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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2023] ZAWCHC 194
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## Kgantlapane v S - Bail Appeal (A122/2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 194 (31 July 2023)
Kgantlapane v S - Bail Appeal (A122/2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 194 (31 July 2023)
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sino date 31 July 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No.:A122/2023
In
the matter between:
BUSISWE
KGANTLAPANE
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON 31 JULY 2023
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD,
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an appeal against the
refusal of bail by a Magistrate in the
District Court of Klawer. The appellant was arrested on 26 April 2023
and charged with the
offence of contravening section 5(b) of the
Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992 (dealing in drugs).
[2]
On the day in question the South
African Police Services (SAPS) held
an authorised road block on a weigh bridge, on the N7 near Klawer.
The appellant was
the only occupant and driver of a navy blue
Mercedes-Benz which approached the road block. After the police
asked her to
open the boot of her vehicle they found three bags
filled with 41 plastic bags which, in turn, contained approximately
1000 mandrax
tablets. The police estimate the street value of
the drugs to be more than two million rand.
[3]
In the bail application there
was no oral evidence led. The
appellant submitted two affidavits - one from herself, and another
from her brother, Boitshoko
Kenneth Kgantlapane. For its part the
State submitted two affidavits - one from the investigating officer,
John Robert Williams,
another from Lieutenant Colonel Johann Smit the
SAPS, as well as a petition from the community of Van Rhynsdorp,
signed by 84 signatures
of that community.
[4]
In summary, the Magistrate found the following:
a.
He was doubtful about whether the applicant was
being honest and frank with the court regarding whether or not she
owns a motor
vehicle.
b.
The appellant’s version in respect of the
merits of the case is questionable. He was doubtful regarding the
appellant’s
alleged failure to search the vehicle and boot
before taking possession of the vehicle and taking a long distance
trip with it.
c.
The provisions of section 60(4)(b) of the CPA were
applicable – that
there is the likelihood that the
appellant, if she were released on bail, will attempt to evade her
trial.
d.
There was a possibility that the appellant may
evade her trial given the
seriousness, nature and gravity of
the charge
against her, strength of the State’s
case against her, and the possible lengthy term of imprisonment that
she faces as punishment.
e.
It is not in the interests of justice to grant
the appellant bail.
f.
The impact of mandrax and drugs
in the community was severe and very
serious.
g.
There would be no effective measures to stop
the appellant from
continuing to transport drugs if she is released on bail.
B.
THE LAW
[5]
The statutory context for determining
an appeal relating to bail
proceedings is section 65(4) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
(“the CPA”), which
provides as follows:
‘
The
court or judge hearing the appeal shall not set aside the decision
against which the appeal is brought, unless such court or
judge is
satisfied that the decision was wrong, in which event the court or
judge shall give the decision which in its or his opinion
the lower
court should have given.’
[6]
The
test for interfering with the Magistrate’s judgment is whether
the
court
a quo
misdirected itself in a material way, in relation to facts or the
law.
[1]
The Court stated as
follows in
S
v Barber
[2]
:
It
is well-known that the powers of this Court are largely limited where
the matter comes before it on appeal and not as a substantive
application. This Court has to be persuaded that the magistrate
exercised the discretion which he has wrongly. Accordingly, although
this Court may have a different view, it should not substitute its
own review for that of the magistrate because that would be
an unfair
interference with the magistrate’s exercise of its discretion.
I think it should be in should be stressed that,
no matter what this
Court’s own views are, the real question is whether it can be
said that the magistrate who had the discretion
to grant bail but
exercised that discretion wrongly.
[7]
If such misdirection is established, the appeal
court is at large to consider whether bail ought, in the particular
circumstances,
to have been granted or refused, and in the absence of
a finding that the magistrate misdirected him or herself the appeal
must
fail.
[8]
An
accused is, in the absence of a conviction by a court of law,
constitutionally presumed to be innocent.
[3]
[9]
The
grant or refusal of bail is a discretionary decision under judicial
control, and judicial officers have the ultimate decision
as to
whether or not, in the circumstance of a particular case, bail should
be granted.
[4]
[10]
Since the offence with which the appellant is
charged falls within the ambit of Schedule 5 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
(CPA), section 60(11)(b) of the CPA is
applicable, and it provides as follows:
“
Notwithstanding
any provision of this Act, where an accused is charged with an
offence referred to in Schedule 5, but
not in Schedule 6,
the court shall order that the accused be detained in custody until
he or she is dealt with in accordance with
the law, unless the
accused, having been given a reasonable opportunity to do so, adduces
evidence which satisfies the court that
the interests of justice
permit his or her release”
[11]
The effect of this provision is that the
appellant bore an onus to establish, on a balance of probabilities,
that the interests
of justice permit her release on bail. In this
regard,
section 60(4)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act provides
that t
he
interests of justice do not permit the release from detention of an
accused where one or more of the following grounds are established:
“
(a)
Where there is the likelihood
that the accused, if he or she were released on bail, will endanger
the safety of the public, any
person against whom the offence in
question was allegedly committed, or any other particular person or
will commit a Schedule 1
offence;
(b)
where there is the
likelihood that the accused, if he or she were released on bail, will
attempt to evade his or her trial;
or
(c)
where there is the likelihood
that the accused, if he or she were released on bail, will attempt to
influence or intimidate witnesses
or to conceal or destroy evidence;
or
(d)
where there is the likelihood
that the accused, if he or she were released on bail, will undermine
or jeopardise the objectives
or the proper functioning of the
criminal justice system, including the bail system; or
(e)
where in exceptional
circumstances there is the likelihood that the release of the accused
will disturb the public order or undermine
the public peace or
security.”
[12]
In terms of
section 60(6)
of the CPA,
in
considering whether the ground in
section 60
(4)
(b)
has been
established, the court may, where applicable, take into account the
following factors:
(a)
the emotional, family, community
or occupational ties of the accused to the place at which he or she
is to be tried;
(b)
the assets held by the accused
and where such assets are situated;
(c)
the means, and travel documents
held by the accused, which may enable him or her to leave the
country;
(d)
the extent, if any, to which the
accused can afford to forfeit the amount of bail which may be set;
(e)
the question whether the
extradition of the accused could readily be effected should he or she
flee across the borders of the Republic
in an attempt to evade his or
her trial;
(f)
the nature and the gravity of the
charge on which the accused is to be tried;
(g)
the strength of the case against
the accused and the incentive that he or she may in consequence have
to attempt to evade his or
her trial;
(h)
the nature and gravity of the
punishment which is likely to be imposed should the accused be
convicted of the charges against him
or her;
(i)
the binding effect and
enforceability of bail conditions which may be imposed and the ease
with which such conditions could be breached;
or
(j)
any other factor which in the
opinion of the court should be taken into account.”
THE
APPEAL
[13]
The grounds for appeal are many and varied, covering, in
essence every issue raised in the bail application, and the appellant
submits
that the
Magistrate erred in reaching the
following findings:
a.
The appellant is a flight risk and will not
stand trial on her own accord;
b.
Her release will undermine the proper
functioning of the criminal justice system;
c.
By placing undue emphasis on the
seriousness of the offence;
d.
That the appellant’s personal
circumstances do not warrant the granting of bail in the interests of
justice;
e.
That the interests of justice do not permit
her release.
[14]
In these proceedings the appellant relies
significantly on the fact
that she has family ties, in South Africa, a verifiable address as
well as an alternative address which
is provided by her brother.
To this the appellant adds that she is a single parent of a four-year
old daughter to whom she
has emotional ties.
[15]
It is most convenient to begin with the
last-mentioned consideration
– the appellant’s tie to her four-year old minor. On the
appellant’s own version,
the minor child has been living with
her grandparents since before the appellant’s arrest for this
matter, and has simply
continued to be in their care since the arrest
of the appellant. No danger or significant concern has been
raised in that
regard, save for the concern that the appellant will
not be able to adequately care for her financially. But, according to
the
appellant’s affidavit, she was not able to provide for her
daughter, even before her arrest. Hence her decision to move to
Gauteng and leave the minor with her grandparents.
[16]
The appellant has continued to maintain
that her incarceration is
impeding her ability to look for employment or to receive employment
offers and contractual offers.
In this regard, she has attached
to her affidavit a number of emails from various institutions to
demonstrate that she was actively
looking for economic opportunities
and that, after her arrest there was some interest shown from at
least two government departments.
However, the interest shown by the
government departments was for her to provide quotations for the
supply of items. The
emails were not offers of employment, or
agreements for her to supply those items. In other words, there
is no guarantee
that her quotation would have been selected, although
I do accept that it would have provided her with some hope.
[17]
As I pointed out to the appellant’s
legal representative in
Court, the appellant is in no different position from many South
Africans who are looking for work opportunities.
It is a known fact
that there is a shortage of employment opportunities in South Africa.
Daily, our courts are inundated with criminal
activity committed by
accused persons who explain that they struggle to find work and to
make ends meet. If this were permitted
as a ground to grant bail for
purposes of
section 60(11)(b)
, then every such arrested individual
might qualify for bail. Even worse, it would be considered in the
interests of justice for
such persons to be released on bail on
account of their economic circumstances. That would negate the whole
purpose of the provision
which is to set stringent conditions for
granting release on bail in the circumstances proscribed.
[18]
In any event, it is common cause that the
appellant was not employed
at the time of her arrest, and was in fact unemployed for a while
before the arrests which is the reason
that she moved from Klerksdorp
to Pretoria. In other words, her arrest did not change her
situation by, for example, creating
a loss of employment. I am
therefore of the view that the economic factors upon which the
appellant relies do not assist
her for purposes of discharging the
onus placed upon her by
section 60(11)(b).
Neither is the reliance on
her ties to her daughter.
[19]
An issue which took prominence during the
court proceedings before me
is the issue of the fixed residential address of the appellant. It is
common cause that the address
provided by the appellant to the police
for purposes of the bail application was […] Al[…]
B[…], Roodepark,
Eco Estate, Pretoria
(“the Pretoria
address”
). As a result of that information, the
police visited and verified that address, and confirmed that in the
affidavit of Detective
Williams.
[20]
By the time the bail proceedings were heard
on 17 May 2023 the
appellant had been evicted from that address, apparently due to her
failure to pay rental as a result of her
incarceration. The eviction
notice is dated 10 May 2023. It is not clear from the record that the
address from which she was evicted
is the same address that was
verified by the police. I say so because the address contained
in the notice of eviction is
Unit 1[…], Roodepark, Eco City,
which seems to me to be a different address. This issue did not
receive any attention during
the bail application and the proceedings
continued on the basis that the appellant was evicted from the
Pretoria address that she
had provided to the police.
[21]
Whatever the address of the appellant was
in Gauteng, it was not
disputed that she had in any event only moved there at the beginning
of April 2023. As a result, whatever
the address was it could not
constitute a fixed address as at 26 April 2023 when the appellant was
arrested. In any event, Mr Paries
who represents the appellant
admitted that, as a result of the eviction, the Pretoria address has
fallen away and cannot be considered
a fixed address. What is
relevant though, is that this was the primary address given by the
appellant as a fixed address
to the police and to the Magistrate for
purposes of the bail application. There was no misdirection in the
Magistrate being dissatisfied
regarding that address, and forming a
view that the appellant was a flight risk.
[22]
Faced with the challenge of the eviction,
the appellant also relied
on her brother’s address at […] Ac[…] Street,
Edenburg, Free State Province (“
the Edenburg address”
).
This address was not verified by the police. However, the
Magistrate did take it into account in her decision, referring
to it
as an alternative address. In response to this alternative address,
the State’s argument was that, since the appellant
was arrested
in the Western Cape there is no reason to grant her bail which is to
be enjoyed in another province. In my view, there
are additional
problems with regard to the appellant’s reliance on the
alternative address.
[23]
Whilst relying on her brother’s address
in Edenburg, the
appellant also continues to rely upon the address in Klerksdorp where
she previously lived with her mother and
child, at 1[…] B[…]
Road, Stilfontein, Klerksdorp (“
the Stilfontein address”
).
It was argued before me that this address can also be considered a
fixed address because of the length of time that the appellant
resided there before moving to Pretoria, and because of the fact that
her minor child and family reside there, thus constituting
an
emotional tie. But Edenburg and Stilfontein are not the same
location. The two addresses may even be in different provinces,
namely the Free State and the North-West Province. This issue
highlights the argument made on behalf of the State, that it
would
place an undue burden on the public resources of having police of a
different province monitoring a bail candidate residing
in another
province. Initially, this argument was made in regard to the fact
that the appellant was arrested in the Western Cape
Province whilst
she wants to enjoy her bail in the Free State at her brother's
address. But it is now clear that the appellant
also relies on the
address in Klerksdorp where her daughter and mother reside, claiming
to have emotional ties there, which makes
the situation much worse.
[24]
The
purpose of providing a fixed address is to assure the court that an
accused's trial attendance is secure. There is no such comfort
when a
fixed address is not present.
[5]
And the emphasis here is on a fixed, not moving, address.
Furthermore, I am in agreement with the State that it would be
onerous to expect it to contact or monitor the appellant for the
purposes of her trial. But this factor – the lack of a fixed
address - is not the sole factor to be considered in the
circumstances of this case. When taken cumulatively with other
factors,
it
is
not a surprise that the Magistrate was not persuaded that the
appellant is not a flight risk. The Magistrate was correctly cautious
that the existence of different addresses might well provide
opportunity for the appellant to evade trial. It is also no
wonder that the State argues that it would be difficult to monitor
the appellant’s movements as between the two addresses,
which are not in the same location, even if it can be argued that
they are in the same general region.
[25]
To further compound the issue, the trial
proceedings are to be held
in the Western Cape Province, the province where the appellant was
arrested. Thus, even if it were established
that the appellant has a
fixed address somewhere in the Free State, that does not provide
comfort that the appellant might not
attempt to evade the trial. As
the State points out,
the appellant has no
emotional, economic, family, community or occupational ties to the
Western Cape and especially to the town
of Klawer where the trial is
to be heard – a factor which is relevant in terms of
section
60(6)(a).
[26]
To add to the mobility concerns, there is
to consider the issue of
the appellant’s assets which, according to her,
were
allegedly last left in Pretoria but at present she has no knowledge
of their whereabouts.
What this means is that the appellant
has no assets in the Free State or Edinburg, where she now relies as
her resident address.
[27]
The issue of the appellant’s assets
raises another concern,
relating to the appellant’s ownership of a motor vehicle. After
all, she was arrested whilst driving
a luxury vehicle. The
appellant’s version in the Magistrate’s Court was that
she did not own any motor vehicle. Yet,
as the Magistrate observed,
there were numerous emails attached to her affidavit in which she
stated while looking for job opportunities
that she had
“
my
own reliable transport in case the job requires one to have one”
.
It was argued before me that this does not mean that the transport
referred to is owned by the appellant. It is difficult to reconcile
that version with the clear text of the e-mails, which expressly
state that the said transport is the appellant's
own
. In one
of the e-mails, after mentioning that she has her own reliable
transport, the appellant adds as follows: “
Am willing to
travel and work extra hours”
. What cannot be denied
is that the emails indicate that the appellant has full access to
transport, including after hours.
These emails were sent in very
close proximity to the appellant’s arrest, the last one being
dated 18 April 2023. What all
of this means is that, at the very
least, the appellant has access to transport which she may access
outside ordinary working hours.
The Magistrate’s cynicism
regarding the appellant’s version was not misplaced. The
appellant’s version regarding
ownership and access to a motor
vehicle remains dissatisfactory. I consider this aspect to be an
important consideration in the
context of bail proceedings, where
there are flight risk concerns. It lends itself towards the
probability that there is a likelihood
that the appellant might
attempt to evade trial.
[28]
I have otherwise found no misdirection in
the decision of the
Magistrate. He correctly took into account the strength of the
State’s case against the appellant. This
is especially the case
given the nature and gravity of the punishment which is likely to be
imposed should she be convicted of
the charges against her.
Prima
facie
,
it cannot be said that the State's case
against the appellant is non-existent, or weak and that the appellant
in all likelihood
will be acquitted after the trial.
[29]
It deserves highlighting that the appellant
has been charged with a
Schedule 5 offence, an indication of the seriousness of the crime.
In those circumstances, the fact
that the crime was not violent - an
issue which was also argued for me - does not assist the appellant.
The said crime is so serious
that the legislature found it necessary
to prescribe a minimum sentence for it.
[30]
The fact
that the offence concerned is included in Schedule 5 means that the
appellant possibly faces a very long term of direct
imprisonment. The
case law
[6]
indicates that this
is a relevant factor which may be taken into account when considering
whether an appellant might be inclined
to evade trial for purposes of
bail. The Magistrate was not misdirected when he took this factor
into account. The fact that
the appellant does not possess a
passport is neither here nor there. She may still manage to evade the
authorities, given the concerns
already discussed.
[31]
It is also not disputed that there was a
petition from the community
of Van Rhynsdorp containing 84 signatures of people who were
obviously triggered by the fact that the
offence in this case
involves the dependence-producing drug, mandrax, a well-known enemy
to the children and communities of the
Western Cape. In his judgment,
the Magistrate set out some of the dire consequences of drug-dealing
upon communities, and those
are not disputed.
[32]
It was argued that the nature of the crime
with which the appellant
is charged was not repetitive such that she can be considered a
notorious drug dealer. That, however,
also does not assist the
appellant in the circumstances of this matter given the value of the
drugs involved. In any event
it is not a requirement that she
be a repeat offender.
[33]
In all circumstances, the appeal against
the Magistrate’
refusal of bail is dismissed.
N.
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
For
the appellant:
Adv
A. Paries
For
the respondent:
Adv M
September-Qatana
D.P.P.
Cape Town
## [1]Panayiotou
v SPanayiotou
v S(CA&R
06 /2015)
[2015] ZAECGHC 73 (28 July 2015),para
[26] – [27].
[1]
Panayiotou
v S
Panayiotou
v S
(CA&R
06 /2015)
[2015] ZAECGHC 73 (28 July 2015),
para
[26] – [27].
[2]
S
v Barber
1979
(4) SA 218
(D)
at 220 E – H.
[3]
Section
35(3)(h) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 108
of 1996.
[4]
S
v Dlamini
;
S
v Dladla and others
;
S
v Joubert
;
S
v Schieteket
[1999]
ZACC 8
;
1999
(2) SACR 51
(CC)
at
88H – I , 89 E and 90B-D.
[5]
S
v
Diale and Another
2013
(2) SACR 85
(GNP) at 18.
[6]
See
S v Hudson
[
1980]
1 All SA 130
(D) at 131
; S
v Nichas
1977
(1) SA 257
(C).
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