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[1987] ZASCA 150
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S v Sefatsa and Others (242/1986) [1987] ZASCA 150; [1988] 4 All SA 239 (AD) (1 December 1987)
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LL Case No 242/1986
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
APPELLATE DIVISION
In the matter between:
MOJALEFA REGINALD SEFATSA First Appellant
REID MALEBO
MOKOENA Second Appellant
OUPA MOSES DINISO Third
Appellant
THERESA RAMASHAMOLA Fourth Appellant
MOTSEKI
CHRISTIAAN MOKUBUNG Fifth Appellant
MOTSIDI GIDEON MOKONE Sixth
Appellant
DUMA JOSHUA KHUMALO Seventh Appellant
FRANCIS DON
MOKGESI Eighth Appellant
and
THE STATE Respondent
CORAM: BOTHA, HEFER, SMALBERGER JJA, BOSHOFF
et STEYN AJJA
HEARD: 2 NOVEMBER 1987
DELIVERED: 1 DECEMBER 1987
JUDGMENT
/BOTHA JA ...
LL Case No 242/1986
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA APPELLATE DIVISION
In the matter between:
MOJALEFA REGINALD SEFATSA First Appellant
REID MALEBO
MOKOENA Second Appellant
OUPA MOSES DINISO Third
Appellant
THERESA RAMASHAMOLA Fourth Appellant
MOTSEKI
CHRISTIAAN MOKUBUNG Fifth Appellant
MOTSIDI GIDEON MOKONE Sixth
Appellant
DUMA JOSHUA KHUMALO Seventh Appellant FRANCIS DON
MOKGESI Eighth Appellant
and
THE STATE Respondent
CORAM: BOTHA, HEFER, SMALBERGER JJA, BOSHOFF
et STEYN AJJA
HEARD: 2 NOVEMBER 1987
DELIVERED: 1 DECEMBER 1987
JUDGMENT
/BOTHA JA ...
2.
BOTHA JA:-
On 3 September 1984 Mr Kuzwayo Jacob Dlamini,
the deputy major of the town council of Lekoa, was mur-dered outside his house in Sharpeville, near Vereeniging.
A mob of people numbering about 100 had attacked his house, first by pelting it with stones, thus breaking the windows, and then by hurling petrol bombs through the windows, thus setting the house alight. Mr Dlamini's car was removed from the garage, pushed into the street,
turned on its side, and set on fire. As his hoúse was burning down Mr Dlamini fled from it and ran towards a
neighbouring house. Before he could reach it he was caught by some members of the mob, who disarmed him of a pistol that he had with him. He was then assaulted. Stones were thrown at him and some members of the mob
went up to him and battered his head with stones. There-
after he as
dragged into the street, where petrol was
poured over him and he was set alight. He died there.
/These ...
3.
These events led to eight persons - they are the
eight appellants in this case - being charged in the Transvaal Provincial
Division
before HUMAN AJ and asses-sors on two counts. Count one was a charge of
murder, arising out of the killing of Mr Dlamini, to whom
I shall henceforth
refer as the deceased. Count two was a charge of subversion, which was framed in
terms of section 54(2) of Act
74 of 1982 (the Internal Security Act), with
refer-ence to certain circumstances surrounding the killing of the deceased,
which will
be detailed later. Count two
contained alternative charges of
arson and malicious in-
jury to property. All the appellants pleaded not guilty
to all the
charges.For convenience I shall refer to
the appellants collectively as the
accused and individually by means of the numbers allocated to each of them in
the Court a quo. At the conclusion of a lengthy trial the trial Court
convicted the accused as follows:
Count one: accused Nos 1, 2, 3, 4, 7 and 8
/convicted ...
4.
convicted of murder; accused Nos 5 and 6 convicted of public violence (this being a competent verdict in terms of section 258 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977).
Count two: all the accused convicted of subversion.
In respect of the convictions of accused Nos 1, 2, 3, 4, 7 and 8 on the charge of murder the trial Court found that there were no extenuating circumstances. Consequently each of these accused was sentenced to death. In respect of the convictions of accused Nos 5 and 6 of public violence, each of them was sentenced to 5 years' imprisonment. In respect of the convictions of subversion all of the accused were sentenced to 8 years' imprisonment. In the case of accused Nos 5 and 6 it was ordered that their sentences of imprisonment were to run concurrently.
The trial Judge granted leave to all the accused to appeal to this Court. In his judgment granting leave the Ierland Judge specified certain grounds upon which he
considered that leave should be granted. The first issue
/to ...
5.
to be considered in this appeal is whether the trial Judge
intended to curtail the ambit of the appeal by limiting it to the grounds
specified in his judgment (this was the
contention advanced on behalf of the
State) or whether the grounds specified were merely the reasons mentioned by the
learned Judge
for granting leave which was intended nevertheless to be leave in
general terms (as was contend-
ed for on behalf of the accused). This issue
was argued
separately, as a preliminary matter, at the outset of the hearing
of the appeal. At the conclusion of this part of the argument the
Court
announced that counsel for the accused would be allowed to argue the appeal
without any limitation as to the scope of the grounds
he wished to
canvass
and that the Court would deal with the preliminary
arguments in its final
judgment. In order to explain why this course was followed, and also with a view
to the
basis upon which the factual issues will be dealt with
later in this judgment, it is necessary first of all to
/survey ...
6.
survey some aspects of the course of the trial generally and of the trial Judge's judgment on the merits, and
thereafter to advert to the application for leave to ap-peal and the trial Judge's judgment thereon.
The trial was, as I have said, a lengthy one. A large number of witnesses were called to testify, both for the State and for the accused. Amongst the witnesses called by the State were a number of eyewitnesses of the events, or parts of the events, in question. Of these, the names of three must be mentioned now: Jantjie Mabuti, Mrs Alice Dlamini, and Joseph Manete. Mabuti gave the
most detailed account of the entire sequence of the events.
In his evidence he implicated accused Nos 1, 4, 5, 6, 7
I and 8, all of whom were known to him. Mrs Dlamini, the widow of the deceased, testified to part of the events, and implicated accused No 1, whom she knew. Manete described a part of the events that he witnessed, and im-plicated accused Nos 7 and 8, who were known to him.
/Accused ...
7.
Accused No 2 was implicated by a confession that he had made to a magistrate, which was ruled to be admissible after a "trial within the trial", and also by a letter he had written to the Minister of Justice while in prison. Accused No 3 was implicated by means of police evidence as to the circumstances under which the deceased's pistoí was found in his possession some time after the events.
During the cross-examination of the State wit-
ness Manetey,counsel for the
accused informed the trial
Judge that he (counsel) was in possession of a
statement
made by Manete which was prima facie a privileged
state-ment, having been made by the witness to an attorney for the purpose of
obtaining legal advice. Counsel argued
that he was nevertheless entitled to
cross-examine Manete on the contents of the statement. It will be necessary
later in this judgment
to examine the nature of the argu-ment that was put
forward by counsel and what transpired during its presentation to the Judge a
quo. For present
/purposes ...
8.
purposes the point to be recorded is that the trial Judge at the conclusion of the argument delivered a judgment in which he held that he had no power to order Manete to be cross-examined about the statement. Accordingly he ruled that such cross-examination be disallowed.
All the accused gave evidence denying compli-city in the events that led to
the killing of the deceased. Most of them denied having
been at or near the
scene at any relevant time and some set up alibi defences of an elaborate
nature, involving the calling of many
witnesses.
In addition, a number of
witnesses were called to contra-
dict some of the general observations
deposed to by the eyewitnesses called by the State, particularly Mabuti.
In a comprehensive judgment on the merits of
the case HUMAN AJ analysed all the evidence in detail and furnished full reasons as to why the trial Court ac-cepted the evidence of certain witnesses and rejected
that of others. With regard to the eyewitnesses called
/by ...
9.
by the State, the trial Court found that some of them were unreliable and that no weight could be attached to their evidence; others the trial Court found to be both credible and reliable witnesses. In the latter category were the three witnesses whose names I have mentioned already: Mabuti, Mrs Dlamini, and Manete. It is clear from the judgment that the trial Court considered Mabuti
to be a particularly impressive witness; the Court's
opinion of him, as
recorded by the trial Judge, was that
he was an extremely competent,
intelligent and honest
witness. During the course of the events in question
he had deliberately from time to time moved from one van-
tage-point to
another in order to be able the better to
observe the events, with the
specific object of later
making a full report of what he had seen to the
police
(which he did). The Court found, on an analysis of
his
evidence,that he was able to make the observations to which he testified
and that they were reliable. Of
/Mrs ...
10.
Mrs Dlamini the trial Judge observed that her honesty could
not be questioned (nor was it), and that her obser-vations were found
by the
trial Court to be reliable. As to Manete, the trial Judge remarked that in
respect
of some details his evidence was subject to valid criti-cism. The
trial Court treated his evidence with caution, but nevertheless
found it to be
acceptable, particularly in so far as he implicated accused Nos 7 and 8. In this
regard it must be noted that the
trial Court, in assessing the State case,
placed reliance on the fact that Mabuti and Manete corroborated each other in a
number
of material respects. (This aspect of the trial Court's approach
will be referred to again later.) With regard to the
witnesses for the defence, the trial Judge canvassed numerous contradictions and other unsatisfactory features in the evidence of each of tKe accused, which the trial Court regarded as justifying the rejection of the denials of complicity by the accused as being false beyond reason-
/able ...
11.
able doubt. Similarly, the evidence of the witnesses called. in support of the alibi defences and in refutation of some of Mabuti's general observations was scrutinized at considerable length, in order to demonstrate the grounds upon which the trial Court concluded that that evidence, in so far as it was material, was also false beyond reasonable doubt.
Against this background I now turn to the ap-plication for, leave to appeal. The application contained no less than 22 separately enumerated grounds upon which leave was sought, some of which were of a composite nature. I do not propose to quote these grounds. For the most part they related to specific findings of fact by the
trial Court and to the acceptance or rejection by the .
trial Court of the evidence of particular witnesses. For instance, in para 10
the ground of appeal put forward
was that the trial Court had erred in
accepting the evi-
dence of Mabuti, for a number of reasons, including the
/fact ...
12.
fact that his evidence was in conflict with that of cer-tain
named defence witnesses on particular stated issues of fact. In a limited
number
of instances, however, the grounds of appeal advanced were based on the
suppo-
sition that the State evidence was acceptable. For in-stance, in paras
1 and 2 it was said that there was no evidence that any act
of any of accused
Nos 1, 2, 3, 4, 7 and 8 had caused the death of the deceased, while in para 12
it was alleged that the trial Court
had erred in finding on the basis of the
State evidence that accused
Nos 5 and 6 were guilty of public violence.
Particular mention must be made of para 14, in which the ground of appeal raised
was that
the trial Judge had erred in law in disallowing the cross-examination
of the witness Manete in regard to the statement made by him
to the attorney of
record in the case. For the rest, the last few grounds of appeal related to the
finding that there were no extenuating
circumstances in regard to the six
/accused ...
13.
accused convicted of murder, and to the sentences of im- prisonment imposed
on all the accused, as mentioned
earlier.
In his judgment on the application HUMAN AJ
said the following:
"Insofar as the application for leave to appeal to the Appellate Division is con- cerned on the charge of murder and the sub-
sequent sentence of death there are at
least twenty-two grounds advanced in the application for leave to appeal. It is
unnecessary to repeat them all in view of
the fact that I am of
the view that there is no reasonable prospect of success insofar
as the facts
found proved by this Court is
(sic) concerned but on three other grounds,
being questions of law, I am satisfied that
I should grant leave to appeal to the Ap=
pellate Division."
The learned Judge proceeded to deal with the three grounds
he had in mind as follows. First, with reference to an argument advanced by counsel for the accused that there
several accused and the deceased's death", the learned
/Judge ...
14.
Judge quoted at length certain passages from three of the judgments delivered in S v Khoza 1982 (3) SA 1910 (A) and
then said:
" it seems to me that the question of
causality is in the melting pot and should once and for all be decided
authoritatively by the Appellate Division. On that ground
I am,therefore, of
the opinion that leave
should be granted."
The learned Judge continued as follows:
"But there is a second ground in law why
I should grant leave to appeal and that is
that I disallowed the cross-examination of the witness Manete in regard to a privi-
leged statement that he had made. Another
Court may come to the conclusion in that
respect that I erred in law and that may have been to the prejudice of the accused generally, especially accused nos. 7 and 8."
The learned Judge mentioned that counsel for the State
had referred him to section 201 of the Criminal Procedure
Act, and, having quoted the provisions of that section,
"I must point out that I gave a separate
/judgment ...
15.
judgment in this respect and I did not agree with the judgment of an English judge
which was quoted to me by Mr Unterhalter for the defence. However, I am still of the view that another Court may come to a different conclusion despite the provisions
of the section to which I have just referred on the ground that where it is in the interests of an accused such cross-examination should have been allowed."
The judgment continued as follows:
"The third ground on which I grant leave to
appeal is the question of my interpretation
of section 54(2) as well as the provisions
of section 69 of the Internal Security Act
No 74 of 1982. Another Court may come to a conclusion that my interpretation was not
altogether correct in law."
Having stated the three grounds of appeal as quoted above, the learned Judge concluded:
"I am therefore disposed to grant leave to appeal to all the accused for leave to appeal
(sic) to the Appellate Division."
However,the learned Judge then added a further final para-
graph to his
judgment, which commenced by mentioning that
accused Nos 5 and 6 had been
convicted of public violence.
/He ...
16.
He then referred, in passing it seems, to accused No 4. He
said that it had been argued on her behalf that there was no evidence proving
that certain words of incitement
which she had shouted (according to the
finding of the
trial Court, as will appear later) had been overheard or acted
upon by other members of the mob. The learned Judge made no comment
on this, but
simply reverted to
accused Nos 5 and 6 by saying, in conclusion of his
judg-
ment:
"I am also disposed to grant leave to accused nos. 5 and 6 to appeal on the charge of public violence."
It will be convenient to dispose at once of the issue whether or not the
trial Judge intended to limit
the ambit of the appeal to the grounds
specified by him.
In my opinion, although the judgment granting leave is not
ideally clear, the learned Judge did intend so to limit the scope of the
appeal.
Having regard to the fact that he expressed the view that there was no
reasonable
/prospect ...
17.
prospect of success in relation to the facts found proved by
the trial Court, it is difficult to conceive that he could have intended
to
allow the accused to canvass the trial Court's factual findings on appeal, for,
ex hypothesi, that would have been a futile exercise. This view is
for-tified by his use of the words "but on three other grounds, being questions
of law", by which the findings of fact were implicitly excluded from
consideration. The manner in which the learned Judge enumerated
the three
specified grounds of appeal, as quoted above, also militates against the
possibility that he intended to grant leave in
general, unrestricted terms, for
it would be difficult to reconcile which he expressed himself with an intention
merely to state
reasons for granting leave generally. In that light his
statement that he was disposed to grant leave to all the accused cannot,
in my
view, properly be
construed as granting leave generally, over and above
the
three grounds of appeal which had been specified. Nor
/does ...
18.
does the final paragraph of his judgment materially alter
the position. In
the context, the granting of leave to accused Nos 5 and 6 to appeal against
their convictions of public violence
was most probably based on para 12 of the
application for leave, to which reference was made earlier, in which it was
alleged that
the trial Court had erred in finding on the basis of the State
evidence that accused Nos 5 and 6 were guilty of public violence.
In
effect,
the learned Judge added a fourth ground of appeal, relating to accused Nos 5 and
6, to the three grounds al-ready enumerated
by him, but I do not think that he
in-tended thereby to open the door to a consideration of the
trial Court's
findings of fact in regard to either the
conduct of accused Nos 5 and 6 or
any other aspect of the
case. Similarly, the reference to the argument
advanced on behalf of accused No 4, mentioned above, was most likely meant
merely to
indicate a point that could be considered on appeal, without any
intention to enlarge the ambit of
/the ...
19.
the leave granted so as to embrace an attack on the trial Court's
findings of fact. Finally, the learned Judge omitted to deal pertinently
in his
judgment with the question of leave to appeal against the finding that
there
were no extenuating circumstances on the murder count or against the sentences
imposed in respect of the other convictions.
It is not clear whether the learned
Judge, by not mentioning this aspect of the matter, in-tended to convey that
leave to appeal
in that regard was being refused, or whether his failure to deal
with it was merely an oversight. But whatever the position may be
in that respect (and I shall revert to it later), I do
not consider that
it could serve to justify an inference
that the learned Judge intended to grant leave to appeal
in respect of the convictions themselves in terms broader than those specified in the judgment.
It will be recalled that the ambit of the leave
to appeal granted by the Judge a quo was argued as a
/preliminary ...
20.
preliminary issue at the outset of the hearing of this appeal, and that the Court then ruled that counsel for the accused would be allowed to canvass all the issues that he wished to raise. It is necessary now to explain why this ruling was made. It was not based upon a con-sideration of the terms of the judgment granting leave,
taken generally, nor upon the arguments addressed to the
Court as to the interpretation of the judgment. The basis of the ruling was a narrow one, and it related
solely to the circumstances pertaining to the "witness
Manete. To sum up: Manete was an eyewitness called by the State, whose evidence the trial Court found to be acceptable, particularly in regard to the complicity of accused Nos 7 and 8; in assessing the State case, as I
pointed out earlier, the trial Court had placed reliance
on the fact that Manete and Mabuti had corroborated each other in material respects, and Mabuti was a most im-portant witness for the State; but the trial Judge had
/disallowed ...
21.
disallbwed cross-examination of Manete on a statement made by him; leave was sought to appeal against that ruling;
and the trial Judge granted leave on that ground, remark-ing that the
accused, particularly accused Nos 7 and 8,
could have been prejudiced in that
respect. In these circumstances it was clear that if this Court were to de-cide
that the trial
Judge had erred in disallowing Manete's cross-examination a
re-appraisal of the entire case would be called for, leaving aside the
evidence
of Manete. But at the stage when the preliminary issue was being debated the
other issue as to the cross-exami-
nation of Manete was yet to be argued. It was obvious that the latter issue involved a principle of considerable importance and it was felt that it would be inadvisable to call for argument on it and to decide it in the context of considering the preliminary issue. Accordingly it was for the purpose of catering for the possibility of the
Court ultimately finding that Manete's cross-examination
/had ...
22.
had been wrongly restricted, and of a re-appraisal of
the
remainder of the evidence in that event, that the Court
made the
ruling under discussion. It was upon that foot-
ing that counsel for the
accused was given free rein in
his argument.
uated. For reasons to be stated later,the coclusion arrived at, after consideration of the arguments presented
for having disallowed the cross-examination of Manete to
the extent that he did. That, however, does not yet put an end to the
preliminary issue. Counsel for the accused argued in
application for leave to appeal, properly construed,did
not limit the grounds upon which the appeal could be ar-gued. For reasons which appear from what has been said above, that argument fails. : But in the second place
/counsel ...
23.
counsel argued that even if the trial Judge did intend to restrict the grounds of appeal to those enumerated by him, this Court could and should nevertheless allow. the appeal to be argued on a broader basis, inclusive of all the grounds put forward in the application and some others too. In one sense, this argument is now academic, since full argument on the appeal has been allowed in any event, for the reasons explained above. But in another sense the argument is still of residual relevance, for upon the answer to it will depend the limits of the issues which fall to be discussed in this judgment. I therefore pro-ceed to deal with the argument.
It is generally accepted that leave to appeal can validly be restricted to certain specified grounds of
appeal (see R v Jantjies 1958 (2) SA 273 (A) at 275 A;
S v
Williams en 'n Ander 1970 (2) SA 654 (A) at 655 F-G; S v
Sikosana"1980" (4) SA 559 (A) at 563 A-B). In
practice this is frequently a convenient and commendable
/course ...
24.
course to adopt, especially in long cases, in order to separate the wheat from the chaff. On the other hand,
this Court will not necessarily consider itself bound by the grounds upon which leave has been granted. If this
Court is of the view that in a ground of appeal not cover-ed by the terms of the leave granted there is sufficient
merit to warrant the consideration of it, it will allow such a ground to be argued. This is well illustrated by
the judgment of SCHREINER ACJ in R v Mpompotshe and
Another 1958 (4) SA 471 (A) at 472 H - 473 F. In my
view, however, it requires to be emphasized that an ap-
pellant has no right to argue matters not covered by the
terms of the leave granted. His only "right" is to ask
this Court to allow him to do so. In Mpompotshe's case
supra SCHREINER ACJ referred to "matters which this Court
should think worthy of consideration", and to the power
of the Court "to condone the delay and grant leave to
appeal on wider grounds than those allowed by the trial
/Judge" ...
25.
Judge". A formal petition for leave to appeal on wider grounds is not an indispensable prerequisite, since the
matter is before the Court, whose members would be con-versant with the record, but the remarks I have quoted
show that the Court will certainly decline to hear argu-
ment on an additional ground of appeal if there is no
reasonable prospect of success in respect of it. I should make it clear that I am dealing here with the
widening of grounds of appeal in respect of an appeal
against a conviction". I am not dealing with the situation
where leave has been granted to appeal against sentence
only and the appellant seeks to appeal against his con-
viction - as to
which see S v Langa en Andere 1981 (3)
SA 186 (A) at 189 F - 190 F; nor am I dealing at the
moment with the converse situation where leave has been
granted to appeal against a conviction and the appellant seeks to appeal against his sentence - as to that, see
S v Shenker and Another 1976 (3) SA 57 (A) at 58 H - 61 E,
/to ...
26.
to which further reference will be made below.
In the present case the grounds of appeal, other than those enumerated by the
trial Judge, which counsel for the accused sought to
argue(and, in the event,
did argue) were, for the most part, wholly with-out substance. Were it not for
the peculiar situation arising
from the point relating to the cross-examination
of Manete, as described above, this Court would not have
allowed argument to
proceed on those grounds of appeal. The difficulty caused by the point about
Manete's cross-
examination has now been resolved, as I have indicated.
In these
circumstances there is no occasion for this Court in the present judgment to
furnish reasons for its view that the grounds
of appeal to which I have referred
are without substance. The position is analogous to that which would have
existed had the accused
petitioned the CHIEF JUSTICE for leave to extend the
grounds of appeal stated by the trial Judge. Accordingly I shall make no
/further ...
27.
further reference to the additional grounds of appeal which were argued but which are considered to be without. merit. I would only mention in general that the trial Court's strong findings of credibility and reliability in respect of Mabuti and Mrs Dlamini, as well as the trial Court's criticisms of the evidence of the accused and their witnesses, are fully borne out by a perusal of the record.
In two instances, however, apart from the grounds of appeal allowed by the
trial Judge, the argu- ments raised by counsel for the
accused are not entirely
devoid of merit. They. relate, firstly, to the conduct of
accused No 1 which
the trial Court found to have been
proved,and, secondly, to the inference as
to the com-plicity of accused No 3 which the trial Court drew from
the facts
found proved against him. I shall deal briefly with these matters later in this
judgment. In addition, a question was raised
in argument before this Court
which
/had ...
28.
had not been referred to in the Court a quo at all,
nor even in counsel's heads of argument, but which requires
consideration. It
relates to the propriety of the con-victions of accused Nos 5 and 6 of both
public violence
and subversion. This will also be dealt with later in
this
judgment.
As to the trial Court's finding in regard to the absence of extenuating
circumstances and the trial Judge's sentences, Shenker's case
supra is authority for the proposition that this Court is empowered to
consider
an appeal against sentence even if leave has been granted
to
appeal against conviction only. I imagine that in that situation, too, the Court
would entertain an argument directed against sentence
only if it were satisfied
that there was a reasonable prospect of it succeeding. In the present case,
however, I do not wish to pose
this question,for,as I have pointed out, it is
not clear from the judgment of the trial Judge whether or not he
/intended ...
29.
intended to refuse leave to appeal in respect of the find-
ing in regard to extenuating circumstances and the sen-tences imposed. Accordingly, in so far as it may turn but to be necessary, I shall deal with these matters at the end of this judgment, as if leave had been granted in those respects.
That concludes my survey of the ambit of this
appeal.
It will be convenient to deal first with the second ground of appeal
mentioned by the trial Judge, i e the matter of Manete's cross-examination.
How
the point arose and was dealt with in the course of the trial re-quires to be
described in some detail. After the cross-
examination of Manete by counsel
for the accused had been
in progress for some considerable time, counsel
requested the trial Judge to order that the witness should tempora-rily stand
down
and leave the court-room. The trial Judge acceded to the request. Thereupon
counsel informed
/the ...
30.
the trial Judge that he was in possession of a statement that the witness had made to an attorney, which was in fact a communication made by him as client to such attorney whom he had consulted, and which was accordingly privi-leged. From exchanges between counsel and the trial Judge during later stages of the debate that ensued, the following further information relating to the statement emerged: it was made by the witness during a consultation with his attorney for the purpose of obtaining legal ad-vice on a matter concerning him (the witness) in relation to the very trial which was being heard; the attorney concerned was the very same attorney who was the instruct-
ing attorney acting on behalf of the accused in the trial;
and the attorney had made the statement available to coun-sel for the accused after having sought and obtained the views of a number of members of the Law Society, which
were to the effect that the matter should be put before the trial Court in order to seek its guidance.
/On ...
31.
On being informed of the existence of Manete's privileged statement which counsel had in his possession, the trial Judge raised with counsel the question whether the Court would have any power to order the witness to answer questions in regard to the statement, in the event
of the witness not being prepared to waive the privilege
attaching to it. Counsel submitted that the trial Judge
did have that power. In support of this submission
counsel relied on R v Barton (1972) 2 All E R 1192. In fact,
he read out the whole of the judgment in that case to the trial Judge. In view of the importance which counsel attached to that judgment, both in the Court a quo and in argument before this Court, and having regard to the
tenor of the judgment,I feel constrained to quote it in
full. It was a judgment delivered by CAULFIELD J in the Crown Court at Lincoln. In the quotation which
follows,have emphasized certain passages for ease of
reference back later.
/"This ...
32.
"This is a novel application in my experience. We are on circuit and counsel, who have given
the greatest possible assistance, have them-
selves been in some difficulty in carrying out the research necessary in order to help the
court. This accused man is facing a number of counts which allege that, in the course of
his employment as a legal executive with a
firm of solicitors in this county, he has fraudulently converted to his own use moneys which formed part of an estate which he was administering on behalf of either executors or
administrators. He is also charged with theft
and falsification of accounts; all these counts are said to have arisen out of his administering,
in the course of his duties, certain estates. It is not necessary for this ruling also to
state that in the Crown case the Crown alleges
that in one or two instances he was an executor
or trustee of estates.
These, of course, are very serious counts and
allegations that are made against him. After arraignment, but before impanelling the jury, counsel for the accused made an application to me to make a ruling on a point that had been taken by a solicitor who is a partner in the
relevant firm. A subpoena has been served on
the solicitor by the defence and, included in
the narrative of the subpoena to attend to give
evidence, is what in effect is the old-fashioned notice to produce documents, and those documents
of which notice is given to produce are, I am
told (and I assume for the purposes of this
ruling), documents that have come into existence in the solicitors' office where the solicitor
/is ...
33.
is acting as the solicitor to executors or
administrators in the administration or
winding-up of estates; and those documents
in respect of those estates are not docu-
ments that would otherwise be relevant or
admissible in this trial. They are not
the subject of any charge against the ac-
cused, and on the Crown case they would not
be in evidence. But I am told by counsel
for the accused, and I have to assume that
this is absolutely correct for the purposes
of this ruling that the documents, or certain
of the documents included in the notice to
produce, will help to further a point that is
going to be raised in defence of these charges
and, subject to correction from counsel for
the accused, that really is the ground on
which he seeks to make this application.
Putting it in another way, counsel says that
in the interests of his client justice would
not bedone unless these documents were dis-
closed.Counsel contends that certain of
those documents may or do contain evidence
which will help the accused in resisting these
counts to which he has pleaded not guilty.
The solicitor has acted perfectly properly,
as one would expect, throughout. He in fact
is a witness for the Crown, and therefore the
subpoena to give evidence which has been served on him was really unnecessary. This ruling is
concerned simply with the notice to produce
that is incorporated in the subpoena. Having
taken the advice of the Law Society, the soli-citor has taken the point that these documents are privileged and therefore he does not have
/to ...
34. to produce them. He has taken this point
in a
purely professional way; he has not taken it aggressively. When the defence
application was made he was not in court officially,
and in any event he is a
wit-ness for the Crown. He was not represented and I took the view that as a
matter of justice he should
have the opportunity of receiving independent advice
and having separate representation before me. So the matter was adjourned for
a
day or so and now counsel has made submissions to me on behalf of the solicitor
to support his contention.
The principles of legal professional privilege are fully set out in
Professor
Cross's book on evidence to which I have
been referred,and generally speaking it is
perfectly simple to decide whether or not a particular document is privileged. As Professor Cross says |in his book:
'Communications passing between a client and his legal adviser, together, in some cases, with communications pas-sing between these persons and third parties may not be given in evidence wïthout the consent of the client if they were made either (1) with reference to litigation that was actually taking place or was in the contemplation of the client, or (2) if they were made to en-
able the client to obtain,or the ad-
vïser to give, legal advice.'
And of course the privilege is one that is claimed by the client. Further, it is fairly
/plain ...
35.
plain from what counsel for the solicitor has submitted to me on his behalf that a solicitor has a duty to alert his client to this parti-cular point, and indeed to take this point. even though the client has not himself had the opportunity to take it. So the solicitor has acted perfectly properly throughout. In the normal case in civil proceedings this is the sort of application which would come to be determined prior to the trial, and the docu-ments which were the subject of objection by the solicitor would be produced to the master
or judge and then the judge, who would not be trying the action, would look at the documents and give a ruling, and of course the procedure is well laid down as to what should be done. That is why I was in some difficulty as to how to determine this application, which of course is being made in the absence of the jury. So I have not seen any of these documents and therefore, apart from what I have heard from counsel, I do not think that it is possible for me to make any ruling on the ground that these documents were documents that had any
reference to litigation that was actually
taking place or was in the contemplation of the client, or secondly - going to the second
point made by Professor Cross - that the docu-
ments were made to enable the client to obtain, or the adviser to give, legal advice.
I am not going to decide this application
on the basis that
either one or other of those
two principles is not satisfied in this
parti-
cular application. I think the correct prin-ciple is this, and I think that it must be restricted to these particular facts in a criminal trial, and the principle I am going
/to ...
36.
to enunciate is not supported by any autho-rity that has been cited to me; I am just
working on what I conceive to be the rules of natural justice. If there are documents in the possession or control of a solicitor which, on production, help to further the defence of an accused man, then in my judg-ment no privilege attaches. I cannot con-ceive that our law would permit a solicitor or other person to screen from a jury informa-tion which, if disclosed to the jury, would
perhaps enable a man either to establish his
innocence or to resist an allegation made by the Crown. I think that is the principle that should be followed.
I am not going to express in any detail what documents should or should not be in
evidence in this case. Of course,those docu-
ments, when they are produced in this case, will have to contain evidence that is both relevant and admissible. Those two points will have to be satisfied, and no doubt the Crown will be alert to object if there is any evidence in the documents which is neither
relevant nor admissible, but where there is
evidence which is in the possession of the solicitor that is relevant and admissible to
a contention by the accused either pointing to his innocence or resisting
his guilt, that document in my judgment is not privileged and the solicitor
must obey the subpoena and notice to produce that has been served on
him.I am
at this stage only stating what
I think is the principle to be followed, and from what I have been told on behalf of the solicitor he is desirous of co-operating.
/The ...
37.
The documents can no doubt be examined by
counsel for the defence in the company of
counsel for the Crown, and I see no reason why the solicitor should not have his own separate adviser present at the time. I have no doubt then that the point I have made in this ruling will be appreciated and only those documents which are relevant and admissible will be brought before the court.
Therefore I do not set aside this subpoena and I do not set aside the notice to produce."
As to the first passage emphasized in the quotation above, counsel for the accused, when reading it to the trial Judge, paused after each sentence in order to stress that he was putting forward contentions in the present case which were identical in substance with those referred to in that passage. As to the last two passages emphasized in the quotation above, counsel said that they embodied the principle on which he was relying for the submission that he was entitled to cross-examine Manete on his statement.
Immediately after counsel for the accused had concluded his reading of the judgment in Barton's case
/to ...
38.
to the trial Judge, the following exchanges took place between the learned Judge and counsel:
"COURT: My difficulty is I do not know how
this statement will assist, even if I adopt
that principle, how will this statement as-sist the accused to prove their innocence? How can I make a ruling before I know that?
MR UNTERHALTER: Well, My Lord, without going into the matter in any detail ...
COURT: Well, I must know.
MR UNTERHALTER: Yes. Well, if I may, with Your Lordship's permission do so, the con-tents of this statement are to the effect
that the implication of accused no. 7and no.
8 is not a voluntary implication, but an im-
plication that was dictated to this witness
and because of that ...
COURT: I beg your pardon? It was not a
voluntary what?
MR UNTERHALTER: It was not a voluntary im-
plication of accused no. 7 and 8, but he was
told to implicate them. In other words he
is not giving the evidence absolutely untram-
melled, he did it because he was told by the
police to do it."
After further argument by counsel for the accused (during which no fresh light was thrown on the contents of the
statement), the trial Judge enquired:from counsel for the
/State ...
39.
State what his attitude was, whereupon counsel for the State responded briefly that he was unaware of what was contained in the statement and that he objected to the disclosure of its contents on the ground of the privilege attaching to it. Thereafter Manete was called back to
the witness stand. The trial Judge explained to him
that counsel for the accused wished to cross-examine him on the statement that he had made to the attorney, that this statement was privileged, that he could claim privi-lege or waive it, and that he was entitled to seek legal advice on his position if he wished to do so. The witness said that he recalled having made a, statement to an attorney. The following then appears from the re-cord:
"Now you see, you cannot be questioned about that statement because it is a privi-leged statement. — Yes, I understand.
Unless I order you to answer questions
about that statement. Now, in order for me to determine what to do I must enquire from you whether you claim privilege, in
/other ...
40.
other words you refuse to answer questions about that statement. — Yes, I refuse.
Pardon? — Yes, I do not want to answer questions about that statement.
You do not want to answer questions about
--Yes.
So you claim privïlege? — Yes."
Counsel for the accused then presented further argument to the Court a quo. He referred to the comments on Barton's case appearing in Phipson on Evidence (12th ed) para 585 at 242 (see now the 13th edition para 15-07
at 294)and in Cross on Evidence (5th ed) at-290-1 and 315.
Finally, he placed before the trial Judge a passage in the speech of LORD DIPLOCK in Secretary of State for Defence and Another v Guardian Newspapers Ltd (1984) 3 All E R 601 (H L) at 605 d-g. That case concerned a statutory pro-vision relating to the disclosure of certain sources of information. In the passage cited LORD DIPLOCK referred to the discretion that an English judge had under the common law to decline to order disclosure of sources of information, despite their relevance to an issue in
/particular ...
41.
particular proceedings, where such disclosure would
be
contrary to some public interest; he said that the clas-sic example of the
exercise of this discretion was where disclosure of the
identity of police
informers was sought; he mentioned that the discretion had been extended by the
House of Lords to other sources
of information, in dif-ferent contexts; and then
he went on to say the following:
"The rationale of the existence of this dis-cretion was that unless informants could be confident that their identity would not be disclosed there was a serious risk that sources of information would dry up. So the exercise of the discretion involved weighing the public interest in eliminating this risk against the conflicting public interest that information which might assist a judicial tribunal to ascertain facts rele-vant to an issue on which it is required to
adjudicate should not be withheld from that
tribunal. Unless the balance of competing
public interest titled (sic ? tilted) against
disclosure, the right to disclosure of sources of information in cases where this was rele-vant prevailed."
Counsel for the accused told the trial Judge that he was
invoking "that principle" for the submission that disclosure
/of ...
42.
of Manete's statement should be permitted.
The trial Judge thereupon gave judgment on the matter. He reviewed the authorities to which he had been referred, and concluded as follows:
"I am of the view that where the witness claims privilege in regard to a statement
that he had made to a professional person
and he does not waive that privilege that I have no power to order him to be cross-
examined about that statement. I there-
fore cannot accede to defence counsel's request that I should order him to be cross-lexamined on that statement which he admit-
tedly made .... to....an attorney,
acting for the accused at the present stage."
I have dwelt at some length on the course of events in regard to the present matter in the Court a quo because when counsel for the accused argued the matter in
this Court it appeared that there was, if not a change of front, at least a distinct shift in the emphasis of
his argument. Although he still relied heavily on
Barton's case supra, the main thrust of his argument in
/this ...
43.
this Court was that the trial Judge had a discretion as to
whether or not he would allow Manete to be cross-examined on his statement,
and
that the learned Judge, by holding that he had no power to do so, had not
exer-cised his discretion at all, or at least not properly.
I shall deal later
with the argument in regard to the dis-cretion and the authorities cited to us
by counsel. For present purposes
the question is whether the trial Judge was
ever invited to exercise a discretion. When this question was put to counsel for
the
accused in the course of his argument in this Court he fairly conceded that
that had not been done in so many words, but he urged
that it had been done
implicitly. The point about this
enquiry is, of course, that there may
possibly be no room for entertaining an argument on appeal that the trial Judge
had failed to
exercise a discretion, or that he had exercised it improperly, if
in fact he had not been in-vited to apply his mind to the exercise
of a
discretion
/at ...
44.
at all.
In view of the course of events outlined above, I do not agree with counsel's
submission that the trial Judge had implicitly been
asked to exercise a
discretion, at least not in the sense in which the phrase "exercise a
discretion" is ordinarily used in a court
of law. The judgment of CAULFIELD J in
Barton's case supra was the cornerstone of the argument in the
Court a quo. That judgment, however, as I understand it, did not involve
the exercise of a discretion. The principle on which the decision was
stated to
be based, to paraphrase it in broad terms, was that in a criminal case documents
in the possession of a solicitor which
would otherwise have been the subject of
legal professional privilege, were-not privileged from production when once it
was alleged
on behalf of the accused that they could help to further
the defence of the accused.by pointing to his innocence
or resisting his guilt. It is clear that the mere
/allegation ...
45.
allegation by counsel for the accused in that case that the documents in question would or might assist the ac-cused in his defence was regarded by CAULFIELD J as a sufficient ground in itself for destroying the privilege. As pointed out earlier, with reference to the first pas-sage emphasized in my quotation of the judgment in Barton's case, that is exactly the way in which counsel for the ac-cused in the present case presented his argument in the
Court a quo. It was never suggested to the trial Judge that he should
peruse Manete's statement with a view to exercising a discretion as to
whether
or not cross-examina-tion on it should be allowed. Such meagre information
regarding the contents of the statement as was
disclosed,
was only elicited
in response to questioning by the trial
Judge. I appreciate that counsel for the accused had reservations about the propriety of divulging the contents of the statement until he had obtained a ruling on its admissibility from the trial Judge, but that cannot alter
/the ...
46.
the basis upon which the ruling was sought. Nor did
counsel's reliance on the remarks of LORD DIPLOCK in the Guardian Newspapers case supra, quoted above, take the
matter any further. The discretion under discussion there related to the weighing of conflicting public
interests in regard to the disclosure of sources of in-formation, and it was
referred to in the most general terms, unrelated to the
relevant facts and
circumstances of any particular case. The passage quoted could not have been
intended to alert the trial Judge
to the pos-sibility of exercising a discretion
related to the par-ticular facts and circumstances of the present case, as
opposed
to the application of the broad principle adopted in Barton's
case supra. Accordingly it is not surprising
that the trial Judge,
having decided, as he obviously did, not to follow the approach in
Barton's case, did not in his judgement advert to the exercise of a
discretion.
On the basis of the analysis above it is
/arguable ...
47.
arguable that it is not open to the accused on appeal to challenge the ruling of the trial Judge on the ground of his failure to exercise a discretion properly or at all. I do not propose to pursue this point, however, since I
prefer not to base my decision on such a narrow ground. The manner in which the argument for the accused was put forward in the Court a quo remains relevant, however, as will appear in due course, to the consideration of the argument addressed to this Court regarding the trial Judge's discretion and the way in which it was submitted that he should have exercised it. I proceed to deal
with this argument.
In support of his contention that the trial Judge was vested with a discretion which he should have exercised in favour of allowing Manete to be cross-examined
on his privileged statement, counsel for the accused re-
ferred to a number of Australian and Canadian cases, inter-
alia: Re Regina v Snider (1953) 2 D L R 9, Sankey v /Whitlam ...
48.
Whitlam and Others (1979) 53 A L J R 11, and Baker
v Campbell (1983) 49 A L R 385. These cases are not directly in
point, but counsel used them to demonstrate the appli-cation of "the principle
that where public
interests con-flict that which is paramount must prevail"
(Snider's case supra at 13). In the present case, counsel said,
"two public policies are in conflict" (Snider's case supra at 43),
namely, the public policy underlying the protection generally afforded against
the disclosure of communications
subject to legal professional privilege, and
the public
policy that no innocent man should be convicted of a crime. In
such a conflict, counsel submitted, the latter public policy is paramount
and
must prevail. In this regard he relied on a passage in the judgment of GREENBERG
JA in the
well-known case of R v Steyn 1954 (1) SA 324 (A). It
was
decided in that case that an accused has no right to claim
disclosure of statements made by State witnesses to the police. The passage relied on by counsel is the following (at 335 C-E):
/"I....
49.
"I did not understand counsel for the appel-lant to contend that the concept embodied in the phrase in favorem innocentiae could be invoked in favour of the claim that the law entitled the appellant to disclosure, and that this would make the rule in civil pro-ceedings inapplicable to a criminal trial, but in any case I do not think such a con-tention could be supported. In the branch of the law now under consideration the phrase is used to indicate a power in the court to relax a rule of privilege if the court is of
opinion that such relaxation may tend to show the innocence of the accused (see Tranter v Attorney-General and the First Criminal Magis-trate of Johannesburg, 1907 TS 415). In the present case the appellant has never con-
tended that the magistrate wrongly failed to
exercise this power, but that he was entitled by a rule of law to the disclosure."
Counsel contended that the trial Judge in the present case should have relaxed the rule of privilege attaching to Manete's statement, on the ground that cross-examination on that statement might have tended to show the innocence of the accused. It is to be observed at once, however, that the privilege which is applicable in the present case in regard to Manete's statement was not at all at stake in Steyn's case, viz the privilege flowing
/from ...
50.
from the confidential nature of Manete's communication to the
attorney for the purpose of obtaining legal advice. Nor was that kind
of
privilege in issue in Tranter's case supra to which GREENBERG JA
referred. Tranter's case
was concerned with the rule of public policy
against the disclosure of the identity of a police informer, as re-cognized
inter alia in Marks v Beyfus (1890) 25 Q B D 494
at 498, whence
the exception in favorem innocentiae is
derived. LORD ESHER said:
"I do not say it is a rule which can never be departed from; if upon the trial of a prisoner the judge should be of opinion
that the disclosure of the name of the in-
formant is necessary or right in order to show the prisoner's innocence, then one public policy is in conflict with another public policy, and that which says that an innocent man is not to be condemned when
his innocence can be proved is the policy that must prevail. But except in that case,
this rule of public policy is not a matter of discretion .....".
(In passing I point out that the phrases "the judge should be of opinion" and "a matter of discretion" presuppose
/that ...
51.
that all the relevant information is before the Court.) More recently, in D v National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children 1978 A C 171 (H L) LORD SIMON said, in a passage (at 232) which was quoted in Sankey's case supra at 20:
"The public interest that no innocent man
should be convicted of crime is so powerful that it outweighs the general public interest that sources of police information should not
be divulged, so that, exceptionally, such
evidence must be forthcoming when required
to establish innocence in a criminal trial
In my opinion, however, the rule of public
policy against the disclosure of the identity of a police
informer is not on a par with the principle of public
policy underlying the legal professional privilege afforded to a client who consults an attorney for the purpose of ob-
taining legal advice (cf S v Mpetha and Others (1) 1982
(2) SA 253
(C) at 259 B-E). The latter is of a more
compelling nature than the former. Wigmore (3rd ed) Vol VIII para 2291 says:
/"The ...
52.
"The policy of the privilege has been plainly grounded since the latter part of the 1700s on subjective considerations. In order to promote freedom of consultation of legal ad-visers by clients, the apprehension of com-pelled disclosure by the legal advisers must be removed; hence the law must prohibit
such disclosure except on the client's con-sent."
With reference to this passage FRIEDMAN J in Euroshipping Corporation of
Monrovia v Minister of Agricultural Econo-mics and Marketing and
Others 1979 (1) SA 637 (C) at 643 H -
644 B spoke of "this fundamental
right of a client" and
rightly stressed that it was important
"that inroads should not be made into the
right of a client to consult freely with his legal adviser, without fear that his confidential communications to the latter will not be kept secret."
A recent comprehensive survey of the history
and nature of legal professional privilege is to be found in the seven
judgments delivered in the High Court of of Baker v Campbell supra
( (1983) 49
A L R 385), which I have found to be most instructive.
/Although ...
53.
Although, on the issue which called for decision in that case (which is not in point in the present case), the Court was divided (4 to 3), all the judgments appear to have recognized, in regard to legal professional privilege, that
"this privilege is a mere manifestation
of a fundamental principle upon which
our judicial system is based"
(see e g at 417 line 32), and in my view the same holds true for our own judicial system. In amplification of
the "fundamental principle" referred to, I quote the fol-lowing excerpts from the judgment of DAWSON J (at 442-5):
"The law came to recognise that for its
better functioning it was necessary that there
should be freedom of communication between a lawyer and his client for the purpose of
giving and receiving legal advice and for
the purpose of litigation and that this en-tailed immunity from disclosure of such com-munications between them."
"Whilst legal professional privilege was
originally confined to the maintenance of con-
fidence pursuant to a contractual duty which arises out of a professional relationship, it
/is ...
54.
is now established that its justification is
to be found in the fact that the proper
functioning of our legal system depends upon a freedom of communication between legal ad-visers and their clients which would not exist if either could be compelled to dis-close what passed between them for the pur-
pose of giving or receiving advice
The restriction of the privilege to the legal profession serves to emphasise that the re-lationship between a client and his legal
adviser has a special significance because
it is part of the functioning of the law itself."
"The conflict between the principle that all relevant evidence should be disclosed and
"the principle that communications between
lawyer and client should be confidential has been resolved in favour of the confidentiality of those communications. It has been deter-mined that in this way the public interest is better served because the operation of the
adversary system, upon which we depend for
the attainment of justice in our society, would otherwise be impaired: see Waugh v
British Railways Board [1979] UKHL 2; (1980) AC 521 at 535,
536
The privilege extends beyond communica-tions made for the purpose of litigation to all communications made for the purpose of receiving advice and this extension
of the principle makes it inappropriate to regard the doctrine as a mere rule of evidence. It is a doctrine which is based upon the view
/that ...
55.
that confidentiality is necessary for proper
functioning of the legal system and not
merely the proper conduct of particular liti-
gation."
"Speaking for myself, and with the greatest of respect, I should have thought it evident that if communications between legal advisers and their clients were subject to compulsory disclosure in litigation, civil or criminal, there would be a restriction, serious in many cases, upon the freedom with which advice or representation could be given or sought. If a client cannot seek advice from his legal
adviser confident that he is not acting to his disadvantage in doing so, then his lack of confidence is likely to be reflected in the instructions he gives, the advïce he is given and ultimately in the legal process of which the advice forms part." With these vïews I respectfully agree. It follows, in my judgment, that any claim to a relaxation of the prïvïlege under discussion must be approached with the greatest circumspection.
In the present case the essence of the situation with which are dealing is this: in a criminal case it
is sought to cross-examïne a State wïtness on a statement
/which ...
56.
which is privileged because it was made by the witness to an
attorney in the course of obtaining professional legal advice; the witness
refuses to waive the privilege; and the trial Judge is asked to relax the rule
of privilege on the ground of an allegation made on
behalf of the accused that
such cross-examination might assist them in defending the charges against them.
Whether in such cir-
cumstances the rule of privilege can ever be relaxed,
as
a matter of principle, need not be decided in this case. I shall assume
that it can. But, on that assumption, I have no doubt that
the question of the
relaxation of the rule can only arise in the context of the exercise of
a
discretion by the trial Judge, based on a consideration
of all the
information relevant to the question. The mere allegation on behalf of the
accused that cross- examination on the statement
may enure to their benefit,
without more, cannot, I conceive, be sufficient to enable the discretion of the
trial Judge to come into
play.
/Minimum ...
57.
Minimum requirements, in my view, would include informa-tion as to how the statement came to be in the possession of the legal representatives of the accused; whether the
legal advice sought related to the trial itself, and if
so, in what way;
what the contents of the statement were (the statement could be handed up to the
trial Judge for his perusal); and,
perhaps most importantly, in what manner and
with what prospects of success the cross-examination could avail the accused in
countering
the charges against them. I do not see how the trial Judge can be
called upon to assess the relative weight of the relevant conflicting
principles
of public policy without
being supplied with information of the kind I have men-
tioned.
Having regard to the manner in which this as-
pect of the case was handled on behalf of the accused in the Court a
quo,as described earlier, I am of the view
that insufficient information
was placed before the trial-
/Judge ...
58.
Judge in order to enable him to exercise a discretion in
favour of the accused, by relaxing the rule of privilege
and allowing the cross-examination of Manete on his
statement. Although it
appeared-that the attorney to
whom Manete had made the statement was also
the attorney
acting for the accused at the trial, it was not
disclosed
whether he was acting for the accused at the time when
Manete
consulted him, and if so, what the relationship
was between Manete and the
accused and how it came about
that the attorney was advising a State witness while acti-
ing for the accused. The advice that Manete sought wasi
related to the trial itself, so it was said, but it was
not disclosed in what way. The contents of his statement
were not made
available to the trial Judge. The meagre
information about the contents of
the statement which was
conveyed to the trial Judge, as mentioned earlier,
did
not constitute a sufficient basis for suggesting that his
evidence in
Court was perjured, or that he was testifying
/under ...
59.
under duress. In short, on an overall view of the in-formation placed before the trial Judge it was not made possible for him to form an opinion as to whether it would have been necessary or right to relax the rule of privilege or even whether such relaxation might have tended to point to the innocence of the accused implicated by Manete (Nos 7 and 8). There was no basis for think-ing so; it was a matter of pure speculation. Conse-quently it cannot be found that the trial Judge erred in disallowing the cross-examination in question.
Before leaving this topic I should revert brief-ly to Barton's case
supra. It is distinguishable on the facts, but apart from that, in so far
as CAULFIELD J pur-
ported to lay down a general principle which could
be
thought to apply to the present case, I respectfully do
not agree with
it. My reasons for saying that appear, I hope,from what has been said above. I
do not find it
necessary to discuss the later references to, or comments
/upon ...
60.
upon, Barton's case, to which we have been referred or which I have been able to trace, since these do not ap-pear to me to be helpful in the context of the present case (see e g Phipson loc cit; Cross Loc cit; Teasdale 1973 New Law Journal 51; Allan 1987 Criminal Law Review 449; Baker v Campbell supra per GIBBS CJ at 395; R v Dunbar and Logan (1983) 138 D L R (3rd) 221 at 251).
For these reasons the second ground of appeal
fails.
I turn now to the first ground of appeal, re-
ferred to by the trial Judge as "the question of causality".
For the purpose of dealing with this question it is neces-
sary to set out
the relevant facts. For convenience I
shall first sketch the background to the events of 3 September 1984 and then describe the events themselves without reference to the roles played therein by the in-
dividual accused; this will be dealt with later. In
what follows I shall not deal separately with the evidence /of ...
61.
of each of the witnesses whose evidence was analysed and accepted by the trial Court. Instead, I shall attempt to paint a composite picture gleaned from the facts found proved by the trial Court in its analysis of the evidence of the individual witnesses.
The town council of Lekoa, of which the deceased
was a member and the deputy mayor, is a regional Black lo-cal authority established under section 2 of the Black Local Authorities Act 102 of 1982. Its area of jurisdic-tion includes Sharpeville. During June 1984 the council
adopted a capital expenditure programme with a view to im-
proving and expanding the amenities of the inhabitants in its area. To finance the programme it was decided to
increase the service levies payable by the inhabitants by
R5,50 or R5,90 per house per month. The increases were planned to come into effect on 1 September 1984. The deceased was known to have favoured the plan and to have pressed for its implementation. Many of the people of
/Lekoa ...
62.
Lekoa were strongly opposed to the increases. Protest
meetings were held and it was decided that on 3 September 1984 (which was a
Monday) the people of Lekoa would stay away from work
and march to the offices
of the council to protest against the increases. On that day rioting and
violence on a massive scale erupted
throughout the area of Lekoa. The cause or
at least a major cause, of the riots was the increase of the service levies.
Hordes of
people went on the rampage through the streets of the townships
comprising Lekoa. The houses of town council-lors and many other
buildings were
stoned and burnt down. The deceased and two other councillors were murdered
on
that day, and also a councillor of the neighbouring area
of Evaton. A
senior police officer with many years' ex-perience of riot control described the
events as the most violenty the most
widespread, and also the best organized
riots that he had ever experienced.
The deceased lived in Nhlapo Street, Sharpeville.
/His ....
63.
His house was one house removed from the intersection of Nhlapo Street with
Zwane Street. I shall refer to the house between the deceased's
house and Zwane
Street as the corner house. On the other side of the deceased's house, in Nhlapo
Street, was the house of one Maile.
In Zwane Street, near to the intersection
with Nhlapo Street, was the house of one Radebe. The yard of that house was used
as a place
for doing repair work on motor cars. On
the day in question a
number of motor vehicles were parked
there.
At about 7 o'clock in the morning a large crowd gathered in Zwane Street. They were singing and rowdy. They moved to the intersection with Nhlapo Street, then into Nhlapo Street and towards the house of the de-ceased. They pelted the deceased's house with stones. At that stage members of the police arrived on the scene in large vehicles. They dispersed the crowd by using tear-gas and firing rubber bullets. After the crowd had
/scattered ...
64.
scattered, the police spoke to the deceased in front of his house and tried to persuade him to leave. He re-
fused to do so. He was armed with a pistol. The
police left the scene.
After the departure of the police, the crowd regrouped themselves. About 100
people, men and women, gathered together in Zwane Street.
They were singing
"freedom songs". Some of them went into the yard of Radebe's house and siphoned
off petrol from the vehicles parked
there into containers which they took along
with them. The mob moved along Zwane Street and turned into Nhlapo Street. The
vanguard
ran towards the deceased's
house and hurled stones at it, breaking
the windows. The
deceased was in the house, together with Mrs
Dlamini.
Members of the crowd shouted repeatedly (I quote from the evidence
on the record, as it was interpreted in Afrikaans): "Laat ons breek,
laat ons
breek, die huis breek. en aan die brand steek." The deceased and Mrs Dlamini
opened the
/door ...
65.
door of the house and went outside to confronz the
mob.
Some of them shouted: "Ons is op soek na jou, Dlamini, die 'sell-out',
wat met Blankes baie te doen het, of met
hulle eet." The deceased and Mrs
Dlamini went back in-
to the house and closed the door. The deceased fired a
shot into the crowd, hitting one of them. This angered
the mob, which became
extremely aggressive. A woman in
the.crowd, who was standing in front of the
house, shouted
repeatedly: "Hy skiet op ons, laat ons hom doodmaak".
In the meantime some members of the crowd were
busy making petrol bombs in the yard of the corner house.
They poured petrol from the containers they had brought
along into
bottles, some of which also contained sand.
The bottles, or bombs, were
passed on to other members of
the mob, who were told to throw them into the
deceased's
house. This was done, and the house caught fire. Mrs Dlamini fled
and succeeded in reaching safety in the
neighbouring house of Maile. The
deceased's house was
/then ...
66.
then surrounded by the rioters. Petrol was poured over the kitchen door and it was set alight.' The deceased tried to extinguish the flames. The deceased's car was pushed out of its garage and into Nhlapo Street, where
it was turned on its side and set on fire. Petrol bombs were thrown into the house from all sides.
The deceased emerged from the house, holding his pistol. The crowd in his immediate vicinity retreated.
deceased ran in the direction of Maile's house. Just
as he reached the fence between the two yards, which con-sisted of a couple of slack strands of wïre, he was set upon by a small group of two or three or more members of the mob. A scuffle ensued, during which the deceased
was dispossessed of his weapon, As he was crossing the
fence, he was
felled by a stone which was thrown by a man standing a couple of paces away and
which struck him on the head.As he was
lying on the ground,stones thrown by the
mob rained down on him. Some members of the mob
/went ...
67.
went up to him and struck his head with stones. When he was lying quite motionless, he was dragged into the street. Attempts were made to place him on his burning motor car, but each time he slid off it. Petrol was poured over him and he was set alight. A woman shouted that the people should not burn him. Another woman slapped her in the face. As the deceased was left to burn, the crowd, which still numbered 100 or more, sang loudly and gave the Black Power salute. They then started to move off in the direction of the Administration Board's buildings.
When the police arrived on the scene again at about 9 o'clock, they found the deceased's house and motor car and his body still smouldering. The deceased was dead.
A medical post mortem examination revealed that the deceased was still alive when he was set alight, but that he had sustained two sets of injuries, each of which
/was ...
68.
was fatal by itself. The one set of injuries consisted of severe wounds to the head, caused by blows. The de-ceased would have died of these injuries, even if he had not been set alight. The other set of injuries consisted of burns all over his body. He would have died as a re-sult of these burns, even if he had not sustained the head injuries.
I turn now to the role played by each of the accused, as found by the trial Court, in the gruesome
events outlined above. Although accused Nos 5 and 6 are not directly involved in the present enquiry, it will be convenient to include them in this survey.
Accused No 1. He was one of the persons who
grabbed hold of the deceased near the fence between the
houses of the deceased and Maile, and who wrestled with the deceased for the possession of his pistol. He was also the person who threw the first stone at the deceased
as he was crossing the fence, which struck him on the head
/and ...
69.
and felled him. (The first-mentioned finding was based
on the observations of Mabuti, and the second on the ob-
servations of Mrs Dlamini. It was argued on behalf of accused No 1 that there was a conflict between the evi-dence of Mabuti and that of Mrs Dlamini which could not be resolved, since Mabuti did not see the throwing of the stone by accused No 1 and Mrs Dlamini did not see accused
No 1 grappling with the deceased. The trial Court con-sidered this alleged conflict fully and carefully, as appears from the judgment of the trial Judge, and found
that it did not exist. In my view the reasoning of the
trial Court is unassailable. The fallacy in the argument for the accused is that it presupposes that either or both
of the witnesses must be untruthful or unreliable simply
because their observations did not coincide. Such an approach to the evidence is unsound. Mabuti and Mrs
Dlamini were making their observations of fast-moving
events from different vantage points, and there is no
improbability inherent in postulating that accused No 1,
/after ...
70.
after having grappled with the deceased for the gun, moved
off some paces and from there threw a stone at him. More-over, as the trial
Judge pointed out, there was other evi-dence confirming the correctness of the
observations of
both witnesses. Some time after the events accused No 1 took
the police to the house of accused No 3 with a view to finding the deceased's
pistol. At that time the police did not know of accused No 3's. involvement in
the affair. In fact accused No 3 was in possession
of the deceased's pistol,
which he handed over to the police. This evidence, coupled with accused No l's
false denial of it, showed
that accused No 1 knew that accused No 3 had obtained
possession
of the pistol from the deceased and this confirms Mabuti's
evidence that
accused No 1 was one of the group who wrestled with the deceased for the
possession of the pistol. On the other hand,
after the deceased had been felled
by the first stone thrown at him, Mrs Dlamini heard him ex-claim: "Ja-ja, wat
maak jy?" "Ja-ja"
was the nickname
/of ...
71.
of accused No 1, but Mrs Dlamini did not know that, al-though she knew accused No 1. This confirms her evidence that accused No 1 threw the first stone that felled the deceased. In the result there is no reason for differ-ing from the trial Court's findings that accused No 1 grappled with the deceased for the possession of his pistol and that he was the man who threw the stone that felled the deceased.)
Accused No 2. He was one of the mob which stoned the deceased's house before the first arrival of the police on the scene. He himself threw a stone which struck a window on the right-hand side of the house and broke it. When the police arrived and dispersed the crowd, he was affected by the teargas used by the police. He went into a yard and washed his face. After the crowd had re-assembled, he rejoined it in front of the deceased's house.He saw that the deceased was standing outside his house. He saw that the house was on fire and that it was
/surrounded ...
72.
surrounded by many people. He threw a stone at the de-ceased. It struck the deceased on his back. When the police arrived again, he ran away. (The facts recited above appear from a confession made by accused No 2, a letter written by him from prison to the Minister of Jus-tice, and statements made by him to a police lieutenant in the course of pointing out certain places.)
Accused No. 3. He was one of the small group of men who caught hold of the
deceased as he was running in the direction of Maile's
house, and who wrestled
with
him for possession of his pistol. He was the man who in
fact
succeeded in taking the deceased's pistol away from
him. (These findings of the trial Court rested on in-
ference. There was
no direct evidence that accused No 3 was on the scene. Neither Mabuti nor Mrs
Dlamini knew accused No 3 and neither
could identify him. The valid-ity of the
trial Court's inference was challenged in this Court. In brief, the evidence
against accused
No 3 was
/as ...
73.
as follows. On 9 November 1984 Detective Sergeant Wessels was taken by accused No 1 to the house of accused No 3. Wessels did not know where accused No 3 lived; he was directed how to get there by accused No 1. Accused No 3 was pointed out by accused No 1 to Wessels as the person who was presumably in possession of a pistol. Wessels asked accused No 3 whether he had a fire-arm in his pos-session and the reply was affirmative. Accused No 3 took a pistol from between some cardboard boxes, through an opening in the ceiling of his house, and handed it to Wessels. The pistol was exh 1 in the Court a quo. Ac-cused No 3 explained to Wessels that he had taken the pistol away from some children who were involved in riotous ac-tivities in the vicinity of the deceased's house on 3 Sep-tember 1984. The pistol, exh 1, was proved to have be-longed to the deceased. Apart from the fact that he admitted accused No 3 denied the sub—
stance of Wessels's evidence. He said that he had told
/Wessels ...
74.
Wessels that he had only obtained the pistol on 4 Septem-ber
1984, when he had come across a couple of youths
arguing about the pistol,
which, one of them said, had been picked up in a scrap-yard. He denied that exh
1
was the pistol that he had handed over to Wessels. He was unable to offer
any explanation as to how accused No
1 could have known that he was in possession of the pistol.
The trial
Court accepted the evidence of Wessels and found
that accused No 3 was an
untruthful witness. On a peru-
sal of the record I can find no warrant for
disagreeing
with the trial Court's assessment of the witnesses.
Having
regard to the nature of the lies told by accused No 3 in
his
evidence, and particularly to the explanation that he
gave to Wessels as to
when and where he had obtained the pistol, coupled with his professed inability
to explain how accused No 1
would have known that he had the pistol, I am of the
view that the trial Court was fully justified
in drawing the inference, as being the only reasonable
/inference ...
75.
inference, that accused No 3 was the person who had dis-possessed the deceased of his pistol.)
Accused No 4. She was one of the crowd that converged on the deceased's house
before the first arri-val of the poiice. She was given
a placard to
carry
aloft,on which was written "Arena Shelete" ("Ons het
nie geld nie").
When the police dispersed the crowd, she was struck on the head by a rubber
bullet fired by the police. After the
crowd had re-assembled, she was again part
of it. She was standing in front of the de-ceased's house when he fired a shot,
hitting
someone in the crowd. It was accused No 4 who then shouted re-peatedly:
"Hy skiet op ons, laat ons hom doodmaak."
Subsequently, when the deceased was
set alight in the
street and a woman remonstrated with the crowd not to burn
him, it was accused No 4 who slapped this woman in the face. (The argument
on
behalf" of accused No 4, re-ferred to in the last paragraph of the trial
Judge's
/judgment ...
76.
judgment on the application for leave to appeal, as men-tioned earlier, and repeated in this Court, that there was no proof that anyone in the crowd had heard what the accused" was shouting, is without substance. Mabuti, who heard the accused's shouts, was standing at the time on the far side of Nhlapo Street, opposite Maile's house. If he could hear what accused No 4 was shouting, there can be no doubt that other members of the mob, who were much closer to her, must also have heard the words shouted. Whether anyone reacted upon her instigation is a question relating to the general issue of causation, which will be dealt with later.)
Accused Nos 5 and 6. They were part of the
vanguard of the crowd which ran towards the deceased's
house and hurled stones at it, after the crowd had been dispersed and had re-assembled. They were not seen to have throne stones themselves,but they were the leaders
of the vanguard in the sense that they were running right
/in ...
77.
in the front, with the others, who were throwing the stones,
following. Accused No 6 was the person who was
struck by the bullet fired by
the deceased. He was hit
in the leg.
Accused No 7. He was part of the stone-throwing crowd. He was amongst the people who made petrol bombs in the yard of the corner house. He was the man who poured petrol onto the kitchen door of the deceased's house and set it alight. He was one of those who pushed the deceased's motor car from the garage into the street.
Accused No 8. When the crowd had re-assembled, he came across Manete and said to him: "Hoe-kom is jy nie saam met die mense nie? Hoekom baklei jy nie? Hoekom neem jy nie deel daaraan nie? Want ons baklei vir die 'community'?". He was one of those who made petrol bombs in the yard of the corner house. He handed out petrol bombs to the mob and commanded them to surround the deceased's house and set it on fire. He
/showed ...
78.
showed people how and where to throw petrol bombs into the deceased's house. The people obeyed his instructions. He assisted in pushing the deceased's. car into the street. Before the deceased was assaulted in Maile's yard, he
(accused No 8) was in Maile's yard, carrying stones in his hand. After the deceased had been set on fire in the street, accused No 8 said: "Kom julle, nou gaan ons na
I proceed to consider the basis upon which the
trial Court convicted accused Nos 1,2,3,4,7 and 8 of
murder. The trial Court found that the mob intended to
kill
the deceased, and that the intention to kill had mani-
fested itself at the
time when his house was set alight.
The following passage in the judgment of the trial Judge
view, was fully justified on the evidence:
die opset gehad het om oorledene te dood op die stadium toe sy huis aan die brand gesteek
/is ...
79.
is nie want elkeen daar het toe besef dat
òf oorledene verbrand òf hy vlug uit die huis en as hy vlug moet hy aangeval word.
Toe hy wel gevlug het is hy onmiddellik ont-
wapen en daarna met klippe bestook tot hy daar roerloos gelê het en om te verseker dat
hy wel dood was is sy liggaam na buite ge-
sleep en aan die brand gesteek."
The same approach appears from the following passage in which the trial Judge explained why accused Nos 5 and 6 were found not guilty of murder:
"Die Hof kan nie bo redelike twyfel bevind dat [toe] hierdie skare ..... alreeds die op-set gehad het om oorledene te gaan dood toe
hulle die eerste keer op pad na sy huis toe
was nie. So 'n bevinding is ook nie bo rede-like twyfel ons insiens bewys tydens her-
groepering tot en met die gooi van klippe na
die oorledene se huis. Op die stadium egter toe oorledene se huis aan die brand gesteek
word is dit duidelik dat die opset was om oorledene ook te verbrand. Dit het almal
besef, dat tensy oorledene vlug hy sou ver-
brand, en as hy vlug sou hulle hom onmiddel-
lik in die hande kon kry en aanrand, soos dit ook geskied het, totdat hy oënskynlik
dood was en daarna verbrand is."
There was no evidence that accused Nos 5 and 6 had taken any part in the activities of the mob after the deceased's
/house ...
80.
house had been set on fire. Consequently the trial Court found that it had not been proved beyond reasonable doubt that accused Nos 5 and 6 had the intention to kill the decêased.
In the case of all the other accused, however,
i e Nos 1, 2, 3, 4, 7 and
8, the trial Court found. that
each of them had the intention to kill the deceased. It found further that all these accused had actively asso-ciated themselves with the conduct of the mob, which was directed at the killing of the deceased. On the evidence, neither of these findings can be faulted. In the case of each of these accused,the conduct described above plainly proclaimed an active association with the purpose which
the mob sought to and did achieve, viz the killing of the
deceased. And from the conduct of each of these accused, assessed in the light of the surrounding circumstances, the inference is inescapable that the mens rea requisite for murder was present.
/In ...
81.
In his judgment the trial Judge, dealing with
the liability of the six accused in question for murder, quoted what was said in S v Williams en Andere 1980 (1) SA 60 (A) at 62 H - 63 H in regard to "mededacers" and "medepligtiges" (perpetrators and accomplices, or, as some would have it, principals and accessories),and, adopting the phraseology used in that case, stated the trial Court's conclusions in respect of these accused in the following terms:
"Beskuidigdes nrs. 1 en 3 het oorledene
ontwapen en sy pistool van hom geneem.
Dit moes gedoen word omdat oorledene 'n
bedreiging vir die skare ingehou het.
Hulle daad vergemaklik die taak van die
skare om die oorledene daarna met klippe
te gooi en hom dood te maak. Nr. 1 het
self 'n klip na oorledene gegooi wat oor-
ledene op sy kop agter getref het. Hy
is dus nie alleen 'n medepligtige nie, maar
ook 'n mededader. Nr. 2, soos reeds aan-gedui, het ook die misdaad bevorder deur 'n klip na oorledene te gooi. Nr. 4 be-skuldigde hits die skare aan om oorledene te dood en sy vereenselwig haar met die
vandie oorledene. Nrs.7
en 8 die bevorder die pleging van die misdaad en verleen hulp aan die skare wie
/se ...
82.
se opset duidelik blyk om die oorledene te dood deur aktief deel te neem aan die ver-branding van oorledene se huis."
It is more usual and, in my view, with respect, more appropriate to deal with the liability of these accused for murder on the basis of what is called in our practice "common purpose", and it is on that basis that I proceed to discuss the matter. It is implicit in the findings of the trial Court, I think, but in any event quite clear on the evidence, that each of these accused shared a common purpose, to kill the deceased, with the mob as a whole, the members of which were intent upon killing the deceased and in fact succeeded in doing so. And, as I have pointed out, all these accused by their conduct actively associated themselves with the achieve-ment of the common purpose and each of them had the re-quisite mens rea for murder.
This is the setting in which consideration must be given to the argument on behalf of these accused that
/their ...
83.
their convictions of murder were wrong because the State had failed to prove
that their conduct caused or contri-buted causally to
the death of the deceased.
In the case of some of these accused it is perhaps debatable whether a causal
connection between the conduct
of each, individually, and the death of the
deceased had indeed
not been proved, but in the case of others it must be
accepted without doubt, in my opinion, that no such causal
connection can be found to have been proved. This is
particularly obvious in the case of accused Nos 2 and 4,
as will appear from what has been said earlier in regard
to their conduct. I shall therefore assume, for the pur-
poses of my judgment, that it has not been proved in the
case of any of the six accused convicted of murder that
their conduct had contributed causally to the death of the
deceased.
Thus the question that must be faced squarely is this: in cases of the kind commonly referred to in our
/practice ...
84.
practice as cases of "common purpose", in relation to murder, is it competent
for a participant in the common purpose to be found
guilty of murder in the
absence of proof that his conduct individually caused or contributed causally to
the death of the deceased?
In recent years much uncertainty seems to have arisen
around this question. This is regrettable, since cases involving a common
pur-pose,
as understood in our practice, are of such frequent occurrence that it
would probably not be an overstatement to say that they arise
practically daily
in the criminal courts of our country. There ought not to be uncertainty
in
this area of the criminal law, and it seems to me to be
imperative that a clear answer be given to the question
that I have posed. Unfortunately, the uncertainty has
been created by a number of decisions of this Court. I
shall have to deal with them. The uncertainty has been
heightened by a mass of legal literature which has been
produced on this topic over many years, contained in large
/numbers ...
85.
numbers of articles in legal journals, in doctoral theses, and in textbooks. While readily acknowledging the great assistance that I have gained from a study of the litera-ture, I have decided not to deal pertinently with the various divergent and often conflicting opinions and views expressed by particular authors. To do so would turn this judgment into an academic treatise and would defeat my object, which is to attempt to clarify the law as it
is applied in practice, as briefly as possible, and with
a minimum of
references to legal subtleties and juris-
prudential philosophizing. When I do refer, in what follows, to the views of the learned authors, without
identifying the author or authors concerned, I do so
solely in an effort to keep the discussion brief and cer-tainly not out of disrespect for the value of their con-tributions.
The best way to approach the problem, I con-
sider, is to examine how the question of causation in
/cases ...
86.
cases of common purpose has been dealt with in the deci-sions of this Court, and to divide the enquiry into two stages, viz the period before the judgment in S v Thomo and Others 1969 (1) SA 385 (A), and the period thereafter.
Before 1969 this Court,. in its judgments in cases of common purpose, did not pertinently address the question of causation, speaking generally. An exception was the minority judgment of SCHREINER JA in R v Mgxwiti 1954 (1) SA 370 (A) at 381 G - 383 B, which was concerned
with a so-called case of "joining in". That type of
situation can be left out of consideration, for it does not arise on the facts of this case: here, each of the accused (i e the six convicted of murder) became an active participant in the pursuance of the common purpose prior to the first fatal wounds being inflicted on the deceased. In the reported cases before 1969 clear instances can be found where this Court upheld the conviction of an accused for murder, on the basis of common purpose, where no
/causal ...
87.
causal connection had been proved between the conduct of the accused and the death. of the deceased. I shall men-tion three such cases. The first is the majority judgment in Mgxwiti's case supra. I had occasion to analyse that judgment in S v Khoza 1982 (3) SA 1019 (A) at 1051 E -
1052 A; and there is no need to repeat what was said
there. The second is R v Dladla and Others 1962 (1) SA 307 (A) at 311 A-E, which was also referred to in Khoza's
case supra at 1052 B. In both Mgxwiti's case and
Dladla's case supra the Court was dealing with an accused who
had participated in a murderous mob attack on the de-ceased, but whose own
conduct was
not shown to have con-tributed causally to the deceased's death.
There is a close resemblance between the facts of those two cases
and the facts
of the present case. The third case to which I would refer, was of a somewhat
different nature. It was of a kind which
occurs more frequently in practice, but
in which the principle relating to causation in the context
/of ...
88.
of common purpose must be the same. The case is S
v
Malinga and Others 1963 (1) SA 692 (A). Five accused had set out
in a motor car to commit the crime of house-breaking with intent to steal and
theft. Accused No 4 was
armed, to the knowledge of the others. On leaving
the
scene, the car in which the accused were travelling
was overtaken by a police
car which tried to stop the car of the accused. Accused No 4 fired a shot and
killed a
policeman. An appeal against the convictions for murder of the other
four accused was dismissed. HOLMES JA (with STEYN CJ and WILLIAMSON
JA
concurring) pointed out at 694 F that
" the liability of a socius criminis
is not vicarious but is based on his own
mens rea",
and went on to say at 695 A-B:
"In the present case all the accused knew that they were going on a housebreaking
expedition in the car, and that one of them was armed with a revolver which had been obtained and loaded for the occasion.
/It ...
89.
It is clear that their common purpose embraced not only housebreaking with intent to steal and theft, but also what may be termed the get-away. And they must have foreseen, and therefore by inference did foresee, the possibility that the loaded fire-arm would be used against the contin— gency of resistance, pursuit or attempted capture. Hence, as far as individual mens rea is concerned, the shot fired by accused No. 4 was, in effect, also the shot of each of the appellants."
(My emphasis.)
In my view, on the facts of that case it was impossible to find any causal
connection between any conduct of the appellants and the
death of the policeman.
The conclud-ing words in the passage of the judgment of HOLMES JA, quoted above,
which I have emphasized,
constitute a clear recognition, in my opinion, of the
principle that in
cases of common purpose the act of one participant
in
causing the death of the deceased is imputed, as a matter of law, to the
other participants (provided, of course, that the necessary
mens rea is
present)
In Thomo's case supra at 399 i f it was stated
/in ...
90.
in general terms, which included a reference to a socius, that on a charge of murder it was necessary to prove that the accused was guilty of unlawful conduct which caused or contributed causally to the death of the deceased. In Khoza's case supra at 1056 D - 1057 B I expressed the view
that, in so far as the statement related to a socius, i e
a participant in a common purpose, it was obiter and in conflict with authority. This view is borne out, I con-sider, by the cases to which I have referred above. In addition, there is a further case to which I would now refer, which is most interesting. It is S v Madlala 1969 (2) SA 637 (A). Thomo's case was reported before Madlala's case - in 1969 (1) SA 385, but in fact the
judgment in Madlala's case was delivered on 21 November
1968,
before the judgment was delivered in Thomo's case, on 3 December 1968.
STEYN CJ was a party to both judgments, and WESSELS JA, who wrote the judgment
in
Thomo's case, concurred in the judgment in Madlala's case.
/In ...
91.
In the latter case HOLMES JA said at 640 F-H:
"It is sometimes difficult to decide, when two accused are tried jointly on a charge of murder, whether the crime was committed by one or the other or both of them, or by
neither. Generally, and leaving aside the position of an accessory after the fact, an accused may be convicted of murder if the killing was unlawful and there is proof -
(a) that he individually killed the deceased,
with the required
dolus, e g by shooting
him; or
(b) that he was a party to a common purpose
to murder, and one or both of
them did
the deed; or
(c)that he was a party to a common purpose
to commit some other crime, and he fore-saw the possibility of one or both of
them causing death to someone in the
execution of the plan, yet he persisted,
reckless of such fatal consequence, and
it occurred; see S v Malinga and Others
1963 (1) SA 692 (AD) at p. 694 F-H and
p. 695; or
(d) that the accused must fall within (a) or
(b) or (c) - it does not matter which,
for in each event he would be guilty of
murder."
In this formulation of the legal position relating to com-mon purpose it is quite clear, in my opinion, that there is no room for requiring proof of causation on the part
/of ...
92.
of the participant in the common purpose who did not "do the deed" (i e the killing). This fortifies my view that it was not intended in Thomo's case to lay down that a causal connection had to be established between the acts of every party to a common purpose and the death of the deceased before a conviction of murder could ensue in respect of each of the participants.
After 1969 this Court continued to deal with cases of common purpose without adverting to the question of causation. Convictions of murder were upheld in cases where the accused's own acts, although showing an active association with the furtherance of a common purpose, mostly to rob, were not shown to have contributed causally to the death of the deceased. Two examples, following closely upon Thomo's case supra, are to be found in S v Williams en 'n Ander 1970 (2) SA 654 (A) at 658-659, and .
S v Kramer en Andere 1972 (3) SA 331 (A) at 334. Jumping
some years, the same pattern appears in more recent
/decisions ...
93.
decisions of this Court: see e g S v Shaik and Others
1983 (4) SA 57 (A) - note especially at 65 A: ".....
the act of one
becomes the act of the other if that act is done in pursuit of a common
design" (my emphasis);
S v Talane 1986 (3) SA 196 (A) at 206 E -
207 A; and S v Mbatha en Andere 1987 (2) SA 272 (A) at 282 B - 284 C. Of
particular interest is S v Nkwenja en 'n Ander 1985 (2)
SA 560 (A),
which was a case of culpable homicide. The two appellants in that case had
decided to rob the two
occupants of a parked motor car. They
simultaneously
opened two of the doors of the car, one on each side, and
assaulted the occupants, one of whom died. It could not be established which
one
of the two appellants in-flicted the injuries on the occupant who was killed.
The trial Court found that dolus was not proved, but culpa was,
and convicted both appellants of culpable homicide. On appeal this Court was
divided on the question whether,
on the facts, culpa had been proved against the appellants.
/The ...
94.
The majority of the Court found that it had, and sustained the convictions. JANSEN JA, delivering the judgment of the majority of the Court (JOUBERT JA and GROSSKOPF AJA concurring), said the following at 573 B-D:
"Die appellante het saamgewerk met die ver-
wesenliking van die gesamentlike oogmerk.
Opgrond van die voorgaande blyk dit dat
beide gehandel het met culpa ten opsigte
van die dood wat ingetree het. Strafbare
manslag is die wederregtelike, nalatige
doodslag van 'n ander en behels in die alge-
meen die vereiste van 'n kousale verband
tussen 'n handeling van die beskuldigde en
diedood. In die onderhawige geval is
dit onseker watter appellant die dodelike
geweld toegepas het en sou dit moeilik wees om aan die een of die ander van die appel-
lante 'n handeling toe te skryf wat conditio
sine qua non van die dood was. Maar in ons
praktyk word in gevalle soos die onder-hawige, waar daar voorafbeplanning was en
dan deelneming aan verwesenliking van die gesamentlike oogmerk, nie altyd streng aan
die vereiste van kousaliteit (sine qua non)
gekleef ten einde die een deelnemer straf-
regtelik aanspreeklik te stel vir 'n gevolg
van die handeling van 'n ander deelnemer nie.
Sonder om die juiste grondslag van hierdie
te stip wil dit my voor-
kom dat albei appellante wel aan strafbare
manslag skuldig is "
/In ...
95.
In my opinion these remarks constitute once again a clear recognition of the principle that in cases of common pur-pose the act of one participant in causing the death of the deceased is imputed, as a matter of law, to the other participants. The reference to "voorafbeplanning" is not significant, for it is well established that a common purpose need not be derived from an antecedent agreement, but can arise on the spur of the moment and can be in-ferred from the facts surrounding the active association with the furtherance of the common design. Nor do I
consider that the words "altyd" and "streng" really qualify
the effective application of the general principle.
I turn now to a number of cases, decided in
this Court in the early eighties, which have given rise
to uncertainty.
In S v Williams en 'n Ander 1980 (1) SA 60 (A) JOUBERT JA explained the difference between liability as a co-perpetrator ("mededader" or principal) and liability
/as ...
96.
as an accomplice ("medepligtige" or accessory) and said, in regard to the latter, at 63 E/F:
"Volgens algemene beginsels moet daar 'n kousale verband tussen die medepligtige se hulpverlening en die pleging van die misdaad deur die dader of mededaders bestaan."
This remark has given rise to the question whether, in
relation to cases of common purpose, some kind of causal connection is required to be proved between the conduct, of a particular participant in the common purpose and the death of the deceased before a conviction of murder can be justified in respect of such a participant. In my view the clear answer is: No. It seems clear to me that the Court in Williams's case was not dealing with
the law relating to common purpose at all. The only
reference to common purpose in the judgment appears at 62 F-G, where, in dealing with the facts, JOUBERT JA said
that it was not to be accepted that the accused had en-tered the train coach with a common purpose to commit a,
/crime ...
97.
crime in which the weapons would be used which were in
fact used later to assault the victim. In my view the Court in Williams's case did not intend to supplant, qualify, or detract from, the.substance of the practice
of the Courts in relation to common purpose. I expressed this view in Khoza's case supra at 1054 C. It has turned out to be correct, having regard to the manner in which cases of common purpose have continued to be dealt with in the decisions of this Court subsequent to Williams's case, as mentioned above. In the present case I am dealing with the position of the six accused who have been con-victed of murder solely on the basis of common purpose. Accordingly there is no need for me to enter upon a dis-cussion of the purport of the above-quoted remark in con-
nection with the liability of an accessory, or of the view now held by some authors that in cases of murder there is no room for basing liability on "medepligtigheid". For practical purposes, in applying the law relating to cases of common purpose, the judgment in Williams's case
/can ...
98.
can safely be left out of consideration altogether.
In S v Maxaba en Andere 1981 (1) SA 1148 (A) VILJOEN JA, having referred to Williams's case supra, said at 1155 E-G:
"Ek wil met eerbied saamstem met Burchell en Hunt S A Criminal Law and Procedure band 1 te 363 dat daar geen towerkrag opgesluit is in die sogenaamde leerstuk van 'common pur-pose' nie. Soos uit die passasie hierbo
uit Williams se saak blyk, moet, waar daar
deelneming aan 'n misdaad is, elkeen van die deelnemers voldoen aan al die vereistes van
die betrokke misdaadomskrywing voordat hy as
mededader skuldig bevind kan word. Moord is 'n gevolgsmisdaad. Indien die Staat mede-daderskap wil bewys, moet hy bewys, nie al-leen dat elke deelnemer die nodige opset ge-had het om die slagoffer te dood nie, maar ook dat sy aandeel bygedra het, daadwerklik of psigies, tot veroorsaking van die dood."
With great respect, I do not agree with the tenor and ef-
fect of these
remarks. The learned Judge's approval of the statement by Burchell and
Hunt that there is no magic
about the "doctrine" of common purpose, as a
basis for his
conclusion that a causal connection between the conduct of
/the ...
99.
the perpetrator and the death of the deceased must be proved, rests, in my respectful opinion, upon a miscon-ception of what the learned authors sought to convey by that statement. A reading of the passages at 363-5 which constitute the context in which the statement appears, shows that the learned authors were concerned with the theme that the liability of a party to a common purpose was not vicarious but was founded on his own mensrea. This theme was developed apropos of the view expressed in the earlier cases that liability in respect of common pur-pose rested on an implied mandate. But the learned authors certainly did not intend to convey that it was necessary to prove a causal link between the conduct of a party to the common purpose and the death of the deceased. On the contrary, they said, in conformity with the case law referred to above, at 364:
"Association in a common illegal purpose
constitutes the participation - the actus reus. It is not necessary to show that
/each ...
100.
each party did a specific act towards the attainment of the joint object. Association in the common design makes the act of the principal offender the act of all."
And in a footnote they added:
"Moreover, it is not necessary to show that there was a causal link between the conduct of each party to the common purpose and the unlawful consequence, see above, p. 352".
The references to Burchell and Hunt above are to the
first edition;
in the second edition, see at 430-5. The
learned authors have retained the
"no magic" statement
referred to above, which is perhaps unfortunate, since
it tends to suggest that a question-mark should be placed against the manner
in
which the Courts have dealt with cases of common purpose in recent times, which
I think is unwarranted. I should add that I myself
see no "magic" in the
practice of the Courts - but I do see a lot of common sense and expediency in
it. Reverting to the
remarks of VILJOEN JA quoted above, he referred to a
causal contribution to the death of the deceased, "daad-
/werklik ....
101.
werklik of psigies", and at 1156 F/G he again mentioned a
"psigiese bydrae tot die dood van die oorledene",
thus adopting the approach of some authors. With respect,
it seems to me that the concept of "psychological causa-
tion" is so nebulous that it is practically incapable of
effective application. In any event, VILJOEN JA's re-
quirement of a causal connection in cases of common pur-
pose is clearly in conflict with the great weight of
authority constituted by the decisions of this Court,
both before and after Maxaba's case, as discussed above.
Finally, the requirement of a causal connection in the
quoted remarks of VILJOEN JA was clearly an obiter dictum,
as he himself pointed out at 1156 F-G. In the result,
the iudgment in Maxaba's case, in so far as it relates
to the question of causation, can safely be ignored in
the future treatment of cases of common purpose.
In S v Khoza 1982 (3) SA 1019 (A)the judgments of CORBETT JA and myself reflect a difference of opinion
/as ...
102.
as to the liability of an accused "joining in" in an assault upon a person who has already been fatally wounded. As I have indicated, that problem does not arise on the facts of the present case. Consequently no more need be said about it. I would merely point out that in the passage in the judgment of CORBETT JA at 1036 F - 1037 A, in which he referred to common purpose, there is nothing, in my respectful opinion,which militates against the views I have expressed above.
In S v Daniëls en 'n Ander 1983 (3) SA 275 (A) the problems of causation discussed in three of the judg-ments (those of JANSEN JA, TRENGOVE JA and VAN WINSEN AJA) in respect of accused No 1 in that case, arose because of a finding by the learned Judges that a common purpose between the two accused in that case had not been proved. These problems are accordingly not relevant in the present case.In the judgment of NICHOLAS AJA the matter was -dealt with on the footing that the conviction of accused
/NO 1 ...
103.
No 1 in that case could not be sustained on a considera-tion of the problems relating to causation, but, signifi-cantly, he upheld the conviction on the ground that a common purpose between the accused to rob and kill the deceased had been proved (see at 302 F, 304 D-H). In my judgment I found that a common purpose between the accused to rob the deceased had been proved. At 323 E-F I said the following:
"Volgens my beskouing is die geldende regs-
posisie dat,waar een van die deelgenote
tot 'n gemeenskaplike oogmerk die handeling
verrig wat die dood van die oorledene ver-
oorsaak, en daar by die ander deelgenote
die nodige mens rea aanwesig is, die handel-
ing van die een wat die dood veroorsaak, as
'n kwessie van regsbeleid, beskou word as
die handeling van al die deelgenote ....."
I adhere to that view,because it seems to me that it is
borne out by the cases decided in this Court, as discussed above. I would add
this observation: the approach re-
flected in the passage just quoted has
been applied, in
effect, in many cases of common purpose decided in the
/Provincial ...
104.
Provincial and Local Divisions which, in recent years have come, and are currently coming, on appeal before this Court, without the validity of the approach being quest-ioned, but which never reach the Law Reports.
That being the existing state of the law re-
lating to common purpose, it would constitute a drastic
departure from a
firmly established practice to hold now that a party to a common purpose cannot
be convicted of murder unless a causal
connection is proved between his conduct
and the death of the deceased. I can see no good reason for warranting such a
departure.
Many of the authors who are opposed to the practice of the Courts
have criticized its origins, both in relation to its rational-
isation on the basis of implied mandate and in relation
to the fact that
it first came to us via the application of English law. In passing I
would say that the much maligned notion of implied mandate seems to me not to be
without
merit, now that it is well recognized
/that ...
105.
that the liability of an individual accused rests on his own mens rea alone (whether dolus directus or dolus even-tualis), and that the English origin of the practice is no reason per se for rejecting it, if it satisfies the exigencies of the administration of our own criminal law. But that is by the way; for the purposes of this judgment matters of merely historical interest can be left aside. What is more important is that the authors who are critical of the practice of the Courts do not appear to have pro-blems with the actual results achieved in the vast majority of cases. In the main the criticism is based on the argu-ment that causation is a fundamental element in die defi-nition of the crime of murder, which cannot be ignored; and it is said also that the concept of active association with the act of killing by another is too vague to serve as a touchstone for liability. In my view, however, in many cases where acceptable (and required) results are
achieved by means of imputing the act of killing by one person to another person by virtue of a common purpose, the
/adherence ...
106.
adherence to the requirement of a causal connection between
the conduct of the latter person and the death of the deceased would necessitate
stretching the concept of causation, inter alia by resorting to the
device of "psychological causation", to such unrealistic limits as border on
absurdity. In the process there
would be present a greater measure of vagueness
and uncertainty than in regard to the application of the test of active
association
with the attainment of the common purpose. In any event, I do not
think that the application of the latter test presents unmanageable
problems. It
simply involves an assessment of the facts of the particular case,
and the
factual issue to be resolved is no more difficult to resolve than many other
factual issues encountered in any criminal case.
The position of accused Nos 5
and 6 in the present case can be taken as an example. The trial Court found that
it had not been proved
that they had had the intention to kill the deceased. On
the facts
/relating ...
107.
relating to their limited participation in the events, prior
to the setting on fire of the deceased's house, it might as well have
found that
the evidence fell short of proving an active association on their part with the
pur-pose of the mob to kill the deceased.
In regard to two cases mentioned
earlier, however, viz Mgxwiti's case supra and Dladla's
case supra, some authors have criticized or queried the result arrived
at, as did counsel for the accused in the present case. I do not consider
those
cases to have been wrongly decided, but for present pur-poses the point to be
stressed is that if it is assumed
that the correctness of the result in those
cases is de-batable, that would be so, not because of doubt as to whether a
causal connection
had been proved between the acts of the accused and the death
of the deceased in each case, but because it would be arguable whether,
as a
matter of fact, the evidence showed an active association
by the accused with
the acts of the mob which caused the
/death ...
108.
death of the deceased.
In the present case, on the facts outlined earlier, there can be no doubt, in my judgment, that the individual acts of each of the six accused convicted of murder manifested an active association with the acts of the mob which caused the death of the deceased. These accused shared a common purpose with the crowd to kill the deceased and each of them had the requisite dolus in
respect of his death. Consequently the acts of the mob
which caused the deceased's death must be imputed to each
of these accused.
I should mention that counsel for the accused argued that the final act of setting the deceased alight fell outside the purview of any common purpose to which the accused were parties and that they could therefore not be held responsible for the deceased's death. There is no substance in this argument. On the particular facts of this case the precise manner in which and the
/precise ...
109.
precise means by which the deceased was to be killed were irrelevant to the achievement of the common purpose.
For these reasons the first ground of appeal fails.
The third ground of
appeal relates to the con-victions of all the accused for subversion. In view of
the way in which the argument
developed in this Court, this ground of appeal can
be disposed of briefly. The charge against the accused was based on the
following
pro-visions of section 54 (2) of the Internal Security Act 74
of
1982 ("the Act"):
"(2) Any person who with intent to achieve
any of the objects specified in
para-
graphs (a) to (d), inclusive, of sub-
section (1) -
(a) causes or promotes general disloca-
tion or disorder at any place in the Republic, or attempts to do so;
(e) prevents or hampers, or deters any
person from assisting in, the main-
tenance of law and order at any
place in the Republic, or attempts
to
do so;
/shall ...
110.
shall be guilty of the offence of sub-
version "
The paragraphs in section 54 (1) on which the State relied in the charge read as follows:
"(c) induce the Government of the Republic to
do or abstain from doing any
act or to
adopt or to abandon a particular stand-
point; or
(d) put in fear or demoralize the general pub-
lic, a particular
population group or the
inhabitants of a particular area in the
Republic
"
In terms of section 54 (8) the expression "Government of
the Republic" includes inter alia any institution contem-
i plated in section 84 (1) (f) of Act 32 of 1961, and the
last-mentioned section refers inter alia to "municipal
institutions and other local institutions of a simi-
lar nature". Section 69 (5) of the Act provides:
"If in any prosecution for an offence in terms of section 54 (1) or (2) it is proved that the accused has committed any act al-
leged in the charge, and if such act resulted
or was likely to have resulted in the achieve-ment of any of the objects specified in sec-tion 54 (1) (a) to (d), inclusive, it shall
/be ...
111.
be presumed, unless the contrary is proved, that the accused has committed that act with intent to achieve such object."
The particular facts on which the State relied in support of the charge were set out in a schedule annexed to the indictment. It is not necessary to reproduce that sche-dule here.It contained, a statement of the acts per-
formed by the mob at or in the vicinity of the deceased's
house, with which the accused made common cause, and which
have been summarized earlier in this judgment.
Those facts having been proved, the trial
Court found that the conduct of the mob, which included
the accused, fell within the ambit of paragraphs (a) and
(e) of section 54 (2) of the Act. This finding was
rightly not challenged on behalf of the accused. On the
facts of this case there is accordingly no need to embark
upon a general discussion of the precise scope of the
paragraphs in question. With regard to paragraph (c) of section 54 (1)
/the ...
112.
the trial Court found that the town council of Lekoa was an institution as contemplated in section 84 (1) (f) of
Act 32 of 1961. This finding was not challenged either.
The trial Court found further that the acts of the mob
were directed at inducing the town council of Lekoa to
abstain from enforcing the payment of increased service
levies, and that such was indeed the result of the riots,
since it appeared from the evidence that the town council
subsequently decided to abandon the project of levying
increased charges. With regard to paragraph (d) of sec-
tion 54 (1) the trial Court found that there was ample
evidence to show that the inhabitants of Sharpeville were
put in fear by the rioting mob.
in their evidence all the accused denied that
they had any intent to achieve any of the objects speci-
fied in paragraphs (c) and (d) of section 54 (1). The
trial Court found, however, that they had failed, on a
balance of probabilities, to rebut the presumption provided
/for ...
113.
for in section 69 (5). This was the only finding
of the trial Court, on this aspect of the case, which was chal-lenged on appeal.
It was argued that the trial Court should have accepted the denials of the
accused. The argument was doomed to fail. Not only were
the de-nials of the
accused contrary to the probabilities emerg-ing from the evidence, but the trial
Court also found that all the
accused were untruthful witnesses. The record
shows that the trial Court had good and sufficient grounds for rejecting the
evidence
of each of the accused. Ac-cordingly there is no room for this Court to
interfere with the finding of the trial Court.
So the third ground of appeal fails also.
Accused Nos 5 and 6, it will be recalled,were
given leave to appeal against their convictions for public violence. It can be assumed that the leave was based on the ground that there was no direct evidence that either of these accused had actually thrown any stones themselves.
/On ...
114.
On the facts of this case, however, it was not necessary
for the State to prove that these accused had themselves thrown stones, for
the evidence against them established clearly that they
were in the forefront of
the stone-throwing mob, and thus that they associated themselves with, and so
were parties to, the execution
of a common purpose to commit a riotous and
violent disturbance of the public peace and security and invasion of the rights
of others
(c f R v Wilkens and Others 1941 TPD 276 at 289, 297; R v
Cele and Others 1958 (1) SA 144 (N) at 153 B-C).On the other hand it is
clear that the very same conduct of these accused, on which their convictions
for public
vio-lence were founded, constituted the essential basis for their
convictions for subversion. It is for this reason that the question
was raised
in argument before this Court, as mentioned earlier, whether it was proper to
convict these
accused both for subversion and for public violence. In
my
view it was not. Not only were the acts of the accused
/which ...
115.
which constituted the basis of each of the convictions
exactly the same, but the nature of those acts, in the par-ticular circumstances of this case, was in substance very similar for the purposes of either of the convictions. The causing of "general dislocation and disorder" and the preventing or hampering of "the maintenance of law and order", for the purposes of paragraphs (a)" and (e) of sec-
tion 54 (2) of the Act, simultaneously involved the force-
ful disturbance of the public peace and security and in-
vasion of the rights of others, for the purposes of public
violence. On the particular facts of this case the proof of the former necessarily constituted proof of the latter. In substance the punishable conduct was the same. The only difference between the two crimes, in
the circumstances of this case, was the specific intent
required for subversion, as described in paragraphs (c) and (d) of section 54 (1) of the Act, which was, in terms of section 69 (5), presumed against the accused to have been present, and in one respect, viz the putting in
/fear ...
116.
fear of the inhabitants of the area (paragraph (d)), the intent largely coincided with the intent involved in pub-lic violence as well. In these circumstances, applying thê consideratïons of common sense and fairness referred to in R v Kuzwayo 1960 (1) SA 340 (A) at 344 A-C, these accused ought not to have been convïcted of both crimes. I may add that the trial Court was probably not alerted
to the position discussed above, because the convïctions for public vïolence were considered in the context of competent verdicts on the charge of murder. Had all the accused been charged originally wïth both subversion and public violence the difficulty would have been more imme-diately apparent. In the result these convïctions of
accused Nos 5 and 6 and the sentences imposed on them in respect thereof cannot stand and will be set aside.
I turn next to the question of extenuating cir-cumstances in regard to the six accused who were convicted of murder. None of them testified on this issue, but on
/behalf ....
117.
behalf of them evidence was given by Professor Tyson, a highly qualified and experienced psychologist. I do not propose to discuss his evidence in detail. The trial Judge dealt. fully with it in his lengthy and careful judgment on extenuating circumstances. The effect of Professor Tyson's evidence is summarized in the following passage:
"I consider, on the basis of my assessment of the psychological literature, that it is high-
ly probable that an individual in a mob
situation will experience de-individuation and that this de-individuation will lead to di-minished responsibility in much the same way as do the consumption of too much alcohol or great emotional stress."
It was argued before this Court that the trial Court had misdirected itself in finding that there were no extenuat-ing circumstances, in view of the unchallenged evidence of Professor Tyson, as summarized above. I am unable to accept this argument. The views expressed by the witness were of a wholly generalized nature, and unrelated to the individual
/accused ...
118.
accused. The generalization of the probability referred
to by the witness cannot be specifically related to any
individual accused in the absence of any evidence at all
regarding the actual motivation and state of mind of such
individual accused. . No such evidence was placed before
the trial Court. The position in the present case is
governed by the reasoning in S v Magubane en Andere 1987
(2) SA 663 (A) at 667 G - 669 E, which was concerned with
a different, but nonetheless closely analogous, context.
Consequently there is no room for finding that the trial
Court had misdirected itself in its assessment of Profes-
sor Tyson's evidence.
It was contended further that the trial Court had misdirected itself in placing reliance on the remarks of RUMPFF JA in S v Maarman 1976 (3) SA 510 (A) at 512 F -513 A. Again, I am unable to accept this argument. Suffice it to say that there is nothing in the judgment of the trial Judge which could indicate that the trial
/Court ...
119.
Court had referred to the interests of the community in
any sense other
than that sanctioned by the remarks re-
ferred to.
It was for the trial Court to assess the matter
of extenuating circumstances. As is well known, the room for this Court to interfere with the trial Court's assess-
ment is very limited. In this case, it has not been
shown that the trial Court misdirected itself. It
was not suggested that a Court could not reasonably have
arrived at the conclusion reached by the trial Court.
Consequently there are no grounds upon which this Court
can interfere with the trial Court's finding that there
were no
extenuating circumstances.
Finally, as to the sentences imposed by the trial Judge on all the accused in respect of their con-victions for subversion, it has not been shown that the
trial Judge's discretion. in the matter of sentence was
not exercised properly. There is no room for this Court
/to ...
120.
to interfere with the sentences.
The order of the Court is as follows:
(1) The appeals of appellants Nos 1, 2,
3, 4, 7 and 8 (accused Nos 1, 2, 3,
4, 7 and 8 in the Court a quo) against their convictions for murder and the
death sentences imposed upon them are
dismissed.
(2) The appeals of all the appellants
against their convictions for sub-version and the sentences imposed upon them in respect thereof are dismissed.
(3) The appeals of appellants Nos 5 and 6 (accused Nos 5 and 6 in the Court a
guo) against their convictions for
sentences im-
posed in respect thereof are allowed;
/these ...
121.
these convictions and sentences are set aside.
A.S. BOTHA JA
HEFER JA
SMALBERGER JA
CONCUR
BOSHOFF AJA
STEYN AJA