![]() |
[Home]
[Databases]
[WorldLII]
[Search]
[Feedback]
High Court of Swaziland |
[Database Search] [Name Search] [Recent Decisions] [Noteup] [Download] [Help]
Application for discharge after Crown
case
Demeanour
Failure to put
version
Crown’s burden of
proof
CRIM.CASE
NO.20/99
In the matter between:
THE
KING
VS
MUSA KHEHLA
HLATSHWAKO
CORAM: MASUKU J.
For the
Crown: MR J.W. MASEKO
For the Accused: MR S.V.
MDLADLA
JUDGEMENT
19/7/00
The accused stands before me charged with the crime of theft, it being
alleged that the said accused person, whilst employed as the
Customs and Excise
Controller of the Department of Customs and Excise, Mbabane Railway office, and
as such a servant or agent of
the said Department of Customs and Excise, he was
entrusted with the custody and care of money which belonged to his employer or
which money came into his possession on account of his said employer, the
accused person did, during the period 17th July, 1997, to
19th September, 1997, and at or near Mbabane, Hhohho District,
unlawfully and intentionally steal some of the said money, thereby causing
a
general deficiency of E42,630-68, the property or in the lawful possession of
the said Department of Custom and Excise.
The accused pleaded not guilty,
a plea which was confirmed by his attorney. The Crown adduced the evidence of
five (5) witnesses
in support of the indictment, and whose testimony will
chronicled herein below.
PW 1 was Captain Phillip Stander a member of the
South African Police Service, attached to the Questioned Documents Unit since
1993.
Captain Stander holds qualifications in questioned documents and is
therefor regarded as an expert in this field. He testified
that in April, 1998
he received certain documents from the Royal Swaziland Police (R.S.P.) in
respect of this matter and from which
he made a positive finding but did not
have enough specimen documents in his possession in order to enable him to make
a concrete
finding.
He therefor requested some more documents from the
R.S.P., which request culminated in R.M. Mthimkhulu of the R.S.P. delivering an
envelope containing disputed signatures, which PW 1 received on the
16th March, 2000. It was his further evidence that he compared two
sets of documents, namely, handing over certificates, which were disputed
and
also the accused’s leave forms which were collected signatures. PW 1
testified that in his opinion the author of both
sets of documents was one
person, and that the probability in favour of that opinion was 95%+
stronger.
In cross-examination, PW 1 was asked if his view that there was
a 95%+ probability that there was one author, then there is then a
chance that
the author, is not the same. In response, it was PW 1’s evidence that
there is 5% that the accused is not the
author and 95% that he is. He stated
further that if he had had more collected specimen, a stronger finding would
have been made.
PW 2 was Phephisiwe Annah Dlamini, the accused’s
subordinate at the Railway office. She testified that she was employed at
the
Railway office as a Customs Officer, whose duty it was to update the date stamp,
check the numbering machine, check in-coming
trucks from South Africa, check the
I.C.A. forms and to ensure that the same were in order. It was also her duty to
receive cash
and cheque payments from traders and to keep the money collected in
a cash box which she would lock. At the end of the day, she
would hand over the
cash and cheques to the accused, who was the Controller.
It was her
further evidence that before handing over the cash and cash book to the accused,
she would prepare and sign certain handover
certificates which the accused would
also sign in PW 2’s presence if the money over handed over corresponded
with the amounts
reflected in the cash book. She would then take copies of the
hand over certificated (H.O.C.) and the accused would also keep his
own. She
further testified that the accused was also responsible for banking the money
collected.
PW 2 was shown five H.O.C’s, which she said she
recognised and testified that the accused and herself both signed them. The
details reflected thereon are as
follows:
NO DATE CASH/CHEQUE AMOUNT
1 18/7/97 cash E
762.80
2 28/7/97 cash + cheque E3 918.75
3 1/8/97 cash E1
216.20
4 16/9/97 cash E 704.40
5 19/9/97 cheque & cash E3
498.64
She confirmed that the signatures reflected on the H.O.C. were the
accused’s and that she recognised his signature as she had
worked
harmoniously with him for a period of eight months. She further testified that
after handing the money over to the accused,
she did not have access to it as he
locked it in a safe.
In cross examination, she was asked if the amount
collected between the dates recorded above was reflective of the total and she
testified
that she is not certain as she attended a course at the Swaziland
Institute of Management and Public Administration (SIMPA) between
4th
August and 5th September, 1997 and left the accused to do the work on
his own. She was further asked if from the amount of E42, 630.68 reflected
in
the charge sheet less the amount reflected in the H.O.C. someone else collected
the money. Her response was that certain receipt
books were not located when an
audit of their duty station was conducted and she would therefor not be in a
position to know the
answer. She further testified that she normally collected
the money and the accused collected the money on a few occasions as he
worked
outside the station on most days, returning late in the afternoon.
When
asked by the Court, PW 2 stated that she did not keep any keys to the safe but
the accused alone did so. She further told the
Court that the accused always
returned and there was no occasion when she had to keep the money at the end of
the day.
PW 3 was Thandabantu Nxumalo the Internal Auditor of the
Department. It was his evidence that his duties entail inspecting all the
Department’s books of account as one of the Government’s collectors
of revenue. He also has to ensure that revenue is
properly collected, banked
and also ensure that all stipulated financial and other procedures are
religiously followed.
It was his evidence that on the 13th,
16th and 22nd September, 1997, he carried out an audit
inspection of the accused’s station and submitted a report of his
findings. That
report was read out and reflects the following:-
That on
the 15th, 16th and 22nd September, 1997, PW 3,
accompanied by Doreen Hlatshwayo carried out an audit inspection at the Railway
Station, where the accused
was Controller. The auditors introduced themselves
to the accused as such and they requested to inspect the stock register,
whereupon
the accused informed them that it was not maintained at that Station.
When referred to an earlier inspection, carried out on 30th
September, 1996, which stated that such a register was maintained, the accused
then told the auditors that they could not get the
register because he had given
it to someone else, together with other documents and receipt books. For that
reason, the auditors
could not determine the stock of receipts on
hand.
The auditors could also not determine the last submission to the
revenue office because the accused failed to produce the file in
which
collectors receipts and other accounting records are filed. The accused
informed the auditors that the file was in the custody
of somebody in
town.
The auditors also established that total cash on receipts was E68
305.11 and the cash on hand, which included coins and cash on bank
slips was
E25,674.43 and the amount unaccounted for was E42,630.68. The auditors asked
the accused about the whereabouts of this
money and the accused confessed that
he had misappropriated the money. This PW 2 confirmed in his evidence, adding
that the accused
told them that he used the money for something else.
A
litany of breaches of financial and accounting regulations was discovered by the
auditors but which are not the subject of this
enquiry. Certain recommendations
were made in respect of the issues cited above and the other infractions to the
Commissioner of
Customs and Excise for appropriate action.
PW 3 also
testified that they also noted a number of discrepancies regarding the due
completion of the C.C.A. forms and when confronted
about these, the accused
failed to give a satisfactory explanation. Deposit slips pertaining to cash
deposits and the general receipt
book were handed in as part of PW 2’s
evidence.
In cross-examination, PW 3 stated that on their arrival on the
15th September, 1997, PW 2 was the officer they found on the premises
as the accused was reported to be at work at Sidwashini, Interfreight
depot. PW
3 said they waited for the accused’s arrival. PW 3 was asked if he was
aware that the accused had been left to
man the station on his own because PW 2
attended a course at SIMPA. It was PW 3’s evidence that this was not
brought to the
auditors’ attention, and that the accused never informed
them of this and that had he informed them, this would have been reflected
in
the report.
It was put to PW 3 that the report was compiled without
calling the accused to answer and this PW 3 vehemently denied. PW 3 insisted
that the procedure is that the auditee is always present when an audit is
carried out and that the auditee is asked questions. He
stated that the audit
team cannot proceed in the absence of the auditee. PW 3 further denied that the
accused was not there and
that upon his arrival, the auditors already had the
documents in their possession. It was further suggested to PW 3 that the
accused
explained that the auditors found the books in disarray because at one
stage the accused was left alone to man the office. This
PW 3 stated was never
explained to them by the accused. It was also put to PW 3 that the accused did
not dispute the signatures
in question because he was not afforded an
opportunity to present his case. This PW 3 denied, maintaining that the accused
was afforded
every opportunity to explain. PW 3 further denied that the
documents were perused in the accused’s absence as suggested.
It was his
evidence that the accused was present throughout.
Mr Mdladla further put
to PW 3 that the accused denies that the signatures on the receipt book are his
to which PW 3 stated that the
accused never denied them during the inspection.
It was stated further that the accused denied ever admitting that he had
misappropriated
funds from the station. PW 3 stated that the accused did
confess and as a result this fact was recorded in the report.
PW 4 was
Nonhlanhla Eunice Mngomezulu a Senior Accountant, who is employed by Government
at the Revenue Section at the Treasury Department.
It was her evidence that her
office issues receipt books to sub-collectors, including the accused’s
station. She confirmed
that the receipt book in issue Exhibit “G”,
bearing serial numbers 162401 to 162500 was issued by her office to the
accused’s
station. In this regard, PW 4 handed in a sheet from the stock
book which confirmed that such a receipt book was issued to the accused’s
station on the 27th June, 1997 and was signed for. PW 4 confirmed
that she knew the accused and that he used to come to her office to collect
receipt
books for his station.
In cross-examination, PW 4 stated that she
did not personally know who had issued exhibit ‘G’ to the station in
question.
She further stated that she did not know therefor to whom the receipt
book was given. When asked what she would say if the accused
would deny having
collected Exhibit ‘G’, PW 4 stated that according to her knowledge
the accused was the only person
known to collect receipt books for his station
and if he did not collect Exhibit ‘G’, he should be in a position to
say
who had done so. PW 4 further stated that as a matter of procedure one
person is always designated to collect receipt books and
if that person is for
some reason unable to do so, he informs the Treasury Department as to who will
collect the receipt books so
that the Department may know. She testified that
strangers may not collect these.
The last witness for the Crown PW 5,
was Caiphus Vusumuzi Msibi, the Personnel Officer stationed at Customs and
Excise Department
head quarters. He testified that he knew the accused as the
accused was in his Department’s employ. PW 5 handed in some leave
application forms in respect of the accused. It was PW 5’s further
evidence that the accused had applied for leave using the
said forms, and the
same were signed by the accused. He further confirmed that these forms were
obtained from the accused’s
personal file maintained by the Department of
Customs and Excise, which were in his custody and care. The defence put no
question
to this witness.
At this stage, Mr Mdladla moved an application
for the acquittal and discharge of the accused at the close of the Crown’s
case,
which application I then dismissed. Section 174 (4) of the Criminal
Procedure and Evidence Act No.67/1938, under which this application
was moved
states as follows:-
“If at the close of the case for the
prosecution, the Court considers that there is no
evidence that the
accused committed the offence charged or any other offence of
which
he might be convicted thereon, it may acquit and discharge
him.”
The Legislative nomenclature clearly shows that the
Legislature gives the trial Court the discretion to decide whether or not to
grant
an application for acquittal and discharge, depending upon the particular
attendant circumstances of the case. The test to be applied
in considering
whether a discharge is competent was stated by Dunn J. in the KING v DUNCAN
MAGAGULA AND 10 OTHERS CRIM. CASE NO.43/96 as being whether there has been
led evidence on which a reasonable man acting carefully might and not
should convict.
In support of the application, it was the contention of
the defence that no link had been created by the Crown between the accused
and
the offence. It was contended that the Crown failed to prove that Exhibit
‘G’ was in the accused’s possession
and the accused signed it.
Furthermore, it was submitted that PW 2 failed to adduce evidence to prove the
Exhibit ‘C’
was used by her at the station.
It cannot be
said, due regard being had to the nature of the evidence led that no evidence
was led by the Crown showing that the accused
had committed the crime where with
he is charged, or any other offence of which he might be convicted.
There
is a clear nexus between the charge and the accused. It was not denied that the
accused was in control at the material time
i.e. when the money disappeared.
Further, PW 2’s evidence was clear that it was the accused, during the
material time who
was responsible for the safe-keeping and banking of the money
and also signed handover notes acknowledging receipt of money. The
evidence of
PW 3, regarding the accused’s admission of misappropriating the money is
also evidence linking the accused to the
offence.
The Crown, in its
evidence regarding the receipt book proved that it was issued by the Treasury
Department to the Railway Station.
PW 3 confirmed that he found it at the
station being used when he was carrying out the audit inspection. The accused,
from the
questions posed to the Crown witnesses does not appear to deny handling
the money neither does he say what he would have stated had
the hearing which he
denies been afforded to him. It is also worthy of note that the money in
respect of which the accused stands
charged was obtained from source documents
obtained from the station where the accused was in charge. It was for these
reasons that
I came to the view that the application lacked substance and was
liable to be refused.
A reviewal of the Crown’s evidence in my view
leads to only one conclusion. The Crown gave good, reliable and credible
testimony.
The evidence was adduced by the Crown witnesses in a forthright
manner. The Crown’s witnesses in my view never wavered and
showed great
fortitude even under cross-examination. I therefor have no hesitation in
accepting their evidence, which was given
in an impartial manner as true. Their
evidence was in my view without blemish.
The accused gave sworn
testimony, led by his attorney. The accused informed the Court that he was
employed by the Department and
had been so employed for more than twenty (20)
years. It was his evidence that he was Controlling Officer (C.O.) at the
Railway
station when he was suspended. His duties as head of the station
entailed overseeing issues relating to import and export of goods,
checking if
trucks had properly declared goods being imported into the country, taking
custody of official stamps and also to keep
files and collectors receipts and
the keeping and banking of the money collected.
It was his further
evidence that on the 15th September, 1997, on arrival from
Interfreight, he found PW 2, PW 3 and one Doreen Hlatshwayo in the office with
the General Receipt
Book, C.C.A. forms and cash books which they were using.
The accused greeted them and proceeded to do his work as there was a truck
he
had to check outside. He testified that the procedure relating to Internal
Auditors was that they do not wait for C.O. if the
key to the station is
available.
It was his evidence that the auditors never asked him to be
present during the audit nor to explain anything to them. He received
a
telephone call from one S.S Dlamini summoning him to the headquarters where he
was told to go on leave because there were certain
mistakes or anomalies at the
station. He was never asked to address the aforesaid queries. On expiry of the
leave days, the accused
was given a letter of transfer to the Inspection
Department where no report of his activities at the previous post were
mentioned.
It was his evidence that only faithful people are employed at the
Inspection Department to which he had been transferred.
He further
testified that in September, 1998, a Police Officer by the surname of Ngwenya
arrested him and he was taken to Court where
he was admitted to bail. He
therefor continued to work until his suspension as aforesaid.
It was the
accused’s further evidence that after the audit inspection, he did not
look at the books of account because the auditors
came with their own receipt
book, used it and took it away. The accused admitted that it is true that some
of the accounting instructions
and procedures had been flouted by him and
attributed this to the fact that he was left to do all the work alone when PW 2
attended
a course at S.I.M.P.A. He admitted that he was responsible for
collecting general receipt books from the Treasury Department but
denied having
collected Exhibit ‘G’. The accused further testified that he was
never asked by the auditors about the
money and he denied having admitted to
embezzling the money.
The accused was also shown Exhibit ‘G’
which he perused, stating that he did not know any of the signatures thereon.
He stated that he could see two different signatures appended thereon but none
of them was his.
The accused lifted the shield during his examination in
chief by stating that only trustworthy persons are employed at the Inspection
Department. In cross-examination, the accused stated that he considered himself
as a trustworthy person. Having lifted the shield,
it then transpired that the
accused was once posted to Nsalitje Border Post in 1985 and he left
as a
result of some money that went missing. As a result, criminal proceedings were
instituted and the accused was acquitted on a
technicality. It further
transpired that the accused was transferred to Sicunusa where some money was
misappropriated and he was
surcharged therefor. When put to him that he was far
cry from a trustworthy officer, the accused did not deny, contenting himself
only in saying that he understands. I have warned myself against using this
evidence to reach any conclusion regarding the accused’s
guilt or
otherwise in this matter. The conclusion reached will be solely confined to the
evidence led in this matter.
The accused was hopeless as a witness. His
hopelessness was shown very early in his evidence in chief when he testified
that when
the auditors came, he was not in the office but found them perusing
books of account and merely greeted them. He was hard pressed
to explain why he
did not take an interest in people who were perusing books at a station which he
controls but gave an unconvincing
answer. The accused further failed to answer
clear and direct questions under cross-examination such that the Court was
called upon
on some occasions to direct him to answer the questions. He was
fidgety and very uncomfortable both in his evidence in chief and
under
cross-examination.
In the case of S V KELLY 1980 (3) SA 301 at 308
C, it was stated that “Demeanour is, at best a tricky horse to ride.
There is no doubt that demeanour...can be most misleading.”
In this case,
the accused’s demeanour in the witness box was in no way deceptive. It
was reminiscent of what was stated by
Osborne, “The Mind of the
Juror” 1938, page 86, namely:-
“The witnesses speak...not
by words alone...Their faces and their changing
expressions may be
pictures that prove the truth of the ancient Chinese saying
that a
picture is equal to a thousand words.”
The defence case faced
several insuperable difficulties over and above the accused’s demeanour in
the witness box. Firstly,
the defence case was not fully put to the
Crown’s witnesses much against the well established principle propounded
with absolute
clarity by Hannah C.J. in R v DOMINIC MNGOMEZULU AND
OTHERS CRIM. CASE NO.94/90, at page 17, where the learned Chief Justice as
he then was stated as follows:-
“It is I think clear from the
foregoing that failure by counsel to cross-examine on
important
aspects of a prosecution witness’ testimony may place the defence at
risk of adverse comments being made and adverse inferences being
drawn. If he
does not challenge a particular item of evidence, then
an inference may be made
that at the time of cross-examination his
instructions were that the unchallenged
item was not disputed by the
accused. And if the accused subsequently goes into
the witness box
and denies the evidence in question, the Court may infer that he
has
changed his story in the intervening period. It is also important that
counsel
should put the defence case accurately. If he does not, and
the accused subsequently
gives evidence at variance with what was
put, the Court may again infer that there
has been a change in the
accused’s story.”
Examples of issues which were not put
to the Crown witnesses and in respect of which the Court was entitled to assume
were not challenged
include inter alia:-
| (a) | It was not put to PW 2 or PW 3 that the procedure at the Customs and |
Excise Department is that the
Internal Auditor does not wait for the
Controller to be in attendance before
he can proceed with his inspection
unless the key is unavailable. This only
surfaced in the accused’s evidence
in chief, much against PW 3’s
unchallenged evidence that he does not carry out the audit in the
Controller’s absence unless
the Controller has delegated one of his
subordinates to work with the auditors.
| (b) | It was never put to PW 3 that he and his colleague brought a receipt book |
with them and which they took
away after conducting the inspection. This
was only disclosed by the accused
in his evidence in chief.
| (c) | It was never put to PW 2 that the accused had to attend to trucks or persons |
who had paid on a
daily basis on his return from Sidwashini. This was also stated in his evidence
in chief when the accused was trying
to explain why he did not attend to the
auditors according to his version, namely that he had a truck to attend
to.
| (d) | It was never put to PW 3 that the Internal Audit Team proceeds to conduct |
its inspection with
whoever is found on duty regardless of the absence of the
controller.
| (e) | The defence never put to PW 2 that the accused questioned her about what |
she was doing with the
auditors. In his evidence in chief, the accused stated
that he questioned
her and her answer was that they were just working as they were required to
ascertain if the money balanced. The
importance of this was that PW 2 and PW 3
stated that the accused was present during the
inspection and he was asked
to explain certain anomalies.
Based on the above cited dictum, I am
entitled and do hereby draw an inference that there was a change in the
accused’s story.
The issues raised above were important to put to the
Crown witnesses in order to put the accused’s case in its proper
perspective
to the Court. That these were only raised in chief is susceptible
to only the one interpretation stated above.
I have also come to a
conclusion that the accused lied in respect of certain matters and proceeded to
contradict himself on others.
In his evidence in chief, he testified that the
Receipt Book, Exhibit ‘G’, was brought onto his station by PW 3 but
under cross-examination he conceded that he may have handed the said Exhibit to
PW 3 to enable him to conduct an inspection.
The accused also lied when
he said that he was not present during the audit inspection. His presence and
participation was confirmed
by the evidence of PW 3, who was impressive as a
witness and was honest in my view. The accused’s story is that he went
into
his office and found PW 2 with internal auditors and merely greeted them.
He then went to attend to a truck outside. When asked
what he did about people
working at his station he said he asked PW 2 but never asked PW 3 because he
(accused) was busy. This is
an unacceptable explanation.
PW 3’s
evidence is that the accused was present during the inspection and was asked
certain questions which he answered. Certain
books were found missing and the
accused gave an explanation. The absence of some of these books was also
confirmed by PW 2 and
she was not contradicted by the defence in this regard.
The accused accepts that there were anomalies which were recorded in PW
3’s report but insists that he was not there during the inspection. The
accused was very uncomfortable when answering questions
regarding this issue and
was evasive. I find for a fact that he was asked questions as stated by PW 3
and his answers were recorded.
It is worth noting that if his story is accepted
that he was not given a hearing by the auditors and the Commissioner, he does
not
state what it is that he would have stated to them to challenge PW 3’s
report or the anomalies attributed to him.
There are excerpts from the
cross examination of the accused which demonstrate his lies. I propose to refer
to a few of these as
recorded in my notes.
Q: I put it to you that on
that day, PW 2 handed over E3,498.64, which includes a cheque of
E626.04.
A: I cannot recall. She may have handed the money
over.
Q: I suggest that this amount is confirmed by the hand-over
certificates which
she signed and you also signed declaring receipt of the
amount
A: I did not sign there
Q: There is no way that PW 2 could
have manufactured this document with
your signature as you acknowledge
being at work on that day and receiving
the amount.
A: I may have taken
this money but not as indicated in this document, (This
question
had to be asked three times. Eventually, the following answer
was
tendered.)
I agree she could not manufacture the
hand over certificates.
Q: I put it to you, she could not have
manufactured the others, especially those
dated 18/7, 16/9, 1/8, 1997 and
28/7/98, especially because of your
evidence that you would always come back
to the station and never went on leave.
A: I agree. She could not have
manufactured them.
Q: At the close of business of each day, you would
put away the stamps and
general receipt book
A: Yes.
Q: PW 3
told the Court that he received Exhibit “G” from you before
inspection
A: I never gave a General Receipt book to PW 3
Q: I suggest that there is no way or reason which PW 3 would plant
Exhibit
“G” because these were locked in the safe
everyday.
A: True. However, I do not remember giving him a General receipt
book
Q: You agree that you may have given him but do not
remember
A: Yes.
Q: I put it to you that there is no way in which PW
3 would have had access to
the books as stamps are affixed thereon and you
collected and locked the
stamps at the close of business.
A: I
agree.
Q: I put it to you that Exhibit “G” was handed to PW 3
and he used it to discover the deficiency as alleged in the charge
sheet.
A: I agree that it was issued to my station but I did not fetch it
from the
Treasury Department.
It is clear from the foregoing that
the accused’s evidence was now changing. His earlier evidence was that he
had not dealt
with PW 3 but from the excerpts it is clear that he did. Earlier
he denied knowledge of the receipt book but later agreed that it
was at his
station. His evidence is therefor not worthy of credit.
From the
evidence, it is abundantly clear that the accused was employed by the Department
and that he was station controller when
the deficiency occurred. As C.O., he
was responsible for the custody and safety of the money and was also responsible
for banking
it. The uncontroverted evidence is that PW 2 collected the money
and handed it over to the accused together with the cheques. The
accused kept
these in a safe of which he only kept the key.
There was therefor no
opportunity for PW 2 or any other person to interfere with the safe nor was it
suggested to PW 2 that she or
another person had access to the safe. No queries
were raised by the accused to PW 2 in which she was suspected to have been
responsible
for the disappearance of the money.
I reject as false that
the receipt book was brought by PW 3. The receipt book was issued to the
accused’s station and he and
PW 2 were receiving money evidenced by their
signatures appended thereon. The accused’s denials of the signatures
thereon
are nothing but an exercise in futility. I say so because of the
compelling evidence of the Crown’s expert evidence adduced
by PW 1
regarding the questioned and collected signatures. His finding was that one
person wrote both. I have also taken time to
compare the signatures on the
receipt book, the stock register and those on the leave forms and hand over
certificates. I have no
hesitation to say that these were signed by one person
save that he abbreviated the signature in the receipt book and the stock
register.
This is so plain that no expert witness is even necessary to state.
His denial of these signatures, which was done half-heartedly
amounted to
nothing other than an attempt to deflect the course of justice. It is also
worthy of note from the excerpts from my
notes that the accused eventually
agreed that PW 2 could not have manufactured the H.O.C. and therefor could not
manufacture the
signatures thereon.
Furthermore, the accused admitted
that PW 3 could not have planted the receipt book in question and further stated
that he could have
given the receipt book to PW 3. If the accused denied the
signatures both on the H.O.C. and the receipt book, he should have done
so
during the audit. His failure to do so is only consistent with PW 3’s
evidence that the accused admitted misappropriating
the funds in
question.
When handed the receipt book to look at the signatures, he
hurriedly went through the book without taking the requisite painstaking
care
and diffidently stated that he did not know the signature thereon. It was clear
that he was lying.
There is also the evidence of PW 3 that the accused
admitted to have misappropriated the money. This evidence, the accused failed
to sufficiently explain. Contrasting the two pieces of evidence i.e. that of
the accused and PW 3, the latter’s should stand,
regard being had to his
impressive demeanour in the witness box. The same cannot be said of the accused
and I am therefor constrained
to admit PW 3’s evidence as true. PW 3
could not manufacture that piece of evidence and proceed to tell a fanciful
story that
certain books were not found and the accused said they were with some
person in town if that was not the case. PW 3 had nothing
personal to gain by
adducing the evidence that he did nor was it suggested to him. It is not
disputed that many accounting instructions
were not followed by the accused
which is an indication that all was not well at his station. This, considered
in the light of the
other evidence led places the accused in a
precipice.
In the case of MILLER v MINISTER OF PENSIONS 1947 (2) ALL
E.R. 372 at 373 (K.B.D.) G – H, Denning J. summed at the position as
follows:-
“...there is a compelling presumption in the man’s favour which must prevail unless the evidence proves beyond reasonable doubt that the disease was not
attributable to or aggravated by war
service, and for that purpose the evidence
must reach the same
degree of cogency as is required in a criminal case before an
accused
person is found guilty. That degree is well settled. It need not reach
certainty, but it must carry a high degree of probability. Proof
beyond the shadow
of doubt. The law would fail to protect the
community if it admitted fanciful
possibilities to deflect the
course of justice. If the evidence is so strong against a
man as to
leave only a remote possibility in his favour which can be dismissed with
the sentence ‘of course it is possible, but not in the least
probable’, the case is proved beyond reasonable doubt, but
nothing short
of that will suffice.”
In this case, I find no possibilities
ensuring to the accused’s favour. The accused was solely and directly in
charge of the
money which went missing and confessed that he misappropriated it.
His subsequent denial is a feeble and unconvincing attempt to
avoid facing the
natural consequences of his action. His account is palpably false and cannot,
with exercise of the greatest benevolence
be regarded as reasonably possibly
true. I accordingly find him guilty as charged and it is so
ordered.
T.S. MASUKU
JUDGE
CommonLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.commonlii.org/sz/cases/SZHC/2000/10.html