Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 539South Africa
Khulekani and Others v S (A43/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 539 (6 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Khulekani and Others v S (A43/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 539 (6 June 2024)
Khulekani and Others v S (A43/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 539 (6 June 2024)
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sino date 6 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A43/2024
1. REPORTABLE: NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
3. REVISED.
In
the matter between:
MKHWANANZI
CYRIEL KHULEKANI
First
Appellant
PITALE
THIPE
Second
Appellant
MAZIBUKO
XOLANI
Third
Appellant
RADEBE
VUKANI
Fourth
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MKHABELA AJ:
[1] This is an
appeal in terms of the provisions of Section 65 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the CPA”)
against the decision
of the Boksburg Magistrates’ Court refusing to release the four
accused on bail pending their trial.
[2] Section 65(4)
of the CPA deals with bail appeals from the lower Courts to the High
Court and provide as follows:
“
4.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 opinion
the lower Court should have
given.”
[3]
In
S
v Barber
[1]
,
Hefer J considered the test to be applied and remarked as
follows:
“
It is well-known
that the powers of this Court are largely limited where the matter
comes before it as an 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 who
had the discretion to grant
bail exercised the discretion wrongly.
…
.
Without saying that the
magistrate’s view was actually the correct one, I have not been
persuaded to decide that it is the
wrong one.”
[4]
It is also trite that in respect of the offences that do not fall
under Schedules 5 and 6, the onus is on the State to
adduce evidence
that proves that the interest of justice do not warrant the granting
of bail.
[5]
In respect of the appellants who are charged with offences that fall
under Schedule 5, the onus is on the appellants to
adduce evidence
that satisfies the Court that the interest of justice permit his or
her release.
[6]
The appellants in this matter were arrested together and found in
possession of jamming devices. The first and third appellants’
bail applications were adjudicated in terms of Schedule 1. This means
that the State bears the onus to prove on a balance of probability
that the interest of justice permit their release on bail.
[7]
The evidence that was adduced in the Court
a quo
is that the
four appellants were arrested after there was an “
attempted
theft of a motor vehicle”
. The first appellant was the
driver of a motor vehicle in which all the other three appellants
were passengers.
[8]
The investigating officer testified that the appellants refused to
stop when they were stopped by both the police and
the security
officers. Eventually they were stopped by the security who used their
vehicle to block the appellants’ motor
vehicle.
[9]
The security vehicle that was used to stop the appellants’
motor vehicle was damaged in the process.
[10]
The appellants drove away when they were stopped notwithstanding that
their motor vehicle had a burst rear tyre.
[11]
The Magistrate remarked that the Court should not allow lawlessness
in South Africa. In its view the Court
a quo
reasoned that “
if
people avoid to be arrested, that is a clear case of those people
being a flight risk”.
It therefore concluded that it was
not in the interest of justice for first and third appellants, who
were facing a Schedule 1
case, to be granted bail.
[12]
With regard to second and fourth appellants, the Court
a quo
noted
that their bail application falls under Schedule 5 and therefore the
onus was on them to adduce evidence that satisfies the
Court that the
interest of justice warrants their release on bail.
[13]
The Court a
quo
found that second and fourth appellants did
not adduce evidence that convinced the Court that it is in the
interest of justice
that they be released on bail. The Magistrate
observed that he would have expected them to explain the reasons as
to why they refused
or failed to stop when the police and the
security officers stopped or tried to stop them. Accordingly, the
Court
a quo
refused to grant bail in respect of second and
fourth appellants on the ground that they did not discharge the onus
that rested
on them since the onus was on them by virtue of the fact
that they are facing a schedule 5 offence.
Analysis
[14]
The refusal of bail in respect of first and third appellants was
predicated on the finding that they were a flight risk
since they
failed to stop when the police and the security tried to stop them.
[15]
In oral argument in this Court, it was not disputed that the
appellants and in particular first appellant, who was the
driver, did
not stop.
[16]
Ms N A Mohomane, who appeared on behalf of all four appellants,
submitted that the appellants were entitled not to stop
when directed
to do so by the security officers driving in an unmarked car. She
submitted that first appellant was a first offender
and should have
been granted bail.
[17]
Ms Mohomane’s submission that the appellants were chased by the
security officers and not the police is not borne
by the evidence on
the record. For the sake of completeness, I reproduce the relevant
extracts from the record:
“
PROSECUTOR:
Before you proceed, Warrant Officer, when you said they were
together, where?
MR O’NEIL: Your
Honour, they were all together in one vehicle that the police were
trying to stop and the security and they
drove away from the police.
COURT: Can you repeat
this? You say they were stopped by the?
MR O’NEIL: The
police picked up the vehicle, and the security. The vehicle was
circulated. Your Honour on the Whatsup group
when they tried to steel
a motor vehicle in Benoni and then the police and security tried to
stop them and they refused to stop.
COURT: So, it is the
police who stopped them?
MR O’NEIL: The
police and the security, your Honour.
COURT: You say they did
not stop.
MR O’NEIL: They did
not stop, your Honour.
COURT: Yes.
MR O’NEIL: And
after about plus minus seven kilometres the vehicle hit a pavement on
the left back wheel and burst and they
still drove on with the
vehicle and refused to stop.
COURT: Which wheel has
burst?
MR O’NEIL: I think
the left back wheel.
COURT: Yes.
MR O’NEIL: And then
for about another kilometres the security blocked the road to make
the vehicle to stopped and then they
drove into the security vehicle
without stopping, your Honour.
COURT: So driving into,
you mean?
MR O’NEIL: He
bumped into the security vehicle that blocked the road to make them
stop.
COURT: Yes.
MR O’NEIL: And then
the vehicle was forced off the road and stopped by the security and
the police and the four accused in
the Court today was found inside
the vehicle.
COURT: Yes.
MR O’NEIL: And then
accused 1 was the driver of the vehicle.”
[18]
Ms Mohomane, who appeared in the Court
a quo
on behalf of
third and fourth appellants, did not seek to dispute the
investigating officer’s testimony to the effect that
the
appellants refused to stop when both the police and the security
tried to stop them. Ms Mohomane did not even attempt
to
challenge the investigation officer’s testimony as reproduced
above. There was also no proposition that was put to the
investigation officer to the effect that the appellants were entitled
not to stop because they were stopped by security officers
who were
driving in an unmarked car. This assertion was made before me from
the bar something that is not permissible.
[19]
Significantly, the submission in oral argument by Ms Mohomane that
the appellants were chased by the security and not
by the police was
not put to the investigation officer in his cross-examination.
[20]
It is trite
that it is impermissible to attempt to place new facts by way of
statements from the bar. A bail appeal has to be determined
on
material on record.
[2]
[21]
It is common cause from the record that appellants 2 and 4 were on
bail involving similar offences and had therefore
pending cases. It
is for these reasons that appellants 2 and 4 faced a bail application
under Schedule 5 of the CPA.
[22]
In light of the evidence that was before the Court
a quo
, it
is difficult to come to a decision that the Court
a quo
’s
decision in refusing bail was wrong.
[23]
To my mind a Court of law is entitled to refuse bail on the ground
that an accused is a flight risk when there is cogent
and
uncontroversial evidence that an accused attempted to evade arrest or
disobeyed an order to stop when directed to do so.
[24]
Although the reasons for the refusal of bail for first and third
appellants were that they were a flight risk since
they
disobeyed the order to stop, these reasons are equally applicable to
second and fourth appellants as well.
[25]
It must be borne in mind that the Magistrate’s reasons for
refusing bail to second and fourth appellants was that
they had
failed to discharge the onus of adducing evidence that satisfied the
Court that it would be in the interest of justice
for them to be
released on bail. It is difficult to disagree with the Court’s
findings in this regard.
[26]
On the contrary, the Court
a quo
’s decision in refusing
bail for all four appellants was well-founded. Even if second and
fourth appellants’ bail application
was under Schedule 1, it
would still not be in the interest of justice to release them on bail
given the undisputed evidence of
disobeying the police when directed
to stop.
[27]
Moreover, the Magistrate took into account the prevalence of the
offence of car theft using jamming devices which were
found in
possession of the appellants when they were arrested. This indicates
unequivocally that the appellants were on a mission
to commit crime
and were determined to evade arrest come rain or sunshine. Hence the
attempt to drive away even with a burst rear
tyre.
[28]
For all these reasons, I am not constrained as a matter of logic to
refuse the appeal in the absence of a conclusion
that the Magistrate
exercised his discretion wrongly.
Order
[29] I therefore
make the following order:
1. The appeal
against the Court
a quo
’s refusal to grant bail to all
four appellants is dismissed.
R
B MKHABELA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Acting 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 of
the judgment is deemed to be
6 June 2024
.
FOR
THE APPELLANTS:
Ms N A Mohomane
FOR
THE STATE:
Mr H H P Mkhari
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
15 May 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
6 June 2024
[1]
1979
(4) 218 (A) at 220E-H.
[2]
S
v Ho
1979
(3) SA 734
(W) at 737G.
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