Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1360South Africa
Nzuza and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (Leave to Appeal) (70192/17) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1360 (27 December 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nzuza and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (Leave to Appeal) (70192/17) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1360 (27 December 2024)
Nzuza and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (Leave to Appeal) (70192/17) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1360 (27 December 2024)
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sino date 27 December 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
70192/17
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
27 December 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
XOLANI
NZUZA
First Applicant
ANELE
ZONKE
Second Applicant
SIMPHIWE
BOOI
Third Applicant
KHANYILE
KAHYISE
Fourth Applicant
MZOXOLO
MAGIDIWANA
Fifth Applicant
THOLAKELE
DLUNGA
Sixth Applicant
SAMKELO
MKHIZE
Seventh Applicant
AMANDA
NOGWAZA
Eighth Applicant
THOBILE
TYOBENI
Ninth Applicant
MAJEKE
NONKONYANA
Tenth Applicant
MZUKISI
SOYINI
Eleventh Applicant
BONGILE
MPOTYE
Twelfth Applicant
ZAMIKAYA
NDUDE
Thirteenth Applicant
STHEMBILE
SOHADI
Fourteenth Applicant
LOYISO
MTSHEKETHSE
Fifteenth Applicant
ZOLILE
HONXO
Sixteenth Applicant
ZWELITSHA
MTSHENA
Seventeenth Applicant
MZIWANELE
MXINWA
Eighteenth Applicant
MZOKOLO
ZUKULU
Nineteenth Applicant
ASSOCIATION
OF MINEWORKERS AND
CONSTRUCTION
UNION
Twentieth Applicant
and
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
First Respondent
THE
NATIONAL PROSECUTING AUTHORITY
Second Respondent
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Third Respondent
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Fourth Respondent
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Fifth Respondent
Heard:
11 October 2024
Delivered:
This Judgement was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and
by uploading to
Caselines and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand down is
deemed to be 10:00 am on 27 December 2024.
ORDER
1.
Condonation for the late filing of the application for leave to
appeal
is granted.
2.
The application for leave to appeal is refused.
3.
Each party is to pay their own costs.
JUDGMENT
(LEAVE TO APPEAL)
MLAMBO, JP
Introduction
[1]
This is an
application for leave to appeal against the judgment and order I
handed down on 15 April 2024.
[1]
The applicants also seek condonation having only launched this
application on 16 July 2024, which is more than 2 months after the
15
days provided for in this Court’s rules.
[2]
Applications for leave to appeal are regulated by section 17 of the
Superior Courts Act.
[3]
In terms
of this section, an applicant must show that another court would
reach a different conclusion or that there is a compelling
reason for
leave to be granted.
[4]
I first
consider whether a case has been made out for condonation.
Condonation
[2]
The main reason provided by the applicants is that when
the attorneys
received the main judgment, the individual applicants, who are
migrant workers, had either relocated (domestically
and outside the
Republic) or returned to their respective rural homes. The result was
that communicating the outcome of the application
and co-ordinating a
unified response equally representing their best interests became
unexpectedly lengthy. A further difficulty
under these circumstances
was that there were no financial instructions given to the attorneys
to prosecute the application for
leave to appeal. Considering that
the history of this matter, has spanned some 12 years, they submit
that a two month delay is
not inordinate nor does it cause incurable
prejudice to the respondents.
[3]
They therefore submit that this explanation covers the
entire
duration of the two months delay, and that in the circumstances,
their representatives took all reasonable measures within
their power
to locate the applicants, a process that unfortunately ended up
taking two months. They further submit that there is
no prejudice on
the respondents, while refusing condonation would cause them great
prejudice. This as their section 34 rights of
access to courts, which
includes appeals, would be denied. Lastly on the prejudice aspect,
they submit that they enjoy excellent
prospects of success on appeal.
[4]
The
respondents
[5]
submit that the
explanation provided by the applicants for condonation is
insufficient and unreasonable. First that it is not true
that some of
the applicants are from outside the Republic as the docket records
them being from the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal.
Second that the
explanation lacks important information such as the dates on which
the attorneys tried to contact the applicants
and how and why they
failed to get a hold of them. They do however concede that granting
condonation would be in the public interest
because it would allow
this matter to be finalised if a decision is granted on the merits.
[5]
I am of the view that while the applicants’ attorneys
do not
include all the detail they could reasonably have provided, the crux
of the explanation is reasonable and it covers the
entire period of
the delay. While a two month delay is not as benign as the applicants
make it out to be, in light of their explanation,
it is not so
unreasonable so as to justify the refusal of condonation, especially
because the respondents have hardly made out
a case of how it was or
would be prejudiced. I therefore grant condonation.
Grounds
for leave to appeal
[6]
The grounds
for leave to appeal are based on this Court’s invocation of
section 173 of the Constitution, its assessment of
the abuse of
court, application of
Khumalo
and Another v Member of the Executive Council for Education: KwaZulu
Natal
[6]
in assessing undue delay and
its treatment of the NDPP’s reasons which they argue were in
the first place no reasons at all,
but if accepted as reasons, as
irrational.
Abuse
of court
[7]
On abuse of
court the applicants first issue is that this Court’s finding
was reached
mero
motu
as
it was not raised by the respondents. They take issue with the fact
that a drastic remedy was used to dismiss their application
in
circumstances where it was not pleaded. As a result, such a finding
would be a development in the law which on its own would
be
sufficient for an appeal court to consider. Regarding section 173,
they place reliance on the Constitutional Court’s decision
in
Molaudzi
v S
[7]
and that of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Knoop
and Another NNO v Gupta (Tayob Intervening)
[8]
that section 173 can only be invoked in relation to procedural and
not substantive rights. The effect of these decisions, they
say, is
that section 173 “does not apply to substantive rights but
rather to adjectival or procedural rights”
[9]
in that “[a] court may exercise inherent jurisdiction to
regulate its own process
only
when faced with inadequate procedures and rules in the sense that
they do not provide a mechanism to deal with a particular
scenario
”
(applicants emphasis).
[10]
[8]
Rule 53
read with Rule 6 of this Court’s rules deals with review
applications. In terms of these rules time periods are included
only
for the initiation of the application until the point of prosecution.
In my view, this creates a
lacuna
for the situation in the current matter where the application is
timeously initiated but not prosecuted. The circumstances of the
delay as set out in the main judgment therefore fall squarely within
procedural matters (i.e. failure to timeously prosecuting
a review
having initiated it) and therefore section 173 was correctly invoked.
I am inclined to agree with the respondents that
the Supreme Court of
Appeal’s decision in
Cassimjee
v Minister of Finance
,
[11]
found that section 173 can appropriately be invoked to limit the
right of access to court as “[t]he same considerations
[relating to vexatious litigation] … apply to an abuse of
court procedures”. As I found the delay an abuse of court
procedures, it was within my discretion to use section 173 in the
manner that I did. The respondents correctly submitted that having
exercised a discretion, an appeal court could only interfere if such
discretion was not exercised judiciously.
[12]
Having followed binding Supreme Court of Appeal precedent,
[13]
this is not such a case.
[9]
With that said, a fault line with this ground and all
others
discussed in relation to this point is that this Court did not merely
dismiss the application on the technical point of
delay. The main
judgment dealt with the merits, and in my view, this renders the
issue of section 173 moot.
Correct
test for undue delay
[10]
The
applicants argue that in following
Khumalo
,
this Court erred as that decision was superseded in
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Limited v Gijima Holdings (Pty)
Limited
[14]
and
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Limited
,
[15]
which developed the correct test to apply in determining the effect
of undue delay. In
Gijima
,
the Constitutional Court emphasised that undue delay in initiating
review proceedings can prejudice the respondent, hinder the
court's
assessment, and undermine the public interest in certainty and
finality. Citing
Khumalo
,
it also acknowledged that courts have a discretion to overlook
delays, stressing that such discretion should not be exercised
lightly and must be grounded in relevant facts or objective factors.
In
Buffalo
City
,
the Constitutional Court applied the two-step approach from
Khumalo
which asks whether the delay was unreasonable and even if found to be
unreasonable, whether the interests of justice require that
the delay
be condoned nonetheless. Contrary to submissions made on behalf of
the applicants, both
Gijima
and
Buffalo
City
approve of
Khumalo,
it is not an “outdated” test. Furthermore, neither
Gijima
nor
Buffalo
City
decided that merely because there is conduct that is constitutionally
invalid, delay does not matter, the decision to condone the
delay
remains within the court’s discretion.
[11]
What
Gijima
and
Buffalo
City
make clear is that a pre-requisite of the test is first finding
conduct, in this instance, a decision by the NDPP, that is
constitutionally
invalid, despite a delay in bringing the
application. Once that threshold has been met, a court “may
nevertheless be constitutionally
compelled to declare the state’s
conduct unlawful … because section 172(1)(a) of the
Constitution enjoins a court
to declare invalid … conduct that
it finds to be inconsistent with the Constitution”.
[16]
In the main judgment, I found the NDPP’s decision to pass
constitutional muster and consequently, the applicants argument
must
be rejected as the test can be taken no further. In any event, as
stated above, this Court went beyond merely dismissing the
review
application solely on the delay ground, it also considered the merits
of the review.
Attribution
of fault for the delay
[12]
This Court found that as
dominus litis
, the applicants had the
duty to move the matter along, and it is not disputed that they
failed to do so. Even after intervention
by the Deputy Judge
President, it was the respondents who filed their heads first. The
main judgment makes it clear that what was
in issue was whether the
applicants took any steps after launching their review, to move the
matter along. The conclusion, which
remains correct, was that after
launching the review in October of 2017, no further engagement with
the matter was forthcoming
from the applicants. Again, as
dominus
litis
, this failure is solely attributable to them. I find no
reason why another court would reach a different conclusion.
[13]
The
attribution of ulterior motives was not reached lightly. It was the
only reasonable inference left for this Court to make on
the evidence
before it. The applicants are the accused in a criminal trial, where
amongst others, they are charged with murder.
If convicted, they
could be sentenced to direct imprisonment. The record placed before
me and this very review are evidence of
the fact that they wanted to
stop their prosecutions.
[17]
They first approached the NDPP and when that failed, they approached
this Court. In the main application, there was no explanation
given
for the delay in the prosecution of the matter, even during oral
argument, the focus was on the proceedings being instituted
in time
and little was advanced on what happened subsequent to the launching
of the application. In these circumstances and where
no explanation
has been proffered for why the review was not timeously prosecuted, I
can find no reason why another court would
reach a different
conclusion on this aspect.
The
NDPP’s reasons
[14]
The main
judgment comprehensively dealt with the reasons why it was not
appropriate in this case to review the decision not to prosecute.
The
legal principles are clear that this is not a power courts will
easily exercise.
[18]
The
applicants exercised their rights by presenting evidence before the
NDPP on why their prosecutions should not proceed. This
included
their view on the evidence of Mr X, which they said was the only
evidence the state had against them. The NDPP disagreed,
and on the
information placed before me contained in the record, it cannot be
disputed that the NPA has other evidence. While the
applicant takes
the view that Mr X’s evidence which is “at the heart of
the NPA’s case”
[19]
was discredited, these are motion proceedings and on application of
the
Plascon-Evans
rule,
the respondents’ version that Mr X is one of many witnesses
must prevail. This Court could not be asked to provide a
view on the
strength of the State’s case because that is the role of the
criminal trial Judge. Any pronouncement from this
Court on this issue
would, in the circumstances be an encroachment of the judicial
independence doctrine.
[15]
On the adequacy of the reasons, this Court’s conclusion was
that although
terse, the NDPP did provide reasons. Further to this,
the record showed the evidence provided to the NDPP included the
docket,
video footage, reasons for his opinion and a copy of an
extract from the Farlam Commission containing its findings regarding
Mr
X’s evidence. There was no basis proffered suggesting that
the NDPP did not apply his mind to it and there is no law requiring
him to state individual reasons based on each instance of the
evidence provided before him. I agree with the respondents that there
was nothing new between the first and second requests. While the
applicants argue that the meeting of 12 September 2017 was an
intervening factor, it does not change that no new information was
presented to the NDPP and that a holistic reason was that the
NDPP
remained unconvinced in their case. It is important to note that the
NDPP too is restrained from overstepping his authority,
and I agree
that the grounds raised by the applicants will more appropriately be
dealt with by the trial judge.
[16]
There was a
further submission that this Court erred in the main judgment when it
found that the NDPP had fully substantiated his
reasons for refusing
to stop the prosecution in the answering affidavit.
[20]
Reliance is placed on the Supreme Court of Appeal’s decision in
Zuma v
Democratic Alliance and Others; Acting National Director of Public
Prosecutions and Another v Democratic Alliance and Another
,
[21]
where it was held that reasons given at the time of the request are
the only reasons a Court should consider and not those proffered
in
an answering affidavit. The respondents are correct that the Supreme
Court of Appeal’s decision was in relation to giving
different
reasons in an answering affidavit. This was not the case in this
matter as the answering affidavit merely substantiated
the reasons
already known to the applicants. Furthermore, the applicants were
aware of this substantiation yet they elected not
to file a replying
affidavit. However, even if the import of the decision in
Zuma
also
covers substantiated and not merely different reasons, this
difference had no effect on the main judgment’s outcome.
This
is because the conclusion reached in what is stated preceding the
words “[i]n any event” in paragraph 59 of the
main
judgment, does not consider the reasons given in the answering
affidavit.
[17]
I now turn to the submission that this Court ought properly to have
found irrationality
on the part of the NDPP in that,
inter alia
,
they failed to take into account relevant considerations and/or took
into account irrelevant ones. When the NDPP received the
representations from the applicants, witness statements, photographs,
the docket, video footage, reasons for the DPP’s opinion
and a
copy of an extract from the Farlam Commission containing its findings
regarding the evidence of Mr X and why the DPP did
not agree that it
was discredited, were considered. The information sent to the NDPP
therefore met the low hurdle required for
his decision to be
rationally connected to the reasons for continuing the prosecution.
It was on this basis that the NDPP agreed
that there was a
prima
facie
case against the applicants. The NDPP was not called upon
to determine with certainty that there would be a successful
prosecution,
merely that if the State’s case as alleged was
true, whether the applicants would be convicted. There was further no
information
placed before this Court stating why any of the
information placed before the NDPP was irrelevant. In the
circumstances, the decision
reached was itself rational while being
rationally connected to the information before the NDPP. Therefore,
another Court would
not reach a different conclusion on the merits
relating to the review of the NDPP’s decision.
Compelling
reasons why leave to appeal should be granted
[18]
The
argument here is that the historical importance of this matter and
its concomitant socio-economic and political context the
events
occurred in, coupled with the now 12 year delay, make a prosecution
to be against the public interest. This ground is unsustainable.
The
public importance of this matter equally applies to anyone who
allegedly committed crimes, especially serious crimes, being
prosecuted and convicted if found guilty. The number of years which
have passed cannot on their own be a ground for granting leave
to
appeal, despite submissions from the applicants that the North West
High Court placed blame for the delay on both the applicants
and the
State when it struck the trial from the roll.
[22]
In my view, this does not change the significance of the fact that
the applicants are
dominus
litis
.
They instituted this review application which played a major part in
those delays, and with this Court having pronounced itself
on it,
there is no longer an impediment to the trial proceeding. In the
circumstances, the application for leave to appeal must
be refused.
Costs
[19]
The applicants submitted that the
Biowatch
principle applies
and I find no reason why it would not, despite the respondents
seeking costs.
Order
1.
Condonation for the late filing of the application for leave to
appeal
is granted.
2.
The application for leave to appeal is refused.
3.
Each party is to pay their own costs.
D
MLAMBO
JUDGE
PRESIDENT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
the Applicants:
D
Mpofu SC; T Seboko and M Qofa Lebakeng instructed by Nkome Inc
For
the Respondents:
Z
Matebese SC and V Mashele instructed by State Attorney, Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
11
October 2024
Date
of judgment:
27
December 2024
[1]
Nzuza
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others
[2024] ZAGPPHC 335;
2024 (2) SACR 251
(GP) (“main judgment”).
[2]
Rule 49(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules.
[3]
10 of 2013.
[4]
Id section 17(1)(a).
[5]
The first and second respondents.
[6]
[2013] ZACC 49
;
2014 (3) BCLR 333
(CC); (2014) 35 ILJ 613 (CC);
2014
(5) SA 579
(CC) (“
Khumalo
”).
[7]
[2015]
ZACC 20
;
2015 (8) BCLR 904
(CC);
2015 (2) SACR 341
(CC)
(“
Molaudzi
”).
[8]
[2020]
ZASCA 149
;
[2021] 1 All SA 17
(SCA);
2021 (3) SA 135
(SCA)
(“
Knoop
”).
[9]
Molaudzi
above
n 6 at para 33;
Knoop
id at
para 32.
[10]
Molaudzi
id.
[11]
[2012]
ZASCA 101; 2014 (3) SA 198 (SCA).
[12]
[2006]
ZACC 15
;
2007 (1) SA 523
(CC);
2007 (2) BCLR 167
(CC);
2007 (1) SACR
408
(CC) at paras 38-9.
[13]
Cassimjee
above
n 11 where it was found that failure to prosecute an appeal can
constitute an abuse of court which can be regulated in terms
of
section 173 of the Constitution.
[14]
[2017]
ZACC 40
;
2018 (2) BCLR 240
(CC);
2018 (2) SA 23
(CC) (“
Gijima
”).
[15]
[2019]
ZACC 15
;
2019 (6) BCLR 661
(CC);
2019 (4) SA 331
(CC) (“
Buffalo
City
”).
[16]
Id at para 63.
[17]
I note this as a neutral fact.
[18]
Panday
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2020] ZAKZPHC 52;
[2020] 4 All SA 544
(KZP);
2021 (1) SACR 18
(KZP)
at para 32;
Patel
v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others
[2018] ZAKZDHC 17;
2018 (2) SACR 420
(KZD) at paras 22-24;
Corruption
Watch NPC and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and
Others; Nxasana v Corruption Watch NPC and Others
[2018] ZACC 23
;
2018 (10) BCLR 1179
(CC);
2018 (2) SACR 442
(CC).
[19]
Amongst others because the NDPP requested it when considering the
applicants representations.
[20]
Para 59 of the main judgment.
[21]
[2017] ZASCA 146
;
[2017] 4 All SA 726
(SCA);
2018 (1) SA 200
(SCA);
2018 (1) SACR 123
(SCA) (“
Zuma
”)
at para 24, citing
National
Lotteries Board v South African Education and Environment Project
[2011] ZASCA 154
;
[2012] 1 All SA 451
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 504
(SCA)
at para 27.
[22]
S v
Zonke and Others
[2023] ZANWHC 31.
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