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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 711
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## Matlala and Another v Head of Prison Leeuwkop Maximum Prison and Others (2024/059539)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 711 (15 July 2024)
Matlala and Another v Head of Prison Leeuwkop Maximum Prison and Others (2024/059539)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 711 (15 July 2024)
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sino date 15 July 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 2024-059539
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES/
NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
3.
REVISED.
15
July 2024
In
the matter between:
MPHO
FLOYD MATLALA
First
Applicant
JUANE
STEPHANE JACOBS
Second
Applicant
And
HEAD
OF PRISON LEEUWKOP MAXIMUM PRISON
First
Respondent
ASSISTANT
HEAD OF LEEUWKOP MAXIMUM PRISON
Second
Respondent
THE
HEAD OF CASE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
Third
Respondent
THE
REGIONAL COMMISSIONER OF GAUTENG
Fourth
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Fifth
Respondent
WRITTEN
REASONS FOR ORDER
WINDELL,
J:
[1]
This is an urgent application for,
inter alia, an order reviewing and setting aside the first and second
applicants decision to
transfer the applicants from Leeuwkop Maximum
Prison (Leeuwkop) to Kgosi Mampuru C-Max Prison (Kgosi Mampuru), as
well as an order
mandating the respondents to transfer the first
applicant (Mr Matlala) to New Prison Pietermaritzburg and the second
applicant
(Mr Jacobs) to Baviaanspoort prison. The relief sought is
final in nature.
[2]
The applicants were both convicted
and sentenced in 2017 for various serious crimes and are currently
serving life sentences. On
20 May 2024, they were both transferred
from Leeuwkop to Kgosi Mampuru for “security reasons”.
The first respondent
is the Head of
Kgosi Mapuru and the
second respondent is the Assistant Head. The third respondent is the
Head of Case Management Committee, the
fourth respondent is the
Regional Commissioner of Gauteng, and the fifth respondent is the
Minister of Justice and Constitutional
Development.
[3]
On 12 June 2024, I struck the matter
from the roll for want of urgency. The applicants have requested
written reasons as they have
lodged an application for leave to
appeal. These are my reasons.
[4]
Uniform Rule 6(12)(b) requires that
an applicant shall: (a) set forth explicitly the circumstances which
he avers render the matter
urgent; and (b) the reasons why he claims
that he could not be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due
course.
[5]
The applicants have filed a 156 page founding affidavit
with annexures. The bulk of the founding affidavit is devoted to
their stay
at Leeuwkop; their medical conditions; the lack of medical
treatment they received at Leeuwkop; the non-compliance by the
respondents
of court orders; the failure to give them
audi
during the disciplinary hearings before they were transferred; and
the assaults and harassment perpetrated against them by the
first and
second applicants at Leeuwkop.
[6]
The
applicants were transferred on 20 May 2024 and are no longer at
Leeuwkop. They have expressed no desire to return to Leeuwkop,
which
was confirmed during the hearing. Consequently, I requested the
applicants' counsel, Mr. Maake, to provide me with an explanation
of
the circumstances at Kgosi Mampuru that would render the review
application and transfer of the applicants to the other facilities
urgent. Specifically, I wanted to know why the applicants would not
receive substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
Despite
the matter standing down to the following day to address me on this
issue,
Mr Maake was unable to point to any averments in the
founding affidavit that constitutes urgency.
[7]
In
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite and
Others
[1]
the Court held pertinently as follows:
‘
The
import thereof is that the procedure set out in rule 6(12) is not
there for taking. An applicant has to set forth explicitly
the
circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent. More
importantly, the applicant must state the reasons why he claims
that
he cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
The question of whether a matter is sufficiently urgent
to be
enrolled and heard as an urgent application is underpinned by the
issue of absence of substantial redress in an application
in due
course. The rules allow the court to come to the assistance of a
litigant because if the latter were to wait for the normal
course
laid down by the rules it will not obtain substantial redress’.
[8]
The
sub-rule was also considered in
Luna
Meubelvervaardigers Edms Bpk v Makin,
[2]
in which Coetzee J remarked
as follows:
‘
Mere
lip service to the requirements of Rule 6(12)(b) will not do and an
applicant must make out a case in the founding affidavit
to justify
the particular extent of the departure from the norm, which is
invoked in the time and day for which the matter be set
down’.
[9]
None
of the allegations advanced by the applicants in their founding
affidavit satisfy the first, nor the second requirement of
Rule
6(12)(b), and do not support any departure from the Uniform Rules and
practice of this Court. It is trite that where
an applicant
seeks final relief (which is the case here), the Court must be even
more circumspect when deciding whether or not
urgency has been
established. In
Tshwaedi
v Greater Louis Trichardt Transitional Council
[3]
the Court said:
'... An applicant who
comes to court on an urgent basis for final relief bears an even
greater burden to establish his right to
urgent relief than an
applicant who comes to court for interim relief...'.
[10]
The applicants were unable to
convince me that there was compliance with Rule 6(12). As a result, I
found that there was no urgency
and that the application was a brazen
abuse of the process. In the circumstances, the application was
struck from the roll. No
order as to costs.
L.
WINDELL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 15 July 2024.
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicants:
Advocate L.M. Maake
Attorneys
for the applicants:
Malale
Nthapeleng Attorneys
Attorneys
for the respondents:
Office of the State Attorney,
Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
11 June 2024 & 12 June 2024
Date
of order:
12 June 2024
Date
of written reasons:
15 July 2024
[1]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty)
Ltd and Others
(11/33767) [2011] ZAG PJHC 196 (23 September 2011).
[2]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin
1977
(4) SA 135
(W) at 137F.
[3]
[2000] 4 BLLR 469
(LC) at para 11.
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