Case Law[2023] ZASCA 141South Africa
Knoop NO and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions (657/2022 ; 694/2022) [2023] ZASCA 141; [2024] 1 All SA 50 (SCA); 2024 (1) SACR 121 (SCA) (30 October 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
30 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (POCA) – asset forfeiture – preservation of property order – Companies Act 71 0f 2008 (Companies Act) – business rescue – preservation of property order granted after adoption of business rescue plan under Chapter 6 of the Companies Act – whether a preservation order under s 26 of POCA is appealable – whether this Court’s decisions in Phillips and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions 2003 (6) SA 447 (SCA) and Singh v National Director of Public Prosecution 2007 (2) SACR 326 (SCA) are definitive on the issue of the appealability of a preservation order.
Judgment
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## Knoop NO and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions (657/2022 ; 694/2022) [2023] ZASCA 141; [2024] 1 All SA 50 (SCA); 2024 (1) SACR 121 (SCA) (30 October 2023)
Knoop NO and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions (657/2022 ; 694/2022) [2023] ZASCA 141; [2024] 1 All SA 50 (SCA); 2024 (1) SACR 121 (SCA) (30 October 2023)
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sino date 30 October 2023
# THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
# Reportable
Reportable
Case
Nos: 657/2022 and 694/2022
In
the matter between:
# KURT ROBERT KNOOP
NO FIRST
APPELLANT
KURT ROBERT KNOOP
NO FIRST
APPELLANT
(in
his capacity as business rescue practitioner of Optimum Coal Mine
(Pty) Ltd)
# JOHAN LOUIS KLOPPER
NO SECOND
APPELLANT
JOHAN LOUIS KLOPPER
NO SECOND
APPELLANT
(in
his capacity as business rescue practitioner of Optimum Coal Mine
(Pty) Ltd)
# KGASHANE CHRISTOPHER
MONYELA NO THIRD APPELLANT
KGASHANE CHRISTOPHER
MONYELA NO THIRD APPELLANT
(in
his capacity as business rescue practitioner of Optimum Coal Mine
(Pty) Ltd)
# JUANITO MARTIN DAMONS
NO FOURTH
APPELLANT
JUANITO MARTIN DAMONS
NO FOURTH
APPELLANT
(in
his capacity as business rescue practitioner of Optimum Coal Mine
(Pty) Ltd)
# OPTIMUM COAL MINE (PTY)
LTD FIFTH
APPELLANT
OPTIMUM COAL MINE (PTY)
LTD FIFTH
APPELLANT
(in
business rescue)
# KURT ROBERT KNOOP
NO SIXTH
APPELLANT
KURT ROBERT KNOOP
NO SIXTH
APPELLANT
(in
his capacity as business rescue practitioner of Tegeta Exploration
and Resources (Pty)
Ltd)
# JOHAN LOUIS KLOPPER
NO SEVENTH
APPELLANT
JOHAN LOUIS KLOPPER
NO SEVENTH
APPELLANT
(in
his capacity as business rescue practitioner of Tegeta Exploration
and Resources (Pty) Ltd)
# TEGETA EXPLORATION AND
RESOURCES EIGHTH APPELLANT (PTY) LTD
TEGETA EXPLORATION AND
RESOURCES EIGHTH APPELLANT (PTY) LTD
(in
business rescue)
# KURT ROBERT KNOOP
NO NINTH
APPELLANT
KURT ROBERT KNOOP
NO NINTH
APPELLANT
(in
his capacity as business rescue practitioner of Optimum Coal Terminal
(Pty) Ltd)
# KGASHANE CHRISTOPHER
MONYELA NO TENTH APPELLANT
KGASHANE CHRISTOPHER
MONYELA NO TENTH APPELLANT
(in
his capacity as business rescue practitioner of Optimum Coal Terminal
(Pty) Ltd)
# OPTIMUM COAL TERMINAL
(PTY) LTD ELEVENTH APPELLANT
OPTIMUM COAL TERMINAL
(PTY) LTD ELEVENTH APPELLANT
(in
business rescue)
# NATIONAL UNION OF
MINEWORKERS
TWELTH APPELLANT
NATIONAL UNION OF
MINEWORKERS
TWELTH APPELLANT
#
# TEMPLAR CAPITAL
LTD
THIRTEENTH APPELLANT
TEMPLAR CAPITAL
LTD
THIRTEENTH APPELLANT
#
# LIBERTY COAL (PTY)
LTD FOURTEENTH
APPELLANT
LIBERTY COAL (PTY)
LTD FOURTEENTH
APPELLANT
and
# NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC RESPONDENT
PROSECUTIONS
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC RESPONDENT
PROSECUTIONS
Neutral
citation:
Knoop NO and Others v National Director of Public
Prosecutions
(Case nos 657/2022 and 694/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 141
(30 October 2023)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, MEYER and MATOJANE JJA and KATHREE- SETILOANE and
KEIGHTLEY AJJA
Heard:
22 August 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives via e-mail, publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date
and time for hand-down are deemed to be 30 October 2023 at
11h00.
Summary:
Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (POCA) –
asset forfeiture – preservation of property order –
Companies
Act 71 0f 2008 (Companies Act)
–
business
rescue
– preservation of property order granted after
adoption of business rescue plan under Chapter 6 of the Companies Act
–
whether a preservation order under s 26 of POCA is appealable
– whether this Court’s decisions in
Phillips and
Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
2003 (6) SA 447
(SCA) and
Singh v National Director of Public Prosecution
2007
(2) SACR 326
(SCA) are definitive on the issue of the appealability
of a preservation order.
# ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Fourie
and Mbongwe JJ, sitting as court of first instance):
The
appeal is struck from the roll with costs including the costs of two
counsel, such costs to be borne jointly and severally by
the first to
eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth, and fourteenth appellants
respectively.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Keightley
AJA (Mocumie, Meyer and Matojane JJA and Kathree-Setiloane AJA
concurring)
[1]
This is an
appeal against the grant of a preservation of property order (the
preservation order) by the Gauteng Division of the
High Court (the
high court) on 23 March 2022 under s 38 of the Prevention of
Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (POCA) on application
by the National
Director of Public Prosecutions (the NDPP).
[1]
The preservation order appointed a curator
bonis
[2]
with designated powers in respect of the affected property. The
property identified in the preservation order is:
(a)
all shares held in Optimum Coal Mine (Pty) Ltd (OCM);
(b)
the business of OCM as defined in the business rescue plan
adopted by the creditors of OCM in September 2020 including, but not
limited to, the assets listed in the business rescue plan; and
(c)
all shares held in Optimum Coal Terminal (OCT).
[2]
The shares in question are held by Tegeta Exploration
and Resources
(Pty) Ltd (Tegeta). OCM, OCT and Tegeta are all in business rescue.
The first to fourth appellants are the appointed
business rescue
practitioners of OCM. The sixth and seventh appellants are the
appointed business rescue practitioners of Tegeta,
and the ninth and
tenth appellants are the appointed business rescue practitioners of
OCT. They share a common stance in the appeal.
Consequently, I refer
to them simply as ‘the business rescue practitioners’,
unless there is a need to be more specific.
[3]
OCM and OCT are linked companies as defined in the Companies
Act 71
of 2008 (Companies Act). OCM is a coal mine which historically has
mined and exported coal. OCT has a shareholding in the
Richards Bay
Coal Terminal that entitles it to export coal. This provides the
avenue for OCM’s coal exports.
[4]
A business rescue plan for OCM was approved by the majority
of
creditors prior to the application for a preservation order. It
contemplates the disposal of the business of OCM to Liberty
Coal
(Pty) Ltd (Liberty), which is the fourteenth appellant. Liberty is a
subsidiary of Templar Capital Limited (Templar), the
thirteenth
appellant. OCM’s business rescue practitioners have recognised
Templar as the single largest creditor of OCM.
Both Liberty and
Templar are controlled by Daniel McGowan (Mr McGowan). Templar’s
claims against OCM have their origin in
the claims of another entity
of which Mr McGowan is a director, namely Centaur Ventures Limited
(CVL). Templar took cession of
CVL’s claims against OCM. The
business rescue plan provides that these claims will be converted to
equity in Liberty. Liberty
and Templar thus have an interest in the
business rescue plan being put into effect.
[5]
The twelfth respondent is the National Union of Mineworkers
(NUM). It
is an ‘affected person’ in the business rescue and is
entitled to participate in any related court proceedings.
NUM voted
in favour of the business rescue plan. Its view is that the plan
offers its members who are employees of OCM their only
hope of being
paid the outstanding remuneration due to them, and the opportunity
for re-employment at the mine as envisaged in
the business rescue
plan.
[6]
The preservation order prohibits:
‘
All
persons . . . other than as required and permitted by (the
preservation order) from removing, taking possession of or control
over, dissipating, interfering with, diminishing the value of,
pledging or otherwise hypothecating, attaching or selling in
execution
or dealing in any other manner with any of the property
unless they obtain the prior written consent of the curator
bonis
appointed under (the) order.’
[7]
This prohibition is subject to a proviso which permits
the business
rescue practitioners to enter into and perform individual
transactions with a value of less than R50 000 in the ordinary
course
of OCM’s business. There is a further proviso recording that
the prohibition against dealing with the property does
not:
‘
Prevent
the disposal of the business of OCM under circumstances where the
curator
bonis
and the business rescue practitioners have
agreed to do so in writing, or if there is no agreement, with the
prior obtained leave
of the Court, pursuant to a business rescue plan
adopted after (the) order by the creditors of OCM under Chapter 6 of
the
Companies Act, in
which event the net proceeds of such disposal
of the business shall be property preserved under (the) order.’
[8]
Save for the latter proviso, the preservation order expressly
operates ‘as a power of attorney for the curator
bonis
to
deal with the property as if he himself is its owner or holder’.
This includes the curator
bonis
having the power and authority
to act as shareholder of the affected shares. The order retains for
the business rescue practitioners
control of OCM’s business,
subject to the express powers of the curator
bonis
. In an
attempt to harmonise the tension between the powers, authority and
obligations of the curator
bonis
under the preservation order,
and those of the business rescue practitioners under the
Companies
Act, the
preservation order directs that:
(a)
They (the curator
bonis
and the business rescue
practitioners) shall co- operate with each other in good faith and
shall use their best endeavours to attempt
to find a purchaser for
the business of OCM at fair value with the aim of disposing of the
business pursuant to a new business
rescue plan.
(b)
In the event of the current business rescue practitioners
being removed, the curator
bonis
will have the power to
appoint their replacement.
[9]
Despite these provisions, the immediate effect of the
preservation
order was to put a hold on the business rescue practitioners giving
effect to the business rescue plan, which had
an implementation
deadline of 28 March 2022. Hence the opposition to the order by not
only the business rescue practitioners, but
also by other parties
whose interests are affected, namely Liberty, Templar and NUM.
[10]
One of the main bones of contention for the appellants is that the
preservation
order impermissibly interferes with the statutory powers
and obligations of the business rescue practitioners as prescribed
under
the
Companies Act. It
does so, according to the appellants, by
making the business rescue practitioners subject to the oversight of
the curator
bonis
insofar as the affected property is
concerned. They contend that the preservation order is incompetent as
it seeks to establish
an unlawful state-controlled business rescue
process, which does not serve the objects of forfeiture under POCA.
[11]
The NDPP
disputes this. She argues that the preservation order, and the
forfeiture of property order that is pending, are competent
and
necessary to serve the purposes of POCA. According to the NDPP, the
asset forfeiture proceedings in this case form part of
her broader
obligation to deal with the consequences of what has become known as
State Capture. The NDPP points to the Public Protector
of South
Africa’s State of Capture Report,
[3]
which found evidence of irregular conduct by a wide range of state
officials. This conduct included the facilitation of the ‘Optimum
acquisition’ by the Gupta family. It involved the acquisition
by them, through Tegeta, of the shares in OCM and OCT, as well
as the
business of OCM through which coal was mined and exported. The State
Capture Commission that followed, supported the findings
of
widespread criminality directly linked to the acquisition of Optimum.
[12]
The NDPP explains that the preservation order, and the pending
forfeiture order
associated with it, are directed at recovering the
proceeds of crime linked to the corrupt scheme that culminated in the
acquisition
of Optimum by the Gupta family. The NDPP’s case is
that the targeted assets are the proceeds, as well as
instrumentalities
of the crimes of fraud, theft and money laundering.
If the business rescue plan is permitted to be put into effect, it
will facilitate
further money laundering. This is because Templar’s
claims are themselves tainted.
[13]
The NDPP adduces evidence that she says demonstrates that the funds
underlying
the CVL claims were advanced by a Gupta family company,
Griffin Line General Trading LLC, and were the proceeds of crime. In
other
words, the NDPP’s case is that Templar acquired a tainted
claim through cession, and that taint persists. The current business
rescue plan if put into effect would allow Templar, which is
controlled by Mr McGowan, to use the tainted CVL claims to acquire
a
benefit ultimately for Mr McGowan. It is for this reason, according
to the NDPP, that effect cannot be given to the present business
rescue plan.
[14]
However, the NDPP contends that this does not mean that an
alternative business
rescue plan, excluding Templar and Liberty,
should not be pursued, with the curator and the business rescue
practitioners working
together as provided for under the preservation
order. In that event, the proceeds from any new acquisition of OCM’s
business
will, after the satisfaction of lawful creditors’
claims, be forfeited to the state. This is assuming, of course, that
the
pending forfeiture application is resolved in favour of the NDPP.
The purpose of the preservation order is thus to preserve the
assets
of OCM and OCT in the interim.
[15]
As noted earlier, OCM, OCT and Tegeta were already in business rescue
when
the preservation application was instituted. The application was
preceded by an investigation launched by the Investigating
Directorate
of the National Prosecuting Authority into offences
perpetrated against Transnet SOC Ltd and Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd
during the
period covered by the State Capture Commission. The
preservation application is supported by a detailed affidavit by
Sibusiso Tshikovhi
(Mr Tshikovhi) who was involved in the
investigation.
[16]
In advance
of launching the preservation application the NDPP wrote to the legal
representatives of the business rescue practitioners
on 26 November
2021, and furnished them with an early draft of Mr Tshikovhi’s
affidavit. The affidavit included evidence
relied on by the NDPP to
show that the Tegeta shares in OCM and OCT and the business of OCM
were acquired with the proceeds of
crime. It also included evidence
that the CVL claims (on which Templar’s claims were founded)
were tainted. The NDPP urged
the business rescue practitioners to
have regard to the evidence and the alleged criminal conduct that
would be perpetrated if
the business rescue plan was put into effect.
The NDPP also sought the business rescue practitioners’ consent
under
s 133
[4]
of the
Companies
Act for
the institution of the preservation application.
[17]
The business rescue practitioners were not swayed by the NDPP’s
letter,
and elected to proceed with the implementation of the
business rescue plan. In addition, they refused the requested consent
under
s 133.
Their response prompted the NDPP to launch the
preservation application on an urgent, or more accurately a
semi-urgent, basis as
the deadline for the implementation of the
business rescue plan was 28 March 2021. The NDPP also sought the
requisite leave of
the high court under
s 133(1)
(b)
of the
Companies Act to
bring the application. Importantly, although
s 38
of
POCA permits the NDPP to apply
ex parte
for a preservation of
property order, she proceeded on notice to the business rescue
practitioners.
[18]
The business rescue practitioners opposed the relief on several
grounds including
the lack of urgency in the application; the
non-joinder of the creditors of OCM and OCT and other interested
parties; the failure
of the NDPP to obtain prior leave of the court
under
s 133
to institute the preservation application; the NDPP’s
failure to make out a case for the preservation of the shares of
OCM’s
business; and the legal incompetence of the relief sought
on the basis that it would result in an irreconcilable conflict with
the business rescue provisions of the
Companies Act. The
defences
were all dismissed by the court a quo. It subsequently granted leave
to appeal to this Court. On appeal the business rescue
practitioners
persisted with the defences raised before the court a quo.
[19]
NUM
contends in the appeal that the court a quo erred in granting the
preservation order in that no prima facie case was made out
to
preserve the business of OCM. Further, that the court a quo failed to
undertake a proportionality inquiry before granting the
preservation
order. It ought properly to have found that the preservation of the
property is not reasonable and justifiable as
required by s 36 of the
Constitution. A further ground of appeal is that the court erred by
ignoring the fact that the NDPP had
used preservation of property
proceedings for an ulterior purpose, namely to scupper business
rescue. NUM also contends that the
relief sought was
ultra
vires
the
Companies Act and
POCA. Finally, NUM takes issue with the costs
ordered against it, placing reliance on the principles laid down in
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
.
[5]
[20]
As for Liberty and Templar, the court a quo granted their application
for leave
to intervene in the main application, and to appeal its
judgment and order in that application. Their appeal is directed at
certain
paragraphs of the preservation order. Essentially, like the
other appellants, their complaint is that the court a quo erred in
preserving the business of OCM. Further, they submit that the court a
quo did not have the power to authorise the adoption of a
new
business rescue plan. Nor could it properly authorise the curator
bonis
to appoint new business rescue practitioners in the
event that the current practitioners resign.
[21]
Despite the
wide-ranging defences raised by the appellants, this appeal turns on
a preliminary point: whether a preservation order
granted under
Chapter 6
of POCA is appealable. This question was raised by the NDPP in
opposing an application by NUM for condonation for the
late filing of
its heads of argument in the appeal. This Court issued a directive
requesting the parties to submit written submissions
on the question
of appealability, particularly in light of this Court’s
judgments in
DRDGold
Limited and Another v Nkala and Others
[6]
(
DRDGold
)
and
TWK
Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[7]
(
TWK
Holdings
).
In their submissions all the appellants contend that the order is
appealable; the NDPP contends it is not.
[22]
TWK
Holdings
[8]
reconfirms the test for appealability set out in
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
[9]
(
Zweni
),
namely that an appealable decision has three attributes: (a) it is
final in effect and not susceptible of alteration by the court
of
first instance; (b) it is definitive of the rights of the parties;
and (c) it has the effect of disposing of at least a substantial
portion of the relief claimed in the main proceedings.
[10]
TWK
Holdings
finds,
despite other judgments to the contrary, that the interests of
justice do not provide a self-standing ground of appealability
in
this Court outside the scope of
Zweni
.
While the
Zweni
test is
not immutable,
[11]
TWK
Holdings
emphasises
that any deviations from the
Zweni
test
must ‘be clearly defined and justified to provide ascertainable
standards consistent with the rule of law’.
[12]
This is necessary to prevent piecemeal appeals.
[13]
The latter finding is consistent with what this Court has previously
stated: when a decision sought to be appealed against does
not
dispose of all the issues, it must, if permitted, lead to a just and
reasonably prompt resolution of the real issue between
the
parties.
[14]
[23]
The
business rescue practitioners advance three reasons for why the
preservation order is appealable. The first is that this Court’s
judgments in
Phillips
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[15]
(
Phillips
)
and
Singh
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[16]
(
Singh
)
are definitive of the issue. The second is that the preservation
order satisfies the
Zweni
test
and the third is that the issue of the competence of the order,
discussed earlier, renders it appealable.
[24]
Are
Phillips
and
Singh
definitive?
Phillips
involved
a restraint order granted under s 26, which is in Chapter 5 of POCA.
This Court found that although a restraint order is
only of interim
operation, and it has no definitive or dispositive effect as
envisaged in
Zweni
,
it is unalterable by the court that granted it.
[17]
The effect of a restraint order is that a defendant is stripped of
the restrained assets and any control or use of them pending
the
conclusion of the related criminal trial. The Court concluded:
‘[t]hat unalterable situation is . . . final in the sense
required by the case law for appealability’.
[18]
[25]
As in this
appeal,
Singh
involved
a preservation order granted under s 38 of POCA. The NDPP in that
case conceded on appeal that the preservation order was
appealable.
The Court noted that the concession arose from its finding in
Phillips
and
commented that it was rightly made in that: ‘the grant of a
preservation order is “final” in the sense required
for
appealability – in the case of both restraint and preservation
orders the court making the order may only rescind or
vary it in
accordance with the provisions of POCA’.
[19]
The Court ventured no further reasoning on the issue, and it rested
there.
[26]
The pronouncement in
Singh
(for this is essentially what it
amounted to) rests on the assumption that there is material parity
between restraint orders under
Chapter 5 and preservation orders
under Chapter 6 of POCA. It is so that they share common features.
However, a closer examination
of the legislative scheme underpinning
each Chapter demonstrates that there are substantive differences in
the remedies established
under each.
[27]
The Chapter
5 asset forfeiture regime, with which this Court was concerned in
Phillips
,
is often referred to as ‘criminal asset forfeiture’.
Although POCA expressly provides that Chapter 5 proceedings are
civil
in nature,
[20]
asset
forfeiture under Chapter 5 is inextricably linked to criminal
proceedings against the defendant. The purpose of Chapter 5
is to
ensure that criminals disgorge the benefit they have derived from the
offences of which they are convicted, or related criminal
activities.
This is achieved by the convicting court making a confiscation order
post-conviction.
[21]
A
confiscation order is a civil judgment for payment to the state of an
amount of money in addition to the criminal sentence imposed,
rather
than for the confiscation of a specific object.
[22]
[28]
As in most
cases there is likely to be a delay between the institution of
criminal proceedings, the conviction of the defendant
and the
imposition of a confiscation
order,
POCA
provides
a
mechanism
to
preserve
property
in
the interim
in the form of a restraint order under s 26. A restraint order acts
as a form of security for the eventual satisfaction
of any
confiscation order that may be granted post-conviction.
[23]
It is not restricted to property actually tainted by the defendant’s
alleged criminality. A restraint order may be made in
respect of
realisable property, which is defined as ‘any property held by
the defendant concerned’,
[24]
meaning that even lawfully-acquired property may be subject to
restraint.
[29]
The high
court, rather than the relevant criminal court, has the power to
grant a restraint order, on application by the NDPP
ex
parte
.
The order prohibits any person, subject to any conditions and
exceptions specified by the court, from dealing in any manner with
any affected property.
[25]
POCA expressly envisages a two-stage, rule
nisi
procedure
for the grant of a restraint order, with a provisional,
ex
parte
order,
preceding the final grant or discharge of the provisional order on a
designated return day.
[26]
[30]
At the same
time as granting a restraint order the high court may appoint a
curator
bonis
with
powers to receive on surrender, and take care of and administer the
property subject to restraint.
[27]
The court has unrestricted powers to vary or rescind the appointment
and terms of appointment of a curator
bonis
.
[28]
However, it may only vary a restraint order if the operation of the
order will deprive the applicant of the means to provide for
her
reasonable living expenses and cause undue
hardship,
and
that
hardship
outweighs
the
risk
of
dissipation
of
the
property.
[29]
[31]
It was in large measure these features of a restraint order that led
this Court
in
Phillips
to conclude that despite being only of
temporary duration, that is, pending the outcome of any conviction
and confiscation proceedings,
a restraint order establishes an
unalterable situation, rendering it final and appealable. The
appellants contend, as
Singh
appeared to accept, that because
a preservation of property order shares these features, it too should
be regarded as final and
appealable.
[32]
Broadly
speaking asset forfeiture proceedings under Chapter 6 of POCA share a
similar objective to that of criminal asset forfeiture
under Chapter
5. They are aimed at depriving persons of their criminal proceeds or
of property used as instrumentalities of designated
offences. The end
goal of Chapter 6 proceedings is the grant of a forfeiture order over
specified property.
[30]
A
preservation of property order is aimed at preserving affected
property pending the outcome of a forfeiture application instituted
under s 48. To this extent a preservation order may be likened to a
restraint order.
[33]
However,
there are significant conceptual and procedural differences between
the two forfeiture regimes. As the Constitutional Court
explained in
National
Director of Public Prosecutions and Another v Mohamed NO and
Others
,
[31]
while under Chapter 5 the confiscation machinery can only be invoked
when a defendant is convicted: ‘Chapter 6 . . . provides
for
forfeiture of the proceeds of
and
instrumentalities
used in
crime, but
is
not
conviction
based;
it may be
invoked even when there is no prosecution’. The proceedings are
in
rem
,
[32]
aimed at the property itself: a preservation order is granted if
there are reasonable grounds to believe that the property is either
the proceeds or an instrumentality of an offence.
[33]
[34]
Thus,
Chapter 6 proceeds from the fiction that the property concerned is
condemned as though it were conscious instead of inanimate.
[34]
It is the property, rather than the person, that bears the taint of
criminality.
[35]
This explains
why although, as with restraint applications, POCA provides expressly
for the NDPP to apply
ex
parte
for
a preservation of property order, no express provision is made for
that order to be granted in the form of a rule
nisi
with a
return day. This is not to say that a court cannot grant a
preservation of property order in the form of a rule
nisi
.
The point is that the legislative scheme does not pre-suppose that
this should be the default position.
[35]
This is an important distinction between restraint and preservation
orders.
Whereas the legislative scheme under Chapter 5 envisages that
affected persons should be given an opportunity to oppose the grant
of a restraint order on the return day before it is made final, the
legislative scheme under Chapter 6 deliberately postpones the
right
to oppose until after a preservation order is granted, and the
proceedings move to the forfeiture stage. This is expressed
in s
39(1), which directs the NDPP, as soon as practically possible after
the grant of a preservation order, to give notice of
the order to
‘all persons known to (her) to have an interest in the property
subject to the order’ and to publish a
notice of the order in
the Government Gazette.
[36]
Within 14
days of receiving notice, or of publication in the Gazette, any
person with an interest in the property may enter an appearance
by
giving notice of her intention to oppose the forfeiture application
that is intended subsequently to be instituted.
[36]
A person with an interest in the property may indicate either that
they will oppose the grant of a forfeiture order, or that they
will
seek to have their interests in the property excluded from the
operation of any forfeiture order that is granted.
[37]
As this Court has noted, this scheme ensures that prior to the
granting of a forfeiture order (but after the preservation order),
people with an interest in the property would have been given
sufficient opportunity to do what they deem necessary to protect
their interests, should they wish to do so.
[38]
[37]
The procedure encapsulated in s 38(1) read with s 39 is unique to
forfeiture
under Chapter 6 of POCA. This procedure deliberately
positions the right to
audi alteram partem
within the
post-preservation order phase. That the legislative scheme does not
envisage, as a general principle, a route to opposition
prior to the
grant of a preservation order, is a strong indicator that
preservation orders are not meant to be appealable.
[38]
A further,
important, indicator is that while express provision is made for
appeals in respect of other orders under Chapter 6,
none is made for
appeals against preservation orders.
[39]
In instances where an appeal may be instituted against
other
orders,
POCA
makes
it
clear
that
the
relevant
preservation
order will
be kept intact pending the outcome of the appeal.
[40]
In addition, preservation orders may only be varied or rescinded on
the same limited grounds as restraint orders.
[41]
These features demonstrate the legislative objective of insulating
preservation orders from challenge pending the forfeiture process.
This is because of the indispensable role that a preservation order
plays in securing proceeds and instrumentalities of crime.
That
objective would be compromised if preservation orders were
susceptible to appeal.
[39]
The Court in
Phillips
was not persuaded that this latter
consideration meant that a restraint order was not appealable. The
appellants urge the same conclusion
in respect of preservation
orders. However, what
Phillips
was not required to consider,
is the unique procedure governing preservation and forfeiture orders
outlined earlier. Nor did this
Court’s pronouncement in
Singh
follow a considered analysis of the Chapter 6 procedure. Further
analysis is thus required.
[40]
The
Constitutional Court has recognised that the two-stage Chapter 6
proceedings are ‘complex and tightly intertwined, both
as a
matter of process and substance’.
[42]
A preservation and a forfeiture order share a distinct symbiotic
relationship not shared between restraint and confiscation orders.
Without a preservation order in place the NDPP cannot institute a
forfeiture application.
[43]
Conversely, if the NDPP does not institute that application within a
period of ninety days of publication of the notice of the
preservation order, the preservation order expires.
[44]
This has the consequence that a new preservation order would have to
be sought should the NDPP wish to pursue forfeiture. By comparison,
a
confiscation order under Chapter 5 may be sought with or without a
restraint order in place.
[41]
A further feature of their intertwined relationship is that the civil
high
court presides over both the preservation and forfeiture stages
under Chapter 6. In contrast, the civil high court only presides
over
the restraint proceedings under Chapter 5, confiscation proceedings
being the preserve of the criminal court. Importantly,
at both
preservation and forfeiture stage under Chapter 6 the court is
concerned with essentially the same questions: is the property
the
proceeds of unlawful activities or an instrumentality of an offence?
However, there are two key distinctions: first, the standard
of proof
is lower (reasonable grounds to believe) at the preservation stage,
whereas it is higher (balance of probabilities) at
the forfeiture
stage. Second, at forfeiture stage interested parties can oppose the
application. Under Chapter 5, once a final
restraint order is
granted, the civil high court's involvement in the asset forfeiture
process concludes.
[42]
Inherent in Chapter 6 of POCA is the recognition that forfeiture
should proceed
without undue delay. This explains the fourteen-day
limit for a person to enter an appearance after receipt of notice of
the preservation
order, as well as the cut-off of ninety days for the
institution of a forfeiture application. The aim is to progress
towards the
forfeiture stage as soon as possible. In this, the scheme
is pragmatic and serves the interests of justice. It is at the
forfeiture
stage that a person with an interest in the property has
the opportunity to participate in the proceedings to defend their
interests.
Thus, it is to their benefit that this opportunity should
not be delayed.
[43]
On the
other hand, a defendant in restraint proceedings under Chapter 5 does
not have the in-built protection of a speedy resolution
to the POCA
proceedings. Her rights in her property are put on hold subject to
the vagaries of the criminal justice system and,
if convicted, the
finalisation of the complex confiscation
[45]
and realisation procedures
[46]
outlined in Chapter 5. It is in this context that this Court
expressed the concern in
Phillips
that,
absent the avenue of an appeal against a restraint order, a defendant
subject to a restraint order is left remediless.
[47]
Its conclusion that a restraint order is intended to be appealable
because it is final in the
Zweni
sense,
should be understood with reference to the particular characteristics
and consequences of Chapter 5 proceedings.
[44]
When properly analysed, the time-sensitive, closely intertwined and
symbiotic
relationship between the preservation and forfeiture stages
of proceedings under Chapter 6 leads to a different conclusion.
Unlike
restraint proceedings, the preservation stage, which as a rule
excludes opposition, is plainly intended to be a short-term, stop-gap
measure to secure tainted property pending the determination of the
main issue – the forfeiture application. This demonstrates
a
deliberate legislative choice that runs counter to the notion that
preservation orders are intended to be appealable.
[45]
The practical consequences of recognising preservation orders as
being appealable
are also irreconcilable with this legislative
scheme. With regard to the time periods for processing opposed
applications and those
for processing appeals, it is clear that in
the ordinary course, an opposed forfeiture application will be ripe
for hearing long
before a notional appeal against a preservation
order could ever be. Why would the stop-gap measure of a preservation
order be
appealable, when a respondent, acting diligently, could
obtain relief at the final, forfeiture stage long before the
finalisation
of the appeal against the preservation order? To suggest
otherwise, would lead to the absurd situation that the appeal against
a preservation order would be rendered moot. This consideration does
not apply in the context of Chapter 5 proceedings, because
the
restraint and confiscation stages do not share the same symbiotic
relationship and are not time- sensitive.
[46]
There is an
additional procedural concern. If a preservation order is final and
thus appealable in the
Zweni
sense,
the effect of an application for leave to appeal under s 18(1) of the
Superior Courts Act 19 of 2013 (Superior Courts Act)
will be to
suspend the operation and execution of the order unless the NDPP is
able to satisfy the court on a balance of probabilities
that, she
will suffer irreparable harm unless the court orders otherwise and
that the appellant will not suffer such harm.
[48]
Unless the NDPP meets this onus, an appeal against a preservation
order would effectively put an end to the entire forfeiture process.
Since there can be no forfeiture application in the absence of a
preservation order, the main objective of the asset forfeiture
provisions of POCA would be rendered nugatory. These were not
considerations before this Court in
Phillips
,
as that judgment preceded the enactment of the
Superior Courts Act.
[47
]
In sum, all of these factors lead, in my view, to the conclusion that
unlike the
situation pertaining to restraint orders under Chapter 5,
preservation orders under Chapter 6 are not intended to be
appealable.
It follows that neither
Phillips
, nor
Singh
,
which gave no consideration to the scheme of Chapter 6 of POCA, is
determinative of the issue.
[48]
Moreover,
contrary to the submissions by the business rescue practitioners, the
preservation order does not meet the three requirements
of the
Zweni
test.
The NDPP accepts that the order is final in the sense that it is not
subject to alteration by the same court that granted
it. This is so
because the scope for rescission and variation of the preservation
order
per
se
is
narrowly circumscribed.
[49]
However, it is clear from the above analysis of Chapter 6 proceedings
that a preservation order is not definitive of the rights
of the
parties, nor does it have the effect of disposing of at least a
substantial portion of the relief claimed in the main proceedings.
This Court in
Phillips
did not
find these requirements to be determinative of appealability in the
context of restraint orders. However, they are of material
relevance
in the context of preservation orders. The entire scheme of Chapter 6
is geared towards the forfeiture stage (and not
that of preservation)
as being the stage at which rights are definitively determined and
the relief claimed either granted or dismissed.
[49]
Nor is the additional requirement laid down in
Zweni
met. An
appeal against the preservation order will not dispose of all the
issues between the parties, nor will it lead to a just
and reasonably
prompt resolution of the real issues between them. As this case
demonstrates, the issues on the merits are often
complex. Here, that
complexity extends to the overlap between the asset forfeiture and
business rescue regimes. The appropriate
stage for determination of
the issues is the forfeiture stage, when they are fleshed out in
full, and can be determined on the
usual balance of probabilities
standard. To permit an appeal against the preservation order would
lead to results against which
this Court warned in
TWK Holdings
:
‘
As
a general principle, the high court should bring finality to the
matter before it, in the sense laid down in
Zweni
.
Only then should the matter be capable of being appealed to this
Court. It allows for the orderly use of the capacity of this
Court to
hear appeals that warrant its attention. It prevents piecemeal
appeals that are often costly and delay the resolution
of matters
before the high court. It reinforces the duty of the high court to
bring matters to an expeditious, and final, conclusion.
And it
provides criteria so that litigants can determine, with tolerable
certainty, whether a matter is appealable. These are the
hallmarks of
what the rule of law requires.’
[50]
[50]
These observations are particularly pertinent when considered in
relation to
the appealability of preservation orders. This is so
because the whole thrust of the legislative scheme of Chapter 6 is
directed
at securing finality of the real issues between the parties
at the forfeiture stage as promptly as reasonably possible. To permit
appeals against preservation orders would fundamentally undermine
this deliberate legislative choice.
[51]
It was submitted on behalf of the business rescue practitioners that
the appealability
of the preservation order in this case should be
considered differently because the NDPP elected to go on notice
rather than
ex parte
. It was also submitted that consideration
should be given to the fact that if the appeal succeeded, this would
bring finality to
the matter, as the forfeiture application would be
invalid.
[52]
The
difficulty with these submissions is that the real inquiry is not
whether
this
preservation
order is appealable. The real question is whether as a matter of
principle, preservation orders are appealable at all.
That question
goes to the DNA of preservation orders under POCA. Either they are
appealable because of their particular statutory
nature or they are
not. This is what certainty and the rule of law require. If they are
not appealable, as I have found, then it
makes no difference how the
NDPP elected to exercise the procedural choices she had available to
her. That she chose to proceed
on notice, rather than
ex
parte
is
neither here nor there. For the same reason it is also neither here
nor there that a successful appeal would bring finality.
In any
event, as
TWK
Holdings
points
out, the utility of permitting an appeal cannot be assessed by
recourse to its most favourable outcome.
[51]
[53]
Lastly, the
business rescue practitioners argue that the preservation order is
appealable as it is not a competent order due to
the conflict between
the curator’s powers under POCA, and those of the business
rescue practitioners under the
Companies Act. This
contention is not
sustainable as it is based on the peculiarities of
this
case
and
this
preservation
order. I reiterate, the specific circumstances of a particular case
have no bearing on whether a preservation order
is appealable. This
submission also overlooks the fact that under
s 47(2)
, orders
pertaining to the appointment and powers of a curator
bonis
may be
rescinded or varied on application by an interested party.
[52]
Quite simply, these aspects of the preservation of property order are
not final in any sense.
[54]
I conclude that the preservation order is not appealable. The appeal
was not
properly before the court and must be struck from the roll.
Costs should follow the cause, with provision made for the costs of
two counsel.
[55]
I make the following order:
The
appeal is struck from the roll with costs including the costs of two
counsel, such costs to be borne jointly and severally by
the first to
eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth, and fourteenth appellants
respectively.
R
M KEIGHTLEY
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
first to eleventh appellants:
G
D Wickens SC (with T Scott)
Instructed
by: Smit Sewgoolam Inc, Johannesburg
McIntyre
Van Der Post, Bloemfontein
For
twelfth appellant:
C
H J Badenhorst SC (with M Desai)
Instructed
by: Ulrich Roux & Associates, Johannesburg
Symington
De Kok, Bloemfontein
For
thirteenth to fourteenth
appellants:
A Bham SC (with P Stais SC and J Brewer)
Instructed
by: Andersen, Johannesburg
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondents: M Chaskalson SC (with K Hofmeyr SC and
M
Sibanda)
Instructed
by: Kunene Ramapala Inc,
Pretoria The State Attorney, Bloemfontein
[1]
The high court delivered a consolidated judgment in respect of two
preservation applications by the NDPP under case numbers 62604/2021
and 62601/2021. The applications were heard together. Separate
preservation orders were granted in respect of each application.
This appeal is against the order granted in respect of case number
62604/2021 only.
[2]
In terms of
s 42
of POCA.
[3]
State of Capture, Report No 6 of 2016/17, dated 14 October 2016.
[4]
Section 133
imposes a general moratorium on legal proceedings
against a company in business rescue. It provides, in relevant part:
‘
(1)
During business rescue proceedings, no legal proceeding, including
enforcement action against the company, or in relation
to any
property belonging to the company, or lawfully in its possession,
may be commenced with in any forum, except-
(a)
with the written consent of the practitioner;
(b)
with the leave of the court and in accordance with any terms the
court considers suitable; . . .’
[5]
Biowatch Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
[2009] ZACC
14
;
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC);
2009 (10)
BCLR
1014 (CC) para 43.
[6]
DRDGold Limited and Another v Nkala and Others [2023] ZASCA 9; 2023
(3) SA 461 (SCA).
[7]
TWK Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings
(Pty) Ltd and Others [2023] ZASCA 63; 2023 (5) SA 163 (SCA).
[8]
Ibid para 21.
[9]
Zweni v Minister of Law and Order [1992] ZASCA 197; 1993 (1) SA 523
(A).
[10]
Ibid para 8.
[11]
Moch v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service
[1996] ZASCA 2
;
1996 (3) SA 1
(SCA) para 13; Phillips and Others v
National Director of Public Prosecutions
2003 (6) SA 447
(SCA) para
19.
[12]
TWK Holdings fn 7 para 30.
[13]
Ibid para 21.
[14]
DRDGold fn 6 para 28.
[15]
Phillips fn 11.
[16]
Singh v National Director of Public Prosecutions [2007] ZASCA 82;
[2007] 3 All SA 510 (SCA); 2007 (2)
SACR
326 (SCA).
[17]
Phillips para 20.
[18]
Ibid para 22.
[19]
Singh para 10
[20]
Section 13(1) of POCA provides:
‘
For
the purposes of this Chapter proceedings on application for a
confiscation order or a restraint order are civil proceedings,
and
are not criminal proceedings.’’
[21]
Section 18(1) provides that:
‘
Whenever
a defendant is convicted of an offence the court convicting the
defendant may, on the application of the public prosecutor,
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; and
(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 benefited, 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.’
[22]
S v Shaik and Others
[2008] ZACC 7
;
2008 (5) SA 354
(CC);
2008 (2)
SACR 165
(CC);
2008 (8) BCLR 834
(CC)
para 24.
[23]
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Wood and Others [2022]
ZAGPJHC 272;
[2022] 3 All SA 179
(GJ);
2022
(2) SACR 245
(GJ) para 30.
[24]
Section 14(1).
[25]
Section 26(1).
[26]
Section 26(3)(a) provides:
‘
A
court to which an application is made in terms of subsection (1) may
make a provisional restraint order having immediate effect
and may
simultaneously grant a rule nisi calling upon the defendant upon a
day mentioned in the rule to appear and to show cause
why the
restraint order should not be made final.’
[27]
Section 28(1).
[28]
Section 28(2).
[29]
Section 26(10).
[30]
Under s 50.
[31]
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Another v Mohamed NO
and Others
[2003] ZACC 4
;
2003 (4) SA 1
(CC);
2003 (1) SACR 561
;
2003 (5) BCLR 476
;
2003 (4) SA 1
(CC) (Mohamed) para 16.
[32]
Mohunram and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions and
Another
[2007] ZACC 4
;
2007 (4) SA 222
(CC);
2007 (6) BCLR 575
(CC);
2007 (2) SACR 145
(CC) para 118.
[33]
Section 38(2) provides:
‘
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
[34]
Brooks and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2017]
ZASCA 42
;
2017 (1) SACR 701
(SCA);
[2017]
2 All SA 690
(SCA) para 16.
[35]
De Vries v The State
[2011] ZASCA 162
;
2012 (1) SACR 186
(SCA);
[2012] All SA 13
(SCA) para 4.
[36]
Section 39(3).
[37]
Section 39(5).
[38]
Ex Parte National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2018] ZASCA 86
;
2018 (2) SACR 176
(SCA) para 24.
[39]
The following sections recognise appeal procedures that may be
instituted under Chapter 6:
(a)
Section 46(4)(b) recognises that there may be an appeal in respect
of the taxing of legal expenses claimed by a person with an interest
in the property.
(b)
Section 47(4) recognises that there may be an appeal against a
decision to vary or rescind an order.
(c)
Section 55 recognises that there may be an appeal against the grant
of a forfeiture order.
[40]
40 Section 47(4) says that: ‘The noting of an appeal against a
decision to vary or rescind (a preservation order or an
order
appointing a curator bonis) shall suspend such a variation or
rescission pending the outcome of the appeal.’ In similar
vein, s 55 provides: ‘A preservation of property order and any
order authorising the seizure of the property concerned
or other
ancillary order which is in force at the time of any decision
regarding the making of a forfeiture order under s 50(1)
shall
remain in force pending the outcome of any appeal against the
decision concerned.’
[41]
Section 47(a) permits a high court to vary or rescind a preservation
order on application by a person affected if the court is
satisfied
that the operation of the order will deprive the applicant of the
means to provide for her reasonable living expenses
and cause undue
hardship; and where that hardship outweighs to risk that the
property may be dissipated in some manner.
[42]
Mohamed fn 31 para 22.
[43]
Section 48(1) states that: ‘If a preservation of property
order is in force the National Director may apply to a High Court
for an order forfeiting to the State all or any of the property that
is subject to the preservation of property order.’
[44]
Section 40(a).
[45]
In Part 2, ss 18-24.
[46]
In Part 4, s 30.
[47]
Phillips para 22.
[48]
Section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act.
[49
]
It should be noted that the same does not apply to those parts of
the preservation order appointing the curator bonis and demarcating
his powers. Under
s 47(2)
those orders may be varied or rescinded at
any time on application of an interested party.
[50]
TWK Holdings para 21
[51]
Ibid para 39.
[52]
Section 47(2)
permits any person affected by an order for the
appointment of a curator bonis to apply for the variation or
rescission of the
order, or of the terms of appointment of the
curator bonis. The high court may so order if it deems it necessary
in the interests
of justice.
sino noindex
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