Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 503South Africa
Smith v Hills and Another (2025/055555; 2021/4094; SS 79/2022) [2025] ZAGPJHC 503 (23 May 2025)
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by himself.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Smith v Hills and Another (2025/055555; 2021/4094; SS 79/2022) [2025] ZAGPJHC 503 (23 May 2025)
Smith v Hills and Another (2025/055555; 2021/4094; SS 79/2022) [2025] ZAGPJHC 503 (23 May 2025)
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sino date 23 May 2025
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Numbers:
2025/055555; 2021/4094; SS 79/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
23
May 2025
In
the matter between:
2025/055555
In
the matter between:
VINCENT
GEORGE SMITH
Applicant
And
TREVOR
HILLS
First Respondent
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECTIONS
Second Respondent
(1
st
Respondent cited as in his capacity as
the
curator bonis
of the Applicant)
2021/4094
In
re
:
Ex Parte
application between:
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
Applicant
And
VINCENT
GEORGE SMITH
First Defendant
EURO
BLITZ 48 (PTY) LTD
Second Defendant
BRUMILDA DOREEN
SMITH
First Respondent
VINCENT
GEORGE SMITH N.O.
First Respondent
(In
his capacity as trustee of Vincent G
Smith
Family Trust (IT 2987/2004)
In
the Application for a Restraint Order in terms
of
Section 26 of Act 121 of 1998
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 23 May 2025.
Restraint
order in terms of s26 of
Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121
of 1998
- Application for provision of reasonable legal expenses in
terms of
s 26(6)
- Application dismissed for inadequate disclosure.
JUDGMENT
MUDAU, J
[1]
This
is an application for the release of funds in terms of s 26 (6) of
the Prevention of Organised Crime Act
[1]
(“POCA”) for legal expenses in the applicant’s
criminal trial set down to proceed in this Court on 2 June 2025
under
case number SS 79/2021, in accordance with the estimate annexed to
the founding affidavit, and limited to an amount of R 2
000 000.00. (two million rand). The applicant brings the
application on an urgent basis pursuant to rule 6 (12) of the Uniform
Rules of Court. The application relates to two immovable properties –
Erf 2[…] Florida Lake Township, registered under
Title Deed
T[…] with the Johannesburg Deeds Registry as well as SS
Woodpecker, Unit 2[…] registered under Title Deed
S[…]
with the Pretoria Deeds Registry. The properties in issue are the
subject of a preservation order granted on 2 April
2021 in this Court
(per Matojane J, as he then was) under case number 2021/4094. It is
trite that in urgent applications, an applicant
must set out
explicitly the circumstances on which he relies that render the
matter urgent and the reason why he claims that he
cannot be afforded
substantial relief at a hearing in due course.
[2]
[2]
The
application is opposed by the second respondent. The first
respondent, the
curator
bonis,
filed
a notice to abide but, importantly, an affidavit setting out relevant
facts for the Court’s consideration in dealing
with this
application
.
POCA
has
been introduced inter alia, to combat organised crime, money
laundering and criminal gang activities, to prohibit racketeering
and
to provide for a range of related measures. One of its purposes
is to prevent criminals benefiting from the proceeds
of their
crimes. In this regard, Chapter 5 of POCA provides for the
restraint
[3]
,
confiscation
[4]
and
realisation
[5]
of property
in consistent with the stated objectives.
Background facts
[3]
The
facts are largely common cause. The applicant was arrested and
charged on 2 October 2020 on allegations of corruption, fraud
and
money laundering in terms of POCA, as well as offences relating to
the Tax Administration Act.
[6]
Act As indicated above, on 2 April 2021, the National Director of
Prosecution (“NDPP”) successfully brought an application
to restrain the applicant’s properties in terms of the
provisions of s 26 of POCA. The effect of the order is to restrain
the applicant from dealing with the relevant properties
and to safeguard them to satisfy a possible confiscation order to the
value of R46 817 636, 36 in this matter.
[4]
The applicant’s case is that while he
initially appointed attorneys of his own choice to represent him in
his criminal trial,
he could not afford said attorneys and thereafter
applied for Legal Aid. His application for Legal Aid was dismissed
and his appeal
is currently under consideration. In addressing the
question of urgency, the applicant’s version is that he was
only informed
of the possibility of an application of this nature on
17 March 2025 by the Honourable Mlambo JP. He could only raise the
fees
to instruct his attorneys for purposes of a substantive
application for a postponement as well as this application on 7 April
2025.
On 14 April 2025, the Honourable Ismail J granted the
application and ordered that this application must be brought by 20
April
2025. Ismail J then postponed the matter to 2 June 2025 for
trial
.
[5]
The urgent application in
casu
was launched and served on the
respondents on 17 April 2025 on the normal urgent roll on Thursday,
to be heard on the following
Tuesday. The respondents were given the
opportunity to respond and file papers. In this regard he approached
family and friends
who, despite earlier indications that they would
not be able to fund his trial, managed to obtain an amount of
R 300 000.00
to prepare and prosecute these applications
for postponement of the trial, release of the property under
restraint and appeal of
the application for legal aid funding. The
applicant estimates and has taken advice that his legal fees for a
term in the High
Court would amount to approximately R 2
070 000.00 including VAT, which he submits is reasonable if
consideration is
had to the fees required by his erstwhile attorneys,
which were substantially higher and the admissible fees on a taxed
basis
.
[6]
In accordance with the restraint order, the
applicant states he submitted monthly statements regarding his
personal assets and liabilities,
the latest of which was submitted in
April 2025. He confirms that the pension from his annuity amounts to
R 88 459.00
per month after tax deductions, and that he
further earns R 7 500.00 per month from the rental of his
property. His actual
expenses amount to R 77 545.00 per
month as set out in detail in Annexure VGS 6, leaving him with a
surplus of approximately
R 18 415.00 per month, which he
says is totally inadequate to fund his trial for the anticipated
whole term. In the founding
affidavit, the applicant states that the
statement relied upon (VGS 5) “constitutes a full disclosure of
all assets relating
to the determination of the value of realisable
property” held by himself
.
[7]
Regarding disclosure, it is common cause
that the restraint order (VGS 2) requires the following:
“
DISCLOSURE
BY DEFENDANTS AND/OR RESPONDENTS
1.37 In terms of section
26(7) of the POCA, the defendants and respondents are hereby ordered
to disclose to the
curator bonis
on affidavit in such form as
the curator bonis may determine forthwith, and in any event by no
later than within 10 days of service
of notice of this order, a
description and the whereabouts of:
1.37.1 all the property
(as defined in section 1 read with section 12(2) of the POCA),
whether or not it has been physically surrendered
into the possession
or otherwise placed under the effective control of the curator bonis,
and in the case of property that has
not yet been surrendered to the
curator bonis, the whereabouts of such property;
1.37.2 all the property
which, according to the present knowledge of the 1st and 2nd
defendants and respondents is to be transferred
to the 1st and 2nd
defendants at any time;
1.37.3 Any and all
affected gifts as defined in sections 12(1) and 16 of the POCA, made
by any of the defendants, together with
the name and address of the
donee;
1.38 The 1st and 2nd
defendants and respondents are further ordered to disclose to the
curator bonis
in an affidavit, as soon as they come to know of
it, the nature and the whereabouts of any property which they may
hereafter come
to learn is to be transferred to any defendant at any
time;
1.39 The 1st and 2nd
defendants and respondents are further required, on or before the 7
th
day of each month, to provide the
curator bonis
under oath
with monthly income and expenditure statements together with
supporting documentation.”
[8]
Significantly, the restraint order makes
provision for the release of funds for the payment of legal expenses
in the following terms:
“
1.42
The court may order the release of realisable property within the
control of the
curator bonis
if the 1st and/or 2nd defendant or respondents satisfies the court
that
1.42.1 he/she has made
full disclosure to the
curator bonis
under oath of all his/her
interests in property subject to restraint; and
1.42.2 he/she cannot meet
the expenses concerned out of his/her unrestrained property.”
[9]
On the question of urgency, the NDPP
contended that the applicant received notice of the restraint order
on 25 February 2021, which
is 4 years 2 months prior to this
application being filed. The applicant filed his first monthly income
and expenditure statement
as required by the order during May 2023,
which is 2 years 3 months after the order was granted. On 17 March
2025, Mlambo JP informed
the applicant of an application for the
release his assets as a viable option, which was 1 month before the
filing of this application.
The applicant’s attorneys of
record, BDK received instructions on 7 April 2025, and yet no
explanation is provided as to
what transpired in the 3 weeks between
17 March 2025 and 7 April 2025
.
[10]
Whilst
the criticism by the NDPP regarding the delay in the launch of this
application is not unfounded, there is however an overriding
consideration in enrolling the application as urgent. In South
Africa, the right to have a trial begin and conclude without
unreasonable
delay is a constitutional right enshrined in the Bill of
Rights. In terms of s 35 (3)(d) of the Constitution every accused
person
has a right to a fair trial, which includes the right to have
their trial begin and conclude without unreasonable delay. The right
to a fair trial also includes the right to choose and be represented
by a legal practitioner (s 135 (1) (f)
.
The decision by this court has an impact on these fundamental rights.
It is however
trite
that the right embodied in s 35(3)(f) of the Constitution
does not mean that an accused is entitled to the legal
services of
any counsel he or she chooses, regardless of his or her financial
situation
[7]
.
The applicable law
[11]
Section 26 (6) of POCA provides:
“
Without
derogating from the generality of the powers conferred by subsection
(1), a restraint order may make such provision as the
High Court may
think fit-
(a)
for the reasonable living expenses of a
person against whom the restraint order is being made and his or her
family or household;
and
(b)
for the reasonable legal expenses of such
person in connection with any proceedings instituted against him or
her in terms of this
Chapter or any criminal proceedings to which
such proceedings may relate
if
the court is satisfied that the person whose expenses must be
provided for has disclosed under oath all his or her interests
in
property subject to a restraint order and that the person cannot meet
the expenses concerned out of his or her unrestrained
property”.
[Emphasis added]
[12]
The
applicant, as the NDPP pointed out, has an insurmountable difficulty.
The NDPP points out that since the restraint order was
granted, the
applicant has not filed any application for living and legal
expenses. The NDPP contends, “on his own admission,
the
applicant could meet his expenses from unrestrained assets”.
The NDPP asserts that if the applicant had saved R 18
505 per
month for the last 4.5 years since his arrest, he could have had
R 999 270 available towards his legal expenses. The
NDPP
contends that, whilst the applicant’s assets were restrained –
“he continued with exorbitant monthly expenses.
He pays R 11
550 on credit cards and overdrafts. R 16 500 on groceries, R 7
200 on rent (this whilst he has his
own property), R 8 100 on a
domestic helper and garden services, R 2 098 on a cell phone,
R 2 000 for clothing,
R 1480 for DSTV, R 899 for
Wi-Fi, petrol at R 5 500 (the applicant is unemployed), over R 9
000 in respect
of medical fees, R 1 000 for his tithe and R 3
200 in respect of printing”
.
[8]
[13]
The
NDPP points out that, “in the absence of an earlier application
for legal expenses, or a legitimate explanation as to
how his legal
expenses was funded since his arrest, the NDPP can infer that the
applicant had funds at his disposal which is not
under restraint, at
least from when the rule nisi was granted, until when this
application was filed”.
[9]
[14]
In
his affidavit, the first respondent points out that: “[F]or the
8 (eight) month period in 2023 between May 2023 and January
2024, the
applicants' total expenses amount to R 300,718.00 (three hundred
thousand seven hundred and eighteen Rand). During this
same period
the applicant's total income was R 322,476.00 (three hundred and
twenty-two thousand four hundred and seventy-six Rand)”
.
[10]
[15]
The
first respondent further points out that: “[F]or the 12
(twelve) month period between January 2024 and January 2025, the
applicant's total expenses amount to R 793,367.00 (seven hundred and
ninety-three thousand three hundred and sixty-seven Rand)
and the
applicant's total income for this same period was R 847,571.00 (eight
hundred and forty-seven thousand five hundred and
seventy-one
Rand).”
[11]
Furthermore that: “[F]or the 3 (three) month period between
January 2025 and March 2025 the applicant's total expenses amount
to
R 337 993.00 (three hundred and thirty-seven thousand nine
hundred and ninety-three thousand Rand) and the applicant's
total
income for this same period was R 383 836.00 (three hundred
and eighty-three thousand eight hundred and thirty-six
thousand
Rand).
[12]
[16]
As
the last nail in the coffin, the Curator points out significantly
that: “[T]he applicant's income and expenses as disclosed
by
him have increased exponentially between the period May 2023 to March
2025. The applicant has failed however to provide a declaration
of
the increase in his income and/or expenses or supporting documents in
support of this increase”
.
[13]
[17]
The
applicant did not file a replying affidavit to the respondents
answering affidavits. Accordingly, there is no real and genuine
dispute on the facts before me. In what has become known as the
“
Plascon-Evans
rule”,
referred to by the Constitutional Court in
Democratic
Alliance in re Electoral Commission of South Africa v Minister of
Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs
[14]
as
follows
:
“
The Plascon-Evans rule
is that an application for final relief must be decided on the facts
stated by the respondent,
together with those which the applicant
states and which the respondent cannot deny, or of which its denials
plainly lack credence
and can be rejected outright on the
papers
”.
[15]
[18]
In
exercising its discretion under section 26 (6), a court must
satisfy itself of the following jurisdictional facts –
as
summarised by Rogers J (as he then was) in
Van
Heerden and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions and
Another:
[16]
“
(i) that
the person whose expenses must be provided for has disclosed under
oath all his or her interests in property subject
to a restraint
order; and (ii) that the person cannot meet the expenses
concerned out of his or her unrestrained property.
These
jurisdictional facts differ in formulation from those laid down in s
44 ( (2) of POCA. In particular, s 26 (6) does
not state
that the person must have submitted a sworn and full statement of all
his or her assets and liabilities; what he must
fully disclosed under
oath are all his or her interests in property subject to a restraint
order. However, and because the court
must also be satisfied that the
person cannot meet the expenses in question from unrestrained
property, a full disclosure of unrestrained
property is necessarily
required. Furthermore, a court is unlikely to be able properly to
exercise its discretion under S26 (6) unless
it also has full
information concerning the person’s liabilities.
[17]
[19]
In the absence of a full disclosure this
Court cannot exercise a proper discretion for the reasons set out by
the respondents alluded
to above. I am not satisfied that Mr Smith
made a full and frank disclosure of his restrained and unrestrained
assets. In the result,
the application stands to be dismissed with
costs
.
Order
[20]
Application is dismissed with costs
.
T P MUDAU
Judge of the High Court,
Johannesburg
Appearances
For
the Applicant:
Adv. Cronje Kriel
Instructed
by:
BDK Inc.
For
the 1
st
Respondent: No appearance
For
the 2
nd
Respondent: Adv. Suna de
Villiers
Instructed
by:
NDPP
Date of
Hearing:
07 May 2025
Date of
Judgment:
23 May 2025
[1]
121
of 1998.
[2]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin and Another (t/a Makin's
Furniture Manufacturers)
1977 (4) SA 135
(W) at 137.
[3]
Part
3 of chapter 5 of POCA
[4]
Part
2 of chapter 5 of POCA.
[5]
Part
4 of chapter 5 of POCA.
[6]
28
of 2011.
[7]
Fraser
v Absa Bank Ltd (National Director of Public Prosecutions As
Amicus
Curiae
)
[2006] ZACC 24
;
2007 (3) SA 484
(CC) para 67.
[8]
AA
para 55.1.
[9]
AA
para 58.
[10]
AA
para 28.1.
[11]
AA
para 8.2.
[12]
AA
para 28.3.
[13]
AA
para 29.
[14]
[2021] ZACC 30
;
2022
(1) BCLR 1 (CC).
[15]
Id
at
para 40 fn 15. See also
Ayres
v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services
[2022]
ZACC 12
;
2022 (5) BCLR 523
(CC);
2022 (2) SACR 123
(CC) at para 15
fn 12.
[16]
[2015] ZAWCHC 96.
[17]
Id
at para 50.
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