Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 264South Africa
Maier and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (4145/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 264 (15 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
15 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Maier and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (4145/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 264 (15 December 2022)
Maier and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (4145/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 264 (15 December 2022)
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sino date 15 December 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 4145/2022
In
the matter between:
JAKOB
MAIER
First
Applicant
MARIA
JOHANNA LAUB-MAIER
Second
Applicant
And
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
First
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL,
Second
Responden
t
HOME
AFFAIRS
Coram:
Justice V C Saldanha
Heard:
3 November 2022
Delivered
electronically:
15 December 2022
JUDGMENT
SALDANHA
J
:
[1]
On 3 November 2022 I made the following order in the above matter:
1.
The decisions purportedly taken on 17 September 2021 and 4 October
2021 respectively,
rejecting the applicants’ respective
permanent residence applications lodged on 30 September 2016, are
reviewed and set aside.
2.
The decisions described in paragraph 1 are substituted and the second
respondent is
directed to issue a permanent residence permit in terms
of
Section 27
(e)
(ii) of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
, as
amended, to each applicant within 10 (ten) days of the granting of
this Order.
[2]
The respondents are directed to pay the costs of the application on
an
attorney and client scale, jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved.
[3]
These are the reasons for the order.
[4]
The
respondents, the Minister of Home Affairs and the Director General of
Home Affairs, literally threw in the towel on the day
before the
hearing of the application, through their counsel`s filing of belated
heads of argument in which they conceded the substantive
merits of
the review application. The only issue that remained for
determination was whether this court should, in terms
of
Section
8(1)
(c)
(ii)(aa)
[1]
of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“the
PAJA”), substitute its own order in place of the decisions
of
the respondents that were to be set aside, and to direct that they
issue permanent resident permits to each of the applicants
within ten
days of the granting of the order. Respondents also resisted an
order of costs against them on an attorney and
client scale, as they
tendered no more than costs on a party and party scale
[5]
It is therefore necessary to set out the background to the
application,
and in particular to highlight what was no less than
egregious conduct on the part of the second respondent in the
application,
that led to the punitive order of costs. I might
at this stage state that the court had seriously considered making an
order
of costs
de bonis propriis
against the second
respondent, for the manner in which he had conducted this litigation
and in the handling of the applicants’
application for
permanent resident status.
[6]
The applicants (“the Maiers]”) are elderly German
citizens
who had wished to retire in South Africa in the remaining
years of their lives. The first applicant, Mr Maiers, reached 80
years
in November 2022, while the second applicant, Mrs Maiers, is 78
years old. They are described as euro millionaires, and between
the two of them have a wealthy asset base on which to live out their
retirement.
[7]
In the
application they sought, in terms of Section 6(1)
[2]
of the PAJA, to have reviewed and set aside the decisions made by the
second respondent on 17 September 2021 and 4 October 2021
respectively, in which he rejected the first and second applicants’
permanent residence applications which they had lodged
on 30
September 2016, in terms of Section 27
(e)
(ii)
[3]
of the Immigration Act 13 of 2002 (“the Act”) and its
attendant Regulations and government notices. They also
requested of the court to substitute its decision for those of the
second respondent, and to direct him to issue to them permanent
residence permits in terms of Section 27
(e)
(ii)
of the Act within ten days of its order. The application was
initially brought on an urgent basis, but by agreement between
the
parties was postponed to the semi-urgent roll.
THE
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
The
Immigration Act and
Regulations
[8]
Section 27
(e)
of the Act provides as follows:
‘
Residence
on other grounds
- The Director-General may, subject to any
prescribed requirements, issue a permanent residence permit to a
foreigner of good and
sound character who –
.
. .
(e)
intends to retire in the Republic, provided that such foreigner
proves to the satisfaction of the Director-General that he or
she –
(i)
has the right to a pension or an irrevocable annuity or retirement
account which will give such foreigner a prescribed minimum
payment
for the rest of his or her life; or
(ii)
has a minimum prescribed net worth . . .’
[9]
Immigration Regulation (“IR”) 24(11) of the Immigration
Regulations
published on 22 May 2014 (GN R413, GG 37679) and as
amended on 29 November 2018 (GN R1328, GG 42071) (“Regulations”)
provides as follows:
‘
The
payment contemplated in section 27
(e)
(i) of the Act shall be,
per month, the amount determined from time to time by the Minister by
notice in the
Gazette
and the net worth contemplated in
section 27
(e)
(ii) of the Act shall be a combination of assets
realising, per month, the amount determined by the Minister by notice
in the
Gazette
.’
[10]
The notice published in Government Gazette 37716 (GN R451) of 3 June
2014 provides as follows:
‘
MINIMUM
AMOUNTS AS PAYMENTS PER MONTH FROM PENSION OR IRREVOCABLE ANNUITY OR
RETIREMENT ACCOUNT IN RELATION TO RETIRED PERSON VISA
OR PERMANENT
RESIDENCE PERMIT
I,
Mr MKN Gigaba, Minister of Home Affairs, hereby, in terms of sections
20(1)
(a)
and
(b)
and 27
(e)
of the Immigration
Act, 2002 (Act No. 13 of 2002) determined the following minimum
amounts as payments per month from a pension
or irrevocable annuity
or retirement account:
Minimum Payment Per
Month
R 37 000.00
Minimum Net Worth
R37 000.00’
BACKGROUND
FACTS
[11]
The applicants claimed that for many years it had been their dream to
retire in South Africa.
During October 2011 they purchased Erf
8[…] M[…], for an amount of R[…], situated at
2[…] G[…]
A[…], T[...] V[…],
wherein they resided when in South Africa. They attached a copy
of the Deed of Transfer,
no. T[…], to their founding
affidavit.
[12]
On 30 September 2016, and at the same time, they both applied for
permanent residence (“PR”)
permits in terms of Section
27
(e)
(ii) of the Act, as the basis on which they intended to
retire in South Africa, with the prescribed minimum net worth of R37
000
per month as prescribed by the Regulations. They attached a
copy of their PR applications to the founding affidavit, and
contended that they had submitted all the necessary documentation and
were fully compliant with the Act and its regulatory requirements.
[13]
Inasmuch as they applied in terms of Section 27
(e)
(ii) of the
Act, they both had to prove in their PR applications that they had a
minimum net worth of R37 000.00 per month. In
this regard they
stated:
(i)
Mr Maier had a one hundred per cent ownership of a company in
Germany, P[…]
G[…], that develops, manufactures and
sells silicone moulds. The nominal stock and capital value was
€[…].
Attached to the application was a letter,
dated 29 April 2016, headed “Certification” by a Mr
Thomas Keller,
a ‘Steuerberater’, in which he certified
that they were preparing his income statement as well as his
financial accounting
and the annual financial statements of his
companies. Mr Keller stated that, based on the numbers, they
were able to certify
that the first applicant received a monthly
income in excess of R[…] from the shares he owns in the
company P[…]
G[…]. The original documents in the
German language in the application in respect of both applicants were
translated
into the English language by a certified translator.
(ii)
The second applicant confirmed that she owned a property in Germany,
situated in T[…],
S[…], which yielded a monthly rental
income of €[…], which equalled about R[…],
depending on the current
exchange rate. She attached a copy of
the relevant documentation in respect of the lease agreement with the
application,
and which likewise included a certified letter, dated 29
April 2016, from Mr Thomas Keller. He confirmed that she
received
a monthly income in excess of R[…] from the lease of
commercial and private real estate which belonged to her.
[14]
The applicants also claimed that they held a joint account in
Germany, with a balance in
excess of R[…]. They also
attached a letter, dated 14 April 2016, from the bank S[…]
M[…]-L[…]-M[…],
addressed to both of the
applicants, in which it was confirmed that the credit balance in the
account was in excess of R[…].
[15]
The applicants claimed that at the time they lodged their PR
applications, they had both
owned assets that yielded more than the
minimum prescribed nett worth of R37 000 per month and were therefore
compliant with the
provisions of Section 27
(e)
(ii) of the Act.
[16]
On 17 September 2021 the DG rejected the application of the first
respondent, and on 4
October 2021 likewise rejected the application
of the second respondent. That was almost 4 years after they
had submitted
their applications.
[17]
In the letter of rejection, the DG did so for the same reason in
respect of both applicants.
The rejection notices read:
‘
You
failed to produce adequate proof that you have a right to a pension
or an irrevocable annuity or retirement account which will
give you a
prescribed minimum payment for the rest of your life. Therefore
you do not qualify for permanent residence in
terms of
section 27(e)
of the
Immigration Act.
You
may, within 10 working days from the date of receipt of this notice,
make written representations for a review or appeal of
the decision
to the Director-General through www.vfsglobal.com/dha/southafrica.’
[18]
The applicants claimed that they were surprised by this rejection
letter, as it appeared
that the DG had conflated the requirements of
Section 27
(e)
(i), ‘has the right to a pension or an
irrevocable annuity or retirement account’, with the
requirements of
Section 27
(e)
(ii), ‘has a minimum
prescribed net worth’.
[19]
In the
circumstances and given the lack of any meaningful content for the
reason for rejection, they sought legal assistance from
their
attorneys of record Eisenberg and Associates. On 22 December
2021 the attorney sent a letter of demand to the second
respondent,
on their behalf, in which they requested adequate reasons for the
rejection of their PR applications. The letter
of demand stated
that the reasons given for the rejection in the respective notices
were ‘not adequate’ in terms of
Sections 5(1)
[4]
and 5(2)
[5]
of the PAJA, and
requested that the second respondent provide them with adequate
reasons within the next ninety days. Before
the ninety days
were up, on 22 March 2022, their attorney sent a follow-up letter of
demand to the second respondent, indicating
that they had still not
received a reply to their earlier letter of demand, and that ‘with
no adequate reasons forthcoming
from you within 90 days of our
request therefor, we will ask the Court to presume that your
rejections were taken without any good
reason and on such basis we
will ask the Court for an Order of Substitution, together with a Cost
Order against you’. The
letter again requested the
reasons for the rejection of their PR application.
[20]
The applicants claimed that at the time they deposed to the founding
affidavit, on 14 April
2022, which was more than ninety days since
the original letter of demand, the second respondent had still not
provided any response.
They therefore had no choice but to
institute the review application. They also placed on record
that they continued
to reside in South Africa on valid visas. They
initially had a retired person visa, in terms of Section 20 of the
Act, which
had long since expired on 28 February 2021, and they now
have to obtain 90 day tourist visas, which means they can only remain
in South Africa for a period of three months at a time. They
pointed out that there was a lot of administration time and costs
involved in continually having to renew their retired person’s
visas. More importantly, they stated their lives were
in a
state of constant uncertainty, never knowing when their next visa may
not be renewed. They had certainly not envisaged
that situation
in their retirement years. They pointed out that, as they have
chosen South Africa as the country in which
they sought to enjoy
their retirement, the constant concerns with regard to their visa
causes them much anxiety and unnecessary
stress. Their lives
have literally remained in flux; despite wanting to retire in South
Africa they are never fully certain
that they can build their
retirement in this country.
[21]
The applicants also attached to their founding affidavit the required
records and documentation
for their applications, which included
amongst others copies of their passports, their marriage certificate
(a certified translation
from the German language), and proof of
their payment of the required fees. They also attached the
letter from their attorneys
of record in respect of the application
for permanent residence, dated 29 September 2016, together with the
necessary Power of
Attorney, in which the basis of the application
was set out and motivated. A copy of the medical certificate on
the pro forma
form of the Department of Home Affairs, filled in by a
medical practitioner in respect of both applicants, and likewise a
radiological
report on the pro forma form likewise filled in by the
radiologist, and copies of the birth certificates of both applicants
were
also attached to the application. The applicants also
attached certificates of conduct, in respect of both of them, from
Germany, and clearance certificates by the South African Police
Services in respect of both of them. The first applicant
attached the Memorandum of Association of the company P[…]
G[…], and in respect of the second applicant, a letter
dated
11 July 2014 headed ‘A record of Land Parcel and ownership’,
an excerpt from the land surveyor registrar Türkheim,
Germany.
A certified translation from the German language of the rental
contract between second applicant and S[…]
V[…] G[…]
and Co. K[..], was also attached.
[22]
Inasmuch as the applicants sought an order of substitution by the
court, they attached
to their founding affidavit further proof that
they still met the financial requirements in terms of Section
27
(e)
(ii) of the Act and its Regulations. They stated
that, given that more than five years had passed since their initial
application
to the second respondent, they attached current evidence
that they still met the prescribed minimum net worth requirement of
R37
000 per month respectively. Their current financial
position was declared as:
(i)
They are the owners of Erf 8[…] (purchased for R[…] in
2011).
(ii)
They have a South African Cheque Account at A[…] with account
number 4[…], and
a current balance of R[…] (as
reflected on 12 April 2022). A copy of a bank letter confirming
the current balance
and that the cheque account is in the name of the
first applicant was annexed and marked “JM18”.
(iii)
The first applicant also has a South African savings account at A[…],
with account number 0[….],
and a current balance of R[…]
(as reflected on 12 April 2022). A copy of the bank letter
confirming the current balance
and that the savings account is in his
name was annexed and marked “JM19”.
(iv)
In Germany, first applicant has four bank accounts with a total
balance of €[…] (which
according to the exchange rate on
12 April 2022, of R15.81 per Euro, equalled approximately R[…]).
One of these accounts
is the P[…] G[…] business
account. Copies of the bank statements were annexed and marked
“JM20”.
(v)
In Germany, the second applicant has seven bank accounts with a total
balance of €[…]
(which according to the exchange rate on
12 April 2022, of R15.81 per Euro, equalled approximately R[…]).
Copies of
her bank balances were annexed and marked “JM21”.
[23]
The applicants contended that there was sufficient evidence on the
papers before the court
to prove that they currently still met the
financial requirements for permanent residence permits, in terms of
Section 27
(e)
(ii) of the Act and the Regulations. They
submitted that there was no further information, or any factual or
technical enquiry,
that was needed by this court to arrive at a
conclusion that they met all of the requirements to be awarded
permanent residence
permits.
[24]
They contended further that there was no question of the exercise of
any outstanding discretion
by any functionary, or any policy issue by
an immigration official being at play, as much as the requirements
were clearly set
out in the Act and Regulations and that they had
clearly met all of them. They further contended that this court
was in as
good a position as the second respondent to make a
determination on the merits of their PR application. They
submitted further
that if the court was to resubmit the matter to the
Department of Home Affairs, it would be nothing more than an
unnecessary waste
of time and resources and would expose them to
further frustration of their rights, and further delays in obtaining
their permanent
residence, which they claimed they undoubtedly
qualified for. They further claimed that it would be nothing
more than unnecessary
and a lengthy period of delay and carried with
it further personal and financial costs.
[25]
The applicants claimed that, inasmuch as the decision may be set
aside, it should not be
remitted to the second respondent or the
Department of Home Affairs, for the following reasons:
(i)
It was no more than a single narrow ground of rejection.
(ii)
The court is in as good a position as the DG to make the decision to
direct that permanent residence
permits be issued to them.
(iii)
The DG was not being called upon to exercise any unique expertise in
considering their PR applications.
That the court had all the
pertinent information before it and that nothing had changed in the
circumstances to make a reappraisal
of the matter necessary. They
further contended that the decision for the approval of their permits
was a foregone conclusion
and that a further delay would cause them
unjustifiable prejudice.
GROUNDS OF REVIEW
[26]
In their founding affidavit they also
alluded to the grounds of review on which they sought the setting
aside of the respondent’s
decision.
[27]
They pointed to the various decisions of
the Constitutional Court that as a whole the Constitution provides
for constitutional rights
available to ‘everyone’, that
extends to all persons, not only citizens but also foreigners,
including those who may
be in the country but have not yet been
granted formal permission to remain. They correctly pointed out
that the courts have
also confirmed that foreigners are as entitled
as citizens to the protection of the fundamental human rights which
are entrenched
in the Bill of Rights, save where those rights are
specifically reserved for citizens only.
[28]
They
contended that the DG’s consideration of their PR application
and the rejection thereof constituted administrative action.
Inasmuch as Section 33(1)
[6]
of the Bill of Rights provides that everyone is entitled to just
administrative action, even though they are foreigners they have
a
constitutional right to demand that such action be carried out in a
lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair manner. They
also
contended that, inasmuch as the decision to refuse to grant them
permanent residence adversely affected their rights, they
also have a
constitutional right in terms of Section 33(2)
[7]
to be provided with written reasons for the decisions. They
contended that a decision to reject their application constituted
‘administrative action’ and fell to be set aside on the
basis of the provisions of the PAJA. In this regard they
claimed that the determination of their PR applications took more
than four years, which was unreasonable and an unlawful period
of
time. Secondly, they claimed that the decisions to reject their
PR applications has materially and adversely affected
their rights
and accordingly should have been accompanied by adequate reasons.
Thirdly, they contended that the rejection
notices simply
stated that their PR applications had been refused because they had
failed to ‘produce adequate proof’
and that that
statement was not accompanied by any facts or reasons which were
intelligible and informative. The DG simply
stated the
conclusions that he had arrived at without providing any reasons for
such conclusion. Fourthly, the rejection
notice, as already
indicated, conflated the requirements of Section 27
(e)
(i)
with that of 27
(e)
(ii).
Inasmuch as they had applied in terms of Section 27
(e)
(ii),
they did not need to provide adequate proof of ‘an irrevocable
annuity or retirement account’.
[29]
They claimed that as a result of the lack
of intelligibility and information in the rejection letters and the
manifest confusion
displayed therein, they were unable to determine
whether the reasons were based on an incorrect factual premise or an
error of
law, and accordingly were not in a position to launch a
meaningful and rational appeal or review against the respective
decisions.
[30]
They also pointed out that, given that it
was the second respondent who was the decision maker who had rejected
their PR applications,
there was no internal remedy available for
them, as the second respondent cannot review himself on appeal or
review and they cannot
directly approach the Minister, in terms of
the Act. They also pointed out that, in the circumstances, to
proceed with any
internal remedy in terms of the PAJA was not only a
futile pursuit (for without adequate reasons they did not know the
case which
they had to meet) but also an impossible one (as there was
no internal remedy available to them in terms of the Act). They
claimed that the second respondent, in having rejected their PR
applications, had failed the peremptory statutory requirements
to
furnish adequate reasons, despite the demand and 90 days’
notice. The DG has simply not responded. Furthermore,
in
reliance on the decision of the Full Bench of this division in
Director-General, Department of Home
Affairs and Others v Link and Others
2020 (2) SA 192
(WCC), they contended that they did not have any
internal remedy or appeal and therefore they were justified in having
brought
the application directly to this court for the necessary
relief.
[31]
In the opposition to the relief sought by
the applicants, the Director-General, Mr Livhuwani Tommy Makhode,
deposed to an answering
affidavit on behalf the respondents. In
his affidavit he spent several paragraphs challenging the urgency of
the application.
He dismissed it as there being no likelihood of any
prejudice that they would suffer as their preferred retirement which
he claimed
was driven by nothing more than ‘sentiment’.
[32]
The second respondent also challenged the
applicants for their failure to have exhausted their internal
remedies. He claimed
that the facts in the matter of
Links
,
above, were incongruent to this matter and in particular that the
exceptional circumstances referred to in that matter related
to the
fact that there were also contempt of court proceedings. He
therefore dismissed the applicants’ reliance on
the decision of
Link
as
being misplaced.
[33]
With regard to the financial requirements
that the applicants were required to demonstrate, the second
respondent contended that
the applicants had only ‘furnished
the department with a list of assets and no mention was made of any
liabilities or debts
that they may be currently servicing or may
service in future’. He also contended that the applicants
‘assets only
reflected their financial position at the given
time and provided no guarantee that the status quo would be
maintained, given that
these assets are liquid and that it was likely
to change form overtime, eg cashing up investments, sales of
properties, relinquishing
company ownership thus losing equity
shareholding, and depletion of savings’. He contended
that the applicants have
not provided his department with any such
guarantees and contended that their livelihood would be better
attended to ‘if
they remain in their country of origin’.
He contended that the applicants had fallen ‘short of
producing adequate
proof to the effect and thus found wanting in
satisfying the Section 27
(e)
(ii)
requirements’.
[34]
In his challenge to the substitution order
sought by the applicants, he simply referred to
University
of the Western Cape and Others v Member of Executive Committee for
Health and Social Services and Others
1998 (3) SA 124
(C), and also the oft quoted
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Ltd and Another
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC). He contended that it could not be concluded that this
matter warranted substitution, as it was not a foregone conclusion
that the remittance of the matter back to the administrator would
yield the same results as before, and as a reconsideration may
lead
to close scrutiny of other relevant facts.
[35]
In the replying affidavit filed on their behalf by
their attorney of record, the applicants dealt with each of the
contentions raised
by the second respondent. The applicants,
correctly in my view, lamented the dismissive tone and content of the
second respondent’s
answering affidavit. It was apparent
that he had simply failed to apply his mind, not only to the contents
of the PR applications
submitted by the applicants as far back as
five years ago,
but also to the founding affidavit and its
contents. He, in my view, failed to demonstrate any
appreciation that he was dealing
with elderly persons and, more
importantly, human beings who had elected, as they were in terms of
the laws of this country entitled
to do, if they so qualified, to
live out the remainder of their lives in retirement in South Africa.
His conduct is deprecated
by this Court.
[36]
In their reply to the second respondent’s opposition, they
pointed out that the Rule
53 record, which they received, contained
nothing more than the applicants’ application and its
annexures, and it was apparent
from the second respondent’s
answering affidavit there was no new information or insights into
when or how the impugned decisions
were made, who made them on behalf
of the DG, and on what basis the applications were rejected. All
they had to work with
were vague assertions, which were nothing more
than a bald repetition of the reasons cited by the second respondent
in the rejection
notices that they had failed to provide adequate
proof of their net worth for the rest of their lives. They
claimed that
they remained very much in the dark as to the exact
details and processes that were followed by the Department of Home
Affairs,
and the DG, when the impugned decisions were taken. They
contended that the inference to be drawn was that there was nothing
more to their version, and that no process was followed and no
administrator had properly applied her or his mind to the impugned
decisions, which meant that their review was justified. The
second respondent had simply failed to provide any factual insights
of any substance.
[37]
In respect of the second respondent’s attack on the urgency of
the application, he
incredulously failed to appreciate that the
matter had been postponed
by agreement
between the parties to
the semi-urgent roll.
[38]
In respect
of the contentions by the second respondent about the failure to
exhaust internal remedies, the applicants pointed in
detail to the
decision in
Link
,
above, and that the DG had simply misconceived the
ratio
therein or had simply failed to understand it. To assist the
respondents to properly interpret the
Link
judgment, they referred at length to the decision in paragraphs 49,
50, 51 and 52 thereof
[8]
. For
the benefit of the DG his attention is drawn thereto.
[39]
The third ground raised by the second respondent in opposition to the
application related
to that of the inadequate proof. The
applicants pointed out that the second respondent had done nothing
more than merely
rehash and restate the reasons in his rejection
letters, in stating, ‘no mention is made of liabilities or
debts, provide
no guarantee that the status quo will be maintained
and that the applicants have fallen short of producing adequate
proof’.
The applicants, in my view, correctly pointed out
that the position adopted by the second respondent was not logically
sound,
and was a classic example of circular reasoning commonly known
as a fallacy. More importantly, it was clear that the second
respondent, in his answer, failed to make any proper distinction
between the provisions of Section 27
(e)
(i) and (ii), and had
completely failed to appreciate that the requirements prescribed
therein were disjunctive, with the use of
the word ‘or’.
This basic distinction, and the application of the principles
of statutory interpretation, was
simply lost on the second
respondent.
[40]
In respect of the substitution relief sought, the applicants pointed
out that the second
respondent, in his answering affidavit, had not
disputed the accuracy or veracity of any part of the applicants’
financial
information as provided in the initial application or in
the founding affidavit. The applicants had taken the trouble of
providing updated financial information and statements in the
founding affidavit, and none of it was disputed, nor were any facts
put up by the second respondent to have challenged its veracity.
[41]
The applicants also referred to the recent decision in this division
in
Ling and Another
v The Director-General of the
Department of Home Affairs and Another
(6928/2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC
177
(9 September 2022), in which an order of substitution was made by
the court where the DG had failed to place any facts before the
court
which could persuade it that it was not in as good a position as the
DG to make a decision related to a permanent residence
application.
The applicants contended that that matter was similar to the
one before this court, where the DG had placed
no facts before the
court to persuade it why a substitution order was not appropriate.
[42]
The applicants also referred to the oft quoted authority of the
Constitution Court in
Aquila Steel (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v
Minister of Mineral Resources and Others
2019 (3) SA 621
(CC),
where it confirmed that where there was evidence of ‘a high
degree of institutional incompetence’ a court was
justified in
awarding a substitution order as a ‘finding of gross
incompetence may make it unfair to require a party to resubmit
itself
to the administrator’
.
They contended that if
anything that was exactly what the second respondent had demonstrated
in this matter
.
I share that view. The applicants
contended that the respondents had dismally failed to demonstrate any
credible grounds
of opposition to the application.
THE
PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THIS COURT
[43]
It was therefore not surprising that the respondents threw in the
towel prior to the hearing
before this court. In the heads of
argument filed belatedly by counsel for the respondents, in seeking
condonation, he claimed
that it had ‘become apparent that an
out of court settlement be negotiated’
.
He then
indicated that the parties had engaged with one another, but that on
the eve of the court proceedings had not agreed
to a proposal made by
the respondents, therefore, the late filing of the respondents’
heads of argument. Clearly that
was no basis for the failure on
the part of the respondents to have timeously filed their heads of
argument.
[44]
Nonetheless, in the heads of argument, he set out what he regarded as
the issues which
were common cause between the parties. More
importantly, under the heading ‘Concessions made by the
Respondents’,
he disclosed: (i) that it was conceded that there
was an unreasonable delay between the lodging of the applications and
the rejection
decisions taken. A further concession made by the
respondents was that the reasons advanced for the rejection ‘were
not in sync with their empowering provisions in terms of which the
applications were made, that is
sections 27
(e)
(ii) of the
Immigration Act (sic
)’. The respondents conceded that the
provisions of
Section 27
(e)
(i) and (ii) were disjunctive, or
‘non-cumulative and that they should be treated as such and not
be conflated as it appears
to have been done in this matter’.
[45]
The respondents’ counsel, in the heads of argument, then set
out what the settlement
proposal was that they had proposed to the
applicants:
(i)
That the ‘Department of Home Affairs be allowed 60 working days
from the date of settlement/court
order to verify the information
submitted in the 2016 application due to the amount of time that has
elapsed’;
(ii)
That the Department of Home Affairs approves the applicants’
permanent residence applications
on condition that they pass the
verification process of their local and foreign bank statements and
meet the minimum requirements;
(iii)
That the Department of Home Affairs tenders the wasted costs on a
party and party scale.
[46]
In respect of the substitution relief sought by the applicants, the
respondents opposed
it on the basis of the decisions they had simply
listed as
The University of the Western Cape
and
Trencon
,
referred to by the DG in his opposing affidavit.
[47]
The respondents contended that a substitution order would not be
warranted in this matter
based on the following:
(i)
‘That both respondents are competent and have the requisite
experience to adjudicate
on the matter in the event of the applicant
passing the verification test as envisaged;
(ii)
It is not a foregone conclusion that the applicants would be granted
permanent residence permits
as the decision would be arrived at after
‘considering all relevant factors (including exceptional
circumstances) and come
to a fair, just and equitable decision; and
(iii)
The granting of a substitution order would be tantamount to usurping
the powers of a functionary by
the empowering legislation and that
would not be in sync with the interests of justice(sic).’
THE
PROPOSED VERIFICATION PROCESS
[48]
In the exchange between the court and counsel for the respondents
with regard to the proposed
verification process, it was apparent to
the court that there appeared to be some uncertainty and confusion as
to exactly what
such process would entail. Initially counsel
for the respondents stated that it was no more than to verify that
the applicants
had the bank accounts they asserted in their
application and founding affidavit. When given an opportunity
to consult with
his client during an adjournment on exactly what was
meant by the verification process, he informed the court that it was
a process
by which the staff of the respondents would undertake to
verify the bank balances of the applicants in their various bank
accounts.
[49]
Counsel for the applicants pointed out that what counsel for the
respondents had failed
to disclose to the court, was that there was
an existing class application pending before a court in this
division, set down for
hearing in March 2023, in which the issue of
the verification processes raised by the respondents in various other
matters were
being challenged. Neither counsel for the
respondents nor his attorney disclosed that to the court in the heads
of argument
or in a Practice Note. Moreover, this court has not
had sight of the details of the proposed class application and does
not
want to pre-empt the outcome of that matter. Counsel for
the respondents claimed that he had no knowledge of it, but it
appeared
that the state attorney of record for the respondents in
this matter is also involved in those proceedings.
[50]
This court does not wish to undermine what is being sought or
contended for by the respondents
in a verification process that is
the subject matter in litigation before another court. The
issue of verification in this
matter can nonetheless be dealt with on
the very facts before this court. In respect of the bank
accounts in Germany and
the financial status of both of the
applicants, this was verified in letters by Mr Thomas Keller as
far back as 29 April 2016.
Moreover, copies of the bank
statements from the German banks were also attached to the initial
application. The applicants,
through an abundance of caution
and to assist this court to grant an order of substitution, furnished
the court with their updated
financial circumstances and attached
copies of their bank accounts. The respondents have, for close
on to five years, not
raised any dispute with regards to the
correctness, authenticity and accuracy of the financial statements
placed before this court.
The respondents have, through their
officials, literally just sat on their hands for all of this time and
on the last minute
have come to this court pleading that it be given
a period of 60 days to conduct a verification exercise. The
exact
process of that verification exercise is not even clear to this
court. I was more than satisfied that the financial information
placed before this court has been adequately verified in order for
this court to make a decision, in terms of
Section 8(1)
(c)
(ii)(aa)
of the PAJA, on the applicants’ application for permanent
residence permits in South Africa.
[51]
What is disconcerting to the court, is the respondents’
contention, in its proposal
referred to above, that the applicants
will only be granted permanent residence permits ‘on condition
that they pass the
verification process of their local and foreign
bank statements and meet the minimum requirements’. There
is no indication
as to what further minimum requirements the
applicants have not already met in this matter, other than the
respondents’ contention
that they need to verify bank
statements.
[52]
Moreover, it is even more disconcerting that the respondents’
counsel stated in the
heads of argument that the respondents would
have to consider ‘all relevant factors (including exceptional
circumstances)
and come to a fair just and equitable decision’
(my emphasis). It is not at all clear to this court what is
meant by
‘exceptional circumstances’ that the applicants
need to demonstrate as a relevant factor for their applications,
other
than those clearly described by the Act and the Regulations.
These assertions by the respondents clearly indicate the
failure
to properly understand and appreciate the confines of the
statute and Regulations which they themselves are bound by.
[53]
The Constitutional Court in
Trencon
confirmed the test for the
substitution of a decision as follows:
‘
[47]
To my mind, given the doctrine of separation of powers, in conducting
this enquiry there are certain factors that should inevitably
hold
greater weight. The first is whether a court is in as good a
position as the administrator to make the decision. The
second
is whether the decision of an administrator is a foregone conclusion.
These two factors must be considered cumulatively.
Thereafter,
a court should still consider other relevant factors. These may
include delay, bias or the incompetence
of an administrator. The
ultimate consideration is whether a substitution order is just and
equitable. This will involve
a consideration of fairness to all
implicated parties. It is prudent to emphasise that the
exceptional circumstances enquiry
requires an examination of each
matter on a case-by-case basis that accounts for all relevant facts
and circumstances.’
(Internal footnote omitted.)
[54]
It is apparent that the applicants have attached multiple financial
documents both in 2016
and now in 2022, and it is obvious that they
have always had more than the prescribed minimum net worth of R37 000
per month.
[55]
Importantly, the respondents’ answering affidavit does not
dispute the accuracy or
the veracity of the updated financial
statements, and given that there is no dispute of fact on this issue,
it must be the applicants’
version of their financial situation
that this court must takes into account in exercising its discretion
in granting the remedy
of substitution. Likewise, the court is
particularly mindful of the Constitutional Court’s comments in
Aquila Steel
, above, and has already indicated that the second
respondent, in particular, has displayed a high degree of
institutional incompetence
in having dealt with the applicants’
initial application and in his response to these review proceedings.
[56]
For all the reasons stated, and importantly the fact that there is no
evidence contrary
to that put before the court in respect of their
financial circumstances, and that there is no information of a
factual or technical
enquiry (or any issue of policy), this court is
well able to arrive at a conclusion that the applicants are entitled
to the relief
sought by way of substitution.
[57]
I am moreover satisfied that the process of verification sought in
this matter will be
nothing more than a time-consuming exercise, will
fulfil no better purpose than the information already provided to
this court,
and in the circumstances appears aimed at no more than to
cause an unnecessary delay to the applicants. They have clearly
demonstrated
exceptional circumstances for such an order.
[58]
As already indicated costs have been awarded on a punitive scale
against the respondents
in this matter. The conduct of the
second respondent, in particular, has demonstrated the necessity for
such an order. He
has displayed a complete disdain for the
applicants in the way he has treated them, has been dismissive of
their pleas for the
matter to be dealt with expeditiously after all
of these many years of undue delay by his department, and has simply
dismissed
as sentiment their expressed preference to retire in South
Africa. I seriously considered that an appropriate costs order
in this matter would not be for the taxpayers to be unnecessarily
saddled with the costs incurred because of the manner in which
the
second respondent has dealt with the matter. I have no doubt
that such conduct on the part of the second respondent in
other
matters of a similar nature, and with an equal display of such a
dismissive attitude by him, may be met with an appropriate
order of
costs against him
de bonis propriis.
For all of these
reasons a punitive order of costs against the respondents was
warranted in this matter.
________________
V
C SALDANHA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
[1]
‘(ii)
In
exceptional cases –
(aa) substituting or
varying the administrative action or correcting a defect resulting
from the administrative action;.. .’
[2]
‘
(1) Any
person may institute proceedings in a court or a tribunal for the
judicial review of an administrative action.
[3]
‘
27.
Residence on other grounds
- The Director-General may, subject to any prescribed requirements,
issue a permanent residence permit to a foreigner of good
and sound
character who –
.
. .
(e)
intends to retire in the Republic, provided that such foreigner
proves to the satisfaction of the Director-General that he
or she –
(i)….
(ii)
has a minimum prescribed net worth; . . .’
[4]
‘
Any
person whose rights have been materially and adversely affected by
administrative action and who has not been given reasons
for the
action may, within 90 days after the date on which that person
became aware of the action or might reasonably have been
expected to
have become aware of the action, request that the administrator
concerned furnish written reasons for the action.’
[5]
‘
The
administrator to whom the request is made must, within 90 days after
receiving the request, give that person adequate reasons
in writing
for the administrative action.’
[6]
‘Everyone
has the right to administrative action that is lawful, reasonable
and procedurally fair.’
[7]
‘
Everyone
whose rights have been adversely affected by administrative action
has the right to be given written reasons.’
[8]
‘[
49] As
far as second and fourth respondents are concerned, the decision to
refuse their applications for permanent residence
was taken by the
DG and not the DDG, and reasons were provided to them in respect
thereof. The difficulty which I have
is that, on my reading of
s 8, no domestic or “internal” remedy of review or
appeal is provided for in respect of
decisions which are taken
at
first instance
by
the DG, and the DG is obviously not in a position to hear an appeal
or review against his own decision, so the provisions
of s 8(4)
cannot find application in instances where the decision was taken by
him/her. Logic dictates that if there is
to be an internal
remedy of review or appeal from the decision of the DG it can only
lie to the Minister.
[50] Although
s 8(6) provides for a right of appeal or review to the Minister, it
is one which can only be exercised in regard
to a decision by the DG
“as contemplated in terms of s 8(5)”, ie in respect of a
decision on appeal or review to
the DG in terms of ss (4), which in
turn is piggybacked onto ss (3). Thus, as I read the section
as a whole, no internal
right of appeal or review lay in respect of
the decision which was taken by the DG, to refuse the applications
for permanent
residence by second and fourth respondents. The
only right of appeal or review which lay to the Minister in regard
to their
applications was a secondary one which would have accrued
had the original decision been taken by a functionary of a rank
lower
than the DG. In a nutshell, had the DDG given adequate
reasons in regard to the rejection of the applications of first and
third respondents, they would have had a right of appeal to the DG
and thereafter to the Minister, in the event that the decision
on
appeal or review to the DG had gone against them, but second and
fourth respondents did not have the option of a ministerial
review
or appeal open to them. In the circumstances I do not agree
with the view expressed by the court a quo that
an appeal
in terms of s 8(6) was available to the respondents.
[51] In
the result, the point of law which was taken by the appellants in
terms of rule
6(5)
(d)
(ii),
namely
that the respondents should be non-suited for failure to exhaust
their domestic remedies, was, in my view, without merit.
(iii) Ad
exceptional circumstances
[52] Even
if I were to be wrong in regard to the interpretation which I have
adopted in respect of the relevant subsections
of s 8, and the
respondents did have recourse to a domestic appeal or review remedy
before they approached the court, I am of
the view that there were
exceptional circumstances present which, in the interests of
justice, merited exempting them from exhausting
such remedies
.’
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