Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 260South Africa
Thoka and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg and Another (10016/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 260 (28 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 March 2022
Headnotes
in custody pending sentence.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Thoka and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg and Another (10016/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 260 (28 March 2022)
Thoka and Another v National Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg and Another (10016/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 260 (28 March 2022)
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sino date 28 March 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
10016/2022
DATE
:
2022.03.28
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES : NO
REVISED
In
the matter between
#
KGASHANE
REUBEN THOKA
First Applicant
NGWAKO
JOHANNES MASHABATHAKGA
Second Applicant
and
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS,
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
First Respondent
REGIONAL
MAGISTRATE BALOYI N.O
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD,
J:
This application came before me in the urgent court on
Saturday, 19 March 2022. The application was opposed by the first
respondent,
the National Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg ("NDPP"). The second
respondent, Regional
Magistrate Baloyi N 0, furnished his reasons for
the impugned order granted by him on 18 March 2022, and referred to
herein below.
The first applicant was
Kgashane Reuben Thoka and the second applicant was Ngwako Johannes
Mashabathakga. Both applicants stood
trial before the Regional Court
Roodepoort on charges of attempted murder and kidnapping of which
they were convicted on Friday
11 March 2022 by the second respondent.
The applicants argued
that the lapse of their bail on 18 March 2022 by the second
respondent was a gross irregularity in terms of
s 22
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
, justifying the intervention of this Court on
an urgent basis. The bail was revoked by the second respondent under
the circumstances
set out hereunder.
Before me, the applicants
sought relief in the following terms:
1.1
That they be released from the custody of the Department of Justice
and Correctional Services
pending determination of the relief sought
in part B of the notice of motion.
1.2
That the bail paid by the applicants initially be reinstated with
immediate effect.
1.3
That the applicants be released on the same bail conditions until
their appearance in Court 1,
Roodepoort Magistrates' Court on 25
April 2022.
1.4
That the costs of part A of the application be reserved for
determination by the court dealing
with the relief sought in part B
theeof.
The applicants sought
urgent interim relief in terms of part A of the application in the
terms set out above and non urgent
relief constituting a review
of the decision taken by the second respondent on 18 March 2022, in
the ordinary course in terms of
part B of the application.
The factual background to
this matter is that the applicants applied for and were granted bail
upon their arrest in the amount of
R1 000 each. They remained out on
bail until 18 March 2022. It was common cause between the applicants
and the NDPP that the applicants
were convicted on both charges on 11
March 2022. Furthermore, that on the said date, 11 March 2022, after
finding the applicants
guilty of the offences, the second respondent
extended the applicants' bail until sentencing on 18 March 2022. On
the latter date,
the applicants sought a postponement of the
sentencing in order to procure a pre-sentencing report that they had
not applied for
on 11 March 2022. The second respondent postponed the
sentencing to 25 April 2022 and ordered that the applicants be held
in custody
pending sentence.
The applicants contended
that on the 11 March 2022 they brought a bail application for bail
pending sentence that was granted by
the court. Thus, on 18 March
2022, the second respondent's cancellation of their bail was unlawful
in that it violated the audi
alteram partem rule and the provisions
of section 68(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 ('CPA')
dealing with the cancellation
of bail. Thus, the revoking of the bail
was a gross irregularity as envisaged by the provisions of s 22 of
the Act entitling this
Court to intervene and authorise the release
of the applicants and the reinstatement of their bail conditions
pending finalisation
of the sentencing proceedings in the Regional
Court.
The second respondent did
not deal in his reasons with the procedure adopted by the court on 11
or 18 March 2022, referring only
to his substantive reasons for
revoking the applicants' bail.
I heard the matter
urgently due to my concern that the applicants may have been
incarcerated unlawfully.
The NDPP opposed the
relief sought by the applicants arguing that the applicants' conduct
in approaching this Court urgently and
the relief sought by them were
ill-conceived as they could apply for bail during the forthcoming
week in the magistrates' court.
Contrary to the
applicants, the NDPP alleged that the record of the proceedings
comprising the second respondent's hand written
notes, demonstrated
that the applicants did not apply for bail on 11 March 2022 but that
their bail was extended pending sentence.
An application for bail
would have required both applicants to give evidence in that they
stood convicted of schedule 5 offences,
which they did not do.
I was not furnished with
the electronic transcript, being the electronic record, of the
proceedings in the regional court and thus
could not determine the
position. Furthermore, these being urgent proceedings the
respondent's averments must prevail.
In the event that the
applicants hold the view that the regional court committed an
irregularity capable of review, then the provisions
of Rule 53 are
available to the applicants.
[2]
The urgent court is not in a position to deal with and determine what
is effectively a bail application,
particularly in instances of
schedule 5 convictions. Moreover, there is no provision permitting
'after hours' bail in such matters.
Moreover,
it is well established that civil courts do not lightly become
involved in pending proceedings in criminal cases save
in exceptional
instances, which this matter is not. The applicants were convicted
and entitled and remain entitled to apply for
bail in accordance with
the provisions of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, on the first
available court date.
In
my view, the applicants are obliged by law to bring their
applications for bail within the confines of the established
statutory
mechanisms. The applicants cannot avoid the provisions of
s
65(1)(a)
of the CPA by approaching the urgent court and invoking
motion court proceedings,
In the event that the
applicants' bail applications in the regional court are denied, the
applicants are free to launch appeal proceedings
to this court
against that denial of bail.
In the circumstances am
of the view that the application must fail and I grant the following
order:
The
application is dismissed with costs.
#
I
hand down the judgment.
## CRUTCHFIELD, J
CRUTCHFIELD, J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE:
28
March
2022
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