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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2022] ZAWCHC 123
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## Tshandu v S (A248/21)
[2022] ZAWCHC 123 (14 June 2022)
Tshandu v S (A248/21)
[2022] ZAWCHC 123 (14 June 2022)
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sino date 14 June 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
A248/21
In
the matter between:
MPUMELELO
TSHANDU
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
Coram:
Rogers and Mantame JJ
Heard
on:
10 June
2022
Delivered:
14 June 2022 (09h30 by email)
JUDGMENT
ROGERS
J (MANTAME J concurring):
[1]
The appellant was tried with three
others in the Wynberg Magistrate’s Court on a charge of robbery
with aggravating circumstances.
He was No 4. No 1 was discharged at
the end of the State’s case. The appellant, and No 2 and No 3,
were convicted as charged.
He and No 2 were sentenced to 15 years’
imprisonment of which five years were suspended. No 3 received a
lesser sentence.
The trial court granted the appellant leave to
appeal against conviction and sentence. No 2 sought leave to appeal
only against
conviction. That appeal succeeded in this Court in June
last year. However, the circumstances relating to the conviction of
No
2 and No 4 are quite different.
[2]
It was established by the State that
on 16 October 2016, a Sunday evening, Mr Hilton Allison was the
victim of a robbery in the
driveway of his home at [....] Birkett
Road, Rondebosch. This was between 22:00 – 22:15. He was
accosted by four men, one
of whom held a gun to his head. There was
probably a fifth perpetrator in a getaway car. One of the robbers
happened to press a
panic button on Mr Allison’s remote
control. The robbers fled. Three of them went down a side alley of Mr
Allison’s
house and climbed over a gate. The fourth robber fled
from the front of the house and down the road.
[3]
Officers
from the security company, ADT, as well as police officers, were soon
on the scene. Two suspects were found hiding on Mr
Allison’s
roof. A third suspect, who was the driver of a car accosted by the
police on their way to the scene, was also arrested.
No 2 and No 3
were charged as being the suspects found on the roof, but on appeal
this Court held that it had not been proved beyond
reasonable doubt
that No 2 was one of those two men. No 1 was the driver, and he was
discharged at the end of the State’s
case. The weapon used by
the robbers was found at the back of Mr Allison’s property.
Upon forensic examination, it turned
out not to be a firearm as
defined in the Firearms Control Act.
[1]
[4]
The appellant was arrested between
05:00 – 06:00 the next morning. The State’s contention
was that he was hiding in
some bushes at or outside a house in
Greenbank Road. This house was claimed to be behind Mr Allison’s
house. The appellant
was alleged to have had burn marks on his leg,
which the State surmised had been suffered when he jumped over the
electric fence
at the back of Mr Allison’s property.
[5]
The appellant testified in his own
defence. He stated that on the Sunday in question he attended a party
at a student residence
in Mowbray. Following an altercation, he
decided to leave the party. He was drunk. He could not find a taxi to
take him back to
Khayelitsha, and eventually he lay down and slept
under a hedge where he was found by ADT. He denied any involvement in
the robbery.
[6]
Mr Allison, in court, identified the
appellant as the man who had held the gun to his head. He testified
that he could remember
the man’s face, because the man was very
close to him for quite a while, and there was sufficient light in the
street. He
described the man as being a bit shorter than himself and
as having a slender face with high cheekbones.
[7]
In closing argument, the appellant’s
legal representative called Mr Allison’s height assessment into
question, saying
that the presiding officer could ask the appellant
to stand up: “He is much taller than Mr Allison. We saw him
stand and
testify.” In another important respect, Mr Allison’s
testimony was inconsistent with the State’s case. He testified
that the appellant was apprehended on his property. It subsequently
became common cause that the appellant was only arrested some
hours
later, under a hedge or bushes outside [....] Greenbank Road.
[8]
Mr
Allison testified about 18 months after the incident. There was no
evidence that he gave a physical description to the police
before
testifying. There was no identification parade. A dock identification
in these circumstances can carry very little weight.
[2]
Honesty and confidence often go hand-in-hand with mistaken eyewitness
identification. The lapse of time, the traumatic nature of
the
incident, the fact that the perpetrators were unknown to Mr Allison,
and the circumstances under which he saw the appellant
in court,
would be sufficient to reach this conclusion. Problems in
cross-racial identification might add a further complication.
[3]
[9]
The timing and location of the
appellant’s arrest cast significant doubt over the State’s
case. The event giving rise
to his apprehension was a housebreaking
incident at [....] Greenbank Road between 05:00 and 06:00 the next
morning, some seven
hours after the robbery at Mr Allison’s
home. The incident at [....] Greenbank Road was reported to ADT, who
attended at
the scene. The appellant was found under bushes or a
hedge opposite [....] Greenbank Road. He was initially arrested as
the suspected
perpetrator of the housebreaking. It was claimed that
he had burn marks on his leg. It was only some time later that he was
charged
with the robbery at [....] Birkett Road.
[10]
The appellant denied involvement in
either of the crimes. He testified that when the occupant of [....]
Greenbank Road saw him after
his apprehension, she said that he was
not the perpetrator, and that the man who broke into her house had
been dressed entirely
in black clothing. The appellant’s legal
representative put to a police witness, Const Nyanda, that the
appellant had
been acquitted on the housebreaking charge. He could
not comment.
[11]
The State’s theory was that
the appellant had sustained the burn marks while jumping over the
electric fence at the back of
Mr Allison’s property. Although
it was implied, in the presentation of the State’s case, that
the appellant was found
on or just outside the property in Greenbank
Road backing onto Mr Allison’s house, this was not established
by the evidence.
In fact, the house that backs onto Mr Allison’s
property is [....] Greenbank Road, and there are several intervening
houses
between 12 and [....] Greenbank Road.
[12]
Then there is the question of
timing. It seems implausible that somebody who had narrowly evaded
arrest for an armed robbery committed
at around 22:00 would have
remained in the immediate vicinity for around seven hours rather than
making good his escape. Moreover,
it was not established that the
appellant was hiding (as the court a quo found), rather than
sleeping, when he was apprehended.
The only ADT officer called as a
witness, Mr Mathews, was inside the house at [....] Greenbank Road
with the occupant when the
appellant was found, and so could not
testify about the precise circumstances of the apprehension.
[13]
Sgt Rala, who formally arrested
the appellant after the latter was handed over to the police by the
ADT officers, could not
recall any of the details. He explained that,
in preparation for testifying, he had refreshed his memory with
reference to his
statement in the docket for the robbery at [....]
Birkett Road. He had dealt with the arrest of the suspected
perpetrator outside
[....] Greenbank Road in his statement in the
docket for the housebreaking case, and had not refreshed his memory
on that incident.
The prosecutor did not ask for an adjournment so
that Sgt Rala could look at the housebreaking docket. Sgt Rala could
not even
confirm that the appellant was the person arrested outside
[....] Greenbank Road.
[14]
Neither Mr Mathews nor Sgt Rala were
asked what the appellant was wearing when he was apprehended. This
might have been important,
because Mr Allison testified that the
gunman (the man he identified as the appellant) was wearing shorts.
[15]
Regarding the alleged burn wounds,
Mr Mathews could not recall whether he saw any injuries on the
appellant. What did emerge from
his evidence is that there was an
electric fence at the front of [....] Greenbank Road. If the
appellant indeed had a burn injury,
and if he was indeed the
perpetrator of the housebreaking, there is no greater likelihood that
he suffered the burn while jumping
over Mr Allison’s electric
fence than over the electric fence at [....] Greenbank Road. There
was, I may add, no evidence
that either of these electric fences was
actually damaged.
[16]
It is unfortunate that the admirable
promptness with which the police attended to the crimes at [....]
Birkett Road and [....] Greenbank
Road was not matched by thorough
investigation and a proper presentation of evidence at the trial.
What this would have revealed
we cannot say, but as it is the State
did not come close to establishing the appellant’s guilt beyond
reasonable doubt. Counsel
for the State, while not conceding the
appeal, frankly acknowledged the formidable difficulties which
confronted her in supporting
the conviction.
[17]
The following order is made:
1.
The appeal succeeds.
2.
The order of the court a quo convicting the appellant is set aside
and replaced with an order acquitting
the appellant.
O
L ROGERS
Judge
of the High Court
B
P MANTAME
Judge
of the High Court
For the
Appellant:
S Kuun, Legal-Aid South Africa, Cape Town Justice Centre
For the First and Second
Respondents: C
J Teunissen, Office of the Director
of Public Prosecutions, Cape Town
[1]
60
of 2000.
[2]
S
v Tandwa and Others
[2007] ZASCA 34
;
2008 (1) SACR 613
(SCA) at paras 129-131.
[3]
See
Elizabeth F Loftus
Eyewitness
Testimony, with a New Preface
(Harvard
University Press 1996) at 136-142, citing studies demonstrating that
people are better at recognising faces of persons
of their own race
than a different race. Loftus is the pioneer and doyen of the study
of memory in its forensic context.
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