Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 278South Africa
Executive Mayor of the City of Cape Town v Director of Public Prosecutions and Another - Application for Leave to Intervene and Leave to Appeal (CC60/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 278 (13 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
13 November 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Executive Mayor of the City of Cape Town v Director of Public Prosecutions and Another - Application for Leave to Intervene and Leave to Appeal (CC60/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 278 (13 November 2023)
Executive Mayor of the City of Cape Town v Director of Public Prosecutions and Another - Application for Leave to Intervene and Leave to Appeal (CC60/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 278 (13 November 2023)
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sino date 13 November 2023
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
NO: CC60/2021
In
the matter between
THE
EXECUTIVE MAYOR OF THE CITY OF CAPE TOWN
APPLICANT
AND
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
1
ST
RESPONDENT
WESTERN
CAPE
B[…]
N[…]
2
ND
RESPONDENT
Date
of Hearing: 19 October 2023
Date
of Judgment: 13 November 2023 (to be delivered via email to the
respective counsel
JUDGMENT
ON APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO INTERVENE AND LEAVE TO APPEAL
THULARE
J
[1]
Judges cannot ignore the eerie sound of their footsteps leaving the
courtroom walking away from their responsibility towards
vulnerable
children. The suspenseful scene ambient for someone walking with
dignity towards nothingness with an empty pride having
achieved
nothing for a child victim is simply too much for judicial robes. The
illusionary Eurocentric
paterfamilias
has gone beserk in South
Africa. The lived reality in this matter was that B[...], a husband
and a father of only one child, chose
a quiet deserted Sunday evening
to kill N[...] his wife over their RDP house by strangling her in
their bedroom. He put her body
in a wheelie bin and pushed it to the
banks of a river near their RDP home, burnt the body and alone buried
her in a waterlogged
shallow grave on the river bank and returned
home in the early hours of the Monday morning. B[...] was sentenced
to life imprisonment.
In mitigation of sentence, it came to light
that B[...] was not a blood child of N[...] who raised him, and this
discovery, perhaps
including what he did to N[...] caused the N[...]
family to distance themselves. On the eve of N[...]’s burial,
an unknown
family came from the Eastern Cape to claim her body from
the T[...] family for her burial. This is how L[...], the only minor
child
of both B[...] and N[...], came to know that the people he knew
as his maternal relatives, the T[...] family, were now alleged not
to
be his blood relatives. L[...]’s mother was buried in the
Eastern Cape. His father was beginning imprisonment for life.
South
Africa has no programme that protects a child’s rights to
property to which minor children have a claim, when their
parents are
deceased, imprisoned or for any other reason unable to protect them.
The result is that the property generally ends
up with other blood
relations who enjoy its benefits whilst the child-beneficiaries
suffer, dumped to fend for themselves. The
lucky ones often find the
support of maternal relatives and in very rare cases some find the
support from paternal relatives. The
N[...] family stepped back, if
not abandoned the child. Two unknown families are potential claimants
to be the paternal family.
They remain a mystery. The T[...] family
yielded to another unknown family to claim the maternal family spot.
That other family
has already given a glimpse of its colours. They
didn’t care about the child, having taken her mother hundreds
of kilometres
away to bury her without him, and making no efforts for
him to even know her grave. When the court adjourned at the end of
the
matter, the child did not know who his maternal and paternal
blood relatives were. The risk of the child losing the benefits of
a
home was real, although he was the only child of parents who owned an
RDP house. The wisdom of our ancestors in Africa, under
these
circumstances, before leaving the
imbizo/lekgotla
or family
meeting where such information came to light, is to ask: “What
about the child and its home?” The application
is for leave to
intervene and to appeal the decision of the court on the answer to
this question. Both respondents filed a notice
to abide the decision
of the court.
[2]
The issue is whether leave to appeal should be granted.
[3]
The relevant parts of the order sought to be appealed against reads
as follows:
“
3.
The Mayor of the City of Cape Town shall, without undue delay, ensure
the establishment
of a Trust for the benefit of the minor child,
L[...] T[...], and assist in upholding the rights of the minor child
of freehold
ownership of the property referred to as 9[…] O[…]
Street, Fisantekraal, Durbanville, in trust, as envisaged and in
the
spirit of Chapter 13: Upgrading of Informal Settlements, National
Department of Housing, dated 14 October 2004, pages 18 to
29, and to
take all steps necessary and ancillary for the full realization of
this objective. …
6.
The State, the curator ad litem, the Mayor of the City of Cape Town,
the Premier
of the Province of the Eastern Cape and the
Director-General, National Department of Social Development, are
granted leave to approach
the court on notice, should the need arise
on the feasibility of the order.
The court had made
certain orders in respect of the curator
ad litem
, the Premier
of the Province of the Eastern Cape and the Director-General,
National Department of Social Development. The three
complied with
the orders of the Court respectively. In the absence of
countervailing evidence, the court accepted that the need
did not
arise for them to approach the court as envisaged in clause 6 of the
order. I have no doubt that if the curator
ad litem
had been
invited in these proceedings, he would have provided the necessary
assistance and input as the relief sought is against
an order in
which the best interests of the minor child were of paramount
importance.
[4]
Section 17 (1) of the Superior Courts Act, 2013 (Act No. 10 of 2013)
provides as follows:
“
17
Leave to appeal
(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the
Judge or Judges concerned are of the opinion that –
(a)
(i) the appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success; or
(ii) there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
(b)
The decision sought on appeal does not fall
within the ambit of section 16(2)(a); and
(c)
Where the decision sought to be appealed
does not dispose of all the issues in the case, the appeal would lead
to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the
parties.”
[5]
The court always appreciated the applicant’s right to join the
case, if needed, and this appreciation amongst others informed
the
wording of the order made. It is against this background that the
court did not even expect his Counsel to argue for what he
termed
intervention. That was summarily granted in the introductory stage of
the hearing of this application. In the result Counsel
only argued
the leave to appeal and its grounds. According to the Concise Oxford
English Dictionary, tenth edition, revised, edited
by Judy Pearsall,
Oxford University Press, 2002, “need” is a verb which
generally means to require something because
it is essential or very
important rather than just desirable. It expresses necessity. If I
understood the applicant correctly,
in his instance, there was a
necessary obligation to approach the court. I have no doubt that this
necessary obligation was covered
in the word ‘need” as
envisaged in clause 6 of the order. “Arise” is defined as
a verb and means to start
to happen or to begin to exist, to come
into being, to originate from a source or to start to become aware
of. In my view, the
circumstances under which the order was made, and
perhaps the order itself, established the necessity to require an
audience if
the need arose. It was precisely because of the
appreciation of this eventuality that the court made clause 6 of the
order. “Feasibility”
is a noun which refers to the
possibility that can be made, done or achieved or is reasonable. A
feasibility study is an assessment
of the practicality of a proposed
project plan or method. The feasibility analysis determines the
viability of the project and
includes an assessment of the technical,
economic, legal, operational and time factors. The question to answer
is: “is this
feasible?” The considerations include
whether what is proposed can be achieved [Jennifer Bridges, What is a
Feasibility Study?
How to conduct one for your project, 19 April
2023,
Project Management
].
[6]
This case has not reached a stage where it presents purely a legal
issue. It seems to me that further development of the facts,
in
particular a feasibility analysis, will render the issue which the
applicant seeks to have reconsidered, more concrete. In my
view the
case is not yet ripe for appeal. It would accord with sound process
in these circumstances to insist that the applicant
pursue the
created procedure to observe his right of audience before his
complaint can be considered ripe for higher relief. The
nature of the
issues in this matter require a case-specific inquiry as it tends to
relate to the content of and the applicant’s
powers or what I
would call a State-Law question in child protection as regards
L[...]. The record submitted to the appeal court
must be sufficient
to allow the appeal court to decide all issues necessary to determine
whether the applicant had the power and
this court had jurisdiction.
It seems to me that the applicant’s reading of the order was
that he was front-desked, in that
his right of audience was blocked
there and then by the order. Even in that understanding, it seems to
me that the appropriate
relief for him would be for the appeal court
to remit the matter back to this court for new jurisdictional
determinations and appropriate
remedies. The appeal at this stage
would therefore not lead to a just and prompt resolution of the real
issues raised by the applicant.
[7]
A child’s right to shelter is expressly provided for in the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act No.
108 of
1996) (the Constitution) in section 28(1)(c). Shelter or
accommodation is part of the maintenance and support to a child
(section 15(2) of the Maintenance Act, 1998 (Act No. 99 of 1998)).
Section 28(2) of the Constitution enjoins a court to give paramountcy
to the best interests of the child in every matter concerning the
child. The Judiciary and the applicant are bound by the Bill
of
Rights (section 8(1) of the Constitution). One of the duties of a
court are set out in
Fose v Minister of safety and Security
[1997] ZACC 6
;
1997
(3) SA 786
(CC) at para 69 where it was said:
“
,,,
I have no doubt that this Court has a particular duty to ensure that,
within the bounds of the Constitution, effective relief
be granted
for the infringement of any of the rights entrenched in it. In our
context an appropriate remedy must mean an effective
remedy for
without effective remedies for breach, the values underlying and the
rights entrenched in the Constitution cannot properly
be upheld or
enhanced. Particularly in a country where so few have the means to
enforce their rights through the courts, it is
essential that on
those occasions when the legal process does establish that an
infringement of an entrenched right has occurred,
it be effectively
vindicated. The courts have a particular responsibility in this
regard and are obliged to “forge new tools
and shape innovative
remedies, if needs be, to achieve this goal.”
[8]
In
Bannatyne v Bannatyne and Another
[2002] ZACC 31
;
2003 (2) SA 363
(CC) at
para 24 it was said:
“
While
the obligation to ensure that all children are properly cared for is
an obligation that the Constitution imposes in the first
instance on
their parents, there is an obligation on the State to create the
necessary environment for parents to do so. This court
has held that
the State
“
must
provide legal and administrative infrastructure necessary to ensure
that children are accorded the protection contemplated
by section 28
[
Government of the Republic of South
Africa and Others v Grootboom and Others
2001
(1) SA 46
(CC) at para 78]”
Our country has committed
itself to giving high priority to the constitutional rights of
children [para 25 in
Bannatyne
]. The courts are there to
ensure that the rights of all are protected. The judiciary must
endeavor to secure for vulnerable children
and disempowered women
their small but life-sustaining legal entitlements [para 27 of
Bannatyne
]. Courts have a duty to ensure effective protection
and enforcement of constitutional rights of children. Failure to do
so amount
to failure to protect children against those who take
advantage of systematic failures, and this has a negative impact on
the rule
of law.
[9]
Courts are constitutionally bound to give consideration to the effect
their decisions will have on children’s lives [Sloth-Nielsen
“Chicken soup or chainsaws: some implications of the
constitutionalisation of children’s rights in South Africa”
(1996)
Acta Juridica
6
at 25;
S v M
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2008 (3) SA 232
(CC) at para 15]. At para 16 and 17 in
S v M
the court
continued:
“
16.
… What should be carried over, however, is a parallel change
in mindset, one that takes appropriately equivalent account
of the
new constitutional vision.
17. Regard accordingly
has to be paid to the import of the principles of the CRC as they
inform the provisions of section 28 in
relation to the sentencing of
a primary caregiver. The four great principles of the CRC, which have
become international currency
and as such guide all policy in South
Africa in relation to children are said to be survival, development,
protection and participation.
What unites these principles, and lies
at the heart of section 28, I believe, is the right of a child to be
a child and enjoy special
care.”
[10]
The applicant elected to deal with this matter on a technical basis
with a disposition in which the socio-economic rights of
the child
were but an irrelevant irritation which should have been ignored when
his father was sentenced to life. The thinking
seems to be that the
court was supposed to treat the child “as a mere extension of
his parents, umbilically destined to sink
with them”. This was
to be the case even when the legal position was that the unusually
comprehensive and emancipatory character
of section 28 presupposes
that in our new dispensation the sins and traumas of fathers and
mothers should not be visited on their
children [
S v M
para
18]. The appeal seems to be calculated to simply have the protection
to the child’s rights, resulting from the impact
on him as a
victim of crime, incised like a wart from the proceedings. In fact in
his application and heads of arguments, including
in oral argument
until the court engaged with his Counsel at the end of his
submissions, the applicant uttered no single syllable
on what is
essentially the protection of the child and in general attention to
socio-economic rights of child victims of serious
violent crimes that
left such a child essentially without parental care and at risk of
losing a home and being systematically reduced
to being a street
child even though such child had a claim to a house within the
applicant’s jurisdiction. This is the disposition
of the Mayor
of a City which is the murder capital of the country, including where
parents are killed in mobs even when they are
attending a family
party. If I understood the submissions of the Mayor correctly, the
socio-economic plight of the children whose
parents are killed in
violent crime is an irritation which courts must keep quiet about and
just concentrate in filling up prisons
in the City over which he
presides. His attitude is that the risk of children who are victims
of crime losing the benefit of a
home, whilst those not entitled to
the houses owned by the children’s deceased and/or imprisoned
parents enjoy them, is none
of his business and the courts must leave
him alone. It may be so, but the case presents an opportunity to test
that and he cannot
run to the appeal court to cancel the whole
examination.
[11]
A substantial part of the applicant’s founding affidavit has
paragraphs commencing with the words “I am advised”,
“I
have been advised”, “I have also been advised”, ‘I
am also advised” or “Legal advise
received is that”.
This is then followed by a statement. The applicant and his legal
advisors would know which factors were
considered and accorded which
weight, and what law was applied, to reach their decisions to
position him to make the statements.
The factors considered and the
law relied upon are for now only known to them. A significant
remainder of the founding affidavit
is then used to introduce facts
which seems to me to be an input on the feasibility of the order. The
applicant cannot advance
a case for the first time on appeal on the
feasibility of the order, which case he did not put before this court
when he had an
avenue to explore and was invited in case of a need,
to do so. It may well be that the applicant, for example, had a
cogent argument
on the meaning of feasibility contrary to what is set
out in this judgment. It may also be that the applicant has a
meritorious
argument as to why the facts in this matter did not
present an appropriate legal process to establish the risk to an
entrenched
right to warrant a court to have recourse to its
responsibility and obligation to forge new tools and shape innovative
remedies
to achieve the goal of effectively vindicating the rights of
the minor child and permanently quell any risk of the child losing
a
home under the circumstances. The simple truth is that through this
appeal, before this court considers his case and pronounce
itself,
the applicant not only denies this court the benefit of his case, but
denies the appeal court the benefit of a complete
record including
this court’s decision on his case. The applicant challenges the
obligation of the court to “forge
new tools and shape
innovative remedies, if needs be, to achieve this goal” to
effectively vindicate a child’s socio-economic
rights when such
child is a victim of serious violent crime. If I understand the law
correctly, he cannot appeal on his own case
when there is no judgment
on that case, when he elected not to exhaust the opportunity to
advance that case for an order informed
by his case. His case will
not be proper before the appeal court. Its deficiency is a proper
consideration by this court.
[12]
At this stage, I am not of the opinion that the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success. In my view it is premature.
I am
unable to find any compelling reason, at this stage, why the appeal
should be heard. For these reasons I make the following
order:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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