Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1186South Africa
Manaka v University of the Witwatersrand (021837/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1186 (18 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 October 2023
Headnotes
as follows at paragraph [33] —
Judgment
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## Manaka v University of the Witwatersrand (021837/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1186 (18 October 2023)
Manaka v University of the Witwatersrand (021837/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1186 (18 October 2023)
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sino date 18 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 021837/2023
18/10/23
In the matter between:
MANAKA, KOKETSO
MONOBE
APPLICANT
And
THE UNIVERSITY OF
THE WITWATERSRAND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
JW SCHOLTZ AJ:
[1] This is an
interlocutory application by Mr Koketso Monobe Manaka (Mr Manaka/ the
applicant) against the University of the Witwatersrand
(Wits/the
respondent) to compel the furnishing of certain information pursuant
to a review application in terms of Rule 53 of the
Uniform Rules of
Court.
[2] The background to the
application is that on 9 March 2023, Mr Manaka launched an urgent
application against Wits to review and
set aside its decision to
refuse him permission to renew his registration for the third year of
the degree of Bachelor of Medicine
and Surgery (MBBCh III) for the
2023 academic year.
[3]
The urgent application was enrolled for 14 March 2023, stood down
until 15 March 2023 and was heard on 16 March 2023. After
argument,
the urgent application was struck from the roll by Adams J on 22
March 2023 and Mr Manaka was ordered to pay the respondent's
costs
including the costs of two counsel. In his judgment dismissing
the urgent application, Adams J held as follows at paragraph
[33]
—
"Whilst he [Mr
Manaka] has a right to apply for re-admission to the MBBCh III in
2023 that right was subject to University
and Faculty Rules. To
establish a prima facie right for purposes of requiring Wits in the
interim, to readmit him, he must
show this Court that he could
succeed in Part B in reviewing and setting aside the impugned
decision on the basis that it is was
unreasonable and irrational…
I am not persuaded that he has prospects of success in that regard."
[4] On 23 March 2023, Mr
Manaka sent an email directly to the Deputy Judge President
Sutherland (DJP), requesting the allocation
of an expedited date for
the hearing of Part A of the application. The DJP responded
that the request was inappropriate and
it was not within its powers
to second guess an order of the Court. He recommended that Mr
Manaka prosecute Part B of the
application to ripeness in the opposed
motion court.
[5] On 24 March 2023, Mr
Manaka confirmed that he would accept an offer for registration for
an alternative degree namely, that
of a Bachelor of Health Sciences
(BHSc) majoring in Pharmacology and Molecular Medicine.
[6]
The notice of motion in the application for review also required Wits
to produce
—
"[T]he record of the
proceedings sought to be reviewed and set aside above (including all
correspondence; reports; memoranda,
minutes of meetings, transcripts
of recording of proceedings; documents; evidence; Faculty of Health
Science 2021 and 2022 statistics
relating to second and third years'
intake; pass rate, re-admissions and academic exclusions as well as
all related information
including the breakdown of race and gender;
any other [sic] before the Respondent when the decisions were made;
and to notify the
applicant that he has done so."
[7] On 4 April 2023, Mr
Manaka’s attorneys sent a letter to the respondent’s
attorneys requesting them to furnish the
record as required in terms
of Rule 53, listing various documents and items of information which
they contended formed part of
the record.
[8] On 7 April 2023, the
respondent’s attorneys replied to Mr Manaka’s attorney.
Their letter is annexure TMM2
to the founding affidavit. The
relevant paragraphs thereof are paragraphs 4 to 7 and they read as
follows —
"
4.
Please note that our client objects to furnishing your client with
the documents and information requested to be included in
the record
of decision listed in paragraph 4.1.1,4.1.6 - 4.1.6.9, 4.2 of your
letter under reference for the following reasons:
4.1. The documents
and/or information had no effect on or relevance in the decision
sought to be reviewed; and/or
4.2. The documents
are confidential and/or privileged, and the disclosure of the
documents and/or information will infringe
on the privacy rights of
persons mentioned in the documents.
5. The information,
documents and/or reasons requested in paragraphs 4.1.2, 4.1.3, 4.1.4
and 4.1.5 of your letter under reply
have previously been provided
and are attached to our client's answering affidavit filed on 14
March 2023.
6. We submit that
all the necessary documentation and information forming part of the
record of the decision sought to be
reviewed have been included and
attached to the affidavits exchanged between the parties and filed
before the Honourable Court.
7. Notwithstanding
the aforesaid, the documents enclosed herewith and listed below form
the record of the decision sought
to be reviewed by your client:
7.1. Wits Student
Matric and Academic History for Mr. KM Manaka.
7.2. Wits Student
MBBCh Ill GEMP I result for Mr. Manaka.
7.3. Wits letter to
Mr. KM Manaka on 19 December 2022 Informing him that he has failed to
meet the minimum requirements for
MBBCh Ill.
7.4. Wits Student
Application Form for WRC for Mr. Manaka.
7.5. Mr. Manaka
appeal letter to WRC1.
7.6. MBBCh Ill WRC2
record for Mr. Manaka with reasons for dismissing the appeal.
7.7. Wits 2022-2023
procedure relating to the renewal or refusal of registration of
students.
7.8. Wits 2022
Health Sciences rules and syllabus.
7.9. Wits
supplementary examinations renewal of registration and re-examination
policy.
7.10. WRC1
decision.
7.11. WRC2
decision."
[9] Mr Manaka's attorneys
replied on 23 April 2023. Their letter is annexure TMM3 to the
founding affidavit in the application
to compel. The relevant
paragraphs are paragraphs 3 to 5 thereof, which read as follows —
"3. Please request
your client to provide us with those Statistics to which our client
is obviously entitled, and which should
include:
3.1. The number of
GEMP1 students who passed in 2022 but did not meet the minimum
requirements for the 1st time (and their
race and gender);
3.2. Those who were
allowed to re-register by the BoE (and their race and gender);
3.3.
Those who were allowed to re-register after the WRC 1 process (and
race and gender);
3.4.
Those who were excluded for the 2023 academic year (and their race
and gender);
3.5.
The number of GEMP 1 students who failed
(not deemed to have failed) in 2022 but were allowed to re-register
in 2023 (and their
race and gender);
3.6
.
The names of the WRC and WRC2 panel
members.
4.
We further request the information requested in an email sent to
Aidan Mylchreest on 3 March 2023, as contained in annexure
"KM12"
which includes inter alia:
4.1.
The number of students registered for 2nd year in 2021 (and their
race and gender);
4.2
.
The number of students with a straight
fail, and were excluded as a result thereto (and their race and
gender);
4.3.
The number of students with a straight fail but were allowed to
register (and their race and gender);
4.4.
The number of re-admissions (and their race and gender)
;
4.5.
The number of exclusions at the end of the WRCs' processes (and their
race and gender).
5.
We reiterate our client's position that, should it be necessary, the
personal information of students as may be contained
in any of the
requested documents may be redacted
."
[10] The respondent's
attorneys replied on 26 April 2023. The letter is annexure TMM4 to
the founding affidavit. The relevant
paragraphs are paragraphs
2 to 4 thereof, which read as follows —
"
1.
We refer to your correspondence dated 23 April 2023.
2. We record that
our client has provided yourselves with the full record of the
proceedings, in respect of our client's WRC
process, that your client
seeks to review. The further information being requested does not
form part of that record and, therefore,
falls outside the ambit of
Rule 53 of the Uniform Rules of Court.
3. We wish to place
on record that the Information requested is irrelevant to the review
proceedings at hand and constitutes
a "fishing expedition"
on the part of your client. It is clear that the request has no merit
and is not supported by
both the Rules of the University and the
Rules of Court.
4. On the basis set
out above, our client will not furnish the requested information to
your client. We wish to state
that our client will oppose any
legal proceedings launched by your client, in pursuance of the
requested Information and reserves
the right to seek an adverse costs
order against him.
"
[11] On 12 May 2023, Mr
Manaka launched the present application, styled an "Application
to Compel". In terms of
paragraph 1 of the notice of
motion an order is sought —
"Directing the
Respondent to furnish the applicant with the Faculty of Health
Sciences' 2021 and 2022 statistics relating to
MBBCh II and III
intake; pass rate, re-admissions and academic exclusions as well as
all related information including the breakdown
of race and gender;
(as well as the information sought on 01 and 03 March 2023 as
contained in annexure KM12 to the main application)".
[12] The matter was
enrolled on the opposed motion roll of 24 July 2023 before Twala J.
The application was struck from the
roll with costs in the cause.
[13] The application was
subsequently re-enrolled. In the parties' joint practice note,
Wits entered a special note, pointing
out that the matter had been
enrolled without the applicant having explained why the matter ought
to be re-enrolled and pointing
out that there had not been a
compliance affidavit. Such affidavit was filed on 23 August 2023 and
at the commencement of the matter
it was agreed between the parties
that the matter was properly before the Court.
[14]
The impugned decisions in respect of which the information is sought
by Mr Manaka are those of the Wits Readmissions Committee
– 1
("WRC1"), and the Wits Readmissions Committee – 2
("WRC2"). WRC1 decided to refuse Mr
Manaka permission
to renew his registration for the third year of MBBCh in 2023 and on
appeal WRC2 upheld the decision of WRC1.
In essence, Mr Manaka
failed MBBCh III because he failed the theory component in that he
attained a weighted average of 56.01%
and not the minimum requirement
of 60.00%, in addition to failing the so-called "Tracks",
in that he scored a mark below
the sub-minimum of 50.00% in one of
the Tracks. The material reasons why Mr Manaka was not granted
permission to renew his
registration for his MBBCh III were that he
failed to meet the minimum requirements of study and subsequently
failed to provide
any supporting documentation to substantiate any of
the reasons he gave for his failure to do so.
[15]
In his judgement dismissing the urgent application, Adams J
summarised the position as follows
—
"[28]. Mr Motau SC,
who appeared on behalf of Wits together with Mr Edwards, contended
that the factual error complained of
by the applicant is not of a
material nature and therefore cannot and should not, by and of
itself, predicate a review and setting
aside of the decision. The
main reason for the WRC-1's refusal to permit the applicant to
re-register for the MBBCh Ill, so the
contention goes, was the fact
that the applicant failed the year in that his weighted average final
mark for the Theory Component
was just under 4% short of the required
minimum pass rate, coupled with the fact that he had not attained the
subminimum of 50%
in one of the Study Groupings I Tracks for the
year. Other considerations included the fact that, of the six Block
Assessments
for the study year, the applicant had failed five of
those in that he did not attain 60% in those five block examinations.
[29] I find myself in
agreement with these submissions. I do not believe that it can be
said with any conviction that the WRC-1
made an irrational or an
unreasonable decision and that is so even if one is to accept that
they made an error by asserting that
five of the six Tracks were not
passed by the applicant. In their final letter dated 28 February 2023
- from the Chief of Staff
& Director: Legal Services - Wits
explains in detail the thinking behind the decision by WRC-1, as
confirmed by WRC-2."
[16] Wits argues that the
matter is moot and that the Court should accordingly not grant the
relief sought in the application to
compel. It is argued that
the relief sought by Mr Manaka in Part B is "entirely
unsustainable" and does not have
prospects of success.
Furthermore, Mr Manaka has accepted a tender, being the
alternative relief in Part B of the notice
of motion which Wits
revived after the hearing and determination of Part A of the notice
of motion in the main application.
[17] In her answering
affidavit on behalf of the respondent, Ms Carol Gail Crosley, the
Registrar of Wits, states that Mr Manaka
persists with his review
application while registered with Wits midway into the academic year
and in circumstances where he is
currently registered for an
alternative degree within the Health Sciences Faculty and in a
context where he is entitled to apply
to the university for
readmission to the MBBCh programme for the 2024 academic year.
As such, so it is argued, the review
application is in moot in
circumstances in which Mr Manaka failed to obtain interim relief
which on his own version renders Part
B nugatory; and Mr Manaka
accepted a tender for the alternative Part B relief which he sought.
Accordingly, so it is argued,
the Court should not make an order
regarding the production of the record in these circumstances,
especially since Adams J expressed
the view that Mr Manaka's
prospects of success in Part B of the review application are poor.
[18] Mr Manaka, in turn,
argues that the contention of mootness is premature and
misconceived. It is pointed out by Mr Mahapa,
his attorney, who
deposed to the founding and replying affidavits in the application to
compel, that Mr Manaka's receipt of the
complete record and his
subsequent right to amend and revise the relief sought is the essence
of what is protected by Rule 53(3).
It is also contended that
any student who has been academically excluded from an institution of
higher learning has to live with
that record for the rest of his
life. This record does not only affect his potential to apply
to other institutions to further
his studies but also has a
potentially adverse impact on future employability (paragraph 25 of
the replying affidavit). It
is argued that Mr Manaka has the
right to supplement the founding papers once the full record has been
received. It is also
argued that Mr Manaka's right to reapply
for admission into the MBBCh programme does not —
"legitimize or take
away the irrationality and/or unlawful and/or procedurally and
substantially unfair administrative decision
that caused him them a
year out of medical school, and any other further consequences
related thereto" (paragraphs 48 and
50 of the replying
affidavit).
[19] It is also argued in
paragraph 63 of the replying affidavit that the offer to pursue an
alternative degree was only intended
to resolve Part A of the
application and not to render the relief sought in Part B moot.
[20] It seems to me that
the issue of mootness is not something that should be considered
finally by this Court in the context of
an interlocutory application,
where the applicant may well wish to supplement his founding papers
in the light of whatever further
documentation he has received or may
receive. I will therefore hold for purposes of this application
that the matter is not
moot and leave the final determination thereof
to the Court that hears Part B of the main application for review,
should the applicant
persist therewith.
[21] In paragraph 10 of
the joint practice note filed by the parties, it is recorded that —
"The applicant seeks
an order compelling the respondent to furnish him with
10.1 The names of the
panel members of the WRC1 and WRC2;
10.2 Minutes of the
meeting of the WRC1 and WRC2;
10.3 The transcribed
record of the proceedings of the WRC1 and WRC2;
10.4 The Faculty
of Health Sciences 2021 and 2022 statistics relating to MBBCh II and
III intake, pass rate, readmissions
and academic exclusions as well
as all related information including the breakdown of race and
gender. In light of the lengthy
nature of the list of
statistics sought, the Court's indulgence is sought to include the
listed information sought by reference
herein which information is
set out in the draft order."
[22] A draft order was
uploaded on CaseLines. In the draft order provision is made for the
following documentation and information
—
"1.1 The Faculty of
Health Science's 2021 and 2022 statistics relating to MBBCh II and
III intake, pass rate, readmissions,
academic exclusions which
include the breakdown of race and gender of such academic exclusions
and readmissions in the aforementioned
years of study.
1.2 Transcripts of
recordings of proceedings in the WRC1 and WRC2 relating to the
decision to refuse the Applicant permission to
renew his registration
for the MBBCh III for the 2023 academic year.
1.3 The names of members
of the panel in the WRC1 and WRC2.
1.4 The WRC1 report that
served before the WRC2 panel.
1.5 The number of GEMP1
students who passed in 2022 but did not meet the minimum requirements
for the first time with the breakdown
of such information on race and
gender, including:
1.5.1 Those who
were allowed to re-register by the BoE;
1.5.2 Those who
were allowed to re-register after the WRC1 process;
1.5.3 Those who
were allowed to re-register after the WRC2 process; and
1.5.4 Those who
were excluded for the 2023 academic year.
1.6 The number of GEMP1
students who failed in 2022 but were allowed to re-register in 2023
including the breakdown of such information
on race and gender."
[23] It was argued on
behalf of the respondent that the applicant did not seek or make out
a case in respect of either the minutes
of the meeting of the WRC1
and WRC2 or the transcribed record of the proceedings of the WRC1 and
the WRC2.
[24] It was argued by Mr
Edwards on behalf of the respondent that nowhere in the application
to compel was provision made for the
minutes or transcript, and that
they were opportunistically included in the practice note. It
was argued that the Court was
confined to what was asked for in the
interlocutory notice of motion and founding affidavit. It was
further argued that the
applicant was not entitled to the minutes or
transcribed record, it being trite law that an applicant is obliged
to make out a
case in his founding affidavit and stand or fall by it.
[25] Mr Manentsa on
behalf of the applicant argued that the notice of motion in the main
application clearly mentions "minutes
of meetings; transcripts
of recordings of proceedings". He also drew attention to
paragraph 16 of the founding affidavit in
the application to compel
which is headed "REQUEST FOR THE RECORD" and where the
notice of motion in the main application
containing the reference to
"minutes of meetings"; transcripts of recordings of
proceedings" are mentioned.
[26]
Both parties referred extensively to the decision of the
Constitutional Court in
Helen
Suzman Foundation v Judicial Service Commission
[1]
(Helen
Suzman Foundation).
[27]
In paragraph [19] of the judgment, Madlanga J refers with approval to
the decision in
City of Cape Town v
South African National Roads Agency Limited
[2013] ZAWCHC 74
at paragraph
[48]
—
"[A]ny record of the
deliberations, by the decision-maker would be relevant and
susceptible to inclusion in the record.…
The contents of such
deliberations can often be the clearest indication of what the
decision-maker took into account and what it
left out of account.
I cannot conceive of anything more relevant than the content of the
written record of such deliberations,
if it exits,…"
[28]
In paragraph [22] of the judgment, Madlanga J continues
—
"It cannot be that
deliberations, as a class of information, are generally: (a)
irrelevant for purposes of assisting an applicant
in pleading and
presenting her or his case; or (b) subject to some form of privilege.
Further I cannot conceive of any policy or
public interest reasons
for excluding deliberations from the record in general."
[29]
Madlanga J continues as follows at paragraph [27]
—
"In sum, I can think
of no reason why deliberations as a class of information ought
generally to be excluded from a Rule 53
record. For me the
question is whether deliberations are relevant, which they are and
whether – despite their relevance
– there is some legally
cognisable basis for excluding them from the record. This
approach to what a record for purposes
of Rule 53 should be better
advances a review applicant's rights of access to Court under Section
34 of the Constitution."
[30] In light of the
above clear authority by our highest court, no convincing reasons
were advanced in the present case for excluding
the transcript of
proceedings in the WRC1 and WRC2 relating to the applicant, from the
record.
[31] Mr Edwards on behalf
of the respondent conceded that if there were transcripts of such
proceedings, they would indeed be relevant.
However, he advised
the Court from the Bar that his instructions are that such
proceedings were not recorded. He advised
that this was not
canvassed in the respondent's answering affidavit, as the issue was
not specifically canvassed in the applicant's
founding affidavit.
[32] Mr Manentsa
expressed surprise at this communication and stated that he would
expect such state of affairs to be confirmed
in an affidavit. I
tend to agree with him.
[33] If the transcript of
recordings of the proceedings of the WRC1 and WRC2 is to be produced
(if such recordings were made), it
stands to reason that there could
be no objections to producing the names of the members of those two
panels, who participated
in the deliberations. I can conceive
of no reason why the identities of the decision-makers should not be
disclosed.
[34] If the WRC1 produced
a report that served before the WRC2, such report would clearly form
part of the record that was before
the respondent when the decisions
were made and such report ought to be made available.
[35]
However, I take a different view of the statistics sought by the
applicant, as set out in paragraphs 1.1, 1.5, and 1.6 of the
draft
order uploaded on 1 September 2023. The reason why these statistics
are sought are stated to be as follows by the applicant
—
"[P]art of the
respondent's case is that it has consistently and objectively applied
its own clear and lawful policies.
The stats will most likely
prove the opposite." (Founding affidavit, paragraph 23)
"The stats sought,
are therefore not only relevant to the issues, but also pertinent to
demonstrate the [in]consistent application
of the Rules and policies
by a public institution such as the Respondent". (Founding
affidavit, paragraph 29)
"Although the
respondent wishes to assert its powers to refuse readmission to a
student who fails to satisfy the minimum requirements
leading to a
qualification in a faculty, in this case, MBBCh programme, it cannot
be disputed that reading from the same policy,
at the end of the day,
it is a numbers game." (Replying affidavit, paragraph 9.2)
"[T]he respondent
either took or ought to have taken into account, the number of places
available for the 3
rd
year of study in the MBBCh
programme, both insofar it relates to new student progressing from
2
nd
year, and those who had to repeat. Accordingly,
the avowal that the statistics were not taken into account and do not
form
part of the record of the decision, is simply indefensible."
(Replying affidavit, paragraph 9.3)
The applicant is
accordingly entitled by law, to the statistics in order to advance
sensible and coherent grounds of review, and
to demonstrate that the
impugned decisions stands to be reviewed and set aside."
(Replying affidavit, paragraph 16)
[36]
The applicant further contends that
—
"All the information
and documents sought by the applicant are available, public and
relevant. There is no conceivable
reason for the respondent not
to provide them, whether this is done in terms of Rules 35 or 53, or
by virtue of this Honourable
Court exercising its inherent powers to
regulate its process" (Replying affidavit, paragraph 19)
[37] The respondent's
answering affidavit was deposed to by Ms Carol Gail Crosley, the
Registrar of Wits. She states in paragraph
2 of her answering
affidavit that the contents of the affidavit fall within her own
personal knowledge and belief and she states
in paragraph 3 that she
has the aforesaid personal knowledge by virtue of her position within
Wits as well as the documents which
form part of the respondent's
records or are within its control. She is the custodian of the
academic records and processes
of the university.
[38]
In paragraph 5.1 of her affidavit, she states that
—
"At the outset, it
should be made clear that none of the information sought in this
application forms part of the record of
decision(s). It was not
before the decision makers and none of it constitutes a document
which throws light on the proceedings
– either on a procedural
or evidentiary level."
[39] In paragraph 18.1 of
her answering affidavit, Ms Crosley points out that it is the
applicant's attorney (Mr Mahapa) who deposed
to the founding and
replying affidavits and that he provided no basis for his knowledge
pertaining to the record of the decisions.
No explanation is
provided for the applicant's (Mr Manaka's) failure to provide a
confirmatory affidavit. She accordingly
contends that any
allegations pertaining to the content of the record should be struck
out and/or disregarded as unsubstantiated
and inadmissible hearsay
evidence. (Paragraph 18.2 of the answering affidavit).
[40]
Dealing with this complaint, Mr Mahapa on behalf of the applicant
states as follows in paragraphs 78 and 79 of the replying
affidavit
—
"Given the fact that
Ms Crosley is aware, or is reasonably expected to know that the
applicant had to, and is still catching
up with the other students,
it is puzzling that she takes a technical issue that I have not
provided the applicant's confirmatory
affidavit.
In this interlocutory
application, I have not raised any new matter which is before this
Honourable Court save for the preceding
paragraph. Therefore
the applicant's confirmatory will serve little or no value."
[41] I find this to be an
unsatisfactory explanation. Mr Mahapa is not the applicant and,
particularly insofar as matters
relating to the record and the
procedures which affected him, one would have expected Mr Manaka at
least to depose to a confirmatory
affidavit.
[42]
In paragraph 25 of her answering affidavit, Ms Crosley states
—
"25.1 It is
denied that the statistics will most likely show that Wits has failed
to consistently and objectively apply
its own clear and lawful
policy.
25.2 In any event, the
allegation is needlessly vague and premised entirely upon
speculation.
25.3 Wits' policies form
part of the issues determined in Part A of the application and
findings were made by Justice Adams, in
that regard."
[43]
In paragraph 27.1 of her answering affidavit, Ms Crosley states that
—
"The impugned
decision(s) may be properly assessed, both procedurally and
evidentially, without the statistics."
[44]
In paragraph 30.1 of the answering affidavit, Ms Crosley states that
—
"It is denied that
these statistics are relevant to the issues. In any event,
these statistics do not form part of the
record of proceedings and do
not throw light on the proceedings, procedurally or evidentially."
[45] In the notice of
motion in the main application in this matter (at page 01-8 of the
CaseLines record and quoted in paragraph
7 above), the record of
proceedings is sought by the applicants, which is stated to include
all correspondence, reports, memoranda,
minutes of meetings,
transcripts of recordings of proceedings, documents, evidence and
various statistics "
before the respondent when the decisions
were made
" (my emphasis).
[46]
In the
locus
classicus
of
Johannesburg
City Council v Administrator Transvaal and Another
[2]
the
Court said the following —
"The
words 'record of proceedings' cannot be otherwise construed in my
view, than as a loose description of the documents,
evidence,
arguments and other information
before
the tribunal
relating to the matter
under review
at the time of making of
the decision in question
. It may be a
in formal record and dossier of what has happened before the
tribunal, but it may also be a disjointed indication
of the material
that was at the tribunal's disposal. In the latter case, it
would, I venture to think, include every scrap
of paper throwing
light, however, indirectly on what the proceedings were both
procedurally and evidentially
.
(my emphasis)
[47] It was argued by Mr
Edwards on behalf of the respondent that the documents sought by the
applicant, and in particular the statistics,
do not throw light on
the proceedings sought to be impugned, either procedurally or
evidentially.
[48] As was argued by Mr
Edwards, the statistics are sought by the applicant despite the
deponent to the university's answering
affidavit (Ms Crosley)
confirming that the information sought did not form part of the
record of proceedings. I am not aware
of any evidence or other
indications that the statistics so sought were before the committees
when the decision relating to the
applicant were taken.
[49] As was argued by Mr
Edwards, it should be borne in mind that the impugned decision
arrived at by WRC1 and which was confirmed
by WRC2 on appeal was
premised
inter alia
on the following —
"The Wits
Readmissions Committee – 1 (WRC-1) has noted that you failed to
meet the minimum requirements of study:
It has considered
carefully the circumstances surrounding your failure and regrets to
inform you that it has decided to refuse
permission for you to renew
your registration….
You have not provided any
supporting documentation to substantiate any of the reasons that you
have given for your failure.
You have mentioned the loss of
your grandmother, but you have not provided any timelines of events
in relation to your actual studies."
(Letter from the respondent
to the applicant dated 13 January 2023, quoted in the judgment of
Adams J at 09-125)
[50] I
agree with the respondent's counsel that the statistics were not
relevant to the impugned decisions. The relevance
of the
statistics as alleged by the applicant in his founding and replying
affidavits and in particular what they might or are
likely to show
seems to be entirely speculative, especially in circumstances where
there is no evidence that those statistics were
before WRC1 or WRC2
or were in fact considered by those committees. As was said by
the Constitutional Court in the
Helen
Suzman Foundation
(
above
)
in respect of documents sought on Rule 53 proceedings
—
"[R]elevance
is assessed as it relates to the decision sought to be reviewed, not
the case pleaded in the founding affidavit."
[3]
[51] To the extent that
it is contended in the replying affidavit that the applicant is
entitled to production of any documentation
or information, (and in
particular, the statistics, outside of the provisions of Uniform Rule
53) it was argued by Mr Edwards that
this is not permissible in the
present case. In the first place, it was pointed out that none
of these grounds were raised
in the founding affidavit and that it is
trite law an applicant may not make out a case in reply.
Furthermore, it was argued
on behalf of the respondent that the
applicant may not in the present case rely on section 173 of the
Constitution, or Uniform
Rule 35 or section 32 of the Constitution.
[52] Mr Edwards argued
that section 173 of the Constitution, which clothes a court with the
inherent power to regulate its own process,
does not avail the
applicant in the present case because, given the mechanism already
provided by Rule 53, there is no
lacuna
which would result in
an injustice, the information sought is additional to the record and
it is irrelevant to the impugned decisions.
[53]
Reference was made by Mr Edwards to the case of
Mamadi
v Premier of Limpopo Province and Others
[4]
where
it was held that the contention that section 173 could be used to
obtain all access to information is unpersuasive and that
the section
has never been employed in trial proceedings to obtain the Rule 53
record. The Court, per Theron J, went on to state
that
—
"It
suffices to say that Rule 53 provides the prevailing mechanism with
which litigants can access all documents and reasons
relevant to the
impugned administrative decision."
[5]
[54]
Reference was also made to
Phillips
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[6]
where
the Constitutional Court held that —
"[O]rdinarily the
power in section 173 to protect and regulate relates to the process
of Court and arises when there is a legislative
lacuna in the
process. The power must be exercised sparingly having taken
into account interests of justice in a manner consistent
with the
Constitution."
[55] Mr Edwards also
argued that the applicant was not entitled to gain access to
information by way of Uniform Rule 35. In the
first place, the
applicant does not rely on Uniform Rule 35 and its founding papers
and accordingly fails to make out a case for
its application.
Furthermore, in the
Helen Suzman Foundation
case (
above
)
the Constitutional Court distinguished the procedures in Rule 35 and
53 as follows —
"The
Rule 53 process differs from normal discovery under Rule 35 of the
Uniform Rules of Court. Under Rule 35 documents
are
discoverable if relevant, and relevance is determined with reference
to the pleadings. So, under the Rule 35 discovery
process
asking for information not relevant to the pleaded case would be a
fishing expedition."
[7]
[56] Accordingly, so Mr
Edwards argued, the applicant was not entitled to the record of
proceedings in terms of Uniform Rule 35.
[57] Finally, it was
argued that the applicant was not entitled to rely on section 32 of
the Constitution, which provides for the
right of access to
information which right has been, given effect through national
legislation being the Promotion of Access to
Information Act 2 of
2000 (PAIA).
[58] Section 7(1)(a) of
PAIA provides that it does not apply to the record of a public or
private body if that record is requested
for the purpose of criminal
or civil proceedings, is requested after the commencement of such
criminal or civil proceedings and
the production of or access to that
record is provided for in any other law.
[59]
Apart from the fact that the applicant did not take any steps in
terms of section 11 of PAIA to request the information, the
review
application instituted by the applicant constitutes a civil
proceeding and accordingly PAIA finds no application in the
current
review application. In
Industrial
Development Corporation of South Africa Limited vs PFE International
Inc (BVI) and Others
[8]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that the contention that PAIA was
intended to supplement the Rules of Court cannot be sustained.
This
was confirmed by the Constitutional Court in
PFE
International and others vs Industrial Development Corporation of
South Africa Limited
[9]
.
[60] I am in agreement
with the arguments advanced on behalf of the respondent.
[61] In paragraph 20 of
the founding affidavit, it is stated that the applicant is amenable
to receive documents where the personal
information of students have
been redacted. The respondent also requested that the names of
specific students be redacted in any
records ordered to be provided.
This is obviously the correct approach.
Order
[62]
Accordingly, I make the following order
—
a.
The respondent is directed to furnish the
applicant with transcripts of the recordings of proceedings of the
Wits Readmission Committee
– 1 (WRC1) and the Wits Readmission
Committee – 2 (WRC2) relating to the decision to refuse the
applicant permission
to renew his registration for the MBBCh III
course for the 2023 academic year, within ten (10) days of the
granting of this order.
b.
Should the above-mentioned transcripts not
exist or be available, the respondent shall file an affidavit
confirming such fact and
explaining why such transcripts are not
available.
c.
To the extent that the contents of any
transcripts provided by the respondent to the applicant do not relate
to decisions relating
to the applicant or contain the names of any
other students at the University of the Witwatersrand, such
information and names
shall be redacted.
d.
The
respondent is directed to furnish the applicant with the names of the
members of the WRC1 and WRC2 panels which deliberated
on and made
decisions relating to the applicant in respect of his registration
for the 2023 academic year.
e.
Costs
shall be costs in the cause.
JW SCHOLTZ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
For the Applicant:
Advocate B Manentsa
instructed by
TM Mahapa Inc
For the Respondent:
Advocate B Edwards
instructed by
MVMT
Attorneys
Date
of hearing: 28 August 2023
Date
of Judgment: 18 October 2023
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
Parties’ legal representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date of this judgment is deemed to be 18 OCTOBER
2023.
[1]
2018
(4) SA 1 (CC); 2018 (7) BCLR 763 (CC).
[2]
(1970)
(2) SA (89) (T)
at
91G - 92B.
[3]
Helen
Suzman Foundation
at para 26.
[4]
2023
(6) BCLR 733
(CC) at para 38
[5]
Id
.
[6]
[2005] ZACC 15
;
2006
(1) SA 505
(CC) at para 48.
[7]
Helen
Suzman Foundation at para 26.
[8]
2012(1)
SA 269 (SCA).
[9]
2013
(1) SA 1
(CC).
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