Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 72South Africa
Bihombel and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (9940/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 72 (6 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
6 March 2024
Judgment
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## Bihombel and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (9940/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 72 (6 March 2024)
Bihombel and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (9940/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 72 (6 March 2024)
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sino date 6 March 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western Cape
Division, Cape Town)
Case No.: 9940/2022
In the matter between:
NOEMIE
LOLINGA BIHOMBEL
First
Applicant
TYSON
LIKUTU MAKALI
Second
Applicant
And
THE MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS
First
Respondent
THE DIRECTOR-GENERAL
OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF HOME
AFFAIRS
Second
Respondent
Date of hearing:
22 February 2024
Date of Judgment: 6
March 2024
Before the Honourable
Ms Justice Meer
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
THIS 6
TH
DAY OF MARCH 2024
MEER, J
[1] The
Applicants, a married couple from the Democratic Republic of Congo
(“DRC”) apply in terms
of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”) to review and set aside
the decisions of officials
of the Department of Home Affairs (“the
Department”), and subsequent appeal decisions by the Director
General and Minister
of Home Affairs (“the DG and Minister”).
The decisions determined that the First and Second Applicants were
prohibited
persons in terms of Section 29(1)(f) of the Immigration
Act 13 of 2002 (“the Act”), for being in possession of
fraudulent
visas. The decisions collectively have the effect of
prohibiting the Applicants from South Africa. The Applicants also
seek
a declaration that they are not prohibited persons under section
29(1)(f) of the Act. A condonation application by the First Applicant
for the late filing of her judicial review application was unopposed
and granted at the hearing.
[2] In
support of their case, the Applicants contend
inter alia,
that:
2.1 They
have a right to a prior fair hearing before being declared
prohibited persons in terms of
section 29(1)(f) and they were denied
such right.
2.2 They
were not complicit in fraudulent activities in obtaining the visas.
The provisions
of section 29(1)(f) thus could not
have been invoked against them. For section 29(1)(f) to have been
invoked, the Respondents had
to prove that they were guilty of fraud
which the Respondents did not do.
[3] In
opposing the application the Respondents contend,
inter alia,
that:
3.1 The
Applicants had no legal right to prior hearings by the Department’s
officials before the invocation
of the provisions of section 29(1)(f)
of the Act declaring them to be prohibited persons;
3.2 The
decision of the Department’s officials is not an administrative
act susceptible to review;
3.3 The
appeal decision of the DG has been superseded by the decision of the
Minister on appeal, is no longer
operational and is not susceptible
to being reviewed by this court;
3.4 The
Minister’s decision on appeal is lawful and rational.
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
[4] The
relevant provisions of the Act are contained in sections 29(1)(f)
which lists who are prohibited
persons, and sections 8(4) and (6) of
the Act which provide for appeals by prohibited persons to the DG and
Minister respectively.
[5] Section
29 of the Act states:
“
29.
Prohibited persons
(1) The
following foreigners are prohibited persons and do not qualify for a
port of entry visa, admission
into the Republic, a visa or a
permanent residence permit:
(a) Those
infected with or carrying infectious, communicable or other diseases
or viruses as prescribed;
(b) anyone
against whom a warrant is outstanding or a conviction has been
secured in the Republic or a foreign
country in respect of genocide,
terrorism, human smuggling, trafficking in persons, murder, torture,
drug-related charges, money
laundering or kidnapping;
(c) anyone
previously deported and not rehabilitated by the Director-General in
the prescribed manner;
(d) a
member of or adherent to an association or organisation advocating
the practice of racial hatred or
social violence;
(e) anyone
who is or has been a member of or adherent to an organisation or
association utilising crime or
terrorism to pursue its ends; and
(f) anyone
found in possession of a fraudulent visa, passport, permanent
residence permit or identification
document.
(2)The
Director-General may for good cause, declare a person referred to in
subsection (1) not to be a prohibited person.”
[6] The
Immigration Regulations (published in Government Notice R413 in
Government Gazette 37679 of 22 May
2014, provide at Regulations
26(6)-(7) that:
“
(6)
The Director-General shall in declaring a person not to be prohibited
person,
consider the following
factors:
(a)
The
reasons for the prohibition;
(b)
The
seriousness of the offence committed;
(c)
Representation
made by the prohibited person, which should include a Police
Clearance Certificate.
(7)The
Director-General shall, upon making a decision as contemplated in
section 29(2) of the Act, provide written reasons for such
decision.”
[7] The
relevant parts of section 8 of the Act provide:
“
8.
Review and appeal procedures
(1)
An
immigration officer who refuses entry to any person or finds any
person to be an illegal foreigner shall inform that person on
the
prescribed form that he or she may in writing request the Minister to
review that decision and -
(a) if
he or she arrived by means of a conveyance which is on the point of
departing and is not to call at
any other port of entry in the
Republic, that request shall without delay be submitted to the
Minister; or
(b) in
any other case than the one provided for in paragraph (a), that
request shall be submitted to the
Minister within three days after
that decision.”
(2)
a
person who was refused entry or was found to be an illegal foreigner
and who has requested a review of such a decision –
(a)
in
a case contemplated in subsection (1)(a), and who has not received an
answer to his or her request by the time the relevant
conveyance departs, shall depart on that conveyance and shall await
the outcome of the review outside the Republic; or
(b)
in
a case contemplated in subsection (1)(b), shall not be removed from
the
Republic
before the Minister has confirmed the relevant decision.
(3)
Any
decision in terms of this Act, other than a decision contemplated in
subsection
(1),
that materially and adversely affects the rights of any person, shall
be communicated to that person in the prescribed manner
and shall be
accompanied by the reasons for that decision.
(4)
An
applicant aggrieved by a decision contemplated in subsection (3) may,
within 10 working days from receipt of the notification
contemplated
in subsection (3), make an application in the prescribed
manner to the Director-General for the review or appeal
of that
decision.
(5)
The Director-General shall consider the application contemplated in
subsection (4), whereafter he or she shall either
confirm, reverse or
modify that decision.
(6)
An
applicant aggrieved by a decision of the Director-General
contemplated in subsection (5) may, within 10 working days of receipt
of that decision, make an application in the prescribed manner to the
Minister for the review or appeal of that decision.
(7)
The
Minister shall consider the application contemplated in subsection
(6), whereafter he or she shall either confirm, reverse or
modify
that decision.
[8] In
terms of the legislation thus, a prohibition under section 29 bans a
foreigner from entering or remaining
in South Africa. The ban is
permanent, unless and until the ban is uplifted by the
Director-General for good cause in terms of
section 29(2). Moreover a
decision that a person is a prohibited person may be appealed to the
DG and thereafter to the Minister
in terms of sections 8(4) and (6).
BACKGROUND FACTS
The First Applicant
[9] On
18 April 2016, the First Applicant was granted a temporary asylum
seeker’s permit authorizing
her to work in South Africa. She
obtained employment and thereafter obtained a work visa through an
agent recommended by work colleagues.
Her employer queried the
legitimacy of the work visa as the date of issue was reflected as
2015. After verification, on 16 August
2016, the Department reported
that the work visa was not issued by it and was a fraudulent
document.
[10] The
First Applicant did not mention the 2015 work visa in her founding
papers, because, she says, this
document was only in her possession
for a few days, she forgot about it, and it was promptly superseded
by her renewed asylum seeker’s
visa. The visa was never raised
again by any Department official or in any correspondence and was
never seen again by her. At no
stage was there ever any evidence,
investigation or finding that she was aware of or complicit in any
fraud committed by the agent
who obtained the visa for her, she adds.
[11] Although
in their answering affidavit the Respondents sought to defend their
decisions by emphasizing
the dubious nature of the 2015 visa and the
fact that the First Applicant did not mention it in her founding
affidavit, none of
the impugned decisions referred to the 2015 visa
as a factor on which the decisions were based, and as pointed out by
the Applicants
it was not even included in the Rule 53 record. It
cannot, contend the Applicants be relied upon to validate the
decisions
ex post facto
.
The First Applicant’s
2016 visa:
[12] The
First Applicant then engaged an agent, Mr Mosenga, based in
Lubumbashi, DRC to assist her with another
work visa application and
paid him 1 500USD for his services. According to the Applicant,
the application and Mr Mosenga appeared
to be legitimate and proper
in all respects. Mr Mosenga informed her that her application had
been granted, whereafter she relinquished
her asylum visa at OR Tambo
International Airport, and departed from South Africa for the DRC to
collect her work visa.
[13] She
met Mr Mosenga at the South African Consulate General office in
Lubumbashi, gave him her passport
and he obtained her work visa for
her. This, according to the Applicant was not unusual as many people
in the DRC use agents to
enter public offices in order to avoid
waiting in queues. Her work visa was valid until 2 May 2019.
According to the First Applicant,
she was never aware of any
impropriety or irregularity regarding the 2016 visa. She states that
for years she travelled on this
visa and never encountered any
difficulty with it from immigration or custom officials.
The First Applicant’s
2018 visa:
[14] On
28 November 2017, an application by the First Applicant for a
critical skills visa was rejected by
the Department on the following
basis:
“
(1)
Comments: 1. You have submitted a fraudulent visa according to our
records a visa with control number b[...] and trp number
j[...] was
issued to someone else. In terms of section 49(14) of the immigration
act any person who for the purpose of entering
or remaining in, or
departing from, or of facilitation or assisting the entrance into,
residence in or departure form, the republic,
whether in
contravention of this act or not, commits any fraudulent act or makes
any false representation by conduct, statement
or otherwise, shall be
guilty of an office and liable on conviction to a fine or to
imprisonment not exceeding eight years.”
[15] This
rejection is referred to by the Applicants as the initial decision by
Department Officials and
is the first decision sought to be set aside
on review. It would appear to be on the basis that the 2016 work visa
obtained for
her by Mr Mosenga, was fraudulent. According to the
Applicant this was the first time she learnt that the 2016 visa was
problematic.
She queried this with Mr Mosenga who advised her that
there was a mistake and she should return to Lubumbashi to resolve
the problem.
She also emailed the Department to query the finding and
engaged a firm, Penguin Immigration to assist her. According to her
the
Department never reverted in substance to any of her enquiries.
On 3 November 2018, she left South Africa for the DRC where she
met
Mr Mosenga who assisted her in obtaining a new visa which she refers
to as the 2018 visa. When she went to the airport in Lubumbashi,
the
officials there told her that this visa too was fake. The First
Applicant then filed criminal charges against Mr Mosenga.
At the
request of the police in Lubumbashi, she asked Mr Mosenga to meet her
near the Consulate and when he did, he was arrested
in her presence.
[16] As
thanks for her assistance, she states, the station commander assured
her that he would personally
arrange for her to receive a new visa at
the Consulatein Lubumbashi, and to have any restriction against her
name withdrawn. The
Consulate assisted the First Applicant with a new
visa application and removed the 2018 visa from her passport.
However, they claimed
not to be able to assist her with removing any
restrictions against her name. The First Applicant was granted a new
visa on 19
February 2019, one she refers to as the 2019 visa.
[17] The
First Applicant then sought the services of a Mr Kajombo in the DRC
to assist her with an application
in terms of section 29(2) of the
Act to uplift the prohibition against her. He informed her that her
application was successful
and the First Applicant flew to OR Tambo
International Airport on 24 February 2019. She was however refused
entry and informed
that prohibitions against her name remained on the
Department’s Movement Control System.
[18] The
First Applicant complained to Mr Kajombo who reiterated that the
prohibitions against her had been
uplifted and that the Department
records had probably not yet been updated to reflect this. The
Applicant then returned to South
Africa via Zimbabwe overland,
because, according to her, the Applicants had run out of funds to pay
for another flight. She was
permitted to re-enter the country without
difficulty on 13 March 2019.
[19] Once
in the country she engaged the services of Le Roux Attorneys, who, on
4 February 2020 brought a
second application in terms of section
29(2) of the Act to have the prohibition against her name uplifted.
The application, which
sets out fully the above history and
emphasizes that she was not complicit in any fraud, was rejected.
[20] The
First Applicant then appealed to the Director General in terms of
Section 8 (4) of the Act. Her
appeal was dismissed by the
Director-General on 4 January 2021. The Director-General’s
reasoning in refusing the appeal was
as follows:
“
You
submitted a fraudulent work visa in support of your application.”
Your fraudulent work
visa was issued on 2016-05-03 while you were on asylum permit in
South Africa and you were not the ordinary
resident in Lubumbashi at
the time of its issuance.”
[21] The
First Applicant thereafter appealed to the Minister in terms of
section 8(6) of the Act on 18 April
2021. This appeal was dismissed
on 29 April 2021. The Minister’s reasons were:
“
The
representation in respect of your request to review your prohibition
has been considered and was unsuccessful based on the following
reason:
-
Your
husband’s Permanent residence permit does not exist on our
Departmental system, and therefore he cannot be recognized
as legal
in the country.
-
At
the time of the issuance of your visa, you were on an Asylum seekers
permit in the Republic. You never submitted your application
in
person or interviewed and you were not an ordinary resident in your
country of origin, as required in terms of
regulation 9
of the
Immigration Act.
>
-
As
a person on an Asylum seekers permit you should ae renounced your
status, and departed from the country to have an opportunity
to apply
for a visa in the country of your origin.”
[22] The
first Applicant’s comprehensive appeal submissions overlapped
substantially with her
Section 29
(2) application, setting out her
history and innocence in relation to any fraud. The First Applicant’s
history and background
as related above were not disputed by the
Respondents albeit their implying that she was complicit in obtaining
the fraudulent
documents.
The Second Applicant’s
history and background:
[23] The
Second Applicant, also a national of the DRC was studying in Cape
Town in 2013. He applied for a
permanent resident permit through a
friend, Mr Nzakomba, and obtained it. The visa was allegedly issued
by the Department’s
official, one Mr Mabaso. The Second
Applicant paid Mr Nzakomba, R13 000-00 for the permit. According
to the Second Applicant,
at no stage was he aware that there was
anything irregular about the application. Once he obtained the
permit, the Second Applicant
travelled internationally many times
without difficulty and also presented the permit without difficulty
to the Department when
registering the birth of the Applicants’
minor daughter.
[24] The
Second Applicant of his own accord, repeatedly, according to him,
attended on the Department and
on the Immigration Inspectorate in
pursuit of,
inter alia,
a South African identification
document. It was never suggested to him that the permanent residence
was irregular.
[25] Also
of his own accord, the Second Applicant briefed his current attorneys
to have his permanent residence
verified. On 19 May 2021, a letter
from the Department was received stating:
“
This
office has no record that he applied for or received permanent
residence in this country.”
[26] Further
enquiries revealed on 4 June 2021, for the First time that the Second
Applicant had been declared
a prohibited person in terms of section
29(1)(f) of the Act. As with the First Applicant he was afforded no
hearing, notice or
reasons prior to his prohibition. On 22 July 2021,
the Second Applicant applied to the DG in terms of Section 29 (2) to
overturn
his prohibition. His application set out his history and
innocence as referred to above. The application was rejected on 1
September
2021. The DG’s reasons for the rejection were as
follows:
“
There
is no evidence in your representation to prove that you were a victim
of fraud. The fact that you travelled in and out of
the country with
your permanent residence permit uninterrupted does not exempt you
from the provisions of
section 48
of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
,
which provides that:
‘
No
illegal foreigner shall be exempt from a provision of this Act or be
allowed to sojourn in the Republic on the grounds that he
or she was
not informed that he or she could not enter or sojourn in the
Republic or that he or she was admitted or allowed to
remain in the
Republic through error or misrepresentation, or because his or her
being an illegal foreigner was undiscovered.’”
[27] Thereafter,
the Second Applicant appealed to the Minister in terms of section
8(6) of the Act. His comprehensive
submissions on appeal overlapped
substantially with the Section 29 (2) application. This appeal was
dismissed on 14 December 2021
for the following reasons as set out by
the Minister:
“
Your
stay in the country was on the basis of deception, you were found in
possession of a fraudulent Permanent Residence Permit.
You cannot
claim that you had the bona-fide belief that you possessed a lawful
permanent residence status after failing to provide
proof to confirm
that the alleged person (friend “Mr.Nzakomba”) did exist.
Your claims that you dealt with Mr Mabaso
are also lacking veracity
with no such name corresponding with the dates of your claims. Your
family members are also in the country
illegally. You have not
presented any new facts to justify the upliftment of your
prohibition. You are therefore a prohibited person
and do not qualify
for a port of entry visa, admission into the Republic, a permanent
residence permit of any other visa.”
I note that as with the
First Applicant, the Second Applicant’s history and background
as related above, were not disputed
by the Respondents albeit their
accusation that he was complicit in obtaining the fraudulent
documents.
FINDING
Review of the Initial
Decisions by officials within the Department of Home Affairs
prohibiting the Applicants from South Africa
in terms of
section
29(1)(f)
of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
:
[28] The
first question for consideration is whether the initial decisions of
officials within the Department
under Section 29 (1) (f) of the Act
declaring the Applicants to be prohibited persons, constitute
administrative actions under
PAJA , in respect of which the
Applicants were entitled to prior fair hearings before being
declared prohibited persons
and to adequate reasons. If the
answer to this enquiry is in the affirmative, then the initial
decisions against both Applicants
fall to be reviewed and set aside.
Should this happen, as was contended by Mr Simonz for the Applicants
and not contested by Mr
Titus for the Respondents, it would follow
that the appeal decisions, which are based upon and replicate the
initial decisions,
would also fall to be set aside.
[29] Section
1 of PAJA defines an administrative action and states in relevant
part:
1.
“
Definition--
In this Act, unless the
context indicates otherwise—
“
administrative
action”
means
any decision taken, or any failure to take a decision, by—
(a) an
organ of state, when—
(i) exercising
a power in terms of the Constitution or a provincial constitution; or
(ii) exercising
a public power or performing a public function in terms of any
legislation;
or
(b) a
natural or juristic person, other than an organ of state, when
exercising a public power or performing
a public function in terms of
an empowering provision, which adversely affects the rights of any
person and which has a direct,
external legal effect ,…”
[30] In
Minister
of Defence and Military Veterans v Motau and Others
[1]
,
the Constitutional Court distilled the definition of the section into
seven elements:
“
The
concept of ‘administrative action’, as defined in section
1(1) of PAJA, is the threshold for engaging in administrative-law
review. The rather unwieldy definition can be distilled into seven
elements: there must be (a) a decision of an administrative
nature;
(b) by an organ of State or a natural or juristic person; (c)
exercising a public power or performing a public function;
(d) in
terms of any legislation or an empowering provision; (e) that
adversely affects rights; (f) that has a direct, external
legal
effect; and (g) that does not fall under any of the listed
exclusions.”
[2]
[31] In
Koyabe
and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[3]
which also concerned a challenge to a Section 29 (1)(f) prohibition
decision, the Court in effect treated a decision in terms of
Section
29 (1)(f) as an administrative decision. The relevant extracts from
Koyabe which bear this out were aptly noted by this
Court in
Najjembe
v the Minister of Home Affairs and Another
[4]
:
“
[23]
In Koyabe and Others v Minister for Home Affairs and Others
,
the
Constitutional Court had the occasion of dealing with applicants in
respect of whom an investigation by the Department revealed
that they
had previously obtained South African identity documents through
fraudulent means, and they were accordingly declared
prohibited
persons in terms of section 29(1)(f) of the Act, resulting in their
disqualification for permanent residency. The Court
found against the
applicants on the basis that they had failed to exhaust their
internal remedy under section 8 of the Act read
with section 8 of the
Act read with section 7(2) of PAJA before launching their review
application. The significance of Koyabe
is that the Court related the
prohibition by the Department in terms of section 29(1) of the Act as
administrative action. This
is borne out by the following paragraphs
from the judgment:
‘
Section
8 thus establishes two channels for review. One route is created
under section 8 (1)and the other under section 8 (4) The
procedure
applicable in a particular case
will
depend
on
the nature of the administrative decision… (my underlining)’
And also paragraph 62
where it was held:
“
Further,
in our constitutional democracy, officials are enjoined to ensure
that the public administration is governed by the values
enshrined in
our Constitution. Providing people whose rights have been adversely
affected by administrative decisions with reasons,
will often be
important in providing fairness, accountability, and transparency. In
the context of a contemporary democratic public
service like
ours,where the principles of batho pele,coupled with the values of
Ubuntu, enjoin the public service to treat people
with respect and
dignity and avoid undue confrontation……..
the
Constitution indeed entitles the applicants to reasons for the
decisions declaring them illegal foreigners
.
It is excessively over formalistic and and contrary to the spirit of
the Constitution for the respondents to contend that under
section 8
(1) they were not obliged to provide the applicants with reasons.’(My
underlining)
[24] The dictum in
paragraph 50 of Koyabe, namely that “
section 8 of the Act
provides for internal administrative review and appeal procedures
regarding decisions taken in terms thereof
for those seeking to
challenge administrative decisions”
, puts it beyond doubt
that the relevant actions under the Act constitute administrative
actions.”
[32] The
Court in
Koyabe
found against the Applicants there, on the
basis that they had failed to exhaust their internal remedies under
Section 8 of the
Act before launching the review application. In
Koyabe, it was not suggested by the Minister that a Section 29
decision was
not an administrative action. Indeed, this was a
premise, and a necessary part of the logic of the case is that a
section 29 decision
is an administrative one.
[33] In
Ndlovu
and another v Director General Department of Home Affairs and
Another
[5]
,
a section 29 (1)(f) decision was also categorized as administrative
action. At para 22 (iii) it was said:
“
The
respondents’ failure to provide adequate notice of the
envisaged administrative action to Ndlovu is not explained anywhere
in the respondents’ answering affidavit. The respondents’
conduct was procedurally unfair, unlawful and falls to be
set aside
on this basis alone.”
[34] Further
support for a Section 29 (1)(f) decision being administrative action
can be found in Section
7 (1)(f) of the Act which empowers the
Minister to make regulations relating
inter alia
to the
conducting of an enquiry of persons suspected of being prohibited
persons.
[35] In
support of the contention that a section 29 (1) (f)
decision is not administrative action,
but applies
ex
lege
and
operates automatically, Mr Titus for the Respondents relied on
Minister
of Defence and Military Veterans v Maswanganyi
[6]
.
There it was held
[7]
that
section 59(1)
(d) of the
Defence Act 42 of 2002
, which provides that
the service of a member of the Regular Force is terminated if he is
sentenced to a term of imprisonment by
a competent civilian court
without the option of a fine, operates as a matter of law and no
further decision was required to effect
the termination.
Maswanganyi
is
clearly distinguishable.
Section 59(1)
(d) of the
Defence Act only
comes into effect pursuant to a hearing before a court in a trial. Mr
Mawanganyi was discharged from service after he had a full
trial
during which he was convicted for rape and sentenced after reasoned
findings by a court.
Section 59
(1) (d) of the
Defence Act, is
thus
clearly distinguishable from
Section 29
(1) (f) of the
Immigration
Act. If
anything, section Section 59 (1) (d) of the former Act, in
providing for termination only after a fair hearing, favours the
Applicants’
stance.
[36] It
remains to be said that the initial decisions are imbued with the
seven elements of an administration
act identified in Motau
supra.
They were decisions of an administrative nature by persons
employed in a state department, exercising a public power in terms of
Section 29
(1) (f) of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
, that adversely
affected rights, decisions which had a direct external legal effect
and were not shown to fall under any exclusions.
[37] Thus,
and in view of all of the above the question whether the initial
decisions of officials within
the Department under Section 29 (1) (f)
of the Act declaring the Applicants to be prohibited persons,
constitute administrative
actions under PAJA, must be decided in the
affirmative.
[38] In
terms of Sections 3(2) and 5 (1) of PAJA, administrative actions must
be procedurally fair. A person
affected by any administrative action
is entitled to adequate notice of the nature and purpose of the
proposed action, a reasonable
opportunity to make representations, a
clear statement of the action, adequate notice of any right of review
or internal appeal,
as well as adequate notice of the right to
request reasons, and reasons in terms of Section 5.
[8]
In other words, such person in entitled to a right to be heard. The
grounds upon which the Applicants allege the decisions are
defective
and warrant being set aside under review appear below and must be
considered against this standard.
Absence of notice of
the decision and fair hearing
[39] The
importance of the
audi
principle has been emphasized by our
courts in a number of cases. In
Zondi v MEC for Traditional and
Local Government Affairs and others
2005 (3) SA 589
(CC)
it was
stated:
“
It
is a fundamental element of fairness that adverse decisions should
not be made without affording the person to be affected by
the
decision a reasonable opportunity to make representations.”
I agree with the
Applicants that by not receiving notice or not being afforded
an opportunity to make representations
before the decision, the
process by which the Applicants were declared prohibited persons was
unfair and unlawful, being contrary
to PAJA.
[40] Disquietingly,
there does not even appear to be a prescribed notice in terms of
Section 29 (1) (f) notifying
persons that they have been declared
prohibited, or of their appeal rights under section 8 of the Act. The
Applicants certainly
did not get such.
Absence
of reasons for initial decision
[41] The
initial decision was not accompanied by reasons. It is a
well-established requirement that adequate
reasons must be given for
administrative decisions. In
Koyabe
supra
the
Court said
[9]
:
“
Providing
people whose rights have been adversely affected by administrative
decisions with reasons, will often be important in
providing
fairness, accountability and transparency. In the context of a
contemporary democratic public service like ours, where
the
principles of batho pele, coupled with the values of Ubuntu, enjoin
the public service to treat people with respect and dignity
and avoid
undue confrontation, the Constitution indeed entitles the applicants
to reasons for the decision declaring them illegal
foreigners.”
Assumption in initial
decision that Applicants were complicit in fraud
[42] A
further defect in the initial decision is that it assumed that the
Applicants were complicit in obtaining
fraudulent documents without
more. In
Najjemba
supra
it
was held that it could never have been the intention of the
legislature that section 29(1)(f) should apply to persons who are
innocent of wrongdoing. This section, it was said, cannot apply
to an innocent party who has been found in possession of
a fraudulent
visa or to a person who was unaware and not complicit in obtaining
such a visa. The court held that it was incumbent
for both the
Director-General and the Minister to determine whether the Applicant
was complicit in the acquisition of the fraudulent
work visa.
[10]
This is apposite in the instant case.
[43] I
agree with the Applicants that there is a lack of evidence of the
Applicants’ complicity in
or knowledge of any fraudulent
activity. The fact that they paid agents to obtain their visas or
that the First Applicant may have
fallen prey to agents before, does
not in my view, suffice. Nor did the Department gather any such
evidence and erred in my view
in not so doing.
[44] Mr
Simonz referred me to
Goldberg
v Director of Public Prosecutions: Western Cape
[11]
where
Rogers J, as he then was, usefully gave consideration to the phrase
‘’found in possession’. After stating
that
possession comprises a physical element of control together with a
mental element, he went on to say
[12]
:
“
A
person cannot possess unwittingly, ie without the necessary mental
element; but if it is shown that he possessed with the necessary
mental element, it may yet appear that he did not have the necessary
mens rea (which depending on the form of mens rea required
by the
statute), might require the state to prove that the accused knew that
his possession of the item was unlawful or that he
should reasonably
have been aware thereof.”
[45] The
analysis in Goldberg, as Mr Simonz, submitted, illustrates that the
meaning of “found in possession”,
be it of a fraudulent
document as in this case, or of ivory, as in
Goldberg
supra is
no simple matter. The Applicants’ state of mind as alleged by
them, that they possessed the documents in good faith,
was relevant
and bore investigation, which did not occur prior to the initial
decisions.
Absence of
investigation
[46] As
is also contended by the Applicants the initial decisions were made
without a fair, proper or rational
investigation into how the
allegedly fraudulent documents came to be issued and who is at fault.
There is no evidence of an investigation
into the First Applicant’s
undisputed participation in a police operation in the DRC in which
the agent responsible for her
fraudulent visas was arrested. In
support of her version the First Applicant has provided receipts for
her visa application, emails
to the Consulate and affidavits filed
with the police in Lubumbashi. It is alleged by the Applicants that
even when Department
officials contacted the Consulate in 2023 to
obtain evidence for their further explanatory affidavits, they simply
did not enquire
about these events.
[47] These
facts, contend the Applicants would strongly support her claims of
innocence and may even demonstrate
that her 2019 visa was not
fraudulent and was in fact issued to her by the Consulate.
[48] With
regard to the Second Applicant, it is contended that he has provided
whatever evidence he was able
to about Mr Nzakomba, the agent he
utilized. The Department claims that because the Second Applicant did
not provide the passport
number of Mr Nzakomba, it could do nothing.
The Applicants retort that it is not explained why the Department in
its further explanatory
affidavits could not obtain Mr Nzakomba’s
passport details from its own records.
[49] In
AK
and others v Minister of Home Affairs and others
[13]
in
similar circumstances, a Russian citizen was found in possession of a
fraudulent visa and was declared to be prohibited. She
successfully
challenged her prohibition, blaming an agent named “Aksu”
for obtaining a fraudulent document without
her knowledge. In
upholding her challenge this court stated appositely:
“
Apart
from harbouring a suspicion that the first applicant may have been
complicit in Aksu’s fraudulent conduct, no evidence
has been
presented by the DG to controvert or gainsay the first applicant’s
testimony. A mere suspicion, however, even if
genuinely held, cannot
be elevated to a finding of fact without more.”
[14]
“
The
question that really needs to be asked is why the Department did not
pursue Aksu or investigate the circumstances in which she
managed to
obtain the visa. The Applicant provided all the evidence at her
disposal relating to her interactions with Aksu. It
is difficult to
ascertain what more she could, or should have done.”
[15]
[50] I
agree with the Applicants that similar logic applies here and that a
decision which bans the Applicants
from a country in which they have
built their lives for over a decade, cannot be made without a
proper investigation. As
the Applicants contend, prohibition is a
devastatingly punitive sanction. A prohibited person is rendered
unemployable
[16]
, cannot be
harboured
[17]
and cannot
remain in South Africa. For such a punishment to be imposed contrary
to the PAJA yardstick is patently unjust and unfair.
[51] Disquietingly,
an explanatory affidavit of Mr Martins Masilela, an immigration
officer in the Department
involved in the first decision, asserts
incorrectly that the Second Applicant’s permanent residence
permit was issued in
terms of the Aliens Control Act 96 of 1991 and
hence must be fraudulent. This is incorrect. It is apparent
from this visa
which forms part of the papers that it was issued
under the
Immigration Act. He
asserts further that the Second
Applicant had been the holder of three study visas. This too is
incorrect. The previous study
visas, also part of the papers were
five in number.
[52] The
Respondents contend that because affected persons have rights to
appeal in terms of
section 29(2)
they need no administrative rights
under
section 29(1)(f)
. This is no answer. As was aptly said in
Democratic
Alliance v Minister of Home Affairs and Another
[18]
,
“No unjust exercise of public power can be condoned merely
because one can appeal against It
.”,
and in
Helen
Suzman Foundation and Another v Minister of Home Affairs
[19]
,
“
fair
notice and a lawful hearing should occur before a decision is taken,
not afterwards.
”
[53] In
view of all of the above, the initial decisions against both
Applicants were administrative actions
as defined in PAJA which
simply did not pass muster when held up to the standards prescribed
at
sections 3(2)
and (5) of PAJA,referred to above. The Applicants
were given neither adequate notice of the decision or the right to
appeal, were
not afforded an opportunity to make representations nor
were they given adequate reasons. The initial decisions thus fall to
be
reviewed and set aside. Flowing therefore it would follow that the
appeal decisions of the DG and Minister, which are based upon
the
initial decisions also fall to be set aside. It is therefore not
necessary for me to consider those decisions further.
[54] Mr
Simonz correctly contended that once the impugned decisions are set
aside, it would follow as a matter
of logic and law that the
Applicants are not prohibited persons. A declaratory order
which states in clear and simple terms
that the Applicants are not
prohibited persons, he submitted would assist the Applicants in their
applications to the Department
for future visas and /or permits.
Absent such a declaration the officials considering those
applications may well be unsure
of the Applicants’ status to
their prejudice. It would seem to me in the circumstances that a
declaratory order is required.
[55] As
the Applicants have succeeded in this application they are entitled
to an order that the Respondents
pay the costs of this litigation,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
[56] I
order as follows:
1.
The
decision of unknown officials in the employ of the Respondents to
determine the First Applicant to be prohibited in terms
of
section 29(1)(f) of the Immigration Act 13 of 2002 (“the
Act”) is reviewed and set aside;
2.
The
decision of unknown officials in the employ of the Respondents to
determine the Second Applicant to be a prohibited person in
terms of
section 29(1)(f) of the Act, is reviewed and set aside;
3.
The
Second Respondent’s decision received on 4 January 2021 to
reject the First Applicant’s application in terms of
section
29(2) of the Act, is reviewed and set aside.
4.
The
Second Respondent’s decision received on 1 September 2021 to
reject the Second Applicant’s application in terms
of section
29(2) of the Act is reviewed and set aside.
5.
The
First Respondent’s decision received on 29 April 2021 to reject
the First Applicant’s appeal in terms of section
8(6) of the
Act read with section 29(2) of the Act is reviewed and set aside.
6.
The
Frist Respondent’s decision received on 14 December 2021 to
reject the Second Applicant’s appeal in terms of section
8(6)
of the Act read with section 29(2) of the Act is reviewed and set
aside;
7.
The
First Applicant’s late filing of her judicial review
application in terms of section 9 of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PJA”) is condoned.
8.
It is declared that the First Applicant is not a
prohibited person in terms of section 29(1)(f) of the Act;
9.
It
is declared that the Second Applicant is not a prohibited person in
terms of section 29(1)(f) of the Act.
10.
The costs of this application shall be paid by the
Respondents, jointly and severally, the one paying to other to be
absolved.
MEER, J
Appearances:
Applicant’s
Counsel: D Simonz
Instructed by: Boshoff
Attorneys
Respondent’s
Counsel: M Titus
Instructed by: State
Attorney
[1]
2014
[5] SA69 CC.
[2]
Para
33.
[3]
2010(4)
SA 327 CC
[4]
[2022]
ZAWCHC 199
(13 October 2022) at para 23.
[5]
[2023]
ZAGPPHC 2280 (11 July 2023).
[6]
2019
(5) SA94 (SCA).
[7]
At
para 13.
[8]
[8]
Section 3 (2) (b) (i)to(v); Section 5 (1).
[9]
At
para 62. See also
Phambili
Fisheries (Pty) Ltd; Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism
and others
v
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd
2003 (6) SA 407
(SCA)
at
para 40,
Director-General,
Department of Home Affairs and Others v Link and Others
2020 (2) SA
192
(WCC)
at
para 29.
[10]
Najjemba
at para 27.
[11]
2014
(2) SACR 57 (WCC).
[12]
At
para 72.
[13]
2023
(3) SA 538
(WCC)
[14]
para
27.
[15]
Para
28.
[16]
Section
38 of the Act.
[17]
Section
42 (1) (vii)of the Act.
[18]
[2023]
ZASCA 97
(13 June 2023) at para 26.
[19]
[2023]
ZAGPPHC 490 (28 June 2023) at para 79-84.
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