S v Ndyebo (Special Review) (CA&R 119/2025) [2026] ZAECMHC 1 (13 January 2026)

80 Reportability
Criminal Procedure

Brief Summary

Criminal Procedure — Review — Irregularity in conviction and acquittal by Magistrate. The accused was convicted of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm, but the Magistrate later reversed this decision without proper grounds, leading to a review. The court held that a Magistrate cannot issue conflicting decisions in the same matter, constituting a gross irregularity.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a special review in the High Court of South Africa (Eastern Cape Division, Mthatha) arising from criminal proceedings in the Magistrates’ Court for the District of Bizana. The review concerned whether the proceedings and decisions in the magistrates’ court were “in accordance with justice” as required for review intervention.


The parties were the State (as prosecuting authority in the underlying criminal trial) and Thobela Ndyebo (the accused in the magistrates’ court). The matter reached the High Court through a referral associated with the Senior Magistrate, who expressed concern that the presiding magistrate had issued two mutually inconsistent decisions on the same day.


Procedurally, the accused was tried in Bizana under case number B292/2023 on a charge of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm. On 14 March 2025, after the State closed its case, the defence brought an application for a discharge under section 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. The magistrate initially delivered a “judgment” that purported to find the accused guilty as charged, but after an adjournment prompted by defence counsel and a meeting in chambers, the magistrate announced that an error had been made and replaced the earlier outcome with a finding that the accused was not guilty and discharged under section 174. The High Court was required to determine whether these events constituted reviewable irregularities and what remedy should follow.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the procedural regularity and legal competence of the magistrate’s conduct when dealing with a section 174 discharge application, the permissibility of issuing inconsistent orders, and the consequences of altering a final decision in circumstances implicating the functus officio doctrine.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the accused was arraigned in the Bizana Magistrates’ Court on a charge of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm, and that the matter proceeded to trial before an acting magistrate. It was also undisputed that on 14 March 2025 the State closed its case, after which the defence applied for a discharge in terms of section 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, and that the State opposed that application.


The record reflected that, instead of granting or refusing the section 174 application in the ordinary manner, the magistrate delivered reasons that accepted, at that stage, that the complainant had been assaulted by the accused. On the face of those reasons, the magistrate treated the complainant’s evidence as sufficient (including on the basis that single-witness evidence is admissible) and proceeded to state that the accused was found guilty.


Immediately after this pronouncement, defence counsel indicated that there was something “grossly irregular” with the judgment and requested a meeting in chambers. The court adjourned for that purpose.


Upon resumption, the magistrate announced that the court had “made an error” by saying the accused was found guilty instead of making a ruling on the section 174 application. The magistrate then stated that because the accused was “out on warning,” the accused was found not guilty and discharged in terms of section 174.


A further material feature relied upon by the High Court was that the record did not disclose what transpired in chambers, who attended, or whether the prosecutor was present. The High Court treated this absence from the record as significant because the magistrates’ court is a court of record, and the chambers discussion appeared to have prompted and shaped the second decision.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the magistrate committed reviewable irregularities by (i) purporting to convict the accused at the close of the State’s case during the determination of a section 174 discharge application, (ii) subsequently altering that outcome and issuing a second, inconsistent order acquitting and discharging the accused, and (iii) doing so after an unrecorded discussion in chambers.


The dispute primarily concerned questions of law and the application of legal principles to the procedural facts appearing from the record. In particular, it turned on the proper interpretation and application of section 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act, the scope of a magistrate’s powers as a statutory court, the operation of the functus officio doctrine after a final decision, and the review grounds in section 22 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (including gross irregularity and related grounds).


The court also engaged in an evaluative determination of whether the irregularities were of a kind that rendered the proceedings not in accordance with justice, as required for intervention on review (as distinct from merely potential prejudice).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The High Court began from the premise that criminal proceedings are not a game and that not every error justifies setting aside proceedings; only errors that result in a failure of justice warrant review intervention. The court located the review power in section 22 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, which permits review of magistrates’ court proceedings on specified grounds including absence of jurisdiction, bias/malice, gross irregularity, and the admission or rejection of evidence in a manner contemplated by the statute. The court accepted that the referral fell within this review framework.


A central plank of the reasoning concerned the nature of an application under section 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act. The court treated section 174 as permitting a verdict of not guilty only where there is no evidence implicating the accused (in the sense explained in authority as no evidence on which a reasonable person might convict). On this approach, the magistrate faced a binary choice at the close of the State’s case: to grant the discharge (ending the case) or to refuse it (allowing the defence to present its case). The High Court reasoned that only one decision is competent at that stage; the notion that two conflicting outcomes could “co-exist” was rejected as unprecedented and inconsistent with the logic of section 174.


In dealing with the first decision, the High Court held that convicting the accused at the section 174 stage was legally inappropriate because it was done before the accused had any opportunity to testify or present a defence case. The court characterised this as a breach of the natural justice principle audi alteram partem, since the accused had not been heard in response to the State’s evidence before a finding of guilt was made. The court therefore treated the first decision as a gross irregularity and as proceedings not in accordance with justice.


The court then turned to the second decision and emphasised that a court’s order is binding unless and until properly set aside, relying on section 165(5) of the Constitution and authority stating that orders generally have force from the moment they are issued (subject to limited exceptions). Against that background, the court held that the first conviction was not set aside by any competent process and therefore remained extant on the record. The magistrate’s purported replacement of that conviction with an acquittal was treated as inconsistent with the binding nature of court orders.


This conclusion was reinforced by the functus officio doctrine. The High Court applied the principle that once a judicial officer has made a final decision, the officer cannot ordinarily revoke, withdraw, or revisit it. The court treated the conviction as a final decision in that sense, with the consequence that the magistrate had exhausted jurisdiction in relation to that determination and lacked the competence to alter it. The High Court reasoned that if the magistrate perceived a gross irregularity after delivering the decision, the appropriate course would have been to refer the matter for review rather than to “correct” it by issuing a conflicting outcome.


The High Court further reasoned that magistrates’ courts are creatures of statute and possess no inherent jurisdiction; their powers must be sourced within the statutory framework, principally the Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944 and the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. The court found that no statutory power authorised the issuing of two conflicting decisions in the same matter at the same time, and it treated the purported second decision as an excess of power amounting to gross irregularity.


On the content of the second decision, the High Court held that the stated reason—namely that the accused was “out on warning”—was irrelevant to the requirements of section 174, which turns on the absence of evidence linking the accused to the offence. The court thus found that the magistrate considered an irrelevant factor and did not meaningfully apply the section 174 test. The absence of substantive reasons and the lack of engagement with the evidence in the second decision were treated as indicators of irrationality and arbitrariness in the decision-making process.


Finally, the High Court attached significance to the unrecorded chambers discussion. Because the magistrates’ court is a court of record, and because that discussion appeared to have influenced the second decision, the failure to place on record what occurred, who attended, and whether the State was present was treated as problematic for assessing whether the proceedings were in accordance with justice.


Having found that the proceedings were materially irregular, the High Court considered the appropriate remedy. It concluded that both the conviction and the subsequent acquittal/discharge were reviewably defective and that the matter should not continue before the same presiding officer. The interests of justice required that the proceedings be set aside and the matter start de novo before a different magistrate.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court reviewed and set aside both decisions made on 14 March 2025 in the Bizana Magistrates’ Court under case number B292/2023, namely the decision convicting the accused and the later decision acquitting and discharging the accused.


The matter was remitted to the Bizana Magistrates’ Court to commence de novo before another magistrate. The judgment did not reflect any separate costs order in relation to the special review.


Cases Cited


R v Hepworth 1928 AD 265.


S v Gaba 1985 (4) SA 734 (A).


South African Transport and Allied Workers Union and Another v Garvas and Others 2013 (1) SA 83 (CC).


R v Monyamane 1958 (4) SA 720 (O).


MEC for Health, Province of Eastern Cape NO and Another v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a Eye & Laser Institute 2014 (3) SA 219 (SCA).


Kondlo v Eastern Cape Development Corporation 2014 (2) ALL SA 328 (ECM).


Ndzululeka v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Another (4514/2022) [2025] ZAECMHC 103 (21 October 2025).


Culverwell v Beira 1992 (4) SA 490 (W).


Master of the High Court Northern Gauteng High Court, Pretoria v Motala and Others 2012 (3) SA 325 (SCA).


Department of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Limited 2017 (1) BCLR 1 (CC); 2017 (2) SA 622 (CC).


Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others 2004 (6) SA 222 (SCA).


South African Broadcasting Corporation SOC Ltd and Others v Democratic Alliance and Others 2015 (4) ALL SA 719 (SCA); 2016 (2) SA 522 (SCA).


S v Heller 1964 (1) SA 524 (W).


S v Khanyapa 1979 (1) SA 824 (A).


Sikhutshwa v MEC for Social Development, Eastern Cape Province and Others 2009 (3) SA 47 (TKH).


Eke v Parsons 2016 (3) SA 37 (CC).


West Rand Estates Ltd v New Zealand Insurance Co Ltd 1926 AD 173.


Zondi v MEC, Traditional and Local Government Affairs 2006 (3) SA 1 (CC).


S v Rall 1982 (1) SA 828 (A).


Legislation Cited


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (section 174).


Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (section 22(1)(a), section 22(1)(b), section 22(1)(c), section 22(1)(d)).


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (section 165(5); section 172(2)(a)).


Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944 (as amended).


Rules of Court Cited


Rule 66 of the Magistrates’ Courts Rules.


Held


The High Court held that the magistrate committed reviewable irregularities by issuing two mutually destructive decisions arising from a section 174 application, first convicting the accused at a procedurally incompetent stage and without affording the accused an opportunity to be heard, and then purporting to overturn that conviction by issuing an acquittal and discharge.


It held that the magistrate became functus officio after the first final decision and had no power to revoke or replace it; that court orders remain binding until properly set aside; and that the second decision was not grounded in the section 174 test and was taken on an irrelevant basis (“out on warning”), without meaningful reasons or engagement with the evidence.


Both decisions and the related proceedings were therefore not in accordance with justice and were set aside, with the matter remitted for a fresh trial before a different magistrate.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A section 174 discharge application requires the court, at the close of the prosecution case, to determine whether there is no evidence that the accused committed the charged offence (or a competent verdict offence). The court’s power to return a verdict of not guilty at that stage is triggered only where there is no evidence on which a reasonable person might convict.


Only one competent decision may be made under section 174 at that procedural stage: the application must be granted (resulting in an acquittal and discharge) or refused (allowing the defence case to proceed). Issuing inconsistent, co-existing decisions in relation to the same section 174 application constitutes a serious procedural irregularity.


The functus officio doctrine generally prevents a court or presiding officer from changing a final decision once it has been pronounced, absent a proper legal basis. Where a magistrate recognises a material irregularity after delivering a final decision, the appropriate remedy is not self-correction by issuing a contradictory order, but referral to a competent reviewing forum.


Court orders are binding in terms of section 165(5) of the Constitution and must be obeyed unless and until they are properly set aside. A presiding officer may not treat an existing order as if it has no legal effect merely because it is considered erroneous.


Magistrates’ courts, as statutory creatures, have no inherent jurisdiction; their powers must be found within the enabling statutes. Acting beyond those powers, including by issuing procedurally incompetent and contradictory outcomes, may amount to a gross irregularity reviewable under section 22 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013.


A criminal trial process must conform to basic procedural fairness, including the audi alteram partem principle. A conviction reached without giving the accused a fair opportunity to present a defence case, in circumstances where the procedural stage calls for a section 174 ruling rather than final adjudication, is inconsistent with justice and is reviewable.

`
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN CAPE DIVISION, MTHATHA)
CASE NO.: CA&R119/2025
In the matter between:

THE STATE

and

THOBELA NDYEBO ACCUSED

JUDGMENT
ON SPECIAL REVIEW

Zono AJ:

Preface
A civilised judicial system such as the one we are trying to create and mantain
demands that no person be unfairly deprived of life, freedom, dignity or property. At the
same time criminal proceedings are not a game in which one side is entitled to clai m the
benefit of any omission or mistake made by the other 1. Therefore, an accused is not
entitled to be acquitted on appeal or review because of trifling errors made by the
trial court; only errors which in fact led to a failure of justice entitle the accused to
such acquittal. Whether a case falls on the one or other side of the line is det ermined
by means of the particular circumstances of the case2.



1 R v Hepworth 1928 AD 265 at 277.
2 Hiemstra’s Criminal Procedure: Page 30-11.

Introduction
[1] The accused was arraigned before the Magistrate Court for the District of
Bizana under Case Number B292/2023 for the charge of assault with
intent to do grievous bodily harm. The matter then appeared before Mr
Njoza, the Acting Magistrate, for trial. On 14 th March 2025 the State
closed its case; whereafter the defence applied for a discharge in terms
of sect ion 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (CPA). Such
application was opposed by the state. The court then delivered
judgment, which was the outcome of the application in terms of Section
174 of CPA. It is that judgment that resulted in and or pr ompted this
review. The Magistrate found the accused guilty as charged. After the
Magistrate had been conscietized of the irregularity 3, the defence
requested a short adjournment of the matter for a meeting with the
Magistrate in chambers, and the m atter was so adjourned. Upon
resumption the Magistrate announced that there was an error in the court’s
judgment and for that reason it changed its finding of guilt and found the
accused not guilty and discharged him.

[2] Proceedings can only be set aside on review if they were not in
accordance with justice. Only an irregularity which infact led to a failure of
justice, in contradistinction to potential prejudice, justifies the setting aside of
the proceedings4.

[3] Section 22 of the Superior Court Act 10 of 2013 provides for the review
of proceedings from the Magistrates Courts. The section provides as
follows:
“1. The grounds upon which the proceedings of any Magistrates’ Court may
be brought under review before a court of a Division are—

3 Albeit that the nature of the irregularity was not discussed or divulged in court or on the record.
4 S v Gaba 1985(4) SA 734 (A).

(a) absence of jurisdiction on the part of the court;
(b) interest in the cause, bias, malice or corruption on t he part of
the presiding judicial officer;
(c) gross irregularity in the proceedings; and
(d) the admission of inadmissible or incompetent evidence or the
rejection of admissible or competent evidence”.
The word “any” in subsection 1 is wide enough to include reviews
emanating from criminal proceedings. No other interpretation is
possible5.

[4] The Senior Magistrate, in his referral, is of the view that the Presiding
Magistrate overturned his earlier decision find ing the accused person
guilty and replaced it with a decision finding the accused not guilty,
thereby committing a gross irregularity. The review falls within the
purview of section 22(1) of the Act. Complainant’s letter annexed to the
covering letter referring this matter for special review complains about the
fact that the Presiding Magistrate changed its decision without a valid
explanation. That underpins the reason for the referral of the matter for a
special review.

[5] As alluded to above, it was in the context of an application made in terms
of section 174 of CPA that those two conflicting decisions were made.
The starting point should be the provisions of section 174 of CPA which
provide as follows:
“If, at the close of the case for the prosecution at any trial, the court is of the
opinion that there is no evidence that the accused committed the offence
referred to in the charge or any offence of which he may be convicted on the
charge, it may return a verdict of not guilty”.

A verdict of not guilty may be returned only where there is no evidence
implicating the accused.

5 SATAWU & Another v Garvas & others 2013 (1) SA 83 (CC) Para 37.

[6] Only one decision may be taken in terms of section 174 of CPA. The
Magistrate must either grant or refuse the application. Once that decision
is taken the court becomes functus officio6. If the court decides to refuse
the application in terms of section 174, it must do so, and allow the
defence to open its case, with a view to rebut any evidence given against
the accused, if so advised. If it grants a section 174 application, that is the
end of the matter, the accused in that case must be found not guilty and
be discharged. There is no authority for proposition that two decisions
may be granted by the same court and co -exist even though they are
conflicting with each other. It is very much unprecedented that a Magistrate
can take two inconsistent decisions in the same matter and almost at the
same time.

[7] Functus officio doctrine demands generally that an official who has once
discharged his official function by making a decision is unable to change
his mind and revoke, withdraw or revisit the decision. It generally applies
to a final decisions 7. In Casu, the decision convicting the accused person
was final decision, therefore the Magistrate had discharged his office,
especially in so far as the finding of guilty is concerned. It was
impermissible of him to change his mind and re-examine and revisit that
decision. The avenue available to him was to refer the matter to this court
to exercise its review jurisdiction, should he found that there was an
irregularity of gross nature.
[8] It is trite that Magistrate’s Co urts are creatures of statute. As, they have
no inherent jurisdiction and their powers must be deduced from the four

6 R v Monyamane 1958 (4) SA 720 (O).
7 MEC for Health, Province of Eastern Cape NO and another v Kirland investments (Pty) Ltd t/a Eye of
Laser Institute 2014 (3) SA 219 (SCA) Para 15.

corners of statute 8. The Magistrates Court Act 32 of 1944, as amended
and the Criminal Procedure Act are relevant sources of power of t he
Magistrates and Magistrate’s Court. Both these two legislations do not
confer power to grant two conflicting decisions in one matter almost at
the same time. For this reason, the Magistrate exceeded his powers or he
exercised a power he did not hav e. That constitutes gross irregularity in
terms of section 22(1)(c) of the Superior Courts Act. Having found that
the Magistrate had committed a gross irregularity, I hereinafter
commence to deal with each decision and how it amounted to a gross
irregularity.

The decision to convict- the first decision
[9] I have indicated above that the Magistrate took his first decision to
convict the accused. The Magistrate seemingly intended to find the accused
person guilty, regardless of the stage of the procee dings. He stated as
follows at page 47 of the record:
“Moreover, this complainant has submitted before the court that even though
the complainant have not stated the day, she was assaulted by the
complainant[?] in his room and happenly [?] ran to the other room where the
child of the complainant was with some of the people staying there and they
came to ask the accused person not to continue assaulting the complainant.
This shows that assault has been committed” (sic).

It is plain from this excerpt that the Magistrate had accepted that the
complainant was assaulted by the accused. This occurred even before the
accused could come and give evidence to rebut, if so advised, any piece
of evidence adduced against him.

[10] On the same page, the Magistrate said the following:

8 Kondlo v Eastern Cape Developmnet Corporation 2014 (2) ALL SA 328 (ECM) Para 39; Ndzululeka v
Minister of justice and Constitutional Development and another (4514/2022) [2025] ZAECMHC 103 (21
October 2025) Para 44.

“If we can remember to the testimony by the complainant, she mentioned that
she was assaulted with fists and also the stick although she never divulged
what type of stick that was used. To me, by the time the complainant divulged
the type of the stick, it was not coming as a new fact because the stick was
there, although the stick was not being named as umlungu mabele. Therefore,
this court wants to put it clearly that the evidence by single witness is
admissible before court. Therefore, this court finds the accused
person before court guilty to the offence” (sic).

This excerpt clearly demonstrates that, for all intents and purposes, the
Magistrate sought to convict the accused. He found as a fact that the
complainant was assaulted by the accused person and further went on to
admit the complainant’s evidence of a single witness and on those bases
he convicted the accused.

[11] The first decision, as stated above, was taken without the accused having
been given an opportunity to give his evidence in rebuttal. That approach
by the Magistrate flouted trite principle of natural justice, audi alteram
partem Rule . The first decision was granted without hearing the
side of the accused. That amounted to gross irregularity which is a
ground of review. It was legally inapposite to convict the accused at the
stage of section 174 application. There is no authority for such approach.
The accused’s legal representative advised the Magistrate of the irregularity
immediately after the conviction in the following words:
“Your worship, there is something grossly irregular with this judgment. Can
we meet in chambers? May I suggest that we meet in chambers” (sic).

The court thereafter accepted the invitation to meet in Chambers an d the
court was adjourned. The Magistrate adjourned the court because he was
made aware of the existence of an irregularity. It is that awareness of the
existence of an irregularity that should have prompted the referral of the

existence of an irregularity that should have prompted the referral of the
matter to this court fo r a special review by the Presiding Magistrate.
However, that did not happen. Instead the Presiding Magistrate took a

second decision. In the light of the above, the proceedings are not in
accordance with justice even at this stage.

Decision to acquit-The second decision
[12] At this stage I advert to section 165(5) of the Constitution, which
provides that:
“5. An order or decision issued by a court of law binds all persons to whom
and organs of state to which it applies”.
All orders of court whether correctly or incorrectly granted have to be
obeyed until they are properly set aside 9. The Constitutional Court 10 in
Tasima aptly put it thus:
“180. The equipoise is tipped by section 172(2)(a), which states:
“The Supreme Court of Appeal, the High Court of South Africa or a court of
similar status may make an order concerning the constitutional validity of an
Act of Parliament, a provincial Act or a ny conduct of the President, but an
order of constitutional invalidity has no force unless it is confirmed by the
Constitutional Court.”
This section culls an exception that implies the general rule. Only an order of
constitutional invalidity requires con firmation by the Constitutional Court to
take force. The general rule is that orders that do not concern
constitutional invalidity do have force from the moment they are issued. And
in light of section 165(5) of the Constitution, the order is binding, i rrespective
of whether or not it is valid, until set aside.
The record reveals that a court order or a decision finding the accused
guilty was never set aside. It is extant. On the administrative law
parlance the following is axiomatic: For, it is wel l settled in our law that
until a decision is set aside by a court in proceedings for judicial review it
exists in fact and it had legal consequences that cannot simply be overlooked 11.
That proposition applies with greater force in cases of court’s decisions.

9 Culverwell v Beira 1992 (4) SA 490 (W) at 494 A -C; Master of the High Court Northern Gauteng High

Court, Pretoria v Motala and Others 2012 (3) SA 325 (SCA) Para 11.
10 Department of Transport and others v Tasima (Pty) Limited 2017 (1) BCLR (1); 2017 (2) SA 622 (CC).
11 Ouderkraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and others 2004 (6) SA 222 (SCA) Para 26; South
African Broadcasting Corporation SOC Ltd and others v Democratic Alliance and others 2015 (4) ALL SA
719 (SCA; 2016 (2) SA 522 (SCA) Para 45.

[13] Notwithstanding the weight of judicial authority to the contrary, the
Magistrate, having been advised of the irregularity, took a different and a
conflicting decision acquitting and discharging the accused. That
happened at the happenstance of the decision convicting the accused. Two
decisions which were mutually destructive were granted by one
Magistrate in respect of one matter concerning one accused person. Both
those orders or decisions are extant. After the adjournment for a me eting
suggested by defence Counsel the court resumed. Upon resumption the
Magistrate had this to say:
“This court earlier on has made an error by saying accused is found guilty,
instead of making a ruling in the application that was made by the defence the
application in terms of section 174. The accused person is out on warning.
Therefore, in terms of section 174, the accused is found not guilty and
discharged” (sic).
That is all that is being said by the Magistrate about the second decision.

[14] The second decision was seemingly granted based on the fact that the
accused was out on warning. That lacks basis in law, especially in the
context of section 174 application. The Magistrate capriciously took the
second decision or order. What about the reasons underpinning the
conviction? Are they nullified? This decision is made in the context of
section 174 of CPA. Release of an accused on warning is not a basis for
the discharge of an accused under section 174 of CPA. The accused can only
be discharged in terms of section 174 of CPA if the court is of the opinion
that “ there is no evidence that the accused committed the offence
referred to in the charge or any offence of which he may be convicted
on the charge12”. The Magistrates powe r to discharge can only be triggered
by the absence of the evidence. Present the evidence, no power to

12 S v Heller 1964 (1) SA 524 (W) at 541 G.

discharge the accused exists. The words no evidence in the section mean
no evidence upon which a reasonable person might convict accused 13. It
is c lear therefore that the Magistrate, when granting the second order
considered an irrelevant consideration and a wrong fact 14. It is plain
again that the Magistrate did not consider requirements for an application in
terms of section 174 of CPA. Therefore, he committed a material error
of law15.

[15] It is demonstrably clear that, except that the accused was out on warning,
there were no reasons underpinning Magistrate’s decision to acquit and
discharge the accused, therefore that decision too was irrational 16. A
decision taken without reasons is, as a corrollary malicious. An element
of malice brings this matter within t he purview of section 22(1)(b) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013. The Magistrate took the second decision
or order discharging the accused capriciously. The second decision is
manifestly not supported by the reasons; therefore, it lacks basis. The
Magistrate was lackadaisical in taking that decision or order especially if
regard is had to the first decision or order that was supported by pieces of
evidence led in the evidence in chief. Contradistinctionally with the first
decision or order no ref erence was made to the evidence led in the
evidence in chief and there is manifestly no evaluation of that evidence.
There is no doubt in my mind that the second decision or order
discharging the accused was arbitrary as the Magistrate took it whimsical ly. It
is therefore evident that the proceedings were not in accordance with
justice.

13 S v Khanyapa 1979 (10 SA 824 (a) 838 F.
14 Section 22(1) (d) of the Superior Court Act 10 of 2013.
15 Section 22(1) (c) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013.
16 Sikhutshwa v MEC for Social Development, Eastern Cape Province a nd others 2009 (3) SA 47 (TKH) Para
69.

[16] One last thing that requires comment is the fact that there were
discussions that were held in Chambers which seemingly led to the
second decision. There is no detail or whatsoever about those discussions
appearing in the record. It is even more murky if the state or the
prosecutor was present thereat. That invites comment because Magistrate’s
Court is a court of record17. What happened in Chambers is import ant
because it prompted and shaped the second decision. It is axiomatic that such
a meeting was suggested by the defence. It could have been prudent for the
Magistrate to place on record what transpired in Chambers in so far as it
relates to the decis ion he would take. The attendees to that meeting
should have been divulged in the record. What then led to the second
decision was not placed on record. The error the Magistrate is referring to in
the record is not explained and its genesis and how it occurred is unknown.
This is not a trivial matter because that has a bearing on whether or not
the proceedings were in accordance with justice.

Conclusion
[17] It is a gross irregularity for a Magistrate to take two inconsistent and
conflicting decisions at the same time and in one case. It is a
fundamental principle of our law that a court order must be formulated in
a language that leaves no doubt as to what the order requires to be done. Not
only must the order be couched in clear terms, but i ts purpose must also be
readily ascertainable from the language used 18. The general principle is
that once a court has duly pronounced a final judgment or order, it has no
authority to correct, alter or supplement it. The reason is that it thereupon

17 Rule 66 of the Magistrates Court Rules
18 Eke v Parsons 2016 (3) SA 37 (CC) at 58F.

becomes functus officio: Its jurisdiction in the case having been fully and
finally exercised, its authority over the subject matter has ceased 19. The
principle of finality of litigation expressed in the maxim interest rei
publicae ut sit finis litium ( It is in the public interest that litigation be
brought to finality) dictates that the power of the court should come to
an end20. The Magistrate had no jurisdiction, power or competence to grant
the second order or decision21.

[18] It goes without saying that the first order was incompetent to be granted
in the context of an application in terms of section 174 of CPA. The
granting of the first decision or order was inimical to the Rules of natural
justice, to wit , audi alterum partem rule , h ence it constituted gross
irregularity. It was granted without the accused being given an
opportunity to state his case or his side of the story. The proceedings were
manifestly not in accordance with justice.

[19] In S v Rall22 Trollip JA aptly stated thus:
“The judge must ensure that justice is done. It is equally important; I think
that he should also ensure that justice is seen to be done. After all, that is a
fundamental principle of our law and public policy. He should therefore so
conduct t he trial that his open -mindedness, his impartiality and his fairness
are manifest to all those who are concerned in the trial and its outcome,
especially the accused.”
A criminal trial that proceeds and comes to a conclusion that the accused
is guilty o f an offence as charged and supports that with pieces of
evidence, and immediately thereafter makes a different decision finding the
accused not guilty without any meaningful reasons is manifestly not in

19 West Rand Estates Ltd v New Zealand Insurance CI Ltd 1926 AD 173 at 176, 178, 186 and 187.
20 Zondi v MEC, Traditional and local Government Affairs 2006 (3) SA 1 (CC) Para 28.
21 Section 22(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013.

21 Section 22(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013.
22 Sv Rall 1982 (1) SA 828 (A) at 831H- 832A.

accordance with justice. That kind of approach do es not reflect that
justice is done and that its seen to be done, hence the complainant herein
complained. A decision taken by whim is unjust and cannot be in
accordance with justice

[20] Our criminal procedure in general requires that a (i) manifest ly (ii)
impartial judicial officer (iii) in accordance with the prescribed
procedural rules (iv) provide the litigants with fair opportunity to (v)
conduct their respective cases in a meaningful manner by the
presentation of (vi) admissible evidenc e ( in chief or cross examination, or by
means of exhibits), as well as by means of (viii) argument and then (viii)
by using such evidence exclusively (ix) to give a clearly reasoned
judgment. Any material departure which prejudices the accused ca uses a
failure of justice which can be set aside23. The procedural rules24 were clearly
flouted in this case. In discharging the accused in the context of section
174, on the bases that the accused was (which is not a reason under section
174) out on warning was manifestly not in accordance with the admissible
rules and procedures and does not conduce to a reasoned judgment. The
proceedings were manifestly not in accordance with justice.

Remedy
[21] A appropriate remedy in the circumstances of this case would be to
review and set aside proceedings and the two orders or decisions made by
the Magistrate on 14 th March 2025 and further remit the matter for it to start
de novo before another or different Magistrate.

23 Himstrar’s Criminal Procedure: Page 30-11.
24 Section 174 of CPA .

[22] Mr Njoza is said to be an Acting Magistrate or was an Acting Magistrate
at the time of the decisions. It is not clear if his contract has not come to
an end. That is plain from the first sentence of the referral letter by the
Acting Senior Magistrate, S Mokotjo, date 31st October 2025, wording
of which is as follows:
“The matter appeared before Mr Njoza, the Acting Magistrate for
trial.
……..
7. I am persuaded that the matter ought to have been referred by the
Magistrate concerned for special review.
8…. upon perusal of the transcribed record indeed it is clear that the
Presiding Judicial officer overturned his decision meaning that he
reviewed himself after having committed a gross irregularity.”
This underscores the fact that this matter must be remitted before another
Magistrate to start de novo. The Presiding Magistrate had prematurely
held two conflicting positions in this matter. It is therefore in the interest
of justice that these proceedings start de novo before another Magistrate.
Order
[23] In the result the following order is made:
23.1 The proceedings together with court order or decision granted
on 14th March 2025 by the Magistrate’s court in the District of
Bizana under Case Number B292/2023, finding the accused
guilty (convicting) is hereby reviewed and set aside.
23.2 The proceedings together with court order or decision granted
on 14th March 2025 by the Magistrate’s court in the District of
Bizana under Case Number B292/2023 finding the accused not
guilty (discharged or acquitting) is hereby reviewed and set
aside.

23.3 This matter is remitted back to the Magistrates Court in the
District of Bizana to start de novo before another Magistrate.

_________________________________
A.S ZONO
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT (ACTING)

I agree
____________________________________
B. MAJIKI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT

Delivered on :13 January 2026