Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 40South Africa
Bless v S (A234/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 40 (15 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
15 February 2023
Headnotes
the appellant was already under arrest. According to his testimony, the appellant was arrested on 02 September 2017. [10] Ms Jones testified that the investigating officer of the case gave her information that contained the photograph number of the appellant,
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Bless v S (A234/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 40 (15 February 2023)
Bless v S (A234/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 40 (15 February 2023)
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sino date 15 February 2023
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Republic of South
Africa
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case No: A234/2022
Before: The Hon Mr
Justice Binns-Ward
The Hon Ms Justice
Nziweni
Hearing: 3 February 2023
Judgment: 15 February
2023
In
the matter between:
AYANDA
BLESS
Appellant
v
THE
STATE
Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
NZIWENI J (BINNS-WARD
J concurring):
[1]
The appellant was convicted on a charge of murder in the Regional
Court. He was sentenced
to 10 years’ imprisonment. The trial
court granted the appellant leave to appeal to this Court. The appeal
is against conviction
only. The appeal raises a number of issues,
most of them linked to the incriminating identification evidence
adduced at the trial.
[2]
The state’s evidence was to the following effect: On 29 July
2017, at 12h45,
a certain Ms P[...] was in the company of the
deceased. They were standing next to a motor vehicle about a
metre and a half
apart from each other. They were approached by
two males. The witness did not pay much attention to them. She
only
took particular notice of them when they were right in front of
her. The two males were unknown to her, as she had only very recently
come to live in the area.
[3]
One of the males walked up to the deceased and stabbed him three
times with an okapi
knife. When the assailant was stabbing the
deceased, he was facing away from Ms P[...]. After the man had
stabbed the deceased,
he and his companion went past her, and she got
an opportunity to look at them. The witness estimated that from
the time
she noticed the two males for the first time to the time the
assailant went to stab the deceased and then walked past her spanned
a matter of minutes. She testified that she saw the facial
features of the two males and noticed that the assailant had a
scar.
[4]
She then went to alert Ms M[...], a relative of the deceased, who was
asleep at the
time. After she had woken M[...] up, she went to call
the police. When she returned with the police, the deceased was
lying
on the ground on his stomach at a corner, close to his house
[the deceased’s house], six to seven metres away from the spot
where he had been stabbed. She heard M[...] asking the deceased
who had stabbed him and the deceased saying “S[...],
I was
stabbed by Hagwana.”
[5]
Ms P[...] made a written statement to the police on the day of
the incident.
She told them that she was not in able to identify the
person who had stabbed the deceased. She gave the police a
detailed
description of the clothing the assailant was wearing but
did not tell them about the scar.
[6]
Subsequent to the stabbing incident, she saw the assailant in the
area again on two
separate occasions, however, she could not recall
when they were. She was not sure whether she saw him again within a
week or a
month later, but it was after the burial of the deceased.
On the first occasion, she saw the assailant standing in the
street
and the second time she saw him standing close to another
house. Under cross-examination, she testified that on the occasions
she
sighted the assailant again, it was somewhere between end of
September and October 2017 and she also saw him again around November
2017. She denied a proposition by the appellant’s attorney that
the appellant had been in custody at those times.
[7]
The police later approached Ms P[...] and enquired if she would be
able to point out
the assailant at an identification parade.
She indicated that she would be in a position to do so. In February
2018, she
was then taken to the police station for a photo
identification parade. She unhesitatingly pointed out the
appellant at the
photo identification parade, as the person who
stabbed the deceased. Despite the fact that the witness
testified that one
of the distinguishing characteristics of the
appellant’s appearance was a facial scar, the scar was not
discernible on the
photograph of the appellant used in the photo
identification parade. It follows that the witness’s
ability to unhesitatingly
point out the appellant must have been
founded on a far more detailed assimilation of his facial features
than the presence of
a scar. Having regard the opportunity for
observation implicit in her description of the commission of the
crime, that was
unsurprising.
[8]
Ms M[...]
testified that she was woken up from her sleep by Ms
P[...] telling her that the deceased had been stabbed. When she
arrived
where the deceased was lying, she asked him who had stabbed
him. The deceased responded twice and told her that he was stabbed by
“Hagwana” and he then passed away. She testified that she
knew the appellant as Hagwana and that he had a history of
hostility
with the deceased.
[9]
According to the investigating officer,
Mr. Mvunelo,
he had
been stationed in the area in question for many years and there was
only one person Hagwana in the area, namely the appellant.
He
confirmed that when the identity parade was held the appellant was
already under arrest. According to
his
testimony, the appellant was arrested on 02 September 2017.
[10]
Ms Jones
testified that the investigating officer of the case gave her
information that contained the photograph number of the appellant,
his age, race and the case number. When she punched that
information on the system, it gave her photos of males with the
same
age group and race as the appellant. She then compiled an album
for the identity parade. A photograph identity
parade was
conducted. The cross-examination of the state witnesses did not
call the probity of the conduct of the identification
parade into
question.
[11]
When the appellant took the witness stand he denied all the
allegations levelled against him
and claimed to have been at a
traditional ceremony being conducted at his father’s house at
the time. The appellant’s
sister testified in his defence. She
stated that she did not know when the deceased was killed; she was
informed the day after
they had conducted a traditional ceremony that
the appellant killed someone the day before. On the day of the
traditional
ceremony she was sitting at a neighbour’s stoep.
She was not watching the appellant the whole time. She wouldn’t
know if the appellant had left their place. It was her testimony that
they no longer call the appellant “Hagwana”.
Hagwana had
been a childhood nickname for the appellant which people no longer
used.
[12]
The case of the State centred upon the testimony of Ms P[...].
It is now established that, even though the
evidence of identification and of a single witness should be
approached with caution,
however, exercise of caution should not
displace the exercise of common sense. The submission made on
behalf of the appellant
that Ms P[...] only saw the assailant for a
brief moment, is not borne out by the evidence. She saw him
approaching, she
watched the stabbing take place at close quarters
and she continued to watch as the assailant walked away after the
attack.
Her observation took place in broad daylight. All
of that would not happen within an instant. Ms P[...]’s
observation
of the appellant cannot be described as a fleeting glance
or one fraught with difficult conditions.
[13]
Ms P[...]’s testimony demonstrates that at the time of the
incident she took in important
and small details. For instance, she
observed that the assailant opened a 15-centimetre long knife, in
front of the deceased. She
also gave account as to how many times the
deceased was stabbed, and where the stab wounds were inflicted. Her
evidence also reveals
that she also observed the assailant closing
the okapi knife, after the stabbing. She could also discern the
features of the knife
which was used to stab the deceased.
[14]
It was also her testimony that she was able to see the facial
features of the men who approached
her and the deceased. Similarly,
she was able to describe the appellant’s special facial feature
[the scar] and when she
made her police statement she described in
detail what the appellant was wearing. Clearly, she could
hardly have known about
the scar of the appellant unless she had been
in close proximity to him.
[15]
One further important factor relevant to the identification of the
appellant is the dying declaration
of the deceased as declared to
Ms M[...]. Besides the fact that the dying declaration
identifies “Hagwana” as
the offender, it demonstrates the
trustworthiness of Ms P[...]’s identification.
[16]
As to the name Hagwana, the investigating officer and Ms M[...],
confirmed that the appellant
was known as Hagwana in the local
community. The defence version regarding the use of the name
Hagwana, as far as the appellant
is concerned, has been controverted
by more than one State witness. For that matter, Ms P[...]’s
identification of the
appellant supports the evidence that the
appellant is still known as Hagwana. Surely, it cannot be a
coincidence that Ms P[...]
fingers the appellant as the offender
and the name Hagwana, which happens to be the name of the appellant,
is linked to the dying
declaration; and on top of that, it so happens
that the appellant bears some form of a grudge against the deceased.
Equally,
in the circumstances of this case it is not
remotely probable that in the vicinity of Hout Bay, there would be
two men with the
same name and same scar and same hat. Inasmuch the
appellant sought to attribute the name issue to a mere coincidence,
it would
really be highly improbable that the person who stabbed the
deceased coincidentally happened to have the same name and a scar as
the appellant.
[17]
In the circumstances, the dying declaration evidence is an objective
fact that strengthens the
identification evidence and dispels any
risk of mistake. There is no reason why the dying declaration should
not be taken into
account when assessing the reliability of
Ms P[...]’s testimony.
[18]
In the appellant’s heads of argument much is made of the fact
that no evidence was lead
in court to describe the scar on the
appellant’s face or even if the appellant had any visible
scar. It is very crucial
to note that, during the trial it was
mentioned that the appellant has a scar on his face which also played
a prominent role in
his identification. Moreover, during the
trial, it was never asserted that the appellant did not have the scar
that Ms P[...]
ascribed to him. The evidence of Ms P[...]
on this aspect, did not meet with any serious challenge in
cross-examination
nor was it rebutted by the appellant when he
testified. In this regard, and as things stand, the evidence of
the scar remains
unchallenged.
[19]
Furthermore, as rightly observed on behalf of the appellant that
P[...] initially said to the
police that she would not be in a
position to identify the man she had seen stabbing the deceased. It
was argued that this went
directly to Ms P[...]’s
credibility and reliability. In the context of this case it is really
difficult to see how this
aspect affected the reliability or cast
doubt on P[...]’s identification. The fact that Ms P[...] was
recorded as stating
that she could not identify the assailant does
not detract from her subsequent identification of the appellant.
Contextually,
her statement could be understood to convey that
she did not know who the assailant was. That was indeed the
effect of her
testimony in court.
[20]
In
S v Mpilo
2021 (1) SACR 661
(WCC) at paragraph 23, the
court (Rogers J, Binns-Ward J concurring) in dealing with criticism
of identificatory evidence,
stated following:
“
The
appellant’s counsel criticised the identificatory evidence
because the witnesses had not mentioned the features of the
driver’s
face which had caused them to identify him with the appellant. Now I
know that points of this kind are often raised
in criminal trials but
I am not much impressed by them. It is not often that a face presents
itself with one, let alone two or
more, remarkable features.
Nevertheless, human beings are highly adept at recognising faces and
voices. A constellation of multiple
minor variations in standard
facial features combine to make up a facial appearance which in its
own way is as unique as a fingerprint.
The laborious process followed
by identikit artists in teasing out from a witness the facial
features of a perpetrator shows that
people can readily match a face
to a perpetrator without being able to verbalise a description.”
See also
S v Bam
[2020] 4 All SA 21
(WCC);
2020 (2) SACR 584
(WCC) at footnote 7 to
para 16.
[21]
Notably, the evidence shows that Ms P[...] was able to pick out
the appellant, without any
hesitation, at the identification parade.
The identity parade did put the reliability of Ms P[...]’s
identification
to test. It follows that, the identification of the
appellant during the identification parade, provided further
supporting material
as it enhanced the reliability of Ms P[...]’s
identification. It provided an assurance of reliability; cf.
S
v Mthetwa
1972 (3) SA 766
(A) at 768A-C.
[22]
There was, as discussed, ample additional evidence supporting the
reliability of Ms P[...]’s
identification. There was thus
no reason for the court a
quo
to not accept Ms P[...]’s
evidence; whether as to the scar, or her later sightings of the
appellant. As to the
latter, it was immaterial that the witness
may have been incorrect as to the months in which subsequently saw
the appellant.
She would have had no reason to remember the
dates.
[23]
The appellant’s alibi defence had to be considered by the court
with regard to the totality
of the evidence; see
R v Hlongwane
1959 (3) SA 337
(A) at 341A, where Holmes AJA said “The correct
approach is to consider the alibi in the light of the totality of the
evidence
in the case, and the Court’s impressions of the
witnesses.” The learned judge endorsed the observation by
Greenberg
JA in
R v Biya
1952 (4) SA 406
(A) at 521 “
...
if on all the evidence there is a reasonable possibility that this
alibi evidence is true it means that there is the same possibility
that he has not committed the crime
”. The evidence of
the appellant’s sister did not exclude the possibility of his
involvement in the commission
of the crime, whereas the combined
effect of the reliability of the identification evidence of
Ms P[...], the dying declaration
made to Ms M[...] and the
evidence of the investigating officer confirming that the appellant
had long been known to him by the
name Hagwana – contradicting
the assertions of the appellant and his sister to the contrary -
justified the magistrate’s
rejection of the appellant’s
alibi defence as not reasonably possibly true. Furthermore the
reasonable possibility
that another person called Hagwana could have
been the person named in the deceased’s dying declaration was
excluded when
regard is had, in the context of the totality of the
evidence, to the unchallenged evidence concerning the history of
violent hostility
between the appellant and the deceased.
[24]
At this juncture it is appropriate to say something about the general
handling of evidence dealing
with the dying declaration, by the trial
court. In this regard we are grateful for the careful and detailed
written submissions
made by counsel for both parties in respect of
the admissibility of the dying declaration in response to our request
for additional
argument on the point.
[25]
Counsel correctly identified that the trial court’s regard to
the dying declaration as
evidence supporting the state’s case
was unexceptionable having regard to approach by this Court in close
comparable circumstances
in
S v Sigcawu
2022 (1) SACR 77
(WCC). Mr Strauss, for the appellant, rightly stressed,
however, that the admissibility of the evidence and its probative
value were quite separate considerations. I have already
addressed the weight that the trial court quite appropriately gave
to
the evidence and nothing more needs be said about that.
[26]
The manner in which the trial court dealt with the dying declaration
evidence was unsatisfactory,
however. A dying declaration is
hearsay evidence, and the admission of such evidence is regulated by
s 3 of the Law
of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988. (The
common law exception concerning the exception from the hearsay rule
of dying declarations
was abolished in terms of the repeal of
s 223
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
by
s 9
of Act 45 of 1988.)
In the current case, the prosecutor correctly forewarned the court
before he adduced the evidence concerning
the dying declaration that
he would be introducing evidence of a hearsay nature. He in
effect was alerting the magistrate
and the appellant’s legal
representative that a ruling in terms of s 3 of Evidence
Amendment Act would be required.
[27]
As it happened, the appellant’s legal representative indicated
an initial inclination to
object to the admissibility of the
evidence, but requested, and was granted, an adjournment to consider
her position. When
the trial resumed on a later date, nothing
further was said on the issue by the legal representative and the
evidence was adduced
by the prosecution without objection from the
defence or any direction from the magistrate. The circumstances
suggested tacit
agreement by the defence to the admission of the
evidence along the lines described in S v Sigcawu supra. The
first express
indication that the trial court was treating the
evidence as admissible came in the magistrate’s conviction
judgment.
That was, to say the least, unsatisfactory.
[28]
It is highly important that trial courts should adopt a
more vigilant approach when
suddenly confronted with
evidence of a dying declaration. There may be instances where
the court is required to immediately
examine and characterised such
evidence. It is also critical that the court should immediately
ascertain from the parties, the
manner in which the admissibility of
the evidence is going to be dealt with.
[29]
This involves the court taking proactive steps to steer and manage
the way as to how the admissibility
issue would be dealt with
timeously. A ruling on the admissibility of the dying
declaration should be made on the record
at the latest before the
opening of the defence’s case. The admissibility of such
evidence should not be deferred for
the main judgment; see S v
Ndhlovu and Others
2002 (6) SA 305
(SCA), at paragraph 18; S v
Sigcawu
supra; and
Kapa v The State
[2023] ZACC 1
(24
January 2023).
[30] For these reasons
given above the appeal is dismissed.
C.N. NZIWENI
Judge of the High
Court
A.G.BINNS-WARD
Judge of the High
Court
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