Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 267South Africa
Munyai and Another v Director General of Home Affairs and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 267; 2024 (2) SA 635 (GP) (6 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 April 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Munyai and Another v Director General of Home Affairs and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 267; 2024 (2) SA 635 (GP) (6 April 2023)
Munyai and Another v Director General of Home Affairs and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 267; 2024 (2) SA 635 (GP) (6 April 2023)
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sino date 6 April 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted
from this document in compliance with the law and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Children – Registration of birth –
Father a foreign national – Child born out of
wedlock –
Requirement of paternity test for father’s details to be
registered – Status and effect of Home
Affairs Circular 5 of
2014 – Requirement in this case unduly infringing the rights
of the child – Affidavits
deposed by the parents sufficient
within framework of the Act to register the father’s details
–
Births and Deaths Registration Act 51 of 1992
,
s 9.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2022-007052
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES /
NO
(3)
REVISED: YES /
NO
DATE: 06 April 2023
In the matter between:
KHODANI HARRIET
MUNYAI FIRST
APPLICANT
ROBERT MUNYARADZI
KUGWA SECOND
APPLICANT
and
THE DIRECTOR
GENERAL OF HOME
AFFAIRS
1
ST
RESPONDENT
THE MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS 2
ND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
# DU PLESSIS AJ
DU PLESSIS AJ
[1]
This
is
an
application
to
order
the
First
Respondent,
or
alternatively,
the
Second
Respondent,
to
take
all
steps
necessary
in
terms
of
s
9
of
the
Births
and
Deaths
Registration Act
[1]
("the
Act"), to register the birth of the minor T[....] M[....]
C[....] K[....] ("the minor"), born on 20 September
2019.
The matter is unopposed.
[2]
The applicants have been in a permanent
relationship since August 2009 and moved in together at the end of
2016. In February 2019,
the First Applicant discovered that she was
pregnant. During the pregnancy and to date, the applicants are
residing together (with
the minor). While discussing marriage, they
elected to wait until after birth to start the lobola negotiations.
[3]
When the child was born on 20 September
2019, the applicants agreed that the child would have the Second
Applicant's surname. On
17 October 2019, within thirty days of the
birth, the applicants completed the birth form, accompanied by the
First Applicant's
identity document and Second Applicant's passport.
Their Kafkaesque bureaucratic journey started when they were informed
by the
Department of Home Affairs ("the Department") that
they needed a paternity test, as the child was born out of wedlock
and the Second Applicant is a Zimbabwean citizen.
[4]
The test was done on 29 October 2019, and
the necessary costs were paid on 21 October 2019. They were advised
by the National Health
Laboratory Services ("NHLS") that
the test would be available in four to six weeks. After six weeks,
the First Applicant
followed up and was advised that the results go
directly to the Department.
[5]
From December 2019 to March 2020, the
Applicant visited the Department weekly to follow up on the results,
with no luck. On 20 March
2020, the Second Applicant was advised to
contact the NHLS directly for the results. He sent them an email on
the same day. He
was asked to contact them telephonically on 23 March
2020, which he tried for a week with no luck. The NHLS then advised
him to
go back to the Department.
[6]
Thereafter, due to the Covid lockdown
restrictions, he was precluded from going to the Department. He did
so as soon as he could
and was told by the Department that they were
still waiting for the DNA results from the NHLS. In May 2021, the
applicants were
advised that there was no information on the system
and that the Department could not assist the Applicants. This was
when the
Applicants approached their attorney to assist them.
[7]
The attorney then took over the
correspondence with the Department between 4 May 2021 and 3 June
2021, when the Acting Provisional
Manager of the Department requested
internal assistance in finalising the matter. On 14 June 2021, this
Manager informed them that
the matter would be placed on a list of
interviews in July 2021. Nothing happened, prompting a follow-up
email on 5 August 2021,
14 September 2021, 30 September 2021 and 27
October 2021, with no feedback. On 2 November 2021, the Civic
Supervisor requested
proof of the application to prioritise the
matter. An email was sent on the same date with the required
documents. After that,
there was no response from the Department.
[8]
This inertia of the Department resulted in
the child being. Absent the certificate, the child has no officially
recorded name, cannot
get legally vaccinated, cannot be registered on
medical aid, cannot attend a crèche or play school, and cannot
travel to
meet his family in Zimbabwe. He is thus excluded from the
education system and from accessing social assistance and healthcare
or exercising his civil rights in obtaining a passport and travelling
to meet his Zimbabwean family.
# The law
The law
[9]
Section
9(1)
[2]
of
the Act prescribes that a parent of a child must, within 30 days of
the
birth,
give
notice
of
such
a
birth
in
the
prescribed
manner.
The
now
unconstitutional
[3]
s
10 prescribed a specific procedure for children born out of wedlock,
namely that a child out of wedlock shall be given the surname
of the
mother or, at the joint request of the mother and in the presence of
the person to whom the notice of the birth was given,
acknowledges
himself in writing to be the father, under the surname of the father.
[4]
In
this case, if the Second Respondent was a South African citizen, s
10(1)(b) would have applied at the time of registration, and
the
minor would have received the birth certificate.
[10]
In
Centre
for Child Law v Director General: Department of Home Affairs,
[5]
the
Constitutional Court set an important interpretative framework for
understanding ss 9 and 10 of the Act. In this case, Victor
AJ makes
it clear that
"Children are
vulnerable members of society, even more so when they are without
valid birth certificates. The latter are at
greater risk of exclusion
from accessing social assistance and healthcare, and crucially access
to their nationality. As children
have a fundamental right to be
registered immediately after their birth to acquire a nationality, it
is not in the best interest
of the child to be rendered stateless."
[11]
Much of the interpretation and
understanding focussed on the child's constitutional right not to be
discriminated against based
on social origin and birth as set out in
the Constitution. Not only their right to dignity but their right to
have their best interests
advanced, protected and respected by
everyone in the society, including the respondents.
[12]
In this case, the applicants', but
moreover, the minor's situation is further exacerbated by the fact
that the Second Respondent
is not a South African citizen, requiring
him to jump over more bureaucratic hurdles to register the minor
under his surname. This
is presumably due to Departmental Circular 5
of 2014, which requires a father of a child born out of wedlock who
is also a non-South
African to go for a paternity test if he wants
his particulars registered in the birth register of the child.
However, if the applicants
were married, they would not be required
to provide a paternity test.
[13]
The applicants did not ask for the
directive to be set aside, and no argument was made on that point.
However, to ensure that the
order made by this court is effective, it
is helpful to set out the legal nature of the Departmental Circular.
[14]
These
circulars are "administrative quasi-legislation" that are
of great practical importance as they guide the exercise
of
discretionary administrative powers.
[6]
Whether
they are legally binding or to what extent they are binding, depends
on whether the Act has anticipated the creation of
such circulars. If
the Act does anticipate the making of such circulars, a court will be
more willing to find that it has legal
authority. Furthermore, if the
rules and guidelines interfere with the exercise of discretionary
powers, they will be regarded
with circumspection.
[7]
In
terms of the circular, an official registering the details of a
non-South African unmarried father of a child
must
have
the paternity test results. It is not apparent from the Act that
these circulars are anticipated with specific reference to
the
registration of births. Considering all this, it cannot be said that
a paternity test is not a
sine
qua non
for
the Respondents to register the particulars of the Second Applicant.
[15]
Such an understanding of the circular is
further bolstered by the fact that the paternity requirement set out
in the circular, in
this case, unduly infringes the rights of a
minor, which include what is in the child's best interest. All the
facts in this case,
as set out in the affidavits and the annexures,
indicate that it is in the child's best interest to have his birth
registered,
to make him visible in the South African law, and to
enable him to exercise and enjoy his citizen rights fully.
[16]
I am further satisfied that the affidavits
deposed by the applicants as to the paternity of the minor are
sufficient within the
framework of the Act, to register the Second
Applicant as the minor's father, and for the minor to carry his
father's surname,
as per the applicants’ wishes.
# Order
Order
[17]
I, therefore, make the following order:
1. The First Respondent,
alternatively the Second Respondent, is directed within 20 days to
take all steps necessary in Section
9 of the Births and Deaths
Registry Act 51 of 1992, to register the birth of the minor child
T[....] M[....] C[....] K[....], born
on 20 September 2019.
WJ DU PLESSIS
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Delivered: This judgement
is handed down electronically by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines. It will
be sent to the parties/their
legal representatives by email.
Counsel for the
Applicant:
Adv S F Fisher-Klein
Instructed
by: Daly
Morris Fuller Inc
Date of the
hearing:
13 February 2023
Date
of judgment:
06 April 2023
[1]
51
of 1992.
[2]
Notice
of birth:
9
(1) In the case of any child born alive, any one of his or her
parents, or if the parents are deceased, any of the prescribed
persons, shall, within 30 days after the birth of such child, give
notice thereof in the prescribed manner, and in compliance
with the
prescribed requirements, to any person contemplated in section 4.
[3]
Centre
for Child Law v Director General: Department of Home Affairs
[2021]
ZACC 31.
[4]
Notice
of birth of child born out of wedlock
10 (1) Notice of birth
of a child born out of wedlock shall be given—
(a)
under the surname of the mother; or
(b)
at the joint request of the mother and of
the person who in the presence of the person to whom the notice of
birth was given acknowledges
himself in writing to be the father of
the child and enters the prescribed particulars regarding himself
upon the notice of birth,
under the surname of the person who has so
acknowledged.
(2)
Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (1), the notice of
birth may be given under the surname of the mother if the
person
mentioned in subsection (1)(b), with the consent of the mother,
acknowledges himself in writing to be the father of the
child and
enters particulars regarding himself upon the notice of birth.
[5]
[2021]
ZACC 31.
[6]
Baxter
Administrative
Law
3ed
(Juta & Co Ltd, Cape Town 1991) at 200.
[7]
Baxter
Administrative
Law
3ed
(Juta & Co Ltd, Cape Town 1991) at 201
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