Myohlakale and Others v S (A133/2017) [2018] ZAFSHC 58 (10 May 2018)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Appeal against conviction — Public violence and attempted murder — Appellants convicted based on witness testimony — Inability of accused to explain why witnesses would falsely implicate them not sufficient for conviction — Test remains whether guilt proved beyond reasonable doubt — Appellants’ versions found to be reasonably possibly true — Appeals upheld, convictions and sentences set aside.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


These were criminal appeals to the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein, against convictions and sentences imposed by the Regional Court sitting at Welkom. The appellants were SS Myohlakale (first appellant), KN Phatsoane (second appellant), and XL Bokoloshe (third appellant). The respondent was the State.


The matter arose from events at Beatrix Mine involving conflict between members of two trade unions, the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU) and the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM). The appellants had been jointly convicted of public violence (count 1). In addition, the first appellant was convicted of assault with intent to cause grievous bodily harm (count 3), and the second and third appellants were convicted of attempted murder (count 2).


After conviction, the Regional Court imposed three years’ imprisonment on count 1 for each appellant; a further five months’ imprisonment wholly and conditionally suspended for the first appellant on count 3; and a further four years’ imprisonment for the second and third appellants on count 2, ordered to run concurrently with the sentence on count 1. The appellants appealed against both conviction and sentence, with leave granted on petition to the High Court.


The central subject-matter of the dispute on appeal concerned whether the State had proved the appellants’ guilt beyond reasonable doubt in circumstances where the trial court had treated the appellants’ inability to explain why witnesses would falsely implicate them as supporting conviction, and where there were concerns about identification evidence and the treatment of the defence versions as allegedly amounting to a “bare denial”.


2. Material Facts


The court relied primarily on the evidence of two complainants who testified for the State and on the appellants’ accounts of the broader incident.


It was common cause, in general terms, that there was a tense and volatile situation at Beatrix Mine involving AMCU and NUM members, and that violence broke out in the vicinity of buses and the bus terminus area. The appellants’ evidence placed them at or near the relevant scene, and their versions accepted that there was conflict between groups, although they denied personal participation in specific assaults.


On count 2 (attempted murder), the complainant Sinothembile Madiloye, an NUM shop steward, testified that he observed AMCU members outside the NUM offices, and that AMCU members were removing people from buses. He stated that the third appellant issued instructions about taking people out of buses and directing AMCU members into buses. He described stones being thrown, and testified that the third appellant struck him with a brick on the head, after which the second appellant struck him with a pick handle. He sustained serious injury and lost consciousness.


On count 3 (assault with intent to cause grievous bodily harm), the complainant Bongani Masikisiki testified that AMCU members approached while he was standing and chatting, and that the first appellant, whom he knew from prior NUM association, struck him at the right temple with a stone.


In relation to disputed facts, the appellants each denied committing the assaults attributed to them. Their versions described arrangements for AMCU members to travel by bus to a mass meeting at a different shaft, delays in transport, and a confrontation that escalated after a car associated with an NUM leader allegedly blocked the road, preventing buses from proceeding. The appellants’ evidence further suggested that a fight erupted between union members and that efforts were made by some, including the third appellant and a mine security officer, to stop the conflict. The appellants also alleged that Madiloye grabbed a stick from Masikisiki and used it to strike AMCU members, contributing to escalation.


A further fact treated as significant by the appeal court was that Madiloye had made an inconsistent earlier statement to the police implicating persons other than the second and third appellants (including the first appellant and another person who was acquitted), and that it was common cause at trial that Madiloye suffered amnesia following the attack. The appeal court noted that there was no medical or psychiatric evidence led to explain the condition and to support certainty in identification at trial despite inconsistency and amnesia.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether, on a proper evaluation of the evidence, the State proved each appellant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt on the respective counts, given conflicting versions and concerns about the reliability of identification.


A key issue was whether the trial court had applied an incorrect approach by effectively reasoning that the appellants’ inability to provide an acceptable reason why State witnesses would falsely implicate them supported a finding of guilt. This raised a question about the proper allocation of evidentiary burdens in criminal trials and the correct test when an accused denies guilt.


A further issue concerned the trial court’s characterisation of the defence as a “bare denial”, and whether the defence versions were instead sufficiently detailed and reasonably possibly true, requiring acquittal under the established criminal standard.


Although sentence was also challenged on the basis that alternatives to imprisonment were not considered, the appeal court’s determination ultimately turned on the convictions themselves and whether they could stand on the evidence.


Overall, the dispute primarily concerned the application of legal standards to factual assessment, particularly the evaluation of conflicting versions, probabilities, and identification reliability, rather than the resolution of a purely abstract point of law.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The High Court approached the appeal by restating the governing principles for resolving conflicting versions in criminal proceedings. It emphasised that it is not a sufficient basis for conviction that an accused cannot explain why witnesses would falsely incriminate them. The court relied on authority indicating that such inability is not, in itself, a proper ground to reject an accused’s version or to infer guilt, and that convicting on the basis that complainants have no apparent motive to lie is a dangerous approach.


The court further restated the proper method for evaluating conflicting evidence, namely a holistic assessment of the totality of evidence, weighing the merits and demerits of the competing versions and considering probabilities. It reiterated the principle that if, after such evaluation, the accused’s version is reasonably possibly true, the accused is entitled to an acquittal even if the version appears improbable or contains some untruths. The ultimate question was framed as whether the State discharged its burden to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.


Applying those principles, the court held that the trial court’s reliance on the appellants’ failure to provide reasons for false implication was inconsistent with the absence of any evidentiary burden on accused persons to establish such reasons. The appeal court treated this as an incorrect approach to the standard of proof and the evaluation of defence evidence.


On the factual evaluation, the High Court disagreed with the trial court’s finding that the defence amounted to a “bare denial”. It considered that each appellant provided a detailed narrative of movements and events, including contextual background about the union meeting, the bus arrangements, the blocking of the road by a car associated with a local NUM leader, and the escalation into violence. The appeal court regarded this detail, including the explanation that the incident was triggered by the road obstruction and union conflict, as demonstrating that the defence was not merely a simple denial without content.


The court also evaluated probabilities connected to identification. It reasoned that, if the State contended it was inherently improbable for complainants to falsely incriminate individuals they knew well, it was likewise inherently improbable that persons in leadership positions (notably the third appellant, travelling in his own car, and the first appellant, previously a NUM branch chairperson), would deliberately assault persons known to them and thereby risk arrest and identification. This probability assessment was used to support the conclusion that the defence versions could not be rejected as false beyond reasonable doubt.


In respect of Madiloye’s evidence, the court attached weight to the fact of prior inconsistent statements and the common-cause amnesia. It highlighted that no expert evidence was presented to explain how Madiloye’s condition affected his memory and reliability, and it therefore questioned whether the trial court was justified in treating Madiloye as “certain and adamant” in a manner sufficient to prove identification beyond reasonable doubt, given the inconsistency and the acknowledged memory impairment.


Finally, regarding count 1 (public violence), the appeal court noted that the trial court appeared to have treated the evidence supporting counts 2 and 3 as establishing public violence, and that there was no other evidence of the appellants’ participation in public violence beyond those contested allegations. Once the evidence on counts 2 and 3 was not reliable enough to sustain convictions beyond reasonable doubt, the public violence conviction could not be sustained on the remaining record as described by the appeal court.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court upheld the appeals. It set aside all convictions and sentences imposed on the appellants.


No separate costs order was made in the judgment, and the operative relief was the setting aside of the convictions and sentences.


Cases Cited


Maseti v S [2013] ZASCA 160.


S v Ipeleng 1993 (2) SACR 185 (T).


S v Singh 1975 (1) SA 227 (N).


S v Guess 1976 (4) SA 715 (A).


S v Van der Meyden 1999 (2) SA 79 (W).


S v Shackell 2001 (4) SA 1 (SCA).


S v Francis 1991 (1) SACR 198 (A).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The High Court held that the trial court adopted an incorrect approach by effectively treating the appellants’ inability to provide reasons for false implication as supporting guilt, despite the State bearing the burden to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt. On a holistic evaluation of the evidence, including the detailed defence versions, the probabilities associated with identification by known complainants, and the material concerns arising from inconsistent statements and amnesia affecting the attempted murder complainant, the appellants’ versions were found to be reasonably possibly true. Consequently, the State had not proved guilt beyond reasonable doubt on any of the counts, and the convictions and sentences were set aside.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that an accused person’s failure to provide an explanation for why State witnesses would falsely implicate them is not, on its own, a sufficient basis to reject the accused’s evidence or sustain a conviction. A conviction cannot be grounded merely on the reasoning that complainants have no apparent motive to lie and the accused cannot suggest one; the correct inquiry remains whether the State has proved guilt beyond reasonable doubt.


In cases involving conflicting versions, the proper approach is a holistic evaluation of the totality of the evidence, weighing the competing accounts and considering probabilities and inherent improbabilities. The court reaffirmed that an accused is entitled to an acquittal where the defence version is reasonably possibly true, even if it appears improbable or contains false aspects.


The judgment further reflected the principle that while a trial court’s findings on oral evidence are generally accorded deference on appeal in the absence of misdirection, appellate intervention is justified where the trial court’s approach discloses a misdirection in the evaluation of evidence or in applying the standard of proof.

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[2018] ZAFSHC 58
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Myohlakale and Others v S (A133/2017) [2018] ZAFSHC 58 (10 May 2018)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Reportable:
NO
Of
Interest to other Judges:   NO
Circulate
to Magistrates:        NO
Case
number:   A133/2017
In
the matter between:
SS
MYOHLAKALE
1
st
Appellant
KN
PHATSOANE
2
nd
Appellant
XL
BOKOLOSHE
3
rd
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
HEARD
ON:
7 MAY 2018
CORAM
:
LEKALE,
ADJP
et
MHLAMBI, J
JUDGMENT
BY:
LEKALE, ADJP
DELIVERED
ON:
10 MAY 2018
SUMMARY:
Criminal law- Inability of accused to furnish acceptable reason as to
why witnesses incriminate him falsely not
per se
adequate to
sustain a conviction - Test remains whether or not guilt proved
beyond reasonable doubt- Appellants’ versions
reasonably
possibly true- Appeals upheld- Convictions and sentences set aside.
[1]
On 12 July 2016 the three appellants, who were legally represented,
were jointly convicted of public violence as count 1 with
the first
appellant also being convicted of assault with intent to cause
grievous bodily harm as count 3 while appellants two and
three were,
on their part, further convicted of attempted murder on count 2 by
the Regional Court sitting at Welkom.  They
were thereafter
sentenced to three years imprisonment on count 1.  The first
appellant, further, received five months imprisonment
which was
wholly and conditionally suspended for assault GBH while the second
and third appellants were each sentenced to a further
four years
imprisonment for attempted murder which was directed to run
concurrently with the sentence for public violence.
[2]
The appellants feel aggrieved by the convictions and sentences.
They now approach us on appeal against the same with leave
granted by
this court on petition.
[3]
On returning the guilty verdicts the trial court found that the
complainant on count 2 was certain and adamant in his evidence
before
the court that the second and third appellants were the culprits
although he had made previous inconsistent statement to
the police
implicating the first appellant and some other person who was
acquitted.  The court below, further, found that
the complainant
on count 3 was also sure in his evidence that the first appellant
attacked him with a brick on the eye.  The
court
a
quo
,
furthermore, held that the appellants’ defence on their
involvement was a bare denial although it was clear from their own

evidence that they were part of a group of members of Association of
Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU) who rendered the
Beatrix
Mine uncontrollable and ungovernable on the relevant day and also
assaulted people in the process.  The court below,
further,
effectively rejected appellants’ version that they were falsely
implicated on the basis that they could not furnish
the rationale
behind such conduct on the part of their accusers or what the
witnesses stood to gain from doing so.
[4]
On the papers and in argument before us Mr Langenhoven for the
appellants submits,
inter
alia
,
to the effect that it is wrong, according to case law, to expect the
accused to explain why State witnesses incriminate them falsely
with
the question simply being whether or not the State proved its case
beyond reasonable doubt.  He, further, submits that
the evidence
of the attempted murder victim amounted to dock identification in so
far as he could not identify his assailants to
the police and only
did so in court when he saw the appellants in the dock.  In his
view the appellants gave credible evidence
which is reasonably
possibly true.  As to sentences the appellants contend that the
trial court did not consider any alternatives
to direct imprisonment
such as correctional supervision regard being had,
inter
alia
,
to their personal circumstances such as the fact that they were
employed and were family men with dependants.
[5]
On its part the State, through Mr Ferreira, supports the convictions
and sentences contending,
inter
alia
,
that the trial court correctly evaluated the case and had regard to
probabilities.  He, further, submits that the court
a
quo
correctly found that the appellants’ respective defences
amounted to a bare denial although it was clear that they were part

of trade union members who made the mine uncontrollable and
ungovernable.  On impugned sentences he submits,
inter
alia
,
that the sentences are appropriate and that the trial court did not
commit any irregularity or misdirection.
[6]
The factual basis for the convictions is apparent from the evidence
of two of the witnesses called by the State in support of
its case
against the appellants.  The complainant on count
2
viz.
attempted
murder, one
Sinothembile
Madiloye
(Madiloye) testified,
inter
alia
,
to the effect that he is a shop steward for the National Union of
Mineworkers (NUM) employed as steward for health and safety
at
Beatrix Mine no.3 shaft.  On the fateful afternoon around
knock-off time he was at the NUM offices at number 3 shaft when
he
noticed people in AMCU t-shirts singing, hitting and banging on the
trees outside.  He proceeded to the bus terminus to
catch the
bus back home but saw people running out of the bus pointing out that
members of AMCU were chasing them out.  He
had a NUM t-shirt on
and heard one of the AMCU members saying here is another member of
NUM.  The third appellant was firing
instructions to the effect
that people should be taken out of the buses and directing
AMCU members to get
into the buses.  He retreated and on
his way back he saw stones being thrown around.  The third
appellant hit him with
a brick on the left side of the head and he
sustained an open wound.  He felt dizzy and ran for cover but
the second appellant
hit him on the head with a pick handle.  He
bled profusely and fell down.  He heard someone shouting that
these people
are killing you before he lost consciousness.
[7]
The complainant on count 3,
Bongani
Masikisiki
(Masikisiki) testified that he was standing and chatting to an
acquaintant when he heard a noise and saw AMCU members coming in

their direction.  The first appellant was amongst them and,
eventually, hit him against the right temple with a stone.
He
knew all the appellants as they used to be members of NUM before they
joined AMCU.
[8]
The appellants’ respective defences are apparent from their
viva
voce
evidence before the trial court.  The first appellant admitted
having been at the scene of the crimes but denied that he
participated in the crimes in any way testifying that he was
initially branch chairperson of the NUM before he joined AMCU.

He pointed out that on the day in question AMCU members were
scheduled to attend a mass meeting of their union at number 4 shaft

and buses were arranged with management to ferry them from number 3
shaft.  The buses did not arrive on time at the boxing
arena
where they were expected and he contacted the third appellant to
inform him accordingly. A decision was taken by the members
to
proceed in the direction of the bus terminus next to the
change house in order to meet the buses halfway.
When they
arrived at the terminus they found the buses waiting to take
mineworkers to their various destinations back home.
Some of
his fellow union members, thereupon, got into a bus scheduled for
Welkom.  The third
appellant arrived and made it clear to
all and   sundry that arrangements had been made with mine
management for other
buses to come to pick them up and that mine
security officer was available to control the situation.
Members alighted
and their buses, eventually, arrived.
When their buses departed he noticed that a car belonging to a member
of NUM was blocking
the road and their buses could not pass. The
union members, thereupon, got frustrated and angry because of the
further delay and
got out of the bus going in the direction of the
relevant obstruction. He, the third appellant and one other person
went to stop
their fellow members in their tracks.  The mine
security officer joined them in that exercise. NUM members were on
the other
side.  A fight thereupon broke out between members of
the two trade unions and, on their part, they did not manage to stop

the fighting.  Madiloye, thereupon, came out in a hurry, grabbed
a walking stick from Masikisiki and used it to hit AMCU members.
The
situation got out of hand and the fighting ensued.
[9]
The second appellant testified that on 5 February 2015 when he
knocked off duty he went to catch a bus to number 4 shaft for
the
AMCU meeting.  As the buses were departing he saw AMCU members
in another bus pointing in the direction of a car parked
in the road
obstructing traffic.  The car in question was used by the branch
chairperson of NUM.  He alighted and went
in the direction of
the relevant obstruction but a colleague advised him to go back as
people were throwing stones.  He accompanied
the colleague in
question back in the direction of the bus.  He saw AMCU members
and NUM members throwing stones at each other.
He never
assaulted Madiloye and never participated in the mayhem in any manner
whatsoever.  He is just an ordinary member
of AMCU.  The
meeting at number 4 shaft was to discuss and decide on the signing of
the recognition agreement between AMCU
and mine management.
[10]
The third appellant also testified in his own defence disputing that
he assaulted Madiloye in any manner whatsoever.
He is a
regional chairperson of AMCU and used to be chairperson of central
committee of NUM before he joined AMCU.  At the
relevant time he
was a member of the task team of AMCU and arrangements were made with
mine management for buses to be made available
to transport their
members to the mass meeting at number 4 shaft.  He got
information that busses were late.  He followed
up on the matter
with the relevant manager. The latter confirmed the arrangement and
asked him to advise AMCU members to move away
from NUM offices as he
had received a complaint.  He repeated the evidence of first
appellant as to what happened with the
car blocking the road.
He was travelling in a car and saw how AMCU members got out of the
busses going in the direction of
the relevant car.  He, further,
confirmed that Madiloye took a stick from Masikisiki as he and
others, inclusive of the mine
security officer,   were
trying to stop the people from fighting.  Madiloye used the
stick to beat people.
[11]
The inability of an accused person to proffer plausible reason for
allegations against him is not,
per
se
, a
proper or sufficient ground for rejecting his evidence or convicting
him.  (See
Maseti
v S
[2013] ZASCA 160
at para
[26]
).
[12]
Convicting an accused person only because the complainant has no
apparent motive to implicate them falsely and they are unable
to
suggest one is based on a dangerous approach.  (See
S
v Ipeleng
1993 (2) SACR 185
(T) at 189 C-D).
[13]
When confronted with conflicting versions the court adopts a holistic
approach to the totality of evidence before it, considers
the merits
and demerits of each version and has regard to the probabilities.
(See
S
v Singh
1975 (1) SA 227
(N) as approved in
S
v Guess
1976 (4) SA 715
(A) at 718H).
[14]
Proper approach is to evaluate conflicting versions against
inherent improbabilities taking account of all
the
evidence.  If after that exercise, it appears that the accused’s
version could reasonably possibly be true, even
if it is improbable
or in some respect untruthful, he is entitled to the benefit of doubt
and to be acquitted.  (See
Maseti
v S
supra
at para [27];
S
v Van der Meyden
1999 (2) SA 79
(W) at 82 D-F and
S
v Shackell
2001 (4) SA 1
(SCA) para [30]).
[15]
In the absence of a misdirection on the part of the trial court, its
acceptance of oral evidence is presumed to be correct
until and
unless it is shown to be wrong on adequate grounds and so are its
conclusions on such evidence.  (See
S
v Francis
1991 (1) SACR 198
(A)).
[16]
The question in the instant matter is whether or not the State proved
its case against each appellant beyond reasonable doubt
regard being
had to the appellants’ respective versions and the
probabilities.  It is, further, clear from recorded
evidence
that the appellants could not, in their evidence, furnish any
plausible reasons why the complainants would implicate them
falsely.
It is, however, clear in our criminal justice system that there was,
in the circumstances of the present matter,
no evidentiary burden on
the appellants to furnish such a reason.  Failure on their part
to furnish such a reason, therefore,
did not constitute proper or
adequate ground to reject their versions and/or to convict them.
The question is, therefore,
whether or not there existed any other
circumstances before the trial court pointing to their culpability on
the counts preferred
against them.
[17]
The court
a
quo
found that the appellants’ defence was a bare denial of their
involvement. A perusal of the record, however, indicates the
contrary
insofar as each appellant gave a detailed account of his movements on
that day placing themselves on the scene of the
crimes but giving
exculpatory explanations.  They even gave a full and undisputed
explanation and background to the unfortunate
incidence.  It is,
thus, not in dispute that the havoc was triggered by a car that was
used to block the road by a local leader
of the NUM.  It is,
further, clear from the record that members of NUM had a problem with
members of AMCU attending a mass
meeting at number 4 shaft for the
purposes of giving mandate to their leaders to sign a recognition
agreement with mine management.
The reason for their misgiving
was probably the fact that as a recognised trade union at the
relevant workplace AMCU was going
to be their rival and was possibly
going to take their union’s position as the majority trade
union at the workplace.
[18]
The appellants, further, gave an explanation as to how the physical
altercation was fuelled pointing to Madiloye as the culprit.
In
my view it can, therefore, not be said that their defence was a bare
denial.  If the trial court found that it was inherently

improbable for the complainants to incriminate the appellants falsely
because they knew them well, it was, in my opinion, equally

inherently improbable for the third appellant, who was a leader and
travelling in his own car, to have attacked Madiloye who, to
his
knowledge, knew him well as a former leader of NUM and thus risk
being arrested.  The same applies to the first appellant
who
used to be the branch chairperson of NUM before as well as the second
appellant who was also reasonably aware that the complainants
would
be able to identify him as the assailant.
[19]
Madiloyi contradicted his statement to the police and it was common
cause before the trial court that he suffered from amnesia
after the
attack.  There was no medical and/or psychiatric evidence before
the trial court to explain his condition in court
and to support the
finding that he was certain as to the identities of his assailants
when he testified.  Whether or not his
evidence before the trial
court as to the identities of his attackers was reliable remains the
question regard being had to his
condition and previous inconsistent
statements as to the identities of such miscreants.
[20]
The roles that the first and third appellants played on the relevant
day are, on their evidence, in line with their previous
leadership
positions at the NUM insofar as AMCU members would have looked to
them for leadership as they reasonably knew them during
their
NUM days.  They were late for a very important mass meeting and
would not, reasonably possibly, have encouraged
fighting and public
violence to ensue thereby delaying their departure further.  MUM
members, on the other hand, would not
reasonably possibly have been
happy with them leaving their union to join a rival union.
[21]
In my view the appellants’ respective versions were reasonably
possibly true and the trial court did not even have to
reject the
State’s case before it could give them the benefit of a doubt
in our law. On the public violence count the trial
court appears to
have accepted evidence tendered against the appellants in support of
counts 2 and 3 as proof of their guilt thereon
insofar as there was
no other evidence of their participation in public violence.
ORDER
[22] In the result the
appeals succeed.
[23] The convictions and
sentences are set aside.
__________________
LJ
LEKALE, ADJP
I
concur
__________________
JJ
MHLAMBI, J
On
behalf of Appellants:
Adv. GT Langenhoven
Instructed
by:

Rosendorff Reitz Barry
BLOEMFONTEIN
On
behalf of the Respondent:
Adv.
AM Ferreira
Instructed
by:

Director of Public Prosecutions
BLOEMFONTEIN