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[2005] ZASCA 107
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ABSA Bank Ltd v Fraser and Another (386/2005) [2005] ZASCA 107; [2006] 2 All SA 1 (SCA) (24 November 2005)
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Last Updated: 3 December 2005
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case no: 386/05
REPORTABLE
In the matter between:
ABSA BANK LIMITED
APPELLANT
and
TRENT GORE FRASER
FIRST RESPONDENT
PORTION 3 LAVIANTO CC SECOND
RESPONDENT
Before: Mpati DP, Cameron, Nugent, Mlambo JJA et Nkabinde AJA
Heard: 19 September 2005
Delivered: 24 November 2005
Summary: Criminal law – restraint order in terms of ss 25 and 26 of the Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 – effect on defendant’s concurrent creditors – properly interpreted s 33(1) does not exclude concurrent creditor’s interests in restrained property; defendant’s legal expenses interest in restrained property has no preference over proven concurrent claims.
JUDGMENT
MLAMBO JA
[1] One of the primary objectives of the Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (the Act) is to divest criminals of the proceeds of their criminal activities. This object is provided for in chapter 5 which contains provisions for restraining[1] and confiscating[2] property belonging to criminals. This appeal concerns the right, if any, of an ordinary unsecured judgment creditor to intervene in proceedings dealing with a defendant’s property which is under restraint in terms of s 26[3].
[2] The appellant (ABSA) is a commercial bank. The first respondent
(Fraser) is a businessman currently incarcerated without bail
at the Durban
Central Prison. He was arrested on 16 November 2003 and subsequently indicted on
charges relating to racketeering and
money laundering under the Act and drug
trafficking under the Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992. Fraser is
indicted with
eight others including his erstwhile fiancée, Lara Nicole
Zeeman (Zeeman).
[3] The second respondent is a close corporation (the
CC) in which Zeeman once held the membership interest as nominee for Fraser.
The
membership interest has since been transferred to Fraser pursuant to an
application by him seeking that result. The CC owns immovable
property at No 3
Lavianto, Robert Bruce Drive, Fourways, Johannesburg (the immovable property).
In 2001 Fraser inherited an amount
of some R1.8 million from a family
trust. In 2002 he caused the CC to be registered and arranged that it acquire
the immovable
property. He then arranged that Zeeman hold the membership
interest in the CC on his behalf. Fraser deliberately devised this scheme
to
safeguard the property from being attached by ABSA to satisfy a default judgment
ABSA had, to his knowledge, obtained against
him on 19 July 2000, in
the Cape High Court, as surety for a company in liquidation, in an amount of
R673 281.
[4] The membership interest in the CC and the immovable
property, amongst other properties, were placed under restraint by order of
the
Durban High Court, obtained ex parte on 26 November 2004 by the National
Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP), in terms of s 26(1) of the Act. In terms
of the order
a rule nisi was issued returnable on
27 January 2005.
[5] After the grant of the interim restraint
order, and on 3 December 2004, Fraser launched an application in terms
of s 26(6)[4] of the Act, seeking
an order directing the curator bonis, appointed in terms of the restraint
order, to sell the immovable property and/or the membership interest in the CC
and pay the proceeds
to his attorneys to meet his reasonable legal expenses in
his criminal trial. Fraser enrolled this application to be heard on
10 December
2004.
[6] On 25 November 2004 the NDPP alerted ABSA to
the proceedings and on 9 December Fraser’s application was postponed at
ABSA’s
behest. On 20 December ABSA launched a formal application to
intervene and oppose Fraser’s application. ABSA’s quest
for
intervention and opposition relied on the default judgment it obtained against
Fraser. It urged that if Fraser was permitted
to dissipate the proceeds of the
restrained property to meet his legal expenses it would be deprived of the means
for recovering
its judgment debt in due course, which it would ordinarily have
been entitled to do by a writ of execution. At the time ABSA sought
to
intervene, the judgment debt, with accrued interest, amounted to
R1 028 214. Fraser opposed ABSA’s application
to intervene,
whilst the NDPP elected only to oppose Fraser’s application for the
release of moneys to meet his reasonable
legal expenses.
[7] The two
applications and the NDPP’s application to confirm the rule nisi,
were heard together on 1 April 2005. On 8 April the court a quo
(Olsen AJ) confirmed the rule nisi, and allowed Fraser’s
application, but dismissed that of ABSA. On 14 July 2005 the court a quo
granted ABSA leave to appeal to this court against the order dismissing its
intervention application including the costs order. ABSA
also sought to amend
its application for leave to appeal to include an appeal against Fraser’s
successful legal expenses application
but that application was refused. The
court a quo also refused, with costs, an application by ABSA to suspend
the order granting relief to Fraser. In this court ABSA, apart from appealing
against the refusal to allow it to intervene, has also filed an application
seeking this court’s leave to appeal against the
order granting relief to
Fraser. The hearing of the appeal was expedited because of the impending trial
date.
[8] In refusing ABSA’s application to intervene and allowing
Fraser’s reasonable expenses application the court a quo found that
the effect of the restraint order was to afford a
defendant[5] not only a moratorium
against the claims of his creditors, but also a right to have first call upon
his property in order to meet
his reasonable legal expenses. This finding was
based on the court a quo’s construction of
s 33(1)[6] that claims of
so-called concurrent creditors, such as ABSA, were
‘obligations’[7] of a
defendant which would ‘conflict’ with his obligation to satisfy a
confiscation order. The court a quo found that the effect of s 33(1) read
with s 30(3)[8] was that a
restraint order deprived third parties of some of their ordinary rights as
creditors of a defendant. The court stated
that in doing so the legislature
intended to achieve the swift implementation of measures designed to prevent
criminals from benefiting
from, and especially making off with, the proceeds of
crime.
[9] The court a quo also found: ‘One of the ways in
which the legislature has disturbed the conventional order of things is by
creating what amounts
to a preference in respect of reasonable legal fees of the
kind identified in s 26(6) of the Act. It seems that the legislature
had no
alternative but to allow for such a preference if the State was to have the
right to seize the estate of an accused person
and put it beyond such
person’s control, until after the conclusion of the criminal proceedings
in question.’
[10] In this court Fraser’s counsel,
supporting that reasoning, argued that once a restraint order was granted the
State becomes
a preferent claimant in the defendant’s property over
concurrent claims. He argued that a defendant’s obligation to pay
a
concurrent creditor was in conflict with his obligation to satisfy a
confiscation order and that it was for that reason that such
claims should be
left out of reckoning until after a confiscation order is satisfied. Counsel
further argued that on this interpretation
of s 33(1) the power of a High Court
to deal with restrained property was limited to the situations mentioned in s
26(6) –
ie a defendant’s living and legal expenses as well as his
secured and preferent obligations[9].
[11] Whether that is indeed what s 33(1) means and whether there is warrant
for this outcome can best be determined after reviewing
the provisions relating
to the granting, nature and effect of a restraint and a confiscation order as
well as the impact of s 26(6)
on these provisions.
[12] The meaning
given to s 33(1) in the court a quo and by Fraser’s counsel has the effect
of elevating the defendant’s
living and legal expenses as well as his
obligation to satisfy a confiscation order to a status similar to his secured
and preferent
obligations whilst relegating his concurrent obligations below
these. On the face of it this would be a surprising result, and one
at odds with
a creditor’s common law entitlement to levy execution on a debtor’s
property.
[13] The provisions dealing with restraint, reasonable legal
expenses and confiscation orders are found in chapter 5 whose objective
is to
deprive a convicted person of the proceeds of unlawful activities. A restraint
order, though not a prerequisite for the grant
of a confiscation order, lays the
ground for the satisfaction thereof. The objective of a restraint order is that,
once granted,
a defendant’s control over his property is removed and the
property is preserved under the supervision of a court to satisfy
any
confiscation order that might be made in due course, unless the defendant is
acquitted at the end of the criminal
trial.[10]
[14] Save for s
26(6)[11] and
(10)[12], the section is silent
regarding the rights, if any, of concurrent creditors and other third parties,
who have an interest in restrained
property, to intervene in proceedings
concerned with such property under the Act. However as I demonstrate hereafter
the fate of
restrained property is not exhaustively regulated in s 26. In this
regard s 31(1)[13] comes into
focus and, in my view, holds the key to the resolution of the issue raised in
this appeal. It is in terms of this section
that the powers of a court are
regulated when it deals with restrained property once a confiscation order is
made.
[15] Properly construed s 31(1) empowers a High Court to apply s 26
with a view to making available the current value of realisable
property to
satisfy a confiscation order. In this context the purpose of a restraint order
is therefore to preserve a defendant’s
property to facilitate the
satisfaction of, amongst others, a confiscation order.
[16] The power of
a court to make a confiscation order is located in s 18 which is the key
provision of chapter 5. This section empowers
a court that convicts a defendant
to order him or her to pay to the State an amount of money ‘that the court
considers appropriate’[14].
Such an order is referred to as a ‘confiscation order’ and its
objective is to relieve the defendant of (‘confiscate’)
the value of
any benefit that accrued to the defendant from criminal activities.
[17] It is clear from this section that after a defendant has been
convicted, a confiscation order can be made only once a court has
established,
after an enquiry, that the defendant has derived a benefit from any offence he
was convicted of, or criminal activity
related to it. This process also applies
in a situation where a convicted defendant absconds or dies before a
confiscation order
is made[15].
[18] In broad terms, s 20(1) read with s 18(2) provides that the amount
a defendant may be ordered to pay to the State may not exceed
the value of the
benefit that accrued to him from criminal activities, or the combined value of
his property together with certain
tainted dispositions that he or she might
have made, whichever is the lesser. The value of the defendant’s property
and tainted
dispositions is their value after deducting the amount of certain
defined obligations, as well as his secured and preferent
obligations[16].
[19] Thus
assuming, for convenience, that no tainted dispositions were made, the maximum
amount in which a confiscation order may
be made is the value of the
defendant’s property less the amount owed to secured and preferent
creditors. It follows that the
claim of the State pursuant to a confiscation
order will never compete with the claims of secured and preferent creditors for
the
defendant’s property (because the value of the property will be at
least the sum of the State’s claim and the secured
and preferent
creditors’ claims).
[20] But it does not follow that claims of
concurrent (unsecured) creditors are thereby simply left out of account. The Act
provides
a mechanism for them to be taken into account, subject to the approval
of the court at the time of the realization of the defendant’s
property
but before satisfaction of a confiscation order. In this regard s 30(5)
expressly authorizes the High Court to delay the
realization of the property so
as to enable a victim of the defendant’s crimes to obtain a judgment and
to satisfy that judgment
from the defendant’s property before the property
is realised.
[21] Once the property has been realised s 31(1) authorizes
the High Court to direct that ‘payments’ be made from the
realised
proceeds of the defendant’s property before the State’s claim is
satisfied. Clearly the ‘payments’
that are contemplated by that
section include payments in discharge of the defendant’s concurrent
obligations.
[22] I can fathom no reason for this provision,
other than that it is intended to provide persons with an ‘indirect
interest’ in the restrained property,
such as the defendant’s
concurrent creditors, to bring their claims to the court’s attention to be
taken into account
for payment, should the court be satisfied of their validity,
before satisfaction of the confiscation order. This, in my view, can
only mean
that the High Court retains the power to entertain applications by persons or
entities with claims, concurrent or otherwise,
in the restrained property.
[23] The payments envisaged in s 31(1), as pointed out above, must also
be to concurrent creditors – because otherwise it is
difficult to see on
what grounds such payments fall to be made. It is only after such court-approved
payments have been made that
the balance of the proceeds of the property is
applied in payment of the defendant’s obligation under the confiscation
order.
[24] One should not lose sight of the fact that the purpose of
the Act is to divest criminals of the proceeds of their criminal activity
and to
prevent them from deriving benefit from such proceeds. Therefore the
‘draconian’ provisions of the Act should
remain directed at
criminals, not innocent third parties such as concurrent creditors. If the Act
does indeed take away the common
law rights of ordinary concurrent creditors to
claim satisfaction of their debts from restrained property, which they would be
entitled
to do in
the ordinary course, it would have to state this very
clearly.[17] The Act does no such
thing.
[25] The notion that a restraint order elevates the
defendant’s legal expenses claim and the State’s claim to a
preferent
position in restrained property, espoused by the court a quo
and in argument before us, is clearly wrong. A restraint order accords the
defendant and the state no preferential claim in the restrained
property.
[26] It follows that the State’s interest in a confiscation order
cannot compete with, but is subordinate to, the defendant’s
concurrent
obligations. After all a confiscation order is not intended to enrich the
State[18] but to divest the
criminal of the benefit derived from an offence. Furthermore the fact that the
Act (in ss 30 and 31) contemplates
the payment of the defendant’s
obligations when the property is realised and distributed is inconsistent with
the construction
of s 33(1) advanced on behalf of Fraser (ie that claims of
creditors are to be ‘left out of account’ whenever a court
exercises
powers conferred upon it by ss 26 to 31).
[27] Indeed, since the
confiscation order is to be met only after other court-approved payments have
been made it is doubtful, as
a matter of language, whether the defendant’s
obligation to make such payments can be said to ‘conflict with’ the
defendant’s obligation to the State. But even if in isolation the words
are capable of that meaning, the context indicates
a contrary intention.
Moreover, a court will not generally construe an unclear statute so as to take
away vested rights.
[28] In my view the court below erred in
finding that it was precluded by s 33(1) from taking account of
ABSA’s claim when
exercising the powers conferred upon it by the Act, and
in particular the discretion that is conferred upon it by s 26(6). It was
also
not obliged to do so. The section confers upon the court a wide discretion that
is to be exercised in the light of the circumstances
with which it is presented.
No doubt a court will be influenced when exercising its discretion by the nature
of the alleged claim
and in particular whether it is satisfied that it is
genuine and not merely a means for the defendant to siphon off property.
ABSA’s
claim in the present case is clearly genuine.
[29] Once it
is found that ABSA’s claim did not fall to be ‘left out of
account’ when the court exercised its discretion
in terms of s 26(6) then
there was no reason why the court below should not have permitted ABSA to
intervene to oppose the application,
in the exercise of its general powers to
hear any person who has an interest in the proceedings. These powers which in my
view are
not excluded by the Act.
[30] The court a quo’s
decision has the further consequence of allowing Fraser to profit from his
illegitimate scheme to frustrate ABSA from attaching his
assets. The legislature
could never have intended that an ordinary unsecured creditor, who has pursued a
claim and has obtained a
judgment before a restraint order is granted, should be
prevented from satisfying that judgment simply because the assets of the
defendant have since become restrained. The dismissal by the court below of
ABSA’s application to intervene must thus be set
aside.
[31] We are
not called upon to decide whether a court is entitled to release restrained
property in order to meet a concurrent claim
before a confiscation order is
made, because that is not what ABSA has asked for, and I expressly do not make
any such finding. ABSA
has sought only to prevent Fraser using the moneys to
meet his anticipated legal expenses while ABSA’s claim remains unpaid.
Application for leave to appeal against reasonable expenses
order
[32] As stated earlier ABSA also seeks leave to appeal against
the order of the court a quo granting Fraser his reasonable expenses in
terms of s 26(6). In view of my construction of s 33(1) ABSA ought to be
granted
leave. The parties were agreed that nothing would be served by referring
the matter back to the court a quo for it to exercise its discretion
afresh. No proper grounds have been shown why Fraser should be permitted to
expend moneys on legal
expenses that would ordinarily have been available to his
creditors. I have already pointed out that the grant of a restraint order
does
not purport to confer preferential rights on a defendant. Its effect is only to
restrict his or her use of the property, unless
a court orders otherwise as
provided for in s 26(6). But that assumes that the defendant has the means to
meet his or her legal expenses.
[33] It is also incorrect to say
that the depletion of a defendant’s assets to satisfy concurrent creditors
at the expense
of his legal expenses interferes with his right to a fair trial.
The defendant has a constitutional right to legal representation
at State
expense if substantial injustice would otherwise
result.[19] For all the aforegoing
reasons the court a quo’s order granting relief to Fraser in terms
of s 26(6) must also be set aside.
[34] At the time the application was heard
ABSA’s judgment debt amounted to R1 028 214 and in my view it was entitled
to ensure
that property to that value was not expended by Fraser in payment of
new debts.
[35] In the circumstances the following orders are
made:
1. The appeal against the dismissal of ABSA’s application to intervene is upheld.
2. ABSA is granted leave to appeal against the order made by the court a quo in favour of the first respondent. The costs of that application are to be costs in the appeal.
3. The appeal by ABSA against the order granted in favour of the first respondent is upheld to the extent set out below.
4. Paragraph A of the order of the court below is set aside and the following is substituted:
‘(a) ABSA is granted leave to intervene in the proceedings. The costs of its application to intervene are to be costs in the main application.’
5. Paragraph 8 of paragraph A of the order of the court below is set aside and the following paragraphs are added to the remainder of paragraph A:
‘8. The orders set out above are all subject to the provision that no moneys for payment of the first respondent’s legal expenses shall be advanced in excess of an amount that results in the moneys being retained by the curator falling below the sum of R1 028 214.
9. The costs of the application are to be borne by
the first respondent.’
6. The costs of the appeal are to be borne by
the first respondent.
__________
D MLAMBO
JUDGE OF APPEAL
CONCUR:
MPATI DP
CAMERON JA
NUGENT JA
NKABINDE AJA
[1] Sections 25 to
29
[2] Sections 18 to
23
[3] Section 26 provides:
‘(1) The National Director may by way of an ex parte application apply to a competent 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 to which the order relates.
(2) A restraint order may be made –
(a) in respect of such realisable property as may be specified in the restraint order and which is held by the person against whom the restraint order is being made;
(b) in respect of all realisable property held by such person, whether it is specified in the restraint order or not;
(c) in respect of all property which, if it is transferred to such person after the making of the restraint order, would be realisable property.
. . . .’[]
4
Section 26(6) provides: ‘Without derogating from the generality of the
powers conferred by subsection (1), a restraint order
may make such provision as
the High Court may think fit –
(a) for the reasonable living expenses of a person against whom the restraint order is being made and his or her family or household; and
(b) for the reasonable legal expenses of such person in connection with any proceedings instituted against him or her in terms of this Chapter or any criminal proceedings to which such proceedings may relate,
if
the court is satisfied that the person whose expenses must be provided for has
disclosed under oath all his or her interests in
property subject to a restraint
order and that the person cannot meet the expenses concerned out of his or her
unrestrained property.’
[5]
The term ‘defendant’ is used here for convenience and as it is used
in the Act to describe someone in Fraser’s
position.
[6] Section 33(1)
‘The powers conferred upon a High Court by sections 26 to 31, or upon a
curator bonis appointed under this Chapter, shall –
(a) subject to paragraphs (b) and (c), be exercised with a view to making available the current value of realisable property for satisfying any confiscation order made or which might be made against the defendant;
(b) in the case of realisable property held by a person to whom that defendant has directly or indirectly made an affected gift, be exercised with a view to realising not more than the current value of such gift;
(c) be exercised with a view to allowing any person other than that defendant or the recipient of such gift to retain or recover the current value of any property held by him or her,
and, except as provided in sections
20(1) and 26(6), any obligation of that defendant or the recipient of such gift
which conflicts
with the obligation to satisfy a confiscation order shall be
left out of account.’
[7] The
term ‘obligation’ means, in the context of the Act as a whole, a
debt. See in this regard s
20(4)(b).
[8] Section 30(3)
provides: ‘A High Court shall not exercise its powers under subsection
(2)(b) unless it has afforded all persons
known to have any interest in the
property concerned an opportunity to make representations to it in connection
with the realisation
of that
property.’
[9] Section 20(4)
These obligations are defined in the following terms: ‘For the purposes of
subsection (1), an obligation has
priority at the time of the making of the
relevant confiscation order –
(a) if it is an obligation of the defendant, where he or she has been convicted by a court of any offence –
(i) to pay a fine imposed before that time by the court; or
(ii) to pay any other amount under any resultant order made before that time by the court;
(b) if it is an obligation which –
(i) if the estate of the defendant had at that time been sequestrated; or
(ii) where the defendant is a company or other juristic person, if such company or juristic person is at that time being wound up,
would be payable in pursuance of any secured or preferent claim against the insolvent estate or against such company or juristic person, as the case may be.’
[10] Section 24(A):
‘A restraint order and an order authorising the seizure of the property
concerned or other ancillary order which
is in force at the time of any decision
by the court in relation to the making of a confiscation order, shall remain in
force pending
the outcome of any appeal against the decision
concerned.’
[11] Footnote 4
supra.
[12] This section
provides: ‘ A High Court which made a restraint order –
(a) may on application by a person affected by that order vary or rescind the restraint order or an order authorising the seizure of the property concerned or other ancillary order if it is satisfied –
(i) that the operation of the order concerned will deprive the applicant of the means to provide for his or her reasonable living expenses and cause undue hardship for the applicant; and
(ii) that the hardship that the applicant will suffer as a result of the order outweighs the risk that the property concerned may be destroyed, lost, damaged, concealed or transferred; and
(b) shall rescind the restraint order when the proceedings against the defendant concerned are concluded.’
[13]
Section 31(1): ‘The following sums of money in the hands of a curator
bonis appointed under this Chapter, namely –
(a) the proceeds of
any realisable property realised by virtue of s 30; and
(b) any other sums of
money, being property of the defendant concerned,
shall, after such payment
as the High Court may direct have been made out of such sums of money, be
applied on that defendant’s
behalf in satisfaction of the confiscation
order made against him or her: Provided that where the High Court may direct
payment out
of such sums of money, the State shall not have a preferential
claim: Provided further that, if sums of money remain in the hands
of the
curator bonis after the amount payable under such confiscation order has
been fully paid, the curator bonis shall distribute those sums of money
–
(i) among such persons who held realisable property which has been
realised by virtue of s 30; and
(ii) in such proportions,
as that court
may, after affording such persons an opportunity to make representations to it
in connection with the distribution of
those sums of money,
direct.’
[14] Section
18(1)
[15] Section 24(2)(a) read
with s 24(3)(a)
[16] Footnote 9
supra.
[17] Casserley v
Stubbs 1916 TPD 310 at 312; Attorney-General, Transvaal v Botha [1993] ZASCA 159; 1994
(1) SA 306 (AD) at 330I-J.
[18] See National Director of
Public Prosecutions v Rebuzzi 2002 (2) SA 1 (SCA) at 7 para 19. ‘The
primary object of a confiscation order is not to enrich the State but rather to
deprive the convicted
person of ill-gotten gains. In my view, it is therefore
not significant that in some cases the State might end up receiving nothing.
It
is because the purpose of such an order is to prevent the convicted person from
profiting rather than to enrich the State that
the court’s inquiry in
terms of s 18(1) is directed towards establishing the extent of his benefit
rather than towards establishing
who might have suffered loss.’
[19] Section 35(3)(f) of the Constitution.