S v Nofomela (161/91) [1991] ZASCA 180; 1992 (1) SA 740 (AD); (28 November 1991)

78 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Death sentence — Appeal against sentence — Appellant convicted of murder and sentenced to death — Petition for clemency unsuccessful — Criminal Law Amendment Act 107 of 1990 introducing new criteria for imposition of death sentence — Appellant seeking to remit case to trial court for consideration of new evidence regarding sentence — Appellant's prior denial of involvement in murder contradicted by later confession — Court holding that new evidence and changed legal framework warrant remittal to trial court for reconsideration of sentence under new criteria.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings took place in the Supreme Court of South Africa (Appellate Division) and concerned the reconsideration of a death sentence under a statutory transitional mechanism introduced by the Criminal Law Amendment Act 107 of 1990. The matter came before the court not as a conventional appeal initiated in the ordinary way, but because a statutory panel had formed an opinion triggering the Appellate Division’s duty to consider the sentence afresh under the new death-penalty regime.


The parties were Almond Nofomela as the appellant and the State as the respondent. The appellant had previously been convicted (together with a co-accused, Johnny Abraham Mohane) of murder and sentenced to death in 1987 in the Transvaal Provincial Division (before Human AJ and assessors) for the stabbing death of Johannes Hendrik Lourens on a farm near Brits in 1986.


The procedural history was central to the court’s jurisdiction and approach. The appellant’s earlier appeal (with leave granted against conviction only) had failed, and he thereafter petitioned the State President for clemency under section 326 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. The co-accused’s clemency petition succeeded (his sentence was commuted), while the appellant’s petition failed. On the appellant’s case, all recognised procedures relating to appeal or review had therefore been exhausted.


After the commencement of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 107 of 1990 on 27 July 1990, the appellant’s case fell to be considered by the statutory panel established under the Act for persons already under sentence of death who had exhausted appeal/review procedures. The panel concluded in terms of section 19(10)(a) that the death sentence would probably have been imposed even if the substituted section 277 (as introduced by section 4 of the 1990 Act) had applied at the time. That finding brought section 19(12) into operation, requiring the Appellate Division to consider the case as if it were an appeal against sentence under the new sentencing regime.


The dispute before the Appellate Division concerned whether the appellant should be permitted—through a remittal under section 19(12)(b)(iii)—to lead further evidence on sentence in the trial court, in light of the new statutory approach to the death sentence, or whether the existing record compelled confirmation of the death sentence.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause (or at least not directly disputed on the papers) that at the time of the murder the appellant was 31 years old and a sergeant in the South African Police, posted since about 1980 to a special unit at Vlakplaats under the command of Captain Dirk Coetzee, which he described as engaged in counter-insurgency operations. At the time of the murder he was on leave at Skeerpoort, near Brits.


At the trial, the appellant and his co-accused led no evidence in extenuation. The co-accused testified that the appellant killed the deceased, while the appellant denied complicity in the murder (although admitting that he accompanied the co-accused to the place where the murder occurred). The trial court found that the appellant had direct intent to kill and that the deceased had been stabbed five times with force, and it found that the co-accused assisted during the knife attack and was accordingly equally guilty.


After conviction and sentence, the appellant’s position regarding responsibility for the murder changed over time. In his petition for clemency to the State President, he reportedly persisted in denying responsibility for the deceased’s death. After the petition failed, his execution was scheduled for 20 October 1989. On 19 October 1989, he consulted Lawyers for Human Rights and deposed to an affidavit again denying that he committed the murder for which he had been sentenced to death.


In that same affidavit the appellant made extensive disclosures about alleged involvement in other assassinations, including the killing of Durban attorney Griffiths Mxenge and participation in other killings and kidnappings. The Minister of Justice granted an administrative stay of execution, and the disclosures led to further investigations and inquiries. One inquiry mentioned as potentially relevant was the Harms Commission of Enquiry into Certain Alleged Murders, culminating in a report in September 1990. During his evidence before that commission, the appellant for the first time admitted that he had in fact killed the deceased and that his earlier denial was false.


When submissions were later made to the statutory panel under the 1990 Act, and confirmed under oath by the appellant, he advanced a narrative relevant to sentence: he stated that the initial plan had been to rob the deceased; that there was no intention to kill or injure; that the deceased had ordered them off the land and called them a racial epithet; that the deceased slapped him; that a scuffle followed during which the deceased produced a firearm; and that in the course of that struggle the appellant stabbed Lourens while the co-accused held the deceased. He asserted that the murder was not premeditated and that the plan to rob emanated from the co-accused.


A clinical psychologist, Mr Vogelman, prepared a report annexed to the panel submissions, expressing a positive view of the appellant’s prospects of rehabilitation and possible future reintegration, with reference to his conduct and apparent attitudes after sentence.


The State opposed the appellant’s application to remit for further evidence on sentence on the basis that the proposed evidence had no reasonable prospect of acceptance, and that in any event it would not constitute mitigating factors sufficient to dissuade the trial court from concluding that death was the proper sentence.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether, in the context of section 19(12)(b)(iii) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 107 of 1990, the Appellate Division should set aside the death sentence and remit the matter to the trial court with instructions to hear further evidence relevant to sentence.


That question required the court to determine the criteria governing such a remittal application, because section 19(12)(b)(iii) itself did not spell out a test. The determination was therefore primarily one of law (formulating the applicable approach in light of statutory purpose and existing principles on further evidence), followed by an application of law to fact (assessing whether the specific proposed evidence satisfied the identified requirements and whether it could reasonably affect sentence).


A further issue concerned the scope of relevance of evidence sought to be introduced: in particular, whether the remittal mechanism was intended to permit a broad re-opening of a concluded case, including new and contradictory versions, or whether it was confined to evidence logically connected to the shift from the prior regime (extenuating circumstances and onus on the accused) to the new regime (mitigating/aggravating factors and the State’s burden in seeking death).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began by situating the matter in the statutory framework created by the Criminal Law Amendment Act 107 of 1990. Section 4 introduced a new approach to the death sentence, and section 19 created a transitional procedure for persons already sentenced to death who had exhausted appeal/review procedures. Where the panel formed the view contemplated by section 19(10)(a), the Appellate Division was required by section 19(12)(a) to consider the matter as if it were an appeal against sentence and as if the substituted section 277 had applied at the time of sentencing.


Because section 19(12)(b)(iii) was silent on the criteria for remittal for further evidence, the court looked to established principles governing the reception of further evidence in criminal matters. It referred to section 316(3) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (itself reflecting section 363(3) of the Criminal Procedure Act 56 of 1955) and to the threefold test articulated in S v de Jager 1965 (2) SA 612 (A). Those authorities emphasised both the court’s reluctance to re-open trials and the need for a satisfactory explanation, a prima facie likelihood of truth, and material relevance to the outcome.


The court explained that, as a matter of policy, criminal litigation requires finality, and that re-opening can invite the danger that evidence may be shaped after the fact to address weaknesses revealed at trial. It also stressed that the transitional provisions were not designed to allow an unrestricted re-opening of the entire case, but rather to ensure that those facing death sentences were dealt with under the new statutory approach. The court contrasted the position of accused persons whose sentencing proceedings were not complete at the time of the legislative change (who might reasonably be allowed to adjust their strategy) with persons like the appellant whose matters had been finalised long before the new regime.


The court treated the purpose of section 19 as permitting an accused to reconsider strategy to the extent that the change in the law could have affected how the case on sentence would have been conducted, particularly given the prior onus and the narrower concept of extenuation compared to mitigation. However, it regarded this as implying a limitation: the remittal mechanism was not designed to permit an accused, convicted after advancing a false version, to re-open proceedings to present a new and contradictory narrative that was available at the time but deliberately withheld. In that regard the court relied on the approach reflected in S v N 1988 (3) SA 450 (A) and related authorities.


The court also addressed the relevance of post-sentence material. Since section 19(12)(a)(i) required the Appellate Division to consider the case as if it were an appeal against sentence, the court treated ordinary appellate limitations as applicable, namely that material arising after sentence would generally not be considered (save possibly in exceptional circumstances), consistent with decisions such as Goodrich v Botha and Others 1954 (2) SA 540 (A), S v Immelman 1978 (3) SA 726 (A), and S v V en 'n Ander 1989 (1) SA 532 (A). It nevertheless acknowledged that relevance is not reducible to rigid rules, adopting the general conception of relevance described in R v Matthews and Others 1960 (1) SA 752 (A).


Synthesising these considerations, and “superimposing” them on section 316(3), the court formulated requirements an applicant would need to satisfy for a remittal under section 19(12)(b)(iii). These included relevance to mitigating/aggravating factors and the new discretion; the likelihood that the evidence would have been presented had the new regime been in place (absent exceptional circumstances); the likelihood that the evidence would be accepted as true; the reasonable possibility of a different sentence if accepted; and a reasonably acceptable explanation for the failure to lead the evidence at trial (again, absent exceptional circumstances).


Applying these requirements, the court grouped the appellant’s proposed evidence into three main categories (with a further residual category for consequential evidence) and evaluated each.


Regarding the proposed evidence of provocation/assault/threat and lack of premeditation, the court accepted that, if such evidence had been tendered at the time and accepted, it could have amounted to mitigation. The difficulty, however, lay in the statutory-purpose-related requirement that the evidence should reasonably be evidence the appellant would have presented had the new test applied at the time. The court found that the appellant had long persisted in asserting innocence, including on the eve of execution, and only later confessed; he also claimed to have been advised by superiors not to admit complicity. On the court’s reasoning, this meant there was no reasonable possibility that he would have presented the “provocation” account at trial even if the new regime had applied, because it depended on admitting the killing. The court further considered the credibility requirement and held that the appellant’s multiple lies over an extended period undermined the likelihood that the trial court would accept his new account as true. It also noted an absence of support in the record for the alleged taunting and threats, and found the probabilities inconsistent with the appellant’s new narrative given the planned robbery context. On this basis, the first category did not satisfy the requirements for remittal.


Regarding the contention that the appellant had been desensitised to violence by “hit squad” activities and had come to regard himself as “above the law”, the court assumed the premise for purposes of analysis but found it did not assist. The murder was committed during a planned robbery against elderly farmers, not during an ordered counter-insurgency mission. The court reasoned that training to kill did not extend to preying on innocent elderly people, and it treated the appellant’s status as a policeman as an aggravating factor rather than a mitigating one. It concluded that, even if accepted, this evidence would not reasonably lead to a different sentence and did not meet the requirements governing remittal.


Regarding the psychologist’s opinion that the appellant had rehabilitation potential, the court considered the submission that post-sentence conduct could shed light on personality at the time. It held that evidence about personality and intelligence was in principle available at the time of trial, and could not be introduced now unless a proper case were made that it would have been presented had the new test been in operation. The court recognised the appellant had been defended pro deo and lacked resources for psychological profiling, but treated that as a systemic feature not sufficient, on its own, to justify remittal under the transitional remittal provision. It also doubted that the trial court would realistically find that a policeman who killed during a planned robbery and who confessed to participation in multiple other murders would be promising material for rehabilitation, and it considered that the psychologist’s view, standing alone, was unlikely to produce a different sentence. A remittal on that limited basis was regarded as futile.


Having rejected the grounds for remittal, the court held that the application to lead further evidence could not succeed. Given the concession that on the original trial record an appeal against sentence would fail, the court concluded that the death sentence had to be confirmed.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Appellate Division refused the appellant’s application to have the sentence set aside and the matter remitted to the trial court for the hearing of further evidence on sentence in terms of section 19(12)(b)(iii) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 107 of 1990.


The court accordingly dismissed the appeal on sentence and confirmed the sentence of death imposed on the appellant.


The judgment, as reported in the excerpt, did not set out any separate or special order as to costs.


Cases Cited


S v de Jager 1965 (2) SA 612 (A)

S v N 1988 (3) SA 450 (A)

S v Sterrenberg 1980 (2) SA 888 (A)

S v Masina and Others 1990 (4) SA 709 (A)

S v Njaba 1966 (3) SA 140 (A)

S v Myende 1985 (1) SA 795 (A)

R v Carr 1949 (2) SA 693 (A)

R v Jantjies 1958 (2) SA 272 (A)

R v van Heerden 1956 (1) SA 366 (A)

R v Siwesa 1957 (2) SA 223 (A)

Goodrich v Botha and Others 1954 (2) SA 540 (A)

S v Immelman 1978 (3) SA 726 (A)

S v V en 'n Ander 1989 (1) SA 532 (A)

R v Matthews and Others 1960 (1) SA 752 (A)


Legislation Cited


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (including sections 277, 316(3), 326, 327)


Criminal Procedure Act 56 of 1955 (section 363(3))


Criminal Law Amendment Act 107 of 1990 (including sections 4, 19, 20)


Rules of Court Cited


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


Held


The Appellate Division held that an application to remit a death-sentence matter to the trial court under section 19(12)(b)(iii) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 107 of 1990 is not an opportunity for an unrestricted re-opening of concluded proceedings. The applicant must satisfy criteria broadly aligned to the established test for receiving further evidence, adapted to the transitional purpose of the Act.


On the facts, the court held that the appellant’s proposed new evidence concerning provocation and lack of premeditation would not reasonably have been presented at trial (given his longstanding denial of guilt) and was unlikely to be accepted as true, particularly in light of credibility concerns and the probabilities. The court held further that the “desensitisation” explanation did not amount to mitigation in the circumstances of a planned robbery and that the appellant’s position as a police officer was aggravating. The rehabilitation evidence, largely based on post-sentence material, was found insufficient to justify remittal and was unlikely to result in a different sentence.


The application to lead further evidence was refused, and the death sentence was confirmed.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that the re-opening of criminal proceedings for further evidence is exceptional and constrained by the need for finality in litigation, including the concern that evidence may be shaped after the event. In evaluating a remittal under the transitional death-sentence provisions, the court treated section 316(3) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 and the test in S v de Jager 1965 (2) SA 612 (A) as reliable guidelines, and it emphasised that the legislature did not intend an unrestricted reopening of concluded trials.


The judgment articulated that, for remittal under section 19(12)(b)(iii), the proposed evidence must be relevant to the sentencing enquiry under the new regime (mitigating and aggravating factors and the “proper sentence” discretion). It must also, save in exceptional circumstances, be evidence that there is a reasonable possibility would have been presented at the original sentencing hearing had the new statutory approach been in place at that time. Evidence aimed at introducing a new and contradictory version after conviction—where the accused deliberately advanced a false version at trial—does not align with the purpose of the transitional provisions.


The judgment further applied the principle that, when a matter is considered as if on appeal against sentence, evidence arising after sentence is generally not relevant for that enquiry (save possibly in exceptional circumstances), and that the relevance enquiry depends on logic and experience rather than rigid rules.

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[1991] ZASCA 180
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S v Nofomela (161/91) [1991] ZASCA 180; 1992 (1) SA 740 (AD); (28 November 1991)

CASE NO. 161/91
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA APPELLATE DIVISION
In
the matter between:
ALMOND NOFOMELA APPELLANT
and
THE STATE RESPONDENT
CORAM:
HEFER, NIENABER JJA et PREISS AJA
DATE HEARD:
18 NOVEMBER 1991
DATE DELIVERED:
28 NOVEMBER 1991
1
JUDGMENT NIENABER JA:
The appellant and one Johnny Abraham Mohane
were convicted and sentenced to death in 1987 for a murder which they were found
to have
committed in 1986, when Johannes Hendrik Lourens was stabbed to death on
his farm near Brits. Their appeal to this court, with leave
granted by it
against convlction only, failed. Both of them thereupon petitioned the State
President for clemency in terms of
s 326
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of
1977
. Mohane's petition succeeded and his sentence of death was commuted. The
appellant's petition did not. He had accordingly exhausted
all the recognized
legal procedures pertalning to appeal or review open to him.
Thereafter, on 27 July 1990, the Criminal Law Amendment Act 107 of 1990 ("the
Act") became law. Section 4 thereof introduced an entlrely
new approach to the
imposltion of the death sentence. Whereas before, the onus was on an accused
convicted of murder to prove the
existence of extenuating circumstances, the
onus is now on the State in asking for the
2
imposition of the death sentence to negative mitigating
and to establish
aggravating factors. The Act also
provided for the appointment of a panel
(consisting of
judges, ex-judges and other persons "who in the oplnion
of the Minister
are f it to serve on the panel on
account of their knowledge of and experience in the
admlnistration of justice" (s 19(l)(a)(ii))) whose
function it is to
"consider the case of every person under sentence of death -
(a)
who was sentenced to death
before the date of commencement of section 4; and
(b)
who has in respect of that sentence exhausted all the recognized
legal procedures pertaining to appeal or review or no longer has
such procedures
at his disposal, whether or not such a person has lodged a petition referred to
in section 327 of the principal Act..."
(s 19(8)(a) and
(b)).
The appellant's
case
was such a one. It came before the panel on 27
March 1991. The panel made a findlng in terms of s 19(10)(a) of the Act that, in
its
opinion, the sentence of death "would probably have been imposed by the
trial court concerned had s 277 of the principal Act, as
substituted by sectlon
4 of this Act, been in operation at the time sentence was
3
passed." This brought into operation s 19(12) of the
Act which reads as follows:
"12(a) Where the panel finds that the sentence of death would probably have been
imposed in the circumstances contemplated in subsection
(10)(a), the
Director-General: Justice shall forthwith transmit the requlsite number of
certified copies of the relevant court record
and proceedlngs to the registrar
of the Appellate Divlsion of the Supreme Court, whereupon that court shall,
irrespective of whether
it has previously given a decision on appeal in the case
concerned, consider the case in the same manner as if
-
(i) it were considerlng an appeal by the convicted
person against his sentence; and (ii) sectlon 277 of the principal Act, as
substituted
by section 4 of this Act, were in operation at the time sentence was
passed by the trial court.
(b) The Appellate Division may -(i) confirm the sentence of death; (11) if
the Appellate Division is of the opinlon that it would
not itself have imposed
the sentence of death, set aside the sentence and impose such punishment as it
considers to be proper; or
(iii) set aside the sentence of death and remit the case to the trial court
with instructlons to deal with any matter, includlng the
hearlng of evidence, in
such manner as the Appellate Division may think fit, and thereafter to impose
the sentence which in the opinion
of the trial court would have been imposed had
the said section 277
4
been so in operation.
(c) A sentence imposed in terms of paragraph (b) (ili), shall for the purposes
of any further appeal and all other purposes be deemed
to be the sentence
imposed upon the convicted person at his trial.
(d) No judge shall sit at the hearing of an appeal contemplated in paragraph (a)
if he served on the panel when the case concerned
was considered by the
panel."
At the trial before Human AJ and two
assessors in the Transvaal Provincial Division neither the appellant nor his
co-accused led any
evidence in extenuation. If the matter were to be considered
by this court on the basis of the evidence which was presented to that
court at
the tlme, the appeal, as counsel for the appellant readlly conceded, is bound to
fail.
What counsel for the appellant accordingly now seeks is an order in terms of
s 19(12)(b)(iii) setting aside the sentence of death
and remittlng the matter to
the trial court for the hearing of further evidence on the aspect of sentence.
In support of that application,
brought by way of notice of motion, the
appellant has furnished some background material and
5
enclosed a report by a cllnlcal psycho.logist, Mr Vogelman, in which the
evldence which the appellant wants the trial court to consider,
is outlined. The
application is opposed by the State on two grounds: firstly, that the suggested
evidence has no reasonable prospect
of being accepted by the trial court and
secondly, in the alternative, if it were to be accepted, that it would not
constitute mitigatlng
factors of such a nature as to persuade the trial court
that the death sentence is not "the proper sentence".
The following facts can be gleaned from the trial record and the
documentation submitted by the appellant which is not directly dlsputed
by the
State:
1. At the time of the murder the appellant,
then 31 years old, was a
sergeant in the South African
Pollce. Since about 1980 he had been posted to
a
special unit at Vlakplaats under the command of captain
Dirk Coetzee.
The function of this unit, so he stated,
was to engage in counter-insurgency
operations.
2.
At the time of the murder he
was on leave at Skeerpoort, near Brits.
3.
At
his trial his co-accused
testifled
6
that the appellant killed the deceased. The appellant, however, denied any
complicity in the murder although he admitted accompanying
hls co-accused to the
place where the murder was committed.
4. The trial court found:
"Dat nr. 2 [the appellant] die direkte opset gehad het om die oorledene te dood
ly geen twyfel nie. Die oorledene is vyf keer gesteek
met 'n skerp instrument en
volgens die mediese getulenis is die steekwonde met geweld toegedien. Nr. 1 het
nr. 2 gehelp om die roof
te pleeg deur oorledene vas te hou of vas te gryp
gedurende die mesaanval en dus is hy onder die omstandighede net so skuldig as
nr. 2."
5.
In his petition to the State President, so we were informed, the
appellant persisted in his denial that he was responsible for the
death of the
deceased.
6.
His petition to the State
President having failed he was scheduled to be executed on 20 October
1989.
7.
On 19 October 1989 the appellant
sought the advice of Lawyers for Human Rlghts. He was interviewed and on the
same day deposed to
an affidavit. In it he
repeated:
7
"I did not commit the murder for which I stand condemned. I repeat my evidence
at the trial which led to my death sentence. I conflrm
the contentions raised
therein by myself and on my behalf by my counsel."
At the same time he made a series of
sensatlonal
disclosures. He stated, for instance, that
he had been briefed by senior
officers in the police
force to "eliminate" a certain Durban
attorney,
Griffiths Mxenge, and that he and three others
travelled to Durban where they stabbed Mxenge to death.
He and his
colleagues each received R1000 for doing so.
(It is only fair to add that the State, in opposing the
appllcation to remit the matter and to lead further
evidence, flled affidavits from those implicated by the
appellant in whlch the appellant's allegations are
denied). The appellant goes on to say:
"I was involved in approximately eight other assasslnations during my stint
in the assaslnation squad, and also numerous kidnappings.
At this stage, I do
not recall the names of any of the victims. Some of the assasslnations, four in
fact, took place in Swazlland,
one in Botswana, one in Maseru and one in
Krugersdorp. The victims were all ANC members, except in Krugersdorp where the
victim was
the brother of an ANC terrorist."
8
8. On the basis of this affidavit the
Minister of Justice granted an
administrative stay of
execution.
9. The appellant's revelations
received
wide media coverage and set in train a series of
further
dlsclosures, investigations, officlal enqulries
and court actions. These are
not germane to the
present proceedings, with one possible exceptlon, and
I
mention them merely in passing. The one that was of
some relevance for
present purposes was the so-called
"Harms Commission of Enquiry into Certain
Alleged
Murders" which culminated in a report of that
commission issued in
September 1990. In the course of
his evidence before that commission the
appellant
admitted for the flrst tlme that he had indeed killed
the
deceased and that his previous evidence in which he
denied his involvement in
the killing was false.
10. This confession was repeated in the
submlssions made on his behalf to the panel, which the
appellant confirmed under oath, stating:
"(b) The appllcant now states that it was at the insistence of his co-accused
that they decided to rob the deceased they went there
to steal. There was never
any intentlon to
9
kill or even to injure the deceased; they went there to steal. When the
applicant and his co-accused approached the house of the
deceased he saw them,
ordered them off his land and called them "kaffirs". According to the applicant
he was very angry and upset
because he had been called a "kaffir" . He felt
raclally degraded and since he had killed a number of blacks supposedly for the
benefit
of white people he felt that the deceased was being dlsrespectful
towards him. He in fact felt superior to the deceased whom he regarded
as a
"hobo" who had little value as a human being.
(c) The deceased further provoked the applicant by slapping him across the face
and a scuffle then ensued. At a certaln stage the
deceased produced a firearm.
In the course of the scuffle the applicant stabbed Lourens while he was belng
held by the co-accused.
The murder was not premeditated and that although the
stabbing was done by the applicant, the orlginal plan to rob the deceased
emanated
from the co-accused."
11. Annexed to the
submissions to the panel was a report by Vogelman, the clinlcal psychologist,
according to which the appellant
"presents a positive prognosis foc the
applicant's rehabilitation and possible re-integration, at some future date,
into society."
So much, then, for the background to the
10
present matter.
Counsel for the appellant submitted that thls court should
set aside the death sentence and remit the matter in terms of s 19(12)(b)(iii)
of the Act to the trial court for it to consider the new material in the context
of the new test for the imposition of a death sentence.
Section 19(12)(b)(iii) of the Act is silent as to the criteria which this
court ought to apply when consldering an application of
this nature.
By way of contrast s 316 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977, which is a general provislon
dealing with the reception of further evidence by a
court considering an application for leave to appeal,
provides as follows:
"(3) When in any application under subsection (1) for leave to appeal it is
shown by affldavit -
(a)
that further evidence whlch
would presumably be accepted as true, is avallable;
(b)
that if accepted the evldence could reasonably lead to a dlfferent
verdict or sentence; and
(c)
save in
exceptlonal cases, that there is a reasonably acceptable explanation for the
failure to produce the evidence before the close
of the
trial,
11
the court hearlng the application may receive that evldence and further
evldence rendered necessary thereby, including evidence in
rebuttal called by
the prosecutor and evidence called by the court."
The requirements of this subsection (a
repetition of s 363 (3) of the Criminal Procedure Act
56 of 1955) are
essentially a codiflcation of a
three-fold test propounded by this court in S
v de
Jager
1965 (2) SA 612
(A) in which Holmes JA at 613B-D
said, apropos of an application for the hearing of
further evidence:
"Accordingly, this Court has, over a series of declslons, worked out certain
basic requlrements. They have not always been formulated
in the same words, but
their tenor throughout has been to emphaslse the Court's reluctance to re-open a
trial. They may be summarlsed
as follows:
(a) There should be some reasonably sufficient explanation, based on allegatlons
which may be true, why the evidence which it is
sought to be led was not led at
the trlal.
(b) There should be a prima facie likelihood of the truth of the evidence.
(c) The evidence should be materlally relevant to the outcome of the
trial."
12
In my vlew the requirements posited in S v de
Jager supra and in s 316(3) of the Criminal Procedure
Act, 51 of 1977, provide reliable guidelines as to the
approach which this court ought to adopt when seized
with an application in terms of s 19(12)(b)(ili) of the
Act or, for that matter, s 20(3), to which I shall
presently refer.
When the legislature enacted s 19(12)(b)(ili)
it
clearly did not contemplate an unrestricted
re-opening of the trial allowing the appellant carte
blanche to adduce new evidence at will. There are at
least three limitlng factors:
Firstly, it is a matter of pollcy that there
must be an end to litigation. As it was stated in S v
de Jager supra at 613A-B:
"It is clearly not in the interests of the administration of justice that
issues of fact, once judicially investigated and pronounced
upon, should lightly
be re-opened and amplified., And there is always the possibility, such is human
frailty, that an accused, having
seen where the shoe pinches, might tend to
shape evidence to meet the dlfficulty."
(See, too, S v N
1988 (3) SA 450
(A) at 458D-F.) And
13
in S v Sterrenberg
1980 (2) SA 888
(A) Trollip JA at
893F-G said:
"Because of the general need in the public interest for finality in duly
concluded
litigation, including criminal trials, this Court will only exercise its
discretion to receive further evidence on the hearing of
an
appeal if, as a minimim requirement, the circumstances are
exceptional."
Secondly, s 19 of the Act is concerned
only with cases where a sentence of death has been imposed. The only issue that
is therefore
open for reconsideration by the trial court would be matters
relevant to its finding on the presence or absence of mitigating and
aggravating
factors and the exercise of its discretion that the sentence of death is " the
proper sentence."
Thirdly, one must have regard to the purpose of s 19 of the Act. Like s 20 it
is a transitional provision. Both sections cater for
cases which had commenced
before the date of commencement of the Act and in which the death sentence had
been or may be imposed.
Section 20 deals with the situation where the trial had
commenced before the date of commencement of the Act but the accused had
not yet
been convicted or,
14
if convicted, had not yet been sentenced or, if
sentenced, had not yet
exhausted all recognised legal
procedures pertaining to appeal or revlew.
Section
20(3) then provides:
"In an appeal referred to in sub-section (1) against the sentence of death, the
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court shall, in
addition to any other power,
have the power to set aside the sentence and to remit the case to the trial
court with instructions
to deal with any matter, includlng the hearing of
evidence, in such manner as the Appellate Division may think
fit."
Section 19, broadly speaking, deals with the
situation where an accused has been convicted and sentenced and all such legal
procedures
have been exhausted. Section 19(12)(b)(iii) is the corresponding
section to s 20(3) and provides, in identlcal terms, for the case
to be remitted
"with instructions to deal with any matter, includlng the hearing of evidence,
in such manner as the Appellate Division
may think fit."
The clear intention of the legislature is that the case of every person who
is currently either facing, or is under, a sentence of
death should be dlsposed
of or, if already disposed of, should be
15
reconsidered, in terms of the new legislation. Where the evidence on sentence
has not yet been completed the trial will be concluded
under the new regime; an
accused in that situation cannot, as a rule, be prejudiced slnce he will
doubtless be allowed the opportunity
of re-opening his case or of recalling
witnesses to meet the exigencies of the new direction introduced by the Act. But
where hls
evidence on sentence has been completed he may indeed be prejudiced if
he is denled that opportunity. The manner in which he conducted
the trial, his
decision to lead, or to refrain from leading or controverting specific evidence,
for instance, may well have been
dictated by either the incidence of the onus as
it then was or the narrower connotation ascribed to the old concept of
extenuating
circumstances in contrast to the new concept of mitigating factors
(cf S v Masina and Others
1990 (4) SA 709
(A) at 714B) or both. Because the
rules have retrospectlvely changed, it is only right that a person sentenced to
death should be
permitted to reconsider his strategy.
Implicit in that approach is, however, a
16
limitation. Since the purpose is to give an accused
the benefit, ex post
facto, of the new test, the
proposed evidence must have a bearing on how
the
accused would have conducted his case on sentence if
the new test had been in place at the time sentence was
passed by the
trial court. It follows that the sluices
are not opened to him to let in a
stream of evidence
which does not flow from the contrast between
the
manner in which he conducted and would have conducted
his case before
the trial court. The section, in
particular, is not designed to permit an
accused who
has been convicted in the face of a false version, to
re-open the trial so as to launch a new and
contradictory defence which was available to him at the
time, which he now claims to be the truth, but which he
deliberately withheld from the court at the time. As
it was stated by Corbett JA in S v N supra at
458I-459B:
"In an appropriate case this Court has the power to relax strict compliance
with the requisite of a 'reasonably sufficient explanation'
(see (a) above), but
it is only in rare instances that this power will be exercised (S v Njaba
1966
(3) SA 140
(A) at 143H).
A study of the reported decisions of
17
this Court on the subject over the past 40 years shows that in the vast majority
of cases relief has been refused: and that where
relief has been granted the
evidence in question has related to a slngle critical issue in the case (as to
which see eg R v Carr
1949 (2) SA 693
(A); R v Jantjies
1958 (2) SA 272
(A); S v
Nkala (supra) and S v Njaba (supra)). In contrast to this, in the present case
the application appears to contemplate a
re-canvassing of the entire case. As
counsel for the appellant conceded in argument, he was really asking for a fresh
trial de novo
before a different magistrate. It seems to me that this factor can
only serve to multiply the dangers and disadvantages to the proper
administration of justice which have been referred to in the
cases."
(See, too, R v van Heerden
1956 (1) SA 366
(A); R v Siwesa
1957 (2) SA 223
(A) at 226B-D.)
As a first step this court
must therefore be satisfied, in considering whether to accede to the request to
have the matter remitted
to the trial court for new evidence to be led, that the
proposed evidence is of such a nature that it is reasonable to suppose that
the
appellant would have presented such evidence if the new test had been in
operation at the time sentence was passed. That would
encompass materiai of
18
which he was aware and which was available to him at the time but which he
may have withheld because the onus was against him or because
it was irrelevant;
as well as evidence of which he was unaware but whlch he may well have led had
he been aware of it and had the
new test been in operation. This formulation
would exclude as irreievant any material, whether or not the appellant was aware
of
it at the time of sentence, which is of such a nature it it would not have
been presented to the trial court even if the test had
then been what it now is.
By the same token material should as a rule be excluded which was not in
existence at the time of sentence.
Section 19(12)(a)(i) enjoins this court, when
a matter reaches it via the panel, to consider it "in the same manner as if it
were
consldering an appeal by the convlcted person against his sentence."
Material whlch origlnated after the passing of sentence but
before the hearing
of an appeal, would, save perhaps in exceptional circumstances, not be taken
into account. (Cf Goodrich v Botha
and Others
1954 (2) SA 540
(A) at 546A-C; S v
Immelman
1978 (3) SA 726
(A) at 730H; S v V en 'n Ander
19
1989 (1) SA 532
(A) at 544H-545C.) The same approach should apply when, as
here, the leading of the further evldence is contemplated under the subsection.
(Such evidence could conceivably be accommodated under
s 327
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
).
But there is this qualificatlon. One is here
dealing with relevance. "Relevance is based upon a blend of logic and experience
lying
outside the law" (per Schrelner JA in R v Matthews and Others
1960 (1) SA
752
(A) at 758A-B). Relevance can never be reduced to hard and fast rules and
some allowance should always be made for unforeseen and
extraordinary cases.
In summary, and superimposing the above observatlons on the requirements of s
316 (3) of the Crlminal Procedure Act 1977, an appellant,
in order to succeed
with an application in terms of s 19(12)(b)(lii), will have to satisfy this
court:
(a)
that the proposed evidence
is relevant to the issues of mitigating or aggravating factors and the exercise
by the trial court of its
discretion in the light of the new
test;
(b)
that, save for exceptional
circum-
20
stancés, there is a reasonable possibillty that such evidence would
have been presented to the trial court by the appellant
if the test had then
been what it now is;
(c)
that the proposed evidence
would presumably be accepted as true by the trial
court;
(d)
that, if accepted, such evidence
could reasonably lead to a different sentence; and
(e)
that, save for exceptional clrcum-stances, there is a reasonably
acceptable explanation why such evidence was not led at the
trial.
Situations falllng under (b) above would
comply with this requirement.
I proceed to consider the appellant's application in the light of these
requirements.
The evidence which the appellant is anxlous to place before the trial court
can be grouped together as follows:
1. Evidence that the appellant was provoked, assaulted and threatened by the
deceased, that he lost his temper, and that the stabbing
was not
premeditated.
21
2.
Evidence that he has become
"desensitized to violence" as a result of the brutalising experiences to which
he was exposed for a number
of years as a member of a "hit squad" of the South
African Police.
3.
The opinion of Mr Vogelman
that the appellant is capable of rehabilitation, having regard to his behaviour
since sentence was passed
on him.
4.
"Such
further evidence, not necessarily contained in the annexures hereto, as may have
bearing upon the question of mitigation of
sentence..." (para 5.3 of the
appellant's affidavlt in support of his Notice of Motion). Counsel for the
appellant did not suggest,
notwithstanding the wide wording of this formulation,
that the appellant be given free rein as to what evidence to lead - what was
meant, to use the phraseology of
s 316
(3) of the
Criminal Procedure Act was
"further evidence rendered necessary" by the evidence which may be let in under
paras 1 - 3 above.
I deal with each of these matters
in turn. Ad 1: The circumstances surrounding the murder of the deceased.
22
According to the appellant the deceased called him a "kaffir", ordered the
two of them off his land, slapped his face, and produced
a firearm. The
appellant thereupon lost hls temper and stabbed the deceased. The kllling of the
deceased was accordingly not premeditated.
That explanatlon, if tendered at
the time and if accepted, mlght well have qualified as mitigation. But that, as
has been stated earlier,
is but a single step in the sifting process. The
appellant's real difficultles commence with requlrement (b). I do not regard the
circumstances of this case as "exceptional" in the sense in which that term was
understood in cases such as S v Njaba
1966 (3) SA 140
(A) and S v Myende
1985
(1) SA 795
(A), ie as a factor which would exonerate him completely. Hence the
crux of the question is whether there is a reasonable possibillty
that the
appellant would have led that evidence at his trial if the Act had by then been
passed. Manifestly not. For one thing he
proclaimed his innocence. In that
defence he persisted even when, on the eve of his execution, he professed to
bare his soul. It
was only
23
sometime thereafter, during his evldence before the so-called Harms Commision
of Enquiry, that he confessed to the killing. Secondly,
he explalned afterwards
that he was advised by his superiors not to admit his complicity in the killing.
What he omitted to explain
is why he perpetuated the flction of his innocence in
his affidavit of 19 October 1989, the day before hls execution, even after
he
had becme disillusioned with his superiors in the police force. But even
assuming that he was so advised it shows no more than
that he would have
persevered in his denial of guilt even if the new test for the imposition of the
death sentence had then been
in operatlon. Requirement (b) has not, therefore,
been satisfied. Turning to requlrement (c) there, too, his applicatlon falls
short
of what is requlred. He has told so many lies, for so long, and on so many
occasions, that little if any credence can be attached
to hls most recent
version of what had happened on the day of the murder. There is nothing in the
record or in any subsequent document
to support his version that the deceased
taunted and threatened the appellant before the latter stabbed him five times
-
24
his co-accused gave no evidence'to that effect, then or now, and the
probabilities, far from supporting it, point the other way. Appellant
and his
companion embarked on an expedition to rob the deceased and his brother; and
when the deceased's brother left, they pounced.
It is highly improbable that the
deceased would have adopted the attitude now ascrlbed to him by the appellant.
What the appellant
now seeks to do is to put an entirely new gloss on his
evidence at the trial. The authorities make it clear that this is not to be
permitted. In my view, therefore, the first ground relied on by the appellant
does not meet the requirements which have to be satisfied
before a matter is
remitted to the trial court in terms of the relevant section.
Ad 2: The effect of the appellant's experiences in the police force.
The thrust of this part of the appellant' s submission is. that he had become
"desensitized to violence" and regarded himself as being
"above the law".
Assuming that to be so, the unpalatable fact is that the crime in question was
not committed while he
25
was on a mission ordered by his superiors. This was a planned robbery, for
which he and his confederates had prepared and armed themselves
in advance,
directed against two elderly farmers, and carried into effect against the
deceased when they saw that he was alone. It
is no excuse for the appellant to
say that he was trained and taught to kill; he was not trained to prey on
elderly innocent people.
Arrogance is not a mitigating factor. That he was a
policeman is a distinctly aggravating factor. In my view this explanation, even
if it is assumed to be true, falls short of requirements (b), (d) and (e).
Ad 3: That the appellant has the potential for rehabilitation.
According to Vogelman the appellant now
"feels the killing was not necessary and feels apologetic. He feels regret
about what he has done before God and man. He believes
no one has a right to
kill and that 'God does not dellght in the death of a man.'"
Moreover, because of the appellant's
"intellect, his capacity to care, his ability to form adequate social
relationships and reflect critically on his past, as well as
his non-aggressive
and co-operatlve conduct whilst in prison, Mr Nofomela is likely to respond to
rehabilitative programmes."
26
Counsel for the appellant conceded that events after sentence ought not to be
taken into account when an application of this sort
is considered; but it was
submltted that since the issue is the appellant's personality, what happened
afterwards can be used to
give insight into it at the time. Evidence as to his
personality and intelligence was of course available at the time of trlal. Such
evldence could have been led, and unless a case is made out that it would have
been led if the test had been dlfferent it cannot
be led now. It is true that
the appellant was at the time defended by pro deo counsel who did not command
the resources to commission
a psychological profile of the appellant, as was
later done by Vogelman. But that is doubtless true for most cases where pro deo
counsel appears for an accused who faces a sentence of death. Such is the
sadness of our system. These are considerations that would
no doubt weigh with
the State President when a matter which has merit is brought to his attention
under
section 327
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
. It cannot,
27
however, form the sole basis for an application in terms of section
19(12)(b)(iii) of the Act (cf R v Carr
1949 (2) SA 693
(A) at 699).
The application on thls ground also founders at the next level. I doubt
whether there is a realistic posslbility that the trial court
will flnd, if all
the evidence is placed before it, that a maverlck policeman who killed an
elderly farmer uuring a planned robbery
and who confessed to eight other
cold-blooded murders is promising material for rehabilitation. In my view
Vogelman's contrary opinion,
standlng alone, is not likely to result in a
different sentence. To refer the matter to the trial court on that limited issue
would
therefore be little more than an exercise in futility.'
For all the above reasons I have come to the
conclusion that the appllcation to lead further
evidence cannot succeed. It follows that the appeal
must fail and that the sentence of death imposed on the
appellant must be confirmed.
P.M. NIENABER JA
HEFER JA )
PREISS AJA | CONCUR