Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 421South Africa
Moyo v Minister of Justice & Correctional Services and Others (13908/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 421 (13 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 June 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Moyo v Minister of Justice & Correctional Services and Others (13908/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 421 (13 June 2022)
Moyo v Minister of Justice & Correctional Services and Others (13908/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 421 (13 June 2022)
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sino date 13 June 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
No: 13908/21
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED:
YES
13/06/2022
In
the matters between: -
PATRICK
MOYO
Applicant
And
THE
MINISTER OF JUSTICE & CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
1st Respondent
COMMISIONER
OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
2nd Respondent
THE
CHAIRPERSON OF THE PAROLE BOARD
3rd Respondent
MR
VIVIAN HAWKINS
NO
4th Respondent
JUDGMENT
BAQWA,
J
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties representatives by email and by
being
uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is deemed
on 13 June 202
2.
Introduction
[1]
In this review application the applicant seeks relief in terms of
which the inclusion of
a non-parole period in the sentence meted out
in terms of section 276B of the Criminal Procedure Act 51of 1977 (The
Act) against
the applicant by the fourth respondent is declared
invalid.
[2]
He further seeks the review and setting aside of the third
respondent’s decision
that the applicant was or is not eligible
for parole on the basis of the non-parole period included in his
sentence.
[3]
Lastly, the applicant seeks an order that the first and second
respondents be ordered
to urgently consider processing the applicant
for placement on parole by the board in terms of the policy and
guidelines applied
by the former parole boards prior to the
commencement of chapter 4, 6 and 7 of the Correctional Services Act
111 of 1998 (The 1998
Act).
The
Facts
[4]
The applicant was arrested in February 2001 after committing several
robberies. He
was tried and found guilty and in 2011 he was sentenced
to twenty years imprisonment which included a non-parole period in
terms
of section 276B of the Act.
[5]
The respondents contend that the review application is flawed in that
the application
has been brought out of time and that no adequate
explanation has been provided for the delay by the applicant.
[6]
They further contend that the applicant was duly processed and that
his application
for parole was duly considered resulting in a
decision that he does not qualify for release on parole.
[7]
The respondents argue that the applicant ought to have appealed the
decision of the
fourth respondent and not approached it by way of a
review application. In the same breath they submit that though the
Phaahla
Judgment is relevant, it is distinguishable and should be
argued in a court of appeal.
Inordinate
delay
[8]
It is not disputed that the application was brought 180 days from the
decision making
dates by the third and fourth respondents. The date
of sentence by the fourth respondent was 2011 whilst the third
respondent’s
decision was on 2 October 2019.
[9]
I accept the respondents’ submission that the applicant has
brought a somewhat
generalised application in that it does not
specify the reasons for lateness and merely refers to the fact that
he has been imprisoned
since 2001 and that he and his family are
indigent and not possessed of the necessary financial resources to
litigate.
[10]
It remains true however that each application for condonation has to
be judged on its own circumstances
and facts and that the court has
to exercise its discretion whether or not to consider it favourably.
[11]
More pertinently, however, the interest of justice plays a pivotal
role in the exercise of the
court’s discretion. In the present
case it is common cause that the application was triggered by the
Constitutional Court
judgment in
Phaahla
v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another
[1]
(Tlhakanye Intervening)
(the
Phaahla
case) which forms the basis of this application.
[12]
It is common cause that a copy of that judgment was circulated to all
the correctional services
centres with a view to giving guidance to
the relevant Correctional Services authorities in the execution of
their duties with
regard to grating or refusing parole applications
brought by the inmates. The need to give a proper consideration to
the judgment
was implicit in the circulation of the judgments and it
gives context to this application in the sense that the 180 day
period
prescribed in terms of PAJA only runs from the date of
circulation of the
Phaahla
judgment to the Correctional
Services centres.
[13]
Whilst the
Phaahla
judgment was handed down in November 2019
and this application was launched on 16 March 2021, I do not consider
that the delay
was inordinate when one considers that after the
circulation of the judgment, the third respondent still had to set in
motion the
parole process and give its decision prior to the launch
of the application.
[14]
The implications of the
Phaahla
judgment not only for the
applicant but also for the respondents are self evident and in that
context I find that it is in the
interests of justice that
condonation for the late filing of this application by the applicant
be condoned. Potential prejudice
would affect the applicant if
condonation were to be granted whereas the respondent would suffer no
prejudice.
The
Law
[15]
In the introductory paragraph of the
Phaahla
judgment the
following is said:
“
Introduction
Parole is an
acknowledged part of our correctional system. It has proved to be a
vital part of reformative treatment for the paroled
person who is
treated by moral suasion. This is consistent with the law: that
everyone has the right not to be deprived of freedom
arbitrarily or
without just cause and that sentenced prisoners have the right to the
benefit of the least severe of the prescribed
punishments.”
[16]
The Constitutional Court goes on to make the following order at
paragraph 72 of the judgment:
“
[72]
In the result I make the following order:
1.
The application for condonation is granted.
2.
Mr Makome Stefanas Tlhakanye is admitted as an intervening party.
3.
The application …
4.
The order of invalidity of the High Court is confirmed and paragraph
1 is varied to read:
‘
Sections
136(1) and 73(6)(b)(iv) of the Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998
(Correctional Services Act) are declared inconsistent
with section
9(1) and (3) and section 35(3)(n) of the Constitution.’
5.
Parliament must, within 24 months from the date of this order, amend
section 136(1)
of the
Correctional Services Act to
apply parole
regimes on the basis of date of commission of an offence, pending
which the section shall read as follows:
‘
Any
person serving a sentence of incarceration for an offence committed
before the commencement of Chapters 4, 6 and 7 of the
Correctional
Services Act is
subject to the provisions of the
Correctional Services Act 8 of 1959, relating to his or her
placement under community corrections,
and is to be considered for
such release and placement by the Correctional Supervision and Parole
Board in terms of the policy
and guidelines applied by the former
Parole Boards prior to the commencement of those chapte.rs.”
[17]
Section 136(1) of the 1998 Act provides:
“
Transitional
provision
136(1)
Any person serving a sentence immediately before the commencement of
this Act will be subject to the provisions of the Correctional
Services Act, 1959 (Act No. 8 of 1959), relating to his or her
placement under community corrections but the Minister may make such
regulations as are necessary to achieve a uniform policy framework
to
deal with prisoners who were sentenced immediately before the
commencement of this Act and
no prisoner may be prejudiced by such
regulations
.
(2)
For the purposes of considering the placement of such person under
community corrections, the relevant authority provided for in
this
Act will have the power to consider such a placement
.”
[18]
I pause here to note that the above provision is not applicable to
the applicant as he was not
serving a sentence prior to commencement
of The 1998 Act. The reliance placed on paragraph 28 of their
answering affidavit by the
respondents on the section is, in the
circumstances misplaced and unsustainable.
[19]
In the same vein, the respondents seek to justify their decision by
relying in paragraph 30 of
their affidavit on section 73(6)(a) of the
1998 Act which provides:
“
6(a)
Subject to the provisions of paragraph (b), a prisoner serving a …
sentence may not be placed on parole until
such prisoner has served
either the stipulated non-parole period, or the rest of the sentence,
but parole must be considered whenever
a prisoner has served 25 years
of a sentence or cumulative sentence.”
[20]
Equally the reliance on the above quoted section cannot apply to the
applicant as it is part
of Chapter VII of The Act which is part of
the order in the
Phaahla
judgment.
[21]
Section 276B finds its origin in
section 22
of the
Parole and
Correctional Supervision Amendment Act 87 of 1997
under the heading
“Fixing of the non parole period”.
Section
(1) provides:
“
(a)
If a court sentences a person convicted of an offence to imprisonment
for a period of two years or longer,
the court may as part of the
sentence fix a period during which the person shall not be placed on
parole.
(b)
Such period shall be referred to as the non-parole period and may not
exceed two thirds of the term
of imprisonment imposed or 25 years
whichever is the shorter.”
[22]
Section 276B
of the CPA provides:
“
(a)
If a court sentences a person convicted of an offence to imprisonment
for a period of two years or longer,
the court may as part of the
sentence, fix a period during which the person shall not be placed on
parole.
(b)
Such period shall be referred to as the non-parole-period, and may
not exceed two thirds of the term
of imprisonment imposed or 25
years, whichever is the shorter.”
Decision
of the Fourth Respondent
[23]
The applicant seeks
inter alia
to obtain an order setting
aside the fourth respondent who is the person who sentenced the
applicant to serve a non parole
period in terms of
section 276B
of the CPA which was applied retrospectively to the applicant.
[24]
The fourth respondent has filed a notice to abide the decision of
this court.
[25]
The respondent contends that the appropriate procedure for the
applicant to follow is to appeal
the decision of the fourth
respondent and not to bring it by way of review.
[26]
I do not propose to consider the relief sought against the fourth
respondent at any length in
that it has not been brought before this
court regularly.
Rule 53
triggers a duty on the decision maker to
deliver a record of proceedings sought to be impugned or set aside.
Such record has not
been brought before this court. Absent a
rule 53
record, no review hearing can be held and any such application stands
to be dismissed on that ground only.
The
Applicant’s case
[27]
Prior to this application an inmate sentenced under
section 276B
to
serve no less than two thirds of his sentence before parole could not
be considered for parole before such term was completed
due to the
fact that the correctional services department (DCS) could not alter
or amend court orders. This section was however
superseded by the
Phaahla
decision referred to (
supra
) in terms of which
the DCS is now empowered to utilise the Constitutional Court to
override the determination of the lower court
by placing the inmate
for parole under the policies and guidelines of Act 8 of 1959.
[28]
Notably, in their answering affidavit the respondent simply noted the
contention by the applicant
without pleading why the communication by
the Constitutional Court communique was wrong.
[29]
Absent any countervailing evidence that the applicant qualifies and
ought to be placed on parole,
it seems that the respondents concede
the correctness thereof. The respondents which include the DCS
officials seem to labour under
the impression that until the judgment
of the fourth respondent is set aside in an appeal court it cannot
simply be superceded
or overridden by a directive emanating from the
judgment of the Constitutional Court. This is a misdirection by the
DCS officials.
[30]
The DCS officials ought to have interpreted the facts and the law as
follows. The Constitutional
Court confirmed the decision of the High
Court in terms of which section 136(1) of The 1998 Act was declared
invalid on the grounds
that Mr Phaahla’s right to equality and
equal treatment by the law and not to be discriminated against
unfairly had been
violated.
[31]
The majority of the Constitutional Court held that the impugned
provisions were invalid on the
ground that the use of the date of
sentence in section 136(1) of the 1998 Act, rather than the date of
the commission of the offence
violated his fair right to trial, which
is the constitutional right to equal protection of the law and the
right to the benefit
of the least severe punishment. The court held
that it amounts to retroactive application of the law, which violates
section 35
of the Constitution and the principle of legality.
[32]
The
Phaahla
judgment was disseminated to the various centres
of the department of correctional services including the Zonderwater
Medium B
prison where the applicant was incarcerated. This ought to
have enabled the DCS officials to not only to read and understand the
judgment but also to implement it in respect of the relevant inmates
in their centres.
[33]
It is common cause that Mrs Fredda Baloyi, the head of Case
Management Coordinators (CMC) at
the Zonderwater Medium B Prison,
compiled and structured release schedules for the list of those
inmates who qualified to be considered
for placement and release on
parole as consequence of the
Phaahla
judgment.
[34]
The said list was allocated to different CMC’s to profile the
files of the inmates to be
handed to the parole board for
consideration.
[35]
A list which included the applicant was compiled and dispatched
together with the relevant records
to the parole board for
consideration and release on parole.
[36]
On 2 October 2019 the applicant and the three other inmates were
considered in accordance with
the
Phaahla
judgment for
possible parole.
[37]
The outcome of that parole board sitting was that the three inmates
excluding the applicant,
who did not have the section 276B court
order attached to their sentences were recommended for placement and
release on parole
by the parole board.
[38]
The applicant’s consideration was not successful due to the
fact that the inclusion of
the section 276B order to his sentence
precluded him from a successful consideration.
[39]
Applicant’s subsequent attempts to convince the DCS officials
that the decision not to
release him were in vain.
[40]
Counsel for the third respondent in addressing this court conceded
that the
Phaahla
judgment also ordered that any person serving
a sentence of incarceration for an offence committed before the
commencement of chapter
4, 6 and 7b of the 1998 Act is subject to the
provisions of The 1959 Act relating to his placement under community
corrections
and is to be considered for such release and placement by
the corrections supervision and parole board in terms of the policy
guidelines
applied by the former parole boards prior to the
commencement of those chapters.
[41]
The error of the third respondent’s counsel creeps in when he
goes on to argue, similarly
to the DCS officials that the applicant
was precluded from consideration by the section 276B order from
parole consideration.
[42]
This error originates in their failure to consider that the said
chapters were not in operation
when the applicant committed the
offenses for which he was charged and subsequently convicted by the
fourth respondent. The result
was a retrospective application of
those chapters to the applicant by the fourth respondent when he
sentenced the applicant. In
other words, the applicant was in exactly
the same position as
Phaahla
in the Constitutional Court
judgment and ought not to have been treated differently.
[43]
In the circumstance, I find that the decision of the third respondent
is reviewable in terms
of section 6 of PAJA in that:
43.1 It was made
because irrelevant considerations were taken into account or relevant
considerations were not considered,
within the meaning of section
6(2)(e)(iii);
43.2 It was
irrational within the meaning of section 6(2)(f)(ii); and
43.3 It was
unreasonable within the meaning of section 6(2)(h).
[44]
In light of the above, I make the following order:
Order
44.1 The late
filing of this application by the applicant is condoned.
44.2 The decision
of the third respondent that the applicant is not eligible for parole
on the basis of the non-parole period
prescribed on his sentence be
and is hereby reviewed and set aside.
44.3 That the first
and second respondents be and are hereby ordered to urgently consider
processing the applicant for placement
on parole by the Board in
terms of the policy and guidelines applied by the former Parole
Boards prior to the commencement of Chapter
4, 6 and 7 of the
Correctional Services Act.
44.4 The application to
declare the judgment of the fourth respondent invalid is dismissed.
44.5 The first
respondent be and is hereby ordered to pay the costs of this
application.
SELBY
BAQWA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: 5 MAY 2022
Date
of judgment: 13 JUNE 2022
Appearance
On
behalf of the Applicants
Adv C Muza
Instructed
by
Nandi Bulabula Inc
Tel:
012 342 6465
Email:
munyai@nandibulabulainc.co.za
On
behalf of the Respondents
Adv R Tsele
Instructed
by
The State Attorney
Tel: 0871 933 9000
Email:
tsele@counsel.co.za
[1]
2009
ZACC 18.
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