Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1029South Africa
S v Likgopo (SS32/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1029 (23 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
23 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Likgopo (SS32/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1029 (23 November 2022)
S v Likgopo (SS32/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1029 (23 November 2022)
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sino date 23 November 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
SS32/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
23/11/
2022
THE
STATE
and
PALO
MAHEA LIKGOPO
ACCUSED
JUDGMENT
OOSTHUIZEN-SENEKAL
CSP AJ:
Introduction
[1]
Mr Mahea
Likgopo Palo (hereinafter referred to as “the accused”)
appears before this court charged in an indictment,
which contains 10
counts.
Count
1
:
Murder read with the provisions of section 51(1) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act
105 of 1997 (“the CLAA”), in that upon or
on 8 May 2021 and at or near Muldersdrift, in the district of Mogale
City,
the accused did unlawfully and intentionally kill Mathoema
Tshabalala, an adult male person.
Count
2
:
Murder read with the provisions of section 51(1) of the CLAA, in that
upon or on 18
October 2021 and at or near Muldersdrift, in the
district of Mogale City, the accused did unlawfully and intentionally
kill T[....]
M[....]4, an adult male person.
Count
3:
Robbery with
aggravating circumstances as intended in section 1 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the CPA”)
and read with the
provisions of section 51(2) of the CLAA. In that upon or about
29 August 2021 and at or near Muldersdrift,
in the District of Mogale
City, the accused unlawfully and intentionally assaulted Boikie
Eugene Amanda, and with force and violence
took a black Samsung S8
cell phone valued at R7600, his property or in his lawful possession,
the aggravating circumstances, as
defined in terms of section 1 of
the CPA being present.
Count
4:
Robbery with
aggravating circumstances as intended in section 1 of the CPA and
read with the provisions of section 51(2) of the
CLAA. In that
upon or about 18 October 2021 and at or near Muldersdrift, in the
District of Mogale City, the accused unlawfully
and intentionally
assaulted T[....] M[....]4, and with force and violence took a Nokia
cell phone, his property or in his lawful
possession, the aggravating
circumstances, as defined in terms of section 1 of the CPA being
present.
Count
5:
Robbery with
aggravating circumstances as intended in section 1 of the CPA and
read with the provisions of section 51(2) of the
CLAA In that
upon or about 18 October 2021 and at or near Muldersdrift, in the
District of Mogale City, the accused unlawfully
and intentionally
assaulted M[....] B[....], and with force and violence took a Huawei
cell phone valued at R5000, her property
or in her lawful possession,
the aggravating circumstances as defined in terms of section 1 of the
CPA being present.
Count
6:
In that upon or about
29 August 2021 and at or near Muldersdrift, in the District of Mogale
City, the accused did unlawfully and
intentionally attempt to kill
Boikie Eugene Amanda, an adult male person.
Count
7:
In that upon or about
19 October 2021 and at or near Muldersdrift, in the District of
Mogale City, the accused did unlawfully and
intentionally attempt to
kill Schalk Jacobus Du Plooy, an adult male person.
Count
8:
Contravening section
3 of the Firearms Control Act, Act 60 of 2000 (“FCA”)
read with section 51(2) of the CLAA.
In that upon or about 19
October 2021 at or near Muldersdrift, in the District of Mogale City,
the accused did unlawfully and intentionally
have in his possession a
silver Norinco firearm with a serial number filed off as per the
ballistic report, without holding a license,
permit or authorization
issued for the firearm in terms of the FCA.
Count
9:
Contravening section
90 of the FCA. In that upon or about 19 October 2021 at or near
Muldersdrift, in the District of Mogale
City, the accused did
unlawfully and intentionally have in his possession an unknown
quantity of ammunition without being the holder
of a licence in
respect of the firearm capable of discharging that ammunition.
Count
10:
That on or about 18
October 2021 at or near Muldersdrift in the District of Mogale City,
the accused did unlawfully and intentionally
assault M[....] B[....],
an adult female person, with a firearm with the intent to cause her
grievous bodily harm.
[2]
Before
pleading, the Court warned the accused regarding the possibility of
the imposition of the minimum sentences if convicted
on the relevant
charges.
[3]
The accused is
legally represented by Ms Bovu from Legal Aid South Africa (“LASA”)
and she confirmed that the trial
could proceed without assessors.
[4]
The accused
indicated that he understood the charges. He pleaded guilty to
count 1 and 2, murder read with section 51(2) of
the CLAA and count
10, assault to do grievous bodily harm. He pleaded not guilty
to count 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9.
[5]
The accused
presented a statement (“Exhibit A”) in terms of section
112(2) of the CPA in respect of counts 1, 2 and
10. The
statement was signed by the accused. Exhibit “A”
reads as follows:
“
I,
the undersigned
LIKGOPO
MAHEA PALO
1.
Freely and voluntarily and without undue influence and of sound and
sober senses declare the following:
2.
I understand the charges against me as per the indictment.
3.
I was informed by my legal representative of my constitutional right
to remain silent.
4.
I am not compelled to make this statement.
5.
I plead guilty to the following charges:
6.
COUNT 1
: Murder read with the provisions of
section 51(2)
of
the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, Act
105 of 1997.
7.
COUNT 2
:
Murder read with the provisions of
section 51(2)
of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act, Act
105 of 1997.
8.
COUNT 10
: Assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm.
9.
AD COUNT 1
:
9.1.
On 8
May
2021 I was at Muldersdrift, in the district of Mogale City.
9.2.
I admit that on the said day and address I did unlawfully and
intentionally kill Mathoema Tshabalala (herein after, the deceased)
an adult male person.
9.3.
I admit further that the deceased was my relative and my next-door
neighbour.
9.4.
On the date of the incident, I had an argument with the deceased.
9.5.
The deceased took a stick and hit me on the head.
9.6.
I managed to disarm the deceased and threw the stick on the floor.
9.7.
I took out my firearm from my waist and unlawfully and intentionally
shot
9.8.
the deceased once on the head and the deceased fell.
9.9.
By shooting the deceased on the head I unlawfully and intentionally
caused the deceased’s death.
9.10.
The intention to kill the deceased was not premeditated.
9.11.
I admit that I had no legal defence for my actions as set out above,
that I had not acted in self-defence and that my actions
are
punishable by law.
9.12.
The cause of death was found to be “GUNSHOT WOUND OF THE HEAD”.
9.13.
The body of the deceased did not sustain any further injuries from
the time the injury was inflicted on 8
May 2021 until a post-mortem
examination was conducted thereupon by Dr JESSICA CLAIR
MEDDOWS-TAYLOR.
9.14.
Dr Jessica Clair Meadows-Taylor conducted a post-mortem examination
on the body of the deceased on 11
May
2021.
9.15.
I admit that the facts and findings of the post mortem examination
recorded by the doctor are true and correct and have no
objection if
it can be handed to court as exhibit.
9.16.
I further admit that the injuries I inflicted on the deceased has
caused his death.
9.17.
I have no right whatsoever to assault and kill the deceased.
10.
AD COUNT 2 and COUNT 10
10.1.
On 18 October 2021 I was at Muldersdrift in the District of Mogale
City.
10.2.
I admit that on the said day and address I did unlawfully and
intentionally kill T[....] M[....]4 (herein after, the deceased)
a
male person.
10.3.
On the date of the incident, I was residing with the complainant in
count 10: M[....] B[....] as girlfriend and boyfriend
at my shack and
as a tenant and was paying a rental to my landlord P[....] M[....]3.
10.4.
The deceased was known to me and was also a boyfriend of the said
complainant.
10.5.
On the said day the complainant brought the deceased in my shack
whilst I was out.
10.6.
Upon my arrival I found the deceased in the company of the
complainant at the door of my shack.
10.7.
I had a verbal argument with the deceased.
10.8.
The deceased assaulted me with a clanged fist on the body and I got
angry and took out my firearm which was in my waist and
shot the
deceased on his body more than once and the deceased fell.
10.9.
By shooting the deceased on the body I admit that I caused his death.
10.10.
The intention to kill the deceased was not premeditated.
10.11.
The cause of death was determined to be “MULTIPLE GUNSHOT
WOUNDS”.
10.12.
The body of the deceased did not sustain any further injuries from
the time the injury was inflicted on 18
October 2021 until a post-mortem
examination was conducted thereupon by Dr OUMAKIE SANNAH HLALELE.
10.13.
Dr Oumakie Sannah Hlalele conducted a post-mortem examination on the
body of the deceased on 20
October
2021.
10.14.
I admit that the facts and findings of the post mortem examination
recorded by the doctor are true and correct.
10.15.
I further admit that the injuries I inflicted on the deceased has
caused his death.
10.16.
I have no right whatsoever to assault and kill the deceased.
10.17.
I admit that on the said day and address I did unlawfully and
intentionally assault M[....] B[....] an adult female person,
with a
firearm with intent to cause her grievous bodily harm.
10.18.
After I shot the deceased, the complainant got angry and held me on
the head I then hit her once with my firearm on the forehead
with the
intention to cause her grievous bodily harm.
10.19.
I admit further that when I hit the complainant with a firearm, she
was in possession of a cellphone namely Huawei which
I bought for her
as a gift.
10.20
The said cellphone fell when I hit her, I then took it from the floor
and left.
10.21.
The said cellphone was found in my possession when I was apprehended
on 19 October 2021.
10.22.
I admit that the injury sustained by the complainant was as a result
of my unlawful actions.
10.23.
The further admit to the contents of the J88 report and has no
objection if it can be handed to court as exhibit.
10.24.
I admit that I had no legal defence for my actions set out above,
that I had not acted in self-defence on both counts 2 and
10 and that
my actions are punishable by law.
10.25.
I was very much aware that my actions were wrongful, unlawful and
punishable by law.
10.26.
I had no right or permission to act in such a manner.”
[6]
The state
accepted the guilty plea on count 1, murder read with
section 51(2)
of the CLAA, and count 10, assault to cause grievous bodily harm.
The state refused to accept the plea of guilty on count
2, murder.
The state was of the view that the murder in count 2 was
planned/premeditated and therefore
section 51(1)
of the CLAA was
applicable to the charge.
[7]
The court was
satisfied that the accused admitted all the allegations in count 1
and 10 and in terms of
section 112(2)
of the CPA, the accused was
found guilty on count 1, murder read with
section 51(2)
of the CLAA
and 10, assault to cause grievous bodily harm.
[8]
The court, in
terms of
section 113
of the CPA, recorded a plea of not guilty on
count 2, murder.
[9]
In terms of
section 115
of the CPA the accused exercised his right to remain
silent regarding count 3 to 9.
[10]
The following
admissions in terms of
section 220
of the CPA were recorded, see
exhibit “A1”, wherein the accused admitted the:
(a)
Identity of
the deceased in count 1, being that of Mathoema Tshabalala.
(b)
That Mr
Tshabalala died on 8 May 2021 and that his death was caused by a
gunshot wound to the head.
(c)
That the body
of Mr Tshabalala sustained no further injuries from the time of his
death until the Post Mortem examination was conducted
on the body on
11 May 2021 by Dr Jessica Clair Meadows-Taylor. The contents of
the Post Mortem examination were admitted,
and the report was handed
in and marked as exhibit “B”.
(d)
Dr Jessica
Clair Meadows-Taylor concluded that the death of Mr Tshabalala was
caused by a gunshot wound to the head.
(e)
That on 8 May
2021 Warrant Officer Marina van Tonder attended to the crime scene at
Diswilmar, Muldersdrift, whereafter she compiled
a photo album which
correctly depicted the crime scene. The photo album was handed
in and marked exhibit “C”.
(f)
Identity of
the deceased in count 2, being that of T[....] M[....]4.
(g)
That Mr
M[....]4 died on 18 October 2021 and that his death was caused by
multiple gunshot wounds to the chest area.
(h)
That the body
of Mr M[....]4 sustained no further injuries from the time of his
death until the Post Mortem examination was conducted
on the body on
20 October 2021 by Dr Oumakie Sannah Hlalele. The contents of
the Post Mortem examination were admitted, and
the report was handed
in and marked as exhibit “D”.
(i)
Dr Oumakie
Sannah Hlalele concluded that the death of Mr M[....]4 was caused by
multiple gunshot wounds.
(j)
That on 18
October 2021 Warrant Officer Stephen Dibate Molefe attended to the
crime scene at [....], C[....], Muldersdrift, whereafter
he compiled
a photo album which correctly depicted the crime scene. The
photo album was handed in and marked exhibit “E”.
[11]
The accused
further admitted the contents of a J88 report compiled by Dr Lewane,
employed at the Dr Yusuf Dadoo Hospital on 21 October
2021. The
report was compiled following a medical examination of the
complainant, Ms M[....] B[....]. The said report
was marked
exhibit “A2”.
[12]
During the
trial the State called 6 witnesses, namely:
(a)
Mr Boikie
Eugene Amanda, the complainant in count 3 and 6;
(b)
Ms M[....]
B[....], eye witness regarding count 2 and 4, and the complainant in
count 5 and 10;
(c)
Mr M[....]3
P[....] M[....]2, eye witness regarding count 2, 4, 5 and 10;
(d)
Mr Schalk
Jacobus Du Plooy, complainant in count 7;
(e)
Constable
Majaha Mashaba; and
(f)
Sergeant
Booysens, the investigating officer.
[13]
The following
exhibits were handed in during the State’s case,
(a)
Exhibit “F”-
sworn statement made by Mr Schalk Jacobus Du Plooy on 19 October 2021
at 15h10;
(b)
Exhibit “G”-
Extract of the Muldersdrift SAP 13 register, entry 689; and
(c)
Exhibit “J”-
Subpoena in Criminal Proceedings: Brigadier David van Niekerk.
[14]
Following the
closure of the state’s case, the accused testified under oath
and no witnesses were called in the defence’s
case.
Evidence
in the State’s Case
Mr
Boikie Eugene Amanda
[15]
Mr Boikie
Eugene Amanda (“Boikie”) testified that on 29 August 2021
at 18h20 he was on his way home and was walking
on Hendrik Potgieter
Road near Cradlestone Mall. He noticed a male person
approaching from the opposite direction.
After passing each
other, Boikie testified that he had a feeling that a person was
following him. As he turned around, he
noticed the same person
who passed him earlier, behind him. The person had a silver
firearm in his hand and instructed the
witness to hand over his cell
phone. It later transpired that the person was the accused.
[16]
The witness
refused to hand over his cell phone whereby the accused pointed the
firearm in his direction, luckily three vehicles
approached and the
accused ran away, across the road. Boikie stated that he could
not see the accused at that stage, because
there were no street
lights on the other side of the road. The witness immediately
ran in the direction of the garage near
the bridge in order to get
help.
[17]
As he was on
the bridge, he saw the accused approaching him from the side, the
accused said that he told Boikie to hand over his
cell phone,
whereafter a shot was fired and the witness was struck on the left
upper thigh/hip area. According to Boikie
the bullet exited on
his front right upper leg. Boikie told the court that after he
was shot, he fell on the pavement next
to the road. He took his
cell phone from his trouser pocket and handed it over to the
accused. The accused then ran
away and disappeared under the
bridge.
[18]
The witness
testified that he screamed for help. While he was sitting on
the pavement, members of the public came to his rescue
and assisted
him. As he was reporting what had transpired, the accused
appeared and watched them form a distance. Boikie
pointed the
accused out to those assisting him. The accused was standing at
a robot about 15/20 metres from where he was
sitting on the
pavement. A police vehicle entered the garage and one of the
people assisting him, walked to the garage, where
he informed the
police officers what happened.
[19]
The police
arrived at the scene and Boikie pointed the accused out to them.
The police officer approached the accused after
which he fled and
disappeared into a Business Park nearby.
[20]
Boikie
testified that he was admitted to hospital on the night of the
incident and was discharged on 19 September 2021.
[21]
The witness
testified that where the incident occurred the area was well lit by
street lights.
[22]
After his
discharge from hospital, he enquired from a friend he used to visit
at the squatter camp, Matumbu, what the name of the
accused was.
Prior to the incident he used to see the accused at the
squatter camp, in an area called Collen’s.
He never
interacted with the accused, but he knew him by sight. Following
his own investigation and enquiries, he referred
the information to
the police.
[23]
After some
time, he was summoned to the Police Station and requested to identify
his cell phone. He was shown cell phones,
but his cell phone
was not amongst the cell phones showed to him by the police. His
cell phone was a black Samsung
S8
valued at R 7900, the cell phone
was never recovered. The witness testified that the police
officer accompanied him to an
office, where he identified the accused
as the assailant.
[24]
Boikie
testified that at a later stage, he attended a formal identity parade
where he again pointed out the accused as his assailant.
Ms
M[....] B[....]
[25]
Ms M[....]
B[....] (“M[....]”) testified that on the evening of the
incident, 18 October 2021, she was residing in a
shack at [....],
C[....], Muldersdrift. She stated that she was involved in a
relationship with Mr M[....]4 (“the deceased”
in Count 2)
since 2013 and a child was born out of the relationship. At the
time of her testimony, the child was 6 years
old. The
relationship between her and the deceased was terminated in June
2020, because the deceased was arrested and in
prison.
[26]
Following the
arrest of the deceased, she got involved in a relationship with the
accused. They would visit each other and
at times stay over at
their respective homes. The accused was residing in a shack on
his brother’s yard, not far from
where she was residing.
She indicated his shack was about a distance of 30 metres from her
shack. They never cohabited
together as husband and wife.
[27]
The witness
testified that during September 2021 she told the accused that she
did not love him anymore and the relationship was
ended.
However, she did spend a night with the accused after the termination
of their relationship. She would also
visit the yard of the
brother of the accused, where she would engage with all the residents
living in the yard, including the accused.
[28]
The reason for
the witness to end the relationship between her and the accused was
due to the fact that she realized the accused
was not accepting her
and the fact that she communicated with the deceased, the father of
her child. Furthermore, she realised
it did not sit well with
the accused when she visited the deceased in prison and when she
attended his court appearances.
[29]
After the
deceased was released from prison, he stayed with his parents in
Lenasia. On the day of the incident, she and the
deceased
arranged to meet in Johannesburg, whereafter she would accompany the
deceased to her shack in order for him to collect
his property which
was in her possession.
[30]
They indeed
met in Johannesburg, whereafter they proceeded to her shack in
Muldersdrift. On arrival at the shack at about
18h00, the
witness testified that while she was unlocking the entrance door, she
heard two gunshots fired behind her. As
she turned around, she
saw the deceased lying on the ground, on his right side, with his
left hand on his left side of his chest.
The accused was
standing near the deceased and she asked the accused why he shot the
deceased. His reply was: ‘I
shot him before he could
shoot me’.
[31]
The witness
testified that she was screaming and crying, and no-one came to her
assistance. She stated that she knelt beside
the deceased and
she noticed that he was still alive. The accused at that stage
moved out of the yard only to return after
a few minutes, where he
again fired 2 gunshots at the deceased lying on the ground. At
that stage she confronted the accused
and a scuffle ensued.
During the scuffle the accused struck her with the firearm on her
forehead.
[32]
After being
struck on the forehead with the firearm, she ran to the house of her
neighbour, Mr M[....]3. The accused fired
another shot at the
deceased and left the yard.
[33]
According to
her, an unknown person called the police. On arrival of the
police the deceased had passed on.
[34]
The witness
testified that her cell phone was lost during the incident, she was
unable to state how and where the cell phone got
lost. She was
informed, the following day, that her cell phone was at the police
station. She told the court that the
cell phone was a gift from
the accused. She testified that the accused paid the rent for
her shack to the landlord, M[....]3.
[35]
According to
her, while she was unlocking the door of the shack, the deceased was
standing behind her and he had his cell phone
in his hand.
After the incident the deceased cell phone was never found. She
had no knowledge as to how the deceased
cell phone got lost.
[36]
The witness
testified that she sustained an injury on her forehead. She
attended to the doctor who gave her tablets.
The wound was not
stitched, but was bleeding profusely after the incident.
Mr
M[....]3 P[....] M[....]2
[37]
Mr M[....]2
(“M[....]3”) testified that at the time of the incident,
Ms M[....] B[....] was his neighbour. Prior
to the incident he
knew the deceased as well as the accused.
[38]
M[....]3
testified that on the evening of the incident he was inside his shack
when he heard two gunshots being fired. He
stated that he was
scared and did not want to go outside to see what was happening.
M[....]3 was in the company of another
man inside his shack, and the
man took cover underneath the bed when the shots were fired.
[39]
M[....]3
testified that after a few minutes he went outside to see what was
happening. He noticed the accused at the gate
of the yard and
the deceased lying on the ground. He reprimanded the accused,
during which time M[....] was walking in circles
inside the yard,
screaming and calling the name of the accused’s brother. He
stated that at some stage, the accused
was in a scuffle with M[....],
during which she was injured with the firearm in the accused’s
possession. After M[....]
was injured, she ran to his shack.
[40]
The witness
testified that the accused, after a few minutes, walked to where the
deceased was lying and he fired twice at the deceased.
After
the shots were fired the accused picked up an object from the ground
next to the deceased and left the yard.
M[....]3 stated that he
heard another shot being fired, but he was unable to indicate in what
direction the shot was fired.
Mr
Schalk Jacobus du Plooy
[41]
Mr Schalk du
Plooy (“Du Plooy”) testified that at the time of the
incident he was employed at Inter Active Security
as a security
officer. He reported for duty on 18 October 2021 at 16h00.
At around 24h00 he received a radio “call-out”
to 105
I[....] line. According to the information received, the owner
of the property called in as there were suspected persons
on his
property. The witness proceeded to the address, which was
situated in the Honeydew/Muldersdrift area.
[42]
Du Plooy
testified while he was driving, he noticed a person walking next to
the road in his direction. It later transpired
that the person
was the accused. The accused was wearing a hoody, with a cap,
carrying a backpack. He had a cell phone
in his hand with
earphones in his ears. The witness drove passed the accused,
but stop a few metres away, the reason for
him stopping was that he
found the situation suspicious. He reversed his vehicle, and
parked next to the accused. Du
Plooy alighted and approached
the accused where he was standing at the right front on the vehicle.
[43]
At the stage
the accused had his phone in his one hand and his other hand was
inside his jacket pocket. Du Plooy stated that
he enquired from
the accused from where he was, and the accused said “Honeydew”.
This was also suspicious, as
the accused was proceeding in the
direction of Honeydew. Du Plooy requested the accused to take
his hand out of his pocket,
because of the situation Du Plooy took
out his official firearm from its holster and held it at his side
pointing to the ground.
[44]
The
witness testified when the accused took his hand out of his jacket
pocket, he saw that the accused had a silver firearm in his
hand.
The accused pointed the firearm at the witness’ chest, and he
moved towards him. The accused pulled the
trigger, but
fortunately, the firearm malfunctioned and the live round was ejected
from the chamber and fell to the ground.
The accused, again
pulled the trigger, whereafter a shot went off. The witness at
that stage retaliated and fired shots in
the direction of the
accused, whereafter the accused retreated in the direction he came
from. While the accused was retreating,
he kept on pointing the
firearm in the direction of the witness and fired shots. Du
Plooy continued firing shots in the direction
of the accused, he
stated that he was unable to indicate how many gun shots were fired.
[45]
Du Plooy
testified that the accused ran and jumped over a razor fence at
[....] I[....], where he disappeared into the bushes.
The
witness immediately requested back up. Tyrone Duranty arrived
on the scene and they searched the area for the accused.
[46]
The accused
was found lying on the ground near a bush. The witness noticed
that the accused was injured at his pelvic and
chest area. The
backpack was lying on the right side of the accused on the ground,
inside the bag were two cell phones and
clothes. The firearm
was found about 2 metres away from the accused, on his left side.
[47]
The police and
ambulance services were summoned to the scene. Arrangements
were made with the owner of [....] I[....] to open
the gate of the
premises for the ambulance to enter the premises in order to attend
to the accused. The accused was transported
to the hospital.
[48]
Du Plooy
testified that he was removed from the scene when the police arrived.
His firearm, a Glock 19 pistol was handed over
to Warrant
Officer Booysen.
Constable
Majaha Mashaba
[49]
Constable
Mashaba testified that he had 13 years’ experience as a police
officer and was stationed at Muldersdrift.
He was on standby
duty on 18/19 October 2021, when he was called out to a crime scene
at I[....] [....]in the Muldersdrift area.
During his
testimony, Constable Mashaba stated that he could be making a mistake
as to the plot number, and that it could have
been I[....] [....].
[50]
On his arrival
at the crime scene, he met a security officer from Inter Active
Security and police officers from the Muldersdrift
Police Station.
The police officers on the scene directed him to the accused.
The accused was lying in a veld and he
was injured. The witness
noticed a firearm, a pistol, lying next to the accused. The
firearm had no serial number as
the serial number was obliterated.
Constable Mashaba also noticed 4 cell phones lying next to the
accused.
[51]
The witness
stated that the accused was not talking, he was breathing and his
eyes were open. He further testified that he
had to enter the
plot via a gate and he was unable to confirm whether the plot was
fenced with a razor fence. The witness
confirmed that the
accused was not found lying in the street, but in a bushy area inside
a plot.
[52]
The witness
testified that he seized the following items found on the crime
scene:
(a)
Silver Firearm
with no serial number;
(b)
Black Samsung
cell phone;
(c)
Blue Samsung
cell phone;
(d)
Black Nokia
cell phone;
(e)
Silver Huawei
cell phone with a damaged screen; and
(f)
Green Power
Bank.
[53]
Constable
Mashaba testified that the exhibits were handed in at the
Muldersdrift SAP 13- 689. The witness confirmed the contents
of
an extract of the Muldersdrift SAP 13 Register relating to the
exhibits relevant in this matter. The document was handed
in
and marked as exhibit “G”.
[54]
The witness
stated that prior to handing the items into the SAP 13, he sealed all
the exhibits in official exhibit bags. The
exhibits were sealed
in the following exhibit bags with the serial numbers as stated:
(a)
Silver
firearm, empty magazine and 3 live rounds- [....];
(b)
Black Samsung,
Blue Samsung, Silver Hawaii and Black Nokia cell phones- [....]; and
(c)
Glock Alsta
9x19 with serial number [....] empty magazine with the same serial
number and 10 live rounds- [....].
[55]
Constable
Mashaba testified that all the exhibits were handed over to the CSC
Commander, Warrant Officer Morobela.
Sergeant
Booysens
[56]
Sergeant
Booysens testified that he was employed by the South African Police
Services for the past 15 years and stationed at Muldersdrift
Detective Branch. He stated that he was the investigating
officer in the matter.
[57]
Sergeant
Booysens testified that on 27 October 2021 he received two sealed
exhibit bags from the CSC Commander at Muldersdrift Police
Station.
Due to the fact that the backside of the exhibit bags was
transparent, the contents of the exhibit bags were visible.
He
corroborated Constable Mashaba’s evidence regarding the
contents of the two exhibit bags and the seal numbers.
[58]
The witness
stated that he transported the exhibits to the Forensic Ballistic
Unit of the South African Police. When he handed
the two
exhibit bags over at the Ballistic Unit, the bags were sealed and not
tampered with. He received two receipts of
acknowledgment,
exhibit “H”.
Evidence
in the Defence Case
Mr
Mahea Likgopo Palo (“the accused”)
[59]
The accused
testified that during October 2021, he was in a relationship with
M[....]. He stated that they cohabited in a
shack on the
premises of M[....]3 at Collens, Muldersdrift. On the day of
the incident, 18 October 2021, he left the shack
and on his return at
about 18h00 he found M[....] and the deceased, Mr T[....] M[....]4 on
the premises. M[....] was inside
the shack close to the door
and the deceased was standing outside the door.
[60]
The accused
confronted the deceased about his presence at his shack, whereafter
the deceased struck him with a fist on his left
shoulder-chest area.
The accused testified that after he was struck with a fist, he took
out his firearm and opened fire
on the deceased. The deceased
collapsed to the ground. The accused stated that he was unable
to indicate how many shots
were fired.
[61]
While the
deceased was lying on the ground, M[....] grabbed the accused from
behind and a struggle ensued. During the struggle
his jacket
was pulled from his body. The accused succeeded to free
himself, whereafter he hit M[....] with the firearm while
she was
standing behind him. M[....] then ran into M[....]3’s
shack. The jacket was lying on the ground.
[62]
The accused
testified that he proceeded to the gate when he realised that he left
his jacket and cap behind. He turned around
and fetched his
jacket and the cap, he noticed M[....]’s Huawei cell phone was
lying on the ground. He picked the cell
phone up and with his
jacket and cap left the yard.
[63]
The accused
testified that after the incident he handed the firearm to his
friend, Chicken (“Khoho”). He did not
remain in the
area, because he was worried that M[....] would point him out to the
police, and therefore at around 23h00 he left
to Honeydew.
[64]
On his way to
Honeydew, he met Du Plooy, the security officer, who was traveling in
a vehicle. After Du Plooy alighted from
the vehicle, he
approached the accused. The accused testified that he noticed
Du Plooy speaking to him, but he did not understand
what he was
saying. The accused in reply pointed in the direction of
Honeydew and he also said, “Honeydew, Honeydew.”
[65]
Du Plooy,
without saying a word, pulled out his firearm and fired various shots
in his direction. During the shooting the
accused stated that
he was injured on the left shoulder, chest area and in the groin.
After he was injured, he collapsed
on the street and lost
consciousness. He only woke up in hospital.
[66]
The accused
denied being in possession of a firearm when he met Du Plooy.
He conceded that he was in possession of cell phones,
namely, a Nokia
and Samsung, which belonged to him and the Huawei cell phone
belonging to M[....].
[67]
The accused
denied any involvement in the shooting where Boikie was robbed of his
cell phone. The accused testified that on
the night of the
incident, 29 August 2021, he was at home.
Common
Cause
[68]
It is not in
dispute that:
(a)
On 18 October
2021, the accused killed Mr T[....] M[....]4, the deceased died as a
result of multiple gunshot wounds.
(b)
In the early
hours of the morning on 19 October 2021, while the accused was
walking in the direction of Honeydew, he was accosted
by Mr Du Plooy
a security officer employed by Inter Active Security Company; and
(c)
During the
encounter, the accused was shot and injured, whereafter he was
transported to the hospital and subsequently arrested.
Facts
in dispute
[69]
The following
issues are in dispute:
(a)
Was the
accused involved in the shooting of Mr Boikie Eugene Amanda and did
he rob him of his cell phone;
(b)
Was the murder
on the deceased, Mr T[....] M[....]4, planned or premeditated;
(c)
Did the
accused rob Mr T[....] M[....]4, the deceased, and Ms M[....] B[....]
of their cell phones;
(d)
Did the
accused attempted to kill Mr Du Plooy;
(e)
Did the
accused possess a firearm in contravention of
section 3
of the FCA,
and lastly;
(f)
Did the
accused possess ammunition in contravention of
section 90
of the FCA.
Case
Law and Evaluation
[70]
The
basic principles of criminal law and the law of evidence that apply
in this case are trite. The first principle is that
the guilt
of the accused must be proved by the State and that the onus rests on
the State to prove the guilt of the accused beyond
reasonable doubt.
In the matter of
S
v T
[1]
the importance of this principle was emphasize as follows:
“
The
State is required, when it tries a person for allegedly committing an
offence, to prove the guilt of the accused beyond a reasonable
doubt.
This high standard of proof – universally required in
civilized systems of criminal justice – is a core
component of
the fundamental right that every person enjoys under the
Constitution, and under the common law prior to 1994, to
a fair
trial. It is not part of a charter for criminals and neither is
it a mere technicality. When a court finds that
the guilt of an
accused has not been proved beyond reasonable doubt, that accused is
entitled to an acquittal, even if there may
be suspicions that he or
she was, indeed, the perpetrator of the crime in question. That
is an inevitable consequence of
living in a society in which the
freedom and the dignity of the individual are properly protected and
are respected. The inverse
– convictions based on suspicion or
speculation – is the hallmark of tyrannical systems of law.
South Africans have
bitter experience of such a system and where it
leads to.”
[71]
It
also
follows from the fact that the onus rests on the State to prove the
guilt of an accused beyond reasonable doubt and that no
onus rests on
the accused to prove his or her innocence.
[2]
In order to be acquitted, the version of an accused need only be
reasonably possibly true.
[3]
[72]
In
S
v Van Der Meyden
,
[4]
Nugent J said:
“
The
onus of proof in a criminal case is discharged by the State if the
evidence establishes the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable
doubt. The corollary is that he is entitled to be acquitted if
it is reasonably possible that he might be innocent (see,
for
example,
R
v Difford
1937
AD 370
at
373 and 383). These are not separate and independent tests, but
the expression of the same test when viewed from
opposite
perspectives. In order to convict, the evidence must establish
the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt,
which will be so
only if there is at the same time no reasonable possibility that an
innocent explanation which has been put forward
might be true. The
two are inseparable, each being the logical corollary of the other.”
[73]
In
the matter of
Naude
and Another v S
[5]
Navsa JA, continued as follows:
“
Importantly,
in that case Nugent J warned against separating evidence into
compartments and to examine either the defence or State
case in
isolation.”
Evaluation
Evidence – Count 3 and 6
[74]
In the first
place, I will start with the evaluation of the evidence pertaining to
the incident that occurred on 29 August 2021
during which Boikie was
robbed of his cell phone.
[75]
Boikie
was a single witness regarding what transpired on the day of the
incident. Nothing prevents a court from
convicting
a person on the evidence of a single witness. Section 208 of the
CPA
provides
that: “[a]n accused may be convicted of any offence on the
single evidence of any competent witness”. However,
it is
trite that “...the evidence of a single witness should be
approached with caution, his or her merits as a witness being
weighed
against factors which militate against his or her credibility”.
[6]
[76]
Furthermore,
Boikie also provided the court with evidence relating to the
identification of the perpetrator, a further aspect to
be approached
with extreme caution. In
Arendse v S
[7]
the Supreme Court of Appeal quoted with approval the trial court’s
comments in
R
v Dladla:
[8]
“…
There
is a plethora of authorities dealing with the dangers of incorrect
identification. The
locus
classicus
is
S
v Mthetwa
1972
(3) SA 766
(A)
at 768A, where Holmes JA warned that: ‘Because of the
fallibility of human observation, evidence of identification
is
approached by courts with some caution. In
R
v Dladla
1962
(1) SA 307
(A)
at 310C-E, Holmes JA, writing for the full court referred with
approval to the reM[....]3 by James J – delivering
the judgment
of the trial court when he observed that: ‘one of the factors
which in our view is of greatest importance in
a case of
identification, is the witness’ previous knowledge of the
person sought to be identified. If the witness
knows the person
well or has seen him frequently before, the probability that his
identification will be accurate is substantially
increased …
In a case where the witness has known the person previously,
questions of identification …, of facial
characteristics, and
of clothing are in our view of much less importance than in cases
where there was no previous acquaintance
with the person sought to be
identified. What is important is to test the degree of previous
knowledge and the opportunity
for a correct identification, having
regard to the circumstances in which it was made’.”
[77]
A useful summary of
the test is set out in Volume 18 of
LAWSA
paragraph 263, where the learned authors state as follows:
“
Judicial
experience has shown that evidence of identity should, particularly
in criminal cases, be treated with great care. Even
an honest
witness is capable of identifying the wrong person with confidence.
Consequently, the witness should be thoroughly
examined about
the factors influencing his or her identification, such as the build,
features, colouring and clothing of the person
identified. An
early identification before the trial (which is admissible as an
exception to the rule prohibiting previous
consistent statements)
lends credibility to the evidence. Particular care should be taken if
the only evidence connecting the accused
with the crime is that of a
single identifying witness; then the cautionary rule relating to
single witnesses should also be taken
into account.”
[78]
Boikie made a favourable impression
during his testimony. The witness testified in a calm,
collected and chronological manner.
He gave detailed evidence
pertaining to the incident. When evaluating his evidence in its
entirety, I cannot find that
he harboured any negative feelings or
vengeance towards the accused in order to implicate him falsely in
the commissioning of the
robbery.
[79]
Regarding the
identification of the
perpetrator, I evaluated the evidence with caution. The attack
on the witness was of a violent nature,
the perpetrator was armed
with a firearm, it occurred at night which would make identification
difficult, and undeniably, it must
have been a traumatic experience
for the witness.
[80]
Undoubtedly,
Boikie had a sufficiently clear recollection of what transpired, his
ability to recall the incident in detail was impressive.
An
important fact to consider is that he testified that prior to the
incident he knew the accused by sight. Prior knowledge
of the
identity of the accused has important bearing upon Boikie’s
observations relative to his identification of the accused.
[81]
The witness
qualified his previous knowledge of the accused in the following
ways:
(a)
He used to
visit a friend who conducted business near Cradlestone Mall, at the
friend’s residence, which was in the area known
as Collen’s.
He stated that on two occasions he saw the accused in the street,
however he never conversed with the
accused.
(b)
Shortly after
his discharge from hospital, he approached construction workers in
the Collen’s area and he obtained further
information regarding
the accused, which he traversed to the police.
(c)
He also gave a
clear description of the accused to the Police at the crime scene, he
described the accused as dark in completion,
short and he had a
cheese cut hair style. The witness also described the clothing,
the accused was wearing as follows, a
grey jacket, jeans and All Star
takkies.
(d)
After the
arrest of the accused on 19 October 2021, the witness was called to
the police station to see whether his cell phone was
handed into the
SAP13. The witness’s cell phone was not amongst the cell
phones shown to him; however, he saw the accused
in an office at the
police station and he immediately identified the accused as the
person who attacked him on the night of the
incident.
[82]
I am of the
view that Boikie had more than sufficient opportunity to make a
reliable identification of his attacker. What
makes this
incident different from similar incidents is that the accused
approached the witness more than once during the incident.
Boikie
testified that the accused approached him from the opposite direction
where he was walking and passed him, at some stage
he turned around
and saw the accused following. At that stage the accused
approached him and threatened the witness with
the firearm and
demanded his cell phone. Due to three vehicles passing them,
the accused ran away.
[83]
Boikie then
ran to the service station nearby, but before reaching safety, the
accused again approached him from the side, armed
with the firearm.
The accused fired at the witness and the witness fell to the ground.
Boikie, at that stage, handed over
his cell phone to the accused.
It is evident that during the attack the accused was an arm length
from the witness.
[84]
Boikie
testified that he was walking on the side of Hendrik Potgieter Road
and the area was well lit by street lights. As
expected, the
accused when disturbed by passing vehicles ran to the other side of
the road because there were no street lights
on the other side of the
road and it was dark. The illumination of the crime scene was
such that I have no doubt that the
witness made a reliable and
trustworthy identification in the circumstances. The witness
was in close proximity to the accused
throughout the attack.
[85]
Boikie made a
good impression, he was confident during his testimony and I find
that he was an excellent witness. He did not
contradict his
evidence-in-chief examination during cross-examination. The
arrest of the accused 3 weeks later was a pure
coincidence. Boikie
could never have known that the accused was arrested for committing
crimes that involved the use of a firearm.
Furthermore, Boikie
was previously acquainted with the accused, and such a factor bears a
deal of reliability to the identification
of the accused. I can
find no reason not to accept his evidence as honest, truthful and
reliable.
[86]
Therefore, I
find that on 29 August 2021, the accused robbed Boikie of his cell
phone. Furthermore, that during the incident,
the accused was
armed with a firearm which was used to threaten and injure the
witness.
[87]
I will now
turn to the question as to whether count 3, robbery with aggravating
circumstances, and count 6, attempted murder, amounted
to duplication
of charges or the so-called splitting of charges.
[88]
Section
83 of the CPA provides that where it is doubtful which of several
offences is constituted by the facts of a case, an accused
may be
charged with “the commission of all or any such offences”
and such counts may be tried together. An accused
cannot be
convicted of all charges if more than one charge of conviction
results from the same criminal act. The reason for
this is that
conviction on more than one count which results from one criminal act
exposes an accused to being sentenced more than
once for the same
offence.
[89]
In
Hiemstra’s
Criminal Procedure
the “test for splitting” (duplication of conviction)
is as follows:
“
There
is no universally valid criterion for determining whether there is
splitting. In
S
v Davids
1998
(2) SACR 313
(C)
the topic is discussed afresh and the most important decisions are
usefully summarised. The courts over the
course of time
developed two practical aids (
S
v Benjamin en 'n Ander
1980
(1) SA 950
(A)
at 956E-H):
(i)
If
the evidence which is necessary to establish one charge also
establishes the other charge, there is only one offence. If
one
charge does not contain the same elements as the other, there are two
offences (
R
v Gordon
1909
EDC 254
at
268 and 269). This can be called ‘the same evidence
test’.
(ii)
If there are
two acts, each of which would constitute an independent offence, but
only one intent and both acts are necessary to
realise this intent,
there is only one offence (
R
v Sabuyi
1905 TS 170).
There is a continuous criminal transaction. This test is
referred to as ‘the single
intent test’.”
[90]
Ordinarily,
the relevant and particular circumstances of a specific case will
dictate which one of these two aids (tests) applies.
[9]
The Supreme Court of Appeal referred to the “single
intent test” with approval in
S
v Dlamini
[10]
but added:
“
There
is,
however
,
no all-embracing formula. The various tests are more
guidelines, and they are not rules of law, nor are they exhaustive.
Their application may yield a clear result but if not, a court
must apply its common sense, wisdom, experience and sense
of fairness
to make a determination.”
[91]
When analysing
the evidence regarding the robbery and attempted murder charges and
whether ‘the same evidence test’,
‘the single
intent test’ or a common-sense approach is applied to the
facts, it is evident that the accused fired at
Boikie and injured him
solely for the purpose (intent) to rob him of his cell phone. Due
to Boikie refusing to hand over
his cell phone, the accused with
force, succeeded in depriving the witness of his property. The
evidence to sustain the attempted
murder charge is necessary to
sustain the robbery with aggravating circumstances conviction.
[92]
Therefore, I
am of the view that in convicting the accused on both count 3 and 6
would amount to a duplication of convictions.
Evaluation
Evidence- Counts 2, 4, 5 and 7
[93]
Counts 2, 4, 5
and 7 related to the incident that transpired on 18/19 October 2021,
where Mr T[....] M[....]4 was murdered, Ms M[....]
was assaulted and
Mr Du Plooy was shot at.
[94]
First and foremost, I
will discuss the issue pertaining to statements made by witnesses and
the evidential weight to be attached
to averments contained in
witness statements and differences in relation thereto during
viva
voce
evidence
in court.
[95]
In this matter, Mr du
Plooy was confronted with the contents of his sworn statement, see
exhibit “F”.
The
defence emphasised and focussed in detail on the witness statement
during cross examination. The attack was based on so-called
“contradictions”. Mr du Plooy was heavily
criticised by the lack of detail recorded in his statement.
[96]
Contradictions
in written statements per se do not result in a conclusion that the
evidence of the witness is to be rejected. In
S
v Mahlangu and Anot
her
[11]
Horn J restated the principles relating to written statements by
witnesses. The learned judge held:
“
In
order to discredit a witness who made a previously inconsistent
statement it must be shown that the deviation was material (
S v
Bruinders
1998 (2) SACR 432
(SE) at 437e;
S v Mafaladiso en
Andere
2003 (1) SACR 583
(SCA) at 593e). Deviations which
are not material will not discredit the witness. Police statements
obtained from witnesses
by the police, are notoriously lacking in
detail, are inaccurate and often incomplete. A witness
statement is in the main
required to enable the prosecuting authority
to determine whether a prosecution is called for, on what charge and
to consider which
witnesses to call on which issues. It would
be absurd to expect a witness to say exactly in his statement what he
will eventually
say in court. There will have to be indications
other than a mere lack of detail in the witness’ statement to
conclude
that the witness said in court was unsatisfactory or
untruthful.
There
is no law that compels a witness what to say and what not to say in
his statement. The witness tells it as he sees it.
He is
not expected to relate in his statement what he saw in the minutest
detail. Should a witness through a lapse
of memory or any other
valid reason omit some detail which later could become important, he
should not as a matter of course be
branded as being untruthful.
Moreover, the mere fact that a witness deviates in a material
respect from what he said in his
statement does not necessarily
render all his evidence defective.
The
court will in the final analysis consider the evidence as a whole in
order to determine in what respects the witness’
evidence may
be accepted and in what respects it should be rejected. Counsel who
act on behalf of accused persons, are wont to
pounce on any
differences, no matter how insignificant, which may arise between an
extra curial statement of a witness and the
witness’ testimony
in court (See
S
v Govender and Others
2006
(1) SACR 322
(E)
from 326c,where Nepgen J gives an insightful discourse on this
topic.) The witness is often lambasted where his
testimony in
court gives more detail than what appears in his written statement.
The more differences that can be found between
the statement
and the testimony in court, the more successful counsel feels his
cross-examination has been. However, as has
been pointed out,
that is not the correct approach. The test is: were the
differences material, always bearing in mind that
a witness’
testimony in court will almost without exception be more detailed
than what the witness said in his written statement.
”
[97]
I will fully
deal with the credibility of Du Plooy during the evaluation of his
evidence. However, I find that the so-called
contradictions in
his sworn statement are not material and not an indication of his
evidence being unreliable.
[98]
M[....] during
her testimony was forthcoming regarding her relationship with the
accused and the deceased. She at no stage
attempted to hide
away from the fact that she had a relationship with the accused while
the deceased, the father of her child,
was in prison. She
admitted that even after she ended the relationship with the accused,
she met him occasionally and they
even spent a night together.
M[....] stated that the accused paid the rent of her shack to
M[....]3, the landlord. She did
not hide the fact that the
Huawei cell phone was a gift from the accused.
[99]
M[....] had
more than enough opportunity to fabricate evidence against the
accused. I can find no indication that she was vindictive
or
revengeful towards the accused, despite witnessing the brutal and
senseless murder of the deceased. In fact, she testified
that
the accused did not take her cell phone with force, but that the cell
phone must have fallen out of her trouser pocket during
the scuffle.
[100]
Furthermore,
her evidence that she was involved in a scuffle with the accused, was
corroborated with the contents of the J88, exhibit
“A2”.
The report corroborated her evidence in that she sustained 3 bruises,
one on the left forehead at the hairline,
one on the back of the
right upper arm, and one on the back of the left upper arm.
This is not in accordance with the version
of the accused that he
only struck her with the firearm on her forehead.
[101]
I do not agree
with the submissions by Ms Bovu, that the evidence of M[....] and
M[....]3 contradicted each other. One has
to be mindful of the
fact that witnesses present during the commissioning of a crime would
evidently give different versions. Different
versions are not
always indicative of malicious intent. Witnesses are human and
humans are different and can make mistakes.
But the fact that a
witnesses might be wrong about a particular detail of the crime does
not necessarily disqualify them or render
their evidence unreliable.
In all the years of presiding in criminal cases like these, I have
yet to come across a case where
witnesses agree on every single
detail during their evidence in court.
[102]
Furthermore,
during stressful situations, like the incident witnessed by M[....]
and M[....]3, one could expect that their versions
would differ.
There are many factors that could influence a witness’
perception and recollection of an event, to mention
a few, physical
location during the incident, past experiences, familiarity with
crimes being witnessed, a witness’ emotional
state and language
skills in describing what they witnessed are all important aspects to
take into consideration when evaluating
the evidence.
[103]
Witnesses see
things differently, forget minor details and recount stories in odd
orders. In fact, if M[....] and M[....]3’
evidence pertaining
to the incident was identical, and did not differ by an acceptable
margin, I would have been suspicious and
that would have been of
great concern.
[104]
The evidence
presented by M[....] and M[....]3 amounted to the following: after
the deceased was shot by the accused, the accused
left the yard, but
returned and again fired shots at the deceased while the deceased was
lying defenceless on the ground. I
can find no reason not to
accept the evidence as reliable and truthful.
[105]
When
evaluating the evidence of Du Plooy, I again take note of the
cautionary rule pertaining to the evidence of a single witness.
The witness testified in a calm, collected and chronological manner,
even during cross examination, he did not contradict his
evidence-in-chief examination. He was extensively cross
examined by Ms Bovu, and his evidence was unshakable.
[106]
Du Plooy
provided the court with a detailed and consistent version. His
involvement during the arrest of the accused was pure
coincidence.
He testified in the early hours of the morning; he noticed the
accused walking in the direction of Honeydew.
Obviously, as a
security officer on duty and alerted to attend a complaint in the
area, he was suspicious of the circumstances
surrounding the
accused’s presence in the near vicinity of the complaint.
[107]
Constable
Mashaba arrived on the scene after the accused was injured. His
evidence corroborated the evidence by Du Plooy in
that the accused
was found in a bushy area, in a plot. He stated that he gained
entry through a gate, and furthermore, he
found the accused injured
and lying on the ground. He confirmed the evidence of Du Plooy
that a firearm was found next to
the accused. Mashaba has no
reason to fabricate evidence, Du Plooy and the accused were unknown
to him.
[108]
I will discuss
the improbabilities in the version of the accused in detail below.
I find the evidence of Du Plooy reliable.
[109]
The accused
testified under oath. He denied his involvement in the robbery
of Boikie on 29 August 2021. During cross-examination
of
Boikie, the defence put it to the witness that the accused cannot
remember where he was on the night of the incident, but he
was not
the person who robbed him. However, during his evidence under
oath, the accused testified that on the night of the
incident he was
at his place of residence. It is evident that the accused was
fabricating evidence as the trial progressed.
I find it highly
unlikely that the accused would have been able to remember where he
was weeks prior to his arrest. More
so, nothing noteworthy
happened on the day in question. In such circumstances I would have
expected the accused to have no recollection
of where he was and what
he was doing. The fact that the accused remembered his
whereabouts on 29 August 2021 was, to my
mind quite incredible.
This did not, in my judgment, have a ring of truth to it.
[110]
His version
regarding the incident involving M[....], M[....]3 and Du Plooy was
broadly similar regarding what transpired on the
fateful night.
The version presented by the accused raised various questions.
M[....] stated that on the day of the
incident she was not involved
in a relationship with the accused and they were not cohabiting in
her shack. I can find no
reason as to why she would lie about
these aspects, taking into consideration that she openly stated that
she was previously involved
with the accused, and even after the
relationship was terminated, she visited him and even spent a night
with him.
[111]
The accused
stated that he and the deceased had an argument and the deceased hit
him with a fist. The accused further testified
that he lost his
temper took out his firearm and shot the deceased more than once.
[112]
According to
the post mortem report compiled by Dr Hlalele, exhibit ‘D”,
the deceased was shot 4 times in the chest
and twice in the right
upper arm. The chief post mortem findings in this case were:
“
Post-Mortem
examination shows multiple gunshot wounds. Post-Mortem
examination further shows hemopneumothorax, perforation
of the lung,
liver, pancreas, mesentery and kidney. The internal organs are pale
on dissection, indicating blood loss”
[113]
M[....] and
M[....]3 would not have the knowledge pertaining to whether a murder
was planned or premeditated. Their evidence
regarding the
killing of the deceased was clear and they provided the Court with
detailed versions of what transpired on the night.
Their
evidence corroborated where one would expect corroboration.
M[....] testified that she did not witness the first shots
fired, she
stated that after she heard the gun shots, she turned around and saw
the deceased lying on the ground behind her and
the accused had a
firearm in his hand. She further testified that she approached
the accused and a scuffle ensued during
which she was injured. After
being struck with the firearm on the head she ran to M[....]3’.
At that stage M[....]3
was standing at the door of his shack
reprimanding the accused. According to both witnesses the
accused moved to the gate
only to return where he again fired shots
at the deceased.
[114]
In relation to
count 7, attempted murder of Du Plooy, the accused expects the court
to believe that Du Plooy fired and injured him
without any
provocation or threat of harm. In fact, the accused gave his
full co-operation when the witness approached him
and enquired as to
his presence in the area. Even more far-fetched, is the fact
that the accused insinuated that after he
was shot, Du Plooy must
have lifted him over a fence, in order for the police to find him
inside the plot. That is the only
inference that the Court can
draw, because Mashaba testified that the accused was found lying on
the ground, inside a plot and
not on the street where the accused
stated he was shot by Du Plooy.
[115]
The version
presented by the accused in regard to count 7 is improbable and
unacceptable.
[116]
I find the
state witnesses’ evidence is a true account of what transpired
on the night of 18/19 October 2021 and I reject
the version of the
accused as false.
Premeditated/Planned
Murder
[117]
The
terms ‘planned’, or ‘premeditated’ murder is
not defined in the CLAA. The legislature has left
it to the
court to define or interpret the concept. The court in the case
of
S
v Raath
[12]
relied on the
Concise
Oxford English Dictionary
for
the meaning of the concept planned and premeditated and explained as
follows:
“
The
concept of a planned or premeditated murder is not statutorily
defined. We were not referred to, and nor was I able to
find,
any authoritative pronouncement in our case law concerning this
concept. By and large it would seem that the question
of
whether a murder was planned or premeditated has been dealt with by
the court on a casuistic basis. The
Concise
Oxford English Dictionary
10
ed, revised, gives the meaning of premeditated as “to think out
or plan beforehand” whilst “to plan”
is given as
meaning “to decide on, arrange in advance, make preparations
for an anticipated event or time”.”
[118]
In
the case of
S
v PM,
[13]
the
court defined the term planned and premeditated murder as two
different concepts, which do not have the same meaning, however,
it
has the same consequences. The court defined ‘premeditated’
as “something done deliberately after rationally
considering
the timing or method of so doing, calculated to increase the
likelihood of success, or to evade detection or apprehension”.
Whereas, ‘planned’ has been described as “a
scheme, design or method of acting, doing, proceeding or making,
which is developed in advance as a process, calculated to optimally
achieve a goal”.
[119]
Finding
that the murder was
planned requires that there must have been a plan, design, or scheme
in place. The accused must have thought
about the murder days
in advance, the planning must have been done in order to ensure that
the act of murder is successful.
[120]
The
court in
S
v
PM
above
stated
the elements of ‘planned’ as follows:
“
(1)
The identification of the goal to be achieved;
(2)
the allocation of time to be spent;
(3)
the establishment of relationships necessary to execute;
(4)
the formulation of strategies to achieve the goal;
(5)
arrangement or creation of the means or resources required to achieve
the goal; and
(6)
directing, implementing and monitoring the process.”
[14]
[121]
In
the case of
Kekana
v S
,
[15]
in
paras 12 to 13, the court dismisses the idea given in the case of
Raath
supra
that
in proving premeditation, the state must lead evidence to establish
the period of time between the accused forming the intent
to murder
and the carrying out of his intention. The court held that it
is not necessary for the appellant who is the accused,
to have
thought or planned their action over a long period of time in
advance, before carrying out their plan. The court
further held
that time is not the only consideration, because even a few minutes
is enough to carry out a premeditated action.
[122]
It
is clear that there is a difference between the two concepts of
planned and premeditation. However, it is important to
note
that the mere fact that an accused formed an intention to kill
someone beforehand does not automatically mean that the murder
is
premeditated or planned.
It is also
important to note that the test for determining intention is
subjective, whereas the test of determining premeditation
and/or
planning is objective.
[123]
It
must be borne in mind
that the finding of premeditation or planned murder does not rely on
whether there was an intention to kill.
First, the Court has to
find that there was an intention to kill. Then the court must
look at the evidence to determine
(based on the surrounding
circumstances) whether there is premeditation or planning.
[124]
I have
accepted the evidence presented by the state regarding count 2, the
murder of the deceased. The accused had direct
intention to
kill the deceased. After firing two shots at the deceased, the
accused proceeded to the gate of the yard, however,
he returned and
fired further shots at the deceased while lying defenceless on the
ground. These actions of the accused clearly
indicate planning
as defined and described by Mathopo AJA (as he then was) in the
matter of
Kekana
supra.
[125]
Therefore, I
conclude that the accused is guilty of murder of the deceased in
count 2 read with section 51(1) of the CLAA.
Count
4- Robbery with aggravating circumstances – Deceased Nokia cell
phone
[126]
The accused is
charged with two charges of robbery with aggravating circumstances,
which relate to the cell phones of the deceased
and M[....].
There is no evidence on record that the accused robbed the deceased
of his cell phone. None of the witnesses,
M[....] or M[....]3,
provided any evidence in this regard.
[127]
The state
argued that the deceased was in possession of his cell phone on the
night of the incident, and the cell phone of the deceased
was never
found following the night in question, therefore, the state was of
the view that the only inference the Court should
make, is that the
accused robbed the deceased of his cell phone.
[128]
I am not
inclined to find that the only inference in the circumstances is that
the accused robbed the deceased of his cell phone.
As already
stated, there is no evidence on record to make such finding.
[129]
Therefore, the
accused should be given the benefit of the doubt regarding count 4.
Count
5- Robbery with aggravating circumstances – M[....]’s
Huawei cell phone
[130]
It is not
disputed that the accused took the cell phone of M[....] during the
incident. M[....] testified that the cell phone
was in her
trouser pocket and must have fell from her pocket during the scuffle
with the accused. The accused testified that
he took the cell
phone and left the yard with it.
[131]
In the
circumstances it is clear that the cell phone was not taken with
force from M[....]. Therefore, the state did not proof
the
elements pertaining to robbery.
[132]
However,
the state proved that the accused took the cell phone without the
permission of M[....] and, as such, deprived M[....]
of the
possession of her cell phone. Theft is a competent verdict on
robbery.
[16]
[133]
I am therefore
satisfied that the state proved the crime of theft in regard to count
5.
Count
8 and 9: Possession of unlicensed firearm and ammunition
[134]
The evidence
before this court conclusively proved that since May 2021, the
accused was in unlawful in possession of a firearm and
ammunition,
furthermore the accused admitted that he shot and killed the deceased
in count 1 and count 2 with the same firearm.
[135]
Due to the
lack of interest by police officers employed at the Ballistic Unit of
the police, no ballistic report was available during
the trial.
At this stage of my judgment, I find it prudent to address the
challenges this Court experienced with regard to
the unavailability
of the ballistic report.
[136]
This trial was
set down for hearing on 31 October 2022, and was to run for 2 weeks.
Prior to commencing with the trial both
the state and defence
approached me in chambers, where I was informed that the ballistic
report was not available. The state
indicated that following
numerous enquiries by the investigating officer, Sergeant Booysens
said that the report would be available
on 2 November 2022.
[137]
On 2 November
2022, the state requested a remand, and stated that the report would
be available on 4 November 2022. Ms Bovu
objected to the
request for remand. After considering the seriousness of the
offences in the matter and interests of justice,
I granted the
requested remand. Needless to say, on 4 November 2022, the
report was still outstanding, and the state requested
another remand,
indicating that he was unable to indicate with certainty when the
report would be available. According to
the information he
received from the investigating officer, the report might be
available on 10 November 2022. Ms Bovu again
objected to the
request for remand.
[138]
As
a result of the delay in the proceedings and conduct of the police
officers attached to the Ballistic Unit of the police, I ordered
a
summons be issued and served on Brigadier David van Niekerk at the
Ballistic Unit, Pretoria. My intention was to obtain
certainty
as to when the ballistic report in this matter would be available.
[139]
Sergeant
Booysens informed me, in open court, that Brigadier van Niekerk
during the previous enquiries, told him that he would not
attend
court, as a summons had to be served 14 days in advance of the
appearance date.
[140]
As
anticipated, Brigadier van Niekerk did not attend court on the date
indicated on the summons, namely 8 November 2022. The summons
was
marked exhibit “J”. The state again requested a
remand to obtain the ballistic report and Ms Bovu objected
to the
request.
[141]
It is so that courts
have a duty to ensure that that the rights in terms of section 35(3)
of the Constitution, to have trials commencing
and being completed
without unreasonable delay, are upheld. Section 342A (1) of the
CPA enjoins a court before which criminal
proceedings are pending to
‘investigate’ any cause of the delay during criminal
proceedings.
[142]
In
S
v Van Huysteen
,
[17]
Traverso J (as she then was) held that section 342A (3)(c) of the CPA
does not require that a formal enquiry be held nor that a
formal
finding has to be made. If the presiding officer enquires as to the
reasons for the request for a further postponement and
concludes that
a further postponement would lead to injustice, that is sufficient.
The learned judge further held that section
342A of the CPA
merely provides guidelines for the factors which a court should take
into account when deciding whether to refuse
a postponement or not.
The Honourable Judge held that:
[18]
“
Na
my mening hoef daar geen formele ondersoek gehou te word of geen
formele bevinding gemaak te word ingevolge hierdie artikel nie.
Indien die voorsittende beampte navrae doen oor die redes vir die
versoek om 'n verdere uitstel, en die mening huldig dat 'n verdere
uitstel tot 'n onreg sal lei is dit na my mening voldoende. Na
my mening le art 342A slegs riglyne neer oor die faktore wat
'n hof
in aanmerking moet neem by die oorweging van die vraag of ’n
uitstel geweier moet word al dan nie.”
[143]
The
learned judge recognising the importance and indispensability of
section 35 of the Constitution, stated the following:
[19]
“
Hierdie
artikel moet voorts ook gelees word teen die agtergrond van die
bepalings van die Grondwet van die Republiek van Suid-Afrika
108 van
1996 en meer bepaald die bepalings van art 35 daarvan, waarvolgens ‘n
beskuldigde se reg op 'n regverdige verhoor
(met inbegrepe sy reg om
sy verhoor sonder 'n onredelike vertraging te begin, en af te handel)
aangestip word.”
[144]
Due
to the absence of any indication as to when the ballistic report
would be available, I refused the request for remand by the
state.
As a result, the state refused to close the state’s case,
whereafter I closed the state’s case.
[20]
[145]
The disregard
and disrespect shown by some police officers is unfortunate and
disquieting.
[146]
Even
though the unviability of a ballistic report, the proven facts show
that the accused was in possession of a handgun of make
and calibre
unknown and at least 8 rounds of ammunition the said firearm.
He has not offered any evidence to suggest that
he was legally
authorised to be in such possession.
[21]
[147]
Ms Bovu,
counsel for the accused, argued that the state had failed to prove
the charges in terms of count 8 and 9 because no expert
evidence had
been adduced to establish that the device used by the accused had
been a firearm as defined in section 1 of the FCA.
[148]
The word
‘firearm’ is defined in the FCA as follows:
“ ‘
firearm’
means any-
(a)
device manufactured or designed to propel a bullet or projectile
through a barrel or cylinder by means
of burning propellant, at a
muzzle energy exceeding 8 joules (6 ft-lbs);
(b)
device manufactured or designed to discharge rim-fire, centre-fire or
pin-fire ammunition;
(c)
device which is not at the time capable of discharging any bullet or
projectile, but which can be readily
altered to be a firearm within
the meaning of paragraph (a) or (b);
(d)
device manufactured to discharge a bullet or any other projectile of
a calibre of 5.6 mm (.22 calibre)
or higher at a muzzle energy of
more than 8 joules (6 ft-lbs), by means of compressed gas and not by
means of burning propellant;
or
(e)
barrel, frame or receiver of a device referred to in paragraphs (a),
(b), (c) or (d), but does not include
a muzzle loading firearm or any
device contemplated in
section
5.”
[149]
In
S
v Filani
[22]
the
appellant’s convictions in respect of the unauthorised
possession of a firearm and ammunition in contravention of the
FCA
was set aside and the court held that it had been incumbent on the
state to adduce evidence establishing that the device used
fulfilled
the technical criteria in the definition of “firearm”.
Pickering J said the following:
“…
[
O]n
an acceptance of Ms
Hendricks’
submission,
any weapon which was capable of discharging or propelling a missile
as set out above would fall within the ambit of
the definition. In my
view, however, given the increased technical nature of the various
definitions of ‘firearm’ contained
in the later and
current Act, such a finding cannot be made in the absence of expert
evidence to that effect. Certainly,
it is not a matter of
which this court may take judicial notice. The state failed to lead
any such expert evidence and accordingly
failed, in my view, to
discharge the onus upon it.”
[150]
In
S
v Jordaan and Others
,
[23]
Binns-Ward J made the following remark:
“
The
logic of the court’s reasoning in
Filani
is
difficult to fault on the facts of that case. Depending on the
evidence adduced in a particular case it could, however,
give rise to
uncomfortably anomalous results if applied as a general doctrine. In
the current matter, for example, it is
plain beyond question that a
significant wound was inflicted on the complainant by a shot fired by
accused 2 from a firearm in
the ordinary sense of the word. It
would make something of an ass of the state of the law if the court
were to find the accused
guilty of the common law offence of
attempted murder committed with the use of a firearm, but be unable
to hold that he had possessed
the firearm without a licence on the
basis that the weapon’s muzzle energy had not been empirically
proved. Such a
result would be especially anomalous in the
context of the expressly stated objects of the Firearms Control
Act.
The
preamble to the Act states that the enactment is directed at the
protection of every person’s ‘right to life and the
right
to security of the person, which includes, among other things, the
right to be free from all forms of violence from either
public or
private sources’ and acknowledges the duty placed on the state
by the Constitution to respect, protect, promote
and fulfil the
rights in the Bill of Rights in the context of the contribution of
the increased availability and abuse of firearms
and ammunition to
the high levels of violent crime in our society. It seems to me
that it would be inimical to the stated
objects of the Act to apply
its provisions in such a way as would place a higher burden on the
state to successfully procure convictions
in respect of the unlawful
possession of firearms and ammunition. Certainly, if the
language of its substantive provisions
were construed to have such an
absolute effect, the result would be undermining of the statute’s
stated objects.”
[151]
In
S
v Sehoole
,
[24]
the Supreme Court of Appeal rejected the reasoning of the court
a
quo
,
that in the absence of expert ballistic evidence it could not be
proved that ammunition found in possession of an accused was
“ammunition” within the defined meaning of the term. The
following was said:
“
Whilst
it is undoubtedly so that a ballistics report would provide proof
that a specific object is indeed ammunition, there is no
authority
compelling the state to produce such evidence in every case. Where
there is acceptable evidence disclosing that ammunition
was found
inside a properly working firearm, it can, in the absence of any
countervailing evidence, be deduced to be ammunition
related to the
firearm. Needless to say, each case must be judged on its own
particular facts and circumstances.” (In that
matter there had
been a ballistic report put in evidence confirming the character of
the firearm.)
[152]
In the current
matter, having regard to the evidence by Boikie, M[....], M[....]3,
Du Plooy, Constable Mashaba and the evidence
contained in the
post-mortem reports -exhibits “B” and “D”,
identifying the object that the accused was
carrying as a firearm and
the nature of the injury inflicted on Boikie, M[....] and both the
deceased, I am satisfied beyond reasonable
doubt, in the absence of
any countervailing evidence, that the firearm was one with a muzzle
energy materially ‘exceeding
8 joules (6 ft-lbs)’.
[153]
The consequences of
the shooting incidents demonstrate that the firearm used could not
have been a device of the nature that the
legislature excluded from
statutory regulation in terms of the FCA. It is clear from the
evidence adduced at the trial that
the accused is familiar with and
knows how to use firearms and Boikie indeed asserted under
cross examination, that he knew
a firearm when he saw it.
The description by the witnesses of the firearm and on the version
for the accused it is clear
that a firearm was indeed used during the
commissioning of the crimes.
[154]
In the circumstances,
the accused falls to be convicted on counts 8 and 9 in respect of the
charges brought under the FCA.
[155]
As mentioned before, at the commencement
of the trial, the accused pleaded guilty on count 1 and 10. The
defence handed in
a statement in terms of section 112 of the CPA
admitting all the allegations pertaining to the said counts.
Following the
state’s acceptance of the facts contained in the
statement, the accused was found guilty on count 1, Murder read with
section
51(2) of the CLLA and count 10, assault with the intent to
cause grievous bodily harm.
[156]
The accused is acquitted on the
following counts:
Count
4
:
Robbery with aggravating circumstances as defined in
section 1
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, Act
51 of 1977 and read with
section 51(2)
of
the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, Act
105 of 1997; and
Count
6
:
Attempted Murder.
[157]
The accused is found guilty of the
following counts:
Count
1
:
Murder
read with
section 51(2)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, Act
105 of 1997;
Count
2
:
Murder
read with
section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, Act
105 of 1997;
Count
3
:
Robbery
with aggravating circumstances as defined in
section 1
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
and read with
section 51(2)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, Act
105 of 1997;
Count
5
:
Theft;
Count
7
:
Attempted Murder;
Count
8
:
Contravening
section 4
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
,
Unlawful Possession of a firearm: Make and Calibre unknown to the
State;
Count
9
:
Contravening
section 90
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
,
Unlawful Possession of ammunition: Unknown to the State; and
Count
10
:
Assault with the intent to cause grievous bodily harm.
CSP
OOSTHUIZEN-SENEKAL
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
OF HEARING: 30
October, 1, 2, 4, 8, 11, 16, 18, 22, 23 November 2022
DATE
JUDGMENT DELIVERED: 23 November 2022
APPEARANCES
:
On
Behalf of the State: Advocate
Mthiyane
On
behalf of the Accused: Ms.
Bovu
[1]
2005
(2) SACR 318
(E)
at para [37].
[2]
See
S
v Mhlongo
1991
(2) SACR 207
(A)
at 210D-F and
R
v Hlongwane
1959
(3) SA 337
(A)
at 340H.
[3]
S
v Van der Meyden
1999
(1) SACR 447
(W)
at 448F-G.
[4]
Id.
[5]
[2011]
2 ALL SA 517 (SCA).
[6]
See
Stevens
v
S
2005
1 All SA 1
(SCA) at para [17]. See also
S
v Sauls amd Others
1981
(3) SA 172
(A) 180E G where Diemont JA established the
approach to the “cautionary rule”.
[7]
Arendse
v S
[2015]
ZASCA 131
at
para
[10]
.
[8]
R
v Dladla and Others
1962
(1) SA 307
(A)
at 310C-E.
[9]
R
v Johannes
1925
TPD 782.
[10]
2012
(2) SACR 1
(SCA) at para [20].
[11]
[2012] ZAGPJHC 114.
[12]
2009
(2) SACR 46
(C) at para [16].
[13]
2014
(2) SACR 481
(GP) at paras [35]-[36].
[14]
Id
at para [36].
[15]
[2014]
ZASCA 158.
[16]
See
section 260(d)
of the CPA.
[17]
2004
(2) SACR 478 (C).
[18]
Id
at
para [8].
[19]
Id
at para [9].
[20]
Section
342A(3)(d)
of the CPA provides:
“
(3)
If the court finds that the completion of the proceedings
is being delayed unreasonably,
the court may issue any order as it
deems fit in order to eliminate the delay and any prejudice arising
from it or to prevent
further delay or prejudice, including an order
-
(a)
...
(b)
...
(c)
…
(d)
where the accused has pleaded to the charge and the State or the
defence, as the case maybe,
is unable to proceed with the case or
refused to do so, that the proceedings be continued and disposed of
as if the case for
the prosecution or the defence, as the
case may be, has been closed …”
[21]
See
section 250
(1) of the CPA, which provides:
“
Presumption
of lack of authority
(1)
If a person would commit an offence if he-
(a)
carried on any occupation or business;
(b)
performed any act;
(c)
owned or had in his possession or custody or used any article; or
(d)
was present at or entered any place,
without
being the holder of a licence, permit, permission or other authority
or qualification (in this section referred to as
the ‘
necessary
authority’
), an accused shall, at criminal proceedings
upon a charge that he committed such an offence, be deemed not to
have been the holder
of the necessary authority, unless the contrary
is proved.
[22]
2012
(1) SACR 508
(ECG) at 515F-G.
[23]
[2017]
ZAWCHC 131
at para
[101]
.
[24]
2015
(2) SACR 196
(SCA) at para [19].
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