Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1480South Africa
Dumane v S - Appeal (A143/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1480 (23 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
23 December 2023
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dumane v S - Appeal (A143/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1480 (23 December 2023)
Dumane v S - Appeal (A143/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1480 (23 December 2023)
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sino date 23 December 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: A143/2023
DPP
Ref No.: 10/2/5/2 (2023/053)
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
23.12.2023
In
the matter between:
DUMANE,
SIFISO
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
PULLINGER, AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and order of the
District
Magistrate of Kagiso refusing the appellant’s bail application
on 10 October 2023.
[2]
The appellant is charged with robbery with aggravating
circumstances.
[3]
In his affidavit in support of his bail application,
the appellant
said that he resides with his father and has resided at the same
fixed residential address for the past 21 years.
He stated, further,
that:
"I therefore would
like to state that I have a fixed address in the jurisdiction of this
Court and I confirm that I will attend
to this matter until
finalised."
[4]
The appellant said further that:
"I am a student at
the University of Johannesburg, currently registered for a Bachelor
of Arts Degree in Humanities and I am
currently in my third year of
studies. I wish to state that if I am denied bail I will be unable to
attend my studies and will
subsequently be deregistered, I therefore
humbly ask this Honourable Court to regard this as exceptional
circumstance [sic]."
[5]
The appellant confirmed that he has no family outside
of the
jurisdiction of the Court, the Gauteng Province or the borders of the
Republic and does not possess a passport or any travel
documentation.
Similarly, he does not have any assets outside the country and
submits that he is not a flight risk.
[6]
The appellant, stated, further, that he is not under
correctional
supervision, not on parole and there are no harassment orders or
protection orders granted against him. He records
that he intends to
plead not guilty and that, if granted bail, he will not endanger the
safety of the public or any person or commit
any offences, will not
evade trial and will not attempt to influence or intimidate witnesses
or to conceal or destroy evidence,
will not jeopardise the objectives
or proper functioning of the criminal justice system, including the
bail system and his release
on bail will not undermine public peace
or security.
[7]
In the circumstances, the appellant stated:
"… the
interests [sic] of justice permits my release on bail. I will have no
further objection if a condition is fixed
that I report to my nearest
police station."
[8]
The appellant proposed that bail in the amount of R500.00
be ordered.
[9]
Before the Magistrate's Court, the State did not oppose
bail. It
opposes this appeal.
[10]
The investigating officer, in his affidavit, stated that:
"3.
Merits of the case
On Saturday 23-09-23 at
about 19:30 the victim was robbed of her cell phone at the passage
Kagiso Ext 06 by two unknown males and
they ran away by foot. The
victim did not sustain any injuries.
4.
Arrest of applicant
On the same day the the
[sic] alerted two known males that she was robbed and they chased the
applicant and arrested him, his friend
ran away. The applicant was
assaulted and undressed by the community members and was later handed
to the police at Kagiso saps
naked and he was detained. The applicant
was taken to Leratong Hospital by the police for medical attention
where he was admitted
for three days."
[11]
The investigating officer, further, confirmed the personal
circumstances of
the appellant.
[12]
In the proceedings on 10 October 2023, the Court postponed the matter
to 7 November 2023
for further investigation and refused
bail.
DISCUSSION
[13]
Robbery with aggravating circumstances is a charge that falls within
the ambit
of Schedule 6 of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 1977
in
that the appellant is accused of robbery involving the use of a
firearm.
[14]
The relevant portion of Section 60(11) of the Criminal Procedure
Act provides:
(11)
Notwithstanding any provision of this Act, where an accused is
charged with an offence-
(a)
referred to 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 interests of
justice permit his or her release
;”
[15]
Accordingly,
the onus is on the Schedule 6 applicant to demonstrate, on a balance
of probabilities, that there are "exceptional
circumstances"
and that it is in the “interests of justice” that he be
released on bail.
[1]
[16]
The Court
a quo
found there to be nothing exceptional about
the appellant's circumstances and held that:
"… The fact
that you have attended school you should have known that you are
attending school.
You are envisaged to take
then before you robbed that complainant. The State's case against you
is so strong that the [sic] and
the firearm that was used is still
out there with your friend.
It is on this basis that
the Court is also of the view that you are also a student is not at
all an exceptional circumstance. As
such bail is denied."
[17]
It is long
established that "exceptional circumstances" defies precise
meaning. In
Mohammed
[2]
the Court found that:
"The phrase
'exceptional circumstances' does not stand alone: the Schedule 6
applicant has to adduce evidence which satisfies
the court that such
circumstances exist 'which in the interests of justice permit his or
her release'."
[3]
[18]
The Court went on to hold that:
"the true enquiry…is
whether the proven circumstances are sufficiently unusual or
different in any particular case as
to warrant the applicant’s
release… and "sufficiently" will vary from case to
case."
[4]
[19]
A similar
sentiment was expressed in
Najoe
,
[5]
where the Court said:
"[6]
It is trite that there is no closed list of factors that constitute
exceptional circumstances
under s 60(11). What becomes evident from
the numerous cases in which the courts have considered applications
for bail, where the
applicants face charges listed under sch 6 of the
Act, is that what constitutes exceptional circumstances is, in each
case, determinable
from the circumstances of the particular case. The
following are some of the guidelines laid down by the courts for
determination
of exceptional circumstances:
'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. … In
any event, one can hardly expect
the lawgiver to circumscribe that
which is inherently incapable of delineation. If something can be
imagined and outlined in advance,
it is probably because it is not
exceptional.
In requiring that the
circumstances proved must be exceptional the subsection does not say
they must be circumstances in addition
to, above and beyond and
generally different, from those enumerated.’" (footnotes
omitted)
[20]
These
expositions of the meaning of a "exceptional circumstances"
appear to accord with the decisions of the Supreme Court
of Appeal
in, amongst others,
Rudolph
[6]
and are an accurate representation of the law as it stands.
[21]
Returning to the facts of this case.
[22]
In his notice of appeal, the appellant states that there was nothing
found
on the appellant linking him to the crime with which he is
accused and no physical evidence linking him to it, thus, it is
contended,
that the court
a quo
failed to properly consider
the strength or weakness of the State's case as part of its
consideration of "exceptional circumstances".
[23]
But, in his affidavit in support of his application for bail the
appellant
did not give a version of his whereabouts at the time the
offence with which he is charged took place. The appellant also
omitted
to address the reasons the community identified him as the
perpetrator of the alleged offence and handed him over to the South
African Police Services.
[24]
Succinctly stated, the appellant did not engage with the facts of the
State’s
case at all.
[25]
It is difficult, in these circumstances, to uphold the appellant’s
argument
that, inferentially, the State’s case is weak. Rather,
the State’s has a
prima facie
case against the appellant
–
ex facie
the investigating officer’s statement,
which was not challenged, the appellant was apprehended by two
members of the
community who gave chase after the commission of the
alleged offence and handed the appellant over to the South African
Police
Services.
[26]
In the absence of a version or a challenge to the investigating
officer’s
evidence, the learned magistrate was, in my view,
correct to infer that the State’s case against the appellant is
strong.
[27]
Mr Guarnari who appeared for the appellant, very properly conceded
that the
appellant's affidavit in support of his bail application
does not, on its own, result in the onus of demonstrating
"exceptional
circumstances" being passed.
[28]
He argued
that the evidence presented to the Court
a
quo
must be considered holistically (and for this proposition he relied
on the decision in
Alephi
[7]
and in supplementary heads of argument on the decision in
Nkuna
[8]
)
and, when a holistic approach is taken, that which creates the
exceptional circumstances contemplated in the
Criminal Procedure Act,
is
the fact that the appellant's bail application was not opposed by
the State.
[29]
So the argument went, the court
a quo
failed to take proper
cognisance of all the material facts and thus erred in its decision
by considering only the fact that the
appellant is a student.
[30]
Taking this argument to its logical conclusion, the appellant’s
real
point is that the court
a quo
failed to take the absence
of opposition from the State into account and weigh up the effect
thereof.
[31]
In this regard, a few observations are apposite. First, this
proposition is
not one of the grounds upon which the appeal was
brought. Second, it ignores the incidence of onus.
[32]
Even where bail is not opposed by the State in a schedule 6 matter,
the applicant
for bail must still establish exceptional circumstances
and that the interests of justice favour release on bail. To the
extent
that the decision in
Nkuna
held to the contrary, such a
conclusion is not supported by the authorities.
[33]
In this case, the appellant failed to present any evidence that could
lead
to a conclusion that exceptional circumstances, as contemplated,
are present in this case.
CONCLUSION
[34]
I am unable
to find that the appellant discharged the onus imposed upon him.
[9]
An appeal on the grounds aforesaid is unsustainable.
[35]
My power to overturn the decision of the court
a quo
is
limited by
section 65(4)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act. It
requires
me to be satisfied that the court
a quo
was wrong in making
its decision.
[36]
I am unable to reach such a conclusion on the facts before the court
a quo
.
[37]
In
supplementary heads of argument, Mr Guarnari sought to address a
question that I put to him in argument, being, whether this
matter
ought to be remitted to the Magistrates Court. The authorities to
which I was referred concerned (second) bail applications
made on new
evidence where appropriate weight was not accorded to the evidence as
a whole or proper opportunity afforded to the
applicant for bail to
adduce evidence.
[10]
[38]
I do not think that these principles apply in this case as there is
no suggestion
that the appellant is able to, or will, if the matter
is remitted, adduce further evidence that will lead to, or could lead
to,
the onus being discharged.
[39]
In the result, I make the following order:
The appeal is
dismissed
A
W PULLINGER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be
10h00
on
23 December 2023
.
DATE
OF HEARING:
6
DECEMBER 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
23
DECEMBER 2023
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANT:
E
A GUARNERI
ATTORNEY
FOR THE APPELLANT:
LEGAL
AID
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
A
K MATHEBULA
ATTORNEY
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
STATE
ATTORNEY
[1]
S
v Rudolph
2010 (1) SA 262
(SCA) at [9]
[2]
S
v Mohammed
1999 (2) SACR 507 (C)
[3]
At 515 C - D
[4]
At 515 D
[5]
S
v Najoe
2012 (2) SACR 395
[ECP] at 7
[6]
S
v Rudoph
(supra) at [9] and the authorities therein cited
[7]
S
v Alephi
2022 (1) SACR 271 (GP)
[8]
S
v Nkuna
2013 JDR 0426 (GNP)
[9]
S
v van Wyk
2005 SACR 41
(SCA) at 44J
[10]
S
v Nwabunwanne
2017 (2) SA 124
(NCK) at [16] – [19] and [23] – [25]
although the distinguishing feature is that there was confusion as
to whether
the offence was one contemplated in schedule 5 or
schedule 6 of the
Criminal Procedure Act which
impacts upon the
incidence of onus and the facts that an applicant for bail must
prove. The State conceded that the offences
fell within the ambit of
schedule 5 (at [14]) thus the applicant was not required to prove
“exceptional circumstances”
but only that the interests
of justice were in his favour.
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