Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 758South Africa
Sitrusrand Boerdery (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Employment and Labour and Others (097109/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 758 (22 July 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sitrusrand Boerdery (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Employment and Labour and Others (097109/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 758 (22 July 2025)
Sitrusrand Boerdery (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Employment and Labour and Others (097109/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 758 (22 July 2025)
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sino date 22 July 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
097109/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
22.07.2025
In
the matter between:
SITRUSRAND
BOERDERY (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF EMPLOYMENT AND LABOUR
First Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF
EMPLOYMENT
AND LABOUR
Second
Respondent
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Third
Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF HOME AFFAIRS
Fourth
Respondent
The
matter was heard in open court and the judgment was prepared and
authored by the judge whose name is reflected herein and was
handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file
of this matter on Caselines. The date of handing-down is deemed
to be 22
nd
July 2025.
JUDGMENT
KEKANA
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant seeks to review and set aside a decision that was taken
by the Department of Employment and Labour (“the
Department”)
refusing/rejecting the applicant’s application for a letter of
recommendation required in terms of
section 21
of the
Immigration
Act, 13 of 2002
read with regulation 20(1)(b) of the Immigration
Regulations (“the decision”). The decision involved the
refusal to
issue a letter of recommendation (Working Condition and
Salary Benchmarking Certificate) required by the Department of Home
Affairs
(“Home Affairs”) to obtain a Corporate Visa.
[2]
The decision was taken by the Department’s Adjudication
Committee on the 24
th
March 2023 and communicated to the
applicant on 12 April 2023.
[3]
Section 21(1)
of the
Immigration Act reads
: “Subject to
subsection (1A), a corporate visa may be issued by the
Director-General to a corporate applicant, to employ
foreigners who
may conduct work for such corporate applicant in the Republic.”
[4]
Regulation 20(1)(b) of the Immigration Regulations provides that w
hen
applying for a corporate visa, the applicant must submit a completed
Form 13 and provide:
(a)
Proof that there is a need to employ the
number of foreign nationals requested; and
(b)
A
letter from the Department of Labour confirming that:
(i)
A
diligent search was conducted but no suitable South African citizens
or permanent residents were found for the positions;
(ii)
Job
descriptions and proposed remuneration for each foreign employee are
provided; and
(iii)
The salaries and benefits offered to
foreign workers are not less than those offered to local employees in
similar roles.
BACKGROUND
[5]
The applicant, a farming company specialising in citrus produce,
grows, packs and exports South African citrus. It required
762
workers for various positions in anticipation of the March to October
2023 harvest season. The positions are as follows: 696
General farm
workers; 52 Packers and Auto packers; 1 Grader/sorter; 10 Carton
Makers; 2 Auto Packer Operators and 1 Handyman/maintenance
worker.
[6]
The Applicant advertised 762 vacancies in the local newspaper in
English. The recruitment drive yielded only 15 applications.
None of
the applicants were found suitable for the positions. On 10 February
2023, the applicant applied to the Department for
a letter of
recommendation as required in terms of
section 21
of the
Immigration
Act, read
with regulation 20(1)(b) of the Immigration Regulations,
alleging that it could not find suitable locals to fill the
positions.
[7]
The applicant sent a letter contemplated in Regulation 20(1)(b) of
the Immigration Regulations for purposes of obtaining a corporate
visa to employ foreign workers to fill the 762 posts. In
response the Department referred a list of 1244 potential candidates
via email to the applicant on several dates as follows:
7.1
On 24 February 2023, a list of 594 potential candidates was sent to
the applicant;
7.2
On 26 February 2023, an additional list of 246 potential candidates
was sent to the applicant;
7.3
On 1 March 2023, a list containing 122 more potential candidates was
sent to the applicant;
7.4
Finally, on 22 March 2023, a further list containing 249 potential
candidates was sent to the applicant.
[8]
On 24 March 2023, the Department’s International/Cross-Border
Labour Migration Management Adjudication Committee (“the
Adjudication Committee”) convened a meeting to adjudicate the
applicant’s application.
[9]
On 11 April 2023, the applicant offered written feedback to the
Department on the recruitment drive it had conducted following
interviews with those who had responded to advertisements that had
been placed in various community halls within
Sunday’s
River Valley and surrounding areas, and those who had been referred
to the applicant by the Department (“the
feedback”).
[10]
In the feedback, the applicant indicated to the Department that 1 759
candidates applied for the posts, but only 58 candidates
were
successful. On the 12
th
April 2023, the Department
transmitted an email to the applicant communicating the decision. The
decision is contained in the Department’s
letter dated 11 April
2023, in which the Department communicated that the application for a
letter of recommendation is refused/rejected.
The letter reads as
follows:
“
This
letter serves to inform you that after careful consideration of your
application for a Working Conditions and Salary Benchmarking
Certificate in respect of your Corporate Visa (DHA-1743) application,
the Department of Employment and Labour made a negative
recommendation thereon based on the following factor: The skill is
available in the country.”
[11]
It is the above decision that is the subject matter of this review
application.
GROUNDS
OF REVIEW
[12]
The applicant’s grounds of review are as follows: (a) the
department failed to consider relevant considerations, (b)
the
decision is irrational; (c) the decision is procedurally unfair
APPLICANT’S
SUBMISSIONS
[13]
The applicant submitted that the Department did not take cognizance
of the reality that there were only 3 candidates with the
required
skills, while it was looking to place 672 candidates. In this regard,
the applicant contends that the department failed
to consider
relevant factors. Further, the decision is procedurally unfair
because the applicant was not provided with an opportunity
to make
representations before the decision.
[14]
The Applicant further contends that the decision-maker failed to
consider the feedback provided on the list of potential candidates
that were sent to the applicant. The basis for this contention is
that this feedback was provided after the meeting of the Adjudication
Committee and that because the decision is dated 11 April 2023, the
same day the feedback was communicated to the Department, the
decision maker could not have considered it.
[15]
A further submission by the applicant is that the deponent of the
respondents’ affidavit lacks personal knowledge of
the contents
of the affidavit and the authority to make the affidavit. In the
absence of a confirmatory affidavit from one of the
members of the
Adjudication Committee, due to her absence at the adjudication
meeting, her statements are hearsay. Because the
deponent did not
attend the meeting and sign the letter (decision), she was not
involved in making the impugned decision.
RESPONDENTS’
SUBMISSIONS
[16]
The respondents submitted that the applicant failed to demonstrate
that it conducted a diligent search, resulting in an inadequate
outcome. Further, had the Applicant conducted a diligent search and
conducted interviews in good faith, it would have been able
to find
suitable candidates, as the required positions are for general
workers whose skills are generally available in the country.
[17]
Initially, the applicant advertised only in a local newspaper in
English, despite some or the majority of potential candidates
being
unable to read English. This, the respondents submit, is a lack of
intention to find suitable candidates.
[18]
Following the Department’s assistance in recruiting potential
candidates and reviewing the applicant's reasons for not
finding
suitable candidates, the Department was not satisfied that the
feedback was satisfactory because it maintains the skill
is available
in the country. The respondent submitted that the reasons that were
provided by the applicant were considered and
found wanting, and
these include:
18.1
Non-compliance with
the application procedure;
18.2
Insufficient
experience in roles such as packers, sorters;
18.3
Submission of
duplicate applications;
18.4
Absence of
experience with citrus farming;
18.5
Lack of familiarity
with packhouse operations;
18.6
Insufficient
understanding and poor eyesight;
18.7
Inability to perform
basic counting tasks;
18.8
Limited proficiency
in English; and
18.9
Failure to attend
scheduled appointments/no-show.
[19]
Finally, the respondents contend that, considering that the applicant
submitted all pertinent information through Form 13 and
provided
additional details through subsequent engagement, the procedure was
fair as the applicant had been given many opportunities
to present
its case.
DEPONENT
OF THE ANSWERING AFFIDAVIT INCOMPETENT
[20]
The applicant contends that the deponent to the answering affidavit
is not competent to depose to the affidavit
because the deponent did
not form part of the committee that took the decision on the 24
th
March 2025.
[21]
The respondent contends that the deponent occupies the position of
chief director of Employee Services, a unit responsible
for
overseeing the issue of the certificates in question. Further that
the deponent indicated that she considered the records and
the
documents in making the decision.
[22]
The deponent is an official in the department and her knowledge is
based on documents which have been identified and form part
of the
record herein. In the answering affidavit, the deponent places no
reliance on consultation with another person to gain knowledge
and
therefore the allegations contained in the answering cannot be held
to be hearsay.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES: JUDICIAL REVIEW
[23]
It is trite that all exercises of public power must comply with the
principles of lawfulness, reasonableness, and procedural
fairness, as
guaranteed by section 33 of the Constitution and codified in the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
("PAJA").
Judicial review under PAJA is concerned with how the decision was
taken, not the merits thereof (See Trencon
Construction v IDC
2015
(5) SA 245
(CC).
[24]
In terms of section 6 of PAJA, administrative action is reviewable
on, inter alia, the following grounds: (a) The action was
unauthorised or the administrator acted beyond their powers; (b) The
action was taken without considering relevant factors or based
on
irrelevant considerations; (c) The action was not rationally
connected to the purpose, the information before the administrator,
or the reasons given; (d) The procedure followed was procedurally
unfair; (e) The decision-maker was biased or acted for an ulterior
purpose or in bad faith.
[25]
Even where a ground of review is established, the court has a
discretionary remedial power under section 8 of PAJA, which includes
setting aside the decision, remitting it, or substituting it where
appropriate.
ANALYSIS
FAILURE
TO CONSIDER RELEVANT CONSIDERATIONS
[26]
The applicant submitted that when the Adjudication Committee
considered the applicant’s application on 24 March 2023,
the
feedback regarding the 1,759 potential candidates had not yet been
received, as it was only provided to the Department on 11
April 2023.
It was further submitted that the record contains no indication that,
after the feedback was received on 11 April 2023,
the Adjudication
Committee reconvened to consider it prior to the decision being
communicated to the applicant the following day,
on 12 April 2023.
Further that there is similarly nothing in the Rule 53 record to
suggest that the written feedback was considered
at any stage of the
decision-making process. On this basis, the applicant contends that
the Department failed to take relevant
considerations into account in
making its decision.
[27]
The respondent submitted that the applicant failed to demonstrate
that it had conducted a diligent search. It was further submitted
that, had the applicant conducted interviews in good faith, it would
have identified suitable candidates. The respondents maintained
that
the positions for which the applicant sought foreign workers were for
general labour, and that such skills are commonly available
within
the country.
[28]
On 10 February 2023, the Director-General of the Department of
Employment and Labour (DoL) acknowledged receipt of the applicant’s
work visa request. The letter stated:
"As part of our
thorough process, the provincial office of the Department will
advertise the job opportunity on the Employment
Services of South
Africa (ESSA) system, consult with private recruitment agencies, and
review national jobseeker databases to determine
if the required
skills are available.
The final decision on
your application will be communicated in writing by the Chairperson
of the Adjudication Committee within 30
working days."
[29]
Importantly, before the Department made its decision, it attempted to
verify whether the necessary skills were indeed unavailable
locally.
It is undisputed that a recruitment campaign was conducted by the
Labour Centre in the Sunday River Valley and Motherwell
regions
following the applicant’s application. This drive attracted
1,410 job seekers, and approximately 1,006 were verified
and referred
to the applicant.
[30]
On 24 March 2023, the Adjudication Committee met to review the
applicant’s request. According to the minutes of that
meeting
of the adjudication committee, the job was listed on the ESSA system,
and 5,995 job seekers were matched to the opportunity.
In addition,
1,410 people responded through the Labour Centre’s recruitment,
with 1,006 verified and referred to the applicant.
After reviewing
all of this, the committee recommended against the application,
stating that the required skills are available
in the country.
[31]
Section 21(2)(d)
of the
Immigration Act requires
the Department to
consider, among other things, any representations made by the
applicant regarding the need to employ foreign
nationals. In its
application, the applicant indicated that its own recruitment
efforts—specifically, an advertisement placed
in a local
newspaper—had not yielded suitable candidates. The committee’s
adverse recommendation took into account
not only this attempt by the
applicant but also the parallel recruitment efforts undertaken by the
Labour Centre, including the
verification of job seekers.
[32]
The applicant’s contention that the respondents failed to
consider the feedback that was sent to the department on the
11
th
April 2023, which was relevant to the decision, was not considered.
The respondents contend that the deponent considered the feedback
before the decision was made. Considering the number of potential
candidates on the ESSA system, the respondent’s assertion
that
the feedback was considered cannot be denied. The deponent indicated
that she considered the feedback and was unconvinced
that the
applicant could not find the skill it required locally. The applicant
did not prove otherwise.
[33]
In my view, the Department duly considered the applicant’s
representations and also took into account the broader context.
This
included the general availability of the skill set in question, the
thousands of potential matches identified on the ESSA
database, and
more than 1,000 verified job seekers who were referred to the
applicant for employment.
[34]
Accordingly, I am of the view that the Department considered all
relevant facts in concluding that the skill is readily available
in
the country. The applicant’s failure to successfully place
candidates does not negate the existence of over 5,000 potential
job
seekers on the ESSA system. [35]In these circumstances, the
Department cannot be faulted.
RATIONALITY
[36]
The applicant contends that the decision by the Adjudication
Committee is reviewable and ought to be set aside on the basis
of
irrationality as contemplated in
section 6(2)(f)(ii)(cc)
of PAJA
[37]
The applicant argued that the adjudication committee was presented
with information indicating that only 3 job seekers were
placed,
whereas the applicant was seeking 762 workers. Accordingly, the
decision is not justified by or rationally connected to
and supported
by the information before the Adjudication Committee. The applicant
contends that given the foregoing, the decision
is liable to be
reviewed and set aside for want of rationality.
[38]
The respondent argued that the department considered the information
before it and concluded that the skill that the applicant
sought to
fill was available in the country. The respondent contends that the
decision aligns with the Department’s mandate
to ensure that
the skill in question is genuinely unavailable in the country before
the foreign nationals are allowed to occupy
the positions in
question. The respondent submitted that the purpose for which the
power was granted was to address the socio-economic
and employment
challenges that South Africa faces.
[39]
It is well established that a decision is reviewable under the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”)
if it is not rationally connected to the information before the
administrator or to the reasons provided by the administrator.
The
inquiry under this ground is whether the decision is rationally
justified and supported by the information that was before
the
decision-maker at the time, as well as the reasons given for the
decision.
[40]
Where a decision is not rationally connected to the information
before the administrator or the reasons provided, it is reviewable
for irrationality. (See Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of
SA: In re President of the RSA
[2000] ZACC 1
;
2000 (2) SA 674
(CC)).
[41]
In the present matter, the Adjudication Committee had before it the
following information:
(a) The applicant sought to employ 696
general farm workers, 52 packers and auto-packers, 1 grader/sorter,
10 carton makers and
auto-packer operators, and 1
handyman/maintenance worker;
(b)
Despite placing an advertisement in the local newspaper, the
applicant was only able to place 3 workers;
(c)
The Department conducted a recruitment drive which resulted in a
substantial number of jobseekers expressing interest in the
advertised opportunities and being referred to the applicant;
(d)
A total of 1 244 verified potential candidates were sent to the
applicant for consideration. Based on this information,
the
Department concluded that the skills required were available within
the Republic and, accordingly, refused the application.
[42]
In terms of section 21 of the Act, the Department is required to be
satisfied that, following a diligent search, the applicant
was unable
to find suitable local candidates. The statutory power to approve the
employment of foreign nationals is triggered only
once it is
established that the required skills are not reasonably available
within the local labour market. This power is intended
to ensure that
job opportunities are, in the first instance, made available to South
African citizens and permanent residents.
Having found that there
were thousands of potential candidates on the ESSA system, the
committee could rightfully not accede to
the applicant’s
application.
[43]
In the circumstances, and given the information before the
Adjudication Committee, the decision to refuse the application is
rational and cannot be faulted.
PROCEDURALLY
UNFAIR
[44]
The applicant submitted that the Department failed to afford it an
opportunity to make representations prior to taking the
impugned
decision. Consequently, the provisions of section 3(1), read with
section 3(2) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act 3 of 2000
(“PAJA”), were not complied with, rendering the decision
procedurally unfair and susceptible to review.
[45]
The respondent, on the other hand, contended that the Department
followed the procedure prescribed by the applicable regulations.
It
argued that, in terms of the regulatory framework, once an
application is submitted, the Department is required to take a
decision
based on the information provided. Accordingly, the
respondent submitted that the applicant’s version was placed
before the
decision-maker through the application itself, and no
further procedural step was envisaged.
[46]
In support of this contention, the respondent relied on the decision
in Jaihai v Financial Services Tribunal and Another (3416/2022)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 697;
[2023] 4 All SA 404
(GP) at para 42, where
Sardiwalla J reaffirmed the principle that while procedural fairness
is a fundamental requirement under
PAJA, it should not be interpreted
in a manner that imposes rigid or expansive obligations that unduly
inhibit the state’s
ability to function effectively.
[47]
It is trite that procedurally unfair administrative action is
reviewable under PAJA. In the present matter, the applicant set
out
the considerations prescribed in Regulation 21 in its application,
including its assertion that, despite a diligent search,
it was
unable to locate suitable candidates domestically. The Department,
however, rejected the application on the basis of the
results of its
own recruitment efforts, which indicated that a significant number of
suitable local candidates were available.
[48]
In my view, no further representation was required in the
circumstances. The procedure inherently assumes that if the
Department
is satisfied that the skill in question is not available
in the country, it will approve the application. Conversely, if the
Department
concludes that the skill is available, it will reject the
application. The recruitment data placed before the adjudication
committee
confirmed the availability of the skill in South Africa.
Importantly, the decision of 12 April 2023 reflected the same
rationale
considered by the committee and was not based on any new
material or undisclosed considerations. The basis for the refusal –
namely, the availability of the skill locally – was known from
the outset.
[49]
Requiring the adjudication committee to invite further
representations in such circumstances would, in my view, amount to an
unwarranted procedural burden inconsistent with the objectives of
efficient administration. In Moseme Road Construction CC and
others v
King Civil Engineering CC and another
2010 (4) SA 359
(SCA) the
refused to impose a relief against Moseme Road Construction CC
despite finding that the process followed to award the
tender to
Moseme Road Construction was flawed. Essentially finding that not
every error will lead to a decision in favour of the
applicant in
review applications.
CONCLUSION
[50] Having considered
the grounds upon which this review is based, the court finds that the
applicant has failed to demonstrate
that the respondent’s
decision is reviewable or liable to be set aside. In the court’s
view, the Department duly considered
all relevant factors placed
before the committee. Furthermore, the decision was rational and the
procedure followed cannot be faulted.
I
therefore make the following order:
1.
The application for review is dismissed with costs.
KEKANA
PD
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
OF HEARING: 19
th
February 2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 22
nd
July 2025
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
ADV
Vincent Mabuza
Instructed
by:
Helena
Strijdom Attorneys
Helena.law@yebo.za
For
the first and second respondent:
ADV
Elizabeth C. Chabalala
Instructed
By:
State
Attorney Pretoria
ronbaloyi@justice.gov.za
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