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[1999] ZASCA 101
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National Director of Public Prosecutions of South Africa v Carolus and Others (162/99) [1999] ZASCA 101; [2000] 1 All SA 302 (A) (1 December 1999)
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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
In the matter between
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
OF SOUTH AFRICA
APPELLANT
AND
GG CAROLUS AND OTHERS
RESPONDENT
BEFORE: MAHOMED CJ, OLIVIER, ZULMAN JJA,
HEARD: 22 NOVEMBER 1999
________________________________________________________________
J U D G M E N T
________________________________________________________________
FARLAM
AJA:
[1] This is an appeal, brought with the leave of the Court a quo, against the
order made by Blignault J, sitting in the Cape of Good Hope
High Court, on 15 April 1999, to the effect that orders made on 15 March
1999 by
Moosa AJ in terms of sections 38, 42 and 43 of the Prevention of Organised Crime
Act 121 of 1998 (“the Act”)
be rescinded and that the appellant pay
the respondents’ costs on the party and party scale.
[2] The judgment
of Blignault J, which has been reported (see National Director of Public
Prosecutions v Carolus and Others, 1999 (2) SACR 27 (C)) was followed by
Hurt J, sitting in the Durban and Coast Local Division, in National Director
of Public Prosecutions v P J Meyer (case No 6441/99), a decision given on
29 July 1999.
[3] The main order made by Moosa AJ and was a preservation
order in terms of section 38 of the Act. It prohibited the first respondent
and any other person from dealing in any manner with certain properties which
were listed in two annexures to the order, the first
dealing with certain
immovable properties and the second with certain movable property.
[4] It was
common cause between the parties that the facts alleged by the appellant as the
basis for his contention that a preservation
order should be made in respect of
the properties listed in the annexures to Moosa A J’s order all related to
activities or
offences allegedly committed before 21 January 1999, the date on
which the Act came into operation.
[5] The decision of the learned judge in
the Court a quo to rescind the orders made by Moosa A J was based on two
grounds, viz. (1) that chapter 6 of the Act, which contained the sections
relied
on by the appellant in support of his application for a preservation order, was
not retrospective with the result that it
did not apply to the alleged facts
relied on by the appellant in support of his application for a preservation
order and (2) that
on the evidence adduced by the appellant there were no
reasonable grounds from which the inference could be drawn that any of the
properties fell within the categories of property in respect of which a
preservation order could be made, i.e. that none of them
was an
“instrumentality of an offence” or “proceeds of unlawful
activities”.
[6] In view of the decision to which he had come on the
two points mentioned above the learned judge did not decide a further point
which was raised in the proceedings before him, viz. whether certain provisions
of the Act are unconstitutional.
[7] When the matter was argued in this Court
the parties were requested to confine their submissions initially to the first
point
decided in the Court a quo, viz. whether chapter 6 of the Act is
retrospective. It was agreed that if this point were decided in favour of the
appellant an
opportunity would be afforded to the parties to address arguments
at a later date on the other matters referred to above.
[8] Before the
parties’ submissions and the judgment of Blignault J on the
retrospectivity point are considered it is necessary
for me to summarise and in
some instances to quote in full the main provisions in the Act and then to say
something about retrospective
legislation, degrees of retrospectivity and the
terminology used in respect thereof.
[9] The main considerations which
prompted the passing of the Act are set out in the Preamble, which before it was
amended by Act
38 of 1999 was in the following terms:
“Preamble. - Whereas the Bill of Rights in the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act No. 108 of 1996), enshrines the rights of all people in the Republic and affirms the democratic values of human dignity, equality and freedom;
AND WHEREAS the Constitution places a duty on the State to respect, protect, promote and fulfil the rights in the Bill of Rights;
AND WHEREAS there is a rapid growth of organised crime, money laundering and criminal gang activities nationally and internationally and since organised crime has internationally been identified as an international security threat;
AND WHEREAS organised crime, money laundering and criminal gang activities infringe on the rights of the people as enshrined in the Bill of Rights;
AND WHEREAS it is the right of every person to be protected from fear, intimidation and physical harm caused by the criminal activities of violent gangs and individuals;
AND WHEREAS organised crime, money laundering and criminal gang activities, both individually and collectively, present a danger to public order and safety and economic stability, and have the potential to inflict social damage;
AND WHEREAS the South African common law and statutory law fail to deal effectively with organised crime, money laundering and criminal gang activities, and also fail to keep pace with international measures aimed at dealing effectively with organised crime, money laundering and criminal gang activities;
AND BEARING IN MIND that it is usually very difficult to prove the
direct involvement of organised crime leaders in particular
cases, because they do not perform the actual criminal activities themselves,
it
is necessary to criminalise the management of, and related conduct in
connection with enterprises which are involved in a pattern
of racketeering
activity;
AND WHEREAS persons should not benefit from the fruits of organised crime and money laundering, legislation is necessary for the preservation and forfeiture of property which is concerned in the commission or suspected commission of an offence;
AND WHEREAS there is a need to devote such forfeited assets and proceeds to the combatting of organised crime and money laundering;
AND WHEREAS the pervasive presence of criminal gangs in many communities is harmful to the well being of those communities, it is necessary to criminalise participation in or promotion of criminal gang activities”.
[10] The Act itself is divided into
eight chapters. In what follows I shall quote from the Act as it was before it
was amended by
Act 38 of 1999.
[11] The first chapter, headed
“Definitions and Interpretations”, consists of a section (section 1)
which contains sixteen
definition provisions, of which it is necessary to quote
those relating to the categories of property in respect of which preservation
orders under section 38 can be made, viz. “instrumentality of an
offence” and “proceeds of unlawful activities”,
as well as the
definitions of “pattern of criminal gang activity” and
“pattern of racketeering activity”:
“ ‘instrumentality of an offence’ means any property which is concerned in the commission or suspected commission of an offence, whether within the Republic or elsewhere;
‘proceeds of unlawful activities’, means any property or part thereof or any service, advantage, benefit or reward which was derived, received or retained, directly or indirectly, in connection with or as a result of any unlawful activity carried on by any person, whether in the Republic or elsewhere, except for purposes of Chapter 5 where it means -
(a) any unlawful activity carried on by any person; or
(b) any act or omission outside the Republic which, if it had occurred in the Republic, would have constituted an unlawful activity,
and includes any property representing property so derived;
‘pattern of criminal gang activity includes the commission of two or more criminal offences referred to in Schedule 1: Provided that at least one of those offences occurred after the date of commencement of Chapter 4 and the last of those offences occurred within three years after a prior offence and the offences were committed -
(a) on separate occasions; or
(b) on the same occasion, by two or more persons who are members of, or belong to, the same criminal gang;
‘Pattern of racketeering activity’ means the planned, ongoing, continuous or repeated participation or involvement in any offence referred to in Schedule 1, of which one of the offences occurred after the commencement of this Act and the last offence occurred within 10 years (excluding any period of imprisonment) after the commission of such prior offence referred to in Schedule 1”
[12] The second
chapter, as the heading indicates, deals with offences relating to racketeering
activities. Its provisions appear
to be modelled on, or at least strongly
influenced by, a statute passed by the United States Congress in 1970, viz the
Racketeer
Influenced and Corrupt Organisations Act
(“RICO”).
[13] The third chapter deals with offences relating to
proceeds of unlawful activities. Among the offences relating to the proceeds
of
unlawful activities created by the chapter is an offence described in the
marginal note to section 4 as “money laundering”.
Section 6 deals
with the acquisition, possession or use of proceeds of unlawful activities. It
reads as follows:
“Any person who-
(a) acquires;
(b) uses; or
(c) has
possession,
of property and who knows or ought reasonably to have known that it is or forms part of the proceeds of unlawful activities of another person, shall be guilty of an offence.”
The provisions in this chapter are for
the most part re-enactments of the provisions in chapter 5 of the Proceeds of
Crime Act 76
of 1996 (“the Proceeds Act”), which came into operation
on 16 May 1997 and was repealed by the Act. Section 6 is substantially
a
re-enactment of section 30 of the Proceeds Act.
[14] The fourth chapter deals
with offences relating to criminal gang activities and, like chapter 2, appears
to be modelled on certain
provisions in the RICO Act.
[15] Chapter 5, which
deals with the proceeds of unlawful activities, is very largely a re-enactment
of the first four chapters of
the Proceeds Act, which was enacted by Parliament
pursuant to proposals made by the Law Commission in its report entitled
International Co-operation in Criminal Prosecutions ( project 98), in
which an account was given of the initiatives taken in the British Commonwealth
and elsewhere to combat large-scale
criminal activity, inter alia, by
enacting legislation providing for the confiscation of the profits of organised
crime. These developments had induced Parliament
in 1992 to enact the Drugs and
Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992, which come into operation on 30 April 1993.
That Act provided,
in Chapter V, for confiscation orders and restraint orders in
respect of realisable property which were similar to those already
in existence
in various Commonwealth countries and which were directed at the proceeds of
drug offences. The Law Commission recommended
that the statutory regime
providing for the forfeiture of the proceeds of drug offences should be extended
to all offences and the
draft bill annexed to its report, which was largely
based on legislation already in existence elsewhere in the Commonwealth, was
enacted by Parliament as the Proceeds Act.
[16] For a survey of the
developments in the Commonwealth, particularly in Australia, which led to
enactment of legislation introducing
(or in some case re-introducing) forfeiture
procedures designed to strengthen the arm of the State in combating organised
crime,
particularly certain offences such as drug offences, see the judgment of
Kirby P, with whom Mahoney and Hendley JJA concurred, given
in the New South
Wales Court of Appeal in DPP v Toro-Martinez and Others (1993) 33 NSWLR
82 at 86-87.
[17] Chapter 5 of the Act provides for the making of
confiscation orders against persons convicted of offences, which orders are
designed to force the convicted persons to disgorge the proceeds they have
received as a result of the offences of which they have
been convicted and as a
result of other criminal activity which the court finds to be sufficiently
related to those offences. Before
making a confiscation order the court
concerned holds an enquiry in order to determine the value of the benefits
received by the
accused in connection with the criminal activity in respect of
which the order is to be made.
[18] Provision is also made in chapter 5 for
restraint orders to be made by the High Court prohibiting persons from dealing
with
property which may be realised to satisfy a confiscation order, for the
seizure of such property and for the appointment of a curator
bonis to take care
of the property until it is realised or the restraint order is
rescinded.
[19] Confiscation orders, which have the effect of civil judgments
against the accused person in question, are satisfied from the
proceeds of
property held by that person or certain gifts made by the accused person to
other persons.
[20] It is clear from section 12 (3) and section 19 (1) of the
Act, which are both contained in chapter 5, that the provisions of
chapter 5
(as was the case with the first four chapters of the Proceeds Act) are
retrospective in the sense that in determining the
value of the proceeds of an
accused person’s unlawful activities the Court is not confined to those
activities which took place
after the coming into operation of the Act or the
Proceeds Act but is obliged to consider also unlawful activities which took
place
before the Act came into operation.
Section 12 (3) reads as
follows:
“For the purposes of this Chapter, a person has benefited from unlawful activity if he or she has at any time, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, received any advantage, payment, service or reward including any property or part thereof in connection with any criminal activity carried on by him or her or by any other person.”
Section 19 (1) is in the following
terms:
“Subject to the provisions of subsection (2), the value of a defendant’s proceeds of unlawful activities shall be the sum of the values of the payments or other rewards received by him or her at any time, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, in connection with the criminal activity carried on by him or her or any other person.”
(The emphasis is mine.)
[21] In
contradistinction to Chapter 5, which provides for orders directed at persons
convicted of criminal offences, Chapter 6, which
is headed “Civil Recovery
of Property”, makes provision for orders to be made for the forfeiture of
property which is
tainted because it is linked to the commission of crime either
because it is proved, on a balance of probabilities, to be “an
instrumentality of an offence” referred to in Schedule 1 of the Act or
because it is proved, according to the same standard
of proof, to be “the
proceeds of unlawful activities”. Such orders may be made even if no one
has been convicted of
having used the property or of having been guilty of the
unlawful activities of which the property is said to be the proceeds.
[22] Mr
Seligson SC, who appeared with Mr Jamie for the appellant,
stated that the provisions in this chapter were modelled on a statute recently
enacted in New South Wales, the
Criminal Assets Recovery Act,
1990.
[23] Section 38 of the Act, which provides for the making by a High
Court of preservation of property orders in respect of certain
property, reads
as follows:
“38. Preservation of property orders.-
(1) The National Director may by way of an ex parte application apply to a High Court for an order prohibiting any person, subject to such conditions and exceptions as may be specified in the order, from dealing in any manner with any property.
(2) The High Court shall make an order referred to in
subsection (1) if there are reasonable grounds to believe that the property
concerned-
(a) is an instrumentality of an offence referred to in Schedule
1; or
(b) is the proceeds of unlawful activities.
. .
.”
[24] Subsequent sections provide, inter alia, for the
giving of notice of preservation of property orders (section 39), the duration
of preservation of property orders (section
40),the seizure of property subject
to preservation orders (section 41), the appointment of a curator bonis
in respect of property (section 42), orders directed to registrars of deeds in
respect of immovable property subject to preservation
orders (section 43) and
the variation and recission of preservation orders (section 47).
[25] Part 3
of Chapter 6 deals with forfeiture orders.
Section 48, which deals with
applications for forfeiture orders, reads as
follows:
“48. Application for forfeiture order. -
(1) If a preservation of property order is in force the National Director may apply to a High Court for an order forfeiting to the State all or any of the property that is subject to the preservation of property order.
(2) The National Director shall give 14 days notice of an
application under subsection (1) to every person who entered an appearance
in
terms of section 39 (3).
(3) A notice under subsection (2) shall be served in
the manner in which a summons whereby civil proceedings in the High Court are
commenced, is served.
(4) Any person who entered an appearance in terms of
section 39 (3) may appear at the application under subsection (1)-
(a) to
oppose the making of the order; or
(b) to apply for an order-
(i) excluding his or her interest in that property from the operation of
the order; or
(ii) varying the operation of the order in respect of that
property,
and may adduce evidence at the hearing of the
application.”
[26] After dealing in section 49 with cases where
persons alleging an interest in property which is subject to a preservation
order
apply for leave to enter appearance in terms of section 39 (3), the Act
provides in section 50 for the making of forfeiture orders.
The section
contains the following:
“50 Making of forfeiture order. -
(1) The High Court shall, subject to section 52, make an order applied
for under section 48(1) if the Court finds on a balance of probabilities that the property concerned-
(a) is an instrumentality of an offence referred to in schedule 1; or
(b) is the proceeds of unlawful activities.
(2) The High Court may, when it makes a forfeiture order or at any time
thereafter, make any ancillary orders that it considers appropriate, including
orders for and with respect to facilitating the transfer to the State of property forfeited to the State under such an order.
(3) The absence of a person whose interest in property may be affected
by a forfeiture order does not prevent the High Court from making the order.
(4) The validity of an order under subsection (1) is not affected by the
outcome of criminal proceedings, or of an investigation with a view to institute such proceedings, in respect of an offence with which the property concerned is in some way associated.”
[27] Section 52, which provides for the making of orders excluding certain
interests in property from the operation of forfeiture orders, as far as is material, reads as follows:
“(1) The High Court may, on application -
(a) under section 48 (3) [which is presumably a misprint for section 48 (4)]; or
(b) by a person referred to in section 49(4) [i.e., a person given leave to enter an appearance late in order to oppose the making of a forfeiture order or to apply for an order excluding his or her interest in the property concerned from the operation of a forfeiture order in respect thereof],
and when it makes a forfeiture order, make an order excluding certain interests in property which is subject to the order, from the operation thereof.
(2) The High Court may make an order under subsection (1) if it finds on
a balance of probabilities that the applicant for such an order -
(a) had acquired the interest concerned legally; and
(b) neither knew nor had reasonable grounds to suspect that the property in which the interest is held -
(i) is an instrumentality of an offence referred to in Schedule 1; or
(ii) is the proceeds of unlawful activities.”
[28] Section 54 provides for the situation where a person affected by a forfeiture order did not receive notice of the application therefor. Subsection (1) provides that such a person may apply for an order excluding his or her interest in the property concerned from the operation of the order or varying the operation of the order in respect of such property.
Subsection (8) provides as follows:
“(8) The High Court may make an order under subsection (1) if it finds on
a balance of probabilities that the applicant for such an order -
(a) had acquired the interest concerned legally; and
(b) neither knew nor had reasonable grounds to suspect that the property in which the interest is held -
(i) is an instrumentality of an offence referred to in Schedule 1; or
(ii) is the proceeds of unlawful activities.”
[29] In terms
of section 56(2) on the date when a forfeiture order takes effect the property
subject to the order is forfeited to
the State and vests in the curator
bonis appointed in respect thereof on behalf of the State.
[30] Section 57(1) provides for the sale of the forfeited property by the curator bonis, subject to any order for the exclusion of interests made, inter alia, in terms of section 52(2)(a)
The presumption against
retrospectivity
[31] An important legal rule forming part of what may be
described as our legal culture provides that no statute is to be construed
as
having retrospective operation (in the sense of taking away or impairing a
vested right acquired under existing laws) unless the
legislature clearly
intended the statute to have that effect: see Peterson v Cuthbert & Co
Ltd 1945 AD 420 at 430. In the context of penalties for criminal offences
(which is the subject now under consideration) this Court laid down in
R v
Sillas 1959 (4) SA 305 (A) at 311 E - F that where a penalty is increased
the accused is entitled to be treated on the basis of the penalty existing at
the date of the offence, and that a penalty cannot without express words or
clear implication, (my emphasis) be increased against a wrongdoer after the
commission of the offence (per Schreiner JA). In the same case it was further
held by Schreiner JA that the basic rationale of the presumption is that the
Legislature must be taken not to have intended anything
unjust.
Consistent
with the underlying rationale of the presumption and the requirement that it can
be rebutted only by express terms or
clear implication, is the rule that if the
court is left in doubt as to the operation of the statute, the law as existing
before
the enactment must be applied. This was correctly stated by Van Winsen
AJ in Njobe v Njobe and Dube NO 1950 (4) SA 545 (C) at 552 as
follows:
“The amending Proclamation is avowedly purporting to make retrospective a state of affairs which did not previously have retrospective effect. If because of its inept wording, the Proclamation leaves in doubt the nature and extent of its retrospective effect, then so much of the previously existing legal position as is not clearly and unambiguously affected by the amending Proclamation must be treated as unaffected thereby.”
[32] This canon of interpretation was
described by my brother Olivier JA in Transnet Ltd v Chairman, National
Transport Commission 1999 (4) SA 1 (SCA) at 7 A as a “time-honoured
principle” and in Gardner v Lucas (1878) 3 App Cas.
582, a decision of the House of Lords, Lord Blackburn (at 603) described it as a
“general rule, not merely of England and Scotland,
but, I believe, of
every civilised nation”.
[33] In the Transnet Ltd case,
supra, at 7 B - D, it was pointed out that a distinction is made in the
case law between “‘true’ retrospectivity (i.e.
where an Act
provides that from a past date the new law shall be deemed to have been in
operation) and cases where the question is
merely whether a new statute or an
amendment of a statute interferes with or is applicable to existing
rights”. Reference
was then made to a number of decisions of this Court,
starting with Shewan Tomes and Co Ltd v Commissioner of Customs and
Excise 1955 (4) SA 305 (A) at 311. “True” retrospectivity was
described (at 7 E) as being “strong” while the adjective
“weaker”
was applied to retrospectivity in the second sense as it is
used in our case law.
[34] In Benner v Canada (Secretary of State)
(1997) 42 CRR (2d) 1 (SCC), a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, Iacobucci
J referred (at 17) to the fact that the terms “retroactivity”
and
“retrospectivity” can be confusing and he quoted with approval
definitions of the two terms given by the well known
Canadian writer on the
interpretation of statutes, Elmer A Driedger, in an article in (1978) 56
Canadian Bar Review 264 at 268-9 as follows:
“A retroactive statute is one that operates as of a time prior to its enactment. A retrospective statute is one that operates for the future only. It is prospective, but it imposes new results in respect of a past event. A retroactive statute operates backwards. A retrospective statute operates forwards, but it looks backwards in that it attaches new consequences for the future to an event that took place before the statute was enacted. A retroactive statute changes the law from what it was; a retrospective changes the law from what it otherwise would be with respect to a prior event.”
[35] In terms of this terminology the
expression “retroactivity” is used for retrospectivity in the
“strong”sense
while the expression “retrospectivity” is
reserved for what is described as retrospectivity in the “weaker”
sense.
[36] It appears clearly from the many cases on the point, both in our
law and in overseas jurisdictions, that the basis of the presumption
against
retrospectivity (in the strong and weak senses) is what Stevens J described,
when giving the opinion of the United States
Supreme Court in Landgraf v USI
Film Products et al [1994] USSC 10; 511 US 244 (1994) at 265 as “elementary
considerations of fairness [which] dictate that individuals should have an
opportunity to know
what the law is and to conform their conduct
accordingly.”
[37] Mr Seligson pointed out that he was not
contending that chapter 6 of the Act was to be interpreted as being
retrospective in the “strong”
sense. He submitted that chapter 6,
on a proper construction, does apply as from the date the Act came into
operation to activities
that took place before it came into operation, with the
result that property can be regarded as an instrumentality of an offence
or as
proceeds of unlawful activities for the purposes of the section 38 of the Act
even if the such activities in question took
place before the Act came into
operation.
In other words, he argued for retrospectivity in the
“weak” sense.
[38] Mr Seligson stated that it is obvious
that, while the Act contains new provisions which are unprecedented in a number
of respects, it builds
on earlier legislation, in particular the Proceeds Act,
and provides drastic remedies to assist the State to combat an intolerable
situation, namely a large increase in organised crime. The main objective of
the Act, he said, is to prevent criminals from benefiting
from the proceeds of
crime and to discourage the use of property for criminal purposes.
[39] Chapter 6, with which we are presently concerned, operates outside and
independently of the other chapters and on a proper analysis,
so he submitted,
the provisions of chapter 5 are not relevant for the purposes of interpreting
chapter 6.
He submitted further that the forfeiture provisions in chapter 6
cannot be described as purely procedural and that the distinction
between
statutes regulating procedure and those dealing with substantive rights is not
helpful in this case.
[40] Mr Seligson submitted that the provisions
do not involve the impairment or infringement of any vested rights because the
acquisition or use of
property acquired through the proceeds of crime would not
give a criminal any rights enforceable in law and that in any event there
is no
basis for assuming that Parliament would have been reluctant or would have
considered it unfair to create a forfeiture mechanism
which would strip
criminals of the proceeds of their unlawful activities even if such activities
had taken place before the Act came
in operation.
[41] He contended further,
relying on R v Grainger 1958 (2) SA 443 (A) and S v Premier Wire
(Pty) Ltd 1985 (2) SA 252 (E), that the respondents in the present case
cannot maintain that they had any right to expect that the law would not change
so
as to remove the requirement that there be a prosecution before forfeiture
proceedings could be instituted and thereby deal more
effectively with organised
crime.
[42] In dealing with the presumption against retrospectivity he relied
strongly on the decision of the House of Lords in L’Office Cherifien
des Phosphates and another v Yamashita - Shinnihon Steamship Co Ltd: [1994]
1 AC 486. In that case the main opinion was delivered by Lord Mustill who (at
525 E - F) referred with approval to the following statement
by Staughton LJ in
Secretary of State for Social Security v Tunnicliffe [1991] 2 All ER 712
(CA) at 724:
“In my judgment the true principle is that Parliament is presumed not to have intended to alter the law applicable to past events and transactions in a manner which is unfair to those concerned in them, unless a contrary intention appears. It is not simply a question of classifying an enactment as retrospective or not retrospective. Rather it may well be a matter of degree - the greater the unfairness, the more it is to be expected that Parliament will make it clear if that is intended.”
Lord Mustill
continued (at 525 F - H):
“Precisely how the single question of fairness will be answered in respect of a particular statute will depend on the interaction of several factors, each of them capable of varying from case to case. Thus, the degree to which the statute has retrospective effect is not a constant. Nor is the value of the rights which the statute affects, or the extent to which that value is diminished or extinguished by the retrospective effect of the statute. Again, the unfairness of adversely affecting the rights, and hence the degree of unlikelihood that this is what Parliament intended, will vary from case to case. So also will the clarity of the language used by Parliament, and the light shed on it by consideration of the circumstances in which the legislation was enacted. All these factors must be weighed together to provide a direct answer to the question whether the consequences of reading the statute with the suggested degree of retrospectivity are so unfair that the words used by Parliament cannot have been intended to mean what they might appear to say.”
[43] The statutory provision under consideration
in the Cherifien case was section 102 of the Court and Legal Services Act
1990, which amended the Arbitration Act 1950 by inserting a new section,
section
13 A. This section empowered an arbitrator, unless a contrary intention was
expressed in the arbitration agreement, to make
an award dismissing a claim if
there had been an inordinate and inexcusable delay on the part of the claimant
which caused the substantial
risk of unfairness or serious prejudice to the
respondent .
[44] The House of Lords held that in dismissing the claim an
arbitrator was entitled to take into account a claimant’s inordinate
and
inexcusable delay which occurred before section 13 A came into
operation.
[45] The House was influenced in coming to this conclusion by the
fact that the right to pursue a claim before an arbitrator which
had been
inordinately and inexcusably delayed was weak since, as the delay showed, the
claimant had not troubled to enforce it for
a long time and it was not unfair to
allow the new section to apply to claims brought before the coming into force of
the new power.
[46] In the present case, so Mr Seligson argued, the
consequences in the circumstances of holding the remedies in chapter 6 to be
applicable in respect of past conduct and
events would not be so unfair that the
Legislature could not have intended this. The property forfeited under chapter
6 could have
been realised in satisfaction of a confiscation order under chapter
5 if the respondents had been convicted, which was a further
reason for holding
that there was no unfairness in making chapter 6 operate
retrospectively.
[47] Mr Seligson also relied on two recent decisions
given in the United States, one a decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit,
viz. United States of America v Certain Funds Contained in
Account Nos 600 - 306 211 - 006, 600 - 306 211 - 011 and 600 - 306 211- 014
Located at the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation et al 96 F 3d 20
(2nd Cir. 1996) and the other a decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Sixth Circuit, United States of America v Four Tracts of Property on the
Waters of Leiper’s Creek 1999 WL 377773 (6 th Cir.
(Tenn.)).
In what follows I shall refer to the first case as “the
Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank case” and to the second case as
“the Leiper’s Creek case”.
[48] In
the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank case the facts were that the US
Government sought the forfeiture of assets valued at between 1.5 and 3 million
dollars located in
Hong Kong. It alleged that the defendants in
rem (i.e., the Funds) constituted the proceeds of a conspiracy to import
heroin into the United States and to launder the proceeds of
that smuggling, The
Government’s Verified Complaint in the action was filed in September 1991.
In April 1992 the claimants
to the property filed a motion for judgment on the
pleadings requesting that the court dismiss the complaint for lack of
jurisdiction
over the res because the res was located outside the
United States and no statute conferred jurisdiction on the federal courts in
these circumstances. In October
1992 the statute conferring jurisdiction on
federal courts over civil forfeiture proceedings was amended to provide district
courts
with in rem jurisdiction over a res located in a foreign
country. A decision by the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of New York dismissing the
action for lack of jurisdiction and holding
that the amendment could not be applied retrospectively as there was no clear
showing
of congressional intent to make the amendment retrospective was
overturned on appeal to the United States Court of Appeals, Second
Circuit,
which held that the amendment could be applied retrospectively to pending
proceedings. The decision rested on two bases.
One was that as the statute in
question was procedural, in that it conferred jurisdiction, it could be applied
retrospectively.
The other basis (at 24) was that the new statute did
“not take away any rights possessed by a party, increase liability, or attach new legal consequences to past conduct. The claimants never had any right to property resulting from illegal gains, and their alleged drug smuggling and money laundering have always carried criminal penalties. One of the legal consequences of drug smuggling or money laundering is that the resulting illegal proceeds are subject to forfeiture to the government. . . .. The mere fact that people who commit crimes within the jurisdiction of the United States manage to secrete proceeds of those crimes out of the country does not mean that they enjoy any greater rights to those proceeds. Accordingly, it cannot be said that [the new section] ever created any new legal consequences or impaired any existing rights. . .”
[49] In the Leiper’s
Creek case the United States Government instituted forfeiture proceedings
against the Leiper’s Creek property in 1992 . The claimant
had purchased
the property in 1989 using the proceeds from drug trafficking activities which
had taken place in the early 1970's.
The forfeiture provision on which the
Government relied was enacted in 1978 several years after the drug trafficking
transactions
which generated the funds used by the claimant to purchase the
property. The United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit, held
that the 1978
statute would be applied retrospectively so that the property could be
forfeited. Its decision rested on two bases.
The second basis for the
Court’s decision (which is relevant here) was that the claimant never had
a right to the proceeds
of his illegal behaviour and therefore forfeiture of the
property as “proceeds” could not impair any vested rights.
On this
point the court followed the decision in the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank
case.
[50] Mr Seligson endeavoured to deal with the point that the
legislature has expressly made the provisions of chapter 5 retrospective, as
appears
from sections 12(3) and 19 (1), and has also in the definitions of
“pattern of criminal activity” and “pattern
of racketeering
activity” made it clear that at least one of the Schedule 1 offences the
commission of which is necessary
in order to bring the definitions into play may
have taken place before the Act came into operation. From these provisions it
is
clear that the legislature was aware of the presumption against
retrospectivity and knew how to make it clear when it intended part
of the Act
to apply retrospectively.
[51] Chapter 5, said Mr Seligson, expressly
deals with the past because it provides for what amounts to an historical
enquiry into what benefits the accused derived
from the offence or offences of
which he or she has been convicted and any criminal activity which the court
finds to be sufficiently
related to those offences. Secondly the forfeiture
order, which is linked to a criminal conviction for an offence committed in the
past, is arguably penal in its effect because it flows from the conviction and
is an additional burden imposed on the accused who
is ordered in terms of the
procedure created by chapter 5 to make a payment of money which can be satisfied
from his whole estate,
including assets which are in no way tainted by being
linked to any criminal activity, which assets can be frozen by means of
restraint
orders made in terms of Part 3 of Chapter 5. Chapter 6 on the
other hand, he submitted, envisages simply an enquiry into two
categories of
property at the time of the court hearing and allows preservation and forfeiture
orders only in respect of such property.
In this regard he relied on the use of
the present tense “is” in sections 38 (2) and 50 (1) .
[52] There is substance in some of the submissions made Mr Seligson but for the
reasons that follow I am of the view that the appeal must
nevertheless fail.
[53] I do not agree that chapter 6 can be differentiated
from chapter 5 because the enquiry in the case of the former relates only
to the
present while the enquiry in the case of the latter looks backwards to the past,
which prompted the legislature to make it
clear in the latter case that the
enquiry extends backwards to the period preceding the coming into operation of
the Proceeds Act.
I say this because it is clear that, in order to decide
whether property is tainted because it is linked to criminal activity, so
that
it is to be forfeited under an order made in terms of chapter 6, it will be
necessary for the court to enquire into the question
as to whether property is
the proceeds of criminal activities, which necessarily involves an enquiry into
the past, whether the
property was derived, received or retained in
connection with or as a result of any unlawful activity. The use of the present
tense in sections
38 (2) and 50 (1) merely indicates that the property must
exist at the time the order is made. An enquiry under chapter 6 looks
as much
backwards as does one under chapter 5. The fact that the legislature considered
it necessary to state expressly in section
12 (3) and 19 (1) and, for that
matter, in the definitions of “pattern of criminal gang activity”
and “pattern
of racketeering activity” that offences committed
before the Act came into operation can be looked at in matters falling under
chapters 2, 4 and 5 is a strong indication, as Blignault J found, that it did
not intend the provisions of chapter 6 to be applied
retrospectively.
[54] In
my view, therefore, the omission of the phrase “whether before or after
the commencement of this Act” in chapter
6 is the most formidable
obstacle to the acceptance of the contentions advanced on behalf of the
appellant. As pointed out above,
Mr Seligson was unable to advance any
cogent argument which would explain Parliament’s failure to use the same
formula in chapter 6 which
it used in chapter 5 when it intended that chapter to
be retrospective.
[55] There may indeed be cogent reasons why Parliament deliberately decided
not to make chapter 6 retrospective. One such reason is
the factor adverted to by Hurt J at pp 26 - 7 of his judgment in the unreported
case of National Director of Public Prosecutions v P J Meyer, where
reference is made to sections 52 (2) and 54 (8) of the Act, which, it will be
recalled, provide for the High Court, when
it makes or has made a forfeiture
order, to exclude certain interests in property from the operation of the order
when it finds that
the person applying for the exclusion order acquired the
interest concerned legally and neither knew nor had reasonable grounds to
suspect that the property in which the interest is held is an
instrumentality of a Schedule 1 offence or is the proceeds of unlawful
activities.
[56] Before the coming into operation of section 30 of the
Proceeds Act, on 16 May 1997, a person who legally acquired property which
was
or formed part of the proceeds of crime acquired indefeasible title thereto even
if he or she had reasonable grounds to believe
that it was or formed part of the
proceeds of crime. (Section 30 of the Proceeds Act has in essence been
re-enacted as section 6
of the Act.) The position in regard to stolen property
was different. A person who received into his or her possession stolen property
and who had reasonable grounds to believe that it was stolen committed a crime
under section 37 of the General Law Amendment Act
62 of 1955. In other words
although the negligent receipt of stolen property was an offence the negligent
receipt of the proceeds
of crime was not.
[57] The new principle introduced
by section 30 of the Proceeds Act has very important consequences for many
persons engaged in commerce.
[58] If Mr Seligson was correct in submitting that chapter 6 is retrospective it
would create a cause of action to justify the
seizure of property, which cause of action did not exist before the
commencement of
the Act. In my view such a result would be lead to an unfair
result: it is unlikely that that could have been intended by
Parliament.
[59] Support for this conclusion is to be found in a case cited
by Mr Arendse, who appeared with Mr Mihalik for the respondents,
namely Plewa v Chief Adjudication Officer [1995] 1 AC 249, a decision of
the House of Lords given after its decision in the Cherifien case.
The facts of this case were that Plewa received a retirement pension from
January 1981, which contained an addition in respect
of his wife, who was in
part-time paid employment, the earnings from which would have affected the
amount of Plewa’s pension.
At the time when the unadjusted pension was
received beneficiaries who received an overpayment of benefit were not required
to repay
it where due care and diligence had been used to avoid the overpayment:
this was because of the provisions of section 119 (2) of
the Social Security
Act, 1975, which was replaced in April 1987 by section 53 of the Social Security
Act, 1986. This latter section
removed the due care and diligence defence to a
claim for repayment and also imposed liability on third parties for innocent
misrepresentation
or failure to disclose. It was held (at 257 G - 258 D) that
the new provision did not apply retrospectively because what was described
as
“a considerable degree of unfairness” could result to third parties
who would come under an obligation to repay which
did not exist before section
53 of the 1986 Act came into force.
“Although the position of the actual payee is obviously not as clear as that of a third party”, said Lord Woolf (at 258 B - C), “I would have been inclined to attach more importance to section 53's possible retrospective unfair effect than the Court of Appeal did in [Secretary of State for Social Security v Tunnicliffe supra, which was quoted with approval in the Cherifien case and in which it was held that section 53 was retrospective]. This is because it removed the defence of due care and diligence. If recipients would not have been under a liability in fact to make a repayment under the former machinery then from a practical point of view they were being placed under a liability which did not previously exist by the change in the law. This is a situation where the presumption against retrospectivity should apply. It is desirable that in this situation legislation should make it clear whether the new provision is to be retrospective or not.”
[60] In my view the cumulative effect of the
unfairness, the legal culture leaning against retrospectivity where there is
unfairness,
the fact that Parliament refrained from repeating the “whether
before or after the commencement of this Act” phrase
used in sections 12
(3) and 19 (1) and the fact that conduct before the commencement of the Act is
specifically referred to in the
definitions of “pattern of criminal gang
activity” and “pattern of racketeering activity” leads me to
the
conclusion that on a proper interpretation of the Act chapter 6 was not
intended to be retrospective.
[61] The two American cases cited by Mr
Seligson do not assist at all because the factors enumerated in the
previous paragraph were not applicable in those cases.
[62] For these
reasons I am satisfied that the appeal should fail.
[63] The following order
is made:
The appeal is dismissed with costs, which shall include those
occasioned by
the employment of two counsel.
I. G. FARLAM
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
CONCUR:
MAHOMED CJ
OLIVIER
JA
ZULMAN JA
MELUNSKY AJA