Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1043South Africa
Nenzhelele and Others v S (A110/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1043 (16 October 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nenzhelele and Others v S (A110/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1043 (16 October 2024)
Nenzhelele and Others v S (A110/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1043 (16 October 2024)
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sino date 16 October 2024
\IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: A110/2024
DATE
:
09-10-2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
In
the matter between
NICHOLAS NENZHELE
& OTHERS
Applicants
and
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
YACOOB,
J
: The four appellants appeal the
refusal of bail by the Regional Magistrate on 25 June this year. The
four appellants are all police
officers, members of the South African
Police Services, with various lengths of service. The first three
appellants are constables
and the fourth appellant is a sergeant.
They face charges
of robbery with aggravating circumstances and extortion, which
allegedly were committed while they were on duty.
It is common cause
that schedule 6 applies and that Section 60(11) of the Criminal
Procedure Act applies to the application. As
a result, the appellants
bear the onus of demonstrating that exceptional circumstances exist
which make their release on bail in
the interest of justice.
The appellants
contend that the magistrate ought to have found that exceptional
circumstances exist, which tilt the balance, making
it in the
interest of justice to release each of them on bail. It is also
common cause that this court may not set aside the decision
of the
court
a quo
,
unless satisfied that the magistrate did not properly exercise their
discretion in making the decision.
The appellant’s
representative relies on the fact that every bail decision has to
take into account the rights encapsulated
in the constitution and the
obligation of the court to [indistinct] spirit, purpose and object of
the bill of rights, and develop
the common law in the interest of
justice. That much is obvious.
However, against
that must be balanced the policy choice made by the legislature that,
in certain narrow circumstances, it is the
accused who must show that
it is in the interest of justice that he or she must be released on
bail, which is the case in this
matter.
The appellants each
set out in little detail their personal circumstances and rely on
these to contend that a finding should have
been made that they have
established exceptional circumstances and that it is in the interest
of justice to permit their release.
Each appellant sets out the
length of his employment with the South African Police Service and
his remuneration and that he supports
family members.
Each states that he
is not a violent person and that this is his first brush with the
law. Each says that he does not intend to
interfere with witnesses or
the investigation. Not one of the appellants sets out anything that
is out of the ordinary and specific
to him, apart from the ages of
the children, whether he is married, the length of his employment and
so on.
Against this must
be balanced the evidence of the investigating officer that the
appellants were found on the scene by the sergeant
who went to the
scene, Sergeant Rushad or Rashad, and that the complainant was afraid
to point them out because they were there
at the scene, and rather
went to the police station with the sergeant in order to say who they
were.
Also, the evidence
that the appellant’s ordinary duties as part of the
infrastructure unit, would not have required them to
be at the shop
where the robbery took place which they are alleged to have
committed, must be taken into account. It must be noted
that the
appellants stated that they were carrying out their duties at the
time of the offence, but do not say whether they were
carrying out
their duties at the same place where the robbery allegedly happened.
Naturally they are
entitled to their rights to remain silent. But they must also bear
the consequence of their failure to discharge
the onus of showing
exceptional circumstances. The magistrate’s decision indeed
came down to the likelihood that the appellants
may interfere with
the witnesses or the evidence, and the effect on the administration
of justice.
I am satisfied that
the magistrate did not misdirect herself. Nothing in the evidence of
any of the four appellants outweighs that,
or amounts to an
exceptional circumstance in favour of any of the four appellants
which will permit them release on bail in this
particular context.
The personal
circumstances set out in the affidavit are commonplace, and there is
nothing before me which shows that the context
of this particular
matter, or these particular appellants renders them exceptional,
although there may well be situations in which
these circumstances do
become exceptional.
But, it is for the
appellants to put that evidence before the court, which allows the
court to come to the conclusion that the circumstances
become
exceptional. In this case there is no evidence that supports that
conclusion. There have been situations where the combination
of the
stable personal circumstances, combined with the applicant being able
to establish that they are not a flight risk, as well
as that there
is no risk that they will interfere with the witnesses or the
investigation, or otherwise compromise the administration
of justice,
while they may be commonplace elements individually, have been found
in combination to be exceptional circumstances.
However, in this
case that particular combination does not exist, and there is no
combination of circumstances that I can find for
any of the
appellants which amounts to exceptional circumstances.
I am therefore
satisfied that I cannot interfere with the decision of the
magistrate. The application is dismissed.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
YACOOB, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
:
……………….
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