Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 290South Africa
Pretorius v S (A151-2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 290 (27 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Pretorius v S (A151-2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 290 (27 February 2024)
Pretorius v S (A151-2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 290 (27 February 2024)
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sino date 27 February 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: A151/2023
DATE
:
26-02-2024
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO.
2.
OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO.
3.
REVISED.
In the matter between
PRETORIUS,
JACQUES
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
KARAM
AJ
:
1.
The appeal in
this matter was argued on 20 February 2024. Mr Gissing appeared for
the appellant and Ms Kau represented the state.
2.
The appellant
applied for bail which was opposed by the State and refused on 10
November 2022.
3.
This is an
appeal against such refusal of bail.
4.
The appellant,
accused 1 in the trial, is charged in the Randfontein Regional Court
with robbery with aggravating circumstances
and with discharging his
firearm in a public place.
4.1
In
essence it is alleged that the appellant and his
co-accused
robbed or hijacked the complainant of the
latter’s
motor vehicle, and that the appellant fired a shot
into the air to
frighten off the complainant and make good
his escape in
the latter’s vehicle.
4.2
The
appellant is a JPMD officer and the complainant, an
SAPS Officer.
4.3
It
was common cause at the hearing, that the hijacking of the vehicle
was a Schedule 6 offence and the bail
application
proceeded that basis.
5.
I will proceed
to set out the legal principles and thereafter
deal with the
submissions made and the merits.
5.1
It
is trite that in bail applications falling under Schedule
6, an accused is
burdened with an onus to satisfy the
Court that
exceptional circumstances exist, which, in the
interests of
justice, permit his release on bail.
Section
60(11)(a)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
(“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 is
dealt with in accordance with law, unless the accused, having been
given a reasonable opportunity to do
so, adduces evidence which
satisfies the Court that the interests of justice permit his release.
5.2
An
appeal against the refusal of bail is governed by
section
65(4)
of the CPA
,
which provides:
"A 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 shall
have given.”
5.3
The
approach of a court hearing a bail appeal is
trite.
In
State v Barber
1979(4) SA 218(D) at 220 E-H
it was
stated:
"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
for bail. 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
it 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 who had the discretion to
grant bail,
exercised that discretion wrongly”.
5.4
In
State vs
Porthern and Others
2004(2) SACR 242(C)
,
in regard to the
appeal court’s right to interfere with the discretion of the
court
a quo
in refusing bail, it was stated:
"When a
discretion... is exercised by the court a quo, an appellate court
will give due deference and appropriate weight to
the fact that the
court or tribunal of first instance is vested with a discretion and
will eschew any inclination to substitute
its own decision, unless it
is persuaded that the determination of the court or tribunal of first
instance was wrong”.
6.
At the bail
hearing, the evidence of the appellant was by affidavit. Oral
evidence of the investigating officer in the matter was
tendered by
the State.
7.
The judgment
of the court a quo, in its refusal of bail, unfortunately fails to
specifically deal with relevant factors, pertaining
to the appellant,
inter alia, the strengths or otherwise of the State’s case
against him, whether or not he is a flight risk,
the possible
sentence he is facing and other such factors.
The failure to
do so does not, however, disqualify or prevent this Court from
considering such factors. Counsel for the appellant
conceded this.
The Court will deal therewith herein below.
8.
It was
submitted on behalf of the appellant, that the learned Magistrate had
erred in dealing with the application under Schedule
6 and that same
ought to have proceeded under Schedule 1.
The reasons
therefor, so it was submitted, were that according to the evidence of
the Investigating Officer, the video footage revealed
that the
appellant was already in possession of the vehicle when the
complainant approached. The appellant then exited the stolen
vehicle,
fired a shot into the air to scare off the complainant, and having
successfully done so, re- entered the vehicle and drove
off.
Accordingly, and already having stolen the vehicle and been in
possession thereof, there was no robbery with aggravating
circumstances, the production of the firearm and firing of the shot
serving to enable the appellant to retain the already stolen
motor
vehicle.
Reference was made
to lines 15-25 of the case lines transcript
004-37.
8.1
This
Court is of the view that there is no merit in this
submission, for
the following reasons:
The appellant’s
legal representative’s concession at the bail hearing (see case
lines transcript 004-3 lines 15-17),
that this was a Schedule 6
hearing, is not a reason for the rejection of this submission.
8.2
Firstly,
it is not clear that counsel’s interpretation of
the evidence as
to what exactly transpired, is correct, regard being had also to the
evidence of the investigating officer as contained
in case lines
transcript 004 -39 at lines 14 – 24, which suggests the
contrary.
8.3 Secondly,
and more importantly, it is trite that the court ought not to
compartmentalize or look at different segments of the
evidence in
isolation or, but rather to consider same in its totality or as a
whole.
The learned
author
CR Snyman in his text Criminal Law (6
th
Edition)
defines
the crime of robbery as theft of property by
unlawfully and
intentionally using
(a)
violence to
take the property from somebody else; or
(b)
threats of
violence to induce the possessor of the property to submit to the
taking of the property.
The elements of
the crime are:
(a)
the theft of
property;
(b)
through the
use of either violence or threats of violence;
(c)
a causal link
between the violence and the taking of the property;
(d)
unlawfulness;
and
(e)
intention
The
learned author goes on to state at pg 509 paragraph 6 thathe premise
is that the violence must precede the taking, and
that
robbery is not committed if the violence is used to retain
a
thing already stolen or to facilitate escape. If this happens,
the
perpetrator commits theft and assault.
However,
this general rule that the violence must
precede
the taking is qualified and robbery may
be
committed in circumstances where the violence
follows
the completion of the theft. This occurs where
having
regard to the time and place of the perpetrator’s act,
there
is such a close link between the theft and the violence
that
they may be regarded as connecting components of one
and
the same action.
See
S v Yolelo
1981 (1) SA 1002
(A) at page 1015.
S
v Nteco
2004 (1) SACR 79
(NC) at page 84.
8.4
Accordingly,
and even were this Court to accept counsel’s interpretation as
to what occurred, the appellant’s conduct
clearly constitutes
robbery.
8.5
Regarding the
other submissions:
Whilst there
appears to have been no identification
parade conducted
or facial comparison evidence
tendered at the
bail hearing, the evidence of the
investigating
officer is such that very shortly after
the hijacking,
the appellant is apprehended driving
the robbed
vehicle.
Given what is
stated above by the learned author,
it is irrelevant
whether the complainant’s vehicle
was taken
forcefully from him at gunpoint or
whether the
complainant ran away after the
was fired. It is
further irrelevant that the complainant
was not
assaulted and/or pointed with the firearm.
There is further
no merit in the submission that the
complainant was
not threatened with the firearm.
The mere
production of the firearm by the appellant, let
alone the
discharge of a shot, sufficiently constitutes a
threat of
violence.
9
This Court is
aware that there is no onus on a bail applicant to disclose his
defence or to prove his innocence. Further, that the
Court hearing
the application or this Court of appeal, is not required to
determine, in such application or appeal, the guilt or
innocence of
the accused. That is the task of the trial court.
10.
Regarding the
strength of the State’s case:
10.1 It is
common cause that the appellant was in possession
of the
complainant’s hijacked vehicle very shortly after the
hijacking in the
early hours of the morning and at the time
the appellant
was apprehended.
10.2 What is
significant is that the appellant gives no
explanation as
to why he was in possession of or his
presence in the
robbed vehicle.
10.3 Counsel for
the appellant conceded that the appellant
faced
difficulties in this regard.
- And
this, apart from the investigating officer’s evidence that
there is video footage of the robbery, depicting the appellant
as
the perpetrator; that one of the two cellular telephones found in
the appellant’s pants pocket belonged to the complainant;
that the appellant’s service pistol together with an empty
cartridge (presumably that fired by the appellant into the
air
causing the complainant to run away), was recovered on the front
passenger seat of the robbed vehicle.
And
this, apart from the investigating officer’s evidence that
there is video footage of the robbery, depicting the appellant
as
the perpetrator; that one of the two cellular telephones found in
the appellant’s pants pocket belonged to the complainant;
that the appellant’s service pistol together with an empty
cartridge (presumably that fired by the appellant into the
air
causing the complainant to run away), was recovered on the front
passenger seat of the robbed vehicle.
10.5
From the
aforesaid, it would appear that indeed, the State has an overwhelming
case against the appellant.
11.
Regarding the
possible sentence the appellant faces should he be convicted:
11.1 The
appellant has been charged with robbery with
aggravating
circumstance, read with the provisions of
Section 51(2) of
the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997 (‘’the
minimum sentence legislation”).
11.2 Should he
be convicted he faces a minimum sentence of 15 years imprisonment.
The minimum sentence legislation
further empowers
a magistrate to impose up to an
additional 5
years imprisonment. Given the aggravating
factors and in
particular the fact that the appellant is a
person whose
duty it is to combat crime and not participate
therein, there
is a possibility that he may receive a sentence
of
more than 15 years on this count alone.
12.
Regarding the
issue as to whether the appellant will stand his trial:
12.1 It is
apparent from the evidence of the investigating
officer that
subsequent to the robbery, a high speed
car chase ensued
with JPMD officers pursuing the
appellant in the
hijacked vehicle for some 4 kilometres
prior to the
appellant stopping. Further, that after the
appellant
stopped the hijacked vehicle he quickly
alighted
therefrom and tried to flee. He was apprehended
by a JPMD
officer and then taken back to the vehicle.
12.2 The
aforesaid evidence purports to demonstrate 2
occasions where
the appellant attempted to evade
justice, thereby
rendering him a flight risk.
13.
The Court has
considered the other submissions made on
behalf of the
appellant and finds no merit in same.
14.
Having regard
to all of the aforegoing, this Court cannot find fault with the
finding of the Court a quo to refuse bail.
In this result,
the appeal against the refusal of bail is dismissed.
WA
KARAM
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances:
For the appellant:
Adv. R Gissing
Instructed by:
Frans Mphatshwe Attorneys
For the respondent:
Adv R Kau
Instructed by:
The Director of Public Prosecutions
Date of hearing:
20 February 2024
Date of judgment:
26 February 2024
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