The Road Accident Fund (RAF) has lodged an application for leave to appeal a high court judgment that declared invalid a Department of Transport regulation and RAF management directive that excluded illegal foreigners from submitting claims against the RAF.
This follows Judge Norman Davis in March this year reviewing and setting aside the provisions of the substituted RAF1 claim form prescribed by a government notice published in the Government Gazette on 4 July 2022 that was issued by former minister of transport Fikile Mbalula in terms of the RAF Act.
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The judgment to review and set aside the regulation and management directive was brought by Adam Mudawo, Wenile Simon Ndlovu, Bruce Mthokozi Sibanda and Oyetunde Oneniyi Areo, all of whom are foreign nationals.
RAF head of corporate communications McIntosh Polela confirmed on Tuesday the RAF has lodged an application for leave to appeal this judgment but has not yet been allocated a date on which it will be heard.
In its application, the RAF claims the High Court in Pretoria erred in granting the order and there is a reasonable prospect the RAF will be successful on appeal.
The RAF claims the court erred in not:
The RAF further claims the court erred in interpreting the phrase “any person” in a manner that is inconsistent with the Immigration Act, which prohibits illegal foreigners from being in South Africa – adding that the court’s interpretation permits illegal foreigners to be in SA, and to submit claims to the RAF without providing evidence that they were in SA when their claims arose and they were legally in SA when their claims arose.
In addition, the RAF claimed the court erred in:
The RAF stressed “this matter is of significant public importance and interest and this constitutes a compelling reason to grant leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal”.
RAF ‘has an obligation’ – judge
Judge Davis said in his judgment to the application lodged by the four foreign nationals that the RAF has an obligation in terms of the RAF Act to “compensate any person (the third party) for any loss or damage which the third party has suffered as a result of any bodily injury to himself or herself or the death of or any bodily injury to any other person, caused by or arising from the driving of a motor vehicle by any person at any place within the Republic …”.
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He said until recently “any person” was treated and interpreted by the RAF to include illegal foreigners injured or killed in road accidents that occurred in South Africa.
Judge Davis said they find nothing in the text of the RAF Act, the context of the RAF scheme as a whole, and the purpose of the act which leads them to conclude that the words “any person” in the RAF Act should be restrictively interpreted so as to exclude illegal foreigners.
“We find that the administrative actions of the RAF in prescribing the management directive of 21 June 2022 and that of the Minister in publishing the new RAF 1 form on 4 July 2022, insofar as those actions in the way they have been formulated and are to be enforced to exclude claims by illegal foreigners, offend against the provisions of section 17 of the [RAF] Act.
“Neither the Minister, nor the RAF, are in law permitted, either by way of a ‘policy decision’ or by way of a novel interpretation of the Act, to amend or limit the ambit of the Act.
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“To do so would be beyond their powers,” he said.
Judge Davis said these decisions therefore fall foul of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act and are to be reviewed and set aside to the extent necessary.
“Having reached the above conclusions, we find it unnecessary to deal with the Constitutionality arguments relating to the attempted exclusion of illegal foreigners as claimants against the RAF.”
This article was republished from Moneyweb. Read the original here
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