Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 643South Africa
Doorsamy and Others v S (A228/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 643 (12 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 August 2022
Headnotes
that:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Doorsamy and Others v S (A228/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 643 (12 August 2022)
Doorsamy and Others v S (A228/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 643 (12 August 2022)
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sino date 12 August 2022
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(SOUTH
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION)
CASE
NO: A228/2018
COURT
A QUO CASE NO:
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
12/08/2022
In
the matter between:
DOORASAMY
PRAGASAN
FIRST APPLICANT
MOODLEY
SHANE
SECOND APPLICANT
MOODLEY
ASHWIN
THIRD APPLICANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGEMENT
MATSEMELA
AJ
(DLAMINI J CONCURRING):
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The Appellants were tried in the Regional Court sitting in Randburg
on the following
charges:
(a) Charge 1 Assault with
intent to do grievous bodily harm.
(b) Charge 2 Assault
common.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The incident occurred in the evening of the 5 December 2009 at
Greenside. The allegation
were that appellants assaulted A [....] C
[....] by hitting him with fists.
[3]
It was also alleged that on the same day, date and place as in count
1 the appellants
assaulted K [....] 1 K [....] 2 by hitting him with
open hands and fist. Both victims were 15 years old at the time of
the incident.
[4]
The appellants were legally represented and pleaded not guilty to all
the charges.
On 12 April 2018 the
court a quo
convicted
the appellants after hearing evidence of 12 witnesses in the trial.
[5]
The
court
a qou
took both counts as one for the purposes of sentence and sentenced
all three appellants to three years correctional supervision
in terms
of
section 276
(1) (h) of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
and
various conditions were attached.
[1]
[6]
On 9 May 2017, leave to appeal against their conviction was granted
by the trial court.
This appeal is against their conviction in
respect of both counts.
LEGAL
ISUES
[7]
At issue in this appeal is whether the State has proved beyond a
reasonable doubt
that the appellants committed the offences for which
they have been charged and convicted with.
[8]
There is a further legal argument that the State did not allege
nor relied on
common purpose in the charge sheet and therefore
denied/deprived the appellants right to a fair trial.
[9]
Various contradictions in the evidence of the State witnesses were
further pointed
out and submitted as premises upon which the appeal
is based.
LEGAL
FRAMEWORK
CONTRADICTIONS
[10]
Counsel for the appellants argued that the are various contradictions
in the evidence of the State witnesses and therefore
the State failed
to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt. The contradictions are
that some of the witnesses statements did not
contain the names of
the suspects and yet they came to court and identify them as if they
knew them well.
[11]
The witnesses made it clear that they did not know the suspects
before the day of the incident
and it is Christina’s mother who
knew accused 1 which then led to the arrest of the other suspects .
During their testimony
in court they identified them as accused
number 1 and 2 and as the people among the group which assaulted the
victims. The appellants
never disputed that they were on the scene.
They only disputed that they assaulted the victims.
[12]
The fact that there are discrepancies is not indicative of lies or
that such evidence should
not be accepted. The totality of the
evidence and circumstances under which such statements were made
should be taken into account.
In
S
v Mkohle
[2]
it was held that:
Contradictions
per se do not lead to the rejection of witnesses evidence. These
contradictions may be an indication of an error.
Not every error made
by the witness affects his credibility. The presiding officer has to
make an evaluation, taking into account
such matters as the nature of
the contradictions, their number and importance, and their bearing on
the parts of the witnesses
evidence.
[13]
In
S
v Oosthuizen
[3]
Willamson J says that contradictions also reflect independence of
witnesses and lack of conspiracy against the accused.
[14]
There are well established principles governing the hearing of
appeals against findings of facts.
The courts have the ruled in
various cases as in
S v Hadebe
1997 (2) SACR
641 (SCA) at 645
Marais JA said.
“
In
the absence of demonstrable and material misdirection by the trial
court, its findings of fact are presumed to be correct and
will be
disregarded if the recorded evidence shows them to be clearly wrong.”
[15]
I
n
The Constitutional Court case of
Makate
v Vodacom Ltd
[4]
and as
reiterated that appeal courts are generally reluctant to interfere
with factual findings made by trial courts more particularly
if the
factual findings depended upon the credibility of the witnesses who
testified at the trail.
[16]
Going through the record it is clear that the
court a qou
approached the evidence of how each of the appellant is implicated in
the commission of the offences individually. Each applicant
was held
liable by their individual action and the admissions. Each applicant
admitted to have been on the scene and therefore
the question of
identification should be dispensed with.
[17]
The credibility of each witness was the main concern of the
court
a quo
. The court analysed and weighed the version of the State
witnesses against the version of the applicants and concluded that
the
two were “worlds apart”.The
court a qou
concluded that one of the two versions was false, fabricated and
meant to mislead the court.
[18]
The court found that the evidence of the State witnesses A
[....] C [....], K [....]
1 Kgatiso and Rahul Branco were not
only satisfactory in all material respects but was also corroborated.
Their evidence was well
corroborated by the evidence of the other
witnesses who were on the scene. Their version was further
corroborated by the appellant’s
version of their presence on
the scene and the reason why they were on the scene in the first
place.
[19]
The court correctly found that the state case against the appellants
was credible, reliable and
overwhelming and further that the
appellant’s version on the totality of the evidence was not
reasonably possibly true.
[20]
The court rejected the appellant’s version as false based on
their own evidence and that
of the defence witness Sheldon.
Credibility of his evidence was called to question. The appellant's
version was found to be improbable
particularly for their denial
wherein the victims were injured.
[21]
It is my view that the trial court carefully analysed the evidence
and correctly rejected the
version of the appellants as not
reasonably possibly true.
[22]
The witnesses gave corroborating evidence implicating the appellants
to the extent of who participated
in the assault of both victims, who
injured the victim and the reasons why the victims were assaulted in
the first place.
[23]
I am of the view that the
court a qou
was correct in rejecting
the appellant’s version of events and accepting that of the
state witnesses.
COMMON
PURPOSE
[24]
In the opening paragraph of the judgement the court remarked
that
"
although
the accused can be convicted individually for their respective roles
in assaulting the complainants, the court is of the
view that it
would not be necessary to separate their roles as such since evidence
show that they acted in furtherance of common
purpose
"
[5]
[25]
Counsel for the appellants argues that the
court
a qou
erred in concluding and convicting the appellants on the basis and
principles of common purpose.
Under
s 35(3) of the Constitution every accused person has a right to a
fair trial, which includes the right ‘
(a)
to be informed of the charge with sufficient detail to answer it’.
[6]
This requirement is not merely formal and procedural but substantive
and material to a fair trial.
[7]
When the State intends to rely on common purpose it must communicate
its intention clearly, unambiguously and adequately.
[8]
However if the evidence proves common purpose the State can apply to
amend the charge sheet even after all the evidence has been
led.
[9]
The trial court has wide powers to amend the charges at any stage
before judgment, regard being had to prejudice to the accused.
[10]
[26]
The purpose of fair trial rights and the harm it seeks to avert is
the risk of a trial by ambush.
The mere lack of an averment of common
purpose in the charge sheet would not automatically render a trial
unfair. Such an approach
would amount to preferring form over
substance, possibly at the expense of justice. However, there are
conflicting decisions about
whether the alleged common purpose in the
charge sheet is fatal to the prosecution’s case. The full court
in Gauteng helpfully
summarised these decisions in
Ntuli
& another v S.
[11]
Post-apartheid, judicial opinion inclines towards pragmatism and
consequentialism. The cases suggest that the issue turns on whether
an accused has a fair trial or is prejudiced.
[12]
Prejudice, actual or potential, will always exist if the defence
would have been different if the allegation had been made in the
charge sheet, amended if necessary.
[13]
[27]
It is my view that t
he
trial court in its judgement gave a careful consideration of the
common purpose. The court further detailed the meaning of “active
association” and the requirements for liability under common
purpose as formulated in
S
v Mgedezi
and
Others
[14]
and the proper illustration of such requirement.
[28]
The presiding officer can also not be faulted in considering the
identification of other people
who were on the scene but did not
participate in the assault as a result the acquittal of Alpha Jasmin
and Krinesan Govender.
[29]
The appellants were well represented during the trial proceedings.
[30]
The trial court in its judgement gave a careful consideration of the
common purpose. The court
further detailed the meaning of "active
association" and the requirements for liability under common
purpose as formulated
in
S
v Mgedezi and Others
supra and the proper illustration of such requirement.
[15]
[32]
It is my view that the application of the common purpose by the
court
a qou
in its judgement cannot be interpreted to mean that the
conviction on the findings of the court are not supported by facts or
that
the convictions are of crimes that the appellants were charged
off. The conviction of the appellants was based on proven facts
following evidence of the conduct of the appellants falling within
the ambit of crime charged.
[34]
In
Ntuli and Another vs The State 2018
ALL 780 (GJ) the court
addressed the doctrine of common purpose being applicable despite
failure of the state to indicate in the
charge sheet that it will be
relying on common purposes. The finding of the court was that such
would not render the proceedings
fatal, as the application of the
doctrine of common purposes was” justified by the facts”.
[35]
It is my view that the
court a qou
correctly applied and
relied on the doctrine of common purposes as the evidence proved that
the appellants were seen kicking A
[....]. In so doing they
acted jointly and those who were part of the group but did not
participate were clearly identified and
subsequently acquitted.
ORDER
The appeal is hereby
dismissed.
MOLEFE
MATSEMELA
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
I
concur
JABU
DLAMINI
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
09 MAY 2022
Date
of judgment:
12 August 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellant
SW Van Der Merwe
Instructed
by
SW Van Der Merwe Attorneys
For
the Respondent
Adv JF Masina
Instructed
by
Director of Public Prosecutions
[1]
record page 871 – line 1 – 7
[2]
1990 (1) SACR 95
(A)
[3]
1982 (3) SA 571 (T)
[4]
2016 ZACC13,
2016 (4) SA 121
(CC)6 BCLR (769)
[5]
Record page 867 paragraph 76
[6]
S 84 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (CPA);
S
v Makatu
2006
(2) SACR 582;
[2007]
1 All SA 470
(SCA); (245/05)
[2006] ZASCA 72
(30 May 2006);
J
Burchell
Principles
of Criminal Law
5 ed (2016) at 475..
[7]
S v
Msimango
2018
(1) SACR 276
(SCA) para 16;
S
v National High Command & others
1964
(1) SA 1
(T) at 2A;
S
v Mpetha & others
(1)
1981 (3) SA 803
(C) at 809F-H.
[8]
Du
Toit Commentary on the
Criminal Procedure Act
RS
60, 2018 ch14-p15;
S
v Msimango
above
para 16.
[9]
S v
Thakeli & another
2018
(1) SACR 621
(SCA) para 7.
[10]
S 86
of the CPA.
[11]
[2018] 1 All SA 780
(GJ) paras 41-52.
[12]
S
v
Maqubela
&
another
2014
(1) SACR 378 (WCC).
[13]
Moloi
&
others
v
Minister
for
Justice
and
Constitutional
Development
& others
2010 (2) SACR 78
para 19; 2010 (5) BCLR 497 (CC).
[14]
1989
(1) SA 687
(A)
[15]
Record Page 868 Paragraph 78
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