Case Law[2022] ZASCA 32South Africa
Dyantyi v Rhodes University and Others (846/2020) [2022] ZASCA 32; 2023 (1) SA 32 (SCA) (29 March 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
29 March 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative law – disciplinary proceedings against student at public higher education institution – Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) applicable – procedural fairness and right to particular legal representation under PAJA – dependent on particular circumstances of each case – in absence of compelling reasons to contrary procedurally unfair to require student to forgo services of counsel steeped in part-heard matter and available within reasonable time – decisions flowing from disciplinary inquiry reviewed and set aside.
Judgment
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## Dyantyi v Rhodes University and Others (846/2020) [2022] ZASCA 32; 2023 (1) SA 32 (SCA) (29 March 2022)
Dyantyi v Rhodes University and Others (846/2020) [2022] ZASCA 32; 2023 (1) SA 32 (SCA) (29 March 2022)
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sino date 29 March 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 846/2020
In
the matter between:
YOLANDA
DYANTYI
APPELLANT
and
RHODES UNIVERSITY
FIRST
RESPONDENT
SIZWE MABIZELA
NO
SECOND
RESPONDENT
WAYNE HUTCHINSON
NO
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Yolanda Dyantyi v Rhodes
University and Others
(Case no
846/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 32
(29 March 2022)
Coram:
SALDULKER, VAN DER MERWE, NICHOLLS AND HUGHES JJA
AND MATOJANE AJA
Heard
:
21 February 2022
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation
to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. It has been published on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII.
The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 09h45 on 29 March 2022.
Summary:
Administrative law – disciplinary proceedings against
student at public higher education institution – Promotion of
Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) applicable – procedural
fairness and right to particular legal representation under PAJA –
dependent
on particular circumstances of each case – in absence of
compelling reasons to contrary procedurally unfair to require student
to forgo services of counsel steeped in part-heard matter and
available within reasonable time – decisions flowing from
disciplinary
inquiry reviewed and set aside.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern Cape
Division of the High Court, Grahamstown
(Nhlangulela DJP sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the court a quo is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
(a)
The decision of 10 October 2017, convicting the applicant on charges
of kidnapping,
assault, insubordination and defamation, in terms of
rules 4.3 and 4.17 (a) and (b) of the first respondent’s Student
Disciplinary
Code, is reviewed and set aside.
(b)
The decision of 17 November 2017, sanctioning the applicant by
permanently
excluding her from the first respondent, in terms of rule
7.27 (b) of the first respondent’s Student Disciplinary Code, and
making
various ancillary orders, is reviewed and set aside.
(c)
The matter is remitted to the first respondent for reconsideration on
condition
that any continuation of the disciplinary inquiry against
the applicant shall take place before another proctor.
(d)
The first respondent is directed to pay the applicant’s costs,
including
the costs of two counsel.’
JUDGMENT
Van der Merwe JA (Saldulker,
Nicholls and Hughes JJA and Matojane AJA concurring)
[1]
During 2017, the appellant, Ms Yolanda Dyantyi, was in her third and
final year of study
for a Bachelor of Arts degree at Rhodes
University (the university). As a public higher education institution
the university is a
juristic person in terms of
s 20(4)
of the
Higher
Education Act 101 of 1997
. It is the first respondent in the appeal.
The second respondent is the vice-chancellor of the university in his
official capacity.
During 2016 the university instituted disciplinary
proceedings against Ms Dyantyi (and others). The third respondent, Mr
Wayne Hutchinson
NO (the proctor), chaired the disciplinary inquiry.
He found that Ms Dyantyi was
guilty of the
misconduct that she had been charged with and ordered
her permanent exclusion from the university, with effect from 17
November 2017.
Ms Dyantyi launched an application for the review and
setting aside of the decisions of the proctor in the Eastern Cape
Division
of the High Court, Grahamstown. The
university and the vice-chancellor opposed the application.
Nhlangulela DJP dismissed the application with costs but granted
leave
to Ms Dyantyi to appeal to this court on the limited ground
that I shall allude to. It suffices to say at this stage that the
issue
on appeal is whether procedural unfairness tainted the
decisions of the proctor in respect of Ms Dyantyi.
The
facts
[2]
During the period from 17 to 20 April 2016, the university was
affected by student protests.
The protests were precipitated by the
emergence, on social media, of a list of male students and former
students of the university
who had allegedly committed rape or acts
of sexual assault at the university. The protests were directed at
the perceived ‘rape culture’
at the university. The
protestors believed that the university failed to effectively address
the existence of pervasive sexual violence
on its campus.
[3]
During the protests, three male students were physically removed from
their rooms at
university residences, manhandled and deprived of
their freedom of movement. Despite calls by the vice-chancellor and
other members
of the senior management of the university to release
him, one of the students was held against his will for about
11 hours.
The protests continued until the university obtained a
comprehensive interim interdict on 20 April 2016. Ms Dyantyi
participated
in the protests but at all times maintained that she had
done nothing unlawful.
[4]
On 28 March 2017, nearly a year after the protests, the university
gave written notice
of a disciplinary inquiry to Ms Dyantyi. In terms
of the notice, Ms Dyantyi had to answer to four charges of
misconduct. The first
was that she had committed the common law crime
of kidnapping in that, acting in common purpose with others, she
deprived the aforesaid
three male students of their freedom of
movement and held them hostage. The second
charge was one of insubordination,
consisting of a failure to adhere
to the lawful instructions of the vice-chancellor and his in-house
legal advisor to release all
or any of the three students. In the
third place Ms Dyantyi was charged with having committed the common
law crime of assault. It
was alleged that she had manhandled and/or
grabbed one of the said three students by his collar, continuously
pushed him and spat
in his face. The fourth charge was that Ms
Dyantyi had defamed another student (not one of the three already
mentioned) by referring
to him as a rapist on social media.
[5]
The notice alerted Ms Dyantyi to the provisions of clause 7.1 of the
Student Disciplinary
Code of the university (the disciplinary
code). It provides for the rights of representation of a student at a
disciplinary hearing,
including the right to legal representation at
own cost. It transpired that two fellow female students had to face
the first and
second charges at the same disciplinary inquiry.
[6]
The vice-chancellor appointed the proctor in terms of the
disciplinary code to preside
over the disciplinary inquiry. The
disciplinary code spells out the procedure to be followed at the
hearing. It provides that in
the event that the proctor finds a
student guilty of a disciplinary offence, he or she has jurisdiction
to impose any one or more
of a variety of sanctions, ranging from a
suspended fine to permanent exclusion from the university. In terms
of the disciplinary
code the university appointed two prosecutors to
represent it before the proctor. They were Mr Sandro Milo and Mr
Fundile Sangoni,
both attorneys in private practice.
[7]
The disciplinary hearing commenced on 26 June 2017. Ms Dyantyi was
represented pro bono
by two counsel, Ms Irene de Vos (not the lead
counsel for Ms Dyantyi before us) and Mr Zweli Makgalemele, as
well as an attorney
(Mr Lindokuhle Mdabe) and a candidate
attorney. The members of this legal team were either attached to or
instructed by
the Socio-Economic Rights Institute (SERI), a
non-profit
company
registered as a law clinic. Counsel acted for one of the two
other charged students on the instructions of an attorney. After the
commencement of the hearing, she ceased to be a registered student at
the university and the disciplinary charges against her were
not
proceeded with. An attorney, Mr Justin Powers, appeared for the third
student.
[8]
Some preliminary skirmishes, including an unsuccessful application on
behalf of all
three students for the recusal of the proctor, preceded
the calling of witnesses. Thereafter, the prosecutors presented the
evidence
of four witnesses. Two of them were the victims of the
kidnapping referred to in the first charge. One of these two was also
the
victim of the assault alleged in the third charge. The third
witness observed some of the events during the protests and the
fourth
was the complainant in respect of the fourth charge
(defamation). Counsel for Ms Dyantyi cross-examined the witnesses and
put to
each of them that she denied any wrongdoing or that she had
been a leader of the protests.
[9]
The hearing stretched over several days (26 to 28 June, 7 to 8 August
and 4 to 7 September
2017) and was then set down for hearing on 9, 10
and 11 October 2017. After lunch on 9 October 2017, the proctor
excused Ms Dyantyi
and Mr Makgalemele to prepare for her testimony on
the following day. On 10 October 2017, however, Mr Powers proceeded
to present
his client’s case. This was the result of an agreement
between Ms Dyantyi’s legal representatives and Mr Powers, to
accommodate
witnesses for his client that were present. The
prosecutors did not object to this. So it transpired that the case
for the fellow
student was not concluded by the close of proceedings
on 11 October 2017.
[10]
In the result, dates for the continuation of the inquiry had to be
determined. It
appeared from the discussion on the record that the proctor was
available on 25 to 27 October, 6 to 8 November and 13 to 15
November 2017. So, apparently, were the prosecutors. In respect of
these dates, Mr Powers was only available on 26 and 27 October.
He said that he had several weeks before proposed these dates to Mr
Milo. There was no indication, however, that counsel for Ms Dyantyi
had been involved in any such discussion. Mr Powers also pointed out
that his client was due to write examinations during the week
of
Monday 6 November to Friday 10 November 2017. (The same applied to Ms
Dyantyi). Mr Powers was also available on 29 and 30 November
and
1 December 2017, which in the circumstances were the first
available dates of counsel for Ms Dyantyi.
[11]
Mr Milo proceeded to say ‘. . . we made it very clear that the
University’s imperative is to conclude
with these proceedings by
20
th
October. That is the imperative and we did make it
clear that if we were unable to achieve finality by then, the
University would
unfortunately be left with no alternative but to
schedule the matter on dates without reference to the availability of
the parties.
It’s a step I’m loathe to request that we do but
it’s something which I fear we have to do’. (I accept that the
reference
to the 20
th
October was due to a slip of the
tongue and should be understood as 30
th
October). He did
not say why it was so important for the university to conclude the
proceedings before 30
October 2017. However, this statement caused the focus to be placed
on continuation of the hearing on 26 and 27 October 2017.
[12]
Ms de Vos said that there was no intention to delay the matter. She
explained that both she and Mr Makgalemele
had prior commitments for
these dates. Ms de Vos was engaged in an application in the Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg to restrain
the deportation of a person
who faced the death penalty in Botswana. Mr Makgalemele was engaged
in a matter between the President
of the Republic of South Africa and
the Office of the Public Protector, which had many weeks before
been set down for the week
of 23 to 27 October 2017. At no stage were
these averments disputed.
[13]
Ms de Vos said that Ms Dyantyi was a poor student who could not
afford other legal representation and
was unlikely to obtain pro bono
legal representation at short notice. She pointed out that through no
fault of Ms Dyantyi or her
representatives, the disciplinary hearing
commenced more than a year after the protests and that there was no
rational reason why
the matter should be concluded by 20 (30) October
2017. She
also
mentioned that the practice on the three previous similar
occasions had been that the dates for the continuation of the
proceedings
were agreed upon.
[14]
Ms de Vos concluded by contending that to set the matter down for
dates on which counsel for Ms Dyantyi
were unavailable would in these
circumstances constitute a gross irregularity. Despite similar
protestations by Mr Powers, the proctor
simply ruled:
‘
Mr
Milo, I think I must do the dates now. Alright. 26
th
,
27
th
,
6
th
,
7
th
and 8
th
November. Thank you. You can pack up.’
[15]
On 20 October 2017 Ms Dyantyi submitted a formal application to the
proctor for the postponement of the
hearing that had been set down
for the aforementioned dates, to dates on which her legal
representatives were ‘objectively’ able
to attend.
The
application was essentially based on the same grounds than those that
had been put forward on 11 October 2017. It was submitted
in the
postponement application that should the inquiry not be postponed,
the proceedings against Ms Dyantyi would be tainted by
procedural unfairness. The university opposed the application.
[16]
The proctor made a ruling on 24 October 2017, in these terms:
‘
1.
I have considered the application by Ms Dyantyi’s
representatives for the postponement of the hearing and the
University’s
response thereto.
2.
On the last sitting of the hearing on 11 October 2017, I duly
considered the objections that were raised by Adv.
De Vos to the
proposed dates. I overruled her objections.
3.
I am not persuaded that my decision should revisited and in the
result, the application is dismissed.’
Thus,
the proctor gave no reasons for his rulings of 11 October and 24
October 2017 (the rulings). As a consequence of the rulings,
neither Ms Dyantyi nor her representatives further participated in
the disciplinary proceedings.
[17]
The proctor produced his judgment on the merits on 10 November 2017.
He found that Ms Dyantyi was guilty
of kidnapping, insubordination,
assault and defamation as charged. (He also found her fellow student
guilty on the two charges put
against her). On
17 November 2017, the proctor handed down the sanction in respect of
Ms Dyantyi, as
follows:
‘
9.1
Ms Dyantyi is excluded permanently from Rhodes University, forthwith
as of the date of this order;
9.2
No credit/s that Ms Dyantyi may obtain at any other institution
during any period that she was excluded from Rhodes University
will
count towards any qualification issued by Rhodes University; and
9.3
Ms Dyanty’s academic transcript shall be endorsed to read “
Conduct
Unsatisfactory – Student permanently excluded for: Kidnapping;
Assault; Insubordination; Defamation
”.
9.4
Ms Dyantyi must vacate the Rhodes University premises by close of
business on the date of this order and may not attend
on the Rhodes
University campus for the duration of her exclusion.
9.5
The order set out in paragraph 9.4 specifically prohibits Ms Dyantyi
from attending the Rhodes University campus for any
academic,
administrative, social or any other purpose whatsoever, including,
but not limited to, the writing of any outstanding examinations;
9.6
Any examinations, practicals or any other means of assessment that Ms
Dyantyi may have written or done during the November
2017 examination
period, which have not been finalised in terms of the Rhodes
University Institutional rules as at the date of this
order, shall be
regarded as
pro non scripto
.’
[18]
As I have said, Ms Dyantyi launched an application for the review and
setting aside of both the decisions
of the proctor of 10 November and
17 November 2017 (the decisions). The grounds of review were
that the decisions had been materially
affected by procedural
unfairness and were unreasonable and/or irrational. In a
supplementary founding affidavit filed under Uniform
rule 53(4), Ms
Dyantyi also alleged that the decisions were
ultra vires
the
powers of the proctor and that she reasonably perceived the proctor
to have been biased against her. The court a quo found no
merit in
any of the review grounds but subsequently granted leave to appeal
limited to the procedural unfairness review ground.
The
law
[19]
As a public higher education institution, the university is publicly
funded for the purpose of achieving
the obligation of the state under
s 29(1)
(a)
of the Constitution to make the right to higher
education progressively available and accessible. It follows that the
university
is an organ of state as defined in s 239 of the
Constitution and thus in s 1 of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of
2000 (PAJA). In terms of
s 27(1)
of the
Higher
Education Act, the
university is governed by its council.
Section
32(2)
(d)
,
inter alia
, provides that the council may
make institutional rules regarding disciplinary measures and
disciplinary procedures relating to students.
In terms of
s 36
, every
student at a public higher education institution is subject to the
disciplinary measures and disciplinary procedures determined
by its
institutional rules. The council of the university approved and the
university applied the disciplinary code under these empowering
provisions.
[20]
Therefore, in subjecting Ms Dyantyi to a disciplinary inquiry, the
university exercised a public power
and/or performed a public
function in terms of legislation, within the meaning of the
definition of ‘administrative action’ in
s 1
of PAJA. The
decisions clearly affected Ms Dyantyi’s rights adversely by direct
external legal effect. It follows that PAJA was
applicable and that
Ms Dyantyi had the right to procedural fairness encapsulated in
s 3
of PAJA.
[21]
In C Hoexter & G Penfold
Administrative Law in South Africa
3 ed (2021) at 501 it is said that:
‘
.
. . procedural fairness is a principle of good administration that
requires a sensitive rather than heavy-handed application. Context
is
all-important: the content of fairness is not static but must be
tailored to the particular circumstances of each case. There
is no
room now for the all-or-nothing approach to fairness that
characterised our pre-democratic law, an approach that tended to
produce results that were either overly burdensome for the
administration or entirely unhelpful to the complainant.’
At
common law the opportunity of an individual to present evidence that
supports his or her case and to controvert the evidence against
him
or her ‘. . . is the essence of a fair hearing and the courts have
always insisted upon it’. See Lawrence Baxter
Administrative Law
1 ed (1984) (3
rd
impression 1991) at 553. Today this forms
part of the reasonable opportunity to make representations under
section 3(2)
(b)
(1)(ii) of PAJA. In
Bel Porto School
Governing Body and Others v Premier of the Western Cape Province and
Another
[2002] ZACC 2
;
2002 (3) SA 265
; 2002 (9) BCLR 891
para 104 Chaskalson P said that ‘what procedural fairness requires
depends on the particular circumstances
of each case’. And in
Minister of Public Works and Others v Kyalami Ridge Environmental
Association and Others (Mukhwevho Intervening)
[2001] ZACC 19
;
2001 (3) SA 1151
(CC);
2001 (7) BCLR 652
(CC) para 102 he said:
‘
Ultimately,
procedural fairness depends in each case upon the balancing of
various relevant factors including the nature of the decision,
the
“rights” affected by it, the circumstances in which it is made,
and the consequences resulting from it.’
[22]
In accordance with the position at common law, there is no general
right to legal representation under
PAJA. Unless a relevant
instrument extends the right to legal representation, it is limited
by
s 3(3)
(a)
to serious or complex cases. Even in such cases
there is no general right to the services of a specific legal
representative or representatives.
Whether, when and to what extent
an affected person should be permitted or enabled to obtain or retain
the services of a particular
legal representative has to be
determined by a similar balancing exercise than the one referred to
in the previous paragraph.
[23]
Thus, the question in such a case (that is, where the affected person
is entitled to legal representation)
is whether in the specific
circumstances procedural fairness in terms of PAJA requires that the
affected person obtain or retain
the services of a particular legal
representative. A weighing of considerations of timing and delay,
prejudice to any affected party,
availability of suitable alternative
legal representation together with all other relevant factors, should
provide the answer to
this question. And it has to be said that the
answer should seldom be in the affirmative.
Application
of the law to the facts
[24]
Was Ms Dyantyi’s case such an exceptional instance? The following
factors had to be balanced. On the
one hand the university took a
predetermined stance that it would seek the exclusion of all the
accused students, including Ms Dyantyi.
It made this attitude clear
from the outset and at all stages during the disciplinary inquiry. In
the result, Ms Dyantyi, an
impecunious young student, faced
grave potential consequences, including three wasted years at the
university, the compromising of
her ability to obtain admission at
another university and dashed dreams and career prospects.
Presentation of her case at the disciplinary
inquiry was a matter of
some factual and legal complexity. It was, therefore, rightly
accepted that legal complexities and potential
seriousness of the
consequences of an adverse finding entitled Ms Dyantyi to adequate
legal representation for the duration of the
inquiry. See
Hamata
and Another v Chairperson, Peninsula Technikon Internal Disciplinary
Committee and Others
[2002] ZASCA 102
;
2002 (5) SA 449
(SCA) para
21.
[25]
Ms de Vos and Mr Makgalemele represented Ms Dyantyi over the 12 days
of the disciplinary hearing up to
11 October 2017. The transcript of
the proceedings up to then came to over 700 pages. In such
circumstances, the role of the instructing
attorney (and his or
her candidate attorney) is usually more of an administrative and
logistical nature. There was no reason
to believe that this was not
the position in this matter. Thus, the
rulings deprived Ms Dyantyi of the services
of two counsel steeped in
the matter. Moreover, they did so at a crucial stage of the
proceedings, when Ms Dyantyi was about to testify
and to otherwise
present her case. The suggestion of the university that Ms Dyantyi
should have proceeded with only the assistance
of Mr Mdabe and the
candidate attorney was quite unreasonable in the circumstances. It
would have been difficult to obtain the services
of counsel willing
to act pro bono and able to properly prepare within the 10 working
days between 11 October and 26 October 2017.
And after the ruling of
24 October 2017 that was virtually impossible. This caused prejudice
to Ms Dyantyi that could only have
been justified by powerful
considerations. That was especially so because all of this could have
been avoided by the simple expedient
of setting down the matter for
29 and 30 November and 1 December 2017, which dates were not
unreasonably distant.
[26]
What had to be placed on the other side of the scale? Nothing really,
apart from the general principle
that student disciplinary
proceedings should be finalised with reasonable expedition. As I have
demonstrated, the proctor gave no
reasons for any of the rulings. It
was a recurring theme in the answering affidavit in the review
application, deposed to by the
in-house legal advisor to the
vice-chancellor, that Ms Dyantyi had no defence to the charges and
throughout employed delaying tactics.
But the prosecutors said
nothing of the sort at the time, no doubt because they had no
justification to say so.
[27]
As I have said, Mr Milo did not at the time explain why the
university regarded it as imperative that
the proceedings be
concluded by 30 October 2017. In the said answering affidavit, the
following explanation was offered:
‘
162.1
The urgency to concluding the matter by 30 October 2017 was grounded
in the fact that the University semester was coming
to an end and the
University would be entering its semester SWOT week period.
162.2
During this time the University does not generally schedule any
events or disciplinary hearings, but reserves that
time for academic
engagements and examination preparation. This ground of urgency is
not unique to the applicant’s disciplinary
hearing but applies
generally to the University’s disciplinary process.’
But
that could only (possibly) have been a reason to not have a
disciplinary hearing during the week from Monday 30 October to Friday
3 November 2017. In the circumstances it must be accepted that there
was no compelling reason to conclude the disciplinary inquiry
before
30 October 2017.
[28]
It remains to address two findings that the proctor made in his
judgment on the merits. In the first
place, he recorded that Mr
Sangoni had contacted Mr Mdabe when the hearing resumed on 26 October
2017 and that the latter confirmed
that there would be no appearance
by and on behalf of Ms Dyantyi. When asked whether ‘there was any
reason that he wished to advance
for their absence’, Mr Mdabe said
that the reasons were set out in the postponement application. The
proctor proceeded to say:
‘
In
the result, I was satisfied that Ms Dyantyi and her legal
representatives had waived their right to participate further in the
proceedings.’
[29]
This finding was plainly wrong. It did not follow from the recordal
that Ms Dyantyi had waived the right
to participate further in the
hearing. Mr Mdabe’s reference to the reasons put forward in the
postponement application indicated
quite the contrary, namely that
the refusal of the postponement tainted the proceedings with
fundamental unfairness. In line herewith,
and with what Ms de Vos had
foreshadowed in her address on 11 October 2017, the court a quo
made the following finding, which
was rightly not challenged before
us:
‘
Having
resisted such a postponement,
albeit
unsuccessfully, both the applicant and her legal team decided not to
engage in the disciplinary proceedings as they had already formed
a
view that the refusal by the third respondent to postpone the matter
to 29 November 2017 was unreasonable.’
[30]
Secondly, the proctor held that from the outset Ms Dyantyi had no
intention of testifying in her own
defence. This finding was
gratuitous and wrong. Ms Dyantyi’s legal representatives
repeatedly stated without question that
she would testify (she was
excused from the hearing on more than one occasion to prepare for her
testimony, particularly on 9 October
2017) and she had not been
called upon to answer such a proposition. Had this motivated the
rulings, they would have been affected
by a gross misdirection.
[31]
In the particular circumstances of this case, a proper balancing of
the relevant considerations would
have dictated that the inquiry had
to be postponed to the dates on which counsel for Ms Dyantyi were
available. The failure to do
so violated Ms Dyantyi’s right to
procedural fairness under PAJA. It follows that the court a quo
should have reviewed and set
aside the decisions. Costs should follow
this result in both courts, including the costs of two counsel.
[32]
In accordance with the notice of motion in the review application,
counsel for Ms Dyantyi asked
that the matter be remitted to the
university ‘for reconsideration before another proctor’. In the
light of the findings of the
proctor in respect of credibility and
otherwise, the disciplinary proceedings should not continue before
him. In my view, however,
the proposed direction in this regard
should allow for the lapse of time and possible changed
circumstances. The matter should be
remitted to the university for
reconsideration in its discretion, on the condition that any
continuation of the disciplinary inquiry
against Ms Dyantyi should
take place before another proctor.
[33]
For these reasons the following order is issued:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the court a quo is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
(a)
The decision of 10 October 2017, convicting the applicant on charges
of kidnapping,
assault, insubordination and defamation, in terms of
rules 4.3
and
4.17
(a) and (b) of the first respondent’s Student
Disciplinary Code, is reviewed and set aside.
(b)
The decision of 17 November 2017, sanctioning the applicant by
permanently
excluding her from the first respondent, in terms of rule
7.27 (b) of the first respondent’s Student Disciplinary Code, and
making
various ancillary orders, is reviewed and set aside.
(c)
The matter is remitted to the first respondent for reconsideration on
condition
that any continuation of the disciplinary inquiry against
the applicant shall take place before another proctor.
(d)
The first respondent is directed to pay the applicant’s costs,
including
the costs of two counsel.’
C H G VAN DER MERWE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
A de Vos SC (with her O Motlhasedi) (heads also
prepared by S Wilson)
Instructed
by:
SERI Law Clinic,
Johannesburg
Webbers Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
1
st
and 2
nd
respondents:
I J Smuts SC (with him N Molony)
Instructed
by:
Eversheds
Sutherland (SA) Inc.,
Johannesburg
Lovius Block Inc., Bloemfontein
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