Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 263South Africa
Motikeng v Regional Magistrate Beaufort West (Ms Moni) and Another (8853/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 263 (15 December 2022)
Headnotes
to determine the admissibility of the evidence obtained pursuant to the search of the vehicle in Applicant’s (and co-accused’s) possession. b)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Motikeng v Regional Magistrate Beaufort West (Ms Moni) and Another (8853/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 263 (15 December 2022)
Motikeng v Regional Magistrate Beaufort West (Ms Moni) and Another (8853/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 263 (15 December 2022)
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sino date 15 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 8853/21
In
the matter between:
MOTOYOO
LANCE
MOTIKENG
Applicant
And
REGIONAL
MAGISTRATE, BEAUFORT WEST (MS MONI)
First Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
WESTERN
CAPE
Second Respondent
Coram:
Justice V C Saldanha
Heard:
21 November 2022
Delivered
electronically:
15 December 2022
JUDGMENT
VC
SALDANHA J
:
[1]
This review application arose literally mid-stream in a criminal
trial
during the course of the State’s case in the Beaufort
West Regional Court. The basis of the application being that of
alleged
irregularities in the proceedings by the presiding
magistrate, the Honourable Ms N Moni.
[2]
The applicant, Mr Motoyoo Lance Motikeng, is one of two accused
facing
charges on two counts, one of which is the contravention of
the
Explosives Act 15 of 2003
, and the other that of the
contravention of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
. On 11 August
2020 both the applicant and his co-accused (Mr Kitso Mnguni), being
legally represented, pleaded not guilty
to both charges and the trial
thereupon proceeded.
[3]
On 26 May 2021 the applicant issued out review proceedings in this
court.
In the original Notice of Motion, he sought the
following relief:
‘
First
Irregularity:
a)
Reviewing and setting aside the Order of the First Respondent, handed
down on 11 August
2020, at Beaufort West Regional Court under Case
No: BSH93/2018, that the main trial proceed first, prior to
considering whether
a trial-within-a-trial should be held, to
determine the admissibility of the evidence obtained pursuant to the
search of the vehicle
in Applicant’s (and co-accused’s)
possession.
b)
Ordering that the Order to proceed with the main trial first,
violated the Applicant’s
right to a fair trial in terms of
Section 35(3) of the Constitution.
Second
Irregularity:
c)
Reviewing and setting aside the Order of the First Respondent, handed
down on 29 April
2021, at the Beaufort West Regional Court under Case
No: BSH93/2018, that the consent obtained to search the vehicle in
the Applicant’s
(and co-accused’s) possession was valid,
and therefore, not in violation of Sections 10 and 14 of the Bill of
Rights, and
also not in contravention of
Section 22
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act, No. 51 of 1977
.
d)
Ordering that the consent obtained was not informed consent and
therefore, that the
search was conducted in violation of the
Applicant’s fundamental Constitutional rights in terms of
Sections 9
,
10
,
14
and
35
(3) and (5);
e)
Ordering that the evidence obtained, violated the aforesaid
fundamental Constitutional
rights of the Applicant and therefore must
be excluded as the admission thereof would be detrimental to the
administration of justice.
f)
Ordering that any party opposing the relief sought be ordered to pay
the costs
of this application, jointly and severally.
g)
Granting Applicant further and/or alternative relief, as this
Honourable Court deems
meet.’
[4]
In support of the relief, the founding affidavit was deposed to by a
Mr
Mitchell Andreas, the attorney of record for the applicant in the
court a quo.
[5]
On 30 June 2021 the Chief Clerk of the second respondent, the
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape, filed a Notice of
Intention To Abide the decision of this Honourable Court in respect
of
the relief sought.
[6]
The application was set down for hearing for 10 June 2022. On 6
June this court addressed a letter to the Chief Clerk of the second
respondent, in which it advised her that the court had noted
that the
second respondent had filed a Notice of Intention To Abide. The
court further stated that, in light of the nature
of the relief
sought by way of the review proceedings, the court required the
second respondent to provide an Explanatory Affidavit
as to why it
elected to simply abide the decision of the court, in proceedings
that had been brought midstream in the criminal
trial. The
second respondent’s urgent responses were requested.
[7]
On 8 June 2022 the second respondent filed an affidavit by a senior
state
advocate in its office, who had dealt with the matter, in which
she set out the reasons for the second respondent`s decision to
abide
the outcome of the review proceedings. In response thereto, and
on the same day, the court addressed a further letter
to the second
respondent, which was copied to the Director of the second
respondent, Ms N Bell. The court noted that the
state advocate
had failed to deal with the question as to whether it was appropriate
and necessary, in the circumstances of the
matter, that mid-stream in
the criminal proceedings, interlocutory orders by the trial court
were being sought to be set aside.
The court also noted that,
in the Explanatory Affidavit by the state advocate, of 8 June 2022,
she concluded ‘that
the proceedings’ should be ‘set
aside’. That notwithstanding, that such relief had not
been sought by the
applicant himself in the Notice of Motion. The
court required of the state advocate to confer with Ms Bell, in her
capacity
as the Director of Public Prosecutions in the Western Cape,
with regard to the matters raised by the court. The court also
confirmed that the state advocate concerned would personally attend
the review proceedings on 10 June 2022.
[8]
In response to the court’s letter of 8 June 2022, the state
advocate
deposed to a further affidavit on 9 June 2022, the contents
of which will be dealt with later in this judgment.
[9]
At the commencement of the proceedings on 10 June 2022, in an
engagement
with the state advocate who attended on behalf of the
second respondent, the court directed that the second respondent
appoint
an independent legal representative to represent the second
respondent in the proceedings, and in particular, in light of the
contents
of the two affidavits and the various positions adopted
therein.
[10]
The second respondent was thereafter represented by the Office of the
State Attorney, Cape
Town, who filed, on behalf of the second
respondent, a third ‘Explanatory Affidavit’ deposed to by
the state advocate.
The content of that affidavit will likewise
be dealt with later in the judgment.
[11]
On 28 July 2022 the applicant filed a Notice of Intention to Amend
the Notice of Motion,
in terms of uniform
rule 28
, and attached
thereto an amended Notice of Motion. In the notice the
applicant sought to amend the original Notice of Motion
in the
following manner:
i)
By deleting prayers (b), (c) and (e), and by renumbering prayers (c)
and (b).
ii)
By inserting the following prayer:
‘
(c)
Ordering that the proceedings in Beaufort West Regional Court, under
Case No. BSH93/2018 be set aside and
the matter is to commence de
novo.’
iii)
By numbering prayers (f) and (g) as prayers (d) and (e).
[12]
In the attached amended Notice of Motion the relief sought was stated
as follows:
‘
First
Irregularity:
a)
Reviewing and setting aside the Order of the First Respondent, handed
down on 11 August
2020, at Beaufort West Regional Court under Case
No: BSH93/2018, that the main trial proceed first, prior to
considering whether
a trial-within-a-trial should be held, to
determine the admissibility of the evidence obtained pursuant to the
search of the vehicle
in Applicant’s (and co-accused’s)
possession.
Second
Irregularity:
b)
Reviewing and setting aside the Order of the First Respondent, handed
down on 29 April
2021, at the Beaufort West Regional Court under Case
No: BSH93/2018, that the consent obtained to search the vehicle in
the Applicant’s
(and co-accused’s) possession was valid,
and therefore, not in violation of
Sections 10
and
14
of the Bill of
Rights, and also not in contravention of
Section 22
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act, No. 51 of 1977
.
c)
Ordering that the proceedings in Beaufort West Regional Court, under
Case No. BSH93/2018
be set aside and the matter is to commence de
novo.
d)
Ordering that any party opposing the relief sought be ordered to pay
the costs of this
application, jointly and severally.
e)
Granting Applicant further and/or alternative relief, as this
Honourable Court deems
meet.’
On
28 May 2022 the applicant’s counsel filed a Practice Note
together with the applicant’s heads of argument. Attached
to the heads of argument was a bibliography in respect of the
authorities it sought to rely upon, including the Constitution of
the
Republic of South Africa 1996. The applicant’s counsel
also attached copies of two decisions,
Mkhutyukelwa v The Minister
of Police
2017 JDR 1523 (ECM) (unreported) and S v
Enujukwu
(unreported, WCC Case No: A775/03, 9 December 2004), on which
inter alia
the applicant sought to base his case.
[13]
The applicant had also filed with the application a copy of the
record of the proceedings,
which comprised three volumes, and which
were also served on both the first and second respondents.
The
proceedings in the court a quo
[14]
It is necessary to provide the overall context to this application by
way of no more than
a thumb nail sketch of the proceedings in the
court a quo. As indicated, the proceedings commenced on 11
August 2020 in the
Regional Court, Beaufort West. After the
accused pleaded, the prosecutor called one witness, Constable Neil
Damon. His
evidence was led in chief, he was cross-examined by
the applicant’s legal representative, Mr M Andreas, where after
he was
re-examined by the State, questions of clarity were put to him
by the court, and no further questions were asked of him by either
the applicant’s legal representative nor the prosecutor. The
matter was thereafter postponed on several occasions,
and proceedings
eventually resumed on 2 December 2020.
[15]
On that day, Mr R Liddell, an advocate practising at the Cape Bar,
appeared for the applicant
on the instructions of Mr Andreas. At
the commencement of the proceedings Mr Liddle brought an application
for a trial-within-a-trial
to be held, with regard to the
admissibility of evidence that related to the search conducted by the
state witnesses, Constable
Damon and Sergeant Jooste, of the vehicle
that the applicant and his co accused had been travelling in at the
time of the incident,
with particular reference to the charge under
the
Explosives Act. Constable
Damon had already testified at
that stage about the search and the subsequent discovery of
explosives (several pipe bombs and detonators)
in the vehicle, and
its confiscation and the arrest of the two accused.
[16]
In his motivation to the court for a trial-within-a-trial to be held
on the admissibility
of the evidence relating to the search, Mr
Liddell addressed the court extensively on the evidence that had
already been given
by Constable Damon, and he also submitted written
heads of argument. The major attack on the search was that the
police officials
had not obtained the ‘informed consent’
of the applicant and his co accused, and neither did the police
officials have
a ‘reasonable suspicion’ to have conducted
the search. The State did not oppose the application and the
magistrate
ruled that a trial-within-a trial be held with regard to
the admissibility of the evidence in respect of the search and
seizure.
The evidence of the first state witness, Constable
Damon, was led again. The evidence of the second state witness,
Sergeant Jooste, was presented and dealt with on 16 March 2021. The
defence led no evidence in the trial-within-a-trial and
the
prosecutor and counsel for the applicant thereupon addressed the
court on the admissibility of the evidence relating to the
search and
seizure. The legal representative for accused no. 2 likewise
addressed the court with regard to the admissibility
of the evidence.
[17]
The court handed down its ruling in respect of the trial-within-a
trial on 29 April 2021,
wherein the magistrate admitted the evidence
relating to the search and seizure of the explosives found in the
vehicle. The
matter was then postponed for further trial. The
applicant thereafter launched these review proceedings.
[18]
This court is particularly mindful that these are interlocutory
proceedings and that the
State has not completed its evidence in the
main trial; more importantly, that the ruling of the magistrate in
the trial–within-a-trial
is likewise interlocutory in nature.
The
alleged first irregularity
[19]
The applicant contended that the magistrate had committed an
irregularity, on the basis
that she proceeded to hear evidence in the
main trial without first having ruled that a trial-within-a-trial be
held prior to the
first state witness testifying. In this
regard the applicant contended that his fair trial rights, as
provided in section
35(3) of the Constitution, were violated.
[20]
It is appropriate that regard be had to the actual record of
proceedings before the magistrate,
with regard to the proper context
in which the irregularity was alleged to have been committed. As
indicated, both accused
pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Immediately after the applicant had pleaded not guilty, his
legal representative, Mr Andreas,
addressed the court and stated the
following:
‘
Your
worship at this stage I would just like to add that I am not sure if
I say (sic) it at this stage, but accused 1 dispute (sic)
the
admissibility of the search and seizure of those evidence. It
is our humble submission that it was unconstitutionally
obtained and
that a trial-within-a-trial must be held in order to determine the
admissibility of the search and seizure. It’s
just the
evidence that relates to the search of seizure of the items. As
the court pleases, Your worship.’
[21]
Immediately thereafter the magistrate recorded the plea by the second
accused, Mr Nguni.
The prosecutor thereafter indicated to the
court that the first state witness was present, who would testify on
the merits
of the matter. He also stated as follows:
‘
We
took note of the objection of accused 1 against the admissibility of
his evidence. So we are in agreement that it would
be incumbent
then for the court to rule that a trial-within-a trial be held. Your
worship it refers rule(sic) regarding the
indistinct(sic) of
admissibility I think I can already call him in the
trial-within-a-trial but he, there’s not much that
he can
contribute in those aspects. If the court can just grant me a
short adjournment that I can take [indistinct].’
[22]
In response, the magistrate stated as follows:
‘
What
I want to understand, first I don’t know about the merits. If
someone is going to come and say I object on the
validity of the
search, for it really means nothing, because a search, what happened
before the search. Do you understand?
And then you object
on the search. Do you understand? Then I will be in a
position to make a ruling, because
right now, for instance, the
police, if there was an authorised road block, or something, I don’t
know how this search came
about. Do you understand? So
like right now I am not in a position to just rule that there must be
a trial-within-a-trial.
It can’t happen like that.’
[23]
The prosecutor thereupon informed the court that the evidence which
the State would lead,
through its first witness, would be with regard
to the search. The court thereupon informed him as follows:
‘
Well,
I would suggest that you call that witness. Then I will hear
that witness and then my decision would be based on what
will be
happening.
PROSECUTOR:
I understand, Your Worship. Do I understand the court
correctly; must we then proceed with the main trial or with
the
[intervention].
COURT:
We must proceed with the main trial.
PROSECUTOR:
As the court pleases.
COURT:
We can’t really go to a trial-within-a-trial yet. We
don’t even know what’s happening. I don’t
know. I am in the dark. Let’s proceed with the main
trial.
PROSECUTOR:
As the court pleases, Your worship. We then call Mr Neil Damon
to the witness stand, Your worship.’
[24]
Thereupon the witness, Constable Damon, was led by the prosecutor.
Briefly stated,
he testified that he, together with his fellow
police officer Sergeant Jooste, was carrying out what he referred to
as crime prevention
duties along the N1 in Beaufort West, along the
route to Johannesburg. He explained that it involved conducting
stop and
search operations on vehicles in the areas patrolled by
them, such as in the town, in the hotspots and high crime areas. On
27 October 2017 they were patrolling the area near the weigh bridge
along the N1, and stopped a vehicle to conduct ‘just
a routine
check’. Constable Damon approached the driver’s
side, while Sergeant Jooste approached the passenger
side. Constable
Damon claimed that he introduced himself and asked the driver to
produce his driver’s licence, and
informed him that they were
doing a routine check. He thereupon asked him if they ‘can
search the vehicle. . .’.
He claimed that in response,
the driver, who he identified as the applicant (accused 1) said that
there was ‘no problem
officer and then they let us do the
search’. He and Sergeant Jooste proceeded with the search
of the vehicle. Sergeant
Jooste then called out to him in the
following: ‘Damon come and look here I found this and I
recognise this paper. Then
he showed me where he found it.’
He then explained that on the passenger side, hidden under the
mat, he found
what appeared to be pipe bombs and detonators.
They immediately stopped the search, and had the vehicle taken
to the police
station where the dog unit was called out. The
dog unit from Mossel Bay responded, and the dogs reacted positively
to the
scent of explosives. They thereupon searched the vehicle
further and found more explosives. The prosecutor then handed
up a set of photographs in an album depicting the inside of the
vehicle where the items were found. The album was handed
in
without any objection by either the applicant nor his co-accused.
Constable Damon stated further that both the applicant
and his
co-accused denied that the vehicle and the explosives belonged to
them, and said that it was a company vehicle and that
they were
merely the drivers of the vehicle.
[25]
In
cross-examination by Mr Andreas, Constable Damon was referred to
Section 22
[1]
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act, and
it was put to him that ‘in relation to 22(a)
if the person concerned consents to such a search for the seizure,
for the article
in question and (b), now I want to question you with
respect to
section 22(b)
, if you, on reasonable grounds, believed
that an offence was committed. . . ’. Constable Damon was
asked whether they
had any reasonable suspicion to pull the vehicle
over and conduct the search. His response was that they did not
have any
reason to do so, but that they had asked the driver and he
‘agreed that we can search the vehicle’. Constable
Damon repeated that he did not have any reasonable suspicion of an
offence by the applicant or his co accused to have conducted
the
search. In response Mr Andreas put to him:
‘
Now,
there’s case law to the effect. . .
MR
DAMON: Ja, we didn’t have any reasonable ground, but we did ask
for, like I said, we asked their permission. So we
did have no
reasonable ground to stop the vehicle, like I said, or no suspicious
vehicle(sic), or whatsoever.’
[26]
In further cross-examination he repeated that he had asked the driver
(the applicant) for
permission to search the vehicle, to which he had
acceded. It was then put to him by Mr Andreas as follows:
‘
MR
ANDREAS: Besides the fact and this is also, our case law is clear
with respect to that as well, that you must, there’s
also a
duty on you to inform any occupant that you want to search the
vehicle, of that he have (sic) the right to refuse to give
consent to
search, for the search to take place. Did you inform them of
that specific right as well?
MR
DAMON: Your Honour, I did not inform them. But they didn’t
refuse or. . .’
The
only question asked in cross-examination by Mr Van Der Westhuizen, on
behalf of the applicant’s co-accused, was whether
the
explosives found were weighed in the presence of Constable Damon.
There was no further re-examination. The court
therefore
put questions of clarity to Constable Damon, with regard to his
recollection, if any, of certain of the provisions of
the ‘Police
Act’ with regard to the conduct of searches. The response
was that he was not able to recall off
hand the specific provisions
of the Act, but that they did on a regular basis conduct such routine
checks and searches of vehicles.
There was no further
re-examination by the prosecutor, neither any questions that arose
from that of the court by both Mr
Andreas or the legal representative
of the applicant’s co-accused.
[27]
The prosecutor thereafter informed the court that that was the only
witness for the day,
to which the court responded: ‘I am going
to, I am not going to, at this moment, to order the
trial-within-a-trial. I
am going to ask you to get that act and
read that act before I proceed with this and I think it has to be
something which is made
available. Because I see lots of this
applications. That means we only read (sic)
Criminal Procedure
Act. The
Criminal Procedure Act, you
have to read it together
with the relevant act sometimes. So the three of you when we
postpone this matter I want you to
have read that act (sic)’.
[28]
The magistrate continued and stated: ‘I am not sure about the
section. You
have to read the act. It might be
section 11
or
12
and
12
and
12
, however, I am not sure about the sections. I
haven’t read it recently. So I want you to read the act
and understand
it. You will read it together with the
Criminal
Procedure Act and
maybe we won’t have this kind of applications
any more if everyone who comes to this court understand what the
police act
says and what is the Criminal Procedure Act says (sic).’
This elicited the following exchange:
PROSECUTOR:
We will do that, Your worship.
COURT:
I guess, oh, but, I guess all the witnesses are police officers. Can
we take this matter to Oudtshoorn?
Mr
Andreas: Your Worship, I don’t have a problem to do that. . .’
[29]
As indicated, when the matter eventually resumed some months later,
counsel for the applicant
applied for a trial-within-a-trial to be
held in which the admissibility of the search and seizure was to be
challenged. The
prosecutor, as indicated, did not oppose the
application and the magistrate immediately ruled that a
trial-within-a-trial be held.
[30]
In his address to this court, on the review, and in his heads of
argument, he maintained
that the first irregularity related to the
magistrate’s refusal to have immediately proceeded to a
trial-within-a-trial prior
to the evidence of Constable Damon being
led in respect of the charges. Counsel for the applicant
persisted with that position
in argument, even when this court
pointed out to him that the magistrate had made it clear that a basis
had to be established in
order for her to consider whether a
trial-within-a-trial should be held. Moreover, even during the
course of the evidence
of Constable Damon being led by the State and
in cross-examination by Mr Andreas, no application had been brought
by the defence
for a trial-within-a-trial to be held at that stage.
Counsel for the applicant then contended that Mr Andreas should
at that
stage have brought the application for a trial-within-a-trial
to be held. There was moreover no indication on the record that
the magistrate would not have entertained a properly motivated
application, once the basis had been set on the evidence and in
terms
of the law.
[31]
There was, in our view, clearly no irregularity committed on the part
of the magistrate
in refusing that a trial-within-a-trial be held
even before any evidence was led on the charges. The magistrate
was correct
in her view that a basis had first to be established on
the evidence, or the grounds for the challenge to the admissibility
of
the evidence in relation to the consent obtained by the police
officers had to be clearly spelled out, for the holding of a
trial-within-a-trial.
In this regard, the authorities do not
define a set procedure to be adopted by a court when considering at
what point a trial-within-a-trial
must be ordered. In
S v
Daniels
1995 (12) BCLR 1687
(C), Van Reenen J remarked to the
effect that it is in essence a court-created concept:
‘
Binneverhore
en die prosedures wat daarop van toepassing is word nie deur
wetgewing gereël nie. Dit is egter ’n
goed
gevestigde praktyk wat waarskynlik ontwikkel het uit die
Hooggeregshof se inherente bevoegdheid om sy eie prosedures te reël.
(Sien
S v Nieuwoudt
(3)
1985 (4) SA 510 (K);
S
v Yengeni and Others
[1990 (4) SA
429
(K)] te 436H; Jerold Taitz
The
Inherent Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court
te
6 9.)’
The
court stated further:
‘
Selikowitz
R het in
S v Yengeni and Others (2) (supra)
, na ’n
ontleding van die toepaslike regspraak beslis dat die prosedure wat
by binneverhore toegepas word geheel en al binne
die domein van die
verhoorregter is met inagneming van die vereistes van geregtigheid en
billikheid. Soortgelyke standpunte
word gehuldig deur Friedman
R (soos hy toe was) in
S v Nieuwoudt (3) (supra)
te 517E–F
en Farlam WnR (soos hy toe was) in
S v Williams and Others
1991 (1) SASV 1 (K) te 9e–f.’
In
S v Masakale and Another
[2007] ZAGPHC 348
;
2009 (1) SACR 295
(W), the court
quoted with approval the following from
S v De Vries
1989 (1)
SA 228
(A):
‘
It
is accordingly essential that the issue of voluntariness should be
kept clearly distinct from the issue of guilt. This
is achieved
by insulating the inquiry into voluntariness in a compartment
separate from the main trial. In England the enquiry
into
voluntariness is made at “a trial on the voir dire” or,
simply, the voir dire, which is held in the absence of
the jury.
In
South Africa it is made at a so-called “trial within the
trial”. Where therefore the question of admissibility
of
a confession is clearly raised, an accused person has the right to
have that question tried as a separate and distinct issue
.’
(Own emphasis added.)
[32]
The fact that the prosecutor acquiesced to the request by the
applicant’s legal representative
for a trial-within-a-trial to
be held even before evidence was led, was entirely neutral. There
was clearly no procedural
irregularity by the magistrate in insisting
that evidence be led on the main trial first, to establish the basis
for the challenge
to the admissibility of the evidence relating to
search and seizure. The magistrate appeared alive to the
challenge to the
evidence of the search and seizure, and even
requested the legal representatives to familiarise themselves with
the relevant legal
provisions relating to searches and seizures
before she considered the holding of the trial-within-a-trial at the
end of Constable
Damon’s testimony. Moreover, as was
apparent from the record of the proceedings, a trial-within-a-trial
was subsequently
held upon a fully motivated application by the
applicant’s legal representative.
Second
alleged irregularity.
[33]
The relief sought under this heading in the amended Notice of Motion
relates to the reviewing
and setting aside of the order by the
magistrate, with regard to the consent obtained by Constable Damon
from the applicant for
the search of the vehicle and the actual
search thereof, as being a violation of Sections 10 and 14 of the
Constitution and a contravention
of
Section 22
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
. Again, as with the relief sought in
respect of the violation of certain rights under the Constitution, as
raised in the
initial Notice of Motion and in the founding affidavit
by Mr Andreas in respect of the first irregularity, the applicant
does not
set out the basis of the alleged violation of his dignity in
terms of Section 10 of the Constitution, neither that of his right
to
privacy under Section 14. More importantly, the applicant does
not set out the basis on which it is alleged that the magistrate
had
committed any procedural irregularity in the proceedings in breach of
his rights under Section 35(5) of the Constitution, that
would
warrant any intervention by this court. No complaint was raised
at all with regard to the procedure adopted by the
magistrate in
conducting the trial-within-a-trial, and the manifest conduct of the
magistrate from the record did not appear to
give rise to any
irregularity in the proceedings. The applicant seeks, however,
to attack the magistrate’s ruling on
its merits as being a
violation of his Section 10 and Section 14 rights under the
Constitution, and also a violation of
Section 22
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act.
[34
]
In this regard, and with reference to the record of the proceedings,
it was repeatedly put
to Constable Damon and Sergeant Jooste, who
testified during the trial-within-a-trial, that they had failed to
inform the applicant
and his co-accused of their ‘right to
refuse the search’. During the cross-examination of
Sergeant Damon it was
also put to him, and to the court, certain
extracts of the decision in
S v Enujukwu
(above) relating to
the notion of ‘informed consent’. Counsel for the
applicant submitted to the magistrate that
he was also relying on the
views expressed by the authors Du Toit et al in the
Commentary of
the
Criminal Procedure Act
which he claimed ‘refer to that
the consent has to be informed consent (sic)’. The witness,
Constable Damon, in response
repeatedly stated that he was not aware
of such a right that the applicant and his co-accused had to be
informed that they have
a right to refuse the search of the vehicle.
He did, however, state that had the applicant or his co-accused
withheld their
consent to search the vehicle they would have simply
told them to drive on. The witnesses, Constable Damon and
Sergeant Jooste,
were repeatedly admonished by counsel for the
applicant during his cross-examination of them, for their failure to
have acquainted
themselves with what he referred to as the provisions
of the Constitution, ‘the Police Act’ and the
Criminal
Procedure Act relating
to searches, privacy and seizures.
[35]
Counsel for
the applicant, as well as his attorney, when conducting the
cross-examination of the police officers in the court a
quo, and
likewise in their oral and written submissions in the court a quo,
and in the written heads of argument and oral submissions
to this
court on review, dismally failed to put the correct position in law
as it presently stands with regard to the question
of consent. That
issue had been dealt with by Griesel AJ in the Supreme Court of
Appeal in
S
v Lachman
2010 (2) SACR 52
(SCA), where that court rejected the contention that
a search was unlawful because the police officer had failed to advise
the
appellant that he could object to the search. The SCA
resoundingly found that the notion of ‘informed consent’
as contended for by the applicant`s legal team was not sound in law.
See in this regard paragraphs 36 and 37
[2]
of that decision .
[36]
The
decision in
S
v
Enujukwu
relied
upon by the applicant’s legal team was likewise dealt with in a
decision of a full bench of this division,
S
v Umeh
2015 (2) SACR 395
(WCC), where the decision in
S
v Enujukwu
was criticised. In this regard see paragraph 41.5 of that
judgment.
[3]
Further, the
authors Du Toit et al deal with all of these cases on the very same
page at 2-30J and very clearly point to
the authority of the SCA
decision in
S
v Lachman
.
Nothing could have been clearer regarding the correct legal position
on the issue.
[37]
Clearly an incorrect proposition in law was put to the state
witnesses, and also to the
magistrate in the court a quo, and was
likewise repeated before us. It is ironic that an experienced
counsel would derisively
criticise the two police officers for their
ignorance of the law (which he repeatedly stated was no excuse), yet
at the same time
launch these review proceedings (with the
applicant’s attorney deposing to the founding affidavit) on an
incorrect position
of law. More importantly, if the applicant’s
legal representatives were of the view that the position of their
client
was distinguishable from that in the matters of
S v Lachman
or S v
Umeh
(which, with respect, they appeared to have been
blissfully unaware of), such contention should more appropriately be
raised at
the end of the trial in the magistrate’s court should
the interlocutory decision by the magistrate not be reconsidered as
a
result of all of the evidence and, if necessary, on appeal.
[38]
With regard to the application of
Section 22
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act, it
was apparent that counsel for the applicant and his
attorney had failed to appreciate the distinctions between
Sections
22(a)
and
22
(b) of the Act. In this regard
Section 22(a)
, on
which basis the search was conducted by the two police officials
(Constable Damon and Sergeant Jooste), is where a person ‘consents
to such search for and the seizure of the article in question’,
as opposed to the police having to have reasonable grounds
to do so
under
Section 22(b)
, and without the consent of the person concerned.
Once again, incorrect propositions in law were put not only to
the witnesses
but contended for in the court a quo, and likewise on
review before us. In our view, there was simply no basis for
the contention
of an irregularity on the part of the magistrate under
the alleged second irregularity.
Interference
with incomplete proceedings.
[39]
In the
heads of argument filed on behalf of the applicant it was contended
that this review should be viewed through the legal prism
of the
Constitution and in particular Section 35 (3). The applicant
also contended that the court should have regard to the
provisions of
Section 38 of the Constitution
[4]
in accordance with which the applicant was entitled to assert that a
right in the Constitution has been infringed or threatened
and that a
court may grant appropriate relief, including a declaration of
rights. Moreover, counsel for the applicant contended
in the
heads of argument that the provisions of Section 39(2) of the
Constitution were relevant. Once again, it is our respectful
view that the applicants’ reliance on the provisions of the
Constitution with regard to his fair trial rights, do not justify
an
interference in criminal proceedings which are mid-stream, and more
so where the applicant has failed to demonstrate any legal
basis for
the relief sought in this court on review. In the founding
affidavit the applicant`s attorney also contended that
the review was
based on the ‘principle of legality’, but in subsequent
revised heads of argument claimed that reliance
was placed on the
provisions of Section 22(1)(c)
[5]
and (d)
[6]
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
. The applicant has likewise failed to
demonstrate that the magistrate committed a gross irregularity or
acted in breach of
section 22(1)(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act, in
either of the alleged two irregularities complained of.
[40]
The State Attorney on behalf of the second respondent belatedly, but
more appropriately,
referred to
Ferreira v Magistrate, Mr Koopman
NO
2020 JDR 1909 (ECG) in which the court referred to the often
quoted decision of
Wahlhaus and Others v Additional Magistrate,
Johannesburg and Another
1959 (3) SA 113
(AD) as one of the
prevailing dicta on the issue:
‘
[21]
. . . If, as appellants contend, the magistrate erred in dismissing
their exception and objection to the charge, his error
was that, in
the performance of his statutory functions, he gave a wrong decision.
The normal remedy against a wrong decision
of that kind is to
appeal after conviction . . . Nor, even if the preliminary point
decided against the accused by a magistrate
be fundamental to the
accused’s guilt, will a Superior Court ordinarily interfere –
whether by way of appeal or review
– before a conviction has
taken place in the inferior court.’ [Own emphasis added.]
[41]
More
importantly, the applicant has failed to demonstrate any exceptional
circumstances for the matter to be reviewed mid-stream
the criminal
proceedings. See also the views expressed by De Kock AJ in
Bisschoff
and Magistrate Jansen Van Rensburg and Others
(1581/2021)
[2021] ZAFSHC 254
(28 October 2021) in which the court very usefully
sets out the law as it presently stands in relation to the review of
proceedings
mid-stream in a trial
[7]
.
[42]
In this division, Dolamo J in
William Frederick Jacobus Smith v A
Immelman & 1 other
- Case No: 24387/11 remarked as
follows:
‘
[52]
The above is a correct exposition of the law on the review of a lower
Court’s decision. A High Court may exercise
its inherent
jurisdiction to review proceedings in lower Courts before the
conclusion thereof in that Court, where grave injustice
might
otherwise result or where justice might not by other means be
attainable. The question however is whether applicant’s
case is such as to justify an interference of the proceedings in the
lower Court before their conclusion. In my view the
conduct of
the first respondent does not warrant the drastic steps of bringing
this review application at this stage. His
case has no special
features as to bring it within the ambit of the authorities on this
topic. Litigants must not be encouraged
to believe that, by
seeking the disqualification of a judicial officer they will have
their case heard by another judicial officer
who’s likely to
decide it in their favour.’ (Internal footnote omitted.)
Lowe
J, in
Ferreira v Magistrate, Mr Koopman
(above), concluded in
that matter:
‘
[27]
In my view, no exceptional circumstances have been demonstrated to
exist in this matter which would
lead to serious injustice arising or
which, if in fact justifying same, cannot be rectified in due course.
Further and in
any event, on what is before us, I am far from
persuaded that any of the grounds referred to in
Section 22
of the
Superior Courts Act are
in any way satisfied to say the least.
[28]
In summary from what has been set out above, and that raised on the
papers in this review, not
only is a Review impermissible at this
stage
in medias res
, but such as is advanced in this matter
constitutes, at best, grounds for appeal in due course, not review,
and in any event does
not fall within
Section 22
of the
Superior
Courts Act at
all.
The points raised go not to the method of
the proceedings but to the result thereof, and will be matter for
appeal in due course
and not review
.’ (My emphasis)
That
position applies with equal strength to the applicant`s ill-fated
review of the magistrate’s conduct and
decisions in
this matter.
[43]
As already stated, it was wholly inappropriate for the applicant to
have brought these
proceedings mid-stream the criminal proceedings in
the court a quo. No exceptional circumstances were
demonstrated, but more
importantly, there was clearly no violation of
the applicant’s fair trial rights, nor was the applicant’s
contention
in respect of the law relating to search and seizures
supported by the existing case law and a proper reading of the
relevant provisions
of the
Criminal Procedure Act.
The
conduct of the second respondent.
[44]
In the third affidavit filed by the senior state advocate on behalf
of the second respondent,
she claimed, for the first time, that when
she had taken the decision to abide the outcome of these proceedings,
and when deposing
to the first two affidavits, she had not had access
to the record of proceedings in the court a quo. That
notwithstanding,
counsel for the applicant confirmed that a full set
of the proceedings had in fact been served on the office of the
second respondent
when the application was filed.
[45]
In the first affidavit, the state advocate stated on behalf of the
second respondent:
‘
5.
Having studied the contents of the file and consulted with the
prosecutor seized with the matter in Beaufort
West, second respondent
was satisfied with the correctness of the facts stated in the notice
of motion.
6.
Respondent respectfully submits that the presiding magistrate erred
in not ordering that the evidence
regarding the admissibility of the
search of the vehicle be heard in the form of a trial-within-a-trial.
7.
Respondent further respectfully submits that the two police officers
were inexperienced, contradicted
each other on material aspects and
were ignorant with regards to the law and applying the law in respect
of search and seizure
procedures.
8.
Respondent had regard to the relevant case law and agrees that the
Constitutional Rights of the
Applicant were violated and that, due to
the gross misdirection of the presiding magistrate, the proceedings
should be set aside.
9.
The above mentioned are the reasons why Respondent filed a notice to
abide as set out in terms
of the Uniform
Rule 53.
’
[46]
It is not clear to this court on what conceivable basis the deponent
to the affidavit could
have arrived at the conclusions which she did,
more especially since she claimed not to have had sight of the record
of the proceedings
of the court a quo. It was simply not a
matter in which she could have merely had a consultation with the
prosecutor who
dealt with the matter in court a quo, in order for her
to have satisfied herself as to the correctness of the facts stated
in the
founding affidavit. She thereupon dismissed the evidence
of the two police officials, who she claimed were ‘inexperienced’
and she likewise claimed that they had contradicted themselves on
material aspects, and were ignorant of the law when applying
it in
respect of search and seizures. As already pointed out in this
judgment, the police officers acted in accordance with
the prevailing
law. Significantly, Constable Damon had ten years’
experience as a police officer, while Sergeant Jooste
had thirty
years. Moreover, the second respondent expressed the view that
having had regard to the ‘relevant case law’
she agreed
that the constitutional rights of the applicant had been violated due
to a misdirection of the presiding officer and
that the proceedings
should be set aside’. Clearly there was absolutely no
basis to seek the setting aside of the proceedings,
given that the
applicant and his co-accused faced a second charge. More
importantly, the second respondent had likewise simply
misconceived
the merits of the review application.
[47]
The second respondent was given a further opportunity to assist the
court, with regard
to the initial question that it raised as to
whether it was appropriate that the review proceedings be brought
mid-way in an ongoing
criminal trial.
[48]
In the second affidavit the state advocate referred to various
consultations which she
conducted with senior colleagues in the
office of the DPP, who apparently confirmed that the second
respondent should abide the
decision. She also claimed that she
had only become aware of the fact that there was a further unrelated
charge the very
morning on which she deposed to the second affidavit,
after having received a copy of the charge sheet and the docket. It
was once again inconceivable that the second respondent could have
deposed to an affidavit without having had sight of the docket
or the
charge sheet in the matter, and yet having adopted the position that
she did in the first affidavit.
[49]
She further stated in the second affidavit that she did not deal with
the question as to
whether it was appropriate, mid-stream in an
ongoing criminal trial, that an interlocutory order by the trial
court was being sought
to be set aside on review, as: ‘I only
had the dated case law of
Wahlhaus and Others v Additional
Magistrate, Johannesburg, and Another
1959 (3) [SA 113] (A) and
Le Grange and Another v Loubser and Another 1990 (2) SACR [202] (O)’.
She then claimed that
she had secured a more recent decision of
Sapat and Others v The Director: Directorate for Organised Crime
and Public Safety and Others
1999 (2) SACR 435
(C) in which Davis
J stated as follows at 439F-440A:
‘
The
issue of ripeness has been subject to careful analysis by the courts
long before the introduction of the Constitution. In
Wahlhaus
and Others v The Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg and Another
1959 (3) SA 113
(A) Ogilvie Thompson JA cited
Gardiner and
Lansdown
with approval to the effect that
“
while
a superior court having jurisdiction in review or appeal will be slow
to exercise any power whether by
mandamus
or otherwise upon
the unterminated course of criminal proceedings in the court below,
it certainly has the power to do so and it
will do so in rare cases
where grave injustice might otherwise result, or where justice might
not by other means be attained”
(at 120 B).
In
Ismail and Others v The Additional Magistrate, Wynberg
1963
(1) SA 1
(A) at 5 Steyn CJ said:
“
I
should point out that it is not every failure of justice which would
amount to a gross irregularity justifying interference before
conviction. As was pointed out in Wahlhaus and Others v
Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg and Another . . ., where the
error relied upon is no more than a wrong decision, the practical
effect of allowing an interlocutory remedial procedure would
be to
bring the magistrate’s decision under appeal at a stage when no
appeal lies. Although there is no sharply defined
distinction
between illegalities which will be restrained by review before
conviction on the ground of gross irregularity, on the
one hand, and
the irregularities or errors which are to be dealt with on appeal
after conviction, on the other hand, the distinction
is a real one
and should be maintained. A Superior Court should be slow to
intervene in unterminated proceedings in a court
below, and should,
generally speaking, confine the exercise of its powers to ‘rare
cases where grave injustice might or a
justice might not by other
means be attained’.”’
A
proper consideration of the very case law she referred to, and the
particular facts of the matter, did not dissuade her from the
initial
position adopted by the second respondent. She contended that
she still was still of the view ‘that the Constitutional
Rights
of the Applicant were violated and that, due to the gross
misdirection of the magistrate, grave injustice might result and
agree (sic) with the relief sought’. Once again, it
appears to this court that it was inconceivable that the second
respondent had properly considered both the law and the merits of
this review application.
[50]
In the third affidavit filed by her with the assistance of the state
attorney, she sought
to explain the position adopted in the previous
two affidavits. In that regard she pointed out that she had not
had sight
of the record of the proceedings in the court a quo.
Strangely, she than contends that if the record confirmed the
applicant’s
version, the second respondent would have
difficulty to defend an appeal if the applicant and his co–accused
were to be convicted
at the end of the trial. That
notwithstanding the incorrect position at law on which the applicant
relied.
[51]
It was only at the stage of the filing of heads of argument by the
state attorney, and
in his address to the court at the hearing of the
matter, that the second respondent was of any assistance to the court
in these
review proceedings. The state attorney, to his credit,
had thoroughly reconsidered the matter, and pointed out the lack of
any merit in the review on the basis of any alleged irregularities on
the part of the magistrate, as there was simply no basis
for the
claims and, more importantly, no procedural irregularity had been
demonstrated in the proceedings in the court a quo. The
state
attorney had provided a substantive set of heads of argument before
the court, which cogently demonstrated a lack of any
merit in the
relief sought by the applicant.
[52]
In his amended Notice of Motion, as in his original, the applicant
sought an order of costs
against any party that opposed the relief.
[53]
At the hearing of the matter the court requested of both counsel for
the applicant and
the state attorney to address it on the issue of
costs. The state attorney pointed out that it had not sought an
order of
costs against the applicant, because it had not opposed the
proceedings. The court pointed out to counsel for the applicant
that the court was inclined to demonstrate its displeasure at the
applicant’s conduct, in bringing the review proceedings
which
were entirely devoid of merit and appeared nothing more than a
stratagem at inordinately delaying the criminal trial. Counsel
for the applicant had also rather opportunistically in his heads of
argument latched on to the incorrect positions adopted by the
state
advocate in the various affidavits deposed to by her. The court
was of the view that these review proceedings were
tantamount to an
abuse of legal process. On the other hand, the court also
pointed out to the state attorney that the position
adopted by the
second respondent appeared to have been nothing more than a
dereliction of duty, in having failed to have properly
considered the
merits of the application, given the interests of justice and the
unnecessary delay in the criminal trial as a result
of the review
proceedings. Moreover, the applicant and his co-accused faced
serious charges relating to the alleged unlawful
possession of
explosives.
The
court also expressed its opprobrium to counsel for the applicant, who
in his address to the magistrate in the court a quo contended
that
the conduct of the two police officers demonstrated a need for them
to be sent ‘for training’. Those comments
were
without any merit given the incorrect legal position repeatedly put
to the police officers by both counsel for the applicant
and his
attorney. Moreover, he accused them of a flagrant violation of
the Constitutional rights of the applicant, and literally
flew into
an unwarranted tirade against the two police officers. There
was, in my view, no need to have denigrated the two
police officers
in the manner which they were subjected to, both in cross-examination
and in the comments by the applicant’s
counsel in his address
to the court a quo.
[54]
This court has seriously considered making an adverse order of costs
against the applicant
in favour of the second respondent, who has had
to resort to the services of the state attorney at the behest of the
court to assist
it. However, given the position adopted by the
second respondent in these proceedings, the court considers that it
is not
appropriate to do so, save to express its grave concern
regarding the position adopted by the second respondent in simply
seeking
to abide these proceedings, the most unhelpful assertions in
the various ‘Explanatory Affidavits’ filed on its behalf,
and also the meritless application in which the conduct and decisions
of the magistrate in the court a quo were sought to be impugned.
[55]
In conclusion, the following order is made:
1.
The application for the review and the setting aside of the
proceedings before the Honourable Magistrate, Ms Moni, in the court a
quo is dismissed.
________________
V
C SALDANHA
Judge
of the High Court
________________
T
LE ROUX
Acting
Judge of the High Court
[1]
‘
22 Circumstances
in which article may be seized without search warrant
A
police official may without a search warrant search any person or
container or premises for the purpose of seizing any article
referred to in section 20-
(a)
if the person concerned consents to the search for and the seizure
of the article in question, or if the person who may consent
to the
search of the container or premises consents to such search and the
seizure of the article in question; or
(b)
if he on reasonable grounds believes-
(i) that a search
warrant will be issued to him under paragraph
(a)
of section
21 (1) if he applies for such
warrant; and
(ii) that the delay in
obtaining such warrant would defeat the object of the search.’
[2]
‘36.
It
was argued on behalf of the appellant that the State could not rely
on the consent ostensibly given by the appellant because
he was not
advised, prior to the search,
(a)
that
he could object to any search, or
(b)
that
any article seized during the search could be used in evidence
against him. The High Court held that this circumstance
was
“neither here nor there” and dealt with the argument as
follows:
“
As
regards the second aspect [
(b)
above] it need merely be
commented that it was obvious that if anything incriminating was
found it would constitute evidence
against him and would be used as
such. As regards the first aspect [
(a)
above], counsel
did not point to any provision requiring the police to advise a
subject that it was open to him to refuse to
allow a search to be
undertaken. (It may be recorded that even if the appellant had
refused consent for the desk to be
searched, the ultimate result,
the retrieval of the cellphone, would, for the reasons stated below,
still have followed).
The
issue of legal representation is relevant here as well. Had an
attorney been engaged by the appellant he would have
adopted one of
two courses: after consultation with the appellant he would have
advised him to consent to the search or he would
have insisted on
Buys obtaining a search warrant. In the latter event Buys
would have adopted one of two courses. He
would either have
invoked s 22
(b)
and proceeded with the search and
seizure on the basis that he had reasonable grounds to believe that
a search warrant would
be issued to him under s 21(1)
(a)
should he apply therefor and that the delay in obtaining the warrant
would defeat the object of the search. Alternatively,
he would
have taken steps to secure the appellant’s desk pending his
return with the search warrant. The retrieval
of the cellphone
would have been the inevitable result.
I
would record that in any event I would, in weighing up the competing
considerations (as to which see eg
S
v Hena and Another
2006
(2) SACR 33
(SE))
have concluded that the admission of the evidence of the finding of
the brown cellphone did not result in an unfair
trial or bring the
administration of justice into disrepute.”
37.The
High Court accordingly concluded that the evidence in question was
correctly admitted. I agree with the above reasoning
and share
the conclusion arrived at by the High Court. I wish to add
that no challenge was directed at the police conduct
in order to
establish whether, subjectively, they held the relevant belief, as
contemplated by s 22
(b)
, when conducting the search.
Looking at the matter objectively, however, I am satisfied
that, had such a challenge been
advanced by the defence, the police
conduct could have been justified on those grounds as well.’
[3]
‘
41.5
Furthermore, on the basis of the authority in S v Lachman
2010
(2) SACR 52
(SCA)
the position of the court in
S
v Enujukwu
,
that the appellant had to be advised of his right to refuse to be
searched, was clearly wrong. Griesel AJA in the
Lachman
matter held that it was not correct to argue that consent obtained
was not reliable, because, firstly, the appellant in that
matter had
not been advised that he could object to the search and, secondly,
that any articles seized could be used in evidence
against him. In
the
Lachman
case Griesel AJA also confirmed the court a quo’s view that
there was not any provision requiring the police to advise
a subject
that it was open to him to refuse to allow a search to be
undertaken.’
[4]
‘
Enforcement
of rights
38.
Anyone listed in this section has the right to approach a competent
court, alleging that a right in the Bill of Rights has
been
infringed or threatened, and the court may grant appropriate relief,
including a declaration of rights. . .’
[5]
‘[G]
ross
irregularity in the proceedings’.
[6]
‘[T]
he
admission of inadmissible or incompetent evidence or the rejection
of admissible or competent evidence.’
[7]
‘
See:
Motata v Nair N.O. and another
2009
(2) SA 575
(T)
578 H – I.
In
Motata v Nair N.O. and another
the following was stated by
Hancke and Pickering JJ, relevant to reviews in
medias res:
“
(9)
It is trite that as a general rule a High Court will not by way of
entertaining an application for review interfere with incomplete
proceedings in a Lower Court. As was stated in Wahlhaus &
others v Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg & another
1959
(3) SA
113
(AD)
at 119G, the High Court will not ordinarily interfere whether by way
of appeal or review before conviction has taken
place in the Lower
Court even if the point decided against the accused by a magistrate
is fundamental to the accused’s
guilt . . .”
[23]
In
Mispha CC and another v The Honourable Regional Magistrate and
others
2647/2011 (15 August 2013) ECD, Grahamstown,
delivered on 18 September 2013 the Full Bench held as follows as to
Review
in
medias res
:
“
(46)
Against this background our Courts are extremely reluctant to
interfere with or allow the review of proceedings not yet completed
in an inferior court. It has been said that a court will only
do so in exceptional circumstances where serious injustice
will
otherwise result or where justice cannot be achieved in any other
way.
Wahlhaus
and others v Additional Magistrate Johannesburg
1959
(3) SA 113
(A)
at 119H – 120C,
Building
Improvement Finance Co (Pty) Ltd
(
supra)
at 793F – 794A,
R
v Marais
1959
(1) SA 98
(T) at 101H,
Van
Tonder v Killian NO
1992
(1) SA 67
(T) at 74D – I
,
Nourse
v Van Heerden
1990
(2) SACR 198
(W),
S
v The Attorney General of the Western Cape, S v Regional
Magistrate, Wynberg
1999
(2) SACR 13
(C).”
[24]
In
Adonis
v Additional Magistrate Bellville and others
2007
(2) SA 147
(C)
at para [21] the following was stated:
“
[21]
It is generally accepted that this Court will not readily intervene
in Lower Court proceedings which have not yet terminated
unless
grave injustice may otherwise result or where justice may not be
obtained by other means. See:
Wahlhaus
and others v Additional Magistrate Johannesburg
1959
(3) SA 113
(A) at 119H to 120C,
Ishmael
and others v Additional Magistrate Wynberg and another
1963
(SA) 1 (A) at 5G to 6A,
Building
Improvements Co (Pty) Ltd v Additional Magistrate Johannesburg and
another
1978
(4) SA 790
(T) at 793F – G.
[25]
What has been overlooked by the Applicant is that the review of the
orders granted in the Magistrate’s Court, Bloemfontein
by the
First and Second Respondents is in
medias res.
The
question of review in
medias res
must be considered
against such grave injustice as a result, if the Court were not to
intervene at this stage, such as to materially
prejudice the
Applicant which cannot in due course be corrected on review or
appeal.’
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