Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 128South Africa
S v Koeries (146/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 128; [2023] 4 All SA 629 (SCA); 86 SATC 441 (24 May 2023)
Headnotes
liable for contravening any provisions of sub-section 61(1) of the NRT Act.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## S v Koeries (146/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 128; [2023] 4 All SA 629 (SCA); 86 SATC 441 (24 May 2023)
S v Koeries (146/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 128; [2023] 4 All SA 629 (SCA); 86 SATC 441 (24 May 2023)
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sino date 24 May 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
High Court Review Ref:
146/2023
Magistrate’s
Serial No.1/23
Magistrate’s
Court Case No. A230/21
In the matter between:
THE STATE
and
CRAIG KOERIES
SPECIAL REVIEW
JUDGMENT
FRANCIS
J:
[1]
This matter was referred to this Court as a special review by
Magistrate van der Heyde, sitting
in the Bellville Magistrate’s
Court, who presides in the trial of Craig Koeries (“the
accused”),
[2]
The charge which the accused faces is reproduced verbatim below:
“
State
v
Craig
Koeries
Count 1
Culpable
Homicide
That the accused is
guilty of contravening Section 61(1) read with Section 1, 34 and 89
of the National Road Traffic Act, Act 93
of 1996.
In the accused did
upon
3 April 2021
And on the corner of
Sacks Circle Belhar
A Public road in the
District of Belville regional Division of Western Cape
Being the driver of a
vehicle, to wit,
Silver A3 Audi
At the time when such
vehicle was involved in or contributed to an accident in which
Melissa la Vita
was killed, did unlawfully”
[3]
The record reflects that on the day of the trial, the prosecutor put
the charge to the accused
in the exact words as reflected in the
charge sheet. The accused, who was legally represented throughout the
trial, confirmed that
he understood the charge and that he intended
to plead guilty.
[4]
The accused subsequently pleaded guilty and submitted a written
statement in explanation of his
plea in terms of section 112 (2) of
the Criminal Procedure Act No 51 of 1977 (“the CPA”)
which was signed by both him
and his legal representative.
[5]
Paragraph 3 of the plea statement states as follows:
“…
In
that I am guilty of contravening section 61(1) read with section 1,
34 and 89 of the National Road Traffic Act, Act 93 of 1996
in that I
did upon the 3 April 2021 on the corner of Sacks Circle Belhar, a
public road in the district of Belville of Western
Cape, being the
driver of a silver audi A3 at the time when such vehicle was involved
who contributed to an accident in which Mylisa
Lydia La Vita was
killed:
”
[6]
In the remainder of the plea statement, the accused confirms his
guilt in respect of all the elements
necessary to sustain a culpable
homicide charge. He admits that on the day in question, he acted
unlawfully and negligently in
that he failed to take reasonable steps
and care and failed in his duty to keep a proper lookout to avoid an
accident that led
to the death of the deceased.
[7]
After confirming that the statement was made by the accused freely
and voluntarily, and that he
understood the contents of the statement
and the consequences thereof, the court accepted the written
statement and found the accused
guilty on the charge of culpable
homicide.
[8]
The Magistrate heard evidence in mitigation and aggravation of
sentence and then adjourned the
matter in order to consider the
sentence to be imposed.
[9]
In the covering letter motivating the request for a special review,
the Magistrate explained that
whilst she was deliberating on what
sentence to impose, she realised that “
the annexure A to the
J15 charge sheet was defective and not as clear as the charge that
was put to the accused by the prosecutor
in court on 16 March 2023 to
which charge the accused pleaded guilty. Further, that the section
112 written plea was defective
in that:
“
1.
the Accused pleaded guilty to contravening section 61 (1) of Act
93/1996 in paragraph 3 thereof
instead of Culpable Homicide;
2.
Despite the plea in paragraph 3 thereof, the acknowledgements by the
Accused contained in
paragraphs 4 to 11 were clearly in line with the
intention of the Accused to plead guilty to the charge of Culpable
Homicide.
”
[10]
The Magistrate is correct. The charge sheet is not a model of
clarity. The main purpose of a charge sheet
is to inform the accused
of the case that the State wants to advance against him or her (
S
v Hugo
1976 (4) SA 536
(A)
). Indeed, section 84 of the
CPA stipulates that sufficient information of the offence with which
the accused is charged must be
set out in the charge sheet.
[11]
The elements of the crime of culpable homicide are the causing of
death of another person unlawfully and
negligently (see,
S v
Burger
1975 (4) SA 877
(A)
at 878 H). In the matter at
hand, one would have expected the charge sheet to expressly set out
the elements of culpable homicide
and the factual allegations that
would be required to sustain a verdict of guilty. However, apart from
alleging that the accused
was the driver of a vehicle that was
involved in, or contributed to, an accident in which the deceased was
killed, there are no
further averments of the respects in which the
accused’s conduct were unlawful or negligent.
[12]
Nor does the charge sheet set out in what respects the accused is
alleged to have contravened the various
sections of the National Road
Traffic Act 93 of 1996 (“the NRT Act”) referred to in the
charge sheet. Section 60 of
the NRT Act is generally used to
prosecute drivers in so-called hit and run situations where the
driver of a vehicle is involved
in an accident that kills or injures
a person or causes damage to property and flees the scene.
[13]
Section 61(1) of the NRT Act provides as follows:
“
The
driver of a vehicle at the time when such vehicle is involved in or
contributes to any accident in which any person is killed
or injured
or suffers damage in respect of any property, including a vehicle, or
animal shall—
(a)
immediately stop the vehicle and report the accident on the
prescribed form and in the prescribed manner,
the officer concerned
shall deal with the report in the prescribed manner and the chief
executive officer must ensure that the
accident is recorded in the
register of accidents in the prescribed manner and within the
prescribed period;
(b)
ascertain the nature and extent of any injury sustained by any
person;
(c)
if a person is injured, render such assistance to the injured person
as he or she may be capable
of rendering;
(d) ascertain the
nature and extent of any damage sustained;
(e)
if required to do so by any person having reasonable grounds for so
requiring, give his or her
name and address, the name and address of
the owner of the vehicle driven by him or her and, in the case of a
motor vehicle, the
licence number thereof;
(f)
if he or she has not already reported the accident to a police or
traffic officer at the
scene of the accident, and unless he or she is
incapable of doing so by reason of injuries sustained by him or her
in the accident,
as soon as is reasonably practicable, and in the
case where a person is killed or injured, within 24 hours after the
occurrence
of such accident, or in any other case on the first
working day after the occurrence of such accident, report the
accident to any
police officer at a police station or at any office
set aside by a competent authority for use by a traffic officer, and
there
produce his or her driving licence and furnish his or her
identity number and such information as is referred to in paragraph
(e);
and
(g)
not, except on the instructions of or when administered by a medical
practitioner in the case of injury
or shock, take any intoxicating
liquor or drug having a narcotic effect unless he or she has complied
with the provisions of paragraph
(f), where it is his or her duty to
do so, and has been examined by a medical practitioner if such
examination is required by a
traffic officer.”
[14]
Section 89(1) of the NRT Act states that anyone who contravenes the
provisions of the said Act shall be guilty
of an offence and section
89(4) lists the penalties with which a person may be held liable for
contravening any provisions of sub-section
61(1) of the NRT Act.
[15]
The charge sheet is wholly deficient in so far as the accused’s
alleged transgressions of the NRT Act
are concerned. Apart from
alleging that the accused was the driver of the vehicle which was
involved in, or contributed to, an
accident in which the deceased was
killed, there is absolutely no indication in the charge sheet of the
respects in which the accused
was alleged to have contravened the
relevant provisions of the NRT Act.
[16]
The record contains a pro-forma charge sheet relating to a
contravention of section 61 of the NRT Act and
it appears that the
charge sheet which was served on the accused was a cut and paste from
this pro-forma charge sheet; the term
“culpable homicide”
was merely tacked on in the heading of the charge sheet. Clearly, no
thought or effort was put
into the drafting of this charge sheet. A
pro-forma precedent was used without much thought, in a mechanical
fashion, and without
any regard to the facts that must have been
evident in the police docket which one assumes was available when the
charge sheet
was prepared.
[17]
The accused’s legal representative, too, appears to have failed
in his duty to properly interrogate
the charge. The plea statement,
which he also signed, merely parrots the charge sheet. The accused
pleads guilty to a statutory
offence in his plea statement which,
like the charge sheet, contains no factual averments to sustain a
guilty plea on the statutory
offence. On the other hand, the accused
does not expressly plead guilty to the common law crime of culpable
homicide but admits
to facts which are sufficient to sustain a
conviction on this charge. The accused was not charged in the
alternative and nor is
culpable homicide a competent verdict on a
charge relating to a contravention of section 61 of the NRT Act and
vice versa.
[18]
Sections 86 and 88 of the CPA does provide some succour to the State
where there may be deficiencies in the
charge.
[19]
Section 86 of the CPA provides as follows:
“
Court
may order that charge be amended
Where
a charge is defective for the want of any essential averments therein
or where there appears to be any variance between any
averment in the
charge and the evidence adduced in proof of such averment, where it
appears that words or particulars ought to
have been inserted in the
charge have been omitted therefrom, or were 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
,
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 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
.”
(own emphasis)
[20]
Thus, section 86 of the CPA does allow for the amendment of the
charge but this must be done before judgment.
This means that any
amendment of the charge sheet should have been effected before the
pronouncement by the trial court on the
guilt of the accused (see,
S
v Ndlovu
2017 (2) SACR 305
(CC)
. In this matter, once
the Magistrate accepted the plea and convicted the accused, she
became
functus officio
.
[21]
Section 88(1) of the CPA provides that:
“
Defect
in charge cured by evidence
Where
a charge is defective for 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.
”
(own
emphasis)
[22]
Again, section 88 of the CPA does not assist the court or the accused
in this matter since judgment had already
been granted by the time
the defect in the charge sheet was noted.
[23]
In terms of section 304A
[1]
of
the CPA, a magistrate may refer a matter to this court after
conviction but before sentence if he or she is of the opinion that
the proceedings in respect of which an accused was convicted are not
in accordance with justice or doubt exists whether the proceedings
are in accordance with justice.
[24] It
is possible for an appellate court to amend the charge on appeal or
review provided that the court is
satisfied that the defence would
have remained the same if the charge had already contained the
necessary averments and the accused
could not be possibly prejudiced
by the amendment (see,
S v Nedzamba
2013 (1) SACR
335
(SCA)
para [20]).
[25] On
receipt of the special review, this Court invited the parties to make
such submissions as they deemed
necessary on whether the charge sheet
can be amended on review, especially in light of the accused’s
plea statement, and
what cause of action the parties would propose in
the event that this Court was to conclude that there was an
irredeemable irregularity
in the trial proceedings.
[26]
The State conceded that the charge sheet was not properly drafted and
that the charge that was read into
the record incorrectly referred to
a contravention of the NRT Act. Nonetheless, it was suggested that
the charge be amended on
review since it was the accused’s
intention to plead guilty to culpable homicide and he had admitted to
all the elements
of this offence in his section 112 (2) plea
statement. A similar approach was adopted by the accused’s
legal representative.
He stated that his instruction by the accused
was to plead guilty to culpable homicide and, as a consequence
thereof, had “elevated”
this aspect in his plea
explanation.
[27] It
appears to me that the common-sense approach would be to confirm the
conviction of the accused on the
charge of culpable homicide
albeit
that the charge sheet refers somewhat obliquely to this offence.
There can be no prejudice to the accused as it is apparent that
at
all relevant times it was his intention to plead guilty to this
offence. This was confirmed by his legal representative and
reflected
in the accused’s plea statement. A new trial, with its
accompanying waste of time and inconvenience, is avoided
without the
accused being prejudiced in any way; this outcome is one that would
be in the interests of justice.
[28] At
first blush, the approach adopted by this Court may appear to be
somewhat unorthodox and unusual. However,
a similar approach was
adopted in
S v Mbokazi
1998 (1) SACR 438
(N)
where it was held that a review court may substitute a conviction of
one offence to which charge the accused had pleaded (fraud)
for an
irregular conviction of another offence (theft) to which charge he
had not pleaded but had nevertheless been convicted.
A substitution
of this nature is proper only if the evidence establishes the guilt
of the accused on the substituted charge. In
the matter at hand, of
course, the accused has indicated that it was always his intention to
plead guilty to the charge of culpable
homicide and the factual
admissions in his plea explanation sustains a conviction on this
charge.
ORDER
[29] In
the circumstances, I propose the following order:
[29.1] The
conviction of the accused on the charge of culpable homicide is
confirmed.
[29.2] The
matter is remanded to the Bellville Magistrate’s Court for the
finalisation of the sentence.
FRANCIS J
Judge of the High
Court
I agree and it is so
ordered.
SLINGERS J
Judge of the High
Court
Special Review Judgment
The judgment was handed down on
24
MAY 2023
[1]
304A
Review of proceedings before sentence
(1)
(a) If a magistrate or regional magistrate
after conviction but before sentence
is of the opinion that the
proceedings in respect of which he brought in a
conviction are
not in accordance with justice, or that doubt exists whether
the
proceedings are in accordance with justice, he shall, without
sentencing
the accused, record the reasons for his opinion and
transmit them, together
with the record of the proceedings, to
the registrar of the provincial division
having jurisdiction, and
such registrar shall, as soon as is practicable, lay
the same for
review in chambers before a judge, who shall have the same
powers
in respect of such proceedings as if the record thereof had been
laid
before him in terms of section 303.
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