Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 447South Africa
Seopela v S (A261/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 447 (3 May 2024)
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and the sentence of the court a quo set aside and replaced with the following: "The accused is sentenced to 10 (ten) years imprisonment."
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Seopela v S (A261/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 447 (3 May 2024)
Seopela v S (A261/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 447 (3 May 2024)
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sino date 3 May 2024
IN
THE HlGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: A261/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/ NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
3 May 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
PIKI
THABO
SEOPELA
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Basson & Millar JJ et Cox AJ
Heard
on:
22 April 2024
Delivered:
3 May 2024 - This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded
to the
CaseLines
system of the GD and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10H00 on 3
May 2024.
ORDER
It
is Ordered:
[1]
The appeal against conviction on both counts 1 and 2 is dismissed;
[2]
The appeal against sentence on count 1 is dismissed; and
[3]
The appeal against sentence on count 2 is upheld and the sentence of
the court
a quo
set aside and replaced with the following:
"The
accused is sentenced to 10 (ten) years imprisonment."
JUDGMENT
COX
AJ (BASSON & MILLAR JJ CONCURRING)
[1]
The appellant was convicted and sentenced by the Gauteng Division of
the High Court,
Pretoria (the trial court) on one count of
premeditated murder whilst acting in common purpose with others and a
second count of
attempted murder for which the court
a quo
sentenced him to life and 20 years imprisonment respectively.
Following a petition he was granted leave to appeal to this Court
by
the Supreme Court of Appeal against both his conviction and sentence
on both counts.
[2]
The central issue in the appeal against conviction is the
identification of the appellant
as the key figure in a mob justice
attack on the victims, and in respect of sentence, that these were
harsh and disproportionate
in the circumstances.
[3]
In the late afternoon of 24 July 2019, a large group of people
arrived at the home
of Mr Innocent Thokozani Dlangamandla (Mr.
Dlangamandla) in lkageng, Mamelodi demanding to know the whereabouts
of his friends.
[4]
Mr. Dlangamandla accompanied the group from his home, to the home of
the deceased,
Mr. Sunnyboy Boykie Kgwedi, in Skierlik informal
settlement. Members of the group forced entry onto the premises where
they found
the deceased's father, Mr. Samuel Moloko (Mr. Moloko) who
directed them to the outside room of the deceased.
[5]
The deceased was taken from his room and as he appeared by the door,
a bottle thrown
by the appellant struck him in his face and caused an
injury. Members of the group alleged that the deceased and others had
stolen
new speakers from Ntjebe's Tavern.
[6]
The appellant was in possession of a megaphone and used it to give
the group instructions.
He told them to bring the deceased and they
left with him. They left the premises with both Mr. Dlangamandla and
the deceased and
headed towards a railway line. On the way to
and at the railway line, both were assaulted with an assortment of
objects,
including sticks, bricks, and an iron rod. They were kicked
too.
[7]
Mr. Dlangamandla testified that the appellant assaulted him. He was
hit with an iron
rod on his upper arm, multiple times on his back
when he fell to the ground and also on the left side of his head.
Whilst he lay
on the ground, he also saw the deceased being assaulted
with the same rod. Whilst hitting the deceased the appellant said
that
"they were going to die". Mr. Dlangamandla
subsequently lost consciousness and only regained this in hospital.
He did
not recognise anyone but the appellant in the group.
[8]
Mr. Lethabo Kgwedi (Mr Kgwedi), the grandson to Mr. Moloko and the
nephew of the deceased
also testified. He saw a group of people and
followed them to see what was going on. From a distance of about 4
meters, he observed
the assault on the two victims. His evidence was
that both were assaulted by the appellant who used a stick, which
broke, while
he was assaulting Mr. Dlangamandla.
[9]
The beating of the deceased continued and the appellant announced
over the megaphone
that the deceased was going to be burnt at the
dumping site and a tyre was placed around his neck.
[10]
Mr. Kgwedi had gone to and fro from the scene to his home, three
times as the events unfolded, urging his family to summon
the police
and thereafter to establish whether the police were on their way as
he was concerned for the life of the deceased.
[11]
Having returned the third time, he found that the tyre had been
removed from the deceased and
that he was unconscious. He was on his
way home for a fourth time when he met the police accompanied by his
mother. The police
arrived on the scene and took control.
[12]
The post mortem examination revealed that the body of the deceased
had sustained numerous injuries
and that his death was caused by the
head injuries he had sustained.
[13]
The appellant offered an alibi as his defence. It was put to the
state witnesses that he was
at his girlfriend's tuckshop, packing
stock and that he could thus not have been part of the group that
committed the offences,
as alleged.
[14]
There is no onus on the accused to prove his alibi. It is for the
state to disprove it. It follows
that the court must consider whether
the identity of the accused, as a member of the group was proved
beyond a reasonable doubt.
These are two mutually destructive and
irreconcilable versions.
[15]
Whenever identity is in issue, the cautionary rules applicable
thereto must be applied to the
evidence of the identifying witness.
This means that the court must consider the evidence to establish
whether the circumstances
under which the identification was made,
was sufficiently reliable for the witness to have made that
identification
[1]
of the
perpetrator.
[16]
Mr. Moloko, Mr. Kgwedi and Mr. Dlangamandla were all identifying
witnesses who placed the appellant
in the group and identified him as
the leader thereof. Both Mr. Kgwedi and Mr. Dlangamandla in addition
testified that they had
witnessed the appellant assaulting both the
deceased and Mr. Dlangamandla.
[17]
Counsel for the appellant did not seriously place in issue the
identification of the appellant
by Mr. Kgwedi and Mr. Dlangamandla
and had some difficulty explaining why it was never put to either Mr.
Moloko that the appellant
would deny his presence in the group on the
day or to Mr. Dlangamandla that the appellant would testify about an
alleged motive
on his part for testifying to falsely implicate the
appellant.
[18]
From the evidence it is apparent that both Mr. Kgwedi and Mr.
Dlangamandla knew the accused before
the incident. It is common cause
that the time span of the incident was several hours, having
commenced at approximately 16h00
and ending at about 20h30.
Visibility was not an issue as there was some hours of daylight
before nightfall and neither of the
two nor Mr. Moloko had any motive
to falsely implicate the appellant.
[19]
In
R v
Dladla
[2]
,
Holmes JA, stated 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".
[20]
Mr. Kgwedi's uncontested evidence was that he knew the appellant by
sight as they lived in the
same street and that he had seen him when
he visited Ntjebe's Tavern whereas Mr. Dlangamandla stated that he
would regularly see
the appellant at an office in the street where he
stays. His evidence was that the appellant worked at the office. They
referred
the court to the fact that the appellant would usually wear
sunglasses as he had a problem with his right eye, a fact
corroborated
by Mr. Moloko.
[21]
The appellant was critical of the trial court for taking into
account, what is termed the
'dock
identification'
,
of the appellant by Mr. Moloko. In his heads of argument, counsel for
the appellant, argued that it ought not to have been admissible.
A
dock identification is admissible into evidence. It is the
reliability and evidentiary value thereof that must be determined.
Dock identification must be approached with caution and generally
carries little weight unless there was an independent preceding
identification.
[3]
At the time
of the identification in court Mr. Moloko did not summarily point out
the appellant, but also had a look at other people
in the gallery
negating the danger of identifying the appellant just because he was
in the dock. His identification of the appellant
was corroborated by
both Mr. Kgwedi and Mr. Dlangamandla and is beyond reproach.
[22]
Mr. Moloko also testified that he may have been able to identify
other members of the group, should he have seen them
subsequently. On
the day of the incident, his attention was drawn to the appellant, by
virtue of him having the megaphone in his
possession. Furthermore, it
is noteworthy that his evidence that he knew the appellant by sight,
was never contested. Similarly,
it was common cause that the
appellant had a problem with his right eye, a feature about which the
other witnesses also testified.
[23]
The inability of the witnesses to give a description of the
appellant's clothing that he wore
during the incident is no reason to
question the veracity of the identification of the appellant.
'This
type of detail takes on far less significance once the appellant was
a person well known
,'
[4]
as was established in the
matter before us.
[24]
In my view, there was no misdirection on the part of the trial court
in accepting the evidence
identifying the appellant as both a member
of the group as well as a perpetrator of the assaults on the day in
question.
[25]
In
Machi
v The State
[5]
the approach adopted in
R
v Dladla
was confirmed and in that case, similar to the present (for the
reasons set out above) the court found that there was no room for
error as far as the identity of the perpetrator was concerned.
[26]
The appellant contends that the witnesses fabricated evidence against
him by placing him on the
scene of the incident. He also argued that
the contradiction between Mr. Kgwedi and Mr. Dlangamandla about the
object used by the
appellant to assault the victims rendered their
evidence unreliable. I cannot agree with that proposition. Not all
contradictions
in the evidence of witnesses in a case are material.
In the present matter, Mr. Kgwedi testified that he was standing some
4 meters
away from where the assaults were taking place. His evidence
as to the appearance of what was being used for purposes of the
assault
must be viewed in that light. The evidence of Mr.
Dlangamandla, who was in much closer proximity, and was assaulted,
carries greater
weight for that very reason.
[27]
The powers of an appeal court are limited when it comes to findings
of fact. In
S
v Bailey
[6]
the power to interfere was set out as follows:
"In order to
succeed on appeal the appellant must therefore convince us on
adequate grounds that the trial court was wrong
in accepting the
evidence of the State witnesses - a reasonable doubt will not suffice
to justify interference with their findings."
[28]
The court
a quo
was cognisant of the contradiction that was
pointed out and was satisfied that it did not taint the reliability
of the state witnesses.
They, in fact corroborated each other in all
material respects. In my view, the consideration, evaluation and
acceptance of the
evidence led on behalf of the state by the trial
court, cannot be faulted and for this reason, the appeal against
conviction on
both counts 1 and 2 are without merit.
[29]
The imposition of sentence lies within the discretion of the court.
Courts of appeal are therefore
reluctant to interfere with a sentence
unless the trial court misdirected itself or imposed a sentence that
is shockingly inappropriate
in the circumstances.
[30]
In respect of the count of murder, the appellant was sentenced to
life imprisonment.
[7]
For the
count of attempted murder, the appellant was sentenced to 20 years
imprisonment.
[31]
The murder of the deceased was a heinous one. The deceased was
continuously assaulted by a group
of people with an assortment of
objects over a prolonged period of time. It was also suggested that
he should be burnt alive and
a tyre was placed around his neck. The
amount of pain and suffering of the deceased must have been
tremendous and is immeasurable.
[32]
Incidents of mob justice in any form must be discouraged at all
levels.
[33]
The assault of Mr. Dlangamandla was just as serious. However, he was
fortunate enough to have
survived.
[34]
It was argued for the appellant that the sentences were too harsh but
as stated previously, this
is not the test. The trial court
considered the purpose of sentence which includes retribution for the
crimes committed, deterrence
of the appellant and would be offenders
from committing similar offences and the prevention of further
criminalisation of the appellant
together with the prospects of his
rehabilitation.
[35]
The court
a quo
, also took into account the personal
circumstances of the appellant as well as the nature and seriousness
of the offences and the
interests of the community.
[36]
I find that there was no misdirection by the trial court in
concluding that that no substantial
and compelling reasons existed
which permitted a departure from imposing the prescribed minimum
sentence of life imprisonment for
the murder.
[37]
I am however of the view, that despite the serious nature of the
assault on Mr. Dlangamandla,
that the imposed sentence, while
correctly warranting incarceration, induces a sense of shock and
warrants interference insofar
as the length of time of such
incarceration is concerned. In my view, the court a quo ought more
appropriately to have imp sed
a sentence on the conviction of
attempted murder on imprisonment for 10 years.
[38]
I therefore propose the following order:
[38.1]
The appeal against conviction on both counts 1 and 2 is dismissed;
[38.2]
The appeal against sentence on count 1 is dismissed; and
[38.3]
The appeal against sentence on count 2 is upheld and the sentence of
the court
a quo
set aside and replaced with the following:
"The
accused is sentenced to 10 (ten) years imprisonment."
I
COX
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
AGREE AND IT IS SO ORDERED
A
BASSON
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
AGREE
A
MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
22
APRIL 2024
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON:
3 MAY
2024
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANT:
ADV.
P MABILO
INSTRUCTED
BY:
PH
NKOSI ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
PHN/PTS/2020
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
ADV.
C PRUIS
INSTRUCTED
BY:
THE
STATE ATTORNEY,
PRETORIA
REFERENCE:
NOT
FURNISHED
[1]
S v
Mthethwa
1972 (3) SA 766 (A).
[2]
1962 (1) SA 307
(A) at 310C-E.
[3]
S v
Tandwa & Others
2008 (1) SACR) 613 (SCA).
[4]
Abdullah
v The State
(2022]
ZASCA 33 (31 March 2022).
[5]
[2021] ZASCA 106
para 27.
[6]
2007 (2) SACR 1 (C).
[7]
In terms of
s 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
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