Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 69South Africa
J.V.R v Director General of Home Affairs and Others (12111/24) [2025] ZAWCHC 69; [2025] 2 All SA 927 (WCC) (19 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
19 February 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## J.V.R v Director General of Home Affairs and Others (12111/24) [2025] ZAWCHC 69; [2025] 2 All SA 927 (WCC) (19 February 2025)
J.V.R v Director General of Home Affairs and Others (12111/24) [2025] ZAWCHC 69; [2025] 2 All SA 927 (WCC) (19 February 2025)
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sino date 19 February 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NUMBER 12111/24
In
the matter between
J[...]
V[...]
R[...]
APPLICANT
and
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL OF HOME AFFAIRS
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
SECOND RESPONDENT
NATHAN
DEMINK
MANAGER:
LATE BIRTH REGISTRATIONS
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Date
of hearing: 11 February 2025
Date
of judgment: 19 February 2025
BHOOPCHAND
AJ:
1.
The Applicant attained his majority before being called upon to prove
his birth,
and that was only because he needed to reap a substantial
award for damages arising from an accident he was involved in on 18
December
2015. He had completed his primary school education and
progressed in high school. The Applicant had evaded the need for an
identity
document since 17 January 2005, the date of his birth. With
the Road Accident Fund (“RAF”) refusing to release his
award until he produced his birth certificate, the pressure turned on
the Department of Home Affairs (“DHE”) to take
notice of
his birth and issue the birth certificate.
2.
The RAF’s award on 16 November 2023 was recoupable six months
later. The
Applicant gave notice of his birth to the DHA, Bellville,
on 29 November 2023. The DHA initiated the process of registering his
birth, which is regulated by the
Births and Deaths Registration Act
51 of 1992
and the Regulations on the Registration of Births and
Deaths, 2014.
[1]
3.
The Applicant acknowledged that there are necessary steps to follow
before one
can be issued with an identity document. The Applicant’s
father followed up on the Applicant’s application on 1 December
2023, 15 January 2024, and 31 January 2024. The father attended the
DHA offices in February and March 2024 as well. In April 2024,
the
father travelled to Leratong Hospital in Randburg to request proof of
the Applicant’s birth. Leratong Hospital advised
the father
that the Applicant’s birth records were destroyed but issued a
maternity certificate confirming the Applicant’s
birth. The
maternity certificate was handed to the DHA on 30 April 2024. The
Applicant instituted an application to order the Respondents
to
consider his application and provide him with a birth certificate on
23 May 2024. The application was set down for hearing on
the
unopposed roll of 14 June 2024.
4.
This Court is assigned to determine the costs relating to the
application to
compel the Respondents to provide the Applicant with a
birth certificate. The Honourable Justice Fortuin ordered the
Respondents
to determine whether the Applicant is entitled to a birth
certificate. If the determination was favourable to the Applicant,
the
Respondents had to allocate an identity number and provide the
Applicant with a birth certificate. The application was postponed
for
hearing in the Third division on 18 September 2024 to enable the
Respondents to comply with the order. It was common cause
that the
DHA had received the Applicant’s notice of late birth
registration and was processing it. The Applicant instituted
the
application soon after providing the DHA with the maternal
certificate. The verification of the certificate followed days after
the institution of the application. The Applicant received his birth
certificate on 13 August 2024.
5.
On 3 September 2024, the Respondents requested the Applicant to
remove the matter
from the roll of 18 September 2024. On 5 September
2024, the Applicant informed the Respondents that they intended to
seek a costs
order and requested that the Respondents tender their
party and party costs with Counsel’s fees to be taxed or agreed
on
scale B. On 6 September, the Respondents replied that costs had
already been granted on 14 June 2024, and the Applicant was unfairly
requesting further costs. The Applicant responded on the same date
that he had incurred further costs, and if the Respondent preferred
to argue costs, it would appoint a more experienced Counsel and seek
Counsel’s costs on scale C. On 13 September 2024, the
Respondents tendered the Applicant’s costs up to 13 June 2024
and no further.
[2]
6.
On 18 September 2024, the Honourable Justice Lekhuleni granted an
order by agreement,
postponing the hearing on costs to the
semi-urgent roll on 11 February 2025 and directed the further filing
of affidavits and heads
of argument. The Respondents filed their
answering affidavit. The Applicant replied, and both parties provided
heads of argument.
THE
RESPONDENTS SUBMISSIONS
7.
The Respondents outlined the pressures on the Bellville office of the
DHA and
the process involved in the late registrations of births
(“LRB”). The office receives fifteen late notices of
births
daily. They have 2000 active LRB applications. The office
prioritises certain applications: those for children who are to be
placed
in foster care, for impending deaths and medical reasons,
children up for adoption, child grant applicants, and children in
grade
12 who need to register for the matric examinations.
8.
The verification process, which authenticates information provided by
an applicant's
documents, is geared towards preventing fraudulent
birth registration. The DHA has established a screening committee to
interview
all persons who give or support notices of birth. The
screening committee recommends whether the Director General approves
or rejects
a notice of birth. The screening committee acts
ad hoc
depending on the priority, number of applications, and availability
of its Chair, the DHA’s Western Cape Provincial Manager.
The
verification of information, which includes scrutinising the
applicant’s factual background and fingerprints, must occur
before the screening committee conducts its interviews.
9.
When the Applicant’s birth notice was received, the DHA
established that
the Applicant’s sister was also unregistered.
The Applicant’s father was advised that he had to submit an LRB
notice
for his daughter, which he undertook to do. The Applicant had
not submitted a proof of birth form with his application. He
submitted
a maternity certificate dated 17 November 2023. The DHA
asked Leratong Hospital in Randburg, where the Applicant was born, to
verify
the maternity certificate. The deponent to the answering
affidavit, Ms Clarence, alleged that in her experience, the
verification
of birth records is not ranked high on a hospital’s
list of priorities. Delays ensue when the hospital or medical
facility
is in another province. The hospitals are concerned that
disclosing a person’s personal information may contravene the
Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013
.
10.
The DHA was awaiting the verification of the birth records in
February 2024. On 30 April
2024, the DHA requested assistance from an
official at their Randburg office to approach Leratong Hospital to
request the verification,
presumably after it had received the
certificate obtained by the Applicant’s father. The
verification was not forthcoming.
On 30 May 2024, they received the
verification. The Applicant had also provided the incorrect school
letter. The school letter
was from the Applicant’s high school,
not the primary school. The school letter aims to establish the
child’s pattern
of movement, which the DHA verifies with the
relevant school and the Department of Education. The DHA tried to
contact the father
to no avail in December 2023. The father was
informed of the requirement when he attended the DHA’s offices
on 16 January
2024. He produced the correct letter on 1 February
2024. The letter was dated 19 January 2024. The primary school
provided the
further information the DHA required on 23 February
2024.
11.
There were also problems with the legibility of the Applicant’s
fingerprints, which
had to be retaken. The DHA experienced problems
contacting the Applicant’s father to redo the Applicant’s
fingerprints.
There was a delay between February and the end of April
before contact was made. The Applicant’s fingerprints were
retaken
on 3 June 2024. The outcome of the fingerprint verification
was received on 5 August 2024.
12.
The Applicant’s father submitted the LRB verification
application for his daughter
on 3 June 2024. Although her application
was also incomplete, the DHA commenced the verification process since
they intended to
place both applications before the screening
committee to avoid duplication. The sister’s fingerprints were
taken on 10 June
2024.
13.
The screening committee was scheduled to sit on 6 June 2024 to
conduct interviews. Ms Clarence
called the Applicant’s father
to arrange for him, the Applicant, and the daughter to attend the
Bellville offices on 6 June
2024 to appear before the screening
committee. The father did not answer his phone. Ms Clarence left a
message for him on his voicemail.
The intention was to conduct the
interviews while awaiting the fingerprint verification's outcome. The
father attended the Bellville
offices during the week of 10 June
2024. Special permission was obtained for the screening committee to
sit on 25 July 2024 to
adjudicate the Applicant’s and the
daughter’s applications. Although the father was informed of
the special arrangement,
they did not attend. The father informed Ms
Clarence that he missed her email and the daughter was unavailable.
The interview eventually
occurred on 1 August 2024, and the screening
committee made its recommendations. The committee was specially
convened to adjudicate
the Applicant’s LRB application. The
fingerprint verification was obtained on 5 August 2024, and the
Applicant’s birth
certificate was issued on 12 August 2024.
THE
APPLICANT’S SUBMISSIONS
14.
In his reply, the Applicant raised a point
in limine
, alleging
that Fortuin J decided the merits in the Applicant’s favour on
14 June 2024. The Applicant alleged that the Respondents
understood
the effect of the order to mean the same. He referred to the State
Attorney’s letter addressed to the Applicant’s
attorney
on 7 September 2024. The Applicant relied on the agreed order granted
by Lekhuleni J that the matter was postponed to
determine its costs.
The Applicant submitted that the Respondents could not belatedly make
submissions that this application had
no basis in fact or law as the
answering affidavit seeks to do.
15.
The Applicant also applied to strike out certain paragraphs of the
answering affidavit.
The Applicant referred the Court to paragraphs
of the answering affidavit that sought to establish that the
Applicant had not made
out a case for the relief sought and asked
that they be struck out.
16.
The Applicant sought costs on an opposed basis, including, but not
limited to, the opposed
Court appearances on 14 June 2024 and 18
September 2024. Applicant sought the fees of his Counsel, including
but not limited to
the day fees of 14 June 2024 and 18 September 2024
on scale B. The Applicant also sought the costs of this hearing,
Counsel’s
day fees and the costs of preparing written heads of
argument on scale C. The Applicant emphasised that the issues for
determination
by this Court are not limited to the costs of
instituting the application but also include all other costs related
to the application.
17.
The Applicant denied that the provisions of the POPI Act could
contribute to delays in this
matter as the personal information
concerned was sought directly at the request of the data subject. He
submitted that neither
he nor his father can be blamed for the
fingerprints that were incorrectly taken. The Applicant submitted
that the State Attorney
knew that his attorneys had been representing
him since 27 May 2024, the day the application was served on them.
The problems in
arranging suitable consultation times can largely be
ascribed to the fact that the Respondents and the State Attorney
failed to
correspond with his attorneys. He states that he does not
always check his emails or answer phone calls from unknown numbers.
EVALUATION
18.
The Applicant raised an application on the unopposed motion roll to
compel the Respondents
to consider his application for a birth
certificate submitted on 29 November 2023 and order them to furnish
him with it. The Applicant
sought the costs of the application on an
attorney and own client scale.
19.
Determining the Applicant’s point
in limine
will not
dispose of the application or interfere with the task assigned to
this Court. The Applicant refers to paragraph 79 of
the answering
affidavit where the Respondents asked, "Applicant’s
application be dismissed with costs”. The answering
affidavit
proceeds to deal with the merits of the application.
20.
In the answering affidavit filed on behalf of the Respondents, they
alleged that the only
issue for determination was whether the
Applicant was entitled to the costs of instituting the application.
They asserted that
the application for a
mandamus
was misguidedly instituted and provided their reasons for this
contention. The Respondents are misguided about the issue this Court
had to hear. That was spelt out in the order of Lekhuleni J, which
stated that the hearing was about costs. The Court will consider
their submissions to the extent that they are relevant to the issue
of costs. Let’s test the Respondents submission that
the order
sought by the Applicant differs from the order granted by Fortuin J
by applying the
Endumeni
principles to its interpretation.
[3]
The proper approach to interpreting legal documents, including
judgments and orders, is to read the words used in the context of
the
document as a whole and in light of all relevant circumstances
attendant upon its coming into existence along with its text,
the
context and the purpose.
21.
The Applicant asked the Court to order the Respondents to “consider”
the Applicant’s
application for a birth certificate submitted
on 29 November 2023 and to order the Respondents to furnish him with
the certificate.
Fortuin J ordered the Respondents to make a
determination as to whether the Applicant is entitled to the issue of
a birth certificate.
There is a difference, albeit minimal.
‘Consider’ means to think carefully about something
before making a decision.
‘Determine’ means to ascertain
or establish exactly by research or calculation. The circumstances
attendant upon the
order coming into being was that the Applicant had
given late notice of his birth, and the Respondents were already
considering
and processing his application. The Court ordered the
Respondents to determine whether the Applicant is entitled to the
issue of
a birth certificate. That decision would be in the hands of
the screening committee and the Director General of the DHA. The
Applicant
asked for relief that had already begun.
22.
This Court will not give further credence to the point
in limine
or the application to strike out paragraphs of the answering
affidavit except to say that any talk of dismissing the application
that has already served before two Judges in this division who issued
interim orders is misguided. This Court must examine the
application's merits to discharge its obligation to determine costs.
The significance of the Fortuin J order is in its relevance
to costs.
Fortuin J ordered the Respondents to pay the costs of the
postponement of the matter to 18 September 2024. Another way
of
framing the costs order is that the Respondents were ordered to pay
the wasted costs occasioned by the postponement, meaning
the costs of
14 June 2024 alone. Fortuin J did not grant the costs of the
application, which would have been determined subsequently
or by
agreement. The Applicant received his birth certificate, and the
application became moot, except for the cost issue.
23.
The awarding of costs remains at the discretion of the Court.
[4]
The rule that costs follow the result is subject to the above
overriding principle.
[5]
The
first principle in the award of costs is that, unless otherwise
expressly enacted, it is at the discretion of the presiding
judicial
officer. The second principle is that the successful party should
have their costs as a general rule.
[6]
The second principle is subject to many exceptions where the
successful party is deprived of their costs. The circumstances where
a Court may deprive a party of its costs are not exhaustive but
include the conduct of the parties, the conduct of the legal
representatives,
whether a party achieves technical success only, the
nature of the litigants and the nature of the proceedings. A
deviation from
the general rule that costs follow the result requires
a Court to be meticulous in its assessment to arrive at a just and
fair
result. The principles which have been developed about the award
of costs are by their nature sufficiently flexible and adaptable
to
meet new needs which may arise
24.
The Applicant obtained an award of damages for injuries sustained in
an accident from the
Road Accident Fund. The legal representatives of
both parties would have known that one of the requirements for
lodging an RAF
claim and payment of an RAF award is furnishing an
identity document to the RAF. The Applicant's attorney is a seasoned
RAF practitioner,
and the Respondent's attorney, the State Attorney,
acts on behalf of the RAF. The Applicant was involved in a motor
vehicle accident
on 18 December 2015. He does not state when his
claim against the RAF was lodged. The significance of the date means
that both
he and his attorney would have known that the Applicant
required an identity document to obtain compensation from the RAF.
The
claim was probably lodged on his behalf by his father. Still,
once the Applicant turned eighteen on 17 January 2023, he would have
required an identity document to receive any monetary award for his
RAF claim. There is no merit in the Respondents submission
that the
Applicant could have sought to enforce the RAF award without an
identity document. The Respondents legal representative
would have
known that this was incorrect.
25.
The Respondent provided a timeline of events relating to the
Applicant’s application
for his identity document. The DHA
established that the Applicant’s sister’s birth had also
not been registered. The
Applicant’s father was informed that
he should also submit an LRB on her behalf. The DHA attempted to
contact the Applicant’s
father on 22 December 2023 to inform
him that the Applicant had submitted the incorrect school report. The
need for the correct
school report was communicated to the father on
16 January 2024 when he attended the DHA’s offices. The correct
school certificate
was issued on 31 January 2024. Leratong Hospital
failed to verify the Applicant’s birth information until 31 May
2024, one
month after the father obtained the maternity certificate.
The
mandamus
had already been instituted by then.
26.
The DHA arranged for the screening committee to interview the
Applicant and his father on
6 June 2024 and 25 July 2024. The
Applicant’s father did not answer his phone or read the
messages left for him to attend.
The interview occurred on 1 August
2024, and the birth certificate was issued on 12 August 2024.
27.
Two months in the process were lost, i.e., between November 2023 and
January 2024, because
the father did not answer his phone in
December. The DHA could not be held responsible for this efflux in
time. Three months were
lost because the Leratong Hospital would not
verify the Applicant’s birth. Neither party could be held
responsible for this
loss of time in the processing of the
application. Once the Applicant’s birth verification was
confirmed, the Applicant failed
to attend two interviews. Two further
months passed in the process. The delayed submission of the
Applicant’s sister’s
application further delayed the
process. The screening interviews were scheduled simultaneously. The
Applicant has to take responsibility
for the delay that ensued.
28.
The Applicant instructed two Counsel, one who fell below the
five-year bracket of enrolment
as a Counsel and the other with over
thirty years of enrolment as an advocate. The junior Counsel prepared
the founding papers,
and the more experienced Counsel prepared the
replying papers, the heads of argument, and provided argument at the
hearing. This
Court emphasised to Counsel that the application
instituted on 23 May 2024 was a simple application that fell within
the competency
of the Applicant’s second Counsel. The
Applicant’s more experienced Counsel correctly agreed and
tempered the cost
expectation against the Respondent. The Applicant
had sought costs for its junior Counsel on scale B and its more
experienced Counsel
on scale C. This application could justify
neither. Applicant’s Counsel agreed that the normal costs order
should apply if
this Court grants an order in their favour, meaning
that one Counsel may recover their fees on scale A. A Court may be
receptive
to granting a more favourable costs order against a
Department of the State if the opposing party promotes the principles
of transformation
in selecting Counsel to represent them. That is not
the case in this matter.
29.
The parties exchanged correspondences relating to the costs of this
application after the
Applicant obtained his birth certificate. The
Respondent initially denied any liability for costs, alleging that
the Fortuin J
order settled the matter of costs. The Respondent
eventually offered on 13 September 2024 to pay the Applicant’s
costs till
13 June 2024, the day before the application was heard by
Fortuin J. The Applicant rejected the offer.
30.
Considering the circumstances of this matter, the question arises
whether this Court should
deviate from the normal costs order that
follows the result. The Respondent urged the Court to do so as the
circumstances in this
matter required it to follow a statutory
process, and it was not responsible for the delays that ensued in the
processing of the
application. What is apparent from the uncontested
facts placed before the Court is that the Respondents could not be
faulted for
their effort in processing the application and that the
Applicant has to assume the responsibility for delays that eventuated
through
his failure to be contacted.
31.
Any South African citizen must give notice of the birth of their
child within thirty days
of the birth. Regulation 128 provides for
late registration of births in two categories: between thirty days
and one year of age,
and then for those older than one year. The
Applicant fell into the latter category, and Regulation 5 applied to
his birth registration.
32.
Regulation 5 requires the biological parents to give notice of their
child’s birth
except where the child is older than eighteen
years. A person older than eighteen years may initiate the process
themselves. The
notice of birth is given in a prescribed form. It has
to be accompanied, among others, by the following documents: proof of
birth,
an affidavit by a person who witnessed the birth, fingerprints
of the parents and the child, photographs, certified copies of the
parent's identity documents, and proof of payment of the applicable
fee. The Director General must authenticate the veracity of
the
information provided to the DHA in the notice. A notice of birth that
does not meet the requirements may be rejected.
33.
The DHA must follow a statutory process where delays may ensue in
verifying information,
as has happened in the Applicant’s case.
The Applicant has to shoulder the blame for at least two periods in
the delayed
process, i.e., the provision of the school report and the
failure to respond to the interview dates. The regulations do not
make
provision for the submission of school certificates, but the
Respondents explained this requirement.
34.
This Court cannot attribute any delay in processing the Applicant’s
birth certificate
to the DHA, but the Applicant cannot escape the
delays that eventuated from his side. It is unclear how speedily the
Applicant
expected the DHA to process his application. He had not
filed the correct school certificate, and the first delay ensued from
filing
the correct one. The delay attributable to Leratong Hospital
was not the DHA’s fault. The Applicant’s father provided
the maternal certificate issued by Leratong Hospital to the DHA on 30
April 2024 and issued this application three weeks later.
The problem
experienced with verifying the Applicant’s fingerprints cannot
be attributed to him, except for his delay in
responding to the need
for it to be redone. The Applicant would have known the process
involved in late birth registrations, or
his attorneys would have
advised him of the peremptory steps. The process is designed to
prevent fraud, just as the RAF awards
are paid out on proof of
identity to achieve the same purpose.
35.
The Respondents submitted that if this Court finds that the Applicant
was successful under
the Fortuin J order, there was cause for it to
deviate from the usual costs order that follows the result. The
Respondents relied
upon the legislative framework as their point of
departure to argue that the costs should not follow the result. The
procedure
for late birth registration is statutorily defined and
regulated. The DHA has to ensure that the legislative requirements
are met
before deciding on an application for the late registration
of births. The Respondents submit that there is no evidence that the
DHA delayed the process or refused to grant the Applicant a birth
certificate to warrant the institution of the application. The
Applicant’s hasty action for instituting the application when
the LRB process was still underway is responsible for the costs
incurred.
36.
This Court believes there are grounds to deviate from the usual costs
order after considering
the conduct of both parties in this
application. The principle guiding the order it makes is that
peremptory statutory provisions
require the cooperation of all
parties. It is inopportune for a party to delay the process and then
seek a
mandamus
to enforce it.
37.
This Court is left with the impression that the institution of this
application was inopportune.
The Applicant deserved calm and
considered counsel, taking into account the processes of the DHA and
any delay caused by the Applicant
before deciding whether the
application was warranted. The Respondents correctly claim that the
dies for them to give notice of
their opposition to the application
had not elapsed before the application was heard. Meticulous
attention to detail would have
warned the Applicant’s legal
representatives that the dies for filing the Respondent's notice of
opposition had not expired
before the application was heard on 14
June 2024. They should have also urged the Applicant to commence the
late registration process
with the DHA well before he obtains his
award of damages.
38.
In the premises, this Court clarifies that the Fortuin J order
entitled the Applicant to
claim his costs for 14 June 2024. The delay
that ensued from 14 June 2024 to the issue of the Applicant’s
birth certificate
cannot be attributable to the DHA. The evidence is
that they made special arrangements to accommodate the Applicant and
his sister.
The Respondents made a fair offer to settle the
Applicant’s costs up to 13 June 2024. The Applicant rejected
that offer but
instead threatened to appoint additional Counsel and
seek unjustified costs of Counsel on the B and C scales. The
Respondents subsequently
revoked that offer.
39.
When the Honourable Fortuin J granted the order of 14 June 2024, she
did not have recourse
to the Respondents version of events. The order
made by the Honourable Lekhuleni J allowed for proper ventilation of
the issues
and for the parties to supplement the papers that this
Court had to consider. After carefully considering the papers and the
arguments
presented, this Court finds that this case calls for it to
exercise its discretion and deviate from the usual order that costs
follow the result.
ORDER
1.
Each party shall pay its own costs from the institution of the
application to
13 June 2024.
2.
From 14 June 2024, each party shall pay its own costs, including the
costs of
the hearings on 18 September 2024 and 11 February 2025.
Ajay
Bhoopchand
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Western
Cape Division
19
February 2025
Judgment
was handed down at 10h00 on 19 February 2025 and delivered to the
parties by email.
Applicants
Counsel: A Laubscher, J-H Gouws Instructed by Adendorff Attorneys
Inc.
Respondents
Representative: State Attorney, L Manuel
[1]
Regulation 128 in Government Gazette, 26 February 2014
[2]
The communication read “…until before 14 June 2024”
[3]
Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
(920/2010)
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA
593
(SCA) (16 March 2012) at para 24
[4]
Intercontinental Exports (Pty) Ltd v Fowles1999 (2) SA 1045 (SCA) at
para 25
[5]
Unimark Distributors (Pty) Ltd v Erf 94 Silverton Day (Pty) Ltd
2003
(1) SA 204
(T) at 215 E-F
[6]
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