Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 100South Africa
Sakildien v S (A218/2021;F458/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 100 (15 February 2022)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAWCHC 100
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Sakildien v S (A218/2021;F458/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 100 (15 February 2022)
Sakildien v S (A218/2021;F458/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 100 (15 February 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2022_100.html
sino date 15 February 2022
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
REPORTABLE
Bail
appeal case number: A218/2021
Magistrate’s
Court case number: Wynberg F458/2021
In
the matter between:
MAGMOED
SAKILDIEN
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Delivered
on 15 February 2022
VAN ZYL AJ
Introduction
1.
This matter came to
this Court by way of an appeal against the refusal of bail to the
appellant by the Wynberg Magistrate’s
Court on 11 August 2011.
The appellant, Mr Magmoed Sakildien, is charged with the rape of a
69-year old disabled woman. The crime
was allegedly committed on 5
July 2021, in Wynberg.
2.
Aggrieved by this
result, the appellant appealed against the refusal in terms of
section 65(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act, 1977
(“the CPA”).
The appellant’s grounds of appeal are, essentially, as follows:
a.
The lower court erred
in finding that the appellant had failed to prove exceptional
circumstances, which justified the granting
of bail.
b.
The lower court failed
to attached any weight, or attached insufficient weight, tot the
facts that:
i.The
appellant has no previous convictions, pending cases or outstanding
warrants;
ii.The
appellant was a young man of 22 years of at the time of the alleged
commission of the offence;
iii.The
relationship between the victim and the appellant is that of
grandmother and grandson; and
iv.The
appellant lived with his parents in a normal family setup.
v.These
factors indicate that the appellant is a normal 22-year old who is
stable and rooted in the community.
c.
As regards the crime
itself, the lower court failed adequately to consider the following
factors:
i.The
crime had elements of a crime of passion;
ii.The
family setup does not exclude the defence of consent;
iii.The
version of the State depends solely on a video, the admissibility of
which might be in issue.
d.
The lower court
over-emphasized the seriousness of the crime, and failed to
sufficiently consider other issues such as that:
i.The
appellant is not a danger to society;
ii.The
appellant will not abscond;
iii.The
repetition of the offence is unlikely;
iv.The
appellant will not meddle with the witnesses; and
v.The
appellant has co-operated with the police.
3.
The State opposes the
appeal upon considerations that will be dealt with in the course of
the discussion below.
When may the
magistrate’s decision be overturned?
4.
In terms of section
65(2) of the CPA, read with section 63(3), the Court is bound by the
record, and there is no scope for placing
additional facts before the
Court for the purposes of the hearing on appeal (
S
v Ho
1979 (3) SA
734
(W) at 737G).
5.
Section 65(4) of the
CPA provides that 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.
A court may interfere
on appeal when the lower court misdirected itself materially in
respect of the relevant legal principles or
the facts of the case (
S
v Essop
2018 (1)
SACR 99
(GP) at paras [34]-[35]), or where the lower court over
looked important aspects in coming to its decision to refuse bail
(
Ramasia v S
(A24/2012)
[2012] ZAFSHC 88
(3 May
2012)). The power of the court on appeal are thus similar to those in
an appeal against conviction and sentence
(
S
v Ho
1979 (3) SA
734
(W) at 737H)
.
7.
Nevertheless, in
S
v Porthern and others
2004 (2) SA SACR 242 (C) the Court observed at para [17] that it
remains necessary “
to
be mindful that a bail appeal, including one affected by the
provisions of section 60(11)(a), goes to the question of deprivation
of personal liberty. In my view, that consideration is a further
factor confirming that section 65(4) of the CPA should eb construed
in a manner which does not unduly restrict the ambit of an appeal
court’s competence to decide that the lower court’s
discretion to refuse bail was ’wrong’”
.
8.
The mere fact that the
reasons for refusing bail are brief, is not in itself a sufficient
ground for the court of appeal to infer
that insufficient
consideration was given to the considerations set out in section 60
of the CPA (
S v Ali
2011 (1) SACR 34
(ECP) at para [15]).
9.
In the present matter,
the appellant effectively contends that the lower court misdirected
itself by overemphasizing the seriousness
of the charge at the
expense of the appellant, thereby disregarding his personal
circumstances and the failing to consider the
factors in section
60(4) as being exceptional in the context of the case.
10.
It is against this
background that I consider the facts at my disposal, and the argument
presented by the parties.
Has the appellant
shown the existence of exceptional circumstances warranting the grant
of bail?
11.
The starting point in
bail applications generally is section 60(1)(a), which provides that
“
an
accused who is in custody in
respect of an offence shall … be entitled to be released on
bail at any stage preceding his
or her conviction in respect of such
offence, if the court is satisfied that the interests of justice so
permit.
”
12.
Section 60(4) enjoins
the Court, in determining a bail application, to have regard to the
following factors in deciding whether
to grant bail:
“
The
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 or any
particular
person or will commit a Schedule 1 offence; or
(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
.”
13.
Section 60(11) of the
CPA constitutes an exception to the general entitlement to be
released on bail as set out in section 60(1),
read with section
60(4):
“
Notwithstanding
any provision of this Act, where an accused is charged with an
offence referred to-
(a)
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 exceptional
circumstances exist which in the interests of justice permit his or
her release;
(b)
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
.”
14.
Rape is a Schedule 6
office. In the premises, the appellant must show, by adducing
evidence, that exceptional circumstances exist
which, in the
interests of justice, permits his release on bail. In
S
v Petersen
2008 (2)
SACR 355
(C) at para [54] it was stated that “…
it
is clear that the onus is on the accused to adduce evidence, and
hence to prove, the existence of exceptional circumstances of
such a
nature as to permit his or her release on bail. The court must also
be satisfied that the release of the accused is in the
interests of
justice
”.
15.
In paragraphs [55] and
[56] of the same case the concept of “exceptional
circumstances” was explained as follows:
“
Generally
speaking ‘exceptional’ is indicative of something
unusual, extraordinary, remarkable, peculiar or simply different.
There are, of course, different degrees of exceptionality,
unusualness, extraordinariness, remarkableness, peculiarity or
difference.
This depends on their context and on the particular
circumstances of the case under consideration.
In
the context of section 60(11)(a) the exceptionality of the
circumstances must be such as to persuade a court that t would be
in
the interests of justice to order the release of the accused person.
… In essence the court will be exercising a value
judgment in
accordance with all the relevant facts and circumstances, and with
reference to all the applicable legal criteria.
”
16.
I agree with the
appellant’s counsel that a charge in respect of a Schedule 6
office is not an absolute bar to the granting
of bail, and that bail
is not punitive in character. That much is clear from a proper
interpretation of the relevant provisions
of the CPA. There are,
however, various factors that militate against the grant of bail in
the present matter.
17.
Firstly, the appellant
had legal representation at the time of the bail hearing, but did not
challenge the State’s case in
his bail application. The
appellant has admitted that he had sexual intercourse with his
grandmother. The State argued that, given
that the video was taken by
civilians in a family setup, there is little chance of it being held
to be inadmissible for the purposes
of trial. The video evidence is,
moreover, not the only evidence that will be presented against the
appellant at the trial in due
course.
18.
Secondly, the appellant
did not provide any evidence in support for his conclusion, in his
affidavit delivered in support of his
bail application, that it would
be “in the interests of justice” that he be released on
bail. He set out his details
in a generic matter on the application
form, and did not give oral evidence in elaboration. He has, in
short, not placed any evidence
on record which can be relied upon to
prove the existence of exceptional circumstances.
19.
Thirdly, the
complainant and the witnesses are all known to the appellant, as they
are family. They have indicated that they will
testify against the
appellant in due course. There are not strangers to him, and he would
know their weaknesses. As such, it would
not be unreasonable to fear
that he would attempt to influence them. I do not agree with the
appellant’s argument that the
mere fact that they were the ones
who brought him to justice will cause them to resist any attempt at
influence, and that there
is therefore no such risk. The fact that
the appellant will, if released on bail, go to reside with his other
grandmother in Maitland
does nothing to allay the fears in this
respect.
20.
Fourthly, I do not
agree with the appellant’s counsel that the fact that the crime
was committed in a family setup constitutes
an exceptional
circumstance in his favour. I do not agree that the offence with
which the appellant is charged can be described
as a “crime of
passion”, committed by a young man who simply acted on his
urges, who should be regarded as a “normal”
22-year old,
and who is unlikely to repeat the crime. I also do not agree with the
submission that the possibility that the grant
of consent by the
victim is not excluded by the available video evidence should be
regarded as an exceptional circumstance. The
appellant chose one of
the most vulnerable persons as his target. She was available to him,
living in the same household. She was
elderly and, on the evidence of
the investigating officer, blind, bed-ridden, suffering from
dementia, and unable to care for herself.
She was unable to fight
back. She was a convenient victim, targeted repeatedly. There is no
assurance that the appellant will not
seek victims further afield,
now that he is under scrutiny as far as his grandmother is concerned.
21.
Fifthly, as alluded to
above, the event captured on video was seemingly not the first
occasion on which the appellant had intercourse
with the victim. The
evidence of the investigating officer is that the victim’s
behaviour observed one evening – by
sitting up straight in her
bed – made one of the witnesses suspicious. From this behaviour
is seems probable that the victim
had had previous encounters with
the appellant. According to the evidence available, the appellant
cleaned the victim after having
had intercourse with her. All of this
indicates a degree of premeditation on the appellant’s part.
22.
In the sixth place, the
appellant’s counsel argued that it should be taken into
account, as an exceptional circumstance, that
the rape was not
accompanied by torture or extreme violence as is often encountered in
rape cases. I do not agree that a “gentle”
rape
constitutes an exceptional circumstance. The medical evidence
following an examination of the victim is compatible with the
allegations of sexual assault or vaginal penetration. The appellant’s
counsel conceded, in argument, that rape is always
“aggravating”,
but submitted that the familial bond between the appellant and the
victim places the event in the category
of “exceptional”
for the purposes of the appeal. I do not agree that such familial
bond constitutes an exceptional
circumstance as contemplated by
section 60(11)(a).
23.
In the seventh place,
the personal circumstances advanced by the appellant do not
constitute exceptional circumstances as contemplated
by section
60(11). In
S v Botha
[2002] 2 All SA 577
(A) the accused advanced similar circumstances,
which the Appellate Division (at para [17]) did not regard as
exceptional in the
face of a
prima
facie
case.
24.
The appellant argues
that his personal circumstances, viewed in totality, should be
regarded as exceptional given the context in
which crime was
allegedly committed, and the fact that it occurred within a family
setup. I fail to see how the circumstances set
forth can be regarded
as exceptional in favour of the appellant. On the contrary, it
appears to me that they point towards the
correctness of the lower
court’s decision.
25.
The appellant argues
further that his personal circumstances indicate that he is stable
and rooted in the community. The fact that
the appellant is
unemployed and unmarried, however, makes it easy for him to abscond,
whatever the degree of his co-operation with
the police up to this
stage. He had to co-operate initially, as he was caught out. That
does not mean that he will not attempt
to evade a trial in due
course.
26.
On a consideration of
the matter as a whole, I am not satisfied that the magistrate’s
court misdirected itself materially
on the legal principles involved,
or on the facts. The evidence on record, viewed as a whole, shows
that the appellant failed,
at the bail hearing, to discharge the onus
of proving that exceptional circumstances exist that justify his
release in bail in
the interests of justice. He simply did not adduce
evidence that could persuade a court that it would be in the
interests of justice
to release him on bail.
27.
A final consideration
(although not an overarching one) is the view that the community
would take of an offence such as the one
with which the appellant is
charged. Counsel for the State referred the Court to
Carmichele
v Minister of Safety and Security and another
2002
(1) SA 79
(CC), where the following is stated at para [62]:
“…
In
addressing these obligations in relation to dignity and the freedom
and security of the person, few things can be more important
to women
than freedom from the threat of sexual violence. As it was put by
counsel on behalf of the
amicus curiae
:
“
Sexual
violence and the threat of sexual violence goes to the core of
women’s subordination in society. It is the single greatest
threat to the self-determination of South African women.”
She referred
in that context to the following statement by the SCA in
the
Chapman
case:
“
The
courts are under a duty to send a clear message to the accused, to
other potential rapists and to the community. We are determined
to
protect the equality, dignity and freedom of all women, and we shall
show no mercy to those who seek to invade those rights.”
South Africa
also has a duty under international law to prohibit all gender-based
discrimination that has the effect or purpose
of impairing the
enjoyment by women of fundamental rights and freedoms and to take
reasonable and appropriate measures to prevent
the violation of those
rights.
”
Order
28.
In the circumstances,
it is ordered as follows:
The
appeal is dismissed
.
P S VAN ZYL AJ
HEARING DATE:
15 February 2022
W.
A. Fisher
for the
appellant (instructed by Isaacs Attorneys)
L.
Snyman
for the
respondent (Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
K2012150042 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Varnado Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another (19788/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 226 (18 October 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 226High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Bilikwana v S (A152/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 205 (26 October 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 205High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Claassen N.O. v Muller-Wolff and Another (1377/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 158 (15 February 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 158High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
K2014266944 South Africa (Pty) Ltd t/a Hyperion Development v Govender (22420/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 225 (23 May 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 225High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
K2021765242 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Thibault Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others - Application for Leave to Appeal (3518/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 135 (6 June 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 135High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar