Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 589South Africa
Nobre and Another v Sneech (15236/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 589 (30 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 May 2023
Headnotes
by, Griffen which was controlled by Mr Nobre.
Judgment
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## Nobre and Another v Sneech (15236/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 589 (30 May 2023)
Nobre and Another v Sneech (15236/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 589 (30 May 2023)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 15236/2018
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
30.05.23
In
the matter between:
NOBRE,
RUI MIGUEL RODRIGUES
First Applicant
RN GRIFFIN
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LIMITED
Second Applicant
And
SNEECH,
BARRY HYLTON
Respondent
Neutral Citation
:
Nobre,
Rui Miguel Rodrigues v Sneech, Barry Hylton
(Case
NO: 15236/2018) [2023] ZAGP JHC 589 (30 May 2023)
ORDER
[1]
The
respondent is declared to be in contempt of the order of Lagrange J
of 16 July 2019 under case number 15236/2018 (the order).
[2]
In
consequence of this declaration the respondent is sentenced to 60
days imprisonment which sentence is suspended on condition
that he is
not again found to be in contempt of the order or any other order of
court.
[3]
Mr
Sneech is to pay the costs of this application on the scale as
between attorney and client.
JUDGMENT
Fisher J
Introduction
[1]
This
is an application for a declaration of contempt of court against the
respondent, Mr Sneech and an order that he be imprisoned
for a period
of 30 days or more. The order in question declares him a vexatious
litigant and precludes him from bringing legal
proceedings against
the applicants or which implicate their interests.
[2]
The
applicants, Mr Nobre and his company, Griffen argue that a compelling
order in the form of a suspended sentence is not appropriate
because
of the repeated, wilful and remorseless approach of Mr Sneech to the
extensive and unrelenting litigation that he has embroiled
the
applicants in since he lost an arbitration against them in 2007.
The issues
[3]
Mr
Sneech concedes the vexatious litigant order, knowledge of the order
and breach thereof.
[4]
It is settled law
that the applicants must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
respondent was deliberate and
mala
fide
in
breaching the order.
[1]
[5]
Mr
Sneech concedes and understands that he bears an evidential burden to
show that he was not deliberate or
mala
fide
.
[6]
Mr
Sneech’s case is, in essence, that he misunderstood the legal
position. He did not intend to breach the order he says.
He seeks to
explain that he did not believe that the proceedings which he
instituted against the applicants were hit by the order.
He alleges
that he has latterly accepted his mistake. He argues that, because he
misunderstood the position, it should be found
by this court that he
was not in wilful contempt.
[7]
The
issue is thus whether Mr Mr Sneech is to be believed as to his lack
of understanding or whether, on the undisputed procedural
background,
the applicant has established beyond reasonable doubt that his
contempt was deliberate and in bad faith.
Procedural background
[8]
To
understand Mr Sneech’s defence it is necessary to have
reference to the long and complicated history of litigation between
the parties. It dates back to 2007.
[9]
Mr
Sneech represented himself in this litigation before me until the
days before the final hearing of the matter when he obtained
the
services of an attorney and counsel. It appears that up until
then he had been without representation since at least
August 2016.
[10]
Between
2007 and 2016 Mr Sneech was serially represented by four sets of
firms of attorneys. The fact that Mr Sneech had attorneys
during this
period did not mean that he left the proceedings completely in their
hands. He would appear in person from time to
time if he felt moved
to do so. He has shown himself in my Court to be able in presenting
his arguments. He is articulate and appears
to be intelligent.
[11]
On
16 July 2019, this court declared Mr Sneech to be a vexatious
litigant pursuant to the applicants’ application for such
declaration in a vexatious litigant application which came before
LeGrange J in this court.
[12]
On
21 January 2020 Mr Sneech’s estate was provisionally
sequestrated per the judgment of Lombard AJ and on 23 June 2020 he
was finally sequestrated per Goedhart AJ. He has sought to appeal and
set these orders aside. In the course of doing so he has
made
allegations of bias against Goedhart AJ and incompetence against
Lombard AJ.
[13]
Mr
Sneech’s sequestration and the declaration that he is a
vexatious litigant and thus cannot institute legal proceedings
which
affect the interests the applicants without leave of the court are
central to this application for a declaration of contempt.
It is the
litigation which flows from the sequestration which is one of the
offending legal processes.
[14]
It
is helpful to go back to where the relationship between Mr Nobre and
Mr Sneech started. For this we must go back to the incorporation
of
Blue Dot Properties 56 (Pty) Ltd (Blue Dot) in 1998. Mr Nobre
was its first director and all its shares were held by,
Griffen which
was controlled by Mr Nobre.
[15]
In
November 1998 Blue Dot purchased a commercial property for
approximately R 19 million. In January 1999 Blue Dot
leased the property to Midas Ltd. This was a valuable 10-year lease.
Around this time Mr Sneech was appointed a director of Blue
Dot. At
the same time 50% of the issued shares were transferred to a company
controlled by Mr Sneech, Hannington Ltd registered
in the British
Virgin Islands.
[16]
The
sole income of Blue Dot was the monthly rental payment from the Midas
lease. The entire rental was paid directly to the bank
which had
financed the immovable property.
[17]
The
business relationship between Mr Nobre and Mr Sneech progressed to a
point where they were to part ways. There was a sale of
shares by
Hannington to Griffen in 2003 which should have meant the end of
their commercial relationship. But this was not to be.
[18]
During
March 2007 Mr Sneech brought an action for damages against Griffen on
the basis of a cession of Hannington’s alleged
claim for
damages. The gravamen of the complaint was that Mr Nobre on behalf of
Griffen had fraudulently withheld information pertaining
to the
renewal of the lease with Midas which influenced the sale of shares
to Hannington’s detriment.
[19]
The
action was ultimately referred to arbitration by the parties before
Mr Michael Kuper SC.
[20]
After
a lengthy arbitration Mr Sneech’s claim was dismissed with
costs.
[21]
Mr
Sneech took Mr Kuper’s award on appeal to an agreed appeal
tribunal comprising retired Justice of the Constitutional Court,
Johan Kriegler, retired former President of the Supreme Court of
Appeal, Justice Craig Howie and Advocate Alistair Franklin SC.
[22]
The
findings and award of Mr Kuper SC were upheld and the appeal was
dismissed with costs on 13 June 2011.
[23]
Mr
Sneech then brought a review of the arbitration and appeal award. At
that stage he had already run up an untaxed bill of R 4
million in
respect of costs awarded against him in the proceedings.
[24]
The
review was dismissed by Sutherland J (as he then was). Mr Sneech’s
application for leave to appeal was also dismissed.
The respondent
then sought leave to the SCA which was refused.
[25]
An
attempt to obtain payment of taxed costs from Mr Sneech was met with
a
nulla bona
return.
[26]
Shortly
after this Mr Sneech threatened Mr Nobre with criminal charges of
theft and fraud if he was not paid an amount of money.
[27]
Payment
of the costs of the arbitration which had been awarded to Mr Nobre
was then sought. In response, Mr Sneech threatened to
bring an
application to have the award set aside on grounds of perjury and
fraud. The threatened application never came.
[28]
In
May 2014 Mr Nobre issued an application to have the award and the
appeal award made an order of court. Mr Sneech filed
a notice
to oppose a month later. No answering affidavits followed.
[29]
The
applications were duly set down on the unopposed roll only to be met
at the last minute with a notice in terms of rule 6(5)(d)(iii)
in
which prescription was raised as a point of law. This resulted in
postponement and the further frustration of the orders sought
by Mr
Nobre in the form of hapless interlocutory litigation at the hands of
Mr Sneech.
[30]
By
May 2016 the applicants were no closer to obtaining the orders sought
in relation to both awards. The litigation launched by
Mr Sneech in
order to frustrate the obtaining of the orders was relentless.
[31]
At
this stage, Mr Sneech resorted also to the criminal processes. He
laid criminal charges against Mr Nobre in June 2016. These
charges
have not been pursued.
[32]
In
addition, he laid criminal charges against the arbitrator and the
appeal tribunal on the basis that they had allegedly aided
and
abetted corruption. He also reported the advocates involved to the
General Council of the Bar
[33]
The
applications to have the awards made orders were again set down in
June 2016 before van der Linde J. After the dismissal of
an
application for postponement and counter application raised by Mr
Sneech, the awards were finally made orders by van der Linde
J on 24
June 2016.
[34]
A
late application for leave to appeal was refused by van der Linde J
in September 2016.
[35]
An
application for leave to appeal to the SCA was then filed a month
late.
[36]
In
these applications for leave to appeal there were the oft repeated
charges of fraud and perjury against Mr Nobre. Mr Sneech
also
dealt with his criminal charges against the members of the
arbitration panels. He raised bias in that Kuper SC, Franklin SC
and
van der Linde J had all been members of Group 621 as was Mr Andre
Gautschi SC who is Mr Nobre’s lead counsel in this
case.
[37]
In
essence, the allegation was that these men had engaged in a
conspiracy which Sneech contended was akin to “match fixing”.
Mr Sneech later went as far as to state that he had acquired
information by “chance” that the sister of Franklin SC,
who was a member of the arbitration appeal tribunal, was married to
the brother of Mr Gautschi. This was false and apparently an
attempt
to bolster his conspiracy theory.
[38]
The
application for leave to the SCA was refused.
[39]
Mr
Sneech then took the avenue of seeking a reconsideration by the
President of the SCA. This was refused on 30 May 2017.
[40]
On
03 July 2017, having been refused leave to appeal by van der Linde J,
the SCA and its President, Sneech delivered an application
for leave
to appeal to the Full Bench of the High Court. This application was
duly declared an irregular step and Mr Sneech was
ordered to pay
punitive costs.
[41]
Mr
Sneech then brought an action against Mr Nobre and Blue Dot alleging
that he was entitled to VAT refunds which had been misappropriated
by
Mr Nobre. Summary judgment was sought and leave to defend granted.
This action was not pursued.
[42]
Mr
Sneech has also instituted an action in terms of section 38 of
the1973 Companies Act which also was not proceeded with.
[43]
As
I have stated, in mid- 2019, as a result of his unrelenting and
mostly ill-conceived litigation, Mr Sneech was declared a vexatious
litigant.
[44]
An
application for leave to appeal followed and the stance taken by Mr
Sneech was that this would suspend the vexatious litigant
order so
that he could continue litigating. In that he was personally no
legally represented he apparently believed himself entitled
to
litigate with relative impunity.
[45]
The
applicants then brought an application to put the order into
immediate operation in terms of section 18 of the Superior Court
Act
which succeeded. The application for leave to appeal the
vexatious litigant order has not been proceeded with by Mr Sneech.
[46]
Ultimately, there was no other avenue open to Mr
Sneech and the substantial costs became due and payable. The costs
were not paid
and this led to the application for his sequestration.
[47]
The
sequestration order and the vexatious litigant order each present an
impediment to the institution of any further proceedings
by Mr Sneech
– he would need the leave of the court because of the vexatious
litigant order and he would need the permission
of his trustees for
litigation to ensue for his estate.
[48]
However, Mr Sneech was undeterred. He continued to
litigate and it is for this reason that this application for contempt
has been
brought. I move to deal with Mr Sneech’s continued
litigation in the face of these two orders.
The continued litigation by Mr
Sneech
[49]
On
3 June 2020 and without leave of the above Court, Mr Sneech issued an
application purportedly in terms of rule 53 of the Uniform
Rules
seeking an order that the writs of execution issued against him by
the registrar in respect of the taxed costs forming the
basis for the
sequestration be reviewed and set aside. The aim was obviously to
unseat the sequestration order.
[50]
Mr
Nobre’s attorney, Mr Paul Kampel immediately notified Mr Sneech
that he was in contempt of the vexatious litigant
order and invited
him to withdraw the rule 53 application. Mr Sneech refused and said
he would persist in the application and oppose
any contempt
proceedings.
[51]
The
applicants next delivered an application in terms of rule 30 to
declare the application an irregular step.
[52]
On
23 September 2020 the applicants delivered this contempt application.
On the same day Mr Sneech instituted a defamation action
against Mr
Kampel.
[53]
On
10 March 2021 I heard the rule 30 application and a number of other
interlocutory applications instituted prior to the vexatious
litigant
order, including the application to set aside the rule 53
application, which I granted.
[54]
On
1 October 2021 Mr Sneech made a belated application for leave to
appeal his sequestration to the Constitutional Court. At this
stage a
final trustee in Mr Sneech’s estate had not yet been appointed.
[55]
Mr
Sneech sought to delay the determination of the matters before me in
light of these pending matters.
[56]
On
12 October 2021 I directed that the matters be set down after the
final trustee had been appointed and the Constitutional Court
had
ruled on the application.
[57]
The
Constitutional Court dismissed Mr Sneech’s application for
leave on 10 January 2022. On 1 June 2022 the Master
appointed two final trustees to Mr Sneech’s estate.
[58]
As
I have said, on the day that this contempt application was delivered
an action for defamation against Mr Kampel was also delivered.
In
this action Mr Sneech complained of allegations made by Mr Kampel on
instruction of his clients in court papers in the litigation.
[59]
A
rule 30 application based on the vexatious litigant order was
delivered by Mr Kampel in respect of this action and the action
was
duly set aside.
[60]
On
03 August 2022 Mr Sneech laid a charge against Mr Kampel with the
Legal Practice Council. His complaint was based on the assertion
that
Mr Kampel was aiding and abetting the applicants “to try to
enforce an award in the full knowledge that it was unenforceable
and
in the full knowledge that the writs relied on by him to sequestrate
[Mr Sneech] are illegal”.
[61]
This
contention is repeatedly made notwithstanding the procedural history
above which shows that the arbitral award has been upheld
by an
appeal panel and the sequestration confirmed all the way up to the
President of the SCA and latterly the Constitutional Court.
[62]
This
contempt application was set down for hearing before me as part of my
Commercial Court Management of these matters. I have
already handed
down orders in respect of most of the other litigation.
The contempt proceedings
[63]
The
applicants allege that, although he is not legally qualified, Mr
Sneech is an astute litigant who has a deep understanding of
procedure. They refer to the fact that he has, over more than 15
years, shown himself to be adept at exploiting the rules of court
and
legal principles generally. They argue that his resort to
protestations of lack of understanding when it suits his purpose
are
a ruse.
[64]
During
November 2022 the applicants filed a supplementary affidavit in this
contempt application. Its purpose was to bring to the
Court’s
attention the conduct of Mr Sneech with reference to his alleged
further and allegedly compounding contemptuous behaviour
in the
proceedings following the filing of the founding affidavit in
September 2020.
[65]
The
allegations in Mr Sneech’s affidavits in the applications
for leave to appeal reflect a trenchant and unabashed refusal
to
accept the binding nature of court findings despite the many failed
attempts to appeal and set them aside.
[66]
In
his complaint to the Legal Practice Council against Mr Kampel dated 3
August 2022 the respondent once again makes clear his disregard
for
the multiplicity of Court orders of this Court in respect of which he
has exhausted his remedies. He states in relation to
Mr Kampel:
“
There
are six essential complaints which I will summarise hereunder, the
most serious of which is that he is aiding and abetting
his client to
enforce an award in the full knowledge that it was improperly
obtained and unenforceable and in the full knowledge
that the writs
relied on by him to sequestrate me are illegal and have prescribed.”
[67]
In
his supplementary answering affidavit, filed in this application on
05 December 2022, Mr Sneech continues to reiterate this position.
He
also puts up a new argument that the bills of costs for which he is
liable and which led to his sequestration have been “padded”
by which he appears to mean inflated. This is notwithstanding that
the bills have be taxed by the Taxing Master of each relevant
court.
[68]
The
applicants argue that the respondent will disobey the consequences of
court orders until he has achieved a result in his favour
or, more
accurately put, his idea of a result he will accept.
[69]
On
16 January 2023 a Commercial Court Management meeting was conducted
with the legal representatives of the applicants including
senior and
junior counsel. Mr Sneech was, as usual, unrepresented. At the
meeting a date was arranged for the hearing of the application
being
16 March 2023.
[70]
I
expressed that it may be prudent for Mr Sneech to seek legal advice
in relation to the hearing given the seriousness of the allegations
and the prayer for direct imprisonment.
[71]
On
the day of the hearing, Mr Sneech sought to file a further
supplementary affidavit. No condonation application was brought
but it was briefly explained by Mr Sneech in the affidavit that he
had not had funds with which to brief an attorney and counsel
until
shortly before the hearing.
[72]
This
affidavit constituted an entirely changed and chastened position. It
was drawn with the assistance of counsel including senior
counsel.
[73]
The
belatedly filed affidavit starts off with an expression of
appreciation for the encouragement of the court to seek legal
assistance
which was given in January 2023.
[74]
Mr
Sneech then expresses that the advice now received from counsel has
led to something of a Damascene conversion.
[75]
He
admits that his past conduct, viewed objectively, is contemptuous of
the Court.
[76]
He
explains that he was informed by an unnamed court registrar that he
should bring proceedings in terms of rule 53. He says that
he acted
in good faith on this “advice’’. He says that he
believed that he “was merely proceeding to review
the
administrative action of the Taxing Master” and that the
interests of the applicants would not be affected this review.
[77]
He
explains further that his convictions as to this legal position were
not displaced by the correspondence from the applicants
to the effect
that he was in contempt of the vexatious litigation order. He seeks
to convey that he was sincere in the belief that
he was entitled to
bring the rule 53 proceedings despite the staunch and detailed
opposition of such proceedings by the applicants.
[78]
He
expresses the same compunction in relation to the action against Mr
Kampel. He explains that he believed that because the action
was not
against the applicants it would not be hit by the order. He alleges
also that he had held the belief that such an
application would
not affect the interests of the applicants as contemplated in the
order. Again, he concedes his mistake.
[79]
In
relation to his failure to seek legal advice and permission from his
trustees and the court before proceeding he claims that
he did not
have the resources.
[80]
Mr
Sneech was present in the virtual hearing of the application and
represented by counsel, Derek Milne briefed by Howard Woolf
Attorneys.
[81]
At
the hearing Mr Sneech was constrained, after a stand-down and
consultation with his legal representatives in the midst
of argument
and at the courts probing finally to concede that Kuper SC’s
award is not a nullity, all court orders against
him (whether
contained in a judgment or in a registrar issued court order) are
binding on him and that the vexatious litigant order
was binding on
him from the date on which he received notice of the section 18 order
putting it into operation and effect, namely
5 March 2020.
[82]
On
the basis of these formal concessions Mr Griffen conceded that he
would be hard pressed to seek the direct imprisonment. He however
pressed for the declaration of contempt and coercive order.
Analysis
[83]
Mr
Sneech’s defence of lack of understanding of the meaning of the
order was made at the very last minute.
[84]
In
light of the years of abuse of court process it comes too late and
rings with insincerity. It is a last-minute attempt at a reprieve.
[85]
I
was given no explanation as to why the affidavit was delivered on the
day before the hearing. As I have said, the seriousness
of the
application and the fact that it was prudent for Mr Sneech to seek
legal advice had been expressed by this court some three
months
before the hearing. The fact that Mr Sneech felt himself entitled to
file this affidavit without seeking condonation or
permission
suggests to this Court that Mr Sneech operates on an understanding
that the court processes are not binding on him and
that he can push
the boundaries of what is acceptable conduct with impunity. His
allegations against members of the judiciary and
tribunal members
that have been involved in his cases reflect a distain which adds to
this general impression.
[86]
The
exculpatory version in the supplementary affidavit in which Mr Sneech
casts himself as a vulnerable and incompetent litigant
who did not
understand that what he was doing was wrong needs to be examined in
light of the undisputed facts.
[87]
I
will deal with each of the offending processes with reference to
whether it would stretch the bounds of credibility to find that
there
is a reasonable doubt as to Mr Sneech’s
wilfulness
and malice.
The rule 53
application
[88]
It is helpful to start with the terms of the
vexatious litigant order. It reads as follows:
“
1.
The respondent Mr Barry Hylton Mr Sneech is declared a vexatious
litigant in terms of section 2(1)(b) and (c) of the Vexatious
Proceedings Act 3 of 1956 for an indefinite period.
2. No legal proceedings
may be instituted by the respondent against:
2.1 the applicants, or
2.2 any other person if
the either of the applicants has a legal interest in the proceedings
instituted against that person.”
[89]
The
question is whether it is at all credible that Mr Sneech could have
believed that this clear and ambiguous order was subject
to his
interpretation.
[90]
As
I have said, Mr Sneech’s liability under the taxed bills of
costs formed a cornerstone in the web of litigation to which
the
applicants had been subjected. It is this barrage of
ill-conceived legal action that the vexatious litigant order was
directed at ending. It is simply inconceivable that Mr Sneech could
not have understood that the rule 53 application to which the
applicants were parties constituted a legal proceeding against them
or that it did not implicate their interests. His protestations
to
the effect that he thought that the order did not apply to these
proceedings because they were the setting aside of an administrative
process makes no sense.
[91]
It
also makes no sense that Mr Sneech would take the advice of a
registrar over that of a senior attorney. Mr Sneech could not have
been so persuaded that he was not in danger of breaching the order
that he could, in good conscience, simply ignore the possibility
that
Mr Kampel was stating the law correctly.
[92]
At
best for Mr Sneech, he showed a reckless and deliberate disregard for
the order of court; at worst he contrived a scheme where
he would
later pretend to be in ignorance as a defence to contempt
proceedings. On both scenarios he is guilty of contempt.
[93]
To
my mind it is clear from the long history of abusive litigation that
Mr Sneech is a canny businessman who has honed his skills
in relation
to litigation processes over the years. The affidavits and other
court documents drafted by him show that he has skills
and knowledge
which far exceed those of a lay litigant. He also has an
accounting qualification at tertiary level and has
operated as a
property developer and commercial landlord for some years. He is bold
and opinionated in his stating of his case.
He has expressly said
that he will not give up fighting for what are, in his view, his
rights.
The action for defamation
[94]
While
it is correct that the applicants were not parties to this process,
Mr Sneech would have appreciated how such an action would
implicate
the broader litigation. It is obvious that if pressure is placed,
personally, on an attorney in relation to his conduct
of litigation,
this is likely to have a deleterious effect on the manner in which he
carries out his instructions from his clients.
[95]
Mr
Sneech has shown himself to have a propensity to engage in personal
attacks on those involved in the litigation. He has sought
to
intimidate Mr Kampel, laid criminal charges against him and reported
him to the LPC.
[96]
These
legal and extra-judicial processes are not launched for the purposes
of obtaining legitimate redress in relation to wrongs
inflicted on Mr
Sneech. They are aimed directly at seeking some advantage in the
litigation.
[97]
There
can be no doubt that, as such, the action for defamation was
instituted with malice and in a direct bid to affect the rights
of
the applicants in the litigation.
[98]
The
action for defamation was set aside on 29 September 2022 with costs
on the basis that it contravened the vexatious litigant
order.
Conclusion
[99]
Mr
Sneech cannot escape a finding that he has acted deliberately and
maliciously in breaching the clear terms of the vexatious litigant
order. This is established beyond doubt.
[100]
He
has, however, conceded in extremis that he will, at last, bow to the
authority of the court. For this reason, I will not grant
the direct
imprisonment claimed. I must state, however, that were it not for Mr
Sneech’s last minute capitulation, he was
at risk of direct
imprisonment.
[101]
The
fact remains that Mr Sneech appears constantly to be on the look-out
for creative ways to flout constraints of the orders which
bind him.
This maverick disposition means that this court must protect its
authority by putting in place coercive measures.
Order
[102]
I
thus make the following order:
1.
The
respondent is declared to be in contempt of the order of Lagrange J
of 16 July 2019 under case number 15236/2018 (the order).
2.
In
consequence of this declaration the respondent is sentenced to 60
days imprisonment which sentence is suspended on condition
that he is
not found to be in contempt of the order or any other order of court.
3.
Mr
Sneech is to pay the costs of this application on the scale as
between attorney and client.
D FISHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
[1]
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006]
ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA).
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