Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 509South Africa
Ilunga v S (Bail Appeal) (A74/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 509 (19 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 May 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ilunga v S (Bail Appeal) (A74/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 509 (19 May 2025)
Ilunga v S (Bail Appeal) (A74/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 509 (19 May 2025)
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sino date 19 May 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: A74/2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE
19-05-2025
PD.
PHAHLANE
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
FANNY KASONGO
ILUNGA
APPELLANT
and
THE STATE
RESPONDENT
Judgment – Bail
Appeal
PHAHLANE,
J
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment
of
the Learned Magistrate MS Mfulwane, sitting
at
Pretoria
Magistrate court, in which the court dismissed the
appellant’s application to be released on bail. The appellant
was legally
represented at the bail hearing before the
magistrate.
[2]
The Appellant is a Congolese National who was charged for
assaulting her seven-year-old son, and for contravening the
provisions
of
section 49(1)(a)
of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
.
According to the charge sheet, the assault charge is specifically
identified as “child abuse; neglect; and assault”,
while
contravention of the
Immigration Act relates
to “entering the
Republic at any place other than at a port of entry”.
[3]
It is common cause that on the day of her arrest, the
appellant’s application for asylum was rejected by the
department of
Home Affairs.
[4]
The grounds of appeal as noted in
the Notice of Appeal are as follows:
(1)
The Learned Magistrate erred and
misdirected herself in finding that the appellant did not discharge
the onus to establish any exceptional
circumstances. Further that the
Learned Magistrate erred in failing to consider all the exceptional
circumstances raised.
(2)
The Learned Magistrate erred in
failing to consider that the bail application was not opposed by the
State.
(3)
The Learned Magistrate failed to
consider the impact of credible evidence that the appellant will not
evade trial in that:
·
She has established her family ties in
RSA and her children are schooling in the republic.
·
irrespective of the appellant being a
DRC national when she entered into the republic of South Africa, she
applied for asylum seeking
permit and after expiry of her asylum
document, she had applied for a renewal of asylum-seeking document
and after her arrest,
she discovered that her asylum-seeking
application was rejected, and she further reviewed the same
rejection.
(4)
The Learned Magistrate erred in
dwelling in the possible outcome of the review application for the
rejected application for asylum
seeking permit which is to be decided
by the Home Affairs.
(5)
The Learned Magistrate failed to
consider that the appellant is not a flight risk, the appellant count
leave to DRC (sic) where
there is political instability and civil
unrest and leave her family in the Republic of South Africa.
(6)
The Learned Magistrate failed to
consider that the interest of justice permit the release of the
appellant on bail.
[5]
It is clear
from the first ground of appeal raised that the appellant had
the
duty or the onus to prove on a balance of probabilities and
adduce
evidence to satisfy the magistrate that exceptional circumstances
existed,
which in the interests
of justice, entitled her to be released on bail, failing which she
would be detained in custody. What is
of importance is that the grant
or refusal of bail is a discretional decision under judicial control
and as such, judicial officers
have the ultimate decision as to
whether or not, in the circumstances of a particular case, bail
should be granted.
[6]
The
jurisdictional requirement for the appeal court to interfere with the
decision of the
learned
magistrate
is set out in
Section 65(4) of
the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the CPA”)
which
provides that: “T
he
court or judge hearing the appeal shall not set aside the decision
against which the appeal is brought, unless such court or
judge is
satisfied that the decision was wrong, in which event the court or
judge shall give the decision which in its or his opinion
the lower
court should have given”.
[7]
It
should be noted that in
a
bail application,
the
enquiry
is whether the interest of justice permits the release of the accused
on bail.
The
“interests of justice” criterion requires a weighing up
of the interest of the accused’s liberty, against
those factors
which suggest that bail be refused, unless ‘exceptional
circumstances’ are shown by the accused to exist.
This exercise
is one which departs from the constitutional standard set by section
35(1)(f). Its effect is to add weight to the
scales against the
liberty interest of the accused and to render bail more difficult to
obtain than it would have been if the ordinary
constitutional test of
the ‘interests of justice’ were to be applied
[1]
.
[8]
Accordingly,
this court as a court of appeal must
determine whether the appellant has discharged the burden placed on
her and most importantly, whether the learned magistrate exercised
her discretion wrongly.
This
principle was expressed by the court i
n
S v
Barber
[2]
as follows: “
It
is well known that the powers of this court are largely limited where
the matter comes before it on appeal and not as a substantive
application for bail. This court has to be persuaded that the
magistrate exercised the discretion which he has wrongly.
Accordingly,
although this court may have a different view, it should
not substitute its own view for that of the magistrate, because that
would
be an unfair interference with the magistrate’s exercise
of his discretion. It should be stressed that no matter what this
court’s own views are, the real question is whether it can be
said that the magistrate who had the discretion to grant bail
exercised that discretion wrongly”.
[9]
It is clear from the reading of the record
of the bail proceedings that
when the application was made on
behalf of the appellant, the defence never addressed the court on any
of the aspects referred to
in section 60 of the CPA which deals with
bail applications. Neither was the aspect relating to the interest of
justice addressed
on behalf of the appellant, nor the factors
referred to in section 60(4) canvassed by either the State or the
defence.
[10]
It can be gleaned from the reading of the record that the only
focus in the bail application was that the appellant had already
lodged her review application in respect of her asylum permit, and
that the court should as such admit her to bail. Be that as it
may,
it does not appear anywhere on the transcribed record − that
this aspect formed the basis on which bail was sought as
an
exceptional circumstance, o
r whether it was
only stated in passing.
[11]
It is indisputable that the court
a quo
declined to
entertain the issues which were the subject of the review before the
high court and stated the following:
“
That
can be dealt with in the high court, not in this court, but for now,
unfortunately, she − (referring to the appellant)
− wants
to be released on bail. The application is still pending in the high
court, and we do not know what the high court
will do….. The
Home Affairs rejected it ….. Me sitting here, I am here if she
is a flight risk or not (sic).
[12]
It is trite that in any bail application, evidence can be
presented through oral testimony or in an affidavit which will
address
the applicant's circumstances such as, amongst other things,
the details of the applicant's address, employment, family and
community
ties, including giving reasons why the applicant should be
released on bail and whether the applicant is not a flight risk.
[13]
As indicated above, none of the factors relating to bail as
outlined in section 60 of the CPA were addressed or placed before
court.
Mr Netshilaphala appearing for the appellant conceded that
these factors were not placed on record before the learned
magistrate,
and neither were they addressed during argument because
“
it was not necessary to do so
” as they
were noted in the appellant’s bail statement (“affidavit”)
admitted by the court as
exhibit A
.
[14]
It is common cause that the alleged affidavit of the appellant
is not attached to the record of the bail proceedings before this
court, and neither is it referred to in the “Index” which
forms part of the appellant’s documents attached to
her
application − to show that such an affidavit existed.
14.1
Ironically, a perusal of the record shows that the only affidavit
admitted by the
court a quo
as
exhibit A
is the
affidavit of the investigating officer, constable Lufuno Winnie
Mutavhasindi dated 18 February 2025 titled “bail statement”.
14.2
Just as with the record of the bail proceedings, none of the crucial
factors to be considered by the court in a
bail application in terms
of section 60 of the CPA were addressed in this affidavit.
14.3
In light of the above, the only inference to be drawn is that the
appellant did not depose to an affidavit in support
of her bail
application before the magistrate, but most importantly, she did not
place any evidence or exceptional circumstances
before the magistrate
to satisfy the court that it would be in the interest of justice that
she be released on bail.
14.4
In my view, if it were indeed true that the appellant had deposed to
an affidavit wherein she addressed all the
pertinent issues to be
addressed during the bail application, same would have been
highlighted in her heads of argument. I say
this being mindful of the
phrase repeatedly used in the appellant’s heads of argument,
which is: “
the appellant explained through her attorneys
….”,
rather than using the words: “the appellant stated in her
affidavit”.
[15]
It is common cause that only one
exhibit A
was admitted
by the
court a quo
, and that is the affidavit referred to
above. Before this court, when the court enquired from the
appellant’s counsel about
the alleged affidavit of the
appellant, counsel indicated that he was informed by the clerk of the
court at the magistrate court
that all the relevant documents were
attached to the record of the proceedings and sent to the high court
for purposes of bail
appeal, and that there was no affidavit of the
appellant on the court record.
[16]
Mr Netshilaphala asked the court to give him a chance to
approach the clerk of the appeal section at the magistrate court to
check
once more, if the appellant’s bail affidavit is in their
possession, and he was granted that opportunity. When the court
resumed after two days, counsel informed the court that the clerk of
the appeal section at the magistrate court searched and could
still
not find the appellant’s affidavit. This is confirmed by an
affidavit dated 13 May 2023 deposed to by ANTHOLINE FERREIRA
NIEMANDT
wherein the following is stated:
“
I
am an admin clerk at the Appeal Section, stationed at Pretoria
Magistrate Court. A bail appeal was sent to the high court on
04/04/2025 – S v Fanny K Ilunga.
This
office was approached and informed that the bail affidavit is
outstanding. There is no bail affidavit attached to the documents
in
our possession. The original charge sheet was also checked, there is
also no bail affidavit attached to it”.
[17]
In light of the above, it is undeniable that the appellant did
not depose to an affidavit during the bail hearing because
the
only
“bail statement marked as exhibit A” is
that of the investigating officer
and not the appellant.
(emphasis added)
[18]
With that being said, what is rather strange is that after
this court raised serious concerns about the total failure to address
the
court a quo
with regards to the requirements of bail as
set out in section 60 of the CPA, and failure to present evidence and
exceptional circumstances,
this court is handed an affidavit which is
alleged to be a copy of the affidavit that was given to the
magistrate in support of
the bail application, and it contains the
very aspects which this court canvassed with counsel that they were
not addressed in
the
court a quo
.
18.1
The red flag and worrying issue about this affidavit is that some of
the words and sentences have been deleted,
and those changes were not
initialled as it should be. One example is at paragraph 4 where typed
words were deleted by striking
them out with a pen and were replaced
by inserting handwritten information, and no initials were made to
these changes. Furthermore,
the appellant did not initial every page
of this affidavit, because the only initial (“JM”) that
appears at the bottom
of each page seems to be that of the
commissioner of oath, as it appears next to his full names where he
administered the oath.
18.2
In my view, this affidavit was only presented to close the gap and
correct the errors which this court has highlighted
when it engaged
counsel about failure to address the requirements of section 60, and
other issues of concern.
18.3
Accordingly, this affidavit will not be taken into account,
particularly because it is clear from the record that
only one
affidavit was admitted into the record.
[19]
The CPA provides in section 60(4)(a) to (e) a checklist of the
main criteria to be considered against the granting of bail, which
any accused or his/her representative should address, and this was
not done. On the other hand, sub-section 6(a-j) which is more
relevant to the case of the appellant was never addressed by her
counsel.
[20]
It appears from the reading of the record that after it was
disclosed to the court that the appellant is illegal in the country,
the State could not make a decision as to whether or not to oppose
bail because upon enquiry by the court, the prosecutor was unable
to
give a clear answer and informed the court that she wanted to
“
address the court off record”
. The prosecutor
further indicated that she “does not have to oppose the bail
application” but acknowledged and conceded
that the court had
the discretion to decide whether to grant bail or not. The
defence also confirmed that the court is vested
with that discretion.
20.1
It should be noted that when the learned magistrate asked the
State if the appellant was a flight risk, the
State was still not
able to respond to the court’s question but instead opted to
inform the court that the appellant’s
review application
regarding her asylum permit has been launched with the high court,
and that − it is yet to be decided
by the high court.
20.2
The following is the interaction between the court and the State:
Court
:
“
It is a flight risk.
Prosecutor
:
I do not have to sound like I am defending the accused
person before court, Your Worship.
Court
:
But ….
Prosecutor
:
Because going ahead, I will sound like I am defending her.
Court
:
Let me see what is happening on the charge sheet. What did I say? I
am not sure if the State is opposing or not. Can
I hear you?
Prosecutor
:
Your Worship, is not it (sic) that even if I say I oppose or I do not
oppose, court can overrule me.
Court
:
No, I want to be sure. Are you opposing?
Prosecutor
:
Your Worship, my view is that I do not have to oppose this
application. The reasons are those that I advanced”.
[21]
Having regard to the second ground of
appeal raised, the appellant’s contention that the State did
not oppose bail is misplaced
because it is evidence from the record
of the proceedings that the court repeatedly enquired whether bail
was opposed, and the
State was undecided.
[22]
Similarly, the appellant’s
contention
that the learned magistrate failed to consider that she is not a
flight risk as alleged on the fifth ground is without
merit and has
no basis. I have already indicated that there was no evidence placed
before the court to make a finding that the
appellant is not a flight
risk.
[23]
With regards to the third and fourth grounds of appeal, these
grounds are misleading and misplaced because it can be gleaned from
the record of the proceedings that the defence was very insistent
that the
learned magistrate
should consider
granting bail because the review application for asylum permit has
been filed with the high court, and stated the
following: “…
I believe that the high court will rule in her favour
”.
[24]
The
learned magistrate made it abundantly
clear and
repeatedly stated that the issue of an alleged
pending review application will not be dealt with during the bail
hearing, but that
it is an issue that will be dealt with by the high
court. It is on this basis that the magistrate declined to entertain
this aspect
because no application was made before the
court a quo
for consideration in that regard.
[25]
Mr
Netshilaphala submitted at paragraph 4 of his heads of argument that
the learned magistrate erred by disregarding the interpretation
of
section 21(4) of the Refugee Act
[3]
,
and
holding that the appellant is an illegal immigrant. The section
counsel referred to provides as follows:
(4)
Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, no proceedings may be
instituted or continued against any person in respect of his
or her
unlawful entry into or presence within the Republic if—
(a)
such person has applied for asylum in terms of subsection (1), until
a decision has been made on the application and, where
applicable,
such person has had an opportunity to exhaust his or her rights of
review or appeal in terms of Chapter 4
(b)
such person has been granted asylum.
[26]
Unfortunately, Mr Netshilaphala put reliance on the old
Refugee Act which has now been repealed because section 21(4)(a) was
substituted
by section 15(d) of Refugees Amendment Act 11 of 2017
which came into effect from 1 January 2020 [and updated on 4 January
2023].
The amended paragraph (a) now reads as follows:
(a)
such person has applied for asylum in terms of subsection (1), until
a decision has been made on the application and, where
applicable
,
such application has been reviewed in terms of section 24A
or where the applicant exercised his or her right to appeal in terms
of section 24B
.
[27]
The amended portion of the above provision of the Refugee Act
changes the trajectory of the interpretation which the appellant
wanted
to use and rely on. Be that as it may, it is important to note
that any argument or submission made by counsel from the bar is not
evidence. What this court cannot comprehend is why counsel would
attack the magistrate’s decision not to entertain a
non-existent
application by submitting that the magistrate
disregarded the interpretation of section 21(4)(a) − while the
very same provision
which counsel relies on has been invalidated and
replaced since 2020.
[28]
As already indicated, there was no evidence placed before the
magistrate and there was certainly no proper application made that
would have enabled the magistrate to consider the provisions of the
Refugee Act. Consequently, I
do
not agree with the submission made on behalf of the appellant −
that the
learned magistrate misdirected herself in
disregarding the interpretation of the Refugee Act.
[29]
In refusing to grant bail to the appellant, the learned
magistrate stated that the court must be cautious of granting bail
where
the risk of absconding remains high because the appellant
lacked documentation to remain in the country. In this regard, the
learned
magistrate held that the appellant poses a flight risk, and
that the interest of justice does not favour the appellant’s
release on bail.
[30]
It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that the
magistrate misdirected herself in coming to that decision because
there was
no evidence brought before court to prove that the
appellant is a flight risk.
[31]
On the other hand, the
respondent
submitted, and correctly so, that the magistrate properly exercised
her discretion and was correct in coming to a finding that
it would
not be in the interest of justice to grant bail to the appellant,
especially where the appellant had a duty to prove that
she is
entitled to be released on bail.
[32]
Reading through the judgment of the learned magistrate, there
is nothing which suggest that the magistrate misdirected herself. The
fact that the appellant is an illegal immigrant is a factor which the
magistrate had to consider, especially where there is a risk
that the
appellant may abscond.
[33]
It may very well be that the appellant’s children attend
school here in South Africa, thus making it improbable for her to
go
back to her country of origin, the Democratic Republic of Congo as
submitted in the appellant’s heads of argument, but
what cannot
be avoided is the fact that the appellant failed to
discharge
the onus of proof to establish
exceptional circumstances that
favours her release on bail − in the interest of justice.
[34]
I therefore do not agree with the submission made on behalf of
the appellant because there was no reverse onus. T
he
appellant had
the duty to prove on a balance of probabilities
and
adduce evidence that
can
stand up to scrutiny and
satisfy the
magistrate that exceptional circumstances existed,
which in
the interests of justice entitled her to be released on bail, and she
failed.
[35]
Having perused the record of the
court
a quo
,
I cannot find any demonstrable misdirection in the
magistrate’s decision to refuse to grant bail to the appellant.
I am satisfied
that the magistrate properly exercised her discretion,
and there are no grounds to satisfy this court that her decision was
wrong.
[36]
Consequently, it is my considered view
that releasing the appellant on bail under the above-mentioned
circumstances would, to my
mind, not be in the interests of justice
as it is likely to undermine the criminal justice system including
the bail system itself.
[37]
In this appeal, there are no grounds to
satisfy this court that the decision of the learned magistrate was
wrong. Put differently,
the grounds set out above do not justify a
conclusion that the appellant has made out a case for her release, or
that the learned
magistrate misdirected herself.
[38]
I therefore cannot find any basis
to interfere with the decision of the learned magistrate, and I
cannot find any fault with the
conclusion that the appellant is a
flight risk. Similarly, I concur with the magistrate’s finding
that the appellant failed
to satisfy the court that the interests of
justice permit her release.
[39]
In the premises, the following
order is made:
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
PD. PHAHLANE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
Counsel for the
Appellant
:
Mr Netshilaphala
Instructed
by
:
Netshilaphala
RE Attorneys
Email:
enquiry@nreattorneys.co.za
Counsel for the
Respondent
:
Adv.
C Pruis
Instructed
by
:
National Director
of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria
Heard
on
:
09 May 2025
Date of
Judgment
:
19
May 2025
[1]
S
v Dlamini; S v Dladla & Others; S v Joubert; S v Schietekat
[1999]
ZACC 8
;
1999
(2) SACR 51
(CC).
at
para 64.
[2]
1979 (4) SA 218
(D) at 220E-F
[3]
130 of 1998
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