Robinson and Others v S (AR18/2017) [2018] ZAKZPHC 22 (25 May 2018)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Robbery with aggravating circumstances — Conviction based on single witness testimony — Appellants convicted of robbery with aggravating circumstances; they appealed against conviction on grounds of misdirection by trial court in evaluating evidence and reliance on uncorroborated testimony of complainant — Court found substantial contradictions in complainant's evidence, including discrepancies between his testimony and prior statements, and lack of corroborative evidence regarding injuries and weapons — Appeal upheld, conviction set aside due to insufficient evidence to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a criminal appeal against conviction heard in the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg. The appellants were Junior R Robinson (first appellant), Eugene J Dunn (second appellant), and Darryl J Strydom (third appellant). The respondent was the State.


The matter originated in the Regional Court, Richards Bay, where the appellants were charged with and convicted of robbery with aggravating circumstances, read with section 51 and Schedule 2 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997. On 12 April 2015, the regional court imposed 10 years’ imprisonment after finding substantial and compelling circumstances.


The regional court refused leave to appeal. The appellants then petitioned the Judge President, and leave to appeal against conviction was granted. The appeal was determined by Mbatha J (Steyn J concurring), with judgment delivered on 25 May 2018.


The general subject-matter concerned whether the State proved beyond reasonable doubt that the complainant was hijacked/robbed of his motor vehicle through violence and threats with weapons, as opposed to the appellants’ version that the vehicle capsized in an accident, after which they were incorrectly accused.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that on the night of 11 July 2014, the appellants boarded a metered taxi driven by Skhumbuzo Mathaba (the complainant) in Richards Bay, intending to go to the beach to meet their girlfriends. On arrival, they could not find the girlfriends and attempted to call them. At some point, the second appellant handed a phone to the complainant so that the complainant could give directions to the girlfriends, but when the complainant took the phone, there was allegedly no one on the line.


The State’s version, advanced primarily through the complainant (as a single witness), was that he was grabbed from behind, pulled toward the driver’s seat, and threatened with a knife and a firearm. The second appellant allegedly alighted from the vehicle. The complainant alleged he was pulled out, assaulted, pushed into the boot, and that he then escaped and ran away while the appellants drove off in his vehicle. He reported the incident by calling a person named Sipho Nxumalo and by alerting the police via the 10111 emergency number. Police fetched him near the location where he said he had been assaulted and then searched for the assailants.


The defence version (and thus the key disputed factual issue) was that there was no hijacking. The appellants maintained that, after failing to meet their girlfriends, they asked the complainant to take them back to the Richards Bay CBD. While travelling, the vehicle allegedly capsized. After regaining consciousness, the first and third appellants got out of the wreck and searched for the driver and the second appellant. The second appellant was found unconscious, later complained of a back injury, and was moved to the side of the road. Motorists stopped to assist and watched over the second appellant while the first and third appellants went to seek assistance. The complainant was not found at the scene. The appellants’ evidence was that they were surprised to be arrested for hijacking, allegedly at the complainant’s instance.


The appeal court treated as material the fact that the complainant’s viva voce evidence materially differed from his police statement, particularly on core aspects of the alleged robbery/hijacking (including the assault, being placed in the boot, and escaping from it). The appeal court also treated as material the evidence that police arriving at the scene found no firearm or knife, despite searches of the vehicle, the surrounding area, and the appellants.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether, on a proper evaluation of the evidence, the State proved the appellants’ guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and correspondingly whether the appellants’ version was reasonably possibly true, entitling them to an acquittal.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal standards to fact, especially the correct approach to (i) assessing single-witness evidence, (ii) weighing contradictions between prior statements and oral testimony, (iii) evaluating two mutually destructive versions on the totality of the evidence, and (iv) determining whether the trial court committed misdirections in its evidentiary approach (including reliance on the J88 and the admission of a statement under section 220 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977).


A further issue concerned whether the regional court applied the correct standard of proof in rejecting the defence version, including whether it improperly rejected the defence case merely because it was seen as improbable rather than false beyond reasonable doubt.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The appeal court identified the “heart” of the appeal as the correct approach to evaluating evidence in a criminal trial, where the decisive factual issue was whether the complainant was hijacked or whether the vehicle capsized.


In dealing with the complainant’s evidence, the appeal court accepted that the complainant was a single witness and that his evidence required cautious treatment. It referred to the principle that a conviction based on single-witness evidence ordinarily follows only where the evidence is substantially satisfactory in every respect or where there is corroboration.


The appeal court then addressed the significance of contradictions and inconsistencies, particularly between a witness’s viva voce testimony and a prior statement. Relying on S v Mafaladiso en Andere 2003 (1) SACR 583 (SCA), it emphasised that the judicial task is to weigh the prior statement against the oral evidence, consider all the evidence, and decide whether the evidence is reliable and whether the truth has been told despite shortcomings. Applying this approach, the appeal court held that the complainant materially deviated from his sworn police statement on issues that went to the core of the alleged hijacking/robbery.


A decisive feature in the appeal court’s assessment was that the complainant’s police statement—made shortly after the arrest and confirmed by the complainant as read back to him before signature—contained a glaring omission: it did not mention the alleged assault, being forced into the boot, or escaping from it. The appeal court treated this not as a minor discrepancy but as a difference of such magnitude that it affected the reliability of the State’s narrative about the commission of the offence. The complainant’s explanation that the statement-taker omitted those details was not accepted as curing the problem, given the extent to which the court found the court testimony to differ from the contemporaneous account.


The appeal court further analysed the two mutually destructive versions and reiterated the proper test for criminal proof. Relying on S v Van der Meyden 1999 (1) SACR 447 (W) (with reference also to R v Difford 1937 AD 370 as cited in Van der Meyden), it restated that guilt must be proved beyond reasonable doubt, and that an accused is entitled to acquittal if it is reasonably possible that he might be innocent. Importantly, it emphasised that the two perspectives—proof beyond reasonable doubt and reasonable possibility of innocence—are not separate tests but two sides of the same enquiry requiring a consideration of all the evidence, without evaluating the State case and defence case in isolation.


On corroboration, the appeal court held that the regional court erred in finding that the J88 medical form corroborated the complainant. The appeal court found that the alleged medical corroboration was effectively non-existent: the doctor’s handwriting was indecipherable, conclusions were absent, and the form did not clearly record the nature and type of injuries. It invoked MM v S [2012] 2 All SA 401 (SCA) for the proposition that where the implications of medical observations are unclear, the doctor should be called to explain them and guide the court on inferences. In the absence of meaningful medical evidence, the appeal court found that the complainant’s injuries were not shown on the record to be consistent with the alleged assault in the manner the trial court had accepted.


The appeal court also relied on the evidence of police officers, including officer Ndlanzi, that no knife or firearm was found. It reasoned that the police were the first to arrive at the accident scene; motorists were still present; and the vehicle, appellants, and surroundings were searched. On this evidence, the appeal court considered it inconceivable that weapons could have been disposed of speedily, and further reasoned that if the vehicle had been hijacked, the perpetrators would likely have fled the accident scene.


In assessing the trial court’s approach, the appeal court concluded that the regional magistrate misdirected herself by considering the State witnesses’ evidence in isolation and by “axiomatically” rejecting the defence versions, rather than applying the integrated approach required by Van der Meyden. It further held that the trial court failed to properly evaluate discrepancies, contradictions, and improbabilities in the State case.


Although acknowledging that appellate courts do not lightly interfere with credibility findings, the appeal court found that the trial court’s acceptance of the complainant as reliable and credible was unjustified on the record. It rejected the trial court’s explanation that the complainant’s difficulties under cross-examination were attributable to trauma, reasoning instead that the complainant’s struggle emerged when the contradictions became apparent.


The appeal court also held that the trial court erred in accepting a statement by a police officer under section 220 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, characterising this as an irregular admission of hearsay affecting fair-trial rights. It relied on S v Jaipal [2005] ZACC 1; 2005 (1) SACR 215 (CC) for the general content of the fair trial right, and treated the reliance on the untested evidence as a serious misdirection notwithstanding that it was handed in by consent.


Finally, the appeal court referred to the requirement that judgments must be justified by an adequate evaluation of evidence (citing S v Teixeira 1980 (3) SA 755 (A)). It also relied on Shusha (2011) JOL 27877 (SCA) for the proposition that rejecting an accused’s version merely because it is improbable constitutes a fatal misdirection; the State must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and the defence version may be rejected only if shown to be false beyond reasonable doubt.


On the totality of these considerations, the appeal court concluded that the State failed to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the complainant was robbed/hijacked, and that the appellants were therefore entitled to an acquittal.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal court upheld the appeal.


It set aside both the conviction and the sentence imposed by the Regional Court on 12 April 2015.


No separate or express order as to costs appears from the judgment.


Cases Cited


Stevens v S [2005] 1 All SA 1 (SCA).


S v Mafaladiso en Andere 2003 (1) SACR 583 (SCA).


S v Govender & others 2006 (1) SACR 322 (E).


S v Bruiners en ‘n Ander 1998 (2) SACR 432 (SE).


S v Van der Meyden 1999 (1) SACR 447 (W).


R v Difford 1937 AD 370.


MM v S [2012] 2 All SA 401 (SCA).


S v Jaipal [2005] ZACC 1; 2005 (1) SACR 215 (CC).


S v Teixeira 1980 (3) SA 755 (A).


Shusha (2011) JOL 27877 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, section 51 and Schedule 2.


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 220.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were expressly cited in the judgment.


Held


The High Court held that the trial court misdirected itself in its evaluation of the evidence, particularly by treating the complainant’s single-witness evidence as reliable despite material contradictions between his oral testimony and his prior police statement on central aspects of the alleged hijacking/robbery.


It further held that the regional court incorrectly treated the J88 as corroboration when the medical evidence was unclear and not properly supported, and that the trial court improperly accepted a police statement under section 220 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 in a manner amounting to the admission of untested hearsay evidence.


Applying the correct criminal standard—proof beyond reasonable doubt assessed on the totality of the evidence and considering whether the defence version was reasonably possibly true—the High Court concluded that the State failed to discharge its onus. The convictions and sentences were accordingly set aside.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A conviction based on the evidence of a single witness requires cautious assessment; it will ordinarily follow only where the evidence is substantially satisfactory in every respect or is supported by corroboration.


Where there are material differences between a witness’s viva voce evidence and a prior statement, the court must evaluate the discrepancies by weighing the statement against the oral evidence and deciding, on the totality, whether the evidence is reliable and truthful, notwithstanding shortcomings.


In criminal matters, the State must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and an accused is entitled to an acquittal if the accused’s version is reasonably possibly true. These formulations represent a single integrated test that must be applied by considering all the evidence, rather than assessing incriminating and exculpatory evidence in isolation.


Medical documentation such as a J88 cannot provide meaningful corroboration where the observations and implications are unclear; in such circumstances, the medical practitioner should be called to explain the findings to enable proper inferential reasoning.


A trial court may test an accused’s version against improbabilities, but it may not reject the defence version merely because it seems improbable; the defence version may be rejected only if it is false beyond reasonable doubt.


A criminal judgment must be supported by an adequate evaluation of evidence, and serious misdirections in evidential assessment (including reliance on untested hearsay material affecting fair trial rights) may justify appellate interference with credibility findings and the ultimate conclusion.

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[2018] ZAKZPHC 22
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Robinson and Others v S (AR18/2017) [2018] ZAKZPHC 22 (25 May 2018)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
DIVISION, PIETERMARITZBURG
APPEAL
CASE NO:
AR18/2017
In
the matter between:
JUNIOR
R
ROBINSON
First
Appellant
EUGENE
J
DUNN
Second
Appellant
DARRYL
J
STRYDOM
Third
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
APPEAL JUDGMENT
Delivered:  25 May
2018
Mbatha
J (Steyn J concurring)
[1]
The appellants were charged and convicted by the Regional Court,
Richards Bay on 12 April 2015 on one count of robbery with

aggravating circumstances, read with the provisions of s 51, and
Schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
. The court a
quo found that there were substantial and compelling circumstances
and imposed a sentence of 10 years’ imprisonment.
[2]
The appellants were refused leave to appeal by the court a quo. They
thereafter petitioned the Judge President of this Division
for leave
to appeal and leave to appeal against conviction was granted.
[3]
It is common cause that on the night of 11 July 2014 the appellants
boarded a metered taxi driven by Skhumbuzo Mathaba (the
complainant)
to take them to the beach in Richards Bay, where they were to meet
their girlfriends. Upon their arrival, they could
not locate the
girls and tried to call them. At one stage appellant two gave the
phone to the complainant so as to give directions
to their
girlfriends as to their whereabouts, but when the complainant took
the phone there was no one on the line.
[4]
According to the complainant he was then grabbed from behind, pulled
to the driver’s seat and a knife and a firearm were
pointed at
him. Appellant two, who was seated in the front passenger seat,
alighted from the motor vehicle. The complainant was
pulled out of
the motor vehicle and assaulted all over his body. He was pushed into
the boot of the motor vehicle but managed to
escape through the rear
door. As he was running away the appellants drove off in his motor
vehicle. He managed to call Sipho Nxumalo
and alerted the police
through the 10111 emergency call number. The police fetched him near
the place where he was assaulted and
proceeded to look for his
assailants.
[5]
The appellants denied assaulting the complainant and hijacking his
motor vehicle. Their version is that when they realised that
their
girlfriends were not at the arranged place, they requested the
complainant to take them back to the CBD in Richards Bay.
Whilst
proceeding to their destination the motor vehicle driven by the
complainant capsized. Upon regaining consciousness appellants
one and
three managed to get out of the motor vehicle wreck. They looked for
both the driver and appellant two. Appellant two was
found lying
unconscious on the road. The complainant was nowhere to be found.
Appellant two upon regaining consciousness complained
of a back
injury and as a result thereof they moved him to the side of the
road. At that stage motorists who had stopped to assist
them kept
watch over appellant two whilst appellants one and three walked
towards the robots to seek assistance. Their evidence
was that they
were surprised when they were arrested for hijacking at the instance
of the complainant.
[6]
The appellants attack against their conviction is that the court a
quo adopted a wrong approach to the evaluation of evidence,
that it
attached weight to the uncorroborated evidence of the complainant,
who was a single witness, the court failed to treat
his evidence with
caution, that there were material contradictions and inconsistencies
to the evidence of the complainant. It was
further contended that the
court erred in not finding his version improbable as compared to that
of the appellants, which it was
submitted was reasonably possibly
true. In that regard the court should have found the complainant’s
version to be inherently
improbable and that it could not be
reasonably possibly true.
[7]
At the heart of this appeal is the correct approach to the evaluation
of evidence by the trial court. The only issue in dispute
is whether
the complainant was hijacked or whether the motor vehicle which he
was driving capsized.
[8]
It is common cause that the evidence of the complainant is evidence
of a single witness and needs to be treated with caution.
In criminal
proceedings a conviction will normally follow only if the evidence of
a single witness is substantially satisfactory
in every respect or if
there is corroboration.
[1]
[9]
In
S v
Mafaladiso en Andere,
[2]
in cases where there are material differences between the witness’s
evidence and his prior statement, the court held that
the final task
of the judge is to weigh up the previous statement against viva voce
evidence, to consider all the evidence and
to decide whether it was
reliable or not and whether the truth has been told, despite any
shortcomings. This means that the court
is enjoined to consider the
totality of the evidence to ascertain if the truth has been told. It
is submitted by counsel for the
appellants that the evidence of the
complainant is riddled with contradictions and inconsistencies on a
number of material issues.
The following contradictions have been
brought to the attention of this court:
(a) The complainant
stated that when he was assaulted outside his motor vehicle, he was
held face down as blows were delivered upon
him like rain, he could
not see how he was assaulted and could not make out who put him in
the boot of his motor vehicle. Having
been severely beaten up and
confused, he managed to get out of the motor vehicle and ran to a
nearby swamp where he made a call
to a Sipho Nxumalo and the police.
He described his injuries as being very serious: the back part of his
head was swollen; he had
a sprained leg and an injury on his private
parts and in fact a torn ligament. He did not seek medical assistance
the following
day and even later on when his injuries did not heal.
(b) In his evidence in
chief he indicated that he parked the motor vehicle at an area where
there were trees, but under cross-examination
it was pointed out to
him that in his statement to the police he stated that he was
directed by the appellants where to park, being
under the trees, in
darkness, giving an impression that the appellants directed him to an
isolated and dark spot.
(c) In his evidence in
chief he described the assault like ‘heavy rain’ which
made him unable to describe how he was
assaulted. However, it was
pointed out to him under cross-examination that in his statement to
the police there is no mention of
the assault in the motor vehicle as
described in his evidence in chief. He was only grabbed, a knife and
a firearm were drawn and
that one of them jumped out and came to
drive the motor vehicle. He further went on to state that he even
fought back trying to
rescue himself. He could not come with a
reasonable explanation as to why the assault was not mentioned in his
statement. When
he was asked about further discrepancies in his
evidence, he also claimed not to have informed the police as to what
his assailants
were wearing; who had grabbed him and that he started
fighting when they grabbed him though this appeared in his statement.
(d) The complainant’s
evidence was so contradictory to a point that he was unable to state
whether the assault started in
the motor vehicle or outside the motor
vehicle. Initially his version was that the assault started in the
motor vehicle, later
on he stated that it started outside the motor
vehicle.
(e) In his evidence in
chief he could only assume that the motor vehicle was driven to the
direction where it was facing, but in
his statement to the police, he
stated that one of the appellants’ got in and drove the motor
vehicle in his presence.
It
is clear to this court that the complainant materially deviated from
the sworn statement he had made to the police.
[10]
The complainant made his statement shortly after the arrest of the
appellants, which he confirmed to have been read back to
him before
he signed it. However, the most glaring omission in his statement is
that there is no mention of the assault, being
put into the boot of
the motor vehicle and escaping therefrom. He claimed that the police
officer who took the statement omitted
to write that down. In this
case the version is completely different from that given in court. It
is not only a question of contradictions
here and there, but they are
so material to a point that they touch to the core of the nature of
the crime that the appellants
were convicted of. Regarding the
statements made to the police officers, this court bears in mind the
dicta in
S
v Govender & others,
[3]
S v Bruiners en ‘n
Ander,
[4]
and
S
v Mafaladiso
.
[5]
[11]
It is clear from the record that there are two conflicting versions
on how the events unfolded on the day in question.
The versions
are completely different from each other.  The second question
which needed to have been considered by the court
a quo was whether
on the totality of the evidence it can be said that the State had
proved its case beyond any reasonable doubt.
It is trite that
in criminal cases the onus rests on the State to prove its case
against the accused beyond reasonable doubt.
In
S
v Van der Meyden
[6]
the test is set out as follows:

The
onus
of proof in a criminal case is
discharged by the State if the evidence establishes the guilt of the
accused beyond reasonable doubt.
The corollary is that he is
entitled to be acquitted if it is reasonably possible that he might
be innocent (see, for example
R
v Difford
,
1937 AD 370
at
373 and 383).’
[12]
The court a quo found that the medical form (J88) completed by the
district surgeon corroborated the evidence of the complainant
as a
single witness. It erred in this regard as in actual fact such
evidence is non-existent. The doctor’s handwriting is

indecipherable. The conclusions which were to be made by the medical
doctor are conspicuously absent from the J88 nor the type
and nature
of injuries sustained by the complainant. It is trite that ‘wherever
the implications of the doctor’s observations
are unclear the
doctor should be called to explain those observations and to guide
the court in the correct inference to be drawn
from them’, as
stated in
MM
v S
.
[7]
Besides this there was no further medical evidence before the
court which indicated that the complainant’s injuries
were
consistent with assault.
[13]
The evidence of officer Ndlanzi and other police officers was that no
firearm or knife was found on the scene. They were the
first officers
to arrive at the scene of the accident. The motorists who had offered
to assist the appellants were still at the
scene of the accident. The
motor vehicle, the surrounding place where the motor vehicle had
capsized and appellants were searched.
It is inconceivable that the
appellants would have disposed of the weapons so speedily. If the
motor vehicle had been hijacked
they would also fled the scene of the
accident.
[14]
It has been further submitted on behalf of the appellants that the
regional magistrate erred in law by simply considering the
version
given by the State witnesses and axiomatically rejecting the
appellants versions.  The court a quo considered the
evidence of
the State witnesses in isolation.  It did not follow the test in
S v Van
der Meyden,
[8]
where Nugent J, stated as follows:

These are not separate and
independent tests, but the expression of the same test when viewed
from opposite perspectives. In order
to convict, the evidence must
establish the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt, which
will be so only if there is at
the same time no reasonable
possibility that an innocent explanation which has been put forward
might be true. The two are inseparable,
each being the logical
corollary of the other.
In whichever form the test is
expressed, it must be satisfied upon a consideration of all the
evidence. A court does not look at
the evidence implicating the
accused in isolation in order to determine whether there is proof
beyond reasonable doubt, and so
too does it not look at the
exculpatory evidence in isolation in order to determine whether it is
reasonably possible that it might
be true.’
[15]
It was incumbent on the trial court to have properly evaluated the
evidence of the State witnesses in the light of all the

discrepancies, improbabilities and contradictions thereto to
determine if it came up to the required standard acceptable by our

courts.  In this case, it has not been established that the
complainant was robbed of his motor vehicle due to the unreliability

of the evidence of the State witnesses.
[16]
It is trite that a court of appeal does not lightly interfere with
the credibility findings of the trial court.  The court
a quo
found the complainant to be a reliable and credible witness who told
the truth. I do not agree. The complainant was a single
witness and
the court ought to have treated his evidence with caution.  The
finding by the court that the complainant was
traumatised and
terrified is unconvincing. The complainant clearly struggled to
answer questions during cross-examination as it
became apparent that
his version was a mere fabrication. He could not have been
traumatised in the middle of cross-examination,
whilst throughout the
entire evidence in chief he was fully composed. The shoe had started
to pinch on the complainant. The court
erred in finding that he was a
reliable and credible witness.
[17]
It was necessary for the court a quo to evaluate the evidence of the
appellants. The court appears to be exclusively not aware
of the
defence case, which I find to be consistent throughout the trial.
There is no obligation on the accused to prove his innocence.
If his
version is reasonably possibly true he is entitled to an
acquittal.
[9]
[18]
The court a quo also erred in law by accepting the statement made by
a police officer in terms of s 220 of the Criminal Procedure
Act.
[10]
This is irregular as it amounts to the admission of hearsay evidence.
This impacts on the appellants rights to a fair trial. In
S
v Jaipal
[11]
the Constitutional Court stated as follows:

The right of an accused to a
fair trial requires fairness to the accused, as well as fairness to
the public as represented by the
State. It has to instil confidence
in the criminal justice system with the public, including those close
to the accused, as well
as those distressed by the audacity and
horror of crime.’
This
was a serious misdirection, as this was untested evidence
irrespective that it was handed in by consent.
[19]
It is trite that the judgment of a court of law must be justified by
adequate evaluation of evidence (see
S
v Teixeira).
[12]
The learned regional magistrate applied the incorrect standard of
proof.  In
Shusha
[13]
,
a full bench decision of the SCA held that a perusal of the
Magistrate’s analysis of the evidence revealed that he had
applied the incorrect standard of proof.  In appearing to have
rejected the Appellant’s version on the basis that it
was
improbable, the Magistrate committed a fatal misdirection.  In
criminal matters, the State must prove its case beyond
reasonable
doubt.  An accused’s version can only be rejected if the
Court is satisfied that it is false beyond reasonable
doubt.  An
accused is entitled to an acquittal if there is a reasonable
possibility that his or her version may be true.
A court is
entitled to test an accused’s version against the
improbabilities.  However, an accused’s version cannot
be
rejected merely because it is improbable.
[20]
The magistrate, in her judgment, did not point to any improbabilities
in the complainant’s version, and this court is
of the opinion
that there are improbabilities.  In that case it cannot be said
that there was proof beyond reasonable doubt
and the appellants' were
therefore entitled to an acquittal.
[21]
In the light of the aforesaid, I find that the State failed to prove
its case beyond a reasonable doubt. I therefore propose
the following
order:
a) The appeal is upheld.
b) The conviction and
sentence imposed by the Regional Court on 12 April 2015 is hereby set
aside.
___________________
Mbatha
J
Date
of hearing : 25 May 2018
Date
delivered : 25 May 2018
Appearances
For
the Appellant : Adv HN Mlotshwa
Instructed
by : Justice Centre
Durban
For
the Respondent : Adv PWR Manciya
Instructed
by : The Director of Public Prosecutions
Durban
[1]
Stevens v S
[2005]
1 All SA 1
(SCA) para 17.
[2]
S v Mafaladiso en Andere
2003 (1) SACR 583
(SCA) at 584.
[3]
S v Govender & others
2006 (1) SACR 322 (E).
[4]
S v Bruiners en ‘n Ander
1998 (2) SACR 432
(SE).
[5]
S v Mafaladiso
note 2 at 593.
[6]
S v Van der Meyden
1999
(1) SACR 447
(W) at 448F-G.
[7]
MM v S
[2012]
2 All SA 401
(SCA para 24.
[8]
S v Van der Meyden
note
6 at 448F-I.
[9]
Above at 449J-450B.
[10]
51 of 1977.
[11]
S v Jaipal
[2005] ZACC 1
;
2005
(1) SACR 215
(CC) para 29.
[12]
S v Teixeira
1980
(3) SA 755 (A).
[13]
(2011)
JOL 27877
(SCA).