You are here:
SAFLII >>
Databases >>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal >>
2007 >>
[2007] ZASCA 164
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Help]
S v Hammond (320/07) [2007] ZASCA 164; [2007] SCA 164 (RSA) (29 November 2007)
.RTF of original document
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Reportable
CASE NO: 320/07
In the matter between
NICHOLAS JAMES HAMMOND
APPELLANT
and
THE STATE RESPONDENT
CORAM: MTHIYANE, LEWIS and JAFTA JJA
HEARD: 16 NOVEMBER 2007
DELIVERED: 29 NOVEMBER 2007
SUMMARY: Appeal against conviction and sentence for drug-dealing in terms of s 5(b) of the Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992:
whether evidence of a police trap was admissible in terms of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. Appeal against conviction dismissed;
sentence reduced from 12 to five years’ imprisonment, two of which suspended.
Neutral Citation: This judgment may be referred to as Hammond v State 164 [2007] SCA (RSA)
JUDGMENT
LEWIS JA
[1]
In March 2004 the appellant was convicted in a district magistrate’s court on a charge of
dealing in Methcathinone (Cat) in contravention of s 5(b) of the Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992 (the Drugs Act) and sentenced
to 12 years’ imprisonment. Cat is categorised as an undesirable dependence-producing drug, listed in Schedule 2, Part 111,
of the Drugs Act. The quantity of the Cat was established as 3.22kgs. The High Court, Johannesburg, in April 2006, dismissed an appeal
against both conviction and sentence. This further appeal is with the leave of that court. It is regrettable that this court does
not have the judgment of the high court on appeal, since, because of a technical error, it could not be transcribed.
[2]
I turn first to the appeal against conviction. The appellant was apprehended on 17 October 2003
with another suspect, the second accused, by two police officers, Sergeant Tickner and Inspector de Jager, who had received information
that men in a particular Mercedes Benz car, to be found at a BP Service Station opposite Gold Reef City in Johannesburg, were in
possession of drugs: they were instructed to arrest them and duly did so.
[3]
The appellant pleaded not guilty to the charge of drug dealing. The second accused gave a plea explanation
in terms of s 115 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, and at the end of the trial was acquitted. The essential submissions
of the appellant before this court are that his trial was unfair as the State did not lead all the evidence available to it, and
the appellant had been trapped into committing the offence by police, the evidence of the trap being inadmissible in terms of s 252A
of the Criminal Procedure Act.
[4]
The background is briefly the following. The police officers made statements after the arrest that
they had been told by an anonymous informer that a man in possession of Cat was to be found at a BP Service Station opposite the
Gold Reef City Casino in Johannesburg. They proceeded to the car where they found the second accused in the driver’s seat.
The appellant approached the car with cooldrinks in his hands. The police searched the car, finding a sports bag on the back seat
which contained 7 plastic bags of a white powdery substance, later identified as Cat. The police handcuffed and arrested the appellant
and the second accused.
[5]
Before the trial commenced, both police officers provided the appellant and the court with supplementary
statements. These differed from their original statements in two material respects, which the appellant argues are significant to
the arguments that the evidence of entrapment by the police should not have been admitted, and that the conduct of the prosecution
and the police was such that he did not have a fair trial.
[6]
First, the police officers’ statements, which were in virtually identical terms, save that
Tickner’s was in English and De Jager’s in Afrikaans, referred to an anonymous informer who had instructed them to proceed
to the BP Service Station and arrest the appellant and others, whereas in their supplementary statements they advised that the informer
was not anonymous but in fact one Captain Kukard, who had died before the trial commenced.
[7]
Secondly, both officers made no reference in their original statements to the presence of an Indian
man in the car with the second accused and the appellant. They subsequently, in both their supplementary statements and in evidence,
said that the Indian man, identified only as Yunus (his name is referred to throughout the record as ‘Eunice’, but I
have assumed that ‘Yunus’ is the correct spelling, although ‘Yunis’ is used in the appellant’s heads
of argument) was in the front passenger seat of the car with the second accused. Yunus, they said, was removed from the scene by
one of the officers, Tickner, on the instructions of Kukard. Both Tickner and De Jager also stated that Yunus (whom they did not
identify further) was a police agent, and that Kukard had instructed them to release him when the other men were arrested. Their
testimony was also to this effect.
[8]
On the day the trial commenced the appellant requested further particulars to the charge. It asked:
‘1 Berus die Staat se saak op lokval getuienis?
2 Was die anonieme beriggewer op die toneel deel van die polisie optrede, indien nie, wat was die doel van sy teenwoordigheid op die
toneel?’
The prosecutrix responded:
‘ 1 Ad par 1: Die Staat sal nie beweer dat daar van ’n lokval gebruik gemaak is nie. Indien die getuienis egter sodanige feit bewys,
sal die Staat ook daarop steun.
b) Ad par 2: Dit is onbekend aan die Staat.’
[9]
The prosecutrix, in her address to the court before evidence was led, confirmed that the State would not lead evidence on the use
of a police trap, but that if the defence led such evidence the State would accept it. She added that the State had no evidence that
a trap was used – the docket disclosed none and the police officers who had made statements would testify that they were not
aware of one.
[10]
It transpired during the course of the appellant’s evidence that there had indeed been a police trap. The appellant argues
that the police and the State must have been aware of this, and thus did not come to court ‘with clean hands’. Before
considering the soundness of this contention, and whether the evidence of the police trap was admissible in terms of s 252A of the
Criminal Procedure Act, in that it did not go beyond affording an opportunity to commit an offence, or that if it did, the trial
court nonetheless had a discretion to admit it, I shall deal briefly with the evidence led by the State and that of the appellant.
[11]
I have already described the way in which the appellant and his co-accused were apprehended. Tickner described the arrest, and the
discovery of the Cat, first. She was cross-examined on why she had failed to disclose the identity of the informant, and the presence
of Yunus in the car, in her initial statement. Her explanation was that the identity of the informer, Kukard, and the presence of
Yunus, were not revealed initially because both were involved in investigations into drug dealing that might be jeopardized if their
identities and status were revealed. Kukard’s subsequent death enabled the police to reveal his identity and she had realized
that it had been a mistake to fail to disclose Yunus’s presence on the scene. She had not known, when apprehending Yunus, that
he was a police agent, but De Jager had been phoned by Kukard when at the scene and told to release Yunus who was a police agent.
Tickner had removed Yunus from the scene.
[12]
De Jager confirmed the evidence of Tickner, and elaborated on the reasons for not disclosing Kukard’s identity: not only would
it jeopardize investigations into drug syndicates but it would also endanger his life. He testified that he had no knowledge of a
police trap or the circumstances leading to his instruction to apprehend the appellant and the first accused.
[13]
As counsel for the appellant argued, the evidence of the police officers was not entirely satisfactory, and their initial statements,
which contained false statements and failed to disclose the presence of Yunus, are to be deprecated. However, the appellant himself
admitted (despite his plea of not guilty) that he was involved in a transaction for the sale of Cat, and it is he who testified as
to a police trap.
[14]
His evidence is the basis of the conviction. Before dealing with the appellant’s involvement in drug dealing, and the trap,
it should be noted that the second accused’s plea explanation was confirmed by the appellant. It transpired that the appellant
had hired him simply as a driver on the day of their arrest, and that he had no knowledge of the presence of drugs in the car –
hence his acquittal.
[15]
The appellant testified that in 2003 he shared a house with a friend, Gareth. Gareth was friendly with a Cat dealer, Tommy Gregory.
The appellant also became a friend of Gregory. Gareth became involved with a woman known as Roxy, who claimed to be a prostitute.
Roxy advised them that she knew a brothel owner in Durban, known as Judy. Judy was interested in acquiring Cat. Judy in due course
contacted Gareth, and at her instigation Gareth and the appellant met a man known as Joe. Joe wanted to buy Cat in large quantities.
Nothing came of this encounter.
[16]
Judy then arranged for Yunus to contact Gareth and the appellant. Gareth at that stage was having emotional problems and so Judy
preferred to make arrangements with the appellant. The appellant met Yunus three times near Gold Reef City, where Yunus was staying.
On each occasion the appellant had been unable to procure Cat to sell to Yunus. On one occasion, Yunus had taken him to his hotel
room, and shown the appellant a vast sum of money to assure him of his serious intention to buy large quantities of Cat. The appellant’s
failure to produce the drugs disappointed Yunus, and angered Judy who kept badgering him. On several occasions she was abusive and
threatening and the appellant was afraid that he might be harmed by one of Judy’s associates.
[17]
The phone calls ceased, however, and when Judy phoned again and apologized for her behaviour, the appellant accepted her apology
and was ‘quite happy’. On 17 October 2004 Judy phoned the appellant and said she knew of a source and that he could collect
the drugs from Fourways, in Johannesburg. He had previously arranged for the second accused to drive him and they went to the address
in Fourways given to him by Judy. There was nobody there. The appellant called Judy and she instructed him to go to Hyde Park instead.
There he met two men and was given the bag in which the Cat was found.
[18]
The appellant was then instructed to proceed to Gold Reef City, and then subsequently to the BP Service Station. There he met Yunus
and his girlfriend and they tested the drugs. While Yunus’s girlfriend was fetching something from their hotel room, the appellant
went to buy cooldrinks. On his return he was arrested by Tickner and De Jager.
[19]
The appellant testified that he was not himself a drug user, but wanted to make money out of the transaction. He would have received
ten per cent of ‘the deal’ – some R60 000. In response to a question by the court he frankly said that he had become
willingly involved in dealing with Judy and Yunus: had he been able to source the Cat from anywhere else, prior to the transaction
in issue, he would have done so. He hoped to make easy money from drug-dealing transactions. He had learned after his arrest that
both Roxy and Judy were police informers.
[20]
The trial court convicted the appellant, finding that the conduct of the police, as described by the appellant, did not go beyond
providing an opportunity to commit an offence, and that the evidence was admissible under s 252A of the Criminal Procedure Act. Section
252A(1) provides:
‘Any law enforcement officer, official of the State or any other person authorised thereto for such purpose (hereinafter referred to in this section as an official or his or her agent) may make use of a trap or engage in an undercover operation
in order to detect, investigate or uncover the commission of an offence, or to prevent the commission of any offence, and the evidence
so obtained shall be admissible if that conduct does not go beyond providing an opportunity to commit an offence: Provided that where the conduct goes beyond providing an opportunity to commit an offence a court may admit evidence so obtained
subject to subsection (3)’ (my emphasis).
[21]
Subsection (2) lists various factors that a court should have regard to in deciding whether conduct does go beyond providing an opportunity
to commit an offence.
Subsection (3)(a) provides that where a court finds that the conduct in question has gone beyond providing an opportunity to commit
an offence ‘the court may refuse to allow such evidence to be tendered or may refuse to allow such evidence already tendered,
to stand, if the evidence was obtained in an improper or unfair manner and that the admission of such evidence would render the trial
unfair or would otherwise be detrimental to the administration of justice’.
Subsection 3(b) requires a court, when considering the admissibility of the evidence, to weigh up the i nterest of the public against the ‘personal interest of the accused’. The subsection lists numerous factors to be taken
into account in the process of determining these respective interests.
[22]
Section 252A, introduced into the Criminal Procedure Act in 1996, does not create a special defence of entrapment: it creates an
evidentiary rule, and the court is given a discretion as to whether to admit evidence of conduct that does go beyond providing an
opportunity to commit an offence. The appellant argues that the conduct of the police did indeed go beyond providing an opportunity
to commit the offence, and the State did not come to court ‘with clean hands’.
[23]
In respect of the latter contention the appellant relies on S v Hayes where the court found that the conduct of the police officers involved in the trap, who had collaborated with one another in making
their statements, was irreconcilable with a fair trial and amounted to defeating the ends of justice. One of the considerations to
be taken into account in balancing the interests of an accused with the public interest under s 252A(3)(iii) is the infringement
of any fundamental right, including, of course, the right to a fair trial under s 35(3) of the Constitution.
[24]
The appellant contends that the conduct of Tickner and De Jager, in making false statements, and of the prosecution in failing to
adduce the evidence of the police agents or informers who set up the trap, rendered the trial unfair. But in Hayes the court held that the true enquiry was whether the conduct of the police had been so fundamentally unfair that the accused’s
right to a fair trial had been frustrated. In my view, the dishonest conduct of Tickner and De Jager in the making of their initial
statements is to be condemned. But it related only to the arrest of the appellant, the identity of the informant and the presence
of Yunus at the scene of the arrest. They had nothing to do with the trap, and before the trial commenced they placed the facts known
to them on record. The failure of the State to adduce the evidence of the police who were involved in the trap does not in itself
render the trial unfair: there was nothing in the evidence or in argument to suggest, contrary to the appellant’s submission,
that the State suppressed vital or even relevant evidence. I do not consider that there is any merit in the appellant’s contention
that the trial was unfair.
[25]
That leaves the questions whether the police conduct went beyond providing an opportunity to source and sell the Cat, and whether
the trial court had a discretion to admit that evidence if it did. The appellant submits that once it became clear to Judy and to
Yunus that the appellant could not obtain Cat himself, and after Judy had threatened him, her conduct and that of Yunus fell foul
of several of the provisions of s 252A(2): they had provided the drug to the appellant, they had induced him with a large reward
(R60 000), and Judy’s threats had made him fear for his safety. The trial court had not considered all of the 13 factors listed
in s 252A(2) nor determined whether they played any role in the commission of the offence by the appellant.
[26]
The submission in this regard has no merit. The factors are listed simply as those to be considered in determining whether the entrapper
has gone further than providing an opportunity. There is no requirement that each be considered. Moreover, in this matter the contention
that any of these factors played a role is not consonant with the appellant’s evidence. As indicated previously, he testified
that he had willingly become involved with his friends in attempting to obtain and sell Cat. Had he been able to obtain it he would
have done so before Judy and Yunus provided him with information about a source. Although testifying that he had become afraid after
Judy had threatened him, once she had apologized he felt comfortable and willingly participated in the transaction. He was aware
of the risks involved.
[27]
As I have said, it is the appellant’s evidence that led to his conviction, and I cannot see any reason why it should have been
treated as inadmissible by the magistrate. The evidence showed that the police conduct did not go beyond providing an opportunity
to commit an offence. Accordingly it is unnecessary to consider whether the trial court correctly exercised its discretion in admitting
the evidence under s 252A(3).
[28]
This court raised with counsel the question whether s 252A renders inadmissible evidence of a trap tendered
by an accused rather than the State. But the matter was not fully argued before us and it is not necessary to decide the issue since
I find that the evidence was in any event admissible. The appeal against conviction must therefore fail.
[29 ]
That brings me to the appeal against the sentence. The trial court imposed a sentence of 12 years’ imprisonment,
and this was confirmed by the court below. It induces in me a sense of shock and this court must interfere. The appellant was seduced
by police agents to participate in one transaction where they provided the drugs. While he was a willing party and entered into the
transaction because of the financial reward it would bring, this does not warrant such a heavy sentence. There are, moreover, mitigating
factors. Apart from the fact of entrapment, the appellant was frank with the court. He did not evade responsibility for the offence.
Moreover, he has spent 20 months in prison awaiting trial, a factor that the trial court said it had taken into account.
[30 ]
However, the offence committed by the appellant is a very serious one. The consequences for society of dealing in drugs
are severe: vast quantities of dependence-producing drugs on the market almost invariably have a detrimental and irreversible impact
on those who do become dependent. And the appellant admitted freely to having tried to deal, before he was trapped, in order to make
money. His offence warrants direct imprisonment.
[31 ]
The appeal against conviction is thus dismissed. The appeal against sentence is upheld. The sentence imposed by the
trial court is replaced with the following:
‘The accused is sentenced to five years’ imprisonment two of which are wholly suspended for a period of five years on condition
that the accused is not again convicted of any offence under the Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992.’
_____________
C H Lewis
Judge of Appeal
Concur:
Mthiyane JA
Jafta JA
SAFLII:
|
Terms of Use
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.saflii.org/za/cases/ZASCA/2007/164.html