Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 862South Africa
Kul v Minister of Home Affairs (42417/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 862 (3 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Kul v Minister of Home Affairs (42417/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 862 (3 November 2022)
Kul v Minister of Home Affairs (42417/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 862 (3 November 2022)
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sino date 3 November 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 42417/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
3
rd
November 2022
In
the matter between:
KUL:
JOYCE KAY NAMWAN
APPLICANT
(Identity
No: [....])
And
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by
the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines.
The date
of the judgment is deemed to be the 3
rd
of November 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
This is an application brought by the applicant who seeks an order
against the respondent
in the following terms:
1.1
Ordering the respondent, within ten days of the
service of this order, to take all steps necessary, to issue a South
African identity
document to the applicant;
1.2
Ordering the respondent, within ten days of the
service of this order, to take all steps necessary, to issue a South
African passport
to the applicant;
1.3
Ordering the respondent to pay the costs of this
application on an attorney and client scale.
[2]
The applicant was born in South Africa on the 18
th
of
February 1999. The applicant was issued with a birth certificate and
when she was six years old she was issued with a South
African
passport. In 2005, apparently the applicant was left in the care of
the family of Mvita, who were family friends at the
time, by his
father who informed the Mvitas that he was going through a bitter
divorce with the mother of the applicant who had
already left the
Country. To date neither of the parents came back to fetch the
applicant after she was left in the care of the
Mvitas. After some
time at the home of the Mvitas, she was taken in by her father’s
cousin, Watshibangu Tshibangu. She has
no recollection of her parents
and has never seen them since. Both the Mvitas and Tshibangus never
followed the process of formally
adopting her.
[3]
When she turned sixteen years of age, Mr Mvita accompanied her to the
offices of the
respondent to apply for an identity document but she
was turned back for, as a minor, she was required to be accompanied
by her
parents or legal guardian. When she turned twenty-one years
old, she again went to apply for an identity document but she was
again
refused on the basis that, as a first time applicant, she must
be accompanied by her parents or guardian. She engaged the officials
of the respondent on this issue but they refused to assist her. She
engaged the service of her attorneys but the officials of the
respondent were adamant that she needed the assistance of her parents
or guardian.
[4]
At the outset the respondent testified in its answering affidavit
that it is not opposed
to issuing the applicant with the identity
document but stressed that, in order to prevent fraud, which the
respondent has to deal
with on a daily basis, due process must be
followed before the applicant is issued with the identity document.
Furthermore, the
respondent is still busy with its investigation in
this matter and therefore the application is premature. The applicant
should
have approached the Court with a review application since the
decision of the respondent to not issue the applicant with an
identity
document or its failure to decide whether or not to issue
the applicant with an identity document is an administrative
decision.
[5]
Furthermore, the respondent
testified that it was still investigating the circumstances
of the
applicant’s application in that on the 1
st
and 2
nd
of November 2018 the parents of the applicant attended at offices of
the respondent and signed an affidavit for the late registration
of
the birth of the applicant. On the 22
nd
of August 2019 the
father of the applicant attended at the offices of the respondent and
collected the document known as “F/B.F062M”.
Faced with
these discrepancies, that the applicant was abandoned by its parents
and they never came back to fetch her and or that
they have left the
country, it cannot be said that the respondent is unreasonable in
requesting more information from the applicant
which the applicant
has failed and or refused to provide or to co-operate with the
respondent. The persons who attended at the
offices of the respondent
as parents of the applicant gave their address in Cape Town and the
applicant refuses to investigate
these persons at the given address.
[6]
To put matters in the proper perspective, it is necessary to restate
the provisions
of the relevant legislation in this case which is
following:
“
The Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”)
Section 1
Administrative action
means any decision taken, or any failure to take decision by –
(a)An organ of state,
when-
(i)
Exercising a power in terms of the
Constitution or a provincial constitution; or
(ii)
Exercising a public power or performing a
public function in terms of any legislation.
(b)
………………
.
Section 3
(1)Administrative
action which materially and adversely affects the rights or
legitimate expectations of any person must be procedurally
fair.
Section 5
(1)Any person whose
rights have been materially and adversely affected by administrative
action and who has not been given reasons
for the action may, within
90 days after the date on which that person became aware of the
action or might reasonably have been
expected to have become aware of
the action, request that the administrator concerned furnish written
reasons for the action.
(2)The administrator
to whom the request is made must, within 90 days after receiving the
request, give that person adequate reasons
in writing for the
administrative action”.
Section 6
(1)
…………
.
(3)
If any person relies on the ground of
review referred to in subsection (2)(g), he or she may in respect of
a failure to take a decision
where –
(a)
(i)
an administrator has a duty to take a decision;
(ii)
There is no law that prescribes a period
within which the administrator is required to take that decision; and
(iii)
The administrator has failed to take that
decision, institute proceedings in a court or tribunal for judicial
review of the failure
to take the decision on the ground that there
has been unreasonable delay in taking the decision;
[7]
It is trite that one of the constitutional responsibilities of a
Minister, like the
respondent in this case, is to ensure the
implementation of legislation. This responsibility is an
administrative one and ordinarily
constitute administrative action.
[8]
The essential question in this case is whether or not the conduct of
the respondent
through its officials can be described as
administrative action as contemplated in section 33 of the
Constitution of the Republic
of South Africa, Act 108 of 1996 which
provides as follows:
“
Section 33 Just
Administrative Action
(1)
Everyone has the right to administrative
action that is lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair.
(2)
Everyone whose rights have been adversely
affected by administrative action has the right to be given written
reasons.
(3)
National legislation must be enacted to
give effect to these rights, and must-
(a)
Provide for the review of administrative
action by a court or, where appropriate, an independent and impartial
tribunal;
(b)
Impose a duty on the state to give effect
to the rights in subsection (1) and (2); and
(c)
Promote an efficient
administration.
[9]
In
President of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South
African Rugby Union and Others (CCT 16/98)
[1999] ZACC 11
;
2000 (1)
SA 1
;
1999 (10) BCLR 1059
(10 September 1999)
the Constitutional
Court stated the following:
“
Paragraph 139
It ca be seen from these provisions that members of the executive in
the national and provincial spheres have a range
of responsibilities:
for preparing and initiating legislation; for developing policy; for
co-ordination of government departments;
for implementing legislation
and for implementing policy. A similar range of responsibilities is
conferred upon the executive councils
of municipalities. One of the
tasks of the national and provincial executives (and municipal
executives) is therefore to ensure
that legislation and policy are
implemented. The process of implementation is generally carried out
by the public service. Members
of the executive, of course, have
other functions as well, such as the development policy and the
initiation and preparation of
legislation, which are not directly
concerned with administration.
[10]
The Court continued to state the following:
“
Paragraph 141
In section 33 the adjective ‘administrative’ not
‘executive’ is used to qualify ‘action’.
This suggests that the test for determining whether
conduct constitutes ‘administrative action’ is not the
question
whether the action concerned is performed by a member of the
executive arm of government. What matters is not so much the
functionary
as the function. The question is whether the task itself
is administrative or not. It may well be, as contemplated in Fedsure,
that some acts of a legislature may constitute ‘administrative
action’. Similarly, judicial officers may, from time
to time,
carry out administrative tasks. The focus of the enquiry as to
whether conduct is ‘administrative action’
is not on the
arm of government to which the relevant actor belongs, but on the
nature of the power he or she is exercising”.
[11]
It is apparent in this case that the applicant has applied to the
respondent to be issued with
an identity document and a passport. It
is also plain that the issuance of the identity document is dealt
with by the respondent
in the execution of its constitutional
functions and duties. It follows ineluctably therefore that the
conduct of the respondent,
through its officials which are part of
the public service, is an administrative action as contemplated in
section 33 of the Constitution.
It is therefore not open to the
applicant to approach this Court with an applicant to compel the
respondent to issue an identity
document and passport without first
exhausting the procedures laid down in PAJA.
[12]
There is no merit in the applicant’s contention that PAJA would
only be applicable if the
respondent had failed or refused to issue
the identity document and passport. In this case the respondent has
not made a decision
whether to issue these documents or not.
According to PAJA, if an organ of state takes any decision or fails
to take any decision
and such decision or failure to take a decision
materially and adversely affects the rights of an individual, the
affected individual
has the right to ask for written reasons for that
decision and to proceed to Court, should need be, to seek an order
that such
a decision or failure to decide be reviewed and set aside.
[13]
It is my considered view therefore that the applicant has its
remedies under PAJA and not by
way of an interdict for it fails to
meet all the three requirements of an interdict, which are, a clear
right, reasonable apprehension
of harm and no other remedy available
in due course. The applicant fails on the third requirement of an
interdict for there is
another remedy available to it under PAJA,
which is the review of the decision taken or failure to take a
decision by the respondent
and its officials. The unavoidable
conclusion is therefore that the application falls to be dismissed.
[14]
Even if I am wrong on the point that the applicant should have
followed PAJA in this case, the
application is still unmeritorious in
that the respondent is entitled by statute to investigate and
ascertain, in order to avoid
fraud which has engulfed the
respondent’s department in recent times, that all processes are
followed. Section 12 of the
Identifications Act, 68 of 1997 provides
that the Director-General (“DG”) may request any person
to furnish it with
proof of the correctness of any particulars which
have been furnished in respect of such person and may investigate or
cause to
be investigated any matter in respect of which particulars
are required to be recorded in the population register. The applicant
has furnished certain particulars to the DG and the DG is entitled to
investigate the correctness thereof.
[15]
As indicated above, the respondent has requested the applicant to
furnish certain information
and documents and the applicant’s
simple answer is that she does not have those documents. The
applicant even refused to
assist the respondent in tracing the
persons who attended at the respondent’s offices and made
themselves out as the applicant’s
parents. It is quite
disturbing that the applicant, who alleges that she does not know
much about her parents whom she alleges
abandoned her, would not want
to trace these people when she is given their names and address by
the respondent. It is further
surprising that the applicant would not
want to meet its parents and find out why and how was it abandoned.
[16]
I do not agree with the applicant that she does not need to bring her
parents or legal guardian
to the offices of the respondent because
she is now a major and was initially issued with the birth
certificate and passport by
the respondent. In terms of
section 7
of
the
Births and Deaths Registration Act, 51 of 1992
, the respondent is
still entitled to require the person who has furnished any
particulars, like the applicant in this case, to
furnish proof of the
correctness of such particulars and to afford the respondent such
time to investigate the correctness of such
information or
particulars.
[17]
It is undisputed that in November 2018 the respondent received
information from people who completed
forms and registered the birth
of the applicant as her parents. The applicant has been furnished
with the particulars of these
people but refused to confront the
situation and clear the air that these persons are not her parents
that abandoned her when she
was only six years old. Faced with this
conflicting information, it would be absurd to deny the respondent an
opportunity to investigate
the correctness of such information.
Furthermore, it cannot be said that the delay in the investigation is
unreasonable for the
applicant refuses to participate and assist to
speed up the process. It is my respectful view therefore that the
process followed
by the respondent in this case is fair and
reasonable and the application falls to be dismissed.
[18]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
The application is
dismissed with costs.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
24
th
October 2022
Date
of Judgment:
3
rd
November 2022
For
the Applicant:
Advocate N Lombard
Instructed
by:
Bregman Moodley Attorneys
Tel: 011 646 0335
sasha@bmalaw.co.za
For
the Respondent:
Advocate M Amojee
Instructed
by:
State Attorneys
Tel: 011 330 7656
zsahib@justice.gov.za
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