S v Kamte and Others (540/90) [1992] ZASCA 45 (27 March 1992)

78 Reportability
Criminal Procedure

Brief Summary

Criminal Procedure — Disclosure of evidence — Duty of prosecutor to disclose discrepancies — Appellants convicted of murder and related offences — Key witness's prior statement to police contained discrepancies regarding the identity of an accomplice — Prosecutor failed to disclose the statement to the defence, impeding effective cross-examination — Irregularity found to have compromised the fairness of the trial — Convictions set aside due to the failure to ensure a fair trial.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter was a criminal appeal to the Supreme Court of South Africa (Appellate Division) arising from convictions entered in the Eastern Cape Division, where the three appellants had been tried before Sutej J and assessors on a charge of murder.


The parties were T E Kamte (first appellant), N Gwebani (second appellant), and N B Nomeva (third appellant) as appellants, with the State as respondent. The appeal was heard by E M Grosskopf, Vivier, and Van den Heever JJA, with judgment delivered by Grosskopf JA.


Procedurally, after conviction and sentence in October and November 1989, an application to the trial judge resulted in a special entry being made on the record. Leave was granted to all three appellants to appeal against their convictions, and to the first appellant to appeal against sentence. The appellate court addressed, first, the complaint embodied in the special entry, which alleged an irregularity in the conduct of the trial related to prosecutorial disclosure and access to a prior police statement of the State’s principal eyewitness.


The dispute concerned the fairness of the trial proceedings, specifically whether the State’s failure to make available a witness’s prior police statement (after disclosing a serious discrepancy between that statement and the witness’s testimony) constituted an irregularity resulting in a failure of justice, requiring the convictions to be set aside. The appeal also implicated the evidential foundation for the third appellant’s conviction, which rested primarily on his own statement against the backdrop of the irregularity affecting the eyewitness evidence.


Material Facts


On the morning of 19 November 1985, the deceased, Andries Mentoor (a coloured man), was killed in the Mlungisi Black Township in Queenstown. He suffered multiple head wounds causing, among other things, a skull fracture, and was subsequently burnt. Initially, the police had no leads as to the perpetrators.


In March 1988, approximately two and a half years after the incident, Miss Nontuthuzelo Solani approached the police and reported that she had been an eyewitness to the killing. A statement was taken from her on 11 March 1988. The first and second appellants were arrested on 28 March 1988.


According to Miss Solani’s trial evidence, shortly before 7 a.m. on the morning of the incident she heard shouting that there was a coloured person. She observed the deceased emerging from a shop while people said he should be beaten and set alight, and stones were thrown at him. She testified that three persons ran toward the deceased from her direction, namely the first appellant, the second appellant, and a person named Phumzile. On her account, as they approached, the second appellant went into a house, the first appellant turned back before reaching the deceased and was not seen again by her, and Phumzile stabbed the deceased, who fell. A tyre was brought, and the second appellant emerged with a bottle containing liquid, placed the tyre on the deceased, poured the liquid over him, and set it alight. Miss Solani stated that the deceased was still “screaming, struggling and talking” while bystanders sang, until a police vehicle arrived and the crowd dispersed.


A key feature, treated by the appellate court as central, concerned the identity of “Phumzile.” In her trial evidence and cross-examination, Miss Solani maintained that she did not know Phumzile’s surname, and denied having provided the surname “Sijila” to the police, asserting that she had only described him and indicated he was a friend of the appellants.


However, in a pre-trial reply to a request for further particulars, the State had alleged that the appellants’ responsibility arose from common purpose, and that the parties to the common purpose included the accused and Phumzile Sijila, together with others unknown to the State. A man named Phumzile Sijila had indeed been arrested with the first appellant but was released after confirming that he had been in gaol in Queenstown at the time of the offence, giving him what the court described as a cast-iron alibi.


While Miss Solani was still testifying, the prosecutor informed the court that, after consultation with the Attorney-General and deputies, he was instructed to place on record that the surname “Sijila” appeared in Miss Solani’s police statement, and in fact appeared more than once. The prosecutor nonetheless refused to make the statement available to the defence.


The first and second appellants testified to alibis, denying that they were at the scene of the murder at all. The trial court treated Miss Solani as a single witness implicating them, found her sufficiently reliable, rejected their alibis, and convicted them.


The third appellant stood in a different position. Miss Solani did not identify him as a participant. His conviction depended mainly on a statement recorded by a magistrate on 9 June 1988, handed in by the prosecutor without objection (but without consent). In that statement he described hearing shouting about a coloured man, picking up an iron object resembling an axe, striking the coloured man once on the shoulder, and running away; he later heard people asking what had burnt and later learned a coloured man had been burnt. The appellate court noted that the statement did not specify the date or place, that the time mentioned (“about 5.00 in the morning”) differed materially from the timing of other evidence, that Miss Solani did not describe such a shoulder blow, that the medical evidence did not reveal an injury consistent with it, and that much of the statement was hearsay concerning subsequent burning.


Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the prosecutor’s refusal to provide Miss Solani’s prior police statement to the defence, after conceding that it contained a serious discrepancy with her testimony (the repeated use of the surname “Sijila” despite her denial), constituted an irregularity in the proceedings and, if so, whether it resulted in a failure of justice requiring the convictions to be set aside.


This issue was primarily a question of law and criminal procedure, involving the application of established principles governing prosecutorial duties and fair trial requirements to the facts of the trial record. It also involved an assessment of the likely effect of the non-disclosure on the evaluation of a witness’s credibility and reliability, which is an application of law to fact.


A further issue, particularly affecting the third appellant, was whether his conviction could stand where the evidential basis was largely his own statement of uncertain linkage to the charged incident, and where the irregularity affecting the only eyewitness narrative potentially impacted the overall fairness and reliability of the conviction.


Court’s Reasoning


The appellate court treated the governing legal principles as settled, relying on S v Xaba 1983 (3) SA 717 (A). It extracted from that authority the rule that when a State witness’s trial evidence reveals a serious discrepancy with a prior police statement, the prosecutor is obliged not only to disclose the fact of the discrepancy but, save for special circumstances not relevant, also to make the statement available to the defence for purposes of cross-examination. A failure to observe this duty constitutes an irregularity for purposes of section 317(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. The seriousness of a discrepancy was framed as existing whenever there is a real possibility that probing it by cross-examination could adversely affect the trial court’s assessment of the witness’s credibility and reliability.


On the facts, the court considered it difficult to doubt that the discrepancy concerning “Sijila” was serious. The record indicated that the statement appeared to place Phumzile Sijila at the scene with the first and second appellants, yet Phumzile Sijila had an incontrovertible alibi and was released. In oral evidence the witness shifted to a different Phumzile of unknown surname as the assailant. The appellate court reasoned that if the witness’s evidence could be shown to be false in relation to Phumzile Sijila’s identity, it was unlikely the trial court would have accepted her testimony against the first two appellants, who had denied participation. The court also noted that the record showed her evidence was not free of blemishes, and that further cross-examination might have materially impaired her credibility.


The State contended on appeal that by informing the court that “Sijila” appeared more than once in the statement, the prosecutor had substantially complied with the duty described in Xaba, and that the defence could infer what the discrepancy was and cross-examine effectively without the statement itself. The appellate court rejected this contention. It held that even if this were the only discrepancy, cross-examination would have been more effective if the defence had the statement in hand, enabling confrontation with the precise wording, frequency, and context of the disputed name, as well as questions about signature and whether the witness had read or had the statement read back to her. The court expressed the view that where a serious discrepancy exists, there is no satisfactory substitute for producing the statement to the defence.


The State further attempted to justify the refusal by explaining that the Attorney-General’s instructions were based on concerns that the witness was frightened of retaliation, nervous in the witness box, and that the defence might prolong cross-examination in a hair-splitting manner. The appellate court found these reasons unsustainable. It emphasised that Miss Solani was the only witness implicating the first two appellants, making her cross-examination central to the defence case, and that if cross-examination exceeded permissible limits the trial court could protect her. It held it was not for the Attorney-General to refuse disclosure on the premise that the court would not manage cross-examination appropriately.


Having found an irregularity, the court considered whether it resulted in a failure of justice under section 322 of the Criminal Procedure Act. In relation to the first and second appellants, the irregularity directly implicated the credibility of the only eyewitness tying them to the crime. The court concluded that a failure of justice was clear and their convictions could not stand.


As to the third appellant, the court held that Miss Solani’s evidence remained important because she was the only eyewitness describing the incident; without her evidence, the remaining evidence was essentially medical and scene evidence, plus the third appellant’s statement. The court then scrutinised the third appellant’s statement and found it materially vague and potentially disconnected from the charged offence, noting discrepancies in time, the absence of supportive medical findings, and the presence of hearsay elements. The court indicated that, even on the record as it stood, doubt might arise whether the statement related to the offence charged. It further reasoned that had the irregularity not occurred, further cross-examination of Miss Solani on her statement might have elicited facts making it unlikely that the third appellant had participated in the incident she described. On that basis, the court concluded that the irregularity also resulted in a failure of justice in respect of the third appellant’s conviction.


Outcome and Relief


The appellate court upheld the appeals of all three appellants. It set aside their convictions and sentences.


No separate order on costs was recorded in the judgment.


Cases Cited


S v Xaba 1983 (3) SA 717 (A)


Legislation Cited


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 317(1)


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 322


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that where a State witness’s evidence reveals a serious discrepancy with a prior police statement, the prosecutor must disclose the discrepancy and, absent special circumstances, must make the statement available to the defence for cross-examination. The failure to produce Miss Solani’s statement after acknowledging that the surname “Sijila” appeared repeatedly in it constituted an irregularity.


The court held further that the irregularity resulted in a failure of justice because Miss Solani was the only witness implicating the first and second appellants, and the withheld statement bore directly on her credibility. The convictions of the first and second appellants were therefore set aside.


In relation to the third appellant, the court held that the irregularity also produced a failure of justice because the eyewitness narrative was central to assessing whether the third appellant’s own statement related to the charged offence and whether he participated in the incident described. His conviction was likewise set aside.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A prosecutor is under a duty, when a State witness’s trial evidence reveals a serious discrepancy from a prior police statement, to disclose the discrepancy and, save for special circumstances, to provide the prior statement to the defence for purposes of cross-examination. This duty is treated as an aspect of procedural fairness in criminal trials.


A discrepancy is regarded as serious when there is a real possibility that probing it through cross-examination could adversely affect the trial court’s assessment of the witness’s credibility and reliability.


Failure by the prosecution to comply with this duty constitutes an irregularity in the proceedings for purposes of section 317(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977.


Where such an irregularity results in a failure of justice, an appellate court may set aside convictions under section 322 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, particularly where the irregularity bears directly on the credibility of a decisive witness or undermines the reliability of the evidential basis for conviction.

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[1992] ZASCA 45
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S v Kamte and Others (540/90) [1992] ZASCA 45 (27 March 1992)

saak No 540/90
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between:
T E KAMTE
1st Appellant
N
GWEBANI
2nd Appellant
N B NOMEVA
3rd Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
CORAM: E M GROSSKOPF, VIVIER,VAN DEN HEEVER, JJA
HEARD
: 12 March 1992
DELIVERED:27 March 1992
JUDGMENT E M GROSSKOPF, JA
2
The three appellants stood trial in the Eastern Cape Division
before SUTEJ J and assessors on a count of murder arising from the death
of one
Andries Mentoor on 19 November 1985 in the Mlungisi Black Township in
Queenstown. They were found guilty of the following
offences:
First appellant: Public violence;
Second appellant: Murder;
Third appellant: Assault with intent to do
grievous bodily harm.
Sentence was passed on 27
October and 3 November 1989. Since the second appellant was only 17 years old no
question of extenuating
circumstances arose under the law then prevailing. The
appellants were sentenced as follows:
First appellant: 18 months'
imprisonment;
Second appellant: 13
years' imprisonment;
Third appellant: 9 months' imprisonment.
On application to the trial judge, a special entry
3
was made on the record. In addition leave was granted to all
three appellants to appeal against their convictions, and to the first
appellant
to appeal against his sentence.
I deal first with the special entry, but
before setting out its terms it is necessary to have regard to the background.
On the morning
of 19 November 1985 the deceased, a coloured man, was killed. He
received a number of wounds to his head, which caused
inter alia
a
fracture of the skull, and was thereafter burnt. The police had no leads to the
perpetrators of the murder. In March 1988, almost
two and a half years after the
event, the main State witness, Miss Nontuthuzelo Solani, approached the police
and volunteered the
information that she had been an eye witness to the killing.
A statement was taken from her on 11 March 1988. The first and second
appellants
were arrested on 28 March 1988.
The evidence of Miss Solani was briefly as follows. She was 23 years old at
the time of the trial, and had been
4
living in Queenstown prior to the murder of the deceased. On
the morning in question, shortly before 7 a.m., she was on her way to
the shop
when she heard people screaming that there was a coloured person. She then saw a
coloured man emerging from a shop, and
people were saying that he should be
beaten up and set alight. Some people started throwing stones at him. He tried
to get away,
but three persons came running to him from the direction where she
was standing. The three persons were the first appellant, the
second appellant
and a certain Phumzile.
As these three persons approached the coloured man,
the second appellant turned and went into a house. The first appellant turned
around before he reached the coloured man, and she did not see him again.
Phumzile went up to the coloured man and stabbed him. The
coloured man fell
down. Somebody brought a tyre onto the scene, and the second appellant emerged
from the house with a bottle containing
some type of liquid. He placed the tyre
on top of the
5
coloured man, poured the liguid over him, and set it alight.
The liquid caught fire. The coloured man was still "screaming, struggling
and
talking". The bystanders were singing. At this stage a police vehicle (which she
called a hippo) appeared and everybody ran away.
In her evidence Miss Solani
said she did not know Phumzile's surname. However, in a reply to a reguest for
further particulars, delivered
prior to the trial, the State had alleged that
the responsibility of the three appellants arose by reason of their being
parties
to a common purpose, and that the parties to the common purpose were the
accused and Phumzile Sijila together with the rest of the
group unknown to the
State.
A man named Phumzile Sijila was in fact arrested together with the
first appellant. However, when guestioned by the police, he told
them that he
had been in goal in Queenstown when the offence was committed. This was
confirmed and he was released.
6
In cross-examination Miss Solani repeated that she did not know
the surname of the Phumzile whom she had seen. She said that she had
given a
description of him to the police and told them that he was a friend of the
appellants' but that she did not mention the surname
"Sijila" to the
police.
While Miss Solani was still in the witness box, the prosecutor
informed the Court that, after discussing the matter with the Attorney-General
and his deputies, he had been instructed to place it on record that the surname
Sijila appeared in Miss Solani's statement, and,
in fact, that it appeared more
than once. He refused, however, to make the statement available to the
defence.
The first and second appellants both testified that they had not been at the
scene of the murder at all.
The trial Court accepted that Miss Solani was a single witness in so far as
she implicated the first and second appellants, but considered
her evidence
sufficiently
7
trustworthy to justify their conviction, particularly
since
their alibi evidence was rejected. The position of the
third
appellant is somewhat different. He was not implicated by
Miss
Solani, and his conviction rests mainly on a statement
made by him. I deal with him separately later.
It is against the background of the facts set
out
above that the special entry was made. It is in
the
following terms:
"The State having disclosed during the course of the trial that notwithstanding
Miss SOLANI'S denial that she provided the surname
"SIJILA" to the Police, the
said surname appeared more than once in her statement to the Police. It is
contended on behalf of the
Accused that the reference to the surname "SIJILA" is
a material discrepancy between Miss SOLANI'S evidence in Court and her statement
to the Police because it goes to the very root of Miss SOLANI'S credibility and
reliability. It is contended further on behalf of
the accused that the State was
under a duty not only to make such disclosure, which they did, but also to make
the relevant statement
available for cross-examination and that its failure in
making the said statement available for such purposes, constituted an
irregularity
or illegality which resulted in a failure of justice."
The law on this matter is not in dispute. In
S
v.
8
Xaba
1983(3) SA 717 (A) at pp. 728 D - 730 D BOTHA
JA
discusses the duty of a prosecutor when the evidence given by
a State
witness at a trial diverges from a prior statement
made by him to the police.
At pp. 728 H to 729 A he then
states the following:
"It is clear, therefore, that when a State witness gives evidence from which a
serious discrepancy emerges between that evidence
and a prior statement made by
the witness to the police, the prosecutor has no choice: he is obliged to
disclose that fact and, apart
from special circumstances which are not relevant
here, to make the statement available to the defence for the purposes of
cross-examination
of the witness. It is equally clear that a prosecutor's duty
of disclosure in these circumstances is one of the rules or principles
of
procedure which must be adhered to in a criminal trial in order to ensure that
the accused has a fair trial and that justice is
done.
It follows that the failure of a prosecutor to observe this duty is an
irregularity in the proceedings for the purposes of s 317(1)
of the
Act."
And as to when a discrepancy is to be regarded
as serious,
BOTHA JA says (at p. 729 G-H):
"Whether or not a discrepancy between the evidence of a State witness and his
previous statement to the police is sufficiently serious
to call for
the
9
performance of the duty of disclosure by the prosecutor must therefore be
assessed in the context of the effect that such disclosure
and the
cross-examination following upon it might have on the credibility of the
witness. In my opinion a discrepancy is serious
whenever there is a real
possibility that the probing of it by means of cross-examination could have an
adverse effect on the assessment
by the trial Court of the witness' credibility
and reliability."
In the present case it can hardly
be doubted that
the discrepancy was serious. According to her statement, so
it would seem, Miss Solani placed three persons on the scene
of the
murder, namely first appellant, second appellant and
Phumzile Sijila.
Phumzile Sijila had a cast-iron alibi, and
was therefore released
immediately. At the trial she gave a
different version - now it was not
Phumzile Sijila, but
another Phumzile whose surname she does not know,
who
assaulted the deceased. If her evidence were shown to be
false in respect of the identity of Phumzile Sijila, the
Court would most
likely not have accepted it against the
first two appellants, both of whom denied having taken part
in the attack on the deceased. And, I should add, although
10
the trial Court accepted Miss Solani's evidence, a perusal of
the record discloses that it was not free of blemishes. Further
cross-examination
may well have seriously impaired her credibility.
On behalf
of the State Mr. Price argued that, by making it known that the name Sijila
appeared in the statement, the prosecutor had
in substance performed his duty
according to the principles laid down in
Xaba
's case,
supra
. The
defence would have been able to infer, he said, that Miss Solani had in her
statement attributed the actions to
Phumzile Sijila which in her evidence she
said had been
committed by a different Phumzile. The defence would
accordingly have been able to cross-examine her as effectively as it would have
been if it had had possession of the statement. He assured us that there were no
other discrepancies between her statement and her
evidence.
These submissions are in my view unfounded. Even accepting that the reference
to Phumzile Sijila was the only
11
discrepancy, cross-examination would have been much more
effective if the cross-examiner had the document in his hand. The witness
could
have been confronted with the actual words recorded in the statement, with the
number of times the name Sijila was used and
the context in which it appeared.
She could have been asked whether she had signed the document and whether she
had read it or had
it read out to her. In short: if there is a serious
discrepancy between a witness' statement and his evidence, there can be no
satisfactory
substitute for the production of the document to the
defence.
According to the principles in
Xaba
's case,
supra
, the
statement should therefore have been made available to the defence unless there
were special circumstances justifying its non-production.
In the present case
Mr. Price said that, on the instructions of the Attorney-General, the document
had not been given to the defence
because the witness was frightened of
retaliation and was very nervous in
12
the witness box. She had already been cross-examined at
length, and it was feared that, armed with the statement, the defence might
indulge in a further protracted and hair-splitting cross-examination. These
reasons do not bear scrutiny. Miss Solani was the only
witness implicating the
first two appellants. Their counsel was entitled,and, indeed, under a duty, to
cross-examine her, and the
statement should have been made available to him for
that purpose. If he exceeded permissible limits, the Court was there to protect
her. It was not for the Attorney-General to presume that the Court would fail in
this duty, and therefore to refuse to allow the
defence the statement to which
it was entitled.
In view of the aforegoing I consider that an irregularity was committed in
the case. Since the irregularity related to the credibility
of Miss Solani, and
since she is the only witness implicating the first two appellants, it is clear
that a failure of justice has
13
resulted and that their convictions cannot stand (vide
section
322
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, no. 51 of 1977
).
As far as the third
appellant is concerned, the evidence of Miss Solani was also important. Although
she did not identify him as one
of the people who attacked the deceased, she is
the only eye-witness to describe the incident. Without her evidence there would
only
be the medical evidence about the nature and extent of the deceased's
injuries, and police evidence of what was found on the scene.
It is against this background that the statement by
the third appellant must be considered. The statement was
recorded by a
magistrate on 9 June 1988. It was handed in by
the prosecutor without
objection (but also without consent).
No other evidence implicated the third
appellant. He did not
give evidence himself. The statement reads as
follows:
"Omstreeks 5.00 die oggend het ek skreeuery gehoor van mense wat gesê het
daar hardloop 'n kleurling op. Ek het iets opgetel
wat van yster gemaak is, die
voorwerp het soos 'n byl gelyk. Ek het die kleurlingman eenkeer op skouer
daarmee geslaan - hy
14
het geval nadat hy op grond geval het het ek gehardloop. Vandaar is ek na my oom
se huis toe wat by S gedeelte van die Woonbuurt
bly. Toe ek daar aankom het ek
gehoor toe mense vra wat dit was wat gebrand het. Ek het myself nie daaraan
gesteur nie. Ek het in
huis ingegaan en weer uit huis gekom. Ek het van die huis
af weggeloop en toe ek met straat op stap was die vuur amper klaar en toe
ek by
die plek verbyloop het die mense al versprei. Ek het verneem dat 'n kleurlingman
daar verbrand is. Dit is al."
Now it
will immediately be noted that the
statement does not indicate the date or place of the
incident. The time ("omstreeks 5.00 die oggend") is
substantially earlier than that given by Miss Splani and by
the deceased's sister, who saw him shortly before his death.
Miss Solani
does not describe any blow on the deceased's
shoulder with an axe, and the
medical evidence by Dr.
Koopowitz, who conducted the autopsy, discloses no
injury
which might have been caused by such a blow. Much of the
statement
is hearsay - the third appellant did not even know
from his own knowledge whether the coloured man whom he had
assaulted, was subsequently burnt.
15
The statement is therefore not only vague as to the date and
place of the incident, but in material respects the incident described
in the
statement differs from that to which Miss Solani testified. In these
circumstances there may well be doubt on the record as
it stands whether the
third appellant's statement has any relationship with the offence of which he
was charged, and this might by
itself justify the setting aside of his
conviction. However, we now have the further feature that an irregularity has
been committed
by the failure to make Miss Solani's statement available to the
defence. If there had not been this irregularity, Miss Solani would
have been
cross-examined further on her statement, and further facts may have been
elicited to render it unlikely that the third
appellant took part in the assault
described by her. In these circumstances it seems to me that a failure of
justice has resulted
from the irregularity also in respect of the third
appellant's conviction and that this conviction cannot stand.
16
In the result the appeals of all three appellants are allowed,
and their convictions and sentences set aside.
E M GROSSKOPF, JA
VIVIER,JA
VAN DEN HEEVER, JA Concur