Sigudo v Minister of Higher Education and Others (2016/19144) [2018] ZAGPJHC 1; 2018 (1) SACR 485 (GJ) (10 January 2018)

85 Reportability
Constitutional Law

Brief Summary

Prisoners' Rights — Right to Education — Applicant, an incarcerated individual, sought to compel the submission of his examination entry form for N6 engineering studies, claiming infringement of his constitutional right to education under section 29 of the Constitution and the Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998. The eighth respondent, head of education at the Correctional Centre, refused to submit the form citing lack of requisite internal assessment marks and the Centre's inability to offer N6 studies. The court held that the refusal constituted an unlawful interference with the applicant's right to education, emphasizing that decisions regarding educational qualifications should lie with the Education Department, not the Correctional Centre.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


These proceedings were brought in the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg, as an application for relief directed at enabling a sentenced prisoner to pursue and complete further education while incarcerated. The matter was heard by Willis AJ, with the applicant appearing in person and the opposing respondents represented by the State Attorney.


The applicant was Sibusiso M Sigudo, an incarcerated person at the Johannesburg Medium-B Correctional Centre. The respondents comprised several state functionaries and departments, including the Minister of Higher Education, relevant officials within the Department of Higher Education and Training, and officials within the Department of Correctional Services. Although multiple respondents were cited, the dispute ultimately focused on the conduct of the eighth respondent, described as the head of education at the correctional centre.


The procedural history was irregular and fragmented. The court record reflected that there were three different notices of motion in the file under the same case number, each accompanied by a founding affidavit, and only one answering affidavit. Earlier applications were struck from the roll or postponed, including at least one matter struck for want of urgency. By the time the matter was ultimately argued, both the applicant and respondents’ counsel confirmed that the operative application was the third application dated 11 September 2016, in which eight respondents were cited.


The general subject-matter concerned the applicant’s asserted entitlement, grounded in section 29 of the Constitution and the Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998, to access further education while incarcerated. The immediate dispute was whether prison education officials were entitled to refuse to submit the applicant’s examination entry form to the Department of Higher Education and Training, thereby preventing him from registering to write the examinations necessary to complete an N6 National Certificate in electrical engineering.


Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicant was incarcerated at the Johannesburg Medium-B Correctional Centre and that he sought to progress his engineering studies by registering for the N6 examinations. It was also not in dispute that the applicant had already completed the N5 level, having achieved a Certificate of Achievement N5 Engineering Studies with effect from 1 December 2013.


The papers also established that the correctional centre was registered with the Department of Higher Education and Training as an examination centre (with an examination centre number reflected in the documentation) offering N1–N6 certificates in engineering studies. Against that background, the applicant sought to register to write the requisite examinations through the centre.


Chronologically, the applicant was provided with an Examination Entry Form (SM1) by the eighth respondent (the correctional centre’s education head). The applicant completed the form and handed it in for submission to the Department of Higher Education and Training by the stated closing date, 2 June 2016. The form and the applicant’s case proceeded on the basis that the Department’s system contemplated both full-time and part-time study; the applicant registered for part-time study in specific subjects and contended that he did not require the correctional centre to provide specific tutoring services in order for his entry form to be submitted.


Before the closing date, the applicant was informed that his examination entry form would not be submitted because he allegedly did not meet the admission requirements, specifically the alleged absence of Internal Continuous Assessment marks. The refusal was linked to a departmental memorandum (described in the judgment as a memorandum by the second respondent, connected to implementation and admission requirements for national examinations, with dates of implementation attached as an annexure). The applicant’s position was that this memorandum did not apply to him.


The respondents’ case on the merits was presented in a limited and procedurally deficient manner. The answering affidavit was deposed to by an attorney in the Office of the State Attorney, and it largely focused on urgency rather than a substantiated merits response. The respondents relied in substance on a letter stating, among other things, that Johannesburg Medium-B allegedly did not provide N6 studies (only N1–N3) due to shortages of tutors and workshops for practical assessment, and that departmental examination policy required 80% class attendance.


A key factual feature emphasised by the court was the lack of admissible evidentiary foundation for the respondents’ version on the merits. The answering affidavit did not meaningfully traverse the applicant’s factual allegations, contained no confirmatory affidavits from persons with direct knowledge, and expressly indicated that the deponent did not intend to canvass the allegations fully. In that context, and on the record as it stood, the court treated the applicant’s version as prevailing where the respondents’ assertions were unsupported.


By the time of the hearing, the time for the applicant to apply for the next enrolment had long since passed; however, the court treated the dispute as raising a continuing issue about whether prison officials were entitled to block the submission of the form, thereby interfering with the applicant’s educational rights.


Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the eighth respondent (acting under the authority of correctional services officials) was entitled to refuse to submit the applicant’s N6 examination entry form to the Department of Higher Education and Training, with the practical effect of preventing the applicant from completing further education.


This was principally a matter involving the application of law to fact. The court was required to identify the content and scope of the applicant’s constitutional and statutory rights (including the extent to which those rights persist during incarceration), and then assess whether, on the established facts, the refusal to submit the form constituted an unjustifiable interference with those rights.


A further issue concerned the institutional boundary between judicial enforcement of rights and administrative decision-making. The respondents suggested that granting relief would amount to the court acting as a “super civil servant”. The court had to determine whether the relief sought entailed impermissible intrusion into prison administration, or whether it was a legitimate judicial response to an alleged infringement of constitutional protection.


Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter on the basis that incarceration does not strip a person of constitutional rights beyond what is lawfully and justifiably limited by the prison regime. The judgment relied on authority recognising that prisoners retain a “residue” of rights, subject to lawful limitation, and that constitutional values such as dignity, human rights, and the rule of law must be practically realised even in the prison environment.


Against that legal background, the court identified section 29(1) of the Constitution as entrenching the right to education, including the right to further education which the state must make progressively available and accessible through reasonable measures. The judgment also referred to the rights of detained persons under section 35 of the Bill of Rights as informing the constitutional standard for treatment of prisoners. In addition, the court relied on the Correctional Services Act, particularly provisions describing the objectives of incarceration (including enabling a sentenced offender to lead a socially responsible and crime-free life in the future) and the duty to provide or give access, as far as practicable, to programmes meeting the educational and training needs of sentenced offenders.


The court treated unlawful interference with the applicant’s right to education as constitutionally invalid. It then applied that principle to the record before it. On the respondents’ version that the correctional centre did not offer N6 studies and that operational constraints prevented provision of such studies, the court found there was no evidence properly supporting those assertions. In the face of that evidentiary deficiency, the court preferred the applicant’s version that the centre was registered to offer N1–N6 and that the refusal to submit the form was not justified on the papers.


The court further reasoned that even if it were wrong in preferring the applicant’s version on whether the correctional centre provided N6 studies, the applicant’s entry form was framed on the basis of part-time study, which (on the court’s reading) did not appear to be affected by the departmental memorandum relied upon to justify refusal. The court then added a further alternative basis: even if the departmental memorandum did apply and even if it affected the applicant’s eligibility, it was not for the eighth respondent to make that determination. The appropriate decision-maker on compliance with national examination admission requirements was the Department of Higher Education and Training, not a correctional centre education official. The refusal to submit the form therefore amounted, in the court’s analysis, to an improper pre-emption of the competent authority’s role.


On the concern about judicial overreach into administrative functions, the court accepted that courts should generally be cautious in matters of prison administration. However, it relied on authority articulating that judicial restraint does not extend to ignoring a valid claim that prison regulation or practice offends a fundamental constitutional protection. The court concluded that granting appropriate relief to vindicate the applicant’s educational right would not constitute the kind of impermissible substitution of administrative discretion suggested by the respondents.


Outcome and Relief


The court granted declaratory relief. It declared that the eighth respondent was obliged to submit the applicant’s examination entry form for N6 Engineering Studies to the Department of Higher Education and Training.


No order as to costs was made.


Cases Cited


S v Makwanyane and Another [1995] ZACC 3; 1995 (3) SA 391 (CC).


Goldberg and Others v Minister of Prisons and Others 1979 (1) SA 14 (A).


Minister of Correctional Services and Others v KwaKwa and Another 2002 (4) SA 463 (SCA).


August and Another v Electoral Commission and Others [1999] ZACC 3; 1999 (3) SA 1 (CC); 1999 (4) BCLR 363 (CC).


Jivan and Others v Louw and Another 1950 (4) SA 129 (T).


Conjwayo v Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs and Others 1992 (2) SA 56 (ZS).


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, section 29 and section 35.


Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998, section 36 and section 41.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 53.


Held


The court held that the applicant, notwithstanding incarceration, retained enforceable constitutional and statutory entitlements relating to access to education. On the evidentiary record, the eighth respondent was not entitled to refuse to submit the applicant’s examination entry form to the Department of Higher Education and Training. The refusal constituted an unjustified interference with the applicant’s pursuit of further education, particularly where eligibility for national examinations was a matter for the education authorities rather than prison officials to determine.


The court therefore declared that the eighth respondent was obliged to submit the applicant’s examination entry form for N6 Engineering Studies, and it made no costs order.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that prisoners retain a residual set of fundamental rights upon incarceration, subject only to lawful and justifiable limitations inherent in the prison regime. In particular, constitutional rights do not fall away merely because a person is detained, and courts remain responsible for enforcing constitutional protections in the prison context.


The judgment further applied the principle that section 29(1) of the Constitution protects access to education, including further education, which the state must make progressively available and accessible through reasonable measures. This constitutional right is reinforced in the correctional context by statutory provisions requiring that sentenced offenders be provided with, or given access to, educational and training programmes as far as practicable.


A further principle applied was that, while courts should generally show restraint in matters of prison administration, judicial restraint does not extend to ignoring a credible claim that prison practices unlawfully infringe constitutional rights. Enforcement of constitutional rights through appropriate relief is not, without more, equivalent to the court assuming the role of an administrator.


Finally, the judgment applied the principle that decisions on compliance with external examination admission requirements are for the competent educational authority to determine. Prison officials are not entitled, on the basis advanced in the matter, to preclude submission of examination entry documentation by substituting their own assessment for that of the Department of Higher Education and Training.

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[2018] ZAGPJHC 1
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Sigudo v Minister of Higher Education and Others (2016/19144) [2018] ZAGPJHC 1; 2018 (1) SACR 485 (GJ) (10 January 2018)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2016/19144
(1)
REPORTABLE:
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
(3)
REVISED:
10
January 2018
In
the matter between:
SIBUSISO
M SIGUDO
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF HIGHER EDUCATION
First
Respondent
THE
CHIEF DIRECTOR OF HIGHER EDUCATION
(
NATIONAL
EXAMINATION AND ASSESSMENT)
Second
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Third
Respondent
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER FOR CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Fourth
Respondent
THE
AREA COMMISSIONER FOR CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
(JOHANNESBURG MANAGEMENT AREA)
Fifth
Respondent
THE
HEAD OF EDUCATION (JOHANNESBURG
MANAGEMENT
AREA)
Sixth
Respondent
THE
HEAD OF CORRECTIONAL CENTRE B
Seventh
Respondent
THE
HEAD OF EDUCATION MED B
Eighth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
WILLIS
AJ:
1.
The applicant appears in person. He is incarcerated at the
Johannesburg Medium-B Correctional Centre (“the Correctional

Centre”).
2.
The state attorney acted for the opposing respondents.
3.
The court file is testimony to the fact that the applicant is not
represented and that the representatives of the respondents
had no
regard for their responsibility to ensure that a properly organised
court file and ordered set of papers were prepared for
the court in
all the circumstances. I have exercised a reasonable measure of
benevolence toward the applicant. I have done so mindful
of the
respondents’ rights and without prejudice thereto. As can be
expected I have had to distil the applicant’s case
from his
notice of motion, founding affidavit and annexures. I did not have
regard to the applicant’s draft supplementary
affidavit because
same had not been deposed to. I was also mindful of the fact that the
applicant’s heads of argument contained
factual matter not
contained in the founding affidavit.
4.
In the
court file under the above case number there were three different
notices of motion each with its own founding affidavit
and only one
with an answering affidavit.
[1]
5.
Both the applicant and counsel appearing for the respondents,
confirmed that it was the third application dated 11 September
2016
with eight respondents which had been set down for hearing.
The
applicant’s case
6.
The
applicant seeks to vindicate a personal right which he articulates as
vesting under section 29 of the Constitution of the RSA
and the
Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998
, which he considers to have
been infringed by the eighth respondent (the head of education at the
Correctional Centre), who he
says is effectively preventing him from
completing his studies. He contends that the eighth respondent does
so for “
invalid
reasons and misinterpretation”
of a 2015 memorandum
[2]
by the
Department: Higher Education and Training
[3]
(“the Education Department”) regarding the implementation
and admission requirements for its national examinations.
7.
Effectively
the applicant seeks an order by way of which he be allowed to apply
to register to write the requisite examinations
with the Education
Department in order to complete his National Certificate (N6) in
electrical engineering.
[4]
8.
The applicant was confused as to the scope of relief which he
requires, and probably for this reason, cited the plethora
of
respondents and prayed the clumsy and ill-conceived prayers which he
did. However his predicament and necessary relief is identifiable
on
the papers and he confirmed what I understood his case to be in
submissions made in the hearing. In fact the respondents’
heads
of argument identified that the applicant effectively sought
declaratory relief.
9.
The
applicant has achieved his Certificate of Achievement N5 Engineering
Studies with effect from 1 December 2013 having passed
industrial
electronics, electro technics, engineering physics and mathematics at
the N5 level.
[5]
10.
The
Correctional Centre is registered with the Education Department under
examination centre number 0899990863 to offer N1 –
N6
certificates in engineering studies.
[6]
11.
On or about 26 May 2016, and in order to register with the Education
Department for his N6, the applicant was given an
Examination Entry
Form (“SM1”) by Mr Mokgadile who is the education head of
the Correctional Centre (the eighth respondent),
which the applicant
completed and handed in for submission to the Education Department by
the 2
nd
June 2016.
12.
The
applicant highlights, which is indicated on SM1, that in respect of
attendance (i.e. class attendance) the Education Department

distinguishes between and caters for both full time and part time
study. The applicant registered for part time study in industrial

electronics and engineering physics.
[7]
The applicant’s argument as I understood it is that he does not
require the Correctional Centre to provide any specific tutoring

services.
13.
Prior to
the closing date for submission of the form namely 2 June 2016, the
applicant was advised that his form would not be submitted
as he does
not qualify to be registered because he does not have the requisite
Internal Continuous Assessment marks outlined in
a memorandum by the
second respondent a copy of which he was furnished with.
[8]
The memorandum by the second respondent cited new requirements for
admission to national examinations and referred to dates of

implementation provided for in an annexure “A” which was
attached thereto. The applicant argued that the memorandum
did not
affect him.
The
case for the respondents
14.
The respondents’ answering affidavit was deposed to by its
attorney employed by the Office of the State Attorney.
The principal
attack in the answering affidavit was on urgency as the commencement
date of classes was 12 September 2016 of which
the applicant was
alleged to have been aware of as early as 8 June 2016.
15.
The answering affidavit dealt briefly with the merits under paragraph
5. There was no confirmatory affidavit nor factual
foundation laid
for why the content of paragraph 5 let alone any other part of the
answering affidavit was admissible evidence.
In paragraph 3.2 the
deponent stated and I quote:

3.2 I do not
intend in this affidavit to traverse the allegations made in the
founding affidavit of the applicant due to the fact
that I did not
have sufficient time to fully canvass the issues raised therein with
everyone involved in the matter and the difficult
time limits imposed
by the applicant which are impossible to comply with.”
16.
This affidavit was signed on the 20
th
September 2016
pursuant to the order of Wright J. On all accounts the application
then became before Swartz J on 29 September 2016
when it was struck
from the roll. As I have indicated no replying affidavit was in fact
filed and from that stage until the hearing
of the matter before me
the respondents did not file a supplementary answering affidavit.
17.
The answering affidavit essentially relied on a letter addressed by
Mr Mogadile to the applicant on 28 June 2016 advising
that:
17.1.  Johannesburg
Medium-B does not provide engineering N6 studies, only N1 – N3
engineering studies, due to a shortage
of tutors and workshops for
practical assessment.
17.2.  The
department of higher education policy for examinations stipulates
that any student sitting for exams for N1 to N6
is required to obtain
80% of class attendance.
17.3.  Due to the
abovementioned reasons applicant was advised to apply for a transfer
to another prison which offers N4 to
N6 engineering studies.
The
real issue
18.
By the hearing of the application the date by which the applicant had
to apply for the next enrolment had long since expired.
The real
issue however was the failure of the eighth respondent acting under
the authority vested in him by one or more of the
third to seventh
respondents, to act in accordance with the applicant’s
constitutional right under section 29 and the Correctional
Services
Act 111 of 1998 (at least ss 36 and 41 thereof) and to submit the
form to the Education Department. Put differently the
issue was
whether the eighth respondent was entitled to not submit the
applicant’s examination entry form.
19.
Prisoners’
rights are not taken away from them upon incarceration. Per
S
v. Makwanyane
[9]
prisoners “
retain
all the rights to which every person is entitled under the Bill of
Rights subject only to limitations imposed by the prison
regime that
are justifiable under s33 of the interim Constitution.”
20.
In fact in
Goldberg
and Others v Minister of Prisons and Others
,
[10]
which was decided at a time when the Legislature was supreme and
where the transgression of human rights was not susceptible to

constitutional challenge, the following appears per Corbett JA:
'It
seems to me that fundamentally a convicted and sentenced prisoner
retains all the basic rights and liberties . . . of an ordinary

citizen except those taken away from him by law, expressly or by
implication, or those necessarily inconsistent with the circumstances

in which he, as a prisoner, is placed.'
This became known as the
Residuum
principle.
21.
Section 29(1) of the Constitution of the RSA under chapter 2, Bill of
Rights, entrenches the applicants right to education
where it reads:

29.
Education
(1)
Everyone has the right –
(a)
to
a basic education, including adult basic education; and
(b)
to
further education, which the State, through reasonable measures, must
make progressively available and accessible.
…”
22.
S
35 of the Bill of Rights details the rights of all detained persons.
The manner in which prisoners are treated should not be out
of line
with the values on which the Constitution is based. Human dignity and
the advancement of human rights and freedoms and
respect for the rule
of law are not just hollow phrases. They must be made real. See the
judgement of Navsa JA in
Minister
of Correctional Services and Others v KwaKwa and Another.
[11]
23.
Chapter IV of the
Correctional Services Act 111 dealing
with
sentenced offenders, under
s 36
dealing with the “
Objective
of implementation of sentence of incarceration
” states:

With due regard to the fact that the deprivation of liberty
serves the purposes of punishment, the implementation of a sentence
of incarceration
has the objective of enabling the
sentenced offender to lead a socially responsible and crime-free life
in the future
.” (my emphasis), and under
s 41
dealing
with “Treatment, development and support services”
states: ”
(1) The Department must provide or give access to
as full a range of programmes and activities, including needs-based
programmes,
as is practicable
to meet the educational
and training needs of sentenced offenders
.” (my emphasis).
24.
There can be no doubt that an unlawful interference with the
applicants right to education is a constitutionally invalid
act.
25.
On the facts of the application: in the face of no evidence to
support the respondent’s version that the Correctional
Centre
does not in fact offer N6 engineering studies, the applicant’s
version falls to be preferred. If I am wrong in doing
so, the
applicant’s examination entry form was based on part time study
which does not appear to be impacted upon by the
memorandum by the
Department of Higher Education and Training. If I am wrong in this
regard too and the memorandum did impact upon
the applicant’s
form and submission, this was not a decision for the eighth
respondent to make but for the Education Department
to make.
26.
In
August and another v Electoral
Commission and others
where the
rights of prisoners to vote was considered, the following said can be
applied in regard to a prisoners right to further
education in terms
of Section 29 of the Constitution:
"They
must submit to the discipline of prison life and to the rules and
regulations which prescribe how they must conduct themselves
and how
they are to be treated while in prison.
Nevertheless,
there is a substantial residue of basic rights which they may not be
denied; and if they are denied them, then they
are entitled to legal
redress
."
(my emphasis).
27.
It was
suggested in argument that to come to the applicant’s aid would
be tantamount to sitting as a super civil servant as
envisaged in
Jivan
and others v Louw and Another.
[12]
However
I have had regard to the following by Gubbay CJ in
Conjwayo
v Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs and
Others
[13]
:
'Traditionally,
Courts in many jurisdictions have adopted a broad ''hands off''
attitude towards matters of prison administration.
This stems from a
healthy sense of realism that prison administrators are responsible
for securing their institutions against escape
or unauthorised entry,
for the preservation of internal order and discipline, and for
rehabilitating, as far as is humanly possible,
the inmates placed in
their custody. The proper discharge of these duties is often
beset with obstacles. It requires expertise,
comprehensive planning
and a commitment of resources, all of which are peculiarly within the
province of the legislative and executive
branches of government.
Courts recognise that they are ill-equipped to deal with such
problems. But a policy of judicial restraint
cannot encompass any
failure to take cognisance of a valid claim that a prison regulation
or practice offends a fundamental constitutional
protection.
Fortunately the view no longer obtains that in consequence of his
crime a prisoner forfeits not only his liberty
but all his
personal rights, except those which the law in its humanity grants
him. For while prison officials must be accorded
latitude and
understanding in the administration of prison affairs, and prisoners
are necessarily subject to appropriate rules
and regulations, it
remains the continuing responsibility of Courts to enforce the
constitutional rights of all persons, prisoners
included.'
I am
satisfied that to come to the applicant’s aid with an
appropriate order would not be tantamount to sitting as a super
civil
servant as envisaged in
Jivan
and others v Louw and Another.
28.
In the result I make the following order: It is declared that the
eighth respondent is obliged to submit to the Department
of Higher
Education and Training the applicant’s examination entry form
for N6 Engineering studies.
29.
I make no order as to costs.
[RS
Willis]
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Date
of Hearing:
21 April 2017
Judgment
Delivered:
10 January 2018
APPEARANCES
On
Behalf of the Applicant:
In
person
On
Behalf of the Respondent:
Instructed
By:
The
State Attorney – Johannesburg
12
th
Floor, North State Building
95
Albertina Sisulu Cnr Kruis Street
Ref:
Mr Pooe
Tel:
(011) 330-7685
[1]
The first application is dated 4 June 2016 (issued 6 June 2016) and
lists five respondents on its face (they are not cited
in the
founding affidavit). The second application is dated 11 June 2016
(issued 15 June 2016) and has eight respondents on its
face (again
none of whom are cited in the founding affidavit) and differs from
the other two in as much as it purports to be
a review application
in terms of rule 53 of the Uniform Rules of Court. The third
application is dated 11 September 2016 (issued
12 September 2016)
and lists eight respondents on its face (again not cited in the
founding affidavit).  In the court file
are four court orders
(as endorsed on the court file) by different judges. On 9 June 2016
Wepener J struck an application for
want of urgency. Clearly this
was the first application. The applicant explains in his heads of
argument that he then attempted
to enrol this matter for hearing but
did so on the unopposed roll and on 7 September 2016 Crutchfield AJ
postponed the application
sine
die
.
According to the applicant’s heads of argument his second
application, evidently brought urgently, came before Masipa
J. He
explains that this matter was set down for hearing on 14 September
but was postponed
sine
die
by
Van Oosten J in chambers for want of service on certain of the
parties. The third application issued on 12 September 2016
appears
to have come before Wright J on 14 September 2016. I say appears,
because the heading to the Wright J order is that of
the first
application and not that of the third application. However for the
reasons dealt with below I accept the heading ought
to have
reflected the third application. Per this order Wright J postponed
the application
sine
die
and directed the applicant to file a supplementary affidavit by
Friday 16 September 2016, the respondents to answer by Tuesday
20
September 2016 and the applicant to reply by Wednesday 21 September
2016. In the court file is a draft supplementary affidavit
under the
heading of the third application. It is filed under a filing sheet
dated 16 September 2016 but bearing the heading
of the first
application. It does not bear a registrar’s stamp. An
answering affidavit dated 20 September 2016 deposed
to by the state
attorney Mr Pooe appears under a filing sheet evenly dated but again
bearing the heading of the first application.
Once again there is no
registrar’s stamp. There is then an order by Swartz J dated 29
September 2016 striking a matter
(the heading is that of the first
application) off the roll. This must have been the third
application, because there is no indication
at all that the first or
second applications were ever ripened or enrolled again.
[2]
Memo 46 of 2015.
[3]
Cited as the first and second respondents
[4]
Application read together with practice note and heads of
argument.
[5]
Annexure “SM4” to the founding affidavit. The
certificate is issued by the Director-General of the Department
of
Higher Education and Training represented in this application by the
first and second respondents. See the foot of annexure
“SM4”.
[6]
Annexure “SM1”.
[7]
Annexure “SM1”.
[8]
Annexure “SM2”.
[9]
[1995] ZACC 3
;
1995
(3) SA 391
(CC)
[142]
– [143]
[10]
1979
(1) SA 14
(A) at 39C-D
[11]
2002
(4) SA p463
(SCA) [33]
[12]
1950
(4) SA 129
T at 131 D-E
[13]
1992
(2) SA 56
(ZS)
at
60G - 61A