Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 188South Africa
MTN (Pty) Ltd v Madzonga and Others (19139/14) [2023] ZAGPJHC 188; 2023 (5) SA 548 (GJ) (7 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## MTN (Pty) Ltd v Madzonga and Others (19139/14) [2023] ZAGPJHC 188; 2023 (5) SA 548 (GJ) (7 March 2023)
MTN (Pty) Ltd v Madzonga and Others (19139/14) [2023] ZAGPJHC 188; 2023 (5) SA 548 (GJ) (7 March 2023)
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FLYNOTES:
DISCOVERY AND SELF-INCRIMINATION
CONSTITUTION
– Fair trial – Self-incrimination – Discovery –
Whether the right not to be compelled
to give self-incriminating
evidence extends further than testimonial utterances – Party
to a civil action is entitled
to refuse to discover material that
may tend to incriminate them in parallel criminal proceedings
arising from the same facts
– Constitution, s 35(3)(j).
I
N
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case No: 19139/14
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
7 March 2023
In the matter between:
MTN
(PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
ROBERT
MMBULAHENI MADZONGA
First
Respondent
NOZUKO
NXUSANI
Second
Respondent
NOZUKO
NXUSANI INCORPORATED
Third
Respondent
Summary
Constitutional law –
right against self-incrimination in section 35 (3) (j) of the
Constitution, 1996 – a party to a
civil action is entitled to
refuse to discover material that may tend to incriminate them in
parallel criminal proceedings arising
from the same facts.
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The applicant, MTN, seeks to compel discovery of a range of
documents relating to its action on a case of fraud against the
respondents.
The second and third respondents oppose the application.
The second respondent, Ms. Nxusani, is an attorney. Ms. Nxusani is
the
sole director of her own firm, which is cited as the third
respondent.
The
fraud alleged and the disclosures sought
2
The first respondent, Mr. Madzonga, was an employee of MTN. In
the main action, MTN alleges that Ms. Nxusani conspired with Mr.
Madzonga to issue instructions for work that MTN did not need, and
which was never performed, or which carried no value. Ms. Nxusani
would then present invoices for the work that Mr. Madzonga accepted
and on which he authorised payment. As a result of a series
of these
sham instructions, Ms. Nxusani’s firm was paid over R12
million. MTN alleges that both Mr. Madzonga and Ms. Nxusani
knew that
the work remunerated was not done or was not needed, and that the
need for the work was itself a contrivance designed
to defraud MTN of
the money paid over to Ms. Nxusani’s firm.
3
MTN now seeks to compel discovery of the second and third
respondents’ financial records to assist it in proving its
case.
The scope of the disclosure MTN seeks is quite broad, but it is
not necessary for me to deal with the nature of the documents sought
in any detail. They are, in the main, the third respondent’s
accounts, ledgers, Value Added Tax returns and audited financial
statements covering the period during which MTN says that the fraud
took place.
4
Ms. Nxusani resists the application on two bases. The first is
that the documents sought are not relevant to the issues in the main
action. That proposition need only be stated to be rejected. The
documents are plainly relevant to MTN’s case. I
n
any event
MTN need prove only that they might be relevant. MTN
has clearly crossed that threshold.
5
The relevance of the documents MTN seeks is confirmed by the
second basis on which Ms. Nxusani resists the application. Ms.
Nxusani
says that the documents may, if disclosed, tend to
incriminate her and her firm in parallel criminal proceedings arising
from the
same facts underlying MTN’s cause of action in this
case. I was informed from the bar that Ms. Nxusani recently appeared
in the criminal division of this court on those charges. Ms.
Roestorf, who appeared for the second and third respondents before
me, presented the attempt to compel discovery in these civil
proceedings, which have been rumbling on since 2014, and have only
recently been renewed by MTN, as an attempt to procure evidence for
the State in the criminal proceedings.
6
I cannot say whether that is the motive force behind this
application. But the fact that there are parallel criminal and civil
proceedings
being pursued simultaneously against Ms. Nxusani and her
firm based on fundamentally the same accusation of fraud is critical
to
any evaluation of whether they have a right to withhold disclosure
of potentially incriminating documents in the civil action. That
is
the question to which I now turn.
The
privilege against self-incrimination in the context of civil
proceedings to compel discovery
7
Counsel were unable to direct me to any domestic authority
which finally decides the question of whether a party may resist a
claim
for discovery in civil proceedings by relying on the
potentially incriminating nature of the documents sought to be
disclosed.
8
In
Adams v Moffat Hutchins & Co
1906 SC 343
, it was
said
obiter
that a party could “as of right”
resist discovery of documents that are “criminatory or penal”
(see page
346). That position was restated in
Mlama v Marine and
Trade Insurance Company
1978 (1) SA 401
(E) at page 402, and
again in
Mazele v Minister of Law and Order
1994 (3) 380 (E)
at page 386. But it does not seem that these courts were concerned
squarely with the question of whether the privilege
against
self-incrimination grounds a valid objection to discovery in civil
proceedings.
9
When the pre-constitutional courts actually attended to the
question of the extent of the privilege against self-incrimination,
the approach appears to have been that the privilege attaches only to
testimonial utterances. The distinction between testimonial
utterances and evidence generated through other means has long been
relied upon to suggest that there is in fact no privilege against
self-incrimination where a party is sought to be compelled to
co-operate in the production of real, as opposed to testimonial,
evidence.
10
In
Ex Parte Minister of Justice: In re Matamba
1941 AD
75
, Watermeyer JA held that the taking of a palm print from an
accused person does not compel that person to produce
self-incriminating
evidence because the accused person concerned is
“entirely passive. He is not being compelled to give evidence
or to confess,
any more than he is being compelled to give evidence
or confess when his photograph is being taken or when he is being put
upon
an identification parade or when he is being made to show a scar
in Court” (see pages 82 and 83).
11
I have some doubts about whether an accused person in this
position is really as passive as Watermeyer JA suggested, but there
is
obviously a distinction to be drawn between an accused person
being forced to make incriminating statements, and compelling an
accused person to participate in the production or disclosure of
other forms of potentially incriminating evidence. In
Levack v
Regional Magistrate, Wynberg
[2003] 1 All SA 22
(SCA) (“
Levack
”),
Cameron JA confirmed that the privilege against self-incrimination
does not extend to the taking of “autoptic”
evidence –
that is “evidence derived from the accused’s own bodily
features” (paragraphs 19 and 26).
12
The question before me, however, is how far, if at all, the
privilege against self-incrimination extends beyond precluding
compulsion
of testimony, into the terrain of forcing an accused
person to disclose, or help generate, documentary evidence that might
incriminate
them.
13
Herbstein and van Winsen
are firmly of the view that a
person who is ordered to produce documents is not thereby compelled
to incriminate themselves. They
support the position that “[a]
party ordered to disclose documents is merely required to confirm
that he or she has complied
with the order in the sense that he or
she has disclosed the existence of all relevant documents in his or
her possession and control.
Such party is required to say nothing
about the authenticity of the documents or their truth” (Adrian
Zuckerman, quoted with
approval in Herbstein and van Winsen
The
Civil Practice of the High Courts of South Africa
(5 ed) vol 1 p
809).
14
It was this position – that the privilege against
self-incrimination extends only to testimonial utterances and not to
compelled
documentary disclosure – that Mr. Martin, who
appeared for MTN, pressed in moving for the relief MTN now seeks.
15
In the UK, however, the approach has been somewhat different.
In
Rank Film Distributors
, Lord Fraser observed that, even if
an undertaking were given, or a rule laid down, that incriminating
material discovered in a
civil action could only be used for the
purposes of that action, the problem remains that “if the
incriminating information
given on discovery or in answer to
interrogatories were disclosed subsequently in open court in the
civil action, it might be heard
and might then be used in a criminal
prosecution against the defendant” (
Rank Film Distributors
Limited v Video Information Centre
[1981] All ER 76
at 84).
Substantially for that reason, the House of Lords held that the
privilege against self-incrimination entitles a party to
refuse to
comply with an Anton Piller order.
Rank Film Distributors
was
followed in
Dabelstein v Hildebrandt
1996 (3) SA 42
(C), where
Farlam J held that a party could refuse to point out and disclose
documents under an Anton Piller order where there
is “a real
and appreciable risk of criminal proceedings being taken against”
them (see page 66E-F).
16
An even more generous approach is suggested in
Erasmus
,
where the authors state flatly that “[a] party is not obliged
to discover a document which will tend to incriminate him
or expose
him to the risk of any kind of penalty or forfeiture” (Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice
,
RS 16, 2021,
D1-462A)
. Lord Fraser’s observation in
Rank Film
Distributions
appeared to be limited to situations in which it
was at least possible that criminal proceedings might follow the
civil action
at issue. However, the authors of
Erasmus
state
their position as if it were an absolute rule to be applied in any
civil action, whether or not there are parallel or possible
future
criminal proceedings.
17
The position stated in Erasmus is said to be derived, in part,
from section 14 of the Civil Proceedings and Evidence Act 25 of 1965
(“the CPEA”), which provides that “[a] witness may
not refuse to answer a question relevant to the issue, the
answering
of which has no tendency to incriminate himself, or to expose him to
penalty or forfeiture of any nature whatsoever,
by reason only or on
the sole ground that the answering of such question may establish or
tend to establish that he owes a debt
or is otherwise subject to a
civil suit”. But it is clear from the text of the CPEA that the
section 14 privilege extends
only to a refusal to answer questions.
The CPEA is not authority for the proposition that the privilege
extends beyond testimonial
utterances. It is in fact more consistent
with the narrower construction of the privilege preferred in
Herbstein and van Winsen
.
Section
35 (3) (j) of the Constitution, 1996
18
As illuminating as these authorities are, the question before
me must be decided, not on any common law or statutory test, but on
an interpretation of section 35 (3) (j) of the Constitution, 1996. In
South Africa, the privilege against self-incrimination is
not merely
a common law principle. It is an entrenched constitutional right.
Section 35 (3) (j) of the Constitution provides that
“[E]very
accused person has a right to a fair trial, which includes the right
. . . not to be compelled to give self-incriminating
evidence”.
19
None of the positions stated in the authorities I have
reviewed map neatly on to this text.
20
The first thing to note about section 35 (3) (j) is that it
applies only to “accused persons”. It was accepted before
me that Ms. Nxusani and her firm are “accused persons” –
their trial is pending – so I need not consider
the difficult
question of whether, as
Erasmus
appears to suggest, the right
against self-incrimination applies even where a person who has not
been “accused” of
anything is called upon to discover in
civil proceedings.
21
The second noteworthy feature of section 35 (3) (j) is that it
excludes a compulsion “to give self-incriminating evidence”.
On the face of the text, “to give self-incriminating evidence”
is not obviously restricted to a situation in which
an accused person
is forced into the witness box, or is compelled to answer
interrogatories, which is the restriction argued for
in
Herbstein
and van Winsen
. Even though “giving evidence” is the
shorthand often used to describe a witness getting into the box, the
plain textual
meaning of the words “give self-incriminating
evidence” is co-terminus with the words “disclose
incriminating
material”.
22
Whether section 35 (3) (j) extends further than testimonial
utterances is an issue that must be resolved through interpretation.
It is well-established that rights in the Bill of Rights must be
interpreted generously and purposively in their textual setting,
and
in the context created by the history of their denial to the vast
majority of South Africans (see
S v Makwanyane
[1995] ZACC 3
;
1995 (3) SA 391
(CC), paragraph 9 and
Government of the Republic of South Africa
2001 (1) SA 46
(CC), paragraphs 21 to 25).
23
I can find little warrant in these principles of
interpretation to restrict the meaning of section 35 (3) (j) to
testimonial utterances
made by an accused person. As I have already
pointed out, the text of the provision is not necessarily restricted
to them. To narrow
the application of 35 (3) (j) to testimonial
utterances would be inconsistent with the generous construction I am
enjoined to place
on the provision. It would also undercut the
purpose of the provision evaluated in historical context.
24
I need not rehearse here the long history of the abuse of
police powers that marks our shameful past. Torture, extrajudicial
executions,
unjust detention, fabrication of evidence and compulsion
of perjured testimony were critical means of enforcing Apartheid’s
perverse and evil superstructure. Although there is no suggestion of
an abuse of police powers in this case, the only way to put
that
history of abuse behind us is to commit to a generous system of
protections for all arrested and accused persons. The starting
point
must always be that an arrested or accused person is not required to
assist in their own prosecution (see
S v Mathebula
1997 SACR
10
(W) at page 19F-H). There may be exceptions to that starting
position carved out by statute over time. It seems plain that the
Supreme Court of Appeal held in
Levack
that statues that
authorise the taking of autoptic evidence (for example sections 36A
to 37 of t
he
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
)
constitute one such exception. Whatever the other exceptions
are, they will always have to be reasonable, justifiable and
consistent
with the values to which the Constitution is meant to give
effect (see section 36 of the Constitution). But exceptions they must
remain.
25
There is presently no statutory limitation on the right
against self-incrimination that applies in the context of civil
discovery
proceedings. Section 14 of the CPEA prevents a witness in a
civil action from refusing to answer a question where the answer
might
expose them to civil liability, but it re-affirms the right not
to be compelled to give self-incriminating evidence in the context
of
a civil trial. It has nothing to say about the discovery process.
26
In the absence of an express statutory limitation on the right
against self-incrimination in this context, I do not think that I
can
allow MTN in this case to secure by means of civil discovery
proceedings evidence that may clearly tend to incriminate the
second
and third respondents if it is produced in the criminal proceedings
currently pending against them. That would be at odds
with the
fundaments of section 35. Whether or not MTN would ultimately pass
any incriminating material on to the State in the pending
prosecution
is not the point. The mere fact that this is possible, and that there
is no obvious legal impediment to the material
being admitted in the
criminal proceedings, is enough to uphold the second and third
respondents’ objection to disclosure
on grounds of
self-incrimination.
27
To be clear, I hold only that it is a valid objection to
making discovery in civil proceedings that a party honestly believes
the
material sought to be discovered may incriminate them in parallel
criminal proceedings arising from the same facts. I say nothing
about
whether the objection would still be good if there were no criminal
proceedings pending, or if those proceedings have nothing
to do with
the civil action in which discovery is sought. Those cases await
future determination. Nor does this judgment have anything
to say
about the application of the right against self-incrimination to
disclosures that may have been, or may in future be, demanded
of Ms.
Nxusani by the Legal Practice Council in its disciplinary capacity.
28
It follows for all of these reasons that the second and third
respondents’ objection to discovering the documents the
applicant
seeks to compel must be upheld, and that the application to
compel discovery must be dismissed.
29
Accordingly, the application is dismissed with costs.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
26 January 2023
DECIDED
ON:
7 March 2023
For
the Applicant:
HWS Martin
Instructed
by:
Knowles Hussain Lindsay
For
the Second and
Third
Respondents:
AC Roestorf
(Heads
of argument drawn by J Peter SC)
Instructed
by:
Tomlinson Mnguni Attorneys
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