Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1274South Africa
Ihedioha v S (A230/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1274 (29 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
29 November 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ihedioha v S (A230/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1274 (29 November 2024)
Ihedioha v S (A230/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1274 (29 November 2024)
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SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case Number: A230/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE
29 NOVEMBER 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
KEVIN
EZE IHEDIOHA
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MOSOPA J
1.
The appellant applied in the Pretoria
Magistrate’s Court to be released on bail following his arrest
on the 31 December 2021.
On the 9 June 2023, District Court
Magistrate J.C. Kruger refused the appellant’s bail, aggrieved
by such decision, he then
appealed against such refusal to grant him
bail, in terms of section 65(1)(a) of Act 51 of 1977.
2.
The appeal matter was heard on the 25
October 2024 and judgment was reserved. At the time of the hearing of
the bail application
at the court
a quo
,
an objection was raised by the defence when the state wanted to have
the matter to resort under Schedule 6. The state at that
stage did
not furnish the certificate confirming that the charge levelled
against the appellant resorts under Schedule 6. The court
a
quo
eventually made a ruling that the
matter resorts under Schedule 1 and the matter proceeded on that
basis.
3.
The court, in
S
v Nel and Other
2018 (1) SACR
576
(GJ) at par 7,
had on occasion of
dealing with the matter where the defence objected to the use of a
particular Schedule by the state, and stated
that;
“
[7]
In the ordinary cause of an application for bail, a timeous ruling
should be made on the applicable
schedule or section, whether
placed in dispute or not. This determines how the bail application
will be conducted and more importantly
determines the issue of onus.”
4.
The court
a
quo
made a timeous ruling to the
objection raised and this matter will proceed and be determined under
Schedule 1. At the time of the
bail application, charges levelled
against the appellant were the following;
4.1.
Trafficking person in contravention of
section 4(1) and related section of the Prevention and Combating of
Trafficking in Persons
Act 7 of 2013 read with the provisions of
section 51(1) of Act 105 of 1997, and
4.2.
Corruption charges that relate to the
alleged bribing of the Investigating Officer.
5.
The appellant is arraigned with 7 other
accused and at the hearing of the appeal, I was informed that the
matter has now been transferred
to the High Court for the purpose of
plea and trial. When the matter was in the High Court, there was an
instance where I postponed
the matter, as the Judge who was allocated
the matter was not present on that day. Before the hearing of the
current appeal, I
enquired from the parties if I can still preside
over the appeal matter as I had postponed the matter on a previous
occasion. I
must pause to say at that stage, my role was only to
postpone the matter to another date. I did not know what charges all
the accused
were arraigned with and I did not know the merits of the
matter.
6.
The appellant was arrested because of the
surveillance that was done by Warrant Officer Barath, the
Investigating Officer in the
matter together with his investigating
team and the police applied for a section 252A of Act 51 of 1977
(“Act”) trap.
The corruption charges were levelled
against him after he was arrested on a trafficking in person charge.
It is alleged that the
appellant’s brother, his wife and a
third person, offered Warrant Officer Barath at the time when he went
to verify the address
of the appellant in Centurion an amount of
R20 000,00 for the release of the appellant. The three people
mentioned were arrested
after a section 252A trap was put in place
and the R20 000, 00 was seized from them at the time of their
arrest.
7.
The appellant was not arrested for being in
the country illegally but for committing an offence, his status in
the country played
a crucial role in him being denied bail as it will
appear clearer later in this judgment. His status in the country was
brought
in as one of the reasons for the state to oppose bail. The
arrest of the appellant and his detention was not as intended in
terms
of sections 3(1)(g), 34 or 49 of the Immigration Act 13
of 2002 (“Act”).
8.
After the arrest of the appellant, a review
application in terms of Rule 53 of the Uniform Rules was brought
against Refugee Status
Determination Officer of the Home Affairs
against its decision the declare to appellant as being illegal in the
country, after
such decision was made on the 5 March 2020. It was
alleged that the appellant submitted a fraudulent visa when he
applied for a
temporary resident status, after entering the Republic
in 2009. Despite the review application documentation admitted into
evidence
during the bail hearing as an exhibit, it did not form part
of the transcribed record when the matter was heard.
9.
I then requested Mr Forbay appearing on
behalf of the appellant to furnish the court with the copy of the
review application of
the appellant, when the matter was adjourned
and judgment was reserved, Mr Forbay is not involved in the review
application but
another legal practitioner was involved and Mr Forbay
faced challenges in being invited into Caselines by that practitioner
as
he informed Mr Forbay that he cannot invite him to Caselines as
the appellant owes him money for his services. This information
was
forwarded to the state and the court by Mr Forbay through an email.
10.
I then instructed my clerk to approach the
general office and if possible, she be invited to Caselines as Mr
Forbay had been provided
with the case number. The review application
under the name and case number Kevin Eze Ihedioha (Ref
PTANGA008989152) v The Director
Department of Home Affairs and 2
Others, Case number 28443/2022 could not be found on Caselines. I
again on the 15 November 2024
instructed my clerk to inform the
parties of such developments. On the 25 November 2024 the state
informed my clerk that the names
of the appellant cannot be found on
Caselines under such case number in the Pretoria High Court as the
matter on Caselines is the
matter
of
Shoba v Road Accident Fund
,
Case number 28443/2022,
which is a
civil trial matter.
11.
The explanation given to the state by Ms
Marema a registrar from the General Office of the Pretoria High
Court, was that if a case
number is issued to a particular matter and
the parties do not upload such to Caselines, that case number can be
allocated to any
matter thereafter. The physical file that was opened
when the case number was issued is still lying in the general office
and there
are no other documents except for the notice of motion,
founding affidavit, annexures and proof of service. There is no
indication
that the respondents indicated an intention to oppose the
review application. No further steps were taken by the appellant to
prosecute
the review application, despite such application being
issued in 2022.
12.
The state in the bail hearing submitted the
section 212 statements from Vella Mack Tshiboze from the Home
Affairs, Control Immigration
Officer Inspectorate who stated that the
appellant entered the Republic on the 7 March 2009 and his
application for temporary resident
status was rejected on the 5 March
2020. The other section 212 statement was from Alfred Leshoka Moleka
an Immigration Officer
from the Home Affairs, who stated that the
appellant is not authorised to remain in the Republic and such
rejection was on the
5 March 2022. The state also presented the
affidavit of Delpha Melicia Motau the girlfriend of the appellant who
confirmed her
relationship with the appellant, although they are not
staying together, but on occasion the appellant would visit her
place.
13.
They also submitted the affidavit of Warrant
Officer Don Barath, the Investigating Officer in the matter who
submitted his affidavit
and spelling out an attempt to bribe him when
he went to verify the address of the respondent at Centurion, which
led to the arrest
of three people after a trap was put in place. He
also stated his reasons in that affidavit why the appellant must not
be permitted
to bail.
14.
The appellant testified in the bail hearing and
confirmed the following;
14.1.
That he was born on the 2 October 1982, and that
he is 40 years old,
14.2.
He is a Nigerian citizen and entered the Republic
in 2009, and that throughout his entire stay in the Republic until
his arrest,
he stayed in Pretoria and never travelled back to his
country of origin;
14.3.
His father passed away in 1988, and he does
currently not have parents, his family is his fiancé and his
5-year-old child,
who was born from his relationship with Khanyisa
Vika and they have since terminated their relationship;
14.4.
He is responsible for the maintenance of his child;
14.5.
He is now in a three-year-old his relationship with his current
fiancé who is a South
African citizen;
14.6.
At the time of his arrest he was residing at 6[...] S[...] street,
Elma Court Flat, Arcadia
which was a rented place. Since his arrest
he has not paid any rental fees, and the rental agreement is no
longer in place;
14.7.
He was paying an amount of R2 600.00 for such rental, and the
flat consisted of 4 bedrooms
and he was occupying one of them and two
other people were occupying other rooms;
14.8.
His brother stays in Centurion;
14.9.
He is in the business of buying and selling vehicles that were
involved in motor vehicle collision
and sold such after repairing
them. He also assists people to bid in auctions for purchase of motor
vehicles and he gets an amount
of R 30 000.00 on a successful
bid;
14.10. As a result
of his incarceration, he cannot do the work anymore, and he cannot
employ other people to do the work for
him as experienced people are
needed for such employment;
14.11. He earned an
amount of approximately R15 000.00;
14.12. He has
immovable assets to the value of R70 000.00 to R80 000.00
which includes a motor vehicle;
14.13. He does not
have previous convictions, no other pending matter and there are no
warrants issued against him, and
14.14. He launched
a review application challenging a decision by Home Affairs declaring
his stay in the Republic as illegal.
15.
After evidence was presented, the presiding Magistrate was not
satisfied with evidence not led on the merits of the matter
and also
evidence that links the appellant to the alleged commission of the
offences. The Magistrate then invoked the provisions
of section 60
(3) of Act 51 of 1977 which provides;
“
60(3) If the court
is of the opinion that it does not have reliable or sufficient
information or evidence at its disposal or that
it lacks certain
important information to reach a decision on the bail application,
the presiding officer shall order that such
information or evidence
be placed before the court.”
16.
Following the order made by the presiding Magistrate, the state
led the oral evidence of Warrant Officer Barath, the Investigating
Officer. He testified that following the section 252A application,
they went to the appellant’s place of residence, and they
found
drugs as well as the two victims who were later rescued and later
taken to a place of safety. The place where drugs were
found is the
place which is rented by appellant as informed by the caretaker and
appellant had the keys to such a place.
17.
He also went to the Pretoria High Court to verify the status of the
review application and received the same documents that
he was
initially furnished with as no further documents could be found.
18.
In cross-examination he confirmed that the victims who were rescued
were not physically found at the room that the appellant
was
occupying but in one of the rooms in the flat. The drugs were found
in the garage in which only the appellant has access to
and they were
found by a dog unit member. The drugs found were tested at the
forensic laboratory and came back positive. At the
time of the bail
hearing appellant was not arraigned on a charge of possession of
drugs as they were still waiting for the test
results. The appellant
did not present further evidence or affidavits.
19.
In not permitting the appellant to bail, the presiding Magistrate
made certain factual findings and on the issue of the address
of the
appellant, concluded that;
“
He was arrested at
his residence and provided an address in Centurion. It appears that
is a family member of the accused (appellant’s)
address, and he
is known in that address. The address in Sunnyside is from his
fiancé, where he states that they are in
a relationship for
there years but that the accused, they are not staying together and
that the agreement is that he will only
visit her at the
premises…there is no lease agreement and there is indeed
nothing preventing the accused to literally move
over night from this
address to any other address including the address in Sunnyside.”
(sic)
20.
Further,
“
He does not have a
business bank account and is not registered at the Revenue services.”
With regard to his status
in the country, the Magistrates stated that;
“
Dealing with the
status of the accused; he entered the country with a visitors visa
and therefore most probably legally…there
is a High Court
application pending to set aside the decision by the refugee status
determination officer in rejecting his application
for asylum…it
appears that since then there is no progress or no movement what so
all to enrol this matter. It is difficult
not to find that this is
clearly a smoke screen in an attempt to justify his stay in the
country. As the accused stand were he
is indeed illegal in the
country.”
21.
The onus is on the state to prove that the appellant is not entitled
to be admitted to bail, and the state must prove its case
on a
balance of probabilities, except for bail applications that resorts
under section 60(11)(a) and 60(11)(b) of Act 51 of 1997
(
S v
Sithole and Others
2012 (1) SACR 586
(KZD)
). The right
to be released on bail at any stage preceding conviction is subject
to the provisions of section 50(6) as provided
in section 60(1)(a) of
Act 51 of 1977. An accused, who is aggrieved by the refusal of a
lower court to grant him or her bail, may
appeal such refusal in
terms if the provision of section 65(1)(a) of Act 51 of 1977.
22.
Section 60(4)(a)-(e) is instructive and makes the following
provision;
“
[4]
The interests of justice do not permit the release from detention of
an accused where one or more of the
following grounds are
established:
(a)
Where there is the likelihood that the accused, if he or she were
released on bail, will endanger the
safety of the public or any
particular person or will commit a Schedule 1 offence; or
(b)
where there is the likelihood that the accused, if he or she were
released on bail, will attempt to
evade his or her trial; or
(c)
where there is the likelihood that the accused, if he or she were
released on bail, will attempt
to influence or intimidate witnesses
or to conceal or destroy evidence; or
(d)
where there is the likelihood that the accused, if he or she were
released on bail, will undermine
or jeopardise the objectives or the
proper functioning of the criminal justice system, including the bail
system;
(e)
where in exceptional circumstances there is the likelihood that the
release of the accused will disturb
the public order or undermine the
public peace or security.”
23.
From the above, it is clear that bail ought to be granted, unless it
is not in the interest of justice (
S v Mwaka
2015
(2) SACR 306
(WCC)
). The Constitutional court
in
S v
Dlamini, S v Dladla and Others, S v Joubert, S v Schietekat
[1999] ZACC 8
;
1999
(2) SACR 51
(CC)
, held that the provision did not amount to a
deeming provision and did not usurp the judiciary’s
constitutionally entrenched
power to decide the question of release
on bail. The provision ought to be read in conjunction with other
provision of section
60 of Act 51 of 1977.
24.
The concept “interests of justice” is not statutorily
defined, but it meant nothing more than unusual factors that
must be
taken into consideration in bail applications (
S v De Kock
1991
(1) SACR 299
(T)
).
25.
It was required for the state to establish the existence of
jurisdictional factors stated in terms of section 60(4)(a)-(e) for
the appellant to be refused to be permitted to bail. However, it must
be noted that the grounds listed, do not mean that it is
an
exhaustive list.
26.
The appellant provided the address that he used to reside at the time
of his arrest. The lease agreement he concluded with the
owner of
that flat is no longer in place as the appellant defaulted on his
obligations to pay rental money because of his incarceration.
The
appellant also provided the address of his brother in Centurion,
which was confirmed by the Investigating Officer after he
visited
that address. He could not access the room in that address wherein it
was stated that appellant would stay in as apparently
his girlfriend
took the key to that room.
27.
Further address visited by the Investigating Officer was the address
of Melissa Motau, appellants current girlfriend who confirmed
that
the appellant was not residing at that address, but he would come and
visit there. It was argued by Mr Forbay that the Investigating
Officer was given wrong instructions when he visited that address,
because it is the appellant’s contention that the address
will
be his address if he is released on bail. This was the position
before the presiding Magistrate invoked the provisions of
section
60(3) for further leading of evidence or information.
28.
Based on that, I fail to understand why the appellant did not obtain
a further affidavit from Ms Motau confirming the version
of the
appellant, bearing in mind that the matter was adjourned to a later
date by the presiding Magistrate for that purpose. In
contention Mr
Forbay could not also give the reason as to why a further affidavit
was not obtained from Ms Motau to confirm the
appellant’s
version. At the time of hearing of the appeal matter, we only had the
affidavit of Ms Motau confirming that the
appellant is not staying at
her address, but he would come and visit.
29.
It is also not clear as to where the appellant is to reside if
released on bail. I also fail to understand why the appellant’s
brother’s address was provided if indeed the appellant was to
reside with his girlfriend if he was released on bail.
30.
The appellant’s status according to the Department of Home
Affairs is that of a person who is illegal in the country.
There is
currently nothing in the appellant’s version to gainsay that.
The review application against such decision, despite
being issued in
2022, nothing has been done to prosecute it. According to Home
Affairs records, the appellant’s application
for a temporary
residence status was rejected on the 5 March 2020, meaning that at
the time of his arrest in 2022, the appellant
knew that he was in the
country illegally. The review application was only attended to after
his arrest.
31.
Revised Consolidated Practice Directive 1 of 2024, court operations
in the Gauteng Division (with effect from 26 February 2024
amended on
12 June 2024) makes it peremptory for all notice of motion (review
application) issued to Caselines and issued on Court
Online portal.
The directive also makes it peremptory for litigants to upload
original notices to either Caselines or Court Online
(whichever
platform is applicable to the relevant case in terms of the
directive).
32.
Directive 6.9 makes the following provision;
“
[6.9] In the
event of non-compliance or partial compliance with any provision in a
statute or by a Rule of court to serve
and file court process and/or
deliver any document ancillary thereto and which is attributable to
strictness imposed by this directive,
its implications for the
litigant or litigant’s legal representatives, condonation where
required, shall be granted by a
court in respect of any shortcomings
in compliance.”
33.
No explanation has been proffered by the appellants failure to upload
documents to Caselines or Court online as prescribed by
the court’s
directives and no further steps were taken to remedy such
non-compliance, as such the case number has now been
allocated to
different parties.
34.
In
S v Acheson
1991 (2) SA 805
at 822A-B
, the
court stated that;
“
An accused person
cannot be kept in detention pending his trial as a form of
anticipatory punishment. The presumption of the law
is that he is
innocent until his guilt has been established in court. The court
will therefore ordinarily grant bail to an accused
person unless this
is likely to prejudice the ends of justice.”
35.
At the time of the arrest of the appellant drugs were found in a
garage which is under his name and control. Such drugs were
tested
and had a positive result from the forensic laboratory. The appellant
was at the time of the bail hearing not yet arraigned
on a charge of
possession of drugs. If careful consideration can be made on how the
charge of Trafficking Persons against the appellant
is crafted, it is
clear that it is alleged that, appellant is arraigned for the abuse
of vulnerability and making his victim(s)
to be “drug
depended.” It shows that the possession of drugs complete the
required elements of that particular charge.
36.
The rescued victims were not found at the appellant’s flat when
they were rescued but elsewhere in that building. DNA
results are
still outstanding and from what is presented on behalf of the state,
it is not clear as to how the appellant is linked
to the two victims
who were rescued.
37.
It might be so that when on attempt was made to bribe the
Investigating Officer, the appellant was in custody and did not
directly
participate in the commission of that offence. But the
question that needs to be answered is, what were the three arrested
individuals
going to benefit by bribing the Investigating Officer? It
is clear also from the Investigating Officer that the benefit was for
him to release the appellant and no other person arrested in the
matter.
38.
One of the people who was arrested is the brother of the appellant.
The bribery allegations arose when the Investigating Officer
went to
verify the address of the appellant in Centurion which is the
property owned by the appellant’s brother who was eventually
arrested together with his wife. It is also the Investigating
officer’s evidence that when he was obtaining the warning
statement from the appellant, he requested the Investigating Officer
to assist him and he construed that to mean that he wanted
him to do
something wrong, “helping him to get out of it or to pay him.”
39.
It is therefore my considered view that the presiding Magistrate did
not misdirect himself when making a finding that the appellant
was in
the country illegally. Further that he does not have a confirmed
address, and it is not known where he will be staying if
released on
bail. Finally, that the state has a strong case against the appellant
and there is no need for this court to interfere
with such finding.
This appeal ought to fail.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is made;
1.
Appeal against the refusal of the Magistrate to release the appellant
on bail is hereby refused.
M.J. MOSOPA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT :
MR
FORBAY
INSTRUCTED
BY :
FORBAY
ATTORNEYS INC
FOR
THE RESPONDENT :
ADVOCATE
ROOS
INSTRUCTED
BY :
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Date
of Hearing :
25
October 2024
Date
of Judgment :
29
November 2024
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