Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 339South Africa
Mutombo v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (2023/121964) [2024] ZAGPPHC 339 (9 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
9 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mutombo v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (2023/121964) [2024] ZAGPPHC 339 (9 April 2024)
Mutombo v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (2023/121964) [2024] ZAGPPHC 339 (9 April 2024)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Before
His Lordship Mr Justice Labuschagne AJ on 9 April 2024
Case
No: 2023/121964
In
the matter between:
MICHAEL
MUTOMBO
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL OF HOME AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT IN THE
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against an order of 28
November 2023 dismissing
the applicant’s application with
costs, due to a lack of urgency.
[2]
The lack of urgency was made apparent when the respondents pointed
out that the applicant
had launched an application in the urgent
court on 24 October 2023 under case number 105994/23 against the
Minister of Home Affairs,
the Director General of Home Affairs, the
Minister of Police, the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services
and the Director
General: Justice and Constitutional
Development. As far as the passport was concerned, the relief
sought was almost
identical to the application before me.
[3]
In the prior application the applicant sought the following
urgent
relief:
“
3.
That the first and second respondents (the Minister of Home Affairs
and
the DG of Home Affairs) be compelled to release the applicant’s
passport with passport number O[...] which the unlawfully
seized and
spoliated from him, alternatively to issue the applicant with a new
passport with an instruction to the relevant Embassies
to reissue the
applicant with the VISAs and/or Permits which were in the unlawfully
seized and spoliated passport, within 30 days
of the first and second
respondent receiving this court order.
4.
That the first and second respondents be compelled to release the
applicant’s permanent residence permit within 30 days of the
first and second respondents receiving this court order.
5.
That the third respondent provide the applicant with a Police
Clearance
Report (PCR) within 10 days of receipt of this court order.
6.
That the fourth and fifth respondents issue a certificate of
expungement
directing that the convictions and sentences have been
expunged for the applicant within 15 days of receipt of this court
order.
7.
That the third respondent inform the applicant in writing that his
convictions and sentences have been expunged within 20 days of
receipt of this court order.
8.
That should the respondents intend to oppose, they must file their
opposing papers and give 48 hours’ notice before the return
date …”
[4]
In the matter that served before me, the applicant sought the
following urgent relief:
“
3.
That the first and second respondents (the Minister of Home Affairs
and
the DG of Home Affairs) be compelled to release the applicant’s
passport with passport number O[...] which they unlawfully
seize and
spoliated from him, alternatively to issue the applicant with a new
passport with an instruction to the relevant Embassies
to reissue the
applicant with the VISAs and/or Permits which were in the unlawfully
seized and spoliated passport, within 24 hours
of the first and
second respondents receiving this court order.
4.
That the first and second respondents pay the costs of this
application,
only if it is opposed.”
[5]
As the prior application had not been withdrawn, and as Prayer 3 of
both applications
are (save for the time period in the last two
lines) identical, the Department of Home Affairs raised a special
plea of
lis pendens.
[6]
The applicant had not disclosed at all in the founding affidavit that
there was a
prior application for the same relief which, when it was
heard before Subbiah Fraser J, was struck for lack of urgency.
[7]
The arguments advanced in this application for leave to appeal
included the following
on the issue of
lis pendens
:
7.1
That the requirement of prior litigation between the same parties
was
not established, because, submits counsel for the applicant, there
were more respondents in the prior application than in the
current
application.
7.2
The respondents in the prior application who were called upon
to
produce the confiscated passport or to supply an alternative, are the
Minister of Home Affairs and the DG of Home Affairs.
As they
have raised a plea of
lis pendens
in these proceedings, the
requirement of pending litigation between the same parties has been
established. It matters not
that there are other respondents in
the prior application against whom other relief was being sought.
7.3
A further argument raised was that the issue of
lis pendens
could
only arise if the prior application had also been set down for
hearing. This is a misconceived argument as the whole
basis of
the special plea of
lis pendens
is that prior litigation
between the same parties on the same cause of action and in the same
forum is
pending
.
7.4
The third argument advanced was to the effect that the cause
of
action for the prior application differs.
7.5
In both these applications the applicant seeks the return of
the same
passport, contending that he wishes to travel, and that the passport
is required for the exercise of his right of freedom
of movement.
Characterised in this manner, the causes of action are the same.
All that changed were the circumstances
why the passport was required
for travel. In the application before me the passport was
required for purposes of a proposed
trip to Russia. The changed
reason for requiring the passport does not constitute a separate
cause of action. While
it might form a basis for rendering the
prior application urgent (if properly motivated), it does not
translate into a new cause
of action.
[8]
There are no prospects of another court coming to a different
conclusion on
these propositions.
[9]
Although the notice of leave to appeal refers to a cost order as a
ground for
leave to appeal, this was not pursued during argument.
It suffices to state that no exceptional circumstances exist which
would justify a cost argument forming the basis of an application for
leave to appeal. As the application, in that sense,
would fall
within section 17(1)(b), read with
section 16(2)
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
, leave to appeal falls to be refused.
[10]
In the premises I make the following order:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed
with costs.
LABUSCHAGNE,
AJ
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