Sithunza v S (AR 340/2015) [2016] ZAKZPHC 9 (9 February 2016)

85 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Murder — Conviction based on common purpose — Appellant's alibi defense rejected — Appellant convicted alongside co-accused for premeditated murder of deceased, with reliance on circumstantial evidence and alleged common purpose — Appeal upheld due to inadmissibility of co-accused's statements against appellant and insufficient evidence to support conviction — Conviction and sentence set aside.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a criminal appeal against conviction in the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg. The appellant, Vuka Ishmael Sithunza, appealed against his conviction for planned and premeditated murder. The respondent was the State.


The matter arose from a trial in the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Southern Circuit, Ramsgate, where Moodley J (sitting as court of first instance) convicted the appellant together with two co-accused (accused 2 and accused 3) of the murder of Sibusiso Victor Gumede. Each accused was sentenced to life imprisonment. All three accused sought leave to appeal against conviction and sentence, but the trial court granted leave only in respect of the appellant’s appeal against conviction. The appeal before the Full Court (Gorven, Seegobin and Olsen JJ) was therefore limited to whether the appellant was correctly convicted.


The general subject-matter concerned whether the appellant could be convicted on the basis of common purpose arising from a prior agreement, where much of the evidence implicating him depended (directly or indirectly) on extra-curial statements made by co-accused, and where the State otherwise relied primarily on circumstantial evidence (including cellular telephone records and evidence placing the appellant with the co-accused the day before the shooting).


2. Material Facts


On the morning of 20 December 2010 at approximately 07h30, the deceased, Sibusiso Victor Gumede, was driving a blue Nissan Skyline along a road in the Bhoyibhoyi area near Port Shepstone. One of the deceased’s sisters was at the Ndaleni bus stop when she saw the deceased’s vehicle approach. She then heard a shot, after which the vehicle careened into a field. The deceased was found wounded and was rushed to hospital, but did not survive.


It was common cause that the shot fired as the deceased approached the bus stop caused his death. It was also common cause on the evidence that two men were seen running from the scene, and that one of them fired the fatal shot.


Three persons were charged with the murder. The appellant was accused 1, and the two men seen running from the scene were accused 2 and accused 3. All three pleaded not guilty and raised alibi defences under section 115 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. The appellant’s alibi was that he was at his parental home in Harding (a considerable distance from the murder scene) from 23 November 2010 to 17 January 2011.


At trial, accused 2 and accused 3 were identified by witnesses (including the appellant’s sister and a 16-year-old witness, [K…] [M…]). In addition, the trial court admitted a contested confession by accused 2 and a contested pointing-out by accused 3, after conducting trials-within-a-trial. Those extra-curial statements, together with other evidence led against accused 2 and 3, established (in the trial court’s view) that they had agreed with others to murder the deceased and that they were the assailants at the bus stop.


In relation to the appellant, a contested statement attributed to him was ruled inadmissible after a trial-within-a-trial. After the rulings, it was agreed that evidence led during the trials-within-a-trial would generally be received into the main trial except for that led in the appellant’s trial-within-a-trial.


At the close of the State case, the appellant sought discharge under section 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, which was refused. The appellant then closed his case without leading evidence.


The admissible evidence against the appellant (once the co-accuseds’ extra-curial statements were excluded) consisted essentially of two features. First, [K…], who knew the appellant and whose evidence the trial court accepted, testified that on the afternoon before the murder he saw the appellant with accused 2, accused 3 and another person about 1.5 km from the scene, and that within minutes of that sighting a gunshot was heard from their vicinity. Second, cellphone records showed that between 05h45 and 09h45 on the morning of the murder, the appellant’s cellphone was used to communicate with accused 2 or accused 3 on at least 10 occasions.


As to disputed facts, the appellant’s alibi was disputed by the State and was found by the courts to be false. Records demonstrated that the appellant’s cellphone was used in the Port Shepstone and Marburg areas on the day before and the day of the murder, and (absent an explanation that he did not possess the cellphone) the inference was drawn that he was operating it. The evidence of [K…] placing the appellant near the scene the previous afternoon also contradicted the alibi.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether, on the evidence admissible against the appellant, the State had proved beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty of murder on the basis of common purpose arising from a prior agreement.


This raised an interrelated set of issues about the law of evidence and the application of legal principles to proved facts. A key legal question was the extent to which the trial court could rely on extra-curial statements by co-accused (confessions, admissions, or pointing-out evidence) when determining the appellant’s guilt. Closely connected was whether the remaining circumstantial evidence (association with co-accused the day before, a gunshot heard in their vicinity, and repeated cellphone contact on the morning) was capable of proving the existence of a prior agreement to murder and the appellant’s participation in that agreement.


The dispute therefore principally concerned the application of law to fact (including logical inference from circumstantial evidence), framed by rules governing admissibility and the doctrine of common purpose (particularly common purpose based on prior agreement rather than presence at the scene).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Full Court noted that the State accepted that the law was clear that extra-curial statements by accused 2 and accused 3 were not admissible against the appellant, regardless of whether such statements amounted to admissions or confessions. The court further noted that such statements are not partially excised to remove only portions implicating a co-accused; rather, as a matter of principle, they are excluded in their entirety as against the co-accused.


Because the trial court’s reasoning relied, at least in part, on matters that were only revealed by the extra-curial statements (including communications involving a person, Sphamandla Mzobe, whose involvement appeared only from those statements), the Full Court held that this reliance constituted a misdirection. Once the inadmissible material was excluded, the State properly conceded that the remaining evidence was insufficient to sustain the appellant’s conviction.


The Full Court nevertheless examined the admissible evidence and the trial court’s approach to circumstantial proof. It accepted that the appellant’s alibi was false, based on cellphone location records and evidence placing him near the scene the day before. However, the Full Court treated the falsity of the alibi as insufficient to supply the missing elements of the State’s case: the issue was not merely whether the appellant was untruthful about his whereabouts, but whether the State had proved the substantive elements required for guilt under the chosen theory of liability.


The court endorsed the general approach to circumstantial evidence articulated in S v Reddy & others 1996 (2) SACR 1 (A), read with the “two cardinal rules of logic” from R v Blom 1939 AD 188. On that approach, circumstantial facts must be considered cumulatively, but the inference of guilt must still be consistent with all proved facts and must exclude every reasonable inference other than guilt.


Applying these principles, the Full Court emphasised that the State’s case against the appellant depended on common purpose arising from a prior agreement. Since the appellant was not one of the two assailants, and accused 2 and 3 were identified as those who fled the scene and who were responsible for the shooting, the State could only secure a conviction against the appellant by proving, beyond reasonable doubt, that there was an agreement to murder the deceased and that the appellant was a party to that agreement.


The court referred to the requirements for common purpose summarised in S v Mgedezi & others 1989 (1) SA 687 (A), while noting that the requirement of presence at the scene does not apply where the State relies on a prior agreement. The court also stressed that, in line with authority including S v Jama & others 1989 (3) SA 427 (A), the elements of liability must be proved beyond reasonable doubt in respect of each accused, and the case against one accused cannot be determined by adopting a broad global approach that effectively imports inadmissible material from the case against others.


A significant aspect of the reasoning was the State’s argument on appeal that, because the trial court had made “findings of fact” (based on evidence admissible against accused 2 and 3) that an agreement existed to murder the deceased, those findings could be treated as binding “irrefutable facts” against the appellant even though the evidentiary basis for the findings was inadmissible against him. The Full Court rejected this argument as overlooking two fundamental principles. First, factual findings must be grounded in admissible evidence; there are no “free-standing” findings independent of the evidence supporting them. Second, any finding made against an accused must be based solely on evidence admissible against that accused. The Full Court illustrated the point by noting that if accused 2 and 3 had been tried separately and convicted on the basis of their own admissible evidence, those factual findings could not automatically be used to convict the appellant in a later trial.


Having rejected this reasoning, the court held that there was no evidence admissible against the appellant that an agreement to murder the deceased existed. The admissible evidence placing the appellant with accused 2 and 3 the previous afternoon, a gunshot heard shortly thereafter, and multiple cellphone contacts on the morning of the murder did not justify an inference, still less the only reasonable inference, that a murder agreement existed to which the appellant was party. The court considered that the trial court effectively assumed the existence of the agreement and then asked whether the appellant associated with it, which the Full Court characterised as placing “the cart before the horse”. Without proof of the prior agreement in the case against the appellant, the foundation for the common-purpose theory was absent.


On this basis, the court concluded that there was no evidence to support the conviction, and further expressed the view that the appellant should not have been put on his defence, implying that the section 174 discharge application ought to have succeeded on the admissible evidential material.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal was upheld. The Full Court set aside both the appellant’s conviction and sentence.


No separate order as to costs appears from the judgment, and the order was confined to setting aside the conviction and sentence.


Cases Cited


Mhlongo v S; Nkosi v S 2015 (8) BCLR 887 (CC).


S v Reddy & others 1996 (2) SACR 1 (A).


S v Mgedezi & others 1989 (1) SA 687 (A).


S v Sefatsa & others 1988 (1) SA 868 (A).


S v Yelani 1989 (2) SA 43 (A).


S v Jama & others 1989 (3) SA 427 (A).


R v Blom 1939 AD 188.


Legislation Cited


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (section 115; section 174).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that extra-curial statements by co-accused are not admissible against the appellant and must be excluded in their entirety when determining his guilt. Once those statements were excluded, there was no admissible evidence proving a prior agreement to murder the deceased in the appellant’s case, which was essential for liability on a common purpose based on prior agreement. The remaining circumstantial evidence, even together with the falsity of the appellant’s alibi, did not exclude reasonable inferences other than guilt and did not establish the required agreement beyond reasonable doubt. The conviction and life sentence were therefore set aside.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A conviction of an accused must be based on evidence admissible against that accused, and findings made on the strength of evidence admissible only against co-accused cannot be transposed as binding “facts” against another accused.


Extra-curial statements (including confessions and pointing-out evidence) made by one accused are not admissible against a co-accused, and the exclusion is not achieved by excising only the implicating portions; rather, the statements are excluded in their entirety as against the co-accused.


In assessing circumstantial evidence, the evidence must be considered in its totality, but the inferential conclusion of guilt must satisfy the Blom logic rules: it must be consistent with all proved facts and must exclude every reasonable inference other than guilt.


Where the State relies on common purpose arising from prior agreement, it must prove beyond reasonable doubt not only the commission of the offence by the perpetrators but also the existence of the prior agreement and the accused’s participation in that agreement. Absent admissible evidence proving the agreement in the case against that accused, liability on that basis cannot be sustained, even if the accused’s alibi is shown to be false.

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[2016] ZAKZPHC 9
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Sithunza v S (AR 340/2015) [2016] ZAKZPHC 9 (9 February 2016)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
DIVISION, PIETERMARITZBURG
JUDGMENT
Case
No: AR 340/2015
DATE:
09 FEBRUARY 2016
Not
Reportable
In
the matter between:
VUKA
ISHMAEL
SITHUNZA
................................................................................................
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
............................................................................................................................
Respondent
Coram:
Gorven, Seegobin and Olsen JJ
Heard
:
25 January 2016
Delivered:
9 February 2016
ORDER
On
appeal from
KwaZulu-Natal Division of
the High Court, Southern Circuit, and Ramsgate (Moodley J sitting as
court of first instance):
The appeal is
upheld and the conviction and sentence of the appellant is set aside.
JUDGMENT
Gorven
J (Seegobin & Olsen JJ concurring):
[1]
At 07h30 on the morning of 20 December
2010, the deceased, Sibusiso Victor Gumede, was driving his blue
Nissan Skyline vehicle along
a road in the Bhoyibhoyi area near Port
Shepstone, KwaZulu-Natal. One of his sisters had caught a taxi from
her workplace. At the
Ndaleni bus stop, she was met by another sister
who gave her a wallet because she planned to continue with the taxi
to town. She
saw the deceased’s vehicle approach and, just
then, heard a shot ring out. The vehicle then careened into a field.
She and
other onlookers rushed to the vehicle, saw that the deceased
was wounded and arranged for him to be rushed to a nearby hospital.

The deceased did not survive. It is common cause that the shot fired
when he approached the bus stop caused his death. Two men
were seen
running from the scene. One of them had fired the fatal shot.
[2]
Three persons were charged with the murder
of the deceased before the High Court. Of these, the appellant was
accused one and the
two men seen running from the scene were accused
two and three respectively. All three of the accused pleaded not
guilty and raised
alibi defences under section 115 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the Act). The appellant’s defence was
that he
was at his parental home in Harding from 23 November 2010 to
17 January 2011. Harding is a considerable distance from the murder

scene. All three of the accused were convicted of the planned and
premeditated murder of the deceased on the basis that they formed
a
common purpose to do so by conspiring and acting accordingly. They
were each sentenced to life imprisonment. They all applied
for leave
to appeal in respect of their convictions and sentences. Apart from
the application of the appellant for leave to appeal
against his
conviction, the trial court dismissed the applications. This appeal
is accordingly with the leave of that court and
is limited to the
question of whether or not the appellant was correctly convicted.
[3]
Accused two and three were identified by
the sister of the appellant who was returning from work and a
16-year-old youth by the
name of [K……] [M……]
([K……..]). In addition, a contested confession by
accused two and
a contested pointing out by accused three (the
extra-curial statements) were found to be admissible against them
after a trial-within-a-trial
was conducted. Along with the evidence
led against them, these made it plain that they had reached
agreement, along with others,
to murder the deceased, and that t
hey
were the two assailants
near the bus stop
who fired the shot resulting in his death.
[4]
A contested statement attributed to the
appellant was ruled inadmissible after a trial-within-a-trial was
held. After the rulings
on the extra-curial statements and the
contested statement of the appellant were given, the status of the
evidence which had been
led during the trials-within-a-trial was
agreed. That evidence was received into the main trial, except for
that led in the trial-within-a-trial
of the appellant. At the close
of the state case, the appellant applied for his discharge in terms
of s 174 of the Act and,
when that was refused, closed his case
without leading any evidence.
[5]
As regards what was found proved, the
judgment of the trial court refers to the firing of a shot in the
presence of the appellant
the afternoon prior to the murder. It says
of the firing: ‘On its own it may appear to be a recreational
activity, but given
that firearms are used by accused 2 and accused 3
on the very next day to shoot the deceased, the knowledge of [the
appellant]
of a firearm gains significance.’ The trial court
also found to be significant the evidence that there were multiple
communications
between the appellant and one Sphamandla Mzobe on the
morning of the murder. Only the extra-curial statements show this
person
to have been involved in the offence. The judgment goes on to
refer to the cellphone communications between the appellant and his

co-accused on the morning of the offence. Of the cellphone
communications by the appellant with his co-accused and Mzobe, the
trial court held, ‘This . . . [indistinct] of course cannot be
dismissed as coincidental, but are clearly related to the killing
of
the deceased as accused 2 and accused 3 were at the  time
waiting for the deceased at the Ndaleni Bus Stop. Further
corroboration
for the state’s version can be found in [the
appellant’s] mendacity. [The appellant] was clearly not where
he alleged
he was at crucial times and his alibi therefore lies to be
rejected as false.’
[6]
The state accepted in
argument that it is now clear law that extra-curial statements by
accused two and three are not admissible
against the appellant.
[1]
This is so regardless of whether they contain admissions or
confessions.
[2]
A court does not only excise from evidence those parts of the
statements which implicate a co-accused. Those statements are
excluded
in their entirety. As such, no part of the extra-curial
statements should have been taken into account in the trial of the
appellant.
The reliance on and reference to the contact between the
appellant and Mzobe thus amounts to a misdirection on the part of the
trial court.
[7]
The state also accepted that, if no regard
is had to any part of the extra-curial statements, there is
insufficient evidence on
which to found a conviction against the
appellant. This concession is an appropriate one. If one disregards
the extra-curial statements,
the evidence relating to the appellant
comprises the following. [
K………],
who knew the appellant and whose evidence was correctly accepted by
the trial court,
testified that the
afternoon prior to the murder he saw the appellant in the company of
accused two and three and another person
approximately 1.5 km from
the scene.
Within minutes of his being seen
by [K…….] that afternoon, a gunshot was heard from
their vicinity. The further evidence
is that between 05h45 and 09h45
on the morning of the murder, the cellphone of the appellant was used
to communicate with either
accused two or three on at least 10
occasions.
That is the sum total of the
admissible evidence against him.
[8]
In addition, it was appropriate for the
trial court to find that the state had disproved t
he
defence of an
alibi
raised
by the appellant
. This defence was
decisively shown to be false by records demonstrating that the
appellant’s cellphone was used in the Port
Shepstone and
Marburg areas on the day before, and the day of, the murder. Without
an explanation by the appellant that he was
not in possession of his
cellphone that day, the inference can properly be drawn that he was
operating it at the time. His alibi
was further disproved by the
evidence of [K……..] mentioned above which placed him
near the scene of the crime during
the previous afternoon.
[9]
The trial court
recognised that the conviction of the appellant relied on
circumstantial evidence. In its judgment, it relied on
the following
dictum in
S v Reddy
& others
[3]
as to the approach to be taken as a result:

In
assessing circumstantial evidence one needs to be careful not to
approach such evidence upon a piece-meal basis and to subject
each
individual piece of evidence to a consideration of whether it
excludes the reasonable possibility that the explanation given
by an
accused is true. The evidence needs to be considered in its totality.
It is only then that one can apply the oft-quoted
dictum
in
R
v Blom
1939 AD 188
at 202-3, where
reference is made to two cardinal rules of logic which cannot be
ignored. These are, firstly, that the inference
sought to be drawn
must be consistent with all the proved facts and, secondly, the
proved facts should be such “that they exclude
every
reasonable inference from them save the one sought to be drawn”.’
The judgment,
seeking to apply this approach, concluded as follows:

In
my view the accumulative effect of the evidence and the only
reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom absent a reasonable
explanation offered by [the appellant], which supports his alibi
defence, is that [the appellant] was involved in the planning and

execution of the murder of the deceased.’
[10]
In the case against the appellant, the
state relied on the doctrine of common purpose arising from a prior
agreement between the
appellant and accused two and three (and any
others who may have been involved) to murder the deceased. This was
the only course
open to the state because it is clear that the
appellant was not one of the two assailants. The assailants were
identified as being
accused two and three.
[11]
Some general comments
concerning the doctrine of common purpose must frame this enquiry.
The requirements for a finding that there
was a common purpose were
summarised in
S v
Mgedezi & others
[4]
as follows:

In
the first place, he must have been present at the scene where the
violence was being committed. Secondly, he must have been aware
of
the assault on the inmates of room 12. Thirdly, he must have
intended to make common cause with those who were actually

perpetrating the assault. Fourthly, he must have manifested his
sharing of a common purpose with the perpetrators of the assault
by
himself performing some act of association with the conduct of the
others. Fifthly, he must have had the requisite
mens
rea
; so, in respect of the
killing of the deceased, he must have intended them to be killed, or
he must have foreseen the
possibility of their being killed and
performed his own act of association with recklessness as to whether
or not death was to
ensue.’
The
first requirement does not have to be proved when, as in this matter,
a previous agreement to commit the crime is relied upon.
[5]
The requisite elements must be proved beyond reasonable doubt in
respect of each accused.
[6]
[12]
In
Jama
the state relied on a previous agreement. The appellants had attended
a meeting which preceded the assaults for which the appellants
had
been charged. There was no reliable evidence of what took place at
the meeting and therefore no evidence that any decision
had been
taken at the meeting. The identification of the appellants as members
of the crowd present at the scene of the crime was
rejected. The
court upheld the appeals, holding that the trial court should not
have adopted a global view of the totality of the
defence cases in
rejecting the evidence of an individual accused.
[13]
Because circumstantial
evidence was relied upon in the present matter, it must be considered
whether the proved facts exclude every
reasonable influence other
than the guilt of the appellant.
[7]
A finding of guilt requires a positive answer to each component of
the following question. In the case against the appellant, did
the
state prove beyond a reasonable doubt that there was a prior
agreement to murder the deceased, that the appellant was part
of that
agreement and that, as such, he formed a common purpose with accused
two and three to do so.
[14]
The first issue, then, is whether the state
proved the existence of an agreement to murder the deceased in its
case against the
appellant. Despite the concession of the state that
if no regard is had to the extra-curial statements there is
insufficient evidence
to found a conviction against the appellant,
the state persisted in its submission that a prior agreement was so
proved. The argument
proffered in support of the submission was a
novel one. It developed along the following lines. The trial court
made findings of
fact in the case before it. This was based on
evidence which was admissible against accused two and three. Such
findings included
a finding that an agreement existed to murder the
deceased. This involved accused two and three and others. This
finding was binding
on the appellant. This is because it no longer
had the character of evidence. The fact that it and other such
findings were contained
in the judgment of the trial court converted
them into ‘irrefutable findings of fact’. These could
therefore be brought
to bear against the appellant even though the
findings could not be arrived at without regard being had to the
extra-curial statements.
[15]
This argument overlooks at least two
fundamental principles. The first is that, leaving aside agreements
or admissions of facts,
all findings of fact must be based on
evidence. There are no factual findings which can exist independently
of the evidence which
supports them. If the evidence does not support
a factual finding, the factual finding must amount to a misdirection
on the part
of a court. The second principle is that any finding
which is made against a particular accused must be based solely on
evidence
which is admissible against that accused. This is precisely
what was meant in
Jama
when the Supreme Court of Appeal emphasised the need to consider the
case against each individual accused. An example may be considered.

If accused two and three had been tried separately before the trial
of the appellant, and the same factual findings had been made
in that
trial, could findings made in their trial be applied in a subsequent
trial against the appellant? The answer is no. Those
factual findings
could not be taken into account any more than the extra-curial
statements could be ruled admissible against him.
When confronted
with this scenario, the state readily conceded this to be the case.
It was unable to distinguish the present matter.
[16]
This means that there is no evidence,
admissible against the appellant, that an agreement existed to murder
the deceased. The fact
that he was in the company of accused two and
three and that a shot was loosed off the afternoon before the crime
and that he had
a number of cellphone contacts with them on the
morning of the murder does not give rise to that inference. Still
less does it
exclude any other reasonable inference. The issue of
whether an agreement was proved does not appear to have been
considered by
the trial court. The only issue enquired into was
whether, assuming the existence of such an agreement, the evidence
went far enough
to prove that the appellant associated himself with
it. That approach, however, is to put the cart before the horse.
Before that
enquiry could be entered into it required as a foundation
the finding that an agreement had been struck to murder the deceased.

This foundation was absent. Since no such agreement was proved in the
case against the appellant, there was no evidence which could
support
his conviction. In my view, the appellant should not have been put on
his defence, let alone convicted at the end of the
trial.
[17]
In the result the following order is made:
The
appeal is upheld and the conviction and sentence of the appellant is
set aside.
GORVEN
J
DATE
OF HEARING: 25 January 2016
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 9 February 2016
FOR THE APPELLANT: X Sindane, instructed by the
Pietermaritzburg Justice Centre
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: S Sankar, instructed by the Director of Public
Prosecutions, Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal.
[1]
Mhlongo v S; Nkosi v S
2015 (8) BCLR 887
(CC).
[2]
Mhlongo
Paragraph 37.
[3]
S v Reddy & others
1996 (2) SACR 1
(A) at 8C-E.
[4]
S v Mgedezi & others
1989 (1) SA 687
(A) at
705I-706C. See also
S
v Sefatsa & others
1988 (1) SA 868
(A) at 893-901.
[5]
S v Yelani
1989 (2) SA 43
(A) at 46F-G.
[6]
S v Jama & others
1989 (3) SA 427
(A) at
436G-H.
[7]
R v Blom
1939
AD 188
at 202-3.