Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 269South Africa
Mbatha v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (5876/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 269 (15 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
15 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mbatha v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (5876/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 269 (15 March 2024)
Mbatha v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (5876/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 269 (15 March 2024)
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sino date 15 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 5876/2022
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED: YES
Date: 15 March 2024
In
the matter between:
MBATHA: SIBINISO
WELCOME
APPLICANT
And
MINISTER OF JUSTICE
AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
1
st
RESPONDENT
NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR
CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
2
nd
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
ALLY
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an opposed review application launched against the decision
by the First Respondent,
hereinafter referred to as ‘the
Minister’, not to parole the Applicant.
[2]
The issue of the late filing of the application was dealt with at the
beginning of
the proceedings. Counsel for the Respondents had no
objection to the granting of condonation and I accordingly granted
condonation
in the interest of justice.
[3]
The Applicant seeks an order substituting the decision of ‘the
Minister’
and placing the Applicant on parole within a
prescribed period and on conditions that the Court deems meet as well
as further ancillary
relief.
[4]
This application has been brought in terms of Section 33 of the
Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa
[1]
,
hereinafter referred to as ‘the Constitution’ and Section
6 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
[2]
,
hereinafter referred to as ‘PAJA’, to review the decision
of ‘the Minister’ taken on 12 November 2021
wherein
parole was denied.
[5]
During the hearing of the application Counsel for the Applicant
submitted that the
applicant would not be persisting with the relief
for the Court to substitute the decision of ‘the Minister’.
[6]
The answering affidavit of the Respondents is deposed to by a member
of the Second
Respondent and no affidavit whatsoever has been deposed
to by ‘the Minister’, the First Respondent.
BACKGROUND
AND FACTUAL MATRIX
[7]
The Applicant is a sentenced prisoner and currently incarcerated at
Barberton Prison
where he is serving a life sentence imposed on 26
January 2004.
[8]
The facts of this matter are largely common cause and not
contentious.
[9]
On the 20
th
and 21
st
of May 2021
[3]
, members of the
Second Respondent met to make a recommendation to ‘the
Minister’ on the eligibility of the Applicant
to be granted
parole. The Second Respondent recommended that the Applicant was not
recommended for parole at that stage and this
recommendation was
approved by ‘the Minister’ on 12 November 2021. It is
this decision that the Applicant seeks to
have set aside.
[10]
On 23
rd
January 2022 the Applicant had served 17 years and
10 months in prison. This date is important, so the Applicant
submits, because
it determines whether on his interpretation of the
law, he is eligible for parole.
LEGAL
FRAMEWORK
[11]
Section 136 of the Correctional Services Act
[4]
provides:
“
136.
Transitional provisions—
(1) Any person serving
a sentence of incarceration immediately before the commencement of
Chapters IV, VI and VII is subject to
the provisions of the
Correctional Services Act, 1959 (Act No. 8 of 1959), relating to his
or her placement under community corrections,
and is to be considered
for such release and placement by the Correctional Supervision and
Parole Board in terms of the policy
and guidelines applied by the
former Parole Boards prior to the commencement of those Chapters.
(2) When considering
the release and placement of a sentenced offender who is serving a
determinate sentence of incarceration as
contemplated in subsection
(1), such sentenced offender must be allocated the maximum number of
credits in terms of section 22A
of the Correctional Services Act,
1959 (Act No. 8 of 1959).
(3)
(a) Any sentenced offender serving a sentence of life incarceration
immediately before the commencement of Chapters IV, VI and
VII is
entitled to be considered for day parole and parole after he or she
has served 20 years of the sentence.
(b) The case of a
offender contemplated in paragraph (a) must be submitted to the
National Council which must make a recommendation
to the Minister
regarding the placement of the offender under day parole or parole.
(c)
If the recommendation of the National Council is favourable, the
Minister may order that the offender be placed under day parole
or
parole, as the case may be. (4) If a person is sentenced to life
incarceration after the commencement of Chapters IV, VI and
VII while
serving a life sentence imposed prior to the commencement, the matter
must be referred to the Minister who must, in consultation
with the
National Council, consider him or her for placement under day parole
or parole.”
ANALYSIS
AND EVALUATION
[12]
As stated above the facts of this case are largely common cause.
However, the Respondents submit
that a person whilst being eligible
for parole is not entitled to be placed on parole and that certain
procedures
[5]
need to be
followed before a decision to place a person on parole is made.
[13]
On the basis of this submission, the Respondents argue that the
Applicant’s parole was
reasonably and justifiably denied.
[14]
The common cause fact remains, however, that the Applicant is
eligible for parole and the question
that begs answering by this
Court is whether there was something untoward in the ‘decision’
taken by ‘the Minister’
not to place him on parole.
[15]
The following issues warrant determination:
15.1. was
there a decision taken by a public functionary;
15.2. is the
‘decision’ rational;
15.3. can the
decision be set aside on the grounds of rationality and/or legality;
15.4. is the
Court entitled to substitute the decision of the public functionary;
[16]
As stated above, there is no need to determine whether this Court
should substitute its decision
for that of ‘the Minister’
because the Applicant has abandoned that relief.
[17]
The Applicant maintains that ‘the Minister’ did not take
a decision but merely repeated
what the Second Respondent had
indicated in the recommendation. Respondent’s Counsel further
submits that the ‘grounds’
for the recommendation do not
constitute reasons for the denial of parole. This, the Applicant
submits is not rational and cannot
be accepted as being rational. If
that is so, then the ‘decision’ falls to be set aside.
[18]
If one has regard to Annexure “SM3”
[6]
then it becomes clear that ‘the Minister’ himself,
ex
facie
“SM3”,
does not engage with the contents of “SM3” at all and
pens an approval. In this regard, it is ineluctable
that the only
inference that can be drawn from “SM3” is that ‘the
Minister’s’ ‘decision’
cannot be said to be
rational.
[19]
In dealing with applications of this nature where a Court is
requested to adjudicate upon a decision
of the executive or a
functionary, the guidance given by the Constitutional Court
[7]
is appropriate, namely:
‘
It is a
requirement of the rule of law that the exercise of public power by
the executive and other public functionaries should
not be arbitrary.
Decisions
must be rationally related to the purpose for which the power was
given, otherwise they are in effect arbitrary and inconsistent
with
this requirement. It follows that in order to pass
constitutional scrutiny the exercise of public power by the executive
and other functionaries must, at least, comply with this
requirement.
[8]
”
[20]
A disconcerting feature in this application is that the Minister has
not deemed it necessary
to depose to an affidavit an explain his
‘decision’. This Court has not been privy to what went
through ‘the
Minister’s mind when the decision not to
parole the Applicant was taken. Our Courts
[9]
have frowned on situations such as this where one a word from the
decision-maker is non-existent.
[21]
It is important to deal with another issue that arose during the
hearing. The deponent to the
answering affidavit requests the Court
to accept hearsay evidence where no confirmatory affidavit has been
filed. No explanation
is given as to why ‘the Minister’
has not deposed to the answering affidavit nor why no confirmatory
affidavit by him
has been filed. The exceptions to the hearsay rule
do not cater for circumstances wherein a person could have deposed to
an affidavit
and one wherein a reasonable explanation has been
provided for the failure to depose to an affidavit. In my view, the
request to
accept hearsay evidence in this matter cannot be acceded
to for the reason that it is clearly prejudicial to the Applicant and
sufficient grounds have not been provided for the acceptance of such
hearsay evidence.
[21]
Taking into account the above, has the Applicant made out a case for
the relief sought. As stated
above, the Applicant abandoned the
relief for a substitution of ‘the Minister’s’
decision. It is clear from the
facts of this case that denial of the
Applicant for parole is an administrative decision which is
reviewable by the Courts should
same be found to be unlawful,
irrational and infringing the principle of legality.
[22]
The submission by Counsel for the Respondents that there are certain
procedures to be undergone
in terms of the policy of the Department
of Correctional Services and accordingly, the denial of parole to the
Applicant was correct.
[23]
Counsel for the Applicant contended that the circumstances of the
Applicant fall within the regime
as espoused in the Constitutional
Court case of
Van
Vuuren
v
Minister
of Correctional Services
[10]
.
The
following passage is appropriate and, in my view, applies to this
application:
“
In
essence, this application concerns the proper interpretation of
section 136 of the Act. The application also raises the question
whether the applicant is eligible for consideration for placement on
parole. In particular, the question is whether the provisions
of the
Correctional Services Act, 1959 (Old Act) and the policy and
guidelines applied by the former Parole Boards apply to the
applicant, or whether the applicant is entitled to be considered for
placement on parole only after completing 20 years in detention
in
terms of section 136(3)(a) and the new policy and guidelines of the
Department of Correctional Services (Department).”
[24]
As I understand Counsel for the Applicant’s reliance on the
abovementioned case, it is
to counter the argument by the Respondents
that they were entitled to postpone the parole application until the
victim/offender
dialogue had been finalised. The reliance by the
Respondents on Section 74 (5) of the Correctional Services Act,
[11]
is misplaced, the Applicant submits. The Applicant submits that
Section 74(5) came into operation on 1 October 2004 and is of no
application to prisoners/lifers sentenced before that date.
Accordingly, so the Applicant submits, his rights are those existing
and applied in 2000 and this is in accordance with the
Van
Vuuren case
mentioned above. I agree with these submissions.
[25]
Returning to the question whether the decision of ‘the
Minister’ is reviewable in
terms of Section 6 of PAJA, the
answer is in the affirmative. The decision as contained in ‘SM3’
is irrational in that
he failed to apply his mind to the relevant
issues in accordance with the applicable statutory provisions and the
requirements
of natural justice.
[26]
The Applicant has requested that should this application be
successful, that ‘the Minister’
be given 30 days to
reconsider placing the applicant on parole and the Respondent
submitted that the period for reconsideration
should be 90 days. In
my view, a period of 30 days is sufficient for ‘the Minister’
to come to a decision.
[27]
In conclusion therefore, the Applicant has made out a case for the
setting aside of ‘the
Minister’s’ decision not to
parole the Applicant as well as the other relief in the Draft Order
provided to the Court.
COSTS
[28]
There is no reason why this Court should deviate from the norm that
costs follow the result and
none were submitted.
[29]
In the result, the following order will issue:
1.
The Draft Order marked X is made an order of Court.
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION OF
THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be
15 March 2024.
Date
of virtual hearing: 7 August 2023
Date
of judgment: 15 March 2024
Appearances:
Attorneys
for the Applicant:
JULIAN
KNIGHT AND ASSOCIATES INC
knights@mweb.co.za
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv.
L. Kellermann SC
Attorneys
for the Respondents:
STATE
ATTORNEY PRETORIA
MeMahloko@justice.gov.za
Counsel
for the Respondents:
Adv.
B. Nodada
[1]
108
of 1996, as amended
[2]
3
of 2000, as amended
[3]
Caselines:
Section 001-62
[4]
111
of 1998, as amended
[5]
Caselines:
Section 005 – 8 at para 2.5
[6]
Caselines:
Section 001-62
[7]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of SA case 2000 at para 85
[8]
This
is an incident of the “culture of justification”
described by Mureinik in “A Bridge to Where? Introducing
the
Interim Bill of Rights”
(1994) 10
SAJHR
32, which is referred to in
Prinsloo,
above
n 106.
[9]
Minister
of Home Affairs an Another v The Helen Suzman Foundation &
Others 2023 GPPHC @ para 12; Freedom Under Law v Judicial
Services
Commission 2023 SCA 103 at para 27
[10]
2010
CC 17
[11]
supra
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