Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1265South Africa
Ndhlovu v Correctional Supervision and Parole Board, Kgosi Mampuru II Central and Others (2024/134587) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1265 (9 December 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – urgent application – for final relief –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ndhlovu v Correctional Supervision and Parole Board, Kgosi Mampuru II Central and Others (2024/134587) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1265 (9 December 2024)
Ndhlovu v Correctional Supervision and Parole Board, Kgosi Mampuru II Central and Others (2024/134587) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1265 (9 December 2024)
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sino date 9 December 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
(1)
NOT REPORTABLE
(2)
NOT OF INTREST TO OTHER
CASE
NO
:
2024-134587
DATE
:
9
December
2024
In the matter between:
ZIGGY
XOLANELE NDHLOVU
Applicant
and
THE
CORRECTIONAL SUPERVISION AND
PAROLE
BOARD, KGOSI MAMPURU Il CENTRAL
First
Respondent
THE
HEAD OF PRISON,
KGOSI
MAMPURU Il CENTRAL
Second
Respondent
THE
AREA COMMISSIONER,
KGOSI
MAMPURU Il CENTRAL
Third
Respondent
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Fourth
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Fifth
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
Sixth
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL,
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Seventh
Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
Ndhlovu v The Correctional
Supervision and Parole Board, Kgosi Mampuru II Central and Others
(2024-134587)
[2024] ZAGPJHC ---
(9 December 2024)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
28 November 2024
Delivered:
9 December 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 12:30 on
9 December 2024.
Summary:
Civil procedure – urgent application –
for final relief –
Application for the
judicial review and setting aside of decision by the Parole Board not
to release the applicant on parole –
application furthermore
for an order directing the respondents to remove from his
Correctional Services profile the ‘foreign
national’
classification and to replace same with the correct classification,
that being one of ‘South African national’
–
Factual dispute to be
decided on the basis of the
Plascon-Evans
rule –respondents’
version cannot and should not be rejected on the papers –
PAJA judicial review
application not to be granted if available internal remedies had not
been exhausted –
Urgent application
dismissed – applicant granted alternative relief to progress
his matter further.
ORDER
(1)
The first to fifth respondents are ordered
and directed to comply fully within one month from date of this order
with the order
of this Court (per Du Plessis AJ) dated 22 August
2024.
(2)
Save as aforesaid, the applicant’s
urgent application is dismissed with no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
This is an opposed urgent application by the applicant, a serial
urgent applicant in this court, for an order reviewing
and setting
aside an alleged decision taken by the first respondent (Parole
Board) on 12 November 2024 in terms of which the applicant’s
application to be released on parole was allegedly denied. The
applicant is presently serving a sixteen-year sentence at the Kgosi
Mampuru Central (Medium) Prison in Pretoria, which sentence was
imposed during 2014, after his conviction on charges of attempted
murder, impersonating a police officer and possession of an unlawful
firearm. He also applies for an order directing the second,
third,
fourth and fifth respondents to remove from his Correctional Services
profile the ‘foreign national’ classification
and to
replace same with the correct classification, that being, according
to the applicant, one of ‘South African national’.
Lastly, the application is for an order that the first respondent be
directed to release the applicant on parole within seven days.
[2].
It is the case of the applicant that a meeting was scheduled for
12 November 2024 between himself and the Parole
Board at which
meeting he was to be considered for release on parole after having
served almost eleven years of his sixteen years
sentence. However, at
the meeting he was informed that his parole application would not be
considered because his address had not
been verified. Moreover, so
the applicant was informed, he could not be considered for release on
parole as he was still classified
as a foreign national, which
disqualifies him from consideration for release on parole.
[3].
The applicant is aggrieved by the aforegoing stance of the Parole
Board, as, according to him, the real reason for him
not being
considered for release on parole is the fact that, according to the
records of the Correctional Services, he is incorrectly
classified as
a foreign national. This means, according to the Parole Board, that
the applicant is not eligible for release on
parole and that he is to
be deported to his country.
[4].
The applicant is adamant that he is a South African national and that
the records of Correctional Services incorrectly
reflect him as being
a foreign national. In support of his aforegoing contention, the
applicant drew the court’s attention
to the fact that during
August 2024, this court (per Du Plessis AJ) issued an order which
‘required’ the respondents
to verify whether the identity
document of the applicant is indeed a valid South African identity
document. Once the Applicant’s
nationality is verified, so the
order reads, this should reflect correctly on the correctional
services system.
[5].
The applicant alleges that such verification was in fact subsequently
done by an official from Kgosi Mampuru Prison,
but despite such
verification, the respondents refuse to accept that he is indeed a
South African National.
[6].
The difficulty with the applicant’s case is that, despite the
tedious history of the dispute between the applicant
and the
Correctional Services authorities, there presently remains a factual
dispute between them in relation to a material aspect,
that being the
applicant’s nationality. Despite applicant’s
protestations to the contrary, that is not a dispute that
can,
without more, be decided on the papers. The respondents aver that the
documentary evidence in support of the applicant’s
claim –
such as his abridged birth certificate, his smart identity card and
the confirmation from the Department of Home
Affairs that he is
indeed a South African national – that he is a South African,
born and bred, are questionable. The allegation
in the respondents’
answering affidavit in this application is that the applicant’s
claim that he is a South African
national is negated by the fact
that, according to their records and presumably that of the
Department of Home Affairs, the person
who the applicant alleges to
be his mother does not have a son by the name of that of the
applicant. Therefore, so the contention
on behalf of the respondents
goes, the applicant’s claim that he is South African is false,
despite all of the documentary
evidence which the applicant came up
with in this and other applications before this court.
[7].
For this
reason alone, the applicant’s application should fail. The
simple point being that, applying the so-called
Plascon
Evans
[1]
rule,
I have to accept the version of the respondents as it cannot be said
with any conviction that such version in relation to the disputed
issue is so far-fetched and untenable that it can be rejected on the
papers.
[8]. The second
difficulty with the applicant’s cause, which he says is an
application for a judicial review of the
decision by the Parole
Board, is that, even if one is to accept that they made a reviewable
decision on 12 November 2024 not to
consider that the applicant
should be released on parole, the applicant failed to exhaust the
available internal remedies. This
point is closely related to the
requirement that an applicant for final interdictory relief is
required to demonstrate that he
or she has no alternative remedy
available to him or her.
[9].
As correctly contended by the respondents, the Correctional Services
Act 111 of 1998 (the
Correctional Services Act) provides
that inmates
who are dissatisfied with any decision of the Parole Board should
approach the Parole Review Board to have reviewed
such a decision.
Section 75
of the said Act deals with the powers, functions and
duties of Correctional Supervision and Parole Boards and s 75(8)
provides
as follows:
‘
8
A decision of the Board is final except that the Minister, the
National Commissioner
or the Inspecting Judge may refer the matter to
the Correctional Supervision and Parole Review Board for
reconsideration in which
case –
(a)
the decision of the Board is suspended pending the outcome of the
Correctional Supervision and
Parole Review Board; and
(b)
the record of the proceedings before the Board must be submitted to
the Correctional Supervision
and Parole review Board.’
[10].
Section 77 of the Act provides, under the heading ‘Powers of
Correctional Supervision and Parole Review Board
in respect of cases
decided by Correctional Supervision and Parole Board’, as
follows: -
‘
(1)
On consideration of a record submitted in terms of section 75 and any
submission which the Minister,
National Commissioner, Inspecting
Judge or the sentenced offender concerned may wish to place before
the Correctional Supervision
and Parole Review Board must –
(a)
confirm the decision; or
(b)
substitute its own decision and make any order which the Correctional
Supervision and Parole Board
ought to have made.
(2)
… … …’.
[11].
The simple point is that, in order for the matter to reach the Parole
Review Board, the Record and formal decision taken
by the Parole
Board must be sent to the Parole Review Board to review the Parole
Board's decision substituting its own decision
prior to approaching
this Court. That applies even in the case of the Parole Board
refusing to take a decision as the applicant
alleges is the case
in
casu
. The respondents, on the other hand, contend that no such
formal hearing by the Parole Board has taken place resulting in no
formal
decision being made.
[12].
Section
7(2) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
[2]
(PAJA), provides as follows: -
‘
(2)(a) Subject to
paragraph (c), no court or tribunal shall review an administrative
action in terms of this Act unless any internal
remedy provided for
in any other law has first been exhausted.
(b) Subject to paragraph
(c), a court or tribunal must, if it is not satisfied that any
internal remedy referred to in paragraph
(a) has been exhausted,
direct that the person concerned must first exhaust such remedy
before instituting proceedings in a court
or tribunal for judicial
review in terms of this Act.
(c) A court or tribunal
may, in exceptional circumstances and on application by the person
concerned, exempt such person from the
obligation to exhaust any
internal remedy if the court or tribunal deems it in the interest of
justice.’
[13].
On the basis of this provision of PAJA, the applicant is not entitled
to the relief sought by him.
[14].
Having said that, I am of the view that, under the heading ‘Further
and/or alternative relief’, the applicant
is entitled to an
order placing the first to fifth respondents on terms to comply with
the order of this Court (per Du Plessis
AJ) dated 22 August 2024.
That order reads as follows: -
‘
(1)
The First to Fifth Respondents are required to verify whether the
identity document of the Applicant
is indeed a valid South African
identity document. Once the Applicant’s nationality is
verified, this should reflect correctly
on the correctional services
system.
(1) The application
is postponed sine die for First to Fifth Respondents to provide proof
clarifying Applicant’s prison
status, whether Applicant is
classified as a medium or maximum offender in terms of its Records.’
[15].
It is, as submitted by the applicant, that the respondents appear to
be dragging their heels in that some three months
from the date on
which the said order was granted, there has been little progress in
the verification of the nationality of the
applicant. I therefore
think that the respondents should be ordered to comply with Du
Plessis AJ’s order within a reasonable
specified period of
time, which, in my view, should be one month.
[16].
For all of these reasons, subject to the granting of the aforesaid
compelling order, the applicant’s urgent application
must fail.
[17].
I conclude, in sum, that the applicant’s application falls to
be dismissed.
Order
[18].
In the result, I make the following order:
(1)
The first to fifth respondents are ordered
and directed to comply fully within one month from date of this order
with the order
of this Court (per Du Plessis AJ) dated 22 August
2024.
(2)
Save as aforesaid, the applicant’s
urgent application is dismissed with no order as to costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD ON:
28 November 2024
JUDGMENT DATE:
9 December 2024 –
Judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Q Khumalo
INSTRUCTED BY:
Quinton Khumalo
Incorporated, Germiston
FOR
THE RESPONDENTS:
M
Ali
INSTRUCTED
BY:
The
State Attorney, Johannesburg
[1]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) Sa 623
(A) at pp 634 and 635 held as follows: -
‘
It
is correct that, where in proceedings on notice of motion disputes
of fact have arisen on the affidavits, a final order, whether
it be
an interdict or some other form of relief, may be granted if those
facts averred in the applicant's affidavits which have
been admitted
by the respondent, together with the facts alleged by the
respondent, justify such an order. The power of the Court
to give
such final relief on the papers before it is, however, not confined
to such a situation. In certain instances the denial
by respondent
of a fact alleged by the applicant may not be such as to raise a
real, genuine or bona fide dispute of fact …
…
Moreover, there may be exceptions to this general rule, as, for
example, where the allegations or denials of the respondent
are so
far-fetched or clearly untenable that the Court is justified in
rejecting them merely on the papers ...’.
[2]
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
.
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