Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 174South Africa
Van Veen v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Others (2280/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 174; 2023 (2) SACR 370 (WCC) (31 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
31 July 2023
Headnotes
by it and thereafter to liquidate it. He alleges that had they not done so, they would eventually have realised a profit. He points out that none of the investors subsequently pursued him or Evercrest Capital (Pty) Ltd in civil proceedings.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Van Veen v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Others (2280/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 174; 2023 (2) SACR 370 (WCC) (31 July 2023)
Van Veen v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Others (2280/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 174; 2023 (2) SACR 370 (WCC) (31 July 2023)
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sino date 31 July 2023
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL – Stay of prosecution –
Delays
–
Long and unreasonable delays – Accused suffering brain
tumour – Civil application seeking permanent
stay –
Medical sequelae meaning accused cannot properly participate –
Principle of subsidiarity – Accused’s
remedy lies in
enquiry under
sections 77
and
79
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977
– Adequate alternative remedy – Failed to
satisfy requirements for final relief of the interdictory
character
– Application dismissed.
Republic
of South Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
no. 2280/2022
Before:
The Hon. Mr Justice Binns-Ward
Hearing:
15 November 2022, 20 January and 18 May 2023
Judgment:
31 July 2023
In
the matter between:
MARC
VAN VEEN
Applicant
and
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
WESTERN
CAPE
First
Respondent
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Second
Respondent
THE
FINANCIAL SECTOR CONDUCT AUTHORITY
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Delivered
by email and listing on SAFLII
BINNS-WARD J:
[1]
The applicant, as accused no. 2, together
with ‘Evercrest
(Pty) Ltd’ (properly named Evercrest Capital (Pty) Ltd), as
accused no. 1, stand arraigned on
a variety of charges in the
Specialised Commercial Crime Court, Bellville. They are charged
with fraud and, in the alternative
thereto, various other common law
offences involving dishonesty, as well as with having contravened
provisions of the
Financial Institutions (Protection of Funds) Act 28
of 2001
, the
Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act 37 of
2002
and the
Inspection of Financial Institutions Act 80 of 1998
,
respectively. The charges are related to losses that were
suffered in 2007 by the Evercrest Aggressive Fund in the amount
of
approximately R146 million and to the investigation subsequently
undertaken by the then existing Financial Service Board.
[2]
The Fund was an investment vehicle - a hedge
fund - that was managed
by Evercrest Capital (Pty) Ltd. Its clientele was comprised
exclusively of institutional investors.
It is alleged in the
summons in the criminal case that the applicant was the director and
controlling mind of Evercrest Capital
(Pty) Ltd. The applicant
contends in the current proceedings that the losses incurred by the
Fund were not occasioned by
his doing, but rather as a result of the
institutional investors’ decision at an inopportune time to
exercise their contractual
right to sell off the stock held by it and
thereafter to liquidate it. He alleges that had they not done
so, they would eventually
have realised a profit. He points out
that none of the investors subsequently pursued him or Evercrest
Capital (Pty) Ltd
in civil proceedings.
[3]
The allegations against the accused set out
in the summons comprehend
conduct described as having occurred at various times between the
years 2005 and 2008. The summonses
against the accused were
issued out by the clerk of the court some 11 years later, during
August 2019. They required the
applicant, in his personal
capacity and as also as the representative of ‘Evercrest (Pty)
Ltd’, to appear for trial
on 27 September 2019. The trial
did not commence on that date, however. The proceedings in the
criminal court have
since been postponed from time to time, and
currently await the outcome of the application to this court now
under consideration.
[4]
In this
application, which was instituted on 8 February 2022,
[1]
the applicant seeks orders in the following terms:
1.
That the prosecution of the applicant in any capacity in the
Specialised Commercial Crime Court
in Bellville under case number
SH/7/45/19 in regard to the contents of the police docket Kirstenhof
CAS 370/03/2014 is permanently
stayed.
2.
Further and/or alternative relief.
3.
That the costs of this application be paid, jointly and severally, by
any respondents who oppose
the application.
The
Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape, who was cited as the
first respondent, is the only party to oppose the application.
The Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and the Financial
Sector Conduct Authority (which is the statutory successor
to the
late Financial Services Board), who were cited as the second and
third respondents, respectively, did not participate in
the
proceedings.
[5]
The founding affidavit in the application
was deposed to by the
applicant’s attorney of record. The attorney’s
affidavit was supported by a short confirmatory
affidavit by the
applicant.
[6]
The grounds upon which the applicant seeks
a permanent stay of
prosecution are summarised as follows at para 10-13 of the
founding affidavit, under the subheading ‘
Legal Basis for
the Relief Sought
’:
‘
10.
There has been an unreasonable and inexplicably long delay to
prosecute the Applicant, in breach
of his rights enshrined in
Section
35
[of the] Constitution of the Republic of South Africa (“the
Constitution”) to a fair trial.
11.
As a consequence of this delay in prosecuting the Applicant together
with his medical condition,
he will suffer irreparable and
insurmountable trial prejudice if the prosecution proceeds.
12.
The Applicant has been diagnosed with a brain tumour during the
delay. He is accordingly
not able to properly adduce and
challenge evidence as a consequence of his loss of certain faculties,
in terms of Section 35(3)(i)
of the Constitution,[
[2]
]
which infringes upon his right to a fair trial.
13.
Furthermore the evidence against the Applicant was obtained in breach
of his right against
self-incrimination contained in Section 35(3)(j)
of the Constitution[
[3]
] and can
therefore not be used in his prosecution as per S35(5) of the
Constitution.[
[4]
]’
[7]
The application, which is founded on the
apprehended infringement or
threatened infringement of the applicant’s fair trial rights in
terms of s 35 of the Constitution,
is accordingly brought on a
three-pronged basis, namely, (i) unreasonable delay, (ii) mental
or intellectual incapacitation
due to the effects of a brain tumour
and (iii) that the prosecution’s case is reliant on
unlawfully obtained self-incriminatory
evidence.
[8]
It is convenient to address the last-mentioned
ground first because
it can be disposed of quite shortly and, advisedly, was not pressed
in argument. It is premised on the
allegation that the state’s
case is reliant on self-incriminatory evidence obtained from the
applicant in the course of an
inspection into the business of
Evercrest Capital (Pty) Ltd by the Financial Services Board in terms
of the (since repealed)
Inspection of Financial Institutions Act 80
of 1998
. It is alleged that the investigation was
unconstitutional ‘
as the Applicant was compelled to provide
self-incriminating evidence
’; elsewhere in the founding
affidavit the point is expressed in a more qualified way, namely that
‘[h]
e was forced to provide possibly incriminating
evidence
’.
[9]
The baldly stated contention in the founding
papers that the state’s
case is entirely reliant on the applicant’s self-incriminatory
evidence is disputed by the
first respondent. Having regard to
the nature of the alleged offences as described in the summons, it
seems to me that it
is inherently improbable that objective evidence
concerning the relevant subject matter would not exist and that the
testimony
of other witnesses would not be available to the
prosecution. Indeed, in contradiction of the averment mentioned
earlier
that the state’s case is entirely reliant on the
applicant’s (possibly) self-incriminatory evidence furnished
under
compulsion during the inspection, the deponent to the founding
affidavit averred in a separate passage of his evidence that ‘[t]
h
case against the Applicant is extremely complicated and it would be
unfair on the witnesses as well as the Applicant to expect
them to
remember the complex events that occurred some 15 years ago
’.
Elsewhere in the founding affidavit it is stated that the case
involves ‘
numerous parties
’. One would
expect that such parties should be in a position to give evidence
independently of any self-incriminating
admissions made by the
applicant during the investigation by the regulatory authority.
[10]
The deponent to the first respondent’s answering affidavit
described the gravamen of the non-statutory offences with which the
applicant has been charged as follows: ‘
all
[the]
charges pertain to one clearly defined aspect, whether the
Applicant executed trades and took certain positions that breached
the
risk parameters and trading limits agreed by the EA Fund on a
continuous and material basis. This aspect is thus clearly
delineated and forms the crux of the more serious charges against the
Applicant
.’ I do not find it necessary to delve into
the question in any detail, but matters that seem to be germane, such
as
the terms of the Fund’s investment mandates and whether or
not the applicant’s conduct was in compliance with them,
or
that he misrepresented them, should be capable of proof by production
of the relevant documentation and the evidence of the
parties who
furnished the mandates and executed the investment transactions that
allegedly gave rise to the situation in which
the Fund suffered its
losses.
[11]
However,
insofar as the ground relied upon by the applicant might, despite my
doubts, nevertheless be a real issue, some attention
to the import
s 35(5) of the Constitution is indicated. It provides that
‘[e]
vidence
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
’.
The subsection has the dual effect of vesting the trial court with a
discretion coupled with a duty.
[5]
The provision does not create an absolute bar against the
admissibility of evidence that has been obtained in a manner that
violates a basic right. The admissibility or non-admissibility
of such evidence in a criminal trial is peculiarly a question
for the
trial court to determine. It must make the determination with
reference to the factors expressly identified in s 35(5).
Their manifestation will be very much case-specific.
[12]
The question of how the balancing exercise posited by s 35(5)
should be undertaken in any given case by a court seized of criminal
proceedings is not one that appropriately falls to be anticipated
in
civil proceedings directed at prohibiting the prosecution from
proceeding with the trial; cf.
Thint (Pty) Ltd v National Director
of Public Prosecutions and Others, Zuma and Another v National
Director of Public Prosecutions
and Others
[2008] ZACC 13
(31
July
[2008] ZACC 13
;
2008); 2008 (2) SACR 421
(CC);
2009 (1) SA 1
(CC);
2008 (12)
BCLR 1197
(CC) at para 62 and 65-66. In the current matter, the
applicant’s case as made out in his founding papers in any
event
fell far short of equipping this court to undertake the
balancing exercise posited by s 35(5), even were the court,
exceptionally,
minded to tackle the question.
[13]
Turning then to the issue of delay. The investigation by the
Financial Services Board commenced in July 2007 and the inspection
report was issued in final form in August 2008. As a result
of
the investigation, the applicant’s licence to practice as a
financial services provider was withdrawn and he was prohibited
from
applying for a new licence for five years. He was also required
to pay for the costs of the investigation in the amount
of over
R366 000. He alleged that there was ‘no engagement’
with him on the matter thereafter until he received
the charge sheet
in August 2019.
[14]
It was averred in the founding papers that the third respondent,
as
the relevant regulatory authority, laid a criminal complaint against
the applicant only at the end of March 2014, nearly six
years after
the completion of the investigation undertaken by the Financial
Services Board. The first respondent’s
evidence, however,
is to the effect that the matter was referred to the police in 2009.
The applicant’s attorney averred
that the police docket shows
that no further substantive investigation was undertaken by the
police after the lodging of the criminal
complaint. He pointed
out that no reasons had been provided for the delay, which on its
face was unreasonably long.
[15]
The state’s explanation for the delay between 2009 and the
end
of 2018 in getting the case against the applicant trial ready is
sadly redolent of the ineptitude and lack of diligence that
media
reports suggest were all too prevalent in many of our public
institutions at the time. The deponent to the answering
affidavit ascribed the delay to ‘systemic failures’.
A succession of investigating officers failed to provide
the
prosecutors with the documentary evidence identified in the Financial
Services Board investigation report. The answering
papers do
not give a satisfactory explanation for this failure or the
prosecution’s response to it. The most recently
appointed
investigating officer, who took over the matter at the end of 2018,
reportedly approached her work ‘
with much more vigour and
zest
’ than her predecessors, which enabled the eventual
enrolment of the matter for hearing in September 2019. The
excuses
offered by the first respondent for the delay are weak and
perturbing.
[16]
The delay
was manifestly inordinate and palpably unreasonable. No nicely
measured calibration exercise is needed to arrive
at that
conclusion. The unreasonableness of the delay is not, however,
by itself, enough to bring the applicant’s case
home. He
had to show that he suffered resultant material prejudice; cf.
Zanner
v Director of Public Prosecutions, Johannesburg
[2006] ZASCA 56
;
2006 (2) SACR 45
(SCA);
[2006] 2 All SA 588
(SCA)
at
para 16,
[6]
cited with apparent
approval in
Bothma
v Els and Others
[2009] ZACC 27
(8 October
2009); 2010 (2) SA 622
(CC);
2010 (1) SACR
184
;
2010 (1) BCLR 1
, at para 72. In Kriegler J’s
seminal judgment in point in
Sanderson
v Attorney-General, Eastern Cape
[1997] ZACC
18 (2 December
1997); 1997 (12) BCLR 1675
(CC);
1998 (2) SA 38
(CC),
it was observed that whilst time is ‘
obviously
central to the enquiry
’,
it ‘
has
a pervasive significance that bears on all the factors and should not
be considered at the threshold or, subsequently, in isolation
’.
[7]
[17]
The
Constitutional Court has identified three types of delay related
prejudice; viz. (i) trial-related, (ii) liberty-related
and (iii) security or socially-related.
[8]
Only the first variety is engaged in the current case. It has
been described as the type that is possibly the hardest
to
establish.
[9]
[18]
The only resultant prejudice identified with any particularity in
the
founding affidavit is the effect of the applicant’s intervening
medical condition. At paragraph 63 of the founding
affidavit,
the attorney averred ‘
The prejudice
in casu
relates to the significant deterioration in the medical condition of
the Applicant which precludes him from having a fair trial
’.
Apart from the effect of the applicant’s medical condition,
which I shall come to presently, there is a distinct
lack of detail
in the founding papers concerning the nature of the forensic
prejudice that the applicant claims he will suffer
on account of the
delay if the trial proceeds at this stage. The effect of the
passage of time on the ability of witnesses
to clearly recollect
relevant events is referred to in only general terms in the founding
papers.
[19]
Human experience teaches us that memories do fade over time, but
also
that some events make a greater impression, and are therefore better
remembered, than others. We also know from experience
that
memory can be jogged by objective aids like contemporaneous records,
the reliability of which can be independently assessed.
Accordingly, without some substantiating detail, it is not
illuminating to baldly claim as materially prejudicial the effect of
the passage of time on the ability of the witnesses to reliably
recall what happened up to 18 years ago. The court has not
been
informed who the witnesses are, nor what it is precisely that they
will be expected to remember, nor that there is no objective
material
on which they could rely to refresh their memories. The
generalised observation by the applicant’s attorney
concerning
the ordinary effects of delay are unhelpful. They call to mind,
by way of response, the observations by Sachs
J in
Bothma v Els
supra, ‘
Witnesses die, evidence disappears, memories fade.
These factors, the natural products of delay, may not necessarily be
sufficient
to establish unfairness. If, as a result of the lack of
evidence, the judicial officer dealing with the matter is unable to
make
a clear determination of guilt, then the presumption of
innocence will ensure an acquittal.
’; see also
McCarthy
v Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg and Others
[2000] ZASCA 191
(29 September 2000);
[2000] 4 All SA 561
(A) at para 46.
[20]
The lack of
substantiating detail concerning the nature and effect of the alleged
trial-related prejudice attendant on the delay
is a fatal defect in
the trial-related prejudice based aspect of the applicant’s
case. That much is clearly implicit
in the following
observation in
Sanderson
:
‘
...the
relief the appellant seeks is radical, both philosophically and
socio-politically. Barring the prosecution before the trial
begins –
and consequently without any opportunity to ascertain the real effect
of the delay on the outcome of the case –
is far-reaching.
Indeed it prevents the prosecution from presenting society’s
complaint against an alleged transgressor of
society’s rules of
conduct. That will seldom be warranted in the absence of significant
prejudice to the accused
’.
[10]
It is for the applicant in such a case to show ‘
whether
he has actually suffered prejudice as a result of the lapse of
time
’.
[11]
[21]
In
Sanderson
, at para 39, Kriegler J wrote ‘[o]
rdinarily,
and particularly where the prejudice alleged is not trial-related,
there is a range of “appropriate” remedies
less radical
than barring the prosecution. These would include a mandamus
requiring the prosecution to commence the case, a refusal
to grant
the prosecution a remand, or damages after an acquittal arising out
of the prejudice suffered by the accused. A bar is
likely to be
available only in a narrow range of circumstances, for example, where
it is established that the accused has probably
suffered irreparable
trial prejudice as a result of the delay
.’
[22]
The
distinct absence of substantiating particularity concerning the
applicant’s alleged trial-related prejudice in the current
case
as a result of the delay falls to be contrasted with the position in
Broome v
Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Others, Wiggins v
Acting Regional Magistrate, Cape Town and Others
[2007] ZAWCHC 61
(31 October
2007); 2008 (1) SACR 178
(C), which for
a long time stood as the only reported case in which an application
for a permanent stay of prosecution was granted
prior to the trial of
the accused person concerned, and on which the applicant’s
counsel placed some reliance.
[12]
[13]
In that case, the
accused, Mr Broome, adduced detailed evidence to the effect that
extensive documentation that was essential to
his ability to properly
conduct his defence against the charges which the state sought to
bring to trial against him more than
a decade after the relevant
events had gone missing. The documentation concerned had been
seized from him by the state many
years earlier. Mr Broome’s
request at the time to be allowed to photocopy and retain a set of
the seized documentation
was refused. When, many years later,
he was eventually granted access to the documentation still in the
state’s possession,
he discovered that a material part of it
had been lost. He was able to draw up a detailed schedule of
the missing documents
and explain the prejudicial effect of their
disappearance on his ability to properly defend himself.
[23]
Broome
’s case was distinguished by the Constitutional
Court in
Bothma v Els
supra, at para 74, where Sachs J
noted ‘
...
[in
Broome
]
it was the state that
had been responsible for the loss of crucial documents. This was the
precipitating factor that introduced
an element of unfairness that
went not only to the untoward harm caused to the defence, but to the
integrity of the criminal process.
It is simply not fair for the
state to prosecute someone and then deliberately or through an
unacceptable degree of negligence
deprive that person of the
wherewithal to make a defence. This is qualitatively different from
the irretrievable weakening of a
defence that flows from loss of
evidence of the kind that could happen even with short delays, but be
intensified by long delays
’.
[24]
If an
applicant does not sufficiently establish that the unreasonable delay
in instituting the prosecution has caused him or her
material
trial-related prejudice, no basis is provided for the balancing
exercise described in cases like
Sanderson
and
Bothma
v Els
to be undertaken. The application will rarely get out of the
starting blocks in such a situation.
[14]
[25]
As mentioned earlier, the only aspect of the applicant’s
alleged trial-related prejudice that is canvassed with any degree of
particularity in the founding papers is his medical condition.
The deponent to the founding affidavit averred that ‘[t]
he
case is extremely complex and involves numerous parties involved with
events that occurred 15 years ago. The Applicant,
as a
consequence of his medical condition does not have the faculties to
either locate witnesses or put appropriate questions to
the potential
witnesses in order for him to properly mount his defence
.’
[26]
It was not surprising in the circumstances that the argument advanced
by counsel in support of the application was focussed on the adverse
effect of the applicant’s medical condition on his ability
to
conduct his defence. The founding affidavit can be read to link
this aspect of the case to the issue of delay in the sense
of
suggesting that had the criminal proceedings been commenced earlier
the applicant would not then have been in the disadvantageous
position occasioned by his subsequently presenting medical
condition. Whilst there might, on a purely chronological
analysis,
be some truth in that, it nevertheless seems to me that the
delay is a matter that is in fact entirely incidental to the question
of the applicant’s mental or intellectual capacity to
adequately conduct his defence. The latter is something that
arises for consideration quite independently of the former in any
enquiry into the applicant’s right to a fair trial.
The
timing of the onset of the applicant’s ill health was an
accident of fate unrelated to his exposure to forensic measures
against him by the state. Notionally, it could have intervened
even if the state had commenced the criminal proceedings much
earlier.
[27]
The applicant’s medical condition was described in a report
submitted under a supporting affidavit by a psychiatrist who has been
treating the applicant intermittently since 2007. The
initial
treatment, given between 2007 and 2011, had been for the anxiety and
depression experienced by the applicant arising from
the allegations
originally made against him concerning the losses made by the Fund.
The psychiatrist’s report was supported
by confirmatory
affidavits made by other specialists who had treated or assessed the
applicant’s condition. The first
respondent was afforded
the opportunity to have the applicant examined by its own medical
experts but failed to make use of it.
In the result, the
medical evidence adduced by the applicant stands uncontroverted.
[28]
It is not necessary to describe the medical evidence in detail.
It is sufficient to record that it is to the effect that the
applicant was diagnosed with a pituitary adenoma (a type of brain
tumour) in April 2021 and underwent neurosurgery for the partial
removal of the tumour. He consulted the psychiatrist in
May
2021 in connection with his renewed depression and reported
‘inability to function without guidance and assistance from
his
wife’. His attorneys informed the psychiatrist that the
applicant was ‘unable to follow logical thought patterns,
and
had not been able to explain himself’. The attorneys
reported that the applicant ‘fully understood the charges
against him but could not cope with questions posed, especially when
under pressure’.
[29]
Testing administered by the psychiatrist found that the applicant
exhibited symptoms associated with physical damage to the frontal
part of his brain. These demonstrated that the applicant
has
deficits concerning his ‘capacity to cope with emotional
pressure or high cognitive demands’. He has associated
deficits in memory functions, which entail an inability ‘to
recall information and deal with it logically, particularly in
relation to his advising his legal team’. The
psychiatrist noted that the applicant’s ‘capacity to
recall
events in 2007 and present them logically and coherently is
markedly impaired’. His report concluded that the
applicant’s
‘inability to retrieve or present information
coherently prevents him from interacting with his legal team and in
court would
have a risk of making him appear evasive or dishonest,
when in reality he is neurologically incapable of retrieving or
presenting
information’.
[30]
The uncontroverted medical evidence suggests that the applicant’s
medical condition and its sequelae have resulted in him being
intellectually disabled to the extent of not being able to
participate
in the criminal trial in a way so as to be able to make a
proper defence. The first respondent contended that the
situation
was one that fell to be dealt with in terms of
s 77(1)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, and her counsel sought to
persuade this court to direct that an enquiry be undertaken in terms
of
s 79
of that Act.
[31]
Section 77(1)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act provides
:
‘
If
it appears to the court at any stage of criminal proceedings that the
accused is by reason of mental illness or intellectual
disability not
capable of understanding the proceedings so as to make a proper
defence, the court shall direct that the matter
be enquired into and
be reported on in accordance with the provisions of
section 79.
’
[32]
The applicant’s counsel resisted the course contended for
on
behalf of the first respondent. He pointed out, correctly, that
the current proceedings are civil in nature, whereas
s 77(1)
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act, according
to its tenor, can arise for
application only ‘
at any stage of
criminal
proceedings
’. It also appears, upon a proper
construction, that ‘
the court
’ referred to in the
subsection is the court seized of such criminal proceedings.
[33]
The attitude adopted by the first respondent does, however, beg
the
question whether it would be appropriate for this court, in civil
proceedings, to grant the relief sought by the applicant,
drawing
directly on s 35(3) of the Constitution and the common law, when
the legislature has specifically provided in the
Criminal Procedure
Act how
the situation should be addressed within the context of the
criminal proceedings in which he was involved prior to the
institution
of the current application. The question seems to
me to require consideration of the principle of subsidiarity; a
matter
which the court is obliged to take into account
mero motu
if it is applicable, irrespective of the first respondent’s
contentions.
[34]
In
Esofranki Pipelines (Pty) Ltd v Mopani District Municipality
[2022] ZACC 41
(30 November
2022); 2023 (2) BCLR 149
(CC);
2023 (2) SA 31
(CC) at para 45, the Constitutional Court (per Theron
J) gave the following synopsis of the principle of subsidiarity:
‘
This principle
provides that where legislation is enacted in order to
comprehensively give effect to a constitutional right, a litigant
cannot bypass the relevant legislation and rely directly on the
Constitution or on the common law, without challenging the
constitutional
validity of that legislation. The principle has two
foundational justifications: to mitigate against the development of
“two
parallel systems of law”, one judge-made and the
other crafted by Parliament, and to ensure “comity between the
arms
of government” by maintaining “a cooperative
partnership between the various institutions and arms tasked with
fulfilling
constitutional rights”.’
(Footnotes
omitted.)
[35]
In
South African Human Rights Commission obo South African Jewish
Board of Deputies v Masuku and Another
[2022] ZACC 5
(16 February
2022); 2022 (4) SA 1
(CC);
2022 (7) BCLR 850
(CC) at para 102-108,
the Court (per Khampepe J) had previously explained the concept
more expansively –
‘
[102]
Broadly, the principle of subsidiarity is the judicial theory whereby
the adjudication of substantive issues is determined
with reference
to more particular, rather than more general, constitutional norms.
The principle is based on the understanding
that, although the
Constitution enjoys superiority over other legal sources, its
existence does not threaten or displace ordinary
legal principles and
its superiority cannot oust legislative provisions enacted to give
life and content to rights introduced by
the Constitution. In simple
terms, the principle can be summarised thus:
“
Once legislation
to fulfil a constitutional right exists, the Constitution's
embodiment of that right is no longer the prime mechanism
for its
enforcement. The legislation is primary. The right in the
Constitution plays only a subsidiary or supporting role.”
Ultimately, the effect of the principle is that it operates to ensure
that disputes are determined using the specific, often more
comprehensive, legislation enacted to give effect to a constitutional
right, preventing them from being determined by invoking
the
Constitution and relying on the right directly, to the exclusion of
that legislation.
[103]
This principle has been pronounced upon by this court on numerous
occasions. And, in
My
Vote Counts
[
[15]
],
Cameron J, noting how deeply entrenched in South African
constitutional litigation the principle is, identified three
categories
of cases where the principle has been endorsed. Firstly,
in a range of socio-economic-rights cases where the government is
under a duty to take reasonable legislative and other measures,
within its available resources, to progressively realise the rights,
this court has affirmed the proposition that claimants must first
impugn the legislation enacted to give effect to those rights
before
they may rely on the right itself in the Constitution.
[104]
The second line of cases were those where this court had determined
that there existed legislation which
was “codifying a right
afforded by the Bill of Rights”. Cameron J noted that this
principle was first affirmed in
New
Clicks
,[
[16]
]
and then expounded and endorsed in the context of labour rights
in
SANDU
.[
[17]
]
In that instance, the litigant had attempted to rely directly on
their s 25(3) right to collective bargaining as enshrined
in the
Constitution, as opposed to what had been codified in the Labour
Relations Act (LRA). This court held that, where legislation
has been
enacted to give effect to a constitutional right, “a litigant
may not bypass that legislation and rely directly
on the Constitution
without challenging that legislation as falling short of the
constitutional standard”. If the legislation
is wanting
in its protection of the right, then a frontal attack to the
constitutionality of that legislation must be brought.
[105]
Notably, ..., the principle of subsidiarity has also been
recognised with approval in relation
to the interaction between the
Equality Act and s 9 of the Constitution. …
[106]
The third line of cases were those where 'the court has applied
the principle of subsidiarity to those
provisions of the Bill of
Rights that specifically
oblige
Parliament to enact
legislation: ss 9(4), 25(9), 33(3), and 32(2)'. In that case, it
would be plainly inappropriate for litigants
to ignore legislation
that Parliament had been required by the Constitution to enact.
[107]
In
My Vote Counts
, the majority noted general reasons
underpinning the principle:
“
First,
allowing a litigant to rely directly on a fundamental right contained
in the Constitution, rather than on legislation enacted
in terms of
the Constitution to give effect to that right, would defeat the
purpose of the Constitution in requiring the right
to be given effect
by means of national legislation. Second, comity between the arms of
government enjoins courts to respect the
efforts of other arms of
government in fulfilling constitutional rights. Third, allowing
reliance directly on constitutional rights,
in defiance of their
statutory embodiment, would encourage the development of two parallel
systems of law.”
[108]
On a conspectus of the above, it is perspicuous from this court's
jurisprudence that subsidiarity as a principle
serves important
practical and normative purposes. It respects the separation of
powers, as designed by the Constitution. Moreover,
it promotes
principled and consistent application of judicial reasoning to the
hierarchical scheme of legal norms laid out in the
Constitution.’
(Footnotes
omitted.)
[36]
It seems to
me that
s 77(1)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act is
legislation
that falls into the second of the categories of situation in which
the principle of subsidiarity has been endorsed
that were identified
by Cameron J in
My
Vote Counts
supra.
[18]
The
provision is clearly directed at preventing the trial of accused
persons who by reason or mental illness or intellectual
disability
are not able to properly defend themselves. An accused person’s
ability to properly defend him or herself
is fundamental to a fair
trial. An accused person who by reason of mental or
intellectual disability is unable to do that
cannot effectively
exercise the right enshrined in s 35(3)(i) of the Constitution
to adduce and challenge evidence.
[37]
If an accused person is found, upon enquiry in terms of
s 79
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act, to
be incapable of making a proper
defence, the court seized of the criminal proceedings may in a case
like the applicant’s
– in which he does not stand charged
with an offence involving serious violence – give any of the
directions provided
for in
s 77(6)(ii)
of the Act. Having
regard to the psychiatrist’s report and the nature of the
charges, it seems to me that the direction
that could well be given
in the current case would be for the applicant to be released
unconditionally. The effect of a finding
of incapacity pursuant
to an enquiry in terms of
s 79
would be that criminal
proceedings against the applicant could not be reinstituted or
continued for so long as the incapacity endures.
The evidence
in this application suggests that the applicant’s incapacity is
permanent. If, however, the finding made
in terms of
s 79
should be disputed, the criminal court would try the issue of the
applicant’s capacity to stand trial in the manner contemplated
by
s 77(3)
-(5) of the
Criminal Procedure Act.
[38
]
In the context of the findings that a case based primarily on the
trial-related prejudicial effect of delay has not been made out, and
that the only cognisable basis for being able to hold that
the
applicant should not be tried is his reported medically related
intellectual disability, it seems to me that application of
the
principle of subsidiarity dictates that his remedy lies in
ss 77
and
79
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, not in
a civil application for
a permanent stay of the prosecution. Entertaining a civil
application for a stay of prosecution in
such circumstances would be
to encourage the undesirable development of an unnecessary parallel
system of law.
[39]
In my view, it is of no consequence for the application of the
principle of subsidiarity that the
Criminal Procedure Act predates
the Constitution. Section 35(3) of the Constitution is a
codification and entrenchment of fair trial rights long established
in our law, and
ss 77
and
79
of the
Criminal Procedure Act give
procedural and substantive effect in specified form to an incident of
such rights.
[40]
But even
were I wrong about the application of the principle of subsidiarity,
I would still not be willing to grant the relief sought
by the
applicant. An order staying a prosecution prohibits the
prosecutor (ordinarily a representative of the office of the
National
Director of Public Prosecutions, but it could be a private person
armed with a
nolle
prosequi
certificate
[19]
) from
exercising his or her power to institute and pursue criminal
proceedings. An applicant seeking a permanent stay of
prosecution is therefore, in essence, applying for a final
prohibitory interdict. The requirements that an applicant must
satisfy to obtain a final interdict are trite, viz. (a) a clear
right, (b) an injury actually committed or reasonably
apprehended
and (c) the absence of an adequate alternative remedy;
see
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
at 227. In my judgment, availing of the procedures
in terms of
ss 77
and
79
of the
Criminal Procedure Act would
provide the applicant with an adequate alternative remedy. He
has therefore in any event failed to satisfy the requirements
for
final relief of the interdictory character that is sought.
[41]
For all these reasons the application will be dismissed.
[42]
In
Sanderson
supra, the Constitutional Court, in comparable litigation, made the
following remarks concerning the incidence of costs: ‘
Ordinarily
the dismissal of a claim such as this in the High Court should not
carry an adverse costs order. It is not a suit between
private
individuals; it relates directly to criminal proceedings, which are
instituted by the state and in
which
costs orders are not competent; and the cause of action is that the
state allegedly breached an accused’s constitutional
right to a
fair trial. Although the appellant failed to establish the
constitutional claim he advanced, it was a genuine complaint
on a
point of substance and should therefore not have been visited with
the sanction of a costs order
.’
[20]
The considerations concerning costs reviewed in
Sanderson
seem to me to be pertinent in the current matter. The case
raised important questions concerning the ability of an accused
person whose fair trial rights might be adversely affected due to
mental illness or intellectual disability to circumvent the
provisions of
ss 77
and
79
of the
Criminal Procedure Act by
bringing civil proceedings for a stay of prosecution. These
questions do not appear to have previously been considered
judicially.
The application cannot fairly be stigmatised as
having been frivolous, vexatious or manifestly inappropriate.
[21]
A costs order will therefore not be made.
[43]
An order will issue in the following terms:
1.
The application is
dismissed.
2.
No order is made as
to costs.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge of the High Court
APPEARANCES
Applicant’s
counsel:
F.S.G. Sievers SC
Applicant’s
attorneys:
Robertson Law
Rondebosch
Wolpe & Associate
Cape Town
First
respondent’s counsel
J. Agulhas
Directorate of Public
Prosecutions
Western Cape
First
respondent’s attorney:
State Attorney
Cape Town
[1]
The first respondent points out that the case against the applicant
had been on the court roll for two years and three months
before the
institution of the current application. During that time, and
apparently when the applicant was differently
represented,
representations were made to the Directorate of Public Prosecutions
for the criminal proceedings to be withdrawn.
No reliance was
made in those representations on the allegedly prejudicial effects
of the delayed institution of the criminal
proceedings. In the
period up to the beginning of March 2021, there were formal plea
negotiations with the state in terms
of
s 105A
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
[2]
Section
35(3)(i)
provides ‘
Every
accused person has a right to a fair trial, which includes the right
– (i) to adduce and challenge evidence
.’
[3]
Section
35(3)(j)
provides ‘
Every
accused person has a right to a fair trial, which includes the right
– (j) not to be compelled to give self-incriminating
evidence.
’
[4]
Section 35(5)
is quoted in paragraph [11] below.
[5]
Consider the discussion in
PJ
Schwikkard et al,
Principles
of Evidence
5 ed (Juta) (looseleaf) at §12.6.
[6]
‘
I
turn now to consider the question whether the delay has caused the
appellant prejudice. It should be borne in mind that the
enquiry
does not concern the appellant’s liberty or personal security.
After the charge was withdrawn against him in January
1994 nothing
happened in connection with the case until April 2004. Issues of
restricted freedom, stress, anxiety or social ostracism
do not
therefore arise. The focus is solely on whether he has suffered
significant trial-related prejudice. In establishing facts
substantiating his claim, “vague and conclusory allegations of
prejudice resulting from the passage of time and the absence
of
witnesses are insufficient to constitute a showing of actual
prejudice. [The accused] must show definite and not speculative
prejudice, and in what specific manner missing witnesses would have
aided the defense” (see US v Trammell
133 F 3d 1343
[10
th
Cir. (1998)]
at
1351, quoted with approval in the McCarthy case supra,
[
McCarthy
v Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg
2000 (2) SACR 542
(SCA)]
para
47).
’
(Per Maya AJA.) (The wording in double quotation marks comes
from the Opinion of Holloway J (Seymour and Kelly JJ
concurring) in
United
States v Jenkins
[1983] USCA10 50
;
701 F.2d 850
(10th Cir. 1983) at 855. It should be noted that,
after quoting the passage from
Jenkins
,
Farlam AJA proceeded, at para 48 of
McCarthy
,
to say ‘
I
am not sure that one need go so far as that in this case, but
something more than the factors listed in Heher J’s judgment,
not backed by specific averments by the accused person in question,
is in my view required before the far-reaching remedy of
an
indefinite stay can be granted in a case such as this
.’
The factors listed in Heher J’s judgment at first instance in
McCarthy
were
that a delay of 13 years would involve an adverse effect on the
fairness of the trial ‘…
in
at least the following respects: the applicant’s recollection
of events, the tracking down of such witnesses for the
defence as
may survive, the willingness of witnesses to testify, the
recollection of those witnesses and the procurement of real
evidence
’.)
[7]
At para 28.
[8]
Id.,
para 23. See also
Wild
and Another v Hoffert NO and Others
[1998] ZACC 5
(12 May
[1998] ZACC 5
;
1998; 1998 (3) SA 695
;
1998 (6) BCLR 656
(CC)
at para 4.
[9]
Id.,
para 30, with reference to the concurring Opinion of Brennan J (with
which Marshall J agreed) in
Dickey
v Florida
398 US 30
, 41 (1970).
[10]
In
para 38.
[11]
Sanderson
supra,
at para 32.
[12]
Broome
’
s
case was heard as an appeal from the decision of the regional
magistrate presiding in the criminal trial refusing an application
by the accused for a permanent stay of prosecution. The
magistrate’s lack of jurisdiction to have entertained the
application outside the ambit of
s 342A
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
was overlooked by the parties in that case
and not considered by the appellate court
mero
motu
;
see
Naidoo
v S
[2011] ZAWCHC 448
(6 December
2011); 2012 (2) SACR 126
(WCC), at
para 4.
[13]
The
applicant’s counsel referred in argument to the matter of
Director
of Public Prosecutions and Minister of Justice and Constitutional
Development v Phillips
[2012] ZASCA 140
(28 September 2012);
[2012] 4 All SA 513
(SCA).
That was a quite exceptional case, in which a permanent stay of
prosecution was granted
after
the applicant had been acquitted
on the charges on which he had been prosecuted in the regional
magistrates’ court. The stay was granted because of
the
prosecution’s failure, in gross non-compliance with the rules
of court, to prosecute an appeal it had noted in terms
of
s 310
of the
Criminal Procedure Act. The
circumstances in
Phillips
were quite different from those that typically present in a stay of
prosecution application, where the object is to avoid a
prosecution.
Bothma
v Els
supra,
was a case in which a permanent stay of prosecution granted in the
High Court was reversed on appeal by the Constitutional
Court.
In
Van
Heerden and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions and
Others
[2017] ZASCA 105
(11 September 2017);
[2017] 4 All SA 322
(SCA);
2017 (2) SACR 696
(SCA), in which a permanent stay was granted on
appeal to the SCA, the material prejudice suffered by the applicants
due to unreasonable
delay by the state was stark. The
prosecution kept chopping and changing its case and was guilty at a
critical point of
making dishonest representations to the court
concerning the conduct of the case. The criminal proceedings were
twice struck
off the roll. The very integrity of the criminal
proceedings was undermined. The applicants in that matter also
suffered
severe social and financial prejudice related to the
dragged-out proceedings and the effect of the restraint against
their property
while such proceedings remained pending. The
SCA stressed (at para 70 of the judgment) that applications of this
nature
are ‘fact specific’.
[14]
Cf.
Wild
v Hoffert
supra, at para 9, where Kriegler J remarked ‘...
in
the ordinary course and absent irreparable trial-related prejudice,
a stay would seldom be the appropriate remedy
’.
See also
Rodrigues
v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others
[2021] ZASCA 87
(21 June 2021);
[2021] 3 All SA 775
(SCA);
2021 (2)
SACR 333
(SCA) at para 50, where Cachalia JA remarked ‘
...
where there has been an unreasonable delay ... the central enquiry
is whether the accused’s trial-related interests
have been
prejudiced by the delay. For the courts have made clear that an
unreasonable delay does not per se infringe the accused’s
right to a fair trial
.’
[15]
My Vote
Counts NPC v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
[2015] ZACC 31
(30 September 2015), 2015 (12) BCLR 1407 (CC), 2016
(1) SA 132 (CC).
[16]
Minister
of Health and Another NO v New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Ltd and
Others (Treatment Action Campaign and Another as Amici
Curiae)
[2005] ZACC 14
(30 September 2005), 2006 (1) BCLR 1 (CC), 2006
(2) SA 3111 (CC).
[17]
South
African National Defence Union v Minister of Defence and Others
[2007] ZACC 10
(30 May 2007), 2007 (8) BCLR 863 (CC), 2007 (5) SA
400 (CC).
[18]
In para 55-56.
[19]
Bothma
v Els
supra,
was concerned with an application for a permanent stay of
prosecution in respect of a privately instituted prosecution.
[20]
In
para 44.
[21]
Cf.
Lawyers
for Human Rights v Minister in the Presidency and Others
[2016]
ZACC 45
(1 December
2016); 2017 (1) SA 645
(CC);
2017 (4) BCLR 445
(CC) at para 7.
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