Case Law[2022] ZASCA 118South Africa
Qurashi and Others v The State (1166/2018) [2022] ZASCA 118; [2022] 4 All SA 295 (SCA); 2022 (2) SACR 459 (SCA) (22 August 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
22 August 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law and procedure – admission of evidence pursuant to search and seizure allegedly in violation of constitutional right to privacy and fair trial – distinction between real and self-incriminatory or conscriptive testimonial evidence – hearsay evidence – admissibility of extra-curial statements by a non-testifying witness.
Judgment
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## Qurashi and Others v The State (1166/2018) [2022] ZASCA 118; [2022] 4 All SA 295 (SCA); 2022 (2) SACR 459 (SCA) (22 August 2022)
Qurashi and Others v The State (1166/2018) [2022] ZASCA 118; [2022] 4 All SA 295 (SCA); 2022 (2) SACR 459 (SCA) (22 August 2022)
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sino date 22 August 2022
SAFLII
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THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 1166/2018
In
the matter between:
SALEEM
QURASHI
FIRST APPELLANT
FARHAN
ULLAH
SECOND APPELLANT
SHABBIR
GULLAM
THIRD APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Qurashi
and Others v The State
(Case no 1166/2018)
[2022] ZASCA 118
(22
August 2022)
Coram:
PONNAN, VAN DER MERWE, and CARELSE JJA and MAKAULA and PHATSHOANE
AJJA
Heard:
10 May 2022
Delivered
:
22 August 2022
Summary:
Criminal law and procedure – admission of evidence pursuant
to search and seizure allegedly in violation of constitutional
right
to privacy and fair trial – distinction between real
and
self-incriminatory or conscriptive testimonial evidence –
hearsay evidence –
admissibility of
extra-curial statements by a non-testifying witness.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein
(Rampai J, sitting as court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
Ponnan
JA and Phatshoane AJA (Van der Merwe and Carelse JJA, and Makaula AJA
concurring):
[1]
The first, second and third appellants, Saleem Qurashi, Farhan Ullah
and Shabber Ghulam,
stood trial as accused 2, 5 and 6 respectively,
together with four others, all Pakistani nationals,
[1]
before the Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein.
Eighteen charges were levelled against the first two and 17 against
the third. Counts 2, 3 and 7 were withdrawn at the commencement of
the trial, and at the close of the State case, the prosecutor
intimated that counts 5, 6, 7 and 8 were not being persisted in.
Eleven counts thus remained, namely: the contravention of s 9(1)
(a)
of the Prevention of Organised Crime Act 121 of 1998 (POCA) (count
1); two counts of robbery with aggravating circumstances (counts
9
and 16); five counts of murder (counts 10, 11, 12, 13 and 17);
kidnapping (count 14); attempted extortion (count 15); and, a
contravention of s 18(2)
(a)
of the Riotous Assemblies Act 17 of 1956, being a conspiracy to
commit kidnapping (count 18) – a charge that was not preferred
against the third appellant.
In
what follows, it may be convenient to refer to the appellants by
their appellation before the trial court, namely accused 2,
5 and 6.
[2]
Count 1 relates to the alleged participation of the accused in
organised criminal
gang activity in contravention of s 9 of POCA.
And, that as part of a pattern of such activity, the accused either
individually
or collectively committed the various offences set out
in the indictment. The prosecution alleged that in November 2007, the
four
deceased in counts 10 to 13, Malik Yasser Awan, Amanullah
Nusrullam, Shabodien Hussein and Majid Saleem, who were also
Pakistani
nationals, were lured to Clocolan in the Free State, were
they were robbed of a BMW sedan motor vehicle, four Nokia cellphones
and two firearms (count 9). They were then murdered and buried in a
shallow grave (counts 10, 11, 12 and 13).
[3]
On 4 March 2008, the accused allegedly kidnapped Zia Khan and
deprived him of his
liberty at 6 Van der Spuy Avenue, in Bloemfontein
(count 14). They then threatened to kill Zia Khan unless his
relative, Rashid
Anwari Khan, paid them R2 million (count 15). Zia
Khan was also robbed of his Opel Corsa bakkie and a cellphone (count
16). Following
the killing of Zia Khan (count 17), he was buried in a
shallow grave at 6 Van der Spuy Avenue. The State further alleged
that accused
1, 2 and 5 conspired with Ifthkar Ahmed to kidnap Rashid
Khan (count 18).
[4]
Save for count 17, on which the appellants were convicted of culpable
homicide instead
of murder, the appellants were convicted as charged
and each sentenced to imprisonment for life. The present appeal, with
the leave
of the trial court, is directed solely against conviction.
[5]
In
S v
Hadebe and Others
,
Marais JA had occasion to repeat what had previously been said by him
in
Moshephi
and Others v R
1980-1984
LAC 57
at 59F- H, namely that:
‘
The
breaking down of a body of evidence into its component parts is
obviously a useful aid to a proper understanding and evaluation
of
it. But, in doing so, one must guard against a tendency to focus too
intently upon the separate and individual part of what
is, after all,
a mosaic of proof. Doubts about one aspect of the evidence led in a
trial may arise when that aspect is viewed in
isolation. Those doubts
may be set at rest when it is evaluated again together with all the
other available evidence. That is not
to say that a broad and
indulgent approach is appropriate when evaluating evidence. Far from
it. There is no substitute for a detailed
and critical examination of
each and every component in a body of evidence. But, once that has
been done, it is necessary to step
back a pace and consider the
mosaic as a whole. If that is not done, one may fail to see the wood
for the trees.’
[2]
[6]
The approach which commended itself in
Moshephi
seems
appropriate in the particular circumstances of this matter. This, all
the more so, because the manner in which the evidence
was presented
was oftentimes haphazard and lacking in any logical coherence,
resulting in a rather protracted trial that generated
a record in
excess of 2500 pages. Thus, to focus too intently upon each
individual part on which the prosecution case rested, is
likely to
result in a judgment that would be indigestible. The mosaic as a
whole lends inescapably to the factual foundation upon
which the
logical deduction must rest that each of the appellants are indeed
guilty of the offences with which they have been charged.
When viewed
against the tapestry of all of the evidence, the claim by them that
they were wrongly convicted by the trial court
and that the appeal
must consequently succeed cannot be sustained.
[7]
It is not necessary to analyse the evidence adduced on behalf of the
prosecution in
granular detail, rather it would suffice to paint the
evidence in broad strokes with a view to demonstrating that the broad
hypothesis
sought to be advanced by the prosecution finds compelling
support in the evidence.
[8]
The prosecution case rested, in the main, on:
(a)
the
viva voce
testimony of
inter alia
Ms Zainub Saleem,
Ms Nazira Awan, Mr Rashid Khan, Mr Steven Musetsi Latela, Mr Ifthkar
Ahmed, Mr Leon van Wyk Rossouw, Warrant
Officer Eben van Zyl and
Warrant Officer Linda Steyn;
(b)
the exhibits seized and the discovery of the body of the deceased in
count 17, pursuant to a search at 6 Van der Spuy Avenue,
Bloemfontein;
(c)
the exhibits seized following upon the arrest of the various accused
in Kestell and Pietermaritzburg; and
(d)
the evidence of Ms Johanna Heyneke, the forensic liaison manager of
Vodacom, relating to various cellphone numbers, pursuant
to a
subpoena issued in terms of s 205 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of
1977 (the Criminal Procedure Act); and
(e)
several statements, as well as a pointing out by Mr Rehman Khan made
to Captain Francois James Lux, which led to the discovery
of the
bodies of the four deceased in counts 10 to 13.
[9]
The evidence of each of Ms Zainub Saleem, Ms Nazira Awan and Mr
Rashid Khan, in that
order, may be a useful starting point. Ms Zainub
Saleem (the wife of Saleem Majid, the deceased in count 13) testified
that her
husband had travelled from Cape Town, where they resided, to
Johannesburg on 7 November 2007. She had daily telephonic contact
with him over the following days, until Saturday 10 November 2007,
when unable to reach him because his phone was apparently switched
off, she made contact with Amanullah Nusrullam (the deceased in count
11). Mr Nusrullam told her that he, her husband, Shabodien
Hussein
(the deceased in count 12) and Malik Yasser (the deceased in count
11) had travelled from Johannesburg to Clocolan (a place
that she had
not previously heard of) with a person named Qurashi. He informed her
that her husband was in a meeting with Farhan
and Shahid and that he
will get him to return her call. The next day she spoke to her
husband, who confirmed that he had travelled
from Johannesburg to
Clocolan with Saleem Qurashi; and, that he had concluded his business
and would be returning to Cape Town
either that evening or the day
thereafter. That was the last time that she spoke to him.
[10]
When, by 15 November 2007, Ms Saleem was still unable to get hold of
her husband she travelled
to Johannesburg. A case docket in respect
of a missing person was opened at the Booysens’ police station,
whereafter she
went to Clocolan. The Clocolan police took her to what
was described in the evidence as the A-frame house, ostensibly
because Pakistani
nationals lived there. At the A-frame house she
encountered accused 4 (Ali Mamo Mazhir) and another person. Despite
confronting
him with the fact that she had knowledge that her blue
BMW vehicle, in which her husband had travelled from Johannesburg to
Clocolan,
had been seen at the house, accused 4 was not forthcoming
with any information.
[11]
The police then took her to another house in Andries Pretorius
Street, in Clocolan, which appeared
to be unoccupied and was locked.
As they walked around the yard, they came upon a little shed behind
the house, in which she recognised
two CD covers, which according to
her had been in the door of her BMW. She went back to Johannesburg
that afternoon and returned
the next day to Clocolan together with
Nazira Awan, the wife of Malik Awan Yasser (the deceased in count
10). Accompanied by the
police, they called on the house in Andries
Pretorius Street. On this occasion they were able to gain access to
the house with
a key supplied by Mr Latela. Amongst the documents
found inside the house, were an asylum seeker permit for accused 2
(Ejaz Ahmed)
and Pakistani passports issued in the names of Afzal
Hussein and accused 2. Some thirteen months later on 5 December 2008,
she
received news that four bodies – one of which she
subsequently identified as being that of her husband – had been
found.
She later also had occasion to identify the blue BMW after it
had been recovered.
[12]
Ms Awan testified that she had last seen her husband alive on Friday
9 November 2007, when he
dropped her off that morning at the taxi
rank so that she could make her way to work. She spent that night
after work at her sister’s
home. The next day, when she phoned
her husband to ask him to pick her up from her sister’s place,
he replied that he could
not because he was on his way to Clocolan to
visit Shahid. He informed her that he was with Majid, Amanullah,
Shahab (an apparent
reference to the deceased in counts 11, 12 and
13) and Saleem Qurashi. At around midnight she spoke to him again,
when he intimated
that he would see her the next day. The next
morning he told her that he was going ‘somewhere very far’
and that she
must ‘look after herself’. Thereafter, she
was unable to contact him telephonically because his phone appeared
to have
been switched off. She then reported to the police that he
was missing. Having managed by means of a sim-swap, and with the
assistance
of Vodacom, to ascertain the last five numbers dialled
from his cellphone, she called each of those numbers. The second
number
called was answered by someone who identified himself as
Farhan. Subsequent attempts to contact that number, however, went
unanswered.
She testified that she had previously seen the deceased
in count 11, Amanullah Nusrullam, who had come to her house with
Saleem
Majid (the deceased in count 13). Saleem Qurashi and Shahid
(who she identified respectively as accused 2 and 1 before the trial
court) had also visited her home. For the rest, she confirmed the
account of Ms Zainub Saleem.
[13]
Mr Rashid Khan and the deceased in count 17, Zia Khan, were business
partners in a supermarket
in Lesotho, where they shared a house in
Maputsoe. Accused 1 (Shahid Saeed), who was a friend of Zia Khan,
together with accused
2 (Saleem Qurashi) and 6 (Shabber Ghulam) spent
approximately one month at their house about three months before the
disappearance
of Zia. In that time, accused 4 and 5 (Farhan Ullah)
also visited. On 3 March 2008, Zia Khan travelled to Maseru for
business purposes.
When he returned that afternoon, he was
accompanied by accused 1, 2 and 6. After dinner that evening accused
1 left and 2 and 6
slept over. The next morning Zia Khan left home
together with accused 2 and 6 in his black Corsa bakkie. He took
R35 000 with
him to meet a tax obligation with the revenue
authorities in Maseru. He was accompanied by accused 2 and 6. Later
that day, Rashid
tried unsuccessfully to contact Zia telephonically.
He then phoned accused 6 at about 3 pm that afternoon, who told him
that Zia
had returned to Maputsoe. Rashid was then unable to contact
either Zia or accused 6 later that day. Zia’s disappearance was
reported thereafter to the Maseru police.
[14]
Eight days later, Rashid received a telephone call; he was told: ‘Do
you want your brother
alive. You have to arrange R2 million’.
He recognised the caller as accused 1. When he was contacted
thereafter, he asked
to speak to Zia. He was not put through to Zia,
but heard a recorded message in Zia’s voice saying ‘Rashid,
Rashid,
Rashid’. Rashid managed to raise the R2 million and was
contacted at regular intervals thereafter, but refused to undertake
delivery until he had spoken to Zia. A friend suggested that Rashid
contact Mr Leon van Wyk Rossouw, a private investigator. They
met in
Ficksburg on 16 March 2008. Rossouw took possession of his cellphone
and downloaded and analysed its call history. On the
next day,
Colonel Topkin called on, and interviewed, Rashid in Ficksburg. On 18
March, he was told by Rossouw that a body had been
found, which he
was asked to identify. He subsequently identified the body as that of
Zia Khan. He was not contacted again about
payment of the ransom.
Rashid thereafter returned home to Pakistan. Whilst in Pakistan, he
received three threatening calls. He
recognised the caller, who was
speaking Urdu, as accused 1. Rashid saved the three numbers on his
phone.
[15]
According to Rossouw, he was provided with the cellphone number
[....] by Rashid Khan, as the
number that had been used by one of the
alleged kidnappers to contact him. Although he did not have access to
the data systems
of any of the cellphone providers at that stage, he
did have a program to process and analyse cellphone data. Rashid had
also furnished
him with the names of the three persons, namely
accused 1, 2 and 6, who he allegedly suspected of being involved in
Zia’s
kidnapping and their contact numbers. Rossouw had first
approached W/O Van Zyl, who was at that stage part of a task team
investigating
vehicle theft, with regard to Zia’s Corsa bakkie.
He had also approached Captain Niemand of Crime Intelligence and
Colonel
Kruger. Captain Niemand informed him that he (Niemand) had
established that the cellphone number [....] was active in the Olive
Hill area of Bloemfontein. Rossouw then called on estate agents in
that area, which led him to 6 Van der Spuy Avenue, a property
situated in Olive Hill, Bloemfontein.
[16]
Rossouw was evidently dissatisfied with the lack of progress on the
part of the police in the
investigation of Zia Khan’s
disappearance. At that stage, 6 Van der Spuy Avenue had only been
observed for approximately
two hours by the police, who reported that
the place was unoccupied. Rossouw then contacted Warrant Officers Van
Zyl and Steyn
of organised crime, who were known to him. By the time
he first approached them for assistance, he had already established
that
a person named Ejaz Ahmed, who had furnished one of his contact
numbers as [....], had signed a lease agreement in respect of 6
Van
der Spuy Avenue. He sought and obtained permission from Captain
Niemand to secure a key from the letting agent for the premises.
Having received the key, he together with Warrant Officers Van Zyl
and Steyn entered the premises. The evidence found at 6 Van
der Spuy
Avenue included: the body of Mr Zia Khan, which was buried in a
shallow grave; Vodacom starter packs for Sim numbers [....]
and
[....] as well as an instruction manual for an Opel Astra vehicle.
Rossouw recognised the latter number as the number that
was used to
contact Rashid Khan by one of Zia Khan’s alleged kidnappers and
was also reflected on the lease agreement for
6 Van Der Spuy Avenue
as one of the contact numbers for the lessee, Ejaz Ahmed.
[17]
The search at 6 Van der Spuy Avenue on 18 March 2008 was described by
counsel for the appellants
as a ‘seminal moment in the
investigation of the case’. Prior thereto, there was no
information with regard to the
whereabouts of Zia Khan and limited
information as to the possible suspects. On 10 April 2008, and after
having obtained information
from Vodacom pursuant to a subpoena
issued in terms of
s 205
of the
Criminal Procedure Act relating
to
the various cellphone numbers that the police then had to hand,
Rossouw and Van Zyl set out to Howick (or more accurately the
GPS
co-ordinates obtained from Vodacom for the cellphones in question
that pointed them in that direction). On their way, they
received
information which led them to Kestell, where they arrested accused 1,
2 and 5 as well as Tammy MacDonald and Iftkhar Ahmed,
all of whom
were seated in an Opel Astra.
[18]
The evidence found at Kestell included: the passports of accused 1, 2
and 5 and a Vodaphone 125
cellphone bearing the sim number [....] in
the possession of accused 5. The contact list on that Vodaphone 125
included the following:
Shabber [....], Shahid2 [....] and Shahid4
[....] (as already pointed out this number had been used to contact
Rashid Khan by one
of Zia Khan’s alleged kidnappers and
appeared on the lease agreement for 6 Van Der Spuy Avenue). Also
seized was a book containing
contact names and numbers, which
included the following: Farhan [....] (which Rossouw recognised as a
number on one of the starter
packs found at 6 Van Der Spuy); Ali
[....]; Ejaz [....]; Rashid [....] (which Rossouw recognised as
Rashid Khan’s number);
Zia [....] (this number was known to
Rossouw as Zia Khan’s number as furnished to him by Rashid
Khan); and Ifthkar [....].
There was yet a further number alongside
the name Farhan on another page of the book, namely [....] (this was
one of the numbers
given to Rossouw at the commencement of his
investigation into Zia Khan’s kidnapping; as belonging to one
of the persons
last seen with Zia Khan). So too, was the number
[....], which was listed alongside the name Shaber. Rossouw also
recognised the
number [....], which was listed alongside the name
Mazhar, as one that was reflected on the lease agreement for 6 Van
Der Spuy
Avenue, as an alternative contact number for the lessee,
Ejaz Ahmed.
[19]
Having received information from accused 5, Rossouw and Van Zyl made
their way with him to Howick.
Accused 5 was detained at the Howick
Police cells and Rossouw and Van Zyl spent the night at the Howick
Falls Hotel. The next morning,
namely 11 April, and whilst at the
hotel, Van Zyl interviewed Ms Alma Dixon, an employee of the hotel,
who later testified that
accused 1 arrived in a Black Corsa bakkie
and spent the night of the 29 March 2008 at the hotel. He reflected
his address as Maseru,
Lesotho and telephone number as [....] in the
guest registrar.
[20]
That afternoon, and again on the strength of information furnished to
them by accused 5 the previous
day, Van Zyl and Rossouw made their
way to Pietermaritzburg; first to Bayat Street and then to Harvard
Street. Accused 3, 4 and
6 were arrested at Bayat Street. The
evidence found at Bayat Street included: the passport of accused 4; a
Nokia 3410 (bearing
an MTN Sim card with number [....]) and a copy of
accused 3’s passport. The evidence found at Harvard Street
included: a
box for the Vodaphone 125 cellphone found in the
possession of accused 5 in Kestell; an invoice from B4U in the name
of S Khan
for that cellphone; an envelope addressed to Farhan with
cellphone number [....] (one of the numbers which by this stage had
come
to feature quite prominently in the investigation); the passport
of one Muhammed Ali and another envelope sent by Muhammed Ali
addressed to Farhan Ullah. On his return to Bloemfontein from
Pietermaritzburg, Rossouw was able to analyse the cellphones found
on
each of accused 3 and 5 and two sim cards allegedly belonging to
accused 1 that was found in a black packet in the Opel Astra
at the
time of their arrest.
[21]
According to Steyn, after the discovery of the body of Zia Khan they
received information that
the persons involved in his death were also
linked to a Booysens’ docket pertaining to the disappearance of
four Pakistani
men. After attending on 6 Van Der Spuy Avenue with
Rossouw and Van Zyl, she opened a docket at the Clocolan police
station. Inspector
Mokgotu was initially the investigating officer,
however, when he took ill during June-July, she was appointed by
Colonel Topkin
to take over the investigation. At that stage, accused
1 to 6 had already been arrested. In December 2008, accused 7 (Ali
Tanveer)
and one Rehman Khan (a cousin of accused 5 and 7) were
arrested after their photographs had been published in a local
newspaper.
Pursuant to a pointing out made by Rehman Khan to Captain
Francois Laux on 4 December 2008, the bodies of the four deceased in
counts 10 to 13 were discovered in a shallow grave approximately one
metre deep in front of a chicken run some 10 metres from the
back
door of the house at 42 Andries Pretorius Street. Rehman Khan, who
was 19 years old and afraid, was then placed in witness
protection at
his request, until he apparently fled about one week before the
commencement of the trial. In the course of her investigation,
Steyn
obtained several statements from Rehman Khan.
[22]
Mr Ifthkar Ahmed testified that he had initially met accused 1 and 2
through an acquaintance
known as Shan. Thereafter he was contacted by
Shan, who told him that accused 1 wanted to meet with him. He then
received a phone
call from the latter, who said that he required
Ahmed’s assistance to secure a property and proposed that they
meet in Qwa
Qwa. Ahmed suggested that they meet in Kestell instead.
On Thursday 10 April 2008, Ahmed, who was accompanied by a friend,
Tammy
McDonald, drove to Kestell, where he met accused 1, 2 and 5 at
the Excel garage. Whilst seated in a blue Opel Astra, which was being
driven by accused 2, Van Zyl and Rossouw arrived and they were
arrested. At the Kestell police station, where he shared a cell
with
accused 1, the latter expressed the hope that the police would not
find the BMW car or Opel Corsa Bakkie, which he stated
were in
Lesotho in the possession of a person by the name of Makara or the
bodies of the ‘four guys from Johannesburg’.
The next day
they were transported to the Bloemfontein police station, where he
shared a cell with accused 2. Accused 2 told him
that they had
kidnapped four people from Johannesburg, ‘with their own BMW, a
blue car’ and took them to Clocolan in
the Free State. Accused
2 phoned Ejaz Zodah, who was then in Johannesburg and allegedly the
gang leader, and told him ‘minus
2’. Later, he phoned him
again to tell him ‘minus 4’ – a reference, so it
would seem, to the fact that
initially two and thereafter all four
had been killed. Ejaz Zodah sent accused 6 to confirm that the four
individuals had indeed
been killed. Accused 2 also said that all
four, who had been shot, were buried in one grave.
[23]
Accused 2 further told Ahmed that they had kidnapped Zia Khan and
taken him to Bloemfontein,
where a friend had organised a place for
them. It was there that Zia Khan was killed. Although he was not
present when Zia Khan
was killed, when he arrived later that day he
washed, dressed and then buried the body. As accused 2 described it,
the killing
of the four deceased, who were members of a rival gang,
was because ‘they want to put the gang down to come out on
top’,
whilst the killing of Zia Khan was not gang-related, but
‘for money’.
[24]
It is against that broad factual backdrop that the appeal falls to be
considered. The appeal
rests upon four main foundations: first, the
admission of evidence, which, so it is asserted, was obtained
unconstitutionally and
which infringed the appellants’ right to
privacy and to a fair trial; second, the admission of hearsay
evidence and the prominent
role that such evidence played in the
conviction of the appellants; and, third, the credibility findings
made by the trial court
in favour of the prosecution witnesses and
against the appellants.
As
to the first:
[25]
It is contended that the search of the premises and seizure of
exhibits at 6 Van der Spuy Avenue
in Bloemfontein violated the
appellants’ right to privacy. So too, the search of their
persons, vehicles and houses upon
their arrest. When Rossouw was
testifying, counsel for the appellants raised the following
objection:
‘
At
this stage M’Lord, I would like to indicate my position that I
have, I have a problem, I object against the admissibility
of the
evidence that the witness is going to tender in respect of exhibits
which was found on this specific premises as well as
his further
evidence. M’Lord, the admissibility of that is attacked firstly
on the basis that the evidence was obtained unlawfully
by this
specific witness that is currently testifying. His actions were not
sanctioned by law and therefore I will propose to His
Lordship that
that evidence is inadmissible on that basis alone.
M’Lord,
furthermore, secondly I would also propose to His Lordship that the
evidence that was obtained was in breach of Section
14 of the
Constitution which deals with the privacy rights of every citizen or
every person. Now M’Lord, I am mindful of
the fact that Section
35 of the Constitution, subsection 5 of that Section, provides that
any evidence which was obtained unconstitutionally
must be excluded
unless it will not have the effect on the fairness of the trial of
the accused or else if it would be in the interest
of justice. So
M’Lord, my submission would be that His Lordship does have
discretion to allow evidence which was unconstitutionally
obtained,
if it does not affect the fairness of the trial or if it is in the
interest of justice.
Now
M’Lord, my submission in this effect is to determine that
admissibility, M’Lord needs to have a trial within a trial.
Now
I am mindful of the fact that my learned friend will probably argue
to His Lordship that the onus in respect of whether there
is a
constitutional infringement will obviously lie with the accused and
if that is the argument I am in agreement with that, that
is so,
there is authority for that. However whether this information was
obtained lawfully that is another question M’Lord
and that I do
not bear the onus, the State has the onus to show to His Lordship
that that evidence was in fact obtained lawfully.
M’Lord,
if I may assist my learned friend in that respect, I say it is
unlawfully because as a private detective or a private
person, the
witness does not have the legal power to first of all enter a
premises, to search a premises, to search a person found
on a
premises and to gather information at such a place, because of that
M’Lord I submit that there is a need for a trial
within a trial
where that point is, admissibility must be determined first before
His Lordship needs to hear the remainder of his
evidence, as it
pleases.’
[26]
The prosecutor agreed with the contention that to determine whether
or not the evidence in question
(which was not identified by counsel
for the accused) was admissible, a trial within a trial had to be
held. And, the trial court
was evidently persuaded to follow that
course. In that, in my view, it was wrong. What is more, the trial
court proceeded to do
so without so much as even attempting to
identify the evidence, the subject of the admissibility trial. Be
that as it may, the
starting point must be an appreciation that a
notable feature of the Constitution’s specific exclusionary
provision (s 35(5))
is that it does not provide for the automatic
exclusion of unconstitutionally obtained evidence. Evidence must be
excluded only
if it (a) renders the trial unfair; or (b
)
is
otherwise detrimental to the administration of justice. As no
evidence was adduced on that score on behalf of the appellants,
the
trial court was simply unable to make that assessment. Moreover, in
this regard it is perhaps important to recognise the distinction
between real and testimonial evidence, and that unfairness in the
method of obtaining the evidence does not necessarily result
in
unfairness in the trial. Importantly, here we are not dealing with
‘self-incriminatory’
or ‘conscriptive’ evidence,
where
the so-called alleged constitutional infringement has resulted in the
creation of evidence which would not otherwise exist.
The appellants
were not conscripted to create the evidence against themselves (such
as for example a self-incriminating statement)
upon which the
prosecution now seeks to rely. Nor was the evidence found with the
compelled assistance of any of the appellants.
[3]
[27]
Insofar as Rossouw’s role in the investigation is concerned,
the evidence is clear that
every stage of his involvement was at the
behest of Van Zyl. All of the exhibits seized were handed to Van Zyl,
who thereafter
dealt with them in accordance with standard police
procedure. There has been no challenge on behalf of the appellants
either in
this Court or the one below to the chain of custody of the
various exhibits. The suggestion appears to be that Mr Rossouw’s
mere presence, without more, tainted the investigation in some or
other undisclosed manner, thereby resulting in an unfair trial.
That,
merely has to be stated, to be rejected.
[28]
It is so that 6 Van der Spuy Avenue was searched without a search
warrant, but by that stage
the property was to all intents and
purposes abandoned. In any event, the search had been conducted with
the permission of the
letting agent, National Real Estate. The
searches in Kestell and Pietermaritzburg followed upon the arrest of
suspects and were
conducted in terms of s 23 of the
Criminal
Procedure Act. In
any event, none of the appellants testified during
the course of the trial within a trial. The trial court was thus
simply none
the wiser as to whose privacy rights had been infringed,
the extent and scope of such infringement and whether or not, as a
consequence,
it ought to exercise its discretion in favour of
admitting such evidence.
[29]
In
S v
Magwaza
it was stated:
‘
Although
s 35(5) of the Constitution does not direct a court, as does s 24(2)
of the [Canadian] Charter, to consider ‘all
the circumstances’
in determining whether the admission of evidence will bring the
administration of justice into disrepute,
it appears to be logical
that all relevant circumstances should be considered (
Pillay
at
433
h
).
Collins
lists
a number of factors to be considered in the determination of whether
the admission of evidence will bring the administration
of justice
into disrepute, such as, for example: the kind of evidence that was
obtained; what constitutional right was infringed;
was such
infringement serious or merely of a technical nature and would the
evidence have been obtained in any event.
In
Collins
(at
282), Lamer J reasoned that the concept of disrepute necessarily
involves some element of community views and ‘thus
requires the
Judge to refer to what he conceives to be the views of the community
at large’.
Pillay
(at
433
d-e
)
accepted that
whether
the admission of evidence will bring the administration of justice
into disrepute requires a value judgment, which inevitably
involves
considerations of the interests of the public.’
[4]
So
approached, no justification existed in this case for the exclusion
of the evidence. The result is that at the conclusion of
the trial
within a trial, a sizeable body of exhibits came, quite correctly, to
be admitted into evidence against the accused.
As
to the second:
[30]
During the course of the trial, some of the evidence relied upon by
the prosecution was sought
to be excluded by the defence on account
of its hearsay nature, such as: (a) the evidence of Ms Saleem of her
telephonic conversations
with her husband and Amanullah Nusrullam;
(b) Ms Awan’s evidence of her conversations with her husband;
(c) six sworn statements
by Rehman Khan, made to three different
police officers; and (d) the pointing out made by Rehman Khan to
Captain Laux. The trial
court ruled them admissible in terms of s
3(1)
(c)
of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988 (the
Law of Evidence Act).
[31]
Hearsay evidence has historically been recognised to tend to be
unreliable. It has thus been
said that a court should hesitate long
in admitting or relying on hearsay evidence, which plays a decisive
or even significant
part in convicting an accused person, unless
there are compelling justifications for doing so.
[5]
Hearsay
is defined, in s 3(4) of the Law of Evidence Act, as statements
either oral or written, whose probative value depends upon
the
credibility of another
independent
person
not testifying before court. In
Seemela
v S
,
it was stated:
‘
For
many years our law knew a rigid exclusionary rule which allowed
specific exceptions but no relaxation. Now there is no exclusion
as
such. Hearsay evidence may now be accepted subject to the broad,
almost limitless criteria set out in s 3(1). Of that section,
Schutz
JA (
s v Ramavhale
1996 (1) SACR 639
(A) at 647d) had this to say:
“
.
. . it is necessary to emphasise . . . that s 3(1) is an exclusionary
subsection and that the touchstone of admissibility is the
interest
of justice, as is made clear by the words ‘. . . hearsay
evidence shall not be admitted as evidence . . . unless
- . . . the
court, having regard to (the considerations in ss (c)) is of the
opinion that such evidence should be admitted in the
interests of
justice’”.’
[6]
[32]
The matters listed in s 3(1)
(c)
are: (i) the nature of the proceedings; (ii) the nature of the
evidence; (iii) the purpose for which the evidence is tendered;
(iv)
the probative value of the evidence; (v) the reason why the evidence
is not given by the person upon whose credibility the
probative value
of such evidence depends; (vi) any prejudice to a party which the
admission of such evidence might entail; and
(vii) any other factor
which should in the opinion of the court be taken into account.
Insofar as the evidence of Ms Saleem and Ms
Awan are concerned, counsel accepted that their ‘evidence falls
squarely within
the ambit of s 3(1)
(c)
’
and that the ‘trial court gave a lengthy judgment and
considered each factor mentioned in section 3(1)
(c)
(i - vii)’.
[33]
I may add that there is much in the other evidence that lends
material support to the evidence
of the two of them. First,
independently of the other, the evidence of each establishes that:
the four deceased were in the company
of each other; their
whereabouts and the other persons in whose presence they found
themselves. Second, their evidence establishes
that each of the
deceased had cellphones with the following numbers: Saleem Majid
[....]; Amanullah Nusrullah [....]; Shabodien
Hussein [....] and
Malik Yasser [....], which Ms Heyneke of Vodacom testified was active
in Clocolan at the relevant time. Third,
Ms Saleem identified her CD
covers in a little shed behind the house at 42 Andries Pretorius
Street in Clocolan, the very property
on which the bodies of the four
deceased were ultimately discovered. Fifth, Frank Opperman, who
lived, and worked as a service
provider of computers and accessories
in Clocolan, recognised accused 1 as the driver of a blue BMW, which
he identified from photographs
taken after the vehicle had been
recovered, as the vehicle that Ms Saleem testified belonged to her,
which had been driven by her
husband from Johannesburg to Clocolan.
Support for this is also to be found in the evidence of Steven
Latela, who testified that
one morning after 9 November 2007, accused
1 came to fetch him in a blue BMW. There is therefore sufficient by
way of safeguards
in the evidence, if viewed holistically, that ought
to satisfy a trier of fact as to the reliability of the hearsay
evidence tendered
by each of these witnesses.
[34]
Turning to the evidence of Rehman Khan. I cannot agree with the trial
court that his various
statements ought to have been admitted into
evidence against the accused. In this regard it is important to
recognise
why hearsay evidence is in
general inadmissible. A witness who testifies in open court does so
under oath or affirmation and so
the potential liability for perjury
operates as a natural deterrent against false testimony. Also, the
presence in court of the
person against whom the evidence is tendered
encourages circumspection on the part of the witness. Because of the
adversarial nature
of court proceedings, a person has the right to
confront his or her accuser and to test by cross-examination the
veracity of the
witness’s assertions. It must be remembered
that cross-examination is a potent tool in the truth-finding exercise
and discerning
who is telling the truth is essential to the
fact-finding role of the court. The court’s ability to observe
the demeanour
of the witness contributes to a more reliable
assessment of credibility. When hearsay evidence is admitted these
important safeguards
are lost. And so, historically the exclusion of
hearsay evidence has been considered necessary to guard against the
danger that
the trier of fact might place undue weight on such
evidence despite its inherent weaknesses.
[35]
As Schutz JA observed in
S
v
Ramavhale
‘[a]n accused person usually has enough to contend with without
expecting him also to engage in mortal combat with the absent
witness’.
[7]
Hence, the
intuitive reluctance on the part of our courts to permit untested
evidence to be used against an accused in a criminal
case
.
[8]
In support of the admission of Rashid Khan‘s statements, the
prosecution argued that he had repeatedly asked for protection
and
that he was not in attendance because he and his family in Pakistan
had been threatened by the accused or persons acting on
their behalf.
Accordingly, so the argument went, because of the intimidation by or
at the hands of the accused, the witness had
disappeared and was not
present to testify. Simply put, there is no factual foundation for
that speculative and conjectural hypothesis.
[36]
That aside, in the trial court much store was placed on the judgment
of this Court in
S
v Ndhlovu
,
[9]
which had
come
to represent a seismic shift in our law inasmuch as it jettisoned the
common law rule that an extra-curial statement by an
accused person
is inadmissible against a co-accused. However, the correctness of
Ndhlovu
has since been reconsidered in
S
v Litako
.
[10]
The key findings in
Litako
were:
the rule against the admission of hearsay evidence developed because
of the inherent dangers of permitting the use of extra-curial
statements by one accused against another; such a statement has
always been regarded as irrelevant insofar as a co-accused is
concerned; the reliability of such evidence can never ever be
properly tested, because an accused person cannot access the tools
traditionally employed for that very purpose; the rule appreciates
that fair trial rights, including the right to fully challenge
the
prosecution case, may be hampered; and, consequently the right to
challenge evidence enshrined in s 35(3)
(i)
of the Constitution may thereby be rendered nugatory.
[37]
In
Mhlongo
v S
;
Nkosi
v S
,
[11]
the Constitutional Court affirmed the correctness of
Litako.
Although
Litako,
like
Ndhlovu
,
was
concerned with extra-curial statements of co-accused persons and in
particular the admissibility of an extra-curial statement
by a
non-testifying co-accused, the considerations that weighed in
Litako
must
no doubt equally apply to a witness in the position of Rehman Khan.
[38]
Unlike his extra-curial statements, however, the pointing out by
Rehman Khan, stands on a different
footing. The pointing out to
Captain Laux on 4 December 2008 led to the discovery of the bodies of
the four deceased in counts
10 to 13. In this regard, as earlier, the
importance of the distinction between real and testimonial evidence
looms large. Thus,
whilst I have had no regard in my summation of the
evidence to the content of each of Rehman Khan’s extra-curial
statements,
including his statements during the course of the
pointing out, as recorded by Captain Laux, the fact of the discovery
of the four
bodies at 42 Andries Pretorius Street, cannot be left out
of the reckoning.
As
to the third:
[39]
It is contended that the trial court erred in finding that Latela,
Ahmed, Rossouw and Van Zyl
were credible and reliable witnesses. It
may be convenient to commence with the last two. As far as they are
concerned, considerations
of credibility and, even for that matter
reliability, hardly arise. I have already alluded to the importance
of the distinction
between real and testimonial evidence. As should
be apparent from the evidence already summarised, the evidence of
each related,
in the main, to the former. Aside from the challenge to
the admissibility of such evidence (which as I have shown is
untenable),
the fact of the existence or reliability of that evidence
was not sought to be impugned in any way. It must thus follow that as
far as Van Zyl and Rossouw are concerned, credibility can therefore
hardly feature in the equation and must recede into the background.
[40]
Mr Steven Latela testified in relation to count 1, as well as 5, 6, 7
and 8; the last four of
which were not persisted with by the
prosecution. The relevance of Latela’s evidence is thus
restricted to count 1. I have
not recounted his version, because
having been warned in terms of
s 204
of the
Criminal Procedure Act,
his
evidence falls to be treated with caution and where it stands
alone, I have chosen rather not to place any reliance upon it. He
stated, which was confirmed by accused 1, when the latter testified,
that in 2006 he had been working part-time at a shop in Clocolan
belonging to a Mr Ghani, who had leased 42 Andries Pretorius Street
to Mr Ejaz Basra (also known as Ejaz Zodah). When Basra left,
apparently because his wife was going to be having a baby, accused 1
remained at the house. Over time accused 1 came to be joined
by the
other accused.
[41]
That accords with the version of accused 2. He stated that he used to
go to 42 Andries Pretorius
Street to visit his friend Basra in 2007.
As he put it, he used to stay there ‘sometimes two weeks,
sometimes four weeks
or sometimes three weeks’. After what
appeared to have been a quarrel of some kind accused 4, 5 and 7 moved
to the A-frame
house. Later they were joined by Rehman Khan. Accused
2 and 6 remained at 42 Andries Pretorius Street, whilst accused 1
seemed
to move between the two houses. Although accused 1 was of the
view that some of the other accused were there to a far lesser extent
than testified to by Latela, it ultimately came to be undisputed that
each of the accused had more than just a passing acquaintance
with
each other as well as 42 Andries Pretorius Street during 2006 and
2007. Latela, who was then still a scholar, was a daily
visitor and
had a fairly intimate knowledge of the goings on at both 42 Andries
Pretorius Street and the A-frame house, so much
so that he was
entrusted with the key to the latter. That is how he was able to
grant access to Ms Saleem, Ms Awan and the police,
when they called
on the second occasion.
[42]
That leaves Mr Ifthkar Ahmed: his version finds material
corroboration in the other evidence
adduced by the prosecution.
First, it is not in dispute that both accused 1 and 2 had contact
with Ahmed. Both admitted to having
spoken to him although each
denied having shared any information about their involvement in the
commission of any of the offences.
Second, both the blue BMW and
black Corsa bakkie were indeed recovered in Maseru, Lesotho. They
were then in the possession of
a person named Lephoi Makara. Ms
Saleem identified the BMW, once recovered, as hers. The Corsa Bakkie
that was recovered from Makara
was positively identified as Zia
Khan’s.
[43]
Third, when asked in the course of his testimony if Malik Yasser was
‘a popular guy and
a gangster’, accused 6 replied: ‘the
whole community knows that he was a gangster’. He added that
the people
were scared of Malik Yasser and Saleem Majid. He said:
‘they used to bring guys from overseas, human trafficking’.
His evidence then ran thus:
‘
If
you say that he was involved in human trafficking, one of the ways of
human trafficking is you get people illegally to a country
and then
you provide them with documentation, although they’re not
supposed to be here. That’s one of the ways of human
trafficking? . . . Yes. I also came with the very same way.
.
. .
And
who arranged that for you? . . . Rajah Novazish
And
Basra? . . . I met him after that.
.
. .
But
you do agree that’s one way of human trafficking. Getting
people here, get them false documentation? . . . Yes
And
there’s a lot of money involved in that. Isn’t it? The
people who want to be illegally in the country, they pay
for the
people in order to provide them with either a place to stay,
protection not to be caught by immigration and to get the
documentation, illegal? . . . Yes. I agree on it.
And
is it also so that there are quite a lot of groups who arrange this
human trafficking in South Africa? . . . Yes, I know some
of the
people they are doing this business.’
[44]
Accused 6 added:
‘
M’lord,
when I came in 2003, I heard from the community that Majid Saleem,
they kill one woman and a girl. That’s why
they in jail.’
This
finds support in the evidence of Ms Saleem. She confirmed that her
husband and Amanullah Nusrullam had been arrested by the
police in
2003 in connection with the murder of a woman and her daughter, both
of whom were Pakistani nationals. She testified
that in the ensuing
trial they were found not guilty. In evidence, she was asked by
counsel for the accused whether she was aware
of ‘the principle
of an eye for an eye’.
[45]
The relevance of this last exchange is illustrated in the following
from the record:
‘
Did
Basra at any stage talk to you about these killings? . . . No. Basra
never told me.
And
did accused number 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 7 at any stage talk about these
killings of Basra’s friends? . . . No
So,
as far as you are concerned, those two persons who were killed,
that’s got nothing to do with this case? . . . I have
no
knowledge about that.
.
. .
Let
me try to make it more easy for you. You didn’t talk to your
attorney, to Mr Potgieter your advocate about the fact that
Basra’s
friends were killed? . . . I didn’t speak anything to my
lawyer. But I did explain [to] him that Majid and
Yasser Awan was
gangsters.
That’s
all what you said? . . . Yes.
And
as far as you know, not one of your co-accused told Mr Potgieter
about the fact that Basra’s friends were killed allegedly
by
Malik Yasser and Majid Saleem? . . . I’m not sure about it.
Because
if you didn’t tell him anything and if the rest of the accused
who testified also denied that, I’d just like
to know if you
can assist us . . . why did he put to Zainub Saleem, the wife of
Majid that there is a religious principle of an
eye for an eye? . . .
M’lord, I can say only about myself. I’m not sure about
the other people what they are saying.
But I am sitting here. I said
nothing about that’.
The
quoted excerpts whilst accused 6 was being cross-examined lend
weighty support to Ahmed’s version that he was told by
accused
2 that the killing of the four deceased was gang-related. What was
put by counsel to Ms Saleem is also telling. It accords
with the
foundational hypothesis sought to be advanced by the prosecution.
[46]
Fourth, the police did indeed find the bodies of the ‘four guys
from Johannesburg’
(as they were described) in Clocolan in the
Free State. On that score, the key post mortem findings of Dr Robert
Book, a specialist
forensic pathologist, who examined the four, was
that: they had been bound; had tape wrapped around their mouths; each
had been
shot in the back of the head; and, their bodies had been
buried and were in an advanced state of decomposition. The discovery
of
the various different passports and execution style killing of the
four deceased lends credence to the assertion of involvement
in human
trafficking and gang-related activity.
[47]
Fifth, Rashid Khan did testify that after Zia Khan had been kidnapped
he was contacted with a
ransom demand of R2 million. In that he
supports Ahmed’s version that he was told by accused 2 that the
killing of Zia Khan
was ‘for money’. Finally, it must be
asked, where else, if not from accused 1 and 2, would Ahmed have
obtained such
information, which is entirely consistent with all the
other proved facts. He could hardly have conjured up that information
and,
what is more, it would take tremendous guile and ingenuity for
him to have pieced together such a coherent account. But even, were
it to have been possible for him to have pieced his version together,
where would he have derived the information from? In short,
his
version has a ring of truth to it. If he did derive his information
from accused 1 and 2, as it seems that he must have, then
the more
important question becomes, how would accused 1 and 2 have been privy
to such details, unless they were intimately involved
in the events
described?
[48]
Thus aside from Rehman Khan’s
extra-curial
statements and to a lesser extent Latela’s testimony, where it
stood alone, no warrant exists for the exclusion
of any of the other
evidence adduced by the prosecution. It bears noting, however, that
the exclusion of such evidence does not
materially detract from the
cogency of the prosecution case. Nor, for that matter, does the
evidence of the accused, to which I
now turn.
[49]
Importantly, it came to be formally admitted that: (i) cellphone
number [....] was used by accused
5 from time to time and cellphone
number [....] was also his number; (ii) cellphone numbers [....] and
[....]3 were accused 1’s
numbers; and (iii) the correctness of
the cellphone data was not in dispute. As shall be demonstrated, the
effect of these formal
admissions, particularly that relating to the
cellphone data, cannot be overstated.
[50]
Accused 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6 testified. The other two did not, nor did
they call any evidence in
their defence. Accused 1 testified that
during August 2006 to July – August 2007 he often stayed at the
house in Andries
Pretorius Street in Clocolan and that after Basra
left he paid the rent. In July or August 2007, he rented the A-frame
house although
accused 5 paid the rent for it. In this regard he was
unable to explain why it was put to Latela that accused 5 in fact
stayed
in Mpumulanga, where he had a shop. Accused 1 stated that
whilst he did fetch Latela in a blue BMW, it was not the same vehicle
as that identified by Ms Saleem. Although he had met her husband
fleetingly only once in Johannesburg, he was unable to explain
her
evidence that her husband had used her cellphone to call a number on
5 November 2007, which came to be admitted as his number.
Importantly, her evidence in this regard was not disputed when she
testified.
[51]
It is not in dispute that accused 1 visited 6 Van Der Spuy Avenue on
4 March 2008. This according
to him was the first time that he
visited there, which co-incidentally was the very day that Zia Khan
went missing. It was also
the place where his body was eventually
found. It will be recalled that the day before, namely 3 March 2008,
accused 2 and 6 left
Zia Khan’s house, having spent the night
there, together with him in his Corsa bakkie. According to the
cellphone data evidence,
from 20 March to 9 April 2008, accused 1 was
using Zia Khan’s handset, with number [....]. That was also the
contact number
reflected on the register for the Howick Falls Hotel,
where Ms Alma Dixon saw accused 1 with the black Corsa bakkie. Inside
the
Corsa bakkie, when it was ultimately recovered from Makara in
Lesotho, were the original passports of accused 6 and Rehman Khan.
Accused 1 admitted to having called Rashid Khan in Pakistan, however,
it was not to threaten him, but as he put it ‘[b]ecause
I want
to know from him why I am in prison’. This despite the fact
that he knew that Rashid was a prosecution witness, with
whom he
ought not to have had any contact. Accused 1 also admitted that he
was the owner of the book seized from the Opel Astra
in Kestell
containing the names and numbers of his contacts. The entry ‘Farhan
[....]’, so he stated, was a reference
to accused 5. That, it
bears repeating, was the number on one of the starter packs found by
Rossouw at 6 Van Der Spuy.
[52]
When accused 3 testified, he admitted that it was his name on the
lease agreement and that he
had in fact concluded the lease agreement
in respect of 6 Van Der Spuy Avenue. He said that he was initially
asked by one Rajah
to lease a property for him in Bloemfontein, but
refused. Thereafter he was asked by Basra, who is his first cousin,
and he agreed.
Although he signed the lease agreement, ‘they
took responsibility to do everything, the rest’ including, so
he states,
the payment of the rent. Accused 5 testified that he came
to 42 Andries Pretorius Street in Clocolan in about June 2007 to see
his relative, accused 1. He lived there until ‘about the end of
July or first week of August and then we rent our own house’.
Accused 5 also admitted that the envelope found at Harvard Street in
Pietermaritzburg was addressed to him and bore his cellphone
number
[....].
[53]
Saleem Majid last spoke to his wife on 9 November 2007. Thereafter
she was unable to contact
him telephonically. The evidence pertaining
to the cellphone data established that accused 1’s SIM card
with number [....]
was used in Saleem Majid’s handset with
number [....] in the period 9 November to 11 November 2007. That
handset was then
not active until 30 December 2007, when from 12:07
on that day until 13:12 on 8 March 2008 it was used with accused 5’s
SIM
card bearing number [....]. In that period a total of 270 calls
were made, 263 of which were successful.
[54]
Accused 5’s other number, [....], came to be used in Saleem
Majid’s handset during
the period 30 December 2007 to 9 January
2008; in which time 13 successful calls were made on that SIM card.
Accused 5’s
number [....] was also used in the handset of the
deceased, Shabodien Hussein, from 1 to 4 January 2008. In that period
111 successful
calls were made. The number [....], which was
reflected on the contact list of the Vodaphone 125 phone found on
accused 5 at Kestlell
next to the name Shabber, was also used in
Shabodien Hussein’s handset in the period 30 December 2007 to 3
January 2008.
Some 50 successful calls were made on that number using
that handset in that period. That SIM card was also used in Saleem
Majid’s
handset in the period 1 January to 4 March 2008.
[55]
As should be apparent, I have restricted my analysis to the evidence
that is, by and large, either
common cause or undisputed. The overall
picture that emerges when the different pieces are stitched together
and the seemingly
disparate threads tightened is pretty damning. To
borrow from Davis AJA n
R v De Villiers
:
‘
As
stated by Best,
Evidence
(5
th
ed.
sec 298):
-
“
Not
to speak of greater numbers; even two articles of circumstantial
evidence – though each taken by itself weigh but as a
feather –
join them together, you will find them pressing on the delinquent
with the weight of
a milestone.
It
is of the utmost importance to bear in mind that, where a number of
independent circumstances point to the same conclusion the
probability of the justness of that conclusion is not the sum of the
simple probabilities of those circumstances, but is the compound
result of them.”’
[12]
Indeed,
as stated in
S v Reddy
:
‘
In
assessing circumstantial evidence one needs to be careful not to
approach such evidence upon a piece-meal basis and to subject
each
individual piece of evidence to a consideration of whether it
excludes the reasonable possibility that the explanation given
by an
accused is true. The evidence needs to be considered in its
totality.’
[13]
[56]
Accordingly, little value would be served in traversing the evidence
of each of the accused in
any greater detail. For the most part, the
attempt to distance themselves from each other, 42 Andries Pretorius
Street and 4 Van
Der Spuy Avenue and the incriminating exhibits,
bordered on the ridiculous. So too, the disavowal of what was put by
counsel on
their behalf to the different prosecution witnesses, as
well as the feigned ignorance or contrived explanations for the
various
seized exhibits and the movement of their cellphone handsets
and SIM cards as testified to by Ms Heyneke. As Nugent J pointed out
in
S v Van der Meyden
:
‘
Evidence
which incriminates the accused, and evidence which exculpates him,
cannot both be true – there is not even a possibility
that both
might be true – the one is possibly true only if there is an
equivalent possibility that the other is untrue. There
will be cases
where the State evidence is so convincing and conclusive as to
exclude the reasonable possibility that the accused
might be
innocent, no matter that his evidence might suggest the contrary when
viewed in isolation.’
[14]
[57]
Nor is it necessary for me to deal with the individual role played by
each of the accused, because
as Moseneke J observed in
S
v Thebus
in summing up the requirements for common purpose liability: ‘[t]he
liability arises from an active association and participation
in a
common criminal design with the requisite blameworthy state of
mind’.
[15]
Here not only
does the evidence show a clear association between the accused to
each other, but also links each of them by means
of several different
pieces of evidence to all five deceased and the two properties where
their bodies were buried.
[58]
It follows that the points raised on appeal, when viewed either
individually or collectively,
can hardly tip the scales in favour of
the accused, meaning that the appeal must fail.
[59]
In the result, the appeal is dismissed.
VM
PONNAN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
MV
PHATSHOANE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
a
ppellants:
J Nel SC with J Potgieter
Instructed
by:
Jacobs Fourie Inc, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
A Simpson
Instructed
by:
Director of Public Prosecutions, Bloemfontein
[1]
The
fact that the accused and several of the witnesses were Pakistani
nationals would appear to have resulted in names not always
being
consistently spelt. For example, whilst the name of appellant 3 is
reflected in the indictment as Shabir Gullam, the evidence
seems to
suggest that he is known as Shabber Ghulam.
[2]
S v
Hadebe and Others
1998
(1) SACR 422
(SCA) at 426E-H.
[3]
See
generally
Magwaza
v S
[2015]
ZASCA 36
;
[2015] 2 All SA 280
(SCA);
2016 (1) SACR 53
(SCA) and the
cases there cited.
[4]
Magwaza
fn 3 above para 15.
[5]
Seemela
v S
[2015]
ZASCA 41; 2016 (2) SACR 125 (SCA).
[6]
Ibid
para 12.
[7]
S
v Ramavhale
1996 (1) SACR 639
(A)
at
648A.
[8]
Metadad
v National Employers’ General Insurance Co Ltd
1992 (1) SA 494 (W).
[9]
S
v Ndhlovu
and
Others
2002
(2) SACR 325 (SCA).
[10]
Litako
& Others v S
[2014]
ZASCA 54; 2014 (2) SACR 431 (SCA); [2014] 3 All SA 138 (SCA); 2015
(3) SA 287 (SCA).
[11]
Mhlongo
v S
;
Nkosi
v
S
[2015] ZACC 19; 2015 (2) SACR 323 (CC); 2015 (8) BCLR 887 (CC).
[12]
R
v De Villiers
1944
AD 493
at 508.
[13]
S
v Reddy and Others
1996
(2) SACR 1
(A) at 8-9.
[14]
S
v Van der Meyden
1999 (2) SA 79
(W) at 81F–G.
[15]
Thebus
and Another
v
S
[2003]
ZACC 12
;
2003 (6) SA 505
(CC);
2003 (10) BCLR 1100
(CC) para 19.
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