Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 33South Africa
Ndabeni v S (A230/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 33 (21 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
21 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Ndabeni v S (A230/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 33 (21 February 2023)
Ndabeni v S (A230/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 33 (21 February 2023)
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sino date 21 February 2023
#
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Number: A 230 /2022
In
the appeal between
BANDILE
NDABENI
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Wille J
et
Nyati, AJ
Heard:
17 February 2023
Delivered:
21 February 2023
JUDGMENT
WILLE,
J:
Introduction:
[1]
This is an appeal with leave from the lower court against
conviction. The appellant
was convicted in the lower court on
two counts of the illegal possession of semi-automatic firearms and
one count of the illegal
possession of ammunition. The
appellant was sentenced to direct imprisonment for twelve years on
each count for illegally
possessing semi-automatic firearms. These
sentences were ordered to run concurrently. In addition, the
appellant was sentenced
to direct imprisonment for four years for the
unlawful possession of ammunition. The latter sentence was
wholly suspended
subject to certain appropriate conditions.
Appeal
grounds:
[2]
The appellant advances that the core witness on behalf of the
respondent was a single
witness and that the conviction was not
justified because the court
a quo
did not apply the cautionary
rule regarding evaluating this evidence. This is on the issue
of identification. On the
contrary, the respondent contends
that the judicial officer in the lower court was mindful of the
probative weight that fell to
be attached to the core witness for the
respondent and that this evidence was evaluated with caution.
Further, the appellant
advances that the ‘chain of
custody’ in connection with the two firearms and the ammunition
found on the scene was
inadequate and that some difficulties existed
in connection with the handling of these exhibits after they were
taken into custody
(on the scene) when the appellant was arrested.
The respondent, in turn, argues that all these shields raised by the
appellant
are highly technical in nature and that the position taken
by the appellant merely amounts to a legal stratagem advanced by the
appellant in an attempt to escape his convictions.
Evidence:
[3]
The respondent presented the evidence of three witnesses. The
appellant testified
and presented his version of events to the lower
court. The first and core witness by the respondent was the
arresting officer.
He was on duty and patrol in the area when
he heard gunshots. He noticed three men running together before
they split up
and went in separate directions. He pursued one
of these men, who later turned out to be the appellant.
[4]
While on the run, the appellant was brandishing a firearm in each
hand. He never
lost sight of the appellant during his pursuit
of the appellant. The appellant was requested to stop running.
In response,
the appellant dropped the firearms (he was carrying) and
jumped onto the roof of a house in the immediate vicinity. The
appellant
was apprehended and taken to the scene where he had dropped
the firearms (in his possession) onto the ground. The appellant
was asked about the ownership of the two firearms and responded that
he had received the same from a friend. The appellant
was
arrested, photographs of the firearms were taken, and the firearms
were placed into police custody.
[5]
The second witness for the respondent was a
member of the police attached to the forensic services department of
the police. On
the scene, he was met by the arresting officer.
The firearms were pointed out to him. He took photographs of
the firearms
with the ammunition, took forensic swabs and placed the
firearms under police custody. He placed the firearms and
ammunition
in a safe for safekeeping. The following day these
exhibits were sent for finger-print analysis and ballistic analysis.
Regrettably, no affidavits were produced supporting some of these
subsequent events. The respondent submitted into evidence
the
photographs of the scene and the ballistics report.
[6]
The final witness for the respondent was a high-ranking police
officer from the forensic
department who merely explained how the
firearms and ammunition were processed at the forensics department.
She testified
that, according to her, no irregularities occurred
concerning the processing and handling of the exhibits in this case.
[7]
The appellant testified that he was in the area at the time and on
the day in question
and was on his way to see his family. For
no apparent reason, the police pointed their firearms at him and
ordered him to
lie down on the ground. The police took him to
the backyard of a house (in the area), and they subsequently arrested
him.
This was also for no apparent reason.
Consideration:
[8]
The appellant did not engage with or challenge that there was an
audible firearm discharging
at that time in the area. The
appellant did not tell the police that he was on his way to his
family and that he was innocently
on the scene. The appellant
did not challenge that he stated to the arresting officer that he
received the firearms from
a friend. It is so that there is no
obligation upon the appellant to demonstrate his innocence.
However, considering
the version of events presented by the
appellant, these omissions are striking in these peculiar
circumstances.
[9]
One of the core arguments advanced by the appellant is that because
the policeman
who had obtained custody of the firearms during the
fingerprint phase of the investigation was not called as a witness,
it was
not demonstrated that the actual firearms seized at the scene
of his arrest were those submitted for subsequent forensic analysis.
The appellant’s submissions in this connection do not
touch upon any ‘tampering’ irregularities involved
in
this process. The argument simply is that the chain of evidence
did not remain intact in connection with these exhibits.
This
argument bears further scrutiny as this seems to be a highly
technical argument.
[10]
The second witness (called on behalf of the respondent) delivered the
sealed exhibit bags containing
the firearms and ammunition seized at
the scene to the forensic department for analysis. These were
assigned reference numbers
and entered into an official exhibit
register kept at the forensic department. These exhibits were
kept in a safe at the
forensic department. A laboratory
technician booked these exhibits out of the safe to the laboratory
for testing and returned
them for safekeeping. It is so that
when the exhibits were returned to the second witness for the
respondent, they were housed
in new exhibit bags with different
exhibit reference numbers. This is then the ‘irregularity’
argument piloted on behalf
of the appellant.
[11]
However, these events were more than adequately explained by the
testimony presented by the witness
employed by the forensic
department. This bearing in mind that he was the same policeman
who attended the scene, took photographs
of the exhibits and took
them into safe custody. The explanation was that the forensic
laboratory protocols, in any event,
required that when the exhibits
were re-sealed from the ‘original’ exhibit bags, these
original bags would also be
included in the new exhibit bags with
their new reference numbers. The evidence was that the exhibits
seized at the scene
were the same exhibits dispatched for ballistic
analysis. These exhibits were sent for ballistic analysis
intact and without
any tampering. Our jurisprudence indicates
that it is not a requirement to prove how exhibits were transported
to their eventual
destination for forensic analysis.
[1]
[12]
The legal arguments presented by the respondent in this connection
are fortified by the factual
evidence and the evidentiary material in
support of these facts handed in during the trial in the lower
court.
[13]
I say this because the following evidence was presented in support of
the respondent’s
case in connection with this issue, namely:
(a) that the exhibits sent for analysis were the same exhibits handed
in and seized
at the scene; (b) that these very exhibits were
photographed at the scene and sent for ballistic analysis; (c) that
there was a
series of ‘custody-chain’ photographs of
these exhibits; (d) that there was a paper trail of how the exhibits
were
dealt with; (e) that the original exhibit bags were retrieved
inside the new sealed bags in which the exhibits were eventually
housed; (f) that at all material times, a complete description of the
brands and names of the firearms (as well as the calibre thereof)
remained the same and, (g) that the evidence was also consistent that
the serial number of one of the firearms was removed from
the frame
of the firearm. This feature was also notable in a photograph
taken at the scene, which was submitted into evidence.
[14]
As alluded to earlier, the shields raised by the appellant were
technical defences. These
shields are, in my view, far-fetched.
On this score, the respondent is not required to counter every
speculative argument
that counsel can conceive without evidence to
substantiate these arguments.
[2]
In my view, speculative defences are just that and no more.
[15]
In my view, it is clear from the mosaic of evidence presented that
the appellant had possession
of the firearms and ammunition shortly
before he was arrested. It is trite that in the absence of a
demonstrable and material
misdirection a trial court’s findings
of fact are presumed to be correct and that they will only be
disregarded on appeal
if the recorded evidence shows them to be
wrong. It is against this principle that the credibility and
factual findings of
the trial court, decried by the appellant, must
be considered. I do not find any misdirection by the judicial
officer in
evaluating the evidence presented in this case.
Thus, the appeal must fail.
Order:
[16]
For these reasons, the following order is granted, namely:
1.
That the appeal against the appellant's convictions is dismissed.
2.
That the convictions and sentences imposed upon the appellant
are
confirmed.
WILLE,
J
I
agree:
NYATI,
AJ
## [1]S
v Du Plessis1972
(4) SA 31 (AD) at par 34.
[1]
S
v Du Plessis
1972
(4) SA 31 (AD) at par 34.
[2]
S
v Ntsele
1988
(2) SACR 178
(SCA).
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