Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 26South Africa
Korver v Regional Magistrate, Specialised Crime Court, Bellville, Western Cape and Others (12891/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 26 (4 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
4 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Korver v Regional Magistrate, Specialised Crime Court, Bellville, Western Cape and Others (12891/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 26 (4 March 2022)
Korver v Regional Magistrate, Specialised Crime Court, Bellville, Western Cape and Others (12891/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 26 (4 March 2022)
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sino date 4 March 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No:
12891/2021
In
the matter between:
MARTIN
LENNARD KORVER
Applicant
and
THE
REGIONAL MAGISTRATE, SPECIALISED CRIME
COURT
BELLVILLE, WESTERN CAPE
First
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
WESTERN
CAPE
Second
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Third
Respondent
Coram
:
Justice J Cloete
et
Justice L Nuku
Heard
:
11 February 2022, supplementary notes filed 25 February 2022
Delivered
electronically
:
4 March 2022
JUDGMENT
CLOETE J
:
[1]
The applicant seeks (a) the review and setting aside of a certain
order made by the first respondent (“the magistrate”) on
23 July 2019; and (b) the permanent stay of his prosecution.
The
relief sought is opposed only by the second respondent (“the
DPP”). The magistrate also provided short reasons
for the order
which the applicant seeks to impugn.
[2]
The applicant faces the following charges in the Specialised
Commercial Crime Court, Bellville, namely (a) two counts of fraud,
alternatively theft, totalling R6.8 million; (b) five counts
each of forgery, uttering and theft amounting to some R5.5 million;
and (c) one count of money laundering, being a contravention
of
section 4 of POCA.
[1]
He has not
yet pleaded to the charges and is out on bail.
[3]
The applicant’s first appearance was on 12 October 2018.
Until
about 23 March 2020 he was represented by a different counsel
and/or attorney. Neither have deposed to affidavits in
support of his
allegations in the matter before us, although there is no indication
on the papers that these legal representatives
were approached and
were unwilling or unable to do so.
[4]
From the record provided to the applicant in terms of uniform
rule 53
the following entries of the proceedings made by the magistrate (or
her colleague, where indicated) are relevant to determination
of the
matter.
[5]
On 23 November 2018 the applicant’s attorney informed
the
magistrate that he (i.e. the applicant) wished to appoint ‘
auditors’
.
The matter was subsequently postponed for purposes of obtaining the
auditor’s report.
[6]
On 26 April 2019 the applicant’s counsel advised the
magistrate
that a provisional report had been received, but from that report it
seemed that the defence would need to request further
particulars
from the State. The magistrate postponed the matter to 4 June 2019
‘
for the above request, State’s response and defence
auditor’s report’.
[7]
On 4 June 2019 the matter was postponed again to 23 July 2019.
One of
the reasons was that the auditor’s final report was not ready
since the State had provided poor copies of certain
documents to the
defence. The magistrate granted that postponement ‘
for
State’s response
[to the further particulars]
and
finally for defence financial instructions’.
[8]
When the matter was called on 23 July 2019 the prosecutor informed
the magistrate that the State was ready to hand over the further
particulars to the defence, and the applicant’s counsel
confirmed this. The relevant portion of the magistrate’s notes
recording what transpired thereafter reads as follows:
‘
SA:
The documents requested
in re Sec 87 application will be handed over
to the Defence Adv. today – in electronic format. Defence have
to provide a
memory stick.
On 26/4/2019
Defence Adv. said they possess a provisional auditors report. Defence
Adv. promised to hand it over to the SA on that
day. They did not. We
need it to determine our next strategic step – before we get
the final report
.
Adv Smith:
We need time to peruse the response.
We will not hand
over our provisional auditors report today because we want to discuss
the State’s Sec 87 response with our
auditors…
Defence Adv. Still
request a remand to consider the state response to their Section
87
Act 51/77
request…
We request a remand
till end Aug…
SA:
No objection.
We just request an
order of court for the Defence to release their provisional auditors
report
.
Court:
Remanded 4/9/19 for the above. Accused’s
bail extended and
warned 8:30am until called.
Court orders
:
1.
Defence have 14 days to consider the state’s response to
Section
87 Act 51/77
application.
2.
If the Defence are going to use the same auditors final
forensic report at trial stage, the provisional report or the amended
version
of it to be handed to the state on or before 21 August 2019
…’
(emphasis supplied)
[9]
Accordingly, counsel for the applicant did not dispute that
he had
previously “promised” to hand over the provisional
auditor’s report, nor did he object to handing it over
at a
later stage. All that he was not prepared to do was hand it to the
prosecutor on that day. Where the waters become muddy,
however, is
when the prosecutor thereafter requested the magistrate to order the
defence to hand over the provisional report and
ex facie
the
magistrate’s notes, without affording the defence the
opportunity to address her, or even take instructions from the
applicant, she made an order to that effect.
[10]
On 4 September 2019 the prosecutor advised the magistrate that he had
just been handed
the provisional auditor’s report and that the
State required time to peruse it. The following is recorded in the
magistrate’s
notes thereafter:
‘
Attorney:
We ask a remand for final auditors report. Our Defence advocate
mandate has been ended.
Accused:
I’m satisfied with that decision of my attorney.’
[11]
There is no indication in the magistrate’s notes as to what
exactly the applicant
meant by stating that he was satisfied with
‘
that decision’
of his attorney. There is also a
dispute of fact in this regard.
[12]
This particular aspect was not dealt with by the applicant in his
founding affidavit.
The magistrate did not deal with it in her
reasons either. The DPP’s answering affidavit was deposed to by
Lt Col Elizabeth
De Villiers, the investigating officer, who stated
that its contents fall within her personal knowledge. According to
her:
‘
14.
The provisional report was disclosed to the second respondent’s
representative on the 04
th
of
September 2019 by the defence attorney… At that stage the
applicant indicated that he is satisfied with his attorney’s
decision…’
[2]
And
‘
107
…neither the applicant and/or his legal team at any stage
objected to disclose the draft progress
forensic auditor’s
report to the second respondent. To the contrary the applicant
confirms on the 04
th
of September 2019 that
he is satisfied with his attorney’s decision. Therefore, the
applicant waived his attorney/client privilege
when he indicated that
he was satisfied with his attorney’s decision…’
[13]
In his replying affidavit the applicant denied this to be the case
and stated that:
‘
12.
On 4 September 2019 my attorneys terminated the mandate of my
then-counsel… The Court enquired
from me whether I was
satisfied with the decision of my attorney to terminate counsel’s
mandate. I confirmed that indeed
I was…’
[14]
The applicant added that in any event, by that stage, neither he nor
his attorney
had any choice but to disclose the draft report in terms
of the impugned order, and that this was the advice which he had
received
from his legal team after the order was granted.
[15]
There is also a dispute about the reason why the magistrate ordered
the provisional
auditor’s report to be handed over. In her
reasons she stated that ‘
the order was granted for pre-trial
purposes and for plea negotiation purposes and to minimise
unnecessary delays in the matter’.
She also stated that the
defence had previously requested postponements ‘
specifically
to place the State in possession of their auditors report’.
[16]
However the DPP does not suggest that the defence ever requested
postponements specifically
for the purpose of providing the
prosecutor with their auditor’s report and, indeed, that no
such request was made previously
is borne out by the magistrate’s
own notes. The DPP appears to agree with the applicant that the
reason for these earlier
postponements was for the defence to appoint
a forensic auditor to assist with the applicant’s case or, put
differently,
the preparation of his defence.
[17]
Further, according to the DPP, it was only on 8 November 2019 that
the matter was
postponed for the purpose of plea negotiations. This
was 4 months after the impugned order was made, and just under
2 months
after the provisional auditor’s report was handed
to the prosecutor on 4 September 2019. The DPP’s averments
are
supported by the notes of the magistrate’s colleague who
stood in for her on that day:
‘
ON:
8/11/2019
PO:
RCM C. NZIWENI
PP:
D. COMBRINK
DEF:
MR. J.P JOUBERT
PP:
Adv. Joubert appear. Matter set down for formal pre-trial.
Attorney
has requested me to relay information to the complainant.
Defence next strategy
with the state.
COURT:
What is meant by the defence next strategy.
PP:
Possible plea negotiation. Mr Joubert confirms.
Remanded 31/01/20 plea
negotiation, bail extended and warned 8:30am RC 5.’
[18]
It is entirely unclear from the record why the applicant’s
erstwhile counsel
allegedly agreed to make the provisional auditor’s
report available to the prosecutor on 26 April 2019. There is no
record
of this in the magistrate’s notes and such a discussion
may well have taken place outside court, whether formally or
informally.
The applicant confirms that he did not instruct his
counsel or attorney to make any report available to the prosecutor,
and the
DPP is unable to refute this. The applicant also confirms
that at the time the impugned order was made, plea negotiations had
not
yet commenced.
[19]
This uncertainty could have been cleared up by evidence in affidavit
form from the
applicant’s erstwhile counsel and attorney as
well as the prosecutor who is still involved in the prosecution and
in fact
represented the DPP in the hearing before us. We are thus
left in the somewhat invidious position of having to determine this
issue
on the objective recordals of the magistrate, her reasons, and
the available evidence weighed against the inherent probabilities.
[20]
When regard is had to the aforegoing, one is compelled to conclude
that the magistrate
is mistaken in her assumptions that (a) the
defence themselves wished to make the report of their auditor
available to the prosecutor;
(b) there was no resistance at all
by the defence (for the simple reason that they were not afforded the
opportunity to raise
any resistance) before she made the order; and
(c) the applicant confirmed his satisfaction with his attorney’s
“decision”
to hand that report to the prosecutor on 4
September 2019.
[21]
Apart from the fact that the notes themselves do not support these
assumptions, the
DPP itself does not support most of them. But on
careful consideration, not even those which the DPP supports
withstand scrutiny.
At the risk of repetition, the claim that the
defence did not resist the making of the impugned order lacks merit
since objectively
they were not afforded an opportunity. Moreover,
the DPP’s reliance on the applicant’s confirmation of his
so-called
satisfaction with his attorney’s “decision”
is misplaced.
[22]
The inherent probabilities favour the applicant’s version for
the following
reasons. First, it is difficult to conceive of a
situation where a sophisticated individual such as the applicant,
facing extremely
serious charges and lengthy sentences of
imprisonment if convicted, would willingly wish to assist the State
in his own prosecution.
Second, the magistrate’s notes record
that it was the
prosecutor
who on 23 July 2019 demanded that
the report be handed over because ‘
we need it to determine
our
next strategic step’
. (emphasis
supplied)
[23]
Third, as a matter of logic, the applicant could not have confirmed
the “decision”
of his attorney to hand over the report
since there was by that stage no decision for the attorney to make –
he was simply
complying with the impugned order. It is far more
probable that the applicant was confirming his satisfaction with the
decision
of his attorney to terminate his counsel’s mandate, as
he alleges.
[24]
In the founding affidavit the applicant alleged that as a consequence
of the impugned
order various of his auditor’s reports (which
appear to have been works in progress) were handed over to the
prosecutor.
In the answering affidavit the DPP stated unequivocally
that the only report which the prosecutor in fact received from the
applicant’s
erstwhile legal team was the one dated 4 June
2019 (“the report”). The applicant is not able to refute
this and
the argument before us thus understandably focussed only on
that report (the disclosure by the applicant himself of the contents
of other such reports in these proceedings, and whether or not they
may be admitted in evidence in a subsequent criminal trial
is
something for the trial court, and not us, to decide).
[25]
The applicant maintains that in making the impugned order the
magistrate acted irregularly
and unlawfully in that there is no
empowering provision which permitted her to make such an order. He
further contends that the
aforementioned irregularity is so egregious
that it will render his trial
per se
unfair, hence him seeking
a permanent stay of prosecution.
[26]
There is no sound reason to doubt the magistrate’s own
bona
fides
when she made the order, but the fact of the matter is that
on the material and evidence before us we must conclude that she
failed
to properly apply the fundamental principle of
audi alteram
partem
. This alone amounts to an irregularity, viewed
objectively, and without in any way seeking to cast aspersions on her
impartiality,
integrity and competency. Put simply, it appears that
in the context of a very busy court she made a genuine mistake, as is
borne
out by her subsequent erroneous assumptions which are contained
in her reasons. The question which then arises is whether the
irregularity
vitiated the applicant’s constitutionally
enshrined right to a fair trial. This in turn involves close scrutiny
of the auditor’s
report of 4 June 2019 viewed against the
applicant’s allegations on this score.
[27]
I acknowledge that it is settled law that determination of an
application for a permanent
stay also entails a balancing of
interests:
Sanderson
v Attorney-General, Eastern Cape.
[3]
However a further difficulty that we face in this matter is how much
weight we should attach to the defences raised by the DPP,
since
frankly it is difficult to fathom a consistent thread in relation
thereto.
[28]
As far as can be gleaned from the papers they vary and are in certain
respects contradictory.
I will attempt to summarise them as follows:
28.1
The application for a permanent stay is premature since the applicant
has not yet pleaded and the report
is thus not yet before the trial
court;
[4]
28.2
The report does not contain privileged information and/or any
information which infringes any of the applicant’s
constitutional rights;
[5]
28.3 It
is the investigating officer’s opinion that ‘
it
is not surprising that the applicant wished for his own forensic
auditor’s report to be omitted as it directly implicates
him
and shows his lack of credibility’.
[6]
This is also the view of the prosecutor himself, as is reflected in
the transcript of certain bail proceedings held on 14 July
2021
(before a different magistrate);
[7]
28.4
The applicant was charged with the offences before the report was
obtained by the State. Therefore ‘
the
applicant’s trial would not be unfair as there is sufficient
evidence to establish a prima facie case against the applicant’
without the report;
[8]
28.5
The DPP ‘
fails
to comprehend’
how the disclosure of the report will render the applicant’s
trial unfair because the evidence is not yet before the trial
court;
[9]
28.6
The complainants are interested parties and have the right to refute
any allegations made by the applicant
and/or his forensic auditor,
thus ‘
it
would have been in the interests of justice to allow the complainants
to peruse any reports’
;
[10]
28.7
The report does not mention any aspects which refute the State’s
case. Therefore the applicant cannot
argue that he suffers
irreparable trial prejudice;
[11]
28.8
The report ‘
does
not put the State at any advantage. Therefore the applicant
[similarly]
cannot
argue that he suffers irreparable trial prejudice’
;
[12]
and
28.9 It
is ‘
unfortunate’
for the applicant if the report contains facts that corroborate the
State’s case ‘
as
this report was obtained at the behest of the applicant’.
[13]
[29]
I believe it fair to say, in light of the “defences”
raised by the DPP
that little, if any, weight should be attached to
them in determining objectively whether the applicant will suffer
irremediable
prejudice if the trial proceeds. I say this because the
scattershot approach adopted by the DPP in truth amounts to no more
than
the expression of varying, contradictory, subjective opinions,
not facts.
[30]
The report of 4 June 2019 was not annexed to the applicant’s
founding affidavit
because apparently he had not been able to locate
a copy at the time when he launched this application (he has not
explained why
he simply did not ask the auditor for one). His
complaint of irremediable trial prejudice is that as a result of the
State having
sight of the contents of the report ‘
those
aspects which were raised to refute the State’s case will now,
as a result of the order, be known to the State, including
the State
witnesses and anticipated…’
together with the
attendant potential consequences.
[31]
He also maintains that this “prejudice” will not be cured
or alleviated
if the report is declared inadmissible at trial; or the
trial is heard by another magistrate; or even if the prosecution is
conducted
by a different prosecutor, since this will not take away
the ‘
advantage’
which the complainants and other
State witnesses have obtained by having seen the contents of the
report.
[32]
The report itself consists of 49 numbered paragraphs. On a plain
reading it is abundantly
clear that it is a preliminary, draft
progress report and that the auditor is unable to complete his
investigation about certain
allegations levelled against the
applicant by the complainants due to outstanding information and
documentation.
[33]
The auditor lists the allegations made against the applicant as set
out in an affidavit
by one of the complainants. He records that the
report includes hearsay evidence based on interviews with certain
unidentified
individuals. He also summarises the applicant’s
version of events as conveyed to him by the applicant himself, which
appears
to be consistent with what the applicant has claimed in a
prior dispute(s) between himself and the complainants, and
accordingly
this does not qualify in this sense as confidential or
privileged.
[34]
The auditor then lists the documentation provided to him at that
stage. This essentially
amounts to an affidavit of one the
complainants, correspondence between the applicant and complainants
as well as the applicant
and a previous accountant(s) of one of the
corporate entities involved, draft financial statements and a draft
trial balance of
one entity; the draft trial balance of another;
extracts from the applicant’s loan accounts in these entities
for a certain
period; and the contents of the SAPS docket itself.
[35]
The above would however no doubt be available to the complainants
(and thus the prosecutor)
in any event, given that the complainants
are the applicant’s former co-directors of these entities, and
the docket itself
is obviously available to the prosecutor.
[36]
The auditor then records that a conclusion cannot be reached on the
validity of certain
money transfers allegedly made by the applicant
without reviewing the general ledgers and financial statements of the
entities,
and detailed loan accounts of the applicant and
complainants for a particular period. However he states that a
preliminary review
of the bank statements of one entity ‘
may
indicate’
that the full amount of R6.8 million, which is
the subject matter of some of the charges, was not transferred to
bank accounts
associated with the applicant (which would presumably
militate in his favour and not against it).
[37]
In any event this amounts to no more than the expression of an
opinion based on independent
financial documentation, which, it can
fairly be assumed, could nevertheless be procured by the prosecutor
in terms of the usual
mechanisms available to the State for purposes
of presenting the State’s case.
[38]
Upon careful scrutiny it would appear that the report contains only
four instances
where the applicant provided the auditor with
explanations that might notionally not be discernible from any
objective documentation
which the State would probably be entitled to
procure in any event. These are set out at paragraphs 27, 30, 41 and
45 of the report.
[39]
In paragraph 27 it is stated that the applicant informed the auditor
that all transfers
pertaining to the second batch of charges against
him were made from the entities’ accounts on the understanding
that they
would be processed by the accountants, and the transactions
recorded against the applicant’s loan account and reflected in
the financial statements.
[40]
In paragraph 30 it is stated that the applicant informed the auditor
that the complainants
also incurred personal expenditure with company
funds from time to time and that these transactions were also
required to be recorded
against their respective loan accounts.
[41]
In paragraph 41 the auditor noted that the R6.8 million in issue was
(initially)
transferred into the bank account of one of the entities
and stated that, according to the applicant, this was the full amount
transferred from Investec, Mauritius.
[42]
In paragraph 45 it is stated that the applicant informed the auditor
that amounts
transferred out of that account thereafter were
appropriately recorded in his loan accounts if used by him for his
personal expenditure.
[43]
I have used the words “might notionally” deliberately.
First, there is
no evidence before us to indicate that the
explanations purportedly given by the applicant to the auditor will
not be recorded
somewhere in the records of the entities concerned,
such as minutes of directors’ meetings, written instructions to
the accountants
and the like. Second, we do not even know if the
applicant confirms that he indeed gave these explanations to the
auditor. He has
not taken us into his confidence in this regard,
despite having himself annexed the report to his replying affidavit.
[44]
As the DPP submitted in its answering affidavit the applicant ‘
does
not disclose any of the aspects he raised to refute the State’s
case; queries raised by the auditors for him to clarify;
admissions
and/or aspects that were corrected and revisited in the draft
reports’.
[14]
Although in his replying affidavit the applicant sought to refute
this, he only dealt with the contents of later reports which
were in
fact never made available to the State.
[45]
It has also not escaped my notice that, according to the rule 53
record, just over
5 months after the applicant appointed his current
legal team he appeared before the magistrate again on 8 September
2020. The
prosecutor informed her that the State and defence were
ready to set a trial date. The applicant’s counsel placed on
record
that ‘
we are indeed trial ready’.
Not a
murmur was made of the prejudice about which the applicant now
complains. The matter was then postponed until 12 to 16 April
2021
for ‘
plea and trial’
.
[46]
On 12 April 2021 it was again postponed, but this was because the
prosecutor was
not ready to proceed due to personal issues. The
applicant’s counsel placed on record that ‘
we don’t
object – 23 to 27 August 2021 suits us all’
. Because
the magistrate could not accommodate the parties on 27 August
2021 she postponed the matter until 23 to 26 August
2021, again for
‘
plea and trial’
.
[47]
But on this occasion too the applicant raised no concerns about his
alleged irremediable
trial prejudice. He instead waited until a mere
3 weeks before the trial was finally due to commence to launch the
current application
on 30 July 2021, as a consequence of which
the trial had to be postponed pending its outcome. There is no
explanation whatsoever
in his affidavits for this sudden change of
stance, notwithstanding the fact that he was represented by, at
least, the same attorney
from 23 March 2020 onwards, and thus for a
period of some 16 months prior to launching this application.
[48]
In
Sanderson
[15]
the Constitutional Court stated, in relation to a permanent stay of
prosecution as a remedy for the infringement of an accused
person’s
fair trial rights (albeit as a result of delay):
‘…
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…’
[49]
During argument
Mr Combrink
, who appeared for the DPP, placed
on record that the State will not and cannot make reference to the
report in the criminal trial
because of its provisional nature as
well as the qualifications and disclaimers it contains. On the other
hand
Mr Webster SC
, who appeared together with
Mr Prinsloo
for the applicant, argued that this does not matter since the damage
has already been done, given that the prosecutor and State
witnesses
have as a fact had insight into the report.
[50]
The contention advanced on the applicant’s behalf was however
firmly rejected
in a similar context by the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
S v
Van der Westhuizen
.
[16]
What happened there is that plea negotiations as contemplated in
s 105A of the Criminal Procedure Act (“CPA”)
[17]
had failed, but during the course of those negotiations the defence
furnished the prosecution with certain reports that were seen
by
various State witnesses. One of these witnesses, a Dr Panieri-Peter,
had regard to them and intended referring to them
in her evidence in
the trial.
[51]
It is necessary to quote at some length from the judgment since it
places the lack
of merit in the applicant’s complaint in proper
perspective:
‘
[16]
...The appellant's attorney submitted that this constituted an
irregularity inasmuch as s 105A(10)(
a
)(i)
provides:
“
Where
a trial starts
de novo
as
contemplated in subsec (6)(
c
)
or (9)(
d
)
─
(
a
)
the agreement shall be null and void and no regard shall be had or
reference made to
─
(i)
any negotiations which preceded the entering into the agreement.”
The
section contains no reference to a situation such as the present
where there was no agreement, but it must apply equally in
such a
case. Normally, an accused cannot consent to an incorrect procedure
being followed:
S v Lapping
;
but the section contains a proviso in the following terms--
“
unless
the accused consents to the recording of all or certain admissions
made by him or her in the agreement or during any proceedings
relating thereto and any admissions so recorded shall stand as proof
of such admission;”.
The effect of the
proviso is that an accused may waive the protection afforded by the
section and agree to the recording of admissions.
A fortiori, then,
can an accused agree to the use of documents-- brought into existence
for the purposes of s 105A proceedings--
which do not contain
admissions, but which are unfavourable or, for that matter,
favourable to the accused. And that is exactly
what happened here.
[17]
After Dr Panieri-Peter had read her report into the record, the
appellant's attorney pointed
out that the reports of the appellant's
experts, sent to the prosecution as part of the s 105A proceedings,
had come into her hands.
The court then adjourned for the day. The
following morning at the commencement of proceedings the appellant's
attorney said:
“
Edele,
dit is nog steeds my submissie dat die verslae was ingehandig in
Artikel 105A verrigtinge, en dat dit bespreek was in daardie
omstandighede. Ek gaan egter, of ek was gister geskok gewees dat
hierdie getuie dit genoem het, dat hierdie verslae oorhandig aan
haar
was. Ek het dit egter met die Staat bespreek, die Staat het my 'n
verduideliking daaroor gegee. Ek gaan nie beswaar maak dat
sy dan
getuienis daaroor gee nie. Indien daar enige aspekte is wat ek voel
wat verkeerdelik genoem word, of 'n verkeerde afleiding
uit daardie
verslae, dan sal ek dit laat uitblyk in kruisondervraging.”
After further
discussions, the court, addressing the prosecutor, said that the
appellant's attorney did not object to Dr Panieri-Peter
continuing
with her evidence--obviously by dealing with the appellant's expert
reports--but that he (the appellant's attorney)
would deal with that
evidence in cross-examination. The prosecutor confirmed that that was
so. The learned judge then asked the
appellant's attorney whether the
position, as had just been explained, was correct, and the
appellant's attorney confirmed that
it was. Dr Panieri-Peter
continued with her evidence but, before dealing with the reports from
the defence, said:
“
I
have deliberately left out the inconsistencies in this Psychologist
and the Psychiatrist reports about memory. I don't know, can
I
comment on those, because that is also relevant to the inconsistency
of memory, but I just want to be clear, because there was
a dispute
about documents. I want to be clear on that information first.”
The
judge then addressed the appellant's attorney and enquired: 'Ek wil
net seker maak wat u houding is daaromtrent.’ The
appellant's
attorney asked for an
opportunity to
take instructions, to which the judge responded:
“
Ja,
maar u moet nou besluit, meneer, watter kant toe u wil gaan daarmee,
want ek verstaan u het dit oorweeg om te sê u het
nie 'n
beswaar as daar na verwys word nie, want u gaan in elk geval daarmee
handel in kruisverhoor. Nou kom dit nou by die punt,
en volgens die
getuie is daar belangrike inligting daarin, feitlike weergawes wat
vir haar van belang is om 'n mening uit te spreek.”
The court then
adjourned at the request of the appellant's attorney and on
resumption, the latter said:
“
Dit
is my instruksies om nie beswaar te maak teen die getuienis wat gelei
word nie, maar versoek spesifiek dat daar spesifieke verwysing
gemaak
sal word na 'n persoon se verslag . . . dat die verslae nie in een
bespreek word, hetsy van Charlotte Hoffman of van Niel
Fouché
nie, maar indien sy dan net 'n verwysing sal maak van 'n spesifieke
verslag, na wat verwys word.”
[18]
In the circumstances, the proposition that the appellant did not have
a fair trial because reports
handed to the State in the course of s
105A proceedings had come into the hands of a State witness and were
commented on by the
State witness, is untenable. The attitude of the
appellant's attorney, as reflected in the exchanges summarised above,
was eminently
sensible if the defence intended to call the witnesses
whose reports had been handed to the prosecution. It would have been
the
duty of the appellant's attorney to put the contents of the
reports to State witnesses, who could comment thereon, and that
included
Dr Panieri-Peter. Allowing the State to lead such comments
in her evidence-in-chief had the advantage that the defence could
consult
its expert witnesses after her comments were known, and then
put the reply of the defence witnesses to her criticism of their
reports
in cross-examination, so obviating the necessity for an
adjournment during cross-examination to enable the defence to take
instructions.’
[52]
At the conclusion of argument counsel were invited to provide us with
supplementary
notes dealing with (a) the application to the
present facts of the approach in
Sanderson
;
(b) the applicability, if any, of the judgments in
Bothma
v Els and Others
[18]
and
Broome
v DPP
;
[19]
and (c) the extent to which this court should take the prejudice
to the applicant as a fact (without independently applying
our minds)
when, so it was submitted by applicant’s counsel in argument,
such prejudice is “common cause”.
[53]
However in the supplementary note provided by counsel for the
applicant reliance
was placed on a concession made by
Mr Combrink
during argument that, given some of the allegations in the DPP’s
answering affidavit, the magistrate’s order would
(on the DPP’s
own version) cause
potential
prejudice. It was also submitted
that the cases referred to above are not applicable to the
applicant’s primary contention,
namely that the magistrate’s
irregularity was so egregious that it will render a trial
per se
unfair without more.
[54]
As was stated in
Klein
v Attorney-General, Witwatersrand Local Division and Another
:
[20]
‘
The Court has,
as the common law has always required, a clear duty to ensure that an
accused person is afforded a fair trial. Apart
from the right to
legal representation at State expense, the common-law principles have
not been broadened or accentuated by the
codification of the right to
a fair trial in the Constitution…
There has, however,
never been a principle that a violation of any of the specific rights
encompassed by the right to a fair trial
would automatically preclude
the trial. Such a rigid principle would operate to the disadvantage
of law enforcement and the consequent
prejudice of the society which
the law and the Constitution is intended to serve. Before any remedy
can be enforced the nature
and extent of the violation must be
properly considered. It is the duty of the Courts to do so in
fulfilment of their obligation
to give effect to the principle of
public policy.
An investigation into
the nature and degree of the irregularity would, in my view,
comprehend an investigation of the extent of
the violation as well as
the circumstances under which it took place….’
[55]
As I understand the cases referred to above
potential
prejudice
is not the test. The investigation which I have conducted into the
nature and degree of the irregularity complained of
leads me to
conclude that it did not result in irremediable prejudice to the
applicant, whether by its very nature (the
per se
argument) or
its effect.
[56]
There is nothing to prevent the applicant from again approaching
court at a later
stage if he is able to demonstrate that any
potential prejudice has become such a reality during the course of
the trial that his
constitutionally entrenched fair trial rights have
been irreparably infringed.
[57]
Accordingly the case made out by the applicant falls short of
demonstrating the irremediable
prejudice which he asserts, and the
application for a permanent stay must fail. As far as costs are
concerned, it is appropriate,
given my findings, that the applicant
and the DPP should each bear their own.
[58]
The following order is made:
1.
The order made by the first respondent on 23 July 2019 is reviewed
and set aside.
2.
The relief sought by the applicant for a permanent stay of his
prosecution in the Specialised Commercial Crime Court, Bellville
under case number SH7/60/18, in regard to the contents of police
docket Somerset West CAS 23/02/2018, is refused.
3.
The applicant and the second respondent shall each bear their own
costs.
J I CLOETE
NUKU J
I agree.
L NUKU
[1]
Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998
.
[2]
See also Record para 96, p409 where this averment is
repeated.
[3]
1998 (2) SA 38
(CC) esp. at para [36] in the context of
unreasonable delay.
[4]
Record para 6, p394.
[5]
Record para 20, p397.
[6]
Record paras 99 to 101, p409.
[7]
Record p464, annexure RA1 to the applicant’s replying
affidavit.
[8]
Record para 149, p418.
[9]
Record para 150, p418.
[10]
Record para 176, p422.
[11]
Record para 180, p423.
[12]
Record para 181, p423.
[13]
Record para 195, p425.
[14]
Record p422, para 178.
[15]
Fn 3 above at para [38].
[16]
2011 (2) SACR 26 (SCA).
[17]
Act 51 of 1977.
[18]
2010 (1) SACR 184 (CC).
[19]
Broome
v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape, and Others; Wiggins
and Another v Acting Regional Magistrate, Cape Town,
and Others
2008 (1) SACR 178 (C).
[20]
1995 (3) SA 848
(W) at 862A-B and D-F.
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