Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1181South Africa
Malatji v Head of Prison Female Centre: Department of Correctional Services and Another (21/54146) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1181 (18 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 November 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Malatji v Head of Prison Female Centre: Department of Correctional Services and Another (21/54146) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1181 (18 November 2024)
Malatji v Head of Prison Female Centre: Department of Correctional Services and Another (21/54146) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1181 (18 November 2024)
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sino date 18 November 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED. NO
…………
..………….............
SIGNATURE
DATE
21 November 2024
CASE
NO:
21/54146
In the matter between:
MOTSATSI
SARAH MALATJI
Applicant
and
THE
HEAD OF PRISON FEMALE CENTRE:
DEPARTMENT
OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
First
Respondent
THE
PAROLE BOARD:
DEPARTMENT
OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines.
The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 21 November 2024.
MAHON
AJ:
[1]
The applicant approached this court seeking an order directing
the First Respondent to place her on parole and the Second Respondent
to deduct the period of her pre-sentencing incarceration from her
current sentence. The application was opposed by the respondents.
[2]
The applicant is currently serving an effective 28-year sentence for
murder and robbery with aggravating circumstances,
imposed on 8 June
2011. It would appear that her effective sentence is calculated at 30
years, considering the concurrent running
of certain portions of her
punishment and a remission of six months under a special remission of
sentence granted in 2012.
[3]
The Applicant has already spent 10 years in
custody and has not been considered for release on parole.
[4]
The applicant's minimum detention period runs to 7 February 2025,
with a parole profile submission which was scheduled
for 7 November
2024.
[5]
Despite these dates, the applicant asserts that she has already
served sufficient time, including her period in custody
awaiting
trial, and should be considered for parole immediately. She further
argues that she is entitled to earlier release on
grounds of
rehabilitation, her health concerns, and her eligibility under
correctional services protocols.
[6]
The applicant contends that:
[6.1] She has
fulfilled all requirements for parole consideration, including
serving one-third of her sentence;
[6.2] Her
rehabilitation efforts, including education and regular participation
in prison programs, demonstrates a readiness
for societal
reintegration; and
[6.3] Her
prolonged incarceration is prejudicial and unnecessary, given her
rehabilitative progress and the lack of
safety risks associated with
her release.
[7]
The applicant also argues that the three years spent in detention
awaiting trial should be included in the calculation
of her sentence.
[8]
The respondents argue that:
[8.1] The
applicant has not reached her minimum detention period and,
therefore, is not eligible for parole consideration;
[8.2] The
parole process requires compliance with institutional protocols,
including victim-offender dialogues, which
the applicant has not
completed; and
[8.3] The
application is premature, as the Parole Board has not been approached
with a profile submission or any formal
recommendation from
correctional services.
[9]
At the heart of this matter is whether the applicant’s request
for immediate parole consideration is procedurally
and substantively
justified. Integral to that enquiry is whether this court has the
power to grant parole under circumstances where
the statutory
procedures contemplated under the Correctional Services Act 111 of
1998 (“the
Correctional Services Act&rdquo
;), for consideration
of parole, have not been followed.
[10]
The
Correctional Services Act and
relevant regulations provide a
structured process for parole consideration. A prerequisite is that
the offender must have reached
their minimum detention period,
barring exceptional circumstances.
[11]
Section 78
of the
Correctional Services Act
empowers
the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services to grant
parole to an offender serving a life sentence but requires
life-sentenced prisoners to serve a minimum detention
period before being eligible for parole consideration.
[12]
This period is determined by the Parole Board, taking into
account the minimum periods prescribed by regulations.
[13]
The Parole Board, in consultation with other stakeholders such
as social workers, psychologists, and correctional
officers,
considers several factors, including:
[13.1] The
prisoner’s conduct and disciplinary record during
incarceration;
[13.2]
Participation in educational, vocational, and behavioural correction
programs;
[13.3] An
assessment of whether releasing the prisoner poses a threat to public
safety; and
[13.4] Inputs from
the victim or victim’s family, ensuring their perspectives are
considered.
[14]
The Board then makes a recommendation to the Minister of Justice
and Correctional Services, who has the final authority
(subject to
judicial review) to grant or deny parole for life prisoners.
[15]
Should a prisoner believe that he or she is
eligible for parole, the prisoner must apply to the Correctional
Supervision and Parole
Board to be placed on parole. The Board, based
on appropriate reports and recommendations from correctional
officers, will consider
and decide whether the prisoner should be
granted parole.
[16]
Should the Board dismiss the application, the
prisoner or an interested party may request that the review board
overturn the decision
of the Board.
[17]
Before
a prisoner can be placed on parole, all possible relevant information
should be considered, and any person, including the
Applicant, may
put relevant information before the Board. It is the duty of the
Board to weigh and consider all information placed
before it and to
exclude information that may be irrelevant.
[1]
[18]
In this case, the applicant’s minimum detention period is still
over a year away.
[19]
Furthermore, the evidence on record indicates that the applicant has
not fulfilled the requisite victim-offender dialogue
nor submitted
her parole profile for assessment. These procedural prerequisites are
integral to ensuring transparency, equity,
and accountability within
the parole process.
[20]
The applicant’s contention that the period spent in pre-trial
detention should be credited against her sentence
lacks support in
the judicial sentencing order. The responsibility for addressing any
potential errors or adjustments in sentence
calculation lies within
the purview of the Parole Board and the Department of Correctional
Services as part of their administrative
mandate.
[21]
Considering these circumstances, the application is premature, as the
Parole Board has not yet had the opportunity to
evaluate the
applicant’s parole eligibility or resolve the issues presented.
[22]
Seemingly alive to these difficulties, the applicant referred me to
the wording of the amended notice of motion, which
constituted a
refinement of the formulation of the relief sought, thus:
“
1.
An order directing the First Respondent to place the Applicant on
parole
process
within 30 days of the granting of the Court Order.
2. An
order directing the First Respondent to release the Applicant on
parole within 90 days of the granting of the
Court Order.
3.
An
order directing the Second read-in (sic) the period of awaiting trial
into the period which the Applicant had already served
in prison.”
[my emphasis]
[23]
The applicant accepted that I could not grant an order directing that
she be placed on parole and she accordingly sought
to argue that the
“process” which was contended for in the amended notice
of motion, was not the placement on parole,
but, rather the
commencement of the process by which the applicant’s
eligibility for parole is to be considered.
[24]
However, this amendment does not assist the applicant for the same
reason that the previous relief sought could not be
granted, namely,
the fact that the applicant had not yet submitted her parole profile
for assessment. It is the applicant who may
initiate this process by
making application for parole and following the procedural
pre-requisites contemplated in the Act. It
is only if the relevant
decision makers fail to act, that the applicant would be entitled to
relief, but that is not the case which
is made out in the founding
papers.
[25]
In the circumstances, this court cannot compel the respondents to
place the applicant on parole, nor does it possess
the authority to
order the applicant’s release on parole within 30 days. Such
powers must first be exercised by the appropriate
authorities in
accordance with the statutory framework governing Correctional
Supervision and the Parole Board.
[26]
The applicant is required to fulfil all procedural requirements for
consideration of parole, including submitting an
application to the
Board. Only upon the Board’s satisfaction that all statutory
and regulatory requirements have been met,
may the applicant be
placed on parole.
[27]
In instances where the Parole Board declines an application for
parole, the applicant is entitled to seek a review of
the decision
before the Parole Review Board. Thereafter, if dissatisfied, the
applicant may bring a review application in terms
of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
[28]
The present application does not set out any legal basis upon which
relief is sought. Specifically, it is uncertain whether
the
application is one for a mandamus under section 6(2)(g) of PAJA or a
review application under section 33(1) of the Constitution.
On either
basis, however, the application is premature, but this lack of
clarity underscores a material defect in the application,
as the
relief sought falls outside the scope of this Court's powers.
[29]
The applicant has also raised concerns about her medical condition as
a basis for her release. However, the applicant
has not based her
case on any compliance with the relevant requirements for medical
parole. Compliance with these criteria, as
prescribed by the
Correctional Services Act, is
a prerequisite for consideration of
medical parole.
[30]
Consequently, reliance on the applicant’s medical condition
without adherence to the statutory provisions is misplaced.
The
application is premature, as the applicant is required to exhaust all
internal remedies before seeking relief from this Court.
[31]
In view of the above, the application lacks merit and falls to be
dismissed.
[32]
In the circumstances, the following order
is made:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs on
scale A.
D MAHON
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Johannesburg
Date of hearing:
20 August 2024
Date
of judgment: 21 November 2024
APPEARANCES
:
For
the Applicant:
Instructed
by:
Mr
Mashitoa
TML
Mashitoa Inc
For
the Respondent:
Instructed
by:
Adv
T Maluleka
Office
of the State Attorney, Johannesburg
[1]
Clive
Derby-Lewis vs Minister of Correctional Services and Others 2015
ZAGPPHC
661 Page 25
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