Case Law[2024] ZASCA 102South Africa
Moodley and Another v S (475/2023) [2024] ZASCA 102 (20 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
20 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal Law and Procedure – identification – witnesses’ previous knowledge of the appellants – appellants identified by witnesses on the strength of their prior knowledge – whether the state witnesses’ identification was reliable and credible.
Judgment
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## Moodley and Another v S (475/2023) [2024] ZASCA 102 (20 June 2024)
Moodley and Another v S (475/2023) [2024] ZASCA 102 (20 June 2024)
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sino date 20 June 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case No: 475/2023
In the matter
between:
DINESH MOODLEY
FIRST
APPELLANT
UGRESEN PERUMAL
SECOND APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Moodley
and Another v The State
(475/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 102
(20 June 2024)
Coram:
HUGHES and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and
SMITH AJA
Heard:
This
appeal was, by consent between the parties, disposed of without an
oral hearing in terms of s 19(
a
)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email; publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal
website and released to SAFLII. The time and date for hand-down is
deemed to be 11h00 on 20 June 2024.
Summary:
Criminal Law and Procedure – identification
– witnesses’ previous knowledge of the appellants –
appellants
identified by witnesses on the strength of their prior
knowledge – whether the state witnesses’ identification
was
reliable and credible.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Van Veenendaal AJ, sitting as court of
first instance):
The appeal is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
Hughes JA
(Mabindla-Boqwana JA and Smith AJA concurring):
[1]
This appeal is
against the judgment of Van Veenendaal AJ of the Gauteng Division of
the High Court, Johannesburg (the high court)
regarding conviction
only. On 6 September 2019, the appellants, Dinesh Moodley and Ugresen
Perumal, were convicted of murder and
subsequently sentenced to
twenty-five years’ imprisonment. The high court granted leave
to appeal to this Court.
[2]
The
fundamental issue in the appeal is whether the State proved the
identity of the assailants who shot and killed the deceased,
Avinash
Manjanu, beyond a reasonable doubt. Critical, is the reliability of
the evidence of the state witnesses and the strength
of the
witnesses’ prior knowledge of the assailants. At the trial, the
first appellant was accused 1 and the second appellant
accused 2,
respectively.
[3]
The evidence
led is briefly as follows. On the evening of 4 November 2017, Mr
Vinay Choonie, one of the state witnesses, hosted
a party at his home
in Lenasia South. The first appellant, Dinesh Moodley and the
deceased were amongst the guests in attendance.
An altercation broke
out involving the first appellant and a brother of the deceased. The
deceased’s brother was accused
of touching the first
appellant’s sister, Ms Nerisha Moodley, inappropriately. This
altercation escalated to a physical fight,
which caused Mr Choonie to
end the celebrations. He requested all the guests to leave his home.
The first appellant left the venue
with his family and the deceased
also left. The deceased returned at a later stage and enquired about
the assault on his brother.
[4]
On his
arrival, the deceased parked his vehicle close to the pavement by Mr
Choonie’s house. He alighted from the vehicle
and stood by the
driver’s door, conversing with Mr Choonie, Ms Prenisha Moodley,
Mr Simeshan Naidoo, and Ms Lorraine Moodley
(the group). The
individuals in the group all testified that the area was well lit by
the streetlights situated on the road. Whilst
they were still
conversing about the first appellant assaulting the deceased’s
brother, the second appellant, Ugresen Perumal,
arrived in a grey
Hyundai i20 motor vehicle, with the first appellant in the passenger
seat. This vehicle made a U-turn on Hibiscus
Crescent and came to
park behind the deceased’s vehicle. The second appellant
alighted from the vehicle, proceeded straight
towards the deceased
with a firearm in his hand, and started shooting directly at the
deceased. He was spurred on by the first
appellant to shoot the
deceased. When the shots were fired, the deceased was facing the
second appellant. After the shooting, the
deceased got into his
vehicle and drove off. The appellants also got into their vehicle and
sped off following the deceased’s
vehicle.
[5]
The group with
whom the deceased was conversing sought safe refuge when the gunshots
were being fired. After the appellants had
sped off, following the
deceased’s vehicle, Mr Choonie together with the others of the
group, climbed into his vehicle and
followed the appellant’s
vehicle. They drove for about 220 metres and saw the deceased’s
vehicle, which had driven
into and collided with a wall of one of the
resident’s houses. They found the deceased slumped in the
driver’s seat.
The post- mortem found that he had
succumbed to the fatal gunshot wound to his chest.
[6]
At the trial,
the State presented eyewitness evidence to confirm the identity of
the shooter and his co-perpetrator. One of the
witnesses, Prenisha
testified that the first appellant was her stepbrother. She grew up
with him in the same home. The first appellant
was known to the
majority of the state witnesses. Mr Choonie was Prenisha’s
husband and Lorraine was Prenisha’s mother.
As regards the
second appellant’s identification, both Lorraine and Prenisha
knew him well as he was the first appellant’s
uncle.
First
names are used for convenience as the witnesses concerned share a
surname.
[7]
At the trial,
Mr Naidoo testified that he encountered the first appellant for the
first time at the party. Earlier that evening,
Prenisha introduced
the first appellant to him, as her brother. Regarding the second
appellant, he was adamant that he was the
shooter and he had seen him
clearly. His testimony was: ‘…I saw him, clean and
clear, he climbed out and he started
shooting like he was crazy’.
He further reaffirmed this whilst being cross-examined. His testimony
was ‘…I can
say for sure. . ., I saw Accused 2
climb out and shoot our friend. It is all I can explain that, you can
ask me [a] hundred
times over and I will tell you the same thing’.
His evidence was that Lorraine confronted the second appellant
saying, ‘shoot
me instead of Avenash’, the deceased.
[8]
When it was
put to him, that the first appellant would say that he was not
present when the shooting occurred, he responded, ‘It
is a lie
though, because everyone was around, saw him climb out and say,
“shoot him, fucken kill him”. He described
what the
appellants wore that night. Mr Naidoo’s evidence was further
that during the party and whilst the first appellant
and the
deceased’s brother were fighting, he witnessed that the
deceased had tried ‘continuously’ to stop the
fight
between the two.
[9]
Lorraine
confirmed in her evidence that the first appellant was her daughter’s
(Prenisha) brother, and her stepson. Her testimony
was that the first
appellant refers to her as ‘Aunty Lorraine’. She further
testified that it was the first appellant’s
fight with the
deceased’s brother that led to Mr Choonie requesting the guests
to go to their respective homes. At some stage,
after he arrived on
the scene with the second appellant, the first appellant spoke to her
directly and instructed her to go inside.
In cross-examination she
was asked ‘how did you identify Accused 2’. Her response
was that he was the first appellant’s
uncle. That was followed
up with another question: ‘I am referring to that evening; how
did you recognise him?’. Her
response was: ‘I know him,
he is sitting right there . . . His face I recognised
immediately’.
[10]
Prenisha
corroborated Mr Naidoo’s evidence that the second appellant
drove a Hyundai i20 and arrived with the first appellant
after the
guests had gone home, whilst the group was conversing with the
deceased. Further, that after the shooting, the appellants
got back
into their vehicle and chased after the deceased’s vehicle.
[11]
Mr Choonie’s
testimony was that whilst he was being interviewed at the police
station, he saw the second appellant through
an open door and pointed
him out to the investigating officer. Captain Israel, who also
testified, corroborated this and explained
that while he was busy
taking Mr Choonie’s statement, the two appellants arrived at
the police station, having been called
by another police officer.
This was when Mr Choonie pointed at them as being the ones involved
in the shooting of the deceased.
[12]
The
appellants’ testimonies amounted to a bare denial. Both were
adamant that they were not present at Mr Choonie’s
home when
the shooting of the deceased occurred. They both relied on
alibi
evidence.
The first appellant testified that he was nowhere near the vicinity
of the shooting at Mr Choonie’s home. He had
been at the party
earlier, had a fight with the deceased’s brother, and when the
guests were told to leave, he left for his
home with his family. He
only became aware of the shooting when he went to the police station
the following day to assist his sister,
Nerisha, to open a case.
[13]
The second
appellant confirmed that he owned a silver grey Hyundai i20. He
testified that on the night of the shooting, he was at
home. He
passed out on the couch watching television. He woke up at 23h00 to
prepare for the prayer he was going to have for his
late brother the
following day. The only time he left his home was to collect his
sister in Lenasia South, between 3h00 and 3h30,
the following
morning.
[14]
The trial
court found that the eyewitnesses all identified the second appellant
as the shooter and ‘accused 1 as being with
him, even goading
accused 2 on’. Further, that the witnesses corroborated each
other in relation to the manner in which the
shooting of the deceased
unfolded, and that they were not shaken, even though they were
subjected to thorough cross-examination.
The trial court was
conscious of the fact that the critical issue in this case was
identification. It was also mindful of the trite
approach to be
followed when dealing with evidence of identification, which is ‘the
opportunity, the lighting, the length
of time [and] the acquaintance
between the witnesses’. The trial court concluded that the
eyewitnesses had ample time to
identify the appellants, knew the
appellants personally, and the visibility was good, even though the
shooting occurred at night.
[15]
It
is trite that the state bears the onus to prove the identity of the
appellants and to dispel their
alibi
defence beyond reasonable doubt. In the circumstances, it is not
sufficient for the witness to be honest, as the reliability of
the
witness must also be tested against opportunity of observation,
lighting, visibility and the witnesses’ proximity to
the
appellant.
[1]
The
alibi
defence raised, must be considered with other evidence in totality,
together with the impression of the witnesses.
[2]
In
S
v Liebenberg
this Court stated:
‘
.
. . Once the trial court accepted that the alibi evidence could not
be rejected as false, it was not entitled to reject it on
the basis
that the prosecution had placed before it strong evidence linking the
appellant to the offences. The acceptance of the
prosecution’s
evidence could not, by itself alone, be a sufficient basis for
rejecting the alibi evidence. Something more
was required. The
evidence must have been, when considered in its totality, of the
nature that proved the alibi evidence to be
false. . .
’
[3]
[16]
Still
on the topic of the law relevant to identification, especially in
relation to witnesses having prior knowledge of the identity
of the
person sought to be identified, I refer to a judgment of this Court
in
Abdullah
v The State
,
[4]
where Nicholls JA quoted the following:
‘
In
Arendse v S
this Court quoted with approval the trial court’s comments in
R
v Dladla
:
“
There is a
plethora of authorities dealing with the dangers of incorrect
identification. The locus classicus is
S
v Mthetwa
1972 (3) SA 766
(A) at 768A, where Holmes JA warned that: “Because
of the fallibility of human observation, evidence of identification
is
approached by courts with some caution. In
R
v Dladla
1962 (1) SA 307
(A) at 310C-E, Holmes JA, writing for the full court
referred with approval to the remarks by James J – ‘delivering
the judgment of the trial court when he observed that: ‘one of
the factors which in our view is of greatest importance in
a case of
identification, is the witness’ previous knowledge of the
person sought to be identified. If the witness knows
the person well
or has seen him frequently before, the probability that his
identification will be accurate is substantially increased…
In
a case where the witness has known the person previously, questions
of identification…, of facial characteristics, and
of clothing
are in our view of much less importance than in cases where there was
no previous acquaintance with the person sought
to be identified.
What is important is to test the degree of previous knowledge and the
opportunity for a correct identification,
having regard to the
circumstances in which it was made”.
This
Court reaffirmed this principle more recently in
Machi
v The State
where
the witnesses stated that they knew the appellant and he too admitted
that he knew them. The court said in these circumstances
there is no
room for mistaken identity
.’
[17]
The trial court was correct to reject the
alibi
defence,
albeit partially on a wrong principle, when it stated that the
alibi
version of the appellants was not disclosed for the state to
disprove. It was, however, correct in its examination of the evidence
regarding the
alibi
defence as well as the other evidence, and
correctly declared it as false.
[18]
In addition, the trial court recognised that this case was not one of
mistaken identity, as the
witnesses knew the appellants. They were
close relatives; the first appellant was the brother to Prenisha, and
they grew up together;
he referred to Lorraine as ‘aunty
Lorraine’. She was his stepmother with whom he had lived. The
second appellant was
known to both Lorraine and Prenisha as the first
appellant’s uncle.
[19]
In his heads of argument, the appellants' counsel criticised the
evidence of the eyewitnesses,
submitting that the witnesses and the
first appellant were family members who evidently had some personal
issues amongst themselves.
The appellants' evidence, however, does
not support this. They both testified that there were no family
issues between them and
the witnesses. There could be no reason the
appellants would be implicated by the eyewitnesses, much so the
second appellant. Furthermore,
the appellants were also
identified by Mr Naidoo who had no prior involvement with them. The
defence of false or mistaken identity
does not withstand scrutiny. In
any event, the evidence is so overwhelming against the appellants.
[20]
Both appellants confirmed that the second appellant drove a grey
Hyundai i20. A vehicle of the
same make was identified by the state
witnesses as the one the appellants arrived in, before the shooting
took place and that which
chased after the deceased’s vehicle,
after the shooting.
[21]
Crucially, the distance between the scene where the shooting first
occurred and the scene where
the deceased vehicle knocked into the
wall was said to be only 220 metres apart. The witnesses testified
that the deceased was
driving his vehicle fast, clearly, in an
attempt to get away from the appellants after being shot at. Shortly
after the crash at
the second scene, the eyewitnesses and the people
from the neighbourhood arrived. Thus, there is little room for
speculation that
there might have been another shooter at the second
scene, where the crash occurred. This, too, negates the probability
of mistaken
or false identification.
[22]
The appellant's
alibi
defence that they were at their
respective homes when the shooting occurred is also negated by
cellphone evidence adduced by the
State. Both appellants’
cellphones were cited at 23:19:45 as being near the Parkside Primary
Tower. There is therefore corroboration
as regards the cellphone
tower evidence that the appellants were in the same vicinity at the
same time. Both appellants live at
different addresses in Lenasia
South. The first appellant lived at Brandberg Place, while the second
appellant lived at Shaba Crescent.
The nearest tower for the first
appellant was Lenasia South Tower with Parkside and Cosmos Street
Towers to his north and Madiba
Primary to the south. The second
appellants’ closest towers were Apex Tower with Spoonhill,
Saliheen Masjidus, Shari Crest
Primary. Therefore, the appellants
could not have been at their respective homes.
[23]
I now turn to the ballistics evidence, which was accepted in part and
rejected in part by the
trial court. A comparison of the bullets
recovered from the deceased’s vehicle was conducted by Captain
Blignaut. The trial
court found this evidence to be inconclusive and
problematic with significant discrepancies. Bearing in mind that
ballistic evidence
is expert evidence, the principles associated with
the acceptance or the rejection of such evidence are applicable.
Captain Blignaut
conceded that the bullets recovered from the
deceased’s vehicle could not have been fired from the second
appellant’s
personal licenced firearm, a 9mm Parabellum
semi-automatic pistol. No cartridges were recovered from the first
scene outside Mr
Choonie’s home. The eyewitnesses’
evidence was to the effect that some woman by the name of ‘Cynthia’
had
picked up all the spent cartridges at the first scene. For some
reason, which was not explained, the State failed to investigate
this
issue or call this witness. The appellants’ counsel submitted
in his heads of argument that all these shortcomings pointed
to a
possibility that there was no shooting at the first scene, and that
the deceased was not struck by bullets fired from the
second
appellant’s firearm. This submission is, however, not
sustainable. The manner in which the shooting occurred and the
proximity between the first and the second scene leave no room for
speculation.
[24]
The expert evidence was accepted in part as being as such and
rejected as the trial court was
of the view ‘that [Blignaut]
corrected [her] finding after consultation with the state, not to
exclude evidence but rather
to implicate the [9mm firearm], appears
highly suspect.’ A
n
expert witness is not retained to give a favourable opinion on behalf
of the party who hired him or her. An expert is not a ‘hired
gun’. The expert’s prime duty is to assist the court in
coming to a reasonable conclusion on matters which require
expert
evidence. Thus, a judge would be favourably impressed by an expert’s
impartiality who is willing to make reasonable
concessions which
might be detrimental to the client’s case, provided the
concessions are justified in the circumstances.
[5]
Hence,
the rejection by the trial court was correct, as it was not bound to
accept the expert evidence, if it was not satisfied
that the finding
of the expert witness was not corroborated by the rest of the
evidence.
[25]
Both the State and the defence conceded that there were discrepancies
in the evidence adduced
by the eyewitnesses. The trial court also
acknowledged this factor. It, however, concluded that ‘although
their evidence
[of the eyewitnesses] can be criticised as not exactly
coinciding, it is also indicative of their independence’. In my
view
the discrepancies were not material. It is trite that
contradictions are to be evaluated in the context of the evidence as
a whole.
The eyewitnesses were steadfast and unshaken as regards the
identity of the appellants as the perpetrators. They may have given
different accounts in relation to some aspects of how the incident
unfolded, their evidence in relation to the main events was,
however,
consistent.
[26]
For these reasons, there is no justification for interfering with the
factual findings of the
high court and its decision to convict the
appellants. The following order is made:
The appeal is dismissed.
__________________
W HUGHES
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For the
Appellants:
Heads of argument prepared by J Muir
Instructed
by:
AVDM Attorneys, Johannesburg
Peyper
and Botha Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For the
Respondent:
Heads of argument prepared by J M K Joubert
Instructed
by:
The Director of Public Prosecutions, Johannesburg
The
Director of Public Prosecutions, Bloemfontein.
[1]
S v
Mthethwa
1972 (3) SA 766
(A) at 768A-C. See also, but not limited to
S
v Nango
[1990] ZASCA 123
;
1990 (2) SACR 450
(A) at 10 and
S
v
Charzen
and Another
[2006] ZASCA 147
;
[2006] 2 All SA 371
(SCA);
2006 (2) SACR 143
(SCA)
para 11.
[2]
R v
Hlongwane
1959 (3) SA 337
(A) at 340H-341A.
[3]
S
v Liebenberg
[2005]
ZASCA 56
;
2005 (2) SACR 355
(SCA)
para
14.
[4]
Abdullah
v The State
[2022]
ZASCA 33
paras 14 and 15.
[5]
Schneider
NO v AA
[2010] ZAWCHC 3
;
2010 (5) SA 203
(WCC);
[2010] 3 All SA 332
at
14-15.
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