Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 161South Africa
Coetzee v S (A36/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 161 (25 August 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Coetzee v S (A36/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 161 (25 August 2022)
Coetzee v S (A36/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 161 (25 August 2022)
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sino date 25 August 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: A36/22
In
the matter between:
JEAN
PIERRE
COETZEE
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
Bench:
P.A.L. Gamble, J
Heard:
3 August 2022
Delivered:
25 August 2022
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives via email and release to SAFLII. The
date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 15H00 on Thursday 25 August
2022.
JUDGMENT
– BAIL APPEAL
GAMBLE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
The appellant, a 36 year old male, was
arrested in a township outside Mossel Bay in the early hours of the
morning of 15 May 2021.
He was in a car belonging to the deceased in
this matter along with two other men. The police found various
household items of
value belonging to the deceased in the vehicle
when the appellant was arrested. A short while after the arrest of
the appellant,
the police went to the home of the deceased where he
was found naked in his bathroom, trussed up with a length of rope.
The State
suggests that the deceased sustained lacerations to the
head and that he suffocated in his own blood.
2.
The appellant appeared before the local
magistrate on 17 May 2021 on a charge of murdering the deceased
together with the other
two occupants of the vehicle. He was charged
with one count of murder, read with the provisions of section 51 of
the Criminal Law
Amendment Act, 105 of 1997 (‘the CLAA”),
and a further count of theft of a motor vehicle. The fact that the
prosecution
at that stage incorporated reference to section 51 of the
CLAA in the charge sheet implied that the State would, at the trial,
allege that a minimum sentence was applicable in the event that the
appellant was convicted of murder.
3.
On 4 October 2021 the appellant applied for
bail before the local magistrate. It was common cause before her that
the provisions
of Schedule 6 of the Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of
1977 (“the CPA”) were applicable to those proceedings.
The effect
of the State’s reliance on the aforesaid Schedule 6
is that the appellant attracted an onus in terms of s 60(11)(a) of
the
CPA to show that there were exceptional circumstances present
which permitted his release on bail in the interests of justice.
4.
To this end, the appellant gave evidence in
person and adduced the evidence of his partner, a German national,
who is the mother
of their twin boys who were then just 7 months old.
The State led the evidence of the investigating officer, whereafter
the parties’
legal representatives both addressed the court.
5.
On 3 November 2021 the magistrate denied
bail and furnished her reasons in an ex tempore judgment. She found
that the appellant
had not discharged the Schedule 6 onus. The
appellant then filed an application for leave to appeal the refusal
of bail in the
Eastern Circuit Local Division sitting at George (“the
George Circuit Court”) during February 2022. It is unclear what
became of that application but the matter eventually served before
this Court sitting in Cape Town on 2 August 2022.
6.
During the course of the appeal hearing it
became evident that the appellant is to be tried in the George
Circuit Court, and the
State handed up its indictment in that regard.
This Court was informed that it was possible that the trial might be
heard during
the current sitting of the George Circuit Court which
ends at the end of the current term, 16 September 2022. For that
reason the
Court advised the parties that it would hold its decision
in abeyance. However, the Court was advised by the appellant’s
legal representative on 23 August 2022 that the trial would only be
heard during the sitting of the George Circuit Court in the
first
term of 2023, hence the delay in the delivery of this judgment.
7.
The State’s indictment refers to 3
offences – murder, robbery with aggravating circumstances and
housebreaking with
intent to steal and theft. In respect of the first
two offences, the State has given notice that it will seek minimum
sentences
under s51 of the CLAA, viz. life imprisonment on the murder
count and 15 years on the robbery count.
THE APPROACH TO
BAIL APPEALS
8.
This matter is to be determined under the
provisions of s 65(4) of the CPA which is to the following effect:
“
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 opinion,
the
lower court should have given.”
9.
In
S v Porthen
and others
2004 (2) SACR 242
(C)
Binns-Ward AJ conducted an extensive review of the authorities on
point with which I fully associate myself. Importantly that
matter
was decided under the Constitution and similarly involved
consideration of the Schedule 6 onus which itself has passed
constitutional muster. (
S v Dlamini
[1999] ZACC 8
;
1999 (2) SACR 51
(CC))
10.
In a case in which the offence with which
the accused is charged falls within the ambit of Schedule 6,
s60(11)(a) of the CPA directs
that the court shall not grant bail
“
unless the accused, having been
given a reasonable opportunity to do so, produces evidence which
satisfies the court that exceptional
circumstances exist which in the
interests of justice permit his.. release.
”
11.
In
Porthen
the Court remarked as follows with respect to the approach of the
court hearing a bail appeal where the case is governed by the
provisions of s60(11)(a).
“
[14]
On the issue of the existence of ‘extraordinary circumstances,
within the meaning of s 60(11)(a) of the CPA, there is
a ‘formal
onus
’
of proof on the applicant for bail. The ordinary equitable test of
the interests of justice determined according to the
exemplary list
of considerations set out in s60(4) – (9) of the [CPA] has to
be applied differently. See
S v
Dlamini...
in para [61]. In my view, a
court making the determination whether or not that onus of proof has
been discharged exercises a discretionary
power in the wide sense of
discretion. The appellate Court is, in terms of s65(4) of the CPA,
enjoined to interfere with the lower
court’s decision of a bail
application if it is satisfied that the lower court’s
decision
was wrong.
[15] Accordingly, in a
case like the present where the magistrate refused bail because he
found that the appellants had not discharged
the
onus
on them
in terms of s60(11)(a) of the CPA, if this Court, on
its
assessment of the evidence, comes to the conclusion that the
applicants for bail did discharge the burden of proof, it must follow
(i) that the lower court’s decision was ‘wrong’
within the meaning of s65(4) and (ii) that this Court can substitute
its own decision in the matter.”
12.
I should mention in passing that during
argument of this appeal, Mr. Booth, for the appellant, submitted
that, notwithstanding the
fact that the appellant and the prosecutor
both accepted in the Court
a quo
that
the matter was governed by Schedule 6, on a proper assessment of the
case it actually resorted under Schedule 5 to the CPA.
In such
circumstances, it was submitted that the appellant bore the onus to
show that his release on bail was governed by s60(11)(b)
– in
which the operative phrase is that the applicant “
satisfies
the court that the interests of justice permit his release
”.
This implies a lesser onus than under s60(11)(a) where exceptional
circumstances are required to be shown.
13.
I do not agree with Mr. Booth that the
matter before the magistrate was governed by Schedule 5. Besides the
fact of the parties’
acceptance that Schedule 6 applied, the
facts and the formulation of the charges in the charge sheet before
the Court
a quo
sufficiently established this and, as I have said, that is in any
event the basis for the indictment in the George Circuit Court.
DID THE APPELLANT
ESTABLISH EXCEPTIONAL CIRCUSTANCES IN THE COURT
A QUO?
14.
The onus which the appellant attracted in
the Court
a quo
is
encumbered by the provisions of s60(4)(a) to (e) of the CPA which set
out five distinct circumstances which preclude a finding
that an
accused’s release on bail is in the interests of justice. These
are, generally speaking, that–
(i) his release on bail
may endanger public safety or lead to the commission of a Schedule 1
offence under the CPA ;(s60(4)(a))
(ii) the accused may
attempt to evade his trial ;(s60(4)(b)) or
(iii) the accused may
attempt to intimidate witnesses ;(60(4)(c)) or
(iv) the release of the
accused on bail will undermine or jeopardise the proper functioning
of the criminal justice system (s60(4)(d));
and
(v) in exceptional
circumstances the release of the accused is likely to disrupt the
public order or undermine the public peace.
(s60(4)(e))
15.
Like a game of snakes and ladders, the CPA
then expands on each of these general categories in ss60(5) to 60(8A)
and sets up a series
of further considerations to be taken into
account when assessing each of those categories. For present
purposes, I shall focus
on s60(6) which is to the following effect –
“
(6)
in considering whether the ground in subsection (4)(b) has been
established, the court may, where applicable, take into account
the
following factors, namely –
(a) the emotional,
family, community or occupational ties of the accused to the place at
which he… is to be tried;
(b) the assets held by
the accused and where such assets are situated;
(c) the means, and travel
documents held by the accused, which may enable him…to leave
the country;
(d) the extent, if any,
to which the accused can afford to forfeit the amount of bail which
may be set;
(e) the question whether
the extradition of the accused could readily be effected should he…
flee cross the borders of the
Republic in an attempt to evade his…
trial;
(f) the nature and
gravity of the charge on which the accused is to be tried;
(g) the strength of the
case against the accused and the incentive that he…may in
consequence have to attempt to evade his…trial;
(h) the nature and
gravity of the punishment which is likely to be imposed should be
accused be convicted of the charges against
him…;
(i) the binding effect
and enforceability of bail conditions which may be imposed and the
ease with which such conditions could
be breached; or
(j) any other factor
which in the opinion of the court should be taken into account.”
I do not intend to deal
with each of these criteria individually. Rather, I shall describe
the relevant facts which collectively
impact thereon.
THE MATERIAL FACTS
AND CIRCUMSTANCES
16.
The evidence adduced before the Court
a
quo
by the appellant and his sometime
German partner, Ms. Ricara Moss, is problematic in respect of many
these criteria. It reveals
that the accused has led a peripatetic
lifestyle, living in Durban, Jeffrey’s Bay, Mossel Bay and
nearby Hartenbos where
he became acquainted with the deceased –
a 76 year old man living on his own. On occasion he lived with Ms.
Moss and their
twins in Mossel Bay and sometimes he lived alone in
Hartenbos.
17.
At the time of his arrest, the appellant
worked on a casual basis as an odd-job-man in the Hartenbos area. The
appellant has no
assets of any value and no fixed income. By his own
admission he has a lengthy history of substance abuse but claims to
have found
religious salvation while awaiting trial.
18.
Ms. Moss told the court that she arrived in
South Africa in 2019 and helped out at a children’s home in
Jeffrey’s Bay
where she met the appellant while in South Africa
on a visitor’s visa. She evidently has no permanent resident
status in
the country and has no entitlement to work. Yet she told
the court that she resided at the time (October 2021) at [....] 25
th
Avenue, Valeria, Pretoria and that that was where the appellant would
reside if he was released on bail. She claimed that she has
a
business degree and might start a business of her own.
19.
That was almost a year ago and this court
does not know if Ms. Moss is even still in the country and if so,
what her residency status
is. In any event, she said she liked
Pretoria because there was an expatriate German community there in
excess of 10 000 persons,
but she gave no firm evidence of her
earning capacity in South Africa, or whether it was legal.
20.
Ms. Moss told the Court
a
quo
that she had managed to secure
employment for the appellant in Pretoria and furnished the contact
details of the prospective employer,
one Thabilo Mhlanga. When this
was followed up by the investigating officer, she established that
there was no such employment
as alleged and that the person who
answered the call, a Zimbabwean man, did not know anything of the
appellant’s prospective
employment.
21.
In regard to the existence of exceptional
circumstances warranting his release on bail, the appellant said that
he needed to assist
Ms. Moss in caring for their twin sons, one of
whom was sickly and required brain surgery. Ms. Moss told the Court
a
quo
that she had given birth to twins
in South Africa in April 2021 and thereafter had returned to Germany
for the sick son to receive
medical care which was readily available
to her there. The investigating officer confirmed that according to
her passport, Ms.
Moss returned to South Africa in August 2021.
22.
The evidence of the appellant, confirmed by
Ms. Moss, was that he has three sons aged 11, 13 and 15 born of his
marriage to their
mother, who is deceased. Those children were taken
into care with the family of the deceased prior to his arrest and
they have
been subsequently been placed in foster care. Clearly, the
appellant has a poor history of parenting and his release on bail to
care for his older 3 sons is not required, nor warranted. As far as
the twins are concerned, Ms. Moss is a foreign national and
comes
from a European country with a sophisticated welfare and health
system. Should she be unable to manage with their care in
this
country, she does have other viable options in her home country.
23.
I am accordingly not persuaded that the
personal circumstances of the appellant are out of the ordinary to
the extent that they
can be construed as exceptional circumstances
under s60(11)(a) of the CPA (See
S v
Botha
[2002] 2 All SA 577
(SCA))
24.
A further factor which counts against the
appellant under s60(6) of the CPA is that he faces a potential life
sentence if convicted
of murder and, if not, a lengthy term of
imprisonment for robbery and/or housebreaking. In addition, the
investigating office was
of the view that the case against the
appellant was a strong one. He was said to have been seen driving the
deceased’s car
by the latter’s girlfriend who knew the
appellant. She suspected that something was amiss and tried to
apprehend him. An
argument ensued when she tried to grab the car keys
and the appellant then sped off. The police were alerted and with the
aid of
a locksmith the deceased’s flat was opened where the
grizzly scene was found. The appellant was arrested later that night
still in the car, with his co-accused and a stash of the deceased’s
property. The police found blood on his clothes which
were sent away
for DNA analysis. There can therefore be no doubt that there is a
prima facie case for the appellant to answer.
25.
Lastly, the investigating office explained
that she knew the community where the deceased had lived and that she
was concerned that
his release on bail may pose a danger for further
attacks in that community. I might mention,
en
passant,
that this Court has sat in the
Circuit Court in nearby Mossel Bay on several occasions and it is
apparent that Hartenbos has a
large community of elderly and retired
persons.
CONCLUSION
26.
The magistrate had regard to the law and
properly considered all the relevant facts and circumstances. A
homeless, unemployed man
with a history of substance abuse was linked
to the crime shortly after it occurred and now faces life
imprisonment. Having
considered the evidence before the Court
a
quo
, I am satisfied that the magistrate
exercised her discretion properly and I am unable to conclude that
her decision to refuse bail
was wrong. On the contrary, the release
of such a person on bail would not be in the interests of justice and
would constitute
a travesty of justice.
ORDER OF COURT
The appeal against the
refusal of bail is accordingly dismissed
.
GAMBLE,
J
APPEARANCES
For
the appellant: Mr. W Booth
W Booth Attorneys
Cape Town.
For
respondent: Ms. R Uys
Instructed by
Director of Public
Prosecutions
Cape Town.
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