Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1127South Africa
Kingscott v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (034689/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1127 (5 November 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Review of the Minister’s decision in dismissing the application for a critical skills visa. The applicant alleges that the decision of the Minister is reviewable on the grounds of (a) having been influenced by a material error of law; (b) having taken irrelevant consideration into account; and (c) having been taken in an arbitrary and capricious manner. None of the grounds punted for by the applicant have been shown to exist. The decision of the Minister is not reviewable either on any PAJA or legality review grounds. Held: (1) The application for review is dismissed. Held: (2) The applicant is to pay the costs of the application taxable at scale B.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Kingscott v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (034689/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1127 (5 November 2024)
Kingscott v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (034689/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1127 (5 November 2024)
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sino date 5 November 2024
FLYNOTES:
IMMIGRATION – Critical skills visa –
Refusal
–
Applicant
a candidate engineer – Candidate engineer cannot work alone
without supervision – Candidate engineer
not a skill
contemplated in the Act – Engineering Council of South
Africa registration category – Minister concluded
that
applicant lacked the necessary critical skills – Decision is
related to purpose for which power exercised was
given –
Purpose to ensure that critical skills are retained in the country
– Decision was lawful and rational
– Application for
review dismissed –
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
,
s 19(4).
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number: 034689/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 5/11/24
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
ROBERT
KINGSCOTT
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
THE DIRECTOR-GENERAL
OF THE
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
Summary: Review of the
Minister’s decision in dismissing the application for a
critical skills visa. The applicant alleges
that the decision of the
Minister is reviewable on the grounds of (a) having been influenced
by a material error of law; (b) having
taken irrelevant consideration
into account; and (c) having been taken in an arbitrary and
capricious manner. None of the grounds
punted for by the applicant
have been shown to exist. The decision of the Minister is not
reviewable either on any PAJA or legality
review grounds. Held: (1)
The application for review is dismissed. Held: (2) The applicant is
to pay the costs of the application
taxable at scale B.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA,
J
Introduction
[1]
This
is an application, in terms of which, the applicant, Mr Robert
Kingscott seeks to review and set aside the decision taken by
the
Minister of Home Affairs on 24 October 2022. The applicant contends
that the decision of the Minister is to be declared to
be
constitutionally invalid. Having set aside the decision, this Court
must order the Minister to issue the applicant with a Critical
Skills
Visa (CSV) contemplated in
section 19(4)
of the
Immigration Act
[1
]
read with regulation 18 of the Immigration Regulations
[2]
.
In the alternative, the supplemented application for CSV be remitted
back to the Minister for reconsideration. The application
is opposed
by the Minister and the Director-General of the Department of Home
Affairs.
Pertinent background
facts to the present application
[2]
Given the grounds of review punted for in the
present application it is obsolete to punctiliously narrate the
entire facts appertaining
the application. It suffices to provide
salient facts. On 8 December 2020, the applicant applied to the
Department of Home Affairs
(DHA) to have his General Work Visa (GWV)
changed to a CSV. His application was rejected, whereafter, he lodged
an appeal with
the Director General of Home Affairs (DG). The DG
rejected his appeal. The applicant then lodged a further appeal to
the Minister.
On 24 October 2022, the Minister dismissed his appeal.
[3]
For the purposes of this judgment, the letter
issued by the Minister, in parts, read as follows: -
“…
I have
decided to dismiss the said application for the following reasons:
(a)
In terms of the Critical Skills List published …
dated 03 June 2014, under the category “Engineering”, no
provision
is made for candidate engineer, whereas you have submitted
proof of your application for registration with the Engineering
Council
of South Africa as a candidate engineer;
(b)
In terms of
section 18(4)
of the
Engineering
Profession Act, 2000
… “A person who is registered in
the category of candidate must perform work in the engineering
profession only under
the supervision and control of a professional
of a category as prescribed”, meaning that a candidate engineer
works under
supervision of a professional engineer. This being the
case, a candidate engineer registered as such… will work under
supervision
of an engineer mentioned under the category “Engineer”
in the Critical Skills Lists … the latter being professional
engineer …
(c)
A critical skills work visa contemplated in
section 19(4)
of the
Immigration Act
must
be in line with the content of the Critical Skills List mentioned in
paragraph 2(a) above, and for the present purposes thus to
an
applicant who is registered as a professional engineer.”
[4]
Displeased by the decision of the Minister, on or
around April 2023, the applicant, launched the present application.
The application
emerged before this Court as an opposed motion.
Nature
of the review and the grounds upon which it is predicated
[5]
Involved
herein is an exercise of statutory powers,
section 6(6)
of the
Immigration Act, by
the Minister. Two judicial pathways are available
in an instance where the exercise of statutory power is involved. The
applicant
hedged his bet on the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act
[3]
(PAJA) as well as the
legality review. In the main, the applicant impugned the decision of
the Minister on three grounds; namely;
(a) material error of law;
based on section 6(2)(d) or (i) of the PAJA and irrationality based
on legality review; (b) considered
irrelevant considerations and
ignored relevant ones; based on section 6(2)(e)(iii) of the PAJA and
the principle of legality; (c)
the decision was arbitrary or
capricious; based on section 6(2)(vi) of the PAJA or the principle of
legality.
[6]
For reasons that are not altogether clear, the
applicant failed to bring to its aid the provisions of rule 53 of the
Uniform Rules
of the High Court. As such, this Court is not armed
with the record of the proceedings sought to be reviewed and set
aside.
Analysis
[7]
It must be stated upfront that unlike an appeal, a
review is not concerned with the correctness of the decision. It is
concerned
with the process leading to the impugned decision. In
motion proceedings, a party is bound to make its case in the founding
papers.
The applicant chose to confine his review application to
three grounds. In any matter, a Court is confined to the four corners
of the pleaded case. In this judgment, this Court will look no
further than the case as pleaded in the founding affidavit.
Error
of law
[8]
The applicant contends that the Minister
misconstrued and misapplied
section 19(4)
of the
Immigration Act and
regulation 18(5)
read with the directive. The directive issued by the
Deputy Director General in 2014, is not law. Nevertheless, the
directive only
stated that there is no need to submit or request an
additional document from the professional body as confirmation of
skills,
as that would have been considered by the professional body
in the process of registering the applicant. An error of law arises
in an instance where there is an error in interpretation and or
application of the law. The law in this instance is
section 19(4)
of
the
Immigration Act read
with
regulation 18(5).
Section 19(4)
provides that subject to the prescribed requirements, an exceptional
skills wok permit may be issued by the Department to an individual
of
exceptional skills or qualifications and to close members of his or
her immediate family determined by the Department under
the
circumstances or regulation. It is abundantly clear from the text of
the section that exceptional skills or qualifications
are
contemplated.
[9]
A candidate engineer cannot be seen as an
individual possessed with exceptional skills or qualifications. The
word exceptional,
grammatically, it means much greater than usual,
especially in skill, intelligence, quality, etc. A candidate
engineer, which is
what the applicant was registered as, cannot be
said to be a greater than usual engineer. A candidate engineer cannot
work alone
without supervision. Clearly, a candidate engineer is not
a skill contemplated in
section 19(4).
[10]
Just
to digress a bit, counsel for the Minister, invited this Court to in
obiter
deal
with what appears to be a growing scourge in the engineering
profession where candidate engineers perform the work unsupervised
and for a long period of time. In some instances, engineers practice
as such without being registered. This Court must mention
that in
terms of the law, a candidate engineer is not allowed to work
unsupervised. Section 18(2) of the Engineering Profession
Act
[4]
(EPA), specifically provides that a person may not practice as a
professional engineer for instance, unless he or she is registered
as
such. Accordingly, the applicant as a candidate engineer could not
practice as a professional engineer, the exceptional skill
required
in the Republic of South Africa. Given the alleged growing scourge,
although not proven before this Court, the relevant
professional
body, the Engineering Council of South Africa (ECSA) must seriously
consider investigating this alleged illegality
in the engineering
profession. As the saying goes, there is no smoke without fire.
Another concerning factor is that in ostensibly
abusing the critical
skills determination list, it is apparent that unscrupulous
applicants, perhaps with the aid of their employers,
pick and choose
a title listed even though not registered as professional engineers,
simply to achieve a favourable consideration
for the CSV
applications. As an example, the applicant before me chose a title of
Manufacturing Manager when in truth he was not
employed as such.
[11]
In terms of section 14(g) of the EPA it is within
the powers of the ECSA to take any steps it considers necessary for
the protection
of the public in their dealings with registered
persons for the maintenance of integrity, and the enhancement of the
status of
the engineering profession. It may well be that the ECSA
must begin to exercise these powers if there is any semblance of
truth
in the scourge revealed by counsel for the Minister. Counsel
for the Minister having invited this Court to restate the law, must
request the State Attorney to avail a copy of this judgment to the
Secretariat of the ECSA for consideration.
[12]
Returning to the issue under discussion, the
Minister committed no error of law when he concluded that candidate
engineers are not
contemplated in section 19(4). Section 6(2)(d) of
the PAJA states that a Court or tribunal has the power to judicially
review an
administrative action if the action was materially
influenced by an error of law. The decision of the Minister was not
influenced
by any error of law, be it materially or otherwise.
Regulation 18(5) is more procedural than being substantive. However,
what the
regulation requires is not only proof of application, as
argued by the applicant’s counsel, but proof that the applicant
falls within the critical skills category in the form of a
confirmation, in writing, from the professional body. In other words,
the proof must be one that confirms that a particular applicant falls
within the critical skills category. A candidate engineer
does not
fall within the category of critical skills. Aptly put, a candidate
engineer is not an engineer. The argument that the
regulation does
not distinguish between a candidate engineer and an engineer is a
lame one. That argument ignores the requirement
of the critical
skills category.
[13]
Again, when the Minister concluded that based on
the ECSA registration category, the applicant lacked the necessary
critical skills,
the Minister was not materially influenced by any
error of law. It must then follow that this ground of error of law
must fail.
Section 6(2)(i) of the PAJA empowers a Court to judicially
review if the decision is unconstitutional or unlawful. The decision
to dismiss the application for CSV cannot by stretch of any
imagination be unlawful nor unconstitutional. The Minister is
empowered
by the
Immigration Act to
take the decision. There is no
provision in the Constitution that prevents the Minister to take a
decision to dismiss a CSV application.
This ground of
unconstitutionality and unlawfulness must fail. The Minister did not
act irrationally since his decision is related
to the purpose for
which the power exercised was given. The purpose is to ensure that
critical skills are retained in the Republic
of South Africa. Where a
skill is not critical, there is no purpose served to retain such a
skill. The means used by the Minister
to establish if the applicant
was registered as a professional engineer is one that is rationally
connected to the purpose of
section 19(4)
of the
Immigration Act.
Thus
, on a legality review pathway, the decision of the Minister is
unassailable.
Consideration
of irrelevant and ignoring relevant considerations
.
[14]
The applicant alleged under oath that he was
employed as a Manufacturing Manager. This being an attempt to bring
himself within
the list of critical skills. However, the contract of
employment reveals that the OE Bearings (Pty) Ltd employed him as a
Production
and Design Engineer and not a Manufacturing Manager. A
Manufacturing Manager contemplated in the list must be a professional
engineer
and not a candidate engineer. The fact that a person is
registered as a candidate engineer as opposed to a professional
engineer
is a relevant consideration when dealing with a
section
19(4)
of the
Immigration Act application
. The Minister was required
to take that fact into consideration for the purposes of considering
a CSV application. Consideration
of irrelevant factors and ignoring
the relevant ones simply entails the failure to apply mind.
Undoubtedly, the Minister had clearly
applied his mind. This being
motion proceedings, on application of the
Plascon
Evans
principle, the version that there
was application of mind is not far-fetched when the contents of the
letter of the Minister are
properly interpreted and considered. The
provisions of
section 6(2)(e)(iii)
of the PAJA does not apply at
all.
Arbitrary or
capricious decision.
[15]
This ground is predicated on an allegation that
the Minister based his decision on the categorisation of engineers by
the ECSA.
Basing a decision on that rendered his decision to be
arbitrary or capricious, so it is contended. Thereby, the decision of
the
Minister was allegedly tainted with irrationality. There is no
merit in this ground. As indicated earlier, a candidate engineer
lacks critical skills and cannot function alone in terms of the law.
There is nothing arbitrary or capricious in wishing to retain
skills
that are critical as opposed to skills that are less critical. There
is nothing exceptional with a candidate engineer. If
candidate
engineers had a gripe in not been listed, the 2014 regulations ought
to have been challenged constitutionally.
[16]
During
argument, an unpleaded case predicated on the 2023 regulation was
punted for under the guise of an interpretation of the
word
engineer
as
employed in the 2014 regulations. Hence reliance was placed on the
judgment of
Aquila
Steel (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Mineral Resources and
Others
(
Aquila
)
[5]
.
The situation contemplated in
Aquila
finds
no application in
casu.
Although
counsel for the applicant was afforded some leeway to advance this
unpleaded case, fact remains that such is not the applicant’s
pleaded case, and most significantly the 2023 regulations did not
influence the 2022 decision. There was no need to interpret the
word
engineer
or
attempt a light throwing exercise contemplated in
Aquila
.
In 2014, all what the Minister did was to determine certain listed
skills to be critical skills. To determine means to cause something
to occur in a particular way or to have a particular nature.
Engineering is the branch of science and technology concerned with
design, building, and use of engines, machines, and structures. As a
broad branch, the Minister is empowered statutorily to determine
that
a particular skill in that broad branch constitute a critical skill
for the Republic of South Africa. Regard being had to
the provisions
of
section 19(4)
of the
Immigration Act, it
is absurd to accept that
the Minister would wish to retain candidate engineers as opposed to
professional engineers as critical
skills.
[17]
Accordingly, this Court takes a view that
section
6(2)(vi)
of the PAJA finds no application in this regard. The
decision to dismiss the CSV application was taken on sound legal
basis and
it is not arbitrary nor capricious. The decision does not
offend the principle of legality since it is lawful and rational.
Order
[18]
For all the above reasons, I make the following
order:
1.
The application for review is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is to pay the costs of this
application on a party and party scale taxable or to be settled at
scale B.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Delivered: This judgment
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 e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be
05 November 2024.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Mr V
Mabuza
Instructed
by:
McMenamin
Van Huyssteen, Pretoria
For
the Respondent:
Mr
T Segage
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
Date
of the hearing:
22
October 2024
Date
of judgment:
05
November 2024
[1]
Act
13 of 2000.
[2]
GN
R413 in GG 37679 of 22 May 2014, as amended.
[3]
Act 3
of 2000.
[4]
Act
46 of 2000.
[5]
2019
(3) SA 621
(CC) at para 73.
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