Case Law[2022] ZAKZDHC 14South Africa
Gopal and Another v S (10730/21) [2022] ZAKZDHC 14 (21 February 2022)
Headnotes
by their presence at the scene where the violence was committed they ‘complied’
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Gopal and Another v S (10730/21) [2022] ZAKZDHC 14 (21 February 2022)
Gopal and Another v S (10730/21) [2022] ZAKZDHC 14 (21 February 2022)
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sino date 21 February 2022
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# KWAZULU-NATAL
DIVISION
KWAZULU-NATAL
DIVISION
DURBAN
Reportable/Not
Reportable
CASE
NO: 10730/21
In
the matter between:-
# TREVOR
GOPAL
FIRST APPELLANT
TREVOR
GOPAL
FIRST APPELLANT
SHAHEEN
GOPAL
SECOND APPELLANT
and
# THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. The date and time
for
hand-down is deemed to be 14h00 on 21 February 2022
# ORDER
ORDER
MOODLEY
J
1. The appeal against
refusal of bail to the appellants by the court a quo succeeds.
2. The decision of the
magistrate in the court a quo is set aside.
3. The appellants are
granted on bail pending their trial in the amount of R10 000 each,
subject to the following conditions:
(i) the appellants are to
reside at their residential addresses as furnished to the
investigating office until the conclusion of
the trial;
(ii) the appellants are
directed to report to SAPS at the Phoenix Police Station every Friday
between the hours of 06h00 and 18h00;
(iii) the appellants
shall not leave the magisterial districts of Verulam and the greater
Durban area without informing the investigating
officer; in his
absence, the head of the detective section and/or the station
commissioner should be informed;
(iv) the appellants shall
forthwith surrender to the investigating officer their passports or
any other travel documents;
(v) the appellants shall
not contact, interfere with and/or intimidate any state witness
reflected on the charge sheets or in documents
furnished by the state
to the defence, whether in person or by means of:
(a)
any cellphone or landline telephone;
(b)
email, Whatsapp, sms, or any form of electronic communication.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered
on 21 February 2022
[1]
In July 2021 KwaZulu-Natal was racked by acts of violence, looting
and attacks with overtones of racial tension, in which many
persons
were injured or died. The appellants were arrested on 24 August 2021
in connection with one such incident which occurred
on 14 July 2021
in the Phoenix area, during or arising from which one person died and
several people were injured. They appeared
with three co-accused in
the Magistrates Court, Verulam on 1 count of murder read with S51(1)
and Part 1 of Schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997
, 5 counts of attempted murder, 1 count of public violence and 1
count of theft out of a motor vehicle. The appellants’
co-accused
were granted bail but they were refused bail on 12 October
2021, and appeal to this court against that refusal. The appeal is
opposed
by the State.
# Argument
Argument
[2]
Mr J Howse SC who represented the appellants in this appeal,
submitted that the learned magistrate lost sight of the main purpose
of bail which was to ensure that the accused stands trial, and where
there are clear indications that he will do so, refusal of
bail is
wrong. He pointed out that bail is also intended to strike a balance
between the interests of society and the liberty of
the accused, who
is presumed innocent pending the outcome of his trial. He contended
that despite there being little evidence to
sustain the charges which
brought the bail application under Schedule 6, the magistrate relied
on the prima facie value of the
DPP’s certificate to maintain
that the bail application remained an application under Schedule 6.
Mr Howse contended further
that magistrate erred in concentrating on
the murder charge in his judgment and holding that the evidence prima
facie showed that
the appellants participated in common purpose in
the murder and attempted murder charges, although there was no
evidence whatsoever
that the appellants’ actions or omissions
fell within the prior agreement or conspiracy format of the doctrine
of common
purpose. Instead the magistrate held that by their presence
at the scene where the violence was committed they ‘complied’
with the doctrine and must have been aware of the crime committed and
associated themselves with it, although he did not specify
what the
acts of association were.
[3]
Mr Howse also pointed out that the murder charge lacks particularity,
which was prejudicial to the appellants’ attempt
to discharge
the onus on them in the bail proceedings. He submitted further that
the lack of strength in the State case was in
itself an exceptional
circumstance, in respect of which the magistrate misdirected himself
by not finding that the appellants had
succeeded in discharging the
onus on them. He pointed out that the magistrate had not accorded
proper weight to the fact that the
IO accepted that the appellants
were not flight risks. Instead the magistrate erred in finding that
there was a likelihood that
they would attempt to influence or
intimidate witnesses to conceal or destroy evidence or cause public
disturbance were they to
be released on bail, when there was no
evidence to support such conclusions. He therefore submitted that the
appellants should
be admitted to bail with appropriate conditions.
[4]
In response Mr T Buthelezi, who also represented the respondent in
the proceedings before the court a quo, contended that as
the DPP’s
certificate constituted prima facie proof of the charges preferred by
the state, the appellants were obliged to
discharge the onus imposed
on them by proving the existence of exceptional circumstances. He
submitted that in the DPP’s
certificate the count of murder is
read with the provisions of
S51
(1) and
part 1
of schedule 2 of the
CLA because the state alleges that the murder was pre-meditated and
committed by a group of persons acting
in common purpose. He argued
that the evidence established premeditation on the part of Appellant
1, who knew that the complainants
were coming to his tavern. He
therefore gathered a crowd and incited them to attack the
complainants when they arrived. Mr Buthelezi
submitted that the
deceased died as a result of the assault perpetrated consequent to
the incitement by Appellant 1. Then the appellants
burnt the taxi in
which the complainants and deceased arrived. He submitted that the
aforesaid conduct of the appellants constituted
evidence of active
participation and association with the other assailants in the
attacks which resulted in the killing of the
deceased and the
destruction of the taxi, which established that the state case
against the appellants was strong.
[5]
Mr Buthelezi reiterated the IO’s testimony that there was a
likelihood that the appellants would interfere with the state
witnesses. He also submitted that the CCTV footage had not been
obtained and ‘cannot be found’, which also sustained
the
likelihood of the destruction of evidence by Appellant 1 should he be
released. Mr Buthelezi emphasized the interest of the
family members
of the deceased and the community in this matter. In conclusion he
submitted that the same considerations and arguments
applied to
Appellant 2 as he was the brother of Appellant 1, and the appeal
should therefore fail.
# The
law and relevant legal principles
The
law and relevant legal principles
[6]
Section 65
(4) of the CPA provides :
‘
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.’ There is no provision for furnishing
additional information to the court hearing the
appeal. In
S
v Ho, McEwan
J
pointed out that it is 'incumbent upon an appellant or his legal
representative to place the relevant facts fully before the
magistrate when the application for bail is made or, if any such
facts are not known to such legal representative, to take steps
under
sub-s (2) when they become known to him. It is not competent to lay
them before the appeal court by way of affidavit, nor
is it proper to
attempt to introduce them by way of statements from the bar.’
[1]
An appeal must therefore be determined within the constraints of the
record which includes the court a quo’s judgment.
[7]
In
S
v Barber
[2]
Hefer J provided the following guidelines for a bail
appeal:
'It
is well known that the powers of this Court are largely limited where
the matter comes before it on appeal and not as a substantive
application. This Court has to be persuaded that the magistrate
exercised the discretion which he has, wrongly. Accordingly, although
this Court may have a different view, it should not substitute its
own view for that of the magistrate because that would be an
unfair
interference with the magistrate’s exercise of his discretion.
I think it should be stressed that, no matter what
this Court’s
own views are, the real question is whether it can be said that the
magistrate had the discretion to grant bail
but exercised that
discretion wrongly.’
It
is therefore trite that an appeal court must be persuaded that the
court a quo exercised its discretion incorrectly, or misdirected
itself materially on the facts or legal principles, before it may
consider the issue of the grant of bail afresh. Where a court
of
appeal sets aside a magistrate’s refusal to grant bail, it is
obliged in terms of
s 65(4)
to give the decision which the magistrate
should have given. However, this does not mean that an appellant
should be released on
bail.
[3]
[8]
In
S
v Porthen & others
[4]
Binns-Ward
AJ
said that there could 'be no quarrel with the correctness of the
observations of Hefer J in
Barber
as a
general proposition’.
Binns-
Ward
AJ
nevertheless considered it necessary to point out that a court
hearing a bail application (ie, the court a quo) exercises a wide
as
opposed to a narrow (or strict) discretion. At [16] the following was
said with reference to
S
v Botha en 'n Ander
[5]
:
'Insofar as the quoted dictum in
S
v Barber (
supra)
might be amendable to be construed to suggest that the appellate
court’s power to intervene in terms of
s 65(4)
of the CPA is
strictly confined, in the sense of permitting interference only if
the magistrate has misdirected him- or herself
in the exercise of his
or her discretion in the narrow sense, I consider that it would be
incorrect to put such a construction
on the subsection; certainly in
respect of appeals arising from bail applications made in terms of
s
60(11)(a)
of the CPA. I am fortified in this conclusion by the manner
in which the Supreme Court of Appeal dealt with the bail appeal in
Botha’s case supra. See paras [21]–
[27]
of the judgment. It is clear that the Appeal Court undertook its own
analysis of the evidence and came to its own conclusion
that the
appellants had not discharged the onus on them in terms of
s
60(11)(a)
of the CPA. (The fact that the appeal in Botha’s case
was an appeal from a decision of a bail application by the High Court
as the court of first instance does not affect the principle in
issue.)’
[9]
At para 17 of
S v Porthen & Others
(supra)
Binns-Ward
AJ observed further that it remains necessary to
'be
mindful that a bail appeal, including one affected by the provisions
of
s 60(11)(a)
, goes to the question of deprivation of personal
liberty. In my view, that consideration is a further factor
confirming that
s 65(4)
of the CPA should be construed in a manner
which does not unduly restrict the ambit of an appeal court’s
competence to decide
that the lower court’s decision to refuse
bail was “wrong”.’
I
align myself with the aforesaid comments in my determination of the
present appeal.
# Proceedings
before the court a quo
Proceedings
before the court a quo
[10]
It was common cause before the court a quo that the bail application
fell within the purview of the provisions of Schedule
6 of the CPA,
and that the provisions of
s 60(11)(a)
applied to the application for
bail.
S 60(11)
(a) of the CPA provides that where an accused is
charged with an offence referred to 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, adduces evidence
which satisfies the court that exceptional circumstances
exist which
in the interests of justice permit his or her release.’
It
was also common cause that the appellant bore the onus to establish,
on a balance of probabilities, that there are exceptional
circumstances which in the interests of justice permit his release on
bail. In other words, the exceptionality of the circumstances
must be
such as to persuade the court that it would be in the interests of
justice to grant bail.
# Summary
of the pertinent evidence before the court a quo
Summary
of the pertinent evidence before the court a quo
[11]
The appellants did not testify at the application for bail, but
elected to file affidavits in support of their application
in which
they declined to deal with the merits of the charges. In his
affidavit, 52 year old Appellant 1 alleged that he had no
pending
cases and set out a list of his previous convictions, some of which
were older than 20 years. In paragraph 9, he set out
details of his
personal circumstances, his family, and his substantial business
operations and immovable assets. In paragraphs
10 -15 he furnished
his responses to the provisions of
s60(4)(a)
– (e) of the CPA,
averring that he does not have a propensity to commit crime, he is
not a flight risk, and that there is
no allegation that he has or a
likelihood that he will interfere with witnesses or the
investigation.
[12]
Appellant 1 also denied that his release on bail would jeopardize the
criminal justice or bail system and pointed out that
he had
cooperated with the police. Insofar as public interest is concerned,
Appellant 1 submitted that there were no exceptional
circumstances
that justified the refusal of bail. In conclusion he submitted that
the cumulative effect of all the circumstances
advanced by him,
constituted exceptional circumstances which permitted his release on
bail in the sum of R10 000 for bail, and
that he was prepared to
abide by any reasonable condition imposed if he was granted bail. (It
is common cause that Appellant was
at the time facing other charges,
and has since been admitted to bail in respect of those charges.)
[13]
Similarly 50 year old Appellant 2 furnished details of his previous
convictions, which he stated were older than 20 years,
his personal
circumstances, his family, his business and immovable assets. In
addition he described his medical conditions, alleging
that he was
consequently at risk if he were to remain in detention. Paragraphs 10
-14 of his affidavit mirrored that of Appellant
1 in respect of his
submissions on
s60(4)(a)
– (e). In conclusion Appellant 2
alleged that his business interests, medical condition and his
cooperation with the police
in handing himself in, cumulatively with
the other circumstances he advanced, constituted exceptional
circumstances which permitted
his release on bail in the sum of R10
000 for bail, and that he was prepared to abide by any reasonable
condition of bail imposed.
[14]
In opposing bail, the State relied on the identical affidavits in
respect of each accused filed by Sgt M E Cele, the investigating
officer (‘the IO’). In respect of the factual
circumstances leading up the events that form the bases of the
charges
against the appellants, the IO described the events preceding
the arrival of the complainants in the taxi in which they were
travelling
at Appellant 1’s tavern. The taxi was damaged before
they arrived and when they arrived at the tavern some of the
complainants
inspected the damage to the taxi while others went into
the tavern. At that stage they were assaulted by a group of Indian
males
who carried sjamboks, sticks and firearms and shots were fired,
and the taxi was set alight. The complainants ran away but the
deceased who was sleeping inside the taxi ‘was removed by an
ambulance from the scene’ to hospital where he died.
[15]
The IO’s reasons for his opposition to bail were:
1
the crime committed is serious: it caused public violence which
resulted in the death of the deceased and civil unrest which
may harm
the economy and cause racial strife.
2
Although the accused were not flight risks, they may interfere with
the state witnesses. The accuseds’ lives were also
in danger
and if released on bail, they may be killed for revenge.
3
the accused have ‘many cases related to violence’ which
is also an element of the charges for which they have been
arrested.
The accused incited public violence which caused the death of the
deceased and the burning of property belonging to another
person.
4
There is strong evidence against the accused.
[16]
Mr Buthelezi summarized the grounds of opposition by referring to the
DPP’s certificate in terms of
s60(11A)(a)
(Exhibit A), and
confirmed that the charges faced by the accused were murder,
attempted murder, theft and malicious damage and
not the charge of
public violence. He emphasized the fact that the attacks were
racially motivated and there was a risk of further
public violence
motivated by a desire for vengeance, as the unrest in Phoenix was
widely publicized.
[16]
Both appellants filed replying affidavits, in which they denied the
specific allegations against them. They also pointed out
that there
had been no outcry or threats against them up to their arrests.
Appellant 1 alleged further that the state case against
him was
exceptionally weak as he was only arrested after several
identifications parades were held and he was eventually pointed
out
by a single witness.
[17]
The IO testified during the bail proceedings in amplification of his
affidavit. He admitted that the items stolen which formed
the basis
of the charge of theft had been recovered and that Accused 3 was
implicated in the theft. He testified that he had a
statement from an
eye witness who had been in the crowd when Appellant 1 threw about
R500 onto the ground and instructed members
of the Indian community
gathered there to ‘strike’ the occupants of the taxi,
before the taxi arrived at the Appellant’s
tavern. The witness
also stated that Appellant 1 had poured petrol on the taxi and set it
alight. There was nothing else in respect
of Appellant 1’s
involvement in the incident.
[18]
The IO had no knowledge of how the deceased died or his injuries, and
the post mortem report remained outstanding. Two of the
complainants
hid inside the tavern and others ran away. He conceded that Appellant
1 was not a flight risk but testified that there
was a risk of a
schedule 1 offence being committed and of interference with the
witnesses who are his customers. He added that
if appellant 1 were
released on bail, there was also a risk of further public unrest and
a risk to the appellant because he was
the ‘ring leader’.
In respect of Appellant 2, the IO testified that there was the
evidence of an eye witness who stated
that Appellant 2 had been
amongst the crowd when the assault began and he inserted a cloth into
the petrol tank of the taxi and
set it alight. There was no evidence
that he had done anything else. Appellant 2 was also not considered a
flight risk, but the
same objections relating to further unrest and
risk to the appellant as with the Appellant 1 were raised. However
the CCTV footage
from the tavern had not yet been retrieved by the
police.
[19]
Under cross-examination Mr Barnard, who represented the appellants
before the court a quo, elicited confirmation from the IO
that the
only evidence he had from the single witness is that Appellant 1
incited the crowd and that both Appellants set the taxi
alight. The
IO also conceded that if the complainants were attacked by the
Indians who arrived later, it is possible that they
did not hear the
comments allegedly uttered by Appellant 1 which were construed as
incitement to violence. He also admitted that
there had been no
attacks on the appellants and no violence in response to the release
of others arrested in connection with the
July riots, but pointed out
that they may yet be such a reaction to the release of the
appellants.
[20]
In response to questions by the magistrate, the IO confirmed that he
had no evidence against the appellants (and their co-accused)
relating to the death of the deceased, and that the cause of his
death would only be confirmed by the post mortem report. He confirmed
further that there was also no evidence that any of the accused
attempted to kill anyone. He had also not obtained the SAP 69 reports
on the appellants. The matter was adjourned for the previous
convictions of the appellants to be confirmed or clarified. It was
subsequently ascertained that many of the previous charges were
withdrawn and that most of the previous convictions were older
than
10 years and /or not relevant to the elements of the current charges.
# Judgment
of the court a quo
Judgment
of the court a quo
[21]
Although the learned magistrate questioned the prosecutor about the
framing of the murder charge in the charge sheet and pointed
out that
there was no reference to the facts which brought the charges within
the purview of Schedule 6, specifically the absence
of any reference
to common purpose or pre-meditation, in his judgment he nevertheless
accepted that the state ‘alleged that
the murder was committed
by a group of persons acting in the execution for furtherance of a
common purpose or conspiracy’.
However a perusal of the record
indicates that the term ‘common purpose’ and the
allegation that the murder of the
deceased was premeditated were
heard for the first time in the bail application when Mr Buthelezi
was presenting his argument to
the court a quo, which triggered the
interrogation by the magistrate. However, contrary to his
reservations which he expressed
in his prolonged exchange with Mr
Buthelezi, and which in my view had substantial merit, the magistrate
subsequently also merely
accepted the DPP’s certificate as
prima facie proof that that the appellants faced a charge or charges
which fell within
the ambit of Schedule 6.
[22]
Although Mr Buthelezi has submitted that this court should do the
same, I am not persuaded that the magistrate was correct
in doing so
because he recognised the lack of particularity in the charges as
framed. He stated in his judgment that ‘The
written
confirmation was also lacking in particularity and detail against
each of the applicants’, and recognized the significance
of
such shortcoming in respect of the onus on the applicants. The charge
sheet for murder merely refers to the provisions of
s 51(2)
52
(2)
52A
and
52B
of the CLA but does not specify why the charge is read with
those provisions of the CLA nor are there any details of allegations
which bring the charge under those provisions. Similarly Exhibit A
merely refers to ‘Murder read with
s51(1)
and
part 1
of
schedule 2 of the CLA.’
[23]
I am therefore in agreement with the submission by Mr Howse, that the
appellants were prejudiced in their attempts to discharge
the onus on
them by the lack of particularity in the charge of murder. Although
the magistrate was alive to this material shortcoming,
in his
judgment he concluded that the appellants ‘knew perfectly well
that they were charged with murder wherein it is alleged
that the
offence was committed by a group of persons acting in the furtherance
of a common purpose’ and ‘…it
would have been
within their contemplation that the nature of the murder …within
the ambit of schedule 6.’ Similarly
I am of the view that the
magistrate failed to consider that in the allegations in the charges
of attempted murder there is no
reference whatsoever to the
appellants or their co-accused acting in common purpose. Further
there was nothing in the IO’s
evidence that sustained the
allegation of common purpose nor did he present any evidence about a
conspiracy to murder. In fact,
he even conceded that the Indians who
arrived after Appellant 1 incited the attack, may not have heard his
incendiary remarks,
although they assaulted the complainants.
Consequently as the magistrate failed to take these relevant factors
and evidence into
consideration or accord them appropriate weight in
the exercise of his discretion, his misdirection must redound to the
benefit
of the appellants.
[24]
It is also significant that, as recorded earlier in this judgement,
in response to questions by the magistrate himself, the
IO confirmed
that he had no evidence against the appellants (and their co-accused)
relating to the death of the deceased or that
any of the accused
attempted to kill anyone. In my view, it was highly relevant in the
determination of whether bail should be
granted to the appellants,
that the cause of death would only be confirmed by the post mortem
report which was still outstanding,
given that there was no other
evidence as to how the deceased died. Consequently Mr Buthelezi’s
submissions that the deceased
died as a result of the assault incited
by the appellants acting in common purpose or that his death was
premeditated are without
reliable foundation.
[25]
The magistrate was also well aware that there was no evidence
relating to the cause of death of the deceased or to the nature
of
the assaults or injuries he suffered. He firmly stated to Mr
Buthelezi that the cause of death was ‘not even established
on
a prime facie level’. He even questioned ‘What if he
passed on due to a totally unrelated event?’ Yet he
nevertheless concluded that evidence ‘on a prime facie level’
established the appellants had the requisite
mens rea
and had
performed some act of association which manifested the common purpose
to commit murder. I am therefore also in agreement
with the
submission that there was no evidence whatsoever that the appellants’
actions or omissions fell within the prior
agreement or conspiracy
format of the doctrine of common purpose in respect of the charge of
murder. Not even the act of setting
the taxi alight, as submitted by
Mr Buthelezi, sustains such a conclusion.
[26]
The magistrate has recorded the sequence of events wrongly in his
judgment. He stated that that after the complainants arrived
at the
tavern, Appellant 1 incited the crowd he had gathered by making
derogatory racial remarks and threw down money to encourage
the
attack on the complainants. Persons in the crowd then attacked the
complainants
and fired shots. The IO however testified that Appellant 1 had
incited the crowd and thrown down the money before the
taxi arrived
at the tavern. It is appropriate to note at this juncture, that I
find it discordant and inconsistent with the allegations
against
Appellant 1 that, according to the IO, some of the complainants
escaped further harm by running into the tavern. If the
appellant who
owned the tavern intended them harm, how did they protect themselves
by running into his premises. In my view this
evidence therefore
impacts adversely on and weakens the State case.
[27]
The magistrate also pertinently questioned why the video footage had
not been retrieved if it was so significant to the state’s
case. The IO could not explain why the video footage had not been
retrieved although a specific person had been tasked with doing
so.
Although it was put to the IO under cross-examination that Appellant
1 was prepared to hand over any footage of the incident,
the
magistrate concluded that ‘it seems unlikely that he will
willingly do so for unknown reasons’. He however furnished
no
reason for such conclusion, and I am unable to find any evidence or
facts that sustain this conclusion. I am also not persuaded
by Mr
Buthelezi’s argument that as the video footage ‘cannot be
found’, there was the likelihood that Appellant
1 would destroy
evidence if granted bail.
[28]
Although the circumstances from which the charges arose were fraught
with unrestrained anger and public indignation, the courts
have an
obligation to maintain judicial equanimity and independence, and to
remain impervious to public outrage, except insofar
as the interests
of the public may be relevant to the application for bail in the
provisions of section 60 of the Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977
(the CPA’). The learned magistrate expressed similar comments
in his engagement with counsel during the proceedings
before him.
However despite asserting the need to assess the facts
dispassionately, in his judgment he seems to have accorded an
inordinate significance to the violence and racial tensions when
considering the likelihood that the release of the appellants
on bail
will disturb the public order and undermine the public peace and
security. Yet all 5 applicants for bail faced the same
charges which
arose under the same circumstances, the objections to their release
on bail were exactly the same, and three were
granted bail although
the state opposed bail in respect of accused 3. Further the
allegations
of common purpose and premeditated murder would also have been
relevant to the granting of bail to these 3 accused.
[29]
In his engagement with counsel, the learned magistrate effectively
(and correctly in my view) questioned the paucity of the
state case,
especially in respect of the charges that brought the bail
application within the ambit of Schedule 6. Nevertheless
in his
judgment he stated that the ‘State appears, on the face of it,
to have a strong case against applicants 4 and 5’,
being the
appellants herein. In my view the learned magistrate, having properly
recognised the weaknesses in the state case in
respect of the
Schedule 6 charges, erred in holding that the appellants had failed
to establish exceptional circumstances which
permitted their release
on bail. To the contrary he ought to have exercised his discretion in
favour of admitting them to bail
with appropriate conditions, being
mindful that the purpose of bail is to strike a balance between the
interests of society (the
accused should stand his trial and there
should be no interference with the administration of justice) and the
liberty of an accused
(who, pending the outcome of his trial, is
presumed to be innocent), especially as the presumption of innocence
operates in favour
of an applicant even where there is a strong
prima
facie
case against him, although it does not create an absolute
right to be admitted to bail.
[30]
In
S
v Fourie
[6]
the court stated that:
'It
is a fundamental principle of the administration of justice that an
accused person stand trial and if there is any cognisable
indication
that he will not stand trial if released from custody, the court will
serve the needs of justice by refusing to grant
bail, even at the
expense of the liberty of the accused and despite the presumption of
innocence.’
In
S v
Branco
[7]
Cachalia AJ stated:
'[A]
court should always consider suitable conditions as an alternative to
the denial of bail. Conversely, where no consideration
is given to
the application of suitable conditions as an alternative to
incarceration, this may lead to a failure to exercise a
proper
discretion.’
[31]
Having considered the evidence before the court a quo, I am of the
view that the learned magistrate misdirected himself in
assessing the
strength of the state case and the risk to public interest and order
should the appellants be admitted to bail. I
am satisfied that within
the constraints of the evidence before the court a quo it was
apparent that the state case was weak. Therefore
the magistrate ought
to have exercised his discretion in favour of granting bail with
suitable conditions. In the premises this
court is at liberty to
interfere with the decision of the court a quo, and order that the
appellants be admitted to bail.
# Order
Order
[32]
In the premises the following order do issue:
1. The appeal against
refusal of bail to the appellants by the court a quo succeeds.
2. The decision of the
magistrate in the court a quo is set aside
3. The appellants are
granted on bail pending their trial in the amount of R10 000 each,
subject to the following conditions:
(i)
the appellants are to reside at their residential addresses as
furnished to the investigating office until the conclusion of
the
trial;
(ii)
the appellants are directed to report to SAPS at the Phoenix Police
Station every Friday between the hours of 06h00 and 18h00;
(iii)
the appellants shall not leave the magisterial districts of Verulam
and the greater Durban area without informing the investigating
officer; in his absence, the head of the detective section and/or the
station commissioner should be informed;
(iv)
the appellants shall forthwith surrender to the investigating officer
their passports or any other travel documents;
(v)
the appellants shall not contact, interfere with and/or intimidate
any state witness reflected on the charge sheets or in documents
furnished by the state to the defence, whether in person or by means
of:
(a)
any cellphone or landline telephone;
(b)
email, Whatsapp, sms, or any form of electronic communication.
# Moodley
J
Moodley
J
APPEARANCES
Dates
of Hearing :
7 February 2022
Date
of judgment :
21 February 2022
For
Appellant :
Mr
J E Howse SC
Instructed
by :
MESSRS R.K
NATHALAL & COMPANY
NATHCO CENTRE, SUITE 1
99 WICK STREET,
VERULAM,4340
DURBAN
Ref: MR NATHALAL / APPEAL
Tel: 032 – 533 2909
/ 5610
Email:
nathco@mweb.co.za
For
Respondent :
Mr T W Buthelezi
Instructed
by :
Office
of the Deputy
Director Of Public Prosecutions
SOUTHERN LIFE BUILDING
3rd Floor, 88 Joe Slovo
(Field Street)
DURBAN
Tel: 031 334 5000
Cell: 063 146 5696
Email:
tbuthelezi@npa.gov.za
[1]
1979 (3) SA 734
(W) at 737G
[2]
1979 (4) SA 218
(D) 220E–H
[3]
S v Green & another
[2006] ZASCA 3
;
2006 (1) SACR 603
(SCA) at 609i–610d
[4]
2004 (2) SACR 242
(C) at [7]
[5]
2002 (1) SACR 222
(SCA)
[6]
1973 (1) SA 100
(D) at 101G
[7]
2002 (1) SACR 531
(W) at 537a–b
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