Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 437South Africa
Marvis v S (A50/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 437 (22 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 June 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Marvis v S (A50/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 437 (22 June 2022)
Marvis v S (A50/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 437 (22 June 2022)
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sino date 22 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: A50/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
22
June 2022
In
the matter between:
MARVIS,
IRVIN
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Heard:
15 JUNE 2022
Delivered:
22 JUNE 2022
JUDGMENT
KARAM,
AJ:
[1]
The appeal in this matter was argued on 15 June 2022.
Mr Schorn
appeared for the Appellant and Mr Futshana represented the State.
[2]
The Court proceeds to hands down its judgment in this
matter.
[3]
The Appellant applied for bail, which was refused on
18 October 2021.
[4]
The Appellant subsequently launched an application for
bail on new
facts and same was refused on 2 December 2021.
[5]
The Appellant subsequently launched a further application
for bail on
new facts and same was refused on 6 January 2022.
[6]
The Court will refer to these as the first, second and
third
applications.
[7]
This is an appeal against the refusal of bail in respect
of the 3
applications. The Appellant is charged with:
·
count 1 – contravening section 5(b) read with Schedule 2 of
the
Drugs and Drugs Trafficking Act 140 of 1992 (dealing in drugs).
Alternatively
to count 1, contravening Section 4(b) read with Schedule 2 of the
aforesaid Act (possession of drugs); and
·
count 2 – contravening section 22A(16)(b) read with Schedule
5
of the Medicines and Related Substances Act 101 of 1965 (possession
of Schedule 5 medicine);
[8]
It is common cause that this is a Schedule 5 matter,
the
Appellant being required to satisfy the Court that the
interest of justice permit his release on bail.
[9]
Section 60(11)(b)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, provides
that where an accused is charged with an offence referred to in
Schedule 5, the Court shall order that the accused be
detained in
custody until he is dealt with in accordance with law, unless the
accused, having been given a reasonable opportunity
to do so, adduces
evidence which satisfies the Court that the interest of justice
permit his release.
[10]
An appeal against the refusal of bail is governed by
Section 65(4)
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act, which
provides that:
“
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 shall have given”.
[11]
The approach of a lower court hearing a bail appeal is trite. In S v
Barber
1979 (4) SA 218
(D) at 220 E – H it was stated:
“
it is well known that the
powers of this Court are largely limited where the matter comes
before it on 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
it 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…
”.
[12]
This Court is aware that there is no onus on a bail applicant to
disclose his
defence or to prove his innocence;
[13]
Further, that the Court hearing the application or this Court of
appeal is
not required to determine in such application or appeal,
the guilt or innocence of the applicant – that is the task of
the
trial court.
[14]
However, one of the factors that can be looked at is the strength of
the State’s
case. It is apparent to this court that the State,
indeed, has an overwhelming case against the Appellant by virtue of
the following
factors:
· It is common cause that
the Appellant was the registered owner of the property whereon the
drug factory/laboratory
was discovered;
· In none of the
applications has it been disputed that the Appellant was not
resident at or in control of such
premises at the time of the
discovery of the drug factory;
On
page 92 or page 413 of the Bundle, the learned Magistrate stated in
his judgment in the third application at lines 13 –
17:
“
The applicant was not found at
the scene. Previously it was claimed that the applicant had rented
out his house and that he had
nothing to do with the activities of
his tenant, which he seemed to blame for the existence of the drug
factory”.
Counsel
for both the Appellant and the State concurred with this Court, that
what is quoted aforesaid is incorrect, and that there
is no basis for
the learned Magistrate to have stated this, as in none of the 3
applications was this averred by the Appellant.
·
Then there is the
DNA evidence, objective evidence, which links the
Appellant to a glove found in the drug factory, which affidavit
states that the
most common occurrence for the DNA result from the
glove is 1 in 999 trillion people.
[15]
The omissions by the police to obtain the identity and statement from
the woman
who had tipped off the police about the presence of the
drug factory and who drove away from the premises, or the neighbours
who
had allegedly seen a person run from those premises into their
premises and vanish, certainly does not impact in any material manner
upon the strengths of the State case.
[16]
Aside from the aforesaid factors are what may be termed suspicious
factors:
·
The fact that the Appellant, who is portrayed as a successful
business man, does not have
a personal bank account and utilises the
company account;
·
The multiple cash deposits as reflected in those bank statements that
were furnished;
·
The disappearance of the docket that resulted in the Appellant only
being arrested some 9
years subsequent to the discovery of the drug
factory;
·
The names of the investigation team forwarded from the Appellant’s
cellular telephone
to the traditional healer/witch doctor;
It
was stated by Colonel Ludick, the investigating officer, that the
Appellant could not have known the names of all the members
of the
investigation team had this information not been leaked from within
the South African Police.
[17]
In the first application, the Appellant had stated as a fact in his
affidavit
that he was the founder and director of Amalangeni Trading,
which manufactures furniture and which had 6 employees, and the other
company, Vikela Security Company, which provided private security,
the latter company having 18 employees.
In
the affidavit opposing bail, Col Ludick stated that the Appellant had
informed the police that the owns Emalangeni Trading, a
furniture
business from which he derives his income, but that he had lost the
company due to bad debt.
The
learned Magistrate requested various additional information, and in a
further affidavit, the Appellant stated that due to the
pandemic, his
businesses had not been doing well, particularly the furniture
business, and that same had to be closed.
These
two averments are material in that same were made on 8 October 2021
and 18 October 2021, it is 10 days apart. They are glaringly
contradictory and impact adversely upon the credibility of the
Appellant, falsely leading the Court to believe that this company
was
fully operational when in fact it had closed down.
This
further impacts upon the veracity of other allegations contained in
the Appellant’s affidavits.
[18]
A further factor relates to what the Appellant stated regarding his
wife having
notified him that the police were looking for him, that
he was willing to hand himself over and that he advised his then
legal
representative that he would be arriving in Johannesburg on 7
October 2021.
This
is material as it relates to the Appellant’s willingness to
submit himself to the authorities, and demonstrates that
he would not
be a flight risk if bail is granted.
Significantly,
there is no affidavit from his legal representative confirming same.
Further, there is no reference to same in any
address to the Court by
any of his legal representatives in any of the three applications.
[19]
Counsel for the Appellant, wisely in the Court’s view, conceded
in argument
that there was no real substance to the second
application.
[20]
The crux of the third application relates to the lawfulness or
otherwise of
the search and seizure conducted by the police at the
Appellant’s premises subsequent to the tip-off.
Counsel
for the Appellant argued that in the event of it being found by the
trial court that the search and seizure was indeed unlawful
and
infringed upon the Appellant’s fundamental rights, then the
State would have no evidence to adduce against the Appellant.
Whilst
this may be correct, the difficulties facing the Appellant, and as
acknowledged by the Appellant’s legal representative
at the
hearing of the third application, are the fact that:
·
Notwithstanding that
Section 11(1)(a)
and (g) of Act 140 of 1992 were
declared unconstitutional by the apex Court in Minister of Police and
Others v Kunjana
2016 (2) SACR 473
(CC), this decision was made
prospective to 27 July 2016 and not retrospective.
In
the current matter the search and seizure occurred in March 2012;
·
The fact that real evidence (as is the case in this matter), is
generally admitted even if
obtained unlawfully;
·
The fact that the Appellant will have to convince the trial court
that the police did not
act lawfully in terms of
Section 22
of the
Criminal Procedure Act.
[21
]
This Court can find no misdirection with the reasoning and prima
facie finding
of the learned Magistrate that the police acted
lawfully and in accordance with this Section, having regard to the
events that
transpired that evening.
[22]
Regarding the video of the live slaughtering of the black chicken and
its blood
being poured onto eggs on which were written in red the
names of the investigation team:
These
images were received on the Appellant’s cellular telephone from
the same person to whom the names were initially dispatched;
The
video was received on the Appellant’s phone after same had been
confiscated by the police;
Whilst
counsel for the Appellant is correct in his submissions that the
images were not sent to the cellular telephones of the investigative
team members and that there is no evidence that any of them suffered
any harm as a result, the fact remains that this is indeed
disturbing
and it is understandable that the team members were deeply disturbed
thereby and fear for their lives. It is highly
arguable that this
constitutes indirect interference with and intimidation of State
witnesses.
[23]
The learned Magistrate was further correct in stating in the first
application,
that on count 1, the Appellant, if convicted, faces a
minimum sentence of 15 years imprisonment, the drugs seized having an
approximate
value of R 1 million.
[24]
Given the sentence he faces, the strength of the State’s case,
the Appellant’s
financial means, and the unsatisfactory aspect
referred to herein above relating to his alleged intention to hand
himself in, there
are indeed reasonable prospects that he will
attempt to abscond.
[25]
This is not a matter where the Appellant will languish interminably
in custody
whilst investigations are being concluded. Both counsel
have advised the Court that the matter is trial ready and that the
matter
is set to commence on 15 July 2022, that is in 3 weeks time.
[26]
Counsel for the Appellant, Mr Schorn, is to be commended for his
preparation
and tenacious efforts on behalf of his client.
[27]
However, and having regard to all of the aforegoing, this Court finds
that
the learned Magistrate was fully justified in refusing bail in
all three applications.
[28]
Accordingly, the appeal against the refusal of bail is dismissed.
Order:
1.
The appeal against the refusal of bail is dismissed.
William
Karam
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division
Appearances:
For
the State:
Adv.
Futshana
(State Advocate)
For
the Appellant:
Adv Schorn
Instructed
by
Zulu Attorneys
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