Thanks Lux! Regarding Directus, here's a trip down memory lane. Cringe.
'Significantly Ms Burger refused to concede that she could have missed hearing the first sounds – that is the shots – as she might have been asleep at the time and that what she heard was a cricket bat striking against the toilet door. The evidence of this witness as well as that of her husband, Mr Johnson, who sought to corroborate her evidence, was correctly criticised in my view as unreliable'.
I'm thinking that, as the trial was recorded, this has to place the Supreme Court judges in a more advantageous position than usual regarding findings of fact. With this in mind, I'm hoping - against all the odds - that they'll defy convention and bravely state that a thorough examination of the recorded evidence leaves them in some doubt as to the correctness of the trial court's factual findings.
This is what we're up against:
'In the absence of demonstrable and material misdirection by the trial court, its findings of fact are presumed to be correct and will only be disregarded if the recorded evidence shows them to be clearly wrong (Sv Hadebe and Others 1997 (2) SACR 641 (SCA) at 645e-f). This, in my view, is certainly not a
case in which a thorough reading of the record leaves me in any doubt as to the correctness of the trial court's factual findings. Bearing in mind the advantage that a trial court has of seeing,hearing and appraising a witness, it is only in exceptional cases that this court will be entitled to interfere with a trial court's evaluation of oral testimony...'
http://www.saflii.org/za/cases/ZASCA/2012/75.pdf