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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Jood and Another v S (Appeal) (A 22/2022)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 120 (4 February 2025)
Jood and Another v S (Appeal) (A 22/2022)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 120 (4 February 2025)
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sino date 4 February 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A22/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
04/02/25
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
PIET
ROMEO JOOD
First Appellant
LUCKY
JOSHUA BOOYSEN
Second Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploading it on
Caselines. The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 10h00 on 4
February 2025.
TEFFO,
J
(Lenyai J and Mc Aslin AJ concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The appellants were convicted in the Regional Court, Pretoria on a
charge of murder
read with the provisions of section 51(1) of Act,
105 of 1997 (the "
Criminal Law Amendment Act
"). They
were both sentenced to imprisonment for life. They appeal against
their conviction and sentence in terms of the provisions
of section
10 of the Judicial Matters Amendment Act, No 42 of 2013. The section
provides that an accused person who has been sentenced
to
imprisonment for life by the regional court under section 51(1) of
the Criminal Law Amendment Act, may note an appeal without
having to
apply for leave in terms of
section 309B
of the
Criminal Procedure
Act, 51 of 1977
.
The
appeal against conviction
[2]
The appellants challenge their convictions on the basis that the
court
a quo
misdirected itself by accepting the evidence of a
single witness, Mr Shaun Buthi Mathonzi and relying on it to convict
them. This
relates to Mr Mathonzi's identification of the appellants
as the perpetrators and also what he allegedly observed at the crime
scene. They claim that the court a quo did not approach Mr Mathonzi's
evidence with caution and that Mr Mathonzi had a motive to
falsely
implicate them. They contend that the court
a quo
failed to
consider or attach sufficient weight to the discrepancies in the
evidence of Mr Mathonzi and the statement he made to
the police.
[3]
The appellants further claim that the court
a quo
did not
consider that the description of the deceased's clothing by Mr
Mathonzi in his evidence when he last saw him was poles
apart and
differed from that provided by the other state witnesses, namely, Ms
Suzan Ndimane as well as Sgt Patrick Nemaphkula
in their evidence.
[4]
Moreover, the appellants assert that the court a qua attached too
much weight to the
evidence of Dr Suzan Mabotja which relates to the
injuries sustained by the deceased. It is claimed that the court
a
quo
misdirected itself by concluding that the evidence of Dr
Mabotja corroborated the evidence of Mr Mathonzi in that regard
whereas
that was not the only reasonable inference to be drawn.
[5]
Lastly, it was contended that the court
a quo
should not have
rejected the evidence of the appellants as false beyond reasonable
doubt as that evidence was corroborated to a
large extent by the
defence witness, Mr Ronslee Morgan.
The
appeal against sentence
[6]
In the notice of appeal, the appellants also criticised their
sentence in that it
was too harsh, shockingly disturbing and
disproportionate to the offence committed. When the appeal was
argued, this was no longer
pursued.
[7]
Mr Coetzer acting for the State submitted that the appellants were
correctly convicted.
The
factual matrix
The
State's case
[8]
On 30 May 2016 at approximately 05:30 am the body of the deceased, Mr
Clement Mosedi
was discovered on a veld next to a river. Ms Suzan
Ndimane testified about the circumstances in which the body of the
deceased
was found. She was on her way to work when she discovered
the body and called the police.
[9]
Sgt Patrick Nemaphkula testified that on 30 May 2016 while on duty,
he was called
to a crime scene where he found the body of a black
male who was lying on his back facing up. The man did not show any
signs of
breathing. An ambulance was called and the paramedics
certified him dead. The deceased was wearing a black T-shirt with
short sleeves.
He could not remember the colour of the deceased's
trousers and the deceased did not have shoes on. He observed a wire
attached
to two pieces of wood around the neck of the deceased.
[10]
After the body of the deceased was collected, Mr Shaun Buthi Mathonzi
approached him and provided
him with the names of the appellants and
the place where they could be found. He arrested the appellants the
following day. The
first appellant (Mr Piet Romeo Jood) was arrested
inside the white Crafter Volkswagen bus which was found parked at the
place of
residence of the second appellant (Mr Lucky Joshua Booysen)
and the second appellant was arrested at his place of residence.
[11]
Under cross-examination the witness mentioned the rope that he also
found on the body of the
deceased but could not recall where it was.
[12]
Mr Shaun Buthi Mathonzi testified that on the night of 29 May 2016
just after 11 pm, he
was standing at a corner of a street at his
sister's place of residence when he observed a bus approaching. The
bus was driven
by the second appellant. The deceased was sitting
between the two appellants inside the bus. The first appellant was
busy fighting
with the deceased. The bus entered the graveyard and
the witness went closer to see what was happening. He observed the
first appellant
pulling the deceased out of the bus to a tree with a
rope he held tight on the deceased's neck. The first appellant
further held
the deceased tight against a tree and the second
appellant pushed him against a tree with the bus. The deceased fell
and the first
appellant opened the door of the bus and loaded him
inside the bus.
[13]
The bus reversed and drove out of the graveyard to a bush next to a
river. The witness followed
the bus on foot to see what was
happening. He then climbed a wall and observed the deceased being
pulled out of the bus and dumped
in the bush next to a river by the
appellants. The deceased's upper body was not dressed when he was
left there but he had his
pants on.
[14]
The next morning the witness saw a certain Rishaan cleaning the bus
in the driveway at the second
appellant's place of residence. He went
to the scene where the body of the deceased was found and observed
the man he saw the previous
night in the bus with the appellants. He
did not speak to anyone at the scene nor report the incident to the
police.
[15]
As he was walking in the street with his daughter, he heard people
screaming saying there is
a man lying in the bush. The police
approached him and asked if he had seen what happened to the
deceased.
[16]
He knows the appellants very well. He grew up in Eersterust in front
of them. The appellants
worked with many foreigners and he knew the
deceased by sight. He did not know his name. He saw him many times
next to the gate
at the second appellant's place of residence. He was
able to observe what happened at the graveyard for 30 to 40 minutes.
When
the bus entered and left the graveyard, its lights were off. He
observed what transpired at the graveyard with the lights from the
houses in the area. However, the lights were not bright. He was
standing at the back of the office at the graveyard and was about
30
metres away from where the appellants were with the deceased.
[17]
Under cross-examination he testified that he could not see the
registration number of the bus
because it was dark. He was adamant
that the bus he saw the previous night was the same bus he saw being
washed the next morning
at the second appellant's place of residence.
In reply to a question as to how he could have seen the occupants of
the bus before
they alighted, he testified that he saw them at the
time the bus was on the road through the streetlights that
illuminated the
area. He further explained that his sister's place of
residence is situated at the corner of the graveyard which is about
30 metres
away from the graveyard and the scene was about 30 metres
from where he was standing.
[18]
Dr Suzan Mabotja conducted the post mortem examination on the body of
the deceased. She concluded
that the cause of death of the deceased
was consistent with ligature strangulation. Her chief post mortem
findings were that the
deceased had features of ligature
strangulation, associated blunt force injuries on the neck and
associated defence injuries on
his right hand. In her evidence she
opined that the injuries she observed on the deceased and noted on
(84.2, 84.3 and 84.4), were
blunt force injuries which could have
been caused by a motor vehicle.
The
defence case
[19]
Both appellants testified and denied the evidence against them. They
raised an alibi that at
the time of the commission of the offence,
they were at their respective homes sleeping. They spent the day of
29 May 2016 together
from the morning. They drove in the Crafter bus
to go and buy the stock for the liquor store of the second appellant.
Subsequent
to their return from buying the stock, they hung out at
the second appellant's place of residence and drank alcohol until
late
afternoon. They then went to Highlands Park to socialise. They
later returned at approximately 6 pm and spent some time together
again at the second appellant's place.
[20]
The first appellant testified that he left the place of residence of
the second appellant before
8 pm and went home. Prior to leaving the
place, Mr Ronslee Morgan, the driver of the Crafter bus, came to
fetch it. The bus belonged
to Mr Neil Dimas.
[21]
During cross-examination the first appellant admitted that he and Mr
Mathonzi know each other
and that Mr Mathonzi also knows the second
appellant. He testified that sometime in March 2016, Mr Mathonzi
threatened to stab
him to death because he accused him of saying
something to the mother of his child.
[22]
The second appellant confirmed that he knows Mr Mathonzi. He denied
knowing the deceased. While he
testified in his evidence-in-chief
that Mr Precious Failos would come and confirm his alibi, during
cross-examination he testified
that he and Mr Failos slept in
different bedrooms. Mr Failos would not know what was happening in
the house when he was asleep.
He denied using or selling drugs. He
testified that he and Mr Mathonzi have children in the same family.
Mr Mathonzi was making
a mistake that he and the first appellant
murdered the deceased.
[23]
He never had problems with Mr Mathonzi. It was put to him that there
can be no reason why Mr
Mathonzi would come and lie about what
happened. He replied that he does not know Mr Mathonzi's intentions
about what he said.
However, there are people who can confirm that Mr
Mathonzi has been sending messages to him demanding payment of an
amount of R8
000,00 to stop him from testifying against them. Mr
Mathonzi also told other people that he would sell his car to pay
him. He told
his legal representative all this information. He also
testified that Mr Mathonzi could have been involved in the murder and
framed
them. He is successful in life and Mr Mathonzi is not.
[24]
Mr Precious Peter Failos testified that he works and resides at the
same place where the second
appellant resides. He sells alcohol. He
knows the first appellant and Mr Ronslee Morgan. He saw the two
appellants at the place
where he works on the day of the incident.
The second appellant gave him the bus keys to hand to Mr Morgan whom
he was told would
come to fetch the bus. Later in the evening at
approximately 7 pm, Mr Morgan arrived and he handed the keys to him.
Mr Morgan thereafter
drove away with the bus. He did not see the bus
again that night. After handing the bus keys to Mr Morgan he
continued selling
liquor. Later on at 10 pm he closed the shop and
retired to bed. He does not know if Mr Morgan returned to the place
in the night.
[25]
Under cross-examination he testified that it was not the first time
that the second appellant
would leave the bus keys with him to give
to Mr Morgan. He conceded that he does not know the day of the
murder. He would not tell
if the day the second appellant gave him
the bus keys, was the same day of the murder. He does not know where
the appellants and
Mr Morgan were on the night of the murder as the
murder was committed at midnight. At the time when Mr Morgan came to
fetch the
bus keys, he did not reside with them permanently. He only
parked the bus at the place where they resided. Mr Morgan used to
stay
at his mother's place and the place is across the street from
where they stay. At the time of testifying, Mr Morgan was residing
with them permanently.
[26]
Mr Ronslee Morgan also testified. He corroborated the evidence of the
appellants regarding the
fact that the second appellant borrowed the
bus from him on 29 May 2016 to go and buy stock for the liquor store
and that he went
to fetch it later. He got the keys from Mr Failos
and did not see the second appellant at the time. After he had
fetched the bus
from the second appellant's place, he went to
Nelmapius to see his girlfriend. Later in the night he came back and
parked the bus
at the shop where the second appellant resides at
approximately 8 pm. He went home with the bus keys. The next morning,
he used
the bus to go to work. He never asked anyone to wash the bus
that morning.
[27]
During cross-examination he testified that he knew nothing about the
death of the deceased and
the involvement of the appellants over
drugs.
The
court
a quo's
findings
[28]
The court
a quo
accepted the evidence of Mr Mathonzi and
concluded that he did not have any motive to implicate the appellants
in the murder of
the deceased. It also found that the evidence of Dr
Mabotja relating to the injuries suffered by the deceased,
corroborated the
evidence of Mr Mathonzi to the effect that the
deceased was pressed against a tree by a motor vehicle. The court
a
quo
rejected the evidence of the two appellants as not being
reasonably possibly true. It found that the appellants planned to
kill
the deceased who was known to them and they ultimately killed
him. The court
a quo
was satisfied that the state proved its
case beyond a reasonable doubt and convicted the appellants of
murder.
Applicable
legal principles
[29]
It is trite law that the
onus
rests on the state to prove the
guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt. If the version of the
accused is reasonably possibly
true, he must be acquitted.
[30]
The powers of a court of appeal to interfere with the findings of
fact of a trial court are limited.
In the absence of any misdirection
the trial court's conclusion, including its acceptance of a witness's
evidence, is presumed
to be correct. In order to succeed on appeal,
the appellant must therefore convince the court of appeal on adequate
grounds that
the trial court was wrong in accepting the witness'
evidence - a reasonable doubt will not suffice to justify
interference with
its findings. Bearing in mind the advantage which a
trial court has of seeing, hearing and appraising a witness, it is
only in
exceptional cases that the court of appeal will be entitled
to interfere with the trial court's evaluation of oral testimony
[1]
.
[31]
Section 208 of the Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977 (the "
CPA
")
provides that an accused person may be convicted of any offence on
the single evidence of a competent witness. It is, however,
a
well-established juridical principle 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
[2]
.
[32]
The correct approach to the application of the so-called "
cautionary
rule
"
was set out by Diemont JA in
S
v Sauls and Another
[3]
,
where he had the following to say:
"There is no rule
of thumb test or formula to apply when it comes to a consideration of
the credibility of a single witness
... The trial judge will weigh
his evidence, will consider its merits and demerits and, having done
so will decide whether it is
trustworthy and whether, despite the
fact that there are shortcomings or defects or contradictions in the
testimony, he is satisfied
that the truth had been told. The
cautionary rule referred to by De Villiers JP in R v Mokoena
1932 OPD
79
at 80, may be a guide to a right decision but it does not mean
that 'the appeal must succeed if any criticism, however slender,
of
the witnesses' evidence was welI-founded ...' It has been said more
than once that the exercise of caution must not be allowed
to
displace the exercise of common sense."
[33]
In
S v
Rautenbach
[4]
,
the Court had this to say:
"The courts have
on more than one occasion noted the difficulties and dangers
associated with uncritically accepting the evidence
of a single
witness, especially one who may have every reason to implicate the
accused, in convicting the accused. Thus the need
to tread
cautiously. However, there is no rule that the evidence, whether
critical to the case or not, has to be rejected because
it is that of
a single witness. Only that it has to be treated with caution.
Consequently, the State is entitled to rely on the
evidence of a
single witness, and the court is obliged to give due weight to it if
the evidence is competent and compelling."
[34]
Where identification is an issue, the evidence that allegedly
establishes the identity of the
person alleged to have committed the
offence should be treated with caution. The oft quoted words of
Holmes JA in
S
v Mthethwa
[5]
remain apposite more than 50 years after he penned them:
"Because of the
fallibility of human observation, evidence of identification is
approached by the courts with some caution.
It is not enough for the
identifying witness to be honest: the reliability of his observation
must also be tested. This depends
on various factors, such as
lighting, visibility, and eyesight; the proximity of the witness; his
opportunity for observation,
both as to time and situation; the
extent of his prior knowledge of the accused; the mobility of the
scene; corroboration; suggestibility;
the accused's face; voice,
build, gait, and dress; the result of identification parades, if any;
and; of course, the evidence by
or on behalf of the accused. The list
is not exhaustive. These factors, or such of them as are applicable
in a particular case,
are not individually decisive, but must be
weighed one against the other, in the light of the totality of the
evidence, and the
probabilities ... "
Discussion
Was
the identification of the appellants as perpetrators proved beyond
reasonable doubt?
[35]
Mr Mathonzi testified that on the night in question, he observed
three incidents. The first one
was when the bus passed him on the
road to the graveyard. He was able to see the occupants in the bus
through the streetlights
that illuminated the area. The second
incident was at the graveyard where he observed what happened for 30
to 40 minutes while
standing at the back of the office about 30
metres from where the appellants were with the deceased. The third
incident was when
the body of the deceased was dumped in the bush
next to a river.
[36]
His further evidence was that when the bus entered and left the
graveyard, its lights were off.
The lights that illuminated the
graveyard were from the neighbouring houses. He conceded that the
lights were not bright. Be that
as it may, he was able to describe
the rope that he observed on the deceased's neck as multicoloured
like the one usually found
on tracksuit trousers.
[37]
He could explain step by step the actions of the appellants, what
each of them did to the deceased
from the time the bus passed him on
the road on its way to the graveyard until the deceased's body was
dumped in the bush near
the river. He had ample time to observe all
what was happening.
[38]
Mr Mathonzi's evidence was criticised that he could not give the
registration number of the bus,
it was dark and therefore he could
not have been able to see what he alleged he observed at the
graveyard. I find this meritless
as Mr Mathonzi testified that there
was light from the neighbouring houses although it was not bright. It
was clear that he knew
the bus and its owner. His evidence about the
owner of the bus was corroborated by the appellants and their
witness, Mr Morgan.
He could therefore not be faulted for not reading
the registration number of the bus.
[39]
In
S v
Abdullah
[6]
,
the Court had this to say:
"... Had the
appellant been a stranger to him, this could have been a significant
factor. However, when seeing a person known
to you, it is not a
process of observation that takes place but rather one of recognition
... The time necessary to recognise
a known face as opposed to
identifying a person for the first time, is very different. It has
been recognised by our courts that
where a witness knows the person
sought to be identified, or has seen him frequently, the
identification is likely to be accurate."
[40]
The identification of the appellants by Mr Mathonzi should therefore
be distinguished from the
identification of a witness who only saw
the perpetrator once at the commission of the offence. Mr Mathonzi
knows the appellants.
He grew up in front of them. The appellants
also admitted knowing him. There can be no doubt that he could have
mistaken them for
other people. The submission by Mr Coetzer that
this case is not about mistaken identity has merit.
[41]
Mr Pistorius referred us in his heads of argument to the judgment in
S v
Charzen and Another
[7]
and submitted that the identification of the appellants by Mr
Mathonzi could not be relied upon. He later conceded that the
judgment
in
S
v Charzen
was
distinguishable in that it relates to the recollection of a person's
appearance whereas in the matter
in
casu
,
the evidence was clear that Mr Mathonzi knew the appellants.
[42]
Mr Pistorius further submitted that Mr Mathonzi had issues with the
appellants and it was easy
for him as a single witness to falsely
implicate them. In persuading us to disregard his evidence, he relied
on the decision in
R
v Mokoena
[8]
where the court held that section 284 of Act 31 of 1917
[9]
should be relied upon cautiously for conviction purposes where the
evidence is clear and satisfactory in every material respect,
and
that such conviction should not follow where the witness has an
interest or bias adverse to the accused, or where they have
made a
previous inconsistent statement, or where they have contradicted
themselves in the witness-box, or where they have not had
proper
opportunities for observation, or where the witness had previously
been convicted of an offence involving dishonesty.
[43]
Mr Pistorius argued that there was evidence from the appellants that
prior to the commission
of the offence, Mr Mathonzi threatened the
first appellant, and when the matter was before the trial court, Mr
Mathonzi attempted
to extort money from the second appellant. There
was also evidence that Mr Mathonzi could implicate the second
appellant because
the second appellant was doing better in life than
him. Furthermore, that he could have committed the murder of the
deceased and
framed them.
[44]
Mr Pistorius conceded that this evidence from the appellants was not
put to Mr Mathonzi when
he testified. However, he argued that this
should not be used to prejudice the appellants. He maintained that it
was evidence before
the trial court, it should have been evaluated
and considered with the totality of the evidence.
[45]
The record shows that this evidence only came out during the cross
examination of the appellants
after it was put to them that Mr
Mathonzi had no reason to falsely implicate them. Coupled with this
evidence, there was also evidence
from the second appellant that he
never had problems with Mr Mathonzi. No evidence was presented to
support the allegations that
Mr Mathonzi could have all the more
reasons to implicate the second appellant because he was doing better
than him and that he
could have committed the murder and framed them.
In our view the trial court correctly rejected these allegations as
they are far-fetched.
[46]
The submission by Mr Pistorius is not persuasive. There can never be
any prejudice to the appellants
where they tendered evidence which
was not put to Mr Mathonzi when he testified. They were legally
represented. In our view the
court a quo was correct in not attaching
weight to that evidence. The court
a quo
cannot therefore be
faulted.
[47]
We find that the court
a quo
correctly found that the
identification of the appellants by Mr Mathonzi was proved beyond a
reasonable doubt and that he did not
have any motive to implicate
them in the commission of the murder.
Contradictions
in Mr Mathonzi's evidence
[48]
Mr Pistorius submitted that there were discrepancies in the evidence
of Mr Mathonzi and the statement
he made to the police.
[49]
It is correct that there were some contradictions in the evidence of
Mr Mathonzi and the statement
he made to the police. As against his
evidence in Court, Mr Mathonzi's statement mentions that on 30 May
2016 in the morning when
he was on his way to church, he saw the same
person who had been assaulted and strangled by the suspects dumped
near the river.
The deceased was wearing the same clothes he was
wearing, the short khaki trousers and a black T-shirt. Further that
when the police
visited the crime scene, he confirmed that it was the
same person strangled by the appellants. In addition, he mentioned
that the
small boy he saw cleaning the lveco bus was unknown to him
and he cannot be able to recognise him if he comes across him. He was
not able to see his face.
[50]
When asked about the contents of the statement he made to the police,
Mr Mathonzi testified that
he spoke Afrikaans when the statement was
taken but it was written in English. He signed it after the police
officer who took it
read it out to him and he was happy with it. He
denied telling the police officer that he was on his way to church to
pray when
he walked past the crime scene. He explained that when he
first saw the deceased in the bus with the appellants, he was wearing
a black T-shirt but when he last saw him where he was lying or when
he was dumped, he did not have a T-shirt on. He denied that
he was
with the police at the scene. Regarding the person he said was
cleaning the bus, he testified that he was his friend.
[51]
The Court in
S
v Mkohle
[10]
held that contradictions
per
se
do
not lead to the rejection of a witness' evidence; they may simply be
indicative of an error. It further held that not every error
made by
a witness affects his credibility; in each case the trier of fact has
to make an evaluation; taking into account such matters
as the nature
of the contradictions; their number and importance, and their bearing
on other parts of the witness' evidence.
[52]
In
S v
Mafaladiso and Another
[11]
,
the court set out the juridical approach to contradictions between
the witness' evidence and his prior statement as follows:
"Courts must
carefully determine what witnesses actually meant to say on each
occasion ... In this regard the adjudicator of
fact must keep in mind
that the previous statement was not taken down by means of
cross-examination, that there may be language
and cultural
differences between the witness and the person taking down the
statement and that the person giving the statement
is seldom, if
ever, asked by the police officer to explain the statement in detail
- It must be kept in mind that not every error
by a witness and not
every contradiction or deviation affects the credibility of a
witness. Non-material deviations are not necessarily
relevant.
Contradictory versions must be considered and evaluated on holistic
basis. Circumstances under which the versions were
made, proven
reasons for the contradictions, with regard to reliability and the
credibility of the witness, questions whether the
witness was given
sufficient opportunity to explain the contradictions and the rest of
the witness' evidence, amongst other factors
to be taken into
consideration and weighed up. Lastly, there is a final task of the
trial judge, namely to weigh up the previous
statement against viva
voce evidence, to consider all evidence and to decide whether it is
reliable or not and to decide whether
the truth had been told,
despite any shortcomings."
[53]
It is our view that the contradictions in Mr Mathonzi's evidence and
his previous statement to
the police are not material and the trial
court dealt with them as such. Its conclusion cannot therefore be
faulted.
Further
contradictions in Mr Mathonzi 's evidence
[54]
Reference was made to Mr Mathonzi's description of the bus as a VVD
bus, a Mercedes and a Vito.
It was submitted that he testified that
he knew the bus but was not able to describe it as a VW Crafter bus.
[55]
During cross-examination when Mr Mathonzi was asked whether the bus
was a VW bus, he replied
that he does not know cars but he was
certain that it was a Mercedes. I must mention that even Sgt
Nemaphkula described the bus
as an lveco bus. Mr Pistorius rightly
conceded that very few people can distinguish between the 30 seater
busses as they are shaped
the same.
Contradictions
between the state witnesses' evidence
[56]
An issue was raised that the trial court failed to consider the
contradictions in the evidence
of Mr Mathonzi, Sgt Nemaphkula and Ms
Susan Ndimane regarding the deceased's clothing at the time he was
found. Mr Mathonzi testified
that when he last saw the deceased, his
upper body was naked. Ms Ndimane testified that when she discovered
the body, its upper
part was wearing a white sleeveless shirt (a
vest) and according to Sgt Nemaphkula's evidence he was wearing a
black T-shirt.
[57]
It is important to note that witnesses do not see things the same
way. The evidence by Sgt Nemaphkula
regarding the clothing of the
deceased in fact corroborates the
viva voce
evidence of Mr
Mathonzi that when he first saw the deceased, he was wearing a black
T-shirt and his previous statement that in
the morning when he
visited the crime scene, the deceased was dressed the same way as he
saw him. It is our view that trial court
dealt with these
discrepancies and having looked at the totality of the evidence, it
correctly weighed the merits and demerits
of the evidence and decided
that despite the contradictions, it was satisfied that the truth had
been told.
Was
Mathonzi's evidence corroborated by the evidence of Dr Mabotja?
[58]
One of the grounds of appeal was that the court
a quo
misdirected
itself by concluding that the evidence of Dr Mabotja corroborated the
evidence of Mr Mathonzi in relation to the injuries
sustained by the
deceased and that that was not the only inference to be drawn. It
appears that when the appeal was argued, this
ground was no longer
pursued. Mr Pistorius conceded that there was corroboration in the
evidence of Dr Mabotja to the evidence
of Mr Mathonzi which related
to the fact that the injuries sustained by the deceased could have
been caused by a motor vehicle
crushing the deceased against a tree.
Did
the court
a quo
err by rejecting the evidence of the
appellants?
[59]
A further criticism of the court
a quo's
judgment was that it
should not have rejected the evidence of the appellants as false
beyond a reasonable doubt as their evidence
was corroborated to a
large extent by Mr Ronslee Morgan.
[60]
There is no
onus
on an accused to prove an
alibi
.
It is the task of the State to disprove it. If the
onus
is upon the State to rebut the
alibi
,
as it certainly is, then the evidence as a whole must be considered
and the fact that the accused and his witness told stories,
which in
some respects disagree, does not mean that the State's case has been
proved beyond reasonable doubt
[12]
.
[61]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
S
v Musiker
[13]
held that once an alibi has been raised, it must be accepted unless
it is proven that it is false beyond a reasonable doubt. The
correct
approach is to consider an
alibi
in the light of the totality of the evidence presented to the court,
as stated in
Mokoena
.
In evaluating the defence of an alibi, Holmes AJA had this to say in
R v
Hlongwane
[14]
:
"At the
conclusion of the whole case the issues were: (a) Whether the alibi
might reasonably be true and (b) Whether the denial
of the complicity
might reasonably be true. An affirmative answer to either (a) or (b)
would mean that the Crown had failed to
prove beyond reasonable doubt
that the accused was one of the robbers."
[62]
Our view is that the evidence of the appellants and their witnesses
does not assist their defence
of an
alibi
. It does not cover
the time the offence was committed. We know for a fact that the
appellants were together on that particular
day and they drove in the
Crafter bus. Having spent the day together they parted ways before 8
pm. The first appellant left the
residence of the second appellant
and went home. According to Mr Mathonzi's evidence the offence was
committed around midnight
on 29 May 2016 to the early hours of 30 May
2016.
[63]
In addition to this evidence we have the evidence of Mr Ronslee
Morgan that when he returned
from his girlfriend's place around 8 pm
on that particular day, he parked the bus at the second appellant's
residence, locked it
and took its key with him to his homestead until
the next morning when he drove in the bus to work.
[64]
Although Mr Morgan testified that things unfolded that way the same
night, he testified that
he knew nothing about the murder. Mr Failos
testified that it was not the first time that the second appellant
would leave the
bus keys with him to give to Mr Morgan.
Further, that the day the second appellant left the keys of the bus
with him, he
would not say if it was the same day of the murder. He
did not know the day of the murder. In our view the court
a quo
having considered the totality of the evidence, correctly found that
the evidence of the appellants was false beyond reasonable
doubt and
rejected it as not being reasonably possibly true. The trial court
did not commit any misdirection in this regard.
Conclusion
[65]
For all the reasons stated above the appeal must fail. Consequently,
the following order is made:
1. The appeal is
dismissed.
M
J TEFFO
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
M
M LENYAI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CJ
Mc ASLIN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Information
Date
of argument
9 September 2024
Date
of judgment
4 February 2025
Appearances
For
the appellants
P F Pistorius SC
Instructed
by
Emile Viviers Attorneys
Pretoria
For
the respondent
P W Coetzer SC
Instructed
by
The Director of Public Prosecutions
Pretoria
[1]
S v
Francis
1991 (1) SACR 198
(A) at 198j-199a in the headnote. See also
S
v Monyane and others
2008 (1) SACR 543
(SCA) &
S
v Hadebe and others
1997 (2) SACR 641
(SCA) at 645
[2]
S v
Stevens
2005 (1) All SA 1
(SCA)
[3]
S v Sauls and Another
1981 (3) SA 172
(A) at 180E-G
[4]
S v Rautenbach 2014 SACR 1 (GSJ)
[5]
S v Mthethwa
1972 (3) SA 766
(A) at 768; see also S v Mehlape
1963
(2) SA 29 (A)
[6]
S v
Abdullah
2022 JDR 0615 (SCA) para 13
[7]
S v
Charzen and Another
2006 (2) SACR 143 (SCA)
[8]
R v
Mokoena
1932 CPD 79
[9]
The predecessor of section 208 of the CPA
[10]
S v
Mkohle
1990 (1) SACR (A), Headnote
[11]
S v
Mafaladiso and Another
2003 (1) SACR 583 (SCA)
[12]
R v
Mokoena
1958 (2) SA 212
(T) at 217G-H
[13]
S v
Musiker
2013 (1) SACR 517
(SCA) para 15
[14]
R v
Hlongwane
1959 (3) SA 337
(A);
[1959] 3 All SA 308
(A) at 339C-D
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