Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1047South Africa
S v Masukunya (CC82/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1047 (15 September 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## S v Masukunya (CC82/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1047 (15 September 2024)
S v Masukunya (CC82/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1047 (15 September 2024)
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sino date 15 September 2024
SAFLII
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number: CC82/2023
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED
DATE: 18 September 2024
In the matter between:
The State
Versus
Tshepo
Thapedi Masukunya
.
JUDGMENT
Strijdom J
[1]
The accused was arraigned on the
following
charges:
(a)
Murder read with the
provisions
of
section
51(1) of Act 105
of 1997.
[2]
The accused pleaded "not guilty"
to the charge of murder, but 'guilty', to culpable homicide. The
state did not accept
the plea of 'guilty' on culpable homicide.
[3]
The
plea
explanation
was
handed
in
as
exhibit
"A".
In
disclosing
the
basis of his defence in terms of
S115
of the
Criminal Procedure Act,
51 of 1977
, he stated that he had assaulted the deceased by hitting
him with open hands and kicking him. He further stated that he did
not
have the intent to kill the deceased and did not foresee that the
deceased will pass away as a result of the assault.
[4]
The following formal admissions were
made by the accused in terms of
S 220
of the Criminal procedure Act,
51 of 1977, and were handed in respectively
as
Exhibit "B" and "C".
4.1
That the deceased is the person
mentioned in count 1 of the indictment, to wit K[..] A[…]
N[…], a minor male and he
was 9 years old at the time of his
death.
4.2
That the deceased, K[…] A[…]
N[…], died between 14 and 15 October 2022.
4.3
That the deceased, K[…]
A[…] N[…], did not
sustain any further injuries from the time he sustained the injuries
until the Medico-legal postmoterm
examination was conducted.
4.4
That Dr Bathabile Soul conducted a
Medico-legal postmortem examination on the body of the deceased K[…]
A[…] N[…]
on 15 October 2022 and recorded her findings
on the form with DR no GP /02- 1753/2022 handed in as Exhibit "D".
4.5
That the facts and the findings of
the Medico-legal postmortem examination of the deceased recorded on
the postmortem
report
are correct.
4.6
That the cause of death of the
deceased, was correctly recorded in the postmortem report as
"Multiple Blunt Force Trauma Chiefly
To The Head With
Consequences Thereof'.
4.7
A photograph album with LCRC no
228/10/2022 compiled by Constable PM Makota, depicting the scene of
the crime and the deceased was
handed in as Exhibit E1 and E2.
4.8
The accused admits that he assaulted
the deceased by hitting him with open hands and kicking him on 14
October 2022.
4.9
He admits that the deceased passed
away as a result of the assault.
4.10
He
admits
that his actions were unlawful and there is no justification for his
actions.
[5]
The crisp issue in this matter is
whether the accused acted with intent to kill the deceased or whether
he acted negligently.
[6]
The State called one witness Dr
Bathabile Soul. Her evidence can be summarized as follows:
6.1
She
testified that she conducted a postmortem examination on the body of
the deceased. She notes injuries from paragraph 4.3 of
the report and
she numbered them alphabetically A to N which are 14 Injuries mainly
sustained on the deceased's head.
6.2
She
further testified that all injuries were caused by blunt-force
trauma. The injuries were so severe that they caused haemorhage
to
the scalp, brain swelling and bleeding. That condition caused the
brain to die.
6.3
She
differentiates, between cause of death and mechanism and concluded
that the assault on the deceased caused the death since it
caused the
bleeding. She further concluded that the injuries on his mouth caused
the decease to breath in blood and he was unable
to breath and that
resulted in his death.
6.4
No
fractures were noted by DR Soul on the rib cage. She recorded that no
bone fractures were observed during the postmortem, and
that the
force applied to the deceased did not lead to any bone fracture.
[7]
The evidence tendered by the accused
can be summarized as follows:
7.1
He testified that on the day in
question, he returned home from a visit to his friends. He had
consumed liquor and was "drunk"
as he was drinking from 4
to 5pm until
8
to 9pm. When
he arrived
at
home,
it was already dark.
He
found the deceased at his home who had hitched a ride on a private
vehicle from hammanskraal
to
the home of the accused. The accused was angered by the action of the
deceased, as he was aware of children "being kidnapped"
7.2
The accused admitted to hitting the
deceased with open hands, and kicking him wearing tekkies (or
sneakers), while he was reprimanding
the deceased. The accused
admitted that he had in fact assaulted the deceased. After the
assault, the accused and the deceased
went to bed sleeping in the
same bed. When accused woke, the following morning, he found that the
deceased had passed away.
7.3
The accused testiied that his
intention had not been to kill his son, the deceased. He testified
that he did not contemplate the
physical condition of the deceased
after he had assaulted him and that he had not thought
to do so. He testified that he did
not see the injuries on the deceased. It was only later that he had
observed the injuries sustained
by the deceased.
7.4
The accused admitted that what he had
done was wrong and that he had excessively
assaulted
the deceased
up to the
child loosing his life.
[8]
It was submitted by the State that
the version of the accused cannot be relied on.
It
was
further
submitted
that
the
way
the
injuries
were
inflicted,
the nature and seriousness of the
injuries point to the direction that the accused had a direct
intention to kill the deceased,
alternatively, that the result of
death was foreseeable.
[9]
It
was
argued
by
the
defence
that
the
State
failed
to
prove
that
the
accused had the necessary intent to kill the deceased. It was
submitted that the accused was negligent in not establishing the
extent of the injuries suffered by the deceased, as a reasonable
person would have done so.
[10] The accused
did not impress me as a reliable witness. There are material
contradictions in his evidence to cast doubt
on his veracity
concerning the actual incident.
[11]
In his evidence in chief the accused
testified that he was 'drunk' when he arrived at home. In his plea
explanation he stated that
he was under the influence of liquor but
not to the extent that he did
not know what he was doing.
[12]
In his evidence in chief and in his
plea explanation, the accused never mentioned the fact that while he
was assaulting the deceased,
the deceased fell twice and bumped his
head twice against the wall. It was only during cross examination
when the prosecutor questioned
him about the laceration on the
forehead of the deceased that the accused came up with this new
version that the deceased fell
twice and bumped his head against the
wall. This version was not put to Dr Soul in cross examination.
[13]
The accused testified that during the
assault on the deceased, it was dark inside
the
house
and
he
could
not
see
the
injuries
or
the
blood.
The
accused answered to a question posed by the court, that the source of
light in the house was a dim solar light. In his evidence
in chief,
the accused did not testify that there was a solar light in the
house.
[14]
In his evidence in chief, the accused
did not testify that during the assault on the deceased, the deceased
went outside the house onto the stoop
and that he had to follow him and drag him back into the house. It
was only during cross examination
when he was confronted with the
blood on the stoop that the accused gave this explanation.
[15]
During cross examination, the accused
was questioned about the blood on the bed, the floor, a T-shirt and
on the stoop. The accused's
explanation
was
that he was injured on his left arm
and blood was dripping from his arm. He also explained
that he used the T-shirt to wipe the
blood on his arm. The accused did not testify in his evidence in
chief
that he was
injured on his left arm.
[16]
There
are
also
the
following
inherent
improbabilities
in
the
accused's
version:
16.1
The accused testified that he could
clearly see that he was assaulting the deceased and he could clearly
see that the deceased fell
twice and bumped his head twice against
the wall. However,
he
testified that he could not see that the deceased was seriously
injured and sustained 14 Injuries which are mainly on the head.
It is
highly improbable that the accused could not see the injuries on the
deceased and the blood under circumstances where they
slept on the
same bed after the assault on the deceased. It is also highly
improbable that the accused was not aware that the deceased
was
seriously injured taking into consideration the nature of the assault
on the deceased.
16.2
It is highly improbable that by
hitting the deceased with open hands and kicking him several times on
his head that the accused
was unaware that the deceased was seriously
injured.
16.3
The accused testified that the
laceration on the forehead of the deceased was caused when the
deceased fell against the wall. If
the accused could see that the
laceration was caused when the deceased bumped his head against the
wall, he could see that the
deceased was seriously injured.
[17]
I reject the version of the accused
that the deceased bumped his head twice against the wall and that the
accused could not see
or was aware of the fact that the deceased was
seriously injured. This version is not reasonably possibly true.
[18]
It
is
a trite principle
that
in criminal
proceedings
the prosecution
must
prove its case beyond reasonable doubt and that a mere preponderance
of probabilities is not enough. It was stated in
S
v Van Aswegen 2001(2) SACR 97(SCA) that:
"A court does not
base its conclusion, whether it be to convict or acquit on only part
of the evidence. The conclusion, which
it arrives at must account for
all the evidence"
[19]
What remains is to determine whether
the accused is guilty of culpable homicide or murder with the direct
form of intent or dolus
eventualis.
[20]
I
am
in
respectful
agreement
with
the
following
statement
by
the Namibian Supreme Court in
S
v Van Wyk 1992(1) SACR 147(NMS)
at
161 e h:
"The state is, from
the nature of things, seldom able to offer direct evidence of the
deceased's state of mind at the time
of assaulting the deceased and
must therefore rely on inferences to be drawn from the circumstances
of the assault (including nature
and duration), the nature of any
weapons used and the nature, position and extent of the injuries
inflicted. These must in turn
be weighed up against any other
circumstances (such as the consumption of drugs or alcohol) which may
indicate that the accused
did not foresee the consequences of his
actions. All the relevant facts which bear on the accused's state of
mind and intention
must be cumulatively assessed and a conclusion
reached as to whether an inference beyond reasonable doubt can be
drawn from these
facts that the accused actually considered it a
reasonable possibility that the deceased could die from the assault
but, reckless
as to such possibility, embarked on or persisted with
the assault".
[21]
On
the
medical
evidence,
the injuries
which
caused
death
were
the
kicking to
the head
of
the
deceased.
The
court
must
look
at
the
assault
as
a
whole in order to determine what the accused's intention was.
[22]
The deceased was a defenceless 9 year
old boy with a mass of 23kg. Dr Soul describe his physique as petite.
On the other hand, the
accused was a 38year old man who was much
larger than the deceased. The assault on the deceased was vicious,
resulting in the serious injuries the
deceased sustained.
[23]
The evidence does not establish that
the accused had the direct intent to cause the death of the deceased.
However, on a conspectus
of all the evidence, I am satisfied that the
accused subjectively foresaw the possibility of his conduct causing
the death of the
deceased and was plainly reckless as to such result
ensuing.
[24]
I find the accused guilty of murder
with dolus eventualis as the form of intent.
Strijdom JJ
Judge of the High Court
Of South Africa
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Appearances
For the State
Adv L Sivhidzho
Instructed by:
OPP
For the Accused:
Adv LA Van Wyk
Instructed by:
Legal Aid
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