Case Law[2024] ZASCA 7South Africa
Nabolisa v The Regional Court Magistrate and Another (568/2022) [2024] ZASCA 7 (19 January 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
19 January 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal against the dismissal of an application for review – whether the appellant's right to a fair trial was infringed – the appeal is dismissed.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZASCA 7
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Nabolisa v The Regional Court Magistrate and Another (568/2022) [2024] ZASCA 7 (19 January 2024)
Nabolisa v The Regional Court Magistrate and Another (568/2022) [2024] ZASCA 7 (19 January 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
Links to summary
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2024_7.html
sino date 19 January 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not reportable
Case
No:
568/2022
In the matter between:
FRANK
NABOLISA
APPELLANT
and
THE
REGIONAL
FIRST RESPONDENT
COURT MAGISTRATE
MS SYTA PRINSLOO
N.O.
THE DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC
SECOND RESPONDENT
PROSECUTIONS:
GAUTENG DIVISION OF
THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Neutral
Citation:
Nabolisa v The Regional
Court Magistrate and
Another
(
568/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 07
(19 January 2024)
Coram:
ZONDI and MOKGOHLOA JJA and NHLANGULELA AJA
Heard:
24 AUGUST 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email, published on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and
released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 11h00 on 19 January 2024.
Summary:
Appeal against the dismissal of an
application for review – whether the appellant's right to a
fair trial was infringed –
the appeal is dismissed.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Bokako AJ with Yacoob J concurring, sitting
as court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
NHLANGULELA AJA (ZONDI
and MOKGOHLOA JJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The appellant together with one Ms Natasha
Mashiane, both legally represented, appeared before the first
respondent (sitting as
the regional magistrate at the Regional
Division of Johannesburg, Alexandra) each charged on two counts of
dealing in or unlawful
possession of cocaine in contravention of s
5
(b)
or s
4
(b)
of
the Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992 (the Drugs Act); and
unlawful possession of paracetamol (acetaminophen) and methenamine
(hexamine) in contravention of s 22A of the Medicines and Related
Substances Act 101 of 1965 (the Substances Act). At the conclusion
of
the trial, the appellant was convicted of dealing in cocaine and
unlawful possession of paracetamol and methenamine. He was
sentenced to undergo imprisonment for a cumulative
period of 30 years. Further,
an order was
issued that the exhibits, 2.455 kg of cocaine, 5.681 kg of
paracetamol and 2.748 kg of methenamine are forfeited to
the State.
Ms Mashiane was found not guilty in respect of
both counts, and she was acquitted.
[2]
Having exhausted all the avenues of appeal, albeit without success,
the appellant brought an application
to the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (high court) seeking an order to review and
set aside the decision of the
first respondent convicting and
sentencing him on the basis that his fair trial rights were
infringed, which vitiated the criminal
proceedings in their entirety.
On 8 April 2021 the high court (per Yacoob J and Bokako AJ) dismissed
the review application.
The appeal to this
Court is with the leave of the high court.
The litigation history
[3]
The appellant’s efforts to have his conviction and sentence
quashed commenced by engaging in the
appeal process. Following
upon the sentence proceedings on 19 May 2014, he
brought an application for leave to appeal against both the
conviction and sentence.
The first respondent found that the
application for leave had no reasonable prospect of success on
appeal, and she dismissed it.
Undeterred by that outcome, the
appellant petitioned the Judge President of the Gauteng Division of
the High Court for leave to
appeal against conviction and sentence.
On 5 September 2014, Mokgoatlheng and Strydom JJ dismissed the
appellant's petition for
leave to appeal against both the conviction
and sentence. In a further application for special leave to appeal to
this Court against
conviction and sentence, on 16 July 2015, Navsa
ADP and Mbha JA dismissed the application on the ground that there
were no special
circumstances present that merited a further appeal.
To that extent, all the efforts of the appellant to have his
conviction and
sentence overturned on appeal came to naught. It is
against that background that the review remedy of the appellant must
be considered.
Background facts
[4]
The facts which gave rise to these proceedings are the following:
Acting on a telephonic police intelligence
report, a team of police
officers led by Warrant Officer Hein Leonard De Jager went to house
no. 2053 Makwata Street, Ebony Park
where they found one Ms Audrey
Radien and her son in occupation of the house. Ms Radien introduced
herself as the mother of Ms
Mashiane, the appellant’s
girlfriend. She permitted them to search the house. In a bedroom that
she identified to the police
officers as belonging to Ms Mashiane,
they found two suitcases, one maroon and another black in colour, in
which they found small
plastic packets that contained large
quantities of powdery substances that they suspected was cocaine.
Thereafter, they removed
the exhibits to the police station, wrote
them into the SAP 13 Register and kept them in the storeroom. These
exhibits were later
analysed by Sergeant Rodney Machimane at the
state laboratory.
[5]
Sgt Machimane and Major Nolovuyo Gifta Makwatane, the government
employees attached to the Forensic
Science Laboratory unit of the
SAPS testified on behalf of the state. Sgt Machimane testified that
he was a forensic analyst who
was charged with the task of analysing
the exhibits to verify if they were ‘dangerous dependence
producing’ substances
within the definition of that term in the
Drugs Act and
the Substances Act
respectively. After rigorous analytical testing performed in a
laboratory applying internationally accepted comparative
analytical
techniques of gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (the
GC-MS) and Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy
(the FT-IR), he
found that out of the substances that were contained in the maroon
suitcase (evidence bag FSG-249068) and the black
suitcase (evidence
bag FSG-249067), substances weighing 2.455kg; 5.681kg; and 2.748kg
were cocaine, paracetamol and methenamine
respectively. The forensic
evidence adduced by Sgt Machimane was foreshadowed in the affidavit
that he had prepared in terms of
s 212 of the CPA. It was admitted in
evidence as Exhibit ‘G’.
[6]
The appellant was legally represented at the trial. But he did
not cross-examine the state witnesses,
testify in his own defence or
call a witness to testify on his behalf. Mr Hamilton, the legal
representative for Ms Mashiane,
led the evidence of Dr Cornelius
Christoffel Viljoen who is qualified as a biochemist with forensic
experience in research of snake
venoms. Dr Viljoen disputed the
integrity of the forensic analysis and findings of
Sgt
Machimane that some of the exhibits contained
cocaine powder, alleging that the 303 molecular mass spectrometry
found is a chemical
description of cocaine as well as other
substances that have been compiled by the USA National Institute for
Standards and Technology.
He testified that the
GC-MS
technique that was applied by Sgt Machimane did not have unlimited
capacity to produce unquestionable results. He testified
that since
only a few of the majority samples obtained from the exhibit
substances were analysed, the findings of Sgt Machimane
that the
exhibits contained cocaine, paracetamol and methenamine were not
conclusive. He also testified that the findings made
by Sgt Machimane
are incorrect because the testing machines used had not been
calibrated.
[7]
Mr Hamilton also called Dr Andrew Dinsmare to testify. He has a
doctoral degree in chemistry. In the
course of executing duties as a
chemistry lecturer at the University of the Witwatersrand, he ran a
private analytic laboratory
for 15 years for the benefit of research
students. He once assisted in a research project of a student on an
assignment that had
been offered by the National Intelligence Agency.
The assignment involved forensic analysis of narcotics or
drug-related substances.
However, it was the student, not Dr Dinsmare
that did the analysis. He testified that the findings that the
exhibit substances
contained cocaine, paracetamol and methenamine,
were invalid because not all the samples were tested in the HP9
machine. The reference
samples used by Sgt Machimane were not named
and the results of the forensic analysis were hastily written by hand
instead of the
HP9 machine printing them out.
[8]
To the extent that Dr Viljoen queried the fact that the GC-MS machine
was calibrated, the prosecution
applied for the re-opening of the
state’s case to lead the evidence of Major Makwatane, which
was granted.
Major
Makwatane’s evidence was that she, in her capacity as a
laboratory technician, had carried out suitability tests on
the two
machines described as HP4 and HP9 that were later used by Sgt
Machimane to analyse the exhibits. She disavowed any involvement
in
the exercise of forensic analysis, but confirmed that the machines
were calibrated properly, and they were in good condition
for the
analysis of exhibits to be carried out.
In
the high court
[9]
The appellant brought an application seeking an order to review the
first respondent's decision to convict
and sentence him. He relied on
the following grounds of review:
(i)
The second respondent’s failure to make proper disclosure and
the first respondent’s failure to order proper disclosure
of
the working papers of the forensic analyst.
(ii)
The first respondent placed an onus on an accused in a criminal
matter.
(iii)
The appellant was convicted of a non-existing offence of possession
with intention to deal, relying on a presumption, contained
in s 21
of the Drugs Act
[1]
, that has
been declared unconstitutional.
(iv)
The first respondent permitted rude and inappropriate
cross-examination by the second respondent’s counsel.
(v)
Evidence of a state witness in favour of the defence was rejected
when the witness was not discredited.
(vi)
Sentencing proceedings were unfair.
[10]
The high court rejected all of the appellant’s grounds
of review and dismissed the application. It, nevertheless,
granted
him leave to appeal to this Court.
In
this Court
[11]
The issue is whether the high court erred in finding that the
appellant's right to a fair trial was not infringed.
To succeed in
his review application the appellant had to bring his application
within the purview of s 38, read with s 35(3) of
the Constitution
[2]
by satisfying the high court on the facts supporting his claim that
his constitutional rights were infringed during the criminal
proceedings. In terms of
S
v Zuma and Others
[3]
(
Zuma
)
the s 35(3) fair trial rights of the Constitution that the appellant
seeks to advance in his review proceedings embrace a concept
of
substantive fairness that is much broader than the fair trial rights
themselves. The Constitutional Court in
Zuma
held at para [16]:
‘
That
caveat
is
of particular importance in interpreting section 25(3) of the
Constitution. The right to a fair trial conferred by that provision
is broader than the list of specific rights set out in paragraphs (a)
to (j) of the sub-section. It embraces a concept of substantive
fairness which is not to be equated with what might have passed
muster in our criminal courts before the Constitution came into
force. In
S v Rudman and
Another; S v Mthwana
1992(1) SA
343(A), the Appellate Division, while not decrying the importance of
fairness in criminal proceedings, held that the
function of a court
of criminal appeal in South Africa was to enquire
"whether
there has been an irregularity or illegality, that is a departure
from the formalities, rules and principles of procedure
according to
which our law requires a criminal trial to be initiated or
conducted".
A
court of appeal, it was said, (at 377)
"does
not enquire whether the trial was fair in accordance with 'notions of
basic fairness and justice', or with the 'ideas
underlying the
concept of justice which are the basis of all civilised systems of
criminal administration'."
That
was an authoritative statement of the law before 27th April 1994.
Since that date section 25(3) has required criminal trials
to be
conducted in accordance with just those "notions of basic
fairness and justice". It is now for all courts hearing
criminal
trials or criminal appeals to give content to those notions.’
[12]
The appellant’s attack on the high court’s
judgment is based on the following grounds:
(a) The prosecutor
suppressed the working papers used in the forensic analysis of the
exhibit substances during the state case,
thus depriving the
appellant of his right to challenge the forensic evidence adduced by
Sgt Machimane which proved
that some of the exhibits were
cocaine;
(b)
The first respondent failed to order the re-calling of Sgt Machimane
for cross-examination on the working
papers;
(c)
Sgt Machimane conducted selective forensic analysis of some of the
samples, instead of all, taken from
the exhibit substances, which was
irregular;
(d)
The HP4 and
HP9 machines used and the GC-MS
technique applied by Sgt Machimane
in analysing the exhibit
substances did not meet internationally recognized scientific
standards;
(e)
The condonation by the first respondent of the prosecutor’s use
of rude and inappropriate
language, ‘Ag shame’, when
cross-examining Dr Dinsmare, the defence witness, was improper; and
(f)
The finding by the first respondent that the appellant and his
counsel had not challenged the
evidence of Sgt Machimane when that
had been done by Mr Hamilton, the legal representative for the
co-accused, was erroneous.
[13]
In argument,
it
was submitted on behalf of the appellant that the irregularities
listed above constituted an infringement of the appellant’s
constitutional rights as set out in ss 35 (3) (i) and (l) of the
Constitution. It was contended further that the suppression
of and/or
late disclosure of the working papers denied the appellant
information that was favourable to his defence, denied him
his right
to raise contradictions in Sgt Machimane's evidence, concealed
irregularities in methods used to analyse the exhibit
samples and
made it possible for Sgt Machimane not to be recalled by the first
respondent to clarify the discrepancies between
his s 212 affidavit
and the working papers on which this scientific analysis of the
exhibit samples was done.
[14]
On the other hand , the State raised a point
in
limine
urging this Court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that this
appeal is
res
judicata
[4]
as the grounds for the appeal against the judgment and order of the
high court are the same as those on which this Court dismissed
the
application for special leave to appeal This same point
in
limine
had also been raised before the High Court, and it was dismissed on
the basis that the grounds for the review application and those
for
the application for special leave overlap. In the absence of an
appeal against that decision, the point
in
limine
cannot succeed.
[15]
On the merits of this appeal, it was submitted on behalf of the State
that the contention by the appellant that
it had suppressed the
working documents of the forensic analysts, was not correct. The
State argued that the documents were not
part of the docket. In any
event, the s 212 statement of Sgt Machimane that was contained in the
docket was discovered, and it
was used by the prosecutor when leading
the evidence of Sgt Machimane. Both the State and defence had closed
their cases when Mr.
Hamilton brought an application in terms of s 87
(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (CPA)
[5]
to be furnished with further particulars of the docket. Although the
first respondent dismissed the application, the working papers
sought
were furnished to Mr Hamilton upon request for the same from the
Forensic Science Laboratory. Counsel for the State argued,
with
reliance on
Mkhize
v S
[6]
,
that the finding of the trial court that some of the exhibit samples
were cocaine was correct as Sgt Machimane was not challenged
by
counsel for the appellant and the alleged discrepancies between the
working papers and the evidence of Sgt Machimane, as alluded
to by
Mr. Hamilton, were never put to Sgt Machimane.
[16] In any
event, the State submitted that the fact that the working documents
had certain numbers written in pen did
not contradict the correctness
of the evidence of Sgt Machimane. It argued that both Dr Viljoen and
Dr Dinsmare lacked the skills
and experience in forensic analysis of
cocaine substances using GC- MS and FT-IR techniques. The State
further submitted that the
use by the State counsel of the term “Ag
Shame” during the cross-examination of Dr Dinsmare did not
constitute an appropriate
language. It argued that the comment was
made in response to Dr Dinsmare’s criticism of the evidence of
Sgt Machimane that
he could not have analysed the number of samples
which he said he did. Dr Dinsmare, proceeded the argument, could not
criticize
the evidence of Sgt Machimane when he had not studied Sgt
Machimane's working papers before testifying.
[17]
The allegations that the appellant’s fair trial rights were
violated during the trial are not borne out by
the evidence. The
police witnesses conducted a lawful search and seizure of the
substance exhibits.
I
cannot find irregularities in the manner in which the charge sheet
was framed and the charges were put to him. The first respondent
handled the plea proceedings and the trial properly.
The
offences that were proved against the appellant were competent and he
was convicted on the strength of credible state evidence.
The
evidence of both Dr Viljoen and Dr Dinsmare was correctly rejected by
the first respondent.
It transpired during
cross-examination that the criticism made
by these witnesses against the forensic findings of Sgt Machimane was
not buttressed with
scientific facts. They testified without having
read the working documents of Sgt Machimane. They were proved not to
possess experience
in analysing drugs. They had no experience in the
use of the HP4 and HP9 machines that were calibrated by Major
Makwatane and used
by Sgt Machimane. Dr Viljoen
conceded that he was a ‘chemical
layman’.
He was unable to point to
any one compound in the list compiled by the USA National Institute
for Standards and Technology that
has the same molecular mass of 303
as the cocaine compound.
Dr Dinsmare
conceded that he was rushed to give his testimony without having had
the benefit of consultation with Sgt Machimane.
He conceded
that the reference samples used by Sgt Machimane to analyse the
exhibit substances were in accordance with international
best
practices. He conceded that Sgt Machimane did find cocaine and
methenamine in the exhibits.
[ 18] I reject the
appellant’s contention that the use of the phrase ‘ag
shame’ by the State counsel during
the cross-examination of Dr
Dinsmare was so inappropriate to such an extent that it undermined
the integrity of the proceedings.
A proper reading of the record
reveals that the prosecutor merely used the comment to lambast Dr
Dinsmare’s stratagem of
shifting blame for not having prepared
for trial.
[19]
The appellant did not ask for further particulars of the charge
relevant to the
working
papers. Neither did he ask for the discovery of
the
working papers of the forensic analysis of the substances that had
been found in his possession
[7]
.
The
dismissal of the appellant’s application for further
particulars of the charges was proper, it having been made on the
basis that the papers sought were not part of the police docket and
were not sought for the purpose of preparation for trial. He
chose
not to exercise his constitutional right to challenge the evidence of
Sgt Machimane that directly implicated him in the commission
of the
offences with which he was charged.
The
appellant, still being legally represented, elected not to
testify.
[8]
[20]
Consequently,
none
of the grounds of appeal have been proved. The judgment of the high
court cannot be faulted.
[21] In the
result the following order is made:
The
appeal is dismissed.
___________________________
ZM NHLANGULELA
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
Appellant:
M Kolbe SC
Instructed
by:
HJ Van der
Westhuizen Attorneys, Roodepoort
Wessels
& Smith Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
Respondents:
AM Williams
Instructed
by: Office
of the State
Attorney, Pretoria
C/O
Director of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria
Director of Public
Prosecutions, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section 21 presumptions were declared unconstitutional in
S
v Bhulwana; S v Gwadiso
1995(2)
SACR 748 (CC)
[2]
Section
38 provides: ‘
Anyone
listed in this section has the right to approach a competent court,
alleging that a right in the Bill of Rights has been
infringed or
threatened, and the court may grant appropriate relief, including a
declaration of rights.’
Section
35(3) provides: ‘
Every accused person has a right to a
fair trial, which includes the right–…
(i)
to adduce and challenge evidence; . . .
(l)
not to be convicted of an act or omission that was not an offence
under either national or international law at the time it was
committed or omitted;’
[3]
S
v Zuma and Others
[1995]
ZACC 1
;
1995 (2) SA 642
(CC);
1995 (4) BCLR 401
(SA);
1995 (1) SACR
568
;
[1996] 2 CHRLD 244
para 16. See also
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v King
[2010] ZASCA 8
;
2010 (2) SACR 146
(SCA);
2010 (7) BCLR 656
(SCA);
[2010] 3 All SA 304
(SCA) para 4.
[4]
In
Molaudzi
v S
[2015]
ZACC 20
;
2015 (8) BCLR 904
(CC);
2015 (2) SACR 341
(CC)
para
14 it was stated “Res judicata is the legal doctrine that bars
continued litigation of the same case, on the same issues,
between
the same parties.”
[5]
Section
87 (1) serves the right of the accused to obtain more information on
what has been alleged or is missing in the charge
sheet to prepare
his/her defence.
[6]
The case of
Mkhize
v S
(390/18)
[2019] ZASCA 56
(1 April 2019) restates the principle of law that
the accused has an obligation to put his/her case to the state
witnesses under
cross-examination, and the failure to do so
strengthens the state case against him/her. In terms of the
decisions in the
President
of the Republic of South Africa v South African Rugby Football Union
& Others
[1999] ZACC 11
;
2000 (1) SA 1
(CC) para 61; and
S
v Boesak
[2000] ZASCA 112
;
2000
(3) SA 381
(SCA), the appellant deliberately abandoned his fair
trial protection.
[7]
As
indicated in
Shabalala
and Others v Attorney-General of Transvaal and Another
[1995] ZACC 12
;
1995 (2) SACR 761
(CC),
1996 (1) SA 725
(CC) at 778E the accused
will have access to relevant parts of the docket if he or she asked
for discovery thereof.
[8]
It
was stated in
Osman
and Another v Attorney General
[1998]
ZACC 14
;
1998 (4) SA 1224
(CC);
1998 (11) BCLR 1362
para 22 and
S
v Thebus and Another
[2003] ZACC 12
;
2003 (6) SA 505
(CC);
2003 (10) BCLR 1100
(CC) at
para 57 that the exercise of the right to remain silence is not a
risk, but has consequences for trial proceedings.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
N M v Central Authority for the Republic of South Africa and Another (1078/2024) [2024] ZASCA 178 (19 December 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 178Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Adendorff N O and Another v Kubheka and Another (463/2020) [2022] ZASCA 29 (24 March 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 29Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
68 Wolmarans Street Johannesburg (Pty) Ltd and Others v Tufh Limited (1263/2022) [2024] ZASCA 48 (15 April 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 48Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Lategan and Another v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Another (314/2022) [2024] ZASCA 74; 2024 (2) SACR 227 (SCA) (10 May 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 74Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Motsima and Another v Kopa and Others (1316/23) [2025] ZASCA 144 (7 October 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 144Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar