Case Law[2022] ZASCA 133South Africa
Land and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v The Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (1174/2021) [2022] ZASCA 133; 2023 (1) SACR 1 (SCA) (13 October 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
13 October 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 – civil recovery of property under chapter 6 – exclusion of ‘interest’ in property from operation of forfeiture order – ‘interest’ means any right – ranking of competing claims for exclusion from forfeiture – to be determined in terms of common law principles particularly precedence of real and prior rights.
Judgment
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## Land and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v The Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (1174/2021) [2022] ZASCA 133; 2023 (1) SACR 1 (SCA) (13 October 2022)
Land and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v The Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform and Others (1174/2021) [2022] ZASCA 133; 2023 (1) SACR 1 (SCA) (13 October 2022)
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sino date 13 October 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 1174/2021
In
the matter between:
LAND AND AGRICULTURAL
BANK OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
APPELLANT
and
THE MINISTER OF RURAL
DEVELOPMENT
AND
LAND
REFORM
FIRST RESPONDENT
MOOVILLE
(PTY)
LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
WILLEM
JANSEN VAN VUUREN
THIRD RESPONDENT
CPAD
FARM
HOLDINGS
FOURTH RESPONDENT
MONGESI
ALFRED
MDE
FIFTH RESPONDENT
THE NATIONAL DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
SIXTH RESPONDENT
MIKE
TIMKOE TRUSTEES CC
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
DONALD
GEORGE DUKE JACKSON
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
NINTH RESPONDENT
REGISTRAR
OF DEEDS, CAPE TOWN
TENTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Land
and Agricultural Bank of South Africa v The Minister of Rural
Development and Land Reform and Others
(1174/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 133(13 October2022)
Coram:
PONNAN, VAN DER MERWE and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and
MOLEFE and SIWENDU AJJA
Heard
:
7 September 2022
Delivered
:
13 October 2022
Summary:
Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121
of 1998
– civil recovery of property under chapter 6 –
exclusion of ‘interest’ in property from operation of
forfeiture
order – ‘interest’ means any right –
ranking of competing claims for exclusion from forfeiture – to
be determined in terms of common law principles particularly
precedence of real and prior rights.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court, Grahamstown, (RugunananJ, Beshe J and Krüger AJ
concurring), sitting as court ofappeal:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including
the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the full court is set aside
and replaced with the following:
‘
(a)
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
(b)
The cross-appeal is upheld with costs.
(c) Paragraphs 1, 2, 3
and 4 of the order of Goosen J are set aside and replaced with the
following:
“
1.
The interest of the first applicant, the Land and Agricultural
Development Bank of South Africa, consisting of the debt secured
by
its mortgage bond over the property concerned, is excluded from the
operation of the forfeiture order.
2.
The fourth respondent, the Minister of Rural Development and Land
Reform, is directed to pay the costs of the first applicant.”’
JUDGMENT
Van der Merwe JA
(Ponnan and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Molefe and Siwendu AJJA
concurring)
[1]
The parties that participated in
the appeal are the appellant, the Land and Agricultural
Development
Bank of South Africa (the Land Bank),and the first respondent, the
Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform (the
Minister). The
Land Bank owes its continued existence to the provisions of s 2 of
the Land and Agricultural Development Bank Act
15 of 2002 (Act 15 of
2002). In terms of those provisions it is a corporate legal person of
which the State is the sole shareholder.
The listed objects of the
Land Bank include the promotion, facilitation and support of
equitable ownership of agricultural land,
in particular the increase
of ownership of agricultural land by historically disadvantaged
persons (s 3(1)
(a)
of Act 15 of 2002). An important part of the mandate of the Minister
is to do the same. The Minister executes this mandate by,
inter alia,
making grants to previously disadvantaged individuals to enable them
to acquire agricultural land.
[2]
Both the Land Bank and the Minister thus made funds available for the
purchase of
portion 1 and the remainder of the farm Poplar Grove No
303, as well as the farm Honeyville No 302 (collectively referred to
as
the property). It is 1218,9797 hectares in extent and situated in
the Kouga Municipality in the Eastern Cape. The property was to
be
registered in the name of a trust of which 39 identified previously
disadvantaged individuals would be the beneficiaries. Because
of
corruption and fraud that sadly are not uncommon in South Africa, the
property was registered in the name of CPAD Farm Holdings
(Pty) Ltd
(CPAD). In the main, the appeal concerns the extent, if any, to which
the Land Bank and the Minister respectively are
entitled to the
exclusion of an interest from the forfeiture of the property under
the
Prevention of Organised Crime Act
121 of 1998 (POCA). I shall
revert to the facts after setting out the relevant provisions of
POCA.
Civil recovery of
property under POCA
[3]
Chapter 6 of POCA
(ss 37
-
62
) deals with civil recovery of property.
In terms of
s 1
of POCA ‘property’ is defined in wide
terms as ‘money or other movable, immovable, corporeal or
incorporeal thing
and includes any rights, privileges, claims and
securities and any interest therein and all proceeds thereof’.
This section
also states that ‘interest’ includes any
right.
Section 37
makes clear that proceedings under this Chapter are
civil proceedings, to which the rules of evidence applicable to civil
proceedings
apply. In terms of
s 38(1)
, the National Director of
Public Prosecutions (NDPP) may by way of an
ex
parte
application apply to the High
Court (as defined) for a preservation order.
Section 38(2)
provides
that the High Court shall make a preservation order if there are
reasonable grounds to believe, inter alia, that the property
concerned is the proceeds of unlawful activities.
Section 42
makes
provision for the appointment of a curator bonis, to assume control
and care of the property under preservation.
[4]
In terms of
s 39(1)
, the NDPP must give notice of a preservation
order to, inter alia, all persons known to have an interest in the
property which
is subject to the order. Such a person may, in terms
of
s 39(3)
, enter an appearance to oppose the making of a forfeiture
order or to apply for the exclusion of his or her interest in the
property
concerned from the operation thereof.
Section 39(5)
sets out
what an appearance shall contain, including an affidavit stating,
where applicable, the nature and extent of the interest
relied upon
and the basis upon which the exclusion of the interest from the
forfeiture order is claimed.
[5]
If a preservation order is in force, the NDPP may in terms of
s 48(1)
apply to the High Court for an order forfeiting to the State all or
any of the property that is subject to the preservation order.
In
terms of
s 48(2)
, the NDPP must give notice of the application to
every person who entered an appearance in terms of
s 39(3).
Section
48(4)
provides that such a person may appear at the hearing of the
application and may adduce evidence to oppose the application or to
apply for the exclusion of his or her interest in the property
concerned from the operation of the order. These procedural rights
are also available to a person who was permitted under
s 49
to enter
a late appearance.
[6]
Section 50(1)
reads as follows:
‘
(1)
The High Court shall, subject to
section 52
, make an order applied
for under
section 48
(1) if the Court finds on a balance of
probabilities that the property concerned –
(a)
is an instrumentality of an offence referred to in
Schedule 1;
(b)
is the proceeds of unlawful activities; or
(c)
is property associated with terrorist and related
activities.’
Each
of the categories listed in subsections
(a)
,
(b)
and
(c)
, are
defined in
s 1
of POCA. On the facts of this matter it is only
necessary to refer to the definition of ‘unlawful activity’.
It means
‘conduct which constitutes a crime or which
contravenes any law whether such conduct occurred before or after the
commencement
of this Act and whether such conduct occurred in the
Republic or elsewhere’.
[7]
Section 52 deals with the exclusion of an interest in property from
the operation
of a forfeiture order. In terms of s 52(1), the High
Court may make such an order on the application of a person who
entered an
appearance under s 39(3) or s 49. Section 52(2) provides:
‘
(2)
The High Court may make an order under subsection (1), in relation to
the forfeiture of
the proceeds of unlawful activities, if it finds on
a balance of probabilities that the applicant for the order –
(a)
had acquired the interest concerned legally and
for a consideration, the value of which is not significantly less
than the value
of that interest; and
(b)
where the applicant had acquired the interest
concerned after the commencement of this Act, that he or she neither
knew nor had
reasonable grounds to suspect that the property in which
the interest is held is the proceeds of unlawful activities.’
[8]
Section 52(2A) proceeds to deal with the exclusion of interests from
the forfeiture
of an instrumentality of an offence or property
associated with terrorist or related activities. In terms thereof,
such an order
must also in the first place be based on a finding on a
balance of probabilities ‘that the applicant for the order had
acquired
the interest concerned legally. . .’.
[9]
Section 54 allows any person affected by a forfeiture order who was
entitled to notice
of the application for the forfeiture order, but
did not receive such notice, to apply for an order excluding his or
her interest
in the forfeited property from the operation of the
order or varying the operation of the order. The procedural aspects
of such
an application and the hearing thereof are regulated by ss
54(2)-(7). In terms of s 54(4), the High Court may consolidate the
hearing
of applications filed under the section. Section 54(8) echoes
the provisions of s 52(2) and s 54(8A) those of s 52(2A).
[10]
Section 56(1) provides that if a curator bonis has not yet been
appointed in respect of the property
concerned, one may be appointed
pursuant to a forfeiture order. The consequences of a forfeiture
order are described in s 56(2)
and (3), as well as s 57(1). Sections
56(2) and (3) read:
‘
(2)
On the date when a forfeiture order takes effect the property subject
to the order
is forfeited to the State and vests in the curator bonis
on behalf of the State.
(3)
Upon a forfeiture order taking effect the curator bonis may take
possession
of that property on behalf of the State from any person in
possession, or entitled to possession, of the property.’
[11]
Section 57(1) reads:
‘
(1)
The curator bonis must, subject to any
order for the exclusion of interests in forfeited
property under
section 52 (2)(a) or 54(8) and in accordance with the directions of
the
Committee—
(a)
deposit any moneys forfeited under section 56(2) into the Account;
(b)
deliver property forfeited under section 56(2) to the Account;
or
(c)
dispose of property forfeited under section 56(2) by sale or any
other means and
deposit the proceeds of the sale or disposition into
the Account.’
The
‘Committee’ means the Criminal Assets Recovery Committee
established under s 65 and the ‘Account’ means
the
Criminal Assets Recovery Account established under s 63.
Relevant
facts
[12]
On 2 August 2006, the Minister paid out an amount in excess of R2.6
million for the purpose of
acquiring the property for the trust. The
Land Bank advanced a further sum of approximately R5 million to
facilitate the transaction.
The advance was secured by a first
mortgage bond over the property in favour of the Land Bank (the
bond). The bond was registered
in the Deeds Office on 13 April 2007
and provided security for the capital sum of R5 082 900, an
additional sum of R1 016 580
in respect of legal and other
costs under the bond and interest.
[13]
CPAD defaulted in respect of payment to the Land Bank and the latter
issued summons against CPAD
in the Eastern Cape Local Division of the
High Court, Port Elizabeth (the local division). On 3 September 2008,
the Land Bank obtained
default judgment against CPAD for the payment
of the capital advanced, accrued interest and costs. The property was
declared executable
and on 14 October 2008 the Sheriff attached it in
the execution of the default judgment.
[14]
In the meantime, the NDPP instituted a criminal prosecution relating
to the property against
a director of CPAD and a former employee of
the Minister. On 28 October 2014, the NDPP ex parte obtained a
preservation order in
respect of the property in the local division.
The order placed the property under the control, custody and care of
a curator bonis.
It provided for notice of the order to interested
parties, including the Land Bank. It further informed interested
parties who
intended to oppose the application for a forfeiture order
or to apply for an order excluding an interest from it, to enter an
appearance
in terms of s 39(3) of POCA.
[15]
When the preservation order came to the knowledge of the Land Bank,
it immediately instructed
its attorney to protect its interest in the
property. The attorney engaged officials of the NDPP, who assured
him: that the NDPP
acknowledged the Land Bank’s security
consisting of the bond; that its interest in the property would be
excluded from the
forfeiture order; and that it was not necessary for
the Land Bank to enter an appearance or become involved in the
application
for a forfeiture order. It is common cause that this
application was not served on the Land Bank. The local division
(Majiki J)
by default made an order declaring the property forfeit to
the State on 13 January 2015.
[16]
For reasons that are not apparent from the papers, the forfeiture
order not only made no mention
of the interest of the Land Bank, but
provided that the property ‘be handed back’ to the
Minister. The relevant part
of the order read:
‘
1.
An Order be and is hereby granted in terms of section 53(1)(a) of
the
Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (POCA), declaring
forfeit to the State the Honeyville Farm measuring 1 218
9797
hectares in the district of Humansdorp (the property).
2.
In terms of
section 50(6) of POCA paragraph 5 below shall take effect
45 days
after publication of a notice thereof in the Government Gazette
unless an Appeal is instituted before this time in which
case this
Order will take effect on the finalisation of such Appeal.
3.
Michael Timkoe (Timkoe) who was appointed as curator in the
Preservation
Order, be and is hereby directed to continue acting as
such for the purpose of this Order.
4.
Pending the taking effect of this Order the property shall remain
under the control of Timkoe.
5.
On the date on
which this Order takes effect, to wit 45 weekdays after
publication
in the Government Gazette, Timkoe shall cause the property to be
handed back to the Department of Rural Development
and Land Reform
for re-allocation in terms of all applicable procedures, and as such
to sign all necessary documents in regard
thereto. This will be
regarded as payment to the State.’
[17]
After the forfeiture order had been made, the officials of the NDPP
continued to maintain that
the Land Bank would be entitled to the
settlement of the debt secured by the bond from the proceeds of the
sale of the property.
They were not, however, authorised to represent
or bind the Minister. Meanwhile, the curator bonis took steps to sell
the property.
The Land Bank had the property valued and informed the
curator bonis that it would agree to the sale of the property for R8
million.
Accordingly, on 25 May 2015, the curator bonisentered into a
deed of sale in terms of which the property was sold to a third party
for the sum of R8 million. By then the debt secured by the bond had
already exceeded R8 million.
[18]
In these circumstances, the execution of the deed of sale would
result in the Land Bank receiving
the full proceeds of the sale and
the Minister receiving nothing. The Minister found this result
unpalatable. The relevant parties
entered into a series of
negotiations, but could not reach agreement. Eventually the Land Bank
approached the local division essentially
for an order amending the
forfeiture order to subject it to the full extent of its rights in
terms of the bond.
[19]
The Land Bank cited various parties that could have been affected by
the order claimed, but only
the Minister (the fourth respondent)
opposed the application. In the answering affidavit, the Minister
alleged that the grant constituted
an ‘interest’ in the
property as defined in POCA. The Minister expressly acknowledged the
rights of the Land Bank under
the bond and in principle had no
objection to a variation of the forfeiture order to provide for the
rights of the Land Bank. However,
the Minister disputed that the Land
Bank enjoyed ‘a prior or stronger right’. As both the
Minister and the Land Bank
had been the victims of unlawful
activities under POCA, so the Minister contended, they should share
in the proceeds of the sale
of the property in proportion to the
capital loss sustained by each. That would result in a proportion of
the proceeds of two thirds
to the Lank Bank and one third to the
Minister. The practical effect would be that the Land Bank would
receive about half of what
was owed to it under the bond, whereas the
Minister would obtain full recovery of the grant.
[20]
The matter came before Goosen J. As I have said, it was not in
dispute that the Land Bank had
an ‘interest’ in the
property as defined in POCA. Goosen J held that there was no
conceivable reason why the Land Bank’s
interest should be
limited to the capital sum advanced. He held that the Minister also
had such an interest in the property. He
placed a value of R2.68
million on the Minister’s interest. With the apparent consent
of the parties, he determined the matter
on the basis that both the
Land Bank and the Minister effectively sought the exclusion of their
respective interests from the operation
of the forfeiture order. This
was a sensible approach. It was clear that, but for the assurances of
the officials of the NDPP,
the Land Bank would have entered an
appearance in terms of s 39. Presumably the Minister did not do so,
because it was expected
that the forfeiture order would contain
paragraph 5 quoted above.
[21]
The court proceeded to conclude as follows:
‘
Notwithstanding
these procedural issues, the forfeiture order in its present form
must be varied not only to properly give effect
to the provisions of
POCA but also to facilitate the final resolution of the matter. That
can be achieved, it seems to me, by rendering
forfeiture subject to
the rights of the bondholder as was sought. It can further be
achieved by giving effect to s 57(1)(c), ie
by authorising disposal
of the forfeited property by sale or other means. To the extent that
this conflicts with paragraph 5 of
the existing order I have already
stated that that order is in conflict with paragraph 1 and cannot, in
the light thereof stand.
Since both the Land Bank and the Department
have established defined interests in the property such interests
ought to be excluded
from the forfeited property.’
[22]
The relevant part of the order issued by Goosen J, as amended by
agreement, provided:
‘
1.
Paragraph 1 of the
order of Majiki J dated 13 January 2015 is amended by the
insertion
at the end thereof the phrase “
subject
to the rights of bondholders
”.
2.
Paragraph 5 of the
order is hereby deleted and replaced with the following:
“
5.
In terms of s 57 of POCA the curator
bonus[sic] is authorized[sic] as of the date on which the forfeiture
order takes effect, to
perform all the powers and functions specified
in the Act including the following:
5.1
To dispose of the property by sale, public auction or other means
after due notice of the proposed
disposal and the terms thereof
having been given to the first applicant, and fourth and fifth
respondents’ attorneys and
further subject to the conditions
set out in paragraph 5A below.
5.2
After deduction of the curator bonis’ fees and expenditure and
further after deduction of
all related and incidental costs and
charges in respect of or relating to the sale and transfer of the
property and in terms of
the provisions of s 52(2) of the Act, to pay
from the balance of the proceeds of the sale, if any, the following
amounts:
5.2.1
to the first applicant and amount equal to the value of the first
applicant’s judgment as at the date of disposal
of the
property;
5.2.2
to the fourth respondent an amount equal to the value of the grant
funds paid to facilitate acquisition of the property;
and
thereafter to deposit the remaining balance of the proceeds, if any,
into the Criminal Assets Recovery Account established in
terms of s
63 of POCA.
5.3
To perform any ancillary acts which in the opinion of the curator
bonis are necessary but subject
to any directives of the Criminal
Assets Recovery Committee, established under s 65 of the Act.”
3.
Paragraph 5A is
hereby inserted in the order:
“
5A
In the event that the disposal of the property is for a purchase
price in an amount
less than the aggregate of the sums referred to in
5.2.1 and 5.2.2 above then in that event the sums paid to the first
applicant
and fourth respondents shall be in proportion to the sums
set out in 5.2.1 and 5.2.2 above.”
4.
The first applicant
and fourth respondent shall each pay their own costs.’
[23]
With the leave of Goosen J, the Minister appealed and the Land Bank
cross-appealed to the full
court of the Eastern Cape Division of the
High Court, Grahamstown (the full court). On appeal the parties
sought the orders that
they respectively had pursued in the local
division. The full court (Rugunanan J, Beshe J and Krüger AJ
concurring) rejected
the argument that the Land Bank’s rights
took precedence and came to the conclusion ‘that the interest
in the property
of both the Minister and the Bank should be limited
to the equivalent of their capital loss without ranking in status or
prior
position’. It accordingly upheld the appeal with costs
and dismissed the cross-appeal with costs. It confirmed para 2 of the
order of Goosen J, but substituted para 1 thereof with the following:
‘
The
proceeds of the sale of the relevant immovable property be
apportioned between the Fourth Respondent and the First Applicant
on
the basis of the capital loss sustained by the Fourth Respondent and
First Applicant pursuant to the unlawful activity referred
to in the
founding papers.”
The
present appeal is with the special leave of this court.
Analysis
[24]
Against this background, the appeal raises two issues:
(a)
Whether the Minister has an interest in the property as defined in
POCA; and
(b)
If so, how the competing claims of the parties for the exclusion of
interests from the operation
of the forfeiture order should be
determined.
As
to (a)
[25]
The courts below based the finding that the Minister had an
‘interest’ in the property
on the judgment in
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Levy and Others
[2004] 4 All SA 103
(W) (
Levy
).
There one of the issues was whether the second and third respondents
had an ‘interest’ in residential property registered
in
the name of the first respondent. The second and third respondents
made ‘investments’ in a pyramid scheme by making
cash and
cheque payments into an attorney’s trust account. The
particulars of the trust account had been furnished to them
by
another ‘investor’. The ‘investments’ were
made on the back of promises of exorbitant short-term cash
returns.
It appears that the court accepted that the ‘investments’
had fraudulently been utilised to purchase the immovable
property
owned by the first respondent. It concluded in paras 21-22:
‘
.
. .
In casu
the monies of the second and third respondent were used to pay the
purchase price of the property. Their interest in the property
accordingly is the equivalent of those amounts . . .I conclude,
therefore, that the second and third respondents have shown an
interest in the property to the extent that they are entitled to be
compensated for their losses, to be paid to them from the proceeds
of
the sale of the property in terms of the forfeiture order.’
For
the reasons that follow,
Levy
was wrongly decided.
[26]
As I have said, s 1 of POCA provides that ‘interest’
includes any right. This brings
the meaning of the word ‘includes’
to the fore. When used in a definition, ‘includes’
generally denotes
a term of extension. That would be the case where
the primary meaning of the term that is defined is well-known and the
word ‘includes’
introduces a meaning or meanings that go
beyond that primary meaning. In such a case, the definition would
encompass the primary
well-known meaning as well as that which the
definition declares that it shall include. The context may, however,
indicate that
‘includes’ signifies that what follows
thereafter constitutes a complete or exhaustive definition of the
relevant term.
In this sense ‘includes’ is equivalent to
‘means’. See
Union
Government v Rosenberg Ltd
1946 AD 120
at 127;
R v Debele
1956 (4) SA 570
(A) at 572H-573A and 575A-576A;
Stauffer
Chemical Co & Another v Safsan Marketing and Distribution Co
(Pty) Ltd & Others
1987 (2) SA 331
(A) at 350H-351E and
De Reuck v Director
of Public Prosecutions, Witwatersrand Local Division &
Others
[2003] ZACC 19
;
2004 (1) SA 406
(CC) paras 17-19. The judgment of Langa DCJ in the latter matter is
particularly instructive.
[27]
The word ‘interest’ has no such well-known primary
meaning. It is a word of wide
and vague import. Therefore it is
unlikely that ‘includes’ was intended to add a wider
meaning to a primary meaning
that itself was in no need of
definition. It rather seems that the purpose of the expression
‘includes any right’ was
to define ‘interest’
more precisely. This is strongly supported by the context of POCA. It
will be recalled that s
52(2) and s 54(8) provide that the first
requirement for an order excluding an interest in property that is
the proceeds of unlawful
activities from the operation of a
forfeiture order is a finding, on a balance of probabilities, that
the applicant ‘had
acquired the interest concerned legally and
for a consideration’. In applications for exclusion under s
52(2A) and s 54(8A),
the applicant must also show on a balance of
probabilities that the interest concerned had been acquired legally.
This is the language
of acquisition of rights to property.
[28]
This also accords with the purpose of Chapter 6 of POCA. Its purpose
is to forfeit the proceeds
of unlawful activities, instrumentalities
of offences and property associated with terrorist and related
activities to the State.
That purpose would be undermined if the
forfeiture is subjected to vague and flimsy interests as opposed to
legal rights.
[29]
Although ambiguity may have been avoided by the employment of the
word ‘means’, I
conclude that this is the meaning that,
in the context, must be ascribed to ‘includes’. In sum,
‘interest’
means any right. And any right to property (as
defined) is an expression of wide import, which may includea
contingent right to
property. See
Mazibuko
& Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2009]
ZASCA 52
;
2009 (6) SA 479
(SCA) (
Mazibuko
)
para 54.
[30]
On the facts, the Minister has no right to the property. For the sake
of illustration, I am prepared
to disregard the legal concepts of
commixtio
of money and that money in a bank account is the property of the
bank. On this basis, I am prepared to accept that the purchase
price
of the property was partly paid by the grant. But even if a thief
purchases property with stolen cash, the owner of the cash
does not
legally acquire a right to that property, much less for a
consideration. In the result, I hold that the Minister has no
‘interest’ in the property.
As
to (b)
[31]
However, even if the Minister did indeed have an interest in the
property in the sum of R2.68
million, that of the Land Bank had to
prevail. As I have demonstrated, the order of the full court was
founded on three main propositions.
These are that: (a) the Land Bank
does not have a stronger right than the Minister; (b) under POCA the
interest of the Land Bank
is limited to its ‘capital loss’;
and (c) the Land Bank and the Minister have to share in the proceeds
of the property
in proportion to their respective capital losses. I
am unable to agree with any of these propositions.
[32]
In the first place, the full court placed reliance on the provisions
of s 57(2) of POCA. It provides:
‘
Any
right or interest in forfeited property not exercisable by or
transferable to the State, shall expire and shall not revert to
the
person who has possession, or was entitled to possession, of the
property immediately before the forfeiture order took effect.’
The
full court said that this section ‘plainly offsets the Bank’s
secured entitlement to the property . . .’.
Section 57(2) does
not say that. It deals with the effect of a forfeiture order and is
clearly not applicable to interests that
were excluded from the
operation thereof.
[33]
The argument of the Minister that found favour with the courts below,
was that in terms of Chapter
6, victims of crime have to be treated
equally. This was largely based on the statement in
Levy
para 21 that:
‘
It
was clearly the intention of the Legislature to protect the interests
of innocent third parties who have become the victims of
a fraudulent
activity.’
[34]
This is not correct. The purpose of Chapter 6 of POCA is not to
protect the interests of victims
of crime by compensation of their
losses. That is, inter alia, provided for in
s 300
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
. As I have said, the purpose of Chapter 6 is
to forfeit the proceeds of unlawful activities, instrumentalities of
offences and
property associated with terrorist and related
activities to the State. To save it from unconstitutionality under s
25(1) of the
Constitution, the Chapter had to provide for the
protection of the pre-existing interests of innocent citizens in
property subject
to forfeiture. See
Mazibuko
para 43. Whether such a person was (also) a victim of crime, is
irrelevant.
[35]
Moreover, there is no indication in Chapter 6 of POCA of an intention
to render common law principles
inapplicable or to vary them. Such an
intention would have required clear articulation. On the contrary,
whether an interest in
property was legally acquired clearly has to
be determined under existing law, including the common law. It
follows that there
is no legal basis for depriving the Land Bank of
the preference provided by its real right or of its secured claims
for interest
and costs.
[36]
The Legislature must have contemplated that competing applications
could be made for the exclusion
of interests in property from a
forfeiture order. As I have said, s 54(4) provides that the High
Court may consolidate the hearing
of such applications. Yet, it did
not prescribe principles for the ranking of such competing claims. It
follows that this must
be determined according to principles of
common law. Two main principles are relevant. The first is that a
real right generally
prevails over a personal right. The second is
that the maxim
qui prior est tempore
potior est iure
applies to the ranking
of rights that are equal in hierarchy. On the application of these
principles, therefore, the interest of
the Land Bank had to be
afforded precedence over that of the Minister.
Conclusion
[37]
Before concluding, there is an aspect that I am constrained to
mention. Paragraph 2 of the order
of Goosen J (which replaced para 5
of the forfeiture order and was confirmed in para 2 of the order of
the full court) gave extensive
directions to the curator bonis. They,
inter alia, related to the manner of disposal of the property, the
deduction of fees and
costs from the proceeds of the disposal and the
deposit of the remaining balance in the ‘Account’. All of
these matters
are regulated by s 57 of POCA. Section 57(5) in
particular provides:
‘
The
expenses incurred in connection with the forfeiture and the sale,
including expenses of seizure, maintenance and custody of
the
property pending its disposition, advertising and court costs shall
be defrayed out of moneys appropriated by Parliament for
that
purpose.’
In the
result, these directions were either unnecessary or incompetent. See
Mazibuko
para 57.
[38]
For the reasons stated, the rights of the Land Bank under the bond,
judgment and attachment of
the property should to their full extent
have been excluded from the operation of the forfeiture order as the
first charge against
the proceeds of the property. The Minister’s
claim for the exclusion of an interest should have been disallowed on
the basis
that the Minister has no such interest in law or at least,
assuming that the Minister has such an interest, on the ground that
the exclusion of such interest from the forfeiture order would not
constitute an efficacious remedy.
[39]
Thus, the appeal must be upheld with costs. It was rightly not
disputed that the employment of
two counsel by the Land Bank on
appeal was justified.
[40]
The following order is issued:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including
the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the full court is set aside
and replaced with the following:
‘
(a)
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
(b)
The cross-appeal is upheld with costs.
(c)
Paragraphs 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the order of Goosen J are set aside and
replaced
with the following:
“
1.
The interest of the first applicant, the Land and Agricultural
Development Bank of South Africa, consisting of the debt secured by
its mortgage bond over the property concerned, is excluded
from the
operation of the forfeiture order.
2. The
fourth respondent, the Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform,
is directed to pay the costs of the first applicant.”’
_______________________
C H G VAN DER MERWE
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For appellant:
A
Beyleveld SC and T Rossi
Instructed by:
Greyvensteins Inc, Port Elizabeth
Muller
Gonsior Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
Forfirst respondent:
R
G Buchanan SC
Instructed by:
State
Attorney, Port Elizabeth
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein.
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