Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 975South Africa
Zondi and Others v S (A66/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 975 (28 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 August 2023
Headnotes
the Appellant who on his application for release on bail relied on an affidavit which was not open to test by cross-examination was less persuasive. It further held that the Appellants denial of complicity and his alibi defence rested solely on his say so with no witnesses’ corroboration to strengthen it. The Court found in conclusion that the Appellant had not contributed anything to establish the existence of exceptional circumstances.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Zondi and Others v S (A66/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 975 (28 August 2023)
Zondi and Others v S (A66/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 975 (28 August 2023)
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sino date 28 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER:
A66/2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In the matter between:
NKOSINATHI
DANIEL ZONDI
1
ST
APPELLANT
HLANGANANI
STANLEY NDLOVU
2
ND
APPELLANT
MUSANI
NDLOVU
3
RD
APPELLANT
ANDILE
AYANDA JACK NGOBESE
4
TH
APPELLANT
BAVUMILE
MASELENI SETSUBI
5
TH
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MAKUME J:
[1] The 5 Appellants
together with 6 others appeared before the Regional Court Magistrate
at Booysens and applied to be released
on bail. Their
application was refused. They now come before this Court on appeal
that I should find that the Regional Court
Magistrate erred in law
and on facts in dismissing their application to be released on bail.
[2] The Appellants are
charged with the following offences:
(i)
Robbery with Aggravating Circumstances
(ii)
Unlawful Possession of Firearms
(iii)
Unlawful Possession of Ammunition
(iv)
Attempted Murder
(v)
Two counts of murder
[3] The allegations are
that a number of men entered the premises of a factory in Thulisa
Park Johannesburg and there allegedly
attempted to rob and remove
solar batteries from the factory. They failed in their
attempt. Gun shots were fired and
11 (eleven) of them were
arrested in the vicinity of the factory. Two of the robbers
were shot dead whilst the other 11 were
arrested in and around the
vicinity of the crime scene.
[4] This is an
application in terms of
Section 60
(11) of the
Criminal Procedure Act
51 of 1977
which states the following:
(ii)
notwithstanding any provisions of this Act where an accused is
charged with an
offence
referred to-
(a)
In Schedule 6 the Court shall order that
the Accused be detained in custody until he or she is dealt with in
accordance with the
law, unless the accused having been given a
reasonable opportunity to do so, adduces evidence which satisfies the
Court that exceptional
circumstances exist which in the interest of
justice permit his or her release.”
[5] The offences which
the Appellants are charged with fall within the category of offences
set out in Schedule 6. For an
accused to succeed on his or her
bail application the onus rests on him to advance sufficient
and satisfactory evidence firstly
that there exist exceptional
circumstances and secondly that as a result of those exceptional
circumstances it will be in the interest
of justice that he or she be
released on bail pending the outcome of the trial.
[6] This being an
application by the Appellants the choice remains with them as to how
they elect to present evidence to prove and
demonstrate exceptional
circumstances whether by way of affidavit or by oral evidence.
In this instance all the Appellants
preferred the route of affidavit
as in motion proceedings. A litigant who chooses to present
evidence by way of affidavit
cannot be subjected to cross-examination
in order that his or her version be tested for veracity.
[7] The Appellant’s
main ground of appeal is that the state’s case is weak the
Appellant say that the Magistrate erred
and misdirected himself in
failing to attach sufficient weight on the fact that the some of the
Appellants were never pointed out
in the Identification parade also
that those who were at the ID parade were subjected to an ID parade
which was invalid.
[8] The onus to proof the
existence of exceptional circumstances lies with the Appellants on a
balance of probabilities. That
onus never shifts. It is
therefore a fallacy as argued by the Appellants that the Court failed
to conduct a proper enquiry
into the existence of exceptional
circumstances.
Section 60(11)
(a) is clear and unambiguous it
reads:
“
unless
the accused having been given a reasonable opportunity to do so
adduces evidence which satisfies the Court that exceptional
circumstances exist which in the interest of justice permit his or
her release.”
[9]
Section 65(4)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act reads
as follows:
“
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 or his opinion
the lower
Court should have given.”
[10] The Constitutional
Court in the matter of:
S v Dlamini; S v Dladla and Others; S v
Joubert; S v Schietekat
[1999] ZACC 8
;
1999 (4) SA 623
at paragraph 75 and 76
dealt
with the concept of exceptional circumstances as follows:
“
An
Applicant is given broad scope to establish the requisite
circumstances whether they relate to the nature of the crime, the
personal circumstances of the Applicant or anything else that is
particularly cogent…. I do not argue that because of the
wide
variety of ordinary circumstances enumerated in SS (4) – (9) it
is virtually impossible to imagine what would constitute
“exceptional
circumstances” and that the prospects their existing are
negligible. In requiring that the circumstances
proved be
exceptional the subsection does not say they must be circumstances
above and beyond and generically different from those
enumerated.
Under the subsection, for instance an Accused charged with a schedule
6 offence could establish the requirements
by proving that there are
exceptional circumstances relating to his or her emotional condition
that render it in the interest of
justice that release on bail be
ordered notwithstanding the gravity of the case.”
[11] The facts in this
matter as they appear from the statement one witness are that all the
Applicants were arrested at the scene
of the robbery. The
officer who arrested Zondi and Ndlovu who are first and third
Appellants stated as follows in his affidavit:
“
I
then followed the lead and at corner street I noticed five African
males fitting the description, I was given at the main scene
running
towards is it GAPI Street and I then chased after them and at the
Department of Infrastructure building they all jumped
there and me
and my colleagues followed them and they entered inside the toilet at
the back of the Department of Infrastructure
building. I then
called back up from security to penetrate the toilet and they came
and assist. I then tactically approached
the toilet and I
ordered the suspects to come out and the door was closed. I
then kicked open the door. I found five suspects
and I ordered them
to lie on the ground. Then they complied. I then asked
them why are they running away from us.
They failed to answer.
I then started to seach the suspects while my crew was cuffing them.
While searching I found
one revolver Taurus 357 Magnum filled with
five life ammunition and one used cartridge case next to urinal
base. I found
9 millimetres with 15 life ammunition and one
magazine. I then asked them about the ownership on the firearm
and all of them
refused to talk. I also noticed 5 of them have
scratches all over their bodies which shows that they were jumping
walls.”
[12] In yet another
statement a witness gave a description of how 2 others were arrested
as they jumped over a fence that was Accused
no 4 and 6 who
are Hlanganani Ndlovu (Appellant 2) and Andile Ngobese (4
th
Appellant).
[13] The Appellants
placed evidence by way of affidavit in which they disputed the fact
that they were arrested in the manner as
described in the statement
referred to above. They also dealt with their personal
circumstances. In my view the facts
set out above do not
justify a finding that the Appellants were not arrested in the manner
as detailed in the statements.
In addition to that the personal
circumstances of the Appellants do not amount to exceptional
circumstances.
[14] The SCA in S v
Mathebula
2010 (1) SACR 55
(SCA) held that the Appellant who on his
application for release on bail relied on an affidavit which was not
open to test by cross-examination
was less persuasive. It
further held that the Appellants denial of complicity and his alibi
defence rested solely on his
say so with no witnesses’
corroboration to strengthen it. The Court found in conclusion
that the Appellant had not
contributed anything to establish the
existence of exceptional circumstances.
[15] This appeal rests on
all fours with the Mathebula decision (supra). The Appellants
have not shown any exceptional circumstances
in the result the appeal
must fail.
Order
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
M A
MAKUME
JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE OF HEARING :
17 AUGUST 2023
DATE OF JUDGMENT :
AUGUST 2023
FOR APPLICANT :
ADV MHLANGA
INSTRUCTED BY :
Edward Sithole &
Associates
FOR RESPONDENT :
ADV ZUMA
INSTRUCTED BY :
National Prosecuting
Authority
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