Case Law[2022] ZACC 39South Africa
Walus v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (CCT 221/21) [2022] ZACC 39; 2023 (2) BCLR 224 (CC); 2023 (2) SA 473 (CC); 2023 (1) SACR 447 (CC) (21 November 2022)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
21 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: [Parole] — [life imprisonment sentence] — [rationality] — [sentencing remarks]
Judgment
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## Walus v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (CCT 221/21) [2022] ZACC 39; 2023 (2) BCLR 224 (CC); 2023 (2) SA 473 (CC); 2023 (1) SACR 447 (CC) (21 November 2022)
Walus v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (CCT 221/21) [2022] ZACC 39; 2023 (2) BCLR 224 (CC); 2023 (2) SA 473 (CC); 2023 (1) SACR 447 (CC) (21 November 2022)
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sino date 21 November 2022
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 221/21
In
the matter between:
JANUSZ
JAKUB
WALUS
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
First Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN COMMUNIST PARTY
Second Respondent
LIMPHO
HANI
Third Respondent
MINISTER
OF HOME
AFFAIRS
Fourth Respondent
and
FAMILIES
FOR LIFERS
NPO
First Intervening Party
TEBOGO
MODISE
Second Intervening Party
SOUTH
AFRICAN PRISONERS ORGANISATION
FOR
HUMAN
RIGHTS
Third Intervening Party
Neutral citation:
Walus v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others
[2022] ZACC 39
Coram:
Zondo CJ, Madlanga J,
Majiedt J, Mhlantla J, Mlambo AJ,
Theron J, Tshiqi J and Unterhalter AJ
Judgments:
Zondo CJ (unanimous)
Heard
on:
22 February 2022
Decided
on:
21
November 2022
Summary:
[Parole]
— [life imprisonment sentence] — [rationality] —
[sentencing remarks]
[nature and seriousness
of the crime] — [Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998] —
[Correctional Services Act 8 of 1959]
ORDER
On
appeal from the Gauteng Division of the High Court of South Africa,
Pretoria
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld.
3.
The decision of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
dismissing the applicant’s
application is set aside and
replaced with the following order:
“
(a)
The decision of the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services
made in March 2020 rejecting the applicant’s
application for
parole is reviewed and set aside.
(b)
The Minister of Justice and Correctional Services is ordered to place
the applicant on parole on such
terms and conditions as he may deem
appropriate and to take all such steps as may need to be taken to
ensure that the applicant
is released on parole within ten (10)
calendar days from the date of this order.
(c)
The Minister of Justice and Correctional Services is ordered to pay
the applicant’s costs
including the costs of two counsel.”
4.
The Minister of Justice and Correctional Services must pay the
applicant’s costs in
this Court including the costs of two
counsel as well as the applicants’ costs in the Supreme Court
of Appeal in respect
of the petition for leave to appeal.
JUDGMENT
ZONDO CJ
(Madlanga J, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J, Mlambo AJ, Theron J, Tshiqi J
and Unterhalter AJ concurring):
[1]
This is an application brought by Mr Janusz Jakub Walus, the
applicant, against, among others, the Minister of Justice and
Correctional
Services (the first respondent or Minister) for leave to
appeal against a judgment and order of the Gauteng Division of the
High
Court of South Africa, Pretoria (High Court) in terms
of which that Court dismissed the applicant’s application
to
have the Minister’s decision rejecting his application for
parole reviewed and set aside. Subsequently, the High Court
dismissed
his application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
He then petitioned the Supreme Court of Appeal for
leave to appeal
but that Court, too, refused him leave to appeal. The applicant’s
application to this Court is opposed by
the Minister, the South
African Communist Party (SACP) and Mrs Limpho Hani who is the widow
of the late Mr Thembisile “Chris”
Hani about whom I shall
say more shortly.
[2]
This
case is about the placement of prisoners or offenders on parole when
they have served a certain period of their term of imprisonment.
As
will be seen later in this judgment, this Court is called upon to
assess the rationality or otherwise of a decision by the Minister
in
March 2020 to reject the applicant’s application for placement
on parole. Since this matter deals with parole, I consider
it
necessary at this stage of the judgment to refer to and quote section
36 of the Correctional Services Act
[1]
(CSA).
[3]
Section 36 reads:
“
With due regard to
the fact that the deprivation of liberty serves the purposes of
punishment,
the implementation of a sentence of
imprisonment has the objective of enabling the sentenced prisoner to
lead a socially responsible
and crime-free life in the future.”
In
my view, this provision provides the statutory basis for the
proposition that our prison services are correctional services which
emphasises that part of the objectives of imprisonment is the
rehabilitation of prisoners. This provision makes it clear that the
objective of the implementation of a sentence of imprisonment is to
“correct” the offender or prisoner so that, when
he or
she is released from prison, he or she is unlikely to lead an
irresponsible social life but would rather lead a life that
is
crime-free. That must be a socially responsible and crime-free life
outside of prison. In this regard it is appropriate to refer
to what
this Court said in
Jimmale
.
[2]
In that case Nkabinde J said on behalf of a unanimous Court:
“
Parole is an
acknowledged part of our correctional system. It has proved to be a
vital part of reformative treatment for the paroled
person who is
treated by moral suasion. This is consistent with the law: that
everyone has the right not to be deprived of freedom
arbitrarily or
without just cause.”
[3]
The
facts
[4]
On 10 April 1993 an assassination
occurred in South Africa which shocked the
whole
country
and many people outside of South Africa. It nearly plunged
South Africa into a civil war that would have derailed the
negotiations aimed at introducing democracy in this country. The
person who was assassinated was a highly respected political leader
and freedom fighter in South Africa, namely, Mr Hani.
[5]
At the time of his assassination, Mr
Hani was the Secretary-General of the South African Communist
Party and a high-ranking
leader of the African National Congress.
The applicant is the man who pulled the trigger and shot Mr Hani
dead.
He
and one Mr Clive Derby-Lewis,
who has since died, had conspired to assassinate a number of
anti-apartheid leaders, including
Mr Nelson Mandela, the then
President of the African National Congress, who was to become the
first President of a democratic
South Africa in 1994.
[6]
The applicant and Mr Derby-Lewis
were charged with, and, subsequently convicted of, the murder of Mr
Hani. They were both sentenced
to death in 1993. The applicant was
also convicted of the illegal possession of a firearm for
which
he was sentenced to five years’
imprisonment. That was the firearm he had used to assassinate
Mr Hani. In 2000 their
death sentences were commuted to life
imprisonment. This was as a consequence of the abolition of the death
sentence. The applicant
has been in prison for 28 years.
[7]
Since 2011 the applicant has applied
on several occasions to be placed on parole but all his applications
have been declined by
the various Ministers responsible for
Correctional Services. Various reasons were advanced by the different
Ministers for their
decisions. The applicant asserts that each time
different reasons were found to refuse him parole. Indeed, he says
that the goalposts
were moved each time he applied to be placed on
parole. It is appropriate to refer below to the various applications
for parole
that the applicant made to successive Ministers
responsible for Correctional Services.
[8]
In 2011 the applicant applied to be
placed on parole. The Parole Board recommended that he be placed on
parole. However, the Minister
responsible for Correctional Services
declined his request. The reason he gave was that the victim’s
family and other interested
parties had not been given an opportunity
to provide either a victim impact statement or a statement of
opposition.
[9]
On 30 May 2013 the applicant wrote a letter to Mrs Hani in
which he apologised. He did not receive any response to that letter.
The applicant appeared before the Parole Board in November 2013.
Mrs Hani, her daughter and their legal representative
attended
that hearing and made representations to the Parole Board.
During the parole hearing, the applicant again apologised
to Mrs
Hani. The applicant states that at that hearing Mrs Hani said
that she did not accept his apology, but said that, if
the applicant
wanted to approach her through her legal representative, he was
welcome to do so. The applicant states that he respected
Mrs Hani’s
wishes as well as her decision at the time. After the Parole Board
hearing, the applicant sent a further letter
of apology to Mrs Hani’s
legal representative to which he received no response. Of course,
Mrs Hani was under no
obligation to accept the applicant’s
apology. It is not clear from the record what the Parole Board’s
decision was
on this occasion but the applicant was not placed on
parole.
[10]
At
some stage in the early months of 2015 the applicant attended a
further Parole Board hearing. Once again it is not clear what
decision the Board took this time. However, on 10 April 2015 the
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services at the time considered
a further application for parole by the applicant and refused to
place him on parole. The reason given by the Minister for his
decision was that the nature of the crime and the sentencing remarks
of the trial court outweighed all the positive factors which
counted
in favour of the applicant’s placement on parole.
[4]
He recommended a restorative justice process and that the Department
should advise on security threats, if any, that might exist
should
the applicant be released on parole.
The
applicant instituted a review application in the High Court to
challenge this decision. The matter came before Janse van
Nieuwenhuizen J. The High Court rejected the reasons given by
the Minister of Correctional Services at the time and concluded
that
his decision was unreasonable and irrational. Consequently, the High
Court set the Minister’s decision aside and ordered
the
Minister to place the applicant on parole.
[11]
The Minister took that judgment on
appeal to the
Supreme Court of Appeal
. The
Supreme Court of Appeal, through Maya P, set it aside and ordered the
Minister to reconsider the applicant’s application
to be placed
on parole.
The issue in that appeal was whether the High Court
had erred in reviewing and setting aside the decision of the Minister
not to
place the applicant on parole and to order the applicant’s
release on parole on the basis that it was irrational and
unreasonable.
It is remarkable that the Supreme Court of Appeal did
not find fault with the judgment of Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J
against which the Minister had appealed but it found fault with the
Minister’s decision. The Supreme Court of Appeal ordered
that
Mrs Hani’s victim impact statement dated 30 October 2013 and
the applicant’s response thereto should be taken
into account
by the Minister in reconsidering the applicant’s application
for parole.
[12]
On 26 October 2017 there was another
Parole Board hearing. Mrs Hani and certain representatives of
the SACP attended that hearing
and made representations in support of
their opposition to the applicant’s application. It appears
that the Parole Board
made a recommendation to the Minister but the
record does not reveal what the recommendation was.
[13]
Upon a reconsideration of the
applicant’s application for parole on 17 November
2017
the Minister responsible for Correctional Services
again declined to place the applicant on parole. The reasons given by
the Minister
at the time can be summarised as follows:
(a)
the applicant needed to undergo individual
psychotherapy with a psychologist to assist in addressing his
political ideologies which
the Minister at the time said had been
highlighted as a risk factor in a psychologist’s report;
(b)
he had noted Mrs Hani’s statement
that the applicant had not disavowed violence as a means to retaliate
against communists;
(c)
there were inconsistencies in the
applicant’s account of the circumstances that led to his
decision to commit the offence;
(d)
the applicant should participate in
individual therapeutic programs with a social worker to enhance his
social functioning skills;
and
(e)
it appeared that over the entire period of
his imprisonment, the applicant had not acquired any academic or
vocational skills that
could enhance his prospects of reintegration
into society and the Minister recommended that the Department should
assist the applicant
to acquire any such appropriate skill.
[14]
The
applicant
also
successfully took this decision on review in the High Court. The
High Court, through Baqwa J, reviewed the decision,
set it aside
and remitted the applicant’s application for parole to the
Minister to consider and decide it afresh. This was
in September
2018.
[15]
In January 2019 the Minister
responsible for Correctional Services at the time reconsidered the
applicant’s application to
be placed on parole following upon
Baqwa J’s judgment. Once again the applicant’s
application was refused. His
reasons were that there were two
conflicting reports of psychologists and this made it difficult for
him to take a decision. He
directed that the two psychologists should
jointly assess the applicant and make a decision and file a joint
report on the issues
concerning risk and remorse. He also said that
the applicant should undergo individual psychotherapy “with the
psychologist
to assist in addressing challenges which have been
highlighted” in a certain paragraph in the report of one Ms
Zelda Buitendag.
He said that those challenges included “depression
and explosive anger episodes”.
[16]
The applicant also successfully took
this decision on review in the High Court. That application was
heard by Kollapen J who
set the Minister’s decision aside.
Kollapen J remitted the matter to the Minister for a fresh
decision within 60 days
of the
date
of the
order. On 16 March 2020 the Minister made a new decision pursuant to
Kollapen J’s order. Once again the applicant’s
application was rejected. This is the decision which is the subject
of these proceedings
.
[17]
In a document containing the Minister’s decision and his
reasons for that decision the Minister said that he had had regard
to
the “latest profile of the offender (containing all relevant
reports, certificates, recommendations, etc.) all submissions
made by
the offender, Mrs Hani and the SACP as well as previous judgments by
the High Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal”.
In the
same document the Minister revealed the factors that he had taken
into account that favoured that the applicant be placed
on parole.
Identifying those factors, he said:
“
From
all the above, I took into account positive factors such as:
1.
The behaviour and adjustment of the offender during his incarceration
and the clean record
he has within the correctional centre;
2.
The multidisciplinary programs attended by the offender within the
correctional centre aimed
at his rehabilitation;
3.
The availability of support systems to the offender and employment
prospects in the event
of him being placed on parole;
4.
The fact that the offender is a first offender;
5.
The reports of the psychologists and social workers;
6.
The remorse on the part of the offender for the crime of murder
committed; and
7.
The opinions of the psychologists that the risk of the offender
re offending is low.”
[18]
The Minister stated that, notwithstanding the factors referred
to above which supported the applicant’s application for
parole,
there were also “negative factors” that supported
the dismissal of the applicant’s application. He said that
these were “the nature and seriousness of the crime of murder
committed by the [applicant] and the remarks made by the courts
at
the time of the imposition of sentence”. About the nature and
seriousness of the crime, the Minister said in the document
containing his decision:
“
The crime of
murder committed by the offender was the cold-blooded assassination
of a prominent political leader, for which careful
preparations were
made well in advance. The act committed was not only intended, but
also had the potential, to bring about a civil
war within the
Republic at the time;
The offender was
convicted of murder with no extenuating circumstances, in respect of
which he was sentenced to death and was later
commuted to life
imprisonment…”
[19]
With regard to the sentencing remarks made by the trial court
and the Supreme Court of Appeal, the Minister said
that he took into account the following remarks:
“
(i).
The murder was a deliberate, cold-blooded one… it was preceded
by weeks of planning.
(ii).
The accused performed an act of assassination on a person who had
attained prominence in public affairs
in South Africa, whose killing
was likely, to the knowledge of the accused, to cause far-fetching,
highly emotive reactions with
very damaging, serious consequences and
extremely harmful effects for the entire society in South Africa.
(iii). The
killing was cold-blooded…after the first bullet struck him,
the accused came close up and administered
the coup de grace from
close range.
(iv). This
was a cold-blooded assassination of a defenceless victim. The crime
of the two appellants was a calculated
one. Well in advance of its
commission careful preparations were made both for the murder and for
the concealment of the identity
of its dastardly perpetrators. Their
atrocious crime demands the severest punishments which the law
permits.
(v). In
imposing the death sentence, the trial court stated that it wished
‘to send out the message loud
and clear to any who contemplate
assassination of political leaders as an acceptable option, what view
the court takes of such
conduct’.”
[20]
The Minister said in the document containing his decision that
he had also taken into account another factor. He said:
“
I have also taken
note that in terms of the parole regime applicable at the date the
offence was committed, the offender, should
it be my decision to
approve his placement on parole, will be on parole for a maximum
period of three years, less any possible
remissions for which he
might qualify.
In light of the nature of the crime he committed
and in light of the sentence remarks by the trial court and the SCA,
it will negate
their remarks that the offender’s atrocious
crime demands the severest punishment which the law permits. I deem
these negative
factors as outweighing the positive factors mentioned
above
.
In the premises, and
after balancing all the factors, positive and negative, I find that
the negative factors outweigh the positive
factors and that the
placement on parole of this offender is disapproved at this stage
.”
(Emphasis added.)
The
reasons given by the Minister for his decision (in March 2020) not to
grant the applicant’s application for parole are
the same as
the reasons that were given by the then Minister of Correctional
Services in 2015 for rejecting a recommendation by
the Chairperson of
the National Council of Correctional Services recommending that the
applicant be placed on parole. The reasons
given in 2015 by the then
Minister of Correctional Services were the nature of the crime and
the sentencing remarks of the trial
court.
[5]
[21]
This last factor that the Minister said he took into account
is not mentioned among the factors listed in the policy document of
the Department as factors that must be taken into account in deciding
applications for parole. Here, I am referring to the factor
that, if
the applicant was granted parole, he would serve a period of two
years only on parole because of the parole regime applicable
to him
and the Presidential amnesties he had received.
[22]
I draw attention to the fact that in
the document containing his decisions, the Minister said, among other
things, that “in
the light of the nature of the crime [the
applicant] committed and in the light of the sentence remarks by the
trial court and
the Supreme Court of Appeal, [to release the
applicant on parole] will negate their remarks
that
the offender’s atrocious crime demands the severest punishment
which the law permits
”. (Emphasis
added). The severest punishment that a prisoner may serve in South
Africa is a life imprisonment where he or
she is not granted parole.
This could happen in a case, for example, where a prisoner is such
that he or she does not meet the
requirements for parole. In this
regard one could think of a prisoner who commits offences while in
prison itself or who is always
causing trouble in prison and does not
show signs of rehabilitation.
[23]
The
meaning and effect of the statement by the Minister that to release
the applicant on parole would negate the sentencing remarks
of the
trial court and the Supreme Court of Appeal needs to be considered
carefully. The Minister understood those remarks to mean
that the
crime that was committed by the applicant deserved the severest
punishment. The South African Concise Oxford Dictionary
gives the
verb “negate” the meaning: “nullify, make
ineffective” or “deny the existence of”.
[6]
Therefore, what the Minister was saying was in effect that, if he
released the applicant on parole, that would render the applicant’s
life imprisonment sentence ineffective or useless. This reflects
that, when the Minister considered the applicant’s application
for parole, he took the attitude that releasing the applicant on
parole would render ineffective or useless the “severest
punishment” permitted by law that the trial court said he
deserved. In the light of the fact that this is what the Minister
believed, it is difficult to see how the Minister could ever release
the applicant on parole in the future. I say this because,
if, in the
Minister’s view, releasing the applicant on parole in 2020
would have made his life imprisonment sentence ineffective
or
useless, he would always see releasing the applicant in that light in
the future. It, therefore, seems unlikely that the Minister
would
ever release him on parole in the future.
In the High Court
[24]
The applicant instituted an
application in the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
in terms of which he sought to
have the Minister’s decision of
March 2020 dismissing his application for parole reviewed and
set aside. The Minister,
Mrs Hani, and the SACP opposed the
applicant’s application.
[25]
In
paragraph
73
of his founding affidavit in this Court the applicant said:
“
Out
of all these requirements, the Minister only utilised and applied the
first two, namely the remarks made by the Court during
the imposition
of the sentence, and the sentence imposed by the Court, to come to
the conclusion that these two requirements should
supersede and
override all the other requirements.
All
other factors and requirements were positive and in my favour
.”
(Emphasis added.)
The Minister responded to
this paragraph in paragraph 20.4 of his answering affidavit. In that
paragraph the Minister had this to
say which is very important:
“
My decision not to
place the applicant on parole was based
on the nature and
seriousness of the crime and the remarks made by the trial court and
the SCA
in imposing [a] sentence (taking into account also that
the applicant will only be required to serve 2 years of his sentence
of
life incarceration on being placed on parole).
It is so (as
stated in paragraph 73 under reply) that the other factors to be
taken into account were positive factors in favour
of the placement
of the applicant on parole.
”
(Emphasis added.)
[26]
A comparison of the above paragraph
quoted from the applicant’s founding affidavit and this
paragraph quoted from the Minister’s
answering affidavit
reveals that the Minister admits the averment made by the applicant
that, except
for
the nature of the crime
and its seriousness and the sentencing remarks made by the trial
court and the Supreme Court of Appeal,
all the other
factors which the Minister was required to take into account
supported or favoured the applicant’s placement
on parole.
[27]
The approach taken by the High Court when it dealt with
applicant’s review application was that the Minister had taken
into
account all the factors he was required to take into account
before deciding whether or not the applicant should be placed on
parole
and he had placed such weight on the various factors as he
considered appropriate. The High Court went on to say that how much
weight the Minister placed on each of the factors fell within his
power and it was not up to it to place upon such factors the weight
that it thought should be placed upon them. The High Court also
emphasised that the Minister had stated that his decision and the
reasons he gave for it did not mean that the applicant would never be
released on parole in the future. The High Court dismissed
the
applicant’s application with costs. It also dismissed his
petition for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
Supreme
Court of Appeal
[28]
The applicant subsequently petitioned the Supreme Court of
Appeal for leave to appeal against the decision of the High Court.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal dismissed his petition on the grounds
that the matter had no reasonable prospects of success and there was
no other compelling reason why his appeal should be heard.
In this Court
[29]
After the
Supreme Court of Appeal
had dismissed the applicant’s petition, he lodged an
application in this Court for leave to appeal
against the decision of
the High Court.
Applications
for leave to intervene
[30]
Families for Lifers NPO applied for admission as an
intervening party in this matter. It is a non-profit organisation
which seeks
to protect the interests of prisoners who serve life
sentences and their families. The Families for Lifers NPO apply to be
admitted
as an intervening party but a reading of its affidavit
reveals that they are dissatisfied with not only the parole system
but also,
generally speaking, with the manner in which the Minister
and other Correctional Services authorities delay in taking decisions
on prisoners’ applications for parole. They also complain that
the Minister often arbitrarily overrides recommendations made
to him
by the Parole Board on applications for parole.
[31]
Families for Lifers NPO seek a review of the whole parole
system. Mr Tebogo Modise also applied for leave to be
admitted
as an intervening party. His case is the same as that of
Families for Lifers NPO and he also seeks the same relief as the
Families
for Lifers NPO. The applications of Families for Lifers NPO
and Mr Modise fall to be dismissed because the issues they raise
fall outside of the ambit of the issues in this matter. For example,
they want the whole parole system to be reviewed by which
I
understand them to mean that they want it to be reconsidered in its
entirety. That falls outside the role and function of a court.
That
is a matter that they should take up elsewhere. Accordingly, the
applications are dismissed. No orders as to costs are warranted.
[32]
The South African Prisoners Organisation for Human Rights
(SAPOHR) also applied for leave to intervene in this matter but it,
too,
raised issues that fall outside the ambit of this matter. It
also wanted the whole parole system to be reviewed and complained in
general about how the Minister and the Parole Board make their
decisions on parole applications. Its application also falls to
be
dismissed for the same reasons as the applications of Families for
Lifers NPO and Mr Modise.
Jurisdiction
[33]
The
decision of the High Court in respect of which the applicant applies
for leave to appeal relates to a review application under
the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
[7]
(PAJA) – which gives effect to section 33 of the Constitution.
This renders this matter a constitutional matter. Accordingly,
this
Court has jurisdiction.
Leave
to appeal
[34]
The
applicant applies for leave to appeal against the decision of the
High Court. This Court grants leave if it is in
the
interests of justice to do so.
[8]
Whether or not it is in the interests of justice to grant leave
depends upon a consideration of various factors. These include
the
importance of the matter or the issues raised by the matter,
[9]
whether, if the Court were to grant leave, the decision of the
Court on the merits would
affect
only
the parties or a large section of society and whether the applicant
has reasonable prospects of success.
[10]
[35]
This is an important matter that
affects the possible release on parole of someone who is serving a
life imprisonment sentence.
In my view, the issues that this matter
raises, as will be seen below, are issues that do not only affect the
applicant
but will affect many other
prisoners who serve life imprisonment sentences.
[36]
This arises because in the present case the applicant
is serving a life
imprisonment
sentence and
had been in prison for 26 years when, after a number of earlier
unsuccessful attempts, his application for parole was
rejected. That
raises the question whether, when a prisoner has served so many years
of a life sentence and has, by the Minister’s
own admission,
complied with all other requirements for parole, the nature and
seriousness of the crime and the sentencing remarks
of the trial
court can still be used to deny him or her parole. If this Court
concludes that the Minister may not use those factors
to justify
denying an applicant parole when he has served such a long part of
his sentence and has complied with all other requirements,
there will
be many other prisoners who will benefit from that decision.
Furthermore, there are reasonable prospects of
success. In the circumstances, it is in the interests of justice that
leave to appeal
be granted.
The appeal
[37]
In considering the applicant’s
appeal, it is appropriate to refer back to what was said in the first
few paragraphs of this
judgment. That is that section 36 of the CSA
tells us that the objective of the implementation of a sentence of
imprisonment is
to enable the sentenced prisoner to “lead a
socially responsible crime-free life in the future”. On the
face of it,
this seems to suggest that, where, on all the evidence,
the risk of a prisoner re-offending, if he or she were released on
parole,
is low, the relevant authorities should seriously consider
releasing such prisoner on parole because the objective of the
implementation
of a sentence of imprisonment would have been
achieved.
[38]
The issue in this appeal is whether
the High Court was correct in dismissing the applicant’s review
application in which he
sought to have the Minister’s decision
dismissing his application for parole reviewed and set aside. The
appeal is opposed
by the Minister, the SACP and Mrs Hani. The
applicant attacks the Minister’s decision on, among others, the
ground that it
is irrational, given that the only two factors upon
which the Minister relied to support his decision are factors that
will never
change. In support of their opposition, the Minister, SACP
and Mrs Hani rely on the nature of the crime, its seriousness
and
the sentencing remarks of the trial court and the
Supreme Court of Appeal.
[39]
The Minister, the SACP and Mrs Hani
contend that, when regard is had to these factors in their totality,
the Minister’s decision
not to grant the applicant parole is
justified and rational. They point out that by his actions the
applicant nearly plunged South
Africa into a civil war and he nearly
prevented the attainment of democracy. On the other hand, the
applicant effectively says:
I have been in prison for 28 years. I
have behaved very well in prison all these years and I am sorry about
what I did. I have
apologised to the Hani family and I am not a risk
to the community and have complied with all that I have been asked to
do to improve
my prospects of getting parole but there is nothing I
can do about the nature of the crime I committed, its seriousness and
the
sentencing remarks of the courts. He contends that the Minister’s
decision fails the rationality test and should, therefore,
be set
aside.
The law relating to
parole under the 1959 Act and the CSA
[40]
In
terms of section
136
of the
CSA
the parole regime applicable to the applicant is one that was
provided for in the Correctional Services Act
[11]
of 1959 (the 1959 Act). In terms of section 65(2) of the 1959 Act the
Minister has the power to place on parole any prisoner to
whom the
parole regime under the 1959 Act applies. Those are prisoners who
were sentenced prior to 1 October 2004.
[41]
Section
136(1), (2) and (3) of the
CSA reads:
“
(1)
Any person serving a sentence of incarceration immediately before the
commencement of Chapters IV, VI and
VII is subject to the provisions
of the Correctional Services Act, 1959 (Act 8 of 1959), relating to
his or her placement under
community corrections, and is to be
considered for such release and placement by the Correctional
Supervision and Parole Board
in terms of the policy and guidelines
applied by the former Parole Boards prior to the commencement of
those Chapters.
(2)
When considering the release and placement of a sentenced offender
who is serving a determinate sentence
of incarceration as
contemplated in subsection (1), such sentenced offender must be
allocated the maximum number of credits
in terms of section 22A of
the Correctional Services Act, 1959 (Act 8 of 1959).
(3)(a) Any sentenced
offender serving a sentence of life incarceration immediately before
the commencement of Chapters IV, VI and
VII is entitled to be
considered for day parole and parole after he or she has served 20
years of the sentence.
(b)
The case of a sentenced offender contemplated in paragraph (a) must
be submitted to the National Council
which must make a recommendation
to the Minister regarding the placement of the sentenced offender
under day parole or parole.
(c)
If the recommendation of the National Council is favourable, the
Minister may order that the sentenced
offender be placed under day
parole or parole, as the case may be.”
[42]
It
will be seen from section 136(3)(a) of the CSA that a prisoner who
was serving a life imprisonment sentence immediately before
Chapters
IV, VI and VII commenced is required to serve a period of 20 years of
imprisonment before he or she can be considered
for parole. As a
result of the judgment in the matter of
Van
Wyk
[12]
in the Gauteng Division of the High Court the then Minister of
Correctional Services issued a policy document which provided that
prisoners who had been sentenced before 1 October 2004 would
become eligible for consideration for parole after serving a
minimum
of 13 years and four months. The applicant was one of such prisoners.
The applicant completed 13 years and four months
of imprisonment in
2007. However, as a result of Presidential
amnesties
that he received, he obtained certain credits which reduced the
minimum period he had to serve before he could be considered for
placement on parole by a whole year. The result was that the
applicant became eligible to be considered for placement on parole
in
2005. That is after serving 12 years and four months’
imprisonment.
[43]
The policy referred to in section 136(1) of the CSA, which
applied to the applicant, is
contained
in
the Parole Board’s Manual. Chapter VI(1A)(18) of the
Parole Board’s Manual relates in part to the function
of
the parole system and reads as follows:
“
(a)
The placement of prisoners with a good prognosis
as soon as
possible after reaching their consideration dates
, taking the
necessary penalisation into account.
(b)
The protection of the community takes place by means of prevention,
rehabilitation, control and supervision
of parolees. Consequently,
parole measures must be aimed at the prevention and help in the
community by means of the social re-integration
of the parolee by
different degrees of supervision and control.
(c)
The concept of placement on parole is based on the supposition that
it is a just and rational
manner of giving prisoners the opportunity
to serve the remainder of their sentence from within the community.
Prisoners who are paroled
under maximum supervision and who want to settle in areas that cannot
be monitored may not be paroled.
Alternatively, placement on day
parole is considered.”
[13]
(Emphasis added.)
It
is to be noted from (a) in this quotation that the Department’s
policy is that the placement of a prisoner on parole should
be as
soon as possible after the date from which such prisoner becomes
eligible for consideration for parole.
[44]
The criteria that must be used to determine whether a prisoner
should be placed on parole are provided for in Chapter VI(1A)(19)
of
the Parole Board Manual. In the introduction in Chapter VI(1A)(19)
the following appears in part:
“
(i)
The criteria for selection for placement on parole is not meant to be
used as the ultimate model. It
should rather be seen as a
predisposition according to which the Parole Board may serve the
interests of the community on the one
hand and those of the prisoner
on the other hand to the best of their ability and in a responsible
manner.
(ii)
Thus the
primary issue is that it should be attempted to evaluate prisoners
fairly
and justly for parole
,
to submit well-considered recommendations and to effectuate the
highest possible form of professionalism.”
[14]
(Emphasis added).
In
this excerpt the policy makes it clear that the evaluation of a
prisoner for parole must be done “
fairly and justly
”.
(Emphasis added.)
[45]
Under “nature of the crime” the Manual reads as
follows in paragraph (a):
“
The nature of the
crime or crimes for which the prisoner had been found guilty and
sentenced for his current imprisonment should
be known. A police
report (SAP 62) which briefly describes the circumstances
surrounding the crimes, as well as any remarks
by the person who
imposed the sentence, must be available. It is of primary importance
that the Parole Board must have a clear
image of what the prisoner
has done and as far as possible what was the cause of his offence. In
the case of drug trade/dagga trade,
the Parole Board must know the
value and the mass thereof was. In all cases of violence,
irrespective of the length of the sentence,
the Parole Board must
take note of the degree of aggression and the type of weapon used,
whether it had been planned or took place
in cold blood or
impulsively or under the influence of alcohol or drugs. If the crime
took place within the context of a group,
the prisoner’s share
in the crime, for example, whether he had used the weapons himself or
only executed orders, or was a
leader, must be taken into
consideration. Furthermore, the age and sex of the victim must also
be known because it gives a good
insight into the personality of the
prisoner.”
[15]
[46]
Chapter IV of the CSA deals with sentenced prisoners. This
chapter covers sections 36 to 45. The heading to section 36
reads:
“Objective of implementation of sentence of
imprisonment.” Section 36 of the CSA reads:
“
With due regard to
the fact that the deprivation of liberty serves the purposes of
punishment,
the implementation of a sentence of imprisonment has
the objective of enabling the sentenced prisoner to lead a socially
responsible
and crime-free life in the future.
” (Emphasis
added.)
[47]
Section 36 seems to me to provide a statutory basis for the
proposition that an important objective of imprisonment in our
correctional
facilities (prisons) is aimed at rehabilitating the
prisoner so that he or she can lead a crime-free life after being
released
from prison and rejoining society. It is important to point
out that the Minister accepts that the reports including the social
worker’s report in respect of the applicant are to the effect
that the risk of him re-offending if he is released is low.
Indeed,
his disciplinary record inside prison over more than 25 years
supports this. There is no complaint that over so many years
the
applicant has ever had any incidents of ill-discipline. By all
accounts he seems to have been an exemplary prisoner.
[48]
Section 37 bears the heading “General principles”.
Section 37(2) reads:
“
In addition to
providing a regime which meets the minimum requirements of this Act,
the Department must seek to provide amenities
which will
create an
environment in which sentenced prisoners will be able to live with
dignity and develop the ability to lead a socially
responsible and
crime-free life
”. (Emphasis added.)
The latter part of this
provision also reflects the reformative objective of imprisonment
under the CSA.
[49]
Chapter VII of the CSA deals with: “Release from
Correctional Centre and Placement under Correctional Supervision and
on Day
Parole and Parole”. The sections that fall under Chapter
VII are sections 73 to 82. The heading to section 73 reads: “Length
and form of sentences”. Section 73(1) reads:
“
73(1)
Subject to the provisions of this Act—
(a)
a sentenced prisoner remains in prison for the full period of
sentence; and
(b)
an offender sentenced to life incarceration remains in a correctional
centre for the
rest of his or her life.”
Section 73(1) of the CSA
makes it plain that, subject to the provisions of the CSA, a
sentenced prisoner serves the full period
of his or her sentence.
This means that, unless a prisoner is released from prison in terms
of some or other provision of the CSA,
he or she must serve a term of
life imprisonment if he or she has been sentenced to life
imprisonment or he or she must serve the
full determinate term of
imprisonment fixed by the court.
[50]
Section 73(4) reads:
“
In accordance with
the provisions of this Chapter a prisoner may be placed under
correctional supervision or on day parole or on
parole before the
expiration of his or her term of incarceration.”
The release of a prisoner
on parole is provided for in the CSA. Section 73(4) authorises the
placement of a prisoner on parole before
the expiry of his or her
term of imprisonment.
[51]
Section 73(5) reads:
“
(5)(a)
A sentenced offender may be placed under correctional supervision,
on
day parole, parole or medical parole—
(i)
on a date determined by the Correctional Supervision and Parole
Board; or
(ii)
in the case of an offender sentenced to life incarceration, on a date
to be determined
by the Minister.
(b)
Such placement is subject to the provisions of Chapter IV and such
offender accepting the conditions
for placement.”
It
is to be noted that section 73(5)(a)(i) envisages a date for the
placement of a prisoner on day parole or on parole being a date
determined by the Correctional Supervision and Parole Board
except in the case of a prisoner who has been sentenced to life
imprisonment in which case it is contemplated that the date would be
determined by the court.
[52]
Insofar as it may be relevant to the placement on parole of a
prisoner who had been sentenced to life imprisonment, section 73(6)
reads as follows:
“
(6)(a)
Subject to the provisions of paragraph (b), a sentenced offender
serving a determinate sentence or cumulative sentences of more than
24 months may not be placed on day parole or parole until such
sentenced offender has served either the stipulated non-parole
period, or if no non-parole period was stipulated, half of the
sentence, but day parole or parole must be considered whenever a
sentenced offender has served 25 years of a sentence or cumulative
sentences.
(
a
A)
Subject to the provisions of paragraph (b), an offender serving a
determinate sentence or cumulative sentences of
not more than 24
months may not be placed on parole or day parole until such offender
has served either the stipulated non-parole
period, or if no
non-parole period was stipulated, a quarter of the sentence.
(b)
A person who has been sentenced to-
(i)
periodical incarceration must be detained periodically in a
correctional centre as prescribed by regulation;
. . .
(iv)
life incarceration may not be placed on day parole or parole until he
or she has served at least 25
years of the sentence; or
. . .
(vi)
any term of incarceration, excluding persons declared dangerous
criminals in terms of section 286A
of the Criminal Procedure
Act, may be placed on day parole or parole on reaching the age of 65
years provided that he or she
has served at least 15 years of such
sentence.
[53]
The provisions of section 73(6)(a) apply to a prisoner who has
been sentenced to a determinate sentence. It is to the effect that,
once such a prisoner has served 25 years, it is obligatory that
he or she be considered for parole. Section 73(6)(b)(iv) relates
to a
prisoner who has been sentenced to life imprisonment. It deals with
two categories of prisoners who have been sentenced to
life
imprisonment. It provides that a prisoner sentenced to life
imprisonment may not be placed on parole before he or she completes
25 years of imprisonment subject to one exception. That
exception is where a prisoner who has been sentenced to life
imprisonment
reaches the age of 65 before completing 25 years of
imprisonment but having completed 15 years of imprisonment. It
provides
that in such a case a prisoner may be placed on parole even
though he or she may not have completed 25 years of
imprisonment,
provided that he or she has completed at least 15 years
of imprisonment.
[54]
Section 75 of the CSA deals with the powers, functions and
duties of Correctional Supervision and Parole Boards. Only section
75(1)
is important for purposes of this judgment. It reads:
“
(1)
A Correctional Supervision and Parole Board, having considered the
report on any sentenced offender serving
a determinate sentence of
more than 24 months submitted to it by the Case Management Committee
in terms of section 42 and in the
light of any other information or
argument, may
(a)
subject to the provisions of paragraphs (b) and (c) and subsection
(1A) place a sentenced offender under
correctional supervision or day
parole or grant parole or medical parole and, subject to the
provisions of section 52, set the
conditions of community corrections
imposed on the sentenced offender;
(b)
in the case of any sentenced offender having been declared a
dangerous criminal in terms of section
286A of the Criminal Procedure
Act, make recommendations to the court on the granting or the
placement under correctional supervision,
day parole, parole or
medical parole and on the period for and, subject to the provisions
of section 52, the conditions of community
corrections imposed on the
sentenced offender; and
(c)
in respect of any sentenced offender serving a sentence of life
incarceration, make recommendations
to the Minister on granting of
day parole, parole or medical parole, and, subject to the provisions
of section 52, the conditions
of community corrections to be imposed
on such an offender.”
[55]
It is clear that in respect of prisoners sentenced to life
imprisonment the power of the Correctional Supervision and Parole
Board
is to make recommendations to the Minister on the granting of
parole. That is provided for in section 75(1)(c). That provision must
be read with section 78. Section 78(1) to (4) reads:
“
(1)
Having considered the record of proceedings of the Correctional
Supervision and Parole Board and its recommendations
in the case of a
prisoner sentenced to life imprisonment, the court may, subject to
the provisions of section 73(6) (b)(iv),
grant parole or day
parole or prescribe the conditions of community corrections in terms
of section 52.
(2)
If the court refuses to grant parole or day parole in terms of
subsection (1), it may make recommendations
in respect of treatment,
development and support of the prisoner which may contribute to
improving the likelihood of future placement
on parole or day parole.
(3)
Where a Correctional Supervision and Parole Board acting in terms of
section 73 recommends, in
the case of a person sentenced to life
imprisonment, that parole or day parole be withdrawn or that the
conditions of community
corrections imposed on such a person be
amended, the court must consider and make a decision upon the
recommendation.
(4)
Where the court refuses or withdraws parole or day parole the matter
must be reconsidered by the court
within two years.”
[56]
It is quite clear that under the CSA a court has the power to
grant parole to prisoners who are sentenced to life imprisonment.
Factors taken into
consideration
[57]
In his answering affidavit the Minister set out the factors
which he said needed to be taken into account in determining whether
an offender should be placed on parole. The factors are contained in
Chapter VI(1A)(19) of the Correctional Services B-Order, under
the
heading “Criteria for Parole Selection” which is the
“Parole Board Manual”. The Minister listed
the
following as the factors that require to be taken into account in
considering an application for parole:
“
7.1
Chapter VI(1A)(19) of the Correctional Services B-Order, under the
heading ‘Criteria for Parole Selection’
(commonly
referred to as the ‘Parole Board Manual’), provides that
the factors mentioned are to be taken into account
in the
consideration of an offender for placement on parole.
7.1.1 In terms of Chapter
VI(1A)(19)(b) of the B-Order, under the heading ‘Nature of the
crime’, the nature of the crime
committed by the offender, the
remarks made by the court at the time of the imposition of the
sentence, and whether the crimes
took place in cold blood or
impulsively are taken into account when considering an offender for
placement on parole;
7.1.2 In terms of Chapter
VI(1A)(19)(c) of the B-Order, under the heading ‘Crime and
background history’, the criminal
history of the offender is to
be taken into account when considering an offender for placement on
parole (including whether he
or she is a first offender);
7.1.3 In terms of Chapter
VI(1A)(19)(d) of the B-Order, under the heading ‘Behaviour and
reaction to treatment’, the
behaviour and adjustment of the
offender during his or her incarceration, together with the
programmes attended by the offender
within the correctional centre
aimed at his or her rehabilitation, are to be taken into account when
considering placement on parole;
7.1.4 In terms of Chapter
VI(1A)(19)(e) of the B-Order, under the heading ‘Medical,
psychological and psychiatric considerations’,
regard is to be
had to psychological reports in considering an offender for placement
on parole;
7.1.5 In terms of Chapter
VI(1A)(19)(f) of the B-Order, under the heading ‘Domestic
circumstances and employment opportunities
after placement’,
regard is to be had to whether an offender will have a fixed
residence, whether he or she will be capable
of obtaining employment
and the availability of support systems in the event of his or her
being placed on parole;
7.1.6 In terms of Chapter
VI(1A)(19)(h) of the B-Order, under the heading ‘Selection for
placement on parole’, the interest
of the community not to be
exposed to increased danger is to be taken into account in
considering an offender for placement on
parole.”
[16]
[58]
In paragraph 7.2 of his answering affidavit the Minister
stated that in terms of the policy of the Department on parole, in
deciding
whether an offender should be placed on parole, the
following factors are required to be taken into account:
“
7.2 In
terms of the policy document of the Department of
Correctional Services pertaining to placement on parole
(“the
policy document”), in deciding whether an offender should be
placed on parole account is to be taken of:
7.2.1 the remarks made by
the court in imposing sentence;
7.2.2 the nature and
seriousness of the crime and the consequence thereof;
7.2.3 the behaviour and
adjustment of the offender during his or her incarceration;
7.2.4 the programmes
attended by the offender within the correctional centre aimed at his
or her rehabilitation;
7.2.5 the availability of
support systems to the offender in the event of his or her being
placed on parole;
7.2.6 whether the
offender has a fixed address which can be monitored on his or her
being placed on parole;
7.2.7 the offender’s
scholastic or technical achievements during his or her incarceration;
7.2.8 the risk of
recidivism in the event of the offender being placed on parole.”
[59]
In paragraph 7.4 of his answering affidavit the Minister
pointed out that in terms of section 63(1) of the 1959 Act –
which
applies to the applicant in regard to parole by virtue of
section 136(1) of the CSA – the decision-maker “is
enjoined
to have regard to the nature of the offence and any remarks
made by the court in question at the time of the imposition of
sentence”
for purposes of the decision whether or not to place
an offender on parole.
Rationality
[60]
The
applicant has attacked the
Minister’s decision not to place him on parole on many grounds
in support of his contention that
that decision should be reviewed
and set aside. One of these was that the decision was irrational
because there was no connection
between the Minister’s exercise
of power given to him in this regard and the purpose for which that
power was conferred.
Counsel for the Minister as well as counsel for
the SACP and Mrs Hani submitted that the Minister’s decision
was rational
and served the purpose of the power conferred on the
Minister. If I conclude that the Minister’s decision was
irrational,
that will be a sufficient ground justifying that the
Minister’s decision be reviewed and set aside. Indeed, that
will make
it unnecessary to deal with other grounds of review upon
which the applicant relied in support of his appeal.
[61]
In
attacking
the
Minister’s decision as irrational, the applicant relied on,
amongst others, the fact that the nature and seriousness of
the crime
of which he was convicted and the sentencing
remarks
of
the High Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal will never change in
the future. The Minister did not dispute this nor could he.
The
applicant then went on to submit in his founding affidavit in the
High Court that, because these two matters on which the Minister
relied to justify denying him parole will never change in the future,
the Minister will never release him on parole which, therefore,
meant
that he would serve a full life sentence of imprisonment.
[62]
In
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers
[17]
this Court said about the standard of rationality:
“
It
is a requirement of the rule of law that the exercise of public power
by the Executive and other functionaries should not be
arbitrary.
Decisions must be rationally related to the purpose for which the
power was given, otherwise they are in effect arbitrary
and
inconsistent with this requirement. It follows that in order to pass
constitutional scrutiny the exercise of public power by
the Executive
and other functionaries must, at least, comply with this requirement.
If it does not, it falls short of the standards
demanded by our
Constitution for such action.”
[18]
[63]
This
Court went on to point out: “The question whether a decision is
rationally related to the purpose for which the power
was given calls
for an objective enquiry”.
[19]
[64]
Indeed,
this Court said later in the same case: “What the Constitution
requires is that public power vested in the executive
and other
functionaries be exercised in an objectively rational manner”.
[20]
[65]
Finally, this Court went on to say
about rationality:
“
Rationality
in this sense is a minimum threshold requirement applicable to the
exercise of all public power by members of the Executive
and other
functionaries. Action that fails to pass this threshold is
inconsistent with the requirements of our Constitution, and
therefore
unlawful. The setting of this standard does not mean that the courts
can or should substitute their opinions as to what
is appropriate,
for the opinions of those in whom the power has been vested. As long
as the purpose sought to be achieved by the
exercise of public power
is within the authority of the functionary, and as long as the
functionary’s decision, viewed objectively,
is rational, a
court cannot interfere with the decision simply because it disagrees
with it, or considers that the power was exercised
inappropriately.”
[21]
[66]
In paragraph 13 of his answering affidavit
the Minister set out the factors which he said he took into account
in deciding the applicant’s
application for parole. Earlier on
I referred to the factors that the Minister said in his decision
document he took into account
in deciding the applicant’s
application for parole. That was based on what appears in his
decision document. Here, I am now
referring to the factors that the
Minister said in his answering affidavit he took into account in
deciding the applicant’s
application for parole. Most of the
factors he mentioned in his decision document he also mentioned in
his affidavit. However,
there are two features in respect of which
there is a difference in what he said in his decision document and
what he said in his
affidavit that may need to be highlighted. For
that reason, I propose to reflect here what he said in his affidavit
in this regard.
The Minister said
:
“
13.1 For purposes
of my decision dated 16 March 2020, I took into account as positive
factors in favour of his placement on parole:
13.1.1
the commendable behaviour and adjustment of the Applicant during
his
incarceration (as attested by his clean disciplinary record within
the correctional centre);
13.1.2
the multidisciplinary programmes completed by the Applicant within
the correctional centre aimed at his rehabilitation;
13.1.3
the availability of support systems to the Applicant and his
favourable employment prospects in the event of his being placed on
parole;
13.1.4
the fact that the Applicant is a first offender;
13.1.5
the remorse on the part of the Applicant for the crime;
13.1.6
the risk of the Applicant re-offending being low.”
I
note that in paragraph 13.1.1 of his answering affidavit, the
Minister describes the applicant’s behaviour in prison as
“commendable”. That description is not reflected in his
decision document. I believe that it is important. I also note
that
in paragraph 13 the Minister does not refer to taking into account
the reports of psychologists and social workers which he
says in his
decision document he took into account.
[67]
The
Minister then
went
on to say in the next paragraph, namely, paragraph 13.2 of his
answering affidavit:
“
13.2
Notwithstanding the positive factors in favour of his placement on
parole, I was in the light of paragraph 7.1.1, paragraphs
7.2.1 –
7.2.2 and paragraphs 7.4 – 7.5 above enjoined to have due
regard to the nature and seriousness of the
crime of murder committed
by the Applicant, and the remarks made by the court at the time of
the imposition of the sentence.”
Paragraphs
7.1.1, 7.2.1 – 7.2.2 and 7.4 – 7.5 referred to in this
paragraphs read:
“
7.1.1
In terms of Chapter VI(1A)(19)(b) of the B-Order, under the
heading
‘Nature of the crime’, the nature of the crime committed
by the offender, the remarks made by the court at
the time of the
imposition of the sentence, and whether the crimes took place in cold
blood or impulsively are taken into account
when considering an
offender for placement on parole.
. . .
7.2.1 the remarks made by
the court in imposing sentence;
7.2.2 the nature and
seriousness of the crime and the consequence thereof;
. . .
7.4 In
terms of the provisions of section 63(1) of Act 8 of 1959 (which
finds application to the placement of
the Applicant on parole by
virtue of section 136(1) of Act 111 of 1998), the decision-maker
is enjoined to have regard “
to the nature of the offence and
any remarks made by the court in question at the time of the
imposition of sentence”
for purposes of the decision
whether or not to place an offender on parole.
7.5 The
Full Court of the North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria in the matter of
Derby-Lewis v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and
Others
stressed the importance of the nature of the crime and the
remarks made by the court at the time of the imposition of the
sentence
when considering an offender for placement on parole in
stating that “
the judgement of the trial court, not only on
the merits, but also on the sentence, is of utmost importance for a
proper decision
on the placement of the applicant on parole
”.
(Emphasis added.)
[68]
What emerges from this paragraph is that the Minister
considered himself enjoined to have regard to the nature and
seriousness of
the crime as well as the sentencing remarks of the
Court.
[69]
The Minister then referred to the crime of murder of which the
applicant was convicted. He said: “The crime of murder
committed
by the applicant involved the cold-blooded assassination of
a prominent political leader, for which careful preparations were
made
in advance. The applicant was convicted of murder with no
extenuating circumstances.”
[70]
The Minister relied on the following remarks of the trial
court:
“
13.4 In
imposing
the sentence of death, the trial court stated as follows:
13.4.1
‘
The accused performed an act of assassination on a person
who had attained prominence in public affairs in South Africa, whose
killing
was likely, to the knowledge of the accused, to cause
far-reaching, highly emotive reactions, with very damaging, serious
consequences
and extremely harmful effects for the entire society in
South Africa
’;
13.4.2
‘
The accused had ample opportunity for reflection and
reconsideration, but carried on regardless
’;
13.4.3
‘
The act was not performed impulsively and spontaneously in
immediate reaction to a specific event
’;
13.4.4
‘
The assassination was planned over a period of many weeks,
with close attention to detail
’;
13.4.5
‘
The killing was cold-blooded, with deliberate intent. After
the deceased fell, when the first bullet struck him, the accused came
close up and administered the
coup de grâce
from close range
’;
13.4.6
‘
The murder was a deliberate, cold-blooded one. …it
was preceded by weeks of planning
’;
13.4.7
‘The trial court wished “
to send out the message loud
and clear to any who contemplates assassination of political leaders
as an acceptable option, what
view the court takes of such conduct’.
”
(Emphasis added.)
[71]
The Minister also referred to the
remarks made by the Supreme Court of Appeal in its judgment when
it dealt with the applicant’s
appeal on sentence. He
quoted
the following passages
from
the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal:
“
13.5.1
Few crimes can be regarded by a court as more atrocious, or as being
more calculated to arouse the revulsion of decent members of society,
than the sort of murder of which the appellants were duly
convicted.
The trial court ultimately concluded that in the case of each
appellant the death sentence was the only proper penalty.
So far from
being assailed by any doubts in the matter, I entirely agree with
that conclusion. I would therefore confirm the death
sentences.
13.5.2
I have already mentioned that I am disposed to confirm both the
death
sentences. However, for the reasons set forth in this court's
judgment in
S
v Makwanyane en 'n Ander
1994 (3)
SA 868(A) at 873C-D it is appropriate that the further consideration
of the appeals against the death sentences by
this court be deferred
until the Constitutional Court shall have ruled upon the
constitutionality of the death sentence in
a case such as the
present.”
[22]
[72]
It will have been seen from the above what types of remarks of
the trial court and the Supreme Court of Appeal the Minister
took into account in deciding not to place the applicant on parole.
The courts’ remarks he took into account relate to the
seriousness of the offence that the applicant had committed or to the
fact that the offence was well-planned and was committed
in cold
blood. The question that arises is: are these the types of remarks
made by a trial court at the time of imposing a sentence
that the
Department’s policy contemplates should be taken into account?
In my view, they are not and the Minister misconceived
the remarks to
which the policy refers. The sentencing remarks to which the policy
document refers can only be remarks about the
minimum period of
imprisonment that a convicted person or offender should serve before
he or she can be considered for parole.
Sometimes Judges and
Magistrates make remarks to such effect when they impose a sentence
of imprisonment. If the reference to the
sentencing remarks of the
Court referred to in the Department’s policy document is
understood to be a reference to such remarks,
the requirement in the
policy document makes sense.
[73]
The
remarks contemplated in the Department’s policy are the types
of remarks this Court had in mind in
Jimmale
when it referred to the court’s “power to postpone
consideration of parole for sentenced offenders”.
[23]
In fact, in
Jimmale
this
Court said:
“
The issue for
determination in this application for leave to appeal relates to the
power of a trial court to grant a non-parole
order – that is –
an order by the trial court that the person sentenced should not be
considered for parole before
a stated portion of the sentence has
been served.”
[24]
In
my view, when the Department’s policy document refers to the
sentencing remarks of the trial court, it refers to the remarks
of
the sentencing court that reflect the minimum period of imprisonment
that the court would have said should be served by the
offender
before he or she could be considered for parole.
[74]
The
courts obtained the power to impose a non-parole portion of a
sentence of imprisonment from section 276B(1)(a) of the Criminal
Procedure Act.
[25]
That
provision reads:
“
(a)
If a court sentences a person convicted of an offence to imprisonment
for a period of two years or longer,
the court may, as part of the
sentence, fix a period during which the person shall not be placed on
parole.
(b)
Such period shall be referred to as the non-parole period, and may
not exceed two-thirds of the term
of imprisonment imposed or 25
years, whichever is the shorter.”
[75]
It is to be noted that section 276(B)(1)(b) limits the length
of the period during which a court may prevent the Correctional
Services
authorities from considering a prisoner for parole. It may
not say that a prisoner may not be considered for parole for his or
her entire period of imprisonment. Its power is limited to a maximum
period of two-thirds of the term of imprisonment to be served
by the
accused or to 25 years whichever is shorter. Therefore, no matter how
serious the crime is for which a person is sent to
jail, the court
has no power to say that he or she should not be considered for
parole for a period after the expiry of 25 years
of imprisonment.
[76]
If, however, the reference to remarks in the Department’s
policy is understood to be a reference to the types of remarks to
which the Minister referred and relied upon, namely, remarks about
the seriousness of the offence, that would not make sense because
the
policy document does mention the seriousness of the offence as a
factor to be taken into account. Since the authors of the
Department’s policy document dealt with the seriousness of the
crime elsewhere in the document, they could not have intended
the
reference to the trial court’s sentencing remarks to be a
reference to remarks that relate to the seriousness of the
crime.
[77]
In the present case neither the trial court nor the
Supreme Court of Appeal made the types of sentencing remarks that are
contemplated
by the Department’s policy. That is understandable
because the sentence that the trial court imposed on the applicant
did
not contemplate his return to society. He was sentenced to death.
Therefore, the Court had no reason to make remarks about the length
of the period of imprisonment that the applicant had to serve before
he could be considered for parole. Accordingly, in this case
there
are no sentencing remarks of the type contemplated in the
Department’s policy that the Minister was entitled to take
into
account. This means that the factors recognised in the policy of the
Department as factors that should be taken into account
that,
according to the Minister, did not support the release of the
applicant on parole were only the nature of the crime and the
seriousness thereof.
[78]
The
Minister
also
made the following important admission in paragraph 16.1 of his
answering affidavit:
“
It
is admitted that the factors mentioned in Chapter VI (1A)
(19)
of the Correctional Services B-Order (the so-called Parole Board
Manual) referred to in paragraphs 7.1.3 to 7.1.6 above were
positive
factors in favour of the placement of the applicant on parole. So,
too, the factors mentioned in the policy document referred
to in
paragraphs 7.2.3 – 7.2.8 above. For purposes of my decision, I
had due regard to such factors in favour of the placement
of the
applicant on parole.”
[79]
The reference in this paragraph to
the factors in paragraphs 7.1.3 to 7.1.6 is a reference to six of the
eight factors that Chapter VI (1A) (19)
of the
Correctional Services B-Order under the heading “Criteria for
Parole Selection” provides are to be taken into
account in
deciding whether or not an offender should be granted parole.
[80]
In his answering affidavit, all the
Minister said was in effect that it was not his position that the
applicant would never be released
on parole. He never explained how
he could release the applicant on parole in the future when the
reasons that prevented him from
releasing
the
applicant on parole in 2020 would still be present and would not have
changed. What the Minister says in effect is that in 2020
he was
prevented by the nature and seriousness of the crime and the trial
court’s and Supreme Court of Appeal’s sentencing
remarks
from releasing the applicant on parole but some time in the future he
could release him on parole despite the fact that
the nature of the
crime, its seriousness and the court’s sentencing remarks would
not have changed. Earlier I pointed out
that the Department’s
policy requires that, as far as possible, a prisoner should be placed
on parole as soon as possible
after he or she has reached the date
when he or she can be considered for parole. In this regard we must
remember that the applicant’s
date when he became eligible to
be considered for placement on parole was in 2005. That is seventeen
years ago. That is close to
20 years ago. Furthermore, I also
highlighted earlier that the Department’s policy makes it clear
that a prisoner must be
evaluated fairly and justly for placement on
parole.
[81]
The question that immediately arises
then is this: if, in the future, the Minister can or will release the
applicant on parole on
the same facts as those which prevailed in
2020 when he
denied
him parole, does that
mean that he will have reached two different and mutually exclusive
conclusions on the same facts? If he could
reach the conclusion to
release the applicant on parole on these facts in the
future
,
why is it that he did not release him in 2020 on the same facts. If
the Minister were to release the applicant on parole on the
same
facts in the future, how will he justify his two conflicting
conclusions on the same facts? The Minister did not explain any
of
this in his answering affidavit. His failure to explain this renders
his decision to deny the applicant parole inexplicable.
If it is
inexplicable, it follows like night follows day that it is
irrational. There is no connection between the exercise by
the
Minister of his power and the purpose for which the legislation
conferred that power on him. If there is no connection between
the
Minister’s exercise of the power and the purpose of the power
conferred upon him, his decision is irrational.
[82]
One can put what I have said in the
preceding paragraph in a different way. That is that, if more than 26
years after the applicant
was sentenced for the crime he committed,
it was appropriate for the Minister not to release the applicant on
parole in 2020 because
of the nature of the crime, the seriousness
thereof and the Court’s sentencing remarks, why would it be
appropriate for the
Minister to release him one or two or three or
five years thereafter? These three factors are immutable. They will
not change one
or two or three or five years later. This the Minister
has not explained, notwithstanding the fact that it cried out for an
explanation
because the applicant clearly put it in issue. Therefore,
this Court must vitiate the Minister’s decision. If it were not
to do so, it would in effect be giving its approval to the
proposition that in future it would be appropriate for the Minister
to deny the applicant parole even when he may have served 30 or 35 or
even 40 years of imprisonment. That, simply on the basis
of the
nature of the crime, the seriousness thereof and the trial court’s
and Supreme Court of Appeal’s sentencing
remarks despite the
fact that the applicant has complied with all other requirements for
him to be placed on parole which the Minister
concedes. The
Minister’s decision is not rationally connected to the purpose
of the power conferred upon him. His decision
is, therefore,
irrational and it falls to be reviewed and set aside.
Remedy
[83]
Having concluded that the Minister’s decision is
irrational and falls to be reviewed and set aside, the next question
is whether
this Court should remit the matter to the Minister to
consider the applicant’s application for parole afresh in the
light
of this judgment or whether this Court should order the
Minister to place the applicant on parole on such terms as may be
appropriate
in all of the circumstances.
[84]
Ordinarily, this Court would remit the matter to the Minister
and direct that he considers the applicant’s application for
parole afresh and make a decision on whether or not the applicant
should be placed on parole. That route enables the court to allow
the
functionary in whom the power to make a certain decision vests to
make the decision whether or not the applicant should be
released on
parole. However, it is not our law that a court will not under any
circumstances either make the decision itself that
was supposed to
have been made by the functionary concerned or that it can never
order such a functionary to make a particular
decision. The courts in
this country appreciated this even before the advent of democracy.
[85]
In
Traube
[26]
Goldstone J concluded that the decision of the Administrator
of Transvaal or the hospital authorities involved in that case
not to appoint the applicant, Dr Traube, as a senior house
officer fell to be reviewed and set aside. The High Court then
had to
consider whether to remit the matter to the relevant functionary to
decide her application for appointment as a senior house
officer or
to make that decision itself. The High Court concluded, after
referring to
Agricultural
Supply Association
,
[27]
that it was permissible for the Court to make the decision itself
where the decision was a foregone conclusion.
[28]
In that case Goldstone J said:
“
In my opinion the
question which must determine which of these two courses I should
follow is primarily whether the result of a
further reference back is
a foregone conclusion. Put in another way, I must consider whether on
all the facts of this case it will
be reasonable for an unbiased,
intelligent person to refuse to appoint the applicant to the position
sought by her because she
is not suitable for that appointment.”
[29]
The
Court ultimately made an order directing the relevant functionaries
to take all steps necessary to cause Dr Traube to be appointed
to the
position of a senior house officer at Baragwanath Hospital,
Soweto.
[86]
After the advent of democracy, this continued to be the
position. It is important to emphasise that courts only substitute
their
decisions for those of government functionaries in exceptional
cases. It is not something the courts do lightly nor should they.
Section 8 of PAJA deals with remedies in judicial review proceedings.
In so far as it may be relevant, section 8 reads:
“
8(1) The
court or tribunal, in proceedings for judicial review in terms of
section 6(1), may grant any order that is just
and equitable,
including orders—
(a)
directing the administrator—
(i)
to give reasons; or
(ii)
to act in the manner the court or tribunal requires
;
(b)
prohibiting the administrator from acting in a particular manner;
(c)
setting aside the administrative action and—
(i)
remitting the matter for reconsideration by the administrator, with
or without directions;
or
(ii)
in exceptional cases—
(aa)
substituting or varying the administrative action or correcting a
defect resulting from the administrative action; or
(bb)
directing the administrator or any other party to the proceedings to
pay compensation.”
(Emphasis added.)
[87]
In
Trencon
[30]
this Court dealt extensively with the circumstances in which it would
be justified for a court not to remit a matter to the relevant
functionary but, instead, to itself make the decision that the law
vests in the functionary. It is not necessary for purposes of
this
judgment to deal with all those exceptions. It should suffice to
refer only to one or two. Khampepe J, writing for a unanimous
Court
in
Trencon
,
said:
“
Pursuant to
administrative review under section 6 of PAJA and once administrative
action is set aside, section 8(1) affords courts
a wide discretion to
grant ‘any order that is just and equitable’. In
exceptional circumstances, section 8(1)(c)(ii)(aa)
affords a court
the discretion to make a substitution order.
Section 8(1)(c)(ii)(aa)
must be read in the context of section 8(1). Simply put, an
exceptional circumstances enquiry must take
place in the context of
what is just and equitable in the circumstances. In effect, even
where there are exceptional circumstances,
a court must be satisfied
that it would be just and equitable to grant an order of
substitution.”
[31]
[88]
This Court also said in that case:
“
In
Livestock
,
the Court percipiently held that—
‘
the Court has a
discretion, to be exercised judicially upon a consideration of the
facts of each case, and . . . although the matter
will be sent back
if there is no reason for not doing so, in essence it is a question
of fairness to both sides.’”
[32]
(Footnotes omitted.)
[89]
One
of the exceptions recognised in
Trencon
is where the decision is a foregone conclusion.
[33]
This Court went on to say:
“
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.
A court will not be in as
good a position as the administrator where the application of the
administrator’s expertise is still
required and a court does
not have all the pertinent information before it. This would depend
on the facts of each case. Generally,
a court ought to evaluate the
stage at which the administrator’s process was situated when
the impugned administrative action
was taken. For example, the
further along in the process, the greater the likelihood of the
administrator having already exercised
its specialised knowledge. In
these circumstances, a court may very well be in the same position as
the administrator to make a
decision. In other instances, some
matters may concern decisions that are judicial in nature; in those
instances – if the
court has all the relevant information
before it – it may very well be in as good a position as the
administrator to make
the decision.
Once a court has
established that it is in as good a position as the administrator, it
is competent to enquire into whether the
decision of the
administrator is a foregone conclusion. A foregone conclusion exists
where there is only one proper outcome of
the exercise of an
administrator’s discretion and ‘it would merely be a
waste of time to order the [administrator]
to reconsider the matter’.
Indubitably, where the administrator has not adequately applied its
unique expertise and experience
to the matter, it may be difficult
for a court to find that an administrator would have reached a
particular decision and that
the decision is a foregone conclusion.
However, in instances where the decision of an administrator is not
polycentric and is guided
by particular rules or by legislation, it
may still be possible for a court to conclude that the decision is a
foregone conclusion.”
[34]
(Emphasis added.)
[90]
A period of more than 15 years has lapsed since the applicant
became eligible for consideration to be placed on parole. It was in
2005 that the applicant became eligible to be considered for
placement on parole. The Minister accepts that the applicant has
shown remorse for the crime he committed. The evidence reveals that
during his imprisonment all these years since 1993 the applicant
has
had no negative disciplinary record in prison. The Minister accepts
that the applicant’s risk of re offending if
he were to be
placed on parole is low. The applicant has apologised to Mrs Hani
and her family more than once. The applicant
cannot do anything about
the nature of the crime he committed, its seriousness nor can he do
anything about the sentencing remarks
that the trial court had made
about him and the crime of which he was convicted. With regard to the
factors the Minister took into
account against the applicant the fact
that, if the applicant were placed on parole, he would serve only a
period of two years
of his life sentence, should not have been taken
into account. This is because that is a benefit that the law has
given to the
prisoners falling in the same category as the applicant
and he is entitled to benefit from that law. In this regard it must
be
remembered that section 9(1) of the Constitution declares that
“[e]veryone is equal before the law and has the right to equal
protection and benefit of the law.”:
[91]
In my view, this Court is in as good a position as the
Minister to determine whether the applicant should be released on
parole.
[92]
The other factor that should be taken into account in deciding
whether to remit the matter to the Minister or to order the Minister
to place the applicant on parole is the history of this matter. That
history reveals that not only has the applicant served 28 years
of imprisonment of his life imprisonment sentence but he has also
complied with all that the various Ministers of Correctional
Services
and the Parole Board have required him to do in order to improve his
prospects of being granted parole.
[93]
For over a decade the applicant made numerous applications for
parole and various Ministers responsible for Correctional Services
rejected his applications for one reason or another. On a number of
occasions the applicant applied to the High Court to challenge
the
various Ministers’ decisions denying him parole and he
succeeded in all of them except the one that is the subject of
this
judgment. Even in this one as will have been seen above, he should
have succeeded. In all those applications, except one,
the Court
remitted the matter to the Minister responsible for
Correctional Services to consider the applicant’s
application for parole afresh and each time the various Ministers
reached the same conclusion as they had reached before, namely,
to
reject his application for parole. The one occasion when the High
Court did not remit the matter is referred to in the next
paragraph.
[94]
The history of the applicant’s applications for parole
reveals that, as far back as 2011, the Parole Board recommended that
the applicant be released on parole but the then Minister responsible
for Correctional Services rejected the recommendation. That
history
also reveals that in the one court application, in which the Court
did not remit the matter, the Court ordered the Minister
to release
the applicant on parole. On that occasion the Minister appealed that
judgment to the Supreme Court of Appeal. The outcome
of the
Minister’s appeal was that the Minister had erred in deciding
the applicant’s application for parole without
considering the
statement of the Hani family. When the Minister reconsidered the
applicant’s application for parole, as ordered
by the Supreme
Court of Appeal, he once again reached the same conclusion as before,
namely to reject the applicant’s application
for parole.
[95]
In the present case the Minister has considered all the
factors that should be considered in deciding whether to place a
prisoner
on parole and concluded that, except for two, they all
supported the conclusion that the applicant should be released on
parole.
The two factors that the Minister considered to count against
the applicant are the ones discussed above which I have concluded
can
no longer stand in the way of the release of the applicant. I have
reached this conclusion against the background that the
applicant
served more than 25 years of his sentence of life imprisonment during
which he has kept a clean disciplinary record and
has complied with
every requirement that he has been told by the prison authorities he
should comply with in order to improve his
prospects of placement on
parole. In the circumstances I am of the view that it is just and
equitable that this Court should order
the Minister to place the
applicant on parole.
[96]
In considering whether or not the applicant should be released
on parole, I have been mindful of the fact that, in assassinating
Mr
Hani, the applicant sought to derail the attainment of democracy in
this country and nearly plunged South Africa into a civil
war.
However, I have also borne in mind that, when the fathers and mothers
of our constitutional democracy drafted our Constitution
and included
in it the Bill of Rights, they did not draft a Bill of Rights that
would confer fundamental rights only on those who
fought for
democracy and not on those who had supported apartheid or who were
opposed to the introduction of democracy in this
country. They
drafted a Bill of Rights that conferred fundamental rights on
everyone including those who had supported apartheid
with all their
hearts. Indeed, they drafted a Bill of Rights which conferred
fundamental rights even upon visitors to our country
so that, upon
entry into our country, they begin to enjoy the benefits and
protections of our Bill of Rights. That is why the preamble
to our
Constitution reads in part:
“
We, the people of
South Africa,
…
Believe that South Africa
belongs to all who live in it, united in our diversity.
We therefore, through our
freely elected representatives, adopt this Constitution as the
supreme law of the Republic so as to –
Heal the divisions of the
past and establish a society based on democratic values, social
justice and fundamental human rights;
Lay the foundations for a
democratic and open society in which government is based on the will
of the people and every citizen is
equally protected by law;
Improve the quality of
life of all citizens and free the potential of each person; and
Build a united and
democratic South Africa able to take its rightful place as a
sovereign state in the family of nations.”
[97]
Furthermore,
most of the sections in our Bill of Rights start with the phrase
“Everyone has a right…” That is
because the
fundamental rights conferred in those sections are conferred on
everyone.
[35]
[98]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld.
3.
The decision of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
dismissing the applicant’s
application is set aside and
replaced with the following:
“
(a)
The decision of the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services
made in March 2020 rejecting the applicant’s
application for
parole is reviewed and set aside.
(b)
The Minister of Justice and Correctional Services is ordered to place
the applicant on parole on such
terms and conditions as he may deem
appropriate and to take all such steps as may need to be taken to
ensure that the applicant
is released on parole within ten (10)
calendar days from the date of this order.
(c)
The Minister of Justice and Correctional Services is ordered to pay
the applicant’s costs
including the costs of two counsel.”
4.
The Minister of Justice and Correctional Services must pay the
applicant’s costs in
this Court including the costs of two
counsel as well as the applicants’ costs in the Supreme Court
of Appeal in respect
of the petition for leave to appeal.
For
the Applicant:
Adv R du Plessis SC and Adv L Kellermann SC instructed
by Julian Knight and Associates Incorporated
For
the First Respondent:
Adv M Moerane SC, Adv G Bester SC, and Adv N Mteto
instructed by State Attorney, Pretoria
For
the Second and Third Respondents:
Adv M Sikhakhane SC and Adv N Nyembe
instructed by
Thaanyane Attorneys
[1]
111 of 1998.
[2]
Jimmale
v S
[2016]
ZACC 27
;
2016 (2) SACR 691
(CC);
2016 (11) BCLR 1389
(CC)
.
[3]
Id at para 1.
[4]
It appears from the judgment of Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J in
Walus
v Minister of Correctional Services and Others
[2016] ZAGPHC 103
(case number 41828/2015 of the Gauteng Division of
the High Court handed down on 10 March 2016) that the only reasons
the Minister
gave in 2015 were the nature of the crime and
sentencing remarks and that he may not have said anything about the
other factors.
[5]
This is reflected in the judgment of Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J in
Walus v
Minister of Correctional Services and Others
[2016] ZAGPHC 103.
[6]
Judy Pearsall
The
Concise Oxford Dictionary
(Oxford University Press Inc, New York 1999) Tenth Edition.
[7]
3
of 2000.
[8]
S v
Boesak
[2000] ZACC 25
;
2001 (1) SA 912
(CC);
2001 (1) BCLR 36
(CC) at para
12.
[9]
Fraser
v Naude
[1998]
ZACC 13
;
1999
(1) SA 1
(CC);
1998 (11) BCLR 1357
(CC) at para 9.
[10]
Id at para 7.
[11]
8 of 1959.
[12]
Van Wyk
v Minister of Correctional Services
2012
(1) SACR 159 (GNP).
[13]
Chapter VI(1A)(18) of the Parole Board’s Manual.
[14]
Chapter VI(1A)(19) of the Parole Board’s Manual.
[15]
Id at under “nature of the crime”.
[16]
Chapter VI(1A)(19) of the Correctional Services B-Order.
[17]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of South Africa: In re Ex Parte President
of the Republic of South Africa
[2000]
ZACC 1; 2000 (2) SA 674 (CC); 2000 (3) BCLR 241 (CC).
[18]
Id at para 85
.
[19]
Id at para 86.
[20]
Id at para 89.
[21]
Id at para 90.
[22]
S v
Walus
[1994]
ZASCA 189
; 2000 JDR 0761 at 44 and 47.
[23]
Jimmale
above n 2 at para 1.
[24]
Id at para 2.
[25]
51 of 1977.
[26]
Traube
v Administrator, Transvaal
1989
(2) SA 396 (T).
[27]
Agricultural
Supply Association (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Agriculture
1970 (4) SA 65 (T).
[28]
Id at 72A-D. See
Traube
above n 26 at 408A-E.
[29]
Traube
id at 408E-G.
[30]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Limited
[2015]
ZACC 22; 2015 (5) SA 245 (CC); 2015 (10) BCLR 1199 (CC).
[31]
Id at para 34–35.
[32]
Id at para 37.
[33]
Id at para 38.
[34]
Id at paras 47-49.
[35]
This is not to say that all the fundamental rights in our Bill of
Rights are conferred on everyone because some are conferred
only on
the citizens and others on other categories of people.
sino noindex
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