Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 225South Africa
Naidoo v Magampha and Another (2023/036454) [2025] ZAGPJHC 225 (3 March 2025)
Headnotes
to constitute a gross irregularity in the proceedings upon which the proceedings may be set aside. I was not referred to any authority to suggest that a cumulation of incorrect factual findings may constitute a gross irregularity in the proceedings. [11] It follows that absent gross irregularity, the application for review must fail.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Naidoo v Magampha and Another (2023/036454) [2025] ZAGPJHC 225 (3 March 2025)
Naidoo v Magampha and Another (2023/036454) [2025] ZAGPJHC 225 (3 March 2025)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023/036454
(1)
Reportable: No
(2)
Of Interest to other Judges
(3)
Revised: NO
3
March 2025
In
the matter between:
BRENDON
REVERNDREN NAIDOO
Applicant
And
MR
MAGAMPHA NO
First
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
H M VILJOEN A J
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
This is an application to review and set aside a ruling of the first
respondent, the presiding Regional Court Magistrate
in case number
SCCC-0190-2018. At issue is the first respondent’s ruling on
the applicant’s request for particulars
to the charge sheet.
#
# The
Charge Sheet
The
Charge Sheet
[2]
The applicant faces 53 criminal charges:
2.1.
Counts
1-26:
Contraventions
of Section 36(a) of the
Financial
Advisory and Intermediary Services Act
,
2002 (“the FAIS Act”), read with Sections 1, 7, 8, and
13. The applicant is alleged to have unlawfully and intentionally
acted and/or offered to act as a financial services provider without
the necessary licence and/or as a representative of a financial
service provider without the necessary licence. The charge
sheet provides a detailed list of transactions, including the
dates
and amounts involved.
2.2.
Counts 27-53: Charges of theft, also detailing specific transactions,
dates, and amounts.
[3]
Comprehensive schedules accompanying the charge sheet provide
detailed breakdowns of the transactions in question.
#
# Request
for Further Particulars and Information
Request
for Further Particulars and Information
[4]
Pursuant to Section 87 of the
Criminal Procedure Act
, 1977,
and Section 35 of the
Constitution of the Republic of South
Africa
, 1996, the applicant requested further particulars and
information from the State. This request extended beyond the
immediate scope
of the charge sheet, and included matters that arise
from witness statements. The State responded to this request.
[5]
Dissatisfied with the State's response, the applicant filed a request
for further and/or better particulars, or alternatively,
an
application to compel the delivery of further particulars. The
applicant did not take issue with all the answers provided by
the
State.
[6]
In his ruling, the first respondent, for the most part, found the
State to have adequately addressed the applicant’s
requests.
#
# The
High Court’s Powers of Review
The
High Court’s Powers of Review
[7]
This court’s power to review proceedings before a magistrate’s
court is derived from Section 22 of the
Superior Courts Act
,
2013. The present application lacks an explicit articulation of
grounds falling within this section. Its premise is formulated
in the closing paragraph of the founding affidavit as follows:
“
With
the aforementioned in mind, it is my respectful submission that the
learned magistrate was wrong in ruling that I am not entitled
to the
specific information sought without same, I believe that a
substantial injustice may result.”
[8]
If a
magistrate, in the performance of his statutory duties, gives a wrong
decision, that does not constitute an irregularity. The
remedy
against a wrong decision is an appeal after the proceedings have been
concluded.
[1]
[9]
To bring the application within the ambit of Section 22, Counsel for
the applicant argued that the cumulative effect of
the errors the
magistrate is alleged to have made constitutes a gross irregularity
in the procedure, thus bringing the matter within
the scope of
Section 22(1)(c).
[10]
In
De
Vos v Marquard & Co,
[2]
the
court allowed for the possibility that a cumulation of
irregularities, none of which is gross, may be held to constitute a
gross irregularity in the proceedings upon which the proceedings may
be set aside. I was not referred to any authority to suggest
that a
cumulation of incorrect factual findings may constitute a gross
irregularity in the proceedings.
[11]
It follows that absent gross irregularity, the application for review
must fail.
#
# Intervention
in Incomplete Proceedings
Intervention
in Incomplete Proceedings
[12]
Another ground exists for dismissing this application.
[13]
It is a
well-established principle that the High Court does not intervene in
ongoing criminal proceedings in lower courts except
in rare and
exceptional circumstances.
[3]
This principle aims to prevent piecemeal litigation and ensure the
efficient administration of justice. It applies irrespective
whether
an applicant seeks the review of proceedings before a magistrate or a
mandamus compelling the magistrate to perform certain
actions.
[14]
This
principle is so compelling that, as remarked in
Wahlhaus
,
[4]
the High Court typically refrains from intervention before a
conviction, even when a preliminary point bears directly on the
accused's
guilt. The legal standard for intervention in incomplete
proceedings demands a showing of
grave
injustice
[5]
where justice might
not otherwise be attained,
[6]
a
considerable
threshold to cross. The applicant bears the onus of demonstrating a
grave injustice demanding this court’s intervention.
#
# Analysis
of the Further Particulars
Analysis
of the Further Particulars
[15]
This being a review application that concerns procedural
irregularity, I express no view on the substantive correctness
of the
first respondent's findings. However, to assess the threat of grave
injustice to the applicant, the charge sheet, the request
for further
particulars and the State’s response must be considered.
[16]
The applicant's request for further particulars, though extensive,
largely sought information either already provided,
readily
obtainable through other means, or not essential to the preparation
of his defence.
[17]
Regarding the identity of shareholders and directors of ACM Gold &
Forex Trading (Pty) Ltd., the information is collateral
and its
absence does not impede the applicant's ability to understand the
charges. Similarly, requests for bank statements and
deposit methods
were adequately addressed by the State’s disclosures.
There is no discernible significant prejudice
to the applicant.
[18]
The applicant's queries concerning alleged contraventions of the FAIS
Act are by and large answered by the Act's extensive
definitions of
“
financial service
”, “
financial service
provider
” and the like. The charge sheet, coupled with
these definitions, provides parameters of the State's case,
sufficiently clear
to prevent significant prejudice to the applicant.
[19]
On the charges of theft, the charge sheet specifies amounts, dates,
and individuals, providing a clear understanding
of the accusations.
The State’s response to the “how” of the theft,
while brief, is not prejudicial, as the core
details are in the
charge sheet.
[20]
Challenges to the complainants' “lawful possession” of
funds, insofar as they are material to the charges,
are evidentiary
matters that the applicant is free to address during trial. The
State's response, “matter for evidence,”
is not a ground
for grave injustice.
[21]
Specific document requests, such as bank statements and electronic
transfer details, were either fulfilled by the State
or, where the
State lacked the information, the applicant was correctly directed to
use a
subpoena
duces tecum
.
[22]
Where statements or details were missing, either the State
subsequently provided them (Questions 2-4, 11, 13, and 19)
or the
applicant was advised to seek them independently, as is his right
(Questions 14, 16, and 20). The court record was in some
respects
incomplete, and this prevented me from assessing the materiality of
some requests, particularly those related to the statement
of Sashin
Govender and Edith Munsamy’s inquiries (Questions 14, 15, 16,
and 20).
[23]
The applicant's inquiries about specific acts constituting theft, and
the distinction between acting in a personal capacity
versus as a
director, were met with responses that, while potentially terse, did
not obscure the core allegations. The State's
stance, articulated
through the charge sheet and responses, provides sufficient notice of
the case to be met, ensuring that no
significant prejudice to the
applicant arises.
[24]
The State's
assertion that it does not possess certain information requested by
the applicant raises the issue of the State's disclosure
obligations.
In
Shabalala
and Others v Attorney-General, Transvaal, and Another,
[7]
the Constitutional Court held that the State has a constitutional
duty to disclose all relevant material in its possession to the
accused, irrespective of whether it strengthens or weakens the
State's case, and irrespective of whether the State intends to use
the evidence at trial.
[8]
This
duty is essential to ensure a fair trial. In this case, there is no
basis to doubt the State's assertion that it does not
possess certain
information.
[25]
The applicant has not definitively established that the State’s
responses to his request for further particulars
were so inadequate
as to create a real risk of grave injustice. Consequently, he has not
met the threshold for High Court intervention
in the proceedings
before the magistrate’s court.
#
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[26]
It follows, for the above reasons, that the application is to be
dismissed with costs to be taxed on Scale B.
H M Viljoen
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION OF
THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 3 March 2025.
Date of hearing: 3
February 2025
Date of judgment: 3 March
2025
Appearances:
Attorneys for the
applicant: Sasha Pillay Attorneys
Counsel for the
plaintiff: Adv. P Jorgensen
Counsel for the second
respondent: Adv. N Mogagabe, NDPP
[1]
Wahlhaus
and others v Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg and another
1959 (3) SA 113
(A) at 119C-E
[2]
1916
CPD 551
[3]
Claassen
v Beyleveld, NO en 'n Ander
1963 (3) SA 302
(O),
Goncalves
v Addisionele Landdros, Pretoria en 'n Ander
1973
(4) SA 587 (T)
[4]
Ibid.
at 119G
[5]
Wahlhaus,
Ibid
at
120A-B
[6]
Claasen,
Ibid
at
303H
[7]
1996
(1) SA 725 (CC)
[8]
S
v Rowand
2009 (2) SACR 450
(W)
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