Case Law[2022] ZASCA 130South Africa
Classen & Another v The State (803/21) [2022] ZASCA 130 (3 October 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal Law and Procedure – hearsay evidence – s 3(1)(c) of Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988 – admissibility, assessment and probative value of previous inconsistent statement by a hostile witness.
Judgment
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## Classen & Another v The State (803/21) [2022] ZASCA 130 (3 October 2022)
Classen & Another v The State (803/21) [2022] ZASCA 130 (3 October 2022)
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sino date 3 October 2022
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THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not reportable
Case
no: 803/21
In
the matter between:
EARL
CRAIG
CLASSEN
FIRST APPELLANT
ELLISTER
ALFREDO JANSEN
SECOND APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Classen & Another v The State
(803/21)
[2022] ZASCA
130
(03 October 2022)
Coram
Makgoka and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Musi, Makaula and Goosen
AJJA
Heard:
17 August 2022
Delivered:
03 October 2022
Summary:
Criminal Law and Procedure –
hearsay evidence – s 3(1)(
c
)
of
Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988
– admissibility,
assessment and probative value of previous inconsistent statement by
a hostile witness.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Mudau J sitting as a court of first instance)
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
The order of the high court convicting the appellants, and the
resultant sentences, are set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
Both
accused are acquitted on all three counts.’
JUDGMENT
Musi
AJA (Makgoka and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Makaula and Goosen AJJA
concurring):
[1]
This appeal, which is with the leave of this Court, is against the
appellants’
conviction in the Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Johannesburg (the high court). They were convicted of murder
(count 1), unlawful
possession of a firearm in contravention of s 1
of the Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000 (count 2) and unlawful
possession of ammunition
in contravention of s 90 of the Firearms
Control Act 60 of 2000 (count 3). They were each sentenced to life
imprisonment for the
murder count and to five and two years’
imprisonment respectively, on counts two and three. The appellants’
convictions
rested largely on a recanted statement by a witness who
was declared hostile. The appeal turns on the evidentiary weight to
be
attached to that statement.
[2]
It was not in dispute that the deceased, Mr Daniel Emmanuel Smith was
shot four times
and killed on 18 May 2017, at Ennerdale. The two
appellants were arrested for the murder and related counts. They
pleaded not guilty
to all the counts. At the trial, the identity of
the deceased’s assailants was the only issue in dispute.
[3]
The facts were as follows. Mrs Belinda Shortridge testified that on
18 May 2017 she
was driving her car on Town Road, Ennerdale. There
were two passengers in the car. Mr Daylen Wesley was seated on the
front passenger
seat and the deceased was seated behind her, on the
right rear seat. As they approached a controlled intersection, she
slowed down
because the traffic light was red. She saw a blue
Volkswagen Golf motor vehicle (the Golf), with two occupants, driving
next to
her - on her right-hand side. As she was about to stop at the
intersection she saw the passenger, who was sitting in the left front
seat of the Golf, pointing a firearm in the direction of her car. As
she accelerated she heard a gunshot and noticed that the right
rear
window of her vehicle – where the deceased was sitting - was
shuttered.
[4]
She turned and stopped next to a taxi rank and jumped out of her car.
She ran and
took refuge behind a taxi. Mr Wesley ran and hid behind
the bushes. The Golf stopped behind her car. She looked out from
behind
the taxi and saw the driver of the Golf alighting. He went to
her car, opened the right rear door and thereafter she heard two
gunshots. The driver walked back to the Golf and drove away. She
walked back to her car and noticed that the deceased, who was still
inside, had been shot. Although visibility was good, she did not
recognise any of the occupants of the Golf.
[5]
The prosecutor confronted her with a previous inconsistent statement
which she had
made two days after the incident. In the statement she
stated that the two appellants were the persons who shot the
deceased. She
stated that the second appellant (Mr Jansen) was the
driver of the Golf and that the first appellant (Mr Classen) was the
passenger.
She admitted that she made the statement freely and
voluntarily. As a result of her recantation, the prosecutor
successfully applied
for her to be declared a hostile witness, in
terms of
s 190(2)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
,
[1]
thus allowing the State to cross-examine her.
[6]
During cross-examination by the prosecutor, she testified that she
mentioned the two
appellants’ names as a result of pressure
brought to bear on her by the deceased’s family members and
friends. The
community also wanted the assailants arrested. She knew
both appellants well and testified that they were not at the crime
scene.
Her statement was admitted into evidence in terms of s 3(1)
(c)
of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988 (the
Law of Evidence
Amendment Act).
[7
]
Mr Daylen Wesley confirmed that he and the deceased were passengers
in Mrs Shortridge’s
car and that the deceased was sitting on
the right rear seat. He testified that Mrs Shortridge’s car
stopped at the traffic
light and the Golf, with two occupants,
stopped next to it. The passenger alighted from the Golf and fired
two gun shots through
the right rear passenger window. Mrs Shortridge
drove off and stopped at a nearby taxi rank. He and Mrs Shortridge
jumped out of
the car and ran into different directions. He heard two
more gun shots. After hearing the Golf drive away, he returned to Mrs
Shortridge’s
car and noticed that the deceased was shot in his
face. The police and ambulance arrived. The incident happened at
about half past
eleven in the morning. He could, initially, not
identify the occupants of the Golf but later became aware that it was
the two appellants.
[8]
He testified that he made two statements about the incident. In his
first statement,
dated 20 May 2017, he stated that he could not
identify the assailants. In his second statement, he mentioned the
names of the
two appellants. During cross-examination it transpired
that his second statement was commissioned on 12 November 2018, a day
before
he testified. According to him, he made the statement on 22
May 2017. He testified that the reason why he mentioned the
appellants
in his second statement was because he heard their names
being mentioned as the persons who might have been involved in the
incident
and could then put their names to the faces of the
assailants. He further testified that the Golf was the second
appellant’s
car and that he saw the registration letters and
numbers of the car. It was WZM 070 GP.
[9]
The first investigating officer until shortly after the appellants’
arrest,
Constable Ntombela testified that she arrested the two
appellants on 22 May 2017 after they handed themselves over to her.
She
had visited the first appellant’s parental home where she
informed his mother that he was a suspect in this case. She called
Mrs Shortridge who arrived at the police station with Mr Wesley. She
requested Mrs Shortridge to identify them, which she did.
Mr Wesley
was uncooperative and did not identify them. She confirmed that Mr
Wesley made a statement about the incident on 20 May
2017 and stated
that he could not identify the assailants. She also confirmed that
her colleagues Constable Mokoena and Captain
Chetty attended the
scene on 18 May 2017 and that Mrs Shortridge did not mention the
names of the appellants to any of them.
[10]
Mr Alexander van Niekerk, a civil engineer in the employ of the South
African National Road Agency
as a manager for transportation, tolls
and planning, investigated whether a car with registration details
[....] passed under the
e-toll gantries, during the relevant period.
He testified that when a vehicle passes a gantry three photographs
(front, rear and
top) of the car are taken. On 17 May 2017, a vehicle
with those registration details passed a gantry on the N1 whilst
driving from
north to south near Soweto. On 18 May 2017, a vehicle
with the same registration details drove under a gantry at 13:11:36,
and
under another gantry at 13:16:11. Both gantries are in the Crown
Mines area, and capture vehicles driving north on the N1. There
were
two unidentifiable occupants in the vehicle.
[11]
Mr Silron Shortridge, Mrs Shortridge’s husband, testified that
on 18 May 2017 he went to
the scene where he spoke to his wife. She
told him that the two appellants shot the deceased. A week after the
incident one Mr
Alfred Arendse approached him and his wife. He
informed them that he was sent by the first appellant and his
brother, Curtis. He
asked them how much it would cost ‘to sort
out the case’. They told Mr Arendse that they did not want any
money from
them. Approximately four weeks thereafter one Mr John
Adams visited them and said that he was sent to give them R5000 to
repair
their car and to apologise for what had happened. He informed
them that he would retain R200 as commission and gave the balance
(R4800) to Mrs Shortridge. During August 2018 he saw messages on his
wife’s phone relating to a meeting that was to be held
between
her, her friend Hazel, the first appellant and Curtis. On 25 November
2018 he discussed this with the deceased’s
uncle, Mr John
Muller, and the latter accompanied him to the police station, where
he made a statement. It was apparent from Mr
and Mrs Shortridge’s
testimonies that they were estranged although they lived in the same
house.
[12]
Mrs Shortridge was recalled as a witness, because her husband’s
statement was taken after
all the state witnesses had testified. She
denied that she was given money by Mr Adams. She also denied that she
was present when
Mr Arendse asked how much it would cost to ‘sort
out the case’. She also denied that she told her husband that
the
two appellants shot the deceased.
[13]
This concluded the state’s case. Both appellants testified in
their respective cases. Both
denied any involvement in the killing of
the deceased. The first appellant owned a bottle store
cum
tavern in Ennerdale, which is situated approximately 200 metres from
the scene of the shooting. The second appellant was employed
at that
business. It is common cause that both appellants and the deceased
lived in the same community, and that there was bad
blood between the
appellants, on the one hand, and the deceased, on the other. During
2015 and 2017, respectively, the appellants
laid two attempted murder
charges against the deceased after the deceased had shot at them. The
first appellant testified that
on 18 May 2017 he arrived at his
business at approximately 10:00, and remained there for approximately
45 minutes before he left.
He saw the second appellant at his
business premises. He denied having been at the scene of the incident
or having been one of
the occupants in the Golf.
[14]
During cross-examination he was confronted with his cellular phone
records, which showed that
he left Constantia Kloof at 11:13 and
arrived in Ennerdale at 11:56. The cellular phone records further
showed that he left Ennerdale
at 12:23. He accepted the veracity of
the records but indicated that he was not sure of the times that he
arrived and left Ennerdale.
He testified that he was at work, on 18
May 2017, from approximately 10:00 until 02:00. He confirmed that his
wife Mrs Tracy Toriani
was the owner of the Golf but denied driving
it on 18 May 2020.
[15]
Mrs Toriani testified that she was the owner of the Golf. During the
first week of May 2017 she
lent the car to her brother. She was
hospitalised for approximately 21 days. It was only after her
discharge that she learnt of
her husband’s arrest. The
investigating officer Sergeant Sithole visited her and asked her
about the whereabouts of the car
and she told him that it was with
her brother. She gave him her brother’s cellular phone number
and he called and spoke to
her brother.
[16]
That concluded the evidence before the trial court. I turn now to the
central issue in the appeal
i.e. whether the high court was correct
in convicting the appellants on Mrs Shortridge’s recanted
statement. The high court
admitted her statement in terms of
s
3(1)
(c)
of the
Law of Evidence Amendment Act, as
mentioned earlier. In
Makhala
v The State,
[2]
this Court said that:
‘…
[O]ur Hearsay Act allows
for a more flexible discretionary approach to the admissibility of
hearsay evidence than the common law
did. In deciding whether hearsay
should be admitted in the interest of justice, the court is not
limited to the factors listed
in s 3(1)
(c)
(i)
to (vi) but empowered in terms of s 3(1)
(c)
(vii)
to have regard to “any other factor which should in the opinion
of the court be taken into account. . . .”
[3]
Although
the high court did not discuss the factors mentioned in s 3(1)
(c)
(i)
to (vi),
[4]
I accept, for
present purposes, that it properly exercised its discretion, in terms
of
s
3(1)
(c
)(vii), in admitting the statement in the interest of
justice. I say this because, the high court found that Mrs
Shortridge’s
statement on the identity of the assailants and
the overall circumstances of the case, including the testimony of Mr
Wesley, provided
adequate assurances for the reliability of the
statement. Further, that the spontaneous report to her husband at the
scene was
consistent with her statement. Consequently, it rejected
the appellants’ versions and convicted them.
[17]
Before us, the appellants conceded that the statement was properly
admitted, since Mrs Shortridge
did not dispute that she made the
statement freely and voluntarily. They, however, argued that the
probative value or weight to
be attached to the statement was not
properly evaluated by the high court. They contended that her
testimony regarding the circumstances
that led to her making the
statement and the material contradictions in the State’s case
detracted from the weight to be
attached to her statement.
[18]
The probative value of Mrs Shortridge’s statement is crucial to
the determination of this
appeal. This is so because her statement
that the appellants were the assailants and their alibis are mutually
destructive. Both
versions cannot be true.
[5]
In
S v
Ndhlovu
[6]
this Court said:
‘
The
probative value of the hearsay evidence depends primarily on the
credibility of the declarant at the time of the declaration,
and the
central question is whether the interests of justice require that the
prior statement be admitted notwithstanding its later
disavowal or
non-affirmation. . . .’
[7]
The
minority judgment in
Makhala
also underscored that:
‘
[T]he
circumstances under which the statement was given will be relevant to
an assessment as to whether it is likely that the declarant
was
telling the truth when making the statement. . . .’
[8]
This
statement is uncontroversial, and the majority had no issue with it.
[19]
The high court found that: (a) the pressure put on Mrs Shortridge was
to bring about justice
and for investigations to commence; (b) it was
not undue and there were no obvious threats or any kind of
inducement; (c) the statement
was given shortly after the incident;
and (d) that she was frightened to look at the appellants and the
public gallery in court.
[20]
The high court chose Mrs Shortridge’s recanted statement over
her testimony despite her
explanation for disavowing the statement.
In my view, the high court attached too much weight to Mrs
Shortridge’s statement
and consequently committed a
misdirection. I say this for the following reasons: (a) it did not
give proper consideration to the
circumstances under which the
statement was given; (b) it misconstrued Mrs Shortridge’s
testimony with regards to the pressure
that was brought to bear on
her to implicate the appellants; (c) and it did not properly evaluate
the impact of the testimonies
of the other witnesses on the contents
of the statement.
[21]
Her statement was taken approximately 48 hours after the incident.
She testified that she was
traumatised and was not in a right state
of mind after the incident. After the incident, before she made the
statement, her house
was ‘bombarded’ by the deceased’s
family and friends who told her what to say. The deceased’s
family members
also told her that it could only be the appellants who
were responsible for the deceased’s death. The community knew
about
the bad blood between the deceased and the appellants. She told
the police that it was the two appellants, based on speculation
and
rumours that abounded in the community insinuating their involvement.
[22]
She testified that when she made the statement all that she had to do
was put names to the two
unknown assailants and bring justice to the
deceased’s family. As a result of the pressure, she mentioned
the two appellants
and assigned roles to each of them in her
statement. Her testimony sums it up well:
‘
Look
at the time of giving my statement, I was not by myself, I had a lot
of pressure from both community, family members, and the
State, due
to the fact that it took me so long to give a statement because, I
was confused as to who it actually was that I saw
and hence I say the
two people mentioned in here, the two suspects in the dock, Earl and
Ellister, are not the two people that
[committed] the offence on the
day as I know them quite well, like I said. [There] was a lot of
influence in identifying the suspects
and a lot of pressure and I
would say speculation because of the fact, as I mentioned here that
Daniel Smith and Earl Classen did
not see eye to eye because they had
a [quarrel]. So actually I would like to say to the Court, if it was
entirely up to me and
I was a 100% uninfluenced, then I suppose we
would not have had [any] suspects because I would not have known who
to point out.’
[23]
It is clear from her testimony that the statement was not made to
ensure that justice prevailed
but because of the unbearable pressure
heaped on her shoulders. She was pressurised for two days to
implicate the appellants. There
was therefore clear evidence of
pressure. She categorically stated that she was not afraid of the
appellants. Given the above,
there was no reason to reject Mrs
Shortridge’s testimony.
[24]
The high court found that Mrs Shortridge spontaneously informed her
husband at the scene who
the assailants were. It accepted her
husband’s testimony regardless of the inherent improbabilities
in his testimony when
viewed in conjunction with the totality of the
evidence. Mrs Shortridge did not inform Captain Chetty or Constable
Mokoena, who
spoke to her on the scene, about the identity of the
assailants. Mr Shortridge was present, and if his wife had told him
about
the identity of the assailants, he would surely have raised
this. He did not. When pressure was exerted on his wife to mention
who the assailants were, he did not tell anyone, including the
police, that his wife had told him who they were. Also, he did not
mention this in his evidence-in-chief. This only came out in
cross-examination.
[25]
He had more than enough occasions to inform the police and the
community what his wife would
have conveyed to him at the scene. In
my view, this negatively affects the credibility of his evidence on
this aspect. He only
mentioned that they were visited by Messrs
Arendse and Adams in his statement which he made on 25 November 2018
– approximately
one and a half years after the incident - when
he was accompanied by the deceased’s uncle, Mr Muller, to the
police station.
There was no explanation as to why he did not mention
this to any person prior to November 2018. His testimony relating to
the
messages that he saw on the cellular phone that she was using
does not take this matter further. In itself his testimony was
unsatisfactory.
Also, when considered in the light of the strained
relationship between him and his wife, it was wholly unreliable.
[26]
The high court found that Mr Wesley’s testimony was
unsatisfactory in some respects. It
found, however, that his
testimony was materially corroborated by Mrs Shortridge’s
statement. I disagree. In my view, Mr
Wesley’s testimony was
untruthful, self-destructive and reconstructed. If anything, it
corroborated Mrs Shortridge’s
version about the improper
suggestions made and pressure brought to bear by the deceased’s
family members and friends. Mr
Wesley made a statement on 20 May
2017, in which he made no mention of the identity of the assailants.
On the contrary, he emphatically
stated that he did not see who was
in the Golf because everything happened so fast. On the day of the
appellants’ arrest,
22 May 2017, he accompanied Mrs Shortridge
to the police station where she pointed out the appellants as the
assailants, but he
did not. Instead, according to Constable Ntombela,
he was uncooperative.
[27]
In his second statement, which was commissioned on 12 November 2017,
a day before he testified,
he mentioned the names of the appellants.
In his first statement he stated that one shot was fired at the
deceased through the
window and that two shots were fired at the Golf
before it stopped. He, however, testified that the passenger of the
Golf jumped
out of the vehicle and fired two shots at the deceased.
After he ran away he heard two further shots being fired. This was an
obvious
reconstruction. This is so because in his statement he
mentioned three gunshots but, in his testimony, he stated that he
heard
four gunshots.
[28]
As to the identity of the assailants, a perplexing version emerged.
Mr Wesley knew both appellants
well. He testified that at the time of
the shooting he could not identify the assailants because he was in
shock but could do so
when he testified. He testified that before he
made his second statement the appellants’ names ‘came up’
and
he could then put ‘a face’ to the people whom he saw.
He conceded in cross-examination that the names of the appellants
‘came up’ because he had heard their names being
mentioned as the people who might be involved in the killing of the
deceased. He explained that at first, he was uncertain but he ‘became
sure’ when he heard their names being mentioned
as the
assailants.
[29]
The other reason he mentioned the appellants as the assailants was
because he recognised, what
he referred to as the second appellant’s
car. During re-examination he recited the car’s registration
details and said
he remembered them after seeing them for one second
at the scene. He did not mention the car’s registration number
in his
first statement. It leaves no doubt that something happened
between his first and second statements. It is clear that he and Mrs
Shortridge were subjected to undue pressure.
[30]
The evidence pertaining to the car passing under e-toll gantries is
neutral. It only established
that the Golf drove in a northerly
direction between 13:11 and 13:16. There is no indication of the
distance between the gantries
and the crime scene. The two occupants
could not be identified.
[31]
The high court rejected the first appellant’s version as
unconvincing, contradictory and
improbable. It also found that the
second appellant contradicted his (first appellant’s) version.
The first appellant’s
version is not beyond criticism. He
contradicted himself with regard to the time he left his house at
Constantia Kloof and the
time he had arrived in and left Ennerdale.
The cellular phone records, which he admitted, also painted a
different picture with
regard to his movements on the morning and
afternoon of the incident. He conceded that he could not remember the
precise times
of his movements and that his testimony with regard
thereto was based on his daily routine.
[32]
The difficulty is the uncertainty regarding the exact time of the
incident. According to Mrs
Shortridge’s statement the incident
happened at approximately 12:30 while Mr Wesley testified that it
happened at 11:30.
The high court decided that the time stated in Mrs
Shortridge’s statement was correct, without proffering any
reasons for
its conclusion or preference. It must be remembered that
she testified that although she did not keep track of the time, the
incident
happened early in the morning.
[33]
The second appellant’s testimony that he and the first
appellant were in Ennerdale, at
the latter’s business, from
approximately 10:00 is incorrect. It was largely based on general
routine. His testimony that
he remained at the business for the whole
day and that the first appellant left at some stage stands unshaken.
[34]
Although the criticism levelled against the appellants’
versions was justified, the rejection
of their versions should not
have been harnessed to rescue a weak case. The onus to prove the
guilt of the appellants rested upon
the State throughout, which it
had to discharge beyond a reasonable doubt. In this matter, the
totality of the evidence did not
establish their guilt beyond
reasonable doubt, but a suspicion. They should have been acquitted.
[35]
The friends and family of the deceased actively tried to assist in
bringing to justice those
they thought were responsible for his
death. I hope that they will understand that suspicion, even a strong
one, does not translate
to the required standard of proof in criminal
matters, which, as mentioned already, is proof beyond reasonable
doubt.
[36]
The appeal must therefore succeed. Accordingly, the following order
is made:
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
The order of the high court convicting the appellants, and the
resultant sentences, are set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
Both
accused are acquitted on all three counts.’
C
MUSI
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
appellants:
PJC Kriel
Instructed
by:
David H Botha, du Plessis & Kruger
Houghton
Estate, Johannesburg
Symington
& De Kock, Bloemfontein.
For
respondent: J Serepo
Instructed
by:
Director of Public Prosecutions, Johannesburg
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Section
190(2)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
reads: ‘ any
such party who has called a witness who has given evidence in any
such proceedings (whether that witness is
or is not, in the opinion
of the court, adverse to the party calling him), may, after such
party or the court has asked the witness
whether he did or did not
previously make a statement with which his evidence in the said
proceedings is inconsistent, and after
sufficient particulars of the
alleged previous statement to designate the occasion when it was
made have been given to the witness,
prove that he previously made a
statement with which such evidence is inconsistent.’
[2]
Makhala
and Another v The State
[2021]
ZASCA 19; 2022 (1) SACR 485 (SCA); [2022] 2 All SA 367 (SCA).
[3]
Ibid
para 118.
[4]
Section
3(1)
(c)
provides:
‘
the
court, having regard to-
(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, is of the opinion that such evidence should
be
admitted in the interests of justice.’
[5]
S v
Liebenberg
2005 (2) SACR 355
(SCA) para 15.
[6]
S
v Ndhlovu
2002
(6) SA 305 (SCA).
[7]
Ibid
para 31.
[8]
Makhala
fn
2 para 78.
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[2022] ZASCA 87Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Manyaka v S (434/2020) [2022] ZASCA 21; 2022 (1) SACR 447 (SCA) (23 February 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 21Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Nhlapo v The State (933/20) [2022] ZASCA 72 (25 May 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 72Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Makhala & Another v S (438/20) [2022] ZASCA 19; 2022 (1) SACR 485 (SCA); [2022] 2 All SA 367 (SCA) (18 February 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 19Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar