Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 439South Africa
M.K and Another v S (A312/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 439 (8 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 May 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## M.K and Another v S (A312/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 439 (8 May 2025)
M.K and Another v S (A312/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 439 (8 May 2025)
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sino date 8 May 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL
– Bail –
Pending
appeal reconsideration at
SCA
–
Two
brothers convicted of rape of minor – High Court appeal
dismissed – Special leave to appeal at SCA dismissed
–
Reconsideration by President of SCA pending – Applicants not
defaulting on bail conditions for four years but
now in custody –
Overcrowding and conditions in prisons discussed – Having
tasted prison life, this will not
encourage applicants to return
to prison if appeal attempt unsuccessful – Failed to show
existence of exceptional circumstances
– Application refused
–
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
,
s 60(11)(a).
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: A312/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE:
08/05/2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
M[...]
K[...]
FIRST APPLICANT
M[...]
K[...]
SECOND APPLICANT
v
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MOSOPA J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application for the applicants to be
permitted to bail pending an application of a reconsideration to the
President of
the Supreme Court of Appeal, in terms of the provisions
of
section 17(2)(f)
of Act 10 of 2013 read with the provisions of
section 316(3)(a) of Act 51 of 1977, brought on an urgent basis in
terms of Rule
6(12) of the Uniform Rules of court.
[2]
Ordinarily, bail applications are urgent matters
which need to be considered on an urgent basis. It is for that reason
that a determination
is made that the matter is urgent. The bail
application is opposed by the respondent.
BACKGROUND
[3]
The applicants were convicted in the Regional
court for the Regional Division of Gauteng, Pretoria on the following
charges;
3.1.
First applicant
(a)
Rape, and
(b)
Sexual assault
3.2.
Second applicant
(a)
Rape
All
the charges relate to the same complainant who was still a minor at
the time of their commission. The applicants were sentenced
to 20
years imprisonment as a sequel to their convictions.
[4]
The matter served before Tshombe AJ and Mosopa J,
as an appeal against convictions and on the 30 October 2024 and the
appeal against
their convictions was dismissed. It was further
ordered that the applicants must surrender themselves within 7 days
of the order
to start serving their sentences.
[5]
Applicants aggrieved by the appeal outcome further
appealed to the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”) and on
the 22 November
2024, Mosopa J, made an order extending the bail of
the applicants with ancillary conditions pending the outcome of their
appeal
to the SCA. The applicants special leave to the SCA was
dismissed on the 19 March 2025.
[6]
Aggrieved by such outcome, the applicants filed an
application for the reconsideration of such decision to the President
of the
SCA in terms of the provisions of section 17(2)(f) of Act 10
of 2013 and such decision is still pending. After the decision of the
SCA, dismissing the special leave to appeal application was handed
down, the applicants handed themselves in to start serving their
sentences at the Kgosi Mampuru II Correctional Centre, in Pretoria.
Application for reconsideration of the SCA decision is still
pending.
PERSONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
OF THE APPLICANTS
[7]
Both the applicants are twin brothers who are 50
years old. They are South African citizens and both do not have valid
South African
passports, nor do they intend to apply for such if
released on bail. They do not have friends or family members outside
of the
boarders of the Republic.
[8]
The first applicant is residing at [...] J[...]
Street, Vanderbijilpark, SE3 and the second applicant resides at
1[...] W[...] R[...],
Bergtuin, Pretoria. The first applicant has
been residing at that address since 2022, meaning that he started
residing there after
the commission of the offence he has been
convicted of. It is not clear as to whose property it is as the
applicant is unemployed.
[9]
The first applicant is not married but has one
dependent, a daughter aged 10 years and is currently residing with
her mother in
Benoni. The second applicant is married out of
community of property and two daughters, namely M[...], 17 years old
and L[...]
13 years old, were born out of that marriage. They are
both attending school and are staying with both the second applicant
and
his wife.
[10]
The first applicant is currently unemployed, and
second applicant is employed as an internal salesperson at Bearing
Agent earning
a net salary of R35 000, 00 and has been in such
employment for the past 23 years. It is not clear as to whether his
employer
will be willing to accept him back to his employment when
released on bail.
[11]
They both have no previous convictions except for
the current convictions and no other pending cases against them. They
have not
defaulted on their bail conditions set for their release,
since during their trial matter up until their appeal outcomes and
even
after learning of their unsuccessful appeal to the Supreme Court
of Appeal.
[12]
They do not have the intentions to endanger the
safety of the public and also they do not have any contact with the
complainant
or her family. They guarantee not to commit schedule 1
offences whilst out on bail. They harbour no resentment towards the
court’s
judgment and the sentence meted upon them.
[13]
The second applicant is responsible for the
maintenance of his children. They promise to adhere to any bail
conditions set for their
release. The interests of justice,
considerations of prejudice and the balancing of respective interests
favour their release on
bail.
DISCUSSION
[14]
The offences which the applicants have been
convicted and sentenced for, still resorts under Schedule 6. Section
60(11)(a) of Act
51 of 1977, makes the following provision;
“
60(11)(a)
Notwithstanding any provision of this Act, where an accused is
charged with an offence referred to-
(a) in Schedule 6, the
court shall order that the accused be detained in custody until he or
she is dealt with in accordance with
the law, unless the accused,
having been given a reasonable opportunity to do so, adduces evidence
which satisfies the court that
exceptional circumstances exist which
in the interests of justice permit his or her release.”
[15]
Section 321(1)(b) of Act 51 of 1977 makes the
following provision,
“
321
(1) The execution of the sentence of a superior court shall not be
suspended by reason of any appeal against a conviction or
by reason
of any question of law having been reserved for consideration by the
court of appeal, unless-
(b)
the superior court from which the appeal is made or by which the
question is reserved thinks fit
to order that the accused be released
on bail or that he be treated as an unconvicted prisoner until the
appeal or the question
reserved has been heard and decided.”
[16]
In essence, section 321 provides that an appeal
against conviction does not automatically suspend the execution of
the sentence
imposed following the conviction. The above also enjoins
the court to consider the bail application of the convicted person,
if
court think fit to order the release of such person. However, what
is important in addition to other factors the court may consider
in
releasing the convicted person on bail is to consider whether that
person is a flight risk especially when he knows that he
is convicted
and sentenced and also facing the prospect of a long prison stay.
[17]
The wording of section 60(11)(a) may suggest that,
is only applicable to accused who are not convicted but in essence it
is applicable
to bail applicants who are convicted and sentenced
pending the finalisation of their appeal matters. The above is
confirmed in
the matter of
S v
Bruintjies
2003 (2) SACR 575
(SCA) at paragraph 6
, when Shongwe AJA
(as he was then) observed that,
“
[6]
The main thrust of the appellant's counsel's submissions before us
was that the grant of leave to appeal on the merits
presupposed the
existence of a reasonable prospect of success in the appeal. Such a
prospect, said counsel, of itself constituted
an exceptional
circumstance within the meaning of the section. If that were so,
however, the great majority of persons facing charges involving
Schedule 6 offences would have to be released on bail pending their
trial without regard to other important considerations, such
as, for
example, the public safety. The mere fact that the trial court
considers that the appellant has a reasonable prospect of
succeeding
on appeal does not of itself amount to an exceptional circumstance.
What is required is that the court consider
all relevant factors
and determine whether individually or cumulatively they warrant a
finding that circumstances of an exceptional
nature exist which
justify his or her release. What is exceptional cannot be defined in
isolation from the relevant facts, save
to say that the Legislature
clearly had in mind circumstances which remove the applicant
from the ordinary run and which serve
at least to mitigate the
serious limitation of freedom which the Legislature has attached to
the commission of a Schedule 6 offence.
The prospect of success may
be such a circumstance, particularly if the conviction is
demonstrably suspect. It may, however, be
insufficient to surmount
the threshold if, for example, there are other facts which
persuade the court that society will probably
be endangered by the
appellant's release or there is clear evidence of an intention to
avoid the grasp of the law. The court will
also take into account the
increased risk of abscondment which may attach to a convicted person
who faces the known prospect of
a long sentence. Such matters,
together with all other negative factors, will be cast into the
scale with factors favourable
to the accused, such as stable home and
work circumstances, strict adherence to bail conditions over a long
period, a previously
clear record and so on. If, upon an overall
assessment, the court is satisfied that circumstances sufficiently
out of the ordinary
to be deemed exceptional have been established
by the appellant and which, consistent with the interests of justice,
warrant
his release, the appellant must be granted bail.”
[18]
The fact that the applicants have been convicted and sentenced, their
appeal was unsuccessful in the High
Court and their special leave to
the SCA was dismissed, is a clear indication that the circumstances
of the applicants had
changed and they need to place new facts, which
must be deemed to be exceptional circumstances, before this court can
release them
on bail. (see
S v Yanta
2000 (1) SACR
237
(TK)
).
[19]
The onus is on the applicants on the balance of probabilities to show
that they meet the requirements set
by section 60(11)(a) and
60(4)(a)-(e) of Act 51 of 1977. Most importantly the court
considering a bail application is enjoined
by section 60(10) to weigh
up the personal interests of the bail applicant against the interests
of the justice. The interests
of justice should be interpreted to
include the safety of a person against whom the offence in question
has allegedly been committed.
[20]
The complainant was violated by the applicants when she was very
young and was a friend of the second applicant’s
child. She
viewed the applicants as her parents as she enjoyed being in the
company of the second applicant more than with her
own parents. At
that stage, even though the first applicant was not residing there,
he used to visit there often and is also known
to the complainant.
She shared deep “secrets” with the wife of the
second applicant, and this shows exactly how
close the complainant
was to the applicants, more especially to the second applicant. She
would alternate going to spend a weekend
at the second applicant’s
place of residence, though with the approval of her parents as they
used to be their neighbour
before she relocated to a new address.
[21]
One must bear in mind that it has now been approximately 4 years
since the applicants have been convicted
and sentenced, the
commission of the offences was in 2018. Despite the fact that
applicant avers in their affidavits that they
do not harbour any
resentment against the complainant, the sentence has a serious effect
and/or impact in their daily lives, without
the applicants expressing
that, it had a negative impact on the marriage of the second
applicant. Their standing in the community
has changed, even if it is
not born out of the record, but it is common sense.
[22] It
is for the above reasons that the safety of the complainant ought to
be guaranteed.
[23] Ms Cronje on
behalf of the respondent contended that the applicant since they
handed themselves to start serving sentence,
they have tasted prison
life and as such this can encourage them to abscond in the event
their applications to petition the President
of their SCA is not
successful and they are therefore a flight risk. It is plain that the
applicants have not been in prison since
their arrest as they were
granted bail after their arrest. This was the position until they
recently handed themselves over to
start serving their sentences.
[24] It is also
common that the prison conditions in South African prisons are not
pleasant. There is an issue of overcrowding
and related ills that are
prevalent in our prisons. Having tasted this kind of prison life,
this will not encourage the applicants
to return to prison if their
applications in terms of section 17(2)(f) is not successful. I fully
agree with the contention by
Ms Cronje.
[25] The first
applicant is not employed and is not a primary caregiver to his
child. The child is currently in the care of
her mother in Benoni,
who is also responsible for her maintenance looking at the fact that
the first applicant does not have any
financial income. The second
applicant is gainfully employed and responsible for the maintenance
of his children. It is not the
second applicant’s contention
that he is a sole breadwinner in his family.
[26] Nothing much
is said with regards to the wife of the second applicant, whether she
is employed or not and her part of
contribution towards the
maintenance of the second applicant’s children.
[27] As stated in
Bruintjies
(
supra
), the reasonable prospects of
success in the appeal does not constitute exceptional circumstances
as intended by section 60(11)(a),
but that aspect must be considered
together with other relevant factors. The approach adopted by the
applicant in not addressing
this court on the reasonable prospects of
success and merits in more detail is applaudable considering the fact
that I do not consider
the applicant succeeding in his further appeal
to the SCA.
[28] The fact that,
for a period of 4 years the applicants never defaulted on their bail
conditions is considered, but it
cannot be used as a factor that can
lean towards the applicants being released on bail at this stage.
They never committed any
schedule 1 offences whilst out on bail, but
this again cannot be used to grant the applicants’ bail. It is
for these reasons
that bail applications should be refused. It is to
be noted that the applicants have been convicted of very serious
offences, which
entail violating the privacy of the complainant, and
the prospects of facing lengthy sentences if their applications to
the SCA
do not succeed is real. The applicants failed to show the
existence of exceptional circumstances that can permit them to be
released
on bail. It is for this reason that the bail applications
cannot succeed.
ORDER
[29] In the result the
following order is made;
1. Application for the
release of the applicants on bail pending the finalisation of the
application for a consideration to the
President of the Supreme Court
of Appeal, in terms of section 17(2)(f) of Act 10 of 2013, is hereby
refused.
M.J. MOSOPA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
FOR
THE APPLICANTS
:
ADVOCATE
JANSE VAN RENSBURG
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
HAMAN
AND BOTHA ATTORNEYS
FOR
THE RESPONDENT :
ADVOCATE
CRONJE
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: 09 April 2025
Date
of judgment: 08 May 2025
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