Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 828South Africa
Lesedi Local Municipality v Municipal Gratuity Fund and Another (2024-067842) [2024] ZAGPJHC 828 (16 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 August 2024
Headnotes
a disciplinary inquiry into the conduct of the second respondent. On 30 January 2024, she was found guilty of gross misconduct, fraudulent misrepresentation and breach of trust, and dismissed. The second respondent has challenged her dismissal on both procedural and substantive grounds and the matter is pending before the relevant bargaining council.
Judgment
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## Lesedi Local Municipality v Municipal Gratuity Fund and Another (2024-067842) [2024] ZAGPJHC 828 (16 August 2024)
Lesedi Local Municipality v Municipal Gratuity Fund and Another (2024-067842) [2024] ZAGPJHC 828 (16 August 2024)
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sino date 16 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024-067842
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
In
the matter between:
LESEDI
LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
and
MUNICIPAL
GRATUITY FUND
First Respondent
MAHLOGONOLO
MPHAHLELE
Second Respondent
Delivered:
16 August 2024 – This judgment is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives via
email, uploading
it to CaseLines and releasing it to SAFLII.
ORDER
The
application is dismissed with costs, including the cost of counsel at
scale B.
JUDGMENT
BESTER
AJ:
[1]
The Lesedi Local Municipality applies urgently for an
interdict
restraining the first respondent, a fund registered in terms of the
Pension Funds Act, 24 of 1956
, from processing the second
respondent’s claim to have her pension benefits paid out to
her. The relief is sought pending
the finalisation of forensic
investigations into maladministration and misappropriation of bursary
funds by the second respondent
whilst the applicant employed her as a
training and development officer.
[2]
During her employment with the applicant, the second
respondent was
responsible for the administration of the applicant’s bursary
funds, which included processing applications
and payments to various
tertiary institutions. The applicant held a disciplinary inquiry into
the conduct of the second respondent.
On 30 January 2024, she
was found guilty of gross misconduct, fraudulent misrepresentation
and breach of trust, and dismissed.
The second respondent has
challenged her dismissal on both procedural and substantive grounds
and the matter is pending before
the relevant bargaining council.
[3]
The first respondent is a defined contribution fund providing
retirement benefits to municipal employees in various provinces.
The second respondent is a member of the first respondent.
# The relief sought
The relief sought
[4]
It is well
settled that an applicant for an interim interdict must establish (a)
a
prima
facie
right even if it is open to some doubt; (b) a reasonable apprehension
of irreparable and imminent harm to the right if an interdict
is not
granted; (c) that the balance of convenience favours the granting of
the interdict; and (d) that the applicant has no other
legal
remedy.
[1]
[5]
In
National
Gambling Board
[2]
the Constitutional Court confirmed the nature of an interdict as:
“
A court order
preserving or restoring the
status quo
pending the final
determination of the rights of the parties. It does not involve
a final determination of these rights and
does not affect their final
determination.”
[6]
Mr Moloi, appearing for the second respondent, challenged
the
applicant’s assertion that it seeks interim relief. He
pointed out that the interim interdict is sought pending
internal
processes, without reference to further proceedings at which the
issue of the second respondent’s liability will
be finally
determined. In the circumstances, he argued, the applicant asks
for final relief. Mr Mthombeni, appearing
for the
applicant, conceded the point and moved for an amendment to have the
interdict granted pending the institution of civil
proceedings for
recovery of funds. He did not, however, clearly articulate the
wording he would move for, nor present an
amended version of the
relief in a draft order. Because of the conclusions I reached
below, it is not necessary to consider
the issue of the amendment
further.
# The prima facie right
asserted
The prima facie right
asserted
[7]
Section 37D
of the
Pension Funds Act stipulates
the circumstances in
which a registered fund may deduct amounts from any benefits due to a
member. The applicant specifically
relies on
section
37D(1)(b)(2).
The section provides as follows:
“
(1) A
registered fund may –
...
(b)
deduct any due by a member to his employer on the date of his
retirement or on which he ceases to be a member
of the Fund, in
respect of –
...
(ii)
compensation (including any legal costs recoverable from the member
in a matter contemplated in sub-paragraph
(bb)) in respect of any
damage caused to the employer, by reason of any theft, dishonesty,
fraud or misconduct by the member, and
in respect of which –
(aa) the member has
in writing admitted liability to the employer; or
(bb) judgment has been
obtained against the member in any court, including a magistrates’
court, from any benefit payable
in respect of the member or a
beneficiary in terms of the rules of the fund, and pay such an amount
to the employer concerned;
(2) For
the purposes of paragraph (a)(ii)(bb) and (cc) of subsection (1), the
amounts so deducted shall be deemed
to be a benefit to which the
member becomes entitled on termination of his or her membership of
the fund for reasons other than
as a result of retirement or death
arising at the date of the transfer or the default.”
[8]
Section 37D
sets out exceptions to the general principles set out in
section 37A
designed to protect pension benefits against
inter
alia
execution. The object of
section 37D(1)(b)
is to protect an
employer’s rights to pursue the recovery of money
misappropriated by its employees.
[3]
For the section to be effective in its purpose, it must be
interpreted as allowing the withholding of payment of a member’s
benefits pending the determination of the member’s
liability.
[4]
[9]
The
applicant has to establish
prima
facie
that
it has reasonable prospects of success in obtaining a judgment
against the second respondent which would entitle it to receive
payments towards the judgment from her pension benefits.
[5]
The applicant thus has to establish a
prima
facie
case that it will obtain a judgment for recovery of damages from the
second respondent which she caused the applicant through theft,
dishonesty, fraud or misconduct. The reference to ‘misconduct’
in
section 73D(1)(ii)
has been interpreted as dishonest conduct, or
conduct involving an element of dishonesty, thus intentional
conduct.
[6]
# The applicant’s
case under scrutiny
The applicant’s
case under scrutiny
[10]
Mr Dlamini, the applicant’s Municipal Manager, deposed to the
founding
affidavit. The deponent states that “
it is
suspected that the applicant has lost more than R200 000,00
through maladministration, dishonesty, misconduct, and
misappropriation
of bursary funds”.
[11]
Presumably,
the applicant envisages relying on a claim for fraud or theft.
The allegations relied upon, do not reveal a
prima
facie
case
on either of those two causes of action.
[7]
[12]
So little is said by the applicant in the founding affidavit in
support of
its case, that it is possible to set it out here verbatim:
“
18. It was
discovered that the second respondent was about to send a signed
letter to UNISA on the letterhead of the Municipal
Manager. The
letter was dated 28 November 2022. In essence, the letter was
requesting UNISA to pay an amount of R20 000.00
into the
personal bank account of Mr John Mofokeng. What is surprising
is that Mr Mofokeng stated in his bursary application
that he
personally paid R8 560.00 for his studies, and it is worrisome
that he could have applied for such bursary while he
paid for
himself.
19. In
addition, on 11 March 2022, an amount of R20 000.00 was paid to
Tshwane University of Technology the same
day in which similar
amounts were paid to UNISA. This disturbing pattern although
sophisticated was designed to embezzle
the bursary funds. It is
against this background that forensic investigation has been
sanctioned to unravel this dubious
scheme and to determine the extent
of monies lost.”
[13]
Based on these two sparse paragraphs, the applicant contends it is
entitled
to interdict the payment of the whole of the second
respondent’s pension benefit.
[14]
The
principle is clear. In
Van
der Merwe
[8]
the Constitutional Court stated:
“
The applicants
must stand or fall by the factual averments in their affidavits which
are intended to support the cause of action
on which the relief
sought is based.”
[15]
In
Betlane
[9]
the
Constitutional Court was emphatic:
“
It is trite that
one ought to stand or fall by one’s notice of motion and the
averments made in one’s founding affidavit.”
[16]
The applicant did not attempt to improve its case in its replying
affidavit,
which includes only a verbatim repeat of paragraphs 18 and
19 of the founding affidavit, quoted above. It is thus not necessary
to consider whether the applicant ought to be allowed to deviate from
the rule.
[17]
The
applicant is required to set out the primary facts from which the
inferences, the secondary facts, may be obtained.
[10]
As the Supreme Court of Appeal explained in
Willcox
[11]
:
“
There is nothing
artificial or technical about the notion of primary facts.
Facts are conveniently called primary when they
are used as the basis
for inference as to the existence or non-existence of further facts,
which may be called, in relation to
primary facts, inferred or
secondary facts.”
[18]
Secondary
facts in the absence of the primary facts on which they are based are
nothing more than the deponent’s conclusions
which are the
expression of an opinion and do not constitute evidential material
capable of supporting a cause of action.
[12]
[19]
The
applicant has not provided primary facts; rather, it has simply
jumped to the legal conclusion that the second respondent is
guilty
of fraud and theft.
[13]
[20]
The applicant seeks to bolster its case with the fact that the second
respondent
was found guilty of various charges, including fraudulent
misrepresentation. It attaches the findings of the chairperson
of the disciplinary committee. It further relies on having
procured a similar order on 10 May 2024 against a different fund,
the
National Fund for Municipal Workers, where the second respondent is
also a member. The founding affidavit does not engage
with the
contents of the two documents, nor with the events that led to either
the disciplinary outcome or the earlier order.
[21]
When pressed to identify the evidence in support of the applicant’s
prima facie
case against the second respondent in the founding
affidavit, Mr Mthombeni, who appeared for the applicant, correctly
conceded that
the founding affidavit does not contain such evidence.
Instead, he sought to rely on the Chairperson’s findings, the
order obtained on 10 May 2024, and the terms of reference for the
forensic investigation.
[22]
The
applicant’s reliance on the Chairperson’s findings and
the judgment against the National Fund for Municipal Workers
does not
cure this deficiency. In
Helen
Suzman Foundation
[14]
the Constitutional Court endorsed what Joffe J said in
Swissborough
Diamond Mines
[15]
:
“
[I]t is not open
to an applicant or a respondent to merely annex to its affidavit
documentation and to request the court to have
regard to it.
What is required is the identification of the portions thereof on
which reliance is placed and an indication
of the case which is
sought to be made out on the strength thereof. If this were not
so the essence of our established practice
would be destroyed.
A party would not know what case must be met.”
[23]
In the same
judgment, the Constitutional Court endorsed what the Supreme Court of
Appeal said in
NDPP
v Zuma
[16]
:
“
It is not proper
for a court in motion proceedings to base its judgment on passages in
documents which have been annexed to the
papers when the conclusions
sought to be drawn from such passages have not been canvassed in the
affidavits. The reason is
manifest – the other party may
well be prejudiced because evidence may have been available to it to
refute the new case on
the facts. A party cannot be expected to
trawl through annexures to the opponent’s affidavit and to
speculate on the
possible relevance of facts therein contained.”
[24]
I nonetheless briefly venture into those documents, to illustrate the
dangers
of not doing so to the administration of justice. This is
especially relevant to urgent hearings, where matters must often be
decided
without the benefit of a careful study of all the available
supporting documents, and the Court must rely on the parties to
properly
present the evidence, and counsel to present their client’s
case in a manner befitting an officer of the court.
[25]
The Chairperson made the following findings against the second
respondent:
she used a colleague’s laptop without authority;
she contracted with an external service provider for venue hire
without
following appropriate protocols; she signed off on a letter
and learnership agreements without the requisite authority; she
failed
to return a laptop upon her suspension; and she took
unauthorised leave. What is entirely missing from these
findings, is
anything related to misappropriated bursary funds.
[26]
The closest reference in the Chairperson’s report is found in a
summary
of one of the witnesses’ evidence:
“
34. [The
witness] testified, in respect to the charge relating to the employee
having signed a letter addressed to UNISA regarding
the bursary
monies and upon her stumbling on the letter, that she required
information and could not obtain same from the employee
as she was
blocked and the employee would not respond to her emails and as such
she contacted a John who confirmed that he had
already paid UNISA and
as such requested a reimbursement.
35.
Thereafter, [the witness] went to look at the bursary application and
found an application for a bursary, however,
the amounts had a
significant difference; R 8 600 was requested but R 20 000
was paid.”
[27]
This payment did not feature in the Chairperson’s analysis and
was not
a basis for any of the findings. The basis for the
conclusion of fraudulent misrepresentation was the use of a
colleague’s
email address to send communication.
[28]
The Municipal Manager’s reliance on the Chairperson’s
findings
in support of the allegations that the second respondent is
suspected of having misappropriated funds is thus baseless.
Counsel’s
persistence with that line of argument is, to say the
least, disconcerting. Both the deponent and counsel contended
that
there was a link between the finding of fraudulent
misrepresentation by the Chairperson and the suspicion of
misappropriation of
funds. No such basis was laid in the
Chairperson’s report.
[29]
The covering letter under which the terms of reference for the
investigation
were sent to the Chairperson of the Disciplinary
Committee Board by the board member who prepared the terms of
reference, Mr Taylor,
deserves mention. The letter presents the
second respondent’s dismissal as being a consequence of her
having fraudulently
caused R20 000 to be deposited into UNISA’s
bank account. The letter further states that it subsequently came to
the
knowledge of the applicant (without any indication of how) that
another R20 000 was deposited into the Tshwane University of
Technology’s bank account on the same day. The letter
thereafter states that the applicant “
is desirous to
ascertain whether additional misconduct was perpetrated by Ms
Mphahlele. This may have an effect on her pension
payout from
the LLM”
.
[30]
It is thus clear that the high watermark of the purported suspicion
amounts
to R40 000, although no evidence in support thereof has been
produced. It thus remains a mystery how the Municipal Manager
could allege in the founding affidavit that the second respondent is
suspected of having misappropriated R200 000.
[31]
Mr Mthombeni also urged me to grant an order on the strength of the
previous
order. That judgment did not make a final finding on
the second respondent’s liability that would be binding on her.
It was also granted against another fund and the order is thus not
binding on the first respondent. This court must decide the
case
before it on its own merits.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[32]
I find that the applicant has not shown that it has a
prima facie
right to obtain judgment against the second respondent which it may
satisfy from her pension benefits. In the result, it
is not
necessary to consider the further requirements for an interim
interdict.
[33]
There is no reason why the ordinary rule that costs should follow the
result
should not be applied here. I therefore make the
following order:
The
application is dismissed with costs, including the cost of counsel at
scale B.
A
Bester
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Heard on:
4 July 2024
Judgment Date:
16 August 2024
Counsel for the
Applicant:
Mr P
Mthombeni, Instructed by Raphela Attorneys Inc.
First Respondent:
No appearance
Counsel for Second
Respondent:
Mr LM Moloi,
instructed by Masekwameng Inc.
[1]
National
Treasury and Other v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others
2012
(6) SA 23
(CC) in [41] to [45], approving
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
and
Webster
v Mitchell
1948
(1) SA 1186 (W).
[2]
National
Gambling Board v Premier, Kwa-Zulu Natal and Others
[2001] ZACC 8
;
2002 (2) SA 715
(CC) in [49], approving of LTC Harms’
definition in
The
Law of South Africa first reissue, Vol. 11 para 314.
[3]
Highveld
Steel & Vanadium Incorporation Ltd v Oosthuizen
2009 (4) SA 1
(SCA) in [16].
[4]
Highveld
above;
South
African Broadcasting Corporation SOC Ltd v South African
Broadcasting Corporation Pension Fund and Others
2019 (4) SA 608
(GJ) in [84].
[5]
SABC
above
in [86];
Highveld
above.
[6]
Moodley
v Scottburgh / Umzinto North Local Transitional Council and Another
2000 (4) SA 524
(D);
SABC
above
in [81].
[7]
For fraud, see
inter
alia Quartermark Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mkhwanazi and Another
2014 (3) SA 96
(SCA) and for the
condictio
furtiva
,
see for instance
Crots
v Pretorius
2010 (6) SA 512 (SCA).
[8]
Van der
Merwe and Another v Taylor N.O. and Others
2008 (1) SA 1
(CC) in [122].
[9]
Betlane
v Shelly Court CC
2011 (1) SA 388
(CC) in [29].
[10]
Willcox
and Others v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1960
(4) SA 599
(A) at 602A;
Radebe
v Eastern Transvaal Development Board
1988 (2) SA 785
(A) at 792 I – 793 G/H.
[11]
Willcox
and Others
above
at 601 J – 602 A.
[12]
Willcox
above;
Radebe
above;
Die
Dros (Pty) Ltd and Another v Telefon Beverages CC and Others
2003 (4) SA 207
(C) at [28]. For the correct approach to
drawing inference, see for instance
South
African Post Office v De Lacy and Another
2009
(5) SA 255
(SCA) in [35].
[13]
See for instance
Radebe
above.
[14]
Helen
Suzman Foundation v President of the Republic of South Africa and
Others
2015 (2) SA 1
(CC) in [35] footnote 35.
[15]
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and Others v Government of the Republic of
South Africa and Others
1999 (2) SA 279
(T) at 324 G.
[16]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) in [47].
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