Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1355South Africa
Anderson v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (022949/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1355 (23 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Review in terms of Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 2 of 2000 (PAJA). Applicant alleges that the Minister; took into account irrelevant consideration; was influenced by material error of law; took an arbitrary decision; had an ulterior purpose or motive; or was irrational when deciding on 26 October 2023 to give him further profile instead of ordering his release on parole. Held: (1) The decision is set aside and the Minister is ordered to release the applicant on parole. Held: (2) There is no order as to costs.
Judgment
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## Anderson v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (022949/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1355 (23 December 2024)
Anderson v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (022949/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1355 (23 December 2024)
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sino date 23 December 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
Number: 022949/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
LEE
ANDERSON
Applicant
and
MINISTER OF JUSTICE
AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
First Respondent
CHAIRPERSON NATIONAL
COUNCIL OF
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Second Respondent
Summary: Review in
terms of Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 2 of 2000 (PAJA).
Applicant alleges that the Minister; took
into account irrelevant
consideration; was influenced by material error of law; took an
arbitrary decision; had an ulterior purpose
or motive; or was
irrational when deciding on 26 October 2023 to give him further
profile instead of ordering his release on parole.
Held: (1) The
decision is set aside and the Minister is ordered to release the
applicant on parole. Held: (2) There is no order
as to costs.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
On 8 February 2001, a newspaper article
relating a story of murder committed by the applicant and his
co-accused was captioned –
slagoffer
is soos n bees geslag
– the
victim was slaughtered like a cattle. The applicant and his
co-accused gruesomely killed Mr Benjamin Ntoba Ramanamane
(deceased).
The fact that the deceased was gruesomely killed is an unchangeable
fact.
[2]
The applicant, Mr Lee Anderson (Mr
Anderson) is a life sentenced prisoner, currently serving his prison
term at Kgosi Mampuru II
Correctional Centre, Pretoria Male Prison.
He launched the present application without any legal
assistance. In the present
application he seeks a review and setting
aside of a decision taken by the Minister of Justice and Correctional
Services (“The
Minister”) on 26 October 2023, in terms of
which, Mr Anderson was refused a release on parole and instead was
offered a “third
profile”. The present application is
opposed by the Minister and the Chairperson of the National Council
Correctional Services
(“The NCCS”).
Pertinent background
facts to the present application.
[3]
On 05 March 2001, Mr Anderson was sentenced
to life imprisonment. As at the time of the hearing of the
present application,
Mr Anderson had been incarcerated for a period
of over 24 years inclusive of awaiting trial period. On two
occasions, Mr Anderson
applied to be released on parole. On those two
occasions he was given what is known as further profiles (effectively
a refusal
to grant parole). Pertinent to the present application, on
26 October 2023, the Minister reached a decision to approve a further
profile (third profile). In reaching that decision, the Minister
recorded the following:
“
Having
considered the documentation of the aforesaid offender and the
recommendations of the NCCS,
further
profile is hereby approved
.”
[4]
In its meeting held on 24-26 May 2023, the
NCCS concluded that parole is not recommended at that stage. The NCCS
recommended that
the matter be placed before the NCCS after 12
months. The recommendation was recorded in the following terms:
“
The
offender is presently urged to improve his situation as follows:
1.
The offender should undergo individual
psychotherapy to address his criminogenic needs anti-social
personality traits, lack of victim
empathy, lack of remorse and
violent offending behaviour;
2.
A risk assessment by a non-treating
Psychologist should be conducted using a tool (e.g. VRAG).
Compliance
with the above will not guarantee the offender placement on parole
.”
[5]
Mr Anderson was aggrieved by the decision
of the Minister and launched the present application. In his notice
of motion, he prayed
for the following orders:
i.
“
That the decision of the first and
second respondent to give the applicant a further profile be
reviewed, declared unlawful and
invalid, and set aside;
ii.
That the pending decision of the first and
second respondent be declared a “foregone conclusion” and
be substituted
with that of the above Honourable Court;
iii.
That the applicant is released on parole by
the above Honourable Court immediately with effect of the granting,
alternatively, of
service of this order;
iv.
Directing that the respondent pays the
costs of this application; and
v.
Granting further and/or alternative relief
that this Honourable Court deems appropriate.”
[6]
As already indicated the Minister and
the NCCS opposed the application.
Evaluation
[7]
There is no doubt that when the Minister
decided to give Mr Anderson a further profile on 26 October 2023, the
Minister was exercising
public power. It is by now settled law that
the rule of law requires that every exercise of public power must be
lawful and rational.
Should the power not meet any of the legs of
legality, a Court of law is empowered in terms of section 172(1)(a)
of the Constitution
of the Republic of South Africa, 1996
(“Constitution”) to declare that exercise of power
invalid. An invalid exercise
of public power is inconsistent with the
Constitution and is bound to be set aside. Before this Court
considers the legality of
the decision of the Minister, it is of
significance to consider the question of opposition by the Minister
(decision maker).
Did
the Minister depose to an opposing affidavit?
[8]
Undoubtedly, it is the decision of the
Minister that is called into question. The only functionary who can
defend the impugned decision
is the Minister. Sadly, Mr Anderson is
unrepresented in the present application. His Court papers are
haphazardly prepared. The
papers were not appropriately indexed and
numbered. There was a lot of duplication. It was difficult for this
Court to identify
the opposing affidavit. After trawling
through three ring-bound bundles, the Court stumbled into an
affidavit titled ‘first
and second respondents’ answering
affidavit”. This affidavit was deposed to by one Ms Amanda
Lindokuhle Vilakazi (Ms
Vilakazi). This Court must remark, included
in the papers before Court was an unsigned version of an answering
affidavit. As an
indication that the answering affidavit stumbled
into is one relied upon by the respondents, Minister included, the
heads of arguments
submitted on behalf of the respondents, almost
word for word, regurgitated the contents of that affidavit.
[9]
Ms Vilakazi is a practising attorney and a
member of the NCCS. She alleged that the facts she deposed to were
within her own personal
knowledge. The only mention by the deponent
of the Minister, relates to submissions of a legal nature which she
accept as being
both sound and correct, given to her by the legal
representatives of the Minister and herself. Of utmost significance,
there is
no confirmatory affidavit deposed to by the Minister. With
regard to the impugned decision of the Minister, in an attempt to
justify
the decision, she testified as follows:
“
[9]
…Absent such reports or reports to the negative, the Minister
cannot, under any circumstances
whatsoever, grant such parole to any
offender, including but not limited to, the applicant.
[10] To
this end, I respectfully state that the Minister’s decision in
casu
is rationally connected to the material that served
before him when he made the decision to refuse parole, as at that
stage, and
further direct such further profile on the applicant…
[11]
In that event
logic and rationality
would dictate that the
Minister ought to err on the side of caution, if only in the interest
of the wider society as opposed to
the applicant’s rather own
selfish interest…”
[10]
All
of the above allegations constitutes inadmissible hearsay evidence.
These allegations were not confirmed by the Minister. That
which is
allegedly logical and rational was made in hollow and was not
sufficiently expatiated. The full Court of this Division
in the
matter of
The
Minister of Home Affairs and another v The Hellen Suzman Foundation
and others
(
Foundation
)
[1]
aptly stated the law to be as follows:
“
What
renders the Minister’s application destined for failure is the
Minister’s failure to depose to the answering affidavit
in the
review proceedings.
Only the Minister,
as the decision maker, could give evidence as to what passed through
his mind and how he exercised it. The affidavit
deposed to by the
Director-General… constitutes inadmissible evidence
.
As was held by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Freedom
Under Law v Judicial Services Commission
if
the decision maker has failed to depose to an affidavit it is
impermissible for a functionary in the office to do so on behalf
of
the decision maker.
In those
circumstances the affidavit of the functionary falls to be declared
inadmissible
. The court in
FUL
proceeded on the basis that on the merits the application was to fail
in any event
. However, the principle is
that inadmissible affidavits should not be considered in adjudicating
a matter
…”
[11]
Based
on the principles deduced from
Foundation
,
the evidence of Ms Vilakazi is inadmissible to the extend it seeks to
justify the decision taken by the Minister on 26 October
2023. This
Court
per
the erudite Acting Justice Ally, in
Mbatha
v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and another
(
Mbatha
)
[2]
felicitously stated the following:
“…
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.”
[12]
Likewise,
no explanation is given as to why the Minister did not depose to
either an answering affidavit or a confirmatory affidavit.
In the
heads of argument submitted on behalf of the Minister there is no
scintilla of a submission regarding the application of
section 3 of
the Law of Evidence Amendment Act.
[3]
Accordingly, in considering whether the decision of the Minister is
rational and not arbitrary, the evidence of Ms Vilakazi remains
inadmissible.
Exhaustion of internal
remedies
[13]
An exercise of public power may be impugned
in terms of either a legality or
PAJA
review.
PAJA
only applies to administrative actions. Inasmuch as the papers of Mr
Anderson are jumbled up, upon careful read of the Notice of
Motion as
well as the founding affidavit, it is clear that his review
application is hybrid. It is predicated on both
PAJA
and legality review.
[14]
According to section 7(2)(a) of PAJA, no
Court or tribunal shall review an administrative action in terms of
this Act unless any
internal remedy provided for in any other law has
been exhausted. Counsel for the Minister and the NCCS forcefully
argued that
Mr Anderson has failed to exhaust internal remedies. In
his submission, a further profile which was to happen in October 2024
constituted
an internal remedy for Mr Anderson. Put differently, Mr
Anderson should have withheld his impugn of the decision of 26
October
2023 until the Parole Board meets again in October 2024. This
Court disagrees with such a submission.
[15]
An internal remedy must be one provided for
in any
other
law. Examples of internal remedies would be internal appeal,
mediation, conciliation and or arbitration. Mr Anderson is unhappy
with a decision to be given a further profile. It is thus incongruous
to consider the impugned process to be an internal remedy.
In
deciding to subject Mr Anderson to a further profile, the Minister
has exercised public power. If that exercise of public power
is
irrational, then Mr Anderson acquires a right in law either in
PAJA
or legality review to seek a review. The irony that beset the
contended internal remedy is that Mr Anderson is told upfront that
compliance with aspects to be reviewed in a further profile is not a
guarantee for being granted parole.
[16]
The import of exhausting internal remedies
is to avoid a continuation to judicial review. Where a process
aimed at avoiding
a judicial review does not promise such avoidance,
then such cannot be considered as a remedy. In law a remedy is a
legal means
to achieve justice and compensate a person for harm
caused by a legal wrong. Accordingly, there are no internal remedies
provided
for in law in relation to the impugned decision. Assuming
that the further profile is a remedy as opposed to a legal wrong, it
must be accepted by this Court that until the Minister on the
recommendation of the NCCS ends a string of perpetual further
profiles,
the likes of Mr Anderson must suffer, as it were, and await
a positive profile. This assumption is clearly inconsistent with
constitutional
rights.
[17]
This Court concludes that Mr Anderson
cannot be non-suited for want of compliance with section 7(2)(a) of
PAJA
.
Is the decision of 26
October 2023 reviewable in law?
[18]
Mr Anderson threw an avalanche of arsenals
to the direction of the decision. As dealt with above, the Minister
for some inexplicable
reasons have failed to defend the decision.
This Court must be quick to point out that failure to oppose an
application for review
does not automatically lead to the review and
setting aside of the decision. If any of the arsenals thrown by Mr
Anderson at the
decision deals a fatal blow to the decision, such a
decision cannot survive a constitutional muster.
[19]
As
correctly pointed out in
Van
Vuuren v Minister of Correctional Services
(
Van
Vuuren
)
[4]
these type of applications concerns the proper interpretation of
section 136 of the Correctional Services Act. There is no quibble
that Mr Anderson has already served the required number of years in
incarceration to enable him to apply and be considered for
parole. He
has applied to be considered for parole four times already and has
been subjected to a plethora of assessments by various
relevant
professionals.
[20]
Mr Anderson has alleged that the decision
of the Minister is irrational. There is no dispute that all other
relevant reports submitted
are not averse to Mr Anderson being
granted a parole. It is only the report of Ms Janeen M Prinsloo, the
Clinical Psychologist
furnished on 31 October 2017 which is averse.
The report concluded thus:
“
This
report should be seen as an addendum to the first psychological
report which was submitted for consideration to the National
Council
for Correctional Services (NCCS) by Ms Benic in June 2015.
Mr Anderson
appears to
pose a serious threat to the professional well-being and personal
safety of professionals in DCS and I am thus of the
opinion that Mr
Anderson’s risk for re-offending should be assessed by DCS
officials
.
The fact that Mr Anderson had reported the social
worker who wrote his last report to her professional council provides
evidence
of this….”
[21]
The
Constitutional Court in
Walus
v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and others
(
Walus
)
[5]
confirmed that the question whether a decision is rationally related
to the purpose for which the power was given calls for an
objective
enquiry. In this particular instance, this Court is bereft of any
facts from a decision maker. This makes it difficult
to conduct an
objective enquiry. As confirmed in
Walus
,
what the Constitution requires is that public power vested in the
executive and other functionaries be exercised in an objectively
rational manner
[6]
.
[22]
Since the Minister did not depose to an
affidavit, it is unknown to this Court what factors he considered to
reach the impugned
decision. The only official document which
contains the Minister’s decision informs this Court as follows:
“
Having
considered the documentation of the
aforesaid offender
and the
recommendations of the NCCS
,
further profile is hereby approved.”
[23]
Based on the above, the Minister appears to
have considered only two factors; (a) the documentation of Mr
Anderson; and (b) the
recommendations of the NCCS. It is of course
unclear as to which of the documentation of Mr Anderson did the
Minister consider.
Having reached the decision he reached, it must be
so that he considered only a report that is averse to granting Mr
Anderson a
parole. There is no objective rational basis upon which
this Court can predicate acceptance of a Clinical Psychologist report
over
other reports that recommended parole.
[24]
It
is so that in terms of section 136(3)(c) of the Correctional Services
Act,
[7]
(CSA) the discretionary
power to place a sentenced offender under parole lies with the
Minister. In other words, it is not the
duty of the Minister to
rubber-stamp, as it were, the recommendation of the NCCS. In my view,
the section cannot be interpreted
to mean that the Minister may only
exercise the discretionary powers once a favourable recommendation is
made by the NCCS. Were
that to be the case, the Minister will be
nothing but a token. Such will also render the Parole Board Manual or
Departmental Policy
nugatory. Since every exercise of statutory power
ought to be objectively rational, if the Minister is a rubberstamp,
then rationality
will hardly be achieved.
[25]
As
indicated above, the Minister provided no explanation to his decision
as predicated on those two grounds. There is no evidence
of
application of mind.
Prima
facie
,
the Minister simply endorsed the recommendations of the NCCS. In
Walus
,
the Court said;
[8]
“…
The
Minister did not explain any of this in his answering affidavit. His
failure to explain this renders his decision to deny the
applicant
parole inexplicable. If it is inexplicable, it follows like night
follows a day that it is irrational. There is no connection
between
the exercise by the Minister of his powers and the purpose for which
the legislation conferred that power on him. If there
is no
connection between the Minister’s exercise of the power and the
purpose of the power conferred upon him, his decision
is irrational.”
[26]
Likewise, this Court is faced with a dearth
of explanation as to why the Clinical Psychologist report was
preferred above the report
of other professionals. How many times Mr
Anderson should be profiled. Criminogenic nature, is nothing but a
likelihood to cause
criminal behaviour. The Minister was behoved to
explain this recommendation by the NCCS to this Court. He failed to
do so. This
Court has no knowledge of what anti-social personality
traits would refer to. Traits are qualities of a person and they
typically
belong to a person. It is something that the person may not
change. The fact that Mr Anderson gruesomely killed the deceased is
unchangeable. Lack of victim empathy and remorse as well as violent
offending behaviour can only relate to the commission of the
crime,
something Mr Anderson cannot change. As it was recognised in
Walus
,
40 years later, the fact that Mr Anderson violently killed the
deceased will still remain.
[27]
Mr Anderson alleged that the assessments
suggested were underwent by him four times. There is no proper answer
before this Court
as to what purpose will the fifth assessment serve.
[28]
As confirmed in
Walus
,
prove of one ground – irrationality – is sufficient to
vitiate the decision of the Minister. Absent any explanation,
this
Court must reach a conclusion that the decision to refuse Mr Anderson
parole is not adorned with rationality and it is reviewable
in law.
Remedy
[29]
A
finding that the decision is irrational ineluctably leads to the
setting aside of the decision by the Minister. The key question
considering the doctrine of separation of powers is whether this
Court must decide or remit to the Minister for a decision that
is
rational. In
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Limited
(
Trencon
)
[9]
,
the Constitutional Court suggested two factors to be considered when
a Court finds itself in the separation of powers crossroad.
First, is
whether a Court is in as good a position as the administrator to make
the decision? The second is whether the decision
of the administrator
is a foregone conclusion. Even though the Court in
Trencon
took time to explain these two factors, the opaqueness in terms of
practical application of these factors still looms large, in
my view.
[30]
Nevertheless, Mr Anderson qualified to be
considered for parole some years back. As at the time of this
application he had served
over 20 years of incarceration. This Court
was favoured with reams upon reams of paper, the majority of which
supports the release
of Mr Anderson. Accordingly, this Court is in as
good a position as the Minister to grant Mr Anderson parole. The
decision is a
forgone conclusion. It is unnecessary to delay the
release of Mr Anderson any further. Accordingly, Mr Anderson must be
released
on parole.
[31]
As a concluding remark, this Court must
emphasise the fact that in matters of this nature, a Court should,
without fail, be favoured
with evidence from the decision maker. It
becomes an arduous or almost an impossible task for a Court of review
to objectively
enquire into the rationality of the decision absent
cogent and admissible evidence. In
casu
,
this Court was furnished with an affidavit of a party who only
recommended and not decided. This is inappropriate and it must
stop.
Order
[32]
For all the above reasons, I make the
following order:
1.
The decision of the Minister of Justice and
Correctional Services made on 26 October 2023 of not approving the
release of Mr. Anderson
on parole is hereby reviewed and set
aside.
2.
The Minister of Justice and Correctional
Services is hereby ordered to place Mr. Anderson on parole on such
terms and conditions
as s/he may deem appropriate and to take all
steps as may be needed to be taken to ensure that Mr. Anderson is
released on parole
within 14 calendar days of this order.
3.
There is no order as to costs.
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
23 December 2024.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
In
Person
For the Respondent:
Mr M Zondo
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
Date
of the hearing:
21
November 2024
Date
of judgment:
23
December 2024
[1]
(32323/2002)
[2023] GPPHC dated 16 October 2023 at para 12.
[2]
(5876/2022)
[2024] GPPHC dated 15 March 2024 at para 21.
[3]
Act
45 of 1988.
[4]
2010
CC 17.
[5]
CCT
221/21
[2022] ZACC 39
(21 November 2022).
[6]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of South Africa: In re Ex Parte President
of the Republic of South Africa
2000
(2) SA 674 (CC).
[7]
Act
8 of 1959.
[8]
Ibid
fn. 5 at para 81.
[9]
2015
(10) BCLR 1199
(CC).
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