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[2016] ZAGPPHC 576
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Masako v S (A437/2015) [2016] ZAGPPHC 576 (7 March 2016)
I
N
THE HIGH
COURT OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A437/2016
DATE:
7 JULY2016
In
the matter between:-
ITUMELENG
DAVID MASAKO
Appellant
and
THE
STATE Respondent
J
U D G M E N T
Ismail
J:
Background
[1]
This is an appeal against both conviction and sentence from a
decision of the trial court presiding at Pretoria North. The
appellant was convicted of two counts of theft and sentenced to 18
months imprisonment on each count. The sentence imposed was suspended
for 5 years on condition that the appellant is not convicted of an
offence involving dishonesty committed during the period of
suspension.
[2]
The appellant was a public prosecutor, who prosecuted in the
specialized criminal court dealing with negligent and reckless
.
Driving offences. The charges emanated in that the appellant,
allegedly in a corrupt manner, received monies from two members
of
the public, on two separate occasions for admission of guilt fines.
It was alleged that he controverted the amounts by reducing
the
admission of guilt fines on he face of the docket and appropriating
the difference for himself. The difference being the original
amount
and the amount which he reduced.
[3]
The appellant was charged with two separate counts of corruption and
several alternative counts as well as two counts of fraud
and two
counts of theft.
[4]
The appellant conduced his own defence, during the trial. Similarly
he presented his own case before us on appeal. The Appellant
has an
LLB degree and he was two master degrees.
[5]
He was given a discharge in respect on the corruption charges and the
alternatives thereto, at the end of the prosecution's
case, in terms
of
section 174
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
[the CPA].
[6]
At the end of the trial he was convicted of the theft charge where Mr
Mpho Malangeni was the complainant, which it is alleged
occurred on
the 12 September 2005 and the second theft charge where Mr Baloyi was
the complainant
[7]
Leave to appeal to this court was granted by the trial court in
respect of both conviction and sentence.
[8]
The record of the proceedings contains some 1283 folios. Many pages
thereof relate to arguments pertaining firstly to a contempt
of court
proceeding, as the appellant failed to attend court on a certain day.
Much of volume 1 of the transcript related to that
issue. The record
also contained diverse pages relating to an argument advanced when
the application for a discharge at the end
of the prosecution's case
was sought. The same applies to the arguments which were advanced at
the end of the evidence prior to
the court delivering its judgment.
[9]
I do not propose to deal with those aspects which the appellant was
acquitted of in terms of the provisions of
section 174
, nor the
application for. contempt proceedings at the outset of the record.
What needs to be mentioned is that the trial was characterised
by
cantankerous behaviour on the part of the appellant and he was warned
several times by the magistrate that his behaviour was
contemptuous
of the court. He insinuated that the Pretoria North Court was known
for being racist and biased and for that reason
his case was being
heard in that forum. Reading through the record one notes that the
magistrate's patience was dearly tested and
that the presiding
officer demonstrated great restraint and patience. clearly tested and
that the presiding officer demonstrated
great restraint and patience.
The
conviction
[10]
I will now plunge into the two convictions relating to the theft
charges which the appellant was convicted on.
[11]
The theft charge where Mr Malangeni was the complainant, in summary,
was as follows:
(i Mr Malangeni was
involved in a motor collision and he was summoned to appear in.
court. He was represented by The Legal Aid
practitioner and through
his attorney he agreed to pay an admission of guilt fine. [AOG] .
(ii)
according to Mr Malangeni he gave the appellant the sum of R1 500, 00
as payment for t he AOG;
(iii)
the appellant gave him a note which, appears on page 1089 of the
record, wherein the details of the appellant were noted
and the
following was written by the appellant -
' 'finalised-paid
R1
500'
"
'
(iv) Mr Malangeni left
court labouring under the impression that he had paid this amount
as an admission of guilt and that it
was the end of the matter;
(v) Mr Andrew Lebese a
court interpreter and the cousin of Mr Malangeni, who knew of the
case of Mr Malangeni, enquired from the
latter what transpired in
his matter. Mr Malengeni told him that he paid AOG and showed Mr
Lebese the note appearing on page
1089.
(vi)
Mr Labese told his cousin that the note was not a receipt and that he
would enquire about the matter. He contacted the appellant
as well
as the clerk of the court and discovered that an official receipt
in the sum of R800, 00 was issued in respect of the
matter.
(vii)
this set the cat amongst the pidgeon's and it culminated in a
complaint being laid against the appellant ; ·
(viii)
the second
count of theft pertains
to the
theft of
money from Mr
Happy Funya
Baloyi [Baloyi]. According to Mr Baloyi .
he
appeared in
Pretoria
court J on
the 9
December 2005;
(ix)
on
that
day
he
intended
to
pay an
AOG
fine
and
he spoke
to the
appellant. The appellant told him
that the
AOG would be for
an
amount
of
R1 500.
The
complainant
told
him
that
he
only
had R500 on
him.
The
appellant told him
to give
him
the
money
and
he would postpone the matter. On the next appearance he should
bring the balance.
(x)
on the subsequent date of the hearing .when Mr Baloyi
appeared in court the magistrate enquired whether Mr Baloyi
intended to pay an admission of guilt or whether he
intended to
plead not
guilty;
(xi) on that day the prosecutor was not the appellant but another
colleague, Mr Baloyi explained that he already paid the sum
of
RSOO as AOG.
(xii)
on the file an endorsement was made that the admission of gu!!t in
the matter was set at R1 000,00;
(xiii)
the magistrate stood the matter down and advised the prosecutor to
take up the issue with his seniors;
[12]
The summary appearing above, is in essence the prosecution's case
against the appellant, relating to the charges against him.
[13]
Several other witnesses gave evidence during the trial, however they
were in the main personnel and colleagues of the appellant
who were
involved as a consequence of the reports which were made by the
complainants against the appellant. Their evidence did
not take the
merits of the two complainants any further than to set out how the
appellant was charged and persecuted.
[14]
The cross examination of the various prosecutors was hostile and one
of them was blatantly called a racist and others were
even called
incompetent.
The
discharge Application
[15]
The appellant submitted that he did not receive a fair trial as the
magistrate did not apply the principles of a discharge
properly in
view of the Constitutional era. The magistrate applied the law on
this aspect in terms of the pre Constitutional period
by relying on S
v Shuping
1983 (2) SA11( B).
The
magistrate, he submitted, should have applied the law in terms of S
v
Lubaxa
2001 (2) SACR 703
at 707d-708b. The appellant
submitted that he should have been discharged on all counts including
the theft and fraud charges.
[16]
I do not agree with the appellant's submission on this ground in view
of the fact that the magistrate acquitted the appellant
on the
corruption charges and its alternative counts. The reasoning of the
court a
quo
was that in the light of the evidence of Mr
Malangeni and Mr Baloyi there was a prima facie case which called for
a response.
[17]
I am in agreement that the failure to grant a discharge on those
counts did not equate to the appellant not receiving a fair
trial.
Credibility was considered by the court and the magistrate was of the
view that the evidence at that stage was not so weak
and brittle that
no reliance could be attached thereto.
[18]
The provision of
section 174
stipulate that at the end of the
prosecution's case the court
may
and not must, grant a
discharge. This will clearly require an analysis of the evidence
presented at that stage of the proceedings
requiring a cognitive
thought process in assessing the evidence
vis a vis
the
charge(s) the accused is confronted with. In the final analysis, to
determine whether a reasonable court -at that juncture could,
in the
absence of other evidence, convict.
[19]
The appellant relied upon the following authorities dealing with the
notion of a fair trial:
Key v
Attorney
General, Cape Provincial Division
[1996] ZACC 25
;
1996 (4) SA 187
(CC) and S
v
Zuma
[1995] ZACC 1
;
1995 (2) SA 642
(CC).
In so far as the failure to discharge the appellant on the remaining
counts at the end of the state's case is concerned I
do not believe
that upon a cautious perusal of the record that the magistrate's
refusal to grant a discharge on those counts violated
the appellant's
right to a fair trial. - See
S
v
May
2005 (2)
SACA 331 (SCA)
[20]
The right to a fair trial resurfaced again as the appellant submitted
that the magistrate did not assist him as an unrepresented
accused
who conducted his own case as he should have. In the judgment at page
1000 of the record the magistrate stated: -
"one
of the
reasons
he
said
the court did not
explain
his rights
to him and
that
his
rights
were
therefore
breached.
However, during
the
trial
Mr
Masako
boasted that
he
has a master's
degree in Jaw
and
a/so a master's
degree in
music
and he
was
busy
with hi second
master's
degree
and that he can train prosecutors and magistrates because of
h
is
superior knowledge of the
law.
n
This
begs the question whether a magistrate should assist a person such as
the accused, who has legal qualifications and who defended
himself,
in
a.
criminal trial. In my view a person's qualifications, should not
dictate whether assistance is to be rendered or should not disqualify
an unrepresented accused from receiving assistance from the court. I
am of the view that a court should intervene in the interests
of
justice. In
R
v
Herholdt
1928 AD
265
at 277 the court stated that:
"A
criminal trial is not a game where one side is entitled to claim the
benefit of any omission or mistake made by the other
side, and a
judge's position in a criminal trial is not merely that of an umpire
to see that the rules of the game are observed
by both sides. A Judge
is an administrator of justice, he is not merely a figure head, he
has not only to direct and control the
proceedings according to
recognised rules of procedure but to see that justice is done."
The
accused's attack on colleagues and the court
[21]
The conduct and remarks which the appellant made about the court and
some of his colleagues, to say the least, were improper
and uncalled
for. To simply brush it aside on the basis that those comments were
made in the heat of the battle is unacceptable.
Trials should be
conducted in a dignified manner notwithstanding the system being as
being adversarial
[22]
He referred to the Pretoria North court as being well known for being
racist, since a white magistrate period and the prosecutor
was also
white.
He
also referred to his colleague, Mr Coetzer, as being anti-social and
a racist :-
"I
want to put it to you in clear and equal terms, you were anti social.
You do not socialise with people of black colour.
Thabo was not even
assisting you, because you Thabo was allocated to prosecutors in that
court, not to Masaka, but you because
of your racist tendencies you
did not want to use him and Thabo will come and testify to that. Do
not hide behind the truth. You
are racist. That is basically it. You
do not like black people like myself and it should be on record. You
have never been friendly
at any given time, and you were not I will
also call other prosecutors I worked with in that court. They will
come talk about it.
You are friends with only white. I am not even, I
will come to that yes. You are basically what I said and I repeat it,
you are
racist. In other words you have preferential treatment and
you are a back stabber, because of your racist tendencies"
[23]
The accused also stated:
"He
is the one who is irregular, because if you are a prosecutor who is
racist, then there will not be any objectiveness and
partically. You
will treat accused based on their colour and that is anti-norms and
values."
Theft
charge - Mr Malangeni was the
complainant.
[24]
· The evidence of Mr Malangeni was that he on each occasion
when he came to court he was accompanied by his sister.
No statement
was taken from the sister regarding the occurrence at court and more
particularly about the money. Whether it was
given to the appellant
or not. She did not testify. Equally important is the fact that Mr
Malengeni contradicted himself in respect
of the money. Initially he
stated he withdrew the money from the bank thereafter he stated he
obtained it from friends and family.
If the money was withdrawn from
the bank or ATM, a receipt would have been sufficient proof of the
amount in question. Where the
money was obtained from is an important
factor and yet he contradicted himself on this crucial point.
[25]
More significantly the appellant at the outset suggested that his
assistant in court, Thabo, accompanied Mr Malangeni in order
to pay
the AOG fine. Thabo was not called by the prosecution nor was a
statement ever taken from him. In this regard the question
to be
asked is whether theaccused version regarding how the money was paid
was reasonably possibly true. See: S
v Mafiri
2003 (2)
SACR 121
SCA par [9]-[13].
[26]
The prosecution, knowing what the accused version was, failed to call
Thabo to testify. Instead the appellant called Thabo
to testify on
his behalf. No
onus
rested on the accused to call, Thabo,
however he was compelled to call him.In S
v
Mcrae
&
another
[2014] ZASCA 37
at par
[28]
Wallis JA stated
'Where
an appeal is being argued one expects the prosecutor to do so in an
objective and fair manner and, if satisfied that the
conviction is
flawed, to draw the attention of the court, particularly where the
flaw goes to the heart of the fairness."
In
the appeal before us, Mr Wilsenach conceded that Thabo's evidence was
vital, and I complement him on his candour and frankness.
This begs
the question why was this same approach not followed at the hearing.
The failure to call or even worse to obtain a statement
from Thabo
was significant, and the appellant was compelled to call him.
[27]
The magistrate alluded to the contradiction between the appellants'
evidence and Mr Thabo Mabetoa's evidence. The following
appears from
the judgment at page1024 (lines 9-25)
'So
it confirms the evidence of Mr Baloyi. Now Mr Masako put it to the
witnesses, Malangeni, that Malangeni gave the money to Thabo,
the
paralegal who went to pay the admission of guilt but because of the
fact that he was In a hurry and he could not wait and
he was annoying
Mr Masako, he gave him the To whom it may concern
(
sic)
and asked him ' How much did you pay?' and he said R1 500.00 and
he wrote his name end telephone number on it now, Mr Mabetoa, Thabo
Mabetoa, he differs. He said he never received money from the accused
person and went along to pay the admission of guilt. He just
accompanied them there and then they paid the admission of guilt
fine. And just took the charge sheet there so that the charge
sheet
does not get lost and then the two receipts, one goes to the accused
who paid and the other one is attached to the charge
sheet. So Mr
Mabetoa repudiates Mr Masako's evidence of what Mr Masako said what
happened. So the court is then satisfied that
the defence case, in
the light of all the evidence is not reasonably possibly true and it
is rejected as false..."
The
appellant's version was rejected because of the contradiction alluded
to. Nothing is said about the lady who accompanied Mr
Malangeni to
court on each occasion; the contradiction about the money referred to
above or why the state failed to call Mr Mabetoa,
Mr Malangeni was a
single witness who testified for the prosecution when there were two
other witnesses who could have either corroborated
his version or
gainsay it. Neither of the two persons were called by the prosecution
to testify, nor were there any statements
taken from them.
Theft
Mr Baloyi the
complainant.
[28]
On this count the appellant was convicted for having received R500,
00 from Mr Baloyi. The details of the appellant appeared
on the phone
belonged to Baloyi.
[29]
It was submitted that Mr Baloyi immediately upon the magistrate
enquiring, in the court where he appeared, responded that he
already
paid R500.00. It vas submitted that he responded spontaneously and
that it was the truth. It was suggested that if he were
lying he
could just as well have said he paid a R1 000, 00 or R1 500,00.
[30]
Mr Baloyi was a single witness and the explanation for having the
telephone number of the appellant on his phone was due to
the fact
that his employer wanted a receipt. He went back to the appellant and
that is when he got the numbeL If Baloyi said to
the appellant my
employer seeks a receipt for the R500, 00 it boggles the mind why the
appellant would give him his telephone details
instead of a note or
receipt. This aspect of the evidence is dealt with on the record at
page 343 (line 3-20)
[31]
Mr Baloyi was a single witness and his evidence was disputed by the
appellant. In view of the two mutually contradictory versions
the
court ought to have applied the law as set out in S
v
Saban
1992(1) SACR 199(A) f-h by examining the probabilities and
bearing in mind that the
onus
was on the prosecution to prove
its case beyond reasonable doubt.
[32]
It needs to be mentioned that the fact that the appellant was charged
with two separate counts of theft, one cannot thereby
reason that the
one incident 'corroborated' the other or that they are similar.
[33]
On the second count one is dealing with the evidence of a single
witness and the cautionary rule therefore applied. I am not
convinced
that the prosecution had established the accused guilt beyond
reasonable doubt. There exist a strong suspicion that Mr
Baloyi's
story has a ring of truth, however a person cannot be found guilty on
the premise of a mere suspicion, there has to be
satisfactory
evidence leading to such a finding.
[34]
For the reasons stated above I will recommend that the appellant's
convictions not be upheld as his version is reasonably possibly
true
on the count where Mr Malangeni was the complainant. On the charge
where Mr Baloyi is the complainant, the state failed to
prove its
case beyond reasonable doubt.
[35]
The appeal therefore succeeds. The conviction and sentence in respect
of both counts are set aside.
M
Ismail J
Iagree
PD
Moseamo AJ
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellant: In person
For
Respondent: Adv. Wilsnach from the office of the DPP
Date
of hearing: 1 February 2016
Date
of judgment: 7 March 2016