Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 358South Africa
Petse v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Others (2016/01339) [2024] ZAGPJHC 358 (12 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Petse v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Others (2016/01339) [2024] ZAGPJHC 358 (12 April 2024)
Petse v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Others (2016/01339) [2024] ZAGPJHC 358 (12 April 2024)
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sino date 12 April 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
###### IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
###### (GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 2016/01339
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
In
the matter between:
MANGALISO
PETSE
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF DEFENCE AND MILITARY VETERANS
First Respondent
DEPUTY
MINISTER OF DEFENCE AND MILITARY
VETERAN
Second Respondent
ACTING
DIRECTOR GENERAL OF DEFENCE AND
MILITARY
VETERANS
Third Respondent
CHAIRPERSON
OF PARLIAMENTS’ PORTFOLIO
COMMITTEE
ON DEFENCE AND MILITARY VETERANS
Fourth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF FINANCE
Fifth Respondent
In
re
:
MINISTER
OF DEFENCE AND MILITARY VETERANS
First Respondent
DEPUTY
MINISTER OF DEFENCE AND MILITARY
VETERANS
Second Respondent
ACTING
DIRECTOR GENERAL OF DEFENCE AND
MILITARY
VETERANS
Third Respondent
CHAIRPERSON
OF PARLIAMENTS’ PORTFOLIO
COMMITTEE
ON DEFENCE AND MILITARY VETERANS
Fourth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF FINANCE
Fifth Respondent
and
MANGALISO
PETSE
Applicant
JUDGMENT
Introduction
1
On 5 May
2022, Keightley J, as she then was, granted the following order.
“
1.
It is declared that the applicant is entitled to a benefit in terms
of regulation 4 and 5 of the 2014 regulations to the Military
Veterans Act, 18 of 2011 (“the Regulations"), read with
section 4 of the Military Pensions Act 84 of 1976, of such amount
as
may have been, and as may be, determined from time to time in terms
of sections 1(1)(viii) read with section 4 of Act 84 of
1976, on the
anniversary of each annual period calculated from 28 August 2016,
until the applicant's passing.
2.
The first respondent, with such assistance as may be required from
the second, third and fifth respondents, is directed to make
payment
to the applicant, within 30 days of service of this order, of the
total sum outstanding from 28 August 2016 owing to him
pursuant to
paragraph 1 above.
3.
The first respondent with such assistance as may be required from the
second, third and fifth respondents, is directed to make
payment of
such amount as contemplated in paragraph 1 above, for each future
annual period from the date of this order, until the
applicant passes
away.
4.
The first respondent with such assistance as may be required from the
second, third and fifth respondents, is directed, within
30 (thirty)
days of any relevant request by the applicant to:
4.1
issue an appropriate card or voucher acceptable to all public
transport operators in the Republic, in terms of regulation 12(3)
of
the Regulations;
4.2
provide access to all available business facilitation services
programmes, as contemplated in regulation 11 of the Regulations;
4.3
facilitate such available and suitable employment placement to the
applicant, as contemplated in regulation 8 of the Regulations;
4.4
provide access to relevant health care services at One Military
Hospital or, where appropriate, to provide the applicant with
a
referral letter for the provision of health care services at another
medical facility at the expense of the Department.
2
The
applicants in this application before me (first, second and third
applicants) are the respondents in the main application which
culminated in the aforementioned order of Keightley J (I will refer
to the parties as in the main application). The fourth and
fifth
respondents have not participated in the application and reference to
the “respondents” in this judgment does
not include them.
3
The
respondents seek to appeal the judgment and order of Keightley J and
to that end, delivered an application for leave to appeal
on 29
September 2022. The application was plainly well out of the 15 days
prescribed in rule 49(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court
and, as a
result, the respondents must seek and obtain condonation for the late
application, which the court may grant, on good
cause shown. However,
and notwithstanding the obviously late application for leave to
appeal, and the trite rule that a party must
seek condonation for
default of the rules as soon as it realises its default, the
respondents neglected to file an application
for condonation with the
application for leave to appeal.
4
The
application for leave to appeal was enrolled to be heard by Keightley
J on 10 November 2022 and, on 9 November 2022, a mere
hours before
the application for leave to appeal was to be heard, the respondents
delivered an application for condonation. The
application was not
accompanied by an application for a postponement and was opposed by
the applicant who sought the opportunity
to file an opposing
affidavit. Rightly in my respectful view, Keightley J struck the
application from the roll on 10 November 2022
with punitive costs
ordered against the respondents.
5
The
circumstances of the striking order are dispiritingly familiar as
will become evident further in this judgment, in particular,
the
respondents’ consistency in lackadaisically prosecuting the
leave to appeal. If only an ordinary South African trying
to
vindicate an order granted in his favour in May 2022 was not on the
receiving end of the respondents’ callous lack of
interest to
bring the matter to finality.
6
Before me
is an “
application for
re-enrolment/reinstatement of the application for leave to appeal
”
.
The application was delivered on 27 January 2024 and is opposed by
the respondent. The matter comes before me following a Directive
of
the Judge President issued on 24 July 2023 that the application for
reinstatement may be enrolled for hearing and the parties
were
informed on 26 January 2024 that the matter was enrolled for the week
5 to 9 February 2024 and, on 29 January 2024, my Registrar,
Ms Yvonne
Maja informed the parties that the matter would be heard on 6
February 2024. On Tuesday, 6 February 2024, when the matter
was
called there was no appearance for the respondents. I stood the
matter down to 14:00 with the direction to the applicant’s
counsel, Mr Moela, to contact the respondents’ attorney Mr
Kolin Thaver of the State Attorney, Johannesburg, to appear in
court
at 14:00. It was not to be and I, again, stood the matter down to 9
February 2024, 10:00, with certain directions that I
discuss below.
When the matter was re-called on 9 February 2024 at 10:00, again
there was no appearance for the respondents or
an explanation for the
non-appearance. The respondents had also not complied with my
directions. As he was entitled, the applicant’s
counsel sought
that the matter proceed and that the application be dismissed. I
accordingly proceeded to hear the matter.
7
Before I
deal with the merits of the application for reinstatement, it is
necessary that I discuss the facts that culminated in
the matter
being heard in the absence of representation for the applicants.
8
I have
referred to the email of 29 January 2024 from Ms Maja to the parties.
In response to that email, the respondents’
attorney, Mr
Thaver, responded by email on 30 January 2024 at 3:29 that
“
Dear
Ms Maja,
Your
email of 29 January 2024 has reference.
Kindly
be advised that Advocate Bokaba who is on brief in this matter has
just informed us that he is not available on the 5th of
February 2024
as he is acting in the Johannesburg High court. Further to that
junior counsel F Opperman has informed us that he
has withdrawn from
the matter as of 29 January 2024.
Yours
faithfully”
9
As appears
from the email, Mr Thaver did not say what should happen with the
matter. Ms Maja responded on the same day at 8:05 pm
that “
Kindly
upload and send the necessary document like Notice of
Removal/Withdrawal”
. It is
necessary to mention that Ms Maja did not represent to Mr Thaver that
her response was sent with my directions because it
was not. Mr
Thaver responded 2 days later on 1 February 2024 that:
“
Dear
Ms Maja,
Your
trailing email has reference.
Herewith
the notice of removal from the roll. Kindly note that we have just
had load shedding and I am experiencing problems uploading
the
document onto caselines. I shall persist and the document shall be
uploaded once we have access to caselines.”
10
Of course
I must not hold against Mr Thaver the problem visited upon him by the
unavailability of electricity supply over which
he has no control and
I have no reason to doubt that he responded to Ms Maja soonest his
electricity supply was restored.
11
Mr
Thaver’s email of 1 February was copied to the applicant’s
attorneys and it elicited a response directed to Ms Maja
on the same
day at 1:36 pm that:
“
Good
Day
Kindly find attached
letter for your attention. We also confirm that we are ready
to proceed with the matter as Mr.
Petse Mangaliso's Attorneys of
record. Any request for postponement by the State Attorney on Tuesday
06 February 2024 would be
vigorously opposed.”
12
I point
out that at this point Mr Thaver had not indicated that he would seek
that the matter be postponed and he never did at any
point in this
sad story of lack of care for the applicant’s cause and common
courtesy to the applicant and to the Court and
crude display of
unprofessional conduct and incompetence.
13
The
applicant’s attorneys sent a further email to Ms Maja on 2
February 2024 at 11:28 which reads,
“
Good
morning Ms Maja
Kindly take note that
the State Attorney Mr. Thaver has no right to unilaterally remove the
matter from the courts roll as he pleases.
The Court's roll belongs
to the Court and only the Court has the right to decide, after
hearing submissions from both parties on
the date of hearing, to
decide whether or not the matter may be removed from the roll.
The State Attorney
through Mr. Thaver are the ones who persisted for the natter to be
placed on the roll, and now cannot do as they
please and say the
matter must be removed from the roll. We urge the Court to protect
its processes from an abusive litigant such
as the State Attorney. We
also request that you bring this email to the attention of Honourable
Baloyi AJ as we are opposed to
the unilateral removal of the matter
from the roll by the State Attorney.”
14
The above
email is attached to a document filed by the applicant’s
attorneys titled “Notice of Objection to the
removal of
the matter from the roll” dated 5 February 2024 which states:
“
BE
PLEASED TO TAKE NOTICE THAT
the
respondents reject to applicants' notice of removal of the above
mentioned matter from the courts roll.
KINDLY
TAKE FURTHER NOTE THAT
the
respondent's attorneys have given reasons for such objections in an
email dated 02 February 2024 which was addressed and forwarded
to the
secretary of Honourable Baloyi AJ to bring to the Judge's attention
as well as the State Attorney Mr Thaver himself. Attached
hereto is
the said email marked “
A”
for ease of reference. Further reasons for objection would be advance
in Court.”
15
The emails
to Ms Maja were copied to Mr Thaver.
16
Regrettably,
the clear intention of the applicant to oppose the removal of the
matter from the roll and to proceed with the hearing
of the matter
did not rouse Mr Thaver to avail himself or to arrange for other
appearance for the respondents on 6 February 2024.
Neither did the
well-established rule of practice that after a matter is enrolled for
hearing, it may only be removed from the
roll by agreement of the
parties or with the leave of the court. There was plainly no
agreement from the applicant that the matter
would not proceed as
enrolled and the respondents were obliged to be present in court on 6
February 2024.
17
On 6
February 2024 when the matter was called, incomprehensibly there was
no appearance for the respondents while the applicant
appeared
through counsel, Mr Moela, and persisted in his position that the
matter be heard, - it would appear that Mr Thaver was
too busy with
more important matters than to appear or arrange for other appearance
in this matter that he enrolled. Unnecessary
in the circumstances, I
nonetheless exercised my discretion to afford the respondents an
opportunity to be represented in court
and directed Mr Moela to
contact Mr Thaver to inform him that I had stood the matter down to
14:00 on the same day for him to appear.
When the matter was
re-called at 14:00, Mr Moela reported that he called and sent a
message to Mr Thaver who responded by text
message that he is busy in
(another) court. Mr Moela submitted a copy of an email to Mr Thaver
advising him that the matter would
proceed at 14:00. Again, Mr Thaver
would not be bothered to appear or make arrangements for the
respondents to be otherwise represented.
Being the optimist, I again
decided to issue a directive as follows:
“
Direction
At the hearing of the
matter on 06 February 2024, 14:00, I issued the following direction
in the presence of the respondent’s
counsel and without
appearance for the applicants for reinstatement:
This matter is stood
down to 10:00, 9 February 2024.
The parties are
directed to make written submissions by 12:00, 8 February 2024 on the
following questions:
3.1 The status of
validity of the applicants' notice of removal from the roll delivered
on 6 February 2024.
3.2 The validity of
the opposition of removal from the roll and grounds for opposition.
3.3 the merits of the
reinstatement application – the respondent may supplement his
heads of argument that it (sic) has filed
or indicate that he stands
by the submission filed.
3.4 It is further
directed that the applicants for reinstatement are required to file
the heads of argument on the merits by 12:00,
8 February 2024.
Failure to do so will not preclude the court from hearing the matter
on 9 February 2024, 10:00 and the Judge will
hear argument on the
merits of the application and the questions in paragraph 3.1 and 3.2”
I ordered that the matter
stand down to 9 February for argument.
18
Counsel
for the applicant filed the supplementary submissions as I directed.
The respondents did not comply with my directive and
there was
neither an explanation nor appearance for the respondents when the
matter was recalled on Friday 9 February. I accordingly
proceeded to
hear the matter in the absence of the respondents or their legal
representatives or an explanation for their failure
to appear.
## Removal of matter from
the roll
Removal of matter from
the roll
19
The
removal of a matter from the roll is in all practical respects akin
to a postponement of a matter
sine die
.
Indeed this is what the respondents sought without asking. Once a
matter is enrolled for hearing by a Judge, as in the present
case,
and in the absence of an agreement of the parties, an enrolled matter
will only be removed from the roll with the leave
of the court.
The obvious reason for this is that the court has a duty to ensure
that matters are finalised as between the parties
without unnecessary
and unexplained delay.
20
The proper
and efficient administration of justice demands that the court must
be satisfied about the reasons why a matter cannot
proceed,
especially where the opponent opposes the removal from the roll or
postponement. In such circumstances, the removal of
a matter from the
roll is not for the taking – the court must be persuaded to
exercise its discretion in favour of the requesting
party. The
underlying consideration in the exercise of the court’s
discretion must be to do justice between the parties.
This, in my
view, is especially the case where a party that succeeded in the main
application, such as the applicant was, is delayed
from realising the
benefit of the order in their favour. A suggestion otherwise would
encourage sloven litigation with the knowledge
that, without any
consideration for prejudice to the opposing party, and in total
disregard for the efficient and proper administration
of court
process, an unprepared party will simply and unilaterally remove a
matter from the roll without explanation. This is precisely
what the
respondents sought to do in this case.
21
The
applicant opposes the removal of the matter from the roll on the
basis that,
1.
The matter having been enrolled, the
applicants required the leave of the court in the absence of an
agreement with the respondent.
I agree with the correctness of this
submission.
2.
The respondent is entitled to finality of
the matter. I agree with this too.
22
In the
absence of appearance for the respondents, I have not been favoured
with a satisfactory explanation why the matter should
not proceed.
The email to the Registrar is not an explanation to the court for the
simple reason that the court does not communicate
with parties by
email. This is especially significant when it is considered that the
applicant’s attorneys firmly informed
Mr Thaver of the
applicant’s opposition to a postponement of the matter and of
their intention to persist with the hearing
of the matter as
enrolled. It was not available to Mr Thaver to ignore the applicant’s
recorded opposition and to spurn the
opportunities I afforded him to
appear or make arrangements for the respondents otherwise. And yet
that is exactly what he did.
In any event, even if I had regard to
the reasons given to Ms Maja in the email of 30 January, namely, the
unavailability of counsel,
this is not a good enough reason of itself
for the matter not to be heard. The respondents would have had to
explain when they
became aware of the unavailability of their chosen
counsel, the reason why other counsel was not appointed and efforts
taken to
appoint other counsel and I would have to determine whether
the explanation provided is sufficiently satisfactory to warrant that
the matter be removed from the roll. No such explanation was properly
before me, even after I afforded the respondents two undeserved
opportunities to purge their discourtesy to the court and to the
applicant and to appear to address me on the intended removal
of the
matter from the roll. Accordingly, in the absence of a satisfactory
explanation, the Notice of Withdrawal stands to be disregarded
and I
do so. The applicant deserves that the application for reinstatement
must be heard and finally decided in the absence of
compelling
reasons otherwise and I determined that the matter proceed in the
respondents’ absence.
23
Finally, I
sadly must point out that, the issues about the employment of counsel
is the very reason that resulted in the application
for leave to
appeal before Keightley J being struck from the roll. This appears to
be a malady that the respondents and their attorney
have no urgency
to purge themselves of. This appears from the applicants’
explanation in the belated condonation application
delivered on 9
September 2023 when the matter was struck from the roll by Keightley
J. The following is the relevant part of the
affidavit in support of
condonation:
“
I
reiterate that Applicants addressed an e-mail to Judge Keightley's
Registrar, That respondents attorney of record and counsel,
to the
effect that in view of senior counsel’s late briefing as
aforesaid, the need for senior counsel to acquaint himself
with the
papers and consult with client for purposes of preparing an
application for condonation for the late filing of the application
for leave to appeal, which in the circumstances may be filed on the
eve of the hearing, there might be a need for postponement
and thus
requested a postponement of the matter for a week or the following
week as aforesaid.”
24
The less
said about the penchant to engage the Court by email, the better.
Re-enrolment/Reinstatement
25
The
applicant opposes the application for reinstatement of the
application for leave to appeal and seeks that the application be
dismissed on the grounds that - (i) the prospects of success in the
leave to appeal application are poor; and (ii) the applicants
perempted the order when they elected not to seek leave to appeal
within the prescribed period.
26
To succeed
with the application for reinstatement, the respondents were required
to explain their default which resulted in the
matter being struck
from the roll and to explain the default in full. In effect, an
application in such situation seeks condonation
of their default. The
court must consider whether the respondents have satisfactorily
explained their default which resulted in
the striking of the matter.
This is not all that I must consider. I must also consider prejudice
to the parties and fairness to
both parties. The interest of justice
must be the overriding consideration.
27
I have
already alluded to the late employment of counsel as a reason offered
for the filing of a condonation application a day before
the hearing
of the application for leave to appeal on 10 September 2023, an
application that was not accompanied by an application
for a
postponement. The affidavits in support of condonation of the late
application for leave to appeal, and for reinstatement
of the
application for leave to appeal offer no explanation why counsel was
briefed late; when counsel was briefed; when the respondents
became
aware that they were required to apply for condonation and why they
did not do so sooner; when the respondents became aware
they would
require a postponement of the matter and why they did not file an
application before the matter was called before Keightley
J. Instead,
the respondents state in the affidavit in support of the
reinstatement application that (at best ill-advised and at
worst
disingenuously in my view),
“
It
is important to highlight that the need and request for a
postponement was to accommodate the court and the respondent, to
consider
his position and to file an answering affidavit in response
thereto.”
“
The
applicants contend that as counsel for the respondent indicated that
they would require an opportunity to consider the condonation
application and file an answering affidavit in opposition thereto,
Keightley J ought to or could have postponed the hearing of
both
applications, to allow the respondents to do so, whereafter either
the application for condonation or both applications are
set down for
hearing on a date to be fixed by Her Ladyship Keightley J as was done
in setting down the application for leave to
appeal as aforesaid.”
“
On
Monday 7 November 2022 a letter via e-mail (annexure KM hereto), was
sent to the court, respondent's attorneys of record and
counsel,
requesting the postponement of the matter on the basis of the reasons
outlined therein in and in particular alerting the
court,
respondent’s attorneys of record and counsel of the
probabilities of the application for condonation not being finalised
before the hearing of the matter on 10 November 2022”
28
On this
“explanation”, it is the fault of Keightley J that the
matter was struck from the roll. Of course, this is a
false and
preposterous suggestion and need only be repeated to be rejected. A
postponement was refused because there was no proper
application for
a postponement with reasons for the postponement. Just as there is
none before me. Keightley J had no obligation
to postpone the matter
and the respondents lay no legal basis for such an entitlement that
they think they had in the circumstances.
Clearly, the respondents
and their attorney appear to believe, for unexplained reasons that is
best not to speculate, that all
they need do to avoid the matter
being finalised is to send emails to the Registrar and the Judge must
abide their wish. This attitude
is most regrettable coming from state
organs.
29
The
unavailability of counsel is not a satisfactory explanation for the
respondents’ unpreparedness to prosecute the application
for
leave to appeal when it was called. Neither is the late employment of
counsel. There is no valid reason that the respondents’
failure
to timeously employ counsel must be visited on the applicant and that
the administration of justice must suffer disrepute
as a result of
their attorney’s and their own incompetence.
30
The
applicant continues to suffer prejudice and the administration of
justice is brought into disrepute each day that the
applicant
is unable to derive benefit from the order of Keightley J. The order
of Keightley J is a money order and each day the
applicant is
deprived the opportunity to enjoy the practical benefit that flows
from the order. He loses interest that he would
have earned but for
the application for leave to appeal which in any event, does not
suspend the judgment and order of Keithley
J until condonation is
granted. In the circumstances, nothing precludes the applicant
executing on the order and this has not fazed
the respondents, and
yet, the respondents have not conducted themselves with any measure
of urgency or real intention to
get condonation.
31
In the
absence of a satisfactory explanation why the application for leave
to appeal should be reinstated on the roll, the applicant
must
succeed that the application must be dismissed. He deserves finality
in the matter. There is nothing before me that evidences
any
prejudice that the respondents may suffer if the application for
reinstatement is dismissed in the circumstances – they
spurned
the opportunity to place such evidence or explanation before me. The
application for reinstatement accordingly fails.
32
In the
light of my conclusion that the respondents have failed to provide a
satisfactory explanation for the reinstatement of the
application for
leave to appeal, and that the application fails for that reason, I do
not consider it necessary to consider the
prospects of success in the
application for leave to appeal and whether the respondents have
perempted the appeal.
Events post 9 February
2024
33
For
completeness, it is necessary that I address events that occurred
after the hearing of the matter.
34
On 9
February 2024 I reserved judgment. On 12 March, the respondents
uploaded Heads of Argument, and on 15 March, an affidavit deposed
by
Mr Thaver referred to as “Explanatory Affidavit”.
Predictably, this elicited an objection from the applicant’s
attorneys who filed a “
NOTICE OF
OBJECTION TO FILING OF APPLICANTS' ATTORNEY'S EXPLANATORY AFFIDAVIT
”
and an email to Ms Maja to bring the notice to my
attention. The email to Ms Maja was copied to Mr Thaver and
accordingly he became
aware of it.
35
The
respondents’ Heads of Argument and “Explanatory
Affidavit” were filed without my leave. It is plain to me
that
Mr Thaver opportunistically, if not dishonestly, thought that the
reservation of judgment was an opportunity for him to steal
the
moment to surreptitiously introduce the Heads of Argument and
“Explanatory Affidavit”. If this was done to create
the
impression that he complied with my directive, it would be most
shameful and deplorable conduct from an officer of the court.
36
The Heads
of Argument and “Explanatory Affidavit” not having been
filed with my leave, I have not taken them into account
and have
accordingly disregarded them. For that reason, it is not necessary to
address the applicant’s grounds of objection
and I do not.
Costs
37
The
respondents not having succeeded in the application, there is no
reason why the applicant should not be awarded costs.
38
The
conduct of the respondents in the manner that they have prosecuted
the application for leave to appeal is cynical and has served
only to
delay the applicant realising the benefit of a long-obtained order.
There is no justification for their conduct.
39
The
conduct of Mr Thaver to file heads of argument and a supposed
explanatory affidavit after judgment was reserved, without my
leave
and without seeking the consent of the applicant is at best
ill-advised and at worst dishonest. It is difficult to believe
that
he did not comprehend that it was not permissible. This kind of
conduct is especially concerning from an officer of the court
and
should not be tolerated by any court. This and the crude lack of care
and courtesy to the applicant and to the court warrants
a punitive
cost order. I intend to make an order accordingly which, regrettably,
will be borne by the taxpayer, including by me.
Conclusion
40
I
accordingly make the following order.
ORDER
1.
The application for the re-enrolment or
reinstatement of the application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
2.
The first, second and third respondents are
to pay costs on the attorney and client scale, the one paying the
other to be absolved.
MS BALOYI AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Heard:
6 and 9 February 2024
Judgment:
12 April 2024
APPEARANCES:
For the
Applicant:
Adv L Moela
Instructed
by:
Khumalo Attorneys Inc
For the
Respondent:
No appearance
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Johannesburg
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