Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 104South Africa
Khumalo v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 104; A114/2021 (17 February 2023)
Headnotes
that N [....] was at the scene where his vehicle was recovered. If one were to follow the rule that says the court takes the record as is, then this part of the evidence on record wipes the whole evidence of N [....] at the scene. I will however not follow this rule because
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Khumalo v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 104; A114/2021 (17 February 2023)
Khumalo v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 104; A114/2021 (17 February 2023)
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sino date 17 February 2023
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: A114/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
In
the Appeal of:
SPHAMANDLA
KHUMALO
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
This
judgment is issued by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is
submitted electronically to the parties legal representatives
by
email. The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file on
Caselines by the Judges secretary.
JUDGMENT
LESO
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
On the 6th of March 2019 the appellant leave to appeal against the
conviction and sentence which was dismissed by the
court a quo
.
The appellant has now filed an appeal against his conviction and
sentence.
BACKGROUND
[2]
On 14 December 2018 the appellant was convicted on a count of robbery
with aggravating circumstances as defined in
Section 1
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
read with
Section 51(2)
of
Criminal
Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
by Magistrate Du Plessis at Tsakane
Regional Court. On 22 February 2019 the appellant was sentenced to
fifteen (15) years imprisonment
and declared unfit to possess a
firearm in terms of
section 103
(1) of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of
2000
.
[3]
I wish to state that record of the and reconstructed evidence was
difficult to follow, specifically the evidence of M [....]
who was
the first witness where the magistrate even commented that are no
notes on the morning of 6 February 2018 and he had to
replace the
record with his electronic notes.
GROUND
OF APPEAL
[3]
The appellant's grounds of appeal are summarised as follows:
3.1 It is submitted that
the trial court erred in ruling that the appellant had properly
identified by M [....];
3.2
that court
a quo
did not treat M [....]’s evidence with
the necessary caution;
3.3
that the court
a quo
did not place sufficient weight on the
above contradictions in the evidence of M [....] and M [....] 1;
3.4 The
magistrate erred in ignoring the material contradictions between
accused 2 and T [....] M [....] 1;
3.5
that there is doubt in the state’s case because the state
witnesses were not coherent.
THE
STATE CASE
[5]
The evidence of B [....] M [....], F [....] N [....], T [....] M
[....] 1, T [....]
1 M [....] 2, T [....] 1 N [....] 1 as far as it
relates to the appellant as summarised below.
The
evidence of M [....]
[6]
This witness testified that while he was driving at
section 6
Vlakfontein he was hijacked by the appellant and accused no.3
according to him he could identify them firstly because the appellant
sat in the front seat and he turned around to open for accused no.3
to sit at the back because the passanger door was not opening
from
the outside. Secondly, while he was driving on a gravel road the
appellant turned as if he was looking for something which
he thought
was money but it was a knife, when he looked at the back and he saw
accused no.3 pointing a firearm at him. I wish to
remark instantly
that the fact that the witness identifies the two assailants who he
had picked from the street and he was seeing
for the first time as
accused no.1 and accused no.3 caught my attention. Unfortunately, the
appellant’s representative did
not follow up on that evidence
nor did the court raise any concerns.
[7]
The witness said that the owner, N [....] told him to go to Duduza
Taxi rank then
from there he went to the house of N [....] who later
joined him and they both went to the place where the vehicle was
spotted
by the tracker officials. There they found accused no.1 and
no.2 inside the police van he then identified the appellant
identified
as accused no.1.
The
evidence of F [....] N [....]
[8]
Th e witness confirms receiving a call about the hijack of his
vehicle from his driver,
M [....] and from the tracker officers. He
disputes the evidence of M [....] that he went with him to the place
where the vehicle
was recovered. He version is that he followed a
lead from tracker officers with his colleagues from the taxi
association. When
they arrived at the place where his vehicle was
spotted by the tracker accused no.1, the appellant was in the front
passenger’s
seat, accused no.2 was outside the hijacked vehicle
and accused no.3 was reversing. He said they only apprehended the
appellant
and accused no.2 because accused no.3 ran away, Metro
police came and they handed them to the police. He disputed M [....]s
evidence
that the appellant and accused no.2 were already in the
police van by insisting that his colleagues and himself apprehended
the
appellant and accused no.2.
[9]
The prosecutor asked him whether he went to the scene with his driver
and his answer
is captured as follows: “
I was never on
the scene
”(my emphasis). This inscription in the record
is obviously incottect because It is clear from the above summary
that N [....]
was at the scene where his vehicle was recovered. If
one were to follow the rule that says the court takes the record as
is, then
this part of the evidence on record wipes the whole evidence
of N [....] at the scene. I will however not follow this rule because
of it is not in the interest of justice to ignore the shortcomings
and the visible mistakes in the record as I have already commented
about the state of the record in paragraph 4.
Evidence
of T [....] 1 M [....] 1
[10]
The witness testified that he could identify the appellant because
he, the appellant, accused
no.2 and no. 3 slept at accused no.2
house and the appellant and accused no.3 came in the morning
with the stolen vehicle. This evidence was denied by accused no.2 and
both the accused. The witness testified that accused no.2 give him
R20 to buy a cigarette he described the cigarette as a pill
called
“mandrax” when he was home from accused no. 2 house heard
the sound of a chopper. He admits that the hijacked
vehicle was found
in his yard but he said it was reversed into his yard by accused no.
2 who got out of the vehicle and ran together
with the appellant into
his shack. He said the officers from tracker found the appellant with
a toy gun and when police came with
accused no.1 looking for a gun He
said later and told the police he did not see any firearm but there
was a toy gun laying somewhere
and he was beaten. He denied
involvement in the hijacking and he disputed the evidence of accused
number 1 that accused 2 sells
dagga.
Evidence
of T [....] 1 Matikinta
[11]
The witness testified that the appellant and accused no. 2 were
handed to him by N [....] who
told him one of the suspects ran away.
He confirms that N [....] told him that he found Accused no. 1 and
no.2 in the car.
Evidence
of
T [....] 1 N [....] 1
[12]
This witness confirmed the M [....] 1 and
appellant s testimony on the search of a gun at M [....] 1s home
where M [....] 1 told them that accused no.3 was Lowanbo Nasareth and
they went to look for accused no.3. This evidence is relevant
because
throughout his testimony T [....] 1 M [....] 1 claimed that he did
not know the 3
rd
accused.
THE
APPELLANT’S EVIDENCE
[13]
Sphamandla Khumalo testified in his defence as follows: that on his
way to work he stopped at
accused no.2’s house to buy dagga
then he went to the shop to buy two cigarettes and gave accused no.2
R8 for dagga because
accused no.2 did not have a change. when accused
no.2 went to fetch dagga, he heard a sound of a helicopter then
accused no. 2
told T [....] M [....] 1 who was in the house not to
run but T [....] ran out of the house. He heard a gunshot and when he
went
to investigate he was apprehended by tracker officials and he
was taken to the Metro Police officer by the name of Justice who took
him and accused no.2 in the police van.
[14]
The appellant denied any involvement in the robbery, he denied
sleeping at accused no.2’s
house, he denied being in the
company of accused no. 3, he denied that he was in the hijacked
vehicle, he said that he cannot drive
a car and he insisted that he
told the police that he went to accused no.2 to buy dagga. He does
not dispute the arrest but denied
that he was positively identified
by the complainant because according to him the complainant looked at
him and he said “
it could be him
”. According to
the appellant, he saw N [....] at Tsakane Court the first time and he
saw T [....] M [....] 1 and accused
no. 2 when he was buying dagga.
He said the Tracker officer found dagga at the accused no.2 house but
he does not know what happened
to it because they were put in the
police Van. He denied that there was a third person at accused no.2’s
house.
ANALYSIS
OF EVIDENCE
[15]
The court a quo relied on circumstantial evidence in its finding that
the appellant is guilty
of the offense of robbery with aggravating
circumstances. This court will interfere with the factual finding of
a trial court if
the magistrate committed a misdirection on facts.
[16]
The magistrate incorrectly relied on the above evidence that Mandela
had identifiedd the appellant.
There are factors which the magistrate
is compelled to observe when testing the reliability of
identification and those are listed
in
S
v Mthethwa
[1]
where it was held that “
because
of the fallibility of the 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
the various
factors such as
lighting; the proximity of the witness; opportunity of observation
and the extent of prior knowledge of the accused and corroboration
of
witnesses.
[19]
The observation of the appellant by M [....] must not pass the test
of positive identification
if not all factors as held in
Mthethwa
are not present. Similarly, the identification of the appellant does
not pass the test and should not be considered. This witness
could
have been close to the assailant (s) but the fact is that he was
seeing them for the first time when he picked them up from
the side
of the street should create a doubt on positive identification. I
doubt that he had an opportunity to observe the asailiant
taking into
account all the activities that demand one's attention while driving.
The appellant’s attorney and the respondent's
counsel are
correct in their submission when they argued that the observance of
the appellant occurred in a moving scene. The evidence
of the second
identification lacks validation because N [....] denies that M [....]
was at the scene at which he claims to have
pointed the appellant.
Even if we were to accept that M [....] was at the scene he does not
describe how he identifies the appellant
as the person who robbed
him.
Makinita
contradicts the evidence of M [....] whio says the appellant and
accused no.2 were already in the police van when they arrived.
[20]
section 208
provides
that a conviction may follow on the evidence of a single competent
witness however the principle our law is that the evidence
of a
single witness must be approached with caution and
M
[....]’s evidence on the identification of the appellant should
have been treated with caution as it was found in
S
v Stevens
[2]
that
an accused may be convicted of any offence on the single evidence of
any competent witness. However, it is trite that …the
evidence
of a single witness should be approached with caution, and his or her
merits being weighed against factors which militate
against his or
her credibility
".
[21]
During cross-examination by accused no.1 attorney and re-examination
by the prosecutor N [....]
could not remember whether he went with M
[....] to the scene. I do not doubt that the magistrate was aware of
this contradictions
in the evidence of the two witnesses because in
his judgment he states the following “
I got the impression
that N [....] wants to be the hero in this case and even tried to
make it better by stating that accused no.2,
he also forgets that his
driver mandela was at the scene
”. Despite the above
observation the magistrate does not make any credibility finding on
this witness but he instead justify
the witness's sudden amnesia. On
the issue of arrest of the appellant and accused no.2 N [....]
insisted that the appellant was
found inside the hijacked vehicle
while accused no. 2 was outside the vehicle when M [....] insisted
that he went with N [....]
to the scene and they found the appellant
and accused no. 2 already arrested in the police van. M [....] 1 also
give a different
testimony in this regard, he testified that the
appellant was arrested by Metro police officials in the shack however
N [....]
denied that the appellant and accused no. 2 were arrested by
Metro police officials and insisted that he and his colleagues handed
the accused to Metro.
[22]
It is clear that the finding was based on the incoherent evidence of
N [....] and M [....] the
magistrate also found that M [....] was
taken from N [....]’s house to where the car was found and they
found accused 1 and
two and identified accused 1 as a knife-wielding
robber but stated that he did not know accused 2. It was incorrect
for the court
a quo to put any reliance or weight on the evidence of
M [....] 1 because of the challenges in Mokena’s who also
admitted
that he was a suspect who was beaten by the police when the
police were looking for a gun at his place.
[22]
When he
was
asked about the issue of the gun M [....] 1 started mumbling to the
extent that the court officials could not hear what he was
saying.
The magistrate also could not follow his mandrax story as
he
made the following comment “
just
find out what he is trying to say
”.
During cross-examination when he was asked to describe the toy gun
which he alleged to have been in possession of the appellant
he
answered that he did not see the gun clearly because the appellant
had hidden it in the t-shirt. When the inquiry about the
toy gun
intensified the witness could not answer the questions until the
interpreter comments as follows: ‘’
your
worship I do not know if this man is frightened or afraid to answer
but I cannot hear
,
I
do nor understand what he is saying, even the stenographer with the
headphones cannot hear him
”.
During cross-examination, he said he made the statement and said he
will take the police to where the appellant and 2 put
the gun. This
evidence does not make sense because this witness had said the
tracker officials found the appellant with the gun
which he could not
describe.
[24]
It I clear from the above dicusion that the testimony and M [....] 1
and N [....] differ on the
issue of the arrest of the appellant and
accused 2 while accused no.2 evidence coincides with the evidence of
M [....]. N [....],s
evidence does not make sense because he denies
that Metro police and tracker officials were already at the scene
when he arrived
with his colleagues even though he was called by them
and he heard gun shot when he got to the scene. On the other hand M
[....]
did not say anything about N [....]’s colleagues being
at the scene. I do not doubt that the magistrate was alive to the
fact that the state case was larking and that were material
contradictions in the state’s case that are irreconcilable
because
in his judgment he said the following “
the state can
be criticised for not calling the officers probably from tracker who
fired shots and clearly assisted in the arrest
as it might have
cleared up a lot of issues that arose at the later stage
”.
[25]
The magistrate made a finding against the testimony of N [....] that
M [....] arrived at the
scene and over an hour he identified the
accused at the address where the vehicle was found and he continues
by stating the following:
“
I got
the impression that Mr N [....] wants to be the hero in this case and
even tried to make it better by stating accused to make
the case even
stronger. This is highly unlikely in the presented scenario o a
helicopter hovering over and authorities closing
inn. He also forgets
that the driver M [....] was at the scene of the arrest where he
pointed accused 1 as one of the robbers
”.
He summarised N [....]’s evidence as follows:
“
colleagues and tracker personnel pounced on the premises
where the car was and noted that the vehicle was driven by someone
whom
they assumed it was accused 3 and accused 1 was in the front
passenger seat and accused 2 was standing outside next to the
vehicle
”. The magistrate does not commend on the
contradictions with M [....] who said the accused were already in the
police van
nor was there any comment made to the fact that N [....]
who actually denied the involvement of tracker officials in the
arrest
of the appellant and accused no.2.
[26]
The magistrate incorrectly rejected the evidence of the appellant on
the basis that the appellant
said dagga cost R9 while he gave accused
no.2 R8. He then made the following commend, ..
it
is strange that accused 2 will risk losing business by not having
change available for his merchandise to be sold, if accused
2 was a
drug dealer I think he would rather admit it as it might be a less
serious offense
.
I do not what to make of this comment save to state that this
inference is misplaced and has no basis. On the flip side, accused
no.2 would not have admitted to dealing with drugs because that
evidence would not have assisted his case in any way.
The
appellants pleaded not guilty and he denied having committed the
offence of robbery.
[27]
Having said the above I found
no
basis for the rejection of the appellants version. In
S
v Shackell
[3]
where the court remarked that “In view of the standard of
proof, the court does not have to be convinced that every detail
of
the accused version are true. If the accused version is reasonably
possibly true in substance, the court had to decide the matter
on the
acceptance of that version. The accused version can only be rejected
on the basis of inherent improbabilities, not because
it was merely
improbable but because it was so improbable that it could not
reasonably possibly true. In the criminal the trial
the accused does
not have to prove his innocence. What is expected of him is to give
the court the version that is reasonably possibly
true. The court
does not have to believe that his version is truthful court a quo
erred in ruling that
the
appellants’ version is not reasonably possibly true
’.
I
t
is not for the appellant to prove that he is innocent but it is for
the state to prove that the appellant is guilty beyond a reasonable
doubt.
[28]
On the issue of evidence on the arrest of the accused the respondent
argued that circumstantial
evidence indicates that the appellant was
at the scene and he is person who robbed the complainant because
there is no part of
the complainant’s evidence that can be
criticised to a point that it failed the test in terms of
section 208
of the
Criminal Procedure Act of 1977
. This argument is misplaced
because
section 208
applies to the admission of evidence of a single
witness. The evidence relating to the fact that the appellant was
found at the
scene was not disputed as tendered by several state
witnesses and the appellant who had tendered a version where he
explained his
presence at accused 2’s house. The respondent
avers that the magistrate had managed to put all pieces from the
circumstantial
evidence to convict the appellant. From the analysis
of the whole evidence there is no evidence either by the state or
appellants
that anyone could piece together save to indicate that the
state evidence is at its worse state.
T
he
magistrate made a mistake by solely relying on the timelines between
the time of the robbery and the arrest of the appellant
and accused
no.2 and not considering the totality of the evidence. The magistrate
does not make a credible finding nor does he
attempt to balance or
test the veracity of the state's evidence especially the evidence of
T [....] 1 M [....] 1 and N [....]
.
[29]
In
S v Monyane and Others 2008(1)
SACR 543(SCA)
the court said the
following: “bearing in mind the advantage that the trial court
has of seeing, hearing and appraising a
witness, it is only in
exceptional cases that this court will be entitled to interfere with
the trial court’s evaluation
of oral testimony”.
The
court has to analyse all the evidence to determine the probabilities
and improbabilities of the witnesses' versions the inconsistencies
and corroborating testimonies and the credibility of the witnesses
which the court found in this matter.
When I test the
version of the appellant that he went to by dagga accused 2 house
against the version Mokena that accused 1 slept
at accused 1 and came
back in the morning with the stolen car and the version of accused 2
who denied that accused 2 slept at his
house. I find the appellant’s
version probable.
I
t is trite law that
the guilt of the accused must be established beyond a reasonable
doubt.
From the totality of the evidence on
record, it is clear that M [....] 1 and N [....] were not good
witnesses nor was their evidence
impressive and I say this from what
I gathered from the totality of their evidence and the comments of
the magistrate himself.
The state evidence lacks credibility,
coherence and logic
as such the court a quo should not have
relied on their evidence to convict the appellant.
CONCLUSION
[37]
The court had to interfere with
the findings because the magistrate erred in relying on state
witness's evidence when it found that
the appellant was positively
identified as a person who robbed the complainant. The magistrate had
incorrectly found that the appellant
is guilty because he
ignored
material contradictions in the evidence of N [....] and M [....].
[40]
The onus is on the state to prove the accused is guilty and
the test is beyond a reasonable doubt. When dealing with a criminal
trial the correct approach is to weigh up all the evidence and
consider the probabilities and improbabilities of all the versions.
I
have no doubt that the state failed to prove
its case beyond a reasonable doubt. T
here
is no evidence that the appellant committed an offense of robbery
aggravating consequently, the conviction
of the appellant was incorrect and the
conviction ought to be
set aside.
AS
A RESULT, I PROPOSE THAT THE FOLLO
WING ORDER BE
MADE:
ORDER
1]
Appeal against conviction is upheld.
2]
The sentence
imposed by the court
a
quo
is set aside.
J
T LESO
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I
AGREE AND IT IS SO ORDERED
M
P N MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
9 November 2022
DATE
OF JUDGEMENT:
17 February 2023
APPEARANCES
FOR
THE APPELLANT :
Mr. B Kgagara
Legal-Aid Pretoria
Tel : 012 304 0617 / 083
514 4613
E-mail:
BishopK@legal-aid.co.za
FOR
THE RESPONDENT:
State Advocate
Director of Public
Prosecutions Gauteng: Pretoria
Tel: 078 164 3061
E-mail:
tnyakama@npa.gov.za
[1]
S v
Mthethwa
1[1]972(3)
SA 766 (AD)
[2]
S v Stevens
2005 1 All SA 1
(SCA) para 17 See also S v Sauls 1981 3
SA 172
[3]
See
S v
Shackell
[3]
2001 (4) SA 1
(SCA)
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