92 SAfrican LJ246
92 SAfrican LJ246
92 SAfrican LJ246
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246 THE SOUTH AFRICAN LAW JOURNAL
But as was stated by the High Court of Australia in the leading case of
Lustre Hosiery Ltd v York (1935) 54 CLR 134 at 143-4:
'When admitted in evidence... its probative force must be determined by reference
to the circumstances in which it is made and may depend altogether upon the party's
source of knowledge. If it appears that he had no knowledge, or that, although he
had some means of knowledge, he had formed no certain or considered belief and
indicated nothing amounting to a personal judgment or conclusion of his own, the
probative force of the admission may be so small that a jury ought not to be
allowed to act upon it alone, or in preference to opposing evidence.'
It seems, therefore, that while such statements are admissible, the
weight to be attached to them will vary from case to case depending on
the circumstances. In Smith vJoyce (1954) 89 CLR 529 it was held by the
High Court of Australia that an admission by an employer that his
employee had been negligent was admissible in an action for damages
against the former, for although he had no personal knowledge of the
circumstances in which the plaintiff had been injured, he must have
been satisfied after making inquiries that this was in fact so.
In criminal cases, however, courts-at least in England-have dis-
played a reluctance to rely on admissions of this nature. In Surujpaul v
The Queen [1958] 3 All ER 300 (PC), [19581 1 WLR 1050, an appeal to
the Privy Council from British Guiana, the appellant had been con-
victed of being an accessory before the fact to the murder of a policeman
in that he had counselled or procured his death at the hands of his
co-accused. The co-accused had been acquitted of committing the
murder, but the appellant had been convicted, partly on the basis of a
statement he had made to the police in which he admitted that his
co-accused had committed it. The Board held that, as this admission
was based on hearsay, it could not be used against him and, further, that,
as the commission of murder by any of the co-accused had not been
proved, the appellant could not be found guilty of having counselled
them to commit it. The conviction was accordingly set aside. In the
more recent Privy Council case of Comptroller of Customs v Western
Lectric Co Ltd [1966] AC 367 (PC), an appeal from the Supreme Court
of Fii, the company had been convicted before a magistrate of making
a false declatation on a customs import entry form about the country of
origin of certain goods. The effect was to qualify the goods for a
preferential tariff. In order to prove the falsity of the declaration, the
prosecution relied upon an admission made by an authorized agent of
the company a few days later to the effect that the origin of the goods
had been wrongly declared, this being based on markings and labels on
the goods in question. In affirming the judgment of the Supreme Court
setting aside the conviction, the Board held (per Lord Hodson at
371E-F) that
'... the conviction ought not to be allowed to rest on the admission alone. If a man
admits something of which he knows nothing it is of no real evidential value.
'The admission made by the respondents' agent was an admission made upon
reading the marks and labels on those goods and was of no more evidential value
than those marks and labels themselves.'
RECENT CASES 249
It is difficult to reconcile these two cases with the earlier decision of
R v Turner [1910] 1 KB 346 (CCA) at 362, in which it was held that a
statement by an accused as to his age would be sufficient proof of that
fact to qualify him for declaration as an habitual criminal. And in the
Canadian case of R v Schmidt [1948] 4 DLR 217, [1948] SCR 333 an
admission out of court by an accused charged with incest as to his
degree of relationship to the complainant was held by the Supreme
Court to be sufficient to prove that fact, Kerwin J stating that 'admis-
sions are not subject to the rule for testimonial qualifications of personal
knowledge'. It seems that the reluctance of the court in the Surujpaul
and Western Lectric cases to rely on the accused's admissions stemmed
from the peculiar circumstances of each case-the one a crime for which
the death penalty had been imposed and the other a crime of strict
liability in which the bona fides of the company was no defence-and
that they cannot be read as excluding such admissions in all criminal
cases.
Admissions of facts outside a party's knowledge have been held
admissible in a number of South African cases as prima facie proof. In
R v Swart 1932 TPD 168 the accused had been convicted of the statu-
tory offence of inciting another person to buy unwrought gold. In
order to prove the existence of the gold, the Crown had relied on the
accused's statement to the intending purchaser that he had a quantity
for sale. On appeal it was urged that the Crown had not proved that the
material in question was gold, but this was rejected by the court.
Tindall J said (at 170):
'it seems to me that that argument cannot succeed.... It seems to me that in a
prosecution of this kind, in the absence of any evidence by the appellant in regard
to the nature of the material in question, the court is entitled to take the appellant at
his word.'
The same principle was applied in R v Panter1932 TPD 121 (incitement
to buy uncut diamonds) and Engel v Race Classification Board & another
1967 (2) SA 298 (C) (an admission as to the appellants' racial origins).
Proof of an accused's or the complainant's age is always of importance
in cases where, for example, an accused is charged with carnal know-
ledge of a girl under the age of 16 or where a particular punishment may
not be imposed on an accused above or below a certain age. Here,
although a statement by an accused as to his own or another's age is
clearly hearsay (see R v Corris 1931 TPD 471), the State, apparently,
may tender such a statement as an admission to prove the fact asserted
(see R v Franciset Cie 1933 TPD 233).
The only contrary view in South Africa is a dictum of Van Blerk JA
in Van LutterveldvEngels 1959 (2) SA 699 (AD) at 702H to the effect that
an admission by a defendant to a paternity suit that he is the father of
the child 'is ... geen bewys van sy vaderskap nie, want so 'n erkenning
kan slegs gebaseer wees op 'n vermoede aan sy kant omdat hyself geen
sekerheid daaromtrent kon gehad het nie'. But in the light of the
25U THE SOUTH AFRICAN LAW JOURNAL
The decision in Sapro v Schlinkman 1948 (2) SA 637 (AD) has given
rise to much discussion: seeJ C de Wet &J P Yeats Die Suid-Afrikaanse
Kontraktereg en Handelsreg 3 ed (1964) 273n(r); A J Kerr The Law of
Lease (1969) 121-4; W E Cooper The South African Law ofLandlord and
Tenant (1973) 143-4; and AJ Kerr 'Incompatible Remedies for Breach
of Contract: Is Lease a Special Case?' (1973) 90 SALJ 228 at 230-2. The
decision was reviewed again, obiter, in Alphedie Investments (Pty) Ltd v
Greentops (Pty) Ltd 1975 (1) SA 161 (T) at 164-5.
Before exanining the approach in the Aiphedie Investments case, one
must recall that in Sapro's case the lessor (plaintiff in the court a quo,
respondent in the Appellate Division) sued the lessees (defendants in the
court a quo, appellants in the Appellate Division) for, inter alia, -§576,
which was claimed to be the balance owed on rental payments up to
28 February 1947. Following a breach of the lease by the lessor, the
lessees' attorneys had written conditionally cancelling the lease from
31 May 1947. (Note that in Sapro's case Davis AJA (at 642) said that on
receipt of the further incomplete document on 5 February 1947 the
lessees 'repeated the terms of their letter of 6 January': for the terms of
the second letter, which is clearer than the first, see (1973) 90 SALJ 228
at 231). As the lessees cancelled only from the 31 May they remained in
occupation, presumably at least until that date. Neither the report of the
decision a quo (Schlinkman v Van der Walt & others 1947 (2) SA 900 (E))
nor that of the decision in the Appellate Division discloses when they
actually left. This is not surprising, as the hearing in the court a quo took
place on 22 May 1947, ic before the date set in the conditional notice of
cancellation had arrived.
The passage in the Alphedie Investments case which requires comment
appears at 164E-F (italics in original):
'For the proposition that rent can be claimed for occupation simpliciter after termina-
tion of a lease the court [in Tooth v Maingard & Mayer (Pty) Ltd 1960 (3) SA 127 (N)]
relied, inter alia, on Sapro v Schlinkman 1948 (2) SA 637 (AD). But in Sapro's case
the situation dealt with was one where the tenant remained in occupation after the
lessor had committed a breach of the contract and the tenant had purported to
cancel the contract (see especially at 644 and 646). The legal nature of a tenant's
liability to compensate his lessor in respect of occupation after the contract had been
effectively cancelled by agreement or by notice of termination duly given was not
in terms adverted to in the judgment, nor was the question of proper pleading in
relation to such a situation considered.' (Per Hiemstra J, Botha J concurring.)