Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 381South Africa
Klemenc v Head of Immigration Inspectorate and Others (18669/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 381 (17 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 April 2024
Headnotes
a visa in terms of section 11(6) of the Act (known as a “spousal visa”)which expired on 08 November 2017.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Klemenc v Head of Immigration Inspectorate and Others (18669/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 381 (17 April 2024)
Klemenc v Head of Immigration Inspectorate and Others (18669/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 381 (17 April 2024)
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sino date 17 April 2024
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NUMBER:
18669/2021
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
/YES
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
/YES
3.
REVISED.
DATE: 17 April 2024
SIGNATURE
TINA
KLEMENC
APPLICANT
and
HEAD
OF IMMIGRATION INSPECTORATE
FIRST RESPONDENT
O.R
TAMBO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE
MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS
THIRD RESPONDENT
THE
DIRECTOR-GENERAL OF THE DEPARTMENT
OF
HOME
AFFAIRS
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Delivered.
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email. The date and time for
hand
down is deemed to be 14h00 on 17 April 2024.
JUDGMENT
MBOWENI
AJ
1.
INTRODUCTION
1.1.
This is an application compelling the
Respondents to return the Applicants passport that was seized
pursuant to her being in possession
of a fraudulently obtained
permanent residence visa(“hereinafter referred to as “visa”).
1.2.
The Applicant furthermore seeks an order
reviewing and setting aside the decision taken by the Respondents in
terms of
Section 29(1)(f)
of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
(“the
Act”) to declare her as a prohibited person.
1.3.
In the alternative, the Applicant prays
that the court do not declare her to be a prohibited person in terms
of
Section 29(1)(f)
of the
Immigration Act.
1.4.
The
Applicant also sought condonation for
the late filing of her review application, together with her failure
to exhaust the internal
remedies in terms of
Section 9
and
7
(2)(c )
of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”)
respectively.
1.5.
In the alternative, in the event that
prohibitions do occur by operation of law, to be declared not to be a
prohibited person because
section 29(1)(f) of the Act does not apply
to persons unaware of the fraudulent nature of documents they
possess.
1.6.
The Applicant also seeks an order that the
Respondents pay the costs of the application.
2.
Background:
2.1.
The Applicant has resided in South Africa
since 2008. The Applicant is a Slovenian national and the lawful wife
of a South African
citizen ,Octavian Ionescu since 19 January 2009.
2.2.
The Applicant previously held a visa in
terms of section 11(6) of the Act (known as a “spousal
visa”)which expired
on 08 November 2017.
2.3.
The Applicant applied to the Respondents to
renew this spousal visa.
2.4.
The applicant applied to the Respondents to
renew this spousal visa. After an initial rejection, she appealed to
the third Respondent
(“the DG”).She apparently applied
personally without the input of any immigration advisor.
2.5.
The Applicant secured the services of an
immigration practitioner to keep track of her appeal.
2.6.
She employed the services of Mr. William
Dixon of Pieter Coetzee Attorneys.
2.7.
According to the Applicant Mr. Dixon
appeared to be a legitimate immigration expert.
2.8.
The Applicant was not concerned about
irregularity as she had a valid claim via her husband to a spousal
visa.
2.9.
The Applicant states that at no stage did
she or her husband have any personal contact with the Respondents
officials.
2.10.
In January 2018,Mr.Dixon informed the
Applicant that her visa was ready and that he will collect it on her
behalf. The visa was
inserted in the Applicants passport.
2.11.
The visa collected by Mr. Dixon had the
control number B[...],and it is this visa that was subsequently
discovered to be fraudulent.
2.12.
The Applicant states that she was not aware
of any fraud.
2.13.
The Applicant states that the First
Respondent does not contend that the Applicant is guilty of fraud or
any other irregular conduct.
Rather ,the Respondents claim that the
mere possession of a fraudulent visa by a foreigner is sufficient for
him/her to be prohibited
in terms of section 29(1)(f) of the Act.
2.14.
The Applicant claims that she only became
aware of the fraud when it was brought to her attention on 14 July
2029,when she was arrested
at the check-in counter at O.R Tambo
International airport.
2.15.
It was at this time that the Applicants
passport was seized.
2.16.
The Applicant was criminally charged but on
22 July 2019 the charges against her were dropped after she
apparently demonstrated
that she was unaware of the fraudulent nature
of the visa.
2.17.
The Applicant in support of her legitimate
standing and application for a spousal visa referred to an affidavit
by of the Respondents
officials confirming that:
2.17.1.
The visa in her passport was fraudulent;
2.17.2.
That the Applicants actual visa application
(the one which she filed) was granted. She did not collect it,
because she thought that
the visa supplied by Mr. Dixon was in fact
the visa she applied for.
2.18.
The Applicant later discovered that she has
been declared a prohibited person in terms of Section 29(1)(f) of the
immigration Act.
2.19.
After the criminal charges were withdrawn,
the Applicant sought to obtain the return of her passport.
2.20.
Correspondence was exchanged between the
Applicant ,her husband and various officials within the Department.
2.21.
On or about 08 October 2020,the Respondents
for the First time notified the Applicant that she is a prohibited
person(“despite
the fact that the criminal matter was withdrawn
in court”).
2.22.
The First Respondent also informed the
Applicant that she can only be given her passport when she is on her
route out of the Republic
since she does not have the authority to be
in the Republic.
2.23.
The Applicants attorneys wrote to the
Respondents on 04 February 2021 enquiring:
2.23.1.
Whether there are any internal appeals
which must be exhausted when is a person prohibited under section 29
of the Act?
2.23.2.
If there is a right of appeal ,in terms of
which section of the Act such rights exist?
2.23.3.
Whether the Department was willing to
accept an appeal?
2.24.
The Applicant states that there was no
substantive answer from the Respondents to the above questions.
2.25.
The Applicant states that she had no choice
but to approach this court for protection and the orders, she seeks.
2.26.
The Applicant states that the matter was
not previously opposed by the Respondents and the matter was set down
on the unopposed
roll of 01 December 2021,and on that date Judge Bam
directed the Respondents to “within 30 calendar days of that
order respond,
in writing ,to the Applicant”.
2.26.1.
Request for the return of her passport; and
2.26.2.
Internal appeal against their decision that
the applicant is a prohibited person in terms of
section 29(1)(f)
of
the
Immigration Act.
2.27.
The
Applicant filed an appeal with the
Respondents.
2.28.
There was however no response from the
Respondents following the order of Judge Bam.
2.29.
The Applicant therefore submits that the
following questions fall to be determined by this court:
2.30.
Are prohibitions under section 29(1) of the
Act administrative action?
2.31.
If they are, has the Applicant made out a
case for the judicial review of her prohibition?
2.32.
And if they are, has the Applicant (to the
extent necessary) justified or condoned:
2.32.1.
The exhaustion of her internal remedies;
and
2.32.2.
The timeous filing of this judicial review
application?
2.33.
If prohibitions are not administrative
action but rather operate ex lege,does the Applicant qualify as a
prohibited person?
2.34.
Should the Applicants passport be returned
to her?
3.
The Applicants case:
3.1.
The Applicants case is that she was not
afforded any notice or opportunity to make representations to the
Respondents prior to being
declared undesirable.
3.2.
In addition to the aforementioned ,the
Applicant states that she was permanently banned from South Africa
without a hearing or a
fair process of any kind and therefore she was
prevented from presenting evidence that she was not complicit in any
fraud.
3.3.
The Applicant furthermore states that the
First Respondent justifies the absence of any fair process by
contending that even innocent
people can be banned from South Africa
,and that prohibitions under section 29 of the Act occur
ex
lege
,that is, by operation of law
rather than administrative action.
3.4.
The Applicant states that the First
Respondent has refused to return her passport notwithstanding that
there is no basis for him
to hold it, even if the Applicant was
correctly prohibited.
3.5.
The Applicant does not contend that the
visa itself is not fraudulent.
3.6.
She contends that there is a distinction
between finding that the visa is fraudulent ,on the one hand ,and
deciding that the Applicant
is responsible for the fraud and should
thus be permanently banned from South Africa, on the other hand. It
is the latter issue
that is before the court.
4.
The Respondents case:
4.1.
The Respondents contend that the
prohibition in terms of section 29(1)(f) is not an administrative
action as contemplated in PAJA.
4.2.
This position they argue stems from the
fact that section 29(1)(f) applies
ex
lege
to a foreigner who is found in
possession of a fraudulent visa amongst the documents listed in the
said provision.
4.3.
Further to the above the Respondents states
that section 29(1)(f) does not require of the Director General and or
the Minister to
take any administrative decision in the
exercise of public power because its operation takes place
automatically upon the
discovery of fraud in relation to any of the
documents listed in the said section, including a visa.
4.4.
The Respondent furthermore contends that
the Applicant must exhaust the Departmental internal remedies before
coming to court, and
that the Applicant has not provided a full
explanation for the delay in filing her review application.
5.
The Legislative Framework:
5.1.
Section 29(1)(f)
of the
Immigration
Act states
that:
5.2.
Anyone found in possession of a
fraudulent visa, passport, permanent residence permit or
identification document is prohibited [person]
and [does] not qualify
for a port of entry visa, admission into the Republic, a visa, or a
permanent residence permit”.
5.3.
Section 29(2) of the Act states that:
5.4.
“
the Director-General may, for good
cause declare a person referred to in subsection (1) not to be a
prohibited person.
5.5.
The Applicants Counsel therefore argued
that the prohibition under section 29 of the Act bans a foreigner
from entering and remaining
in South Africa. The ban is permanent
,unless and until the ban is uplifted by the Director-General “for
good cause”
in terms of section 29(2).
5.6.
The First Respondent contends that the
Applicant was prohibited by operation of law in terms of section
29(1)(f) of the Act.
5.7.
The Applicant therefore interprets the
actions of the Respondents that the prohibition is automatic, and the
affected party is not
afforded any of the protective rights and
procedures set out in the South African administrative law.
No
notice, no opportunity to make representations, no reasons, no
explanation of the impact of the decision or of any rights of
appeal.
5.8.
The Applicant argues that such an approach
is incorrect and that a finding that a person is prohibited under
section 29(1)of the
Act constitutes administrative action in terms of
PAJA.
5.9.
Section 1 of PAJA defines
“administrative action” in relevant part as:
“
any
decision taken, or any failure to take a decision, by-
(a)
an organ of state, when-
(i) exercising a power
in terms of the Constitution or a provincial constitution; or
(ii)
exercising a public power or performing a public function in terms of
any legislation;
or
(b)
a natural or juristic person ,other than an organ of state ,when
exercising a public power or
performing a public function in terms of
an empowering provision ,which adversely affects the rights of any
person, and which has
direct ,external legal effect.”
5.10.
It is therefore the Applicants case that
all of these elements are present in the case of prohibitions .They
are decisions of an
administrative character taken by a government
official, in fulfillment of a public function (immigration control)
in terms of
empowering legislation (the Act) which directly
,externally and adversely affects the legal rights of the person
concerned (by
banning the Applicant from South Africa),and it does
not fall within any of the exclusions listed in section 1 of PAJA.
5.11.
In the case of
Najjemba
and
Koyabe
,the
court held that a decision to prohibit an individual constitutes
administrative action.
5.12.
The affected individual is entitled to
adequate notice of the nature and purpose of the proposed action, a
reasonable opportunity
to make representations ,a clear statement of
the action ,adequate notice of any rights of appeal ,as well as
adequate reasons
or notice of the right to request reasons. The right
to be heard before a decision is made is enshrined in the maxim of
natural
justice
audi alteram partem
.
5.13.
In the case of
Zondi
v MEC for Traditional and Local Government Affairs
,the Constitutional Court emphasized the importance of the audi
principle:
“
The
right to notice before an adverse decision is made is a fundamental
requirement of fairness. Notice provides a person affected
with an
opportunity to make representations as to why an adverse decision
should not be made. It is a fundamental element of fairness
that
adverse decisions should not be made without affording the person to
be affected by the decision a reasonable opportunity
to make
representations.”
The timeous filing
of this application:
6.
The applicants review application was filed
late, and she states that that she was not aware of the prohibition
until 8 October
2020, although she also refers to the Kistan
affidavit that was filed as early as July 2019.
7.
The Applicant states that even though she
was aware of the Kistan affidavit, she was not aware of the
implications as an administrative
decision.
8.
Even though I agree with the Respondents
that this version is quite difficult to accept since the Applicant
always had the support
of an attorney, the Applicant is the only
party that has suffered prejudice as a result of the Respondents
actions.
9.
I am therefore of the view that the
condonation should be granted as it’s in the interest of
justice.
10.
The Applicant has been without her passport
for more than four years, communicating with the department without
any progress.
Exhaustion of
Internal Remedies:
11.
The Applicant enquired from the Respondents
and VFS whether there is any internal appeal process that she can
exhaust.
12.
The Applicant then filed an internal appeal
through the court where Judge Bam made an order that the Respondents
advise the Applicant
within thirty (30) days which the Respondent did
not respond to.
13.
There is no ground to allege that the
Applicant failed to exhaust the internal remedies.
Application
:
14.
The most important question before me is
whether the prohibition can be regarded as administrative action.
15.
There must be a decision to declare a
person prohibited.
16.
That decision is taken by an organ of
state, exercising a public power performing a public function in
terms of any legislation…
17.
In this instance the decision is taken in
terms of
Section 29(1)(f)
and
29
(2) of the
Immigration Act.
18.
The Respondents were exercising a public
power in terms of legislation.
19.
There is no other conclusion that I can
draw that the actions of the Respondents are administrative action
and not
ex lege
.
20.
The Applicant was not afforded an
opportunity to make representations before the decision to declare
her undesirable was made.
21.
It is not disputed by the Respondent that
the Applicant was in contact with their offices, asking questions and
seeking solutions
on how to reclaim her passport.
22.
The Constitutional court has held ,”
once a ground of review under PAJA has
been established there is no room for shying away from it.Section
172(1)(a) of the Constitution
requires the decision to be declared
unlawful
.”
23.
The Respondents does not dispute that
Applicant was criminally charged with fraud by the, but the charges
were withdrawn.
24.
In my view, once the charges were
withdrawn, the Applicants passport should have been immediately
returned to her as that was the
basis of the charge and arrest.
25.
In
Najjemba
the court held that:
“
On
the surface, it appears that the Minister’s decision is solely
based on the finding and conclusion that the applicant obtained
a
fraudulent work visa. Counsel for the applicant argued that section
29(1)(f) cannot rationally or lawfully be held to apply to
persons
who are innocent of wrongdoing. In other words, it cannot apply to an
innocent party who has been found in possession of
a fraudulent visa
or to a person who was unaware or not complicit in obtaining such a
visa. I agree that this could never have
been the intention of
legislature. Therefore, it was incumbent for both the DG and the
Minister to determine whether the applicant
was complicit in the
acquisition of a fraudulent work visa.”
26.
In the case of
Goldberg
,
the court was called upon to decide whether the appellant was “found
in possession” of various ivory items. The court
stated that
the word “
possession”
comprises a physical element of control together with a mental
element and that a person cannot possess unwittingly,
i.e. without
the necessary mental element.
27.
Once it is accepted that there is a mental
component-that is, an element of awareness – in being found in
possession, the
First Respondents case cannot stand.
The return of the
Applicants Passport:
28.
Section 31
(1)(a) of the
Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977
provides that when criminal proceedings are
terminated, articles seized in connection with those proceedings
“shall be returned
to the person from whom it was seized”.
29.
The Applicants passport was seized in
connection with the “fraudulent visa”.
30.
The fraudulent charges were dropped and
therefore the Applicants passport must be returned.
31.
The Applicant is not able to move around
without her passport and that on its own is unconstitutional.
Conclusion:
32.
There is no reason for the Applicant to
have obtained a fraudulent visa from an agent.
33.
The Applicant is the lawful spouse of a
South African citizen and have been issued with a valid spousal visa
before.
Order
The
following order is granted:
1.
The application for
condonation is granted.
2.
The decision to
declare the Applicant a prohibited person in terms of
Section
29(1)(f)
is reviewed and set aside.
3.
The Respondents are
to return the Applicants passport to her immediately, cancelling the
fraudulent visa.
4.
The Respondents is to
bear the costs of the application on the scale as between attorney
and client.
L.J
MBOWENI
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA,
NORTH GAUTENG
Date
of Hearing:
05 February 2024
Date
of Judgment:
17 April 2024
Appearances
:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
D Simonsz
Instructed
by
MC
Taggart Labuschagne Inc Attorneys
For
the First Respondent:
Adv
M Rantho
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney
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