Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 863South Africa
Nkosi v S (A65/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 863 (11 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
11 November 2022
Headnotes
that:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nkosi v S (A65/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 863 (11 November 2022)
Nkosi v S (A65/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 863 (11 November 2022)
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sino date 11 November 2022
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#
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A65/2022
REPORTABLE:NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:NO
11
NOVEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
# DAVID
VUSI NKOSI
Appellant
DAVID
VUSI NKOSI
Appellant
And
# THE
STATE Respondent
THE
STATE Respondent
This
judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines. As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
M.
MUNZHELELE J
## Introduction
Introduction
[1]
When
crimes are committed against persons, prosecutors should discharge
their duties diligently and competently to avoid a
miscarriage
of justice towards victims of
crimes
in the words of the Hounarable Justice Nkabinde in
Ndlovu
v The State
[1]
para
58;
"
When even the most heinous of crimes are_committed against persons,
the people cannot resort to self-help: they generally
cannot
prosecute the perpetrators of these crimes on their own behalf. This
power is reserved for the NPA. It is therefore incumbent
upon
prosecutors to discharge this duty diligently and competently. When
this is not done, society suffers. In this case the prosecutor
failed
to ensure that the correct charge was preferred against Mr Ndlovu.
The prosecutor was from the outset in possession of the
J88 form in
which the injuries sustained by the complainant were fully described.
It boggles the mind why the proper charge of
rape read with the
provisions of section 51(1) of the Minimum Sentencing Act was not
preferred. This can only be explained as remissness
on the part of
the prosecutor that, further, should have been corrected by the
Court. This error is acutely unfortunate - victims
of crime rely on
prosecutors performing their functions properly. The failings of the
prosecutor are directly to blame for the
outcome in this matter".
[2]
The appellant appeared at Benoni
Regional Court on the charge of contravention
of section 55 of the Criminal Law
(sexual offences
and
related matter Act) 32 of 2007 which reads as follows;
'in
that on or about the 11 July 2017 and at or near Patfontein in the
regional division of Gauteng the accused did unlawfully and
intentionally attempt to
commit a sexual offence
to M[....]
M[....]2(13 years old ) by grabbing or pulling or undressing her
pyjama and panty. (Court's underlining emphasis).'
The
appellant was found guilty as charged and sentenced to seven (7)
years imprisonment in terms of section 276(1)(b) of the Criminal
Procedure Act
[2]
.
He
was declared unfit to possess a licenced firearm in terms of section
3(1) of the Firearm Control Act
[3]
.
[3]
The appellant is appealing his
conviction,
and
sentence as
the
application for leave to appeal was granted on 11 May 2021 by the
trial court. The basis for the appeal is that
the
evidence
of
the
complainant
as
a
single
witness
should
have
been
taken
with caution, more so because she is a
child witness. The entire evidence is alleged to be based on her
evidence. The second important
issue is the type of offence with
which the appellant was charged. The charge is defective because it
is not clear as to what offence
was attempted by the appellant. The
second issue is the only issue which the court will deal with on this
appeal.
## Background
of the case
Background
of the case
[4]
A child, aged 13 (thirteen) years, who
was left in the appellant's company by the child's grandmother, was
touched on her breast
and her pyjamas were undressed until the middle
of her thigh by the appellant,. The child's grandmother
had gone to work in the morning, leaving
David Nkosi with her granddaughter, who was at that time still
asleep. The complainant
was awakened by the appellant' actions, the
appellant entered the blankets under which she was sleeping and
touched her inappropriately,
and pulled her pyjamas and panty to her
thighs. The complainant jumped and ran to her friend's place. She
narrated the ordeal to
Mrs Scotland, her friend's mother, who took
her to the police station to report the matter. Mrs Skosana saw the
accused zipping
his trouser and putting on the belt, and when he saw
Mrs Skosana, the appellant said that he did not rape the child
without being
asked while running after the child. The accused was
arrested after that.
[5]
The version of the appellant is that he
only went and looked for the complainant because she did not return
home in time from a
visit to her friend. He denies the allegation
against him
## Arguments
on behalf of the appellant
Arguments
on behalf of the appellant
[6]
The
appellant was convicted, on the basis of these merits, as charged. Mr
Alberts, for the appellant, contends that the accused
was entitled to
be informed of the case he was to meet with a reasonable
degree
of clarity
as
stated in S
v
Hugo
[4]
at
para 540 D, Section 35(3) (a) of the Constitution of the Republic of
South Arica 1996,
R
v Mnguni
[5]
,
and
S
v Nembanzeni
[6]
.
[7]
Considering
the vast array of offences in the Sexual Offences and Related Matters
Act
[7]
, Mr
Alberts
argued
that
the charge
sheet
should have been required to
specify
the
offence the alleged attempt refered to. He further argued that even
the trial court failed to specify the offence the appellant
was
convicted of.
## Assessment
of the case
Assessment
of the case
[8]
Mr
Lalane, for the respondent, did not argue the point of a defective
charge sheet. During the arguments in court, Mr Lalane conceded
that
the charge sheet did not specify which offence
was
attempted
by
the
appellant.
He
also
conceded
that
there
was
no
application by the prosecutor to amend the charge. The court also
never made an order in terms of
section
86 to amend the
charge.
Section 86
of
the
criminal
procedure Act
[8]
provides that.
"
Court may order that charge be amended.
(1)
Where
a
charge is defective for want of any
essential averment therein, or where there appears to be any variance
between any averment in
a charge and the evidence adduced in proof of
such averment, or where it appears that words or particulars that
ought to have been
inserted
in the
charge
have been omitted therefrom, or where any words
or
particulars that ought to have
been omitted from
the
charge have
been
inserted therein, or
where
there is any other error in the charge, the Court may, at any time
before judgment, if it considers that the making of the
relevant
amendment will not prejudice the accused in his defence, order that
the charge, whether it discloses an offence or not,
be amended, so
far as it is necessary, both in that part thereof where the defect,
variance, omission, insertion or error occurs
and in any other part
thereof which it may become necessary to amend.
(2)
The amendment may be made on such
terms as to an adjournment of the proceedings as the Court may deem
fit.
(3)
Upon the amendment of the charge
in accordance with the order of the Court, the trial shall proceed at
the appointed time upon the
amended charge in the same manner and
with the
same consequences
as if it had been originally in its
amended form.
(4)
The fact that
a
charge is not amended as provided in
this section shall not unless the Court refuses to allow the
amendment, affect the validity
of the proceedings thereunder.
[9]
During the trial, it was unclear which
offence the evidence revealed. Thus,
section 88
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
would not be applicable.
Section 88
provides
defect in charge cured by evidence.
"
Where
a
charge is defective for the want of an averment
which is an essential ingredient of the relevant offence, the
defect shall, unless brought to the notice of the court before
judgement, be cured by evidence at the trial proving the matter which
should have been averred."
[10]
The prosecutor should formulate a charge with great care to protect
the accused's constitutional
right to a fair trial (see generally
S
v
Legoa
[9]
at
[20]; S
v
Mhlongo
[10]
at
[15); S
v
Mukuyu
[11]
at
[13); S
v
Mponda
[12]
at
[13), [14); S
v
Tshal,
[13]
at
[11]);
The
Constitution of South Africa, 1996 on section 35(3)(a) provides that:
"every accused person has
a
right to
a
fair
trial, which includes the roght to be informed of the charge with
sufficient detail to answer it."
In
S v Hugo
1976 (4) SA 536
(A), the Court held that:
"the
charge should inform the accused of the case the State wants to
advance against him." That is what fairness requires
and what is
expressly required in section 35(3)(a) of the Constitution Of South
Africa. The conviction in the case of Hugo above
was set aside on the
basis that the accused was prejudiced, because evidence had been
admitted regarding allegations which did
not appear on the charge.
[11]
In
S
v
Ndlovu
[14]
,
the
Constitutional Court pointed out that the prosecutor's failure to
draft an accurate charge was unacceptable.
[12]
The purpose of a charge sheet is to
inform the accused of the nature of the charge against him
and
to
inform
the
court
accordingly
as
well.
This
enables
the
accused
to
prepare for
his
defence.
If
the
charge
was
unknown
to
the
prosecutor, he
should
have stated it. The charge should
disclose an offence.
[13]
Section 55 of the criminal law (sexual
offences and related matters Act 32 of 2007 stipulates that;
"any
person who attempts to commit
a
sexual offence in terms of this act
is guilty of an offence."
The
sexual offence has a corresponding meaning in terms of section 1 of
Act 32 of 2007 and it reads as follows;
"sexual
offence'
means
any offence in terms of Chapters
2,
3
and 4 and section
55
of this Act and any offence referred
to in Chapter 2 of the Prevention and Combating of Trafficking in
Persons Act, 2013, which
was
committed for sexual purposes;."
All
the prosecutor had to do was to choose the offence according to the
circumstances of the case, which offence the accused attempted
to
commit and state it on the charge sheet so that the Appellant would
know. But the prosecutor failed to do that.
[14]
In
Sv
Namzi
[15]
at
[39], Henney J and Loots AJ referred to the 'continuous carelessness
of prosecutors in drafting charge sheets and indictments'
in matters
involving the minimum sentence provisions in
Act
105 of 1997
.
In the present case, the court says that the prosecutor carelessly
drafted a charge sheet with an incomplete charge.
[15]
In
S
v Prinsloo
[2014]
ZASCA 96
(unreported, SCA case no 534/13, 15 July 2014)It has been
said that:
"when
a prosecutor drafts the charges, 'he is performing an important
public
...
task which can have significant consequences for the public at large
and especially for an accused".
See
Moodley
&
others
v
National
Director
of
Public
Prosecutions
&
others
[16]
at
[26]
and
Mahupelo
v Minister of Safety and Security
&
others
[17]
at
[130]. The importance of the prosecutorial task of identifying and
formulating the relevant charge(s) is highlighted by the fact
that a
conviction 'can only occur in respect of a charge on which an accused
is indicted, or a competent verdict in respect thereof'
(S
v
Barn
2020
(2) SACR 584
(WCC)
at [54]).
[16]
In
S
v Tyebela
[18]
,
Milne
JA stated at 29G-H:
'It
is a fundamental principle of our law and, indeed, of any civilised
society that an accused person is entitled to a fair trial.'
[17]
In this case, the question is whether,
where there has been an incomplete
charge,
it
can be
said
that
an
appellant
had
a
fair
trial.
The
appellant
had
a
right
to
know
what
charge
he
was facing, and not guess
what
kind
of
offence would be
on
such a different array of offences outlined in Chapters 2, 3 and 4 of
the Criminal Law(Sexual Offences and Related Matters Act
32 of 2007.
Where the state intends to choose upon
either of those offences in the
Act,
it would be
unfair for the accused
not
to
know which offence he
is
facing. A fair trial will generally
demand that the state's intention be brought to the attention of the
accused
at
the outset
of
the trial in the charge
sheet
so that
the
accused
is
placed
in
a position to appreciate the
charge appropriately that
he
faces
as well as
the
type
of
sentence that accompany such offence.
[18]
The regional magistrate found the
appellant "guilty as charged" without having amended the
charge. The evidence could
cure the defective charge, but the
evidence, in this case, does not cure the defect. There was not
enough evidence led for rape,
seeing that the appellant was already
discharged of the offence of sexual assault. The respondent conceded
that the charge was
defective, so
the
appellant's conviction should be set aside.
## Order
Order
[19]
As a result, the court orders as
follows:
1.
The appeal is upheld;
2.
The conviction and the sentence are set
aside.
M
MUNZHELELE
Judge
of the High Court
I
agree.
C
J VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
Judge
of the High Court
Heard
on: 25
October 2022
Electronically
Delivered: November
2022
Appearances:
For
the Appellant: Mr
H.L Alberts
Instructed
by: Legal
Aid South Africa
For
the Respondent: Adv.
S Lalane
Instructed
by: National
Prosecution Authority
[1]
(2017] ZACC 19
[2]
51 of 1977
[3]
60 of 2000
[4]
1976(4) SA 536 (A)
[5]
1958 (4) SA 320 (T)
[6]
1976 (3) SA 68(T)
[7]
32 of 2007
[8]
51 of 1977
[9]
2003 (1) SACR 13 (SCA)
[10]
2016 (2) SACR 611 (SCA)
[11]
2017 (2) SACR 27 (GJ)
[12]
2007 (2) SACR 245 (C)
[13]
2007 (2) SACR 23
(C)
[14]
2017 (2) SACR 305 (CC)
[15]
(unreported, wee case no 06/2017, 9 October 2018)
[16]
2008 (1) SACR 560 (N)
[17]
2017 (1) NR 275 (HC)
[18]
1989 (2) SA 22
(A}
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