THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 451/2022
In the matter between:
ROLSTON PILLAY APPELLANT
and
THE STATE RESPONDENT
Neutral citation: Rolston Pillay v The State (451/2022) [2023] ZASCA 113
(27 July 2023)
Coram: SALDULKER, CARELSE and HUGHES JJA and
NHLANGULELA and MALI AJJA
Heard: 2 May 2023
Delivered: This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representative via email, publication on the Supreme Court of Appeal
website and release to SAFLII. The date and time of hand-down is deemed to be
10:00 am on 27 July 2023.
Summary: Evidence – assessment of evidence of a single witness – cautionary
rules – contradictions in the evidence of a single witness – onus of proof where
accused pleads self-defence – appeal against conviction and sentence upheld.
2
________________________________________________________________
ORDER
________________________________________________________________
On appeal from: Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Phahlane J and
Motha AJ sitting as a court of appeal):
1 The appeal is upheld.
2 The order of the full bench in respect of the conviction and sentence is set
aside and replaced with the following order:
‘The appellant is found not guilty and discharged’.
________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
Nhlangulela AJA (Saldulker, Carelse and Hughes JJA and Mali AJA
concurring)
Introduction
[1] On 12 June 2020, Rolston Pillay (the appellant) was convicted by the
regional court, Benoni for murder read with s 51(2) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997 , further read with Part II of Schedule 2 to the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the CP A). Pursuant thereto, on 13 August
2020, the regional court found no substantial and compelling circumstances and
sentenced the appellant to 15 years’ imprisonment. On the same day, the appellant
applied for leave to lead further evidence in terms of s 309B(5)(a) of the CPA,1
and leave to appeal against both conviction and sentence which was granted, in
both instances. The regional court also admitted the new evidence. The full bench
of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria , per Phahlane J and Motha
1 The provisions of s 309B(5)(a) reads as follows:
‘An application for leave to appeal may be accompanied by an application to adduce further evidence (hereafter
referred to as an application for further evidence) relating to the conviction, sentence or order in respect of
which the appeal is sought to be noted.’
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AJ (the full bench) dismissed the appeal both in respect of the conviction and
sentence. This appeal is with the leave of this Court, special leave having been
granted.
The background facts
[2] It is not disputed that on 19 May 2017, at or near Benoni, the appellant shot
Veli Molala (the deceased) , a male aged 17 years, who died a s a result of a
gunshot wound. He pleaded not guilty and submitted a written plea explanation
in terms of s 115(1) of the CPA.
[3] On 19 May 2017, the appellant , attached to the Ekurhuleni M etro Police
Department (EMPD), was engaged in patrol duties. He attended an accident scene
in Great North Road, situated at the corner of 5th Avenue and Tom Jones Street,
where he was informed by unidentified members of the community that a robbery
was taking place at the nearby Wordsworth School, Farra rmere. He noticed two
young men running from the direction of the school towards Bunyan Street and
gave chase. According to the appellant, shots were fired at him by the alleged
robbers.
[4] The appellant gave a detailed account of the chase in pursuit of the alleged
robbers. He explained that the alleged robbers ran into Bunyan Street, a one-way
street, where he pursued the alleged robbers while driving in the direction of the
oncoming traffic. As he approached the alleged robbers he shouted at them to
stop, but they did not . Instead, one of the alleged robbers pulled out a revolver
and fired a shot at him. In turn, he fired a shot in the direction of the alleged
robbers.
[5] The alleged robbers ran towar ds the railway line. He stopped his vehicle
along the embankment which was covered with tall grass. As he alighted from
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his vehicle, one of the alleged robbers fired a second shot in his direction. He took
cover underneath a metal barrier on the side of the road where he fired two
gunshots in the direction of the alleged robbers. One of the alleged robbers fell to
the ground and the other ran awa y. He then called for backup. When the
paramedics arrived at the scene they declared that the alleged robber , who had
been injured by the gunshot, was deceased. The appellant testified that he acted
in self-defence when he fired the fatal shot. It was not disputed that the body of
the deceased did not sustain any further injuries between 19 and 27 May 2017
when the post-mortem was conducted.
[6] The crisp issue before us in this appeal is the credibility of a single
eyewitness, Mr Mpilo Kubeka (Mr Kubeka), who was seated at the corner of
Bunyan Street and the N12 highway when the shoot ing took plac e. His initial
testimony was that he observed two boys walking towards the school situated in
Farrarmere. After thirty minutes, he noticed the two boys running away, being
pursued by the appellant , who was driving a police vehicle. According to Mr
Kubeka, he did not see the two alleged robbers in possession of a firearm. He
denied that the deceased or the other alleged robber fired any shots at the
appellant. He said that the appellant fired the first gunshot, and a further gunshot
when the two alleged robbers were running up the embankment along the railway
line, fatally shooting the deceased who fell to the ground . Mr Kubeka said that
the appellant is known to him and has on occasion provided him with food. He
disputed the appellant’s version that he fired gunshots at the alleged robbers in
self-defence.
[7] Mr Kubeka denied that he was coached by Ms Bur nell Motshepe (Ms
Motshepe), who is a constable, to tailor his evidence in order to implicate the
appellant in the commission of the murder. Ms Motshepe, who was attached to
the Internal Affairs Unit of the EMPD attended the scene of the crime with Mr
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Thulani Magagula (Mr Magagula), the investigating officer who was attached to
the Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID), Benoni. Other officers
on the scene included Mr Naicker, the detective sergeant who was attached to the
EMPD, who was tasked to investigate the crime.
[8] Ms Motshepe testified that Mr Kubeka told her that the deceased and his
companion did not have a firearm in their possession , including the time when
the deceased was shot at and fell near the railway line . She found half a brick
lying on the bonnet of the appellant ’s motor vehicle, whi ch was denied by the
appellant and her colleague, Mr Magagula. Because no one wanted to get
involved, she did not take any written statements at the scene of the crime. After
receiving information from Mr Xolani Mabunda, statements were only taken a
‘few weeks’ later at the Benoni police station by Mr Naicker, in her presence. For
some inexplicable reason, she only caused the statements to be made available on
12 July 2017. Ms Motshepe only submitted her statement to Mr Naicker on 14
August 2018, instead of May 2017. Since it involved a colleague , the delay in
submitting her statement was unusual, so she conceded.
[9] The plea explanation of the appellant was confirmed by him during his
testimony. Importantly, the nub of his defence was that he feared for his life after
a shot was fired at him. This caused him to stop his vehicle, jump out, and lay on
the ground underneath a metal barrier next to the road. Despite him seeking cover,
a second gunshot was fired in his direction. In return, he fired one shot using his
service firearm in the direction of the alleged robbers who were walking
alongside the railway line, some ten metres from him. After firing two further
shots to prevent the alleged robbers from returning fire , he saw that one of the
alleged robbers had fallen to the ground. The second alleged robber ran away. He
was unable to confirm which of the two alleged robbers were in possession of a
revolver and which of the two fired shots at him. He reiterated that he fired the
6
shots in the direction of the alleged robbers in self-defence because he feared for
his life and that he had fired in the direction of the two alleged robbers without
having specifically aimed at any one of the two alleged robbers.
[10] The further evidence led by the appellant in terms of s 309B(5)(a) of the
CPA which was admitted by the regio nal court materially contradicted Mr
Kubeka’s previous testimony. Contradicting his earlier evidence and the evidence
of Ms Motshepe, Mr Kubeka’s evidence revealed that he had seen a firearm
tucked in the trousers of one of the two suspects. He stated that he did not mention
this during the trial because he was persuade d by Ms Motshepe who convinced
him that he should put himself in the position of the deceased . It was therefore
necessary for him to give evidence that would implicate the appellant. He
conceded that he fabricated a material fact (ie that none of the alleg ed robbers
were in fact in possession of a firearm) in order to assist the deceased. In addition,
he also gave an account of an incident in which he had been assaulted and forced
to attend court by Mr Naicker in order to give false evidence to implicate th e
appellant in the commission of the murder. Mr Naicker confirmed Mr Kubeka’s
version that he was forced to attend court but denied assaulting Mr Kubeka.
[11] These revelations are common cause accounts. Ultimately , the magistrate
granted leave to appeal against the conviction largely on the strength of the further
evidence that was placed before him. In terms of the provisions of s 309B(6) of
the CPA,2 further evidence becomes part of the evidence to be taken into account
in the determination of the appeal.
2 Section 309B(6) of the CPA reads:
‘Any evidence received under subsection 5 shall for the purposes of an appeal be deemed to be evidence taken or
admitted at the trial in question.’
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Before the full bench
[12] The grounds upon which the appeal was noted were inter alia that the full
bench erred in accepting the veracity of the evidence adduced by Mr Kubeka in
the face of the uncontested evidence of the appellant, th at one of the alleged
robbers was in possession of a firearm and fired at the appellant who in turn fired
two shots in self-defence. This resulted in the death of the deceased. The trial
court admitted the contradictory evidence of the eyewitness, Mr Kubeka. This
evidence has a direct bearing on the credibility of the single eye witness.
[13] Counsel for the appellant submitted that the full bench materially erred
when it accepted the evidence of Mr Kubeka, who materially contradicted his
evidence in chief, cross-examination and pertinently his statement that he made
to the police. In sum, the appellant’s complaint is that the full bench did not treat
Mr Kubeka’s single evidence with caution.3
[14] The thrust of the submissions advanced on behalf of the respondent was
that the evidence of Mr Kubeka, a single witness, is credible and reliable to
sustain a conviction for murder , notwithstanding the fact that he contradi cted
himself in material respects. The respondent contended that it was improbable
that an influence was exerted upon Mr Kubeka to falsely implicate the appellant
in the commission of the murder and that no objective evidence existed to draw
an inference that the alleged robbers had a firearm.
[15] In matters of this nature, this Court is not at liberty to interfere with the
findings of fact made by the trial court unless the manner in which the evidence
3 Section 208 of the CPA provides that:
‘An accused may be convicted of any offence on the single evidence of any competent witness.’
However, the power of the court to do so must be guided by the principles stated in S v Webber 1971 (3) SA 754
(A) at 757H that the single evidence must be clear and satisfactory and in S v Sauls and Others 1981 (3) SA 172
(A) at 180F where it was stated that if the evidence is flawed, its merits and demerits must be evaluated closely
to establish if it is trustworthy or not.
8
was evaluated is proved to be wrong.4 In determining the question of whether the
full bench committed an error, of fact or law, the findings of fact made by the trial
court must be evaluated against the entire evidence that was led at the trial. That
much was stated by this Court in S v Trainor.5 That exercise has to be undertaken
against the legal principle that the duty to prove that the accused is guilty lies
squarely within the domain of the prosecution, and that duty does not shift to the
accused even if they have raised a private defence.6 Where, in the performance of
that exercise, it is found that it is reasonably possible that the accused might be
innocent, the accused must be acquitted.7
[16] There are fundamental errors committed by the full bench in this matter.
The record indicates that the full bench: (a) accepted the evidence of Mr Kubeka
that he saw the boys running and being chased by the appellant; (b) the appellant
fired a total of four gunshots towards the two boys; (c) that the boys did not have
a firearm in their possession at all. In my view on the probabilities, the position
of the cartridges indicated in photographs clearly support the appellant’s version
that he fired shots at different places and not all at once in the same vicinity. It is
highly improbable that the appellant fired the shots all at once in the same vicinity
because the photographs indicate that catridges were found at different places.
[17] The view held by the full bench that the version of self-defence was not
true cannot be correct. The admitted evidence in terms of s 309B (5)(a) of the
CPA where Mr Kubeka stated that he saw one of the two alleged robbers with a
4 Rex v Dhlumayo and Another 1948 (2) SA 677 (A) at 706; S v Francis 1991 (1) SACR 198 (A) at 204C-F; S v
Hadebe 1997 (2) SACR 641 SCA at 645E-G.
5 S v Trainor [2003] 1 All SA 435 (SCA) para 9.
6 S v De Oliveira 1993 (2) SACR 59 (A) at 63H-64A.
7 R v Difford 1937 AD 370 at 373 and 383.
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firearm in his possession is a material contradiction that should have been taken
into accou nt in the determination of the appellant’s guilt or innocence. The
acceptance of such contradictory evidence, especially in the absence of
corroborating evidence adduced by Mr Kubeka, has a material effect on his
credibility as a witness and as such , the full bench committed a material
misdirection and ought to have tilted the scale of justice in favour of the appellant.
The full bench was correct in finding that the evidence of Ms Motshepe and Mr
Naicker was unhelpful to the State’s case.
[18] The consultation with witnesses after a few weeks, or after more than two
months, and the presence of two witnesses together with Ms Motshepe in one
room when the witness statements were recorded by Mr Naicker on 12 July 2019,
are matters that ordinarily ought to h ave been found by the full bench to
undermine the reliability of Mr Kubeka’s evidence. The full bench should have
rejected the evidence of Mr Kubeka on the basis that it is not satisfactory in every
material respect.8
[19] The further evidence of the presence of a firearm in the hands of one of the
two alleged robbers supported the appellant’s defence. It ought to be so because
the prosecution anchored the State’s case firmly on the proposition that the
service firearm of the appellant was the only firearm that was present at the scene
of the crime. On the contrary, the State presented no evidence, other than the
evidence of Mr Kubeka, to show that the appellant had not been threatened in any
manner at the time when he shot and killed the deceased. This Court stated in S v
De Oliveira9 concerning S v Ntuli, 10 that where the defence of self-defence has
been specifically pleaded by the accused or emanates from the evidence, the onus
8 R v Mokoena 1932 OPD 79 at 80 as refined in S v Webber 1971 (3) SA 754 (A) at 758 and S v Sauls and Others
1981 (3) SA 172 (A) at 180E-G. See also especially in S v Ffrench-Beytagh 1972 (3) SA 430 (A) at 445-446.
9 Op cit fn 6.
10 S v Ntuli 1975 (1) SA 429 (A) at 436D-437G.
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nevertheless remains on the State to pro ve beyond reasonable doubt that the
accused acted unlawfully and that he realised , or ought reasonably to have
realised that he was exceeding the bounds of self -defence. The full bench ought
to have found that the defence as pleaded by the appellant was reasonably
possibly true in its essential features. 11 The appellant did not have a duty to
convince the court of the truthfulness of his version that he acted in self-defence.12
Conclusion
[20] In light of the fact that the further material evidence was not taken into
account and the approach to the evidence concerning self-defence was improper,
the full bench misdirected itself. For those reasons the State failed to discharge
the onus of proof that the appellant is guilty of murder beyond reasonable doubt.
In the circumstances, the conviction and sentence cannot stand.
Order
[21] In the result, the following order is made:
1 The appeal is upheld.
2 The order of the full bench in respect of the conviction and sentence is set
aside and replaced with the following order:
‘The appellant is found not guilty and discharged’.
______________________________
Z M NHLANGULELA
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
11 S v Van der Meyden 1999 (1) SACR SA 172 at 448F-G.
12 S v V 2000 (1) SACR 453 (SCA) at 455B.
11
Appearances:
For appellant: M van Wyngaard
Instructed by: Leonnie Naude Inc, Benoni
Hendre Conradie Inc, (Rossouw Attorneys), Bloemfontein
For respondent: M Jansen van Vuuren
Instructed by: Director of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria
Director of Public Prosecutions, Bloemfontein.