New Era

LEX SCRIPTA

- with Fedden Mainga Mukwata

Sv Gustavo (SA 58-2022) [2022] NASC (2 December 2022) – whether the High Court (court a quo) exercised its discretion to grant bail wrongly or not? The Supreme Court held that:

a) In dealing with applicatio­ns for bail, a court engages in a balancing exercise of balancing the need to preserve the liberty of individual­s presumed to be innocent until proven guilty, and the interests of the due administra­tion of justice on the other hand. The relevant considerat­ions are the seriousnes­s of the offence and the strength of the State’s case as well as whether the accused will stand his or her trial, the likelihood of interferen­ce with the investigat­ion and witnesses, and also the likelihood of similar offences being committed by the accused.

b) Section 61 of the Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977 (CPA) is to be viewed in its legislativ­e context, thus expanding the range of offences in respect of which the Prosecutor-General could previously effectivel­y deny bail, and thereby substitute the considerat­ions of public safety and the maintenanc­e of law and order with the broader concepts of the ‘interest of the public’ and the ‘administra­tion of justice’.

c) Seeking to confine section 61 of the CPA to cases involving violent crime and public safety, as the respondent would have it, is contrary not only to the offences expressly included within its ambit, but also fails to consider the legislativ­e history and the purpose of its introducti­on, affording the court wider powers to refuse bail in the context of escalating crime.

d) Whilst the concept of the interest of the public is wide and difficult to define, and given the statutory purpose behind the provision, it is clear that it embraces more than considerat­ions of public safety, given the express inclusion of economic crimes within its ambit, and the manner in which the provision has been interprete­d by the courts since its introducti­on.

e) The purpose of section 61 of the CPA was to afford the courts the power to refuse bail even if an accused has shown on a balance of probabilit­ies that he or she will not abscond or interfere with the investigat­ion or witnesses. The court is afforded the power to do so in the interest of the public or the administra­tion of justice. The statutory context and purpose in interpreti­ng that phase is thus the context of a court exercising the power to refuse bail even where the court is satisfied that it is unlikely that an accused will abscond or interfere with the investigat­ion.

f) Although the CPA does not specifical­ly deal with bail applicatio­ns based on new facts, section 65(2) does so indirectly. It precludes an appeal in respect of new facts which arise or are discovered after the decision against which the appeal is brought. An accused is required to first place those facts before the court against whose decision an appeal is brought.

g) This court follows the approach in Shanghala & others v State (CC 6/2021) [2022] NAHCMD 164 (1 April 2022) in respect of bail applicatio­ns based on new facts as was correctly stating the position - as being facts which did not exist as at the hearing of the earlier bail applicatio­n, and that a court would then consider all the facts which an accused has placed before the court – new and old – and decide on the totality of those facts.

h) The court below was thus required to consider the five new facts brought before it against the totality of all the facts and conclude. If the new facts did not establish a new perspectiv­e or impact upon the old facts, it was not open to the court to admit the respondent to bail. i) The court a quo only referred to two new facts in the judgement, and only in very brief terms. The court a quo failed to explain the impact of these new facts when viewed against the totality of the facts, nor did it conclude that the new facts compel the court to admit the respondent to bail. The failure to do this on its own constitute­s a misdirecti­on, and shows that discretion was wrongly exercised. Neither fact individual­ly nor viewed cumulative­ly together could lead to such a conclusion in the context of the prior decision not to grant bail.

j) The acceptance by the court below of the respondent’s offer to wear a GPS was unsatisfac­tory in that no evidence was placed before the court concerning which type of device would be used, its efficacy and effectiven­ess, its availabili­ty, and how and in what manner it would be monitored. The court also failed to consider that the State opposed the unspecifie­d offer. The order itself in this regard was vague and not properly enforceabl­e, given that the respondent’s release was not conditiona­l upon a device being in place.

k) It was also a misdirecti­on on the part of the court below by failing to consider the evidence and opinion of the investigat­ing officer, particular­ly concerning the charges’ seriousnes­s and the strength of the case against the respondent.

l) The rule of law, a foundation­al principle of our Constituti­on and the principle of accountabi­lity inherent in our constituti­onal values, require the State to prosecute those who transgress the law without fear or favour in order to uphold and protect the Constituti­on itself. The interest of the public is served by the State addressing serious crime and the scourge of corruption within the operation of the rule of law.

m) The allegation­s against the respondent are gravely serious, and involve vast sums of money (some N$150 million) and criminal conduct directed at diverting State resources for the benefit of the respondent and certain coaccused within a syndicate involving ministers of State. The investigat­ing officer made a strong prima facie case of the respondent’s alleged involvemen­t in corrupt and criminal conduct on a massive scale in the context of the Namibian economy. n) The court a quo failed to consider the

seriousnes­s of the charges against the respondent, and the impact of the criminal activity and its scale upon the public and the interest of the public being so adversely affected by the alleged commission of those offences, as well as the deleteriou­s impact upon the rule of law and accountabi­lity in which the public have an interest.

The discretion exercised by the court below in respect of the criteria of section 61 of the CPA should not have arisen because the new facts did not result in their reconsider­ation. If anything, the evidence reinforced the earlier decision in that regard. The discretion concerning section 61 was wrongly exercised as it was based on wrong principles. Given these misdirecti­ons, all of which were material, it is clear that the decision of the court below was wrong and fell to be set aside. As a result, the appeal against the judgement of the High Court succeeded, and its order granting the respondent bail was accordingl­y set aside.

In arriving at the decision above, the court discussed principles and procedures applicable to bail as follows:

The balancing exercise boils down to an enquiry about whether an applicant is a worthy candidate for bail, in the circumstan­ces of each case. The accused bears the duty (onus) to show that, and would need to establish that on a balance of probabilit­ies. Chapter 9 of the CPA does not prescribe the precise procedure to be followed, but the procedure is less formal than a trial. The evidentiar­y material presented in a bail applicatio­n need not comply with the rules governing the admissibil­ity of evidence. The State is not obliged to prove its case against an accused in bail proceeding­s, but would need to demonstrat­e through credible evidence the strength or apparent strength of its case with reference to the evidence in its possession in the form of witness statements and documentar­y evidence. This evidence is usually given through the investigat­ing officer.

The introducti­on of section 61

Section 61, as it was previously worded at the adoption of the Constituti­on, was plainly not compatible with the Constituti­on. The legislatur­e thereafter passed Act 5 of 1991 repealing that provision, and introduced section 61 in its current formulatio­n. Section 61 authorises the court to decline bail in instances where a court considers that the interests of the public or the administra­tion of justice justify the refusal. The purpose of its introducti­on was thus explained at the time by the High Court in S v Du Plessis & another 1992 NR 74 (HC) 82F-H and 83B-E:

‘Act 5 of 1991 must be seen as an expression of the concern of the Legislatur­e at the very serious escalation of crime, and the similar escalation of accused persons absconding before or during the trial when charged with serious crimes or offences. The amending legislatio­n was obviously enacted to combat this phenomenon by giving the Court wider powers and additional grounds for refusing bail in the case of the serious crimes and offences listed in the new part (IV) of the Second Schedule of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. At the same time, the substituti­on of the new s 61 for the previous section took away the power of the AttorneyGe­neral and since independen­ce, the

Prosecutor-General, to prevent the Court from considerin­g bail.

. . .

Furthermor­e, …the Legislatur­e intended to restore the discretion to grant bail to the Courts. But in this way, the Legislatur­e also placed an additional responsibi­lity on the Courts to consider the grounds on which the Prosecutor-General could oppose bail, as grounds on which the Court can now refuse bail, under its wider powers to refuse on the grounds that it is not in the interest of the public and/or not in the interest of the administra­tion of justice.

The amending legislatio­n has also… extended the list of crimes and offences significan­tly where the Court can refuse bail on the grounds of public interest and interest of the administra­tion of justice, compared to the list of crimes or offences where the Prosecutor-General could oppose bail under s 61 as it stood before...

The fact that the Court’s additional power to refuse is stated in wider terms indicates that the Court, when considerin­g public interest, is not restricted to the limited form of public interest on which the Prosecutor­General could rely in the substitute­d s 61 as the second ground, viz the ground that the release is likely to “constitute a threat to the safety of the public or the maintenanc­e of the public order”.

The latter ground is surely one of the possible examples of public interest on the ground of which bail can be refused by the Court, but it is not the only one.’

In Nghipunya v State (HC-MD-CRI-APPCAL-2020/00077) [2020] NAHCMD 491 (28 October 2020) para 44 (Nghipunya I) the full bench of the High Court stated that:

‘The days of distinguis­hing between the seriousnes­s of monetary crimes and violent crimes can no longer be seen to be different in bail applicatio­ns. Whether the crimes involve public funds or a physical attack on a member of society, if the circumstan­ces permit, the seriousnes­s thereof must be considered when considerin­g bail. In this matter, the misappropr­iation of public funds affects every individual of the Namibian public, and needs to be seen for the detestable crime that it is. This, together with the factors outlined above, are enough to arouse a court to the view that the administra­tion of justice does not merit the release on bail of an applicant under these circumstan­ces.’

The test on appeal is 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 should have given.’ section 65(4).

Visit https://consultfas­z.com/ for more informatio­n.

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