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2022
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[2022] ZANCHC 5
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S v Gema and Another (CA&R 4/2022) [2022] ZANCHC 5; 2023 (1) SACR 304 (NCK) (31 January 2022)
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(NORTHERN
CAPE DIVISION, KIMBERLEY)
CASE
NO: CA&R 4/2022
DATE:
21-01-2022
DATE
DELIVERED: 31-01-2022
In
the Review Judgment of:
The
State
vs
Horracious
Gema and 1 Other
CORAM:
Williams J et Lever J
JUDGMENT
Williams
J:
1.
This matter has been referred for special review by the Chief
Magistrate, Kimberley, with the request that the part-heard
proceedings before retired magistrate Mr Prinsloo be set aside and
that the proceedings against the two accused be ordered to commence
de novo
before a different magistrate.
2.
The accused, Horracious Gema and Godfrey Setlogelo, appeared
before
Magistrate Prinsloo on a charge of assault with intent to do grievous
bodily harm. The charge sheet states that the complainant
was stabbed
with a knife and thrown with stones. A plea of not guilty was entered
on behalf of the first accused after claiming
self-defence and the
second accused pleaded not guilty.
3.
After the first witness (the complainant) had testified the
trial was
postponed on various occasions for reasons of unavailability of
counsel or witnesses of the absence of the accused. Mr
Prinsloo, who
had since retired, still presided over one such postponement on 17
January 2020 when the matter was postponed to
6 April 2020. From 6
April 2020 many similar further postponements ensued before different
magistrates until 26 January 2021 when
an e-mail from Mr Prinsloo to
Chief Magistrate Krieling dated 20 January 2021 was read out in court
by the presiding officer which
states in effect that he (Mr Prinsloo)
will not be finalising the current part-heard matter since he has
relocated to Wildernes,
some 750 km away and due to the risks
involved in travelling brought about by the Corona virus.
4.
It appears from the correspondence of the Chief Magistrate that
the
matter was sent on special review during April 2021 already. Upon his
enquiry as to the progress of the review it was discovered
that the
original covering letter, charge sheet and transcribed record had
never reached the office of the Registrar, hence the
undue delay in
this review being brought before us.
5.
The issue before us is whether this is a case where the interests
of
justice would warrant the setting aside of the part-heard proceedings
so that the trial can commence
de novo
before another
presiding officer.
6.
It needs no restatement that where a magistrate, before conviction,
has became unavailable due to death, retirement, discharge,
resignation or other incapacity, the trial may proceed
de novo
before another magistrate, should the interests of justice so
demand (see
inter alia S v Bireke
2003(2) SACR 225
(WLD);
S v Lapping
1998 (1) SACR 409
(W)
; S v Polelo
2000
(2) SACR 734
(NC) ).
7.
At the heart of this matter, in my view, is whether the delay
in
getting the review before us has infringed on the accused’s
constitutionally entrenched right to a fair and speedy trial.
8.
In
S v Thobela
[2007] ZAGPHC 204
;
2008 (1) SACR 605
(WLD), the accused during the
course of the trial, absconded and was eventually arrested and
brought before another magistrate
after a period in excess of 5
years. The trial magistrate had in the meantime resigned. The matter
was referred to the High Court
for review but only reached the
Registrar after a delay of a further 6 months. The court on review
found in the circumstances,
where
inter alia,
there was a
concession by the referring magistrates and the Director of Public
Prosecutions that there may be difficulty in tracing
witnesses in the
event of a trial
de novo
, the obligatory inquiry into the
default of the accused was never held in order to determine whether
his absence from court was
intentional or whether there was some
plausible explanation for default and the additional delay in
referring the review, that
the accused had suffered substantial
prejudice and that a trial
de novo
would result in further
prejudice for him. In the event it was held that the interests of
justice required that the accused be acquitted.
9.
In
casu,
though there has been an
inordinate delay before the matter was finally brought before us on
review, there is no indication that
witnesses would be untraceable.
Whilst it cannot be gainsaid that any accused whose trial, for
whatever reason, is set aside and
who is tried
de novo
will
suffer some prejudice, the interests of justice do not only serve
accused persons, but also the victims of crime and the broader
community. The record of the proceedings, which has been retyped from
the digital recordings and provided to us, furthermore reveals
that
the 1
st
accused was serving a sentence of imprisonment on
a different matter since the commencement of the trial
in casu
and
that the 2
nd
accused had been out on warning throughout.
10.
In these circumstances it seems to me that the interests of justice
would be
served should the part-heard proceedings be set aside and
the trial commence
de novo
, before a different magistrate.
The
following order is therefore made.
a)
The part-heard trial before retired magistrate Mr
Prinsloo
is
set aside.
b)
The proceedings are to commence
de novo
before
a
different Magistrate should the Prosecuting Authority
so determine.
CC
WILLIAMS JUDGE
I
concur
L
G LEVER JUDGE