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Paying Mkhwebane a R10m gratuity would reward ‘constitutional delinquency’, court hears

The Office of the Public Protector ought not to pay Busisiwe Mkhwebane a R10m gratuity as she had received an ‘extraordinary financial benefit’ from the office through the payment of her legal fees amounting to more than R10m, the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria heard on Tuesday.
Paying Mkhwebane a R10m gratuity would reward ‘constitutional delinquency’, court hears

Granting impeached former Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane a gratuity payment estimated at R10-million would be tantamount to rewarding “constitutional delinquency”.

This was part of the argument by advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitobi SC on Tuesday at the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria. Ngcukaitobi represents the Office of the Public Protector, which is the first respondent in the matter

Mkhwebane is challenging her former employer’s refusal to pay her a gratuity, which it has paid to all the previous Public Protectors upon their departure.

Ngcukaitobi argued that Mkhwebane was the only Public Protector to be impeached for misconduct and incompetence and was not in the same position as other Public Protectors.

Giving her the payment would set a bad precedent, said Ngcukaitobi.

“What you have is a reward for constitutional delinquency. And this, I’m afraid, my Lord, is the big elephant in the room that this case, really what it is about, is asking the judge to be party to a reward for constitutional delinquency.”

Ngcukaitobi argued that Mkhwebane did not meet the requirements for a gratuity payment because she had not left office as required by the Public Protector Act, but was removed on grounds of misconduct.

Read more: Long road to impeachment: Mkhwebane is guilty as charged – here’s a breakdown of the damning findings

He cited four categories under the Public Protector Act and conditions of service in which a gratuity payment is made when a Public Protector leaves office.

The first category refers to a Public Protector leaving office upon completion of their seven-year term. The second refers to incapacity or ill-health where the National Assembly allows the Public Protector to leave office before the end of their term. The third refers to resignation for various reasons. The last is through death.

Mkhwebane, however, did not leave on any such terms. She was removed through a vote by Parliament on the recommendation of the lengthy and costly multiparty Section 194 inquiry, which found her guilty of incompetence and misconduct and recommended her removal from office, weeks before she was due to complete her term.

Read more: Historic impeachment of Mkhwebane highlights impact of politicking in crucial public accountability appointments

“Which other Public Protector in the history of the Office of the Public Protector has ever had these findings made against them?” argued Ngcukaitobi

He maintained that the previous Public Protectors received a gratuity because they left office after serving the full seven-year term. “They were also deemed, on discretion, suitable for such payment. There is no unfair or irrational differentiation.”

‘No legal right to gratuity’


On Monday, Mkhwebane’s legal counsel, advocate Dali Mpofu told the court that the decision to deny Mkhwebane her gratuity payment was “arbitrary, cruel and degrading”. It was a “double punishment” and went against the values of ubuntu.

Read more: Mkhwebane’s impeachment is irrelevant to her R10m gratuity claim — Dali Mpofu

Ngcukaitobi rejected this.

“There is no provision in the Constitution that deals with — never mind establishes a legal right to — a gratuity on the part of a Public Protector. Accordingly, there is no legal right to a gratuity under the provisions of the Constitution,” he said.

On Mpofu referring to the conditions of service document, which does not explicitly state that a Public Protector who has been removed from office should not be paid a gratuity, Ngcukaitobi responded:

“We submit that the text, language and purpose of the service conditions indicate that a Public Protector who has been removed from office is ineligible to be considered for gratuity.”

The Office of the Public Protector wants the court to dismiss Mkhwebane’s application with costs. It also wants Mkhwebane to be ordered to pay punitive costs for the “personal attacks, and unwarranted and unsubstantiated allegations directed at the second respondent [Public Protector Kholeka Gcaleka] and the officials of the Office of the Public Protector”, according to court documents.

Judgment reserved


As previously reported, should the court find that Mkhwebane has to forfeit just a portion of the gratuity, it would not be the first such occurrence. Outgoing Public Protector Thuli Madonsela had a portion of her R4-million payout docked by Mkhwebane back in 2016

The circumstances, however, were very different — Madonsela not only completed her term of office, but did so with aplomb, completing the State Capture report which led to the historic Zondo Commission.

After taking office, Mkhwebane deducted R470,000 from Madonsela’s total gratuity for repairs to an official vehicle paid for by the office. Madonsela’s son had crashed the car after driving it without her permission.

Ngcukaitobi, in his heads of argument, said Mkhwebane had run through millions of rands in legal costs during her tenure.

“The applicant ought not to be paid a gratuity in light of the fact that she has been found guilty of misconduct and incompetence during her term of office by the Section 196 committee, and has received an extraordinary financial benefit from the Office of the Public Protector through the payment of her legal fees amounting to more than R10-million,” said Ngcukaitobi.

Minutes before 5pm on Tuesday, Judge Omphemetse Mooki stopped Mpofu, who was responding to Ngcukaitobi’s arguments, and reserved judgment in the matter.

“The court will reserve judgment, and I intend to deliver that judgment as quickly as is prudent to do so and I do want to thank the court staff for obliging the court staff to sit as late as they did,” said Mooki. DM

Comments

Easy Does It Aug 20, 2024, 10:19 PM

Some of the lame proposition's which Dali makes are actually an insult to the judges, the court and the public save for the EFF supporters. "“arbitrary, cruel and degrading”. It was a “double punishment” and went against the values of ubuntu." For goodness sake, where does he get this from.

Malcolm McManus Aug 21, 2024, 07:38 AM

The inquiry which led up to her impeachment was a farce, Dali Mpofu, was openly allowed to mock and degraded witnesses of moral integrity. This inquiry should have been a week long and should have had Mpofu struck off the role.

Colin K Aug 22, 2024, 02:41 PM

Agreed

Harrisingh56 Aug 21, 2024, 08:15 AM

Dali Mpofu continues to waste time of the court. He doesn’t deserve to be an advocate.

Kanu Sukha Aug 22, 2024, 01:39 AM

That is because we have a 'lame' and heavily 'compromised' legal professional council, which should have investigated his shameless and extortionist behaviour a long time ago.

David Pennington Aug 21, 2024, 08:17 AM

Paying any politician R10,000,000 would be constitutional delinquency

Gert Witbooi Aug 21, 2024, 09:00 AM

Dali Mpofu is a politician not a lawyer, that is why he has lost so many court cases. But until the judges punish lawyers who waste the court's time with frivolous matters they know their clients will lose, such antics from Mpofu will continue.

Malcolm McManus Aug 21, 2024, 12:34 PM

Absolutely. They should be disbarred if not imprisoned. Telling us Ubuntu is a logical explanation to allow someone to be given 10 million that they don't deserve, is so ridiculous. Just on this basis we need a new law to counter such bollocks that leads to immediate disbarment. Law is not a game.

eugene.mthombeni895 Aug 21, 2024, 09:42 AM

There's no justification for the State to validate this R10million grand heist where it'd received a raw deal from the impeached incumbent, someone here's looking for a big payday hence the usual legal rhetoric in this case. What taxpayer would relish the idea of footing this unjust hefty bill?

Kanu Sukha Aug 22, 2024, 01:42 AM

He pulled off just such a 'heist' when he served on the SABC board many years ago ! Why stop now ! He is above the law - like Trump ... a king !

Jennifer D Aug 21, 2024, 10:17 AM

Absolute joke - how dare she even attempt to get a handout - she should pay back the salary she received for not doing her job.

Malcolm McManus Aug 21, 2024, 12:39 PM

If she has any idea what the law is, she should also pay back the money that was used to defend her. She deliberately weaponized the legal system through dishonest means. Even she knows it.

Les Thorpe Aug 21, 2024, 10:34 AM

You ain't seen/heard nothing yet. Wait for the appeal, followed by the rhetoric and conspiracy fables, followed by the application to the ConCourt, followed by . . . . .

Hilary Morris Aug 21, 2024, 10:36 AM

Beyond speech! Mpofu and Mkhwebane should elope together and go live on a lovely island far, far, far away, and NEVER, EVER, come back. Between them they make a mockery and joke of the law and lawyers. Bloody disgraceful is the polite term to describe their behaviour.

Kanu Sukha Aug 22, 2024, 01:18 PM

There is a disused island far from Cape Town ... called Robben .. but will require/need renaming to Robber/s ! ?

h_holt Aug 21, 2024, 10:47 AM

Leave aside for a moment the individual and what she may not have achieved and ask yourself why should there be any form of automatic or even contractual gratuity paid to any salary earner simply due to their having completed a period of employment. Surely the salary alone is adequate compensation?

Matthew Quinton Aug 21, 2024, 10:56 AM

Can someone PLEASE for once and for all actually define UBUNTU? I kind of get the feeling it's S-African for U-O-ME? "I am what I am through what I took from ya'all" Anyone? Anyone? Bueler? Bueler?

Philip Wernberg Aug 22, 2024, 12:08 PM

Quote from Desmond Tutu: A person with Ubuntu is open and available to others, affirming of others, does not feel threatened that others are able and good, for he or she has a proper self-assurance that comes from knowing that he or she belongs in a greater whole and is diminished when others are humiliated or diminished, when others are tortured or oppressed.

Con Tester Aug 21, 2024, 10:58 AM

Busizuma Mkhwegupta is merely acting in character with the fathomlessly audacious conceit of her role models. Windbag Mpofu is one of them.

regalh Aug 21, 2024, 12:05 PM

Gratuity: something given voluntarily or beyond obligation usually for some service Trying to force someone to tip you after you gave them bad service = Mkhwebane's Unicorn Dream

Antonie Jordaan Aug 21, 2024, 02:27 PM

gra·​tu·​i·​ty : something given voluntarily or beyond obligation usually for service over and above the expected. Why is this even a debate?

Loyiso Nongxa Aug 22, 2024, 06:28 AM

Spot on!

William Edward Dix Aug 21, 2024, 05:20 PM

Mkhebane had a very troubled relationship with her mandate which was an oversight role in government for ensure accountability of political members to the public in terms of statute laws. Under her watch corruption increased.

Confucious Says Aug 21, 2024, 05:23 PM

I was useless your Honour! Never won a case (±)! Spent millions! Did nothing! Ruined the name of the Office! Wasted time and taxpayer money! Bungled everything I stuck my nose in! I truly deserve a payout!

Kanu Sukha Aug 22, 2024, 01:36 AM

Additionally it would encourage legal counsels to 'take up/on' such cases .. as 'inducement' to earn the extra 'peanuts' that the current one does, especially by proffering spurious and irrelevant arguments and wasting invaluable court time.

Steve Davidson Aug 22, 2024, 05:48 PM

Come on judge, someone's got to pay Mpoofoo's account.

jcdvil Aug 22, 2024, 10:24 PM

Mpofu comes across as a constitutional delinquent

Rae Earl Aug 23, 2024, 11:53 AM

The con artist methinks, is about to lose another case, one of many. Unbelievable that people can possibly be stupid enough to trust and pay this inept legal shark so much money to have their cases lost. Mkhwebane is an advocate and, so it seems, is as stupid as any layman who runs to Dali Mpofu.