South Africa: SENTINEL JUDGEMENT: SEIZING PENSION FUNDS

As a whole pensions funds are governed by separate legislation, the Pension Funds Act. It  attempts to ring-fence pension money from any attachment in order to prevent the person who is the beneficiary thereof and his/her family from becoming a liability to the State when he/she is old and frail.

 

What happens to these funds in the forfeiture context?

 

The answer depends on which application is being considered: restraint or confiscation. It also depends on whether or not the funds have been paid out to a defendant / respondent. Furthermore, it requires consideration of the Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956 (PFA).

 

Funds paid out to defendant

If the funds have been paid out to a defendant, that is, they are in the form of money that the defendant for example holds in a bank account, then like with any other money in his/her account these funds can be restrained as realisable property, or used to pay a confiscation order.

 

The issue however needs indepth understanding since the relationship between POCA and the Pension Funds Act require consideration. In particular, are pension funds ringfenced from any attachment through remedies catered for in POCA even if they were paid out to a defendant? Is there some kind of exception that protects pension funds?

 

In the SCA judgement of Sentinel Retirement Fund and Another v Masoanganye and Two Others (1003/2017) [2018] ZASCA 126 (27 September 2018), the court held the following at paragraph [14] of the judgment:

 

“It follows that a ‘benefit’, as defined, belongs to the fund for so long as it is in the hands of the fund, and not the member. It therefore cannot be subject to any restraint under POCA. The fact that a payment becomes due and has accrued to the member does not change this.”

 

The protection under the PFA terminates the minute the member stops being a member of the Fund and becomes entitled to receive the pay out of the benefit.

 

[16]“The high court held that once a benefit is paid to the member, and he ceases being a member, the protection afforded to the benefit by s 37A(1) falls away and the pay-out then becomes part of the general estate of the former member.”

 

 

The Sentinel SCA judgment clarifies that the Pensions Funds Act does not prevent the restraint of pension money of a defendant after it has been paid out by a fund.  It only held that while the pension money is still “in the hands” of the pension fund it is not susceptible to restraint nor can it be used to pay a confiscation order.

 

Payment to curator?

A separate question that arises is whether or not a pension fund must make payment to a defendant or the appointed curator in a restraint case. This was considered in the aforesaid Senetinel judgement. The court confirmed that [17] “The curator steps into the shoes of the defendant …  A payment to the curator is, therefore, in truth and effect a payment to the defendant himself.  As a result, payment can be made by the pension fund to the curator directly.

 

The ratio in paragraph [18] of the Sentinel case was also held in the case of Van Heerden & Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions & Another 916910/11) [2015] ZAWCHC 96 (22 June 2015)

 

Pension funds to be paid out to a defendant

If the pension funds are still to be paid out to the defendant (or curator) in a restraint case, this future payment may be restrained on the basis of section 26(2)(c) of POCA. This section holds that a restraint order may be made in respect of all property that is transferred to the defendant (or respondent) after the making of a restraint order.

 

Position before payout

The funds in effect belong to the fund. At most, what the defendant holds is an interest in a future payment or a claim or a right to receive payment. POCA makes provision for the restraint of an interest (see definition of property in s1 of POCA).  It is this interest that can be restrained.

 

At confiscation stage, this interest may be included as realisable property. The question however that arises is whether or not the realisation court can order the realisation of that interest into actual funds. It is this latter aspect that has still to be considered by our courts. Currently, it appears not to be possible when read with the Pension Funds Act. The question that arises therefore is whether or not there is any purpose of restraining such an interest. This should be decided on a case by case basis.

 

The matter may be one of pragmatism or timing: the relevant fund may have taken a decision to pay out the funds or be in the process itself of paying out the funds to a defendant in terms of the Pension Funds Act. It is therefore not a futile exercise to restrain the interest as well as the future property, namely the funds in terms of section 26(2)(c). Once this process of payment has been completed then the confiscation order can be satisfied.  Engagement with the relevant fund may be necessary.

 


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