Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 765South Africa
Anthony v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (49327/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 765 (20 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Anthony v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (49327/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 765 (20 October 2022)
Anthony v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (49327/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 765 (20 October 2022)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 49327/21
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED
20/10/2022
In
the matter between:
NWABUEZE
ANTHONY
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS
First Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
THE
CHAIRPERSON:
STANDING
COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEE AFFAIRS
Third Respondent
REFUGEE
STATUS DETERMINATION OFFICER
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
PHOOKO
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is an application for a review of a decision that was taken by the
First Respondent
[1]
or
the Third Respondent
[2]
refusing
Mr. Anthony Nwaubeza ("the Applicant"), refugee status.
[2]
The
Applicant
inter
alia
seeks
that this Court to review and set aside the aforesaid decision or to
refer the matter back to the Third Respondent for reconsideration
on
the basis that the rules of natural justice and the provisions of the
Promotion of Administrative Just Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”)
were not observed. The Applicant also wants a cost order against the
Respondents.
THE PARTIES
[3]
The Applicant is Anthony Nwaubeza, an adult
male Nigerian citizen who has an expired asylum permit and resides in
Kaalfontein, Johannesburg.
[4]
The First Respondent is the Minister of Home Affairs, the executive
authority
of the Department of Home Affairs who is
inter alia
responsible for inter alia issuing documents for all people who
enter, reside, or leave the Republic of South Africa and whose
address for these proceedings is that of the State Attorney, Salu
Building, 316 Thabo Sehume Street, Pretoria.
[5]
The Second Respondent is the Director-General Department of Home
Affairs
cited in his official capacity and to the extent that he is
responsible for administering the Refugees Act 130 0f 1998 (“the
Refugee Act”) and has his principal place of business at
Hallmark Building, 230 Johannes Ramokhoase Street, Pretoria.
[6]
The Third Respondent is the Chairperson: Standing Committee for
Refugee
Affairs. A Committee established in terms of section 9 of the
Refugees Act and whose address for the purpose of these proceedings
is 7
th
Floor, City Centre Building Attorney, 8
th
Floor, 266 Pretorius Street, Pretoria.
[7]
The Fourth Respondent is the Refugee Status Determination Officer, an
official appointed in terms of section 8 of the Refugees Act, and has
his principal place of business at Hallmark Building, 230
Johannes
Ramokhoase Street, Pretoria.
JURISDICTION
[8]
The cause of action arose within the jurisdiction of this Court. The
Respondent’s
principal place of business is also situated
within the jurisdiction of this Court. Therefore, this Court has the
competency to
adjudicate this matter.
THE
ISSUE
[9]
The issue to be determined before this
Court is whether
the
Third Respondent’s decision to refuse the Applicant’s
application for refugee status ought to be reviewed and set
aside.
# THE FACTS
THE FACTS
[10]
From the onset, it must be said that the pleadings
brought before this Court were poorly drafted. The Applicant’s
case is
vague. Even during oral submissions, counsel for the
Applicant to a large extent did little to assist this Court but
echoed the
same points that are contained in the founding affidavit.
[11]
According to the Applicant, this
application relates to the:
“
.
. . lawfulness, reasonableness and procedural fairness of the
decisions of:
5.1 The Refugee
Determination Officer (“RSDO”) to reject my application
for asylum.
5.2 The Standing
Committee for Refugee Affairs (“SCFA”) for upholding the
decision of the RSDO.
5.3
The Director-General who authorizes my detention for the purposes of
Detention back to my country of origin without offering
me an
opportunity to exercise my rights of review and appeal in terms of
the PAJA.”
[3]
[12]
As a result of the negative outcome of the
Applicant’s application for refugee status, the Applicant
instituted these review
proceedings.
APPLICABLE
LAW
[13]
The legal
framework for the promotion and protection of the rights of asylum
seekers and refugees is well documented. The Constitution
of the
Republic of South Africa, 1996 (“the Constitution”), the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
, and the
Refugees Act 130 of 1998
are
the first points of contact locally when dealing with the plight of
asylum seekers or refugees.
[14]
The
Constitution unequivocally guarantees everyone, regardless of their
citizenship, the fundamental rights and freedoms enshrined
in it. As
was correctly stated in
Siyad
v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[4]
by
Khumalo
J that:
“
Our
constitution commit to a culture of protection and respect of human
rights of all people, especially the vulnerable, weak, citizens,
non-citizens
and the worst amongst us” (own emphasis added).
[15]
At
regional and international levels, South Africa has
inter
alia
signed
and ratified
[5]
the
1951 United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees,
the 1969 Organisation of African Unity Convention
Governing
the Specific Aspects of Refugee Problems in Africa, and the 1967
Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees.
[16]
Therefore, any decision-maker who deals
with applications for an asylum seeker or refugee status must act
within the ambit of the
aforesaid legal framework. Failure to do so
may render such a decision reviewable under PAJA and/or the principle
of legality.
[17]
For the reasons that will follow later on,
this Court does not deem it necessary to venture into the specific
provisions of the
above laws given the absence of certain crucial
information.
APPLICANT’S
SUBMISSIONS
[18]
The crux of the Applicant’s case can be summarised as follows:
the decision made
by the Third Respondent was procedurally unfair on
the basis that the Applicant was not granted a hearing, was not
allowed to make
a statement, and was not notified about the date of
the hearing.
[19]
Furthermore,
the Applicant contended that the decision of the Third Respondent “
is
not rationally connected to the information that was before him in
terms of section 6 (2((f)(cc)”
.
[6]
To this end, the Applicant argued that the Third Respondent
“
conspicuously
ignored the country’s information”
.
[7]
[20]
Ultimately, the Applicant submitted that the decision made by the
Third Respondent, whereby
the Third Respondent found that the
Applicant is not likely to face any reasonable risk of harm or
persecution if the Applicant
was to be returned to his home country
ignores the actual persecution that the Applicant suffered in his
country.
[21]
Concerning costs, the Applicant sought
costs of this application against the Respondents.
EVALUATION OF EVIDENCE
AND SUBMISSIONS
[22]
There are several concerns regarding this
application, some of which range from the absence of information
regarding the date when
the Applicant’s application was lodged
with the office of the Third Respondent, and the record of
proceedings thereof but
I will only focus on a few. The Applicant
brought this review application, but the Applicant failed to produce
the record of proceedings
of his refugee application under File No:
PTANGA0003003413. Therefore, the references made by Applicant in his
application to
inter alia,
the information ignored such as the Applicant’s
country’s information, and the decision of the Third Respondent
being
reasonably biased is not before this Court. There are also
various bold but unsubstantiated claims throughout the Applicant’s
founding affidavit.
[23]
Consequently, this Court is placed at a
disadvantage and left to second guess the outcome of the Third
Respondent’s decision
and/or the reasons that led to the
refusal of the Applicant’s application for refugee status. In
other words, the decision
that is sought to be reviewed is not before
this Court. I find it difficult to formulate what it is this Court is
required to review
in the absence of such a decision.
[24]
The
significance of making the record of proceedings of the previous
forum available to the court of review cannot be gainsaid.
In
Helen
Suzman Foundation v Judicial Service Commission
[8]
the
Constitutional Court per Mdlanga J said:
“
The purpose of
rule 53 is to “facilitate and regulate applications for
review”. The requirement in rule 53(1)(b) that
the
decision-maker file the record of decision is primarily intended to
operate in favour of an applicant in review proceedings.
It helps
ensure that review proceedings are not launched in the dark. The
record enables the applicant and the court fully and
properly to
assess the lawfulness of the decision making process. It allows
an applicant to interrogate the decision and,
if necessary, to amend
its notice of motion and supplement its grounds for review.
Our courts have
recognised that rule 53 plays a vital role in enabling a court to
perform its constitutionally entrenched review
function
:
“
Without the
record a court cannot perform its constitutionally entrenched review
function
, with the result that a litigant’s right in terms
of section 34 of the Constitution to have a justiciable dispute
decided
in a fair public hearing before a court with all the issues
being ventilated, would be infringed.”
The filing of the full
record furthers an applicant’s right of access to court
by
ensuring
both
that the court has the relevant information
before it
and that there is equality of arms between the person
challenging a decision and the decision-maker. Equality of arms
requires
that parties to the review proceedings must each have a
reasonable opportunity of presenting their case under conditions that
do
not place them at a substantial disadvantage
vis-à-vis
their
opponents. This requires that “all the parties have identical
copies of the relevant documents on which to draft their
affidavits
and that they and the court have identical papers before them when
the matter comes to court”.
In Turnbull-Jackson this
Court held:
“
Undeniably, a
rule 53 record is an invaluable tool in the review process. It may
help: shed light on what happened and why;
give the lie to
unfounded ex post facto (after the fact) justification of the
decision under review; in the substantiation
of as yet not fully
substantiated grounds of review; in giving support to the
decision maker’s stance; and
in the performance of
the reviewing court’s function
.”
[27]
It is therefore challenging if not
impossible to review a decision that has not been made available
before this Court. This presents
a major defect in this application.
This Court cannot simply make out a case on behalf of the Applicant.
It is the duty of those
who bring review cases before the courts to
ensure that they make all the necessary information readily available
to assist the
courts to adjudicate their cases.
[28]
In light of the above, the Applicant’s
case falls to be dismissed on this ground alone.
COSTS
[29]
The Applicant sought a cost order against the Respondents.
However, no compelling reasons whatsoever were advanced to justify
such
a costs order against the Respondents.
[30]
In the absence of a justification for a cost order and the
fact that the applicant has been an unsuccessful litigant, there is
no
reason to award a cost order in their favour.
ORDER
[31]
I, therefore, make
the following
order:
(a)
The application is dismissed.
(b)
There is no order as to costs.
M
R PHOOKO AJ
ACTING
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 email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 18 October 2022.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv M.S Moretsele
Instructed
by:
Xiviti Attorney
Counsel
for the Respondent:
n/a
Instructed
by:
State Attorney
Date
of Hearing:
08 August 2022
Date
of Judgment:
20 October 2022
[1]
Notice
of Motion para 1.
[2]
Applicant’s founding affidavit para 4.
[3]
Applicant’s founding affidavit para 5.
[4]
(46038/2016)
[2020] ZAGPPHC 54 (6 February 2020).
[5]
See
General measures of implementation at
https://www.justice.gov.za/policy/african%20charter/afr-charter03.html
(Date of use:
15/10/2022).
[6]
Applicant’s founding affidavit para 15.
[7]
Ibid.
[8]
2018
(7) BCLR 763
(CC) paras 13-16.
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