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[2017] ZANCHC 53
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Buys and Others v Minister of Police and Another (2339/2016) [2017] ZANCHC 53 (23 June 2017)
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(Northern
Cape High Court, Kimberley)
CASE
NO:
2339/2016
DATE
HEARD :
20 JUNE 2017
DATE
DELIVERED:
23 JUNE 2017
In
the matter between:
BUYS,
CHARLES
1
st
Applicant
BUYS,
ANDRIES
2
nd
Applicant
BUYS,
CONRAD
3
rd
Applicant
BUYS,
GORDON
4
th
Applicant
MOSSEL,
LOUIS
5
th
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF
POLICE
1
st
Respondent
HEAD
OF
HAWKS,
SA POLICE
SERVICE
2
nd
Respondent
Coram
:
Snyders AJ
JUDGMENT
– APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
Snyders
AJ:
[1.]
The applicant s seek leave to appeal to the
Full Court of the Northern Cape Division
,
alternatively to the Supreme Court of Appeal against the whole of my
judgment and order granted on 21 April 2017, in which the
following
order was made:
1.1
The application is dismissed.
1.2
Each party is to pay their own costs.
[2.]
The
grounds of appeal upon which the applicants relied were couched as a
notice of motion with supporting and confirmatory affidavits
which
comprised of 10 pages.
The
applicants also listed eleven findings I made, in which they alleged
I erred
and
consequently
argued
that
there
were
reasonable
prospects
of
success. listing and dealing with all of them will render this
judgment unnecessarily prolix
[1]
.
[3.]
The first three grounds boils down to my finding that the
respondent had discharged the onus in providing
objective facts
that there was a reasonable belief for the seizure of the items.
Grounds 5, 6 and 7 related to my finding that
the applicants had
failed to make out a case in terms of section 31 of the
CRIMINAL
PROCEDURE ACT,
51 of 1977 ("CPA"). Ground 4 was my
alleged finding that the failure by the Asset Forfeiture Unit to
bring a forfeiture
application counted against the applicants. Ground
9 related to my alleged finding that the 2
nd
respondent
did not exist. Grounds 8, 10 and 11 related to my findings regarding
the cost order.
[4.]
G
rounds
6 and 7 are what they applicants sought to emphasise and argued that
leave to appeal should be
granted
on
this
ground
alone.
The
applicants
relied
on
the finding of
NDPP
v Freedom under the Law
[2]
.
Therein,
the Court referred to a withdrawal under section 6(a) of the
CPA,
i.e.
withdrawing the charge before the accused has pleaded. In such an
instance the State may later re-institute proceedings.
However,
the Court held
that
such withdrawal will nevertheless be final
and
should
not be labelled as
"provisional".
The
applicants argued
that
their referral to the withdrawal of the matter was to strengthen
their case set out
in
the founding papers and not to set out a case based on s 31 of the
CPA. They further argued that they had no onus to do
so.
[5.]
In terms of the provisions of section 17(1) of the
SUPERIOR COURTS
ACT
(
“
ACT”),
10 of 2013, leave to
appeal may only be granted if the Judge concerned is of the opinion
that:
5.1
The appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success or if there is
some compelling reason why leave should be granted;
5.2
The decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of
section
16(2)(a) of the Act;
5.3
Where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues
in the case, the appeal would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties.
[6.]
In
S
v
Smith
[3]
,
Plasket
JAJA
stressed
t
hat:
'
What
the test of reasonable prospects of success postulates is a
dispassionate decision, based on the facts and the law that a court
of appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that
of the trial court.
In order to succeed,
therefore , the appellant must convince this court on proper grounds
that he has prospects
of success on appeal and that those prospects
are not remote, but have a realistic chance of succeeding. More is
required
to be established than that there
is a mere possibility of success, that the case is
arguable on appeal
or that the case cannot be categorised
as hopeless. There must, in other words, be a sound,
rational basis for
the conclusion that there are prospects of success
on appeal.'
[7.]
Having had regard to the above and having dispassionately considered
the application, I am satisfied that the applicants
have a
reasonable prospect of success on appeal on grounds 1, 2,
3, 5, 6 and 7. In my view, a Court of Appeal could
not reasonably
arrive at a different conclusion to that of the trial Court on
grounds
4, 8,
9 and 10 and 11 for the reasons
below.
[8.]
As stated above, this application came before in the form of an
affidavit. Mr Schreuder for t
he applicants conceded that
grounds 4 and 9 were subjective feelings experienced by the
applicants and did not form part of my judgment.
No more
consideration thus needs to be given to these aspects.
[9.]
Ground number 9 consisted of my supposed finding that no such
unit as The Head of the Hawks existed. This
was however
not what I had found and the applicant had misconstrued this portion
of the judgment. This was merely to record the
reason why the
applicant abandoned any relief against the 2nd respondent (the Head
of The Hawks).
[10.]
During argument, Mr Schreuder conceded that the
applicants were not prejudiced with a cost order.
The
cost order related to grounds 8, 10 and 11. In my view, the Appeal
Court may in any event make an appropriate order as to costs
in the
hearing of the appeal. The applicants further conceded that the
matter could be referred to a Full Court of this Division.
[11.]
In the result , the following order is made:
1.
APPLICANTS ARE GRANTED LEAVE TO APPEAL ON THE GROUNDS SET OUT AS
9.1, 9.2, 9.3, 9.5, 9.6 AND 9.7 IN THE AFFIDAVIT OF CHARLES BUYS
DEPOSED TO
ON 6 MAY 2017.
2.
THE APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL ON THE GROUNDS SET OUT AS 9.4,
9.8 AND 9.9 IN THE AFFIDAVIT OF CHARLES BUYS DEPOSED TO ON 6 MAY
2017 IS
DISMISSED.
3.
THE COSTS
OF
THE
APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE
TO APPEAL ARE
COSTS IN THE
APPEAL.
___________________
SNYDERS
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE
NORTHERN
CAPE DIVISION
For
the Applicants:
ADV J J SCHREUDER
(RICK ISHMAlL ATTORNEYS)
For
the Respondent:
MS.
M
N
PHAKAMA
(OFFICE OF THE STATE
ATTORNEY)
[1]
Compare
Songono
v Minister of Law and Order,
1996
(4) SA 384
(E), at 385C - E
[2]
2014(4) AII SA 147 (SCA), at 158 - 160
[3]
2012 (1) SACR 567
(SCA), at para 7