Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 206South Africa
State Attorney v Notshe (2022/00966) [2025] ZAGPJHC 206 (5 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 March 2025
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPJHC 206
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## State Attorney v Notshe (2022/00966) [2025] ZAGPJHC 206 (5 March 2025)
State Attorney v Notshe (2022/00966) [2025] ZAGPJHC 206 (5 March 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2025_206.html
sino date 5 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
5 March 2025
Case
No. 2022/00966
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
ATTORNEY
Applicant
and
VIWE
SAMUEL NOTSHE
First Respondent
SOLICITOR-GENERAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Second Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
On 11 September 2024, I
gave judgment directing the applicant, the State Attorney, to honour
over R5 million in unpaid invoices
presented by the first respondent,
Mr. Notshe. The deadline for seeking leave to appeal against my
judgment came and went in early
October 2024. On 19 November 2024,
Mr. Notshe’s attorney wrote to the State Attorney and asked the
State Attorney to pay
the judgment debt, or face execution on it. His
letter was ignored. On 27 November 2024, Mr. Notshe’s attorney
issued a writ
of execution. On 4 December 2024, the Sheriff attached
a range of office equipment at the State Attorney’s office.
Still,
the State Attorney did nothing, either to prevent the sale of
its goods, or to challenge my judgment.
2
On 27 January 2025, the
Sheriff took the further step of garnishing the State Attorney’s
bank account. That finally appears
to have incited a response. On 28
January 2025, the State Attorney served an application for leave to
appeal against my judgment
of 11 September 2024, together with an
application for condonation. The State Attorney filed its
applications with the registrar
on 4 February 2025.
3
Both applications were
enrolled before me on 5 March 2025. Mr. Mhambi, who appeared for the
State Attorney, accepted that he was
obliged first to obtain
condonation for the late filing of the application for leave to
appeal. He nonetheless addressed the prospects
of success in the
State Attorney’s proposed appeal in the context of the
condonation application.
4
The test applicable to
applications for condonation is so well-known it barely needs
repeating. A court considers the nature and
degree of non-compliance
with a rule, the explanation for that non-compliance, any prejudice
caused by the non-compliance, and
the applicant’s prospects of
success in the main case. Each of these considerations is weighed
with the aim of promoting
the interests of justice on the facts of
each matter, which is a court’s fundamental pre-occupation
(
Grootboom v National Prosecuting Authority
2014 (2) SA 68
(CC) paragraph 22).
5
In this case, the degree
of non-compliance is substantial. The State Attorney’s
application for leave to appeal was just under
four months late. The
prejudice to Mr. Notshe is likewise clear. He had developed the good
faith impression that the judgment had
become final, and he went to
the trouble and expense of executing on it. For two and a half months
after the first steps toward
execution were taken, the State Attorney
said nothing to him. It did not say that it would seek to appeal the
judgment. Nor did
it say that it was considering doing so.
6
The explanation for the
delay is extremely poor. It was first said that the
Solicitor-General’s contract expired on 30 September
2024, and
an acting Solicitor-General was appointed for a six-month period from
1 October 2024. When pressed on what that meant,
Mr. Mhambi’s
submission was that the former Solicitor-General could not be
expected to take steps to appeal my judgment so
close to the end of
his term, and that the acting Solicitor-General experienced a
“backlog” of matters when she took
office on 1 October
2024. That “backlog”, together with the leave of absence
that the head of the Johannesburg State
Attorney’s office took
over December 2024, meant that the acting Solicitor-General could not
consider the matter until mid-January
2025.
7
Neither the former nor the
acting Solicitor-General deposed to an affidavit setting out why they
did not pay attention to the matter
during their respective tenures.
Nor was it explained why the Solicitor-General’s input was
necessary before an appeal could
be pursued. No description of the
“backlog” apparently experienced by the new
Solicitor-General was proffered. Nor
was any account given of the
level of priority, if any, assigned to this matter in that “backlog”.
In light of those
absences, Mr. Mhambi was ultimately constrained to
submit that his case on condonation was really that I should give
both Solicitors-General
a grace period at the beginning and at the
end of their terms, during which I should simply overlook their
inaction.
8
As bad as that case is, it
may have been made up for by a good case on the merits of the appeal.
But those merits are hopeless.
It is common cause that the judgment I
gave on Mr. Notshe’s unpaid invoices related to work he had
actually done for the
State Attorney, and to invoices that his
instructing attorneys had approved and forwarded for payment. Most if
not all of those
invoices predated the tenure of the current head of
the State Attorney’s Johannesburg office, Ms. Mobeng. Ms.
Mobeng nonetheless
claimed the right to withhold payment on those
invoices because of an investigation carried out by the Special
Investigation Unit
(SIU) into amounts already paid to Mr. Notshe on
other work done by him for the State Attorney. Ms. Mobeng claimed the
right to
set the payments due on the unpaid invoices off against any
amount that Mr. Notshe might be obliged to repay as a result of the
SIU investigation.
9
In my judgment
a quo
,
I found that no such set-off was legally permissible. But even if it
were, the problem with Ms. Mobeng’s submission is that
the SIU
has expressed no interest at all in the particular invoices on which
I ordered payment. Nor was either party able to point
me to any
respect in which the SIU has found that Mr. Notshe was liable to
repay the sums that were the focus of its investigation.
In these
circumstances, there was no basis on which the State Attorney could
lawfully withhold payment on the invoices before me.
Perhaps
realising this, Ms. Mobeng’s answering affidavit
a quo
was, for the most part, an invoice-by-invoice critique of Mr.
Notshe’s claims, in which she – quite recklessly –
alleged that Mr. Notshe had engaged in over-reaching, dishonesty,
double-briefing and other unethical conduct. However, since most
if
not all of the invoices were approved for work done prior to Ms.
Mobeng’s tenure, Ms. Mobeng plainly had no personal knowledge
of the nature of the work or the basis on which Mr. Notshe had
charged for it. She advanced no explanation of why her predecessor
and the specific briefing attorneys who instructed Mr. Notshe had
approved the invoices for payment. Nor were any affidavits –
confirmatory or otherwise – put up from those attorneys. While
Ms. Mobeng appeared to assert in her affidavit that her critique
of
Mr. Notshe’s affidavits amounted to admissible hearsay, no
application to receive that hearsay evidence was brought.
10
Finally, Mr. Mhambi
suggested that my judgment ought not to have been granted without
joining the SIU. He was, however, unable to
explain what interest the
SIU had in these proceedings, given that the invoices on which I
ordered payment never formed part of
its investigation.
11
For all these reasons, the
appeal proposed is stillborn. Whatever merit it may have certainly
cannot make up for the appalling explanation
advanced for the
lateness of the application for leave to appeal. Condonation must be
refused.
12
Mr. Vobi, who appeared for
Mr. Notshe, submitted that the condonation application was brought in
bad faith, since it was only pursued
to stave off execution of my
judgment, rather than because of any genuine belief in the merits of
the proposed appeal. The facts
before me are certainly open to that
interpretation, but I need not go that far. Even without the taint of
bad faith, the application
cannot succeed.
13
Accordingly –
13.1
The application for condonation for the late filing of the
applicant’s application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
13.2
The applicant is directed to pay the costs of the application.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 5 March 2025.
HEARD
ON:
5 March 2025
DECIDED
ON:
5 March 2025
For
the Applicant:
MH Mhambi
Instructed by the State
Attorney
For
the First Respondent:
I Vobi
Instructed by Buthelezi
NF Attorneys
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd v T.C Esterhuysen Primary School and Others (2024/076235) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1288 (4 December 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1288High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
South African Municipal Workers Union v Tirhani Travel and Tours (Pty) Ltd (112/2022) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1217 (21 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1217High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
South African Securitisation Programme (Rf) (Pty) Ltd v Hakem Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/009594) [2025] ZAGPJHC 230 (6 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 230High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Government of Madagascar v National Director of Public Prosecution and Others (2021/45702) [2025] ZAGPJHC 907 (1 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 907High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Reserve Bank v YWBN Mutual Bank (2025/059995) [2025] ZAGPJHC 518 (23 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 518High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar