This week Gerrie Nel tried to convince the SCA it should read every word of the trial to determine whether OP was guilty of the murder of Reeva Steenkamp rather than of the culpable homicide charge on which he was convicted.
Barry Roux argued that the appeal court judges should read only the relevant parts of the court record. The SCA president agreed with Roux that the 31 volumes should be shortened. After this was done, a good many fewer volumes were handed to the court.
Nel now has until August 28 a week after OP is set to be released on corrective supervision to file the states appeal application papers.
However, Advocate Johann Engelbrecht SC said a lot of evidence was presented to Masipa that would play no role in the appeal court judges reaching a decision on whether Pistorius was correctly convicted of culpable homicide or not.
http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Oscar-Pistorius-nearly-home-free-20150802
But then there's this from the SCA's own website:
Procedure before the Court
The Court decides cases upon the record of the proceedings before the lower court and after considering the written and oral arguments presented. Witnesses do not appear before the court, and the parties need not be present during the hearing of an appeal. A written judgment is usually handed down shortly after the argument.
The Court hears appeals on fact and since there are no jury trials, it has a relatively wide discretion to make its own factual findings. Because of this jurisdiction,
judges have to read the record of the full proceedings in the lower courts. Typically, each judge is allocated cases with about 30 000 pages of evidence and exhibits per year. In addition, each judge is allocated petitions for leave to appeal.
http://www.justice.gov.za/sca/aboutsca.htm
Do you already see the way things are going here? I wouldn't be holding my breath on the outcome. The rules, even those of the SCA, apparently can and do get broken ... in some cases.
Oscar World aka Animal Farm = some are more equal than others.