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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Anaye v Jaskolka and Others (133375/2023)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 321 (24 March 2025)
Anaye v Jaskolka and Others (133375/2023)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 321 (24 March 2025)
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sino date 24 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 133375/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
24
March 2024
In
the matter between:
SOLOMON
EYOP
ANAYE
Applicant
And
MAGISTRATE
MR JASKOLKA
1
st
Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
2
nd
Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL: HOME AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT
3
rd
Respondent
REFUGEE
STATUS DETRMINATION OFFICER:
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
4
th
Respondent
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
5
th
Respondent
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
6
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Mdalana-Mayisela
J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant has brought an application in terms of section 304 of
the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the
CPA”) read
with rule 53 of the Uniform Rules of Court for reviewing and setting
aside the conviction and sentence handed
down by the magistrate,
Orlando East Magistrate Court on 8 November 2023 under case number
86/11/2023. The first to fifth respondents
are not opposing the
application. The sixth respondent is opposing the application.
[2]
In part A of his notice of motion, he sought an order interdicting
the second and third respondents from deporting
him to his country of
origin pending the determination of part B. Part A was heard in the
urgent court on 18 December 2023. The
interim interdict was granted
against the second and third respondents.
[3]
In part B, he seeks an order that the conviction and sentence be
reviewed and set aside; that he be released from
custody or released
on bail; and further or alternative relief be granted. In his heads
of argument and oral argument he seeks
an order that the matter be
remitted back to the lower court to start
de novo
. During oral
argument, he advised that the prayer for release from custody or
release on bail has been abandoned.
Factual
background
[4]
The applicant who is an Ethiopian citizen was a holder of the Asylum
seeker temporary permit (“permit”)
which expired on 6
March 2020. He applied for extension of his permit. He received
correspondence from the fourth respondent dated
14 June 2023 advising
him that a decision has been reached on his application for extension
of the permit and requesting him to
report to the Pretoria Refugee
Reception Office on 14 July 2023 to receive a decision in person. He
stated that he could not attend
to the fourth respondent’s
office on 14 July 2023 because he was shot and robbed and was
admitted at Chris Hani Baragwanath
Hospital.
[5]
On 6 November 2023, the applicant was arrested by members of the
South African Police Services and detained at Orlando
West Police
Station. He was charged with an offence of being an illegal immigrant
in the Republic of South Africa. It is common
cause that at the time
of his arrest he was not in possession of a valid permit to reside in
the Republic.
[6]
On 8 November 2023, he appeared in the lower court. He was legally
represented. He was convicted in terms of
section 49(1)
of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
, as amended. He was sentenced to 30 days
imprisonment, and a deportation order to his country of origin was
issued.
Grounds
of review
[7]
The grounds of review are as follows:
[7.1]
There was gross irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court;
and
[7.2]
The lower court admitted inadmissible evidence and rejected
admissible evidence.
Evaluation
[8]
The applicant has launched this application in terms of
section
304(4)
of the CPA read with
rule 53.
Section 304(4)
provides as
follows:
“
If
in any criminal case in which a magistrate’s court has imposed
a sentence which is not subject to review in the ordinary
course in
terms of
section 302
or in which a regional court has imposed any
sentence, it is brought to the notice of the provincial or local
division having jurisdiction
or any judge thereof that the
proceedings in which the sentence was imposed were not in accordance
with justice, such court or
judge shall have the same powers in
respect of such proceedings as if the record thereof had been laid
before such court or judge
in terms of
section 303
or this section.”
[9]
I now deal with the first ground of review. The applicant alleges
that his language is Amharic. He is not fluent in English.
He was
legally represented by a legal practitioner, Mr Lesolang who could
not speak Amharic. The interpreter, Mr Legodi also could
not speak
Amharic. He contends that he requested the services of the legal
practitioner and interpreter who know Amharic. The proceedings
were
conducted in English. They were not interpreted in Amharic. He
contends that he was advised to plead guilty when he did not
understand the charge preferred against him. The lower court
convicted and sentenced him on that guilty plea. He contends that
his
constitutional right to a fair trial was infringed.
[10]
The 6
th
respondent is opposing this application on the
basis that the applicant did not inform the magistrate that he did
not understand
the charge preferred against him. Further, the 6
th
respondent contends that the applicant should be fluent in English
because he has been residing in the Republic for about eight
years.
[11]
Section 6 of the Magistrate Court Act 32 of 1944 provides for the
medium to be employed in proceedings in
the lower court as follows:
“
(1) Either of
the official languages may be used at any stage of the proceedings in
any court and the evidence shall be recorded
in the language so used.
[S 6(1) amended by s 7
of Act 40 of 1952 with effect from 27 June 1952]
(2) If, in a criminal
case, evidence is given in a language with which the accused is not
in the opinion of the
[1]
court
sufficiently conversant, a competent interpreter shall be called by
the court in order to translate such evidence into a language
with
which the accused professes or appears to the court to be
sufficiently conversant, irrespective of whether the language in
which the evidence is given, is one of the official languages or of
whether the representative of the accused is conversant with
the
language used in the evidence or not.”
[12]
Section 35(3)(k) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa
provides that every arrested person
has a right to a fair trial,
which includes ‘
to
be tried in a language that the accused person understands or, if
that is not practicable, to have the proceedings interpreted
in that
language’
.
In
S v
Mashinini and Another
[2]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
“
To my mind the
solution to this legal question lies in section 35(3) of the
Constitution. Section 35(3)(a) of the Constitution
provides
that every accused person has a right to a fair trial which, inter
alia, includes the right to be informed of the charge
with sufficient
detail to answer it. This section appears to me to be central to the
notion of a fair trial. It requires in clear
terms that, before a
trial can start, every accused person must be fully and clearly
informed of the specific charge(s) which he
or she faces. Evidently,
this would also include all competent verdicts. The clear objective
is to ensure that the charge is sufficiently
detailed and clear to an
extent where an accused person is able to respond and, importantly,
to defend himself or herself. In my
view, this is intended to avoid
trials by ambush.”
[13]
In
Tigabu
Adane v Magistrate MR Jaskolka and Others
[3]
,
where I was sitting with Dosio J, on similar facts, we stated as
follows:
“
An
accused has a fundamental right to a fair trial and to be tried in a
language that he or she understands. In S v Ngubane
[4]
(Ngubane) the court held that the accused had been deprived of his
fundamental right to a fair trial in terms of section 25(3)(i)
of the
interim Constitution Act 200 of 1993, by not having heard the
proceedings simultaneously interpreted to him in a language
which he
fully understood. The court in Ngubane also stressed that the
interpretation must be given in a language that the accused
fully
understood and not in a language that he or she partially
understood.”
[14]
In the current matter it is clear from the record that the magistrate
did not
ask the applicant whether he understands English well.
He was also not asked which language he fully understands. It was not
placed
on record whether Mr Legodi interpreted the proceedings, and
if he interpreted them, it was in which language. After the charge
was put in English, Mr Lesolang approached the applicant and
thereafter, the magistrate asked the following questions only:
“
COURT: Yes. How
old is your client, Adv Lesolang?
MR LESOLANG: 26, Your
worship.
COURT: Do you
understand the charge, sir?
ACCUSED: Yes.
COURT: How do
you plead?
ACCUSED: Guilty”
[15]
The section 112(2) statement was read into the record in English. The
magistrate did not ask the applicant
if he understood and confirmed
the contents of the section 112(2) statement. The magistrate asked
the State if the plea was acceptable.
The state answered in the
affirmative. Thereafter, the magistrate delivered a judgment in one
sentence, finding the applicant guilty
as charged.
[16]
It is clear from the record that the applicant did not have a fair
trial. The proceedings were not interpreted
in the language he fully
understands. He was not fully and clearly informed of the specific
charge which he faced. There is not
indication from the record that
the Amharic interpreter was present and interpreted the conversation
between the applicant and
Mr Lesolang when the section 112(2)
statement was prepared.
[17]
On the second ground of review, the applicant contends that the lower
court admitted inadmissible evidence
against him. It admitted the
statement prepared by the immigration officer of the department of
Home Affairs, Masakhane Mbayi in
terms of section 212(1) of the CPA.
Mr Masakhane alleged in the statement that there were no personal
details of the applicant
in the department’s database. He used
the names Solomon Iop to search for the details. The record of the
proceedings in the
lower court also refers to the applicant as
Solomon Iop. The appellant contends that he is not Solomon Iop. His
correct details
are Solomon Eyop Anaye. He handed up the
correspondence document from the department of Home Affairs to prove
that he applied for
extension of his permit and that his personal
details are recorded in the database of the department.
[18]
I do not find it appropriate to comment on the status of Mr
Masakhane’s section 212(1) statement because
this matter will
be remitted back to the lower court and another magistrate will make
a finding on this issue.
Conclusion
[19]
I conclude that the lower court has failed to comply with section
6(2) of the Magistrate Court Act and section
35(3) of the
Constitution by not ascertaining whether the applicant is
sufficiently conversant with English, and by not calling
the
competent interpreter to translate the proceedings in Amharic, the
language that the applicant fully understands. The applicant’s
right to a fair trial was also infringed, in that he was advised to
plead guilty to a charge he did not fully and clearly understand.
I
find that there was a gross irregularity in the proceedings which
warrants that the conviction and sentence be reviewed and set
aside.
[20]
The applicant seeks costs against the opposing respondent. There is
no evidence before this court showing
that the sixth respondent acted
mala fide in opposing this application. I am not inclined to award
costs against the sixth respondent.
ORDER
[21]
In the premises, the following order is made:
1. The conviction and
sentence are reviewed and set aside.
2. In terms of
section
304(2)(c)(v)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
the proceedings
are to commence
de novo
before another magistrate.
MMP
Mdalana-Mayisela
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division,
Johannesburg
I
agree
T Bokako
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Date of delivery: 24
March 2025
Appearances:
On behalf of the
applicant: Mr MP Mahafha
Instructed by: Mulisa
Mahafha Attorneys
On behalf of 6
th
respondent: Adv A Deoraj
1
S v Mashinini and Another
2012(1) SACR 604 (SCA).
[3]
Tigabu
Adane v Magistrate MR Jaskolka case no. 006387/2024 GLD (9 September
2024).
[4]
S
v Ngubane
1995 (1) SACR 384
(T).
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