Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 3South Africa
Moyo v S (A147/2024) [2025] ZAGPJHC 3 (9 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 January 2025
Headnotes
the appeal, set aside the Magistrate’s
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Moyo v S (A147/2024) [2025] ZAGPJHC 3 (9 January 2025)
Moyo v S (A147/2024) [2025] ZAGPJHC 3 (9 January 2025)
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sino date 9 January 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No.
A147/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:
9 January 2025
In
the matter between:
DOUGLAS
EUGENE MOYO
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The appellant, Mr. Moyo, was arrested and brought before the
Randburg Magistrates’ Court on a charge of fraud. Mr. Moyo
applied
for bail. The amount involved in the fraud alleged is in
excess of R500 000. That meant that Mr. Moyo’s bail application
fell to be determined under
section 60
(11) (b) of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
Section 60
(11) (b) obliges an applicant
for bail to adduce “evidence which satisfies the court that the
interests of justice permit
his or her release”.
2
Mr. Moyo put up an affidavit dealing with the circumstances
giving rise to the charge and his personal circumstances. The State
answered with its own affidavit, deposed to by the investigating
officer.
3
On the strength of these two affidavits, the Magistrate below
refused bail, apparently on the bases that there is a strong
prima
facie
case against Mr. Moyo, that Mr. Moyo is a flight risk, and
that Mr. Moyo should continue to be detained for his own safety.
4
Mr. Moyo then appealed. His appeal was enrolled before me on 7
January 2025. I upheld the appeal, set aside the Magistrate’s
decision, and substituted it for an order releasing Mr. Moyo on bail,
subject to conditions which were, for the most part, agreed
between
the parties. I intimated at the time I made my order that my reasons
would follow in due course. These are my reasons.
The
State’s case
5
There is nothing on the record that so much as outlines what
the State’s case is – let alone material that would have
permitted the Magistrate to form a view of its strength. The charge
sheet gives no particulars of the offence, save to assert that
it
involves a sum exceeding R500 000. The absence of particularity was
neither addressed nor remedied in the investigating officer’s
affidavit opposing bail.
6
By contrast, Mr. Moyo gives a detailed, if at times obscure,
account of the facts that he believes gave rise to the charge. He
says
that the charge arose from the execution of his duties as a
financial administrator for his church. The church wanted to purchase
land in De Duer, and there appears to have been a disagreement about
the handling of the money procured for that purpose. The leader
of a
church faction hostile to Mr. Moyo laid a charge of fraud against
him. Mr. Moyo says that the charge was malicious and without
substance.
7
Whether or not that turns out to be true, it was the only
admissible factual version relating to the nature of the case against
Mr. Moyo placed before the Magistrate. Not a word of the
investigating officer’s affidavit opposing bail addresses it,
and
no attempt was made to supplement the State’s case in light
of it. The Magistrate might have been swayed by the public
prosecutor’s
assurances from the bar that the State’s
case is very strong. If she was, that was a mistake. The unsupported
assertions
of an advocate pleading his case should not be mistaken
for evidence. Here, it is the evidence that counted, and the State’s
case was extraordinarily light on it.
8
Accordingly, the Magistrate’s conclusion in her judgment
refusing bail that “the state has a strong
prima facie
case against the applicant” lacks any discernible factual
substrate on the record. As things stand, the situation is quite
the
reverse. There is nothing on the record that indicates what the
State’s case really is, but there is a fundamentally
coherent
allegation from Mr. Moyo that the complaint against him is malicious.
Whether
Mr. Moyo will stand his trial
9
Mr. Moyo is a Zimbabwean national. He lives in South Africa
with his wife and two children. His wife is employed at a major South
African insurance company. Mr. Moyo is not presently employed,
largely, it seems, because he does not have the right to work in
South Africa. Mr. Moyo instead has a three-year multiple-entry
temporary residence permit. That permit expired in October 2024,
but
not before Mr. Moyo applied to renew it in September 2024. The permit
was issued under
section 11
(6) of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
,
which provides for the issuance of temporary residence permits to
spouses of South African citizens and permanent residents. From
that,
it may safely be inferred that Mrs. Moyo is a South African citizen
or permanent resident. It is also likely that Mr. and
Mrs. Moyo’s
children were born in South Africa and are South African citizens.
10
In light of all these facts, it might have been concluded that
Mr. Moyo presents no serious flight risk. He is married to a South
African, has two South African children, and, purely on the strength
of his temporary residence permit, it can be inferred that
he has
lived here for at least three years. His affidavit also discloses
that he has substantial moveable but illiquid assets in
South Africa,
which he would probably have to leave behind if he fled the
jurisdiction.
11
There are also the uncontested facts that Mr. Moyo knew about
the complaint laid against him and the existence of the investigation
into it for at least six months before he was arrested; that he
co-operated fully with that investigation, including by giving
a
statement under warning in April 2024; and that Mr. Moyo arrived at
the police station under his own steam immediately before
his arrest.
None of this is consistent with the proposition that Mr. Moyo
presents an appreciable flight risk.
12
Against all this, however, the Magistrate concluded that “if
Mr. Moyo is convicted, punishment can be an incentive to abscond,
so
there is a possibility of a flight risk, he can go back to Zimbabwe”.
This conclusion was plainly unsustainable, because
it ignored the
substantial evidence of Mr. Moyo’s ties to his home and family
in South Africa, the negligible prospects of
conviction on the
evidence before the Magistrate at the stage of the bail application,
and Mr. Moyo’s co-operation with the
police for months before
his arrest.
Mr.
Moyo’s safety
13
In what appears to be a rhetorical flourish at the end of her
judgment
ex tempore
, the Magistrate observes that “the
gallery is full of community members and it is the court's opinion
that it might be a
safety risk for the applicant”.
14
It is hard to know what to make of this. I am in the first
place constrained to point out that cases are decided on the
evidence,
not on the presiding officer’s subjective
observations of the public gallery. In any event, a high level of
public interest
in a case does not in itself demonstrate a risk to
the accused. The Magistrate does not record – and probably did
not know
– who was in the public gallery and why they were
there. They might have been there in support Mr Moyo. They might have
harboured
animosity toward him. They were likely just curious.
15
A court should not detain an accused person against their will
merely because it is alleged that they would be in danger if
released.
Detention for an accused person’s safety will seldom
be appropriate. If it ever is, such detention may only be authorised
after anxious consideration, where there is clear evidence of an
imminent and acute risk of death or serious injury, only for so
long
as that risk endures, and only where the risk cannot be ameliorated
by the imposition of appropriate bail conditions. The
facts of this
case fall far short of that standard.
Release
on bail
16
It was for these reasons that the appeal had to succeed. On
the facts as I have set them out, Mr. Moyo met his burden under
section 60
(11) (b). On the evidence before the Magistrate, he should
have been released on conditions designed to address the seriousness
of the charge and to ensure that he stands his trial. These
conditions were for the most part agreed between the parties once it
became clear that the Magistrate’s decision would not stand.
17
There was, however, a disagreement about the amount of bail to
be set. Mr. Moyo’s counsel asked for bail to be set at R1000.
The State asked that bail be set in the amount of R5000. Given the
seriousness of the charge, and that, on a conspectus of the
evidence,
R5000 is clearly within Mr. Moyo’s grasp, I agreed with the
State that bail should be set in that amount.
18
It was for these reasons that I upheld the appeal, set the
Magistrate’s decision aside, and ordered Mr. Moyo’s
release
on the conditions set out in my order of 7 January 2025.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 9 January 2025.
HEARD
ON:
7
January 2025
DECIDED
ON:
9
January 2025
For the
Appellant:
T Paile
Instructed
by ET Paile Attorneys Inc
For
the Respondent
MB
Mchunu
Instructed
by the National Prosecuting Authority
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