Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 135South Africa
Van Aswegen v District Magistrate Atlantis and Another (15846/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 135 (20 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Van Aswegen v District Magistrate Atlantis and Another (15846/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 135 (20 May 2024)
Van Aswegen v District Magistrate Atlantis and Another (15846/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 135 (20 May 2024)
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sino date 20 May 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
CASE NUMBER:
15846/2023
In the matter between:
SUSAN
VAN
ASWEGEN
Applicant
And
THE
DISTRICT MAGISTRATE, ATLANTIS
First
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second
Respondent
WESTERN CAPE
Date Heard: 06 May
2024
Date Judgment
delivered electronically: 20 May 2024
JUDGMENT
NZIWENI, J:
Introduction and
background
[1]
This is a review brought in terms of
section 21 (1) (b) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (“the
Act”). The applicant
who initiated this review application, is
currently standing trial in the District Court, Atlantis (“court
a quo”),
facing charges of defeating or obstructing the
administration of justice. The trial is currently partly heard at the
stage where
the State has closed its case.
[2]
Following the completion of the
State’s case before the first respondent (“the
magistrate”), the applicant applied
for the discharge in terms
of section 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act, Act 51 of 1977 (“the
CPA”). The application
for the discharge was premised on the
grounds that the second respondent (“the State”) had
failed to prove the elements
of the crime as set out in the charge
sheet.
[3]
At the conclusion of the parties’
oral submissions for and against the discharge, the magistrate
reserved judgment on the
application and postponed the proceedings
for his ruling. Eventually in reaching his decision, the magistrate
refused the application
for the discharge on the grounds that he was
satisfied that the State has made out a case against the applicant.
At this point
in the proceedings, the magistrate also indicated that
his reasons for his decision would be delivered later in the main
judgment.
[4]
Pursuant to the refusal by the magistrate
to discharge the applicant in terms of section 174, she [the
applicant] approached this
Court seeking to review and to set aside
the court a quo’s decision. As part of this review, in
terms of section 21
of the Act, the applicant also seeks that this
Court should exercise its powers in terms of section 304 (2) (c) (iv)
of the CPA
and substitute the court a quo’s ruling with an
order for her discharge in terms of section 174.
[5]
The magistrate has delivered a notice
to abide. On the other hand, the State vehemently opposes this
application. Due to this
review application, the trial proceedings
before the magistrate were adjourned pending this Court’s
decision.
[6]
According to the applicant’s heads of
argument, this Court has jurisdiction to hear and determine this
review by reason of
sections 21 and 22 of the Act and section 173 of
the Constitution Act 108 of 1996 (“the Constitution”).
The proceedings before
the magistrate
[7]
During the trial, the State in its
endeavours to prove its case against the applicant, presented
evidence of two witnesses.
The witnesses who testified against
the appellant were the witnesses who were present at the time of the
incident.
[8]
I am going to give the barest outline of
the evidence led during the trial as this is a review application of
an impending trial.
[9]
The facts relevant to this Court’s
determination are as follows. On 17 August 2021, Captain Els and
Captain Van Aardt from
Polokwane Hawks division and other uniformed
officers, travelled from Polokwane to the house of the applicant to
arrest the applicant’s
husband.
[10]
Captain Els had the original warrant of
arrest in his possession. Captain Els handed the original warrant of
execution to the applicant
and enquired about the whereabouts of the
applicant’s husband. The applicant, after being handed the
search warrant told
the officers that it was invalid and tore it up
(“the incident”).
[11]
Captain Els testified during evidence in
chief that due to the actions of the applicant, he could not continue
further with the
arrest of the suspect due to the fact that the
warrant was destroyed. Later that evening, he received a call from
the applicant
informing him that her husband was going to hand
himself over at their offices in Polokwane. When he ultimately
arrested the suspect
in Polokwane, he did that without a warrant.
[12]
Shortly thereafter [the incident] the
applicant was charged with the defeating or obstructing the
administration of justice. The
charge gave rise to the impugned
trial proceedings, in which the applicant, who was duly legally
represented, pleaded not guilty
to defeating or obstructing the
administration of justice.
[13]
As mentioned previously, after the
magistrate’s decision, and before the applicant made an
election on whether to testify
or not; the applicant brought an
application before the court a
quo
to adjourn the impugned trial proceedings in order to launch this
review application. The trial proceedings were then adjourned
pending the finalisation of this review application.
Applicant’s
Submission
[14]
From the submissions made on behalf of the
applicant, it was argued that the evidence presented by the State was
not sufficient
to sustain a conviction on the charge preferred
against the applicant. It is further suggested on applicant’s
behalf that
the court a
quo
abused its discretion by refusing to grant the application for the
discharge.
[15]
During the hearing of this application, it
was strenuously contended on applicant’s behalf that the trial
record bears it
out that Captain Els [one of the state witnesses]
conceded that he did not make any attempts to arrest the husband of
the applicant
after the warrant was torn. It was also contended on
applicant’s behalf that this Court, sitting as a review court,
has a
jurisdiction to hear the matter because the court a
quo
totally ignored evidence that should
have led to a discharge of the applicant.
[16]
It has been strongly asserted on
applicant’s behalf that, if regard is had to the evidence that
was placed before the court
a
quo
,
it is evident that a gross irregularity was committed by the
magistrate, because the evidence contained in the record warrants
the
granting of the application for discharge. It was contended that the
evidence did not rise to the level to show that the State
had made
out
prima facie
evidence against the applicant.
[17]
According to the applicant, the record does
not indicate any iota of evidence indicating the commission of the
offence for which
the applicant is charged. Additionally, it was
argued that the evidence led by the State was insufficient to prove
the intent to
defeat the administration of justice. It was further
contended on applicant’s behalf that the warrant under which
the state
witnesses wanted to execute the arrest was invalid.
[18]
It was then argued that the magistrate
committed a legal error by refusing to discharge the applicant. Thus,
it was submitted on
behalf of the applicant that there is no evidence
on which a reasonable court could convict in relation to the charge
or a lesser
charge.
[19]
Lastly it is argued by the applicant that
the submissions made in support of this application are bolstered by
the outcome of the
Legal Practice Council’s investigations into
the facts of this case. So, the argument continues; it is difficult
to imagine
circumstances wherein a reasonable court would find that
there is sufficient evidence for an accused person to answer to a
State’s
case when a legal professional body found the same
allegations to not even warrant a disciplinary hearing.
[20]
In respect of the Magistrates conduct
during the trial, amongst others, it is contended that the
magistrate’s conduct was
concerning on 15 September 2023; when
he refused to grant a postponement, despite the fact that the State
was amenable to the postponement
which was sought by the applicant.
In the head of argument on behalf of the applicant, this conduct by
the magistrate in refusing
a postponement is described as bizarre and
clearly prejudicial to the applicant. It is further submitted
on applicant’s
behalf that the magistrate’s conduct does
not accord with the conduct of ‘a dispassionate presiding
officer who presides
over properly conducted criminal proceedings’.
[21]
By contrast, it was submitted on behalf of
the State that, amongst others, if the applicant asserts that the
magistrate’s
ruling was not justified given that, in their
view, the evidence led by the State did not support the charge the
applicant is facing;
then the correct route for the applicant to
follow is an appeal route not a review route.
Section 174
[22]
A section 174 procedure involves a scenario
that many accused persons in a trial will encounter. The procedure
laid out by section
174 is a common feature in criminal trials. It is
recognised, without citation of authority, that a section 174
procedure is an
interlocutory procedure. It is unnecessary for me to
set out in detail the law which governs applications in terms of
section 174
and the test applicable at the close of the State’s
case. The test at the close of the State case has been repeated by
our
courts on numerous occasions. Thus, the law on this subject is
settled.
[23]
It is important to bear in mind that a
court seized with an application in terms of section 174, in deciding
whether to grant it
or not, the test is not whether a reasonable
court would find the accused guilty beyond reasonable doubt. At this
stage of the
proceedings the court does not reach a definitive
determination that the finding leads it to conclude that the accused
is guilty.
Hence, the application is interlocutory. The court has to
still decide later on in the proceedings as to whether the State has
discharged the burden necessary to secure the guilt of an accused
person.
[24]
At the same time, however, it is important
to remember that before the conclusion of the trial the decision
whether there is any
evidence on each material element of the
offence, should be left to the trier of facts. Of course, this is to
avoid piecemeal adjudication
and protracted costly delays of a trial.
[25]
Against that background, before considering
anything, this Court will consider first the question as to whether
the decisions of
the magistrate to refuse to discharge the applicant
is susceptible to a review.
[26]
This is so because the issue of whether
this is a case in which review proceedings lie, may be dispositive of
this review application.
In order to decide that, I have to consider
the grounds of this application, and specifically the legal
principles related to this
question.
Is a refusal to grant
a discharge reviewable?
[27]
The different grounds relied upon by
applicant for the relief sought are the following:
a.
no reasonable presiding officer, acting
carefully within the specific circumstances of the matter, would have
dismissed the discharge
application; and
b.
Magistrate’s conduct during the
proceedings.
[28]
Consequently, at this juncture, this Court’s power to
decide this review hinges on the
question of
whether the applicant in the circumstances of this case can review a
refusal to discharge her at the close of the State’s
case.
Applicant’s counsel submitted that the magistrate’s
discharge constituted gross irregularity and his finding
constitutes
a deviation from constitutional criminal law norm that one would have
expected in properly conducted trial.
[29]
I wish to repeat here what I have indicated
before; it is the role of the magistrate as a trier of facts to
decide whether the evidence
presented establishes the elements of the
charge. When a court, during an application in terms of section 174,
makes a finding
that is contrary to the expectations of an accused
person, that does not make the decision of the presiding officer
reviewable.
Even assuming for the purpose of argument, but not for
deciding, that the decision of the presiding officer is wrong, I am
afraid,
the decision stands.
[30]
It is, therefore, not open to this Court to
determine that the discretion should have been exercised differently.
Simply stated,
when a magistrate refused to discharge an accused in
terms of section 174, it is not for the review court to review the
exercise
of the discretion of the magistrate if the grounds mentioned
under section 22 of the Act are absent.
As previously mentioned,
this is the case even if the exercise of the discretion is erroneous.
Simply put, even if this Court disagrees
with the decision of the
magistrate, it has to defer to him if the grounds for review
mentioned in
section
22 are not satisfied.
[31]
It is important to note that a discharge of
an accused at the close of the State’s case, notwithstanding
the fact that there
is evidence before the court upon which a
reasonable court can convict; is in complete contrast to a situation
where the trial
court refuses to discharge an accused person in terms
of section 174 of the Act.
[32]
This is so,
inter
alia
, because at the close of the
State’s case the accused may elect to present evidence or may
choose to close his or her case
without tendering evidence
.
[33]
Applicant’s reliance on the case of
Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg v Regional Magistrate, Krugersdorp
AA
2018 (1) SACR 93
(GJ), in arguing that a review application lies
in this case is misplaced. The Regional Magistrate, Krugersdorp case
postulates
a scenario where the prosecution took a discharge of an
accused on review. This is obviously distinguishable from the instant
case.
The mischief in that case was directed at the gross
irregularity committed by the trial court, in its application of the
law. Clearly, if a presiding officer short-circuits proceedings at
the close of the State’s case and there is evidence upon
which
a reasonable court can convict, that is a gross irregularity, and it
is contrary to the provisions of section 174.
Importantly,
it is a gross irregularity not to apply the law evenhandedly and as
it is supposed to be applied.
[34]
Furthermore, by contrast to this matter, in the matter of
Regional Magistrate, Krugersdorp
,
the conduct of the magistrate brought the proceedings to a definite
termination. As a consequence, the magistrate’s decision
[in
the matter of
Regional Magistrate,
Krugersdorp
] finally disposed of the
issues between the accused and the State.
[35]
In this matter, I agree with the
submissions made on behalf of the State that the applicant is calling
upon this Court to examine
the trial court's exercise of its
discretion. For instance, amongst others, it was argued on
behalf of the applicant that
the State did not present evidence as to
the intention of the applicant when she tore the warrant of arrest.
[36]
It is a well-known fact that the intention
of an accused person is rarely proven through direct evidence. In
this regard, it is
true, of course, that generally the State relies
on the surrounding circumstances from which the intent of an accused
person may
be inferred. Thus, the conduct of an accused person may
give an insight into his or her intentions. In other words, the court
can
infer intention from the conduct of an accused person. One thing
this Court cannot do, is to usurp the functions of the trial court
in
weighing evidence and drawing inferences.
[37]
By its nature, the application to review
a decision to refuse to discharge an accused person in terms of
section 174 refusal would
be rare. This is borne out by the
fact that it is very difficult to find jurisprudence directly to the
point to support the
stance that the applicant desires this Court to
take. Little wonder the applicant’s counsel could not bring to
this Court’s
attention jurisprudence directly bearing on the
issue.
[38]
In the context of this case, I find it
necessary to enumerate the several grounds upon which a review can be
brought. In terms
Section 22 of the Act, proceedings stemming
from the magistrate court may be brought under review before a court
of a division
only on the following grounds:
“
. . .
(a) absence of jurisdiction on the part of the court;
(b) interest in the
cause, bias, malice or corruption on the part of the presiding
judicial officer;
(c) gross irregularity in
the proceedings; and
(d) the admission of
inadmissible or incompetent evidence or the rejection of admissible
or competent evidence.”
[39]
A careful reading of section 22 (1) (c) of
the Act, suggests that the gravity of an irregularity contemplated in
section 22 is relevant
as evinced by the use of the word ‘gross’.
As a consequence, a twofold question becomes. First, whether the
magistrate
acted irregularly during the trial and if so, whether such
irregularities are sufficient enough to vitiate the proceedings.
[40]
In
LAWSA Vol 5
paragraph 61, the authors state the following:
“
An
incorrect judgment is not an irregularity; an irregularity refers to
the method of conducting the trial and, to be gross, it
must be of
such a serious nature that the case was not fully and fairly
determined.”
[41]
First and foremost, even if this Court is
of the view that the evidence before the magistrate does not satisfy
the elements of the
crime, this court cannot interfere with the
discretion of the trier of facts.
[42]
This assertion by the State
finds support in the case of
Ebrahim v
Minister of Justice
2000 (2) SACR 173
at 175F-H, the following is stated:
“
.
. . [A]s I already said, if the magistrate’s ruling was not
justified by the evidence before him, this is a matter for appeal,
not review. Of course, such an appeal can only be brought at the end
of the case as a whole and not now before the applicant has
closed
his case. As the applicant has not produced any proof of any
irregularity in the conduct of the trial, there is no basis
whatsoever for the present application . . .”
[43]
Du Toit et al
in
the
Commentary on the Criminal Procedure
Act
, Service 70, 2023, ch 22 p123 state
the following on reviewability of a refusal to grant a discharge of
an accused person:
“
Where
an application for discharge at the end of the State’s case is
refused there are no grounds for review where there is
no proof of an
irregularity in the conduct of a trial . . . It was held in Director
of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng Local Division,
Johannesburg v
Regional Magistrate, Krugersdorp & another
2018 (1) SACR 93
(GJ)
that
the State
is entitled to bring a review of an unwarranted discharge by a
magistrate where it constitutes a gross irregularity in the
proceedings
as understood within the provisions of
s 22
(1) (c) of
the
Superior Courts Act
. . . In that case the facts were such that
‘no reasonable presiding officer could have granted a
discharge’,
and the ‘deviation
from the norm [was] such that that one would not have expected it in
a properly conducted criminal trial
’.
. . In Namibia it has been held that a higher tribunal may interfere
with a decision to discharge an accused
only
if the judicial officer, in deciding that the requisite facts or
state of affairs existed, acted mala fide from ulterior motive
or
failed to apply his or her mind to the matter.”
Emphasis
added.
[44]
As these above-mentioned cases well show,
as far as reviewability of a decision of a magistrate to refuse a
discharge of an accused
person is concerned; it is clear that a
different approach applies. Plainly, the courts have slammed the door
on such review if
it falls outside the grounds stated in section 22
of the Act.
[45]
Ms Du Toit on applicant’s behalf
strenuously submitted that the magistrate’s dismissal of the
applicant’s application
for discharge on the basis that “the
State made out a case against you” constitutes a gross
irregularity in terms of
section 22 (1) (c) of the Act.
[46]
In
Doyle v
Shenker and Co Ltd
1915 AD 233
, the
court stated the following regarding what constitutes gross
irregularity:
“
There
is no need to attempt a definition of that expression: it must be
allowed to speak for itself. The question is whether it
can be
applied to the matter before us. Now a mere mistake of law in
adjudicating upon a suit which the magistrate has jurisdiction
to try
cannot be called an irregularity in the proceedings. Otherwise, a
review would lie in every case in which the decision depends
upon a
legal issue, and the distinction between procedure by appeal and
procedure by review, so carefully by statute and observed
in
practice, would largely disappear. Yet in this case it is a mistake
of law alone which is relied upon as constituting gross
irregularity.”
[47]
Clearly, for an error in law to be a ground
of review it must also be material enough or fundamentally erroneous
as to render the
magistrate’s decision nugatory. The
applicant’s assertion of an error in law simply states that the
magistrate committed
a clear error in law.
[48]
Obviously, there is a difference between an
error in law and a material error in law. There is nothing from
the part of the
applicant to indicate how this error in law relates
to the matter in issue at the time of the evidence. In the present
matter,
there is no iota of evidence to attest to the fact that the
comment of the magistrate is central to the case against the
applicant.
As I mentioned earlier, at that juncture the magistrate,
when he posed the question, was engaging the applicant’s
counsel.
In my mind, the exchange between the magistrate and the
applicant’s counsel did not lead to the magistrate to lose his
objectivity.
Nothing turns on the questions that were posed to the
applicant’s counsel by the magistrate, that warrants it to be
treated
as an irregularity or an error in law. I am fortified in this
view by the following case.
[49]
In
Seedat v
Arai and Another
1984 (2) 198C-D, the
following was stated:
“
In
my view a mistake, to qualify as such for the purposes . . . must
relate to and be based on something relevant to the question
to be
decided by the Court at the time, or to something in the procedure
adopted. It can never be founded on material which is
irrelevant at
the time of the grant of the judgment sought to be set aside.”
After considering the
submissions, this Court can also not find that there is evidence that
the magistrate acted in bad faith or
as prejudicial against the
applicant in refusing the application. For that matter, the said
irregularities are not of such serious
nature that they could result
to an unfair trial.
[50]
Much was also made about the magistrate’s
conduct that supported the contention that his finding constitutes a
deviation from
a constitutional criminal law norm. According to
applicant’s counsel, when the magistrate posed a certain
question when she
was putting the version of the applicant to the
Sate witnesses,
constituted an error in
law and a lack of understanding
of the
requisite elements of the offence of defeating or obstructing the
administration of justice. It boggles one’s mind
as to how a
question by the court can constitute an error in law and a lack of
understanding of the law. Particularly, if the questions
do not imply
a finding of guilt. Much of the fault found with the magistrate does
not amount to an irregularity. The remarks made
by the magistrate
were mostly when the applicant’s counsel was cross examining a
state witness. For instance, when applicant’s
counsel was cross
examining Captain Els [state witness] the counsel asked him about the
validity of the warrant he wanted to execute.
It was also put to him
that it was rational for the applicant to tell them that the arrest
was unlawful as the applicant was aware
of the facts. When this
assertion was made, the magistrate commented as follows:
“
[t]herefore
she can take the law into her own hands”. The applicant counsel
respondent as follows: “we will get to that
part, Your
worship.”
[51]
Another instance was when the magistrate
posed the following question:
“
So,
until it is cancelled it remains a legal valid document . . .”
After the applicant’s
counsel responded to the question, the magistrate responded as
follows:
“
.
. . [m]ine was just to clarify the legal position that I have allowed
you to go on in your cross- examination on the basis that
this J50 is
invalid and that is why I asked you whether that is a fact or not.”
[52]
In my mind, most of the questions asked
by the magistrate during the cross examination of Captain Els were
questions aimed at engaging
the applicant’s counsel or seeking
clarity. It is also my view that the questions raised by the
magistrate to the applicant’s
counsel had factual relevance in
her cross examination of the state witness.
[53]
One final point bears mentioning. The material
that was relevant at the time of considering the application for
discharge was the
evidence that was presented by the State at the
close of the State’s case, not the comments made by the
magistrate.
[54]
Even if the magistrate committed an error in
law, that on its own does not make the decision reviewable . But it
may be appealable.
The upshot of this is that an applicant who
relies on an error in law to review a decision taken in terms of
section 174,
would have to show that this
error
materially affected the outcome of the decision reached by the
magistrate
. It bears noting,
however, that in the present case, for instance, gleaning from the
record, there is absolutely nothing to show
that the decision of the
magistrate borders on being absurd.
[55]
I am well alive to the fact that
irregularities in a trial may come in different shapes and forms.
Hence, irregularity in a case
depends on its facts and has to be
decided on a case-by-case basis. However, in the instant case, I am
not convinced that the magistrate
committed any act as envisaged by
the provisions of section 22 of the Act.
[56]
For that matter, I am of the view that the
magistrate did not commit any irregularity in the instant case. The
occurrences mentioned
by the applicant, merely relate to the
peripheral aspects of the case and not central to the case against
the applicant. Even
when the magistrate was engaging the
applicant’s counsel. All the incidents mentioned, do not even
come close to create an
apprehension of unfairness in the case, as
suggested.
[57]
This is especially true, when regard is had
to the record, particularly the evidence of the State witnesses;
there is nothing to
suggest that the alleged irregularities pointed
out by the applicant separately or cumulatively had any influence or
effect on
the ruling by the magistrate.
[58]
Additionally, pursuant to the perusal of the
record, I am clearly of the view that it does not disclose
any irregularity
that would render the decision to refuse the
discharge irregular as contemplated by the provisions of section 22.
Accordingly,
the applicant’s reliance on the case of
S
v Lubaxa
2002 (2) All SA 107
(A) (25
September 2001), is also misplaced.
[59]
For these reasons I make the following
order:
1.
The application is dismissed;
2.
The matter is remitted back to the
magistrate to continue with the trial; and
3.
There is no order as to costs.
__________________
C.
N. NZIWENI
Judge
of the High Court
I
agree
______________________
R PARKER
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Appearances
On
behalf of Applicant: Adv A Du Toit
Instructed
by: VA Attorneys and Conveyancers
On
behalf of the respondent: Adv S. M. Galloway
Instructed
by: Director of Public Prosecutions
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