Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 196South Africa
Tiko v Director General Department of Home Affairs and Another (57494/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 196 (20 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 February 2024
Headnotes
no further instructions regarding this application.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tiko v Director General Department of Home Affairs and Another (57494/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 196 (20 February 2024)
Tiko v Director General Department of Home Affairs and Another (57494/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 196 (20 February 2024)
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sino date 20 February 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
57494/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO DATE: 20 FEBRUARY 2024
In
the matter between:
IYAMU
TIKO
Applicant
and
THE DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
K
STRYDOM, AJ
Introduction:
1.
This is a review application brought against the
decision to withdraw the Applicant’s permanent residence
certificate. The
Applicant seeks an order setting aside the decision
and any decision taken in terms thereof (such as the order to depart
from South
Africa.
2.
The Applicant was issued with permanent residence
certificate on 27 September 1996. On 13 February 2018, the first
Respondent informed
the Applicant that a decision had already been
taken in 2012 by the Department of Home Affairs to withdraw the
permanent residence
permit certificate.
He was
ordered to depart from South Africa on the 18
th
of April 2018. Perturbed by this decision, allegedly
taken six years before it was communicated to him, he appealed to the
second
Respondent. However, on 03 June 2018, the second Respondent
confirmed the decision to withdraw the Applicant's permanent
residence.
3.
As a result, the Applicant launched the present review
proceedings in August 2021. The Respondents served their notice of
intention
to oppose on the 28
th
of April 2022 and emailed the record of proceedings to
the Applicant’s legal representatives on the 24
th
of November 2022. The matter was set down on the
unopposed roll of the 27
th
of
February 2023. The matter was removed by agreement between the
parties to enable the Respondents to file their answering affidavit
and the Respondents were ordered to pay the costs. On the 5
th
of May 2023, the answering affidavit still being
outstanding, the Applicant’s legal representatives sent a
letter to the state
attorney representing the Respondents, indicating
that if the answering affidavit is not filed within seven days
thereof, the applicant
will re-enroll the matter on the unopposed
roll for hearing. No answering affidavit being forthcoming, the
matter was duly enrolled
and the notice of set down, for the present
unopposed roll date of 23 October 2023, was served on the state
attorney on the 6
th
of
June 2023. The Respondents were again warned of the approaching
hearing date and the fact that the matter would be heard unopposed
by
letter from the Applicant’s attorneys on the 18
th
of October 2023.
Proceedings
before Court on 23 and 27 October 2023
4.
When the matter was called on the 23
rd
of October 2023, counsel for the Respondents attempted
to hand up two unsigned (and resultantly uncommissioned) documents
purporting
to be the unsigned answering affidavit of the first
Respondent and the unsigned confirmatory affidavit of Mr Kruger.
These documents
were also uploaded to Case Lines on the same date. I
refused to accept these documents. Counsel for the Respondents sought
clemency
on the basis of the tremendous influx of work faced by the
Respondents. I granted the Respondents an indulgence and stood the
matter
down to the 27
th
of
October 2023, to afford them the opportunity to have the affidavits
signed and commissioned. In doing so, however, I made it
clear
that the failure to present a signed and commissioned answering
affidavit on the 27
th
would
result in a ruling that the matter remained unopposed and would
proceed on that basis.
5.
On the 27
th
of
October 2023, I was informed that the answering affidavit, despite my
admonitions was still not before Court. Counsel for
the
Respondents informed me that, save to confirm that the confirmatory
and answering “affidavits” remained unsigned,
he held no
further instructions regarding this application.
6.
Given that the Respondents had not filed an answering
affidavit and there was no substantive application from the
Respondents for
a postponement, the matter was accordingly heard on
an unopposed basis. I did however allow counsel for the respondents,
as an
officer of this Court, to assist this Court by citing the
relevant statutory provisions that could find application and to
which
regard should be had. I am grateful for his assistance in this
regard.
Background
to the review application
7.
As already indicated, in 2018 the Applicant was informed
that a decision had been made in 2012 to withdraw his permanent
residence
visa. It is important to note that there is no proof
of the 2012 decision on the papers or on the record as filed by the
Respondents, save for the reference thereto in the 2018
communication. Despite this irregularity in the record, counsel
for
the Applicant proceeded to argue the review on the basis that the
2012 decision was made as reflected in the 2018 correspondence
received from Mr Kruger, on behalf of the Director General (“Mr
Kruger’s 2018 correspondence”. Unfortunately,
as will
become apparent forthwith, the lack of the original decision and
reason cannot be remedied so easily.
8.
Mr Kruger proffered two reasons for the first
Respondent’s 2012 decision:
"The reason was
firstly that you received Permanent Residence in 1996 on grounds of
your marriage to a SA citizen. However
you divorced her within two
years after obtaining Permanent Residence. In terms of the Aliens
Control Act (which was valid at the
time of the approval of your
Permanent Residence) you may have been withdrawn if you divorced your
spouse within two years. You
divorced her within 8 months after
obtaining Permanent Residence".
(“marital
status”)
"And secondly you
entered SA claiming to be an Angolan and obtained refugee status.
However, it appears that you are a Nigerian
and therefore resided in
SA and applied for Permanent Residence on a permit issued on
incorrect information."
(“fraudulent
nationality”)
9.
The second Respondent, in upholding the 2012 decision
(“the internal appeal decision”) added a third reason:
“
You have three
convictions in the database of the South African police Service for
driving under the influence of alcohol on a public
road. The
respective dates of these convictions are 30 July 1998, 27 August
1999 and 6 July 2001."
(“previous
convictions”)
10.
The second Respondent concluded that:
“
In conclusion I
wish to inform you that despite your impressive academic record, the
result of your fraudulent identity, terminated
marriage and criminal
convictions are that you are regarded as a person who is not of good
and sound character and I prefer that
such people are not known to
the general public as being permanent residents of this country.”
11.
The reasons proffered for the dismissal of the internal
appeal differ on two fundamental grounds from those stated in Mr
Kruger’s
2018 correspondence. In the first place, the prior
convictions are now included. Secondly, whereas Mr Kruger’s
2018 correspondence
alluded to the issue of fraudulent identity
(“..
it appears that you are a
Nigerian…”)
, the internal appeal
decision deems fraud as having been established (“…
your
fraudulent identity
…”
).
12.
From the record furnished, the basis
for these discrepancies can be found in the internal memorandum
furnished by Mr Kruger to the
first Respondent dated 18
th
of May 2018 (“the internal
memorandum”). The salient paragraphs therein are:
“
8. However
according to his police certificate he was convicted on 30e July1998
for driving a vehicle on the public road under the
influence of
alcohol and was sentenced to pay a fine of R1000 or 30 days
imprisonment with a further suspended sentence of five
years. On 27
August 1999 he was convicted for the same offence and again on 6 July
2001. His application was duly considered and
thereafter refused in
2002 due to his criminal convictions. He appealed against the
refusal, but it was rejected in 2003.
11. An interview was
conducted by inspectorate on 19 February 2016 with Mr, lyamu and he
acknowledged that he indeed committed fraud
by presenting himself as
an Angolan citizen while trying to obtain Permanent Residence as he
was advised that he will only qualify
for asylum if he is an Angolan.
He also acknowledged that the divorce of his marriage with a South
African citizen was already
started before his Permanent Residence
was approved. (Annexure-C)”
Legal
framework
13.
It should at this juncture be noted that the Alien’s
Control Act, 1991 (“ACA”) was repealed in 2003 when the
Immigration
Act, 2002 (“the new Act”) came into force.
14.
Section 54(2) of the New Act governs the effect
the repeal has on permits issued under the ACA as follows:
“
Anything done
under the provisions of a law repealed by subsection (1) and which
could have been done under this Act shall be deemed
to have been done
under this Act.”
15.
Section 8 of the New Act
provides for internal administrative review and appeal procedures
regarding decisions taken in terms thereof,
for those seeking to
challenge administrative decisions. The two channels of internal
review were succinctly described by the Constitutional
Court in
Koyabe
and Others v Minister for Home Affairs and Others
(“Koyabe”):
[1]
“
[51]
Section 8 thus establishes two channels for review. One route is
created under section 8(1) and the other under section 8(4).
The
procedure applicable in a particular case will depend on the nature
of the administrative decision. In section 8(1), a person
refused
entry into the country or found to be an illegal foreigner must be
notified of his or her right to request in writing that
the Minister
review that decision. If the affected person arrived on a conveyance
about to leave the country, the request must
be communicated to the
Minister without delay. Should the Minister’s response not be
obtained by the time the conveyance
departs, the person shall leave
and await the Minister’s decision outside of the country. In
any other case, the affected
person has three days within which to
lodge a review application and may not be deported unless and until
the Minister has confirmed
the decision. Presumably the review must
occur within a reasonable timeframe.
[52]The
procedure established under section 8(1) stands in contrast to that
provided for under section 8(4). In all cases other
than those
contemplated in section 8(1), where a decision has materially and
adversely affected a person’s rights, the decision
shall be
communicated in the prescribed manner and reasons shall be
furnished. Under section 8(4), the affected person may,
within
10 working days, request a review or appeal to the Director-General.
Within a further 10 days of the receipt of the Director-General’s
decision, the person may seek a ministerial review or appeal.”
16.
The new Act, in section 28 sets out the grounds upon
which permits may be withdrawn:
The Director-General
may withdraw a permanent residence permit if its holder –
(a) is convicted of
any of the offences- (i) listed in Schedules 1 and 2; or (ii) in
terms of this Act;
(b) has failed to
comply with the terms and conditions of his or her permit;
(c) has been absent
from the Republic for more than three years, provided that …;
or
(d) has not taken up
residence in the Republic within one year of the issuance of such
permit.
Evaluation
of Respondents’ grounds for withdrawal of permit
First
ground: Previous convictions
17.
It is evident from the record that
the third reason for refusal of the internal appeal, was added
pursuant to the internal memorandum.
It was not factored as a reason
for the withdrawal in 2012. The second respondent, in an internal
appeal of an administrative decision,
may not, of his own accord, add
additional reasons in support of the decision he is to review and
decide upon. In any event, those
convictions were already expunged
from the applicants records in March 2013, well before Mr Kruger
penned the internal appeal memo.
Insofar as this reason may have been
a basis for the decision to withdraw the applicant’s permanent
residence permit, the
reason is based on an error in fact.
Second
ground: marital status
18.
In relying on the marital status of the Applicant, the
withdrawal decision was purportedly based on the provisions of
section 30(2)
(e) of the repealed ACA:
"
The Minister may withdraw an immigration permit issued in terms of
section 25 and by notice in writing order the holder of
such permit
to leave the Republic within a period stated in the notice if- "The
said holder obtained the permit on the basis
of a marriage entered
into less than two years prior to the date of issue of the permit,
and such marriage is judicially annulled
or terminated within two
years subsequent to the said date, unless the Minister is satisfied
that such marriage was not contracted
for the purpose of evading any
provision of this Act."
19.
The marital status of the permit holder is however no
longer listed as a ground for withdrawal per Section 28 of the New
Act. By
virtue of S54(2) of the new Act, therefore, the
Respondents had had no statutory authority to withdraw permanent
residence permits
after the ACA was repealed in 2003. The decision
taken on this basis in 2012 therefore was not authorised by the
empowering provision
as per section 6(2) (f)(i) of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act of 200 ("PAJA") was procedurally
unfair and
was materially influenced by an error of law in terms of
section 6(2) (c) and (d) of ("PAJA").
Third
ground: fraudulent nationality
20.
The fraudulent nationality ground must similarly be determined with
reference to the provisions of the New Act. S30(2)(a)
of the
ACA, had previously empowered the Minister to withdraw a permit where
“(a
) The application for such a permit
contains incorrect information; or (b) The holder of such permit or
his or her agent has furnished
incorrect information in connection
with that application
..."
21.
Section 28 of the New Act contains no similar provision.
I have, however, also considered to the following provisions of the
New
Act:
21.1.
Section
29(1), under the heading ”
Prohibited
persons
”
lists instances where
foreigners would be prohibited persons who would “…
not
qualify for a port of entry visa, admission into the Republic, a visa
or a permanent residence permit
.”
21.2.
One
of these instances is listed in subsection 29(1)(f) as:
"….anyone found in possession of a
fraudulent visa, passport, permanent residence permit or
identification document
.".
21.3.
Section
48 furthermore states that: “
No illegal
foreigner shall be exempt from a provision of this Act or be allowed
to sojourn in the Republic on the grounds that he
or she was not
informed that he or she could not enter or sojourn in the Republic or
that he or she was admitted or allowed to
remain in the Republic
through error or misrepresentation, or because his or her being an
illegal foreigner was undiscovered.”
22.
The applicant argues that, in terms of the New Act, the
applicant should first have been declared a prohibited person before
his
permit could have been withdrawn.
23.
The New Act does not pertinently reference a procedure
for declaring someone to be a prohibited person, however,
contextually seen,
there has to be some form of finding regarding
“fraud” before someone can be held to be a prohibited
person. To
hold otherwise would imply that a person can be
found to be illegally in the country or to have committed fraud
without any proof
thereof.
24.
Without a finding, the
application
of Section 48 of the New Act to the facts
in
casu
would result
in a ‘catch-22’ scenario: The provisions of section
48 apply to
illegal
foreigners. The applicant would only
be
an illegal
foreigner
if his
permanent residence permit was withdrawn. Section 28, which governs
the instances of withdrawal, does not provide for withdrawal
of such
a permit in cases of misrepresentation or fraud.
25.
Similarly, an application of the
provisions of Section 29(1)(f) presupposes a finding that a person is
in possession of a
fraudulent
resident permit. It
is at this juncture that Counsel’s concession in assuming that
the reasons of the 2012 decision are as
per the communication from Mr
Kruger in 2018 becomes problematic.
26.
Mr Kruger’s 2018 correspondence does not indicate
that, when the decision to withdraw was taken in 2012, there had been
a
definitive finding of
misrepresentation
or fraud re the applicant’s nationality. It is only after being
furnished with the internal memorandum which
indicated that
the
applicant allegedly “…
acknowledged
that he indeed committed fraud by presenting himself as an Angolan
citizen”
during
an
“…
interview …conducted
by inspectorate on 19 February 2016…”
that
the second Respondent pertinently uses the term ‘fraud’
in the internal appeal decision.
27.
Presupposing that the admission of fraud in 2016 is
sufficient for purposes of finding the applicant to be a prohibited
person per
section 29(1)(f), the reliance thereon for purposes of
upholding the 2012 decision to withdraw to residence permit is in
itself
ultra vires
.
The alleged admission having only taken place in 2016, it was not
open to the Minister to have regard thereto when deciding the
2012
decision. This would constitute a new reason for the withdrawal,
which in turn would trigger the processes for administrative
review
in terms of section 8 of the New Act afresh. To, on internal appeal,
have regard to such allegations made in
the
internal memorandum, violates the principle of
audi
alteram
partem and
S3(2), in general, and S3(2)(b)(ii), specifically, of PAJA.
28.
In any
event, from the procedure followed in the internal appeal, it also
does not appear as if there was a finding made on illegality.
As per
Koyabe
supra
,
there are two procedures for review envisioned in the New Act. Where
a person is “
..found
to be an illegal foreigner..”,
section
8(1) applies and such a person may not be deported until the decision
is confirmed by the Minister. The present matter,
however, concerns
an internal appeal in terms of Section 8(4)
[2]
– which caters for “…
all
cases other than those contemplated in section 8(1), where a decision
has materially and adversely affected a person’s
rights..”
Finding
29.
The second Respondent’s decision to uphold the
2012 decision to withdraw the applicant’s permanent residence
permit
therefore stands to be set aside.
30.
In considering whether to refer the internal appeal back
to the second respondent for reconsideration, I had regard to the
timelapse
since the original decision was purportedly made in 2012
coupled with the fact that the Respondents, in compiling the record
could
not provide proof of the 2012 decision or reason given at that
time, as well as the reliance on new facts by the first respondent
in
the internal appeal. In view of all these factors and those
listed in the judgment, it would be just and equitable to
substitute
the second Respondent’s decision to uphold the withdrawal of
the applicant’s permanent residence permit,
with a decision to
withdraw the 2012 decision to do so. Naturally all actions taken
pursuant to the withdrawal of the residence
permit stand to be set
aside as a matter of course.
31.
The Applicant as part of his prayers has sought a
declaration that he be declared a permanent resident. I am
disinclined to
grant such a specific order given the possible
permeations that might have on the investigative and other
administrative functions
of the Respondents.
Costs
32.
Counsel for the Applicant, in argument, also submitted
that costs should be awarded on a punitive scale given the
Respondents’
dilatory conduct in this matter. Even though the
notice of motion does indicate that such costs would be sought, given
the prejudicial
nature of such an order, I allowed counsel for the
Respondents to address me on this aspect.
33.
Whilst I agree with the applicant that the continued
failure by the Respondents to file their answering affidavit is
lamentable,
their failure to do so, given my finding, has not had any
real effect on the aspect of the costs incurred on the 23
rd
of October 2023. Their previous failure in March 2023,
has already been dealt with by a cost order granted at that time and
this
Court can therefore not revisit that failure. For purposes of
the present set down, even if an answering affidavit had been filed,
the applicant would still have had to set the matter down for
argument (albeit on the opposed roll). As such, it cannot be
countenanced
that costs have been unnecessarily exacerbated for
purposes of the set down of 23 October 2023.
34.
However, the proceedings of 27 October 2023 were
exclusively for the benefit of the Respondents; they were granted an
indulgence
to have the matter roll over to the further date to enable
them to file the answering affidavit. The failure to do so, again, is
deplorable. In this regard, I have taken notice of the previous
postponement of March 2023 to enable them to mount their defence.
Having been for their exclusive benefit, there is no reason why the
Applicant should be out of pocket for the costs of this second
day.
As was stated in
Nel v Waterberg Landbouwers v
Ko-operatiewe Vereeniging
1946 AD 597
:
‘
[t]he
true explanation of awards of attorney and client costs not expressly
authorised by Statute seems to be that, by reason of
special
consideration arising either from the circumstances which give rise
to the action or from the conduct of the losing party,
the court in a
particular case considers it just, by means of such an order, to
ensure more effectually than it can do by means
of a judgment for
party and party costs that the successful party will not be out of
pocket in respect of the expense caused to
him by the litigation
.’
35.
The costs of this second day should be borne by the
Respondents.
Order
36.
In the result, I make the following order:
1.
The decision of the Second Respondent to uphold the
second Respondent’s decision to withdraw the applicant's
permanent residence
in terms of section 8(6) of the Immigration Act,
2002 ( Act No 13 of 2002) as amended is reviewed, set aside and
replaced with
the following decision:
“
The applicant’s
internal appeal is upheld and the decision of the Director-General:
Department of Home Affairs in 2012 to
withdraw the applicant's
permanent residence, as communicated on 13-02-2018, is reviewed, set
aside and/or withdrawn in its entirety.”
2.
Any decisions taken as a result of the decision set that
has been set aside and/or withdrawn per paragraph 1 above, including
those
aimed at ordering the applicant to leave the Republic of South
Africa, are reviewed and set aside.
3.
The Respondents are ordered to re-instate the
Applicant's immigration status accordingly.
4.
The first and Second Respondents are ordered to pay the
Applicant’s costs up to and including the 23
rd
of October 2023 on a party and party scale.
5.
The first and Second Respondents are ordered to pay the
Applicant’s costs for the 27
th
of October 2023 on an attorney-client scale.
K
STRYDOM
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF
SOUTH AFRICA GAUTENG
DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Judgment
delivered: 20 February 2024
Appearances:
For
the Applicant: MR Smart I Nwobi
info@nwobiattorneys.co.za
For
the First and Second Respondents: State Attorney Pretoria
[1]
Koyabe
and Others v Minister for Home Affairs and Others
(CCT 53/08)
[2009] ZACC
23
;
2009 (12) BCLR 1192
(CC) ;
2010 (4) SA 327
(CC) (25 August 2009)
[2]
See for instance the “purpose” of the internal memo: “1
To
provide Minister with a submission regarding an appeal in terms of
section 8(4)
of the
Immigration Act (Act
13 of 2002) regarding the
withdrawal of Permanent Residence..”.
at
CL 011-1
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