Case Law[2023] ZASCA 155South Africa
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others v Wilhelm Pretorius and Others (440/2022) [2023] ZASCA 155 (17 November 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
17 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal – Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, s 16(2)(a) – mootness – whether, irrespective of mootness, interests of justice require decision on appeal.
Judgment
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## Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others v Wilhelm Pretorius and Others (440/2022) [2023] ZASCA 155 (17 November 2023)
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others v Wilhelm Pretorius and Others (440/2022) [2023] ZASCA 155 (17 November 2023)
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sino date 17 November 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case no: 440/2022
In the matter between:
MINISTER OF JUSTICE
AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
FIRST
APPELLANT
THE NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER DEPARTMENT
OF CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES SECOND
APPELLANT
THE HEAD OF THE
PRISON: ZONDERWATER
PRISON THIRD
APPELLANT
and
WILHELM PRETORIUS
FIRST
RESPONDENT
DR JOHAN
PRETORIUS
SECOND RESPONDENT
DR JOHAN (LETS)
PRETORIUS
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Minister
of Justice and Correctional Services and Others v Wilhelm Pretorius
and Others
(Case no 440/2022)
[2023]
ZASCA 155
(17 November 2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA, MEYER, MATOJANE AND GOOSEN JJA AND
UNTERHALTER AJA
Heard:
13 September 2023
Delivered:
17 November
2023
Summary:
Appeal –
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
s
16(2)
(a)
–
mootness –
whether, irrespective
of mootness, interests of justice require decision on appeal.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Adams J with Mudau and Dippenaar JJ
concurring), sitting as court of appeal):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, including those of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Meyer JA (Dambuza,
Matojane and Goosen JJA and Unterhalter AJA concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and order of the full court of
the Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the full
court),
per
Adams J, with Mudau and Dippenaar JJ concurring,
delivered on 21 January 2022. The first appellant is the Minister of
Justice and
Correctional Services (the minister), the second
appellant, the National Commissioner: Department of Correctional
Services (the
national commissioner), and the third appellant, the
Head of the Zonderwater Correctional Centre, Cullinan, Gauteng. The
first
respondent, Mr Wilhelm Pretorius, was registered for a doctoral
degree in Theology at the University of Pretoria. The second
respondent
is his brother, Dr Johan Pretorius, a medical doctor who
was registered for a masters degree in Biblical and Ancient Studies
at
the University of South Africa. The third respondent is their
father, Dr Johan (Lets) Pretorius, a medical doctor, who was
registered for an honours degree in Political Sciences at the
University of South Africa.
[2]
The respondents were long term prisoners serving sentences of between
20 and 30 years’
imprisonment at the Zonderwater Correctional
Centre, Cullinan, Gauteng. Although they had access to computers in
the Zonderwater
Correctional Centre’s computer room between the
hours 7:00am and 2:00pm, they were not permitted to use their
personal computers
in their cells to progress their studies during
the lengthy hours that they were locked up in their cells. They
accordingly brought
proceedings in the Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Johannesburg (the high court), to challenge the Policy
Procedures Directorate
Formal Education (the policy), pursuant to
which their requests to use their personal computers in their cells
for the purpose
of their studies, were declined.
[3]
On 14 May 2018, the high court,
per
Swanepoel AJ, granted an
order in their favour. The order reads:
‘
50.1
The Policy Procedures on Formal Education Programmes, as approved by
the [National Commissioner: Department
of Correctional Services],
insofar as it relates to the use of personal laptops without a modem
in any communal or single cell,
is declared to constitute unfair
discrimination in accordance with the provisions of the
Promotion of
Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000
[the
Equality Act], as against applicants.
50.2
First, second and third applicants shall be entitled to use their
personal computers without the use
of a modem in their cells, for as
long as they remain registered students with any recognized tertiary
institution in South Africa.
50.3
All of applicants’ computers shall be made available for
inspection at any given time by representative
of the respondents.
50.4
First and second respondents shall pay the costs of the application
jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved.’
[4]
Aggrieved by that order, the appellants, with leave of the high
court, appealed to
the full court. On 21 January 2022, the full court
dismissed the appeal with costs. This appeal, with leave of this
Court, lies
against that order. Another appeal, involving
similar facts and the same issues of law, was pending before this
Court. It
is the matter of
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Ntuli
(Judicial Inspectorate for Correctional services intervening
as
amicus curiae)
.
[1]
The
Ntuli
appeal
was enrolled for hearing in this Court on 12 May 2022. At the request
of the appellants, due to their counsel’s indisposition,
the
parties agreed to request that the
Ntuli
appeal
be removed from the roll. This Court considered it efficient and
appropriate that this appeal and the
Ntuli
appeal be heard together, and both appeals were enrolled for hearing
on 13 September 2023.
[5]
However, it turned out that the three Pretorius family members (the
respondents in
this appeal) were all released on parole, at the end
of March 2022. They, therefore, adopted the stance that the appeal
became
moot. In a letter dated 30 March 2022, their attorney brought
that fact to the attention of the State Attorney, representing the
appellants. The appellants nevertheless elected to pursue this
appeal.
[6]
Section 16(2)
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
stipulates:
‘
(2)
(a)
(i)
When
at the hearing of an appeal the issues are of such a nature that the
decision sought will have no practical effect or
result, the appeal
may be dismissed on this ground alone.
(ii)
Save
under exceptional circumstances, the question whether the decision
would have no practical effect or result is to be
determined without
reference to any consideration of costs.’
[7]
It
is clear from the factual circumstances that this matter is moot. In
other words, a decision on appeal would have no practical
effect or
result. This, however, is not the end of the inquiry. The central
question for consideration is whether, irrespective
of its mootness,
it is in the interests of justice for this court to decide the
appeal.
[2]
The
interests of justice might well have compelled us to decide this
appeal on its merits had it not been for this Court’s
judgment
in
Ntuli
.
[8]
The high court found the policy, insofar as it relates to the use of
personal laptops
without a modem in any communal or single cell, to
constitute unfair discrimination in terms of the provisions of the
Equality
Act as against the three Pretorius family members. Hence,
subparagraph 1 of the high court order. The full court endorsed that
order.
However, the parties could not demonstrate to us that
Swanepoel AJ, who presided in the high court, had been designated as
a presiding
officer of the equality court.
[9]
The same happened in
Ntuli
. There this Court,
per
Unterhalter AJA, said:
‘
[12]
I consider, first, Mr Ntuli’s challenge to the policy
under the Equality Act. Did the high court enjoy jurisdiction to
entertain
this challenge? I think not. A person wishing to institute
proceedings under the Equality Act must notify the clerk of the
equality
court and a presiding officer of the equality court must
decide whether the matter is to be heard in the equality court (s
20(3)(a)).
Although every high court is an equality court in its area
of jurisdiction, a judge of the high court can only serve as a
presiding
officer of the equality court if so designated (s 16(1)).
[13]
Designation is a ministerial act taken by the Minister after
consultation with the Judge President (s 16(1)(b)). A high court
judge, once designated, serves as a presiding officer of the equality
court. Until so designated, a high court judge enjoys no
such
competence. When a matter comes before the high court which raises
claims both under the Equality Act and outside of it, the
judge of
the high court before whom this matter is brought has the power to
entertain all of these claims only if he or she is
a judge designated
as a presiding officer of the equality court. If the judge of the
high court has not been so designated, then
the judge cannot
entertain those claims which have been brought under the Equality
Act.
[14]
We raised this matter with the parties. They could not demonstrate to
us that Matsemela AJ, who presided in the court below,
had been
designated as a presiding officer of the equality court. Once that is
so, Matsemela AJ enjoyed no power to entertain Mr
Ntuli’s claim
under the Equality Act. The court below made an order that the policy
is declared to constitute unfair discrimination
in terms of the
Equality Act. Matsemela AJ had no power to make such an order, and,
as a result, that order must be set aside.’
[10]
This court, therefore,
inter alia
set
aside the order of the high Court granted under the Equality Act, it
declared the policy, to
the extent that it prohibits the use
of personal computers in cells, constitutionally invalid and set it
aside. It suspended that
order for 12 months and directed the
minister and the national commissioner, after consultation with the
Judicial Inspectorate
for Correctional Services, to prepare and
promulgate a revised policy for correctional centres permitting the
use of personal computers
in cells for study purposes. Paragraph 6 of
this Court’s order provides,
inter alia
, that:
‘
6.
Pending the revision of the education policy:
6.1
The applicant is entitled to use his personal computer in his cell,
without the use of a modem, for as long as he remains a
registered
student with a recognised tertiary or further education institution
in South Africa.
6.2
Any registered student in a correctional centre who needs a computer
to support their studies, and/or any student who has registered
for a
course of study that requires a computer as a compulsory part of the
course, is entitled to use their personal computer without
the use of
a modem in their cell for as long as they remain a registered student
with a recognised tertiary or further education
institution in South
Africa.’
[11]
This Court’s order in
Ntuli
,
therefore, is not confined to Mr Ntuli, but extends
to ‘[a’]ny
registered student in a correctional centre who needs a computer to
support their studies, and/or any student
who has registered for a
course of study that requires a computer as a compulsory part of the
course’.
[12]
In the light of this Court’s order in
Ntuli
, paragraph 1
of the high court’s order need not be corrected in this appeal.
Furthermore, the Pretorius family members, who
are on parole, are
afforded adequate protection against an infringement of their
constitutionally entrenched right to further their
education should
their parole be revoked, and they are reincarcerated.
[13]
Finally, the matter of costs. The respondents
request that the costs of the appeal should be awarded in their
favour on the scale applicable as between attorney and client on
the
basis that: (a) the appellants steadfastly persisted with their
appeal despite their knowledge that the Pretorius family members
were
released on parole almost eighteen months before the hearing of the
appeal; and (b) the appellants failed to bring that fact
to this
Court’s attention prior to the granting of leave to appeal on
21 April 2022. I agree that the appellants should bear
the
respondents’ costs of the appeal. But this, in my view, is not
one of those ‘rare’ occasions where a deviation
from the
ordinary rule that the successful party be awarded costs as between
party and party, is warranted.
[3]
[14]
In the result, the appeal is dismissed with costs, including those of
two counsel.
________________________
P MEYER
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
First, second and third
appellants: M T K Moerane SC (assisted by E B Ndebele)
Instructed by:
State Attorney, Johannesburg
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
First, second and third
respondents: R du Plessis SC (assisted by A D Theart)
Instructed by:
Julian Knight and Associates Inc., Pretoria
Rossouws
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Ntuli
(Judicial Inspectorate for Correctional services intervening
as
amicus curiae)
(539/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 146
(8 November 2023) (
Ntuli
).
[2]
Normandien
Farms (Pty) Ltd) v South African Agency for Promotion of Petroleum,
Exportation and Exploitation SOC Ltd & Others
[2020]
ZACC 5
; 2020 (6) BLCR 748 (CC);
2020 (4) SA 409
(CC) paras 46-50.
[3]
See
LAWSA
Vol
3 Part 2 (2 ed) para 320.
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