Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 155South Africa
Britton v Minister of Justice & Correctional Services and Others (1349/18) [2023] ZAWCHC 155 (21 February 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Britton v Minister of Justice & Correctional Services and Others (1349/18) [2023] ZAWCHC 155 (21 February 2023)
Britton v Minister of Justice & Correctional Services and Others (1349/18) [2023] ZAWCHC 155 (21 February 2023)
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sino date 21 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
[WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN]
Case no: 1349/18
In the matter between:
JOYCE
SEABERRY BRITTON
Applicant
And
THE
MINISTER OF JUSTICE &
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
First
R
espondent
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
WESTERN
CAPE
Second
R
espondent
THE
MAGISTRATE, PRETORIA
Third
R
espondent
THE
ADDITIONAL MAGISTRATE, CAPE TOWN
Fourth
R
espondent
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
(VIA EMAIL) ON 21 FEBRUARY 2023
SHER, J:
1.
This
is an application in terms of which the applicant seeks an order
declaring s 5(1) of the Extradition Act
[1]
(‘the EA’), and a notification which was issued by the
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and a warrant
for her
arrest which was issued by the magistrate of Cape Town, in terms of s
5(1)(a) thereof, to be inconsistent with the Constitution
and
invalid.
2.
The applicant is a citizen of the United States of
America and has been living in Cape Town since or about 2002. She is
wanted for
trial in two separate cases in the State of Illinois, on
charges of theft, tax evasion and a failure to file tax returns
between
2000 and 2003.
3.
Her extradition is sought in terms of the
extradition treaty which was concluded between the USA and SA in
1999, which came into
force on 25 June 2001.
The facts
4.
The applicant was formerly an attorney in Chicago,
Illinois, who was contracted to provide legal services in adoption
matters involving
children who were wards of the State. In 2005 she
was disbarred by the Supreme Court of Illinois.
5.
The applicant is alleged to have fraudulently
billed the State of Illinois, over several years, for services that
were supposedly
rendered by her in an amount of approximately USD 4
million, on which she failed to pay income tax and failed to submit
income
tax returns in which she disclosed such earnings.
6.
In March 2005 an indictment was filed in the
Circuit Court of Cook County, Chicago whereby the applicant was
charged with 8 statutory,
state offences, including theft ‘by
deception’ and theft by ‘unauthorised control over
property’, and a
failure to file income tax returns. Based on
these charges the Circuit Court issued a warrant for her arrest in
April 2005.
7.
In January 2006 a further indictment was filed
against her in the District Court for the Northern District of
Illinois, in terms
of which she was charged with 6 statutory, federal
offences, involving attempts to evade or ‘defeat’ the
payment of
taxes and a failure to file tax returns, in respect of
which a warrant of arrest was similarly issued.
8.
According to the US authorities both warrants
remain valid and executable and the applicable US statutes of
limitations do not bar
the prosecution of the applicant on the
offences for which she has been charged.
In this regard, in
affidavits which were filed by Assistant State Attorneys of both
Courts, it was pointed out that in terms of
US law the applicant’s
prosecution for the offences referred to commenced with the filing of
the indictments against her
by grand juries in the two Courts; and
under US law once an indictment has been filed the periods provided
for in the federal and
local statutes of limitations, for the
prescription of such offences, no longer run.
9.
In terms of the extradition treaty the offences with which the
applicant
has been charged are extraditable offences in terms of the
law of the USA. Although in her founding affidavit the appellant
contended
that that they were not offences in terms of our law,
during argument this was conceded. Whilst in our law we do not have
specific
offences of theft ‘by deception’ or by
‘unauthorized control over property’, we do have a common
law offence
of theft which is wide enough to cover such terms, and we
have similar statutory offences in relation to a failure to render
tax
returns and the evasion of tax. Thus, the principle of ‘double
criminality’ in terms of the law of both States, as required
in
terms of article 4 of the extradition treaty, is satisfied.
10.
The request for the extradition of the applicant was launched via
a
diplomatic note
verbale
which was presented by the diplomatic
mission of the USA to the Department of International Relations and
Co-operation, in Pretoria,
in February 2017. This was followed by the
transmission of several documents in support thereof, including
affidavits by Maureen
Merrin an assistant US State attorney for the
Northern District of Illinois and James Lynch an assistant State
Attorney for Cook
County, as well as an affidavit by Vince Zehme, a
special agent in the employ of the Inland Revenue Service of the US
Department
of Treasury, and copies of the Illinois indictments and
warrants of arrest.
11.
In their affidavits both Merrin and Lynch declared that the
documentation
which was submitted constituted sufficient evidence to
support the request for extradition, and in his affidavit, Lynch
indicated
that the State would prove its case against the applicant
via ‘billing documents’ submitted by her, ‘checks’
(sic) by means of which she had been paid, and financial records and
‘testimonial’ evidence. Both Merrin and Lynch
also
submitted certificates for the purposes of s 10(2) of the EA, in
which they certified that the evidence which was summarized
or
contained in the extradition documents was available for trial and
was sufficient under the laws of the USA to justify the applicant’s
prosecution.
12.
On 20 June 2017 the Minister of Justice issued a notification in
terms of s 5(1)(a) of the EA in which he stated that he had received
a request from the USA for the extradition of the applicant
to stand
trial in the Courts of Illinois on the various charges referred to in
the indictments.
13.
According to Mr H van Heerden, a principal State law adviser in the
Chief Directorate: International Legal Relations of the Department of
Justice and Constitutional Development, who deposed to an
answering
affidavit on behalf of the respondents, in issuing the notification
the Minister had regard for the documents which had
been forwarded to
his office, as outlined above. This was confirmed by the Minister in
his affidavit.
14.
On the same day that the Minister’s notification was issued
the
National Director of Public Prosecutions was informed thereof,
pursuant to which steps were taken to obtain a warrant for the
arrest
of the applicant from the magistrate of Pretoria, as provided for in
terms of s 5 of the EA. The warrant was issued on 18
July 2017.
15.
It is common cause that notwithstanding that the wording of the
warrant is consistent with the empowering provisions of both s
5(1)(a) as well as 5(1)(b), it was issued in terms of the former.
At
the time s 5(1)(a) provided that, upon receipt of a notification from
the Minister stating that a request for the surrender
of a person to
a foreign state had been received, a magistrate could (‘may’)
issue a warrant for their arrest.
16.
During
October 2017 the applicant was contacted by the police officer who
had applied for the warrant, who informed her of the issue
thereof.
On 10 October 2017 her attorneys advised him that extradition
proceedings in respect of the selfsame charges on which
the applicant
was being sought had previously been instituted against her and had
been set aside by order of this Court
[2]
on 18 August 2009, on the grounds that the proceedings were unlawful
and/or unconstitutional. The applicant alleges that the terms
of the
order covered both the issue of an earlier notification by the
Minister and the warrant for her arrest by the magistrate
of Cape
Town pursuant thereto, as well as the extradition enquiry which was
pending before the magistrate.
17.
In this
regard, it appears from the founding affidavit that the reason why
the order setting aside the earlier extradition proceedings
was
granted in 2009 was that, whereas in the ministerial notification
which had been issued the Minister had declared that
he had
received a request for the extradition of the applicant this was not
the case, as the diplomatic note
verbale
from the USA embassy and the supporting documents had in fact only
requested the assistance of the SA state in securing the provisional
arrest of the applicant,
[3]
as a
precursor to and pending a request for her extradition, and had not
contained a formal request for her extradition as required
in terms
of s 4 of the EA.
18.
In their letter to the police the applicant’s attorneys further
advised that in August 2009 she had informed both Interpol and the
office of the DPP that she would ‘avail’ herself
to the
authorities in the event of a further request for her extradition
being received. As such, the applicant remained willing
and able to
report to the police for the purposes of appearing in court for an
extradition enquiry, and to apply for bail.
19.
Pursuant to the letter, arrangements were duly made for the applicant
to attend the Cape Town Magistrate’s Court on 12 October 2017,
where she was formally arrested in terms of the warrant and
appeared
before the magistrate, who made an order, by agreement between the
parties, whereby the applicant was released on bail
of R 50 000. As
part of her bail conditions the applicant was required to report to a
police station once a week and not to leave
the area of the Western
Cape without prior consent and was required to surrender her
passport.
20.
On 13 October 2017 the applicant’s attorneys were provided
with
copies of the diplomatic note dated 27 February 2017 and the
notification by the Minister dated 20 June 2017, together with
the
bundle of affidavits and certificates which had been lodged by the US
authorities in support of their request for her extradition.
Further
documents were provided in November 2017.
The
challenges to the request for extradition
21.
In her founding affidavit the applicant launched several challenges
to the request for her extradition and the process which had ensued
pursuant thereto.
22.
In the
first instance she claimed that her arrest on the basis of the
warrant which was issued in terms of s 5(1)(a) was unconstitutional,
as it violated her constitutional right not to be deprived of freedom
arbitrarily, or without just cause.
[4]
In this regard the applicant submitted that the subsection
effectively compelled the magistrate to issue a warrant once he/she
had received a notification from the Minister in terms thereof. The
applicant contended that the wording of the subsection was
such that,
by issuing such a notification the Minister effectively instructed
the magistrate to issue a warrant for her arrest,
thereby violating
her right to liberty, as the provision did not afford the magistrate
an independent discretion to consider the
circumstances and to decide
whether the arrest was justified. Thus, the applicant contended, the
provision violated the separation
of powers. Consequently, the
applicant submitted that her arrest was unlawful and should be set
aside.
23.
In the second place, the applicant sought to challenge the validity
of the ministerial notification itself. In this regard she contended
that before issuing a notification in terms of s 5(1)(a),
which would
form the basis for actioning a warrant for her arrest and the
start of extradition proceedings, the Minister
was required to
consider not only whether the formalities required by the extradition
treaty and the EA had been complied with,
but was also required to
take into account ‘all other relevant info’ (sic).
24.
In this regard the applicant complained that it had seemingly not
been brought to the Minister’s attention that a previous
request for her extradition, which had failed, had been made some
11
years earlier, in 2006, and no explanation had been tendered by the
US authorities for the lengthy delay in launching the second
request
for her extradition in 2017. The applicant pointed out that the
documents which had been submitted by the USA in the previous
request
for her extradition during 2006-2008, had not been included in the
documents which were provided to the Minister in 2017.
25.
In the circumstances, in the absence of any information pertaining
to
the previous extradition proceedings having been before him, the
Minister could not have properly applied his mind to the request
for
her extradition in 2017. Therefore, inasmuch as the notification from
the Minister was defective, based as it was on information
that was
materially incomplete, the magistrate equally was not possessed of
the necessary information on which to decide whether
to issue the
warrant for her arrest, and his decision was liable to be set aside
for the same reason.
26.
The applicant submitted further that the notification was in any
event invalid because the legislative basis for it was housed in s
5(1)(a), the provision which empowered the issuing of the warrant,
which had been declared unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court.
Finally, the applicant submitted that the delay was so unreasonable
that this in itself rendered the extradition proceedings
unconstitutional.
The
decision in
Smit
27.
On 18
December 2020 the Constitutional Court held in
Smit
[5]
(contrary to the decision of this division a year earlier
[6]
),
that s 5(1)(a) was inconsistent with the Constitution and invalid.
28.
Madlanga J
for the majority pointed out that the constitutional right not to be
deprived of freedom arbitrarily or without just
cause
[7]
has both a substantive as well as a procedural element to it. The
substantive element requires that there be valid grounds for
the
deprivation of an extraditee’s liberty, thereby ensuring that
it does not occur without satisfactory or adequate reasons.
[8]
29.
The learned
judge was of the view that the provision satisfied the substantive
element, as there were adequate reasons for it, as
it gave effect to
the need to arrest persons who were wanted for extradition to foreign
states in fulfilment of SA’s international
obligations, thereby
complying with the requirements of reciprocity and comity.
[9]
30.
However, as
far as the procedural element was concerned, Madlanga J was of the
view that the provision fell short of what was required,
unlike s
5(1)(b), which in its formulation afforded the magistrate a
discretion in considering whether to issue a warrant after
duly
weighing-up the relevant factors which were set out therein, to wit
whether there were reasonable grounds to suspect that
the extraditee
had committed extraditable offences, or had been convicted thereof by
a competent court, in a foreign state.
[10]
In contrast to this, s 5(1)(a) did not provide for such an
exercise, and the magistrate was simply required to act
on the say-so
of the Minister and effectively had no discretion once a notification
in terms of s 5(1)(a) had been issued by the
Minister.
[11]
Thus, the provision made it impossible for the magistrate to act as
an independent arbiter and to exercise the kind of judicial
oversight necessary to ensure that there had been compliance
with the procedural safeguards required in terms of s 12(1)(a)
of the
Constitution.
[12]
In the
circumstances, the majority held that the subsection limited the
constitutional right not to be deprived of freedom arbitrarily
and
without just cause and was unconstitutional, and violated the
separation of powers.
[13]
31.
In the order which it made the Constitutional Court accordingly
declared that s 5(1)(a) was inconsistent with the Constitution and
invalid, and it directed that the declaration was to take effect
from
the date the order was made i.e. was to have prospective effect.
32.
It is trite
that ordinarily, as a default position,
[14]
a simple declaration of constitutional invalidity of a legislative
provision has retrospective effect, as the Court declares what
the
position is, objectively.
[15]
Thus, from the moment of the issue of the declaration
[16]
the provision will be invalid, retrospectively, either to 4 February
1997 (being the date when the (final) Constitution, 1996 came
into
effect), if the provision existed at that date, or to the date when
it came into effect, if it was enacted after the date
when the
Constitution came into operation. The default position can however be
departed from by the Court which issues the declaration
of
constitutional invalidity, in the exercise of its power to make an
order that is just and equitable, in terms of s 172(1)(b)
of the
Constitution.
[17]
33.
Notwithstanding the directive by the Constitutional Court in
Smit
that the declaration of constitutional invalidity was to take effect
from the date of the order, the applicant contended that this
Court
was not barred from ruling that the notification which had been
issued by the Minister in her case, and the warrant of arrest
which
had been issued pursuant thereto, were unconstitutional.
34.
In this regard, the applicant’s counsel contended that justice
and equity demanded that the Court should make such an order, for a
gross injustice would otherwise be done to the applicant. Applicant’s
counsel pointed out that the applicant had effectively sought an
order on the very same basis as that which had been sought in
Smit
and would have obtained it, had the decision in Smit not been handed
down before the decision in this matter. The applicant contended
that, having had her constitutional right not to be deprived of
freedom arbitrarily and without just cause violated, it would be
constitutionally impermissible to allow her arrest and the
ministerial notification on which it was based to stand,
notwithstanding
the prospectivity of the directive made in para 10 of
the order in
Smit
. Consequently, the applicant submitted
that this Court was at liberty either to vary the order which was
made in
Smit
, or to make an order in this matter which would
have retrospective effect.
35.
In debating this aspect with counsel for the applicant I raised the
issue of what the effect of such an order would be, assuming I had
the power to make it, on extradition matters which had previously
been finalized and on those which might still be pending.
36.
I queried whether this would not have been one of the primary
considerations
in the mind of Madlanga J, when he arrived at the
decision to make the order of constitutional invalidity prospective
in effect.
37.
The applicant contended, in response, that the terms of any order
which I made could be limited as far as retrospectivity was
concerned, to her case only, thereby avoiding any risk of disruption
to any other, finalized and pending, matters.
38.
As these aspects had not been properly raised and dealt with in the
heads of argument which had been filed, or during argument, I called
for supplementary submissions to be filed on 1) the law pertaining
to
the retrospectivity/prospectivity of declarations of constitutional
invalidity, with reference to applicable case law in comparable
jurisdictions pertaining to extradition matters and 2) whether this
Court was empowered to make an order in relation to and/or
limiting
or varying the declaration of constitutional invalidity which had
previously been made by the Constitutional Court in
Smit
, and
if so, whether it was empowered to do so in respect only of finalized
extradition matters or in respect of those which may
still be
pending.
39.
Considering the impact which such an order might have on extradition
matters that had been finalized or those that were pending, in
addition I called for submissions to be made as to whether the
respondents could be called upon to place evidence before the Court
as to the circumstances pertaining to matters that were pending
at
the time, in particular whether the persons who were sought to be
extradited were in custody or on bail and the dates of their
arrests,
and whether the arrests had occurred in terms of s 5(1)(a) or
(b).
40.
In their
supplementary submissions the parties were agreed that the Court was
empowered to call for such evidence,
[18]
as we were dealing with a constitutional matter, and they were
further agreed that it would be necessary or at least advisable
to
obtain such information, with a view to making an appropriate order
that would not impact beyond what was required or necessary.
41.
Pursuant to the receipt of the supplementary submissions I
accordingly
called for such evidence to be provided before a set
date. The respondents failed to comply with the direction and
requested an
extension in order to do so, which was granted. However,
the respondents again failed to provide the information which was
sought
by the extended date and did not report back to the Court.
42.
Unfortunately, due to administrative inefficiencies this was not
noted and acted upon, and the respondents were only put to terms a
considerable period of time after they had failed to comply
with the
extension.
43.
In November 2022 the respondents’ attorneys filed an affidavit
in which they explained that the request to provide the additional
information which was sought by the Court had been forwarded
to the
Chief Directorate of the International Legal Relations section of the
Department of Justice and Correctional Services and
had elicited a
response which was inadequate. From the affidavit it appears that
various follow-up requests were made in January,
February, March and
September 2022, which also did not elicit the necessary co-operation
and the information required. Attempts
by the office of the DPP to
obtain some of the information from the SAPS were also unsuccessful.
Although the respondent’s
attorneys received further
documentation in October 2022, it also fell short of what was sought.
Consequently, in November 2022
the respondents’ attorneys
indicated that they had been unable to obtain the information sought,
and they requested that
the application be determined on the basis of
the existing evidence which was before the Court.
44.
An opportunity was given to the applicant to respond to this, and
both parties were afforded an opportunity to place further
submissions before the Court as to any developments in the case law
subsequent to the hearing of the matter, if they so wished. Neither
party chose to do so.
An
assessment
45.
In
Cross-Border
Road Transport Agency
[19]
the Constitutional Court reiterated that court orders must be
interpreted on the basis of their terms and their context, within
the
judgment in which they occur, as a whole.
46.
As the
applicant points out, it is so that in making its declaration of
constitutional invalidity in
Smit
prospective, the Constitutional Court did not set out its rationale
or justification therefore, contrary to the declaration of
constitutional invalidity it made in regard to s 63 of the Drugs and
Drug Trafficking Act (‘the Drugs Act’),
[20]
and the amendments to schedules 1 and 2 thereof.
47.
In this respect Tshiqi J (for the minority) pointed out that, given
that the purpose of the Drugs Act was to protect the welfare of the
public and to prevent the use, possession of, and dealing in
dependence-producing substances, declaring s 63 to be
unconstitutional and invalid with retrospective effect would result
in the setting aside of all previous amendments to the Drugs Act,
which would be inimical to the public interest and the interests
of
‘proper administration’, and prosecutions for
contraventions of the Drugs Act which had been concluded, and would
result in a disruption in the (pending) prosecution of suspected
offenders.
48.
In his judgment for the majority Madlanga J agreed that s 63 (and
the
amendments to schedules 1 and 2 of the Drugs Act) were inconsistent
with the Constitution and that the declaration of constitutional
invalidity in respect thereof should be prospective. However, in
holding, for the reasons previously set out above, that the
provisions
of s 5(1)(a) were also inconsistent with the Constitution,
he did not expressly deal with the question of retrospectivity and
made
no comment as to why he proposed an order in similar terms viz.
one whereby the declaration of constitutional invalidity was to
be
prospective.
49.
The fact
that the learned judge failed to comment in this regard, or to
expressly set out his rationale for making an order which
was
prospective in effect, as opposed to one which was retrospective, in
accordance with the default position, does not mean that
this aspect
was not considered. As was pointed out in
Cross-Border
,
[21]
judges must be taken to be ‘well-apprised’ of the
consequences of a declaration of constitutional invalidity, and their
‘silence’ when making such a declaration must not readily
be understood to mean that there was ‘judicial inadvertence’
on their part.
50.
In my view, considering the context of the minority and majority
judgments in
Smit
as a whole, one must conclude that the
selfsame considerations as those which motivated the minority against
the default position
being implemented in respect of the declaration
of constitutional invalidity pertaining to s 63 of the Drugs Act,
must have motivated
the determination in paragraph 10 of the order of
the majority, that the declaration of constitutional invalidity in
respect of
s 5(1)(a) of the EA was also to be prospective.
51.
In this regard, making a default order which was retrospective would
have nullified all extradition proceedings and orders for extradition
which had been previously made, since the time when the Constitution
came into operation i.e since 1997, and would have invalidated all
pending extradition proceedings where extraditees had been arrested
in terms of s 5(1)(a), which had not been finalized as at the date of
the decision. This would obviously have caused immeasurable
chaos and
disruption in international relations between SA and partner states
with whom it had entered into extradition treaties
and would have
damaged its international standing and reputation. It would, at least
in regard to pending extraditions, have resulted
in convicted foreign
criminals and fugitives being rendered non-extraditable, resulting in
a wholesale failure of justice.
52.
In the circumstances, in my view there is no room to argue that there
was a failure on the part of the Constitutional Court to address this
issue, or that the order which it made was deficient in some
way, or
that it is an order which allows for this Court to make a declaration
which is at odds with it. In my view this Court does
not have the
power to make an order of constitutional invalidity which varies or
goes beyond, or behind, the order which the Constitutional
Court made
in
Smit
.
53.
In their
supplementary submissions the applicant’s counsel pointed out
that in
Mhlope
[22]
the Constitutional Court held that s 172(1)(b) of the Constitution
gave the Court powers in constitutional matters that were so
extensive ‘that they ought to be able to craft an appropriate
or just remedy even for exceptional, complex or apparently
irresoluble situations’ and ‘whatever considerations of
justice and equity point to as the appropriate solution to
a
particular problem, may justifiably be used to remedy’ it. They
also referred to the dictum in
Economic
Freedom
Fighters
[23]
that the power to grant an order in a constitutional matter that is
just and equitable is so ‘wide and flexible’ that
it
allows a Court to formulate relief that does not follow that sought
in the notice of motion, in order to address the dispute
before it.
In my view neither of these dictums allow for this Court to make an
order of constitutional invalidity which would be
retrospective in
effect, albeit one limited to this matter, contrary to the order
which was made in
Smit
.
54.
Furthermore, even if by some stretch of legal ingenuity or
imagination
the court had such a power, in my view it does not find
application in the circumstances of this matter. In this regard, the
applicant’s
submissions are premised on the contention that the
continued restrictions to her freedom of movement and her liberty
occurred
pursuant to, and as a result of, her wrongful and
unconstitutional arrest in terms of s 5(1)(a), to which she is still
subject.
I have several difficulties with these contentions.
55.
In the first place, in my view the restrictions on the applicant’s
liberty and freedom of movement which are currently in place are not
because she is still ‘under arrest’ as she contends,
but
because of the bail conditions which were set by the court with her
consent and agreement, when she was released. Although
her arrest
occurred in terms of a warrant which was issued in terms of s
5(1)(a), it endured only for the short, momentary period
until she
appeared before the magistrate and was released on bail, on the same
day, in terms of conditions to which she bound herself
voluntarily,
which set restrictions on her freedom of movement. But, from the
moment the bail order was granted she was no longer
‘under
arrest’ and her contentions in this regard are artificial and
contrived. In the event that she were to default
on any of the bail
conditions which were set she would not be capable of being arrested
on the original warrant, which lost its
legal force after it was
executed and discharged by the order of the magistrate when releasing
her on bail. As in the case of an
ordinary accused who breaches their
bail conditions, to arrest the applicant and to detain her in custody
the police would have
to be authorized to do so in terms of a fresh,
so-called ‘bench’ warrant which is issued by the
magistrate, on application.
56.
In my view, the net result of all of this is that the magistrate’s
decision to issue the warrant, and the arrest of the applicant
pursuant thereto, are matters which are beyond the remit of this
court’s powers, and orders declaring them to have been
retrospectively inconsistent with the constitution are not competent.
57.
Similarly, an order declaring that s
5(1)
of the EA as a whole
is inconsistent with the Constitution and invalid, as prayed for in
the notice of motion, also cannot be granted.
In this regard,
inasmuch as it is common cause that the applicant was arrested in
terms of a warrant which was issued in terms
of subsection 5(1)(a)
she has no cause or standing to challenge s 5(1)(b), and from a
reading of her founding affidavit it is apparent
that she in fact did
not purport to do so. In addition, as the Constitutional Court
already made an order on 18 December 2020 declaring
s 5(1)(a) to be
unconstitutional it is in any event not possible, let alone
necessary, for this Court to do so again.
58.
That leaves the prayer for an order declaring the notification by
the
Minister to be unconstitutional and invalid. In my view, the relief
which is sought in this regard is similarly not competent.
59.
Other than a reference to the Minister’s notification being
‘to
the effect’ that a request for the surrender of a person has
been received from a foreign state, the content and
form which it was
to take was not prescribed by s 5(1)(a), nor is it dealt with in s 4,
which deals with the formal requirements
for an extradition request.
It too does not prescribe any requirements for it, other than that it
is to be made to the Minister
via diplomatic channels, subject to the
terms of any extradition agreement which may be applicable. Thus, to
determine what the
requirements of such a notification might entail
one is required to go to the extradition treaty, which in article 9
thereof sets
out the agreed formalities and procedures which are to
be followed.
60.
In this
regard, article 9 provides that a request for extradition by the USA
must be made in writing and must be submitted via diplomatic
channels,
[24]
and must be
supported by a copy of the indictment/chargesheet
[25]
and the warrant of arrest which was issued by a judge or competent
authority,
[26]
together with
the relevant information pertaining to the ‘facts of the
offences’ and the ‘procedural history
of the case’,
and a ‘statement or text’ of the relevant law pertaining
to the offences for which extradition
is sought and the punishment
which can be imposed for them.
[27]
In addition, a ‘statement or text’ of the law
relating to the lapse of time must be provided, the effect
of which
‘shall be conclusive’ i.e. which shall
be determinative for the courts in the requested
State (SA).
61.
If one considers the documents that were submitted to the Minister
by
the US authorities, on which he based his decision to issue a
notification in terms of s 5(1)(a), it is evident that there was
substantial compliance with the requirements provided for in the
treaty.
62.
To repeat what was previously set out above, the documents which
were
submitted to the Minister included: 1) the diplomatic note
verbale
in which the identity and particulars of the applicant were set
out, together with particulars of the charges on which
she was sought
for trial in Illinois and the warrants of arrest which were issued
for her in respect thereof, as well as the punishments
which could be
imposed on conviction 2) affidavits by US state attorneys Merrin and
Lynch in which a full ‘procedural history’
of the case
against the applicant was set out from the time of the investigation
and her indictment by federal and District
grand juries,
together with particulars of the charges, including the statutory
provisions which pertained thereto, and a statement
that none of the
charges on which the applicant is sought for trial have lapsed or are
time-barred in terms of the applicable federal
and local statutes of
limitation 3) an affidavit from a special agent in the Inland Revenue
Services section of the US Department
of Treasury, which set out
details of the federal tax offences committed by the applicant and of
the investigations that were carried
out in respect thereof and 4)
copies of the indictments which were filed and the warrants of arrest
which were issued. The necessary
certifications of these documents
were also supplied.
63.
In the circumstances, the agreed procedural, documentary requirements
as set out in the extradition treaty between the USA and SA were
complied with, and from any perusal of the documents supplied
the
Minister was justified in concluding that the applicant was being
sought for surrender by the US authorities, as required in
terms of s
5(1)(a).
64.
As I have already indicated, the documents which were submitted set
out a detailed and comprehensive account of the ‘procedural
history of the case’ being, as I understand it, the case
which
the US authorities seek to make against the applicant. In my view the
fact that the 2017 request for extradition did not
set out
particulars of the previous requests for extradition in 2006-2008 and
again in 2011, does not detract from this. In terms
of the
extradition treaty the USA complied with its obligations in relation
to the information which it was required to submit
to the Minister.
65.
From my reading of the Act, in particular ss 4, 5 and 9 thereof it
is
apparent that the purpose of the issuing of a notification by the
Minister in terms of s 5(1)(a) was to allow for the issuing
of a
warrant of arrest by a local magistrate, in order that the extraditee
concerned could be brought before the magistrate in
whose area of
jurisdiction he/she was arrested, as soon as possible, so that an
extradition enquiry with a view to their surrender
to the foreign
state concerned, could be held.
66.
At such an
enquiry the magistrate must determine whether 1) the extraditee is
liable to be surrendered to the foreign state (this
is a matter of
law determined by reference to the extradition treaty and the
provisions of the EA) and 2) whether sufficient evidence
exists to
warrant the prosecution of the extraditee in the foreign state on the
offences for which they have been charged (this
is a matter of
evidence/fact which is determined by the rules pertaining to the
admissibility of documents in extradition proceedings
[28]
).
If the magistrate finds that these two requirements have been
satisfied, he/she is required to make an order committing the
extraditee to prison to await the Minister’s decision as to
their surrender, in terms of s 11.
67.
Section 11
provides that at this juncture the Minister has the power and
authority either to order the surrender of the extraditee
to the
requesting foreign state, or to order that that they should not be
surrendered, if the Minister is satisfied that it would
not be in the
interests of justice to do so, or that for any other reason it would
be unjust or unreasonable to do so.
[29]
68.
Thus, in my view, the lengthy delay on the part of the US authorities
in seeking the applicant’s extradition and their two previous,
failed attempts to do so, are factors that will become relevant
at
the point when the Minister is required to make a decision in terms
of s 11 as to whether the applicant is to be extradited,
and are not
factors which the Minister was required to take into account in order
to determine whether to issue a notification
in terms of s 5(1)a).
All that was required for the purpose of the exercise of a power in
terms of that provision, at the time
when it was in force, was that
the Minister was satisfied on the basis of the necessary documents
and information which were to
be provided in terms of the extradition
treaty, that a request had been made by the USA for the surrender
i.e. extradition of the
applicant.
69.
In the result, the application for an order setting aside the
Minister’s
notification in terms of s 5(1)(a) must also fail.
70.
As far as
costs are concerned, following the decision of the Constitutional
Court in
Harksen
[30]
it has become common for costs orders not to be made against
unsuccessful extraditees in failed extradition-related reviews, on
the basis that they are essentially criminal proceedings in nature
and costs orders are not ordinarily made against persons who
are the
subject of such proceedings. As was pointed out in
DPP
v Tucker
,
[31]
this is not an inviolate rule and may be departed from where the
proceeding constitutes an abuse of process, or is frivolous or
vexatious.
71.
Although the review clearly was aimed at putting a spoke in the wheel
of the extradition process, given the decision of the Constitutional
Court in
Smit
it cannot be said that it was legally without
merit, and it raised pertinent constitutional issues. In the
circumstances I am not
persuaded that a costs order should be made
against the applicant.
Order
72.
In the result I make the following order:
The application is
dismissed.
M
SHER
Judge
of the High Court
(Signature
appended
digitally)
Appearances
:
Applicant’s
counsel:
A
Katz SC and A Adhikari
Applicant’s
attorneys:
Walkers
(Cape Town)
Respondents’
counsel:
N
Mayosi SC and A Christians
Respondents’
attorneys:
State
Attorney (Cape Town)
[1]
Act 67 of 1962.
[2]
Per
Van Reenen J, in the matter under case no. 8448/09.
[3]
In terms of article 13 of the extradition agreement.
[4]
Section 12(1) of the Constitution.
[5]
Smit v
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services & Ors
2021 (1) SACR 482 (CC).
[6]
Per Francis AJ (as he then was) in
Smit
v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services & Ors
2019
(2) SACR 516 (WCC); [2019] 4 All SA 542 (WCC).
[7]
Section
12(1)(a) of the Constitution.
[8]
Para 102.
[9]
Para 104.
[10]
Paras 111-112.
[11]
Para 148.
[12]
Para 114.
[13]
Para 143.
[14]
S
v Bhulwana; S v Gwadiso
[1995] ZACC 11
;
1996
(1) SA 388
(CC) para 32.
[15]
Gory
v Kolver NO & Ors
2007
(4) SA 97
(CC) para 39.
[16]
Cross-Border
Road Transport Agency v Central African Road Services (Pty) Ltd
2015 (5) SA 370
(CC) para 20.
[17]
Id,
para 21.
[18]
Vide
Prince
v Minister of Justice & Constitutional Development & Ors
2017 (4) SA 299 (WCC).
[19]
Para 22.
[20]
Act 140 of 1993.
[21]
Note
16 para 25.
[22]
Electoral
Commission v Mhlope & Ors
2016
(5) SA 1
(CC) para 132.
[23]
Economic
Freedom Fighters & Ors v Speaker of the National Assembly &
Ano
2018 (2) SA 571
(CC) paras 210-211.
[24]
Article 9.1
[25]
Article 9.3(b).
[26]
Article 9.3(a).
[27]
Articles 9.2 (a)-(d).
[28]
As set out in ss 9(2)-9(3) and 10(2) of the EA.
[29]
Section 11(b)(iii).
[30]
Harksen
v President of the Republic of South Africa & Ors
2000 (1) SACR 300 (CC); 2000 (2) SA 825 (CC).
[31]
[2022] 4 All SA 332
(WCC) para 87.
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