Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1041South Africa
Moodley v Minister of Justice and Correctional Service and Others (21/53385) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1041 (15 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 December 2022
Headnotes
against Mr. Moodley is that he had not participated in a victim-offender dialogue with the Matthews family. While Mr. Moodley was open to this, the Matthews family understandably had no interest at all in participating in such a dialogue.
Judgment
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## Moodley v Minister of Justice and Correctional Service and Others (21/53385) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1041 (15 December 2022)
Moodley v Minister of Justice and Correctional Service and Others (21/53385) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1041 (15 December 2022)
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sino date 15 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
####
Case
No. 21/53385
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE:
15 December 2022
In
the matter between:
DONOVAN
SAMUEL
MOODLEY
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
First
Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
AND
CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Second
Respondent
NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER: DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
AND
CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Third
Respondent
JOHANNESBURG
AREA COMMISSIONER:
DEPARTMENT
OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Fourth Respondent
HEAD
OF PRISON: JOHANNESBURG
CORRECTIONAL
CENTRE B
Fifth
Respondent
PAROLE
BOARD: JOHANNESBURG CORRECTIONAL
CENTRE
B
Sixth
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, Mr. Moodley, is serving
an effective life sentence for the kidnapping and murder of Leigh
Matthews, and the extortion
of her family. Labuschagne J imposed that
sentence on 4 August 2005.
2
Mr. Moodley’s minimum detention
period, after which he became eligible to be considered for release
on parole, expired on
3 June 2018. There was, however, a significant
delay in considering Mr. Moodley’s fitness for parole.
Aggrieved by that delay,
on 22 November 2021, Mr. Moodley applied
urgently and in person to this court for a wide range of relief aimed
at speeding up the
process. Mr. Moodley’s application came
before my brother Wright J, who removed the matter from the roll and
reserved the
question of costs.
3
On 24 November 2021, Mr. Moodley
approached the Deputy Judge President of this Division, and asked
that his application be allocated
a hearing date on the ordinary
roll. The Deputy Judge President set the matter down for hearing on
28 January 2022. The Judge President
of this Division then specially
allocated Mr. Moodley’s application to me.
4
By 24 January 2022, it became clear that
the matter would not be ripe for hearing on 28 January, because the
necessary papers had
not been filed. I convened a pre-hearing
conference in open court to case manage the matter. By that time, Mr.
Moodley’s
efforts to catalyse the parole process had achieved
their purpose. He had been summoned to a hearing before the sixth
respondent,
the Correctional Supervision and Parole Board (“the
Parole Board”). That hearing took place on 21 January 2022. It
lasted six-and-a-half hours. The parties agreed that the outcome of
the hearing ought to be addressed in further papers. They agreed
a
timetable for the filing of those papers. I removed the matter from
the roll for 28 January 2022, and set it down for hearing
before me
on 18 February 2022.
5
On 18 February 2022, it emerged that the
Parole Board had declined to recommend Mr. Moodley’s release.
It had instead recommended
that the issue of Mr. Moodley’s
eligibility for parole be referred for further examination by a
psychologist and a social
worker. Mr. Moodley objected to this
outcome. He sought an interdict restraining the first respondent, the
Minister, from considering
or acting on the Parole Board’s
recommendation pending the outcome of an application to review the
recommendation and set
it aside. The interdict was granted by
agreement between the parties.
6
The parties also agreed that I should
remain seized with the matter for the purposes of case managing and
deciding the review application.
It seemed to me that this was the
sensible way forward. Mr. Moodley is litigating this matter in person
while incarcerated. It
would not be fair to require him to take the
ordinary administrative steps necessary to secure a hearing of his
review application
in these circumstances.
7
The parties exchanged further papers in
terms of case management orders I made between 18 February and 21
October 2022, when the
matter was finally heard. At my request, the
Johannesburg Society of Advocates appointed Mr. Kerr-Philips and Mr.
May to appear
and make submissions to assist the court. I am
particularly grateful to them for their thoughtful and concise
argument. In the
best traditions of advocacy, their argument isolated
the true issues in this case with insight and dexterity.
8
Although he has two degrees in law, Mr.
Moodley is a lay litigant. He has himself drawn all the papers on
which he relies. Although
his oral submissions before me were lucid
and well-presented, his papers do not focus attention on the material
issues in the normal
manner of documents drawn by qualified legal
practitioners.
9
I have accordingly approached Mr.
Moodley’s case as required by the Constitutional Court’s
decision in
Xinwa
v Volkswagen of South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2003] ZACC 7
;
2003 (4) SA 390
(CC)
(at paragraph 13). I have
construed
his affidavits generously, in the light most favourable to him. I
have also been assisted by very fair and able advocacy
from Mr.
Malema, who appeared for the respondents. In the end, it was possible
to chart a path through the papers that identifies
Mr. Moodley’s
true complaint, and to assess and remedy that complaint in a manner
that is fundamentally fair to all the parties.
The
Review
10
The issue now before me is whether the
outcome of the 21 January 2022 Parole Board hearing falls to be
reviewed and set aside. The
hearing and its outcome play a critical
role in the process that may eventually lead to Mr. Moodley’s
release. That process
commences with a series of interventions and
reports meant to provide a meaningful assessment of whether a
prospective parolee
is fit for release – whether, in other
words, they are likely to be able “to lead a socially
responsible and crime-free
life in the future”
(section 36
of
the
Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998
).
11
The relevant material is considered by a
Case Management Committee in terms of
section 42
of the
Correctional
Services Act. The
Case Management Committee compiles a report which
covers the ground specified in
section 42
(2) (d) of the Act. The
report deals with the offence the prospective parolee committed;
their criminal record; their disciplinary
record, attitude, conduct
and physical and mental state while in prison; any training
programmes in which they have participated;
their immigration status;
the risk they may pose to the community if released; and their
progress in implementing a correctional
sentence plan against which
all prisoners are periodically assessed in terms of
section 38
of the
Act.
12
Having taken all of this into account,
and recorded it in a report, the Case Management Committee produces a
recommendation. In
Mr. Moodley’s case, the Case Management
Committee produced a report on 14 March 2021. The Case Management
Committee took
into account what it considered to be Mr. Moodley’s
genuine remorse for the crimes he committed; the fact that he can
expect
to benefit from a strong social support structure if and when
he is released; the fact that he had, at the time, an offer of
employment
on release; the fact that he had obtained a full matric
exemption, a Bachelor of Laws degree and a Master of Laws degree
while
incarcerated; his co-operation with the psychologist and social
workers assigned to assist him; and his good (though not spotless)
disciplinary record.
13
The only fact the Case Management
Committee held against Mr. Moodley is that he had not participated in
a victim-offender dialogue
with the Matthews family. While Mr.
Moodley was open to this, the Matthews family understandably had no
interest at all in participating
in such a dialogue.
14
After weighing the various
considerations before it, the Case Management Committee recommended
that Mr. Moodley be placed on parole.
15
The Case Management Committee’s
report was then transmitted to the Parole Board. The Parole Board
convened to consider Mr.
Moodley’s case on 21 January 2022.
While a Case Management Committee is composed entirely of
correctional officials, a Parole
Board, constituted under
section 74
of the
Correctional Services Act, includes
representatives from the
broader community. Mr. Moodley’s Parole Board also included a
representative from the South African
Police Service.
16
The function of the Parole Board is to
review the Case Management Committee’s report and to assess
whether the prospective
parolee should be placed on parole. Where the
prospective parolee is serving a life sentence, that assessment takes
the form of
a recommendation to the National Council for Correctional
Services, which in turn makes a recommendation to the Minister
(section 78
(1) of the Correctional Services Act). It is the Minister
who takes the final decision on whether parole should be granted
(section 73
(5) (a) (ii) of the
Correctional Services Act).
17
Mr
. Moodley’s papers are sharply
critical of the way the Parole Board conducted the hearing of 21
January 2022. He alleges that
he was deprived of the information
necessary to meaningfully prepare for and participate in the hearing.
In his oral submissions
before me, Mr. Moodley argued that the Parole
Board proceedings were a sham, in that he was given no meaningful
opportunity to
make submissions in support of his case for parole,
and in that no serious effort was made to consider his fitness for
parole objectively
and fairly.
18
These are far-reaching criticisms, but I
need not ultimately determine whether they are well-made.
19
The more fundamental problem is that it
is impossible to evaluate what happened at the Parole Board hearing
of 21 January 2022,
because the minutes of the Parole Board hearing
are incoherent. They consist of three and a half pages of scattershot
notes. The
hearing lasted for six and a half hours. Even if anything
meaningful could be deciphered from the minutes (not much can), it is
inconceivable that the minutes constitute a fair reflection of what
happened at the hearing.
20
The Parole Board ultimately recommended
that Mr. Moodley be referred for what it calls a “further
profile”. The “further
profile” process the Parole
Board recommended would consist of additional interactions with
social workers and a psychologist
to address what the Parole Board
refers to as Mr. Moodley’s “abnormal love of money”
and what the Board characterises
as his insensitivity to gender-based
violence.
21
These conclusions cannot be reconciled
with the reports of the psychologist and the social workers upon
which they apparently rely.
There was of course a financial motive to
Mr. Moodley’s crime, and that crime was a particularly horrific
act of gender-based
violence. But neither the psychologist nor the
social workers who assessed Mr. Moodley stated that Mr. Moodley
currently tends
toward excessive greed or currently has a propensity
to commit acts of gender-based violence.
22
The Parole Board’s conclusions
appear to me to confuse the nature of and motive for Mr. Moodley’s
offence with the social
workers’ and psychologist’s
considered views about the extent to which Mr. Moodley has been
rehabilitated while serving
his sentence. The psychologist who
assessed Mr. Moodley was apparently so impressed with Mr. Moodley’s
rehabilitation that
he recommended that Mr. Moodley be placed on
parole. While the social workers’ report concluded that Mr.
Moodley had not
been “entirely truthful” in his
interactions with the social workers who compiled it, no reasons are
given for that
conclusion, and the report otherwise concludes that
the “necessary interventions [have] been made to prepare [Mr.
Moodley]
to be a responsible and productive citizen again”.
23
The Case Management Committee, having
considered the social workers’ report and the psychologist’s
report, took the
view that Mr. Moodley should be placed on parole.
The Parole Board’s contrary view does not appear to be based on
the Case
Management Committee’s report, or on the material on
which that report was based, or on any other evidence discernible
from
the record. It is possible that there was material before the
Parole Board that might have justified its recommendation, but
without
an adequate minute of the hearing, that conclusion cannot be
drawn.
24
In my view, the statutory scheme set up
by the
Correctional Services Act establishes
the Case Management
Committee’s recommendations as a baseline, to be departed from
only where justified by reasons grounded
in established facts. Such
documentary insight as I have been given suggests either that the
Parole Board’s conclusions were
entirely subjective
impressions, unrelated to anything the Case Management Committee had
found when it considered the material
generated by the various
programmes in which Mr. Moodley participated, or that the Parole
Board’s conclusions are backed-up
by evidence that, for
whatever reason, was not recorded in the minutes of the Parole Board
hearing.
25
The matter was argued before me on the
basis that the Parole Board’s recommendation to the National
Council constitutes “administrative
action” within the
meaning of section 1 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3
of 2000 (PAJA). Even though the
Parole Board’s decision is
preparatory in character, in that it constitutes a recommendation to
the final decision maker,
I am satisfied that the recommendation is
administrative action. It is a decision taken by an organ of state in
terms of legislation
that plainly “has the capacity” to
affect Mr. Moodley’s rights, in the sense conveyed by Nugent JA
in
Grey’s Marine Hout Bay (Pty)
Ltd v Minister of Public Works
[2005] ZASCA 43
;
2005
(6) SA 313
(SCA) (at paragraph 23).
26
The impact on Mr. Moodley’s rights
arises from the way in which the Parole Board’s recommendation
undercuts the ability
of the National Council or the Minister to act
rationally in light of it. Because the Parole Board’s
recommendation has no
discernible rational basis, there is no
prospect that any recommendation or decision taken by the National
Council or the Minister
will be rationally grounded. Those
recommendations or decisions will of necessity rely on, and be
tainted by, the Parole Board’s
recommendation. Even if they
decline to adopt the Parole Board’s recommendation, the
National Council and the Minister will
do so without any real insight
into the Parole Board’s proceedings and rationale. The Parole
Board’s proceedings and
recommendation are mandated and
controlled by statute. They play a critical role in the parole
process. The Minister may not release
a prisoner unless the Parole
Board has convened, considered the prisoner’s fitness for
parole and made a recommendation to
which the Minister must then have
careful regard. Without a transparent recommendation from the Parole
Board, rationally grounded
in established facts, the Minister cannot
himself exercise his decision-making power lawfully and rationally.
27
For all these reasons, the Parole
Board’s recommendation constitutes unlawful administrative
action. The recommendation is
not rationally connected to the
information placed before the Board (section 6 (2) (f) (ii) (cc) of
PAJA), and it renders the lawful
and rational exercise of the
Minister’s power to grant or refuse parole to Mr. Moodley
practically impossible. The recommendation
must accordingly be
reviewed and set aside.
Remedy
28
Section 8 of PAJA requires me to grant
just and equitable relief. It was agreed between the parties that, if
I set the Parole Board
hearing aside, the appropriate further remedy
would be to refer the matter back to the Board for a further hearing.
Mr. Malema
submitted that the remedy should end there. Mr.
Kerr-Philips and Mr. Moodley, however, sought to persuade me that I
should set
a timetable for the new hearing, and that I should
supervise the process to the extent necessary.
29
Mr. Moodley has, it is true, endured
significant and largely unexplained delays in the process of
considering his fitness for parole.
I am convinced that, had he not
brought the urgent application that he enrolled before Wright J in
November 2021, the Parole Board
hearing would not have taken place as
soon as it did.
30
I am accordingly satisfied that it would
be just and equitable to put the respondents to terms in preparing
for and holding the
new hearing that must follow upon my order
setting aside the hearing of 21 January 2022. Mr. Kerr-Philips also
submitted that I
should require that Mr. Moodley be afforded copies
of various policy manuals, standing orders and other documentation
necessary
to allow him to prepare for the new hearing. There was no
real resistance to an order of that nature.
31
It was further submitted that I should
place the Minister and the National Council on terms to consider and
decide upon the Parole
Board’s recommendation within a specific
period. I am not satisfied that there should be an order of that
nature, because
the National Council has not been joined to these
proceedings, and because there is no suggestion that the Minister
will not process
the Parole Board’s recommendation promptly and
in good faith once he receives it.
32
In the event, however, that there is an
unreasonable delay in processing the Parole Board’s new
recommendation, I will retain
the supervisory jurisdiction necessary
to remedy any such delay.
The
Interim Interdict
33
Shortly before this matter was heard,
Mr. Moodley brought an urgent application to interdict and restrain
the respondents from harassing,
intimidating or subjecting him to new
conditions of incarceration in retaliation for what appears to have
been his unauthorised
recording of utterances made by the Parole
Board Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson.
34
It is not clear what these recordings
show, or when they were taken. Nor was it clear at the time the
papers were filed whether
Mr. Moodley had actually suffered any
retaliation.
35
However, Mr. Moodley stated that the
urgent application was about his “personal safety” and
was a “matter of life
and death”. His application was not
opposed or answered by any of the respondents. Accordingly, out of an
abundance of caution,
I issued an interim order directing the fourth,
fifth and sixth respondents to take the necessary steps to protect
Mr. Moodley
from unlawful assault, threats, harassment or
intimidation pending the hearing of this application.
36
Mr. Moodley conceded at the hearing that
he had not been subjected to any harsh treatment as a result of his
conduct. Considering
that concession, my interim order should plainly
be discharged.
Order
37
For all these reasons, I make the
following order –
37.1
The recommendation made by the sixth
respondent on 21 January 2022 in respect of the applicant’s
fitness for parole is reviewed
and set aside.
37.2
The sixth respondent is directed to hold
the applicant’s parole hearing afresh by no later than 31 March
2023.
37.3
All reports and other preparatory steps
necessary to hold the hearing on or before 31 March 2023 must be
completed on or before
28 February 2023.
37.4
Not less than two weeks before the
hearing is held -
37.4.1
the applicant is to be informed of the
date and time of the hearing;
37.4.2
the applicant is to be afforded access
to all the material that will be placed before the Parole Board at
the new hearing; and
37.4.3
the applicant is to be afforded access
to all the applicable Parole Board manuals, practice directives,
policies and other material
relevant to the process by which the
Parole Board will consider the applicant’s fitness for parole.
37.5
The applicant is to be afforded a
reasonable opportunity to present his own evidence and argument at
the new Parole Board hearing,
including access to any equipment that
may reasonably be necessary to present his case.
37.6
The first to fifth respondents are
directed to take all the administrative and other steps necessary to
enable the sixth respondent
to comply with this order.
37.7
In the event of non-compliance with this
order, or of unreasonable delay in the further processing of the
Parole Board’s recommendation
on the applicant’s fitness
to be placed on parole, the applicant is authorised to re-enrol this
matter before Wilson J on
five days’ notice to the respondents
and the
amicus curiae
for such further relief as may be necessary.
37.8
Paragraph 4 of this court’s order
dated 10 October 2022 is discharged.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
HEARD
ON: 21
October 2022
FURTHER
SUBMISSIONS ON: 28
October 2022
DECIDED
ON:
15 December 2022
For
the Applicant:
Donovan Moodley
in person
For
the Respondents:
JMV
Malema
Instructed
by the
State
Attorney
For
the
amicus curiae
:
GE
Kerr-Phillips
SG
May
At
the request of the court
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