Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 340South Africa
Nkatha and Another v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 340; A 167/2021 (3 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 May 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nkatha and Another v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 340; A 167/2021 (3 May 2023)
Nkatha and Another v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 340; A 167/2021 (3 May 2023)
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sino date 3 May 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No: A 167/2021
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
JUDGE KUNY
3 MAY 2023
In the matter between
ALEX
NKATHA
First Appellant
COLLINS
MOYO
Second Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
KUNY J
1)
The appellants were convicted on 4 November 2020
of attempted murder. On 2 December 2020 they were each sentenced to
10 years imprisonment
in terms of section 276(1)(b) of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (CPA). The sentence was antedated from 4
August 2019 in
terms of section 282 of the CPA. The appellants were
also declared unfit to possess a licensed firearm in terms of section
103(1)
of the CPA.
2)
The appeal is against both conviction and
sentence. Each appellant was represented at the trial in the Regional
Magistrates court
by his own legal representative.
3)
The charges against the appellants were that on 4
August 2019 at or near Crystal Park they, unlawfully and
intentionally and with
the furtherance of common purpose, attempted
to kill John Nkomo (“the complainant”) by stabbing him
with a knife and
hitting him with bricks. Both appellants pleaded not
guilty.
4)
The complainant was called to give evidence. His
testimony was as follows:
a)
The appellants had lived in the same area and were
known to him for a period of more than three years.
b)
Appellant no 1 owed him an amount of R6 400 and
appellant no 2 owed him an amount of R8 200. The debt was due at the
end of August
2018. The complainant had confronted the
appellants about the fact that they had not repaid their debt to him.
The appellants
kept on making promises that they would pay.
c)
On 4 August 2019 he was on his way home from a
society meeting in Alexander. Appellant no 1 called him that
afternoon to come and
collect his money. The complainant went to
where the appellants were staying with his wife, Sithulisile Ndlovu,
and their baby.
They arrived just after 6pm and were met at the gate
by appellant no 1. He told them to go inside where the complainant
could collect
his money. They went into the yard and found appellant
no 2 standing outside the house, ready and waiting with a knife.
d)
Before the complainant could say anything
appellant no 2 started stabbing him. He was first stabbed on his
chest. The complainant
started to fight back with his hands. However,
he was overpowered and fell to the ground. Appellant no 2 threw
bricks at him and
assaulted him with a stick. The complainant was hit
with a stick on his shoulders and on the head. A brick hit his head
and his
thigh causing his cellphone in his pocket to break.
e)
The complainant was also stabbed on his back and
stomach. He received 6 puncture wounds and had to have six stitches.
f)
At the time that the stabbing and assaults
occurred, the complainant’s wife started screaming. This
alerted appellant no 2’s
employer (Havenger) who came outside
to see what was happening. The complainant testified that at this
stage that he was paralysed.
His wife explained to Havenger what had
taken place. The complainant testified that he woke up in hospital
where he spent a week
being treated for his injuries. He was operated
on and medicated. The wound on his stomach was so serious, that
it caused
his intestines to protrude from his body.
g)
There was a streetlight close to the gate and he
was able to identify appellant no 1 when they arrived. The
complainant also testified
that the appellants were known to his wife
and she would be able to identify them.
APPELLANT NO 1’S
VERSION PUT TO THE COMPLAINANT
5)
The following was put to the complainant in
cross-examination by appellant no 1’s legal representative:
a)
On the day in question appellant no 1 was with the
complainant’s wife when the complainant arrived at the place
where appellant
no 1 was staying.
b)
The complainant was angry with appellant no 1 and
he slapped him twice at the gate on the day in question.
c)
Appellant no 1 let the complainant into the
property and they walked towards the house. The complainant asked
appellant no 1 where
appellant no 2 was.
d)
Appellant no 1 told the complainant that appellant
no 2 was taking a shower and the complainant slapped him in the face.
e)
Shortly thereafter, appellant no 2 came out of his
room with a chair and invited the complainant to sit down. The
complainant refused
to do so, walked towards appellant no 2 and
started hitting him in the face with his fists.
f)
The complainant took out a knife and tried to stab
appellant no 2. There was a struggle for the knife. Appellant no 2
managed to
grab it.
g)
Appellant no 1 notice that the complainant was
bleeding but he could not tell exactly what had happened to him
because it was dark.
h)
Appellant no 2’s employer came out of the
house after hearing the commotion and called CMS members who arrived
with an ambulance.
i)
Appellant no 1 would say that he did not in any
way attack the complainant. He had tried to separate the
complainant and appellant
no 2. The complainant had been the
aggressor on the day in question and had produced a knife.
6)
The complainant denied appellant no 1 version put
to him in cross-examination in all material respects.
APPELLANT
NO 2’S VERSION
PUT TO THE
COMPLAINANT
7)
The following was put to the complainant in
cross-examination by appellant no 2’s legal representative:
a)
Appellant no 2 had only borrowed an amount of R2
000 from the complainant and not the R8 200, as alleged.
b)
Two to three weeks before the incident the
complainant came to appellant no 2’s place. He was very angry.
The complainant
took a fridge, TV, a bag full of clothes, a blanket,
DVD and speakers and shoes as security for repayment of the money
that appellant
no 2 borrowed from him.
c)
The complainant returned on a second occasion. He
was angry. Appellant no 1 opened for him. The complainant started
hitting appellant
no 2 with his fists. Appellant no 2 fell down and
the complainant continued to hit him with his fists and stomp on him
with his
feet.
d)
Appellant no 2 saw the complainant take a knife
out of his pocket. There was a struggle for the knife. Appellant no 2
twisted the
complainant’s hand towards the complainant and that
is how he (the complainant) got stabbed.
8)
The complainant denied appellant no 2’s
version put to him in cross examination in all material respects.
This included a
denial that he had taken appellant no 2’s
possessions as security for the debt. The complainant denied that he
had attacked
appellant no 2 on the day in question. The complainant
pointed out in evidence that he had been stabbed on the back and that
appellant
no 2’s version did not explain how this injury was
incurred.
EVIDENCE OF
SITHULISILE NDLOVU
9)
Ms Ndlovu gave evidence for the state. Her
testimony was as follows:
a)
She was the complainant’s wife. She
conducted a money lending business. She confirmed that she and the
complainant had been
called to the house where the Appellants stayed
on 4 August 2019.
b)
When they arrived appellant no 1 opened the gate
for them. She and her husband entered the property. They found
appellant no 2 standing
outside. The appellants started assaulting
her husband. Appellant no 2 had lifted his hands and hit the
complainant with something.
She did not see the weapon involved
because it was “a bit dark”.
c)
Her husband was struck on the chest. Appellant no
1 hit her husband on his head with a stick. The complainant was
pushed towards
a hole or a pit in the yard and fell inside. The
appellants continued hitting him in the pit.
d)
Ms Ndlovu screamed out to try and get the
attention of the owner of the house. The owner of the house came
outside and Ms Ndlovu
told him that the appellants had been hitting
her husband. She asked this person to help her because the
complainant was bleeding
profusely. Whilst being assaulted her
husband lost his shoes.
e)
Security guards arrived and came back with the
appellants. Her husband was put on a drip because he had been
bleeding profusely.
An ambulance was called and her husband was taken
to Tembisa hospital. Ms Ndlovu noticed that her husband had
been stabbed
in his stomach. He was swollen on his forehead and his
hands.
f)
Her husband was not armed when they entered the
property and when appellant no 2 was approached. She confirmed in all
material respects
the complainant’s version that he had been
attacked by the appellants.
EVIDENCE OF JOSEPH
PRINSLOO
10)
Mr Prinsloo testified as follows:
a)
He was employed by CMS Security. He had been
called to the scene by the owner of the house. On his arrival at the
premises in question
he observed a man who had been injured being
dragged outside. The victim was placed flat on the grounds next to
his vehicle. A
paramedic team had been called to the premises.
b)
He was informed by one of the ladies that the
victim had been stabbed. Mr Prinsloo spoke to the owner of the
property at the gate
who made a report to him. He requested back-up
as he did not know how many suspects there were or what kind of
weapons they had.
c)
After back-up had arrived they entered the
premises and found to suspects at the back rooms of the house. The
suspects were asked
what had happened and they admitted stabbing the
victim. One of the suspects pointed out a knife that had been used in
the attack
and a knife was found lying in the dust near to a braai
area. The suspects were taken into custody.
d)
The complainant’s intestines were protruding
from his stomach. He had been stabbed five or six times. The wounds
were in front
on the complainant’s right shoulder, on the right
side in front on his chest, in the middle of his back, and on his
left
arm. The knife that was retrieved and shown to the police. Mr
Prinsloo identified appellant no 2 as having been one of the
attackers.
EVIDENCE OF GRANT
HAVENGER
11)
Mr Havenger testified as follows:
a)
He was the owner of an agricultural holding in
Benoni described as plot number 3[...] N[...] Road. Appellant no 2
was his former
employee who worked on the plot and stayed in a room
at the back of the house. Appellant no 1 was also renting a room from
him
in the same building that appellant no 2 stayed in.
b)
The complainant and his wife had previously been
to his property to claim money from the appellants. The
incident had taken
place at between 6pm and 7pm in the evening. Part
of the premises were lit by a bright flood light that shone down the
driveway
towards the side gate.
c)
On 4 August 2019 his wife came running inside to
tell him that there had been an incident outside. He went outside and
observed
appellant no 2 pulling a lady with a child on her back by
the arm, up the driveway, towards the driveway gate.
d)
He observed appellant no 1 throwing bricks at a
man who he later found out was the husband of the lady with the
child.
e)
It became clear to Mr Havenger that the appellants
had ejected the complainant and his wife from the property and once
they had
done so they had locked the gate with a chain. The
appellants reported to Mr Havenger that the complainant and his wife
had attended
at the premises to get their money because they (the
appellants) owed them money. There had been an argument as to how
much money
had been owed by the appellants to the complainant.
f)
Mr Havenger was informed by the lady that her
husband had been stabbed. He went outside to have a look and noticed
that the complainant’s
stomach had been cut open and he had a
stab wound on his back and shoulder. His intestines were protruding
from his stomach.
g)
The appellants retreated to their rooms and CMS
security and the police were called. An ambulance arrived. Mr
Havenger went to the
bottom of the plot where the appellants were
standing. He and the persons who were with him wanted to establish
the whereabouts
of the knife that had been used in the attack. The
appellants would not reveal where the knife was.
h)
The appellants were interrogated by CMS officer
and it was decided to place the appellants under arrest. The police
arrived and
a bloodied knife was found at the rooms where the
appellants stayed. The knife was placed in a plastic bag and taken
into evidence
by the police.
i)
In re-examination Mr Havenger was asked whether
the appellants had ever reported to him that they had been attacked
by the complainant.
He testified that they had not.
12)
It was put to Mr Havenger under cross-examination
that appellant no 1 would testify that he never threw stones at the
complainant.
Mr Havenger responded as follows:
Mr Havenger:
Well, that is very interesting because it actually
was not stones it
was bricks if I can be more precise.
Ms Eliza:
Yes.
Mr Havenger:
And that is those bricks were found at the gate at
the exit to the
gate as well and I mean that is what I saw with my own eyes and
definitely witnessed him doing that. So, that is
interesting to say
the least.
13)
After all the witnesses for the prosecution had
given evidence the state handed in the medical records of the
complainant without
objection from the appellants.
EVIDENCE OF APPELLANT
NO 1
14)
Appellant no 1 disputed that he owed the
complainant and his wife R6 400. He stated that an amount of R2 000
had been borrowed.
He had repaid R1 200, leaving a balance of R800
owing.
15)
Appellant no 1 testified that the complainant and
his wife had come to the property where he was staying on the day in
question
to collect money that he and appellant no 2 owed them. He
testified that the complainant had slapped him three times at the
gate.
Appellant no 1 opened the gate for the complainant and his
wife. They entered the property. They met appellant no 2 who offered
a chair to the complainant. The complainant grabbed appellant no 2’s
shirt and started beating him. Appellant no 2 fought
back with his
fists.
16)
Appellant no 1 testified that he had intervened
and stopped the fight between the complainant and appellant no 2. He
did so by getting
between them and by getting hold of appellant no 2
and the complainant. He asked them to “please stop fighting”.
After
that, the complainant walked away unassisted to the gate of the
property. Appellant no 1 opened the gate to allow the complainant
to
leave the property. He did not see that the complainant was injured.
He only saw that he was bleeding later on, after he and
appellant no
2 had been arrested. However, he did not know why he was bleeding and
how the complainant got injured.
17)
Appellant no 1 denied seeing a knife being used in
the fight between appellant no 2 and the complainant. He testified
however, that
appellant no 2 had told him after the fight that the
complainant had a knife and wanted to stab him.
18)
It was put to appellant no 1 in cross-examination
that it had been put to the complainant on his behalf, that he would
testify that
the complainant had tried to stab appellant no 2 with a
knife and that during the struggle appellant no 2 had managed to take
the
knife. His evidence therefore differed from the version that was
put to the complainant.
19)
Upon being challenged about the contradictory
aspects of his evidence, appellant no 1 changed his evidence and said
that he saw
a knife fall down. He explained the discrepancy by saying
he did not understand properly earlier on what was being asked of
him.
Appellant no 1 then conceded that the complainant was bleeding
from his stomach because he had been stabbed with a knife.
20)
Appellant no 1 denied having admitted that he had
stabbed the complainant. Under questioning from the court, he
testified that he
had not reported to Mr Havenger or CMS that the
complainant had attacked him and appellant no 2. He had been
told by appellant
no 2 that the knife that belonged to the
complainant had been produced. He did not see the knife being
produced by the complainant.
EVIDENCE OF APPELLANT
NO 2
21)
Appellant no 2 testified that on the day in
question he was approached by the complainant who held him by the
shirt and started
hitting him with closed fists. He fell down. He
asked the complainant why he was beating him and did not get an
answer. He tried
to get away from the complainant but was unable to
do so. His shirt got torn. Whilst he was on the ground, the
complainant produced
a knife. Appellant no 2 got hold of the
complainant’s hand with the knife in it.
22)
Appellant no 2 elaborated under cross-examination
that the complainant was on top of him and kicked him and continued
to assault
him. He never retaliated. Whilst he was on the ground, the
complainant produced a knife. Appellant no 2 held the complainant’s
wrist with one hand and his shirt with another. He testified that he
did not try to take the knife from the complainant’s
hand and
did not know how the complainant got stabbed. Appellant no 2 had not
fallen to the ground during the fight. The fight
came to an end when
the complainant let go of him and started running. Appellant no 2
then stood up. When the complainant left
the premises, he was walking
properly.
23)
Appellant no 2 was asked to explain how the
complainant sustained the stab wounds to his chest and back. He
testified that there
was a small gate and after the complainant had
run away he had fallen at a place where there was steel. Appellant no
2 was emphatic
that he never stabbed the complainant and never used
any weapon to injure him.
24)
Appellant no 2, when confronted with appellant no
1’s version that he (appellant no 1) had attempted to stop the
fight by
coming between the two of them, said that he could not
remember.
25)
The magistrate in his judgment summarised the
evidence given by all the witnesses at the trial. He found that the
version put forward
by the appellants had to be rejected in its
totality based on the contradictions in their case. He accepted the
evidence of Mr
Prinsloo and Mr Havenger, commenting that it was
independent evidence.
EVALUATION OF EVIDENCE
26)
In my view the magistrate was correct in rejecting
the appellants’ evidence. The evidence of appellant no 1
and appellant
no 2 was contradictory and unsatisfactory in material
respects.
27)
Insofar as the evidence of appellant no 1 is
concerned, the following is relevant:
a)
Appellant no 1’s evidence was totally
different from his version that was put to the complainant by his
legal representative
in cross-examination. Appellant no 1 testified
that he did not see a knife being used in the fight between the
complainant and
appellant no 1 and that he did not see how the
complainant sustained his injuries. This contradicted his version put
in cross-examination,
that appellant no 1 would say that the
complainant took out a knife, tried to stab appellant no 2 and that
in the ensuing struggle,
appellant no 2 managed to grab the knife.
b)
It was not put to the complainant when he gave
evidence that appellant no 1 would testify that he tried to intervene
and stop the
fight between the complainant and appellant no 1. This
evidence was given for the first time when appellant no 1 testified.
c)
Appellant no 1’s evidence that after the
fight, the complainant walked unassisted to the gate is highly
improbable. It is
clear from the evidence, including the medical
records, that the complainant had been grievously injured in the
attack upon him
(see record page 237). There were two stab wounds to
the complainant’s back, a stab wound to the front of his left
shoulder,
a laceration to his scalp and a large wound to his
stomach. Both Havenger and Prinsloo confirmed that the
complainant’s
intestines were protruding from his body.
28)
Insofar as the evidence of appellant no 2 is
concerned, the following is relevant:
a)
Appellant no 2’s testimony as to how the
fight between him and the complainant took place, differed from
appellant no 1’s
account. Appellant no 2 did not confirm
appellant no 1’s evidence that he had tried to stop appellant
no 2 and the
complainant from fighting.
b)
Appellant no 2’s evidence as to how the
fight occurred contradicted appellant no 1’s evidence.
c)
Appellant no 2’s version put to the
complainant in cross-examination differed from appellant no 2
testimony as to how the
fight took place. It was put to the
complainant that appellant no 2 would say that the complainant
produced a knife and that a
struggle ensued for the knife. Appellant
no 2 alleged that he twisted the complainant hand towards him and
that was how he (the
complainant) got injured. However, when he gave
evidence, appellant no 2 testified that he had not tried to take the
knife from
the complainant and he did not know how the complainant
got stabbed.
d)
Appellant no 2’s evidence that the fight
broke up when the complainant ran away and that he was able to walk
normally out
of the premises, in light of the objective evidence
relating to the severity of the complainant’s injuries, is so
improbable
that it can be rejected.
e)
Appellant no 2 evidence as to how the fight
between him and the complainant occurred, did not explain the
objective evidence relating
to the complainant’s wounds.
f)
Appellant no 2 evidence that the complainant had
some two weeks prior to commission of the offence, taken property
belonging to
appellant no 2 as security for the monies loaned was
uncorroborated. The complainant denied having done so.
29)
The complainant’s evidence, and the fact
that the appellants were the aggressors, was supported by the
complainant’s
wife. Mr Havenger, who observed appellant no 1
throwing bricks at the complainant, also supported the evidence that
the appellants
had attacked the complainant.
30)
In my view, the evidence of the appellants was so
unsatisfactory and improbable, that it can safely be rejected as
being false.
All the evidence points to the fact that the appellants
had called the complainant to their place on the day in question with
the
intention of assaulting him with a lethal weapon. There was a
motive for the assault namely, that the appellants owed the
complainant
money and did not want to repay him.
31)
The evidence demonstrates that the appellants
acted in concert with one another. Appellant no 2 wielded the knife.
The manner in
which the assault occurred and the nature and severity
of the wounds sustained by the complainant also demonstrates that the
appellants
meant to inflict lethal harm. Appellant no 1 actively
associated himself with the attack by assaulting the complainant with
a stick
and bricks (see S v Mgedezi
1989 (1) SA 687
(A)). This was
directed to overcoming his resistance and ensure that appellant no 2
who wielded the knife could inflict lethal
harm. The assault was of a
sustained nature and in all probability would have continued, had it
not been for the cries of the complainant
wife, who alerted Mr
Havenger to the attack. In my judgment both appellants intended, by
assaulting and stabbing the complainant,
to bring about his death.
Accordingly in my view, both appellants were correctly convicted of
attempted murder.
32)
I find that the sentence imposed by the magistrate
was not inappropriate and does not induce a sense of shock. The
sentence of 10
years imprisonment was justified given the
circumstances in which the offence was committed. It is clear from
the evidence that
the appellants planned the attack upon the
complainant. They called him to the premises where they were staying
with the intention
of carrying out the grievous bodily assault.
33)
The complainant gave evidence in aggravation of
sentence. He testified that he was healthy before the assault took
place and that
he continued to suffer from pain as a result of his
injuries. The medical records speak to the severity of the attack
upon the
complainant and the seriousness of his injuries.
34)
I accordingly make the following order:
1
The appellants’ appeal against conviction and sentence is
dismissed.
KUNY J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
MA LUKHAIMANE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
DATE OF HEARING: 24
February 2022
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 3
May 2023
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Appellants:
Ms
MMP Masete
Instructed
by:
Pretoria
Justice Center
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv
LF Sivhidzho
Instructed
by:
Office
of the Director of Public Prosecutions
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