Case Law[2024] ZASCA 113South Africa
Nyhonyha N O and Others v NDPP (972/2022; 973/2022; 974/2022) [2024] ZASCA 113; [2024] 3 All SA 706 (SCA); 2024 (2) SACR 358 (SCA) (16 July 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 – trust assets – realisable property in terms of s 14 – restraining orders in respect of property held by persons other than a defendant – unilateral powers of the defendants to dispose of trust assets – shareholding in an entity – proportional shareholding in the underlying property of a subsidiary company – consideration of other shareholders.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Nyhonyha N O and Others v NDPP (972/2022; 973/2022; 974/2022) [2024] ZASCA 113; [2024] 3 All SA 706 (SCA); 2024 (2) SACR 358 (SCA) (16 July 2024)
Nyhonyha N O and Others v NDPP (972/2022; 973/2022; 974/2022) [2024] ZASCA 113; [2024] 3 All SA 706 (SCA); 2024 (2) SACR 358 (SCA) (16 July 2024)
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sino date 16 July 2024
FLYNOTES:
POCA AND SIU – Restraint –
Realisable
property
–
Appellants
holding “realisable property” on behalf of defendants
cited in restraint application – Material
question is not
who formally owns the property, but who controls it or has its use
and benefit – POCA casts net widely
to cover those that
benefitted and hold realisable property – Definition of
“property” in POCA is expansive
– NDPP has met
the case required to be made – Prima facie showing that
appellants’ assets are held as envisaged
by section 14(1) of
POCA – Appeals dismissed –
Prevention of Organised
Crime Act 121 of 1998
,
s 14(1).
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 972/2022; 973/2022; 974/2022
In
the matter between:
MAGDELINE
SEKGOPI NYHONYHA N O
APPELLANT
And
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
RESPONDENT
PROSECUTIONS
(Case
no 972/2022)
and
in the matter between:
MAGANDHERAN
PILLAY N O
FIRST
APPELLANT
ERGOLD
PROPERTIES No 8 CC
SECOND APPELLANT
And
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
RESPONDENT
PROSECUTIONS
(Case
no 973/2022)
and
in the matter between:
ASH
BROOK INVESTMENTS 15 (PTY) LTD
FIRST APPELLANT
CORAL
LAGOON INVESTMENTS
SECOND
APPELLANT
194
(PTY) LTD
KGORO
CONSORTIUM (PTY) LTD
THIRD APPELLANT
and
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
RESPONDENT
PROSECUTIONS
(Case
no 974/2022)
Neutral
citation:
Nyhonyha
N O and Others v NDPP
(Case
no 972; 973 & 974/22)
[2024] ZASCA 113
(16 July 2024)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, WEINER and MOLEFE JJA and COPPIN and
SMITH AJJA
Heard:
7 March 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal
website and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 11h00 on 16 July
2024
Summary:
Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998
–
trust assets – realisable property in terms of
s 14
–
restraining orders in respect of property held by persons other than
a defendant – unilateral powers of the defendants
to dispose of
trust assets – shareholding in an entity – proportional
shareholding in the underlying property of a
subsidiary company –
consideration of other shareholders.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Keightley and Adams JJ and Randera AJ
sitting as full court):
In case number
972/2022
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include those of two counsel where so
employed.
In case number
973/2022
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include those of two counsel where so
employed.
In case number
974/20222
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include those of two counsel where so
employed.
JUDGMENT
Molefe
JA (Nicholls and Weiner JJA, Coppin and Smith AJJA concurring):
[1]
The crisp issue that falls for decision in these appeals is whether
the appellants hold ‘realisable property’ within
the meaning of
s 14(1)
of the Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121
of 1998 (POCA), on behalf of defendants cited in a restraint
application brought by
the National Director of Public Prosecutions
(the NDPP) in terms of ss 25 and 26 of POCA (the restraint
application). The three
appeals were consequently consolidated and
heard simultaneously.
[2]
The NDPP alleged that the appellants are holding property for and on
behalf of some of the defendants
in the restraint application, namely
Dr Eric Anthony Wood (Dr Wood), Mr Magandheran Pillay
(
Mr
Pillay) and Mr Litha Mveliso Nyhonyha (Mr Nyhonyha), and accordingly
sought an order restraining their property on the basis
that it falls
within the definition of ‘realisable property’ in terms
of POCA. Those defendants (the Regiments directors)
have been
indicted on various charges relating to corruption, money laundering
and fraud.
Dr Wood was cited as the first defendant in the
restraint proceedings, and Mr Pillay and Mr Nyhonyha, as the second
and the third
defendants, respectively.
[3]
Regiments Capital (Pty) Ltd (Regiments
Capital), which is in liquidation, Regiments Fund Managers (Pty) Ltd
(Regiments Fund Managers)
and Regiments Securities (Pty) Ltd
(Regiments Securities) were also cited as the fourth, fifth and sixth
defendants resepectively
in the restraint proceedings. I also refer
to these corporate defendants collectively as the Regiments Group, or
‘Regiments’.
Where appropriate, Regiments Capital is
specifically referred to.
[4]
On 18 November 2019, the Gauteng Division
(per Wright J) granted a provisional restraint order in respect of
certain property owned
by the Regiments directors and their
co-accused, as well as the entities which hold properties on their
(the Regiments directors’)
behalf. The appellants were also
cited as defendants in that matter and the order consequently also
implicated their property.
[5]
That order was discharged on the return date, namely 26 October 2020
(per Mahalelo J). The respondent
(NDPP) subsequently filed appeals
against the discharge of the provisional order. The appeals were
heard simultaneously by a specially
constituted full court of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (per Keightley and
Adams JJ and Randera AJ) (the
full court).
[6]
On 3 May 2022, the full court delivered its
judgment in terms of which it, inter alia, upheld the appeals and
confirmed the provisional
restraint order, subject to a variation of
the amount, and the exclusion of Regiments Capital (the fourth
defendant in the restraint
application), against whom liquidation
proceedings had been instituted. The full court held that the
appellants’ property
(excluding that of Regiments Capital)
should be included in the restraint order in terms of s 14(1) of
POCA.
[7]
This Court granted the appellants special leave to appeal only on the
issue
‘whether the appellants hold realisable property
within the meaning of s 14(1) of POCA on behalf of
Mr
Nyhonyha
and Mr Pillay.’ The restraint order against Mr
Nyhonyha and Mr Pillay is final, special leave to appeal having been
refused
by this Court, and in the case of Mr Nyhonyha, also by the
Constitutional Court.
The Parties
[8]
The appellant in case no 972/2022 is Mrs Magdeline Sekgopi Nyhonyha
(Mrs Nyhonyha), in her capacity
as a trustee of the Nyhonyha Family
Trust. Prior to October 2018, Mr Nyhonyha was a co-trustee of that
trust. The beneficiaries
of the Nyhonyha Family Trust are the members
of the Nyhonyha family.
[9]
The first appellant in case no 973/ 2022 is Mr Magandheran Pillay (Mr
Pillay), in his capacity
as a trustee of the Pillay Family Trust. The
trust has two trustees, Mr Pillay and his brother, Mr Indheran
Pillay. The beneficiaries
of the Pillay Family Trust are Mr Pillay
and his family. The second appellant is Ergold Properties No 8 CC
(Ergold). The Pillay
Family Trust is the sole member of Ergold and Mr
Pillay is in control of Ergold’s affairs through authority
given by the
Pillay Family Trust.
[10]
The first and second appellants in case no 974/2022 are Ash Brook
Investments 15 (Pty) Ltd (Ash Brook) and
Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd (Coral Lagoon), entities which are special purpose
vehicles. Both were established in 2006
as property holding companies
and for the purpose of taking advantage of a black economic
empowerment (BEE) offer made by Capitec
Bank Holding Limited
(Capitec), to a number of blacked-owned entities, including Regiments
Companies. Ash Brook has at all times
housed the Capitec shares
issued under the BEE transaction. Coral Lagoon is wholly owned by Ash
Brook. Initially Regiments Capital
owned the majority stake in Coral
Lagoon. Presently Ash Brook is wholly owned by Regiments Capital
after the minority shareholders
were bought out for value following
the provisional restraint order. Mr Nyhonyha and Mr Pillay are its
directors. The third appellant
in case 974/2022 is Kgoro Consortium
(Pty) Ltd (Kgoro), a company which is majority owned by Regiments
Capital. Its assets are
regarded as part of the Regiments Group’s
‘primary assets’. I also refer to these appellants as the
‘subsidiaries’.
Factual background
[11]
The restraint application had its origins in the criminal charges
preferred against the Regiments directors,
namely Dr Wood, Mr Pillay
and Mr Nyhonyha, relating to financial advisory services provided
through the Regiments Group. Dr Wood
had left the Regiments Group
during late 2016 or early 2017 as a result of a fall-out between the
directors.
[12]
The Regiments Group provided services to state-owned entities,
including Transnet SOC (Transnet) and the
Transnet Second Defined
Benefit Fund (the Fund). The restraint order flowed from alleged
corrupt activities involving these entities,
which were part of the
State Capture project and enriched the defendants.
[13]
Transnet had paid the Regiments Group more than R1 billion arising
from the alleged corruption and unlawful
contracts. All of this is
alleged to constitute the proceeds of crime. The Fund sued the
defendants for some R848 million in losses
which it allegedly
suffered as a result of the Regiments Groups’ unlawful conduct.
Although the defendants denied the allegations,
they paid the Fund
approximately R639 million in settlement of those claims.
The
legislative framework
Restraining
of property owned by a person other than a defendant
[14]
As mentioned, this appeal concerns the circumstances in which a
restraint order under ss 25 and 26 of POCA
may be made in respect of
property owned by a person other than a defendant, and must be
determined in the context of the legal
framework put in place in
Chapter 5 of POCA. The material question is not who formally owns the
property, but who controls it or
has its use and benefit. Chapter 5
provides for conviction-based forfeiture. A confiscation order may be
made against a defendant
after conviction, who is found to have
benefitted from an offence of which he or she is convicted
[1]
or to have benefitted from a sufficiently closely related offence.
[2]
[15]
This Court in
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Gardener
and Another
(
Gardener
), explained the framework created by
Chapter 5 of POCA with reference to the confiscation enquiry under s
18 as follows:
‘
In
the exercise of its discretion a court must bear in mind the main
object of the legislation, which is to strip sophisticated
criminals
of the proceeds of their criminal conduct. To this end the
legislature has, in Ch 5 of POCA, provided an elaborate scheme
to
facilitate such stripping. The function of a court in this scheme, as
appears from what I have said above, is to determine the
“benefit”
from the offence, its value in monetary terms and the amount to be
confiscated. It is undoubtedly so that
a confiscation order may often
have harsh consequences, not only for the defendant, but also for
others who may have innocently
benefited, directly or indirectly,
from the criminal proceeds. This is what the legislation
contemplates, and a court may not,
under the guise of the exercise of
its discretion, disregard its provisions – harsh as they may be
….’
[3]
[16]
This Court further noted that the confiscation phase involves a
three-stage post-conviction enquiry under
s 18 of POCA:
‘
Once
a defendant’s unlawful activities yield proceeds of the kind
envisaged in s 12, he or she has derived a benefit as contemplated
in
s 18(1)
(a)
.
This entitles a prosecutor to apply for a confiscation order, and
triggers a three-stage enquiry by the court. First, the court
must be
satisfied that the defendant has in fact benefitted from the relevant
criminal conduct; second, it must determine the value
of the benefit
that was obtained; and finally, the sum recoverable from the
defendant must be established.’
[4]
[17]
Section 26(2) of POCA specifies the subject matter of a restraint
order. It provides:
‘
(2)
A restraint order may be made –
(a)
in respect of such realisable property as may be specified in the
restraint order and which is held by the person against
whom the
restraint order is being made;
(b)
in respect of all realisable property held by such person, whether it
is specified in the restraint order or not;
(c)
in respect of all property which, if it is transferred to such person
after the making of the restraint order would
be realisable
property.’
[18]
Section 14(1) of POCA defines ‘realisable property’ for
purposes of Chapter 5 as follows:
‘
(14)
Realisable property
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subsection (2), the following property
shall be realisable in terms of this Chapter, namely-
(a)
any property held by the defendant concerned; and
(b)
any property held by a person to whom the defendant has directly or
indirectly made any affected gift.’
[19]
The purpose of a restraint order is to preserve assets pending the
final determination of criminal proceedings.
If the legislation did
not provide for the preservation of assets, the key purpose of
Chapter 5 of POCA, namely, ‘to ensure
that no person can
benefit from his or her wrongdoing’,
[5]
could not be achieved. Assets are preserved to cater for the
possibility that the criminal proceedings may culminate in a
confiscation
order.
[20]
Section 12(3) of POCA provides that a person will have benefitted
from unlawful activities if he or she has
received or retained any
proceeds of unlawful activities. Therefore, what constitutes a
‘benefit’ is defined by reference
to what constitutes
‘proceeds of unlawful activities’.
[21]
It was held in
S
v Shaik,
[6]
that a court should bear in mind that the definition of ‘proceeds
of unlawful activities’ in POCA makes it possible
to confiscate
property that has not been directly acquired through the commission
of crimes, but through related criminal activity.
A court should also
bear in mind that one of the objects of the broad definition of
‘proceeds of unlawful activities’
is to ensure that wily
criminals do not evade the purposes of the Act by a clever
restructuring of their affairs. A court should
have regard to the
nature of the crimes and how closely these are connected to the
purpose of the statute. The reason for this
is that the larger the
value of the confiscation order, the greater the deterrent effect of
such an order.
[7]
[22]
Regarding the restraining of property in the hands of third parties,
it was held in
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Phillips
(
Phillips
) that:
‘…
It
is significant that the Act does not refer to the ownership of
realisable property. The concept of “holding” immovable
property can occupy one or more of many semantic slots in a range
through ownership, possession, occupation, and holding as a nominee
…
The context is decisive. In the POCA, the primary concern of the
Legislature is not the title, registered or otherwise.
On the
contrary, one major evil which the Legislature contemplates and sets
out to neutralise is the concealment by criminals of
their interest
in the proceeds of crime. That suggests that “holding” of
property should be given a meaning wide enough
to further that end.
That is, no doubt, why the concept and consequences of a “gift”
have been extended, as is found
in ss 14 and 16….’
[8]
[23]
The leading authority on when property is ‘held’ by a
defendant is
Phillips
where Heher J explained the approach of
POCA as follows:
‘…
The
respondents point out that the Act does not allow the seizure of
assets owned by another entity unless it is an affected gift.
Only
misuse or abuse of the principle of corporate personality warrants
piercing the veil …
I
do not agree with these submissions. The restraint order has been
made in respect of all realisable property held by the first
respondent. “Realisable property” is “property held
by the person concerned” (s 14(1)
(a)
)
and “any property held by a person to whom the defendant has
directly or indirectly made an affected gift” (s 14(1)
(b)
)
other than property in respect of which a declaration of forfeiture
is in force….’
[9]
[24]
When a person stands in this kind of relationship to the property in
question, he or she will have, in the
language of s 12(2)
(a)
,
‘any interest in the property’ and will therefore ‘hold
it’. The enquiry is a contextual one, which must
take into
account the totality of the case in issue. To find otherwise would
frustrate the purpose of POCA. Whereas the confiscation
order is
determined at the end stage of criminal forfeiture proceedings, POCA
makes provision for the grant of a restraint order
as an interim
measure.
Regarding disputes
of fact in restraint applications
[25] As
mentioned, the NDPP’s case is that the defendants will be
prosecuted, at least in respect of the
offences of corruption, money
laundering and fraud. The purpose of a restraint order is to preserve
assets pending the final determination
of a criminal prosecution, to
cater for the possibility that the defendants may be convicted at the
conclusion of the criminal
trial, and that a confiscation order may
be made against them.
[26]
Counsel for the NDPP correctly submitted that this Court has
repeatedly held that a restraint order is only
of interim operation
and like interim interdicts and attachments orders pending trial, it
has no definite or dispositive effect.
[10]
A restraint merely preserves the status quo pending the final
determination of the criminal proceedings against the defendant(s).
It is thus for all intents and purposes an interdict
pendente
lite
.
In an application for a restraint order, the NDPP need only to make
out a prima facie case for granting of such an order. Her
application
is not defeated merely because her prima facie evidence is disputed.
[27]
It is the NDPP’s contention that the purpose of a restraint
order would be wholly defeated if, once
the NDPP has made out a prima
facie case that a defendant ‘holds’ property through a
respondent, a court was to decline
to grant the restraint order
merely because the respondent disputes this allegation. Most
defendants will dispute that property
which they formally own is
‘held’ on their behalf, as will the respondent who
‘holds’ it. It is undoubtedly
for this reason that POCA
provides that the confiscation enquiry under s 18 of POCA, which
determines the benefit a defendant has
obtained and the appropriate
amount of any confiscation order, is to be undertaken by the court
that has convicted the defendant(s)
having heard all the evidence.
The confiscation enquiry must also determine ‘the values of all
realisable property held by
the defendant’ as well as the value
of an affected gift made by the defendant.
[11]
This is because a confiscation order may not exceed the value of the
realisable property.
[12]
[28]
The clear legislative policy in the structure of Chapter 5 of POCA is
that applications for restraint orders
should not be waylaid by
disputes of fact that are to be properly determined by the court at
the conclusion of the criminal proceedings.
This includes the enquiry
into what realisable property is held by the relevant defendants or
on their behalf. It is inappropriate
for the appellants to demand a
full-scale enquiry into the realisable property held by Mr Pillay and
Mr Nyhonyha, and also a judicial
finding on the merits of an issue
that POCA reserves for the court which holds the confiscation enquiry
at the conclusion of the
criminal proceedings. Thus, the NDPP need to
do no more than to establish a prima facie case that the respective
appellants hold
property on behalf of Mr Pillay and Mr Nyhonyha,
respectively.
[29]
The appellants, other than the subsidiaries, rely to a greater or
lesser extent on the existence of Mr Pillay
and Mr Nyhonyha’s
respective family trusts for the submission that their property is
beyond the reach of the restraint order.
The trustees of the family
trusts say this is so because they are separate and distinct juristic
entities. Ergold says this is
so because its sole member is not Mr
Pillay, but the Pillay Family Trust.
[30]
This Court flagged the potential misuse of the trust form as a
concern in
Land
and Agriculture Bank v Parker and Others
.
[13]
There Cameron JA, dealt with the challenge posed in recent times by
family trusts designed to secure the interest and protect the
property of a group of family members, usually identified in the
trust deed by name or by descent or by degree of kinship to the
founder. He concluded that the ‘essential’ notion of
trust law, namely, that enjoyment and control should be functionally
separate, is frequently lacking.
[14]
[31]
In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Van Staden and Others
,
[15]
this Court confirmed a provisional restraint order in respect of
assets which the defendant controlled through his family trust,
companies and his family members, which were the formal owners, and
found that they were realisable assets. Counsel for the NDPP
correctly argued that it is not necessary in a matter such as this,
where the question is whether the defendant ‘holds’
the
property in terms of s 14(1) of POCA, to demonstrate that a notional
corporate veil should be lifted, or to show that there
has been an
abuse. It is sufficient to show that the defendant is, in substance,
the person who controls or enjoys the property.
This conclusion also
flows from POCA’s wide and encompassing notion of a defendant
having ‘any interest’ in the
realisable property he
holds.
The
appellants’ submissions
Regarding
the Nyhonyha Family Trust
[32]
Counsel for the Nyhonyha Family Trust submitted that the evidence
does not establish that the trust holds
assets on behalf of Mr
Nyhonyha. He asserted that Mr Nyhonyha was but one of the four
trustees of the family trust until his resignation
on 29 October
2018, approximately a year before the Wright J order. The allegation
that Mr Nyhonyha used the cash assets of the
trust for his benefit
was introduced by the NDPP for the first time in her replying
affidavit. It was based on the information
she requested from the
South African Revenue Service (SARS) on 3 February 2020,
approximately three months after the ex parte application
was
launched on her behalf. Thus, so it was argued, the full court erred
in allowing the introduction of new facts by the NDPP
without any
explanation why such evidence was not contained in the founding
affidavit.
[33]
Counsel also argued that the full court’s conclusion that the
cash assets of the trust were being used
consistently for the benefit
of Mr Nyhonyha is not supported by the evidence. The NDPP persisted
with her submission adopted in
the full court based on loans
allegedly advanced by the trust to various individuals, including Mr
Nyhonyha, between 2011 and 2019.
However, she could only point to
loans advanced during 2014 to 2017, accounting for only four of the
nine years during which the
trust is alleged to have advanced loans
to him.
[34]
Counsel further argued that Mr Nyhonyha was not in exclusive control
of the trust as there were three other
independent trustees when
loans were allegedly advanced to him. Mr Nyhonyha resigned as a
trustee on 29 October 2018, eighteen
months before the provisional
restraint order. In the circumstances, the NDPP did not make out a
case that Mr Nyhonyha had exclusive
use or effective control over the
assets of the trust, and the full court therefore erred in finding
that the trust holds assets
for Mr Nyhonyha.
[35]
Regarding affidavits previously filed by Mr Nyhonyha and relied upon
by the NDPP for the assertion that he
is a shareholder in Regiments
and owned and managed Regiments either directly or through the trust,
counsel submitted that the
quoted extracts were taken out of context
by the full court. Mr Nyhonyha owns 15% shares in Regiments in his
personal capacity
and the Family Trust owns 20% shares in Regiments.
Counsel submitted that those affidavits were deposed to by Mr
Nyhonyha in his
capacity as a Regiments director and as a trustee
looking after the interests of the trust.
[36]
Finally, the thrust of the Nyhonyha Family Trust’s contention
is that a defendant must have the exclusive
use and effective and
unilateral control over the property in question before he can be
found to ‘hold’ the property.
It argued that the NDPP has
not advanced any facts supporting the full court’s finding that
it held property on behalf of
Mr Nyhoyha within the meaning of s
14(1) of the POCA and the provisional restraint order against the
trust should therefore not
have been confirmed.
Regarding
the Pillay Family Trust and Ergold
[37]
The submissions by counsel for the Pillay Family Trust and Ergold
were as follows. The trust was registered
in 2003 and has always had
at least two trustees. Until 7 August 2019, the trust had three
trustees, one of whom was an independent
trustee, who later resigned.
Mr Pillay and his brother Mr Indheran Pillay remained the only two
trustees. The trust owns 100% shareholding
in Ergold and 33%
shareholding in Regiments Capital. The trust’s purchase of Mr
Pillay’s shares in Regiments Capital
was funded by a loan from
Mr Pillay, which was repaid in full. The trust also purchased Mr
Pillay’s shareholding in Ergold,
using a loan advanced by Mr
Pillay, which has also been repaid over time.
[38]
Mr Pillay, his wife and their descendants are beneficiaries of the
trust. Mr Pillay did not participate in
the day-to-day management of
the trust, nor did he enjoy any type of majority or veto vote when it
came to making decisions for
the trust.
[39]
According to this argument, Ergold is a property-owning entity in
which Mr Pillay acquired the controlling
interest around September
1997. Ergold continued to run a rental portfolio for more than 20
years and evolved to include property
development, property trading,
and share trading. It built its assets over time and these
acquisitions were purchased using its
own resources and by way of
loans from Mr Pillay, the Pillay Family Trust and Standard Bank. It
did not receive any donations from
Mr Pillay for these acquisitions.
[40]
Counsel for the Pillay Family Trust and Ergold submitted that neither
appellant received any realisable property
as defined in POCA from Mr
Pillay or any of the defendants, nor do they possess any realisable
property as defined in POCA. It
is contended that the trust is not a
defendant as contemplated in POCA, nor is it alleged that the trust
received a gift from a
defendant, namely Mr Pillay. It was argued
that the only basis on which the assets of the trust, which are its
shareholding in
Ergold and Regiments, can be made subject to the
restraint, is if the NDPP could show that, despite the existence of
the trust,
Mr Pillay in fact holds its assets as contemplated in
POCA.
[41]
It was further argued that the Pillay Family Trust is a discretionary
trust of which a beneficiary may only
claim a distribution to the
extent that the trustees have exercised their discretion in favour of
that beneficiary.
[16]
Mr
Pillay was therefore not guaranteed anything from the trust and there
is no evidence or allegation that the income of the trust
was used to
benefit him exclusively or disproportionately in relation to the
other beneficiaries. It therefore cannot be said that
the trust’s
assets and income were administered for the sole benefit of Mr
Pillay.
[42]
The submissions made concerning Ergold were as follows. Other than
the fact that the Pillay Family Trust
is the sole member of Ergold, a
factual basis was never laid for the restraint of Ergold’s
assets. Ergold is not a defendant
as defined by POCA, or an entity
that received a gift from Mr Pillay. There is no evidence that Ergold
benefitted or was enriched
by proceeds of crime. It is a
property-owning entity and was registered on 20 May 1997, long before
any of the alleged offences
occurred. The business activities of
Ergold were completely distinct from the business activities of
Regiments or Mr Pillay, and
Ergold did not receive any donations from
Mr Pillay or any of the defendants.
[43]
Counsel for Ergold argued that the full court misdirected itself when
it restrained the assets of the appellants.
On the full court’s
approach, every property held by a third party in which a defendant
can be said to have an interest would
be susceptible to restraint by
virtue of that fact only. That approach, it was argued, is
inconsistent with the import and purpose
of POCA.
Regarding Ash
Brook, Coral Lagoon and Kgoro
[44]
Counsel for Ash Brook, Coral Lagoon and Kgoro (the subsidiaries)
submitted that the full court confirmed
the restraint order which
included, inter alia, all the assets of the subsidiaries, without
catering for the third parties who
owned shares in Ash Brook and
Kgoro. At the time the provisional restraint order was granted, Ash
Brook had shareholders unrelated
to the defendants. The minority
shareholders, Lemoshanang Investments (Pty) Ltd and Rorisang Basadi
Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
held approximately 18% of Ash Brook
shares. Regiments thus held approximately 60% of the issued share
capital of Ash Brook. Regiments
held approximately 84% shares in
Kgoro, while various minority shareholders held approximately 16%.
[45]
Counsel submitted further that the effect of a finding that a
defendant ‘holds’ realisable property,
formally owned by
a third party, is that the property is, in all relevant respects,
considered to be the property of the defendant
and not of the third
party. The property may be restrained until confiscation proceedings
in respect of the defendants are completed,
and the value of the
restrained property may be used to satisfy a confiscation order. For
these reasons it was submitted that the
meaning of ‘holding’
realisable property should not be extended any further than what was
accorded to it in
Phillips
, despite textual indications in the
POCA to the contrary. The defendants, whether through the family
trusts or otherwise, were
not the sole shareholders in Ash Brook,
Coral Lagoon and Kgoro.
[46] It
was further argued that the NDPP has not shown that, first, the
defendants, had the power to dispose of
the Capitec shares or the
Sandown property. Second, that the defendants were ‘the real’
beneficiaries of the income
from that property, and third, that the
defendants treated the subsidiaries’ property as their own.
According to this argument,
the full court therefore erred in finding
that shareholding in an entity equated to having a proportional
interest in the underlying
property of a subsidiary of that entity,
several layers removed, and failing to pay attention to other
minority shareholders. The
full court’s test therefore results
in an irrational and arbitrary application of POCA, which in turn
results in an arbitrary
deprivation of property, contrary to s 25(1)
of the Constitution.
[47]
According to the subsidiaries, the effect of the final winding-up of
Regiments Capital is that the court
had no power to make a restraint
order against its assets as those assets are dealt with by the
liquidators of Regiments Capital.
For that reason, the full court
correctly did not confirm the restraint order as against Regiments
Capital. The subsidiaries contend
that the full court failed to
consider the effect of the liquidation of Regiments Capital on the
test for ‘holding’
property as set out in
Phillips
.
[17]
[48]
Finally, counsel for the subsidiaries argued that the full court
erred in failing to recognise that the effect
of the liquidation was
to sever any link between the defendants and the appellants which
could establish the defendants’
power of disposal, control, use
and enjoyment over the assets of the appellants. It thus bypassed the
Phillips
test. The liquidators will control Regiment’s
60% shareholding in Ash Brook and its 84% shareholding in Kgoro. By
including
the subsidiary companies in the restraint order, and
concomitantly excluding the income or proceeds on disposal of their
assets
from the effects of the
concursus creditorum
, it was
argued that the full court preferred the NDPP, a non-creditor of the
subsidiaries, above the creditors of Regiments Capital
and that this
negates the purpose of s 36(2) of POCA. In addition, for policy
reasons, the full court should have held that the
necessary
implication of s 36 is to exclude from a restraint order the
subsidiary companies of a company liquidated before the
restraint
order was granted.
The NDPP’s
submissions
Regarding the
Nyhonyha Family Trust
[49]
The NDPP contended first, that the Nyhonyha Family Trust’s
cash assets have consistently been used by Mr Nyhonyha for his
personal benefit. Second, Mr Nyhonyha and Mr Pillay previously filed
affidavits on behalf of Regiments stating that they are shareholders
in Regiments, directly or through their family trusts and confirmed
the use of the family trusts to hold their respective shareholdings
in Regiments Capital on their behalf. And third, Mr Nyhonyha stated
under oath that Regiments was owned, managed and funded by
himself,
Mr Pillay and Mr Wood, either directly or through their family
trusts.
[50]
In her founding papers, the NDPP put up several affidavits previously
filed on behalf of Regiments Capital
by Mr Nyhonyha and Mr Pillay,
which referred to the use of the respective family trusts to ‘hold’
their respective
shareholdings in Regiments Capital on their behalf.
The NDPP referred in particular to:
(a) Mr Nyhonyha’s
answering affidavit on behalf of the Regiments Companies in an
application launched by Dr Wood, in
which he said that after the
initial shareholders in Regiments Capital had been bought out, he, Dr
Wood and Mr Pillay ‘were
the only remaining shareholders,
either directly or through our family trusts.'
(b) In an affidavit
filed in an application for the removal of Dr Wood as a delinquent
director, Mr Nyhonyha said that he,
Mr Pillay and Dr Wood had managed
and owned Regiments Capital through their respective trusts and
‘[s]ince then, Regiments
has been owned, managed and funded by
the three of them’.
(c) In an
answering affidavit in opposition to an Anton Pillar application
brought by the Fund, Mr Pillay said that
he and Mr Nyhonyha (and not
the trusts) had caused Dr Woods to be removed as a director at a
shareholders’ meeting.
[51]
The NDPP’s argument is that neither Mr Pillay nor Mr Nyhonyha
has denied or attempted to explain these
statements, beyond Mr
Nyhonyha’s complaint that they have been taken out of context.
The NDPP submits that, contrary to their
bare disavowals, these
affidavits are borne out by the facts.
[52]
The NDPP submitted further that, although Mr Nyhonyha alleged that he
resigned as a trustee on 29 October
2018 and Mrs Nyhonyha confirmed
that she is a trustee, neither of them disclosed if there are other
trustees and who they are.
The NDPP argued that it must accordingly
be assumed that Mrs Nyhonyha is the sole trustee of the Nyhonyha
Family Trust.
[53]
According to the NDPP, Mr Nyhonyha’s assertion that the trust
is there to provide for the Nyhonyha
family has been shown to be
untrue through the trust’s financial statements for the 2015
and 2017 financial years. Those
statements show:
(a) Substantial
interest-free loans to unidentified persons totalling some R50
million.
(b) During the
2015, 2016 and 2017 financial years all but a small amount thereof
was lent to Mr Nyhonyha.
(c) Apart
from the trust’s shares in Regiments Capital, almost the entire
assets of the trust had been disbursed,
interest-free, to Mr
Nyhonyha.
[54]
Mr Nyhonyha has thus benefitted, not only from the use of the capital
sums lent to him, but also because
he was exempted from paying any
interest on those substantial loans. In addition, no repayment date
was specified. The NDPP argued
that it is thus undisputable that the
trust assets have and are being used for Mr Nyhonyha’s benefit.
The inference is therefore
ineluctable that the trust holds its
assets on his behalf.
Regarding
the Pillay Family Trust
[55]
Regarding the assets of the Pillay Family Trust, the NDPP contended
that:
(a) The two
trustees, namely Mr Indheran Pillay and Mr Tewodros Gebreselasie are
not independent trustees. Mr Indheran Pillay
is Mr Pillay’s
brother. Both he and Mr Gebreselasie have represented Regiments in a
related corrupt locomotives project and
received payments from
Regiments.
(b) Ergold’s
company documents show that Mr Pillay has been involved in the
running of the trust, since in those documents
he is listed as the
representative of the Pillay Family Trust.
(c) Ergold’s
registered address is Mr Pillay’s home address.
(d) Mr Indheran
Pillay and Mr Gebreselasie appointed Mr Pillay as their agent for the
purposes of dealing with the trust’s
member’s interest in
Ergold.
(e) Mr Indheran
Pillay has been unable to provide the financial statements reflecting
that loans had been repaid to Mr Pillay.
(f) Mr
Pillay is a beneficiary of the trust along with his wife and
descendants. The financial statements show
that some R1.75 million of
the trust assets had been distributed to unidentified beneficiaries
and some R591 405 was disbursed
in respect of school fees.
(g) The financial
statements of the trust for the 2019 financial year show that it made
an interest-free long-term loan to
Ergold with no repayment date. In
2019, the outstanding loan amount was some R103 million.
[56]
The NDPP argued that the evidence thus established that Mr Pillay had
acquired the shareholding in Regiments
Capital through the trust and
the latter holds those shares on his behalf. He and his family have
enjoyed the fruits of that shareholding.
It is also undisputable that
Mr Pillay is in control of Ergold through the trust. There can
accordingly be little doubt that the
trust holds property on his
behalf as contemplated in terms of s 14(1) of POCA. This includes
interests in the subsidiaries, namely
Ash Brook, Coral Lagoon and
Kgoro.
[57]
The NDPP argued that, save for the implications of the liquidation of
Regiments Capital, Mr Pillay and Mr
Nyhonyha have always been in
control of Ash Brook and Coral Lagoon and had caused their assets to
be distributed to entities under
their control. It is common cause
that Regiments Capital owns 84.36% of its share capital and its
assets have always been regarded
as part of the Regiments Group’s
primary assets. Insofar as the interests of minority shareholders are
concerned, the NDPP
submitted that they are recognised and protected
by s 30(3) of POCA.
[18]
Discussion
[58]
The appellants each put forward a narrow and decontextualised version
of what they describe as the ‘
Phillips
test’,
which they say limits the property which a defendant can be said to
‘hold’ indirectly. The Nyhonyha Family
Trust says that a
defendant must have the exclusive use and effective control over the
property in question before he can be found
to ‘hold’ the
property. Ergold and the Pillay Family Trust say that before property
can be said to be ‘held’
for the purposes of s 14(1)
(a)
,
the defendant must narrowly meet what they say is the test
communicated in
Phillips
. They effectively treat the
circumstances in
Phillips
as a prescriptive closed list. The
subsidiaries say that what
Phillips
requires is that the
defendant must meet at least one of the four requirements: he or she
must be the sole shareholder or member
of the respondent; he or she
must have provided the funds for the acquisition of the property; he
or she must have control over
the assets and treat them as their own;
or the defendant must have used the trust form as a substitute for
his or her own estate.
[59]
Heher J in
Phillips
explained the approach of POCA as follows:
‘
Without
attempting to place strict limits on the expression
,
I have no doubt that when a person exercises
control
over
the disposal of property… or has the exclusive use of or
control over the property… and is the
real
beneficiary (albeit through shareholding)
of
the income from those properties or any proceeds of disposal of them,
then he “holds” such properties within the
meaning of s
14(1) of the Act and it is unnecessary to invoke the doctrine of
“lifting the veil”….’
[19]
(Emphasis added.)
[60] I
agree with the NDPP’s submissions that
Phillips
does not
support the approach of the appellants. The evidence does indeed make
out a prima facie case that Mr Nyhonyha and Mr Pillay
have control
over the assets of each of the appellants; that they are the real
beneficiaries of those assets and the income generated
thereby, and
that they have treated them as their own.
[61]
The Pillay Family Trust and Ergold, as well as the subsidiaries,
further complained of the full court’s
use of the phrase ‘any’
to denote the kind of interest which a defendant has in the
realisable property and submitted
that this amounts to a misdirection
because it is not what
Phillips
required. There is no merit in
this submission as these are the very words which s 12(2)
(a)
of POCA employs to determine when a person holds property.
[62]
The subsidiaries also contended that s 15 of POCA assists in
determining what kind of interest will suffice
before a defendant can
be said to ‘hold’ property. They contended that it must
be a proprietary interest, but do not
state what consequences flow
from this. The definition of ‘property’ in POCA is
expansive and includes ‘any rights,
privileges, claims and
securities, and any interest therein and any proceeds thereof’.
It is not limited to ownership and
includes other forms of
possessing, holding, enjoying and using. Counsel for the NDPP
correctly submitted that this is the kind
of interest which Mr Pillay
and Mr Nyhonyha have in the appellants’ property.
[63]
Mrs Nyhonyha argued that the Nyhonyha Family Trust has never been
used as Mr Nyhonyha’s alter ego and
has been established and
managed in the interest of the beneficiaries. The trust is there to
provide for the Nyhonyha family. The
NDPP however demonstrated
through the trust’s income tax returns from the years 2011 to
2019, and its financial statements
for the 2015 and the 2017
financial years, that the trust holds its assets for Mr Nyhonyha.
Each year since 2015, including the
2019 financial year, the trust’s
income tax returns record outstanding interest-free loans to Mr
Nyhonyha exceeding R50 million.
In 2015, 2016 and 2017 financial
years, the trust’s financial statements show that all but
R16 903 of the trust’s
assets was loaned to Mr Nyhonyha.
[64]
The result is that since at least 2011, virtually all the assets of
the Nyhonyha Family Trust, save for the
shares in Regiments Capital,
have been loaned to Mr Nyhonyha indefinitely and interest-free. For
practical purposes, Mr Nyhonyha
has, for eight years, been the sole
beneficiary of the trust. Evidence therefore shows that the Nyhonyha
Family Trust holds its
assets on behalf of Mr Nyhonyha. The NDPP’s
contention that it is therefore not necessary to pierce the trust’s
corporate
veil in those circumstances is well founded.
[65] Mr
Pillay denied that he is in control of the assets of the Pillay
Family Trust and states that he does not
involve himself in the day
to day running of the trust. However, the evidence shows that in
2012, the trustees appointed Mr Pillay
as the trust’s agent for
the purpose of holding and dealing with the trust’s interest in
Ergold, and he is listed as
the representative of the trust in
Ergold. Mr Pillay’s brother Mr Indeheran Pillay, who is not an
independent trustee, stated
under oath that Mr Pillay had placed
funds in the trust by way of loans that have been repaid over time
and that the repayments
are ‘reflected in the financial
statements’. However, upon request by the NDPP for financial
statements in terms of
rule 35(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court, the
trust was only able to provide financial statements dated after Mr
Indheran Pillay’s
affidavit was deposed to. The trust’s
attorneys say there are no other financial statements.
[66]
The statement by Mr Indheran Pillay regarding the fact that the
financial statements reflect the repayment
of loans over time by Mr
Pillay must in the circumstances be disregarded. The most recent
financial statements for the Pillay Family
Trust show that in 2019
the trust distributed R1.72 million to ‘beneficiaries’
who are not identified, and R591 405
in respect of school fees.
[67] Mr
Pillay acquired the shareholding of Regiments Capital shares through
the trust, and the trust holds those
shares on his behalf. He
controls the Pillay Family Trust’s shareholding in Regiments,
and has enjoyed the fruits of that
shareholding, both personally and
by providing for his family.
[68]
The sole member of Ergold is the Pillay Family Trust, represented by
Mr Pillay. Ergold contended that the
NDPP did not make out a case for
the restraint of Ergold’s property on the basis that it was not
under the control of Mr
Pillay. This even though the Pillay Family
Trust’s financial statements record an interest-free long-term
loan to Ergold,
with no repayment date. The loan stood at nearly R114
million in 2018 and nearly R103 million in 2019. Mr Pillay plainly
holds
his assets through Ergold (as well as the Pillay Family Trust)
as contemplated by POCA.
[69] I
now come to the subsidiaries which stand on a somewhat different
footing, not least because their formal
ownership structure has
shifted significantly over the years that this matter has been
pending. Save for the potential implications
of the liquidation of
Regiments Capital, Mr Pillay and Mr Nyhonyha have been in control of
Ash Brook and Coral Lagoon at all relevant
times and caused its
assets to be distributed to entities under their control. In regard
to Kgoro, it is common cause that Regiments
Capital owns 84.36% of
its share capital, and its assets have been regarded as part of
Regiments Group’s ‘primary assets’.
Kgoro, too,
holds assets on behalf of Mr Pillay and Mr Nyhonyha.
[70] As
for Kgoro’s minority shareholders, their rights are recognised
and protected by s 30(3) of POCA.
The court which is ultimately
seized with an application for the realisation of the defendants’
property, including that
of Kgoro, must afford all persons with an
interest in the property a hearing before exercising its powers, and
may recognise their
interest for this purpose.
[71]
In essence, Mr Pillay and Mr Nyhonyha’s argument is that the
intercession of their family trusts places
their shareholding in
Regiments beyond the reach of the court and that an order restraining
the assets of the trust is not permissible.
Sophisticated criminals
will rarely permit the benefits they obtain to be linked to them
directly or hold their realisable assets
in their own names. POCA
recognises this and casts its net widely to answer the two questions.
Did the defendants benefit? And
do the defendants hold realisable
property? If the legislation did not provide for the preservation of
assets, the key purpose
of Chapter 5 of POCA to ‘ensure that no
person can benefit from his or her wrongdoing’ could not be
achieved.
[20]
[72]
The full court’s findings on the principles set out in
Phillips
and the proper interpretation of s 14(1)
(a),
read with s
12(2)
(a)
of POCA, that the appellants’ property is held
on behalf of Mr Nyhonyha and Mr Pillay, are well founded. The NDPP
has met
the case she is required to make, namely, prima facie showing
that the appellants’ assets are held by Mr Nyhonyha and Mr
Pillay as envisaged by s 14(1) of POCA.
Order
[73] In
the result, the following order is made:
In case number
972/2022
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include those of two counsel where so
employed.
In case number
973/2022
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include those of two counsel where so
employed.
In case number
974/20222
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, such costs to include those of two counsel where so
employed.
D S MOLEFE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
Case
no 972/2022
For
appellant:
D
Dorfling SC (with him G Ngcangisa)
Instructed
by:
A
B Scarrott Attorneys, Sandton
Moroka
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent
G
M Budlender SC (with him K Saller)
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein.
Case
no 973/2022
For
1
st
and 2
nd
appellants:
M
du P van der Nest SC (with him AC Mckenzie)
Instructed
by
A
B Scarrott Attorneys, Sandton
Moroka
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent
G
M Budlender SC (with him K Saller)
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein.
Case
no 974/2022
For
1
st
, 2
nd
and 3
rd
appellants:
D
Smit (with him T Scott)
Instructed
by
Sewgoolam
Incorporated, Johannesburg
McIntyre
Van der Post, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent
G
M Budlender SC (with him K Saller)
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein.
[1]
S
18(1)(a) and s 18(1)(b) of POCA.
[2]
S
18(1)(c) POCA.
[3]
National
Director of Public Prosecution v Gardener and Another
[2011]
ZASCA 25
;
2011 (1) SACR 612
(SCA);
2011 (4) SA 102
(SCA) para 19.
[4]
Ibid
para 17.
[5]
S
v Shaik
[2007]
ZACC 19
;
2008 (2) SA 208
(CC);
2007 (12) BCLR 1360
(CC);
2008 (1)
SACR 1
(CC) para 51.
[6]
Ibid
para 69.
[7]
Ibid
para 71.
[8]
National
Director of Prosecutions v Phillips
and
Others
2002
(4) SA 60
(W) para 81.
[9]
Phillips
para
80-81.
[10]
Phillips
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
2003 (6) SA 447
(SCA)
para
18.
[11]
POCA
section 20 (1)(a) and (b).
[12]
POCA
section 18(2)(b).
[13]
Land
and Agriculture Bank v Parker and Others
2005
(2) SA 77 (SCA).
[14]
Ibid
para 25.
[15]
National
Director Public Prosecutions v Van Staden and Others
[2012]
ZASCA 171
;
2013
(1) SACR 531
(SCA) paras 27 and 28.
[16]
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue and Others v Sive’s Estate
1955
(1) SA 249
(A) at 258 and 266.
[17]
In
this regard the full court held:
‘
However,
what are the assets of these subsidiaries? They do not fall under
the control of the liquidators and there is no impediment
to
confirming the restraint order in respect of those assets. The NDPP
submitted that the assets of the subsidiaries could however,
fall
under the curator. This because, although those assets are not owned
by Regiments Capital (or for that matter the Regiments
Capital
shareholders), they are ‘held’ by the ultimate
shareholders as envisaged in s 14(1)
(a)
of
POCA, and therefore constitute realisable property vis-à-vis
Dr Wood, Mr Nyhonyha and Mr Pillay. This seems to us to
be
consistent with the broad definition of realisable property, and its
interpretation in jurisprudence. The assets of the subsidiaries
ought properly to be placed under restraint’.
[18]
Section 30(3) reads as follows: ‘A High Court shall not
exercise its powers under subsection (2)(b) unless it has afforded
all persons known to have any interest in the property concerned an
opportunity to make representations to it in connection with
the
realisation of that property. (4) If the court referred to in
subsection (2) is satisfied that a person – (a) is likely
to
be directly affected by the confiscation order: or (b) has suffered
damage to or loss of property or injury as a result of
an offence or
related criminal activity referred to in section 18(1) which was
committed by 10 the defendant, the court may allow
that person to
make representations in connection with the realisation of that
property.’
[19]
Phillips
para
81.
[20]
S
v Shaik
para
51.
sino noindex
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