Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 174South Africa
S v Afrikaner (36/24) [2024] ZAWCHC 174 (19 June 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## S v Afrikaner (36/24) [2024] ZAWCHC 174 (19 June 2024)
S v Afrikaner (36/24) [2024] ZAWCHC 174 (19 June 2024)
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sino date 19 June 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
[WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN]
Review
case no: 36/24
Ex
Hermanus Mag Crt: A2643/23
In the matter of:
THE
STATE
v
DONOVAN
AFRIKANER
REVIEW
JUDGMENT: 19 JUNE 2024
SHER, J (HENNEY J)
concurring:
1.
This matter comes before us on automatic
review. The accused was arraigned in the Hermanus magistrate’s
court on 2 charges,
each of which had an alternative. He was
convicted on both main counts and sentenced to a term of 24 months
imprisonment in respect
of the 1
st
charge and 6 months imprisonment in respect of the 2
nd
,
which were ordered to run concurrently.
2.
As will be apparent from the narrative
which ensues, the process that was followed in the trial and
conviction of the accused can
only be described as extraordinary and
highly irregular.
The facts
3.
The
accused was arrested on 4 September 2023 for allegedly breaching a
‘protection order’ which was granted in favour
of his
mother on 6 May 2022, in terms of the Domestic Violence Act (‘the
DVA’).
[1]
Amongst its
terms the order prohibited him from entering her residence in Hawston
and from damaging her property.
4.
Following his 1
st
appearance on 6 September 2023 the matter was remanded on several
occasions for a bail application and legal aid representation.
However, the accused subsequently indicated he no longer sought bail
and at his appearance on 21 November 2023 he informed the
magistrate
that he wished to represent himself, at which time the charges were
put to him.
5.
The 1
st
charge was that he had contravened s 17(1)(a) of the DVA by breaching
the protection order on 2 September 2023, in that he had
allegedly
entered the residence of his mother and had broken her kettle and
window. In the alternative thereto he was charged with
malicious
injury to his mother’s property. The 2
nd
charge alleged, in both the main and the alternative count, that on
the same date and at the same place he had assaulted his sister
with
intent to cause her grievous bodily harm, by kicking her on her back,
hitting her with his fists, and threatening to kill
her.
6.
In
its formulation the main count of the 2
nd
charge referred to the provisions of s 51(2) and Part 3 of Schedule 2
of the Criminal Law Amendment Act (‘the CLA’)
[2]
read with the provisions of ss 256 and 266 of the Criminal Procedure
Act (‘the CPA’)
[3]
and s 1 (the definitions section) of the DVA. As far as the
provisions of the CPA are concerned, s 256 provides that if the
evidence
in criminal proceedings does not prove the commission of the
offence with which an accused has been charged but merely an attempt
to do so, he may be convicted accordingly, and s 266 provides that if
the evidence does not prove the offence of assault with intent
to
commit grievous bodily harm but that of common assault, an accused
may be convicted thereof.
7.
Section 51(2) and Part 3 of Schedule 2 of
the CLA are so-called minimum sentence provisions. They provide that
a person convicted
of an offence which is listed in Part 3 will be
liable to a prescribed minimum sentence of not less than 15, 20 or 25
years imprisonment
depending on whether they are 1
st
,
2
nd
or
3
rd
time offenders. However, although assault with intent to commit
grievous bodily harm is one of the offences which is listed in
Part
3, it only attracts a prescribed minimum sentence when it is
committed on a child who is under the age of 16.
8.
In this regard the charge was nonsensical.
It alleged that the accused’s sister was a child under the age
of 16 years ‘to
wit 17’ (sic) at the time, and that the
age difference between the accused and his sister was more than 4
years. Given the
averment that the accused’s sister was 17
years of age at the time of the offence, the minimum sentence
provisions referred
to in Part 3 were therefore not applicable to him
and the charge was not a competent one.
9.
As an alternative thereto the accused was
charged with common law assault with intent to do grievous bodily
harm, without any reference
to any of the aforesaid statutory
provisions.
10.
Although the intricacies pertaining to the
main count of the 2
nd
charge were not explained to the accused, he was asked to confirm
that he understood the charges as they were presented. In response
he
said that he intended to plead not guilty in respect of all the
charges. However, on being questioned by the magistrate it was
evident that he did not appreciate the distinction between the
various charges, so the magistrate put them to him again, without
explaining them, at which time the accused indicated that he wished
to plead not guilty to the main count in respect of the 1
st
charge, but guilty to the alternative, and guilty to both the main
and the alternative counts in respect of the 2
nd
charge.
11.
The magistrate did not ascertain from the
prosecutor whether the state was prepared to accept the accused’s
plea as tendered
on any of the charges, and did not enquire whether
the accused was prepared to submit an explanation in respect of his
plea of
not guilty (in terms of s 115 of the CPA) or inform him that
he could be questioned (in terms of s 112(1)(b)) in respect of the
charges to which he had pleaded guilty. Instead of following the
well-established procedures set out in these provisions the
magistrate
directed the state to proceed with evidence in relation to
the first charge, whereupon the accused’s mother was called to
the witness stand. The magistrate informed the accused that after she
had given evidence in chief, he would have an opportunity
to ask her
any questions that he wanted. He did not inform the accused that,
insofar as he differed from the evidence that was
to be led, he had a
duty to contest it, or that he had a duty to put his version.
12.
The accused’s mother confirmed that
she had obtained the protection order which was referred to in the
charge-sheet, against
the accused. She was however not asked to
confirm that a copy of it had been served on him or that he was
otherwise aware of it.
From the documents that were received by the
court it appears that only a copy of the interim order which was
issued on 8 April
2022 was served on the accused, on 19 April 2022,
and there is no indication that the final order which was granted on
6 May 2022
was served on him.
13.
As to the incidents which gave rise to the
charges it was evident, from the outset of her evidence, that the
accused’s mother
was at a friend’s house at the time and
did not witness or have personal knowledge of the accused’s
alleged breaches
of the protection order. She said she was informed
by her daughter (who came to her whilst she was at her friend’s
house)
that she had found the accused in her home, and he had kicked
the kettle thereby breaking it, and had ‘beaten’ her.
14.
Although this evidence was clearly hearsay
evidence of an incriminating nature and, as such, should not simply
have been admitted
unless there was an indication by the prosecutor
that the source thereof i.e. the accused’s sister, on whom the
probative
value of the evidence depended, would be called, the
magistrate simply allowed it to go in without demur.
15.
The accused’s mother said that after
her daughter had made a report to her in relation to the incident the
accused had arrived
and had started swearing at her, whereupon the
police were summoned. According to the accused’s mother the
side of her daughter’s
face was ‘swollen’ because
‘she was beaten’. Notwithstanding the possible hearsay or
otherwise inadmissible
nature of this evidence insofar as it related
to the reason which was given for her daughter’s allegedly
swollen face, it
was not placed in issue and was simply allowed
without a query by the magistrate.
16.
As far as the alleged damage to her
property was concerned the accused’s mother said that on her
return home a day later,
she found that the handle of the bathroom
window was broken, and the accused had put his hand through the
window. When the prosecutor
asked her how she knew this she said she
had been told this by her neighbour. Once again, this hearsay
evidence was allowed by
the magistrate without obtaining any
indication from the prosecutor that the source thereof (the
neighbour) would be called to
confirm it.
17.
At the conclusion of her evidence in chief
the magistrate indicated that the accused could cross-examine her. At
the outset the
accused attempted to put to her that she had not been
at home at the time of the alleged incident and when he had seen her
at her
friend’s house she was under the influence of alcohol,
but the court repeatedly intervened in this line of questioning,
which
was then abandoned. The magistrate then allowed the
cross-examination to meander into an attempt, by the accused, to
canvass the
underlying family issues between him and his mother
rather than to focus on the evidence which she gave. Although the
magistrate
did ask the accused, on more than one occasion, whether he
had any questions in relation to the charges, he did not inform the
accused that he was required to put his case to his mother in
relation to what had occurred between him and his sister. The nearest
that the accused came to dealing with the charges was when he put to
his mother that he did not break the kettle and that his sister
had
done so when she threw it to the floor, which he claimed had resulted
in his feet being burnt, which his mother was unable
to respond to.
The accused did indicate that he had broken the bathroom window and
his mother said that she had replaced the pane
and had bought a new
kettle, and the accused had given her his bank card so that she could
reimburse herself for these expenses.
She had however not drawn any
money from the accused’s account for this.
18.
At the conclusion of her evidence the
prosecutor asked for the matter to be postponed so that she could
call a witness who was 17
years of age. In all likelihood this was an
indication that the state intended to call the accused’s
sister. The matter was
consequently remanded to 29 November 2023 for
further trial, at which time the prosecutor indicated that she was no
longer intending
to call any further witnesses in respect of the 1
st
charge and was closing the state’s case, and requested that the
matter be finalised in terms of s 112(1)(b) of the CPA i.e.
that the
court should question the accused in order to determine whether he
admitted all the necessary elements of the charges
to which he had
pleaded guilty. On what basis the prosecutor sought to invoke the
provision is not apparent. It is of application
at the time when an
accused first pleads guilty to an offence with which they are
charged, and the prosecutor accepts their plea.
It does not find
application when a prosecutor seemingly does not accept a guilty plea
and chooses to present evidence to prove
a case against the accused.
In such instances the court is required to determine whether the
evidence which is placed before it
by the state, together with any
evidence that may be produced by the accused, justifies a conviction
on the charge(s).
19.
The magistrate did not proceed to invoke s
112(1)(b) and informed the accused that he should address the court
as to whether, in
his ‘opinion’, the evidence which had
been presented on the charge was sufficient to justify a conviction.
Thus, it
appears that the magistrate requested the accused to address
him as to whether the state had made out a sufficient case for him
not to be discharged, in terms of s 174 of the CPA. In doing so the
magistrate did not draw to the accused’s attention that
the
state’s case was based entirely on hearsay evidence which had
not been corroborated by the sources thereof. In response
the accused
indicated that he had no submissions to make, whereupon the
prosecutor submitted that the accused’s mother had
‘testified
clearly’ to the offence that the accused had been charged with,
and the accused had not given any ‘rebutting
evidence’.
Given that the court was dealing with the issue of whether discharge
should be granted at the close of the state’s
case, the
statement that the accused had not given any rebutting evidence was
nonsensical. Notwithstanding this and notwithstanding
that the
evidence the state sought to rely on was largely inadmissible as it
was uncorroborated hearsay evidence, and without affording
the
accused an opportunity to reply to the state’s submissions, the
magistrate proceeded to deliver an
ex
tempore
judgment in which he held that,
upon a consideration of the evidence which was presented by the
complainant and the ‘evidence’
which had been presented
by the accused ‘under oath’, in which he had admitted to
all the allegations that had been
made by his mother, he was guilty
of breaching the protection order as charged, on the first charge. In
this regard he found that
the accused had breached the conditions
which were imposed in the protection order by entering his mother’s
residence and
breaking her kettle and window.
20.
Bizarrely, despite the accused having
pleaded to all the charges a while earlier, and despite having found
him guilty on the main
count in respect of the 1
st
charge, the magistrate then proceeded to ask the accused whether he
was pleading guilty or not guilty on the alternative count
thereto,
whereupon the prosecutor again asked the magistrate to apply the
provisions of s 112(1)(b).
21.
Given that the accused had already been
found guilty on the main count of the 1
st
charge this was wholly inappropriate. The magistrate did not
immediately proceed to question the accused in terms of the aforesaid
provision but asked the prosecutor to re-put the alternative count to
the accused (to which he had previously pleaded not guilty)
for a 2
nd
time and directed the accused to plead to it again. Once again, the
accused entered a plea of not guilty. The magistrate then proceeded
to direct a series of questions to him in terms of s 112(1)(b) in
relation to the alternative count. During this exchange the accused
stated that whilst he was at his mother’s residence his sister
had arrived and started shouting and swearing at him. She
also
allegedly referred to his child, who had been born HIV-positive, in
disparaging terms. The accused said this made him angry
and he struck
her with his fist, whereupon she took the kettle and threw it on the
floor and ran out of the house. He followed
her to the place where
his mother was drinking with a friend, and an argument ensued between
them. The accused then left and went
to live elsewhere for a few days
during which time he was attacked and stabbed by a group of unknown
assailants. He was arrested
by the police a few days later, at which
time he was also allegedly assaulted by them.
22.
After considering what the accused told him
the magistrate was not satisfied that he had properly admitted to all
the elements of
the charge and he consequently altered the accused’s
plea to one of not guilty and directed the prosecutor to present
evidence
in respect thereof, whereupon the prosecutor proceeded to
recall the accused’s mother to give evidence for a 2
nd
time, even though, as previously pointed out she had no personal,
first-hand knowledge of the events which gave rise to either
of the
charges and had not witnessed the accused damaging her property or
assaulting his sister. No surprise then that, when she
was asked, at
the commencement of her second testimony, what had happened on the
day, she said that she had not been at home at
the time and had
simply been told certain things by her daughter.
23.
At this point the court adjourned for
a few minutes. On resumption of proceedings the prosecutor again
pointed out that the accused
had already been found guilty on the
main count of the 1
st
charge. Notwithstanding the reminder the magistrate allowed the
accused’s mother to continue to give evidence, at which time,
instead of eliciting admissible evidence she again referred to
certain hearsay intimations which had been imparted to her by her
daughter and a neighbour. When asked by the magistrate whether she
personally knew anything about the kettle and the window she
said
that she had not seen the accused damage or break either of them. How
the magistrate could have asked the accused’s
mother this after
finding that the accused had broken the kettle and the window, when
convicting him on the main count, is beyond
comprehension.
Understandably, given this evidence the accused had no questions in
further cross-examination, whereupon the state
again reminded the
magistrate that the accused had already been found guilty on the main
count of the 1
st
charge and proceeded to close its case, for a 2
nd
time.
24.
The magistrate then informed the accused
(for the 1
st
time) that he had the right to give evidence. The accused elected not
to testify. The magistrate then proceeded to deliver a judgment
on
the alternative count to the 1
st
charge, notwithstanding that he had already convicted the accused on
the main count thereto, in which he held that the elements
of the
offence had not been established and acquitted the accused.
25.
Thereafter, the magistrate proceeded to
direct the state to present evidence on the 2
nd
charge. Before the prosecutor did so he directed that the main count
of the 2
nd
charge be put to the accused again and required him to plead to it
for a 2
nd
time. After the accused again entered a plea of guilty thereto
the magistrate sought to question him again in terms of s
112(1)(b).
In response the accused largely repeated what he had previously said
i.e. that whilst he was at his mother’s house
his sister
arrived and they became embroiled in an argument, as a result of
which he struck his sister on her neck. But this time
he added that
he had also kicked in her back, whereupon she threw the kettle at
him. He said he knew that it was wrong for him
to hit her, but he had
not caused her any injuries.
26.
Upon completion of the questioning the
magistrate proceeded to deliver yet another judgment, which was all
of a paragraph long,
in which he held that he was satisfied that the
accused admitted all the elements of the offence of which had been
charged on the
main count in respect of the 2
nd
charge i.e. assault with intent to commit grievous bodily harm, read
with the relevant statutory provisions previously referred
to.
27.
From the transcript it appears that the
magistrate made no finding or determination in open court, during the
proceedings, in respect
of the alternative count on the 2
nd
charge. However, it appears from the J15 that he initially
recorded on 29 November 2023 that he had also found the accused
guilty on the alternative count to the 2
nd
charge, which he then ‘immediately corrected’ by drawing
a line through it.
28.
Upon the conclusion of the proceedings in
respect of conviction the state proceeded to prove the accused’s
previous convictions.
These included a conviction some 10 years ago
on a charge of malicious injury to property, and convictions of
breaching a protection
order in November 2022 and March 2023, for
which the accused received a suspended sentence of 6 months
imprisonment and a sentence
of 90 days imprisonment, respectively.
After eliciting the accused’s personal circumstances the
magistrate then sentenced
him to 24 months imprisonment on the 1
st
charge and 6 months imprisonment on the second, which were ordered to
run concurrently.
An assessment
29.
As is evident from what has been set out,
several gross and material irregularities occurred in the arraignment
of the accused.
30.
Instead of applying the established
processes which are provided for in ss 112 and 115 of the CPA, in a
holistic, single exercise
at the time when the accused was first
called upon to plead, and without even ascertaining from the state
whether it was prepared
to accept the accused’s plea to any of
the charges, the magistrate diverted therefrom and directed that the
trial take place
in a piecemeal and haphazard fashion.
31.
Immediately after the accused pleaded to
the charges the magistrate instructed the state to produce evidence
on the 1
st
charge only. In the process he allowed the state to elicit
incriminating evidence against the accused, which was inadmissible,
in that it was entirely of a hearsay nature and there was no
indication that it would be confirmed by the original sources
thereof.
Thereafter, he invited the accused to make submissions
pertaining to a possible discharge on the 1
st
charge even though there was no admissible evidence on which he could
properly be convicted, and even though discharge proceedings
only
take place at the conclusion of the state’s case in respect of
all the charges which an accused is facing.
32.
He then proceeded to convict the accused on
the main count of that charge, on the basis that his guilt had been
proven by the hearsay
evidence which had been given by his mother and
the ‘evidence’ which he had given ‘under oath’,
in which
he had supposedly admitted to the elements of the charge,
when he had in fact not testified and the proceedings were concerned
with an application for discharge.
33.
Then, notwithstanding that he had already
convicted the accused on the main count, he proceeded to direct the
prosecutor to put
up evidence pertaining to the alternative thereto,
and required the accused to re-plead to it for a 2
nd
time, and again allowed the witness who had previously testified, to
be recalled and to give evidence on aspects on which she was
unable
to provide any direct, admissible evidence. He then proceeded to
deliver a 2
nd
judgment (in respect of the same charge) in which he acquitted the
accused on the alternative count thereto before directing the
state
to present evidence on the 2
nd
charge and requiring the accused to plead to it again.
34.
He then again purported to apply the
provisions of s112(1)(b) of the CPA, before delivering a 3
rd
judgment, in which he held, in a single paragraph, that the accused
was guilty on the main count of the 2
nd
charge, as charged. As previously pointed out, the main count was
defective in that, although in its formulation it made reference
to
various provisions of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act
of
1997
pertaining to prescribed minimum
sentences these were not applicable as the victim of the alleged
assault was not a child under
the age of 16, according to the
charge-sheet itself. The accused was never asked about his sister’s
age and no evidence was
tendered by the state in this regard and he
could accordingly not be convicted on this count on this basis.
35.
Another reason why he could not be found
guilty ‘as charged’ on this count is that he was never
asked whether he intended
to inflict grievous bodily harm to his
sister during his initial questioning in terms of
s112(1)(b)
and he
made no admissions to this effect. Likewise, although when he was
questioned again he seemingly admitted to having assaulted
his sister
by striking her on her neck and kicking her, after she had provoked
him, nothing in the exchange between him and the
magistrate indicated
that in doing so he ever had any intention to inflict grievous bodily
harm, or to plead guilty to such a charge,
and no admissible,
first-hand evidence pertaining to any injuries which his sister may
have sustained was tendered. In fact, the
accused claimed that she
had not sustained any injuries at all. Although according to the
accused’s mother her daughter’s
face was ‘swollen’,
the accused claimed he had struck her in the neck, and whether the
alleged swelling of one side
of her face was in fact sustained in the
incident was therefore unclear. In the circumstances, at best the
accused could possibly
have been convicted of common assault, as it
was a competent verdict.
36.
There is a further problem with the trial
and conviction of the accused on this count. As indicated previously,
in terms of
s 51(2)(b)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, an
accused
who is convicted of an offence in terms of
Part 3
of Schedule 2 of
the CLA becomes liable to a prescribed minimum sentence. But in terms
of the section that sentence can only be
imposed by a regional court
or a High Court, and a magistrate’s court does not have the
jurisdiction to do so. It seems to
me that, in seeking to arraign the
accused on a charge formulated in terms of the section read with
Part
3
of Schedule 2, the state therefore sought to try the accused before
a court which did not have the necessary jurisdiction, as far
as the
charge, as formulated, was concerned. But even if the court did
have jurisdiction to try the accused on the charge,
having found him
guilty thereof the magistrate did not have the power to impose an
appropriate sentence on him, as required and
prescribed by the
section, and was required to refer the matter to the regional court
for this purpose.
37.
Then, to compound the irregularity it
appears from the J15 that the accused was also convicted on the
alternative count to the 2
nd
charge, albeit not in open court and in his presence, a conviction
which was then scrapped or reversed by the magistrate, as an
‘immediate correction’.
38.
A magistrate does not ordinarily have the
power to scrap or reverse a conviction that he/she has wrongly
entered against an accused:
that is something only a higher court can
do, as he is considered to be
functus
officio
i.e. to have discharged the
powers he has to convict or to acquit, once he has pronounced on an
accused’s guilt.
39.
It
is so that in terms of
s 176
of the CPA where ‘by mistake’
a ‘wrong judgment’ is ‘delivered’ in a
criminal matter, it may
be ‘amended’ immediately after it
is recorded.
[4]
But as is
evident from the transcript, the magistrate never formally pronounced
upon the alternative count to the 2
nd
charge during the course of any of the 3 judgments he rendered and it
is therefore doubtful whether he could ‘correct’
the
conviction he noted outside of court, in terms of this provision.
40.
In
Wells,
[5]
s 176
was held by the Appellate Division to afford a presiding
officer in a criminal matter the power of
explicare
et amendare
in relation to a judgment that has been delivered i.e. the power to
explain what might be obscure or unclear in the judgment and,
in
doing so, to correct the wording thereof where necessary, provided
that the substance and tenor of the judgment is preserved.
Thus, this
power has commonly been exercised to correct patent typographical or
grammatical errors or word choices or obvious omissions,
or to
clarify ‘obscure formulations’.
[6]
41.
Recently,
in
Tuta
[7]
the Constitutional Court
narrowed the ambit of this power of correction. It pointed out that
as an accused is entitled to know
the reasons upon which a court
relied to convict him, these should accordingly be clearly and
precisely formulated, so that he/she
is able to consider the merits
of the court’s decision, with a view to exercising the right to
a possible appeal, if warranted.
Consequently, an accused must be
able to rely on the reasons which are given in the judgment, as they
reflect the curial pronouncement
of the court’s authority, and
these should be made known in open court, in his presence. As a
result, a person who is convicted
of an offence should not be
required to suffer ‘
ex
post
reformulations’ (sic) or explanations which the presiding
officer considers, on reflection, to best express the reasons for
finding as he/she did. The CC held that therefore, whereas revisions
in respect of ‘infelicities of style, grammar, spelling
and
word choice’ in judgments that are handed down
ex
tempore
in criminal matters, may be permitted afterwards, the reasons given
by the court in its judgment may not be altered or embellished
to
give further expression to what the court meant to convey.
42.
On the face of it the deletion of the
finding of guilty on the alternative count to the 2
nd
charge does not appear to amount to a correction of the kind
envisaged in either
Wells
or
Tuta.
It
was clearly not the correction of a typographical or grammatical
error or unfortunate word choice, or of an obscure formulation.
The
only way it could qualify is if one considers it to have been an
attempt to correct a patent error that was made, in noting
that the
accused had been found guilty on this count, instead of recording
that the accused was found not guilty, as he had already
been found
guilty on the main count. The difficulty that I have with such a
construction is that it is evident from the transcript
that the
magistrate never formally pronounced on the alternative count to the
2
nd
charge, at any time during the proceedings. Such a construction may
have been tenable it the magistrate had, upon convicting the
accused
on the main count to the 2
nd
charge, or at any time before sentence, informed the accused that he
had found him not guilty on the alternative. Then it would
have been
clear that the ‘correction’ which was made on the J15 was
made simply to bring the record in line with the
finding that was
made in open court.
43.
But, even if one accepts this as an
explanation for what happened, the difficulty I have is that the
‘conviction’ on
this charge was deleted or scrapped by
the magistrate, in the absence of the accused. This was contrary to
the provisions of
ss 152
and
158
of the CPA which require that,
except where otherwise provided for by the Act, criminal proceedings
must take place in open court
and in the presence of the accused.
Neither the error in recording a ‘conviction’ on the
alternative count to the 2
nd
charge nor the ‘correction’ thereof were disclosed or
made known to the accused, in proceedings in open court. In my
view
what was done therefore also amounted to an irregularity. In any
event, as is evident, the accused was impermissibly subjected
to a
piecemeal process in which he was required to plead repeatedly to
charges he had previously pleaded to, and was subjected
more than
once to questioning, purportedly in terms of
s 112(1)(b)
of the CPA.
He was wrongly convicted on the first charge on the basis that he had
testified, when he had never given evidence at
all, and when the
evidence which had been tendered was inadmissible evidence that had
no value. On the second charge he was convicted
on the main count as
charged, when the charge as formulated was defective and the evidence
did not substantiate it.
Conclusion
44.
In my view the numerous, egregious
irregularities in the process which was adopted resulted in a trial
which was manifestly irregular
and unfair, contrary to the accused’s
constitutional rights to a fair trial in terms of s 35 of the
Constitution, and it
would constitute an abject failure of justice
were the convictions to be allowed to stand.
45.
This
is a most unfortunate state of affairs given the admissions which
were made by the accused during the course of the repeated
questionings to which he was subjected by the magistrate in relation
to both charges, but in my view the proceedings as a whole
were
vitiated cumulatively by the irregularities that have been
highlighted. In the interests of the due and proper administration
of
justice it is important that the necessary corrective measures be
applied, in order to ensure that criminal proceedings in magistrate’s
courts adhere to due and proper process. In this regard in
Thebus
[8]
the Constitutional Court pointed out that the concept of a fair trial
is not limited to ensuring fairness to an accused but must
also have
regard for the interests of society and the administration of
justice.
46.
In the result I would make an order setting
aside both the convictions and the sentences imposed. I would also
order that a copy
of the judgment be sent to the Chief Magistrate for
the district of Hermanus.
M
SHER
Judge
of the High Court
(Signature
appended digitally)
I
agree, and it is so ordered.
R
HENNEY
Judge
of the High Court
[1]
Act
116 of 1998.
[2]
Act
105 of 1997.
[3]
Act
51 of 1977.
[4]
Section
298 of the CPA similarly provides that in instances where a wrong
sentence is passed ‘by mistake’ it may be amended.
[5]
S v
Wells
[1990] 2 All SA 1(A)
at 820E-F
[6]
Tuta v
S
2024
(1) SACR (CC) para 123.
[7]
Id
para
61.
[8]
Thebus
v S
[2003] ZACC 12
;
2003 (6) SA 505
(CC) para 107.
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