Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 70South Africa
Van Der Schyff v S (A94/22) [2023] ZAWCHC 70 (4 April 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Van Der Schyff v S (A94/22) [2023] ZAWCHC 70 (4 April 2023)
Van Der Schyff v S (A94/22) [2023] ZAWCHC 70 (4 April 2023)
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sino date 4 April 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: A94/22
In
the matter between
FARIED
VAN DER SCHYFF
APPELLANT
AND
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Date of Hearing:
22 March 2023
Date of Judgment:
04 April 2023 (to be delivered via email to the respective counsel)
JUDGMENT
THULARE J
[1]
This is an opposed appeal against the decision of the magistrate to
grant appellant bail. The appellant is accused 1 of 9 accused.
The
State opposed the appeal primarily on two grounds. The first was the
likelihood that the appellant would endanger the safety
of the fiscus
and that he will commit a schedule 1 offence as envisaged in section
60(4)(a) of the Criminal Procedure Act, 1977
(Act No. 51 of 1977)
(the CPA). The second was the likelihood that the appellant would
undermine or joepardise the objectives or
proper functioning of the
criminal justice system including the bail system as envisaged in
section 60(4) (d) of the CPA.
[2]
The issue was whether the magistrate was wrong to refuse to grant the
appellant to bail.
[3]
The South African Revenue Services (SARS) identified linked corporate
entities registered as Tax vendors and claimed VAT refunds,
which
refunds could not be substantiated. The entities were managed as car
dealerships or businesses in the property or building
industry and
variously associated with members of the Modack family. These vendors
followed a similar method of procedure which
entailed the submission
of false information via the e-filing system initially on VAT returns
and subsequently on substantiating
documentation. Once the bi-monthly
VAT201 returns were submitted SARS would issue an automated request
for substantiating information.
Sometimes a revised return reflecting
lesser refund amounts would be submitted and on other occasions a VAT
schedule or invoices
would be uploaded to substantiate. Many of these
entities existed in name only and the only activity in the business
bank accounts
were the receipt of VAT refunds. In others there were
some actual business dealings which were not nearly sufficient to
justify
the magnitude of the VAT expenses claimed.
[4]
Where documents were submitted in support of VAT refunds claimed, the
schedules or invoices contained false information. Many
of the
entities ostensibly had the primary purpose of obtain g VAT refunds.
The aim of these scheme was to obtain VAT refunds from
SARS to which
the entities were not entitled. In some instances SARS paid out the
refunds either based solely on the initial VAT201
submitted or on the
substantiating documentation provided. In other instances the refunds
were disallowed. Where the amounts were
disallowed the vendors only
pursued some but never with sufficiently verifiable documentation.
Where the refunds were paid into
the bank account of a particular VAT
vendor the monies were quickly moved or transferred to various other
accounts effectively
concealing or disguising the source thereof. As
a result of the scheme SARS faced potential prejudice in the amount
of R219 352
743-00. SARS paid out some of the refunds claimed and
suffered actual prejudice in the amount of R46 651 794-00.
[5]
The State alleged that the appellant was one of the two kingpins
essential to the success of the operation of the criminal syndicate
which ran the scheme. He was largely responsible for the submission
of the false VAT returns and supporting documentation. He traded
as
VDS Financial Services & Advisors. He was for a period registered
with SARS as a tax practitioner and was appointed the
tax
practitioner for most of the entities and provided financial services
to the vendors involved. He was also registered as an
e-filer in
respect of most of the entities in the scheme and was responsible for
the submission of most of the VAT201 returns and
for uploading most
of the invoices submitted to SARS.
[6]
The appellant and his co-accused faced 711 charges. Counts 1 to 3
were alleged contraventions of the Prevention of Organised
Crime Act
121 of 1998 (POCA) in relation to the management of and participation
in the activities of the criminal enterprise. Counts
4 to 285 were
offences in relation to the submission of false VAT returns to SARS
to unlawfully claim VAT refunds. Counts 286 -645
were offences in
relation to the preparation and submission of false invoices and/or
schedules to substantiate the unlawfully claimed
VAT refunds. Counts
646 to 695 were alleged contraventions of POCA arising from the cash
flows distributing the unlawfully claimed
VAT refunds which were paid
out by SARS and counts 696 to 711 were alleged contraventions of
section 6 of POCA arising from deposits
made into the bank account of
accused 9. The State alleged that the accused, including the
appellant, were guilty of the crimes
of racketeering, money
laundering, fraud, forgery and uttering, contraventions of the
Value-Added Tax Act, 1991 (Act No. 89 of
1991) and contraventions of
the Tax Administration Act, 2011 (Act No. 28 of 2011).
[7]
The State applied for, was opposed by the appellant but was granted
leave to adduce further evidence relevant for the bail appeal.
The
evidence was that the appellant, whilst in custody at Pollsmoor
Correctional Facility, was found in unauthorised possession
of a
cellphone in his cell on 1 September 2022. On 13 November 2022 the
appellant was again found in unauthorised possession of
a cellphone
in his cell hidden in his towel. The State’s case against
appellant included offences which were largely committed
by
electronic means through which large funds were transferred
electronically. A cellphone was susceptible to being used as a device
to move funds or to commit further offences.
[8]
Unauthorised possession of a cellphone in a cell within a prison
facility enabled communication with others, which carried the
risk of
interfering with witnesses or the ongoing investigation of other
criminal activities against the appellant. The very nature
of the
unauthorised possession within such facility is itself a security
risk. The cellphones found were being investigated
in
accordance with the provisions of the Cybercrimes Act, 2020, (Act No.
19 of 2020). The propensity to commit crime or disregard
for the law
whilst bail appeal proceedings are pending was a relevant factor for
the court to consider.
[9]
The appellant’s testimony was that he was arrested at his home,
a property owned by his wife to whom he is married according
to
Muslim rites. He and his wife owned two immovable properties. They
paid R6000 per month to service a bond of about R800 000-00
on the
one property. The other property was bought for about R650 000-00 and
he used it to sponsor a drug rehabilitation centre.
The appellant has
children. The eldest is a daughter, two sons and one set of twins. He
still maintained his daughter and her child.
He also maintained his
two sons and his twins. He did not live with the mother of the twins
and paid about R3000-00 per month per
child of maintenance for the
children. He paid R6000-00 per month for the maintenance of one of
his sons who was 18 years, who
he had with his ex-wife who he also
supported. He also maintained his current wife and her parents. He
also had three permanent
employees and a casual worker who depended
on him.
[10]
The appellant testified that he was self-employed providing a
bookkeeping service. He testified that he was an accountant.
His
company name was VDS Financial Services and had been in operation for
18 years. The company was about 3 years at the address
it used and
had been at a previous address for about 10 years. His job entailed
to bring books to trial balance. He did company
tax, VAT, PAYE, UIF,
Workmen’s compensation. He was a registered tax practitioner
about 3 or 4 years ago. He had a pending
matter in the regional court
and that was the reason he could not renew his registration as a tax
practitioner. SARS made contact
with him and indicated that he needed
to be registered to practice as a tax practitioner. When he did not
register SARS cancelled
his registration as a tax practitioner.
[11
A registered tax practitioner could load up all their clients on
their own profile and the practitioner was responsible for
that
profile. Once so registered and uploaded the tax practitioner could
act on behalf of their clients. You attend to SARS for
your clients.
Without registration as tax practitioner he could not represent the
client to SARS. He is still doing tax as a bookkeeper.
Clients
brought to him their own profile, which included their login details
and password and he would submit their returns on
VAT, income tax and
other related submissions to SARS with the permission of the tax
payer through e-filing.
[12]
He was not aware of what was happening in his business since his
arrest. He kept files of various clients, one of whom was
Mr Modack,
the other alleged kingpin and accused number 2 in the case. He
stopped working for Modack before Modack’s files
were taken. He
informed SARS when Modack’s files were taken from him, he told
SARS. He also told SARS about his cellphone
and computer. SARS gave
back his cellphone and computer but not the files. The files were
taken from him in 2015. The charges against
him were speculative. The
appellant did work for Groundbreaking, a non-profit organisation and
did not get any compensation.
[13]
In cross-examination the appellant initially said he had no previous
convictions. It however emerged that he was convicted
and sentenced
for fraud and therefore had a previous conviction. When he was
pressed to concede that he had a previous conviction
which he did not
disclose, the appellant suggested that he did not voluntarily plead
guilty on that charge, but was told that because
of justice he need
to, to get over and done with the case. Under further
cross-examination he admitted having a lawyer who represented
him. He
admitted to having pleaded guilty to the charge of fraud. He admitted
to having been sentenced after his participation
in those
proceedings. He admitted that the sentence, on 4 March 2020, was a
fine of R4000 or 12 months imprisonment which was wholly
suspended
for three years on condition that he was not convicted of fraud or
similar offence committed during the period of suspension.
[14]
The appellant’s explanation of why he was not worried that he
was now arraigned for charges which included fraud, with
a sword of a
suspended sentence hanging over his head, was that he did not know
that the previous conviction would come up now.
His explanation as to
why he did not inform his attorney of his previous conviction was
that he thought that matter was done and
it was over. The State put
to him that he was either indifferent about fraud and that he would
just perpetrate it in any way and
not mindful of the consequences or
he chose not to take the court into his confidence and disclose his
previous conviction as he
was statutorily obliged to do. The previous
conviction involved the licensing of a vehicle for a car hire
business, City Car Rental,
which his wife ran.
[15]
The appellant also had what he called ‘shelf CC’s”.
These are close corporations that he registered, and
part of the
service he delivered was that if somebody needed a cc then that
person could buy that ‘shelf cc’ from him.
He also
intended utilising some to tender with government. He had three such
cc’s and two co-operations. The names of the
shelf cc’s
were Ocean breexe, X-Mart and FN Interiors. These shelf cc’s
had not done any business. The appellant was
just drawing up to trial
balance people’s books. He was able to draw up financials but
that was what accountant did. He sometimes
drew up financials. He did
that as a bookkeeper. He did not submit the financials that he drew
for clients to SARS because he was
not qualified to do that. He was
qualified as a bookkeeper but not as an accountant. He did not have
an explanation as to why in
his evidence in chief he had told the
court that he was an accountant.
[16]
It also came to light during cross-examination that the pending
matter in the regional court also related to tax related fraud
in
respect of VAT and it was about 61 charges. The appellant thought the
other person, and not him, was responsible for the charges
in that
matter. The appellant’s business provided services to clients
which included VAT, company tax, personal tax, UIF,
workmen’s
compensation and financials. According to the appellant, what
qualified him to provide tax services to clients
and to submit the
returns on the client’s behalf was the client themselves. If
the client gave permission to submit the return
on its behalf on its
own profile then he could do it. He was however aware that there were
limitations to what he was permitted
to prepare and he was aware that
there was a limitation that he may not prepare financial statements
for the purposes of submission
to SARS. If it was a client’s
profile and the client gave permission to submit a return, he
submitted the return.
[17]
The permission from the client to do the tax was by word to mouth,
orally only and there was nothing in writing. To his knowledge
one
did not need a power of attorney to submit tax returns on behalf of a
client and that power was only needed if there was a
dispute or a VAT
audit. All that you needed was a log on details including a password
of the client. Through VDS Financial Services
he provided a tax
service, compiling tax returns to clients for which the clients paid.
This included drawing up income and expenses,
losses and profits. He
got information from the client and captured that information on a
spreadsheet. He would then use that information
to prepare a VAT
return and submit the VAT201. If the client is happy with the VAT
201’s result, he then submitted the VAT201
on e-filing to SARS.
He submitted using the client’s profile. That is done before
the 25
th
of the month. Some clients would be present when
he submitted, some not. The client had access to what he submitted if
they logged
on to e-fling. Clients who would be present when he did
their returns were Frozen Fairy, The Biscuit Factory, Pikkies, Fairy
Designs
and Exotic Taste. This was because he physically went to the
premises of these clients to do their returns.
[18]
The applicant said that he had been informed by SARS about 18 years
ago that to be a tax practitioner he needed to be registered,
and
that registration was renewable. Once registered you could do tax
returns on behalf of clients. He was so registered until
around 2017
or 2018. He applied to SARS, through the National Accounting Board to
renew his registration as a tax practitioner
in 2018 but it was not
renewed. This was because two of the requirement he did not meet,
which was that he had to have a tax clearance
certificate and have no
pending tax cases. When he informed SARS that he did not meet the
requirements of the National Accounting
Board, SARS told him that he
could not be a tax practitioner. SARS, through Mr Benjamin de Klerk,
told him that he could not practice
with his old tax practitioner
number and that he may not act or conduct services as a tax
practitioner if he was not registered.
SARS also told him that
failing to register as a tax practitioner could constitute a criminal
offence of he provided the services
and was not registered.
[19]
For the 18 years of the business of VDS he was the one submitting the
tax returns on behalf of the clients. Captured it on
the e-filing
system. The other staff members at VDS capture information that is
needed to go onto the e-filing. There was no documentation
for the
permission of the client to use the client’s profile and there
was no documentation for his authorisation or that
of the client.
Every permission was oral. He had provided tax services until
around March 2021. He prepared the returns.
He never told his clients
that he was not authorised to do their returns on his profile and
that is why he was doing it on the
client’s profile. He
initially used an invoice program and a manual invoice system until
the search and seizure was conducted
by SARS at his offices in 2015,
and from then on he only used manual invoices. Before the search
about 70% of his clients paid
by electronic bank transfer and about
30% paid cash. This was the position even after the seizure.
[20]
VDS was not registered as an employer and as a result he did not
deduct PAYE from its employees who should be registered. He
intended
to register and backdate the liability for PAYE with the two-year
period that VDS was behind in registering as an employer.
The
appellant conceded that the amounts given in his evidence as the
earnings of VDS employees was double the amounts given for
each of
them in the employment contract handed in during his
evidence-in-chief. According to him the increases in their income
were not recorded. The appellant himself has not paid provisional
tax, according to him because he had a dispute with SARS about
his
personal tax. It related to his objection in respect of his
assessment for the years 2016, 2017 and 2018 and it could include
prior to 20165 as well. According to him SARS raises the assessment
on whatever went into his bank account and did not distinguish
between his business income and expenses and his personal income. He
had not submitted his returns for 2019. His returns were prepared
but
not submitted as he waited for the outcome of his assessment.
[21]
The appellant also sold cars. SARS raised issues in their assessment
of amounts in an FNB account into which his income was
paid, whilst
the cheque account was in his wife’s name. According to him he
used his wife’ cheque account as his business
account. He did
not open a bank account because he did not see the need for it. VDS
operated a Thyme bank account. Some of the
money from his client went
into that account and some of the clients paid into his wife’s
account. The payments through his
wife’s account were in the
main debit orders and fixed fee monthly payments over a period of
time. This was the position
for about the past 14 years. His wife had
a business and a savings account and clients used her business
account for payments.
His wife did not have any business. VDS did not
have a business account with any of the four major banks. He did not
have a bank
account with any of the major banks. VDS turnover was
about R60 000-00 per month. He paid overheads and was left with about
R20
000-00 monthly. The two properties that he paid the bonds for
were registered in his wife’s names. There were clients who
paid him, but also provided some grocery items to him, like meat and
vegetables. These were Right Meat Market, Economic Meats and
vegetables would be from a client who was a street vendor, Gapie, in
Athlone.
[22]
He also ran a SWIFT Registrar business which was a platform to
register a company. In other words, he registered companies
on behalf
of other people. He had a portal where he had registered himself as a
member of the CIPC. He could register a name for
a company. He could
do amendments. He could do share certificates. He could add people or
remove them and could do minutes for
any changes that needed to be
done. He did not have the authorisation from the Companies and
Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC)
to do what he was doing. He
earned about R5000-00 per month from this venture. It was not income
derived from his business so according
to him it was not taxable. It
was an income which he did not have to disclose to SARS. This he knew
because he worked for SARS
from 1992 to 1999 when he resigned. The
income was invoiced through VDS. He started at procurement in SARS,
worked at the cash
office and then went to the VAT department and
also in registration and ended up at VAT and Company Tax Collections
Unit. He went
to all the three courses offered to SARS employees,
commonly known as IB1, IB2, IB3 and IB4. He did all SARS courses on
Income
Tax and on VAT, IT and PAYE. He was skilled to prepare tax
returns, to read a VAT return and what needed to be done on a VAT
return
and on IT returns and PAYE obligations. He worked in the
department of finance as a revenue clerk from 1 June 1992 to 2
October
1994 and was promoted the senior revenue clerk worked in that
capacity until 31 March 1996. The department of finance transferred
to SARS and from 1 April 1996 to 1 March 1997 with him in the same
post. From 1 April 1997 to 1 December 1999 he was senior revenue
clerk. He resigned in December 1999. He resigned because he wanted to
establish his own business, which he did, which was VDS.
[23]
VDS was never registered as a VAT vendor because it never reached the
threshold of VAT. He had matric, studied but did not
complete at
Tygerberg College and then had courses at SARS. Since 2018 he did not
have any audit queries except for one or two.
He had about 100
clients for which he submitted tax returns. It was not SARS that told
him that he did not need any written document
to indicate that he was
submitting the returns on behalf of his clients for a fee. The
cross-examination was in November 2021 and
he had submitted his last
tax returns for his clients in September 2021 for a fee. He had
submitted the last income tax returns
for clients for a fee in July
2021, when the tax season opened. He had also submitted PAYE returns
for clients in September 2021.
It is the same services he had
provided when he was acting as a registered tax practitioner. The
nature of the services that he
rendered to his clients did not
change, despite the warning from SARS that he was not a tax
practitioner.
[24]
A court hearing a bail appeal shall not set aside the decision
against which the appeal was brought Unless such court was satisfied
that the decision was wrong [Section 65(4) of the CPA].
[25]
The appellant was dishonest about his previous conviction. He was
warned that he had a duty to disclose his previous convictions
if any
in the bail application and was warned that failure to do so
constituted a punishable offence. Initially the appellant lied
and
said he had no previous convictions. When confronted about it, he
tried to trivialise the nature of the previous conviction.
The
appellant had shown to have utter disregard for the law. It did not
weigh in his mind that he had a previous conviction for
fraud. He had
a pending case for tax and did not qualify to practice as a tax
practitioner. SARS told him that he could not practice
as a tax
practitioner. He was aware that providing services that he did
without being registered constituted a criminal offence
on its own.
[26]
The relationship of the appellant with subjecting himself to
authority, in particular the authority of institutions of the
State
is very disturbing. Institutions of the State are the machinery which
gives South Africa its identity, which keeps South
Africa working,
safe, secure, intact and in authority as well as able to provide for
those who live in it. The biggest problem
with the appellant is that
he overrated his intelligence and his being clever has become his own
liability and downfall. His capacity
to intellectually engage has led
to a position where he reasons himself into being the enemy of the
truth and a danger to society.
According to him, it is clients who
submit their information to VDS and it is clients who provide the
login details including password
on e-filing and it is the client’s
profiles that are worked on and therefore it is clients, and not VDS,
that submit the
returns. VDS showed clients how to submit the
returns. The business, VDS, cannot do what it does without him
because none of its
employees are able to provide tax services
without him or his instructions.
[27]
He never told his clients that he could not do their returns on his
own profile because he did not have the requisite qualification
as a
tax practitioner. He did not inform his clients that he was not
qualified to act as a tax practitioner and that he was not
registered
as a tax practitioner to submit their returns. The appellant knew
since 2016, from SARS, that he needed to be registered
as a tax
practitioner to render a service which he was providing through VDS.
He was advised that he was committing a criminal
offence. He simply
ignored the requirements of the law and proceeded to render the
service without advising his clients that he
was not legally allowed
to render the service which he did. Under false pretences, he
submitted the client’s returns on their
behalf to SARS. He
pretended to clients that he was in law entitled to render the
service, and pretended to SARS that it was the
client themselves who
were submitting the returns.
[28]
For five years the appellant simply disregarded the law and charged
clients for a service which in law he did not qualify to
render and
was not allowed to render. The appellant knew that he was acting in
contravention of the tax provisions, that it was
a criminal offence
to do so, yet he continued regardless. The appellant was not an
accountant and could not in law sign off financial
statements. The
evidence suggests that the appellant gave out to his clients that he
could provide auditing services when in law
he could not. Because of
appellant’s own conduct, many of his clients seemed to be under
an impression that he could legally
assist them with financial
statements and auditing services. It appears that the appellant led
his clients to believe that he could
assist them to be tax compliant
through the services that he gave out that he could render. The
appellant’s clients are implicated
taxpayers in a scheme to
defraud SARS of millions of rands. The extent of the client’s
own conscious and willing participation
in the scheme would be
understood at trial.
[29]
After a search and seizure at VDS offices the appellant changed from
a computer program to a manual invoice system. VDS was
not registered
as an employer and as such he did not deduct and pay PAYE for the
qualifying employees. The income of VDS and his
personal income went
into his wife’s business account, when his wife did not conduct
any business. He did not have an account
with any bank in his own
name even though he had a business and earned an income. All these
are milestones pointing towards the
dishonesty of the appellant and
fortified the strength of the State case, which suggests that the
appellant was a kingpin in a
scheme which was designed to defraud the
State through fraudulent submission of tax returns wherein SARS paid
out refunds claimed
and suffered actual prejudice of R46 651 794-00
and SARS faced potential prejudice in the amount of R219 352 743-00.
Criminal convictions,
a sentence which was suspended on conditions
intended to help him correct his behaviour, did not mitigate his
propensity to disregard
the law against written advice from SARS. The
fear that if released on bail, he will commit further offences, and
that bail conditions
would be helpful, was well founded.
[30]
These past conducts of the appellant were indicators that there was a
likelihood that the appellant, if released on bail, will
undermine or
jeopardise the objectives of the proper functioning of the criminal
justice system including the bail system [
S v Olatunji
2020
JDR 0402 (GJ);
S v Donatus
2014 JDR 1103 (ECG)]. The
appellant’s personal circumstances did not outweigh the risk
that his release on bail posed to the
safety of the fiscus, and
society as well as the likelihood of undermining or jeopardising the
objectives or the proper functioning
of the criminal justice system
including the bail system.
[31]
It is common knowledge that the working class in South Africa,
including up to Public Office Bearers, legitimately complained
that
their income and the buying power of their remuneration has over the
years been reduced by inflation and the inability of
their employers,
including the State, to give inflation-related annual increases. Many
workers look at their salary advices, especially
their tax
deductions, with a heavy heart. It is against this background that
the looting of public offers has become such a worrying
factor. The
looting of public coffers has become a threat to the democratic
project.
[32]
My office demands of me the brevity to say that the looting of public
funds, actual and perceived, has singularly now called
into question
the moral authority of the leader of the construction of a democratic
and constitutional State, to still lead the
nation to an ideal South
Africa, by those who historically and genuinely trusted its
leadership without any questions asked. The
looting is the greatest
question mark on the capacity to lead South Africa, hovering over the
current leadership of the State,
and require resolute attention. As
the allegations against the appellant showed, the looting happens
even outside the machinery
of the State administrative machinery. It
seems to me, with the prevalence of these cases by private
individuals and juristic entities,
that for some, submitting tax
returns to defraud the Republic of South Africa out of millions of
rands is a thriving multi-million
business. The time has arrived for
the State to have a focused intelligence and inspectorate unit either
within SARS or within
the greater State security cluster dedicated to
save the Republic’s money from national and foreign fraud and
laundering
monetary vultures. Our guardians must guard our money. It
is the responsibility of the Judiciary, the conscience of this
nation,
to draw a line for those who demonstrate the likelihood that
their release back into society on bail will endanger the safety of
our fiscus and other members of our society.
[33]
The clarion call from our nation is clear, let them warm up in yellow
overalls awaiting trial and after a fair trial, if convicted,
be in
orange overalls in prison where they belong. The appellant posed a
significant threat to society and the country’s
fiscus with his
destructive attitude and conduct. His access to login details and
passwords of tax payers, at their own instance
and request, because
of how the appellant postured himself, made the public vulnerable to
incorrect information submitted to SARS
on their behalf, when he
pretended to SARS that he was the actual taxpayer. The release of the
appellant on bail would, in my view,
seriously undermine and erode
the confidence of the right thinking members of society in our
criminal justice system [
S v Siwela
2010 JDR 1471 (SCA) at p
10] and will cause questions to be asked about the legitimacy of our
courts to speak justice.
[34]
I am not persuaded that the magistrate was wrong. For these reasons I
make the following order.
The appeal is dismissed.
DM THULARE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
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