Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 66South Africa
Dlamini v Ntuli and Others (Leave to Appeal) (D4845/2015) [2024] ZAKZDHC 66 (2 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
2 October 2024
Headnotes
the plaintiff’s claims against the second defendant for wrongful arrest and detention and I upheld her claim against the fourth defendant for malicious
Judgment
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## Dlamini v Ntuli and Others (Leave to Appeal) (D4845/2015) [2024] ZAKZDHC 66 (2 October 2024)
Dlamini v Ntuli and Others (Leave to Appeal) (D4845/2015) [2024] ZAKZDHC 66 (2 October 2024)
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sino date 2 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
D4845/2015
In
the matter between:
PHIKISILE
ALVINA DLAMINI
PLAINTIFF
and
DETECTIVE
INSPECTOR NTULI
FIRST DEFENDANT
MINISTER
OF POLICE
SECOND DEFENDANT
E
M NXUMALO
THIRD DEFENDANT
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
FOURTH DEFENDANT
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE
FIFTH DEFENDANT
Coram:
Mossop J
Heard:
18 September 2024
Delivered:
2 October 2024
ORDER
The
following order is granted
:
The
application for leave to appeal is refused, with costs to be taxed on
scale C.
JUDGMENT
MOSSOP
J
:
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against my judgment
of 19 July 2024. The party that brings this application is the fourth
defendant in the action, the Director of Public Prosecutions. I shall
refer to the parties in this judgment as they were cited
in the
plaintiff’s summons.
[2]
At trial, I was only required to consider the issue of
liability and, after hearing evidence, I upheld the plaintiff’s
claims
against the second defendant for wrongful arrest and detention
and I upheld her claim against the fourth defendant for malicious
prosecution. The second defendant has not sought leave to appeal the
judgment that was delivered against it.
[3]
Unlike at the trial, Mr Epstein SC and Mr
Mabuda now appear for the fourth defendant. Mr Pretorius SC continues
to appear for the
plaintiff.
[4]
I do not intend reciting the facts of the
matter in this brief judgment. It is unnecessary to do so as they
were dealt with in some
detail in my judgment and have been mentioned
in extenso
in Mr Epstein’s heads of argument. It would serve no useful
purpose to repeat them for a third time.
[5]
Section 17(1) of the Superior Courts Act 10
of 2013 (the Act) regulates the appeal procedure from the high court
and reads as follows:
- Leave
to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are
of the opinion that—
Leave
to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are
of the opinion that—
(a)
(i)
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
(b)
the decision sought on appeal does not fall within
the ambit of section 16(2)
(a)
;
and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues in the
case, the appeal would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties.’
[6]
From
the heads of argument delivered on behalf of the fourth defendant, it
appears that it acknowledges that the test for leave
to appeal has
been elevated since the introduction of the Act, as explained in the
seminal decision of Bertelsmann J in
The
Mont Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen and others
.
[1]
As mentioned by Mr Epstein in those heads of argument, in that matter
it was found that the use of the word ‘would’
in
s 17(1)
(a)
(i)
of the Act indicated a measure of certainty that another court would
come to a different decision in respect of the decision
sought to be
appealed.
[2]
[7]
Mr
Epstein commenced his argument by highlighting a factor relevant to
the conduct of the trial. This centred on the transcript
of
proceedings (the transcript) of the criminal trial in the Eshowe
Regional Court (the criminal trial) in which the plaintiff
was
initially convicted of murder and sentenced to 20 years’
imprisonment. Mr Epstein highlighted the fact that the transcript
was
handed in as an exhibit at the trial before me (the civil trial) and
was accepted by me as an exhibit.
[3]
However, not all of the persons who testified at the criminal trial
were called to testify at the civil trial: in fact, only one
witness,
excluding the plaintiff, testified at both trials. Mr Epstein
correctly drew attention to paragraph 3 of my judgment,
in which I
noted my reservation at proceeding in this fashion. My disquiet was
based on the fact that I did not get to see or hear
the evidence of
all the witnesses who testified at the criminal trial, but instead
had to accept the recorded evidence of those
witnesses who did. One
of the difficulties that I anticipated was the weight to be attached
to the evidence that was not given
before me.
[8]
It
was argued by Mr Epstein that the transcript was hearsay evidence and
ought to have been excluded by me and that my failure to
order this
may be viewed by another court as a misdirection on my part. My
attention was drawn to the full court decision of this
division in
Griffiths
v S
,
[4]
and to the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Technology
Corporate Management (Pty) Ltd and others v De Sousa and others
.
[5]
Griffiths
affirmed the principle that hearsay evidence is not admissible, and
Technology
Corporate Management
dealt, inter alia, with the application of the well-known matter of
Hollington
v F Hewthorn
&
Co Ltd
.
[6]
[9]
In
my view, the facts and circumstances of the civil trial are
distinguishable from the principles extracted from all three cases
just mentioned. In
Griffiths
:
[7]
‘
The
State
presented evidence to show that the
appellant masterminded the killing and robbery of the deceased for
monetary and property gain.
In order to secure conviction on the
charges of murder and robbery with aggravating circumstances, the
State relied on the narration
of hearsay evidence by certain
witnesses relating to the statements the deceased allegedly made to
them as well as the fact that
subsequent to the hijacking incident
the appellant allegedly pointed out the body of the deceased to the
police in terms
of s 218(2) of the Act as the intermediate facts
supporting the inference that the appellant was responsible for the
death of the
deceased.’
The
trial court in
Griffiths
accepted the hearsay evidence
presented in terms of
s 3(1)
(c)
of the
Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988
.
[10]
In
Technology
Corporate Management
, the dispute
before the court related to a dispute amongst shareholders of a
company. One of the parties attempted to lead evidence
of a finding
made against the defendant by a commissioner of the Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and the
rule in
Hollington
was invoked to prevent its admissibility. The judgment of Wallis JA
explained the rule in
Hollington
to be the following:
‘
Evidence
that a party has been convicted of a criminal offence is not
evidence, not even
prima
facie
evidence,
in a subsequent contested civil suit; it is the irrelevant opinion of
another court. In uncontested civil proceedings
the fact of the
conviction constitutes
prima
facie
proof. The
finding of a court in civil proceedings is inadmissible in subsequent
criminal proceedings and a conviction
is not evidence in
subsequent criminal proceedings against someone else.’
[8]
[11]
The
rule in
Hollington
is not without its critics.
[9]
Wallis
JA, however, stated further in
Technology
Corporate Management
that:
[10]
‘
The
rule in
Hollington
v Hewthorn
should
not be extended beyond the circumstances to which it expressly
applied. In other instances where it is sought to use findings
in a
previous case to prove facts in a subsequent case, the test for
admissibility should be relevance and the court must pay careful
attention to the weight to be attached to the evidence thus tendered.
It should be excluded if, like the
Land
Securities
case,
it diverts the case into a collateral enquiry.’
[12]
In the authorities referred to by Mr
Epstein, one party attempted to use evidence of statements or what
had been found at legal
proceedings against the other without the
other party’s consent. The differentiating factor between the
facts of those matters
and the facts of this matter is that in this
matter, all the parties consented to the handing up of the
transcript. This included
senior counsel who then acted for the
fourth defendant. I was advised that there was agreement between the
parties that I was to
treat what was recorded in the transcript as if
it was evidence that had been led before me. It consequently hardly
lies in the
mouth of the fourth defendant to now say that I should
have ignored what its own counsel, amongst others, urged me to do.
[13]
While hearsay evidence is usually not
accepted in legal proceedings it is perfectly permissible to agree to
the admission of hearsay
evidence. In terms of
section 3(1)
(a)
of the
Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45
of 1988
evidence can be admitted by consent (as was done in this
case). It reads as follows:
‘
(1)
Subject to the provisions of any other law, hearsay evidence shall
not be admitted as evidence at criminal or civil proceedings,
unless
-
(a)
each party against whom the evidence is to
be adduced agrees to the admission thereof as evidence at such
proceedings…’
That is precisely what
occurred in this instance.
[14]
I
am, furthermore, not sure what relevance
Hollington
has to the facts of this matter. The rule in
Hollington
only relates to findings of guilt by another court.
[11]
It is so that the plaintiff was twice convicted by the regional
court, but she was ultimately acquitted on appeal by the high court.
That acquittal was with the concurrence of Mr Epstein’s client,
who conceded the plaintiff’s appeal when faced with
the facts.
The convictions of the plaintiff and her ultimate acquittal were
accordingly not an issue in dispute. Indeed, it was
the very basis of
the civil action and was conceded by the fourth defendant in its
combined plea.
[12]
On the
issue of the parties agreeing to hand up the transcript, Mr Pretorius
drew my attention to
Fischer
v Ramahlele
[13]
in which Theron and Wallis JJA stated that:
‘…
it is
for the parties, either in the pleadings or affidavits (which serve
the function of both pleadings and evidence), to set out
and define
the nature of their dispute, and it is for the court to adjudicate
upon those issues.’ (Footnotes omitted.)
[15]
That, it would seem to me, also means that
the parties are at liberty to agree upon what evidence will be
accepted as being common
cause and how certain evidence will be
presented to the court. This is routinely agreed to in civil trials
at Uniform
rule 37
conferences. In this instance, the transcript was
handed in consensually. In any event, there was nothing prohibiting
the fourth
defendant from calling any person that it wished to call
to testify in the civil trial. The handing up of the transcript did
not
preclude witnesses who appeared at the criminal trial from being
called to give evidence in the civil trial. I can see no other
court
concluding that the transcript ought not to have been handed up as an
exhibit, or that the parties were not at liberty to
agree on its
status, and this ground of appeal consequently holds no attraction to
me.
[16]
It
was next submitted on behalf of the fourth defendant that the
plaintiff had not established an absence of reasonable and probable
cause when deciding to prosecute the plaintiff and that I had erred
in finding that it had. In
Majaesa
v Minister of Police and others
,
[14]
Keightley J stated as follows:
‘
Absence
of reasonable or probable cause means either that subjectively a
defendant did not have an honest belief that the plaintiff
had
committed the offence, or that objectively, on the facts and law as
known to the defendant at the time, a reasonable person
could not
have concluded that the plaintiff had committed the offence. It is
sufficient for the plaintiff to prove either of these
two elements.’
(Footnotes omitted.)
[17]
In
S
v Lubaxa
,
[15]
the court remarked as follows:
‘
Clearly
a person ought not to be prosecuted in the absence of a minimum of
evidence upon which he might be convicted, merely in
the expectation
that at some stage he might incriminate himself. That is recognised
by the common law principle that there should
be “reasonable
and probable” cause to believe that the accused is guilty of an
offence before a prosecution is initiated
… and the
constitutional protection afforded to dignity and personal freedom
(s
10
and
s 12)
seems to reinforce it. It ought to follow that if a
prosecution is not to be commenced without that minimum of evidence,
so too
should it cease when the evidence finally falls below that
threshold.’
[18]
In coming to the conclusion that there was
no reasonable or probable cause, it was submitted that I apparently
failed to attach
sufficient weight to the evidence of Mr Hlonipheni
Ntanzi (Mr Ntanzi). This argument is ironic in that Mr Ntanzi did not
testify
before me and his evidence was presented as part of the
transcript, which Mr Epstein earlier argued should not have been
permitted
to be handed up. That notwithstanding, Mr Epstein submitted
in his heads of argument that:
(a)
The plaintiff was the only other person in
the dwelling apart from Mr Ntanzi when the deceased met his fate;
(b)
Mr Ntanzi heard two shots and two spent
cartridge cases were subsequently found;
(c)
Mr Ntanzi observed the plaintiff placing a
firearm on the ground;
(d)
Although he had earlier received
information that the deceased was threatening to shoot himself, Mr
Ntanzi did not find a firearm
on the deceased when he searched him;
and
(e)
The firearm that caused the death of the
deceased belonged to the plaintiff.
[19]
Not all these points are accurate. The
point raised in sub-paragraph (a) is not. There was no evidence that
the plaintiff was in
the house immediately prior to the death of the
deceased. Mr Ntanzi testified that the plaintiff and the deceased met
at the doorway
to the dwelling. He testified that he observed the
plaintiff through a window as she approached the dwelling. His
further evidence
made it clear that she was outside when she met the
deceased.
[20]
The point mentioned in sub-paragraph (c) is
also inaccurate. It was apparent that Mr Ntanzi did not actually see
the plaintiff place
the firearm on the ground. His evidence on this
point was mentioned in my judgment and was the following:
‘
Okay.
Now, let’s analyse this putting. How was the accused putting
this firearm down? He (sic) was putting slowly, not throwing
it down?
--- Well, I cannot explain that, whether she was putting it down
slowly or whether she was throwing it on the floor, I
did not see,
but she did put it on the floor.’
This was the critical
point of Mr Ntanzi’s evidence. Without this, there was nothing
that could conceivably have linked the
plaintiff to the death of her
husband. In context, it followed upon Mr Ntanzi stating, on at least
two occasions, that the deceased
had, indeed, committed suicide. His
answer described above casts serious doubt, in my view, on his
alleged observations. What he
testified to was a conclusion but the
basis for that conclusion was unsound. I do not believe that
another court would come
to a different conclusion.
[21]
As regards the point raised in
sub-paragraph (d), it is so that Mr Ntanzi testified at the criminal
trial that he had searched the
deceased but did not find a firearm.
But he testified that he only searched the upper torso of the
deceased and never mentioned
searching any other part of his body or
any part of the house.
[22]
A further point taken by the fourth
defendant in its application for leave to appeal is that too much
reliance was placed by me
on the affidavit of the deceased’s
sister, Ms Maureen Gumede (Ms Gumede). I do not believe that I did
so. Her evidence formed
part of the transcript and it was not
impugned by any of the defendants at the civil trial. It is suggested
that I attached more
probative value to Ms Gumede’s evidence
than to Mr Ntanzi’s evidence. Both were considered. I
specifically considered
that Ms Gumede actually said nothing factual
about how the deceased met his fate. Her evidence related to events
that occurred
primarily before the death of the deceased. She did not
say that the deceased had killed himself or that anyone else had
killed
him. On the other hand, Mr Ntanzi did say that the deceased
had killed himself. He said it on two different occasions to two
different
people. And then he changed his version. I think the point
taken is misconceived.
[23]
It was further submitted that the medical
report that the deceased was shot at close range did not constitute
conclusive proof of
suicide. Of course, it did not have to
conclusively establish that fact at the criminal trial. It was
sufficient if that evidence
raised a reasonable doubt about the
accuracy of the State’s version. The fourth defendant’s
heads of argument went
on to reinforce the submission that it was not
conclusive proof by stating the following:
‘…
especially
without hearing the expert evidence of the expert at trial.’
[24]
That submission, in my view, is unsound.
The doctor who performed the post mortem on the deceased, Dr Ngcobo
(Dr Ngcobo), did testify
at the criminal trial. And he was asked
about the likelihood of the deceased having committed suicide. His
response to a question
from the plaintiff’s legal
representative was the following:
‘…
If you
are saying there was this absence of a tattoo, does this mean that
there is no possibility of the deceased to have killed
himself? ---
Actually that question had never been posed to me before, whether the
deceased had killed himself or not, but anyway.
The absence of a
muzzle imprint, as I said, suggest that it was not a hard contact. It
means that the gun was not in direct contact
with the skin which does
not necessarily exclude the possibility that he may have killed
himself, if there is such a question.’
[25]
There most certainly was such a question.
But the prosecution had apparently not even canvassed the possibility
with Dr Ngcobo of
the deceased’s death being attributable to
him committing suicide. It knew that this was what the plaintiff and,
at least
initially, what Mr Ntanzi said had happened and that this
was likely to be the plaintiff’s defence. Dr Ngcobo responded
to
another question put to him by the plaintiff’s legal
representative as follows:
‘
But
as you have said, you don’t deny the possibility of that the
deceased had killed himself? --- I’m not in a position
to.’
The expert accordingly
did testify and the point has no merit.
[26]
An important point raised by Mr Epstein is
the issue of the gunshot residue (GSR) specimens and tests. It was
submitted that the
test results were not available when the decision
to prosecute was taken and that, even if introduced before the trial
concluded,
those test results would not have been conclusive proof of
suicide. The same point about conclusiveness not being the required
standard is worth mentioning again.
[27]
Extensive reference was made in the fourth
defendant’s heads of argument to the judgment of the regional
magistrate where
he referred to a statement delivered by the
scientist who performed the tests on the GSR specimens harvested from
the deceased,
the plaintiff, and Mr Ntanzi. That statement was
ostensibly prepared in terms of the provisions of
s 212(4)
(a)
and
s 212(8)
(a)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
and was received and
considered by the regional magistrate without demur. The deponent
stated its purpose to be the following:
‘
On
2015-10-28 I was requested to give information about primer residue
in the case Nkandla CAS 101/01/2008.’
[28]
That is what the statement dealt with. The
phenomenon of primer residue. Not specifically with regard to the
facts of the case for
which the plaintiff stood trial, but generally.
Neither of the sections referenced by the scientist who made the
statement permit
such general opinion evidence to be established by
way of an affidavit.
Section 212(4)
(a)
deals, essentially, with proof of facts
by way of a number of identified sciences and
s 212(8)
(a)
deals generally with the receipt,
delivery, and custody of specimens. There was no basis in law for the
receipt of this affidavit,
which expressed the opinion of the
scientist in the abstract as to why GSR may, or may not, be present
on the hands of a person
tested for it.
[29]
Of particular relevance to the issue of GSR
is the evidence of the third defendant, who was the public prosecutor
involved in the
plaintiff’s criminal trial. His conduct impacts
upon the issue of animus iniuriandi, an aspect thoroughly dealt with
by Mr
Epstein in the fourth defendant’s heads of argument.
[30]
It was submitted that there was no
reference to GSR tests in the docket or in the SAP13 before the
conclusion of the criminal trial
of the plaintiff. Accepting that the
proposition is correct, that did not necessarily mean that the third
defendant did not know
of the existence of the specimens harvested or
that there were no results then in existence. The third defendant
knew of the specimens
because a copy of the letter accompanying the
specimens to the Forensic Science Laboratory in Pretoria was in the
photographic
album that the third defendant received prior to the
criminal trial commencing. That album was uplifted from Insp Ngobese
on 6
March 2008, a month and a half before the plaintiff’s
criminal trial commenced and the third defendant thus had knowledge
of the existence of the specimens for a considerable period before
the trial commenced. If that was not enough, on the first day
of the
trial, Insp Ngobese told him of the harvesting of specimens. Such
knowledge appeared, ultimately, to have been ignored by
the third
defendant.
[31]
Mr Epstein, correctly in my view, took the
position that the third defendant’s conduct was ‘not
exemplary’ but
that it was not evidence of an intention to
injure. The third defendant may have been negligent, or even grossly
negligent, but
even such conduct fell short of establishing animus
iniuriandi, so the argument went. In my view, the third defendant’s
conduct
went way beyond being ‘not exemplary’.
[32]
At the civil trial, I found the interaction
between the third defendant and the regional magistrate at the
criminal trial shortly
before the State closed its case to be
disturbing and significant. In that exchange, quoted in full in my
judgment, the third defendant
responded as follows to a question from
the regional magistrate:
‘
COURT
So, there were no tests made?
PROSECUTOR
No.’
[33]
That was factually untrue. There is a
distinct difference between the taking of a sample and the testing of
that sample. A test
had been conducted on the deceased’s right
hand in order to test for the presence of GSR. That test was
positive. Mr Epstein
in his heads of argument stated the following
and I quote it in full:
’
37.1
At the time of the exchange between the Prosecutor and the Regional
Magistrate, it was common cause from
the evidence of Inspector
Ngobese that GSR tests had been conducted;
37.2
If the Magistrate and the Plaintiff’s representatives
understood that the Prosecutor meant anything
other than that the
tests had been carried out but that the results had not been
received, either party would have raised the issue
with the
Prosecutor, as it contradicts the evidence of Insp Ngobese; and
37.3
The plaintiff’s counsel who prepared the heads of argument for
the appeal acknowledged that the
Prosecutor meant that the tests had
been carried out but that the results had not been received.’
[34]
There are several inaccuracies in that
lengthy submission. Firstly, it was not common cause from the
evidence of Insp Ngobese that
GSR tests had been conducted. Insp
Ngobese had, on his own version, last had any involvement with the
GSR samples that he collected
once he dispatched them to the Forensic
Science Laboratory. He did not know whether any tests had actually
been carried out and
he did not, and ordinarily would not, know of
the results once the tests had been carried out. Secondly, the
interaction between
the regional magistrate and the third defendant
did not suggest that the test had been conducted but that the results
were not
yet to hand. The question posed by the magistrate was clear,
as was the third defendant’s response: no tests had been done.
There was, thus, nothing for the plaintiff’s legal
representative to raise with the third defendant for he would have
heard
that no test had been conducted, notwithstanding that specimens
had been collected.
[35]
As
to whether animus iniuriandi had been established, as was stated in
Minister
for Justice and Constitutional Development and others v Moleko
:
[16]
‘
The
defendant must thus not only have been aware of what he or she was
doing in instituting or initiating the prosecution, but must
at least
have foreseen the possibility that he or she was acting wrongfully,
but nevertheless continued to act, reckless as to
the
consequences of his or her conduct (
dolus eventualis
).
Negligence on the part of the defendant (or, I would say,
even gross negligence) will not suffice.’ (Footnotes
omitted.)
[36]
I was satisfied that on the proven facts,
dolus eventualis had been established. After reflection, I am not
persuaded that another
court would come to a different conclusion
other than the one to which I came. Costs must follow the result. In
my judgment, I
assessed the costs to be taxable on scale C. I see no
reason to deviate from that scale in this application.
[37]
I accordingly grant the following order:
The
application for leave to appeal is refused, with costs to be taxed on
scale C.
MOSSOP J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the fourth defendant:
Mr H
Epstein SC and Mr T Mabuda
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney
6
th
Floor
Metropolitan
Life Building
391
Anton Lembede Street
Durban
Counsel
for the plaintiff:
Mr C
Pretorius SC
Instructed
by:
Ndwandwe
Attorneys
Suite
505, 5
th
Floor
Metropolitan
Life Building
391
Anton Lembede Street
Durban
[1]
The
Mont Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen and others
2014 JDR 2335 (LCC) para 6.
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
It was marked as ‘Exhibit C’.
[4]
Griffiths
v S
[2017]
ZAKZPHC 13 para 107 (‘
Griffiths
’).
[5]
Technology
Corporate Management (Pty) Ltd and others v De Sousa and others
[2024]
ZASCA 29
;
2024 (5) SA 57
(SCA) (‘
Technology
Corporate Management
’).
[6]
Hollington
v F Hewthorn
&
Co Ltd
2
[1943] 2 All ER 35
(CA);
1943 KB 587
(CA) (‘
Hollington
’).
[7]
Griffiths
para
9.
[8]
Technology
Corporate Management
para 161, citing with approval
18
Lawsa
3 ed (2015) para 141.
[9]
B T
Njoko
‘The admissibility of criminal findings in civil matters:
re-evaluating the
Hollington
judgment’
(2021)
De
Jure Law Journal
160.
[10]
Technology
Corporate Management
para 165.
## [11]Institute
for Accountability in Southern Africa v Public Protector and others[2020] ZAGPPHC 64; 2020 (5) SA 179 (GP); [2020] 2 All SA 469 (GP)
para 19.
[11]
Institute
for Accountability in Southern Africa v Public Protector and others
[2020] ZAGPPHC 64; 2020 (5) SA 179 (GP); [2020] 2 All SA 469 (GP)
para 19.
[12]
Paragraph 44A of the plaintiff’s amended particulars of claim
reads: ‘On the 25
th
May 2017, the Plaintiff successfully appealed against her conviction
and sentence at the Pietermaritzburg High Court.’
To this, the
second and fourth defendants pleaded: ‘The second and fourth
defendants admit these paragraphs.’
[13]
Fischer
and another v Ramahlele and others
[2014]
ZASCA 88
;
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA) para 13.
[14]
Majaesa
v Minister of Police and others
(GJ) unreported case no 43046/2020 (14 June 2024) para 8.
[15]
S
v Lubaxa
2001
(2) SACR 703
(SCA);
[2002] 2 All SA 107
(A) para 19.
[16]
Minister
for Justice and Constitutional Development and others v Moleko
[2008] ZASCA 43
;
2009 (2) SACR 585
(SCA) para 64.
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