Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 151South Africa
Motsi v S (A37/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 151; 2023 (1) SACR 218 (WCC) (15 August 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 151
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Motsi v S (A37/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 151; 2023 (1) SACR 218 (WCC) (15 August 2022)
Motsi v S (A37/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 151; 2023 (1) SACR 218 (WCC) (15 August 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2022_151.html
sino date 15 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: A37/22
In
the matter between
OLWETHU
MOTSI
APPELLANT
V
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Date
of Hearing: 25 May 2022
Date
of Judgment: 25 May 2022
REASONS
FOR THE ORDER delivered 15 August 2022
THULARE
J
[1] This was an opposed
appeal against the decision of the magistrate to dismiss the
appellant’s bail application. The parties
were agreed that it
was a schedule 5 offence and that the provisions of section 60(11)
(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act, 1977
(Act No. 51 of 1977) (the
CPA) were applicable. I gave the order immediately after argument,
with reasons follow later. These are
my reasons
[2] The issue was whether
the decision of the magistrate was wrong.
[3] In order to do
justice to the matter, one has to cite extensively and verbatim from
the record as opposed to a simple summary,
as regards the first day
of the bail application. It is also convenient to deal with the first
day of the proceedings on 10 September
2020 distinct from the second
day, which next day was 11 September 2020.
THE PROCEEDINGS OF 10
SEPTEMBER 2020
[4] The record of 10
September 2020 reads as follows:
“
PROCEEDINGS
ON 10 SEPTEMBER 2020
PROSECUTOR:
Thank you, Your
Worship. Your Worship, this case is on the court roll for a bail
application. It is a matter for the accused he
is in custody. The
state is opposing bail, Your Worship.
COURT:
Mr Gangathele.
MR
GANGATHELE:
Thank
you, Your Worship. Your Worship, I do confirm my appearance on behalf
of the accused Your Worship, also confirm that the defence
have
drafted an affidavit in support of the bail application, Your
Worship. If I may read it into the record?
COURT:
What
else do we have?”
[5] There was an
interruption and the discussion was around other matters that were
still outstanding on the court roll of that
day. After the Prosecutor
had briefed the magistrate in respect of the other cases, the
magistrate directed that Mr Gangathele
proceed:
“
MR
GANGATHELE
: Thank
you, Your Worship. Your Worship, may I read the affidavit of the
accused before Court on record?
COURT
:
Ja, We are recording.
MR
GANGATHELE:
As the
Court pleases, Your Worship.
COURT
:
Yes.
MR
GANGATHELE:
“
I
the undersigned Olwethu Motsi understand my rights in terms of
Section 60(11) (b) of Act 51 of 1977 and make the following statement
under oath. That I am an accused in this matter. I confirm that this
is an application in respect of Schedule 5 offence. I am an
adult
male of 33 years of age currently residing at 02786 Mthunza Street,
Numbama. I have lived at the above address for the past
four years
and I live at that address alone.”
I do have an alternative,
Your Worship. However, I cannot at this stage provide the exact
address, Your Worship, which is the address
that my client wishes to,
if the bail is granted, to live in, Your Worship, alternative address
Your Worship. We are still trying
to get that alternative address,
Your Worship. I will provide same. As the Court pleases.
“
I
am not married. I have two dependents of age ten years and five
months old. I am currently employed as a police officer. Where
I earn
R7000 per month after deductions. I do not have a passport or any
travelling documents. I have been informed by my legal
representative
that I am obligated to disclose all my previous convictions pending
my past outstanding warrants, as well as the
fact that should I not
disclose the above information and be found guilty, I will be liable
for an offence for which I can receive
up to 2 years’
imprisonment, with or without an option of a fine. I therefore
declare as follows: I have no previous convictions.
I have no pending
matters. I have no outstanding warrants.
I would like to bring the
following facts under the Court’s attention. That my release on
bail will not endanger the safety
of the public, or any particular
person and will not disturb public order, or undermine public peace
or security. That my release
will not undermine or jeopardise the
objective of proper functionality of the criminal justice system,
including the bail system.
That I will not influence or intimidate
any witness. That I will not conceal or destroy any evidence. That I
will not evade my
trial upon release on bail. That I would obey my
bail conditions and attend all court dates until the case is
finalized.
I am charged with murder,
but dispute the charges against me. Furthermore, in regard to this
statement I do not deal with the merits
of this case, which should
not be seen as an admission of any kind. I plead not guilty to the
charges against me. I humbly request
my bail application to be
considered for the following reasons. I do have a child which is
attending school here in Strand. But
due to Covid-19, he went to the
Eastern Cape. I now wish to be out so that I can facilitate the
transfer process so that he can
continue with school in the Eastern
Cape. Furthermore, I am the primary caregiver of my children, also a
breadwinner as it was
only me that was working. The grandmother of my
children the two they are with her in the Eastern Cape. She is not
working as well.
I was responsible for supporting her.
I wish and pray to be
outside so that I can make arrangements for the deceased to be
buried. The deceased has been in the mortuary
since her passing and
her family said will not bury her. I wish to have her buried as she
has been in the mortuary for the past
21 days. Furthermore to the
above said, the cost of keeping her in the mortuary Your Worship, it
is increasing each and every day
and becoming more expensive.
It is my respectful
submission that the interest of justice will not be adversely
affected by my release on bail. I therefore humbly
request this
honourable Court to consider my bail. I can afford bail in the amount
of R2000 and it will be paid by my brother.”
It is signed at Strand on
10 September 2020 by the applicant and duly commissioned, Your
Worship. If I may hand in the affidavit,
Your Worship?
COURT:
You confirm the contents of this
statement as correct?
APPLICANT:
Confirm, Your Worship.
COURT:
EXHIBIT A
MR
GANGATHELE:
As the
Court Pleases.
PROSECUTOR:
Court pleases.
COURT:
Yes, Ms Van Zyl?
[6] The Prosecutor did
not lead any evidence and went straight into addressing the court on
the application.
“
PROSECUTOR:
Thank you, Your Worship. Your Worship, this is a very serious
offence. It is indeed already instructed by the state to go to the
High Court, Your Worship. The reason why the State is not opposing
bail today Your Worship, the fact that the accused has no previous
convictions, no pending matters and no outstanding warrants of
arrest. And the case as it stands against the accused is also not
particularly strong, Your Worship.
There is one confession
from the accused wherein he refers to the address of his girlfriend
where he says, he first claimed in the
confession that it was a
robbery gone wrong Your Worship, that she was shot dead in that
manner. Later he changed in the same confession
Your Worship, the
version to that he hired someone, Your Worship to kill his
girlfriend. It is the same girlfriend he had been
referring Your
Worship, who he wants to get out of the mortuary. Your Worship, on
his evidence state currently he has security
Your Worship with either
confession. We are obviously still waiting for ballistic evidence and
passport are present Your Worship,
to possibly confirm that his
version is correct.
The state is requesting
R2000 bail to be set today, Your Worship. State is also requesting 24
hours house arrest Your Worship, for
this accused. It has been
discussed with the defence and they indicated they have no objection.
The accused did inform the Court
by his affidavit Your Worship, that
he is a SAPS official, but he is currently not working Your Worship,
I believe he has been
suspended. By …(indistinct) he will
return to duty Your Worship with this charge pending. Either should
that change, I did
advise Legal Aid that he will approach the Court
Your Worship, and statement … (indistinct). State will further
request
… (indistinct) for further investigation.
COURT;
So how did the deceased die?
PROSECUTOR:
She was shot, Your Worship.
COURT:
Yes, how, where?
PROSECUTOR:
She was shot in the
premises Your Worship, they obviously found the body in …
(indistinct) Your Worship and they have, as
indicated in respect of
evidence at that stage Your Worship, is the confession of the accused
before court. There is no eye witnesses
Your Worship of that nature
at this stage, Your Worship.
COURT:
And shot with
firearm?
PROSECUTOR:
Yes, Your Worship.
COURT:
Whose firearm?
PROSECUTOR
:
That is what we are still trying to determine Your Worship, at this
stage. As indicated, ballistics are being done, Your Worship.
COURT:
So where was the
body found?
PROSECUTOR:
In the house, Your Worship.
COURT:
Yes, where in the
house?
PROSECUTOR:
If the Court will
give me a moment, Your Worship. Your Worship, they do not list the
room in the house, Your Worship.
COURT:
Hey?
PROSECUTOR:
They do not say
specifically the room in the house, Your Worship. Court pleases.
COURT:
So the accused and
the deceased lived together?
PROSECUTOR:
Yes, Your Worship.
COURT:
And the children?
PROSECUTOR:
Your Worship, that is in the docket …
(indistinct) Your Worship. I am not sure Your Worship. Unfortunately
I do …
(indistinct). Court pleases.
COURT:
And she was shot
where on her body?
PROSECUTOR:
Your Worship, it is
difficult at this stage. The State is not in possession of the
post
mortem,
Your
Worship. State also … (indistinct) understand, but do not
think they specifically indicated where in her body she was
shot,
Your Worship.
COURT:
Then you will roll
till tomorrow to get that information.
PROSECUTOR:
Court pleases, Your
Worship.
MR
GANGATHELE:
As the
Court pleases.
COURT:
The matter will
proceed tomorrow. You will be in custody until then, September 11
th
.
PROSECUTOR:
Your Worship, the
state … (indistinct) the Court will would like to know how
many times she was shot?
COURT:
Yes, where was the
body found> I mean they have a body what is so difficult to look
at the body and see where the gunshot wounds,
how many gunshot
wounds. And I mean, they are not living in an island. Where is the
neighbours, anybody heard the gun going off.
He is issued a firearm.
I am sure as a police person. Was it his firearm? What is so
difficult? I mean violence against women is
rife now. You would not
expect the Court to just release with not knowing much.
PROSECUTOR:
Court pleases.
COURT:
You may stand down.
PROSECUTOR:
Thank you, Your
Worship. Your Worship, so the Court would like to know how many times
she was shot, where her body was found?
COURT:
Where on her body
was she shot.
PROSECUTOR:
As the body …
(indistinct) and I think the Court also asked about the children,
Your Worship.
COURT:
Yes, were they there, are there
neighbours, was any investigation done? Is this now a case where the
police is going to do nothing,
because it is a police officer that is
charged.
PROSECUTOR:
I hope they will do
more, Your Worship.
COURT:
Well they will only
do more if the state instructs them to do more. If the DPP is
involved why are so relaxed – I mean, why
is the situation so
easy with it, you know, so many questions that there is not, just
because there is a confession is that now
actually put you on another
route?
PROSECUTOR:
No, Your Worship.
COURT:
They must still do
it, they must still do it.
PROSECUTOR:
Court pleases. Is
there any other queries, Your Worship.
COURT:
Okay.
PROSECUTOR:
Court pleases, Your
Worship.
COURT:
Now the firearm
that was used is it a police issue, was it issued to him? Have they
found the firearm. Have they spoken to the neighbours,
did they hear
anything, was a silencer used, you know. Somebody must have heard or
seen something.
PROSECUTOR:
Your Worship …
(indistinct) at this stage they are not sure whether he himself did
it, or whether someone was … (indistinct)
Your Worship.
COURT:
Even worse, if it
is conspiracy then it is schedule 6.
PROSECUTOR:
Your Worship, we
will now confirm … (indistinct). But I will ask the
investigating officer to follow-up with that, Your Worship.
COURT:
We are taking a tea
break.
PROSECUTOR:
Court pleases, Your
Worship.”
[7] The feeling of being
upset, annoyed or disappointed as a result of being unable to achieve
or fulfil constitutional obligations
is a discernable emotional
response from the magistrate. It is grounded on the perceived
resistance of the National Prosecuting
Authority (NPA) and the SAPS,
to the magistrate’s fulfilment of their constitutional duty.
The questions of the magistrate
reveal frustration, which manifested
in what may seem like aggression, hostility or impulsivity. The
frustration is founded by
two failures on the part of the State.
First, it is the failure to have the applicant, and by extension the
court, informed of
the particulars of the reason for his further
detention or of the charge against him. Secondly, it is the failure
to observe the
new ideological, philosophical and jurisprudential
nature of a bail application.
Particulars of the
charge
[8] Section 50 of the CPA
provides that a person who is in detention following an arrest for
allegedly committing an offence, shall
be informed of his right to
institute bail proceedings [section 50(1)(b)] and to be brought
expeditiously before court for such
purpose [section 50(1)(c)].
Section 50(6)(a)(i) provide as follows:
“
Procedure
after arrest
50(6)(a) At his or her
first appearance in court a person contemplated in subsection (1)(a)
who-
(i)
Was arrested for allegedly
committing an offence shall, subject to this subsection and section
60-
(aa) be informed by the
court of the reason for his or her further detention; or
(bb) be charged and be
entitled to apply to be released on bail.”
[9] Section 1 of the CPA
defines “charge” as including an indictment and a
summons. In terms of section 144(3) of the
CPA, an indictment shall
be accompanied by a summary of the substantial facts of the case
that, in the opinion of the Director
of Public Prosecutions (the
DPP), are necessary to inform the accused of the allegations against
him and that will not be prejudicial
to the administration of justice
or the security of the State. It is the utmost demonstration of a
lack of common sense and absurd
to have a bail application when an
applicant has not been fully informed of the case against him.
[10] It is bizzare,
fanciful and implies the character of seeming unable to use
discretion and good sense to expect a magistrate
to make a just
pronouncement on a bail application, when the State did not place
before such magistrate information which answer
three important
questions, which are:
(a) What allegedly
happened?
(b) What did the
applicant allegedly do in what happened, which caused him to be
arrested for allegedly committing an offence(s)?
(c) What are the charges
preferred against the applicant?
[11] An applicant for
bail reasonably need the information upon which the State relies,
which answers the three questions. The failure
to provide the
particulars which answer these questions is prejudicial to an
applicant. A judicial officer who lacks knowledge
and is not aware of
the information in respect of the case against an applicant, is
uneducated and functionally undeveloped, therefore
not fit for
purpose to decide on the application. The essentials of a charge is
not limited to the description of the offence.
Section 84(1) of the
CPA provides that a charge shall set forth the relevant offence in
such manner and with such particulars as
may be reasonably sufficient
to inform the accused of the nature of the charge. Having said that,
there may be circumstances where
the description of the offence would
be sufficient, like in statutory offences in criminal proceedings
[section 84(3)].
[12] In my view, at the
first appearance of an accused person, or at any bail application,
the prosecutor has a duty to address
the court. It is expected that
the public prosecutor should address the three questions as a
necessary, desirable and prudent performance
of their duty. Although
it may be a short description, it must however provide a general
outline with sufficient particularity.
In this way all the parties,
including the court, are able to form a general summary of the State
case. Section 150(1) of the CPA
provides as follows:
“
Prosecutor
may address court and adduce evidence
150 (1) The prosecutor
may at any trial, before any evidence is adduced, address the court
for the purpose of explaining the charge,
and indicating, without
comment, to the court what evidence he intends adducing in support of
the charge.”
[13] A bail application
is also a formal examination of the evidence and the law by a
judicial officer in order to arrive at a decision
on a dispute. The
extension of the word ‘trial’ in section 150 of the CPA
to extend to bail applications would not
be un unnecessary and
prejudicial judicial overstretching of language. In
Mafe v S
(A49/22)
[2022] ZAWCHC 108
(31 May 2022), writing for the
majority, at para 70 and 71 I said:
“
[70]
In my view, fairness and justice call for the State to put the
substantial facts upon which its charge is founded, first, and
that
the accused then has an opportunity to provide an answer and show
exceptional circumstances where applicable, and if needs
be the State
gets an opportunity to rebut. In that case a court can be
well-informed to form an opinion whether it has reliable,
sufficient
or important information to reach a decision on the bail application,
as envisaged in section 60(3) of the CPA, without
infringing on the
responsibilities and rights of the State and of an accused. In
Naude
and Another v Fraser
1998(4) SA 539 (SCA) at 563E-G it was said in the context of a civil
matter:
“
It
is one of the fundamentals of a fair trial, whether under the
Constitution or at common law, standing co-equally with the right
to
be heard, that a party be apprised of the case which he faces. This
is usually spoken of in the criminal context, but it is
no less true
in the civil. There is little point in granting a person a hearing if
he does not know how he is concerned, what case
he has to meet. One
of the numerous manifestations of the fundamental principle is the
subrule that he who relies on a particular
section of a statute must
either state the number of the section and the statute, or formulate
his case sufficiently clearly so
as to indicate what he is relying
on:
Yannakou v
Apollo Club
1974
(1) SA 614
(A) at 623G. As the proposition itself indicates there is
no magic in naming numbers. The significance is that the other party
should be told what he is facing.”
In his book, “The
Land is Ours”, Penguin Books, 2018, Adv. Tembeka Ngcukaitobi,
SC, on page 1 of “Introduction”
said:
“
The
Judiciary must protect the Bill of Rights, enforce its promises and
monitor the conduct of government. Yet, despite the admiration
of the
world, many promises contained in the Constitution remain a hollow
hope.”
[71] The State is
required to put all the necessary and relevant substantial facts
before the court for the purposes of upholding
the right of a bail
applicant to be apprised of the case which he faces, in the bail
application. This will enhance the impartiality
of the courts and
their independence in exercising their judicial functions. It also
adds to the flavor of bail proceedings being
sui generis
. A
bail application is unique and special. Its inquisitorial
characteristic is one manifestation. In my view, the other
manifestation
of its unique and special character are that the
interests of justice demands that the State begin and apprise the
applicant and
the Court of the case which the applicant has to face,
especially in section 60(11) proceedings where the so-called reverse
onus
is found. The further manifestation is that the applicant bears
the onus to satisfy the court on a balance of probabilities that
the
interests of justice do not require their detention [
S v Branco
2002(1) SACR 531 (W) at 532E-G]. The onus on the applicant and the
State bearing the duty to begin and adequately inform the court
of
the substantial facts, are not mutually exclusive in a unique
procedure specifically designed to administer justice. The prosecutor
is
dominus litis
and is responsible for the charges. In
S v
Sehoole
2015(2) SACR 198 (SCA) at para 10 the Supreme Court of
Appeal said the following:
“
[10]
The State as
dominus
litis
has a
discretion regarding prosecution and pre-trial procedures. For
instance the State may decide, inter alia, whether or not
to
institute a prosecution; on what charges to prosecute; in which court
or forum to prosecute; when to withdraw charges and so
forth.””
Failure to observe the
new ideological, philosophical and jurisprudential nature of a bail
application.
[14] The science behind
the ideas of a bail application, or the ideology, has shifted. The
initial theory appears to have been that
the State as
dominus
litis,
was in charge of the criminal justice system. The SAPS and
the Prosecuting Authority, representing a Republic with a
parliamentary
supremacy arrangement and as responsible functionaries
for law, order, State security and justice, had a big voice that
caused
the magistracy to shiver. A study of the theoretical basis of
knowledge on a bail application or simply its philosophy, reveals
that the Republic now has the supremacy of the constitution and the
rule of law as one of our founding values. It will also reveal
that
the judicial authority is vested in the courts, which are independent
and subject only to the Constitution and the law which
they must
apply impartially and without fear, favour or prejudice. The legal
system or jurisprudence of the Republic on a schedule
5 bail
application is that it is the court, and not the SAPS or the NPA,
that shall order the detention of an accused unless the
accused
presented evidence that satisfies the court that the interests of
justice permitted his or her release.
[15] This case indicated
that there are SAPS members, including commissioned officers, and
prosecutors in the NPA, who have not
yet made the paradigm shift on
the ideology, philosophy and jurisprudence of bail applications. They
still believe that the further
detention of an accused or his or her
release on bail is their decision, and the magistrate, when the
matter goes to court, should
just take notes and parrot their views
under the pretence of a court order. A mindset that informed the
reaction to the 1976 uprisings
cannot continue into a democratic and
constitutional South Africa with a bill of rights, supremacy of the
constitution, the rule
of law and an independent judiciary.
The response of the
magistrate
[16] The magistrate
should be commended for standing their ground in asserting judicial
independence and the rule of law. It was
the magistrate’s state
of active attention, awareness, courage, being watchful and prompt to
meet the danger, which caused
the magistrate to come down on the side
of the applicant, the victims, the society and the interests of
justice, and pound for
pound, confronted an otherwise serious
dereliction of duty by members of the SAPS and the prosecutor.
Considering the nature of
the offence alleged against the applicant,
the magistrate sought to know the value, quality and the strength of
the case against
him. All that I would call for, is a measure of
judicial restraint. Section 60(3) of the CPA provides as follows:
“
Bail
application of accused in court
60 (3) If the court is of
the opinion that it does not have reliable or sufficient information
or evidence at its disposal or that
it lacks certain important
information to reach a decision on the bail application, the
presiding officer shall order that such
information or evidence be
placed before the court.”
[17] The court may
insistent and authoritatively ask, without being brusque, that the
prosecutor addresses the court in respect
of the three questions
referred to earlier in this judgment. I do not understand section
60(3) to be an authority for the magistrate
to take over the
prosecution, and basically dictate to the prosecutor in court, the
instructions that the NPA should direct to
the SAPS in the further
investigation of the matter. It must be kept in mind that the
evidence or information that the magistrate
may source, through
section 60(3), is limited to that which the court needs to reach a
decision on the bail application. The section
remove the use of irony
to mock or convey contempt to the DPP and the SAPS, from
consideration. It is preferable that the magistrate
set out, in a
simple, frank, honest and straightforward way, the information or
evidence sought.
THE PROCEEDINGS OF 11
SEPTEMBER 2020
[18] On the second day
the State called the investigating officer, Wynand Carelse (Carelse),
a Sergeant in the South African Police
Service (SAPS). He gave
viva
voce
evidence. Members of the SAPS were called to the applicant’s
flat on 12 August 2020 at around 20:55. The members found the
applicant inside the police vehicle sitting on the driver’s
seat. The vehicle was parked in front the flat. The applicant
had
booked out a different vehicle, which was reported as broken down and
he was granted another vehicle which was what he was
found in. The
applicant was crying when he was found.
[19] The applicant
reported to the officers that responded to the call that two unknown
African men entered the flat where he was
staying with his
girlfriend. The unknown men threatened him and his girlfriend and
demanded a firearm. The applicant and his girlfriend
denied that they
had a firearm. He and his girlfriend were asked to kneel. He then
heard a gunshot and the two men ran out of the
house. The applicant
went to his safe and took out his official firearm, cocked it, ran
out to establish if he could find the two
men. He saw them running a
distance from him and he fired shots at them. He emptied the magazine
which loaded 15 rounds in that
chase.
[20] The applicant then
went back to the flat, and noticed that his girlfriend was on the
floor and was full of blood. He realized
that the shot that went off
hit his girlfriend. He noticed that she had passed away and he went
to the police vehicle from where
he called the SAPS Control for
assistance. That is where the members who responded found him. The
officers who responded to the
scene, when they entered the house,
found the deceased on the floor in a kneeling position. The deceased
was near the bed in the
one room flat. She had one gunshot wound to
the head. She was shot from behind and the bullet went out through
her eye. The position
in which she was found and the manner she was
shot at was called execution style. There was an empty magazine near
the deceased.
That is when one of the officers asked for the
applicant’s official firearm, a 9mm caliber, which the
applicant handed over.
The firearm was sent for ballistic
investigations and the results were still outstanding. The deceased
was shot with a 9mm caliber
firearm.
[21] The applicant had
been issued with a temporary authorization for a firearm issued to
him. Carelse discovered that the period
on that authorization had
been tampered with. The period had lapsed and was changed without
authorisation. The applicant was issued
with a permit for the period
17 April 2020 to 30 April 2020. The second permit, which was tampered
with, was for the period 15
to 30 June 2020. The month 06 was changed
to 08. The officers who dealt with firearm authorisations had under
oath confirmed that
they did not bring about the amendments that were
on the dates. The applicant was appointed in the SAPS on 1 March 2016
and held
the rank of Constable. Carelse was not the first
investigating officer and did not know why the applicant was arrested
7 days after
the incident.
[22] Carelse was yet to
interview the neighbours to establish if they had any information
that could help the investigation. The
applicant and the deceased
were engaged and they had only one 5 month old baby. The baby was
found on the scene inside the flat.
The applicant’s version was
that he was holding the baby and the mother was preparing food for
the baby when the incident
occurred. There was however a statement
from a friend of the deceased. The friend alleged that the deceased
had confided, before
her death, that she was afraid of the applicant.
The deceased wanted to leave the applicant but had not done so at the
time of
her death.
[23] The applicant had
made a statement in which he alleged the robbery. In the same
statement, however, he had also changed his
version. He had further
alleged that he had met one Bongani before and that they had agreed
that Bongani would fix a problem which
the applicant had for R3000.
The two planned that on a specified evening, the applicant would
leave the burglar gates open and
that Bongani would then come in and
do the job that the applicant wanted done. The plan happened, Bongani
came in and Bongani shot
the deceased. Carelse had not checked the
applicant’s bank records for any leads on the alleged payment
to Bongani. Carelse
did not know whether the statement that the
applicant made was taken in accordance with the law. Carelse
indicated that he, together
with Captain Snyman at Lwandle SAPS and
after discussion with the prosecutor it was decided not to oppose
bail. After learning
of the magistrate’s questions the previous
day, they decided that bail should be opposed.
[24] The reasons for the
opposition was that the matter was a gender-based violence matter.
The reaction of the community in Nomzamo,
Lwandle to the offence
raised the issue of the safety of the applicant. The applicant may
commit suicide or his life may be in
danger from the family of the
deceased. Carelse considered the seriousness of the offence and
especially having regard to what
the accused said, if accepted,
showed a premeditated murder. The applicant was a member of the SAPS,
should have known better and
according to Carelse that was
aggravating.
[25] The challenges that
the State was facing at the laboratories was one of the factors that
the State had considered in not opposing
bail. Carelse said that it
normally took between three to four months to get a report. They were
told that there was a chemical
used at the lab which was not
available and this resulted in delays in getting the reports. The
applicant was charged with unlawful
possession of a firearm and
ammunition after it was discovered that there was interference with
his authority to be in possession
of a firearm. 8 Cartridges were
found on the street. A projectile was found in the flat where the
deceased was lying, and the firearm
which the applicant handed over
to the police had live rounds of ammunition in it. An empty magazine
was found next to the deceased.
The magazine found in the firearm was
full. The applicant was tested for gunpowder residue and the results
were still outstanding.
Carelse was not aware of the relationship
between the deceased and her family.
[26] Section 65(4)
provides as follows:
“
Appeal
to superior court with regard to bail
65 (4) 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.”
[27] A worrying practice
is developing and increasingly becoming larger and greater over time
in the magistrates courts, by persons
represented in bail
applications especially those as envisaged in section 60(11) of the
CPA, which are serious crimes. For inexplicable
reasons, these
accused persons who are generally lay persons, in a written statement
confirmed under oath or affirmation for use
as evidence in court,
suddenly assume the position of University professors who write a
study guide for magistrates, on section
60(4) of the CPA, simply
regurgitating the provisions of sub-subsections (a) to (e). The
applicant in this matter also did the
same. Sometimes this
unnecessary lecture covers the whole of section 60 from subsection 4.
This practice should be nipped in the
bud. There is a distinction
between an affidavit in support of a bail application and heads of
arguments submitted in such an application.
[28] The essentials of a
bail application includes addressing the relevant offence if the
applicant so elects, and such particulars
as may be reasonably
sufficient to satisfy the court, in this instance that the interests
of justice permit the release of the
applicant. The affidavit must be
intended to result in that the court is fully informed of the facts.
I understand section 60(11)(b)
to mean that a bail application is an
opportunity for an applicant to adduce evidence to meet the onus on
such an applicant. In
my understanding, the ‘evidence’
envisaged in section 60(11) for which a bail application is an
opportunity to adduce,
refers to the available body of facts and
information which indicate that the proposition by an applicant that
the interests of
justice permit their release, is a valid and true
proposition. The Legislature could not have intended that an
applicant can simply
repeat the findings which the Legislature set
out for consideration., and not provide the facts upon which such
findings could
be made. Parroting the terms of section 60(4), without
facts which have weight, did not establish any of those grounds
[
Mathebula v S
2010 (1) SACR 55
(SCA) at para 15].
[29] If a return is made
to basics, the unique particulars of each case would crystallise
which of the grounds would draw specific
or general attention. The
regurgitation of the law in the affidavit, generally serves no
purpose. From the facts of the present
application, section 60(4)(d)
and (e) called for specific attention. No facts were placed before
the magistrate which would found
a conclusion of the grounds as
envisaged in sub-subsections (a)-(c) of section 60(4). The
speculative opinions of an investigating
officer are not sufficient.
It must be understood in the context that the central question was
whether the accused will appear
at the trial [
Hiemstra’ s
Criminal Procedure,
Issue 1, page 9-10 under the heading “Bail
hearing and trial”].
[30] Section 60(4)(d) and
(e) read:
“
Bail
application of accused in court
(4) The interests of
justice do not permit the release from detention of an accused where
one or more of the following grounds are
established:
(d) where there is a
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.
(e) where in exceptional
circumstances there is a likelihood that the release of the accused
will disturb the public order or undermine
the public peace or
security.”
[31] There are issues
around the authority for the applicant to use the state vehicle and
the state issued firearm. The admissibility
of the alleged statements
made by the accused at the time of his arrest, against the background
that they were made in what the
State perceived to be a confession,
is a disputed matter which is best left for the trial court. If the
State case is correct,
the execution of the deceased, which is what
the community of Lwandle suspect and which according to Carelse
caused some instability,
the offence induced shock and the release of
the accused on bail may undermine the public confidence in the
criminal justice system.
In my view, however, the public confidence
may be jeopardized only on the eyes of those who do not understand
court processes and
hasten to pronounce themselves before they had an
opportunity to read the judgments of our courts and the reasons
provided for
their decisions. The appellant elected to give a bare
denial of the offence.
[32] In
Hiemstra
page
24-50, the following was said about section 217 of the CPA:
“
Summarised
briefly, section 217 means the following: the primary and
indispensable requirement for the admission of a confession
is that
it be made freely and voluntarily by a person in sound and sober
senses who was not unduly influenced into making it. If
the
confession was made to a peace officer (who is not a magistrate or
justice), it is not admissible, irrespective of how freely
it was
made, unless it is confirmed and put in writing in the presence of a
magistrate or justice.”
[33] A peace officer
includes any police official, in the definitions in section 1 of the
CPA. Section 217 (1)(a) of the CPA provides:
“
Admissibility
of confession by accused
217 (1) Evidence of any
confession made by any person in relation to the commission of any
offence shall, if such confession is
proved to have been freely and
voluntarily made by such person in his sound and sober senses and
without having been unduly influenced
thereto, be admissible in
evidence against such person at criminal proceedings relating to such
offence: Provided:
(a)
That a confession made
to a peace officer, other than a magistrate or justice or, in the
case of a peace officer referred to in
section 334, a confession made
to such peace officer which relates to an offence with reference to
which such peace officer is
authorized to exercise any power
conferred upon him under that section, shall not be admissible in
evidence unless confirmed and
reduced to writing in the presence of a
magistrate or justice;”
[34] Carelse’s
evidence suggests that in the applicant, the SAPS may be having a
criminal, and a cold-blooded killer who executed
his wife in the
presence of their 5 month old child, in its blue uniform. The
applicant’s conduct around the authority to
use the state
vehicle and firearm at the time of the killing of his girlfriend, was
sufficient to call an SAPS committed to deter
and investigate crime,
especially gender-based violence in our current context, to do more
than just display a lackadaisical attitude
to the investigation
including preparation for a bail application. Carelse may be correct
that a premeditated murder is suspect.
But he should have led the
investigation by example and sourced facts, and not depended on his
explanations and opinions.
[35] The State did not
provide any evidence to show that the police officer to whom the
applicant made the statement, was the one
envisaged in section
217(1)(a) of the CPA. In particular the State did not provide
evidence that that police official was the one
holding the rank which
the Minister of Justice (Minister) had declared a peace officer for
the purposes of conferring the power
to have a confession made before
them, as envisaged in section 334 of the CPA. Section 334(2)(b)
provides that a power exercised
contrary to the provisions of
paragraph (a) shall have no legal force or effect. This includes the
taking of a confession by a
police official who does not hold a
declared office or rank. Furthermore, section 217 (1)(a) of the CPA
requires a confession made
to a peace officer who is not declared by
the Minister, to be confirmed and reduced to writing in the presence
of a magistrate
or justice. The evidence of Carelse is silent hereon.
If the confession was made to an officer as envisaged in section 334
or was
reduced to writing before a person holding an appropriate
office as envisaged in section 217, this would have formed part of
Carelse’s
evidence, as it was material to the alleged
confession.
[36] There are serious
doubts about the admissibility of the alleged confession. In the
absence of the confession, the State case
relied on circumstantial
evidence. The industry of the SAPS and the prosecutor in this matter
leaves much to be desired. It is
not for this court to speculate
whether it is laziness, inexperience or lack of training. Whatever
its foundations, unless there
is intervention by the respective
superiors, this case is very typical of its kind and a classic and
outstanding example of how
our criminal justice system can fail
victims of crime, especially women in gender-based violence if
officials are not diligent.
If the evidence of the deceased’s
friend is proved at trial, as part of the circumstantial evidence,
the deceased may be
found to have been executed in gender-based
violence. The evidence of the friend on its own is not sufficient. In
this bail application
the State relied on a murky case with a dark
and gloomy confession due to the failures of morally questionable
functionaries which
resulted in obscure facts of what happened.
[37] It will be a sad day
if the case was deliberately dealt with in a clumsy and unskillful
way simply because the applicant was
one of those who served in the
criminal justice system as a police official. It was only at the bail
appeal stage that the state
indicated that the applicant will be
tried in the High Court and stood to be charged with 5 counts which
were:
(a) Murder (read with
section 51(1) of Act No. 105 of 1997. That is a premeditated murder.
(b) Contravention of
section 3 of the Firearms Act, No. 60 of 2000 - unlawful possession
of a firearm.
(c) Contravention of
section 90 of the Firearms Act, No. 60 of 2000 – unlawful
possession of ammunition.
(d) Fraud
(e) Defeating the ends of
justice.
[38]
There was no objection for the court being approached on appeal in a
matter where, all things being equal, the State currently
must know
more than it did at the time of the bail application, which new
information may have tilted the scales in favour of the
strength of
the State case. On the record of the bail proceedings, on the whole,
the State case was subject to some serious doubt.
The State case was
not sufficient to tilt the scales against the appellant’s right
to be presumed innocent. I understand
Mathebula
at para 12 to be
referring to a weak and delicate case and not an uncertain State
case. I was persuaded that the interests of justice
permitted the
release of the applicant on bail.
The
appellant established that the decision of the magistrate was wrong.
[39] For these reasons I
made the order as follows:
1.
The appellant is
granted to bail in the amount of R10 000-00 on condition:
1.1
He attends court on the
next date and to any further date to which this matter is postponed
and remain in attendance until excused
by the court or dealt with in
accordance with justice.
1.2
He informs the
Investigating Officer of his whereabouts at any stage that he has to
leave the Cape Town Metropolitan Municipal area
and also when he for
any reason whatsoever changes his residential address.
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mafe v S (A49/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 108 (31 May 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 108High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Mbakum v S (A148/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 213 (31 October 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 213High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Sogoni v S (A243/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 136; 2023 (1) SACR 290 (WCC) (18 July 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 136High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Mokoteli and Another v The Body Corporate of Viling Villas Sectional Title Scheme (SS52/2012) and Others (16623/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 114 (6 June 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 114High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Coetzee v S (A36/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 161 (25 August 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 161High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar