Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 646South Africa
Mathibela v Minister of Justice and Correctional Service and Others (36375/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 646 (31 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mathibela v Minister of Justice and Correctional Service and Others (36375/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 646 (31 August 2022)
Mathibela v Minister of Justice and Correctional Service and Others (36375/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 646 (31 August 2022)
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sino date 31 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number
: 36375/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
31
AUGUST 2022
In
the matter between:
VUSI
REGINALD
MATHIBELA
APPLICANT
and
THE
MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
FIRST
RESPONDENT
NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER OF CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE
AREA COMMISSIONER OF KGOSI MAMPURU Il
CORRECTIONAL
CENTRE THIRD
RESPONDENT
THE
WARDEN OF KGOSI MAMPURU II
CORRECTIONAL
CENTRE FOURTH
RESPONDENT
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT IN TERMS OF UNIFORM RULE 49(1)(C)
KUBUSHI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This matter related to the detention of the Applicant, as an
unsentenced offender,
at the C-Max Centre of the Kgosi Mampuru II
Correctional Centre (“the C-Max”), whereas, as was
alleged by the Applicant
he should be detained at the local remand
detention facility.
[2]
The Applicant was detained as such because he was, on 23 June 2022,
together with
three of his co-accused, convicted on charges of
murder, attempted murder, unlawful possession of a firearm(s) and
unlawful possession
of ammunition. The criminal case was postponed to
4 August 2022 for sentencing. The matter appeared before this Court
in the Urgent
Court on 10
August 2022, when the date of 4 August 2022 had already passed. This
Court
was informed that the criminal case was postponed further to 20
to 21 September 2022 for sentencing.
[3]
The application was opposed by the Second, Third and Fourth
Respondents. For ease
of reference, they shall be referred to herein,
collectively as the Respondents, and individually as the Second,
Third or Fourth
Respondents.
[4]
The Applicant’s counsel insisted that the matter remained
urgent as it involved
the detention of a person. Counsel for the
Respondents, on the other hand, contended that the matter was not
urgent. This
Court took a view that the application was
inherently urgent because the Applicant’s rights to freedom
were at stake.
[5]
When the matter was to be heard, the Court had not read the papers as
they had not
been uploaded on Caselines, only the heads of argument
were uploaded. The Applicant’s counsel informed this Court that
the
Applicant’s attorneys had timeously uploaded the correct
application on Caselines. For some odd reason, both counsel for the
Applicant and the Respondents, were able to access the papers on
Caselines whilst the Court was unable to do so.
[6]
Since the application was to be decided urgently, the Applicant’s
counsel was
allowed to move the application and to provide the papers
at a later stage. The papers were later sent through by electronic
mail
to the Court’s clerk.
[7]
The matter was decided in favour of the Respondents and the
Application was, as a
result, dismissed with costs. Because this
matter was on the urgent roll, a Court Order was granted without any
reasons provided.
The Applicant applied in terms of Uniform Rule 49
to be provided with the reasons for such Court Order. Below are the
reasons.
BACKGROUND
[8]
The Applicant, whilst awaiting the finalisation of his trial,
instituted an application
against the Respondents for an order to
review and set aside the decision of the Second and/or Third and/or
Fourth Respondents,
dated the 26
June 2022 to transfer the Applicant from the local remand detention
facility to
the C-Max. That application served in the Urgent Court,
on 19 July 2022, before Sardiwalla J, who granted an order in favour
of
the Applicant (“the Court Order”). The Respondents
were, in that Court Order, directed to remove the Applicant from
the
C-Max and to place him with other remand detainees at the local
remand detention facility.
[9]
It, further, appeared that the Applicant was never transferred back
to the local remand
detention facility as directed in the Court
Order. The Respondents’ explanation not to act as ordered by
the Court Order
was that they were served with an incorrect Court
Order. The Respondents contended that due to the said incorrect Court
Order,
which they had requested the Applicant’s attorney to
rectify, to no avail, they were not in a position to comply with it
or implement it, before it could be rectified. The Applicant was, as
such, aggrieved by this conduct of the Respondents, which he
alleged
was in contravention of the Court Order and that the Respondents were
in contempt thereof. He, as a result, instituted
these proceedings
for relief.
[10]
In the application before this Court, the Applicant sought an order
to declare the Second and/or
Third and/or Fourth Respondents to be in
contempt of the Court Order, and for the Second and/or Third and/or
Fourth Respondents
to be sentenced to imprisonment for a period of
thirty (30) days, which committal was to be suspended on condition
that the Second
and/or Third and/or Fourth Respondents complied with
the Court Order. Such compliance was to commence from 10 August 2022.
At the
time of instituting these proceedings it was alleged that none
of the Respondents had complied with the said Court Order.
ARGUMENTS
[11]
The Respondents’ counsel raised a point
in limine
on the
ground that the Court Order upon which the Applicant relied for his
relief was not authorised by the Judge (Sardiwalla J)
who granted it,
and therefore, was defective, invalid and not enforceable. The
argument was that in the Court Order that was authorised
by
Sardiwalla J the cost order that was granted was based on a party and
party scale, whereas, the cost order in the Court Order
that was
endorsed by the Registrar and upon which the Applicant relied for
relief, was on a punitive scale. On the merits, the
Respondents’
counsel argued that the Applicant was not entitled to the relief he
sought because he had not established that
the Respondents have not
complied with the Court Order, that is, the requirements of contempt
of the Court Order had not been established.
[12]
In response to the argument by the Respondents’ counsel, the
Applicant’s counsel
submitted that the Court Order was valid
and enforceable, and that on the merits, the Applicant had succeeded
to show that the
Respondents had not complied with the Court Order,
in that he was able to establish all the requirements of contempt of
the Court
Order.
[13]
It became common cause between the parties that the issue that ought
to be decided by this Court
was whether the Respondents had complied
with the Court Order or not.
ANALYSIS
[14]
Based on the so-called Plascon - Evans rule, this application was
decided by relying on the Respondents’
version of events as
well as those aspects of the Applicant's version that were admitted
by the Respondents.
[1]
The
rationale for this approach was founded in the principle that, in
motion proceedings, the Court is not equipped to determine
the
probabilities or improbabilities of the opposing factual propositions
expressed by the parties.
[2]
Whether the Court Order
should have been complied with
## [15]
The main contention of the Respondents’ pointin
liminewas that the Court Order that was granted by Sardiwalla J and that
was endorsed by the Registrar were not the same. The difference
was
brought about by the cost order that was stated in the respective
Court Orders. The Respondents submitted that the parties
had agreed
that the cost order be awarded on a party and party scale of costs,
and that was what Sardiwalla J ordered, but the
Court Order endorsed
by the Registrar, stated a cost order awarded on a punitive scale of
costs. It was in this regard that the
Respondents argued that the
Court Order endorsed by the Registrar was defective, in that it was
not authorised by the Judge.
Relying on the judgment inMotala[3]the
Respondents’ counsel argued that the unauthorised Court Order
was defective, invalid and could, therefore, not be enforced
unless
corrected.
[15]
The main contention of the Respondents’ point
in
limine
was that the Court Order that was granted by Sardiwalla J and that
was endorsed by the Registrar were not the same. The difference
was
brought about by the cost order that was stated in the respective
Court Orders. The Respondents submitted that the parties
had agreed
that the cost order be awarded on a party and party scale of costs,
and that was what Sardiwalla J ordered, but the
Court Order endorsed
by the Registrar, stated a cost order awarded on a punitive scale of
costs. It was in this regard that the
Respondents argued that the
Court Order endorsed by the Registrar was defective, in that it was
not authorised by the Judge.
Relying on the judgment in
Motala
[3]
the
Respondents’ counsel argued that the unauthorised Court Order
was defective, invalid and could, therefore, not be enforced
unless
corrected.
[16]
It was the view of this Court that
Motala
was not apposite in
the circumstances of this application. The facts in
Motala
are
that the Judge had exercised the powers that ought to have been
exercised by the Master of the High Court. In deciding that
matter,
the Supreme Court of Appeal made a finding that the Judge in usurping
the powers of the Master of the High Court had no
jurisdiction to do
so and, consequently, declared his judgment a nullity.
[17]
Furthermore, the facts in the matter before this Court were
distinguishable, in that, whereas
in
Motala
the Court Order in
question was granted by a Judge, in this matter the Court Order in
dispute was endorsed by the Registrar.
Secondly, the principle
enunciated in
Motala
was that a Court Order issued by a Judge
without authority and jurisdiction was not binding. Thus, this Court
found that
Motala
was no authority for the proposition that
incorrectly granted orders of Court
should not be obeyed.
[18]
It is a trite principle of our law that all orders of Court whether
correctly or incorrectly
granted have to be obeyed until they are
properly set aside. Following on this principle, it was this Court’s
view that up
until the Court Order was set aside by a competent
Court, the Respondents were bound to comply with it, even if, as
according to
the Respondents, it was faulty.
Whether
the Applicant made out a case for Contempt of Court
[19]
The Applicant's contention was that, even though he was convicted, he
was still a remand detainee
since his criminal trial had not been
finalised. Based on his contention that he was a remand detainee, the
Applicant alleged that
the decision of the Respondents to retain
and/or accommodate him at C-Max, was in violation of the Court Order
and, as a result
thereof, the Respondents were in contempt of the
Court Order.
[20]
The Respondents’ contention was that following the Applicant’s
conviction, the Department
of Correctional Services classified him as
an unsentenced offender, in terms of section 1 of the Correctional
Services Act (“the
Act”).
[4]
Having classified the Applicant as an unsentenced offender, a
reappraisal of his security classification was done and a decision
was taken to accommodate him in a more secured part of the
Correctional Centre, hence his continued stay at C-Max.
[5]
[21]
It was the Respondents’ submission that when an inmate is
admitted at the Correctional
Facility, an assessment of his/her
security classification is made. Such security classification,
according to the Respondents,
is in accordance with section 29 of the
Act,
[6]
not a once-off activity,
but is done as and when the circumstances of the inmate changes.
[22]
It was not in dispute that, at the time the application served before
this Court, the Applicant
had been convicted, hence he was an
unsentenced offender. His circumstances had changed from those that
prevailed when he appeared
before Sardiwalla J, because at that time,
he was not yet convicted. These changed circumstances, entitled the
Respondents to reassess
his security classification, afresh.
Therefore, the decision to retain and/or accommodate the Applicant at
C-Max was a new decision
that did not have any relevance, whatsoever,
to the Court Order. This finding, however, should not be construed as
a decision by
this Court that the Respondents’ decision to
retain and/or accommodate the Applicant at C-Max, was correct.
[23]
In addition, it was this court’s view that the Applicant did
not satisfy all the requirements
for the relief he sought in this
application.
[24]
The requirements for contempt are trite. For the Applicant to be
successful in his claim he must
prove the following elements: (a) the
existence of the order; (b) the order must be duly served on, or
brought to the notice of,
the alleged contemnor; (c) there must be
non-compliance with the order; and (d) the non-compliance must be
wilful and
mala
fide
.
[7]
[25]
It was common cause that a Court Order was granted in this matter. It
was, also, not in dispute
that the Respondents were aware of the
Court Order and did not comply with it. However, it was this Court’s
view that the
Applicant failed to establish that the Respondents
wilfully failed to comply with the Court Order.
[26]
It is trite that once it is shown that the order was granted and
served or came to the notice
of the Respondent, and that the
Respondent disobeyed or neglected to comply with it, both wilfulness
and
mala fides
will be inferred and the Applicant is
prima
facie
entitled to a committal order. The Respondent,
in turn, must advance evidence that establishes a reasonable doubt as
to whether non-compliance was
mala fide
and wilful. Even
though the Respondent may be wilful he/she may escape liability if
he/she is
bona fide
– that, is, he/she genuinely,
through mistake, believed that he/she was entitled to commit the act,
or the omission.
[27]
The evidence on record, that was not disputed, show that the
Respondents genuinely, through mistake,
failed to act on the Court
Order because they believed that the Court Order was defective and
that the Applicant ought to correct
it first, before they could act
on it. This Court, earlier in this judgment, dealt with the issue of
the validity or otherwise
of the Court Order which the Respondents
failed to comply with. The Respondents, thus, acted under a genuine
mistaken believe that
they were correct in not complying with the
Court Order. It could, therefore, not be said that they were not
bona
fide
in their omission, nor could it be said that they
deliberately defied the Court Order.
CONCLUSION
[28]
It was on these reasons that this Court came to the conclusion it
did, when it dismissed the
Applicant’s application with costs.
E.M
KUBUSHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
:
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL:
ADV.
M MPHAGA SC
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS:
MKHABELA
ATTORNEYS
RESPONDENTS’
COUNSEL:
ADV.
E LEBEKO
RESPONDENTS’
ATTORNEYS:
STATE
ATTORNEY
[1]
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA
623
(A) at 634E - 634C.
[2]
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma (Mbeki and Another
intervening) 2009(2) All SA 243 (SCA) at para [26].
[3]
Master of High Court v Motala
2012 (3) SA 325
(SCA) para11 -13.
[4]
Act 111 of 1998.
[5]
This according to the Respondents was in terms of section 7 (d) of
the Act.
[6]
Section
29 of the Act provides as follows: "Security classification is
determined by the extent to which the inmate presents
a security
risk and so as to determine the correctional centre or part of a
correctional centre in which he or she is to be detained".
[7]
Matjhabeng Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Limited and Others;
Shadrack Shivumba Homu Mkhonto and Others v Compensation
Solutions
(Pty) Limited
2018 (1) SA 1
(CC) para 73.
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