Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 502South Africa
Lembore and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2023/097427) [2024] ZAGPJHC 502 (21 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lembore and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2023/097427) [2024] ZAGPJHC 502 (21 May 2024)
Lembore and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (Leave to Appeal) (2023/097427) [2024] ZAGPJHC 502 (21 May 2024)
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sino date 21 May 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023-097427,
2023-097292,
2023-097111,
2023-097076,
2023-100081,
and
2023-100526
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED:
NO
21
May 2024
In
the matter between:
DEGEFA
SUGEBO LEMBORE
First Applicant
TEKETEL
TUMIRE HAJISO
Second
Applicant
ADEN
AHMED OSMAN
Third Applicant
ABI
OSMAN
YUSUF
Fourth
Applicant
TEMESGEN
MATIWOS
Fifth Applicant
THOMAS
GODISO
Sixth
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First
Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL: HOME AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Third Respondent
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Fourth
Respondent
HEAD:
BOKSBURG CORRECTIONAL SERVICE
CENTRE,
BENONI
Fifth Respondent
HEAD:
MODDERBEE CORRECTIONAL SERVICE
CENTRE,
BENONI
Sixth Respondent
Coram:
Mlambo JP, Twala J and Collis J
Heard:
14 March 2024
Delivered:
This Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and
by uploading to
Caselines. The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 10:00 am
on 21 May 2024.
ORDER
1.
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
2.
The applicants are ordered to pay the first to third respondents’
costs.
JUDGMENT
(LEAVE TO APPEAL)
MLAMBO, JP (Twala J and
Collis J concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The
applicants seek leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA)
against the whole Judgment and orders, handed down by this
Court on 8
February 2024. It is necessary, at the outset, to point out that
Counsel for the applicants used the leave to appeal
hearing to
reargue almost all the points he raised during the hearing of the
main application. That said, distilled to their bare
essentials, the
crux of the applicants’ grounds in their application for leave
to appeal, are that this Court erred in dismissing
their application
to amend the notice of motion and, regarding the main merits, in
failing to follow the Full Court Judgment from
this Court in
Abraham
and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Another
.
[1]
[2]
The
applicants rely on section 17(1)(a)(i) and (ii) that there are
reasonable prospects that the SCA will reach a different conclusion,
and that there is a compelling reason for the SCA to hear this matter
because this Court’s Judgment conflicts with the
Abraham
Full Court
.
Section 17 of the Superior Courts Act
[2]
governs applications for leave to appeal. Of particular relevance is
section 17(1)(a) which provides:
“
(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned
are of the opinion that
(a) (i) the appeal
would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii) there is some
other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter
under consideration.”
[3]
The
applicants’ submission regarding the dismissal of their
amendment application is a non-starter. Nothing new was raised
to
counter the view that, that application was self-evidently a review
of the good cause interviews process. The applicants listed
a number
of what they regarded as defects in that process. In substance what
the applicants sought was a review of that process
and the decisions
taken pursuant thereto. Without the full record of the process, this
Court could not make any pronouncements,
as those would be premature.
In
Democratic
Alliance and Others v Acting National Director of Public Prosecutions
and Others
,
[3]
the Supreme Court of Appeal explained this principle as follows:
“
In the
constitutional era courts are clearly empowered beyond the confines
of PAJA to scrutinise the exercise of public power for
compliance
with constitutional prescripts.… It can hardly be argued that,
in an era of greater transparency, accountability
and access to
information, a record of decision related to the exercise of public
power that can be reviewed should not be made
available, whether in
terms of Rule 53 or by courts exercising their inherent power to
regulate their own process. Without the
record a court cannot perform
its constitutionally entrenched review function, with the result that
a litigant’s right in
terms of s 34 of the Constitution to have
a justiciable dispute decided in a fair public hearing before a court
with all the issues
being ventilated, would be infringed.”
[4]
(Footnote omitted.)
[4]
The applicants have further submitted that this Court erred in
ordering all the applicants to pay the costs for the unsuccessful
amendment application, when in fact, the application was only in
relation to three of the applicants, Hajiso, Osman and Yusuf.
This
submission is misguided as well. The costs in relation to the
amendment application refers to the applicants in that application.
Furthermore, the argument that only one respondent opposed the
application is incorrect. All three respondents opposed the main
application and that point was made by counsel who appeared for the
respondents during the hearing of the main application. This
was not
challenged by the applicants so they cannot now take issue with it.
Thus, it was well within this Court’s discretion
to award the
costs for the failed amendment application in the manner that it did.
It must also be pointed out that no costs order
has been made
regarding the main application. In terms of the order issued, the
parties were invited to file further written submissions
on why an
order of costs should not be made against them. The intervention of
this application for leave to appeal has placed this
process on hold
and the result is that no order on costs has been made regarding the
main application.
[5]
The
applicants submit that this Court made its own law by granting orders
that are not sourced within the Refugees Act.
[5]
They take specific issue with orders 2 and 3 which were to the
following effect:
“
2. The first,
second, third and fourth respondents are directed, to the extent
necessary, to take all reasonable steps, within 60
days from the date
of this order, to afford the applicants an opportunity in terms of
section 21(1B)
of the
Refugees Act 130 of 1998
, read with regulation
(8)(3) thereto, to show good cause, and to allow the whole process of
any review or appeal, in the event
where good cause is not
established, to unfold until it is finally determined.
3. The first,
second, third and fourth respondents are directed to approach the
Magistrates Court, for the extension of time
should the review or
appeal process not be finalised within the 60-day period. This
request should be accompanied by a report directed
to the Magistrates
Court, setting out what steps have been taken and why the processes
have not been finalised within the 60-day
period.”
[6]
The
submission that this Court created its own law is misguided. Counsel
for the applicants, was constrained to concede that section
172(1)(b)
of the Constitution gives this Court the power to make an order that
is just and equitable. The impugned orders were
practical and aimed
at ensuring judicial oversight of the applicants’ detention,
whilst exercising their rights in terms
of the provisions of the
Refugees Act. The
same approach was adopted by the Constitutional
Court in
Ashebo
v Minister of Home Affairs
.
[6]
[7]
The other submission made is that this Court failed to consider the
section 27A
argument, which formed the applicant’s basis of
their reliance on the
non-refoulment
principle. Although the
main judgment did not mention
section 27A
, the Court dealt with the
substance of the applicants’ case, i.e. that their detention
was unlawful.
Section 27A
provides in relevant part that:
“
An asylum seeker
is entitled to –
(a) a formal
written recognition as an asylum seeker in the prescribed form
pending finalisation of his or her application
for asylum;
(b) the right to
remain in the Republic pending the finalisation of his or her
application for asylum;
(c) the right
not to be unlawfully arrested or detained..
..” (Emphasis
added.)
[8]
In paragraphs 72 to 81 of the main judgment, this Court extensively
discussed the difference between pre-deportation detention
in terms
of
section 34
and detention for committing an offence in terms of
section 49(1) of the Immigration Act. This discussion included the
effect of
the repeal of regulation 2(2) that allowed for release from
detention upon the intimation of an intention to apply for asylum.
The effect of this repeal cannot be gainsaid, and it is disingenuous
for the applicants to now state that this Court did not consider
their argument. Their argument was to the effect that once they
declared their intentions to apply for asylum, they had a right
to be
released. The Constitutional Court in
Ashebo
jettisoned this
argument and nothing more need be said further in this regard.
[9]
Following
from this ground is the claim that the Court erred in finding that
the Constitutional Court in
Ruta
v Minister of Home Affairs
[7]
and the
Abraham
Full Court
conflated
detention and deportation. The main judgment fully ventilated the
difference between detention and deportation. In line
with
Ashebo
,
there is no bar, post amendment, to holding an illegal foreigner in
detention for a violation of the Immigration Act. The Constitutional
Court made it clear that detention permitted in terms of the Criminal
Procedure Act
[8]
is lawful. The
effect of the crime created by section 49(1) was fully discussed in
the main judgment. The judgment dealt with persons
who had not yet
shown good cause. In any event, it bears repeating that neither
persons who have not shown good cause, nor
de-jure
or
de-facto
refugees
can be deported after intimating their intention to apply for asylum,
or once being granted asylum as in the case of
de-facto
refugees.
However, unlike
de-jure
and
de-facto
refugees,
for those who have not shown good cause, as the main judgment went to
great lengths to explain, there is no protection
from detention
arising from a contravention of section 49(1) of the Immigration
Act.
[9]
[10]
A further submission raised by the applicants was that this Court
should grant leave as there was a conflict between
two Full Court
judgments of this Court, i.e. the
Abraham Full Court
Judgment
and the Judgment of this Court. This submission does not leave the
starting blocks. In paragraphs 69 to 71 of the main
judgment it is
explained that the Constitutional Court considered the
Abraham
Full Court
Judgment, and expressly rejected it and as such there
can be no talk of a conflict between two Full Court Judgments.
[11]
From all the above, there is no reasonable prospect that the Supreme
Court of Appeal will reach different conclusions
than this Court on
all those issues. This Court clearly followed and applied the binding
authority of the Constitutional Court
in
Ashebo
.
[12]
In the circumstances the application must fail and consequently the
following order is made:
Order
1.
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
2.
The applicants are ordered to pay the first to third respondents’
costs.
D
MLAMBO
Judge
President of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Appearances
For
the Applicants: S I Vobi; A Nase and T Mdingi instructed by
Manamela Attorneys, Pretoria
For
the First to Third Respondents:
Hephzibah Rajah instructed by State Attorney, Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 14 March 2024
Date
of judgment: 21 May 2024
[1]
[2023] ZAGPJHC 253;
2023 (5) SA 178
(GJ) (“
Abraham
Full Court
”).
[2]
10 of 2013.
[3]
[2012] ZASCA 15; 2012 (3) SA 486 (SCA); [2012] 2 All SA 345 (SCA);
2012 (6) BCLR 613 (SCA).
[4]
Id at para 37.
[5]
130 of 1998.
[6]
[2023] ZACC 16
;
2023 (5) SA 382
(CC);
2024 (2) BCLR 217
(CC)
(“
Ashebo"
).
[7]
[2018] ZACC 52
;
2019 (3) BCLR 383
(CC);
2019 (2) SA 329
(CC)
("
Ruta
”).
[8]
A
ct
51 of 1977, as amended.
[9]
13 of 2002.
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