Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 186South Africa
Phillips and Others v S (A70/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 186 (15 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
15 September 2022
Headnotes
on to his phone in his pocket, the person at the back hit him on the face with a fist three to four times and successfully pulled the phone from his pocket. He also took his four finger rings. At that time, the first appellant demanded Mr Wentzel’s silver chain and the man sitting on the front passenger seat told the first appellant to shoot Mr Wentzel. The first appellant then took out a firearm, hit Mr Wentzel randomly on the face, and then pulled the chains off him. The man at the backseat also wanted to take off Mr Wentzel’s shoes, and as the latter opened the door, the man at the back kicked him out of the car.
Judgment
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## Phillips and Others v S (A70/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 186 (15 September 2022)
Phillips and Others v S (A70/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 186 (15 September 2022)
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sino date 15 September 2022
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
Case
No: A70/22
In
the matter between:
ASHWIN
PHILLIPS
First Appellant
DENZIL
NOBELS
Second Appellant
ISMAEL
HAMMERS
Third Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON 15 SEPTEMBER 2022
LEKHULENI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The three appellants were convicted in the Regional Court sitting in
Strand on a charge
of Robbery with Aggravating Circumstance read with
section 51(2)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
The
Regional Magistrate found that there were compelling and
substantial circumstances meriting a deviation from the prescribed
minimum sentence and imposed a sentence of 12 years direct
imprisonment in respect of the first appellant, 10 years imprisonment
in respect of the second appellant and 8 years imprisonment in
respect of the third appellant. In terms of
section 103(1)(g)
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
, the court declared the three
appellants unfit to possess a firearm.
Subsequent
thereto, the appellants applied for leave to appeal against their
conviction and sentence and their application was refused
by the
trial court. However, on petition to the Judge President in terms of
section 309C of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
(“
the
CPA”
), the
appellants were granted leave to appeal to this court against their
conviction only.
[2]
The charge against the appellants was that on 08 September 2016 and
at or near Main
Road in Strand, they unlawfully and intentionally
assaulted Tolgah Chotia and Ayoob Wentzel and took the following
items from them:
one Samsung J5 Cell phone, R20 cash, Gold chain and
R200 cash. The appellants pleaded not guilty to the charge and
exercised their
right to remain silent and provided no plea
explanation. The applicable penal provisions in terms of the
Criminal
Law Amendment Act were
properly explained to them before the
commencement of the trial. At the trial, Mr Hancook from Legal Aid
South Africa represented
the appellants and Ms Swartz appeared for
the State.
THE
FACTUAL MATRIX
[3]
At the trial, the state’s case rested principally on the
evidence of four witnesses
namely, Mr A Wentzel, Mr T Chotia, J Lewis
and Mr Y Harris. The accused testified and did not call any witnesses
to corroborate
their version. The evidence led at the trial can be
summarised briefly as follows: Mr Wentzel testified first and stated
that on
11 September 2016, just after 24h00, he was in a Nightclub
called Locomotion in Somerset West. He was with his friends, Junaid
Lewis, Yusuf Harris, Tolga Chotia and Cherelle Meyer. They went to
this place with Junaid in the latter’s green Uno motor
vehicle.
Early that evening, before their departure to the nightclub, he
smoked dagga with his friends; however he was sober and
was aware of
what was going on around him. On their way home, Junaid was the
driver, and Cherelle Meyer was seated in the front
passenger seat. He
testified that he was sitting with Mr Chotia and Yusuf at the back
seat of the Uno. They were all sober he stated.
As they were driving,
his companions in the car told him that there was a car that was
driving very close behind them and he looked
back to see the car, and
suddenly, their car overturned. He identified the car that drove very
close behind them as a white BMW.
After their car overturned, they
all got out of the vehicle, and he then saw the white BMW stopping a
distance away from them.
The three men alighted from the BMW and
approached them. According to him, those three men are the appellants
in this matter. He
had seen the first appellant earlier at the
Locomotion Club and was seeing him for the first time in the club. He
stated that the
first appellant had asked him who he was and where he
lived when they were at the club.
[4]
He stated that as a result of the accident, he was injured and
bleeding on his nose
and left eyebrow. Cherelle Meyer suffered a
concussion. The first appellant approached him and told him that he
is going to take
him (Mr Wentzel) to the hospital. However, Mr
Wentzel told the first appellant that he did not want to go to the
hospital but the
first appellant insisted that he would take him to
the hospital and pulled him to the BMW and caused him to sit in the
back seat.
He stated that when he was pulled to the car, he just went
with him because the first appellant told him they were taking him to
the hospital. He was however not happy, but they forced him to get
into the BMW. As this was happening, he asked Ismael Hassan
who was
with him in the Uno to go with him to the hospital, and as Ismael was
getting into the BMW, the first appellant drove off
leaving Ismael
behind. After driving a short distance, the person seated with Mr
Wentzel in the back seat demanded his phone. Mr
Wentzel testified
that he could not remember what the person at the back looked like.
As he held on to his phone in his pocket,
the person at the back hit
him on the face with a fist three to four times and successfully
pulled the phone from his pocket. He
also took his four finger rings.
At that time, the first appellant demanded Mr Wentzel’s silver
chain and the man sitting
on the front passenger seat told the first
appellant to shoot Mr Wentzel. The first appellant then took out a
firearm, hit Mr Wentzel
randomly on the face, and then pulled the
chains off him. The man at the backseat also wanted to take off Mr
Wentzel’s shoes,
and as the latter opened the door, the man at
the back kicked him out of the car.
[5]
The first appellant and his friend immediately drove off. Mr Wentzel
then walked a
distance of about half a kilometre to where the Uno was
and told his friends what happened to him. They decided to walk home,
leaving
the Uno behind. On the way, a bouncer from Locomotion Club
came and gave them a lift to the nightclub where they were earlier.
Shortly thereafter, an ambulance was called, and Mr Wentzel was taken
to the hospital. He testified that both his cheekbones were
broken
and he spent a month and a half in hospital. On 20 October 2020,
after he was discharged from hospital, he gave a statement
to the
police and also attended a photo identification parade at the Police
Station. At the identification parade, the police showed
him several
photos, and he could only identify the first appellant. He stated
that he identified him instantly because he saw his
face at the
nightclub and he also saw his face again at the accident scene.
[6]
Under cross-examination, he admitted that he could only point the
first appellant
at the photo identification parade, and could not
remember anything about the other two persons who were with the first
appellant.
He testified further that despite him sitting at the back
and speaking to the man seated with him at the back seat, he could
not
identify that person. He also stated that he did not know the
second and the third appellants. He denied that he voluntarily asked
them to stop and to drop him off shortly after they left the accident
scene. He denied that he told the appellants that he wanted
to be
with his friends whom he had left behind at the Uno.
[7]
Tolga Chotia was the second witness to testify and he corroborated Mr
Wentzel’s
evidence as to how they drove to the nightclub and
how the accident occurred. In addition to the evidence of Mr Wentzel,
Mr Chotia
testified that when they left the nightclub, the front two
tyres of their vehicle were flat. He testified that after their car
rolled, it came to a standstill on its side and not the roof.
Thereafter, two men came out of the BMW while one remained seated
on
the front passenger seat of the BMW. One of the two men stood at a
distance while the first appellant came closer to them and
asked them
if they needed help. He testified that they asked the first appellant
to assist them to roll the vehicle onto its wheels.
Indeed, the first
appellant assisted them. He could not identify the person who was
standing at a distance.
[8]
The first appellant asked him to phone the police. When he took out
his phone to call
the police, the first appellant pressed something
which the witness thought was a firearm against the witness’s
stomach and
demanded that he hand over his phone and all his
belongings. Out of fear, he gave the first appellant his J5 Cell
phone worth R3000.
He also gave the first appellant R20, which was in
his pocket. The man standing at a distance took Mr Wentzel to the car
alleging
that they were taking him to the hospital. He also saw the
person who was standing at a distance taking Ms Meyer’s bag
which
was laying close to the road against the curb. They then left
with Mr Wentzel and a few minutes later, Mr Wentzel returned with
his
face swollen and full of blood. His rings and chains were taken from
him. Mr Wentzel told them that he was assaulted and robbed
of his
money. He also testified that the robbers took the front loader and
Ms Meyer’s tog bag. After the incident, he attended
a photo
identification parade at the Police Station, and could only identify
the first appellant. He could not identify the other
appellants.
[9]
Junaid Lewis who was the driver of the Uno on the night in question
also testified.
His evidence mirrored the evidence given by Mr
Wentzel and Mr Chotia. In addition to the evidence given by the other
two witnesses,
he testified that the BMW that drove behind them
literally touched the rear bumper of the Uno. After their vehicle
overturned,
three people from the BMW came out, and the first
appellant approached them. The first appellant told them to call the
police.
He then saw the second appellant removing speakers, a black
Nike bag, a red eagle jacket, and a front loader from the Uno.
According
to him, three people came out of the BMW, but he could not
identify the third person as the latter was a distance away from him.
The first appellant saw that Mr Wentzel was bleeding, and offered to
take him to the hospital. He did not see when Mr Chotia was
robbed of
his phone, however, Mr Chotia told him that he was robbed of his
phone. He supported the evidence of the other two witnesses
that Mr
Wentzel left with the first appellant and his friends and shortly
thereafter, he came back and his face was swollen and
his eyes were
closed and he could not speak properly. After this incident, he also
attended a photo identification parade at the
Police Station where he
could only identify the first appellant. He testified that he could
not identify the second and the third
appellant as he did not see
their faces.
[10]
Yusuf Harris also testified. He agreed with the other witnesses on
the sequence of events; however
according to him, after their vehicle
overturned, two men approached them from the BMW. He testified that
the first appellant was
one of the two persons from the BMW. He could
not identify the other person who was with the first appellant. He
saw the person
he could not identify holding Ms Meyer’s bag in
his hands. He did not see where he got the bag from. He did not see
when
Mr Chotia was robbed of his phone. It was his testimony that the
first appellant left with Mr Wentzel and shortly thereafter, Mr
Wentzel came walking towards them and his face was covered with blood
and was swollen. Mr Wentzel told them that they robbed him
and also
beat him. Mr Chotia took a cloth and wrapped it around Mr Wentzel’s
face.
[11]
The three appellants also testified. The first appellant’s
evidence was that on the evening
in question, he was together with
his fiancé Monique Thomas at the Lane, where young people
gather to relax. It is a place
where there are always parties,
braais, and the cooking of potjiekos. Around 19h00, they then went
home. He spent some time with
his girlfriend drinking, and later went
looking for more Ciders to drink. He could not find any in the area
where they stay and
decided to go to a nightclub called Wild West in
Somerset West, to buy the Ciders there. He used a BMW 320 motor
vehicle. The vehicle
belonged to his wife. Upon arrival at the club
in Somerset West, he found that it was closed, and he decided to go
home. On his
way home and at a robot intersection, he saw the second
and the third appellants walking. He knew them very well as they
stayed
in the same neighbourhood. He essentially gave them a lift
home. Whilst driving, the second appellant alerted him of a vehicle
that had overturned and was lying on its roof. He stopped and the
three of them got out and observed that it was an accident. He
saw
three young men and a lady standing outside the vehicle. One of the
young men was severely injured. The three of them assisted
in pushing
the vehicle to stand on its wheels.
[12]
The complainants thanked them and asked the appellants to take Mr
Wentzel to the hospital, and
he obliged. Mr Wentzel got in his
vehicle and had an empty bag. He sat on the front passenger seat, and
as they were on their way
to the hospital, Mr Wentzel informed them
that he could not leave his friends alone at the place where the
accident occurred. He
testified that Mr Wentzel told him to stop.
First appellant stopped the vehicle and Mr Wentzel opened the door,
got out of the
vehicle and ran down the road back towards where his
friends were. He then turned around and drove home. He went home and
upon
arrival, he had some drinks with his fiancé. On the
Monday of that week, his wife went to work and looked in the car and
found Mr Wentzel's bag under the front passenger seat. He did not
look to see what was inside the bag. He kept the bag in his place.
He
was later arrested for this incident. During cross-examination, he
testified that at the scene, Mr Wentzel was seriously injured,
his
face was seriously swollen, and he could not speak. He testified
during cross-examination that Mr Wentzel exited his vehicle
possibly
because he was afraid of them as they have a lot of tattoos and this
is associated with gang violence and gangs in prison.
He denied that
he assaulted Mr Wentzel with a firearm. He also informed the court
that he wanted to keep the bag that was found
in his vehicle.
[13]
The second and the third appellants also testified. They both
testified that on the night in
question, they were in a place called
Halfway looking for scraps. It was around 22h00 in the evening when
they were looking for
scraps and wine bottles to sell and make money.
They later got a lift home from the first appellant. They have known
the first
appellant for a very long time. Second appellant sat on the
front passenger seat, and the third appellant sat at the back seat.
As they were driving, the second appellant alerted the first
appellant of the Uno that had overturned. Both second and third
appellants
supported the evidence of the first appellant that they
assisted the complainants in getting their Uno back onto its wheels.
They
also testified that at the request of the complainants, they
obliged to take Mr Wentzel to the hospital. On the way to the
hospital,
Mr Wentzel told the first appellant to stop the vehicle as
he said he could not go without one of his friends. The first
appellant
stopped the vehicle and Mr Wentzel alighted. The first
appellant turned right there and took them to their respective homes
and
went home as well. During cross-examination, the second appellant
testified that when Mr Wentzel alighted from the vehicle, he walked
out with his rings and jewellery. They denied that they robbed the
complainants as alleged or at all. That was in brief, the evidence
that was before the trial court.
GROUNDS
OF APPEAL
[14]
The appellants’ grounds of appeal can be summed as follows:
First, the appellants contends
that the trial court erred in finding
that the state had proved their guilt beyond reasonable doubt because
the court
a quo
failed to take sufficient consideration to the
many contradictions of the state witnesses. The appellants contend
that the contradictions
in the State’s case were material in
nature, specifically in the light of the defence preferred by the
appellants that the
complainants had fabricated the robbery in order
to lessen the consequences they were to face as a result of attending
a party
without the permission of their parents and thereafter being
involved in an accident where property was lost. Secondly, it is was
submitted that the court below erred in finding that the appellants’
version was not reasonably possibly true because the
appellants did
not deviate from their version during the trial and gave a plausible
explanation as to how the bag from the Uno
came to be inside the
white BMW. Thirdly, the appellants contend that the court
a quo
failed to attach sufficient weight to the global testimony of the
complainants regarding a motive to mislead their parents and
the
court as to what happened on the night in question.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND ANALYSIS
[15]
This appeal is mainly on the facts.
Of
importance in this matter is that, it is common cause that the
complainants’ vehicle overturned and that there was an
encounter between the appellants and the complainants. The only issue
in dispute before the trial court was whether the appellants
robbed
the complainants of their property and assaulted them as alleged or
at all.
[16]
It is trite law that a court of appeal should be slow to interfere
with the trial court’s
findings of fact in the absence of a
material misdirection. See
R
v Dhlumayo and Another
1948 (2) SA 677
(A) at 705-706. An appeal court’s powers to
interfere on appeal with the findings of fact of a trial court are
limited. See
S
v Francis
1991
(1) SACR 198
(A) at 204E. In the absence of a demonstrable and
material misdirection by the trial court, its findings of fact are
presumed to
be correct and will only be disregarded if the recorded
evidence shows them to be clearly wrong. When an appeal is lodged
against
the trial court’s findings of fact, the appeal court
should take into account the fact that the trial court was in a more
favourable position than itself to form a judgment because it was
able to observe the witnesses during their questioning and was
absorbed in the atmosphere of the trial. See
S
v Monyane and Others
2008
(1) SACR 543
(SCA).
[17]
In criminal proceedings, the state bears the onus to prove the
accused’s guilt beyond reasonable
doubt. See
S v Mbuli
2003 (1) SACR 97
(SCA) at 110D-F;
S v Jackson
1998 (1) SACR
470
(SCA) and
S v Schackell
2001 (4) SACR 279
(SCA). However,
the State does not need to prove the guilt of an accused person
beyond any shadow of a doubt. On the other hand,
no onus rests on the
accused to prove his or her innocence. See
S v Combrinck
2012
(1) SACR 93
(SCA) at para 15. The accused’s version cannot be
rejected only on the basis that it is improbable, but only once the
trial
court has found, on credible evidence, that the explanation is
false beyond a reasonable doubt. See
S v V
2000 (1) SACR 453
(SCA) at 455B. The corollary thereof is that, if the accused’s
version is reasonably possibly true, the accused is entitled
to an
acquittal.
[18]
At the heart of this appeal is the correct approach to the evaluation
of evidence by the trial
court. I must mention though that the
version proffered by the State and that of the appellants at the
trial are diametrically
opposed to each other as far as the alleged
robbery is concerned. The complainants aver that the appellants
robbed them of their
cell phones, cash and other items. On the other
hand, the appellants deny these allegations and contend that they did
not rob the
complainants as alleged or at all. Instead, they aver
that they assisted the complainants in pushing the Uno to stand on
its wheels.
The two versions in my view, are mutually destructive.
[19]
The approach to resolving two irreconcilable, mutually destructive
factual versions is well-established
in our law
and
requires no repetition. S
ee
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and another v Martell & Cie SA and
others
2003 (1) SA
11
(SCA) para 5.
Applying
these principles to the evidence above, i
t
is common cause that the State relied on the evidence of four
witnesses who all testified on what happened on the night in
question.
While on the other hand, the appellants testified and gave
a different version from that proffered by the State witnesses.
Notwithstanding,
there are several common cause issues between the
State and the defence case. As explained above, it is common cause
that the complainant’s
vehicle overturned on the night in
question. It is also common cause that the first appellant and his
two companions came to the
scene where the accident happened. It is
common cause that the first appellant assisted the complainants in
rolling over the vehicle
to stand on its wheels. It is also common
cause that the first appellant and his companions drove off with Mr
Wentzel purportedly
taking him to the hospital. It is not in dispute
that the first appellant was positively identified at the photo
identification
parade and in court by all the State witnesses who
came to testify at the trial. Against this backdrop, I turn to
consider an anomaly
that occurred during the trial at the court
below.
FAILURE
TO DISCHARGE THE THIRD APPELLANT IN TERMS OF
SECTION 174
OF THE CPA
[20]
Before I can consider whether the court
a quo
was correct in
its evaluation of the evidence and findings against the three
appellants, I deem it necessary to address an irregularity
that
happened in this matter in the court below, which in my view, is
dispositive of the appeal in respect of the third appellant.
Gleaning
from the court's record of proceedings, it is worth noting that
throughout the course of the trial, none of the State
witnesses
identified the third appellant. There was no evidence whatsoever
adduced by the state witnesses that proved or suggested
that the
third appellant was at the crime scene or in the BMW on the night in
question. There was also no evidence whatsoever that
implicated the
third appellant. The State witnesses did not identify the third
appellant at the crime scene, at the photo identification
parade and
even in court.
[21]
Notably, the third appellant was placed at the crime scene
particularly, in the first appellant’s
vehicle by his legal
representative during cross-examination. From the record, the
evidence against the third appellant was deficient
and fell short of
the required threshold for the third appellant to be put on his
defence at the closure of the State case. At
the hearing of this
appeal, Both Mr Snyman who appeared on behalf of the State, and Ms
Kuun who appeared for the appellants, conceded
that there was no
evidence against the third appellant at the closure of the State’s
case.
[22]
In my view, the trial court should have discharged the third
appellant in terms of
section 174
of the CPA at the closure of the
State case. In a case like this, it is crucial in my view to revisit
the provisions of
section 174
and determine how it engages the
constitutional right of an accused person to a fair trial. For the
sake of brevity,
section 174
provides as follows:
“
If,
at the close of the case for the prosecution at any trial, the court
is of the opinion that there is no evidence that the accused
committed the offence referred to in the charge or any offence of
which he may be convicted on the charge, it may return a verdict
of
not guilty.”
[23]
This section gives a court a discretion in deciding whether to
discharge an accused person at
the conclusion of the State case. The
discretion must be exercised constitutionally and judicially within
the ambit of the law.
The words “no evidence” in the
section have been interpreted to mean no evidence upon which a
reasonable person acting
carefully may convict -
that
the accused committed the offence with which he is charged, or an
offence which is a competent verdict on that charge.
See
S
v Khanyapa
1979
(1) SA 824
(A) at 838F-G;
See
also
S v Swart and
Another
2001 (1)
SACR 334
(W).
However,
suppose in the opinion of the trial court, there is evidence upon
which the accused might reasonably be convicted, in that
event the
duty of the trial court is straightforward. In that case, the accused
may not be discharged and the trial must continue
to its end. See
S
v Lubaxa
[2002]
2 All SA 107
(SCA) at para 11.
[24]
It is interesting to note that notwithstanding the deficiencies in
the State’s case, the
legal representative appearing for the
appellants did not apply for the discharge of the third appellant in
terms of
section 174
of the CPA at the closure of the case for the
prosecution. The court as well did not deem it prudent
mero motu
to discharge the third appellant at the closure of the State case.
Even in this appeal, this issue was not raised by the parties
on the
papers. The appeal court raised it
mero motu
with the parties.
I deem it necessary to emphasise that there is a constitutional duty
on a judicial officer to discharge an accused
person at the closure
of the State case where there is no evidence at all implicating an
accused person.
[25]
From the reading of the record, it seems to me, the reason why the
court
a quo
did not consider the invocation of
section 174
of
the CPA at the closure of the State’s case in respect of the
third appellant was because of the version that was put to
the State
witnesses that the appellants would come and say that they were at
the crime scene and assisted the complainants to bring
the car on its
wheels. In my view, the statements made by a legal representative on
what the accused would say if called to testify
does not amount to
evidence at all. It does not relieve or exonerate the State to make a
prima facie
case against the accused before the accused can be
put to his defence.
[26]
It must be emphasised that an accused person has a right to a fair
trial as envisaged in section
35(3) of the Constitution. This right,
among others, encompasses the right to be presumed innocent, the
right to remain silent
and the right not to be compelled to give
self-incriminating evidence. Where the evidence at the closure of the
State case is inadequate
and
falls
below the required threshold, that should be the end of the matter in
respect of that accused. It must be stressed that the
failure by a
trial court to discharge an accused person in circumstances where
there is no evidence connecting the accused to the
charge or, at the
very least, implicating him, amounts to an irregularity that vitiates
a resultant conviction. In
S
v Lubaxa
at
para 18, Nugent AJA, as he then was, stated as follows:
“
I
have no doubt that an accused person (whether or not he is
represented) is entitled to be discharged at the close of the case
for the prosecution if there is no possibility of a conviction other
than if he enters the witness box and incriminates himself. The
failure to discharge an accused in those circumstances, if
necessary
mero
motu,
is in my
view a breach of the rights that are guaranteed by the Constitution
and will ordinarily vitiate a conviction based
exclusively upon his
self-incriminatory evidence.”
[27]
I am aware that this matter involved multiple accused and that the
trial court had to be careful
and meticulous in invoking section 174
of the CPA. However, from the version of the appellants which was put
to the State witnesses,
it could not be suggested that the appellants
were going to implicate each other to supplement the State case.
There was no conflict
of interest. They were all represented by one
attorney, and they all raised a bare denial to the commission of the
alleged offence.
In my view, the invocation of section 174 would not
have compromised the proper administration of justice. It is further
my view
that the court
a
quo
should have acted
mero
motu
and discharged the third appellant in terms of section 174 of the
CPA. More so, i
n
S v Legote and
Another
2001 (2)
SALR 179
(SCA), the Supreme Court of Appeal indicated that it was the
duty of the trial court to ensure that an unrepresented accused
against
whom a
prima
facie
case had not
been made is discharged before giving evidence. In my view, this
approach applies with equal force to cases where
an accused person is
represented and no
prima
facie
case is made
out at the closure of the State case.
[28]
To my mind, the third appellants' rights to a fair trial was
infringed when he was called to
the witness' stand, notwithstanding
that no cogent evidence was adduced against him.
To
this end, I find that the appeal of the third appellant should
succeed.
APPEAL
IN RESPECT OF THE FIRST AND SECOND APPELLANT
[29]
I now turn to consider the appeal on the merits, particularly in
respect of the first and second
appellant. The two appellants argued
that the trial court erred in finding that the State had proved their
guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt because the court
a
quo
failed to take
sufficient consideration of the many contradictions of the state
witnesses. It is common cause that there were contradictions
in the
State’s case. The State witnesses contradicted each other on
several issues, for instance, the position of the vehicle
after it
overturned, how many people came from the BMW to assist them and
whether Mr Wentzel was forced to aboard the first appellant's
vehicle. In its judgment, the trial court found that the differences
in the State case were not essential, especially when considering
that the witnesses were traumatised and shocked by the accident. I
can’t agree more with the findings of the trial magistrate.
[30]
It must be stressed that contradictions
per
se
do not lead to
the rejection of a witness' evidence; they may simply be indicative
of an error. See
S v
Mkohle
1990 (1)
SACR 95
(A) at 98E. In
S
v Oosthuizen
1982
(3) SA 571
(T) at 576B-C, the court observed that ‘not every
error made by a witness affects his credibility; in each case the
trier
of fact has to make an evaluation, taking into account such
matters as the nature of the contradictions, their number and
importance,
and their
bearing
on other parts of the witness' evidence’. In my view, the trial
court was alive to this judicial injunction. The magistrate
cannot be
faulted with her conclusion that the inconsistencies and the
differences in the State’s case were of a relatively
minor
nature and were to be expected from the witnesses.
[31]
Significantly, the incident happened in September 2016. The witnesses
were called to testify
two years after the occurrence of the
incident. In my view, the State witnesses were frank, open, and
candid with the court. They
did not want to implicate the appellants
falsely. They testified that they did not identify the second
appellant during the photo
identification parade. Even during the
hearing, all the state witnesses, except for Mr Lewis, testified that
they did not know
the second and the third appellant. The argument
that the State witnesses laid the charge against the appellants in
order to gain
the sympathy of their parents as they went to a
nightclub without permission, is devoid of substance and was
correctly rejected
by the trial court.
[32]
In my view, the contradictions were of insignificance viewed from the
totality of the evidence.
I must emphasise that all the State
witnesses corroborated each other that their vehicle overturned. They
were in a state of shock
and traumatised. Notwithstanding, the second
appellant was seen by Mr Lewis taking the speakers and a Nike
backpack from the complainants
vehicle. Mr Lewis’ evidence was
corroborated by Mr Harris who testified that he saw a man from the
BMW in possession of Cherelle’s
blue handbag in his hand. All
the State witnesses agreed that Mr Wentzel left the scene with the
first appellant and his friends.
They all corroborated each other
that shortly thereafter, Mr Wentzel returned and, his face was
bloodied and swollen, and his rings
and necklaces had been taken from
him. The first and second appellants to a greater extent,
corroborated this version in my view.
In addition, the first and the
second appellant confirmed under oath that Mr Wentzel entered their
vehicle. They only denied that
they assaulted or robbed the
complainant as alleged or at all.
[33]
The appellants raised a bare denial to the charges levelled against
them. The version proffered
by the first appellant did not make sense
at all. The first appellant wanted the court to believe that Mr
Wentzel, who requested
them to take him to hospital as he was
seriously injured, suddenly decided that he no longer wanted to be
taken to the hospital
and wanted to alight from the vehicle for no
cogent reason. According to the first appellant, Mr Wentzel alighted
shortly after
they left with him and told them that he no longer
wanted to go to the hospital, but instead, wanted to be with his
friends despite
his serious injuries. The first appellant suggested
that Mr Wentzel was probably scared by their tattoos which may have
made him
think they are gangsters.
[34]
This in my view, is improbable, does not make sense and is devoid of
truth. The Regional Magistrate
was quite correct in rejecting this
version. It must be borne in mind that it was during the night, and
Mr Wentzel was alone. I
find it very strange that Mr Wentzel would
want to return to his friends notwithstanding the fact that he was
injured, and the
Good Samaritans were taking him to the hospital to
receive medical attention. Furthermore, if that was the case, the
first and
the second appellants could not explain why they did not
drive Mr Wentzel back to his friends, but instead decided to leave
him
in the middle of nowhere during the dangerous hours of the early
morning. This version, with respect, is illogical and inconsistent
with rationality. In my view, the court
a quo
was correct in
finding this version implausible.
[35]
It was also argued that Mr Wentzel was a single witness regarding
what transpired in the vehicle
and that the court
a quo
should
have approached his evidence with caution. It is well established in
our law that the evidence of a single witness must
be approached with
caution and should be clear and satisfactory in all material aspects.
A conviction will typically follow only
if the evidence of a single
witness is substantially satisfactory in every respect or if it is
corroborated by other evidence.
However our courts have stressed that
the exercise of caution must not be allowed to displace the exercise
of common sense.
See S v Artman and Another
1968 (3) SA 339
(SCA).
[36]
Accordingly, it behoves a court in evaluating such evidence to
determine whether, having regard
to its shortcomings, defects or
contradictions the truth has been told. See
R v Mokoena
[1956]
3 AII SA 208 (A);
S v Sauls and Others
1981 (3) SA 172
(A) at
180 E – F. In my view, the trial court in this matter was alive
to the fact that it was dealing with the evidence
of a single witness
and the applicable cautionary rule. The court below evaluated the
evidence of Mr Wentzel with caution and found
that Mr Wentzel’s
evidence was forthright and beyond reproach. The trial court found
that despite the thorough and extensive
cross-examination that Mr
Wentzel was subjected to, there were no discrepancies or
improbabilities in his version to disregard
his evidence. In my view,
these findings cannot be faulted.
[37]
Furthermore, in addition to the findings of the court
a quo
, I
do not doubt that Mr Wentzel was a truthful and credible witness. His
evidence was forthright and to the point. He was emphatic
that he did
not identify the person seated with him at the back who robbed him of
his cell phone and the cash amount. He identified
the first appellant
as the person who assaulted him with the firearm on his face. His
version was corroborated by the other State
witnesses who testified
that on his return after the first appellant dropped him, his face
was swollen, he was bleeding and he
could not talk.
[38]
In my view, there was overwhelming evidence against the first and
second appellants. The first
appellant was a poor witness and gave a
mendacious account of what transpired that evening. He was very
evasive in answering simple
questions put to him by the Prosecutor.
He could not explain to the court why he said Mr Wentzel was afraid
of them when he allegedly
requested to get out of the vehicle. He
also could not explain why he said he felt he was a hero when he
failed to take Mr Wentzel,
who was seriously injured, to the
hospital. His intention to rob the complainant was evidently
manifested by his admission that
he wanted to keep the complainant’s
bag for himself, even though he knew it was not his. His evidence
that he did not open
the bag to see what was inside it despite the
fact that he personally kept the bag in his shower, is so incongruous
and bereft
of rationality and truth. The second appellant on the one
hand, could not explain why he was looking for scrap and beer bottles
in the streets at 24h00 in the morning. To my mind, the version of
the first and second appellants that they did not rob Mr Wentzel
is
contrived, far-fetched, and it cannot be said to be reasonably
possibly true.
[39]
In the light of the evidence presented to the trial court, I am
satisfied that on the conspectus
of the evidence, the factual
findings made by the trial court were correct and that there was no
misdirection in this regard. In
my judgment, the trial court was
correct in finding that the state succeeded to prove the guilt of the
first and second appellants
beyond reasonable doubt.
ORDER
[40]
In the result, I would propose the following orders:
40.1
That the appeal in respect of the first and second appellants be
dismissed and their conviction confirmed.
40.2
That the appeal in respect of the third appellant be upheld and his
resultant conviction and sentence be
set aside.
LEKHULENI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree and it is so ordered
KUSEVITSKY
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel
for the Appellant: Ms S Kuun
Instructed
by Legal Aid South Africa, Cape Town Office
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv L Snyman
Instructed
by Office the Director of Public Prosecutions: Western Cape
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