Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1844South Africa
S v Zikhali (Trial within a Trial) (CC15/23) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1844 (3 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 August 2023
Headnotes
the provisions of s 25 required the court to look beyond the reliability and voluntariness of the evidence and to consider the impact of admitting the evidence on the “fairness of the criminal justice system as a whole and not only the fairness of the actual trial itself. Froneman J concluded that the pointings out were inadmissible as their admission would bring the administration of justice into disrepute.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## S v Zikhali (Trial within a Trial) (CC15/23) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1844 (3 August 2023)
S v Zikhali (Trial within a Trial) (CC15/23) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1844 (3 August 2023)
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sino date 3 August 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO CC15/23
In the matter between:
THE STATE
And
NTOKOZO
KHULEKANI ZIKHALI
JUDGMENT
TRIAL WITHIN A TRIAL
COX, AJ
[1] Mr Zikhali, the
accused, was arraigned before this court on various counts which
included kidnapping and murder of a four year
old girl.
[2] During the trial
counsel for the State informed that he wished to present evidence
relating to a pointing out.
It was established from
the defence counsel that the alleged pointing out is not in dispute
but that the requirements for the admissibility
of the evidence was
not met as firstly the pointing out was made pursuant to threats made
against the accused assaults on him and
to avoid further assaults and
threats and secondly that the accused’s rights were not
explained to him.
[3] The State
presented the court with the evidence of the investigating officer,
sgt Mbhele and the officer who took the
accused for the pointing out,
Col Scheepers.
[4] Following his arrest
on 14 October 2022 the accused was collected from Boksburg North
police station and transported to Actonville
police station by Mbhele
and Cst Roulls.
[5] The accused
confirmed that his constitutional rights as per exhibit L was
explained to him by the arresting officer. He could
however not
recall the details of the explanation.
Mbhele accepted that the
arresting officer would have done that and did not explain any rights
to the accused.
[6] The accused having
given Mbhele and his colleagues a proverbial run around Mbhele called
in Lt Col Scheepers, now Colonel to
assist.
Scheepers testified that
the accused intimated that he wished to make a pointing out in the
matter; that he would point out where
he had left the child the
previous evening.
[7] Scheepers
proceeded in explaining the accused’s rights with regards to
remaining silent, warned him against self-incrimination
and legal
representation. Whilst he was busy with the explanation, so he
testified, the accused interrupted him and said that he
knew his
rights. He however continued with his explanation regardless of that.
[8] After the
explanation he asked the accused whether he still wished to proceed
with the pointing out which question the accused
answered in the
affirmative.
[9] Due to the
nature of the matter Scheepers elected to follow the informal as
opposed to formal processes in conducting
the pointing out. It means
that no official driver was appointed, no notes were made regarding
the route or distances followed
or any utterances by the accused en
route or during the pointing out and obviously the accused could not
sign any document to confirm
the correctness of notes made.
[10] Both Mbhele
and Scheepers testified that the accused was not assaulted by them or
by anyone else in their presence.
It was common cause that
the accused had injuries behind his left ear, right chest and right
arm which he had sustained prior to
his arrest.
[11] The accused
person was a poor witness as far as it relates to the alleged assault
on him.
He failed to confirm the
statement of his legal representative concerning an alleged
swollen neck, wrist and internal pain
that he would have experienced.
Despite the small number
of police that he was involved with on the 14
th
he was
unable to identify any of his assailants.
It was the undisputed
evidence of Scheepers that prior to his involvement the accused
pointed out a number of addresses to Mbhele
and Roulls. It agrees
with Mbhele’s evidence. In the circumstances it would be
impossible for the accused not to know who
assaulted him as there
were only two police officials in the vehicle with him.
It was put to Mbhele that
the accused was assaulted continuously and that he was threatened to
do the pointing out. This statement
was also not borne out by his
evidence. It can hardly be said that he was assaulted continuously.
As per his version he was not
assaulted by Scheepers or by anyone in
his presence.
Initially no mention was
made of being suffocated with a plastic bag during the initial
pointing out or at the Actonville police
station. It appears to have
been an afterthought
Based on the aforegoing I
cannot find that the accused person was assaulted as alleged.
[12] A pointing out
amounts to an admission and are therefore governed by the principles
applicable thereto. It follows that
a pointing out by an accused need
to be made freely and voluntary whilst in his sober senses.
[13] The fair trial
rights of an accused person are contained in section 35 of the
Constitution, Act 108 of 1996.
Pointings
out which were contradictory to the Constitutional rights of the
accused were said to be inadmissible in
Nomwebu
1996(2) SACR
396 (E)
and
Mathebula
1997 (1) SACR
10
(W).
[14] I am
satisfied that the accused’s rights as per the Notice of Rights
were explained to him and that he understood
what was explained.
The relevant portion of
the Notice of Rights reads:
(3)
As a person arrested for the alleged commission of an offence, you
have the following rights:
(a) you have the right
to remain silent and anything you say may be recorded and may be used
as evidence against you;
(b)
you are not compelled to make a confession or admission which could
be used in evidence against you;...
[15] Notably the
document does not refer or mention anything about pointings out. It
is a
lacuna
in the form and an omission that can prove to be
fatal to the admissibility of pointings out as police officers, as in
this case,
subsequently fail to explain the accused person’s
rights in such event to him or/ her.
[16]
In
S v Melani
and Others
1996
(1) SACR 335
(E)
the court considered the
admissibility of pointings out made by the three accused. Accused No
1 had not been warned that the evidence
obtained as a result of the
pointing out could be used against him.
The court considered the
defence argument that the pointings out should be excluded as they
had been obtained in breach of s 25(1)
(c)
of the Interim
Constitution. It was held that the provisions of s 25 required the
court to look beyond the reliability and voluntariness
of the
evidence and to consider the impact of admitting the evidence on the
“fairness of the criminal justice system as a
whole and not
only the fairness of the actual trial itself. Froneman J
concluded that the pointings out were inadmissible
as their admission
would bring the administration of justice into disrepute.
The Constitutional Court
subsequently ruled that before a pointing out is made the police must
warn a suspect that he is not compelled
to do so and that he must be
made aware of the evidentiary consequences of the pointing out.
Failure to do so would render the
pointing out as inadmissible (
S
v Melani en Andere
1995 (4) SA 421
(CC))
[17] Scheepers
admitted that he did not explain to the accused that he was not
obliged to do a pointing out. Neither did
he explain to the accused
the evidentiary consequences should he proceed with the pointing out.
It follows that the accused was
not afforded the opportunity to make
an informed decision whether he wished to proceed with the pointing
out or not. That constitutes
an infringement on the constitutional
and fair trial rights of the accused hence the pointing out made by
the accused is ruled
inadmissible.
Cox AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
North
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Appearances:
For the Accused:
Adv Van Wyk Legal Aid
South Africa.
For the State:
Adv Sihlangu DPP
Pretoria.
Date of delivery: 03
August 2023
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