Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 547South Africa
Ngqulunga v S (2021/A102) [2022] ZAGPJHC 547 (9 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 August 2022
Headnotes
at Wynberg with the following counts;
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ngqulunga v S (2021/A102) [2022] ZAGPJHC 547 (9 August 2022)
Ngqulunga v S (2021/A102) [2022] ZAGPJHC 547 (9 August 2022)
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sino date 9 August 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no.
2021/A102
REPORTABLE:
/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: /NO
REVISED.
08/8/2022
In
the matter between:
NGQULUNGA
STHEMBISO NICOLAS
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Dlamini J & Matsemela AJ
Date
of hearing: 12 May 2022, Court
9E.
Date
of Judgment: 09 August 2022
This
judgment is deemed to have been handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives via email and
shall
be uploaded onto the caselines system.
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI
J
[1]
The Appellant was charged in the Regional court for the Regional
Division of Gauteng
held at Wynberg with the following counts;
1.1
Robbery
with aggravating circumstances, read with Section 51(2) of the
Criminal Law Amendment
[1]
;
1.2
Attempted murder;
1.3
Attempted murder;
1.4
Unlawful possession of an unlicensed
firearm;
1.5
Housebreaking with intention to steal and
theft.
[2]
The Appellant was legally represented throughout the trial. He
pleaded not guilty
to all the charges.
[3]
On 1 February 2010, the Appellant was found guilty on counts 1-4 and
was acquitted
on count 5.
[4]
On the same day, he was sentenced as follows;
4.1
Count 1, 15 years imprisonment
4.2
Count 2, 10 years imprisonment
4.3
Count 3, 10 years imprisonment
4.4
Count 4, 5 years imprisonment
[5]
The court ordered that the sentences in count 2 and 3 should run
concurrently. Effectively
the Appellant was to serve 30 years
imprisonment.
[6]
On 20 May 2013, the Appellant application for leave to appeal in
respect of both conviction
and sentence was refused.
[7]
On 22 October 2021, this Court granted the Appellant petition for
leave to appeal
against both conviction and sentence.
[8]
It is common cause that the record of appeal is incomplete. The
evidence of the complainant
Mzikayise Ntshingila, Constable Mabunda
and the Appellant does not appear from the record.
[9]
The numb of the issue is whether this court can proceed to hear this
appeal on an
incomplete record.
[10]
The Appellant submit
s
that this court must consider that the
missing part of the complainant evidence, constable Mabunda and the
Appellant evidence are
crucial to the determination of whether the
state succeeded in proving beyond reasonable doubt the case against
the accused. That
it is the duty of the clerk of the court which
convicted and sentenced the Appellant, to prepare a certified copy of
the record
upon leave to appeal being granted. Finally, that if the
proper record for the appeal cannot be provided and it is not
possible
to reconstruct the record, on that basis alone, the
Appellant submit that the appeal should succeed.
[11]
The respondent submits that the Appellant was correctly convicted by
the trial court and no irregularities
were commtted. That the trial
court took the evidence in totality into account and found the guilt
of the appellant was proven
beyond reasonable doubt. Finally the
respondent avers that from the record and the available transcripts ,
the exhibits received
by the trial court, the magistrate judgment,
this court will be able to determine the appeal fairly.
[12]
The supreme court of appeal in
S
v Chabedi
[2]
guides us as follows;
“
On
appeal, the record of the proceedings in the trial court is of
cardinal importance. After all, that record forms the whole basis
of
the hearing by the court of appeal, if the record is inadequate for
the proper consideration of the appeal,it will as a rule,
lead to the
conviction and sentence being set aside. However, the requirement is
that the record must be adequate for proper consideration
of the
appeal; not that it must be a perfect recordal of everything that was
said at the trial”.
[10]
In my view the nature of the defects in this case are immense. The
entire evidence in chief and
cross examination of the complainant is
missing. The record does not indicate exactly how the offence
occurred and further how
he implicates the Appellant. More critical
is the absence of the evidence of the Appellant in the record. His
evidence was briefly
summarized by the magistrate.
[11]
In fact, the magistrate delivered a very brief and short
ex
t
empore
judgment of not more than two pages. In this
judgment, the trial court simply makes brief summaries of the
evidence of the complainant,
other witneses and the Appellant.
[12]
Furthermore, there were no meaningful and genuine attempts made by
the state to reconstruct the
record. On 29 June 2021, an attempt was
made in the
court a quo
to reconstruct the record. On that
day, it transpired that only the magistrate and the Appellant were
the only people present during
the original trial. It turned out that
the Appellant’s erstwhile legal representative had resigned
from the Legal Aid Board.
The state prosecutor was not also not
available, as he had also since resigned.
[13]
As a result, all that transpired on that day is that the charges were
again put to the Appellant
and nothing else happened.
[14]
Significantly, it should be also be noted that the Appellant was
convicted on 1 February 2010.
Almost 12 (twelve) years has passed
since his conviction. As for the reasons stated above any further
attempt to reconstruct this
record, will in my view, be an exercise
in futility.
[15]
Having regard to all the above circumstances it is my considered view
that the record is wholly
inadequate for the proper consideration of
the appeal.
In the result, I make the
following order
1.
The appeal succeeds.
2.
The conviction and sentence are set aside.
DLAMINI
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
MATSEMELA
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
12 May 2022
Handed
down on:
09 August 2022
For
the Appellant:
ADV. L
MUSEKWA
Email:
lutendoM@Legal-aid.co.za
For
the
Respondents
:
ADV. JF MASINA
Email:
jmasina@npa.gov.za
[1]
Act
105 of 1997
[2]
S
v Chabedi
2005 (1) SACR 415
(SCA) at [5]
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