The Zimbabwe Independent

Shocking mystery of ‘fake’ SC judgement

- Teererai Mafukidze lawyer Tererai R Mafukidze practises as an advocate.

IN his brilliant paper Sausages and the Judicial Process: the Limits of Transparen­cy delivered at the Annual Conference of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, in Sydney, Australia on 1 August 2014, the now retired English jurist, Lord Neuberger borrowed the famous statement: “Laws are like sausages — it is best not to see them being made” and used it to describe the behind-the-scenes judgment writing process.

Transporti­ng the sausage theme to court judgments, Lord Neuberger added: “When it comes to judgments, the sausage analogy can be taken a little further. Sausages are contained in a transparen­t skin, or casing, which means that the contents of a wellmade sausage are neatly packaged and are clearly visible. Like the casing of a sausage, the style and structure of any judgment should ensure that the ultimate product appears elegant and that its contents are clear. And a traditiona­l sausage contains a well-judged mixture of meat, starch and flavouring, and the best sausages have more meat than starch and they have good flavouring—not a bad descriptio­n of the best judgments.”

It seems the Supreme Court official sausage factory has a rival or does it?

The Supreme Court judgment

On July 4, 2022, the Supreme Court handed down judgment in the matter of Zesa Holdings (Private) Limited and Obson Matunja. When the case was heard on May 12, 2022, the two lawyers argued opposing legal positions but relying on opposing outcomes of the same case! It was bizarre.

The employer’s counsel, D. Peneti argued that an employer who has appointed a disciplina­ry tribunal has no right of appeal to the Labour Court in the event of an unfavourab­le outcome and placed reliance on the authority of the Supreme Court judgment reported in the Zimbabwe Law Reports as Pioneer Transport v Mafikeni 2017 (2) ZLR 71 (S) handed down on July 10, 2017.

On the other hand, Zesa’s counsel N. M. Phiri argued that in another judgment in the same case, Pioneer Transport v Mafikeni SC 65/18 handed down on October 19, 2018, the Supreme Court had reached the opposite conclusion. It is bizarre that in one appeal, the same court arrives at two opposed positions and delivers two different judgments.

The first Pioneer judgment allegedly handed down by the Supreme Court on July10, 2017 was purportedl­y penned by Justice Susan Mavangira, with Justices Paddington Garwe and Chinembiri Bhunu concurring in it.

The second Pioneer judgment handed down on October 19, 2018, some 15 months later, is penned by Justice Mavangira, with Justices Garwe and Bhunu concurring it.

In a judgment authored by Justice Nicholas Mathonsi, in which Justices Samuel Kudya and Hlekani Mwayera, concur handed down by the Supreme Court on July 4, 2022 in the Zesa matter, the Court said that the 2017 judgment purporting to have been authored by the Court is ‘fake’.

This ‘fake’ judgment has found its way into the official Zimbabwe Law Reports and is reported as Pioneer Transport v Mafikeni 2017 (2) ZLR 71.

The Supreme Court, in the Zesa judgment the ordered the registrar of the Supreme Court to issue a corrigendu­m removing the judgment from the list of Supreme Court judgments and asserting that the authentic judgment of the Supreme Court is Pioneer Transport v Douglas Mafikeni SC 65/2018 — the second Pioneer judgment.

Curiously, the Labour Court in its Zesa judgment, which was the subject of the July appeal, had acknowledg­ed that there were two opposing Supreme Court decisions in the same Pioneer Transport v Mafikeni matter and elected to follow the decision dated July 10 2017. But how does this happen?

Justice Mathonsi notes that his Zesa judgment thus: “On the face of it, the same panel of this Court appears to have issued two conflictin­g judgments over the same appeal.”

He noted that the registrar of the Supreme had been approached by the lawyers in the Zesa matter and “was unable to articulate the exact status of the two judgments.”

Justice Mathonsi states that the Supreme Court panel, which heard the Zesa appeal, conducted an investigat­ion into the existence of the two conflictin­g Pioneer Transport v Mafikeni judgments. He states in the Zesa judgment: “Reacting to the invitation by both parties to set the record straight, this Court conducted an investigat­ion on how there are two judgments, ostensibly disposing of one appeal in different ways. It has been verified that the 2017 “judgment” is certainly not the judgment of this Court. It is in fact a fake judgment which was never handed down by the court and never signed by the appeals panel that heard the appeal,” Justice Mathonsi said.

“Indeed what is even more disturbing is that all this was drawn to the attention of the editorial committee of the Zimbabwe Law Reports when moves were made to report the 2017 “judgment”. Regrettabl­y, that notwithsta­nding, the irregular “judgment” was still included in the 2017 volume 2 of the Zimbabwe Law Reports.”

This intriguing saga of two conflictin­g judgments in the same case is most disconcert­ing. First, a simple administra­tive investigat­ion by another panel of the Supreme Court into how the two judgments of the Supreme Court came into existence is not enough.

This is on the face of it a serious case of fraud. Either a criminal investigat­ion or an independen­t inquiry is necessary to determine what really transpired. If the judicial processes can be so easily manipulate­d, there is urgent need for serious interventi­on in order to ensure that fake judgments do not find life in our justice system.

A person’s property, life and liberty is at serious risk if the justice system is vulnerable to fake judgments.

Second, it seems from Justice Mathonsi’s judgment that the existence of the ‘fake’ judgment has been known for some time. This is why he states that this was drawn to the attention of the Editorial Committee of the Zimbabwe Law Reports before it was published in the 2017 law reports.

These have been out for a few years now. Why did the Editorial Committee of the Zimbabwe Law Reports, which has in its membership, senior members of the judiciary and senior lawyers ignore this alarm?

Third, it is most disturbing that, going by the delivery date of 10 July, 2017 the first Pioneer judgment bears in the Zimbabwe Law Reports, the “fake” judgment precedes the supposed genuine one and yet both bear striking resemblanc­e.

The judgment declared genuine by the Supreme Court was handed down 15 months later on October 19 2018. If the fake one preceded the correct one by 15 months how is it that the fraudster knew in advance that when the ‘genuine’ judgment gets to be written, it would copy his/her judgment word-for-word in many places?

I will now turn to the compelling similariti­es. The opening paragraph in both the fake judgment and the genuine one open in identical words: “This is an appeal against a judgment of the Labour Court wherein the decision to dismiss the appellant from employment that had been made by the appellant’s Managing Director was set aside whilst an earlier decision by the disciplina­ry committee that the respondent be issued with a second written warning was confirmed.”

So does this mean that the fake judgment writer foretold that when the genuine one gets to be written 15 months later, the Supreme Court would adopt these opening words — word for word? Amazing!

The next paragraph in the genuine judgment is again identical, word-for-word, to the same paragraph in the “fake” judgment.

It reads: “The facts of the matter may be summarised as follows: The respondent was employed as a creditor’s clerk by the appellant.

He was charged with a number of acts of misconduct. He denied all the charges. A hearing was conducted by the disciplina­ry committee. On 30 January 2014, the Human Resources Manager communicat­ed the disciplina­ry committee’s decision to the respondent in the following terms . . .

Both the fake and genuine judgments reproduce the disciplina­ry committee’s decision word-for word. The only slight difference is that the “fake” judgment has some parts in italics and contains the following after the quote: “(sic) (my emphasis)”.

The next paragraph in the genuine judgment contains two sentences: “The complainan­t in the disciplina­ry hearing appealed to the managing director against the Disciplina­ry Committee’s decision. There was no appeal by the respondent.”

The next paragraph in the fake judgment contains one sentence. It states word-forword: “The complainan­t in the disciplina­ry hearing appealed to the Managing Director against the Disciplina­ry Committee’s decision.”

It omits the second sentence finds in the genuine judgment.

The following paragraph in the genuine judgment is a replica of the same paragraph in the fake judgment.

It quotes a letter from the managing director to Mafikeni.

Where the fake judgment skips certain details, the genuine judgment does the same! Where the genuine judgment marks the writer’s English and adds “sic” in brackets, the fake judgment does exactly the same. There are three “sics” in both judgments in the same place marking the managing director’s English grammar.

At the end of the quoted letter of February 10 2014, the genuine judgment underlines the words “I hereby overturn the determinat­ion by the Disciplina­ry Committee, and the respondent is found guilty of the charges and the penalty is dismissal. The respondent (sic) should be dismissed effective 12 February.”

In brackets the words “emphasis added” appear at the end of the underlinin­g. In the “fake” judgment, the same words are emphasised in italics rather than by underlinin­g.

The next sentence in the genuine judgment is a word-for-word replica of the next sentence in the “fake” judgment. The paragraph then quotes a letter of February 12 2012 written by the Human Resources Manager to Mafikeni.

Both the genuine and the “fake” judgment cite the same content. The writer’s English is also marked and two “sics” appear in identical places!

The next nine paragraphs, yes nine, after this in both the genuine and the “fake” judgment contain identical sentences!

How did the fraudster foretell that when the genuine judgment gets to be written, the Supreme Court will replicate his/her judgment word-for-word? Amazing!

After that, the genuine judgment changes course and analyses the law and finds in favour of Pioneer Transport and orders that the matter be remitted to the Labour Court for a hearing of the appeal before a different judge. Each party is ordered to bear its own costs.

In the “fake” judgment there is an analysis of the law and the judgment finds in favour of the employee, Mafikeni and the appeal by Pioneer Transport is dismissed with costs.

Conclusion

The Supreme Court “investigat­ion” disclosed in the Zesa decision sadly does not lay this controvers­y to rest. The “fake” judgment which is in the official Zimbabwe Law Reports states that it was delivered on July 10 2017. The genuine judgment in the same matter was delivered some 15 months later on October 19 2018.

How can a “fake” judgment, which precedes the genuine one by a year and three months, have prophesied the contents of the genuine and reproduce many sentences word-for-word, paragraph-by-paragraph?

This is why it is absolutely critical that an independen­t and transparen­t investigat­ion be carried out to determine how a “fake” judgment got to exist.

This matter cries out for more. The whole truth. Interferin­g in the administra­tion of justice is a serious crime. If there is someone out there running a sausage factory of judgments, that person needs to be stopped and prosecuted. It is not enough to simply declare that the 2017 judgment in Pioneer

Transport v Mafikeni ‘fake’! This scandal harms public confidence in the justice system.

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