National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma

JurisdictionSouth Africa
Judgment Date12 January 2009
Citation2009 (2) SA 277 (SCA)

National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
2009 (2) SA 277 (SCA)

2009 (2) SA p277


Citation

2009 (2) SA 277 (SCA)

Case No

573/08

Court

Supreme Court of Appeal

Judge

Harms DP, Farlam JA, Ponnan JA, Maya JA and Cachalia JA

Heard

November 28, 2008

Judgment

January 12, 2009

Counsel

W Trengove SC and B Downer SC (with G Baloyi, A Breitenbach and A Steynberg) for the appellant.
KJ Kemp SC (with MDC Smithers and AA Gabriel) for the respondent.
MTK Moerane SC and P Coppin SC (with L Gcabashe) for the intervening parties.

Flynote : Sleutelwoorde B

Judge — Duties and functions — Limits of judicial decision-making restated — Judges to limit themselves to judicial sphere — In particular, judges to confine themselves to issues before them; to desist from making findings against persons not called before court; to distinguish between allegation, C fact, and fiction; and to abstain from injecting personal views or preferences into judgment.

Constitutional law — Separation of powers — Independence of Judiciary — Doctrine of separation of powers and independence of Judiciary requiring that judges also respect limits of their own powers. D

Administrative law — Administrative action — What constitutes — Prosecutorial decision by National Director of Public Prosecutions — Decision not constituting administrative action.

Costs — Attorney and client costs — When to be awarded — Application to strike E out — Most allegations sought to be struck out irrelevant, gratuitous and based on suspicion — Excuse for including them unconvincing, especially since any reliance on them disavowed — Prejudice to applicant manifest — Costs on attorney and client scale awarded against respondent.

Costs — Attorney and client costs — When to be awarded — Application to strike F out — Applicant seeking to strike out respondent's affidavit in support of respondent's application to strike out — Respondent's application succeeding — Applicant's application ill-conceived — Application to strike out dismissed with costs on attorney and client scale.

Costs — Special order — Costs against successful party — When to be G awarded — Application to intervene on appeal — Court a quo making findings which impinged negatively on applicants and applicants wishing to set record straight — Respondent filing lengthy answering affidavit which was unnecessary and inappropriate — Respondent having no legal interest in upholding denigration of applicants and in opposing intervention because it did not affect order sought to be upheld on appeal — Successful party H deprived of any order for costs.

Criminal procedure — Prosecution — Prosecuting authority — National Director of Public Prosecutions — Decision to prosecute — Review — Failure to comply with constitutional obligation to consult with accused — Obligation not applying to review of NDPP's own decision to prosecute — Earlier decision I having lapsed when matter struck off roll — Impugned decision thus not constituting review of earlier decision — Application dismissed — Constitution, s 179(5)(d).

Practice — Parties — Joinder — Application for leave to intervene — Proper approach to restated. J

2009 (2) SA p278

A Practice — Applications and motions — Striking out — Irrelevant, vexatious or scandalous material — Proper approach restated — Uniform Rules of Court, rule 6(15).

Practice — Applications and motions — Dispute of fact — Approach of court — Established principles restated — Not designed to determine probabilities.

Headnote : Kopnota

B The respondent, the former Deputy President of South Africa and leader of the ruling political party, requested the High Court to annul the appellant's decision to indict him (the Mpshe decision). The respondent advanced two grounds for his application: (1) The decision to indict him amounted to a review of the appellant's earlier decision not to prosecute him (the Ngcuka C decision), a review that took place without his having been invited to make representations as intended in s 179(5)(d) of the Constitution (and in s 22(2)(c) of the National Prosecuting Authority Act 32 of 1998). (2) Alternatively, and flowing from his constitutional right to administrative justice, he had had a legitimate expectation, arising from Mr Ngcuka's press release when he announced his decision not to prosecute him and from a D letter written by the respondent's attorney shortly before the Mpshe decision was made and Mr Mpshe's response thereto, to have been invited to make representations before any decision was taken to change the Ngcuka decision. The Mpshe decision was the second decision by the appellant following the Ngcuka decision to indict the respondent. The first such decision, the Pikoli decision, had lapsed when the matter was struck E from the High Court roll because the State had not been ready to proceed to trial. The appellant brought an interlocutory application for the striking- out from the respondent's affidavits, on the ground of irrelevance, of a large number of allegations relating to the merits of the appellant's decisions. The allegations sought to be struck out mainly related to an alleged political conspiracy to prosecute the respondent. The respondent in turn brought an F application for allegations to be struck from the appellant's affidavit in support of his application to strike out.

In the main application the High Court found in favour of the respondent and set aside the Mpshe decision and the indictment that followed. The court declined to make any finding regarding the relevance of the facts sought to be struck from the respondent's affidavits, but granted the respondent's G application to strike out. The appellant appealed to the Supreme Court of Appeal. Mr Mbeki, the former President of South Africa, and the Government of South Africa sought leave to intervene in the appeal, alleging an interest in the appeal by virtue of the fact that the High Court had made certain findings that reflected negatively on them and they wished to set the record straight.

H Held, that the High Court had failed to adhere to the principle that judges were themselves constrained by the law when exercising their judicial function. It had failed to confine its judgment to the issues before the court; decided matters that were not germane or relevant; created new factual issues; made gratuitous findings against persons who were not called upon to defend themselves; failed to distinguish between allegation, fact, and suspicion; I transgressed the boundaries between Judicial, Executive and Legislative functions; and overstepped the limits of its authority by injecting personal views and political preferences into its judgment. (Paragraphs [15] and [16] at 287I - 288D.)

Held, further, that the court had furthermore erred in its approach to the determination of applications. In the context of the appellant's striking out J application the court's approach had been to examine the correctness or

2009 (2) SA p279

otherwise of the allegations sought to be struck out, while the real test for A irrelevance was whether the allegations applied to the matter in hand or contributed to the decision of the matter. Relevance did not depend on the factual merit of the impugned allegations, but their applicability to the merits of the case, which was never considered. (Paragraphs [23] - [25] at 289G - 290D.)

Held, further, that unless motion proceedings were concerned with interim relief, B they were all about the resolution of legal issues based on common-cause facts. Unless the circumstances were special they could not be used to resolve factual issues because they were not designed to determine probabilities. It was well-established under the Plascon-Evans rule that where disputes of fact in motion proceedings arose on the affidavits, a final order could be granted only if the facts averred in the applicant's affidavits and C admitted by the respondent, together with the facts alleged by the latter, justify such order. It might be different if the respondent's version consisted of bald or implausible denials, raised fictitious disputes of fact, or was palpably implausible, far-fetched or so clearly untenable that the court was justified in rejecting it merely on the papers. The court below did not have regard to those propositions, and instead decided the case on probabilities D without rejecting the appellant's version (Paragraph [26] at 290D - G.)

Held, further, that the court below erred further in applying a rule of evidence which applied only to trials, namely that if the facts were peculiarly within the knowledge of a defendant, the plaintiff needed less evidence to establish a prima facie case, and in failing to have regard to the principle that, the E more serious the allegation or its consequences, the stronger had to be the evidence before a court would find the allegation established. (Paragraph [27] at 290G - 291C.)

Held, further, that the court below began its discussion of the legal issues by implying that a decision to prosecute was an administrative action to which the audi principle (with its offspring, the doctrine of legitimate expectation) F applied. That has never been the law and was not the law under the Constitution and the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000. Such a decision was not susceptible to review. That did not mean, however, that a failure to comply with a constitutional or statutory requirement to hear a party was not justiciable under the principle of legality. (Paragraphs [35] - [36] at 293H - 294B.)

Held, further, as to the Ngcuka decision, that the court found - despite the fact G that the respondent made no such allegation - that the Minister and indeed the entire Cabinet were party to political interference in the Ngcuka decision, and that such interference...

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