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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Thwala v S (A175/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 224 (29 January 2024)
Thwala v S (A175/2023)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 224 (29 January 2024)
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sino date 29 January 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A175/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 29/1/24
Signature
In
the matter between:
SIBUSISO
LOURENS NKOSI
THWALA
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Summary:
Appeal against conviction and sentence – Evidence of a single
witness is acceptable if supported by other corroborating
evidence.
The evidence of the appellant is not reasonably possibly true when
regard is had to the uncontested fingerprints evidence.
The single
eyewitness’s identification of the appellant is beyond any
reasonable doubt and the appellant failed to establish
an alibi and
his evidence is false with regard to his alibi. The appellant was
correctly convicted. There were no substantial and
compelling
circumstances shown to exclude the prescribed minimum sentences
properly imposed. There is no legal basis to interfere
with and
disturb the sentence imposed by the Court below. Held: (1) The appeal
is dismissed. Held: (2) The conviction and sentence
are upheld.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J (Baqwa J
and Neukircher J):
Introduction
[1]
Before us is an appeal against the conviction and sentence of Mr
Sibusiso Lourens
Nkosi Thwala (the appellant). The appeal is against
the judgment of the Court a quo per Moloto AJ. The present appeal is
with the
leave of the Supreme Court of Appeal per Mabindla-Boqwana
and Weiner JJA, which leave was granted on 14 February 2023. The
appeal
is duly opposed by the State.
Background
facts and evidence
[2]
Given the limited bases upon which this appeal oscillates, it is
imperative to punctiliously
narrate the background facts and the
evidence appertaining this appeal. The present appeal is grounded on
the contended acceptance
of the evidence of the State witnesses,
despite contradictions and the acceptance of the identification
testimony of a single witness
which the appellant contends, is in
disregard of the cautionary rules. With regards to sentence, the
appellant contends that the
sentence imposed by the Court a quo was
shockingly harsh and that the Court a quo erred by not finding that
substantial and compelling
circumstances existed to justify departure
from the imposition of the prescribed minimum sentence.
[3]
Owing to the grounds advanced by the appellant, the brief salient
facts of this appeal
are that on the morning of 2 April 2013, the
appellant shot and fatally wounded one Mr Mthetho Gquba (the
deceased). On that fateful
morning the deceased and his friend,
Maseko, were driving from Embalenhle heading to their place of work
at Syferfontein. Whilst
so driving at a point, they offered a lift to
three male hitch-hikers (the appellant and his co-assailants). The
appellant and
his co-assailants indicated to Maseko and the deceased
that they were destined to Secunda. At a certain point during the
drive,
one of the assailants paid to Maseko R10.00 (ten rands) and
requested him to stop so that he can alight. It was at this point
that
two of the assailants alighted and one of them opened the front
passenger door. The deceased, who at the time occupied the front
passenger seat, forcefully pulled the passenger door and closed it.
[4]
The appellant remained at the backseat of the vehicle after having
failed to open
the right-hand side rear door. Maseko pulled off the
vehicle and the two assailants who had held onto the passenger door
fell off
the vehicle. In the process of the drive, the appellant
fatally shot the deceased. The appellant ordered Maseko to stop the
vehicle
or else he will shoot him as well. Maseko refused and
continued to drive the vehicle in a zig-zag fashion in an attempt to
draw
the attention of other road users. At a point, the appellant
jumped into the front seats area and tussled and grabbed the steering
wheel away from Maseko, as a result of which, the vehicle veered off
the road into a hill and stopped.
[5]
In the process of the tussle for the control of the vehicle, the
appellant butted
Maseko with the firearm on his head, causing him
some injuries. The appellant alighted from the vehicle and ran away.
He ran into
the bushes and in the process, got stuck in the mud
whereafter he returned to the road and continued to run in an
opposite direction.
Maseko managed to call for help, he identified
the appellant to the members of the public who were walking past the
crime scene.
At some point, a police vehicle arrived, and Maseko
reported the incident to the police occupants of the police vehicle.
He also
pointed out the appellant, who at the time was still running,
to the police occupants.
[6]
The police vehicle gave the appellant a chase, and in a jiffy the
police occupants
returned with the appellant to the scene. Maseko
confirmed to the police that the appellant is the one who fatally
shot the deceased.
Ultimately the appellant was placed under arrest.
In due course, the appellant was charged with (a) murder; (b)
attempted robbery
with aggravating circumstances; (c) attempted
murder; and (d) two counts of contravention of the Firearms Control
Act.
[1]
The appellant was
arraigned before the Court a quo to answer to those proffered
charges. Having pleaded not guilty to all the charges,
the State led
the evidence of about six witnesses (namely, Maseko; Warrant Officer
Ntuli; Constable Mbambo; Captain Ditshego; Sergeant
Joubert; and
Warrant Officer Ras) in order to prove the said charges.
[7]
After having made certain formal admissions, the appellant was the
only witness in
his own defence. Importantly, the appellant admitted
that Warrant Officer Ras obtained test samples from both his hands
with primer
residue evidence collection kit. Additionally, he
admitted that at the crime scene Sergeant Joubert, collected 1 x 9mm
Parabellum
calibre fired cartridge case inside the Nissan Almera (the
vehicle driven and owned by Maseko). Also, the appellant admitted
that
at the government mortuary Warrant Officer Ras received a sealed
bag containing a 1 x 9mm calibre discharged bullet from Dr Du Ploy
who removed it from the body of the deceased during the medico-legal
post-mortem examination.
[8]
During his trial, the appellant was legally represented by Advocate
Joubert. In the
course of the trial, the appellant did not dispute
that there was an attempt to rob Maseko off his vehicle; that Maseko
sustained
an injury on his head as a result of being butted with a
firearm by his assailants; that the deceased was fatally shot while
travelling
with Maseko and the three unknown men were in Maseko’s
vehicle; that the deceased died as a result of gunshot wound; that
a
discharged cartridge was found inside the vehicle and that the
fingerprints were lifted from the vehicle which Maseko, the three
unknown men and the deceased were travelling in; that the said
cartridge was discharged from a firearm picked up in the bushes
shortly after the deceased was shot and not far from the scene; and
that the said fingerprints lifted from the vehicle matched
the
fingerprints that were obtained from the appellant by the
investigating officer.
[9]
The appellant in his defence, testified that on the fateful day, he
was indeed arrested
at the place where the State witnesses testified
he was arrested at. However, on that morning he was from Secunda
destined to Embalenhle.
He was hitch-hiking for a lift from the
vehicles travelling to Embalenhle. To his surprise, he was called by
Captain Ditshego,
and when he looked back white policemen pointed him
with firearms. He was slapped on his face by one of the police
officers, handcuffed
and taken into Captain Ditshego’s vehicle.
He told the police officers who were questioning him that he was from
a nightclub
known as Club 16 situated in Secunda. From the Club he
was given a lift by somebody who was travelling to Winkelhaak and
dropped
him off on the road close to a hiking spot where he continued
to hitch-hike for a lift from the vehicles that were travelling to
Embalenhle. The appellant denied that he was wearing a blue top at
one stage and that he was carrying a blue top just before his
arrest.
He actually denied ever seeing a blue top. He also denied dropping a
pistol before he was arrested.
[10]
As indicated above, the Court below found the appellant guilty as
charged and sentenced him to
life imprisonment for the murder charge,
ten years’ imprisonment for the robbery charge, five years’
imprisonment for
the attempted murder charge, and 15 years for the
contravention of the Firearms Control Act charges.
Grounds
of appeal
[11]
In the main, the appellant predicated his conviction appeal on: (a)
contradictions by State witnesses;
(b) reliability of the evidence of
his identification by Maseko, on whose evidence, he contends the
Court below attached undue
weight; and (c) failure to apply the
cautionary rules in respect of Maseko’s evidence, who was the
State’s solitary
eyewitness. With regard to the sentence
imposed, his gripe is that of harshness and inappropriateness of it,
as well as the disregard
of the substantial and compelling
circumstances.
Analysis
[12]
It is indeed so that the duty of the State in a criminal trial is to
prove the charges beyond
a reasonable doubt. It is also so that where
the version of an accused person is reasonably possibly true an
accused person is
entitled to his or her acquittal.
[2]
Properly considered, the appellant’s defence is that of an
alibi
.
At the time of the commission of the offences, he was, on his
version, at Club 16 or on his way from there. The Supreme Court
of
Appeal in
S
v Musiker
[3]
concluded that once an
alibi
is
raised, the
alibi
has to be accepted unless it can be proven that it is false beyond a
reasonable doubt. As it shall be demonstrated in due course,
the
alibi
of the appellant was proven to be false beyond a reasonable doubt. In
an attempt to bolster his
alibi
,
the appellant sought to challenge his positive identification by
Maseko after his arrest.
[13]
The approach to be adopted by the Courts with regard to
identification was perfected by Holmes
JA in
S
v Mthethwa.
[4]
The erudite Justice correctly suggested that such evidence requires a
cautionary approach. He suggested that honesty by the identifying
witness is not enough. A Court must still test the reliability of his
observation. In doing so, various factors such as lighting,
visibility, eyesight, proximity of the witness, opportunity for
observation and others must be considered. These factors are not
individually decisive, they ought to be weighed one against each
other in light of the totality of the evidence and the probabilities.
[14]
As indicated in
Zondi
,
[5]
the identification must not only be credible but must also be
reliable. Maseko positively identified the appellant after a lapse
of
no time after the incident. Regard being had to the totality of the
evidence, Maseko had spent reasonable time with the appellant
in the
vehicle shortly before shooting the deceased (when he took the lunch
box from the rear seat to the boot of the vehicle and
back and when
he saw his face through the rear mirror of his vehicle) and after the
shooting when he drove the vehicle in a zig-zag
fashion as well as
when they tussled for the steering wheel. Such a traumatic experience
must have indelibly edged the face of
the appellant in the mind of
Maseko, to a point that the probabilities are that few moments later
when the same face, that probably
inflicted trauma on him, is
presented to him, he reliably identified the face. It ought to be
considered that it is the same face
that promised to shoot him if he
does not stop the vehicle. It is also the same face that butted and
injured his head.
[15]
Thus applying the factors suggested by the learned Holmes JA, this
Court has no reason to conclude
that the identification was
unreliable. Indisputably, Maseko was a single eyewitness. Again, the
general rule is that the testimony
of a single witness ought to be
approached with caution. However, it does not follow that a Court
cannot base its finding on the
evidence of a single witness. Where
the evidence, as in this case, is substantially satisfactory in every
material respect and
is corroborated, such evidence can be relied on
to make the necessary findings.
[6]
As indicated above, the evidence of Maseko for reasons already
exposed above is satisfactory in every material respect. Undoubtedly,
his
viva
voce
evidence is firmly corroborated by the fingerprints evidence. There
was incontrovertible evidence that fingerprints were uplifted
from
the vehicle of Maseko on the same day of the incident and those
fingerprints matched those of the appellant. Of course, if
for a
moment, the
alibi
of the appellant is accepted, the key question will be why his
fingerprints were found on the vehicle of Maseko when at all the
material times he was at Club 16 or on his way back when the deceased
was shot. Although his testimony was one of bare denial with
regard
to the dropping of the pistol, a spent cartridge that was found in
the vehicle, which in his version, he never got close
to at any
stage, matched the pistol that was dropped, and the bullet removed
from the body of the deceased matched the spent cartridge.
This
evidence when considered in the light of the undeniable fingerprints
evidence proves beyond any reasonable doubt that the
appellant is the
one who fatally shot the deceased.
[16]
During the cross-examination of Maseko, a half-hearted attempt was
made by the new appellant’s
counsel to cast a shadow of doubt
on the testimony of the fingerprints found on the vehicle. The trial
transcript reveals a long
line of questioning around where Maseko
parked the vehicle and the possibility of the vehicle being touched
by members of the public
This line of questioning did not culminate
to “
I put it to you that the fingerprints of the appellant
were possibly embedded on the vehicle at the mall or some other
place
”. If ever there was any
scintilla
of doubt on
the fingerprints evidence, such doubt was removed by the appellant
when he testified under cross-examination to the
following effect:
“
MR
MOLATUDI
: … Your fingerprints on the vehicle of Mr Maseko
also links you to this offence, perfectly. What is your comment?
ACCUSED
:
There is nothing that I can say about those fingerprints, because at
the end the person who uplifted the fingerprints,
he is an expert.
MR MOLATUDI
:
Hmm. Can you explain then why they were on that car?
ACCUSED
:
There is nothing that there is to explain, because even the expert
explained when coming to this issue of the fingerprints.
He did not
say he uplifted them from the motor vehicle. There may be a chance
that he uplifted them from some other place. So,
there is nothing
there to explain about that. I think the explanation that he gave to
the Court, I mean the Court understand it.”
MR MOLATUDI
:
Are you, suggesting that your fingerprints were not uplifted from the
car?
ACCUSED
:
As I am saying I was not present when he uplifted the fingerprints so
I will not testify about something that I don’t
know.
MR MOLATUDI
:
Are you saying they could be lying about this?
ACCUSED
:
I do not have any comment about that,
I will not say he is lying
.
MR MOLATUDI
:
But you have the right to, to dispute, to say no, those are not my
fingerprints.”
[7]
[17]
When the State counsel pressed on this important issue, the appellant
sought to shift a blame
to a counsel whose services he terminated.
Since Mr Molatudi, the State counsel, was unrelenting like a
Bull
Terrier
, the appellant, after distancing himself from the
versions put by his erstwhile counsel with regard to the possibility
of him touching
the vehicle when Warrant Officer Ras took the primer
residue because he took him closer to the car, ultimately the
appellant testified
thus:
“
MR:
MOLATUDI
: And Mr Maseko was clear in his
evidence when he said when the incident happened he only had the car,
his
car for a week and he never drove it to public places. He parked
it in the garage. It was first time he decided to go to work with
it.
Now the question will be where did you touch it?
ACCUSED
:
I do not have an answer to that question as I have already said
that
I did not touch it.”
[18]
The appellant’s new counsel other than skirting around the
issue of the touching of the
motor vehicle, he never put to the State
witnesses that appellant did not touch the vehicle at all, or the
vehicle was touched
at some place before 2 April 2013. The importance
of putting versions was emphasised by the Constitutional Court in the
matter
of
President
of the Republic of South Africa and others v South African Rugby
Football Union and others.
[8]
Failure
to put a version is fatal, particularly where a party is legally
represented. The appellant having not touched the vehicle
before, it
must axiomatically follow that the only time his fingerprints were
embedded on the vehicle was when he and his co-assailants
attempted
to rob Maseko of his car and when he got into the car and ultimately
fatally shot the deceased. Applying the test in
Musiker
,
the
alibi
of the appellant is proven to be false beyond reasonable doubt. More
recently the Supreme Court of Appeal re-approved, as it were,
its
earlier decision in
Mthethwa
in
Cupido
v S.
[9]
More
particularly, the SCA cautioned that the appeal Court should be slow
to interfere with the findings of the Court below with
regard to the
acceptability of the testimony of a single witness. The erudite
Tokota AJA writing for the majority reasoned thus:
“
[23]
Relying on
S
v Mthethwa
(
Mthethwa
)
the trial court said: ‘after considering the above factors and
the guiding principles set out in
S
v Mthethwa
I accept that not only was Mr Brown honest in his identification of
Cupido but that was also reliable’. It is trite that
the
factual findings of a trial court are presumed to be correct
.
Therefore, a party seeking interference therewith must demonstrate
that there was a misdirection on the part of a trial judge
which can
be clearly identified in order to justify interference with the
findings on appeal The trial court was alive to the fact
that it was
dealing with the evidence of a single witness and properly applied
the cautionary rules
.
Consequently, I hold the view that the credibility findings of the
trial court were justified in that regard…”
[10]
[19]
It is clear from the judgment of the Court a quo that it was alive to
the fact that it was dealing
with the evidence of a single witness.
It resourcefully relied on the authority of
S
v Gentle
[11]
where the SCA pointedly stated that other evidence which supports the
evidence of the complainant tends to render the evidence
of the
accused less probable.
[20]
To the extent that the appellant places store on the contradictions
between State witnesses,
the Court a quo dealt appropriately with
that argument and superbly placed reliance on binding authorities of
S v Mokgotle
and
Sithole v S.
Masterfully, the Court
below, made factual findings that this Court as a Court of appeal is
loath to interfere with. This Court
shares the view of the Court a
quo to the effect that the contradictions do not affect the
credibility of Maseko’s testimony.
Accordingly, this Court
concludes that none of the grounds raised by the appellant drive this
Court to a conclusion that the appellant
was wrongly convicted.
Indeed, the State succeeded in proving its case against the appellant
beyond any reasonable doubt. The evidence
of the appellant is not
reasonably and possibly true and it was correctly rejected as being
false.
Common
purpose
[21]
In his closing address counsel for the appellant submitted regarding
count 2 of attempted robbery
with aggravating circumstances, that the
appellant ought not to have been convicted on that count as attempted
robbery had not
been proved by the state.
[22]
The evidence regarding count 2 was that at some point, one of the
assailants paid R10 and requested
Maseko to stop for him to alight.
Two of the assailants alighted and one of them opened the front
passenger door, pulled the deceased,
and ordered him and Maseko
to get outside the car or else they would be shot. The deceased
grabbed the door and closed
it. The right-hand side door behind
Maseko would not open from inside and as a result the appellant
remained in the car.
[23]
Maseko drove off and the two assailants who held on to the front left
hand side door fell off.
It was at this point that the appellant
fatally shot the deceased. Maseko drove in a zig zag fashion to draw
the attention of other
road users and prevent them from driving past
him. The appellant grabbed the steering wheel after threatening to
shoot Maseko if
he did not stop the vehicle. The vehicle veered off
the road and came to a stop next to a hill whereupon the appellant
alighted
and fled the scene.
[24]
The evidence shows that the assailants, including the appellant were
acting in concert from the
time they stopped Maseko’s vehicle.
They had a common intention to dispossess and rob Maseko of his
vehicle.
[25]
As submitted by counsel for the respondent, Mr Molatudi, the
assailants including the appellant
acted in furtherance of a common
purpose and that the acts of the one became the acts of the other in
terms of the Doctrine of
Common Purpose.
[12]
[26]
In the circumstances the submissions by the appellant’s counsel
regarding count 2 are not
sustainable. Factually and legally the
conviction on count 2 was the correct one.
Sentence
[27]
Turning to the question of sentence, there is no lawful basis for
this Court to conclude that
the sentence induces any sense of shock,
nor it is disproportionate to the offences that the appellant was
found guilty of. As
a guiding principle, the imposition of a sentence
is the prerogative of the trial Court. An appellate Court may not
interfere with
the discretion of the trial Court simply because it
may have imposed a different sentence.
[13]
The only time a Court of appeal may interfere with sentence imposed
is where there has been an irregularity that results in failure
of
justice; the Court below misdirected itself to such a degree that its
decision on sentence is vitiated or the sentence is so
disproportionate or shocking that no Court acting reasonably could
have imposed it.
[14]
This
country is struggling with violent crimes. As a deterrence, Courts
must impose stiffer sentences in order to send a clear
message to the
world of malefactors. The deceased did not deserve to die in the
manner in which he did. As an honest citizen he
was on his way to
work for his family only not to return to his family. Where a
sentence is prescribed statutorily, unless substantial
and compelling
circumstances are shown to exist, the prescribed sentence must be
imposed and cannot be interfered with on appeal.
[15]
Accordingly, this Court finds that the appellant was correctly
sentenced and it shall not interfere with the sentence imposed by
the
Court below
.
[28]
For all the above reasons, I propose that the following order is
made:
ORDER
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
2.
The conviction and the sentence of the appellant
are confirmed.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
(I Agree)
SELBY BAQWA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
(I Agree and it is so
ordered)
Date
of the hearing:
22
January 2024
Date
of judgment:
29
January 2024
APPEARANCES:
For the Appellant:
Mr M G Botha
Instructed by:
Pretoria Justice
Centre, Legal Aid Board.
For the Respondent:
Mr M R Molatudi and
Mrs T R Ndou
Instructed by:
Director for Public
Prosecutions Gauteng, Pretoria.
[1]
60 of 2000.
[2]
Michael
Jantjies v S
[2024] ZASCA 3
(SCA) at para 22
[3]
2013 (1) SACR 517
(SCA) at paras 15-16
(See
also
Zwelithini
Maxwell Zondi v The State
).
[4]
1972 (3) SA 766
(A) at 768A-C.
[5]
Zwelithini
Maxwell Zondi v The State
[2022]
ZASCA 173
at para 14.
[6]
S
v Mahlangu and another
2011
(2) SACR 164
(SCA) at para 22.
[7]
Volume
1 of 7-page 99 line 17 up to page 102 lines 1-2.
[8]
2000
(1) SA 1 (CC).
[9]
[2024]
ZASCA 4
.
[10]
Id
at para 23.
[11]
2005 (1) SACR 420
(SCA) at para 18.
[12]
S
v Mgedezi and Others
[1989]
2 All SA (13) A.
[13]
S
v Hewitt
2017 (1) SACR 309
(SCA) and
S
v Livanje
2020 (2) SACR 451
(SCA). E Du Toit
et
al
Commentary
on the Criminal Procedure Act
(Jutastat RS 66 2021) at Ch30 p42A.
[14]
S v
Bogaards
2013 (1) SACR 1
(CC) at para 41.
[15]
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA) at para 7.
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