; 2025 (1) SACR 561 (SCA) (31 March 2025)
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Victor N.O and Others (756/2023) [2025] ZASCA 31; 2025 (1) SACR 561 (SCA) (31 March 2025)
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sino date 31 March 2025
Latest amended version 3
April 2025.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 756/2023
In
the matter between:
THE NATIONAL DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Appellant
and
HERMANUS
JOHANNES VAUGH VICTOR N O
JOHANNA
NINI MAHANYELE N O
CAROLINE
MMAKGOKOLO LEDWABA N O
(jointly
the First Respondent in their capacities
as
the joint provisional liquidators of
Tariomix
(Pty) Ltd (in liquidation)
Masters
Ref No M000016/2023
First
Respondent
DAM
MOHASOA N O
T
P MAMAHLODI-SOFE N O
(jointly
the Second Respondent in their capacities
as
the joint provisional trustees of the insolvent estate of
Louis
Petrus Liebenberg)
Master’s
Ref No
T242/2025
Second Respondent
MPONYANA
LAZARUS LEDWABA N O
SANDRA
JOAN MC KENZIE N O
(jointly
the Third respondent in their capacities
as
the joint trustees of the insolvent estate of
Magdelena
Petronella Kleynhans
Master’s
Ref No T2485/2024
Third
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
The
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Victor N O and Others
(Case no 756/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2025)
Coram:
MBATHA, HUGHES, MEYER, MATOJANE and KOEN JJA
Heard:
20 March 2025
Delivered:
31
March 2025
Summary:
Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (POCA) –
funds kept in bank accounts of company and directors the
proceeds
of an unlawful investment scheme and the instrumentality of
certain offences – National Director of Public Prosecutions
(NDPP)
having obtained preservation of funds order against company
and its directors in terms of s 38 of POCA – preservation order
reversed on reconsideration –appeal noted but lapsed–
company placed under final winding-up – NDPP and liquidators
both seeking to exercise their powers in respect of disputed funds –
whether appeal should be reinstated.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Mokose J, sitting as court of first instance):
The
application for condonation and reinstatement of the appeal is
dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Meyer JA (Mbatha,
Hughes, Matojane and Koen JJA concurring):
[1]
This
is an appeal against the order of the Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Pretoria,
per
Mokose
J, dated 22 August 2022 (the high court), overturning a preservation
of property order granted by Davis J on 18 March 2021
in terms of s
38 of the Prevention of Organized Crime Act 21 of 1988 (POCA).
[1]
The appeal is with leave of the high court.
[2]
On 5 March 2021, the Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC) issued a
directive (the directive) to
ABSA Bank Limited (ABSA) and to Nedbank
Limited (Nedbank) in terms of the Financial Intelligence Centre Act
38 of 2001 (FICA) to
freeze the funds that were kept in the bank
accounts held in the names of Tariomix (Pty) Ltd
(Tariomix),
[2]
Mr Louis
Petrus Liebenberg (Mr Liebenberg),
[3]
and Ms Magdelena Petronella Kleynhans (Ms Kleynhans)
[4]
(jointly referred to as the respondents). The directive had a limited
lifespan of 10 days expiring on 18 March 2021, whereafter
the funds
would be freely available for use by the respondents. Mr Liebenberg
and Ms Kleynhans are the directors of Tariomix.
[3]
The appellant, the National Director of Public Prosecutions (the
NDPP) accordingly brought an
ex parte
application in terms of
s 38 of POCA. It sought the preservation of funds kept in certain
bank accounts of the respondents. The
basis of the application was
that the funds were the proceeds of unlawful activities or an
instrumentality of an offence.
[4]
The grounds on which the NDPP relied were that Tariomix, Mr
Liebenberg and Ms Kleynhans operated
a fraudulent investment scheme -
a Ponzi scheme – relating to diamonds in terms whereof innocent
members of the public were
duped and incited to pay large funds to
Tariomix as investors for the purchase and selling of alleged
diamonds. In reality, there
were never any diamonds purchased, and
the funds invested by the general public were utilised by Mr
Liebenberg and Ms Kleynhans
for their own gain and to the detriment
of the investors and other creditors of Tariomix.
[5]
On 18 March 2021, Davis J granted the preservation of property order
on an
ex
parte
basis
(the preservation order). On 19 April 2021, the respondents launched
a reconsideration application of the preservation order
in terms of
rule 6(12)
(c)
of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[5]
Having reconsidered the preservation order, the high court set it
aside with costs on 22 August 2022. In setting aside the preservation
order, the high court reasoned that the NDPP had failed to establish
the requirements under s 38(2) of POCA for obtaining a preservation
order. On 3 July 2023, it granted the NDPP leave to appeal to this
Court.
[6]
In the meantime, on 23 February 2023, Tariomix was placed under
provisional winding-up by the
North West Division of the High Court,
Mafikeng, at the instance of one of its major creditors, ABSA Bank
Limited, whereafter joint
provisional liquidators were appointed
during March 2023. Tariomix was placed under final winding-up during
April 2024. The estates
of the directors of Tariomix were
subsequently also sequestrated and trustees were appointed to their
insolvent estates.
[7]
In terms of rule 8(1) of the Supreme Court Rules,
[6]
the NDPP was obliged to lodge with the registrar of this Court six
copies of the record of the proceedings in the court
a
quo
on
or before 3 November 2023. It did so only on 20 March 2024. The
appeal had accordingly lapsed. An application for condonation
was
thus required to revive it.
[7]
The NDPP lodged an application seeking condonation for the late
filing of the record of the proceedings; reinstatement of the appeal
that had lapsed; and leave to file its heads of argument within six
weeks after the filing of the record of the proceedings. This
application must be adjudicated before the appeal can be decided.
[8]
Factors which usually weigh with this Court in considering an
application for condonation and
reinstatement of a lapsed appeal are
trite.
[8]
They include a reasonable and full explanation covering the entire
period of the delay and the prospects of success on the merits
of the
appeal. The explanation for the delay given by the NDPP falls far
short of a full, complete and satisfactory explanation.
But as this
Court said in
Valor
IT v Premier, North West Province and Others
[9]
‘very weak prospects of success may not offset a full, complete
and satisfactory explanation for a delay; while strong merits
of
success may excuse an inadequate explanation for the delay (to a
point).’ I, therefore, propose to first consider whether
the
NDPP has strong merits of success that may trump its unsatisfactory
explanation for the delay.
[9]
Once the appeal had lapsed, the
curator
bonis
appointed
in terms of s 42(1) of POCA
[10]
paid the money in the account of Tariomix over to the liquidators of
Tariomix. The funds are currently kept by the liquidators
and are
administered for the benefit of the creditors of Tariomix to be
applied in accordance with the provisions of the
Insolvency Act 24 of
1936
.
[10]
The facts relating to the unlawful scheme are largely common cause
between the liquidators and the NDPP.
The liquidators argue that they
are best suited to deal with the funds forming the subject of the
preservation order. That will
allow the investors to prove claims
against the insolvent estate of Tariomix and to allow them to be paid
a dividend of the moneys
lawfully owed to them in accordance with the
insolvency law. The NDPP, on the other hand, persists in its claim
that the preservation
order should be reinstated until the forfeiture
proceedings are disposed of.
[11]
I subscribe to the views expressed by Keightley J in
Prinsloo
N.O. and Others v NDPP and Others
.
[11]
There, the NDPP also obtained an order to preserve the funds obtained
by a company which duped investors into paying funds to the
company,
which had also conducted an unlawful investment scheme. That company
was also placed under final winding-up. The liquidators
also laid
claim to the funds forming the subject of the preservation order. On
that aspect of the case Keightley J concluded:
[12]
‘
I
conclude that there is no good reason to deprive the investors of
their ordinary rights to pursue their claims through the winding-up
process in this case. To retain the disputed funds under restraint
would amount to an arbitrary deprivation of their property rights.
It
would not serve a proper public purpose in that it would place
unnecessary hurdles in the path of the ongoing winding-up process,
which had already commenced by the time the restraint order was
granted.’
[12]
A preservation order is the precursor to an application for the
forfeiture of the property preserved as provided
for in Chapter 6 of
POCA. The preservation order that was granted
ex
parte
was not revived by the noting of the appeal to this Court.
[13]
The forfeiture application thus also lapsed. The investors have a
legitimate claim against the initially preserved funds, and rely
on
the liquidators, through the exercise of their statutory powers, to
effect a distribution of the funds. These rights are protected
under
s 25(1) of the Constitution
[14]
from arbitrary deprivation.
[13]
The NDPP argues that not all investors in the unlawful investment
scheme were innocent members of the public.
In support of this
argument it relies on a conclusion of fact to that effect in its
founding affidavit. No primary facts, on which
the conclusion could
be founded, were however alleged. No particulars of the identity or
identities of the particular investor
or investors or the grounds on
which acts of turpitude had been given. The remarks of Miller J in
Hart v
Pinetown Drive-in Cinema (Pty) Ltd
[15]
are pertinent:
’
Where
proceedings are brought by way of application, the petition is not
the equivalent of the declaration in proceedings by way
of action.
What might be sufficient in a declaration to foil an exception, would
not necessarily, in a petition, be sufficient
to resist an objection
that a case has not been adequately made out. The petition takes the
place not only of the declaration but
also of the essential evidence
which would be led at a trial and if there are absent from the
petition such facts as would be necessary
for determination of the
issue in the petitioner's favour, an objection that it does not
support the relief claimed is sound.’
[14]
Nevertheless, the NDPP may object to the claims of investors
(creditors) against the insolvent estate of
Tariomix at the meetings
of creditors held in terms of the provisions of the
Insolvency
Act
[16
] if it believes the
investor was complicit in the unlawful investment scheme. It may
object to the liquidators’ account at
any time before its
confirmation by the Master.
[17]
If the NDPP is aggrieved by a decision, ruling or order of the Master
or officer presiding at a meeting of creditors, it may bring
it under
review by the court.
[18]
It
may also invoke the provisions of POCA in respect of any specific
payment that may accrue to an investor, if it can establish
a factual
basis that the particular investor was complicit in the unlawful
scheme.
[15]
The NDPP, therefore, has not established any prospects of success,
let alone strong prospects of success
in the appeal, that might
otherwise have trumped its unsatisfactory explanation for the delay.
[16]
In the result, the following order is made:
The
application for condonation and reinstatement of the appeal is
dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel.
P.A. MEYER
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
DP
Skosana SC with S Jozana
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
first respondent:
J
Hershenson SC with R Leeuw
Instructed
by:
Strydom
Rabie Inc, Pretoria
Symington
& De Kok Inc, Bloemfontein
For
second and third respondents:
P
Lourens
Instructed
by:
F.J.
Senekal Inc., Bloemfontein
[1]
Subsections 38(1) and (2) of POCA reads:
‘
(1)
The National Director may by way of an
ex parte
application
apply to the High Court for an order prohibiting any person, subject
to such conditions and exceptions as may be
specified in the order,
from dealing in any manner with any property.
(2) The High
Court shall make an order referred to in subsection (1) if there are
reasonable grounds to believe that the
property concerned-
(a)
is an instrumentality of an offence referred to in Schedule 1;
(b)
is the proceeds of unlawful activities; or
(c)
is property associated with terrorist and related activities.’
[2]
Tariomix has since been liquidated and was substituted by its
liquidators as the first respondent.
[3]
The estate of Mr Liebenberg has since been provisionally
sequestrated and was at the hearing of this appeal substituted by
consent with its provisional trustees as the second respondent.
[4]
The estate of Ms Kleynhans has since been sequestrated and was at
the hearing of this appeal substituted by consent with its
trustees
as the third respondent.
[5]
Rule 6(12)
(c)
of the Uniform Rules of Court reads:
‘
A
person against whom an order was granted in such person’s
absence in an urgent application may by notice set down the
matter
for reconsideration of the order.’
[6]
Rule 8 of the Supreme Court Rules reads:
‘
An
appellant shall within three months of lodging of the notice of
appeal lodge with the registrar six copies of the record of
the
proceedings in the court
a quo
and deliver to each respondent
such number of copies as may be considered necessary or as may
reasonably be requested by the respondent.’
[7]
Court v
Standard Bank of Ltd; Court v Bester NO and Others
[1995] ZASCA 39
;
1995
(3) SA 123
(A) at 139F-H.
[8]
See, for example,
Dengetenge
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sphere Mining and Development Company
Ltd and Others
[2013] ZASCA 5
;
[2013] All SA 251
(SCA) paras 11-15;
Miles
Plant Hire v Commissioner SARS
[2015] ZASCA 98
paras 12-13.
[9]
Valor
IT v Premier, North West Province and Others
[2020] ZASCA 62
(SCA);
[2020] 3 All SA 397
(SCA);
2021 (1) SA 42
(SCA) para 38.
[10]
Section 42(1) of POCA reads:
(1) Where a High Court
has made a preservation of property order, the High Court shall, if
it deems it appropriate, at the time
of the making of the order or
at a later time-
(a)
appoint
a
curator bonis
to do, subject to the directions of
that High Court, any one or more of the following on behalf of the
person against whom
the preservation of property order has been
made, namely-
(i) to
assume control over the property;
(ii) to
take care of the said property;
(iii) to
administer the said property and to do any act necessary for that
purpose; and
(iv) where
the said property is a business or undertaking, to carry on, with
due regard to any law which may
be applicable, the business or
undertaking; and
(b)
order
any person holding property subject to the preservation of property
order to surrender forthwith, or within
such period as that Court
may determine, any such property into the custody of the
curator
bonis
.
[11]
Prinsloo
N.O. and Others v NDPP and Others
((Case
No. 7907/2020) An unreported judgment of the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg, dated 10 December 2020
(Prinsloo
N.O.).
[12]
Ibid
para
80.
[13]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Rautenbach and Others
[2004]
ZASCA 102
;
[2005] 1 All SA 412
(SCA);
2005 (4) SA 603
(SCA) paras
12-13.
[14]
Section 25(1) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa
reads:
‘
No
one may be deprived of property except in terms of law of general
application, and no law may permit arbitrary deprivation
of
property.’
[15]
Hart v
Pinetown Drive-in Cinema (Pty) Ltd
1972(1) SA 464 (D & CLD) at 469 C- E.
[16]
Insolvency Act 24 of 1936
.
[17]
Section 111(1)
of the
Insolvency Act.
[18
]
Section 151
of the
Insolvency Act.
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