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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 1349
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## Jantjies v S (A299/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1349 (6 December 2024)
Jantjies v S (A299/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1349 (6 December 2024)
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sino date 6 December 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: A299/23
DATE:
06 December 2024
JANTJIES
JOHANNES MDLULI
APPELLANT
V
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
FLYNOTES:
Criminal Procedure-statements whether confession or
admission-court a qou correct in finding that the statements are
admissions-
circumstantial evidence-whether sufficient to prove guilt
of the appellant-court a qou correct in accepting the circumstantial
evidence appeal is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
MATSEMELA
AJ: (PHAHLANE J, concurring)
[1]
On the 8 August 2023 the Appellant was convicted in the Magistrate
Court for the district
of Merafong held at Oberholzer on one count of
murder read with the provisions of Section 51(1) or (2) of the
Criminal Procedure
Act 105 of 1977.The allegations were that on or
about the 23 August 2020 at Khutsong the Appellant did intentionally
and unlawfully
kill one Sonnyboy Aubrey Phungula (the deceased). He
was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment.
[2]
The appeal is against the conviction only.
[3]
The state called six (6) witnesses. However, I would deal with
evidence of the 4 (four)
witnesses which I think are of relevance for
this appeal.
[4]
Gustav Modise
(Gustav) testified that on the 8 August 2020 at
about 22HOO, he was with Banyana, Happy, Pringle and the deceased at
Thapelo tavern.
The appellant was also with them at the tavern.
[5]
They left the tavern to go to their homes. The appellant left with
them. The appellant
was walking in front of them.
[6]
On their way to their homes, the deceased took a short cut which went
through the
Appellant's house. Happy, Banyana and himself also took a
short cut. The shortcut that they took its on the house next door to
the house of the appellant. They waited for the deceased to appear on
the other side however he did not appear. They then went to
their
respective homes.
[7]
He went to his home to get a reflector jacket. He is working as a
security at the
nearby church hence the reflector jacket. On his way
to work he went inside Monati Zone tavern. He wanted a lit for his
cigarette.
He sat down and bought one beer.
[8]
Before he can finish his beer Susan came and shouted at him saying
that the person
that he was with has passed on. The person that he
was with is Aubrey (deceased).
[9)
He, Cater and the others proceeded to the place where the body of the
deceased was
lying. After he identified the body, he then went to
call the deceased's' wife and the deceased's best friend Vusi
Simelane (Vusi).
[1O]
They tried to reason as to how did this happen. They looked at
everyone who was nearby the vicinity
and/or who could have been with
the deceased before his death especially those who were in his
company at the tavern. They wanted
to sit down with them, and I
suppose the intention was to interrogate them.
[11]
Everybody who was with the deceased before his death was accounted
for except for the appellant.
They reported the matter to detective
Kekane and started to look for the appellant. They did not find him
that night.
[12]
In the morning when he woke up, they (Happy and Banyana) started to
look for the appellant again.
They found the appellant at his home.
He was seated in the salon. On their arrival the appellant asked them
as to why they were
making noise last night. The appellant looked
frightened. Gustav responded by saying that they were making noise
because they were
looking for him.
[13]
He noticed blood stains on the left side of appellant's jacket. He
also noticed blood stains
in his fingertips. He realised that there
will not be able to manage him and they called detective Kekane.
Detective Kekane told
them to guard the appellant so that he could
not run away. They then left the appellant in the salon to go and
call Vusi Simelane
(Vusi). When they came back after five minutes
with Vusi the appellant was gone.
[14]
As they were looking for him, they managed to get the cell phone
number of his best friend Chappies.
They phoned Chappies who informed
them that the appellant is gambling at Extension 4. They went to
extension 4 and they could not
find him.
[15]
As they were walking, he spotted the appellant jumping the bridge
which separates extension 4
(four) and extension 5 (five). He was the
first person to meet the appellant. The first words to come out of
the mouth of the appellant
was that "
I did a mistake
".
As they were walking along, the appellant did proceed and said that
he and the deceased fought over cigarette. The deceased
assaulted him
with an open hand and he stabbed the deceased with a knife.
[16]
They took the appellant to where the deceased was staying. Inside the
house there was family
members of the deceased and outside there was
a presence of members of the community. He was never assaulted in his
presence. Detective
Kekana arrived. As he was approaching the
appellant went out to go to detective Kekana, he ultimately ran away.
Members of the
community chased him. They apprehended and assaulted
him.
[17]
Constance Mashabane
(Mashabane) testified that the father of
the deceased is a friend of her brother. On the day in question at
about 3H00 AM she received
a call from lvania Lungu. She informed her
that the deceased has been killed. She woke up her son who took her
where the deceased
was staying.
[18]
At about 12H30 the three boys came into the house. One of the boys
was the Appellant. The Appellant
then told her that he killed the
deceased. The deceased wanted some cigarette, and he told him that it
was late. The deceased assaulted
him with an open hand. The Appellant
went to his home to fetch a knife. No one assaulted the appellant in
her presence.
[19]
Piet Vusi Simelane
testified that he was awaken by Gustav who
told him that the deceased had been stabbed. They went to the dumping
site and found
the body of the deceased with a stab wound on the
neck. They went to the Appellants' place and saw blood trail from the
gate to
the dumping site. This motivated them to go and look for the
Appellant. After looking for the Appellant at several places they
finally located him on the bridge the next day.
[20]
He asked him as to what transpired between him and the deceased. He
apologised for killing the
deceased and said he made a mistake. The
Appellant said they had a quarrel, and he fought back. They took the
Appellant to the
deceased's home. They told the family of the
deceased that the appellant confessed to them for killing the
deceased. There was
a lady who attempted to assault the appellant.
Chaos erupted when the appellant was taken outside the house. Members
of the community
chased the appellant.
[21]
Sergeant Kekana
testified that on the day in question was on a
stand-by. He received a call from the police station that he must
attend a murder
scene at Extension 5. Upon arrival at the scene, he
found a corpse wearing a cap. This corpse looked like it was put
there because
it did not look like that the person was attacked and
fell. Even the cap was still with him on the head. He saw only one
wound
and it was on the neck of the deceased.
[22]
Later he received a call around 2H00 PM from Constance who is the
family member of the deceased.
Constance informed him that they had
found the person who stabbed the deceased and gave him the address.
She requested him to come
urgently as the community was in uproar and
wanted to take the law into their hands.
[23]
Upon arrival at the place of the deceased he saw blood on the hands
and the top of the Appellant.
He did not conduct DNA to prove that
the was that of the deceased. The top the Appellant was wearing also
had blood stains.
[24]
He arrested the Appellant and took him to the police station. He then
took him to hospital where
he received medical attention. When they
came back from the hospital interviewed him about the knife which was
used in killing
the deceased. The Appellant told him that he took it
not far from where the remains of the deceased were. He took him to
where
the corpse was found and showed him where threw the knife. He
did explain his rights before they went to point out. They could not
get that knife because the grass was tall.
[25]
During the interview with the Appellant told him that on the day in
question he saw the deceased
knocking at the neighbour's door. He
only offered to knock on his behalf.
[26]
Sgt Kekana read into the record the statement of Sibusiso Soshe who
was now deceased. The paragraph
which is of importance is the one in
which he stated that in the morning (after the incident) Sibusiso
Soshe he was going to work
as usual. As he was passing the
Appellants' yard, he noticed at the Appellants' house substance that
looked like blood on the door,
walls and dropped on the ground. It
looked like somebody was dragging something. The state closed its
case.
[27]
The
appellant
testified in his defence. He testified that he
stays in Extension (5) five. There is an open space next to his home
which is used
as a dumping site. At the time of the incident his home
was not fenced and people would use the yard as a short cut. On the
day
in question at about 22H00, he was at Thapelo Park Tavern. He
bought (2) two beers. He never saw the state witnesses at the tavern.
He did not ask anyone about cigarettes. When he left, he looked back
and did not see anybody.
[28]
He went home, got R500 cash and went to Sam's place which is also a
tavern. He bought a
beer and cigarettes and remained there
until 8H00 the next morning. On his way home he met Gustavo, Vusi and
the girls. Gustav
and Vusi confronted him with allegations that he
killed someone and that the police were looking for him. They
requested him to
accompany them to the house of the deceased.
[29]
Upon arrival he was introduced as the person whom they were looking
for. A certain lady asked
him, why he killed Aubrey. Banyana went out
to call his mother. The lady assaulted him with open hands and threw
a vase at him.
[30]
Gustavo blew a whistle. The community came and assaulted him. He ran
away.
[31]
The police arrived and arrested him. Sgt Kekana later took him to the
hospital. The police came
to his cell and took him to where the
deceased was found. They did not take him to point the knife. While
on the same trip his
grandmother brought him home warmer clothes and
gave his ID book to the police. He never made any admissions to Sgt
Kekana.
[32]
They took to him to the magistrate that winks. He did not go there to
confess but to tell the
truth.
CONFESSION
OR ADMISSION
[22]
In his Heads of Argument, counsel for the Appellant argued that the
confessions made to Mr Gustuv,
Mr Simelane and the family of the
deceased was not made freely and voluntarily. The first question to
answer is whether indeed
these statements were a confession.
[23]
Section 217
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
provides that a
confession shall be done before a Magistrate or Peace Officer and be
reduced in writing and these statements were
not. The court a qou
correctly found that these statements were admissions and not a
confession.
[24]
Section 219
A of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
deals with the
admissibility of admission by an accused and provides as follows:
(1)
Evidence of any admission made extra-judicially by any person in
relation to the commission of an offence shall, if such admission
does not constitute a confession of that offence and is proved to
have been voluntarily made by that person, be admissible in evidence
against him at criminal proceedings relating to that offence .....
[25]
Having said that, the second question to answer is whether these
statements were made freely
and voluntarily Section 35 of the
Constitution provides as follows:
"35. Arrested,
detained and accused persons.-
(i)
Everyone who is arrested for allegedly committing an offence has the
right-
(a)
to remain silent;
(b)
to be informed promptly-
(i)
of the right to remain silent; and
(ii)
of the consequences of not remaining silent;
(c)
not to be compelled to make any confession or admission that could be
used in! evidence
against that person; ......
(5)
Evidence obtained in a manner that violates any right in the Bill of
Rights must be excluded
if the admission of that evidence would
render the trial unfair or otherwise be detrimental to
[26]
It was an issue in the court a qou as to whether the Appellant made
those admissions. The appellant
denied having made those statements.
On several occasions it was put to the state witnesses that the
appellant denies having made
those admissions. It was put to Sgt
Kekana that apart from denying to have made those admissions the
appellant also denies to have
made a point out. This part of the
evidence by the state was never broken down.
[27]
The Appellant cannot deny to have made those statements and in the
same breath say that they
were not made freely and voluntarily. How
else would the above state witnesses know about the cigarette, the
quarrel and the knife
if the Appellant did not mention it to them.
The court a qou quite correctly made a finding that indeed the
appellant made those
statements. Having made a finding that the
Appellant made those admissions and the court a qou therefore, could
not deal with the
issue of free and voluntariness of those
admissions.
CIRCUMSTANTIAL
EVIDENCE
[28]
Counsel for the Appellant argues further in his Heads of Argument
that there were no eye-witnesses
who actually saw the killing of the
deceased by the Appellant. Hence, the State has relied to a certain
extent on circumstantial
evidence, the testimony and version of the
accused, in order to prove the allegations against the Appellant.
Whether the circumstantial
evidence was enough to convict the
Appellant.
[29]
Counsel for the Appellant argued further that the version of the
state was both highly improbable
as well as not credible because
there are contradictions in their versions of the events.
[30]
I am of the view that the court a qou was dealing with two mutually
destructive versions. How
the courts are resolving two
irreconcilable, mutually destructive factual versions is trite. It is
a well-established doctrine
in our law. The court a qou had to
resolve the disputed issues, by making a finding on the credibility
of the various factual witnesses,
their reliability, and the
probabilities. Having assessed the credibility, reliability, and
probabilities, it then, determined
whether the party burdened with
the onus of proof has succeeded in discharging it. See
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and another v Martell & Cie SA and
others para 5, (427/01)
[2002] ZASCA 98.
[31]
The court a quo did not per se convict the Appellant on
circumstantial evidence. It considered
the probabilities.
[32]
Gustav testified that the Appellant told him he was at Thapelo
tavern. The other key witnesses
put the Appellant around 22H00 at
Thapelo tavern on the day of the incident. Mr Gustav would not have
known that the appellant
was at Thapelo tavern unless the appellant
told him so.
[33]
Gustav testified further that while they were looking for the
appellant, they found him at the
salon. The appellant was wearing the
same clothes as yesterday except for the shoes. He noticed that there
were blood stains on
the left side of the jacket of the appellant and
finger nails. The existence of blood stains was corroborated by other
state witnesses
He then called Seargent Kekana, who said they must
keep an eye on him. He left the salon and when he came back after
five minutes
the appellant was gone. Gustav made a good impression to
the court a qou and it accepted his evidence as probable. I agree.
[34]
The state witnesses corroborated each other in all material respects.
I will now deal with the
corroboration regarding the admissions made
by the appellant. Gustav, Seargent Kekane, Simelane and Constance
Mashabane testified
that the appellant admitted to them the following
when questioned:
(a)
He started by apologising and said what he did was a mistake. It was
not his intension.
(b)
He and the deceased had a quarrel about cigarettes.
(c)
The deceased slapped him.
(d)
He went home to get a knife.
[35]
There was a part of Mashabane testimony which contradicted the
testimony of other witnesses. For an
example he should have seen that
the members of the public are assaulting the appellant. However, for
some reason he did not mention
it to the court. The court a qou was
of the view that this contradiction is immaterial. I agree.
[36]
Simelane also made a good impression to the court
a qou
. He
conceded that the appellant was assaulted by members of the public.
This part of his testimony actually shows that he was not
conspiring
with the other witnesses against the appellant. He testified that he
is the one who told the members of the public that
the appellant is
the one that killed the deceased. He took responsibility of what he
did himself. Under cross examination he was
asked whether he knew
that other people phoned the police. He immediately revealed that he
was not sure.
[37]
Mashabane testified that the appellant spoke about the cigarette at
the neighbour's house. She
could not have had this information from
anyone else but the appellant. Her evidence was to some extent
corroborated by Sergent
Kekana. She was never broken down under cross
examination. She testified that she is the one who protected the
appellant from the
members of the public.
[38]
Sgt Kekana testified that at some point he allowed the grandmother of
the appellant to give him
warmer clothes. He even took him to
hospital to get medical attention. This would not be the actions of
the person conspiring with
other state witnesses against the
appellant. He conceded that he was inexperienced insofar as the
homicide cases are concerned.
[39]
It is quite clear that the court
a quo
, and quite correctly
so, accepted the evidence of the State witnesses. In my view, there
existed valid grounds for doing so in
that they were credible
witnesses. Their versions of events are reasonably possibly true.
[40]
I agree with the court
a quo
's finding that the Appellant's
version of events was not reasonably possibly true. I am of the view
that the appellant's version
is a pure fabrication. He lied to the
trial court. The court
a quo
was correct in rejecting his
version.
[41]
The Appellant in his own version tells the court
a qou
that
during his detention, before his first appearance he was taken to the
magistrate that winks for a confession. He wanted to
tell the
magistrate the truth. This was denied by Seargent Kekana. I agree
with the court
a qou's
view that it is not probable that a
suspect will be brought before the magistrate without an indication
that he wished to confess.
Only those suspects who indicated that
they wished to confess are brought before the magistrate for a
confession. If the appellant
told the police that he knew nothing
there will no use to bring him before the magistrate.
[42]
In his evidence in chief the appellant exaggerated his problem of not
being able to use his hands.
He denied that he would be able to hold
a knife. However, under cross examination he conceded that he would
be able to carry a
water bucket. Later on, he even conceded that he
can hold a knife but cannot use it.
[43]
The appellant was confronted under cross examination as to why the
state witnesses know about
their cigarette. He responded by saying
that the state witnesses were conspiring against him. If the state
witnesses were conspiring
against him, why would certain parts of
their evidence differ. The court a qou was correct in rejecting his
conspiracy theory.
[44]
Having said that I should emphasise that the court of appeal should
consider an appeal as set
out in
R v Dhlumayo
1948 (2) SA 677
(A) 696. When an appeal is lodged against a trial court's findings,
the Court of Appeal, takes into account the fact that the trial
court
was in a more favourable position than itself to form a judgment. The
court a qou, was able to observe the witnesses during
their evidence
in chief and questioning, from the beginning to the end. Therefore,
the Appeal Court must assume that the trial
court's findings are
correct. Under normal circumstances a Court of Appeal will accept
those findings unless there is some indication
that a mistake was
made. See
S v Tshoko
1988 (1) SA 139
(A).
[45]
The court
a quo
has weighed all the elements that points
towards the guilt of the accused against those which are indicative
of his innocence.
It has taken into account taking proper account
strength and weaknesses, probabilities and improbabilities on both
sides. Having
done so, it found that the balance of probabilities
weighs in favour of the State to the exclusion of any reasonable
doubt of the
accused's guilt. The court a qou therefore concluded
that the only reasonable inference to be drawn from all the evidence
before
it, which included circumstantial and viva voce evidence, is
that the appellant killed the deceased during the period 25 - 27
November
2017, by stabbing him with a knife. This decision cannot be
faultered.
[46]
In my view, the appeal against conviction cannot succeed.
[47]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
1.
The appellant's appeal against the conviction is hereby dismissed.
2.
The conviction of the appellant by the court a quo is hereby
confirmed.
MOLEFE
MATSEMELA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE GAUTENG HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
I
agree
PD.PHAHLANE
JUDGE
OF THE GAUTENG HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 5 November 2024
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Appellant:
Mr S Moeng
Instructed
by:
Legal Aid South Africa
Counsel
for the Respondent: Adv GP
Harmzen
Instructed
by:
Director of Public Prosecutions
Date
Heard:
03 September 2024
Date
of Judgment:
06 December 2024
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