Case Law[2024] ZASCA 77South Africa
Schultz v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (76/2023) [2024] ZASCA 77; 2024 (2) SACR 294 (SCA) (23 May 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
23 May 2024
Headnotes
Summary: International law – extradition – Constitution – Extradition Act 67 of 1962 – whether power to make extradition request to a foreign State vests with the Minister of Justice or National Prosecution Authority.
Judgment
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## Schultz v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (76/2023) [2024] ZASCA 77; 2024 (2) SACR 294 (SCA) (23 May 2024)
Schultz v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (76/2023) [2024] ZASCA 77; 2024 (2) SACR 294 (SCA) (23 May 2024)
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sino date 23 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL
– Extradition –
Power
of minister
–
Power
to request extradition of person from United States to stand trial
in South Africa – High Court finding that power
vested in
NPA and not in Minister – Request is from one state to
another and engages executive sphere of power –
Minister is
central to administration and implementation of Extradition Act –
Decision-making power in respect of all
extradition requests vests
in him – Appeal upheld – Only Minister has power to
make extradition request –
Extradition Act 67 of 1962.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 76/2023
In the matter between:
JOHNATHAN RICHARD
SCHULTZ APPELLANT
and
MINISTER OF JUSTICE
AND
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
FIRST RESPONDENT
DIRECTOR GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT
OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
SECOND RESPONDENT
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS,
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
THIRD RESPONDENT
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Schultz v Minister
of Justice and Correctional Services and Others
(76/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 77 (23 May 2024)
Coram:
MOTHLE, HUGHES and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA
and SEEGOBIN and
KEIGHTLEY AJJA
Heard:
15 March 2024
Delivered:
23 May 2024
Summary:
International law – extradition –
Constitution – Extradition Act 67 of 1962 – whether power
to make extradition
request to a foreign State vests with the
Minister of Justice or National Prosecution Authority.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Janse van Nieuwenhuizen J, sitting as court of
first instance):
1
The
appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel,
where so employed.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and
replaced with the following:
‘
It
is declared that only the first respondent in his capacity as a
member of the national executive of the Republic of South Africa,
has
the power to make an extradition request for the extradition of the
applicant from the United States of America.’
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Mabindla-Boqwana JA
and Keightley AJA (Mothle and Hughes JJA and Seegobin AJA
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The crisp issue in
this appeal is whether the power to request the extradition of a
person from the United States of America (the
US) to stand trial in
the Republic of South Africa (the Republic/ South Africa) vests in
the executive authority of the Minister
of Justice and Constitutional
Development (the Minister), or whether it vests in the National
Prosecuting Authority (the NPA).
The question was considered by the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the high court). The
high court held that the
authority to make an extradition request
from the US vested in the NPA and not in the Minister. The decision
comes to this Court
on appeal with leave of the high court.
Background
facts
[2]
The appellant, who was the applicant in the high
court, is Johnathan Richard Schultz. He is a South African citizen
who has resided
in the US since 2019. In November of that year the
South African Police Service (the SAPS) made several arrests of
persons accused
of offences related to the alleged theft and sale of
unwrought precious metals. The SAPS also obtained and executed six
search
warrants. The affidavit supporting the application for the
warrants mentioned the appellant as an active member of one of the
companies
alleged to have been involved in the commission of the
offences. In March 2022, when the arrested accused appeared in court,
the
prosecution sought a postponement on the ground, among others,
that the NPA intended to request the appellant’s extradition
from the US.
[3]
Having been alerted to this fact, the appellant
instructed his South African attorneys to communicate with, among
other authorities,
the Minister, the National Director of Public
Prosecutions (the NDPP), the NPA and the Director of Public
Prosecutions, Johannesburg
(the DPP). In their letter, dated 14 April
2022, the appellant’s attorneys made the following submissions
and request:
‘
It
is our view that an extradition request by South Africa to the US in
respect of our client may be unconstitutional, unlawful
and invalid
on various different bases.
In particular, the State
official who makes the extradition request must indeed be authorised
under the Constitution or legislation
to do so. In this respect, we
hereby request you to advise us as to which official you may be of
the view is empowered and authorized
to submit an extradition request
on behalf of South Africa to the US.’
[4]
On 21 April 2022 the Minister’s
spokesperson, Mr Phiri, responded by way of an email. He advised that
as the spokesperson
it is ‘unlikely that [he] would be involved
in all the administrative processes that pertain to extraditions or
any other
administrative issue generally’. He suggested that
the appellant’s attorneys should contact the relevant officials
dealing with the administration of extradition requests, namely Ms
Lujiza and Mr Botes. The DPP’s response, also by way of
email,
was terse. It read: ‘Kindly keep the NDPP and the ministry out
of this matter’. The NPA responded later, saying
that
‘pertaining to the extradition proceedings that are envisaged,
this office can assure you that due process will be followed,
and
your client will be able to exhaust his rights in this regard’.
In the high court
[5]
On the premise that extradition proceedings
against him were envisaged by the NPA, the appellant approached the
high court for urgent
relief. His first substantive prayer was for an
order declaring that he had a right to submit representations to the
Minister,
and the DPP in relation to any extradition request that may
be sought. The appellant’s second substantive prayer was for an
order:
‘
Declaring
that only the Minister, in his capacity as a member of the national
executive of the Republic of South Africa, has the
power to submit a
request for the extradition of the applicant from the United States
of America.’
[6]
It is
this second declarator, which was refused by the high court, which
forms the subject matter of this appeal. The appellant
did not pursue
an appeal against the high court’s refusal of the first
declaratory prayer,
[1]
which
consequently falls outside the scope of this judgment.
[7]
It is relevant also to highlight at this stage
that the declarator is specific
to the
power to submit a request
for
extradition from the US. On 16 September 1999, the Government of
South Africa entered into an Extradition Treaty with the Government
of the US (the Treaty) in terms of the Extradition Act. The Treaty
was signed by the then Minister of Justice and Constitutional
Development, Dr Penuel Maduna, on behalf of the Government of South
Africa. In terms of Article 1 of the Treaty, the parties agreed
to
extradite to each other, pursuant to the provisions of the Treaty,
persons whom the authorities in the requesting State have
charged
with or convicted of an extraditable offence. It is the exercise of
power in terms of this Treaty which the appellant says
vests in the
Minister.
[8]
As is evident from the citation of this appeal,
the appellant cited several respondents in his application. The first
respondent
and second respondent, being the Minister, and the
Director General: Department of Justice and Correctional Services
(the DG) opposed
the application. Mr Botes, who was referred to in Mr
Phiri’s email, deposed to the answering affidavit on their
behalf. The
DPP and the NDPP, being the third and fourth respondents,
also opposed the application. The deponent to the affidavit filed on
their behalf, was Ms le Roux, a senior State advocate in the office
of the DPP. She is the prosecutor in the criminal case relevant
to
the appellant’s possible extradition. The respondents made
joint submissions to both the high court and to this Court
on appeal.
[9]
In their respective affidavits both Mr Botes and
Ms le Roux explained the current procedure that is followed in giving
effect to
an extradition request from the Republic to foreign States,
including the US. They described substantially the same process. It
is the individual prosecutor who
initiates
the request by identifying the need for
extradition and preparing the relevant documentation. This includes,
as part of the Treaty,
a warrant of arrest and a charge sheet. These
preparatory documents are forwarded to the Deputy Director in the
DPP’s office
in charge of extraditions. If he is satisfied that
the documentation is correct, it is forwarded to the DPP, who signs
off on the
final document. It then goes to the NDPP for her perusal
and, if she is satisfied, it is forwarded to the DG. Mr Botes and Ms
le
Roux described the DG as being the designated Central Authority
for extradition requests.
[10]
Crucially, Mr Botes and Ms le Roux were at pains
to explain that the Department of Justice and Correctional Services’
(the
Department) role in an extradition request is simply to function
as a conduit to channel the request to the Department of
International
Relations and Co-operation (the DIRCO) from where it is
dispatched to the US. According to Ms le Roux, the role of the
Department
is ‘to go through the documents to satisfy
themselves as to the authority of the magistrate that authorised the
warrant of
arrest, etc’. According to the respondents’
evidence, the entire process is prosecution-driven, with the Ministry
playing
no more than an administrative role. What is more, as Mr
Botes explained, ‘it is not the Minister in person who deals
with
the extradition or considers the extradition’.
[11]
The appellant argued before the high court that
the process described by the respondents was unlawful in that it is
the Minister,
and not the NPA, who has the authority to deal with
extradition requests to the US. The high court dismissed the
appellant’s
submission. It drew a distinction between the
treatment of extradition requests
to
the Republic (incoming requests) in the
Extradition Act 67 of 1962 (the Extradition Act), and those made
by
the Republic (outgoing requests) to a foreign
State. While the Minister has a range of express powers in respect of
incoming requests,
the Extradition Act is silent as regards the
Minister’s powers in respect of outgoing requests. The high
court agreed with
the respondents that while the Minister, through
the Department, has some role to play in requests for extradition to
the Republic,
this is a limited administrative function.
[12]
In essence, the high court found that s 179 of the
Constitution, read with ss 20 and 33 of the National Prosecuting
Authority Act
32 of 1998 (the NPA Act), vests the NPA with the power
to institute and conduct criminal proceedings on behalf of the State.
Section
179(2) also empowers the NPA to ‘carry out any
necessary functions incidental to instituting criminal proceedings’.
Under this statutory scheme, prosecutions fall within the exclusive
domain of the NPA. This includes the power to decide whether
an
extradition request to the US should be made. To find in favour of
the appellant would be contrary to this scheme. It would
permit the
Minister to enter the exclusive terrain of the NPA by giving him the
power to overrule its prosecutorial decisions.
Consequently, the high
court refused to grant the declaratory relief sought by the
appellant.
In this Court
[13]
For purposes of the appeal, it is important to
clarify the precise substance of the appellant’s declarator.
Both the appellant
and the respondents agree that the Department,
‘submits’ the extradition request to the US via the
DIRCO. To this extent,
at face value, the declarator may seem to be
uncontentious. However, the wording of the declarator masks the real
issues at stake.
The point of contention is which authority, the NPA
or the executive, has the power to decide whether, how and when an
extradition
request should be submitted. Inherent in this, is the
question of the role and power of the Minister.
[14]
The appellant submits that the source of this
power is derived from the Constitution, the Extradition Act and
customary international
law. All three sources vest the power in the
Minister alone. The Treaty confirms that the power lies with the
Minister. According
to the appellant, the high court erred in finding
that s 179(2) of the Constitution empowers the NPA to make
extradition requests
to the US on behalf of the Republic. It is not a
power necessarily implied by the NPA’s power to prosecute. Were
it so implied,
it would give the NPA the power to act on behalf of
the Republic in the international sphere, which function lies
exclusively within
the realm of the executive.
[15]
The respondents contend that the high court was
correct in identifying the source of the power as the NPA Act, and
the NPA as the
repository of the power. To hold otherwise, they
submit, would be to accord to the Minister the power to thwart a
request for the
extradition of a person to stand trial in the
Republic. This would constitute an impermissible transgression into
the exclusive
prosecutorial authority of the NPA recognised under the
Constitution.
Declaratory relief
[16]
We are
satisfied that this Court’s jurisdiction to consider the
declaratory relief sought by the appellant is properly engaged.
Although no extradition request has yet been submitted in respect of
the appellant, it is common cause that the NPA intends on
charging
him and that it will have to seek his extradition to the Republic if
he is to stand trial. His right to liberty is accordingly
clearly
threatened by the real prospect of a request for his extradition.
Once this is so, the declaratory relief he seeks on appeal
is not
abstract or academic.
[2]
Further, the appeal raises an important legal issue which will affect
extradition requests in the future. Finally, the decision
of the high
court which is on appeal before this Court is inconsistent with the
judgment of the Western Cape Division of the High
Court in
Spagni
v Acting Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape
.
[3]
Although
Spagni
came
before this Court on appeal,
[4]
that appeal was dismissed on the basis that it was moot. This Court
expressly noted that it made no pronouncement on the appeal’s
merits. It is important, therefore, that this Court now considers the
merits of the issues in dispute.
Who has the power to
make the extradition request to the US?
[17]
To
answer this question, we discuss conferral of powers in the
Constitution, the application of international law and the
Extradition
Act. The starting point for considering the parties’
competing submissions on the merits of the appeal is the doctrine of
legality, an incident of the rule of law, which entails that no power
may be exercised beyond that which is conferred by law. Power
should
therefore be sourced in law. It is thus necessary ‘first, to
identify the source of power . . . and, second, to determine
to whom
that power accrues’.
[5]
[18]
To
identify the source of power requires an exploration of what
extradition is about. Extradition is ‘the surrender by one
State, at the request of another, of a person within its jurisdiction
who is accused or has been convicted of a crime committed
within the
jurisdiction of the other State’.
[6]
There
are three fundamental elements involved. These are:
acts
of sovereignty between two States; a request by one State to another
State for the delivery to it of an alleged criminal; and
the delivery
of the person requested for the purposes of trial or sentence in the
territory of the requesting State.
[7]
[19]
The
procedure governing
extradition
operates at both the international and domestic level.
Internationally, a request from one foreign State to another
for
the extradition of a particular individual and the response to the
request will be governed by the rules of public international
law,
including customary international law. Domestically, States are
regulated by their own domestic laws, which they are free
to
prescribe, before extraditing an individual.
[8]
We
should add that the same would apply in respect of outgoing requests
for extradition, the regulation of which, to the extent
that this
concerns internal matters, may be regulated by domestic law. A
further point to note is that if a State has entered into
extradition
treaties with other States, both internal and external requests will
also be governed by those treaties in respect
of requests from or to
the reciprocal States.
[20]
In
terms of our domestic law, extraditions are regulated by the
Extradition Act. Section 2 gives the President the power to enter
into agreements with foreign States for the surrender on a reciprocal
basis of persons accused or convicted of the commission of
an
extraditable offence
[9]
within
the jurisdiction of the Republic. Section 3 provides that a person
accused or guilty of an offence included in the extradition
agreement
and committed within the jurisdiction of a foreign State shall be
liable to be surrendered to such State in accordance
with the terms
of such an agreement.
[21]
The Extradition Act includes several provisions
expressly giving the Minister powers in respect of extraditions from
the Republic
to a foreign State. These include s 4 which provides:
‘
(1)
Subject to the terms of any extradition agreement any request for the
surrender of any person to a foreign State
shall
be made to the Minister by a person recognized by the Minister as a
diplomatic or consular representative of that State or
by any
Minister of that State communicating with the Minister through
diplomatic channels existing between the Republic and such
State.
(2)
Any such request received in terms of
an extradition agreement by any person other than the Minister
shall
be handed to the Minister.
. . .’ (Emphasis
added.)
As
far as requests to the Republic are concerned, these are dealt with
on a ministerial level. Similarly, s 5 provides that upon
receipt of
a notification from the Minister, concerning receipt of an
extradition request, any magistrate may issue a warrant of
arrest.
This is consistent with other legislation dealing with international
matters.
[10]
[22]
Crucially, for purposes of the current dispute,
the Extradition Act has only two provisions expressly dealing with
extradition requests
made by the Republic to a foreign State for
purposes of prosecution in our courts. These are sections 19 and 20
which, respectively,
provide:
‘
19.
No person
surrendered
to the Republic
by
any foreign State in terms of an extradition agreement or by any
designated State shall, until he or she has been returned or
had an
opportunity of returning to such foreign or designated State, be
detained or tried in the Republic for any offence committed
prior to
his or her surrender other than the offence in respect of which
extradition was sought or an offence of which he or she
may lawfully
be convicted on a charge of the offence in respect of which
extradition was sought, unless such foreign or designated
State or
such person consents thereto: Provided that any such person may at
the request of another foreign or designated State
and with a view to
his or her surrender to such State, be detained in the Republic for
an extraditable offence which was so committed,
provided such
detention is not contrary to the laws of the State which surrendered
him or her to the Republic.
20. The Minister may at
the request of any person
surrendered to the Republic
return
such person to the foreign State in or on his way to which he was
arrested, if –
(a)
in the case of a person accused of an offence,
criminal proceedings against him are not instituted within six months
after his arrival
in the Republic; or
(b)
he is acquitted of the offence for which his
surrender was sought.’ (Emphasis added.)
[23]
As to
the authority in whom the power vests in relation to incoming
extradition requests from a foreign State, the Extradition Act
is
clear. In that instance, the Minister would receive the request.
Section 11
(a)
expressly
gives the Minister the power to determine whether the person sought
by the foreign State will be extradited to that requesting
State. In
addition, ss 8, 11 and 15 describe other far-reaching powers for the
Minister to, for example, direct a magistrate to
cancel a warrant of
arrest issued under the Act;
[11]
direct that a person arrested under a warrant be discharged
forthwith;
[12]
order that the
person concerned shall not be surrendered to the foreign State
seeking their extradition;
[13]
and to cancel a warrant and order the release of a person where the
Minister is satisfied that the offence in respect of which
surrender
is sought is political in character.
[14]
[24]
There are no equivalent provisions in the
Extradition Act in respect of outgoing extradition requests. The
respondents submit that
this absence underlines the fact that, unlike
in the case of incoming extradition requests, the Minister does not
have any decision-making
powers in respect of outgoing requests.
[25]
What the respondents’ submission overlooks
is that extradition operates at the international level as well as
the domestic
level. Further that, as noted earlier, one of the
essential elements of extradition is that it involves an act of
sovereignty between
two States. As such, it necessarily implicates
foreign relations, in respect of which powers are bestowed on the
executive.
[26]
This
was affirmed by the Constitutional Court in
Kaunda
and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa
.
[15]
Although
there were three judgments by the court in the matter, all three were
unanimous that the conduct of foreign relations is
a matter for the
executive.
Kaunda
concerned
South African citizens who were held in Zimbabwe on various charges.
They feared that they might be extradited from Zimbabwe
to Equatorial
Guinea at the risk of being accused as mercenaries and plotting a
coup
against
the President of Equatorial Guinea. They contended that if this were
to happen, they would not get a fair trial and if convicted,
may face
the risk of being sentenced to death. They, accordingly, sought an
order compelling the Government to make certain representations
to
the Governments of Zimbabwe and Equatorial Guinea to take steps to
ensure their rights to dignity, freedom and security of their
person
and fair conditions of detention, among other things.
[27]
In his minority judgment, Ngcobo J stated:
‘
The
conduct of foreign relations is a matter which is within the domain
of the executive. The exercise of diplomatic protection
has an impact
on foreign relations. Comity compels states to respect the
sovereignty of one another; no state wants to interfere
in the
domestic affairs of another. The exercise of diplomatic protection is
therefore a sensitive area where both the timing and
the manner in
which the intervention is made are crucial. The state must be left to
assess foreign policy considerations and it
is a better judge of
whether, when and how to intervene. It is therefore generally
accepted that this is a province of the executive.
. .’
[16]
[28]
In another minority judgment, O’Regan J
observed:
‘
It
is clear, though perhaps not explicit, that under our Constitution
the conduct of foreign affairs is primarily the responsibility
of the
Executive. That this is so, is signified by a variety of
constitutional provisions including those that state that. . .
the
national executive is responsible for negotiating and signing
international agreements. The conduct of foreign relations is
therefore typically an executive power under our Constitution. This
is hardly surprising. Under most, if not all constitutional
democracies, the power to conduct foreign affairs is one that is
appropriately and ordinarily conferred upon the executive, for
the
executive is the arm of government best placed to conduct foreign
affairs.’
[17]
[29]
Although
Kuanda
does
not deal directly with extradition powers, it confirms that State
conduct implicating foreign relations falls within the ambit
of
executive authority. This is consistent with customary international
law, which recognises that foreign functions of State are
conducted
by the executive. It is presumed in international law that where the
State acts, it does so through its executive officials.
This is so
because when an official makes undertakings on behalf of the State or
performs such acts, he or she must have authority
to do so, as such
acts have binding consequences for the State.
[18]
Article 7(2) of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties,
codifies this international norm:
‘
In
virtue of their functions and
without
having to produce full powers
,
the following are considered as representing their State:
(a)
Heads
of State, Heads of Government and Ministers for Foreign Affairs,
for
purposes of performing all acts relating to the conclusion of a
treaty
.’
[19]
(Emphasis
added.)
[30]
The
Constitution is consistent with this international customary law
principle. Section 231(1) of the Constitution provides that
‘the
negotiating and signing of all international agreements is the
responsibility of the national executive’. While
s 2 of the
Extradition Act confers the power on the President, it was held in
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Quagliani
,
and
Two Similar Cases
(
Quagliani
),
[20]
that the President was empowered to delegate the power to enter into
extradition agreements to the Minister, and that this is entirely
consistent with the conferral of the power to the national executive
by s 231(1) of the Constitution.
[21]
[31]
The force of customary international law in our
legal systems is underlined in two further provisions of the
Constitution. In terms
of s 232, customary international law is law
in the Republic unless it is inconsistent with the Constitution or an
Act of Parliament.
In addition, courts are enjoined by s 233, when
interpreting legislation to prefer any reasonable interpretation
consistent with
international law over any alternative interpretation
that is inconsistent with it.
[32]
A request for extradition by one State to another
necessarily operates at the international level. This must apply in
respect of
both incoming and outgoing requests. Implicitly, and
consistent with international customary law and the Constitution,
both forms
of request engage the executive sphere of power. To hold,
as the respondents argue, that it is the NPA and not the executive
that
has decision-making power in respect of outgoing extradition
requests would be contrary to established international law
principles:
it would accord to a non-executive domestic organ of
state, an executive function at a State-to-State level. An intention
so to
depart from established international law principles would
require clear expression in the Extradition Act. It cannot be implied
simply from the absence of express provisions according to the
Minister’s decision-making powers in outgoing extradition
requests.
[33]
The respondents’ submission is also
unsustainable given what the Constitutional Court said in
Quagliani
in relation to this issue:
‘
The
Act,
read with other legislation such as the Criminal Procedure Act, thus
gives
the executive branch all the required statutory powers
to
be able to respond to a request for extradition from a foreign State
and
for the executive branch to be able to request the extradition
of individuals who are in foreign States
.
It should be added that
although
the power to request extradition to the Republic from a foreign
country is not expressly provided for in the Act, it is
necessarily
implicit in sections 19 and 20. Both deal with requests for
surrender, and indeed, s 19 expressly envisages extradition
being
requested in terms of an extradition treaty
.
. .
.
To
the extent that Mr Goodwin’s appeal is based on similar
challenges, it also cannot succeed. Mr Goodwin contended further
that
the Act gave no power to anybody within this country to request an
extradition of someone who is in the United States.
The
answer is that the Act by implication does confer authority to make
the request by reason of the provisions concerning reciprocity,
as
well as sections 19 and 20.
Mr
Goodwin’s appeal accordingly fails.’
[22]
(Emphasis added.)
[34]
Quagliani
thus
confirms that under the Extradition Act it is the executive that is
empowered not only to respond to an incoming request for
extradition
but also to make an outgoing request. Importantly, the judgment
recognises that the absence, in the Extradition Act,
of an express
power on the part of the executive to make an outgoing extradition
request does not signify an absence of that power.
The executive
power to make an outgoing request is to be implied from the principle
of reciprocity, which lies at the very heart
of extradition.
[35]
The respondent’s contention that bestowing
that power on the Minister would permit executive interference with
the NPA’s
constitutionally guaranteed prosecutorial
independence does not withstand scrutiny. The respondents’
interpretation of s
179(2) is tantamount to suggesting that the NPA
has the power to conduct foreign relations and to bind the Republic
on a State-to-State
level. This is inconsistent with the principles
articulated in
Kaunda
and
of customary international law. It is also inconsistent with the
separation of powers and the constitutional recognition of
matters
involving foreign relations as falling within the preserve of the
executive.
[36]
A
further difficulty for the respondents is that for their contention
to succeed, they would have to show that the decision-making
power in
respect of outgoing extradition requests is a power necessarily
implied from their authority to prosecute. In
GNH
Office Automation CC and Another v Provincial Tender Board, Eastern
Cape
,
[23]
this Court outlined the test for whether a power is ‘necessarily
implied’ as follows:
‘
Powers
may be presumed to have been
impliedly
conferred
because they constitute a
logical
and necessary consequence of powers
which
have been
expressly
conferred
,
because they are reasonably required in order to exercise the powers
expressly conferred, or because they are ancillary or incidental
to
those
expressly
conferred
.’
(Emphasis added.)
[37]
As we
have noted, the express power relied on by the respondents is the
authority to prosecute. However, extradition necessarily
involves an
international act, invoking executive authority. In these
circumstances, there can be no necessity that requires s
179(2) to be
construed as logically entrusting the NPA with the exercise of the
power to make outgoing extradition requests. In
fact, it would be
constitutionally untenable to have both the executive authority and
the NPA exercise the power. This would lead
to South Africa speaking
with two voices in the conduct of its foreign affairs
[24]
in relation to extradition, which is an undesirable consequence.
[38]
The
real nub of the issue is the demarcation of functions between the NPA
and the Minister. In other words, where the line is drawn
between the
NPA’s power to prosecute and to do things necessarily
incidental thereto, on the one hand, and the power of the
executive
to act in matters involving foreign affairs, on the other. The NPA
clearly has the power to enter into a plea and sentence
agreement
with an accused.
[25]
In
contrast, a clear example of a demarcated power, is that involved in
issuing a warrant of arrest. That power is incidental to
the criminal
proceedings, but the function and decision-making power that goes
with it vests in the judicial officer and not the
prosecutor. By
analogy, the fact that extradition is sought for criminal proceedings
to take place, does not necessarily imply
a decision-making power for
the NPA to engage with other States internationally. It is thus
important to distinguish between a
decision to prosecute, which can
only be made by the NPA, and a decision to request the extradition,
from another State, of the
person who is to be prosecuted. Those are
two distinct powers.
[39]
The
importance of distinguishing between functions in the extradition
context (albeit in relation to incoming requests) was highlighted
in
Khama
v Director of Public Prosecutions
,
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg and Others
[26]
as follows:
‘
An
extradition inquiry and criminal proceedings are not the same in all
respects. Extradition proceedings are aimed at determining
whether
there is a reason to remove the person to foreign state – not
to determine whether the person concerned is or is
not extraditable.
The hearing before the magistrate is but a step in the proceedings:
“
extradition
is deemed a sovereign act, its legal proceeding are deemed
sui
generis
,
and its purpose is not to adjudicate guilt or innocence but to
determine whether a person should properly stand trial where accused
or be returned to serve a sentence properly imposed by another
state”.’
[27]
[40]
In its role as the prosecuting authority, the NPA
has the important function of determining who is to be prosecuted and
what the
charges are to be. The Minister has no role or power in the
exercise of this prosecutorial function. However, if an identified
accused is in a foreign State, this triggers the engagement of
executive authority, as the NPA must seek assistance from the
executive
to make the extradition request to the foreign State.
[41]
Under
the Treaty, a request to the US must be in writing, supported by
prescribed documents, including, among others, a copy of
the warrant
of arrest, the charge sheet, information relating to the facts of the
offence and the procedural history of the case,
and a statement of
the law relating to the relevant offence.
[28]
This information all falls within the knowledge and preserve of the
NPA, which must compile and provide the documents to the executive
for inclusion in the extradition request. However, no matter how
necessary this role of the NPA is, it does not imply a power to
make
the extradition request, and to decide when and whether to do so.
[42]
The respondents acknowledge that there is some
role for the Department to play in making a request for extradition.
Their contention,
however, is that it is a limited role, does not
involve the Minister, nor the exercise of any decision-making power
by the Department.
As noted earlier, the current process involved in
making outgoing extradition requests is described in the affidavits
filed on
behalf of the respondents. Significantly, the Minister does
not consider the request.
[43]
In addition, it seems that the Minister of
International Relations and Co-operation also does not consider the
request. The involvement
of the DIRCO in the process does not take
the matter any further. It really talks to nothing more than the
administrative process
involved.
[44]
The described process does not satisfy the
principle of legality, which requires the identification of the
source of power and the
functionary responsible for the exercise of
that power. As things currently stand, there is no identified
functionary, even within
the NPA, who exercises the decision-making
power to make the extradition request. Is it the prosecutor, or the
DPP, or a functionary
within the NDPP’s office or the NDPP
herself who does so? The respondents do not tell us, nor does the NPA
Act.
[45]
To the extent it is suggested that this role might
be fulfilled by the DG as the Central Authority, this contention is
not helpful.
We were not directed to any law that designates the DG
as the Central Authority for extradition purposes. In any event, it
is clear
from the respondents’ description of the role played
by the Department that it involves no decision-making power. As we
have
already stated, the question of who has the power to make
outgoing extradition requests and the process involved should not be
conflated.
[46]
The Minister is the executive authority who
represented the government of the Republic in concluding the Treaty.
Accordingly, he
has the power to represent the State in requests made
under it. Moreover, under the Treaty, it is the executive authority
who acts
on the part of a requested State.
[47]
The role of the NPA in the outgoing
extradition process does not stretch to dictating to the Minister how
to exercise this power,
as this would be destructive of the
separation of powers. Contrary to the respondents’ submissions,
this demarcation of powers
and functions between the NPA and the
Minister does not impinge on the NPA’s prosecutorial powers.
This is because the principle
of legality defines the ambit of the
Minister’s lawful powers. While he has the power to decide
whether and when to make
an outgoing extradition request, he cannot
do so in a manner that undermines prosecutorial independence. Whether
he has acted within
the realms of his authority will depend on the
circumstances of the extradition request in question in any given
case.
[48]
We conclude that it is clear that the Minister is
central to the administration and implementation of the Extradition
Act. Critically,
the decision-making power in respect of all
extradition requests vests in him. The reciprocal obligations that
arise with extradition
are to be dealt with by the Minister on behalf
of the Republic. This not only applies to incoming extradition
requests, as expressly
provided for in the Extradition Act, but also,
by implication, to outgoing requests to the US. This conclusion is
reinforced by
international law and by the Constitution.
[49]
Accordingly, the finding by the high court that an
extradition request is incidental to the functions of the NPA cannot
be sustained.
The appeal must therefore be upheld as the appellant
was entitled to the declarator sought.
[50]
In the result, the following order issues:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the
costs of two counsel, where so employed.
2
The
order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
It
is declared that only the first respondent in his capacity as a
member of the national executive of the Republic of South Africa,
has
the power to make an extradition request for the extradition of the
applicant from the United States of America.’
N P MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
R M KEIGHTLEY
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
A Katz SC and K Perumalsamy
Instructed by: Ian Levitt
Attorneys, Johannesburg
Pieter Skein Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
the respondents:
C F J Brand SC
Instructed by: The State
Attorney, Pretoria
The State Attorney,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
That
he has the right to submit representations to the Minister and the
DPP.
[2]
West
Coast Rock Lobster Association v The Minister of Environmental
Affairs and Tourism
[2010]
ZASCA 114
;
[2011] 1 All SA 487
(SCA) para 45. See also
Association
for Voluntary Sterilization of South Africa v Standard Trust Limited
and Others
[2023]
ZASCA 87
para 12.
[3]
Spagni
v Acting Director of Public Prosecutions, WC and Others,
unreported
(Case No. 17224/2021, delivered on 6 April 2022).
[4]
Spagni
v The Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Others
[2023]
ZASCA 24
para 27.
[5]
Minister
for Justice and Constitutional Development v Chonco and Others
[2009]
ZACC 25
;
2010 (2) BCLR 140
(CC);
2010 (4) SA 82
(CC) paras 27 and
28.
[6]
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Quagliani, and two
similar cases
(
Quagliani
)
[2009] ZACC 1
;
2009 (4) BCLR 345
(CC);
2009 (2) SA 466
(CC) para 1.
[7]
Mohamed
and Another v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
(Society for the Abolition of the Death Penalty in
South Africa and
Another Intervening)
[2001]
ZACC 18
;
2001 (7) BCLR 685
(CC);
2001 (3) SA 893
(CC) para 29.
[8]
Harksen
v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
[2000] ZACC 29
;
2000
(2) SA 825
(CC);
2000 (1) SACR 300
(CC) para 4.
[9]
In
terms of s 1 of the Extradition Act, ‘
Extraditable
offence
means
any offence
which
in terms of the law of the Republic and of the foreign State
concerned is punishable with a sentence of imprisonment or
other
form of deprivation of liberty for a period of six months or more,
but excluding any offence under military law which is
not also an
offence under the ordinary criminal law of the Republic and of such
foreign State’.
[10]
See
also reference to the role of the Minister or Cabinet Member
responsible for Justice, in
International
Co-operation in Criminal Matters
Act
75 of 1996 and
Implementation
of the Rome Statute of The International Criminal Court
Act
27 of 2002.
[11]
Section
8(2)
(a)
.
[12]
Section
8(2)
(b)
.
[13]
Section
11
(b)
.
[14]
Section
15.
[15]
Kaunda
and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa
[2004]
ZACC 5; 2004 (10) BCLR 1009 (CC);
2005
(4) SA 235 (CC).
[16]
Ibid
para 172.
[17]
Ibid
para 243.
[18]
Nuclear
Tests
(
Australia
v. France; New Zealand v. France
),
Judgment, 1974 I.C.J. para 46. See also ILC, Guiding Principles
applicable in unilateral declarations of States capable of
creating
legal obligations, Principle I, U.N. Doc. A.
[19]
United
Nations (1969), “Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties”
Treaty Series 1155, 331, article 7(2). See also
Arrest
Warrant of 11 April 2000
(
Democratic
Republic of Congo v. Belgium
),
Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 2002, at 21-22, para 53.
[20]
Quagliani
fn
6 above.
[21]
Ibid
para 25.
[22]
Ibid
paras 44 and 55.
[23]
GNH
Office Automation CC and Another v Provincial Tender Board, Eastern
Cape
1
998
(3) SA 45
(SCA) at 51G-H.
[24]
Harksen
v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
1998
(2) SA 1011
(C) para 13.
[25]
It
was held in
Wickham
v Magistrate, Stellenbosch and Others
2016
(1) SACR 273
(WCC) para 81, that
‘
[w]here
the prosecution enters into a plea and sentence agreement with an
accused person it fulfils a function incidental to the
institution
of criminal proceedings in terms of s 179(2) of the Constitution, on
behalf of the State. . .’
[26]
Khama
v Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg and Others
[2023]
3 All SA 193 (GJ); 2023 (2) SACR 588 (GJ).
[27]
Ibid
para 20.
[28]
Article
9.
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