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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 675
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## Mabula v S (A58/2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 675 (23 July 2024)
Mabula v S (A58/2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 675 (23 July 2024)
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sino date 23 July 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A58/2024
1. REPORTABLE: NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
3. REVISED.
In
the matter between:
HECTOR
SIBUSISO MABULA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MKHABELA AJ:
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal in terms of the provisions of Section 65 (4) of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the CPA”)
against the
decision of the Kempton Park Magistrates’ Court refusing to
release the appellant on bail pending his appeal
against his sentence
only. The appellant was sentenced for a period of three years
imprisonment pursuant to his conviction of culpable
homicide.
[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 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 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 that 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]
As already stated the accused ‘ s conviction of culpable
homicide is pursuant to a motor vehicle collision in which
he was the
driver.
[5]
Upon an application for leave to appeal against his conviction and
sentence, leave was granted in respect of sentence
only. Leave
against conviction was refused.
[6]
Motivated by the granting of leave to appeal against his sentence,
the accused applied for bail pending the outcome of
his appeal
against the sentence. The Magistrates’ Court refused.
[7]
Aggrieved by the refusal, the accused has now brought on appeal
against the refusal to be released on bail pending the
outcome of the
appeal on sentence.
[8]
During oral submission in respect of the bail application, the State
vehemently opposed it.
[9]
The prosecutor submitted that since the accused has now been
convicted, the risk of him evading trial was higher compared
to the
time when the appellant was still undergoing his trial.
[10]
It was submitted on behalf of the accused that the fact that the
Trial Court is of the opinion that the High Court might
come to a
different view on sentence, should have nudged the trial Court to
grant bail.
[11]
The Magistrate refused bail on the basis that even though it was on
the opinion that the High Court might interfere with
sentence, it
does not mean that the Court will find that the entire sentence of 3
years imprisonment was incorrect.
[12]
The Magistrate then held that it had reservations as to whether the
High Court will consider a lower period of imprisonment.
[13]
Further, the Magistrate held that the issue of innocence no longer
exist and accordingly refused bail.
Arguments
before this Court
[14]
It was submitted on behalf of the accused that the Magistrate
committed a misdirection when it refused bail.
[15]
The basis of the alleged misdirection was that the Court failed to
take into account that the appellant attended his
trial and was not a
flight risk.
[16]
On the contrary the respondent submitted that the Magistrates’
Court did not commit any misdirection in refusing
bail.
[17]
Further, that it was correct for the Magistrate to have taken into
account that the issue of innocence does not exist
anymore.
Analysis
[18]
In my view applications for bail after conviction stand on a
different footing.
[19]
In circumstances where a Court has refused leave to appeal against
conviction and the pending appeal is only in respect
of sentence, it
does not amount to a misdirection for purposes of Section 65(4) to
justify substituting setting aside the Magistrate
‘s decision .
[20]
The cliché justice must not only be done but must be seen to
be done must be given effect to. Society must see
that crime does not
pay and a convicted person must go to jail and do the time after
doing the crime. It is as simple as that.
This must be so since the
appeal is in respect of sentence only.
[21]
Otherwise Courts risk losing the confidence of our society and would
inevitably give fertile ground to vigilantism if
convicted persons
are treated like persons who are still innocent notwithstanding
conviction.
[22]
Granting bail after conviction pending sentence on this peculiar
facts would negate the very direct imprisonment that
the trial
imposed. This would undermine the rule of law underpinned by our
constitutional order as envisaged in the Constitution
of the Republic
of South Africa, 108 of 1996.
[23]
The peculiar facts that I am alluding to as gleaned from the record
are , inter alia, that the appellant drove the motor
vehicle
recklessly which ultimately lead to the appellant losing control of
the motor vehicle. The evidence was that the appellant
ignored
requests to drive slowly before the crash happened. The result of the
motor vehicle accident caused the death of one passenger.
The alluded
evidence above must have occupied the magistrate s' mind when she
refused bail. This court as an appeal court is not
at liberty to
substitute that decision in the absence of a misdirection.
[24]
For all these reasons I reiterate that I am not persuaded that the
Magistrate committed a misdirection on refusing bail.
After all she
took into account the gross negligence committed by the appellant in
the manner that he drove the motor vehicle that
resulted in the loss
of life.
Order
[25] I therefore
make the following order:
1. The appeal
against the Court
a quo
’s refusal to grant bail to the
appellant 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
23 July 2024
.
FOR
THE APPELLANT: MR AJ MASIYE
FOR
THE STATE:
ADV HHP MKHARI
DATE
OF THE HEARING: 23 JULY 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 23 JULY 2024
[1]
1979
(4) 218 (A) at 220E-H.
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