Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 113South Africa
S v Beja and Another (CC18/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 113 (19 May 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## S v Beja and Another (CC18/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 113 (19 May 2023)
S v Beja and Another (CC18/2021) [2023] ZAWCHC 113 (19 May 2023)
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sino date 19 May 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: CC18/2021
In the matter between
THE STATE
V
GCINITHEMBA
BEJA
ACCUSED
1
FUNDILE
MASETI
ACCUSED
2
Date of Hearing:
02 May 2023
Date
of Judgment: 19 May 2023 (to be
delivered via email to the respective counsel)
SECTION
190(1) JUDGMENT
THULARE J
[1] This is an opposed
application for the impeachment of a State witness, Thobelani Wanda
Tofile (Tofile) also known as Mampintsha,
by the State. Tofile
refused to co-operate with the SAPS and the Prosecution about his
attendance to give evidence and the court
had to issue a warrant of
arrest for him to be brought to court. He was an awaiting trial
prisoner in another matter. An eye witness
to the incident for which
the accused are arraigned, Mr X, had implicated Tofile and both
accused as the persons who attacked and
shot a number of people who
were having a party in section Q, Site B, Khayelitsha. Some of the
people were wounded, others fatally.
As a result of the threat to his
person, Mr X was in police protection and during his testimony, upon
application by the State,
the court ordered that his identity not be
revealed. Mr X also testified through audio visual resources and not
in open court.
[2] The issue was whether
the witness, Tofile, was to be impeached. It has to be stressed that
the question that the court had to
pronounce on in the
trial-within-a-trial was solely on the impeachment of the witness.
The trial-within-a-trial was not intended
to consider the appropriate
weight, if any, to be attached to his evidence. That will be done
when the court is called upon to
pronounce its judgment.
[3]
Nokwanele Makhetha, the sister to
Ntandazo Makhetha (Ntera) knew Tofile and accused 2 who was known as
Phiri. She knew them as friends
of Ntera. Ntera hosted the party
where the shooting occurred on 8 March 2020. Nokwanele was inside the
house in a room at the property
where she shooting happened but did
not see who were the shooters. It was on the basis that she knew
Phiri and Tofile being friends
of Ntera, that she did not believe
that they could be the ones who had attacked and shot at Ntera and/or
the people that Ntera
hosted at the party. She knew accused 2 as
Phiri. It is against this background that the police sought Tofile,
not as an accused,
but as a witness in the multiple-murder and
attempted murder case, to obtain his statement.
[4] Mpendulo Tyali and
Sizwe Ncaku were members of the SAPS and Dectective Sergeants who
were involved in the investigation of gang-related
violence in the
Western Cape. Their commander was now retired Colonel Nceba
Mathentamo. Tyali managed to get the cellphone number
of Tofile and
communicated with him about taking his statement. Although the two
spoke a number of times on the telephone, and
Tofile agreed to make a
statement, Tofile never got to Tyali for Tyali to take his statement.
Tofile subsequently signed a written
statement before Tyali, which
the State alleged was the disavowed previous inconsistent statement.
This is common cause. It is
the circumstances under which the
statement was made and signed, where the parties differ. In the light
of the possibility of infringements
of Tofile’s constitutional
rights, in the face of his allegations of being induced to make the
disavowed previous inconsistent
statement, and that he was a
lay-person and according to him indigent, the court allowed him to
enjoy legal representation limited
to the impeachment application and
the decision thereon. Adv, Vakele is thanked for his industry in the
matter, on behalf of Tofile.
[5] The State case was
that Tyali, Ncaku, Constable Sibusisio Manqindi, Constable Tarrance
Basholo and Mathentamo were in an office
occupied by the Anti-Gang
Unit in Lentegeur SAPS. Only the first three testified in respect of
the impeachment application. Manqindi
and Basholo went to fetch
Tofile from cells at Lentegeur and brought him to that office on the
instructions of Mathentamo. A casual
discussion on general irrelevant
topics was an introduction, which included Tofile speaking in English
with a Colonel Tarentaal
who walked into the room shortly after
Tofile arrived in the room. Tarentaal left before the interview. Back
to the business of
the meeting, Tofile confirmed that he was on the
scene at the time of the incident. He agreed to make a statement on
what happened
on the night of 7-8 March 2020 at Ntera’s house.
He raised concerns about his safety as he feared the people
implicated,
amongst others requesting an assurance that he will have
protection including testifying audio-visually so that he did not
have
to face the accused when he testified in court. When Tofile
started telling the police about the incident, Tyali wrote down as
Tofile narrated what happened. Tofile was satisfied with what Tyali
wrote and appended his signature on the statement after its
completion. All this happened in that office in the presence of the
other four police officers. Ncaku followed the interview, and
watched
Tyali write down as Tofile narrated what happened. In his statement,
Tofile mentioned the two accused, and other suspects
which the police
did not know about, as being part of the shooters.
[6] Manqindi said
although he was in the meeting, he did not pay attention to what was
being said as he stood by the window and
looked outside. He was
however present in the room during the interview and saw the
discussion between Tyali and Stofile, but did
not listen to what was
actually being said. The State case was that the date stamps and
commissioner’s stamp were not in
the room. The Statement was
given to Manqindi to commission. Detectives did not carry the date
stamps and commissioning stamps
with them around, and it was practice
in the SAPS, and very common within Detectives, to take a statement
of a witness and have
the witness sign the statement, and to later
append the date stamps and commissioning stamps to record the
commissioning, later
and at the service centre, as it is at the
service centre where the stamps are generally kept. According to him,
the Lenteguer
office was new as the Anti-Gang Unit was in the main
operating from Cape Town, and he had just joined the unit, and was
from Site
B Police Station in Khayelitsha. He did not commission the
statement at Lentegeur, but went back to site B to commission the
affidavit.
He did not cause Tofile to take the oath before him. He
and Basholo were the ones who took Tofile back to the cells after the
interview.
[7] Tofile’s
version is that he was detained in Phillipi SAPS for unlawful
possession of a firearm. He was called to an office
of the
investigating officer of that case, at Phillipi, and found him in the
presence of Tyali. According to Tofile, it was at
Phillipi where
Tyali made him an offer that he should incriminate the accused in
exchange for the charges of unlawful possession
of a firearm and
another two charges of murder being withdrawn against him. He was
taken back to the cells. He was taken back to
that office where he
found Tyali in possession of the statement which was already written.
In exchange for the withdrawal of the
unlawful possession of a
firearm and two murder charges against him, and not being charged in
this matter, he signed the statement
that Tyali presented to him. He
did not know what the contents of the statement was.
[8] Simply put, in his
disavowed previous inconsistent statement Tofile saw the two accused
and others shoot at the people who attended
the party. In his
viva
voce
evidence Tofile did not see who shot. Section 190(1) of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 1977 (Act No. 51 of 1977) (the CPA) read as
follows:
“
190
Impeachment or support of credibility of witness
(1)
Any party may in criminal proceedings
impeach or support the credibility of any witness called against or
on behalf of such party
in any manner in which and by any evidence by
which the credibility of such witness might on the thirtieth day of
May, 1961, have
been impeached or supported by such party.”
[9] The application by
the State was very narrow. The State asked the court to declare the
witness, Tofile, hostile. This was aimed
at allowing the State to
cross-examine its own witness. This is because the rule is that a
party may not cross-examine its own
witness unless the court forms
the opinion that the witness was hostile [
Commentary on the
Criminal Procedure Act,
Du Toit and others, Service 57, 2016,
23-17]. In
Rex v Wellers
1918 TPD 234
, Wessels said at
237-238:
“
Then we have
a third class of case, where a person approaches a party, tells him
what evidence he can give, and then goes into the
box and tells a
diametrically opposite story adverse to the party calling him; the
witness has in this case deceived the party
into putting him into the
box. In such a case it is necessary in the interests of justice that
the examining counsel should be
allowed to cross-examine the witness
and to show that he really deceived the party calling him; his
statement must be put to the
witness, and he must be asked whether or
not he has made such a statement. It seems to me clear that any
previous statement made
by a witness who is called, say, by a
plaintiff, which entirely contradicts the evidence he gives in the
witness box, ought to
be placed before him and if he admits it it
ought to be brought to the knowledge of the judge that he has made,
to the party calling
him, an entirely different statement from what
he is stating in the box. That being so, the Judge will give leave to
cross-examine
the witness, and if he has made a contrary statement
previously, dismiss his evidence as not being trustworthy.”
[10] The last sentence no
longer represents the correct approach. The new approach was set out
in
Makhala & Another v S
2022
(1) SACR 485 (SCA) at para
111-115 as follows:
“
[111]
It is a long-standing rule of our common law, derived from English
law that in such cases, the state witness’
extra-curial
statement may be used solely for the purposes of impeaching him or
her and may not be tendered into court as proof
for the facts
contained therein. Bellengère and Walker [Adrian Bellengère
and Shelley Walker ‘
When the truth
lies elsewhere: A comment on the admissibility of prior inconsistent
statements in light of S v Mathonsi
2012 (1) SACR 335
(KZP) and
S v Rathumbu
2012 (2) SACR 219
(SCA)’
(2013) 26 SACJ 175]
searched for the
rationale of the common law rule in our jurisprudence and that of
other jurisdictions and concluded that ‘as
far as South African
law is concerned, the rule rested on a dual foundation; namely: (1)
the traditional objections to hearsay
evidence; and (2) the notion
that no probative value can be attached to contradictory evidence’.[
At 175-177]
[112] The
learned commentators point out that the rationale behind the
admission of hearsay evidence is based on the common
law conception
and rendered redundant in 1988 when our law concerning hearsay was
amended by the Hearsay Act.[
Ibid at
177-178] Insofar as the contradiction rationale is concerned, the
learned commentators state:[
Ibid at 178]
‘
The
objection that, faced with a contradiction between a witness’s
viva voce evidence and what he said on an earlier occasion,
the court
cannot give credence to either version, is equally groundless. The
old maxims “
falsus in uno, falsus
in omnibus
” (false in one thing,
false in everything) and “
semel
mentitus, semper mentitur
” (once
a liar, always a liar) are not part of the South African law of
evidence (
R v Gumede
1949 (3) SA 749
(A) at 576A).
Certainly a witness’s
contradictions may cast doubt on his credibility (and commonly do),
but this is a matter for the court
to determine, in light of all the
available evidence. Thus, the mere fact that a witness has
contradicted himself is no reason
to disregard or exclude his
evidence in entirety. This applies irrespective of whether the
witness has contradicted himself in
his
viva voce
evidence, or
on some other occasion (
S v Mathonsi
2012 (1) SACR 335
(KZP)
at paras [34] to [37] and further authorities cited therein).’
[113] The learned
commentators continue to state: [Ibid at 178-179]
‘
It would be
evident from the above that there is no longer any valid reason for
the retention of the rule. On the contrary, its
only contribution in
most cases has been to exclude relevant evidence, which would have
assisted the court in determining the truth.
In the circumstances, it
is hardly surprising that the rule has been abolished, not only in
England and Wales (s 119 and 120 of
the Criminal Justice Act 2003),
but also in Australia (s 60 of the Evidence Act 2 of 1995), Canada (
R
v B
(supra) [
R
v B
(K.G.)
[1993] 1 SCR 740])
, American
federal law (s 801(d)(1) of the Federal Rules of Evidence 1975) and a
number of individual American states, such as Alaska,
Arizona,
California, Indiana, Kentucky, North Dakota, West Virginia and
Wisconsin (SM Terrell “
Prior
Statements as Substantive Evidence in Indiana”
Indiana LR (1979) 12(2) 495, 502-517); jurisdictions whose law of
evidence, like that of South Africa, was originally derived from
English law.
In light of the two recent cases
referred to above [
Mathonsi
and
Rathumbu
], it appears
that South Africa is at last following suit’.
[114] I
subscribe to the views expressed by the learned commentators,
Bellengère and Walker. It may be argued, which argument
found
favour with the first judgment, that the contents of a 204 state
witness’ prior inconsistent statement are not hearsay
evidence,
since their probative value depends on the state witness'
credibility, who, him or herself, is testifying.[See BC Naude
‘The
substantive use of a prior inconsistent statement’
(2013) 26
SACJ 55
at 59-61.] However, although a s 204 state witness is
compelled to give his or her evidence under the sanction of an oath,
or its
equivalent, a solemn affirmation, and be subject to
cross-examination by the accused person or persons against whom he or
she is
called to testify and who had access to all evidence in
possession of the state prior to the trial, there seems to be a
compelling
rationale for our courts to treat the disavowed prior
inconsistent statement as hearsay evidence within the meaning of s
3(4) of
the Hearsay Act. Treating such statement as hearsay enables
the trial court to subject such evidence to the preconditions
required
in s 3(1) (c) of the Hearsay Act and to admit such evidence
only if the court ‘is of the opinion that such evidence should
be admitted in the interests of justice’. Such interpretation
of ‘hearsay evidence’ as defined in s 3(4) of the
Hearsay
Act promotes ‘the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of
Rights’ contained in chapter 2 of the Constitution
of South
Africa,[
Section 39(2) of the Constitution
enjoins a court to ‘promote the spirit, purport and objects of
the Bill of Rights’
when ‘interpreting any legislation’.]
and particularly an accused person’s fundamental constitutional
‘right
to a fair trial’, enshrined in s 35(3) of the Bill
of Rights, because the effectiveness of the cross-examination of a
state
witness who denies having made the prior inconsistent statement
or cannot remember having made it, may in a given case be
compromised.[
Ibid BC Naude fn 38 at 61-63]
[115] In
Rathumbu
,
this Court held that a disavowed prior written statement of a state
witness is essentially hearsay evidence, that the probative
value of
the statement depends on the credibility of the witness at the time
of making the statement, and that the central question
is whether the
interests of justice require that the prior statement be admitted
despite the witness’s later disavowal thereof.
In
Mamushe
,
this Court held that the extra-curial statement by a state witness is
not admissible in evidence against an accused person under
s 3(1) (b)
of the Hearsay Act unless the prior statement is confirmed by its
maker in court. This Court declined to admit the state
witness’
prior statement, which she disavowed in court, under s 3(1) (c) of
the Hearsay Act, inter alia because ‘the
identification
evidence deposed to by Ms Martin in her statements appears to be of
the most unreliable kind’. The doctrine
of precedent also binds
courts of final jurisdiction to their own decisions unless the court
is satisfied that a previous decision
of its own is clearly wrong,
which is not so in this case. [
Camps Bay
Ratepayers’ Association & Another v Harrison & Another
2011 (2) BCLR 121
(CC);
[2010] ZACC 19
(CC);
2011 (4) SA 42
(CC)
paras 28-30. See also
Head of
Department, Department of Education, Free State Province v Welkom
High School and Another; Head of Department, Department
of Education,
Free State Province v Harmony High School and Another
[2013] ZACC 25
;
2013 (9) BCLR 989
(CC);
2014 (2) SA 228
(CC);
Firstrand Bank Limited v Kona and
Another
[2015] ZASCA 11
;
2015 (5)
SA 237
(SCA);
BSB International Link CC
v Readam South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2016]
ZASCA 58
;
[2016] 2 All SA 633
(SCA);
2016 (4) SA 83
;
Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited v Hendricks and Another; Standard Bank
of South Africa Limited v Sampson and Another; Standard
Bank of South
Africa Limited v Kamfer; Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v
Adams and Another; Standard Bank of South Africa
Limited v Botha NO;
Absa Bank Limited v Louw
[2018] ZAWCHC
175
;
[2019] 1 All SA 839
(WCC);
2019 (2) SA 620
(WCC);
Firstrand
Bank Ltd t/a First National Bank v Moonsamy t/a Synka Liquors
[2020] ZAGPJHC 105;
2021 (1) SA 225
(GJ)
and
Investec Bank Limited v Fraser NO and Another
[2020] ZAGPJHC 107;
2020 (6) SA 211
(GJ). Like the courts of foreign
jurisdictions, this court has laid down its own safeguards before
admitting the conflicting extra-curial
statement of a state witness
who performs an about-turn in the witness box and testifies in favour
of the defence or develops a
sudden case of amnesia.”
[11] The court continued
as follows at para 117 and 118:
“
[117]
However, the common law principle that a state witness’
extra-curial inconsistent statement may be used solely
for the
purposes of impeaching him or her and may not be tendered into court
as proof of the facts contained therein no longer
finds application
in our law. In this country, we have our definition of hearsay
evidence and legislative instrument prescribing
the factors or
safeguards that the court must consider in deciding whether the
extra-curial inconsistent hearsay statement of a
state witness should
be admitted as evidence in the interests of justice. Our courts,
therefore, are not permitted to substitute
our statutory prescripts
with common law principles or statutory provisions of foreign
jurisdictions in deciding whether such hearsay
should be admitted as
evidence. Therefore, the decision in
Mathonsi
is wrong.
[118] I have
mentioned that our Hearsay Act allows for a more flexible
discretionary approach to the admissibility of hearsay evidence
than
the common law did. In deciding whether hearsay should be admitted in
the interests of justice, the court is not limited to
the factors
listed in s (3)(1)(c)(i) to (vi) but empowered in terms of s
3(1)(c)(vii) to have regard to ‘any other factor
which should
in the opinion of the court be taken into account’. If in
deciding whether hearsay should be admitted in the
interests of
justice in terms of s 3(1)(c) of the Hearsay Act in a given case, the
trial court is of the opinion that a factor
taken into account in
another jurisdiction when admitting hearsay into evidence should
additionally be taken into account, it is
by virtue of s 3(1)(c)(vii)
empowered to do so.”
[12] Commenting on
section 190(2), which I find appropriate also in respect of section
190(1), it was said in
S v Hancock
2004 JDR 0418 (SCA) at para
11:
“
[11] Section
190(2) allows a person to discredit his witness if such witness turns
hostile whilst testifying. A witness is hostile
if he is not desirous
of telling the truth at the instance of the party calling him
(Stephen Digest of the Law of Evidence 12th
ed art 147).”
[13] Section 190(1)
provides for one of the exceptional cases where a previous
inconsistent statement made by a witness is admitted
into evidence.
The purpose is to call into question and discredit the credibility of
the witness, to disparage his character and
to cast an imputation
upon their motive for an about-turn. The intention is to challenge
the honesty of the witness and the veracity
of the second statement.
An application to impeach a witness is only a start of what may lead,
as it did in this matter, to the
next phase, being a
trial-within-a-trial. A trial-within-a-trial is only part of the
process that may or may not lead to the acceptance
or rejection of
some of or the whole of such a witness’ testimony. An
impeachment process is related to the witness being
deemed adverse.
The witness should first be deemed adverse before they could be
cross-examined [
Rex v Saqwashula
1930 AD 437
at 441]. The
questions in cross-examination cannot properly be put to a witness,
before the witness, in the opinion of the presiding
officer, proved
adverse to the party who called such witness. In other words, it is
the opinion of the presiding officer that the
witness is hostile to
the party that founds cross-examination of a party’s own
witness.
[14] Tofile did not want
to consult with the prosecutor. When the prosecutor succeeded in
meeting him, after he was arrested and
was in prison awaiting trial
on a different matter, he told the prosecutor that he did not want to
testify and that he was not
a State witness. On his own version,
Tofile was on the scene at the time of the shooting and had signed a
statement in the presence
of Tyali. His hostility to the prosecution
was highly obvious. As a person who was likely to give material
evidence in these criminal
proceedings, the State led the evidence of
the investigating officer under oath that Tofile was evading service
of the subpoena,
and the court issued a warrant for his arrest to
appear at the proceedings.
[15] The fact that Tofile
contradicted himself in
viva voce
evidence and in his prior
statement is no reason to disregard or exclude his evidence in its
entirety. His disavowed prior inconsistent
statement is hearsay
evidence within the meaning of section 3(4) of the Law of Evidence
Amendment Act, 1988 (Act No. 45 of 1988)
(HEA) [
Makhala
para
114]. Section 3(1)(c) of the provides:
“
3
Hearsay evidence
(1) Subject to the provisions of any
other law, hearsay evidence shall not be admitted as evidence at
criminal or civil proceedings,
unless-
(c)
the court, having regard to-
(i)
the nature of the proceedings;
(ii)
the nature of the evidence;
(iii)
the purpose for which the evidence is tendered;
(iv)
the probative value of the evidence;
(v)
the reason why the evidence is not given by the person upon whose
credibility the probative value of such evidence
depends;
(vi)
any prejudice to a party which the admission of such evidence might
entail; and
(vii)
any other factor which should in the opinion of the court be taken
into account, is of the opinion that such evidence
should be admitted
in the interests of justice.”
[16] The question whether
the court should declare a witness hostile entails an exercise of a
discretion by the court [
Saqwashula; Commentary on the CPA,
issue
57, 2016, 23-18]. A discretion should be judicially exercised [
S v
Botha
2017 JDR 1769 (SCA) para 34]. In my view, it was not
desirable at this stage to deal fully with the assessment of the
factors to
which the court had regard to, as it involved the
assessment of the credibility of the witnesses, both for the State
and Tofile.
Two of the witnesses for the State in the impeachment
application also testified in the main trial against the accused.
This matter
cannot be decided in pieces. It cannot be denied that
credibility played a role in the impeachment application. The
credibility
of a witness is a factor at the stage of a consideration
of an impeachment and must be taken into account to the extent that
it
is necessary. However, the test remains whether in the opinion of
the court Tofile stood to be impeached. The fact that criticism
was
levelled to the commissioning of the statement can be answered by
reference to
Rex v Valacha and Another
1945 AD 826
at 837
where it was said:
“
Naturally,
the fact that the statement is not made under oath, and is not
subject to cross-examination, detracts very much from
the weight to
be given to those portions of the statement favourable to its author
as compared with the weight which would be given
to them if he had
made them under oath, but he is entitled to have them taken into
consideration, to be accepted or rejected according
to the Court’s
view of their cogency.”
[17] I was persuaded that
the statement of Tofile which the State tendered was,
prima facie,
freely and voluntarily made and that no promises from the police
induced the statement [
S v Sheehama
1991(2) SA 860 (A) at
873E-I]. The question of whether the disavowed previous inconsistent
statement was admissible in evidence
is distinct from the question
whether it was proved beyond reasonable doubt that Tofile made the
statement whose contents are accepted
as the truth. The latter is the
function of the court when considering the totality of the evidence,
just like other facts in dispute
[
S v Dhlamini and Another
1971
(1) SA 807
(A) at 810E-F]. Tofile’s statement was obtained in
the course of an investigation into crime. The ruling that his
statement
was admissible was interlocutory and always open to
challenge by the defence after laying a proper basis [
S v M
2003
(1) SA 341
(SCA) at para 30]. The Court has a discretion to exclude
evidence improperly obtained. Section 35(5) of the Constitution of
the
Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act 108 of 1996) (the
Constitution) reads:
“
35 (5)
Evidence obtained in a manner that violates any right in the Bill of
Rights must be excluded if the admission of that evidence
would
render the trial unfair or otherwise be detrimental to the
administration of justice.”
[18] For these reasons I
found Tofile hostile, and thus allowed the prosecution to
cross-examine him.
__________________________
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OG THE HIGH COURT
sino noindex
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