S v Van Staden (105/2007) [2008] ZANCHC 45; [2008] 3 All SA 476 (NC); 2008 (2) SACR 626 (NC) (28 March 2008)

80 Reportability
Criminal Procedure

Brief Summary

Criminal Procedure — Right to appeal — Missing record of proceedings — Accused convicted of murder and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment; application for condonation and leave to appeal lodged three years after conviction without adequate explanation for delay — Court held that the unavailability of the record and the accused's failure to comply with procedural requirements precluded the exercise of the right to appeal, leading to the setting aside of the conviction and sentence.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter was a special review in the High Court of South Africa (Northern Cape Division, Kimberley), concerning the effect of a missing trial record on an accused’s attempt to pursue condonation and leave to appeal against sentence.


The parties were Frans Van Staden (the appellant/accused) and the State (respondent). The judgment was delivered by Olivier J, with Lacock J and Williams J concurring.


The procedural history was central to the court’s inquiry. The accused had been convicted of murder on a guilty plea and sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment by a regional court on 8 February 2002. Years later, he attempted to initiate appellate steps out of time and sought condonation. At that point it emerged that the record of the regional court proceedings was missing and could not be reconstructed. The matter reached the High Court on special review after the regional magistrate apparently adopted the position that the conviction and sentence should be set aside simply because the record was unavailable.


The general subject matter of the dispute was the interaction between (i) the constitutional right to a fair trial, including a fair appeal process, and (ii) the requirements for a valid, enforceable appellate right, especially where an accused’s own delay is implicated in the practical impossibility of adjudicating an appeal due to an absent record.


Material Facts


The following facts were treated as material by the court and were largely undisputed.


On 8 February 2002, the accused was convicted of murder in the regional court after pleading guilty and was sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment. Despite this, he took no timeous steps to appeal.


A notice of appeal was only lodged with the Registrar of the High Court on 3 June 2005, approximately three years and four months after conviction and sentence. No application for condonation accompanied this late notice of appeal.


In April/May 2006, the accused lodged an application for leave to appeal and condonation with the Clerk of the Magistrates’ Court, Upington. In February 2007, he again signed documentation for leave to appeal and condonation, which was received by the clerk on 11 April 2007. The judgment recorded that it was unclear why no further steps followed the April/May 2006 filing; the accused gave no explanation and, in argument, it was incorrectly suggested on his behalf that no earlier application had been made before February 2007.


The court accepted that the trial record was missing and that it could not be reconstructed. The judgment noted there was no evidence the record had been destroyed, and it was not known when it went missing; it might have occurred soon after sentencing. However, the court regarded it as a matter of logic that a timeous appeal would probably have enabled reconstruction from the recollection and notes of the magistrate, prosecutor, accused, and his trial representative.


The accused’s explanation for the late steps was consistently vague. In 2006 he attributed the delay to “gevangenis probleme” and “gevangenis omstandighede” without elaboration. In the later affidavit he similarly referred to “gevangenis omstandighede buite my beheer” and asserted he only learned “at a later stage” how appeals work, without stating when. The court considered it significant that he had been legally represented at trial and was represented when he eventually appeared before the regional magistrate on the condonation/leave issues.


The application for leave to appeal was directed only at sentence, but the court accepted that, given the state of the record, if rescission were to be ordered it would likely entail the setting aside of the conviction as well, because sentence could not properly be considered in isolation without the relevant record.


It was placed on record that witnesses were still available, and that a fresh prosecution could technically follow if proceedings were set aside, but the court considered that a retrial after such a lapse of time would likely prejudice State witnesses, particularly if evidence on the merits became necessary.


Legal Issues


The central questions concerned the proper response where a criminal appellant seeks to pursue condonation and leave to appeal but the trial record is missing and cannot be reconstructed.


The court had to determine, as a matter of law applied to fact, whether the mere absence of a record automatically required the setting aside of conviction and sentence, or whether such relief depends on whether the accused had a valid and enforceable right of appeal that was genuinely frustrated through no fault (or no substantial fault) of the accused.


A further question concerned the correct procedural order in circumstances where the record’s unavailability prevents adjudication of prospects of success on condonation and leave to appeal. This required an evaluative judgment about whether, in an appropriate case, an application should be struck from the roll, refused, or whether the underlying proceedings should be set aside.


Finally, the court confronted a value-laden assessment balancing the constitutional fair-trial and appeal interests against the public interest in finality, and whether an accused can rely on constitutional protections where the inability to proceed is materially attributable to the accused’s own inordinate and unexplained delay.


Court’s Reasoning


The court accepted the constitutional premise that the right to a fair trial includes the right of appeal or review, as guaranteed by section 35(3)(o) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. It further accepted the general line of authority that if an appellate or review court is not furnished with a proper record, the right to a fair appeal can be infringed and setting aside the proceedings may be the only way to protect that right, particularly where reconstruction is impossible.


However, the court emphasised that the loss or incompleteness of the record does not automatically entitle an accused to have the conviction or sentence set aside. Such relief is tied to the frustration of a valid and enforceable appeal right. The existence of that right depends on the accused acting with due diligence, complying with time limits and procedural requirements, and, where those requirements are not met, furnishing an adequate basis for condonation.


The court located these requirements within the statutory framework for criminal appeals from the magistrates’ courts. It stressed that an accused must apply for leave to appeal within the prescribed period, and must advance proper grounds for complaint, failing which condonation becomes necessary. Where condonation is sought, a sufficiently detailed and persuasive explanation for non-compliance is required; in the court’s view, a bare reference to prison conditions, without elaboration, could not satisfy that threshold.


The judgment acknowledged the rationale underlying the “missing record” remedy: the State bears responsibility for keeping proper trial records and an accused should not lose appellate rights because the State failed in that duty. At the same time, the court cautioned that an approach that ignores procedural diligence would undermine the finality of criminal proceedings and create an untenable situation in which an accused could disregard the rules, delay for years, and then claim an appeal right was frustrated once records become irretrievable or reconstruction becomes impracticable.


A central theme in the court’s reasoning was blameworthiness (or contribution) by the accused. Drawing on authority recognising the significance of fault, the court reasoned that even if it could not be shown that the accused caused the record to go missing, the accused’s inordinate delay could be causally linked to the impossibility of reconstruction. After a lengthy lapse of time, it is unrealistic to expect judicial officers and other participants to recall details adequately or to reconstruct proceedings reliably, and this practical barrier is precisely what time limits are designed to avoid. On the facts, the court regarded it as a matter of simple logic that a timeous attempt to appeal would likely have made reconstruction possible.


Applying these principles to the present matter, the court found the delay extraordinary and the explanation entirely inadequate. The accused waited years before taking steps and then provided only vague references to prison conditions and late understanding of appeal procedures, without meaningful detail. The court noted that the accused had legal representation at trial and when he eventually pursued the condonation/leave process, which undermined any suggestion that he was unable to act earlier due to ignorance of procedure.


The court also considered (without purporting to determine the merits) that even if the record had been available, it was unlikely that the accused’s stated grounds would have presented such compelling prospects as to outweigh the defective explanation for the delay. More fundamentally, however, the court criticised an approach that would refuse condonation based on “insignificant” prospects where prospects could not be evaluated at all due to the missing record; it regarded that as artificial because it compares an unknown (prospects on the record) with known factors (delay and explanation).


Turning to the appropriate order, the court preferred the approach that where the accused is substantially to blame for the inability to adjudicate the application (because the delay renders reconstruction impossible), the application should be struck from the roll. This was presented as procedurally cleaner than a merits-based refusal of condonation in circumstances where the record might later be found and where prospects could not currently be assessed.


The court then formulated a broader approach for such cases: the court considering the matter should determine whether the accused is to blame for the unavailability of a reconstructed record and, if so, to what extent. If the accused is substantially to blame, striking the matter from the roll is appropriate because the application cannot be entertained and the accused is responsible for the impasse. Only where the accused is not to blame might the setting aside of conviction or sentence be justified, in which event special review should be pursued for such relief.


Finally, the judgment addressed systemic concerns about record-keeping failures in the relevant magistrates’ court office and indicated that it was not in society’s interest for convictions and sentences to be set aside due to administrative laxity. This concern informed the court’s direction that the judgment be brought to the attention of the Director-General: Justice and Constitutional Development.


Outcome and Relief


The High Court substituted the regional magistrate’s contemplated approach with an order that the accused’s application for condonation and for leave to appeal is struck from the roll.


The court further directed the Registrar to furnish the Director-General: Justice and Constitutional Development with a copy of the judgment.


No separate order as to costs was recorded in the judgment.


Cases Cited


S v Sebothe and Others 2006 (2) SACR 1 (T)

S v Collier 1976 (2) SA 378 (C)

S v Quali 1989 (2) SA 581 (E)

S v Mcophele 2007 (1) SACR 34 (E)

S v Miggel 2007 (1) SACR 675 (C)

S v Talenyane 2006 (2) SACR 153 (O)

S v Appel 2004 (2) SACR 360 (E)

S v Fredericks 1992 (1) SACR 561 (C)

S v K 1991 (2) SACR 190 (B)

S v Ntantiso and Others 1997 (2) SACR 302 (E)

S v Leslie 2000 (1) SACR 347 (W)

S v Zondi 2003 (2) SACR 227 (W)

S v Carter 2007 (2) SACR 415 (SCA)

S v Mohlathe 2000 (2) SACR 530 (SCA)

S v Di Blasi 1996 (1) SACR 1 (A)

S v Thobakgale and Others 1998 (1) SACR 703 (WLD)

S v Lesala and Another 2002 (2) SACR 8 (OPD)

S v S 1995 (2) SACR 420 (T)

S v Marais 1966 (2) SA 514 (T)

S v Joubert [1990] ZASCA 113; 1991 (1) SA 119 (AD)

Makhudu v Director of Public Prosecutions 2001 (1) SACR 495 (SCA)

S v Mantsha 2006 (2) SACR 4 (CPD)

S v Shiteni 1978 (4) SA 156 (SWA)

S v Haarmeyer 1970 (4) SA 113 (O)

Cairn’s Executors v Gaarn 1912 AD 181

S v Ackerman 1965 (4) SA 740 (O)

S v Ndlovu 1978 (3) SA 533 (T)

Shinga v The State and Another (Society of Advocates (Pietermaritsburg Bar) intervening as Amicus Curiae); S v O’Connell and Others 2007 (2) SACR 28 (CC)

S v Masuka and Others 1985 (3) SA 908 (AD)

Sanderson v Attorney-General, Eastern Cape 1998 (1) SACR 227 (CC)

S v Legote en ‘n Ander 1999 (1) SACR 269 (O)

S v Heslop 2007 (1) SACR 461 (SCA)


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act 108 of 1996), section 35(3)(o), section 11, section 12, section 25, section 198(a), section 205(3)


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 309B(1)(b)(i), section 309B(1)(b)(ii), section 313 read with section 324


Magistrates’ Courts Act 32 of 1944, section 7


Rules of Court Cited


Magistrates’ Courts Rule 67(1)


Held


The court held that the absence of a trial record, even where reconstruction is impossible, does not automatically justify setting aside a conviction or sentence. Relief of that nature is tied to the frustration of a valid and enforceable appeal right.


The court held that where an accused has delayed inordinately and provides an inadequate explanation, and where that delay materially contributes to the practical impossibility of reconstructing the record, the accused cannot properly contend that the right of appeal is being frustrated in a manner warranting rescission.


In such circumstances, the appropriate procedural consequence is that the application for condonation and leave to appeal should be struck from the roll, rather than the conviction and sentence being set aside.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A missing or incomplete record that makes it impossible for an appellate or review court to adjudicate an appeal can infringe the constitutional right to a fair trial, which includes the right of appeal or review. Where reconstruction is impossible and the accused is without fault, setting aside the proceedings may be the only avenue to protect that right.


The mere loss or incompleteness of the record does not, by itself, entitle an accused to rescission. The remedy depends on whether a protectable appeal right exists, which in turn depends on compliance with procedural requirements and time limits or, where non-compliance occurred, the furnishing of an adequate basis for condonation.


An application for condonation requires a sufficient, detailed explanation for delay or procedural non-compliance. Vague, unelaborated references (including generalised “prison conditions”) were treated as inadequate in this case.


Where the accused’s inexcusable delay contributes materially to the fact that the record cannot be reconstructed, the accused is substantially to blame for the inability to adjudicate the condonation/leave process. In such circumstances, the court endorsed a procedural approach of striking the application from the roll, reserving the exceptional remedy of setting aside proceedings for cases where the accused is not to blame for the state of affairs.


The court reaffirmed that the constitutional fair-trial framework must be applied alongside the public interest in the finality of criminal proceedings and fairness to the administration of justice, and should not be applied in a way that facilitates abuse where procedural neglect by the accused is the source of the impasse.

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[2008] ZANCHC 45
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S v Van Staden (105/2007) [2008] ZANCHC 45; [2008] 3 All SA 476 (NC); 2008 (2) SACR 626 (NC) (28 March 2008)

Reportable:
YES / NO
Circulate
to Judges: YES / NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES / NO
Circulate
to Regional Magistrates: YES / NO
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(Northern Cape
Division)
Case
Nr:
105/2007
Case
Heard:
18/03/2008
Date
delivered:
28/03/2008
In
the matter between:
FRANS
VAN STADEN APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Lacock J et Williams J et Olivier J
JUDGMENT
ON SPECIAL REVIEW
Olivier J:
The accused was
convicted on a charge of murder (to which he had pleaded guilty) and
sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.
The
case has now been submitted for special review, on the basis that
the accused had lodged an application for condonation and
for leave
to appeal against the sentence, and that the record of the trial
proceedings is missing and cannot be reconstructed.
The regional
magistrate has apparently adopted the attitude that the conviction
and sentence should without further ado be set
aside because of the
unavailability of the record or a reconstruction thereof.
The
constitutional right of an accused to a fair trial includes the
right of appeal (see
s
35(3)(o)
of
the
Constitution, 108 of 1996
).
Where
an accused has the right to appeal and a missing or incomplete
record makes it impossible to consider and adjudicate such
appeal,
the conviction or sentence will often be set aside.

The
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, provides
,
inter
alia,
through s 35, that an accused person has a right to a fair trial,
which includes the right to appeal or review. If the appeal
Court or
the review Court is not furnished with a proper record of
proceedings, then the right to a fair hearing of the appeal
or review
is encroached upon and the matter cannot properly be adjudicated. In
that regard, the only avenue open to protect the
right of the accused
or the appellant is to set aside those proceedings if it is
impossible to reconstruct the record.”
Per
Mavundla
J
in
S
v Sebothe and Others
2006 (2) SACR 1
(T) at paragraph [8]
(
see
also
S
v Collier
1976 (2) SA 378
(C),
S
v Quali
1989 (2) SA 581
(E),
S
v Mcophele
2007 (1) SACR 34
(E),
S
v Miggel
2007 (1) SACR 675
(C),
S
v Talenyane
2006 (2) SACR 153
(O),
S
v Appel
2004 (2) SACR 360
(E),
S
v Fredericks
1992 (1) SACR 561
(C) and
S
v K
1991 (2) SACR 190
(B)).
The mere fact that the
record of the proceedings might be lost or incomplete would not,
however, automatically entitle an accused
to the setting aside of a
conviction or sentence.
Such
relief will only be granted where a valid and enforceable right of
appeal is frustrated by the fact that the record is
lost or
incomplete
and
cannot be reconstructed
(see
S
v K, supra
,
at 192i-194b,
S
v Ntantiso and Others
1997 (2) SACR 302
(E) and
S
v Leslie
2000 (1) SACR 347
(W) at 353D-E).
Prerequisites
for such a right of appeal are:
that
such
right is
“exercised
with due diligence”
and that the rules and legislation regarding,
inter
alia
,
time limits are adhered to (see
Constitutional
Criminal Procedure; A Commentary on the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa, 1996
,
Steytler (1998), p 397 and
S
v Zondi
2003 (2) SACR 227
(W) at 241b-c) and failure to do so may in some
cases be viewed as an abandonment of the right to appeal (see
S
v Carter
2007 (2) SACR 415
(SCA) at 421c-d and
S
v Ismail
,
in-fra
,
at p 5);
that
the accused appl
ies
for leave to appeal within the prescribed period of 14 days after
sentence (see
s
309B(1)(b)(i)
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
and
Shinga
v The State and Another
(
Society
of Advocates (Pietermaritsburg Bar) intervening
as
Amicus
Curiae
);
S
v O’Connell and Others
2007 (2) SACR 28
(CC); and
that
the
accused advances
“his reasons or grounds for complaining that he was wrongly
convicted”
(see
S
v Zondi, supra
,
at 240i-241b).
5.3.1 W
here
an accused has failed to adhere to the prescribed time limit for
the lodging of an application for leave to appeal, condonation

would be required; the granting of which would then amount to leave
to proceed with the late application for leave to appeal
(see
s 309B(1)(b)(ii)
of
the
Criminal
Procedure Act
).
W
here
condonation is required, the reasons for the failure to comply
with the applicable rules or legislation need to be sufficiently

explained (see
S
v Mohlathe
2000 (2) SACR 530 (SCA) at 535g-536a and
S
v Di Blasi
1996 (1) SACR 1 (A) at 3f-h).
In
S
v Thobakgale and Others
1998 (1) SACR 703 (WLD) Flemming DJP succinctly summarised the
position of an accused who has failed to take timeous steps
to
appeal and who requires condonation (at 710C):

When
a party wishes to appeal after expir
y
of the limited time, he no longer has a ‘right’ to
appeal. The Court is dealing with the resuscitating of a right
which
perished.”
Although
the judgment has in some cases no
t
been followed in other respects, this approach has not been
challenged (compare also
S
v Lesala and Another
2002 (2) SACR 8 (OPD) at 11c-d).
It
will, however, for purpose
s
of this judgment be accepted that the right to apply for
condonation would also be a feature of an accused’s right
to
a fair trial.
The
underlying rationale for the
fact that the setting aside of a conviction or sentence would be
competent relief where the record of the trial proceedings is
lost
or incomplete (and cannot be reconstructed), is that the State is
burdened with the responsibility of keeping proper record
of trial
proceedings and that an accused’s right to a fair trial (and
therefore also the right of appeal) should not be
frustrated by the
State’s failure to do so (see
S
Zondi, supra
,
at 243i-244b and
S
v S
1995
(2) SACR 420 (T) at 424b).
As
already stated t
here
can, however, only be a protectable right of appeal (or to apply for
condonation) where the accused has complied with the
applicable
rules and legislation or, if not, is able to furnish a sufficient
explanation for such failure. It would lead to
an untenable
situation, where finality in criminal proceedings is indefinitely
delayed, if accused persons were to be allowed
to blatantly
disregard the law and then still claim that a right of appeal has
been frustrated by the loss of the record of the
trial proceedings.
At
the same time
it
should be kept in mind that crime affects fundamental rights like
the right to life, the right to freedom and security of the
person
and the right to property (see ss 11, 12 and 25 of the
Constitution). South Africans have the right to
“live
in peace and harmony”
and
“to
be free from fear”
(see
s
198(a)
of
the
Constitution
).
The objects of the police service
“to
prevent, to combat and investigate crime, to maintain public order,
to protect and secure the inhabitants of the Republic
of their
property, and to uphold and enforce the law”
(see
s
205(3)
of
the
Constitution
),
and the effective execution thereof, are also relevant factors that
should be taken into account. The interests of society,
and of
those responsible for the enforcement of the law, should therefore
not be lost sight of.
T
he
fact that an accused himself/herself is to blame for the situation
that, at the stage when steps are eventually taken to appeal,
the
record is not available and cannot be reconstructed, should
therefore in my view in any event be a relevant consideration
in
deciding whether the unavailability of the record (and the fact that
the application for condonation and for leave to appeal
therefore
cannot be considered) has led to a failure of justice which would
justify the setting aside of a conviction or sentence.

A
similar impasse – a lost record with no prospect of
reconstructing one – arose in
S
v Marais
1966 (2) SA 514
(T). That being the situation, the Court at 516 G-H
observed that:

The
appellant has been seriously frustrated and prejudiced
owing
to a fault on the part of the State’s servants
.
She is entitled to an appeal as of right. She is entitled to
receive a copy certified as correct. This cannot be achieved.
She
has been frustrated in a basic right. She has been deprived of this
through
no fault of her own
.
In all these circumstances the only thing to do is to exercise the
powers granted in s 98 of Act 32 of 1944, as amended, and
to set
aside the whole of the proceedings’
And at 517A-B the
judgment proceeded:

If
during a trial anything happens which results in prejudice to an
accused of such a nature that there has been a failure of justice,

the conviction cannot stand. It seems to me that if something
happens, affecting the appeal, as happened in this case, which makes

a
just hearing of the appeal impossible,
through
no fault on the part of the appellant,
then likewise the appellant is prejudiced, and there may be a failure
of justice. If this failure cannot be rectified, as in this
case, it
seems to me that the conviction cannot stand, because it cannot be
said that there has not been a failure of justice.’
In
the result in that case the proceedings
in the magistrate’s court were set aside, and – it
followed – the conviction and sentence were likewise rescinded.

I endorse what was said in the quoted passages from that judgment …”
(My own emphasis)
Per
Kumleben
JA
in
S
v Joubert
[1990] ZASCA 113
;
1991 (1) SA 119
(AD) at 126E-I.
The
relevance of blame on the part of the accused in
such cases was again emphasised in
Makhudu
v Director of Public Prosecutions
2001 (1) SACR 495
(SCA) at 499b.
The facts of the
present matter are as follows:
The appellant was
convicted and sentenced on 8 February 2002.
No
steps were taken to appeal, until a notice of appeal was lodged
with the Registrar of this Court on 3 June 2005; in other
words
approximately three years and four months after the conviction and
sentence. The accused never applied for condonation
for the late
filing of the notice of appeal.
It
was not until April/May 2006 that the accused lodged an application
for leave to appeal, as well as an application for condonation,

with the
Clerk
of the Magistrates’ Court, Upington.
In
February 2007 the accused again signed documentation (for an
application for leave to appeal and for condonation), which

documentation was received by the said Clerk on 11 April 2007.
It
is not clear why no further steps
were
taken in respect of the notice of appeal and the application lodged
in April/May 2006. The accused has not explained this
and has made
no mention thereof. In fact, in argument on his behalf before the
matter was submitted for special review, it
was for some reason
stated that the accused had not, before February 2007, applied for
leave to appeal.
Due
to the fact that
I was concerned that an appeal against the sentence might already
have been heard and finalised, my secretary went through
the
records of the Registrar. No trace of any such appeal could,
however, be found.
In
his application of April/May 2006 the
only reason advanced by the accused for the delay (at that stage of
more than four years) was that it had been caused by
“gevangenis
probleme”
and
“gevangenis
omstandighede”
.
This was never elaborated upon or explained and could quite
obviously not be regarded as a proper explanation for the delay.
In
his most recent affidavit, after a lapse of five years since the
date of his sentence, the accused once again simply stated
that the
delay had been caused by
“gevangenis
omstandighede buite my beheer”
.
He also stated that he had only
“op
‘n latere stadium verneem … hoe appèlle werk”
,
but failed to explain when that was. It bears mentioning that the
accused had been legally represented at the trial, as well
as when
he finally appeared before the regional magistrate to apply for
condonation and leave to appeal.
The
fact of the accused’s completely inadequate explanation for
the delay, as well as the extraordinary length of the delay
(even if
only until the notice of appeal was filed), would in my view in any
event have militated against the granting of condonation.

The delay
involved here in noting the appeal is an inordinately long one –
more than four years.
The
failure to comply with Magistrates’ Courts Rule 67(1) timeously
is therefore gross. The longer the delay, generally speaking
the
more reluctant will a Court of appeal be to condone it and the more
persuasive will the explanation for the delay have to
be before
condonation can be granted.
In
this case the explanation is, in my view, far from satisfactory or
persuasive. In fact, in my opinion it is totally inadequate.
One of
the reasons why Magistrates’ Courts Rule 67(1) was worded as it
was, was to avoid the very kind of situation which
has arisen here,
where
after the lapse of a very long time the record of the trial
proceedings has been lost, or parts of it have been lost, and they

cannot at this stage easily be reconstructed.
In
terms of s 35 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,
1996
,
the appellant is entitled to a fair trial, and that includes a fair
appeal, but there is another side to that coin. The State
is also, I
think, entitled to expect to be treated by the courts with a modicum
of fairness. It would simply not be fair to the
State, nor to the
Magistrate, for that matter, in my view, to permit the appellant, in
the circumstances of this case, where the
record has been lost, to
wait more than four years to note his appeal, without a very good
explanation for the inordinate delay.”
(My own emphasis)
Per
Thring
J
in
S
v Mantsha
2006 (2) SACR 4
(CPD) at 7a-e.
Although
the initial delay of almost t
hree
and a half years in this case might have been slightly shorter than
that in
S
v Mantsha, supra
,
the explanation proferred therefor in this case has even less merit
than the explanation in that matter.
Although
it might be argued that the regional magistrate would not have been
able to consider the accused’s prospects of
success on the
merits without the record, it is extremely unlikely that the grounds
of appeal advanced by the accused would (even
if the record or a
reconstruction had been available) have shown such strong prospects
of success as to outweigh the inadequacy
of the explanation for the
delay (see
S
v Thobakgale and Others, supra
,
at 707e).
Apart
from the question whether the accused would have been entitled to
condonation, it would not be in the interests of justice
and of the
society that a convicted person who has caused or contributed to the
fact that not even a reconstructed version of
the record is
available, should be entitled to have his or her conviction or
sentence in respect of such a serious crime set
aside.

Die
feit dat die oorkonde in die onderhawige geval tans nie meer bestaan
nie en dat daar tans ook nie ‘n sekondêre notule
van die
oorspronklike verrigtinge saamgestel kan word nie, is egter geheel en
al te wyte aan die beskuldigde se eie skuld. Die
beskuldigde het
naamlik vanaf 30 Junie 1975 tot 2 Februarie 1978, d w s vir ‘n
tydperk van meer a
(s)
twee jaar en sewe maande, gewag alvorens hy besluit het om ‘n
Regter-sertifikaat … aan te vra. (Hierdie sertifikaat
is
toegestaan). Die beskuldigde se versuim kom neer op ‘n totale
miskenning of verontagsaming van die stelreël
interest
rei publicae ut sit finis litium
(vgl
S
v Haarmeyer
1970 (4) SA 113
(O) te 115A). Die beskuldigde het hom klaarblyklik
berus by sy twee skuldigbevindings en vonnisse; vgl
Cairn’s
Executors v Gaarn
1912 AD 181
te 187 en
S
v Ackerman
1965 (4) SA 740
(O) te 746H-747E.
Hierdie berusting
blyk ook uit sy geheel en al onbevredigende verklaring vandag in
hierdie Hof aangaande waarom hy nie eerder appèl
aangeteken
en/of om ‘n Regter-sertifikaat gevra het nie.”
Per
Lichtenberg
AJ
(as he then was) in
S
v Shiteni
1978 (4) SA 156
(SWA) at 158A-D.
(compare
S
v Sebothe and Others, supra
,
at 3d)
It
is so that t
he
present matter can to a certain extent be distinguished from
S
v Shiteni, supra
.
Here there is no evidence that the record was destroyed. It is in
fact not known exactly when the record or the tapes went
missing.
It might have happened very shortly after the accused was sentenced.
There is therefore no basis for blaming the accused
for the fact
that the record cannot be found at this stage.
It
is, however, a matter of simple logic that, had the accused taken
timeous steps to appeal, a reconstruction of the record would
in all
likelihood have been possible. Had the accused taken steps within
two weeks, or even within a year, the magistrate, the
prosecutor,
the accused and his erstwhile legal representative would in all
probability have been able, if not individually then
at least among
themselves, to reconstruct a record from notes, or even from memory.
The accused had after all pleaded guilty
and there would not have
been any evidence (apart from his plea explanation) as far as the
conviction is concerned.
It
is precisely because of the long delay that one cannot at this stage
realistically expect the magistrate or any of the other
parties
concerned to make any meaningful contribution towards the
reconstruction of the record or to remember any details of
the trial
(see
S v Quali, supra
,
at 582i-j and
S
v Talenyane, supra
,
at paragraph [10]).
It
is to prevent such a
situation,
and to ensure that criminal proceedings are brought to finality as
soon as possible, that a time limit for the filing
of an
application for leave to appeal has been enacted and effectively
approved by the Constitutional Court in the
Shinga
case referred to above.
It
should also be kept in mind that the Director-General:
Justice and Constitutional Development determines the period for
which records have to be preserved and when they can be destroyed

(see
s
7
of the
Magistrates’
Courts Act, 32 of 1944
).
If
the mere filing of an application for leave to appeal and for
condonation would entitle an accused to the setting aside of

his/her conviction or sentence where no record of the trial
proceedings is available (and no reconstruction is possible),
irrespective of the reason for the delay in lodging such
application and of the question whether the accused might be to

blame for the fact that no such record is available and that no
reconstruction is possible, it could lead to an abuse of the
process and a travesty of justice.
I
have to add, however, that the order issued by the Director-General
in this regard in 1986 (and which is apparently still
applicable)
is to
the
effect that, where proceedings had been recorded mechanically (but
no transcription had been made) and where imprisonment
of more than
2 years had been imposed, the tapes will not be erased and the case
record will not be destroyed before the expiration
of such term of
imprisonment.
Where
less than 2 years imprisonment had
in such circumstances been imposed, the record will be destroyed
and the tapes erased after 2 years. Theoretically speaking
such an
accused would be entitled to apply for condonation and leave to
appeal even after the expiry of the sentence (even
if only not to
have a criminal record). If the fact that the record had been
destroyed would then automatically entitle such
an accused to the
setting aside of his or her conviction and sentence, this would
clearly lead to an untenable situation.
It is also extremely
unlikely that the State would in such a case again institute a
prosecution.
The
accused in this matter clearly has no explanation or excuse for the
delay. He therefore
has himself to blame for the delay. He is therefore equally to
blame for the fact that the record could not be reconstructed,

because it is clear that the inability of those concerned to
reconstruct the record was caused by the delay.
If
the route of rescission
is
to be followed in this case the result will be that, even though the
application for leave to appeal was only directed against
the
sentence, the conviction will also have to be set aside, because
without that part of the record concerning the conviction
it will be
impossible to deal with the issue of sentence (see
S
v Ndlovu
1978 (3) SA 533
(T)).
It
was placed on record that the witnesses are still available and
technically speaking the accused could in such an event again
be
prosecuted (see
s
313
,
read with
s
324
,
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act
,
S
v Zondi, supra,
at 250i-251a and
S
v Quali, supra
,
at 584 C-D).
In
view of the fact that the accused is now only prepared to admit
having inflicted one stab wound (while the body of the deceased
had
two stab wounds) it would, in the event of a rescission of the
conviction, in all probability be necessary for the prosecutor
to
present evidence on the merits. I think it goes without saying that
the lapse of such a long time since the trial (let alone
since the
incident) will prejudice the state witnesses.
In
any event, the setting aside of either the conviction or sentence
under these circumstances (even if it is to be accepted that
an
accused’s basic right to a fair trial should generally take
precedence over the interests of the society in the finalisation
of
criminal trials) would in my view not be in the interests of
justice:

Since
time immemorial it has been an established principle that the public
interest is served by bringing litigation to finality
and, of course,
quite apart from the general public, there are individuals with
a
very special interest in seeing the end of a criminal case.
Conscientious judicial officers, prosecutors and investigating
officers
are therefore always mindful of the interests of witnesses,
especially complainants, in bringing a case to finality.”
Per
Kriegler
J
in
Sanderson
v Attorney-General, Eastern Cape
1998 (1) SACR 227 (CC) at 244H-245A.
(compare
also
S
v Legote en ‘n Ander
1999 (1) SACR 269 (O) at 273g-h)
Had
the
re
been an acceptable explanation for the delay, and therefore in
effect also for the resultant impossibility of reconstructing
the
record, the position may have been different.
Mrs
Erasmus, who appeared on behalf of the accused
pro
amico
and to whom we are indebted for her efforts, suggested that a
liberal approach should be adopted in applications for condonation

in criminal matters, that the accused would therefore have been
granted condonation and that he would accordingly have been able
to
have his appeal adjudicated, had it not been for the missing record.
I
am afraid that it is not that simple. Even though applicants in
criminal matters are often not legally represented, they still
have
to furnish a sufficient explanation for the fact that the relevant
provisions have not been complied with.

In matters of
this kind, due allowance must of course be made for the fact that the
lay accused concerned has been unrepresented
for all or part of the
relevant time. Consequently, purely superficial and technical
imperfections and lapses in procedural steps
taken by such an accused
are usually more readily condoned than they would have been had he
been represented by a legal practitioner
throughout. However, there
is a limit to the lengths to which a Court of appeal can go in
relaxing the Rules and granting condonation
to those who flagrantly
fail to comply with them. It is not, and has never been, the
position in our law that whilst the relevant
Rules apply to
appellants who are represented, they do not apply to others who are
not. That would be a quite untenable and unjustifiable
stance to
adopt. Nevertheless, sitting in criminal appeals week after week in
this Court, one cannot help forming the impression
from what is
sometimes advanced on behalf of appellants that that, or something
like that, is the stance which this Court is from
time to time
invited to adopt. I firmly decline the invitation. The Rules are
for all litigants. They must be adhered to by
all litigants. That
is the basic principle which applies.”
Per
Thring
J
in
S
v Mantsha, supra
,
at 6e-h.

There
is currently a great misconception amongst accused and indeed some
practitioners that condonation is there for the taking
…..”
Per
Kgomo
JP
in
S
v Ismail
,
an unreported judgment on review in this division under case no K/S
20/2001 (delivered on 9 February 2007) at p4.
I
am aware of the judgment in this division in
S
v Moya
(review case no 68/07), in which a conviction of murder and a
sentence of 15 years imprisonment were set aside because the accused

had filed an application for condonation and leave to appeal, and
where the record was also lost (or missing). Although it appears

from the judgment that there had been a delay of five years in
filing that application, the judgment does not reflect what the

explanation for the delay was. The question whether the accused
himself might have been to blame for, at the very least, the
fact
that the record could not be reconstructed, does not appear to have
been raised or considered.
The
question whether an accused, whose inexcusable delay in advancing an
appeal or review has led to the situation where the record
is no
longer available and, more importantly, cannot be reconstructed
(because the presiding officer and other Court officials
cannot
realistically be expected to recall details of the proceedings after
an inordinate long delay), would nevertheless be
entitled to
rescission, was also not raised or considered in any of the cases
referred to in paragraph 4 above, or to which we
were referred by
mrs Erasmus.
In
my view an accused who has without sufficient explanation not
complied with the applicable rules and legislation and who is
also
himself/herself to blame for the situation that an appeal cannot be
considered, can surely not be heard to say that his/her
right of
appeal is being frustrated.
This
brings
me to the question of what order the regional magistrate could or
should have made and whether the matter should be remitted
for that
purpose.
In
the matter of
S
v Mantsha, supra
,
Thring J eventually refused condonation on the basis that the
inadequacy of the accused’s explanation for the delay
caused
any possible favourable prospects of success (that may have emerged
from the record) to
“fade
into insignificance”
(at 7f-g).
In
my view such an approach would, with respect, be legally unsound
and artificial. The fact is that the prospects of success
were not
considered and could therefore not have been regarded as
insignificant
,
or even have been compared to any other factor. It would quite
simply be impossible to subject an unknown to a comparison
with a
known fact (compare
Makhudu
v Director of Public Prosecutions, supra
,
paragraph [8]).
Had
the record been available it could conceivably have appeared that
the accused in fact had excellent prospects of success
with the
application for leave to appeal, and eventually with an appeal
(compare
S
v Masuka and Others
1985 (3) SA 908 (AD) at 912H).
This
brings me to the second problem that I have with the approach
adopted in
S
v Mantsha
.
In the matter at hand, like in
S
v Mantsha
,
the record is merely missing. There is no indication of it having
been destroyed or that it could not at some later stage
be found.
In
fact, that is precisely what happened in
S
v Moya
,
referred to above, where the record was discovered after the
conviction and sentence had already been set aside.
Should
the record be found after an application for condonation had
already been refused, and it should then appear that the
accused in
fact has excellent prospects of success, it could be argued that
the accused would not be entitled to lodge another
application for
condonation.
In
my view the better approach would be th
e
one adopted in
S
v Shiteni, supra
,
where the appeal was struck from the roll because the accused was
himself to blame for the fact that no record was available
for the
purposes of the appeal. Here there is no record, making it
impossible to consider the prospects of success with the
application
for leave to appeal and, therefore, to adjudicate the application.
The
accused has already stated on oath what his explanation for the
delay (and, in effect, for the resulting impossibility of

reconstruction) is. It was never suggested to the regional
magistrate that there might be another or better explanation for

condonation.
It
would therefore serve no purpose to remit the matter to the regional
magistrate. The
“explanation”
tendered by the accused was obviously devoid of any merit and,
because he had only himself to blame for the fact that it was

impossible to produce at least a reconstruction of the record for
the purposes of an application for condonation and for leave
to
appeal, the order the regional magistrate should, in my view, have
made, was to strike the application from the roll.
To summarise, I am of
the view that the proper approach in cases where the unavailability
of at least a reconstructed record renders
it impossible to finalise
an application for condonation (and leave to appeal), would be to
determine whether the accused is
to blame for this and, if so, to
what extent.
This
would probably appear from the explanation in the application for
condonation, because it would be the same delay that resulted
in the
impossibility of at least reconstructing the record. If not, the
accused and his/her legal representative should be afforded
the
opportunity of explaining why the delay and the resulting
impossibility of reconstruction should not be attributed to the

accused.
Should
it then appear that the accused is substantially to blame for this,
the proper order would be to strike the matter from
the roll (on the
basis that the application cannot be entertained without the record
and the accused is to blame therefore).
Only
in the event of it appearing that the accused is not to blame for
this state of affairs, would the setting aside of a conviction
or
sentence possibly be justified, in which case the presiding officer
must then submit the matter for special review and for
consideration
of such relief.
It is not clear why no
further steps were apparently taken following the filing of the
notice of appeal or the application of
April/May 2006.
In
my view it cannot, however, be expected of this Courts to speculate
about whether the record would have been available at
any of those
stages. Even if it had, the inordinate length of even those
delays, the inadequacy of the accused’s explanation
(in the
case of the notice of appeal there was in fact no application for
condonation and therefore no explanation at all)
and the
improbability that the grounds of appeal advanced by the accused
would have shown such strong prospects of success
as to outweigh
the lack of a sufficient explanation for the delay, would have
militated against the granting of condonation.
I
am nevertheless of the view that the Registrar should investigate
this to ensure that criminal appeals do not become lost
in the
system and are processed and finalised as speedily as possible (see
S
v Heslop
2007 (1) SACR 461 (SCA)).
In conclusion
reference has to be made to the fact that it appears from remarks by
the regional magistrate in this matter that
poor administration in
the offices of the Upington Magistrates’ Courts led to the
loss of not only this record, but numerous
other records as well.
He
states that the custody and control of records have become chaotic
and out of control and that this state of affairs is caused
by
personnel of that office who neglect to replace records properly
and who, as soon as some order is restored,
“krap
alles weer om en los dit net so.”
It could never be in
the interests of society at large, not to mention those involved in
the fight against crime, that convictions
and sentences are set
aside and that criminals are set free because of laxity and poor
administration.
I
therefore intend directing that his judgment be brought to the
attention of the Director-General: Justice and Constitutional

Development.
In
the premises I
would
make the following orders:
The order made by
the regional magistrate is substituted with the following order:
The
application
for condonation and for leave to appeal is struck from the roll.
The Registrar is
directed to furnish the Director-General: Justice with a copy of
this judgment.
________________________
C J OLIVIER
JUDGE
NORTHERN CAPE
DIVISION
I
agree
and it is so ordered:
________________________
H J LACOCK
JUDGE
NORTHERN CAPE
DIVISION
I
agree
:
________________________
C C WILLIAMS
JUDGE
NORTHERN CAPE
DIVISION
For the
Plaintiff:
Adv
S L Erasmus
Instructed
by:
KIMBERLEY
For the
Respondent: Adv A H van Heerden
On
behalf of
: Director
of Public Prosecutions, KIMBERLEY