Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 258South Africa
Kara and Others v S (A 218/22; F563/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 258; 2023 (2) SACR 171 (WCC) (1 December 2022)
Headnotes
each of the appellants had failed to discharge the onus under s60 (11) and consequently bail was denied. 6. The onus which an accused person bears in bail proceedings was discussed at length by the Constitutional Court in Dlamini et al[2], the leading case on the constitutionality of a variety of aspects of bail applications and to which the court a quo had regard in the course of a detailed judgment. The following remarks of Kriegler J in that matter are, in my respectful view, apposite in this appeal. “[11] Furthermore, a bail hearing is a unique judicial function. It is obvious that the peculiar requirements of bail as an interlocutory
Judgment
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## Kara and Others v S (A 218/22; F563/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 258; 2023 (2) SACR 171 (WCC) (1 December 2022)
Kara and Others v S (A 218/22; F563/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 258; 2023 (2) SACR 171 (WCC) (1 December 2022)
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sino date 1 December 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
CASE
NO: A 218/22
LOWER
COURT CASE NO F563/2022
In
the matter of the bail appeal between:
EBRAHIM
KARA
First Appellant
MESHACK
NGOBESE
Second Appellant
ELIAS
RADEBE
Third Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Bench:
P.A.L. GAMBLE, J
Heard:
25 November 2022
Delivered:
1 December 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 10h00 on Thursday 1 December
2022.
JUDGMENT
GAMBLE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
On 4 August 2022 members of the SA Police
Service pulled over a 10 ton Isuzu truck, with registration number
[....], on Jan Smuts
Drive in the Magisterial District of Athlone.
Upon searching the truck, the police found an extraordinarily large
quantity of what
is believed to be cocaine contained in the enclosed
cargo section of the truck. It is said that the stash, apparently
hidden between
sheets of pine wood, consisted of some 672 bricks of
cocaine, weighing 672 kg and valued at approximately R403m.
2.
The first appellant, who was the driver of
truck at the time, was arrested there and then on charges of dealing
in cocaine as also
a number of charges relating to the unlawful
driving of the truck. The second and third appellants were evidently
arrested at a
different location, brought to the truck and similarly
charged. The 3 appellants appeared before the Magistrate, Athlone on
8 August
2022 and thereafter on 19 August 2022 when they applied for
bail, which application the State opposed. The appellants were
represented
in that hearing by Adv. R. M. Liddell and the State by
Adv. P-J. Damon.
3.
On 12 September 2022 the Magistrate refused
bail whereafter the appellants lodged an appeal against that refusal
on 23 September
2022, which appeal was heard by this Court on Friday
25 November 2022. The parties were represented in this Court as they
were
before the court a quo. The Court is indebted to counsel for the
comprehensive heads of argument and bundles of authorities which
have
facilitated the speedy determination of this appeal.
APPLICABLE LEGAL
PRINCIPLES IN THE COURT A QUO
4.
Given
that the first count on which the appellants were charged (the
narcotics offence) resorts under Schedule 5 to the Criminal
Procedure
Act, 51 of 1977, (“the CPA”), it is common cause that
they bore the onus of establishing that their release
on bail was in
the interests of justice.
[1]
Section 60 (11)(b) of the CPA is to the following effect –
“
60(11)
Notwithstanding any provisions of this Act, where an accused is
charged with an offence referred to –
(a)…
(b) in Schedule 5, but
not in Schedule 6, the court shall order that the accused be detained
in custody until he or she is dealt
with in accordance with the law,
unless the accused, having been given a reasonable opportunity to do
so, produces evidence which
satisfies the court that the interests of
justice permit his or her release.”
5.
The appellants elected to discharge that
onus through the filing of affidavits rather than presenting viva
voce evidence. The State
responded similarly whereafter the
appellants filed replying affidavits. The State put up a further
affidavit in reply to further
allegations made in the replying
affidavits. After hearing comprehensive argument from both counsel on
a number of days in August,
the court a quo gave a detailed judgment
on 6 September 2022. In so doing it was held that each of the
appellants had failed to
discharge the onus under s60 (11) and
consequently bail was denied.
6.
The
onus which an accused person bears in bail proceedings was discussed
at length by the Constitutional Court in
Dlamini
et al
[2]
,
the leading case on the constitutionality of a variety of aspects of
bail applications and to which the court a quo had regard
in the
course of a detailed judgment. The following remarks of Kriegler J in
that matter are, in my respectful view, apposite in
this appeal.
“
[11]
Furthermore, a bail hearing is a unique judicial function. It is
obvious that the peculiar requirements of bail as an interlocutory
and inherently urgent step were kept in mind when the statute [i.e.
the CPA] was drafted. Although it is intended to be a formal
court
procedure, it is considerably less formal than a trial. Thus the
evidentiary material proffered need not comply with the
strict rules
of oral or written evidence. Also, although bail, like the trial, is
essentially adversarial, the inquisitorial powers
of the presiding
officer are greater. An important point to note here about bail
proceedings is so self-evident that it is often
overlooked. It is
that there is a fundamental difference between the objective of bail
proceedings and that of the trial. In a
bail application the enquiry
is not really concerned with the question of guilt. That is the task
of the trial court. The court
hearing the bail application is
concerned with the question of possible guilt only to the extent that
it may bear on where the
interests of justice lie in regard to bail.
The focus at the bail stage is to decide
whether the interests of justice permit the release of the accused
pending trial; and that
entails in the main protecting the
investigation and prosecution of the case against hindrance
…
[45] …(T)he
default position [has] changed: whereas previously the starting point
was that an arrestee was entitled to be
released, the position under
s 35(1)(f) [of the Constitution, 1996] is more neutral. Now, unless
there is sufficient material to
establish that the interests of
justice do permit the detainee’s release, his or her detention
continues.” (Emphasis
added; internal references omitted)
7.
The Learned Justice had the following to
say in relation to the understanding of this criterion.
“
[46]
The separate yet associated problem with sub-ss (4) to (9) [of s 60]
arises from the use of criterion of the interests of justice.
The
term “the interests of justice” is of course well known
to lawyers, especially students of South African constitutional
law.
It is a useful term denoting in broad and evocative language a value
judgment of what would be fair and just to all concerned.
But while
its strength lies in its sweep, that is also its potential weakness.
Its content depends on the context and applied interpretation.
It is
also, because of its breadth and adaptability, prone to imprecise
understanding and inapposite use…
[49] One can therefore
confidently conclude that although the wording of sub-s (1)(a) no
longer replicates the governing constitutional
norm, and although the
term “the interests of justice” is used with variable
content, the nature of the exercise under
chapter 9 of the CPA, and
the manner in which a court enquiry into bail is to be conducted,
remain substantially unaltered. It
remains a unique interlocutory
proceeding where the rules of formal proof can be relaxed and where
the court is obliged to take
the initiative if the parties are
silent; and the court still has to be pro-active in establishing the
relevant factors. More pertinently,
the basic enquiry remains to
ascertain where the interests of justice lie. In deciding whether the
interests of justice permit
the release on bail of an awaiting trial
prisoner, the court is advised to look to the five broad
considerations mentioned in paragraphs
(a) to (e) of sub-s (4), as
detailed in the succeeding subsections. And it then has to do the
final weighing up of factors for
and against bail as required by
sub-s (9) and (10).
[50] Sub-ss (4), (9) and
(10) of s 60 should therefore be read as requiring of a court hearing
a bail application to do what courts
have always had to do, namely to
bring a reasoned and balanced judgment to bear in an evaluation,
where the liberty interests of
the arrestee are given the full value
accorded by the Constitution. In this regard it is well to remember
that s 35(1)(f) [of the
Constitution] itself places a limitation on
the rights of liberty, dignity and freedom of movement of the
individual. In making
the evaluation, the arrestee therefore does not
have, a totally untrammeled right to be set free. More pertinently
than in the
past, a court is now obliged by s 60(2)(c), (3) and (10)
to play a pro-active role and is helped by sub-ss (4) to (9) to apply
its mind to a whole panoply of factors potentially in favour of or
against the grant of bail.”
8.
As the Constitutional Court has thus
observed, a court hearing a bail application is statutorily assisted
in coming to its conclusion
by a host of considerations (“a
panoply of factors”) set forth in s60 of the CPA. So, in the
case of the consideration
of “the interests of justice”
criterion, the bail court may have regard to s60(4) which is to the
following effect
–
“
60(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:
(a) Where there is the
likelihood that the accused, if he or she were released on bail, will
endanger the safety of the public or
any particular person or will
commit a Schedule 1 offence;
(b) where there is the
likelihood that the accused, if he or she were released on bail, will
attempt to evade his or her trial;
or
(c) where there is the
likelihood that the accused, if he or she were released on bail, will
attempt to influence or intimidate
witnesses or to conceal or destroy
evidence; or
(d) where there is the
likelihood that the accused, if he or she were released on bail, will
undermine or jeopardize the objectives
of the proper functioning of
the criminal justice system, including the bail system;
(e) where in exceptional
circumstances there is the likelihood that the release of the accused
will disturb the public order or
undermine the public peace or
security.”
And, these individual
criteria are buttressed by further factors in ss60 (5) – (9)
which seek to assist a bail court in assessing
whether the criteria
have been established. I shall revert to this later.
9.
It
has repeatedly been said that an accused who elects to go by way of
affidavit rather than presenting viva voce evidence in a
bail
application runs a distinct risk. Recently, in
Killian
[3]
(where the accused was charged with murder which resorted under
Schedule 6 to the CPA), Binns-Ward J observed, in my respectful
view
correctly, that, in choosing to attempt to discharge that onus on
affidavit, an accused person runs the risk of not resolving
disputed
allegations which might arise in the process.
“
[9]
The appellant chose to bring his application for bail by means of an
affidavit and the state responded with answering affidavits.
Each
side in effect submitted two sets of affidavits. In the result the
court a quo was called upon to determine the bail application
on what
were in substance motion proceedings. I question whether it is wise
or desirable for a party bearing a formal onus to seek
to discharge
it by adducing its evidence on paper, especially when the evidence is
likely to be challenged or disputed, as was
the case in the current
matter.
[10] The difficulty may
be illustrated by reference to a single but important aspect of the
evidence in the current matter. The
appellant averred that when the
police descended on him after the shooting of Colonel Kinnear he had
informed them that he had
been tracking the deceased at the instance
of a certain Mr. Mohammed, whom the appellant understood wished to
recover a vehicle
from the person he had been asked track. The
police, on the other hand, testified, also on affidavit, that the
appellant gave a
variety of mutually inconsistent explanations for
his tracking activities.
[11] Neither side applied
to offer oral evidence in support of its version or to cross-examine
the deponent to the version in conflict
with its own. How was the
court a quo to deal with the conflicting evidence on paper?
[12] In civil
proceedings, there are rules to deal with that sort of situation. In
terms of the so-called Plascon-Evans rule, where
final relief is
sought on paper and there is a conflict on the facts, the version
asserted by the respondent prevails unless it
is obviously
far-fetched or untenable. The rule operates in that manner
irrespective of incidence of the onus. Where interim or
interlocutory
relief is sought, the court makes a determination on the
probabilities as they appear from the papers.
[13] Bail applications
are sui generis. To an extent they are inquisitorial and, in general,
there is no prescribed form for introducing
evidence at them. But in
cases where s 60(11) applies and there is consequently a true onus on
the applicant to prove facts establishing
exceptional circumstances,
an applicant would be well advised to give oral evidence in support
of his application for bail. This
seems to me to follow, because -
differing from the position in which the Plascon-Evans rule is
applied – the discharge of
the onus is a central consideration
in s 60(11) applications. If the facts are to be determined on paper,
the state’s version
must be accepted where there is a conflict,
unless the version appears improbable. Reverting to the example in
the current case
used to illustrate the proposition, the
probabilities are neutral on whether the appellant gave the police a
consistent explanation
or various conflicting ones. Applying the
approach I have just described, as I believe it was bound to do in
the circumstances,
the court a quo was obliged - if it chose not to
exercise its power of its own accord to require oral evidence - to
accept the
police evidence on the point. The example given was not
chosen idly. Whether the accused supplied false information at the
time
of his arrest or thereafter is a material consideration in bail
proceedings (see s 60(8)(a)).” (Internal references omitted)
10.
As
to the manner in which an accused may discharge the onus under
s60(11), and in particular the evidential material that will suffice,
the Supreme Court of Appeal set the bar fairly high in
Mathebula
[4]
,
also a charge of murder falling under Schedule 6 and thus requiring
proof of “exceptional circumstances”.
“
[11]
In the present instance the appellant’s tilt at the state case
was blunted in several respects: first, he founded the
attempt upon
affidavit evidence not open to test by cross examination and,
therefore, less persuasive: cf S v Pienaar
1992 (1) SACR 178
(W) at
180h; second, both the denial of complicity and the alibi defence
rested solely on his say-so with neither witnesses nor
objective
probabilities to strengthen them. The vulnerability of unsupported
alibi defences is notorious, depending as it does,
so much upon the
court’s assessment of the truth of the accused’s
testimony. In so far as the appellant suggested that
the police had
extracted an inadmissible confession from him (or his co-accused), he
provided no detail which might have enhanced
either his or their
reliability or credibility.
[12] But a state case
supposed in advance to be frail may nevertheless sustain proof beyond
a reasonable doubt when put to the test.
In order successfully to
challenge the merits of such a case in bail proceedings an applicant
needs to go further: he must prove
on a balance of probability that
he will be acquitted of the charge
: S v Botha
2002 (1) SACR 222
(SCA) at 230h, 232c; S v Viljoen
2002 (2) SACR 550
(SCA) at 556c.
That is no mean task, the more especially as an innocent person
cannot be expected to have insight into matters
in which he was
involved only on the periphery or perhaps not at all. But the state
is not obliged to show its hand in advance,
at least not before the
time when the contents of the docket must be made available to the
defence; as to which see Shabalala &
Others v Attorney-General of
Transvaal and Another
[1995] ZACC 12
;
1996 (1) SA 725
(CC). Nor is an attack on the
prosecution case at all necessary to discharge the onus; the
applicant who chooses to follow that
route must make his own way and
not expect to have it cleared before him. Thus it has been held that
until an applicant has set
up a prima facie case of the prosecution
failing there is no call on the state to rebut his evidence to that
effect: S v Viljoen
at 561f-g.
[13] As will be apparent
from the paucity of facts in support of his case, the appellant fell
substantially short of the target.
Despite the weak riposte of the
state, the magistrate was left, after hearing both sides, no wiser as
to the strength or weakness
of the state case than he had been when
the application commenced. It follows that the case for the appellant
on this aspect did
not contribute anything to establishing the
existence of exceptional circumstances.”
I will deal below with
the relevant evidence that was advanced by the parties before the
court a quo.
THE APPROACH ON APPEAL
11.
Turning to the function of this Court, the
test on appeal against the decision of the court a quo is set forth
in s65 (4) of the
CPA.
“
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.”
12.
In
Porthen
[5]
,
Binns-Ward AJ (as he then was) examined the authorities and
postulated the approach on appeal as follows.
“
[8]
When considering the extent of an appellate court’s power to
interfere with a decision of a lower court entailing the
exercise by
the lower court of a discretion, it is necessary to know whether the
discretion in issue is one in the narrow
or wide
sense of the term. The distinction between ‘wide’ and
‘narrow’ (or strict) discretion has been explained in a
number of comparatively recent judgments of the Supreme Court of
Appeal and the late Appellant Division. See Media Workers Association
of South Africa and Others v Press Corporation of South Africa
Ltd ('Perskor')
[1992] ZASCA 149
;
1992 (4) SA 791
(A) at 800CJ, Knox D'Arcy
Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others 1996 (4) SA 348 (A) at
360D362G (and
the authority cited there) and Hix Networking
Technologies v System
Publishers (Pty) Ltd and Another 1997 (1) SA 391 (A)
at 402BC.
[9] Where the lower court
has exercised a discretion in the wide rather than the narrow sense
the court of appeal ‘
is entitled to substitute its view for
that of the court which heard the matter and is not precluded from
interfering unless it
concludes that the lower court has not
exercised a judicial discretion’
. See Fedsure Life
Assurance Co Ltd v Worldwide African Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
and Others
2003 (3) SA 268
(W) at para [26], pp. 2778. Accordingly,
where the court a quo, exercises a discretion in the wide sense, it
does not have a free
hand to do whatever it wishes to do and a court
of appeal is not hamstrung by the traditional grounds of whether the
court exercised
its discretion capriciously or upon a wrong
principle, or that it did not bring its unbiased judgment to bear on
the question,
or that it acted without substantial reasons. See
Ndlovu v NGGPBP; Bekker and Another v Jika 2003 (1) 113 (SCA) at para
[18], p.124…
[12] In determining
whether or not a bail applicant has established the existence of
‘extraordinary circumstances’ within
the meaning of
s 60(11)(a) of the CPA, the court has to make a decision on the facts
judged within the context of the particular
case. Facts which might
be sufficient in one case, might not be enough to warrant the grant
of the bail application in the peculiar
context of another matter. In
S v Botha en ‘n Ander
2002 (1) SACR 222
(SCA), at paragraph
[19], p.230, Vivier ADCJ described the exercise required of the court
as entailing the making of a ‘value
judgment’ as to
whether the proven circumstances are of such a nature as to be
‘exceptional’.
[13] The term ‘value
judgment’ (Afr. waardeoordeel) is an expression which does fit
comfortably with the concept of
judicial discretion in the narrow
sense of the term. The expression ‘value judgment’ is,
for example, often used in
the civil context to describe the court’s
powers to determine an appropriate sum of general, as distinct from
special damages.
The onus in such a case is on the claimant to show
that damages have been suffered. The quantum of general damages is
however not
amenable to empirical proof, unlike special damages where
the quantum has to be proved. The fixing of the quantum of general
damages
constitutes the exercise of a discretion in the narrow sense.
In the context of criminal law, sentencing in general entails the
exercise of judicial discretion in the narrow sense. Sentencing
plainly entails the making of a value judgment as to what punishment
is appropriate in the relevant circumstances. In my view, however,
the concept of a ‘value judgment’ goes not so much
to the
question of whether the power entailed in its making is discretionary
in the wide or narrow sense of the word, but rather
to emphasise the
flexibility that is available in the exercise of the power (cf. S v
Dlamini, supra, at paragraph [75]). I offer
the following
illustration of the point I seek to articulate. Whether or not to
grant an interdict entails the exercise of a discretionary
judicial
power. It is a power, the exercise of which generally entails
weighing a number of countervailing considerations and interests,
ultimately requiring the making of a value judgment. As confirmed in
the passage in Knox D’Arcy cited above, that incidence
of the
exercise does not, however, result in the inherent exercise of
judicial discretion in the narrow sense.
[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 ss 60(4)(9) of the
Act has to be applied differently. See
S v Dlamini, supra, at
paragraph [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 of sense of discretion. The appellate
court is, in terms of s 65(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”.
Porthen
enjoyed
the subsequent approval of a Full Bench in this Division in
Petersen
[6]
and has been followed elsewhere in
Faye
,
Sithole
and
Mbaleki
[7]
.
13.
Finally,
in
Trencon
[8]
,
the Constitutional Court restated the approach to reconsideration by
a higher court of matters involving the exercise of a discretion
by
the lower court. Khampepe J put it thus;
“
[83]
In order to decipher the standard of interference that an appellate
court is justified in applying, a distinction between two
types of
discretion emerged in our case law. That distinction is now
deeply-rooted in the law governing the relationship between
appeal
courts and courts of first instance. Therefore, the proper approach
on appeal is for an appellate court to ascertain whether
the
discretion exercised by the lower court was a discretion in the true
sense or whether it was a discretion in the loose sense.
The
importance of the distinction is that either type of discretion will
dictate the standard of interference that an appellate
court must
apply.
[84]
In
Media
Workers Association
[9]
,
the Court defined a discretion in the true sense: ‘
The
essence of a discretion in [the true] sense is that, if the
repository of the power follows any one of the available courses,
he
would be acting within his powers, and his
exercise
of power could not be set aside merely because a Court would have
preferred him to have followed a different course among
those
available to him
.’
[85] A discretion in the
true sense is found where the lower court has a wide range of equally
permissible options available to
it. This type of discretion has been
found by this Court in many instances, including matters of costs,
damages and in the award
of a remedy in terms of section 35 of the
Restitution of Land Rights Act. It is ‘
true
’ in
that the lower court has an election of which option it will apply
and any option can never be said to be wrong as each
is entirely
permissible.
[86]
In contrast, where a court has a discretion in the loose sense, it
does not necessarily have a choice between equally permissible
options. Instead, as described in
Knox
[10]
,
a discretion in the loose sense – ‘
means
no more than that the court is entitled to have regard to a number of
disparate and incommensurable features in coming to
a decision.’
[87] This Court has, on
many occasions, accepted and applied the principles enunciated in
Knox
and
Media Workers Association
. An appellate court
must heed the standard of interference applicable to either of the
discretions. In the instance of a discretion
in the loose sense, an
appellate court is equally capable of determining the matter in the
same manner as the court of first instance
and can therefore
substitute its own exercise of the discretion without first having to
find that the court of first instance did
not act judicially.
However, even where a discretion in the loose sense is conferred on a
lower court, an appellate court’s
power to interfere may be
curtailed by broader policy considerations. Therefore, whenever an
appellate court interferes with a
discretion in the loose sense, it
must be guarded.
[88] When a lower court
exercises a discretion in the true sense, it would ordinarily be
inappropriate for an appellate court to
interfere unless it is
satisfied that this discretion was not exercised— ‘
judicially,
or that it had been influenced by wrong principles or a misdirection
on the facts, or that it had reached a decision
which in the result
could not reasonably have been made by a court properly directing
itself to all the relevant facts and principles
.’ An
appellate court ought to be slow to substitute its own decision
solely because it does not agree with the permissible
option chosen
by the lower court.
[89]
In
Florence
,
[11]
Moseneke DCJ stated:
‘
Where
a court is granted wide decision-making powers with a number of
options or variables, an appellate court may not interfere
unless it
is clear that the choice the court has preferred is at odds with the
law. If the impugned decision lies within a range
of permissible
decisions, an appeal court may not interfere only because it favours
a different option within the range. This principle
of appellate
restraint preserves judicial comity. It fosters certainty in the
application of the law and favours finality in judicial
decision-making
.’ (Footnotes
otherwise omitted)
14.
In summary then, this Court will, at
common law not lightly interfere with the exercise by the court a quo
of its “true”
discretion to refuse bail and, even more so
in light of the express statutory imperative contained in s60(4).
THE MATERIAL EVIDENCE
BEFORE THE COURT A QUO
15.
Reading the judgment one can see that the
court a quo carefully analysed the evidence adduced in the
affidavits. The appellants
relied on a series of rote allegations in
their individual affidavits which bore a remarkable similarity in
structure and content
– the term ‘cut and paste’
comes to mind. So, they point out that they are all family men with
various dependents
whom they support and all have clean criminal
records. Only the second appellant (aged 47) has health issues -
chronic diabetes
and hypertension - which are evidently controlled by
medication. The first appellant (aged 39) and the third appellant
(aged 42)
enjoy good health.
16.
Each of the appellants claims to be
gainfully employed. The first appellant says he is an IT specialist
who works from home on his
laptop and also has an interest of sorts
in a vaping shop in Stellenbosch. He says his income fluctuates
around R20 000 per
month, although he told the investigating
officer it was as high as R30 000. The second appellant claims to be
a sub-contractor
in the building industry (he does not specify the
trade he practices) earning around R10 000 per month, while the
third appellant
says he works as a “Bolt driver” –
an e-hailing taxi service – where he earns approximately R6 000
per month.
17.
According to the charge sheet, the J15, the
addresses given by the appellants at their first appearance were as
follows –
15.1 The first
appellant - 131 Riebeeck Street, Goodwood, Western Cape;
15.2 The second
appellant - 45 Perth Road, Westdene, Gauteng; and
15.3 The third
appellant - 3 End Street, Westdene, Gauteng.
These are the addresses
which the three appellants gave up to the police on their arrest and
which are recorded in their interview
statements taken down
contemporaneously. There is no issue with the address of the first
appellant, which was verified by the police
as a house being rented
by him for R10 000 per month.
18.
However, prior to submitting their bail
affidavits, which were obviously drawn up by their legal
representatives and deposed to
on 19 August 2022, on around 9 August
2022, the second and third appellants gave different addresses. No 2
then told the police
that he lived at 17/19 Rothbury Avenue, Auckland
Park, Johannesburg and went on to explain later that he had furnished
the investigating
officer, Capt. John Daniel May, with the Perth Road
address because it was “a postal address”. The third
appellant
gave his second address as E610, Kathrada Park, Newclair,
Johannesburg but chose not to explain the discrepancy.
19.
The investigating officer explained in his
first answering affidavit dated 19 August 2022 that he had asked a
colleague in Gauteng,
Col Mark du Bruin, to follow up on the
addresses of no’s 2 and 3. Col du Bruin, who was furnished with
each accused’s
pair of addresses conducted a verification
exercise around midday on 11 August 2022 and reported (and later
confirmed by way of
affidavit) that the Perth Road address furnished
by no 2 was false. He said that when he went to the premises he found
a tuck shop
being operated by a Zimbabwean national who did not know
the second appellant and did not recognize him when shown his
photograph.
20.
He established further, after speaking
telephonically to no 2’s wife (who was in the Eastern Cape at
the time) that this appellant
lived at [....] L[....] (not Rothbury)
Road, Auckland Park. Col du Bruin visited the home of the second
appellant which he described
as “a cottage in the back of a
main house” and met the second appellant’s son there,
thus satisfying himself
as to the correctness of the second address.
He also noted that a VW Polo vehicle with registration number [....]
(allegedly belonging
to no 2) was parked at these premises. The son,
Sicelo, confirmed that it was the second appellant’s VW vehicle
but disavowed
knowledge of the owner of a Nissan Almera car also
parked there.
21.
In respect of the third appellant, Col du
Bruin found that the End Street address was false – it
evidently consisted of a
disused factory with adjacent rooms –
and the occupants there also knew nothing of the third appellant. He
said he further
contacted no 3’s wife, who worked in
Johannesburg, and was then taken to the address in Kathrada Park.
This was a shack in
an informal settlement. At that address, said Col
du Bruin, he asked appellant no 3’s wife what vehicle her
husband drove.
She spoke of a Nissan Almera motor vehicle with
registration number [....] but the accused’s wife said she did
not know where
it was. In his ball application affidavit, the third
appellant asserted ownership of this vehicle, which he said he used
in the
course of his employment as a Bolt driver.
22.
In his further affidavit dated 26 August
2022, Capt. May clarified an obvious mistake which had crept in to
his earlier affidavit
regarding which vehicle had been parked where.
He went on to explain that when Col du Bruin visited the L[....] Road
address he
found a Nissan Almera with registration number [....]. He
later established that this vehicle belonged to the second appellant.
Both the Polo and the Nissan were, however, registered at the Perth
Road address.
23.
In his first affidavit, Capt. May gave the
court a quo an overview of the State’s case. He said that the
perpetrators were
put under police surveillance as early as 29 July
2022 when the Isuzu truck involved was driven by the first appellant
to a McDonalds
fast food outlet opposite Kenilworth Centre. There the
truck was handed over to the second appellant who drove off in the
general
direction of Gauteng.
24.
Capt. May went on to say that on 4 August
2022 the same truck was seen at another McDonalds outlet, this time
at N1 City in Goodwood
where it was handed over by appellants 2 and 3
to no 1 who drove the truck further until it was stopped by the
police in Athlone.
He stated that the truck was not registered to any
of the appellants. The police knew who the owner was but did not want
to disclose
that person’s identity to the court at that stage.
25.
Capt. May also referred to the passports of
the 3 appellants which confirmed that all of them have regularly
travelled in and out
of the Republic in the past number of years. The
first appellant made regular trips to Namibia and during
February/March 2022 he
went to Turkey for a month. This, according to
May, is a country with which South Africa has no extradition treaty.
The second
appellant also travelled into Namibia on occasion while
the third appellant travelled extensively in and out of Botswana.
26.
Lastly, Capt. May said that the second
appellant made incriminating admissions during the course of
interrogation, which he partially
reduced to writing before his legal
representative arrived and put a stop to it. There is also an
allegation that that the truck
was searched in the presence of all
three appellants, the inference being that no’s 2 and 3 were
brought along to the truck
shortly after it had been stopped. Capt.
May said that the first appellant gave permission that the truck
might be searched and
that he too made an incriminating statement to
the arresting officer in the process. These incriminating statements
need not be
expanded upon at this stage. Suffice it to say that there
is admissible evidential material for purposes of considering bail
and
which was placed before the court a quo, in which the said two
appellants admitted being involved in the transportation of the cargo
to a lesser or greater extent.
THE APPELLANTS’
VERSIONS
27.
What of the appellants? What do they have
to say on the merits at this stage? And, ultimately what evidence
have they put up to
demonstrate that their release on bail is in the
interests of justice? Or, as was suggested in
Mathebula
,
what evidence have they adduced to demonstrate that they have an
arguable defence to the charges, in circumstances where at the
very
least a prima facie is set up against them?
28.
The answer, I regret to say, is precious
little. Other than a rote repetition of their personal circumstances
and a promise that
they will stand their trial, they have chosen to
remain silent on the merits, which they are of course entitled to do.
But, they
have expressly challenged the evidence put up by the State
and asserted their innocence in relation thereto. That silence must
thus be evaluated in the context of what, in my view, is a fairly
compelling prima facie case made against them at this time. It
is
axiomatic that if they had an innocent explanation regarding their
respective presences on a truck with which they apparently
have no
connection, they would surely have advanced it so as to discharge the
onus which they have under the CPA. Indeed, in terms
of the
dictum
in
Mathebula
they were obliged to persuade the court a quo of their innocence.
They did nothing of the sort.
29.
To advance an exculpatory defence, the
first appellant was required, for instance, to explain how he, an IT
specialist and sometime
purveyor of e-cigarettes, came to be driving
the truck, both when it left Cape Town and when it was stopped by the
police in Athlone.
One is reminded of a harbour pilot seeing the
vessel out of port and safely back in upon its return with a valuable
cargo on board.
Further, he needed to explain why he handed over a
truck, which was not his own, to no 2 in Kenilworth and received it
back into
his control at N1 City a few days later. And against the
case put up by the State, he was required to contextualize his
frequent
travels outside of the Republic, bearing in mind that he
said that his work as an IT specialist did not require that he keep
an
office from which to work – his laptop is his office, he
claimed.
30.
The other 2 appellants were required to
explain what they, as persons ordinarily resident in Gauteng, were
doing driving a truck
laden with narcotics 1500 km away in the
Western Cape when they handed it back to the first appellant at N1
City. And that, in
circumstances where the evidence strongly suggests
that they set out together on their journey southwards, parking their
cars at
the alleged abode of the second appellant. The latter had the
further duty of explaining why he came down to Cape Town to collect
the truck in the first place.
31.
Lastly, the second and third appellants
were required to explain why they furnished false addresses to the
police when arrested.
The third appellant has not explained that fact
at all, while the second respondent’s referral to furnishing a
“postal
address” makes little sense, given the fact that
the warning statement which he signed on the day of his arrest
required
him to provide the police with an address at which he was
residing. The police would have had little interest in knowing where
the appellant allegedly received his mail. For purposes of
considering whether to oppose bail or not, the police obviously need
to know where an arrested person ordinarily resides.
32.
An issue which none of the appellants dealt
with was why they were all found in possession of 2 cell phones at
the time of arrest.
Given the ease with which criminals can make use
of so-called “burner phones” – the name given to
cheap mobile
devices which can easily be disposed of when it is
expedient to do so – the appellants, in my view, faced a
further difficulty
in discharging the onus.
THE REASONING OF THE
COURT A QUO
33.
The court a quo was concerned primarily
with the fact that the appellants might seek to evade their trials.
After all they are charged
with a so-called victimless crime and the
prospect of interference with State witnesses does not loom large.
Accordingly, the court
a quo focused on the criterion referred to in
s60 (4)(b) of the CPA. In so doing, the bail court was alive to the
provisions of
s60 (6) which lists a further number of factors that a
bail court may take into account when looking at whether the ground
contended
for under s60 (4)(b) has been established.
“
60(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 or she is to be tried;
(b) the assets held by
the accused and where such assets are situated;
(c) the means, and travel
documents held by the accused, which may enable him or her to leave
the country;
(d) the extent, if any,
in which the accused can afford to forfeit the amount of bail which
may be set;
(e) the question whether
the extradition of the accused could readily be effected should he or
she flee across the borders of the
Republic in an attempt to evade
his or her trial;
(f) the nature and
gravity of the charge on which the accused is to be tried;
(g) the strength of the
case against the accused and the incentive that he or she may in
consequence have to attempt to evade his
or her trial;
(h) the nature and
gravity of the punishment which is likely to be imposed should the
accused to be convicted of the charges against
him or her;
(i) the binding effect
and enforceability of bail conditions which may be imposed and the
ease with which such conditions could
be breached;
(j) any other factor
which in the opinion of the court should be taken into account”
34.
Although the court a quo did not specify
the provisions of ss60 (6)(a) to (j) and deal with each
seriatim
in the judgment, it is clear that the substance thereof was
considered. The court a quo was alive to the fact that all three
appellants
had travelled in and out of South Africa fairly
extensively over a protracted period of time. In the case of the
first appellant,
he was shown to have travelled outside the Republic
15 times during the period 2019 to 2022. In the case of the second
appellant,
it was said to be 10 times over the period 2011 to 2020
while the third appellant’s travel record was very high –
64
times over the years 2010 to 2018. In respect of no’s 2 and
3, these are extensive travel records for persons who hold down
fairly menial jobs and do not earn salaries commensurate with the
extent of travel.
35.
In regard to the first appellant, he chose
to explain only the month-long trip to Turkey in early 2022, which he
said was a holiday
with his wife. For a family man earning a modest
income of between R20 000 and R30 000 per month, with a
monthly rental
component of R10 000 in his domestic expenses,
travel of that sort and duration does seem rather extravagant in the
circumstances.
I agree with the court a quo that this factor raised a
red flag in respect whereof there is no satisfactory explanation.
And, such
an explanation would not ordinarily have impacted upon the
appellants’ right to remain silent about the merits of the
case.
If there were innocent explanations, these should have been
forthcoming.
36.
It
was suggested in this Court that the appellants’ passports
could be surrendered and that orders might be made that they
be
precluded for applying for new travel documents. It is, however, a
concern of this Court that this may not be a suitable answer
to the
flight risk question. It is a matter of public knowledge that the
Department of Home Affairs (“DOH”), has regularly
been
reprimanded by the courts in relation to its tardiness and
bureaucratic ineptitude.
[12]
Simply put, this Court cannot be satisfied that such an undertaking
would be adequately policed by DOH. And, in any event, the
possibility that the appellants may procure travel documents
unlawfully can also not be discounted as a possibility which is too
remote in the circumstances. It is also regrettably a matter of fact
that the country’s borders are notoriously porous.
[13]
37.
The
court a quo correctly looked at the strength of the State’s
case and the potential sentences which the appellants face
if
convicted on the drugs charges. During argument before this Court,
Mr. Liddell confirmed that the appellants faced a minimum
sentence of
15 years under the relevant minimum sentencing legislation
[14]
,
while the drug trafficking legislation itself
[15]
permitted a sentence up to a maximum of 25 years. These heavy
sentences are predicated on the quantity of contraband involved.
Given the huge mass and value of the drugs allegedly involved here,
it is not unreasonable to postulate that the prospect of a
double
digit prison sentence would be a legitimate basis to be concerned
about a person evading his bail, particularly where the
State has
shown a fairly convincing prima facie case, even at this relatively
early stage of the investigation.
38.
In
my view, the court a quo correctly considered the facts before it
contextually
[16]
and did not
misdirect itself on any issue. In accordance with the principles and
approach set out above, I am unable to find that
the bail court was
wrong or that it exercised its true discretion improperly. It thus
follows that the appeal against the order
refusing bail for all three
appellants must fail.
PROPOSED BAIL ORDERS
39.
A further issue falls to be mentioned. In
the court a quo the appellants did not indicate what amount of bail
each could afford
nor what further conditions might be attached to
the granting of bail. Rather, there is a rote allegation by each in
their bail
affidavits to the effect that –
“
I
respectfully aver that any concerns which this Honourable Court may
have in the event of it granting me bail, can be addressed
via the
imposition of appropriate and, if necessary, strict bail conditions.
I am willing to pay any
amount of reasonable bail to ensure my release, which I am advised,
is a further consideration by this Honourable
Court, in the event of
it finding that it is interests of justice that I should be released
on bail.”
40.
At the conclusion of argument, the Court
enquired of Mr. Liddell what might be considered a reasonable amount
of bail and what conditions
might be appropriate in relation thereto,
in the event that the Court was mindful to uphold the appeal. Mr.
Damon was invited to
do likewise. In the result, counsel presented
this Court with a draft order on Monday 28 November 2022 which
contained terms with
which both parties were in agreement should be
made, if the appeal was upheld.
41.
That order contemplated bail for the first
appellant in the amount of R200 000.00 and for the second and
third appellants in
the amount of R150 000.00 each. The
conditions attached thereto were that each appellant would report at
his local police
station on a Monday and Thursday between the hours
of 09h00 and 15h00 and that they were not to leave the jurisdiction
of the provinces
in which they reside without the written permission
of the investigating officer.
42.
In my view the conditions attached to the
proposed orders are wholly inadequate. Firstly, there is no mention
therein regarding
the surrender of travel documents or an undertaking
not to apply for new documents. Secondly, the delay between reporting
hours
is of such a duration that there would be more than enough time
for the appellants to leave the country without being missed.
Thirdly,
the second and third appellants reside outside of the
jurisdiction of the province in which they will be tried and the
monitoring
of their suggested reporting will be an unduly onerous
task for the investigating officer. Further, they are the persons who
furnished
false addresses upon their arrest.
43.
As to the amount of bail which each
appellant has tendered to pay, there is no evidence on record that
any of them can afford such
large amounts. This is an important
consideration because a court will not fix bail in an amount which is
beyond the means of an
arrested person: that would manifestly defeat
the purpose of bail. What does the evidence establish?
44.
Appellant 1 has a wife and family of
five to support, as also his aged parents, this Court was told. He
said he earns a maximum
of R30 000 per month and pays monthly
rent for his house of R10 000. In addition, the lease on the
vaping shop (which
was concluded by the first appellant on behalf of
a company of which he is the sole director) makes provision for
monthly rental
of R9000 and the first appellant has put up a
suretyship for the company’s obligations under the lease. He
has no assets
of any significant value with which he might be able to
raise such a substantial amount of bail as that offered, other than a
second
hand car. The first appellant manifestly is not possessed of
the funds to put up the bail suggested by counsel
45.
The second and third appellants are in a
similar predicament. They claim to earn far less than the first
appellant and have no assets
of any significance other than a couple
of second-hand cars. The costs associated with their accommodation
(if any) are not disclosed.
But the position is clear: the second and
third appellants are not possessed either of sufficient funds to put
up the bail offered.
46.
In the result, the appellants have failed
explain to this Court how they collectively will procure the
aggregate of R500 000,00
which is tendered as bail. The only
reasonable inference in the circumstance is that a third party (or
parties) is likely to put
up the money for the appellants’
bail. If the appellants are not putting up their own money to secure
their release on bail,
the provisions of ss60 (6)(d) set out above
come into play. Absent any explanation as to the basis upon which
their bail is to
be funded, it seems to me fair to infer that the
appellants can afford to forfeit their bail given that it is not
their money that
has been tendered.
47.
Lastly,
there is the question of extradition. S60 (6)(e) of the CPA requires
consideration to be given of how readily extradition
can be effected
if the appellants skip their bail. In the case of Turkey, it is
common cause that there is no extradition treaty
with South Africa.
But even in respect of Botswana and Namibia, destinations regularly
visited in the past by all of the appellants,
an extradition
application would take time and that is not in the interests of
justice in a matter such as this.
[17]
ORDER OF COURT
Accordingly, it is
ordered that the appeal by the first, second and third appellants
against the refusal of bail in the Athlone
Magistrates Court is
dismissed.
GAMBLE,
J
APPEARANCES:
For
the appellants:
Adv. R. M. Liddell
Instructed by L.P.
Hendricks Attorneys
Cape Town
For
the respondent:
Adv. P-J. Damon
c/o Director of Public
Prosecutions
Cape Town.
[1]
Schedule 6 offences, on the other hand, require proof of exceptional
circumstances – a more stringent test.
[2]
S v
Dlamini; S v Dladla & ors; S v Joubert; S v Schietekat
1999 (4) SA 623 (CC)
[3]
Killian
v S
[2021] ZAWCHC 100
(24 May 2021)
[4]
S v
Mathebula
2010 (1) SACR 55 (SCA)
[5]
S v
Porthen & ors
2004 (2) SACR 242 (C)
[6]
S v
Petersen
2008 (2) SACR 355 (C)
[7]
S
v Faye
2009 (2) SACR 210
(Tk);
S
v Sithole
2012 (1) SACR 586
(KZD);
S
v Mbaleki
2013 (1) SA 165 (KZD)
[8]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of
South Africa Limited and Another
2015 (5) SA 245 (CC)
[9]
Media
Workers Association of South Africa and Others v Press Corporation
of South Africa Limited
[1992] ZASCA 149
;
1992 (4) SA 791
(A) at 800E.
[10]
Knox
D'Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996
(4) SA 348
(SCA) at 361I
[11]
Florence
v Government of the Republic of South Africa
2014 (6) SA 456
(CC) at [111].
[12]
See, for example,
Director-General
of Home Affairs and others v De Saude Attorneys and another
[2019] 2 All SA 665
(SCA) at [44]
et
seq
[13]
S v
Rohde
2020 (1) SACR 329
(SCA) at [14]
[14]
S51
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 105 of 1997
read with
Part II
of Schedule 2 thereto
[15]
The
Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act, 140 of 1992
[16]
S v
Bruintjies
2003 (2) SACR 525
(SCA) at [7]. This matter involved a Schedule 6
offence but the approach is the same in respect of both schedules.
[17]
Rohde
at [15]
sino noindex
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