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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 688
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## Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng, Pretoria v Molefe and Another (A280/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 688 (5 September 2022)
Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng, Pretoria v Molefe and Another (A280/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 688 (5 September 2022)
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sino date 5 September 2022
# INTHEHIGHCOURTOFSOUTHAFRICA
IN
THE
HIGH
COURT
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
# GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
## Case
number: A280/2021
Case
number: A280/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES/NO
5
SEPTEMEBER 2022
In
the matter between:
# THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
# GAUTENG,
PRETORIA APPELANT
GAUTENG,
PRETORIA APPELANT
And
# THATO
MOLEFE
FIRST
RESPONDENT
THATO
MOLEFE
FIRST
RESPONDENT
# ZENZILE
NDABA SECOND
RESPONDENT
ZENZILE
NDABA SECOND
RESPONDENT
## Delivered:
this judgment was prepared and authored by the judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically and by
circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of his matteron Caselines. The date for h
nding down is deemed to be 05 September 2022.
Delivered:
this judgment was prepared and authored by the judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically and by
circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of his matter
on Caselines. The date for h
nding down is deemed to be 05 September 2022
.
JUDGEMENT
# PHAHLAMOHLAKA
AJ.
PHAHLAMOHLAKA
AJ.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an appeal against the
judgement and order by the Learned Regional Magistrate at Vereeniging
dated 29 September 2019 whereby
the two Respondents were found not
guilty and discharged in terms of Section 174 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (CPA).
[2]
This appeal is in tenns of Section 310
of the CPA on the question of law in that the Learned Magistrate
ruled that the evidence
of search and seizure was inadmissible,
thereby acquitting the respondents. Section 310 the CPA provides as
follows:
“
when
a lower court has in criminal proceedings given a decision in favour
of the accused on any question of law, including an order
made under
section 85(2), the Attorney-General or, if a body or a person other
than the Attorney-General or his representative,
was the prosecutor
in the proceedings, then such other prosecutor may require the
judicial
officer
concerned
to
state a case for the consideration of the provincial or local
division having jurisdiction, setting forth the question of law
and
his decision
thereon
and,
if evidence
has been heard,
his
findings of fact,
in
so
far
as
they are material to the question of
law."
BACKGROUND
[3]
The respondents were charged with the
following offences:
3.1
Contravention of section 3(b) and
section 5(b)
of the
Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992
; and
3.2
Contravention of
section 3
and
section
90
of Act 60 of 2000.
[4]
The charges were put to the appellants and the both pleaded not
guilty to all the
charges. The prosecutor called one witness, warrant
officer Andre Van Schalkwyk but before he could conclude his
testimony, the
State applied for a trial within a trial to determine
the validity of the search warrant and the admissibility of the
evidence
obtained as a result of the search warrant. After the trial
within a trial, the Learned Regional Magistrate found that the search
warrant was invalid and therefore the evidence regarding the search
and seizure was consequently inadmissible. The prosecutor informed
the Learned Magistrate that, that was the only evidence at the
disposal of the state and he closed the State's case. The respondents
were discharged in terms of the provisions of section 174 of the CPA,
and the prosecutor did not oppose the acquittal of the respondents.
[5]
On 13 October 2020 the appellant filed a
request for the Learned Magistrate
to
state a case wherein the appellant raised the following questions of
law, which the Learned Magistrate responded to on 17 October
2020.
5.1
Did the regional court magistrate
properly deal with the application of section 21 and 23 of the CPA to
the proven facts?
5.2
Did the regional magistrate have
jurisdiction
to
make a finding that the search warrant is invalid, despite the search
warrant not having been set aside by a high court?
5.3
Did the regional court magistrate
properly deal with all the legal issues, in particular, the
application of section 35(5) of the
Constitution regarding
admissibility of evidence?
5.4
Did
the
regional
court
magistrate
properly
interpret
the
judgment
in
S
v
Malherbe 2020
[1]
and
apply it to the facts before him?
[6]
The
appellant now appeals against the ruling of the magistrate in the
trial within a trial, not to admit evidence seized during
the search
and subsequently
the
acquittal of the respondents in terms of
section 174
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act
[2
].
[7]
There are three aspects raised by the
appellant as misdirection on the part of the Learned Magistrate and
they are:
7.1
That the Learned Magistrate erred in not
ruling that the evidence was inadmissible in terms of
section 23(1)
(a) of the CPA;
7.2
That
the Learned Magistrate erred by not admitting the evidence in terms
of section 35(5) of the Constitution
[3]
.
7.3
That
the
Learned
Magistrate
erred
by
incorrectly
interpreting
and
applying
the
decision of
S
v
Malherbe.
[4]
# RESERVED
QUESTIONS OF LAW
RESERVED
QUESTIONS OF LAW
[8]
At the commencement of the proceedings
counsel for the appellant informed the court that the appellant was
abandoning its argument
regarding section 23 (1) (a). The only issues
for determination by this court are therefore, whether the Learned
Magistrate erred
by not admitting the evidence in terms of section
35(5) of the Constitution and whether
the learned magistrate properly and
correctly interpreted
S
v
Malherbe.
THE
LEGAL POSITION
[9]
Section 35(5) of the Constitution
provides as follows:
"Evidence
obtained in
a
manner
that violates any right in the Bill of Rights must be excluded if the
admission of that evidence would render the trial unfair
or otherwise
be detrimental
to
the administration of justice"
[10]
Mbatha JA said the following in
Ma/herbe
supra
at
paragraph 9:
"The
magistrate should have held that the search warrant
was
issued unlawfully and was invalid. On
that basis none of the material seized under the warrant would have
been admissible."
EVALUATION
[11]
From the facts of this case, it is not
in dispute that warrant officer Van Schalkwyk was in possession of a
defective search warrant
when he, together with his colleague
searched the premises and ultimately arrested the respondents. Van
Schalkwyk did not bring
it to the attention of the respondents that
he was in possession of search warrant which was bearing a wrong
address. Van Schalkwyk's
behaviour when effecting the arrest leaves
much to be desired.
[12]
The question is whether evidence obtained under those circumstances
should be declared admissible,
despite Van Schalkwyk behaving in the
manner in which he did. More so, Van Schalkwyk did not properly
explain the Constitutional
rights to the respondents during their
arrest. I am of the view that the Learned Magistrate correctly found
that the evidence found
in that manner should not be admissible.
[13]
The respondents' rights are protected in
terms section 35(5) of the Constitution which provides that the
evidence can only be admissible
if it will not render the trial
unfair or otherwise be detrimental to the administration of justice.
[14]
Counsel for the respondents correctly
argued that our courts have followed a process of two stage enquiry
in determining the admissibility
of evidence in terms of section
35(5) of the Constitution. He further argued that in all cases where
the courts excluded evidence
in terms of section 35(5), it was
because police's actions were egregious and they acted in bad faith
and with a flagrant and deliberate
disregard of the Constitutional
rights of the suspects.
[15]
In
S
v
Mthembu
[5]
the
evidence was excluded because the suspect was tortured.
Cameron
JA said the following in paragraph 32:
'the
notable feature of the Constitution's specific exclusionary provision
is that it does not provide for automatic exclusion of
unconstitutionally obtained evidence. Evidence must be excluded only
if (a) it renders the trial unfair; or (b) is otherwise detrimental
to the administration of justice. This entails that admitting
impugned evidence could damage the administration of justice in ways
that would leave the fairness of the trial intact: but where the
admitting the evidence renders the trial itself unfair, the
administration
of justice is always damaged. Differently put,
evidence must be excluded in all cases where its admission is
detrimental to the
administration of justice, including subset of
cases
where
it renders the trial unfair. The provision plainly envisages cases
where evidence should be excluded for broad public policy
reasons
beyond
fairness
to
the individual accused."
[16]
In
S
v
TandiNa and Others
[6]
statements
made by accused 6 were excluded because he had been assaulted.
Counsel for the respondents referred to
S
v Lachman
[7]
and
Dos
Santos and another v The
State
[8]
,
among
others. It is my view that all the authorities referred to herein
supports the Learned Magistrate's decision of declaring
the evidence
obtained when the search was conducted inadmissible. It is apparent
that the admission of evidence obtained in the
manner in which it
was, when the search was conducted would have the effect of rendering
the trial unfair to the respondents.
[17]
This brings me to the aspect of the
proper interpretation of the
Malherbe
judgment. The principle in the
said judgment is that the magistrate should have held that the search
warrant was issued unlawfully
and therefore invalid. In this case it
is common cause that the search warrant
was invalid and that much was conceded
by the appellant. In terms of
Malherbe
judgment on the basis that the
search warrant was invalid, the court held that the material seized
under the warrant would have
been inadmissible.
[18]
Counsel for the respondents correctly argued that our courts have to
follow a process of a two
stage enquiry in determining the
admissibility of evidence in terms of section 35(5) of the
Constitution, That, in all cases where
the courts excluded evidence
in terms of section 35(5) of the Constitution, it was because the
police conduct was egregious and
they acted in bad faith and with
flagrant and deliberate disregard of the constitutional rights of the
suspect.
[19]
In this case, the Learned Magistrate in
my view was correct in holding that the evidence of the material
obtained at the premises
was inadmissible. The Leaned Magistrate
therefore correctly interpreted the
Malherbe
judgment. In any event, the
Constitutional rights of the respondents were flagrantly and
deliberately ignored when they were not
informed, firstly, of the
existence
of
the search warrant but most importantly, about their rights as
suspects.
[20]
Even if the court were to find the
Learned Magistrate misdirected himself, which I find he did not, the
appellant has an elephant
in the room. After the Learned Magistrate
made his ruling, the state prosecutor without provocation, closed the
State's case.
In
my view, the issues raised by the appellant are therefore moot.
[21]
Counsel for the appellant argued that
the State did not have any other remedy but to close the State's case
after the magistrate
had made a ruling regarding the search and
seizure. That argument is unfortunately without merit and inherently
baseless.
[22]
I cannot find any
authority that provides
that the State cannot review
the decision of a magistrate under the
similar circumstances of this case, although parties are discouraged
to take matters on review
whilst the trial is ongoing. This is a
classical case where the State could have reviewed the decision of
the Learned Magistrate.
[23]
I agree with counsel for the second
respondent that the appellant wants this court to assist it in
reopening its case but it does
this under the veil of an application
in terms of section 310 of the CPA.
# CONCLUSION
CONCLUSION
[24]
In light of the aforesaid I am of the
view that the appellant has not made out a case for the relief sought
Consequently,
the appeal should fail.
[25]
In the result I make the following
order:
## Theappealisdismissed.
The
appeal
is
dismissed.
K
PHAHLAMOHLAKA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I
AGREE
PD.
PHAHLANE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
JUDGMENT
RESERVED ON
:16
March 2022
FOR
THE APPELLANT
:
ADVOCATE
MASHUGA
INSTRUCTED
BY
:DPP, GAUTENG, PRETORIA
FOR
1
st
RESPONDENT
:ADVOCATE J HUYSAMEN
INSTRUCTED
BY
:V M MASHELE ATTORNEYS
E-MAIL
ADDRESS
:
vmmashele@gmail.com
FOR
2
nd
RESPONDENT :ADVOCATE
J
D
PRETORIUS
E-MAIL
ADDRESS
:
jd.pretorius@zmail.co.za
INSTRCTED
BY
:V M MASHELE ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
:05 SEPTEMBER 2022
[1]
(1) SACR 227 (SCA).
[2]
Act 51 of 1977
[3]
108 of 1996
[4]
Supra
2020(1) SACR 227 (SCA)
[5]
2008{2) SACR 404 (SCA)
[6]
2008(1) SACR 613 (SCA)
[7]
2010 (2) SACR 52 (SCA)
[8]
2010 (2) SACR 382(SCA)
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