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South African Law • Jurisdictional Corpus
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Spagni v The Acting Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Others

Citation(455/2022) [2023] ZASCA 24 (13 March 2023)
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Criminal Procedure
Constitutional Law
Extradition Law
Administrative Law

Facts of the Case

Mr Riccardo Paolo Spagni, a dual South African-Italian citizen, faced criminal charges of fraud, forgery and uttering in Cape Town involving R1.5 million since 2011. His trial commenced on 22 August 2019. Following the Covid-19 pandemic, his trial was postponed on several occasions. Mr Spagni failed to appear in court on 24 and 25 March 2021, having travelled to Bermuda and then to the USA on a non-immigrant visa obtained in October 2020. On 21 July 2021, he was arrested in Nashville, Tennessee pursuant to a provisional arrest request from South Africa through Interpol under Article 13 of the Extradition Treaty between South Africa and the USA. Following his release on bail, a formal extradition request was submitted by the Acting Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape (ADPP) on 21 September 2021, endorsed by the National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP). Mr Spagni then challenged the validity of the extradition request, arguing that only the executive authority (Minister of Justice) had the power to submit such requests, not the NPA or ADPP. On 25 May 2022, Mr Spagni voluntarily and knowingly waived his extradition rights before the Tennessee District Court and consented to surrender to South Africa. He was returned to South Africa for continuation of his trial, which was set to resume on 3 November 2022.

Legal Issues

  • Whether the ADPP and NDPP had the authority to submit an extradition request to a foreign state on behalf of South Africa, or whether that power was vested exclusively in the executive authority (Minister of Justice)
  • Whether the appeal was moot following Mr Spagni's voluntary waiver of extradition rights and return to South Africa
  • Whether the court should exercise its discretion to hear a moot appeal in the interests of justice
  • Whether further evidence of events occurring after the high court judgment should be admitted on appeal

Judicial Outcome

1. Leave to adduce further evidence is granted with no order as to costs. 2. The appeal is dismissed with costs, including costs of two counsel.

Ratio Decidendi

Where an appellant voluntarily and knowingly waives extradition rights with full legal representation and knowledge of the right to challenge the extradition request, and returns to the country seeking extradition for continuation of the same trial for which extradition was sought, an appeal seeking to declare the extradition request invalid is moot and will be dismissed as having no practical effect under section 16(2)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013. A court will not exercise its discretion to hear a moot appeal in the interests of justice where: (a) the appellant's own voluntary conduct created the mootness; (b) no discrete legal issue of public importance requiring resolution is demonstrated; (c) the matter turns on its peculiar facts; (d) there is no showing of practical effect on other persons; and (e) the only basis advanced is a general assertion about vindicating the rule of law without articulation of a specific public interest or right affected.

Obiter Dicta

Dambuza ADP in a concurring judgment made several additional observations: (1) The waiver of extradition rights pursuant to Article 19 of the Extradition Treaty is distinct from the extradition inquiry process - once waiver is given, the inquiry does not proceed further. (2) The case is distinguishable from S v Stokes because Mr Spagni challenged the final extradition request (not the provisional arrest request), did not rely on a difference between the extradition request and the charges at trial, was not misled about the charges, and consented with full knowledge of the alleged unlawfulness. (3) The case is distinguishable from Pheko v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality because there the municipality's conduct caused displacement, whereas here Mr Spagni's own conduct through waiver and consent resulted in his repatriation. (4) Unlike cases such as MEC for Education v Pillay and AB v Pridwin Preparatory School where important constitutional questions affecting many people were raised, this appeal turns on peculiar facts without demonstrable broader impact. (5) The question of the lawful 'initiator' of an extradition request (as considered in Schultz v Minister of Justice) may be different from the question of the lawful 'requestor' or 'applicant' for extradition. (6) In appropriate circumstances, the court will decide the question of the correct repository of power for submission of extradition requests, but this was not such a case due to mootness.

Legal Significance

This case illustrates the application of the mootness doctrine under section 16(2)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013. It demonstrates that when an appellant's voluntary conduct renders the relief sought without practical effect, courts will not expend scarce judicial resources on abstract legal questions. The judgment reinforces that waiver of extradition rights is a serious and binding decision that cannot be undone by later challenging the underlying extradition request. The case also provides guidance on when courts will exercise discretion to hear moot appeals in the interests of justice, requiring demonstration of a discrete legal issue of public importance, potential practical effect on others, complexity, and the need to resolve conflicting decisions. The judgment emphasizes that general assertions about vindicating the rule of law or potential future relevance are insufficient to overcome mootness. While the SCA did not decide the substantive question of whether the NPA has authority to submit extradition requests (leaving that for a live case), the judgment confirms that such questions will be decided when properly raised in non-moot circumstances.

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This case references

Cites

  • National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and OthersCCT 10/99; 1999 (2) SA 1 (CC); 2000 (2) BCLR 39 (CC)
  • AB and Another v Pridwin Preparatory School and Others[2020] ZACC 12
  • Government of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Grootboom and Others2001 (1) SA 46 (CC)
  • Willy Aaron Sibiya and Others v The Director of Public Prosecutions: Johannesburg High Court and Others
  • Masetlha v The President of the Republic of South Africa and Another

Distinguishes

  • Schultz v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others(76/2023) [2024] ZASCA 77 (23 May 2024)
  • Pheko and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality(CCT 19/11) [2011] ZACC 34

Referenced by

Applied By

  • The Public Protector of South Africa v The Chairperson of the Section 194(1) Committee and Others(627/2023) [2024] ZASCA 131 (1 October 2024)

Considers By

  • Schultz v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others(76/2023) [2024] ZASCA 77 (23 May 2024)

Followed By

  • The Public Protector of South Africa v The Chairperson of the Section 194(1) Committee and Others(627/2023) [2024] ZASCA 131 (1 October 2024)

Related To By

  • Schultz v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others(76/2023) [2024] ZASCA 77 (23 May 2024)