Abdul and Another v S (A847/12) [2015] ZAGPPHC 483 (17 June 2015)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Robbery with aggravating circumstances — Appeal against conviction and sentence — Appellants convicted of robbery and housebreaking — Evidence of single eyewitness, corroborated by recovered stolen items — Appellants' claims of coincidence and lack of involvement rejected — Court finds that contradictions in eyewitness testimony do not undermine overall reliability — Conviction upheld.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter concerned a criminal appeal in the High Court of South Africa (North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria) brought with leave of the court against both conviction and sentence imposed by the Regional Court, Piet Retief, Mpumalanga.


The appellants were Mohamed Abdul and another (two accused who remained after the discharge of others), and the respondent was the State. The appellants had been convicted of robbery with aggravating circumstances (as defined in section 1 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977) read with the minimum sentence regime in section 51(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, as well as housebreaking with intent to steal and theft. They pleaded not guilty to all charges and were each sentenced to an effective term of 15 years’ imprisonment.


Procedurally, five accused initially stood trial in the regional court. At the close of the State’s case, three accused were discharged in terms of section 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. The two present appellants also applied for discharge at that stage, but their application was refused on the basis that the State had established a prima facie case. After conviction, they appealed to the High Court.


The dispute in the appeal primarily concerned the reliability of identification evidence (the complainant being a single identifying witness), the impact of alleged contradictions in the complainant’s testimony, the consequences of the second appellant’s election to remain silent, and whether the sentencing court properly applied the minimum sentence framework and took relevant considerations into account, including time spent in pre-trial custody.


Material Facts


On 29 October 2010, the complainant, Mr Sikandar Mansur, was robbed at his shop in Market Street, Piet Retief. The robbery occurred in broad daylight. A group of approximately five men entered the shop, initially posing as customers by enquiring about prices (specifically blankets), and then returned shortly thereafter. Upon their return, Mansur was held at gunpoint, searched, and items were taken from him, including keys, a cellular phone, clothing, and approximately R300 cash. Money was also taken from the till. Mansur was tied up and had cello tape placed over his mouth. His assistant, Ms Siphiwe Cynthia Nsibande, was also held up during the robbery.


The keys taken from Mansur included keys to both the shop and his house. After Mansur was freed by his assistant, he reported the incident to the police. Later that day, and shortly after the shop robbery, Mansur’s house was broken into, and approximately R7000 and his passport (kept in a cupboard at the house) were stolen. Mansur found his home in disarray. He inferred the intruders used the stolen keys because there was no evidence of forced entry and the house had been secure when he left earlier that morning.


Two police officers, including Constable Patrick Mthombeni, searched for suspicious vehicles after receiving the robbery report. They stopped a vehicle in which the appellants were passengers. On alighting from the vehicle, Constable Mthombeni testified that he observed the first appellant throw Mansur’s passport underneath the vehicle. A search of the vehicle produced keys and foreign money, which Mansur later identified as his property. At the police station, Mansur also identified other property recovered by the police; all was returned to him except the cash and the passport.


As to identification, Mansur testified that both appellants were in the shop at the time of the robbery. He specifically implicated the first appellant as the person who searched his pockets and removed his belongings, including the keys. Mansur’s assistant could not identify any of the accused.


The first appellant’s version was a complete denial: he claimed he was never in the shop, that he first saw Mansur at the police station, and that Mansur’s identification was false. He testified that he, the second appellant (a relative), and another person hitch-hiked from Ladysmith to Piet Retief, met an unknown person to hand over various goods, and then set off towards a mosque for prayers. He stated that it was coincidental that the same driver who had earlier given them a lift picked them up again, and that further coincidentally other strangers were also picked up en route to the mosque. He denied throwing any passport under the vehicle and alleged that he was assaulted at the police station and forced to sign statements.


The second appellant elected to remain silent and called no witnesses.


Where the record disclosed inconsistencies in Mansur’s evidence, the High Court treated these as relating mainly to the number of attackers and confusion arising from how the accused were arranged in court when Mansur was asked to indicate who was present. The High Court noted the presence of interpretation issues and that Mansur sometimes attempted to answer before translation was completed. The court treated these inconsistencies as relevant to evaluation but not determinative in isolation.


Legal Issues


The central issues for determination were whether the regional court was correct to conclude that the State had proved the appellants’ guilt beyond reasonable doubt, in circumstances where:


The complainant was a single witness in relation to the identification of the appellants as participants in the robbery, and his evidence contained certain contradictions and apparent confusion.


There was corroboration, if any, sufficient to overcome the caution typically applied to single-witness identification.


The second appellant’s decision to remain silent in the face of a prima facie case could properly bear on the evaluation of the evidence.


In relation to sentence, the issues were whether the magistrate correctly applied section 51(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (the 15-year minimum sentence regime), whether there were substantial and compelling circumstances, and whether the period of 17 months spent in custody awaiting trial finalisation had been properly accounted for.


These issues involved a mixture of fact (identification, contradictions, presence and conduct), application of legal principles to fact (single-witness caution, adverse inference from silence, prima facie case evaluation), and discretionary/value judgment in sentencing within the statutory minimum sentence framework.


Court’s Reasoning


On conviction, the High Court approached the appeal by evaluating the evidence in its totality, rather than isolating contradictions. It relied on the principle stated in S v Mkhole 1990 (1) SACR 95 (A) that contradictions do not automatically justify rejection of a witness’s evidence; they may indicate error, and the trier of fact must assess their nature, number, importance, and bearing on the rest of the evidence.


Applying that approach, the court accepted that Mansur’s evidence was “not beyond criticism,” particularly regarding his varying descriptions of how many attackers were present and his initial confusion when identifying which accused were present. However, the court treated the confusion as explicable in the context of misunderstandings between the witness and the interpreter and the witness’s tendency to answer before translation, and it held that the contradictions did not materially undermine his credibility on the core issue of identification.


The court further held that the caution applicable to a single eyewitness was overcome by corroboration and surrounding circumstances that reduced the risk of mistaken identity. The factors identified by the court included that the robbery occurred during broad daylight, that Mansur had sufficient opportunity to observe the attackers, that items stolen from him (including keys) were later recovered from the vehicle in which the appellants were travelling, and that there was police evidence that the first appellant threw Mansur’s passport (stolen from the house) under the vehicle during the stop. The recovery of stolen property, together with Mansur’s identification, was treated as corroborative of the State’s account.


The court also considered the relationship between the appellants and the first appellant’s own testimony that he and the second appellant were together throughout the relevant time until arrest. Despite Mansur’s evidence identifying the second appellant as present in the shop, the second appellant did not testify. Relying on S v Chabalala 2003 (1) SACR 134 (SCA), the court reasoned that where an accused is confronted with direct, apparently credible evidence that calls for an answer, a failure to testify may leave the prima facie case “to speak for itself,” and may be “damning” in the assessment of whether reasonable doubt remains.


In response to the contention that the magistrate should have warned the second appellant about the consequences of remaining silent, the High Court referred to S v Scholtz 1996 (2) SACR 40 (NC) and held that where an accused is legally represented, there is no requirement that the trial court must warn that an adverse inference could be drawn from silence in appropriate circumstances. On the facts, the court considered the second appellant’s silence in the face of the State’s case to be significant.


On sentence, the court proceeded from the premise that the appellants were convicted under a charge implicating the minimum sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment in terms of section 51(2) of Act 105 of 1997, absent substantial and compelling circumstances. It rejected the contention that the magistrate was biased or that the sentence was otherwise “shockingly inappropriate,” concluding that the sentence was “just and reasonable” within the statutory scheme.


However, the court held that one factor had not been taken into account by the trial court, namely that the appellants had spent 17 months in custody awaiting finalisation of the case. The High Court accepted the submission that this period should have been incorporated into the effective punishment. Rather than substituting a different number of years, it addressed the omission by ordering that the 15-year sentence should run from the date of arrest.


Outcome and Relief


The appeal against conviction was dismissed. The High Court upheld the trial court’s rejection of the first appellant’s version as not reasonably possibly true, accepted the State’s evidence (including the identification and corroboration), and found that the State proved guilt beyond reasonable doubt in respect of both appellants.


The appeal against sentence was upheld to a limited extent. The sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment in respect of each appellant was confirmed, but the court ordered that it should run from the date of their arrest, 29 October 2010, to account for the period spent in pre-sentence custody.


The judgment, as provided, did not record a distinct costs order, which is consistent with criminal appeal outcomes where costs are not ordinarily awarded.


Cases Cited


S v Mkhole 1990 (1) SACR 95 (A)


S v Chabalala 2003 (1) SACR 134 (SCA)


S v Scholtz 1996 (2) SACR 40 (NC)


Legislation Cited


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 1 (definition of robbery with aggravating circumstances) and section 174


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, section 51(2)


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993, section 25(3) (referred to in the discussion of S v Scholtz)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment as provided.


Held


The High Court held that, despite certain contradictions and confusion in the complainant’s evidence, those defects were not material when assessed against the evidence as a whole. The complainant’s single-witness identification was regarded as sufficiently reliable due to the circumstances of observation and corroboration in the form of recovered stolen items and police evidence concerning the passport.


The court further held that the second appellant’s silence, in circumstances where he was legally represented and faced a prima facie case implicating him, left the State’s case effectively unanswered and could properly be weighed in determining whether reasonable doubt existed.


On sentence, the court held that the statutorily prescribed minimum sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment was appropriate on the facts and not shockingly inappropriate, but that the period of 17 months’ pre-sentence incarceration required recognition. This was achieved by ordering the sentence to run from the date of arrest.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The assessment of contradictions in a witness’s evidence requires an evaluation of their nature, number, importance, and connection to the rest of the evidence; contradictions do not automatically justify rejection of testimony and may reflect error rather than dishonesty, as applied with reference to S v Mkhole 1990 (1) SACR 95 (A).


Where identification rests on a single eyewitness, the evidence must be approached with caution, but that caution may be overcome where there is corroboration and surrounding circumstances that reduce the risk of mistaken identification, including opportunity for observation and recovery of stolen property connected to the accused.


An accused who remains silent in the face of direct and apparently credible evidence may leave a prima facie case “to speak for itself,” and the silence may be materially relevant to whether the State’s case excludes reasonable doubt, as applied with reference to S v Chabalala 2003 (1) SACR 134 (SCA).


Where an accused is legally represented, the trial court is not required to warn the accused that an adverse inference may be drawn from a failure to testify; in appropriate circumstances such an inference may be drawn without infringing the right to silence, as applied with reference to S v Scholtz 1996 (2) SACR 40 (NC).


Under the minimum sentence regime in section 51(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, a court may impose the prescribed sentence unless substantial and compelling circumstances justify deviation, and time spent in pre-trial custody is a relevant factor that should be taken into account when determining the effective punitive impact of the sentence.

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[2015] ZAGPPHC 483
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Abdul and Another v S (A847/12) [2015] ZAGPPHC 483 (17 June 2015)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(NORTH GAUTENG
HIGH
COURT)
CASE
NO:  A847/12
In
the matter between:
MOHAMED
ABDUL
+1
APPELLANT
VERSUS
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
SWARTZ
AJ
1.
With the leave of this court, the appellants appealed against the
convictions and sentence handed down against them by the magistrate

in the regional court, Piet Retief, Mpumalanga.
They
were convicted on charges of robbery with aggravating circumstances
as defined in Section
1
of Act 51 of 1977, read with the
provisions of section 51 (2) of Act 105 of 1977, and housebreaking
with the intent to steal and
theft. They pleaded not guilty to all
the charges. After conviction they were each sentenced to effectively
serve 15-year prison
sentences.
2.
Five accused initially appeared before the court
a quo.
At the
close of the case for the prosecution three of the accused were
discharged in terms of the provisions of S 174 of the Criminal

Procedure Act. The two appellants also applied for their discharge.
This was refused. The magistrate ruled that the State had proven
a
prima
facie
case against them. They were identified by the complainant
as being amongst the people who had been in his shop when he was
robbed.
3.
The State called four witnesses, being the complainant, his
assistant, one Nsibande and two police officers who effected the

arrests. The first appellant testified in his own defence and did not
call any witnesses. The second appellant chose to remain
silent and
did not call any witnesses to testify in his defence.
4.
The complainant, Mr Sikandar Mansur (Mansur), a then […..]-year­
old gentleman testified that on 29 October 2010 he
was robbed in his
shop, situated in Market Street, Piet Retief, Mpumalanga. He was held
at gunpoint and his attackers took from
him his keys, cellular phone,
clothing and approximately R300 cash. His assistant, one Siphiwe
Cynthia Nsibande was equally held
up when they were robbed by a group
of about five men.
5.
On the same day, shortly after the robbery at the shop, Mansur's
house was broken into from where R7000 and his passport were
taken.
The evidence of Mansur was that he was the owner of a certain shop.
At approximately 9hl 5 on 29 October 2010 people whom
he thought were
customers entered his shop and made enquiries about the prices of
blankets. They left and returned a short while
later. On their return
he was held up at gunpoint. The first appellant searched his pockets
and took his keys, cellular phone and
cash. He was tied up and cello
tape was placed over his mouth. Money was also taken from the till.
6.
His attackers left the shop with the items taken from him that
included a bundle of keys containing keys to the shop and his
house.
His assistant, Cynthia Nsimande untied him and removed the cello tape
from his mouth. He went to report the incident to
the police.
7.
He was in the company of the police in search of his attackers when a
report was received that certain suspects were arrested.
He returned
to the police station where he identified his property which the
police had retrieved. Everything was returned to him
except for the
cash and his passport. He kept his passport in a cupboard in his
house. The passport was taken from his house. It
was never shown to
him again.
8.
After the police handed his keys back to him he returned to his house
where he found his place in disarray. He surmised that
the persons
who entered his house used the keys to gain entry because the doors
and windows were not broken. His passport and about
R7000 was taken
from the house. His house was securely locked and everything was in
order when he left home earlier that
morning.
9.
The two appellants were in the shop when he was robbed earlier that
morning. He later saw the appellants at the police station
after
their arrest. Ms Siphiwe Cynthia Nsibande could not identify any of
the accused. Patrick Mthombeni is a Constable in the
South African
Police Services. After receiving the report of a robbery, he,
accompanied by Constable Bapela, drove around in search
of any
suspicious looking vehicles. They spotted the vehicle in which the
appellants were passengers. They ordered the driver to
stop and the
occupants thereof to alight. When getting out of the vehicle he
noticed the first appellant throw Mansur's passport
underneath the
vehicle. They searched the vehicle and found keys and foreign money
in the vehicle. Mansur later identified all
these items as his
property.
10.
The first appellant denied all knowledge of the allegations levelled
against him. He was never in Mansur's shop. He contended
that Mansur
lied when he identified the first appellant as the one who searched
his pockets and who removed his belongings. He
saw Mansur for the
first time at the police station after his arrest.
11.
According to the first appellant they were travelling from Ladysmith
and were on their way to Piet Retief. They hitch-hi ked
and managed
to get a lift from a total stranger. He was in the company of the
second appellant and accused number five. The second
appellant and he
are related and they were together throughout this time, until their
arrest. Upon their arrival in Piet Retief
they were dropped off at a
petrol garage and made their way to a taxi rank where they were to
meet another person, also unknown
to them. The purpose of their visit
to Piet Retief was to hand over to this stranger, goods which
included washing powder, school
books and school bags. Having done
this, they were heading back to Ladysmith. However, they decided to
first visit the local mosque,
for prayers.
12.
They hitch-hiked again and purely by co-incidence, the very car that
dropped them off in the first place, happened to drive
by again. The
driver of this car stopped and offered them a lift again. However,
co-incidentally, the driver of this car, whose
name they did not
know, was also on his way to the mosque for prayers.
While
travelling, the car stopped again and they gave a lift to two other
strangers who also happened to be going to the mosque
for prayers.
After driving off, the police stopped the car. They were ordered to
get out of the car and the police searched the
car. Mansur's items
were found in the car and they were arrested.
13.
At the police station they were assaulted and forced to sign
statements, which statements they signed in order to save their

lives. He denied throwing Mansur's passport underneath the car. He
never saw the passport at all and no-one confronted him about
the
passport. During cross-examination the first appellant testified that
when he hitch-hiked he was in the company of the second
appellant.
From the time of his arrival until their eventual arrest he was at
all times in the company of the second appellant.
They never parted
ways.
14.In
weighing up the evidence presented to the court, the magistrate
considered that the only evidence against the appellants was
the
evidence of Mansur who testified that he saw both of them in his
shop; that the first appellant was the one who searched his
pockets;
that the second appellant did not do anything - he was just present
in the shop; the policeman's evidence that he saw
the first appellant
throwing Manur's passport underneath the car, which happened to be
the passport Mansur kept in a cupboard in
his house; and the first
appellant's version that the events of the day was all a mere
co-incidence. He was just "at the wrong
place at the wrong
time". He and the second appellant, who are related, came all
the way to Piet Retief to bring items that
could easily have been
purchased in Piet Retief.
15.
Counsel who appeared before this court on behalf of the appellants
submitted that the magistrate erred in concluding that the
State
proved its case beyond reasonable doubt, rejecting the first
appellant's version and in convicting the appellants. He submitted

that the evidence of Mansur was tainted with contradictions and
confusion and therefore not sufficiently reliable for the court
to
rely on to convict. He refers to the confusion presented when the
witness referred to the number order in which the accused
stood
before
the magistrate and the apparent contradiction this presented.
16.
Furthermore, Counsel for the appellants argued that Mansur was a
single witness on identification and the magistrate did not
approach
his evidence with the necessary caution. He also submitted that the
magistrate should have drawn a negative inference
from the fact that
Constable Mthombeni did not show the complainant his passport when
they attended the scene. On behalf of the
respondent it was submitted
that where the evidence of a single eyewitness was corroborated in a
way which tends to indicate that
the whole story was not concocted.
The caution may be overcome and acceptance facilitated.
17.
Having regard to this, on the single eyewitness evidence of Mansur,
the caution is overcome and corroboration is found by the
fact that
the incident took place during broad daylight; Mansur's evidence that
the first appellant is the person who took his
belongings
from his pocket, amongst others his keys that were later recovered in
the car when the appellants were arrested; Mansur
having identified
the second appellant as one of the gentlemen who was present in his
shop during the robbery; the evidence of
the first appellant that he
and the second appellant were together throughout the relevant times;
the stolen items were recovered
from the
vehicle
in which they were travelling. Consequently, it was argued that the
risk of mistaken identity is reduced and corroboration
for the
evidence of Mansur is found.
18.
This court is in total agreement with these submissions made on
behalf of the respondent. Ms Siphiwe Nsibande did not identify
any of
the accused. Mr Mansur is a single eyewitness on identification. The
court is mindful of the fact that his evidence I not
beyond
criticism. On a question by the magistrate of how many attackers were
present, his answer was that there were four gentlemen
who entered
his shop and asked for the price of the blankets.
19.
0n a question by the prosecutor he said there were four gentlemen
with the one who asked for the price of the blankets,
meaning five
people. Later he testified that there were "three plus one"
gentlemen in the shop. During the trial there
were five accused
present in the court. The witness was asked who of the accused were
not present during the incident. His initial
response was that it was
accused numbers
1,
2 and 4. It however transpired that he
counted the accused the wrong way around.
20.0n
behalf of the second appellant it was submitted before us that, if
Mansur indeed started counting the wrong side it would
in reality
mean that it was accused 5, 4 and 2 that were not present. The
prosecutor was still confused and suggested that it was
accused 2, 4
and 5 that were not present. The witness contradicted himself, so it
is submitted, by stating that accused number
4 was present in the
shop.
21
.The question for consideration by this court is whether the
contradiction is material in nature when consideration is had to
the
totality of the evidence presented, and not considering
contradictions in isolation.
See:
S v
Mkhole
1990 (1) SACR
95
(A)
"Contradictions
per
se
do not lead to the rejection of witness'
evidence; they may simply be indicative of an error. Not every error
made by a witness
affects his credibility; in each case the trier of
fact has to make an evaluation, taking into account such matters as
the nature
of the contradictions, their number and importance, and
their bearing on other parts of the witness' evidence".
22.The
contradictions of Mansur did not affect his credibility as a witness.
It may be indicative of an error. What is also obvious
from the
record is the initial misunderstanding between Mansur and the
interpreter and the magistrate's observation that the witness
tried
to answer questions even before it was translated to him by the
interpreter, and that is why there was at some stage
misunderstandings.
23.Despite
the evidence of Mansur that the second appellant was in the shop,
coupled with the evidence of the first appellant that
he
and
the second appellant were together at all relevant times up until
their arrest, the second appellant elected to remain silent.
Thus,
the state's
prima facie
case against him was left
unchallenged and to speak for itself.
See:
S.v
Chabalala
2003
(1) SACR
134
(SCA):
"The appellant had
been faced with direct and apparently credible evidence which had
made him the prime mover in the offence.
He had also been called upon
to answer evidence of a similar nature relating to the parade. Both
attacks had been those of a single
witness and capable of being
neutralised by an honest rebuttal.
There
could be no acceptable explanation for him not rising to the
challenge ....to have remained silent in the face of the evidence
had
been damning. He thereby had left the
prima facie
case
to speak for itself. The court was bound to conclude that the
totality of the evidence taken in conjunction with his silence

excluded any reasonable doubt about his guilt'.
24.The
second appellant was legally represented. There was no need for the
magistrate to warn him of the risks involved in leaving
the
prima
facie
evidence presented by the prosecution against him
unchallenged. See:   S
v
Scholtz
1996 (2) SACR 40
(NC),
where, in an appeal against their
conviction in a regional court it was contended on behalf of
10
the
appellants that the magistrate had erred constitutionally in that he
had drawn an adverse inference from the appellants' failure
to
testify. It was contended that the appellants' right to silence as
contained in s 25 (3) of the Constitution, Act 200 of 1993
had been
infringed. The Court held that an accused's right to silence at the
end of the State's case did not prevent the court
from drawing an
adverse inference against the accused in certain circumstances. In
the instant case the appellants had been represented
during their
trial and it was accordingly not necessary for the court to have
warned them that the court could draw an adverse
inference from their
silence.
25.Accordingly,
the appellants' appeal against their conviction is dismissed. This
court agrees that the version of the first appellant
is not
reasonably possibly true and is rejected as false. The second
appellant was in the company of the first appellant at all
relevant
times. All the stolen items were recovered from inside the vehicle
in
which the appellants were travelling when arrested. There was no
problem with the identification of the appellants. The incident

happened during broad daylight. Mansur had opportunity to see the
faces of the appellants when he was robbed. He had enough time
to
make the necessary identification. The respondent had proven its case
against the first and second appellants beyond reasonable
doubt.
26.The
appellants were convicted of robbery with aggravating circumstances
read with S 51 (2) of Act 105 of 1997 which makes provision
for a
minim um sentence of 15 years imprisonment unless there are
substantial and compelling circumstances present. It was
11
contended
on behalf of the appellants that the magistrate was biased against
them and did not investigate whether there was such
circumstances
present.
27.We
are satisfied that the sentence imposed by the magistrate was
correct. It is not shockingly inappropriate but just and reasonable.

The appellants spent 17 months in custody awaiting the finalisation
of the matter. This factor was not taken into consideration
by the
court
a quo.
We agree with the submissions of counsel for the
appellants that the time spent in custody should have been
incorporated in the
sentence accordingly.
ORDER
.
1.
The appeal against conviction is dismissed.
2.
The appeal against the sentence succeeds and in its place it is
ordered that the 15-years imprisonment in respect of both
the
appellants is to run from the date of their arrest, 29 October 2010.
E SWARTZ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I
agree
T A MAUMELA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT