Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1782South Africa
Nomganga v S - Appeal (A276/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1782 (4 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 October 2023
Headnotes
at Tsakane where he was charged with one count of murder as described in paragraph (a), Part I of Schedule 2 to the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (“the Minimum Sentence Act” or “the Act”). At the trial the appellant was represented and with his confirmation, his signed statement containing formal admissions in terms of Section 220 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the CPA”) was read into the record.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1782
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Nomganga v S - Appeal (A276/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1782 (4 October 2023)
Nomganga v S - Appeal (A276/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1782 (4 October 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2023_1782.html
sino date 4 October 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
Case
Number: A276/2019
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
REVISED
DATE:
4/10/2023
In
the matter between:
MATHEMBA
ALFRED NOMGANGA
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
TSHOMBE
AJ
INTRODUCTION:
[1]
The appellant appeared before the regional court of the Gauteng
division held at Tsakane where
he was charged with one count of
murder as described in paragraph (a), Part I of Schedule 2 to the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105
of 1997 (“the Minimum Sentence
Act” or “the Act”). At the trial the appellant was
represented and with
his confirmation, his signed statement
containing formal admissions in terms of Section 220 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of
1977 (“the CPA”) was read into the
record.
[2]
The Minimum Sentences Act provides that
upon
conviction of the crime of murder, when the murder was
planned
or premeditated,
[1]
the sentence that must be imposed is subject to a minimum of life
imprisonment. The appellant was advised that should he be convicted
of the crime he is charged with, he will be facing a sentence of life
imprisonment if the court does not find substantial and compelling
circumstances. The appellant pleaded
self-defense
to the charge. He was convicted of murder as envisaged in the Act and
sentenced to life imprisonment on 10 April 2019.
The appellant
approached this court on an automatic right of appeal wherein he
appealed against both the conviction and the sentence.
BACKGROUND
[3]
On 2
October 2017 the deceased sustained injuries, namely; “
sharp
instrument wound on the chest penetrating through 2
nd
and 3
rd
rib”
[2]
.
He was later
pronounced dead by Dean Francis from the Department of Health
Emergency Medical Services who attended at the scene.
THE
ISSUES:
[4]
It is common cause that the conviction in this case was secured on
the evidence of Mr Medupi,
Mrs Baloyi, Misses Joyce Phala and Annie
Lekala as well as the deceased’s grandson, (“Thumelo”).
Although the
appellant admitted to the killing of the deceased by
stabbing him with his sharp iron rod, he submitted that he did not
intend
to kill the deceased, but to scare him, making this an act of
self-defense against an attack by the deceased and Thumelo.
Therefore, the three issues that need to be determined in this matter
are:
4.1
whether the appellant’s version of events that he did not
intend to kill the deceased but
to scare him, or that he acted in
self-defense can reasonably possibly be true;
4.2
whether the appellant’s killing of the deceased was “planned
or premeditated”
as envisaged in Part I of Schedule 2 of the
Minimum Sentences Act; and
4.3
whether the State proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt that the
murder was intentional and
“planned or premeditated
.”
GROUNDS
OF APPEAL - AD CONVICTION:
[5]
As grounds of appeal against conviction, the following submissions
have been made on behalf of
the appellant:
5.1
The court
a quo
erred in not finding that the appellant’s
version that he acted in self-defense was reasonably possibly true in
spite of the
evidence that the deceased and his grandson had weapons
and attacked the appellant;
5.2
The learned regional magistrate erred in rejecting the appellant’s
version that when he struck
the deceased with his rod, he did not
intend to injure or kill him but intended to scare him;
5.3
The learned magistrate erred in accepting the testimony of the
witnesses: Joyce Phala and Arnie Lekala
in spite of the appellant’s
submission that they were ganging up against the appellant.
GROUNDS
OF APPEAL AD SENTENCE:
[6]
Against sentence it is submitted on behalf of the appellant that:
6.1
The court
a quo
erred in not finding that: (i) the appellant’s
age of 59 years; (ii) the two years spent in prison awaiting trial;
(iii) the
imposition of a life sentence which induces a sense of
shock - constitute substantial and compelling circumstances to
justify deviation
from imposing the prescribed minimum sentence;
6.2
The court
a quo
did not exercise its discretion judiciously
because it over emphasized the seriousness of the offense;
6.3
The court
a quo
over-emphasized the interests of the community
when imposing the sentence; and
6.4
the court
a quo
failed to blend the sentence with a measure of
mercy.
THE
EVIDENCE:
Evidence
Ad Background:
[7]
In the light of the issue/s that must be determined in this appeal it
is necessary to include
in the background the relationship between
the deceased, the appellant and one Mr Medupi (“Medupi”),
who was the first
witness for the State as well as the actual
evidence of Mr Medupi and the deceased’s wife pertaining to
events before the
incident that led to the death of the deceased.
[8]
Medupi testified that he knew both the deceased and the appellant
very well. He had known the
deceased from Soweto during the late
1980’s even before he (Medupi) moved to Tsakane in 1989.
Ultimately the deceased
and his family also moved to Tsakane between
1992 and 1993. He further testified that he also knows the appellant
very well, having
at some point even stayed with him (the appellant)
at his house for about 2 to 3 years. Medupi further testified that
the appellant
and the deceased also had a good relationship and were
on good terms before the events leading to the death of the deceased,
which
unfolded against the background below.
[9]
The three of them (Medupi, the appellant and the deceased) were
participants as ‘
runners’
in a Chinese gambling
game called “
fafi”
. Without going into much detail
about the game, the evidence led indicated that it consists in the
runners taking bets from a number
of people, say 10, the runner
putting the bets into a bag
(isikhwama)
which a ‘runner’
would take to Medupi, who, in addition to being a runner was also
“
the Master”
and held a
pool
bag into which
the various bags would be put until the day of the draw. The draw
took place at 13h30 on Mondays upon the arrival
of a certain Chinese
man who would establish which bets have won and what they have won.
[10]
From Medupi’s evidence it appears that on the Saturday before
the draw that was to take place on Monday
2 October 2017, the
appellant asked for his bag from Medupi. Medupi, thinking the
appellant wanted to add an additional bet,
opened the pool bag,
whereupon the appellant took, not his bag but the deceased’s
bag and ran away with it. This effectively
meant that deceased’s
bag would not be in the pool bag from which the Chinese man was going
to draw the people’s bets.
Medupi’s further evidence is
that the appellant’s bag was also not in the pool bag.
[11]
The second aspect of Medupi’s relationship with the appellant
consists in the services the appellant
provided to Medupi, the
deceased and a number of other people in the area who were tavern
owners. Being a tavern owner, Medupi
and the others used the services
of the appellant to go and buy their stock for them and he provided
the same service to the deceased
but stocking cooldrinks and not
alcohol. Further evidence is to the effect that the appellant was
once robbed of the money that
had been given to him by Medupi to go
buy stock and for that reason, he obtained and sharpened an iron rod
which he carried with
him for defense when going to buy stock for his
clients.
Medupi’s
evidence re: 2 October 2017:
[12]
Medupi testified further that on the fateful Monday, the appellant
arrived at his place around 10 or 11am,
carrying his iron rod and
asking Medupi where the deceased was and, claiming that “
this
person must die”/
“
he must die” -
referring
to the deceased. As the appellant uttered the words, he was
scratching the rod on the floor. Medupi pointed out to him
the early
hour, reminded him that the draw is only at 13h30. Upon the
appellant’s departure Medupi went to the deceased’s
house
and warned the deceased not to go to fafi that day because the
deceased wants him (the deceased) dead. When he delivered
this
warning, the deceased was with his wife, Mrs Baloyi. Medupi also
requested the deceased’s wife to stop him from going
to the
game that day.
[13]
Medupi’s testimony is that the appellant came back for a second
time, at about 13h00, once again demanding
to know where the deceased
is. Medupi reminded him again of the time for fafi, dismissed him
again and a short while later he (Medupi)
was called by a certain
lady to go and assist a man that was being killed.
[14]
Although Medupi testified that he saw the appellant running away from
the scene as he approached, he (Medupi)
could not testify as to what
happened between the deceased, the appellant and Thumelo (the
deceased’s grandson) because by
the time Medupi arrived, the
deceased was already lying on the ground and wounded. Accordingly,
Medupi did not see how the deceased
sustained the injury that caused
him to fall on the ground and resulted in his death.
Evidence
by Mrs Margaret Baloyi (“the deceased wife” or “Baloyi”)
[15]
Baloyi testified that on Monday 2 October 2017, Medupi arrived at
their home and advised the deceased that
he must not go to the fafi
on that day because the appellant said he was going to kill him (the
deceased). Medupi further advised
Baloyi to tell the deceased not to
go. Upon advising her husband to rather go report the matter to the
police, the deceased told
her that he will go to the fafi and then go
to the police afterwards.
[16]
At that point, Thumelo, their grandson entered the room and the
deceased there and then asked Thumelo to
accompany him to the fafi.
The two left and shortly thereafter Thumelo came back running and
reported that the deceased had been
stabbed by the appellant. By the
time Baloyi got to the scene, the deceased could no longer speak and
when the paramedics arrived
on the scene, they advised that the
deceased had died.
[17]
Having dealt with the evidence of Mr Medupi and Mrs Baloyi
constituting the background above, I now deal
with the evidence of
the other three key witnesses in the sequence below.
Brendan
Thumelo Dandi (“Thumelo” or “Thumi”)
[18]
Thumelo testified that when he got home the deceased asked him to
accompany him to play fafi – this
apparently because Thumelo’s
older brother was not at home. Thumelo testified further that he also
found two young girls
who told him that the appellant has a weapon
that he is going to use to kill his grandfather. Thumelo’s
further testimony
is that when they left the house, him and the
deceased did not take the issue seriously. Thumelo testified further
that they reached
a field where the appellant was waiting. The
testimony continued that when the appellant saw them, he stood up and
approached them.
The deceased went in front of Thumelo and without
saying anything the appellant stabbed the deceased with an iron rod.
[19]
Thumelo’s testimony continued that the deceased had a mop stick
with him, which fell to the ground
when he was stabbed –
Thumelo picked up the stick and hit the appellant with the stick on
the head a number of times and
at this stage Joyce arrived at the
scene and disarmed the appellant of the iron rod that he had. The
appellant stood up and walked
away and Thumelo ran home to tell his
grandmother what had happened. As his grandmother went to the scene,
Thumelo called an ambulance
and was advised to go and wait for it at
Mutibe street. When Thumelo and his friend arrived at the scene they
were advised by the
paramedics that the deceased had passed.
Ms
Joyce Phala (“Joyce”):
[20]
At about 1pm on the day in question, Joyce and Annie were walking in
an open veld on their way to the clinic.
Joyce testified that she saw
the appellant seated next to a furrow which separates Medupi’s
house from a passage that leads
to her house. He was about 4-5metres
away and she could see him clearly in the broad day light together
with the iron rod he had
with him. She also saw the deceased walking
with Thumelo towards the appellant. The appellant stood up and walked
further to stand
in front of the deceased. The two were standing
about a meter from each other when the appellant drew out the iron
rod and stabbed
the deceased in the rib cage area and in an above the
shoulder movement.
[21]
Her testimony was to the effect that at the time of the stabbing the
deceased was carrying what looked like
a half of a broomstick, which
he never used because it fell to the floor after the stabbing. She
then ran closer and saw the grandson
striking the appellant with the
broomstick. At this point the witness testified that she became aware
that the appellant was going
to stab the grandson and she
dispossessed the appellant of the iron rod. Joyce never heard any
communication between the appellant
and the deceased – all she
heard was when the deceased, after being stabbed, asked Thumelo to
stop the appellant. At that
stage Thumelo picked up the stick that
had fallen from the deceased and struck the appellant on the head.
Ms
Annie Lekala (“Annie”):
[22]
On the day in question Annie was walking to the clinic together with
Joyce. She noticed the appellant seated
next to the furrow, which
they had to walk across. The appellant had with him an iron rod stuck
to the ground. The deceased appeared
with his grandson and the
appellant approached the deceased and stabbed him. The deceased moved
backwards and his grandson took
a broomstick and hit the appellant on
the head.
[23]
The appellant then went for the grandson with the iron rod and it was
at this point that Joyce and Annie
intervened and disarmed the
appellant of the iron rod. This witness did not see any physical
fight between the appellant and the
deceased, neither did the
appellant and the deceased fight over the iron rod or a broom stick.
There was also no verbal altercation
that this witness heard between
the three people, the appellant, the deceased and Thumelo. All that
the witness heard was the deceased
asking Thumelo to stop the
appellant and this was after the deceased had been stabbed. The
witness did not see any attack on the
appellant by the deceased and
Thumelo.
I
now turn to deal with the appellant’s evidence.
The
appellant:
[24]
The appellant testified as follows:
24.1
At around past 1pm he was seated next to a furrow waiting for the
fafi game to start; (i) deceased appeared
and made a turn-around,
went back and appellant couldn’t see him; (ii) he appeared
again, now with someone else whom the
appellant quickly identified as
his (deceased’s) grandson Thumelo;
24.2 As
they were coming, he realized they were armed, the deceased with a
stick and Thumi with an iron rod, noticing
this when the two were
some 15-20 meters away;
24.3
When the two were some 4-5meters away, the deceased jumped across the
furrow to appellant’s side and
simultaneously he was telling
Thumi to block the appellant;
24.4
Then the deceased hit him with the wooden mop stick, which did not
have the cotton part but had the steel
that hold the mop head
together. The deceased hit him three times without saying anything.
24.5
Before the third blow, Thumi threw the first stone at him, which he
ducked. The second stone hit his knee
and as he was falling, the
deceased hit him for the third time with the mop stick. The appellant
testified that he tried to run
away but Thumi blocked his way and as
he was turning, Thumi hit him on the side of his face with an iron
steel and the deceased
was also hitting him;
24.6
The appellant testified that one of the other two witnesses (Joyce)
called out the deceased name and asked
as to what they were doing;
24.7
The appellant testified that he once again tried to run away and
Thumi blocked his way and hit him with the
iron rod and at this stage
the appellant testified that he then took out his weapon and in
trying to defend himself that is how
the deceased got stabbed;
24.8
After the deceased got stabbed, he grabbed the appellant and they
fell together, with the deceased on top
and appellant fighting to get
on top;
24.9 At
that time, while the appellant was trying to get separated from the
deceased, Thumi was busy still hitting
the appellant on the head with
the iron rod that he had;
24.10 As appellant
managed to slip, he saw his rod that stabbed the deceased, took it
and gave it to Joyce;
24.11 Appellant
left, went home, decided to sleep, planning to wake up and go to the
police but was woken up by his landlady
(“Fikile”);
24.12
Fikile advised him of the passing of the deceased and he then got up
to go hand himself over to the police because he
had killed someone
unintentionally;
24.13
On the way he stopped a taxi and as he was about to get in, members
of the community pulled him out of the taxi and
at the same time the
metro police arrived and after being identified by the community
members, the metro police office ordered
him to get into the police
car;
24.14
In his testimony, the appellant denied seeing Medupi on the day in
question, denied that he said the deceased must die.
Although he went
to Medupi’s place, he didn’t find anyone there and
decided to go and sit next to the furrow so he
could see the arrival
of the fafi man;
24.15
The appellant denied the version of the witnesses, Joyce and Annie
that the appellant was stalking the deceased and
that Joyce had to
dispossess the appellant of his iron rod, this in contrast with the
appellant’s version that he handed
the iron rod to Joyce;
24.16
The appellant testified further that although on the day before the
fafi game there was a problem between him and the
deceased about the
running of the pool bag for fafi, he denied declaring that he was
going to kill the deceased when he meets him;
24.17 The appellant
testified that he does not know why Medupi went to court and told
lies about him and he did not have an
intention to fight with or kill
the deceased;
24.18 The appellant
further testified that if the deceased had not attacked him, the
incident would not have occurred at all;
24.19 During cross
examination the appellant alluded for the first time to there being
bad blood between him and Medupi arising
from an occasion when the
appellant came back late from stocking up liquor for Medupi and since
that there was bad blood between
the two of them;
24.20 He (the
appellant) even testified that about 2 years before the incident in
court, Medupi and his brother ganged up
against him and injured him;
24.21
In spite of not having made a note in his statement that there was
bad blood between him and Medupi, in spite of not
having told his
attorney about the existence of such bad blood and in spite of Medupi
having denied the existence of any bad blood
between the two of them
when Medupi was testifying, the appellant submitted in court that he
was aggrieved because he was not given
an opportunity to state that
Medupi’s testimony is as a result of bad blood between the two
of them.
[3]
THE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES -
Ad Conviction
[25]
Appeal court powers re
:
credibility findings
25.1
With reference to the appeal on conviction, there are three legal
principles that are applicable to this
matter, the first being that
a
court of appeal should only interfere with the findings of the trial
court where there is a material misdirection on the facts
and
credibility findings of the witnesses.
[4]
In the case of S v Monyane
[5]
,
Ponnan JA referred with approval to the case of S v Hadebe and
Others
[6]
and held that the
appeal court’s powers to interfere on appeal with the findings
of fact of a trial court are limited. The
learned Judge of Appeal
pronounced further that in the absence of demonstrable and material
misdirection by the trial court, its
findings of fact are presumed to
be correct and will only be disregarded if the recorded evidence
shows them to be clearly wrong.
25.2
Similarly to the Monyane case
(supra)
,
in casu,
a
thorough reading of the record does not indicate any doubt as to the
correctness of the findings of the trial court. The witnesses
for the
State corroborated one another’s evidence in all material
respects and they all came across credibly well during
cross
examination. There were no indications of fabrication of evidence and
all the witnesses testified to what they saw and/or
heard and
indicated very clearly all the events that each did not see or hear.
Further, the appellant did not adduce any demonstrable
evidence that
could have supported a different finding by the court
a quo
with respect to the evidence led by any of the State’s
witnesses.
25.3
The appellant’s allegations that there was bad blood between
him and Medupi during cross examination
was correctly rejected by the
court as he had ample time and the opportunity to have raised it
during Medupi’s testimony
especially because the specific
question regarding any bad blood between the two was asked of Medupi
during his testimony and Medupi
denied the existence of any bad
blood. Similarly, the appellant’s allegation that Joyce and
Annie were ganging up against
him because Joyce had seen the attack
on him (the appellant) was baseless given that Joyce has testified in
his (appellant’s)
presence as to what she saw, which is the
stabbing of the deceased by the appellant without any preceding
exchange of words, fight
or any kind of altercation. The appellant
was hit by Thumelo only after the stabbing of his (Thumelo’s)
grandfather by the
appellant, even then with a mop stick as opposed
to the iron rod which the appellant used to stab the deceased. There
was therefore
no evidence led by the appellant which could have
supported a different finding by the court
a quo.
[26]
The standard of proof:
26.1
The second principle is that the state bears the onus to prove its
case beyond a reasonable doubt. The accused
bears no onus and if his
version is reasonably possibly true he is entitled to receive the
benefit of the doubt and be discharged.
[7]
It
is also trite law that proof beyond a reasonable doubt does not mean
proof beyond all doubt.
In
Monageng
v S
[8]
the court
described proof beyond a reasonable doubt as:
". . . evidence
with such high degree of probability that the ordinary reasonable
man, after mature consideration, comes to
the conclusion that there
exists no reasonable doubt that the accused has committed the crime
charged. An accused's evidence therefore
can be rejected on the basis
of probabilities only if found to be so improbable that it cannot be
reasonably true."
26.2
The above establishes a tension between proof beyond a reasonable
doubt and the reasonable possibility that
the accused may be
innocent. In order to resolve the tension that exists between the two
seemingly separate but in essence the
same test, the court must look
at all the evidence in its totality. In other words, the court must
not look at the evidence exculpating
the accused in isolation and
neither must it look at the evidence implicating the accused in
isolation. This therefore means that
a court does not base its
conclusion, either way, on only part of the evidence. The
conclusion of the court must account
for all the evidence. In S v Van
der Meyden
[9]
Nugent J stated as
follows:
“
In
order to convict, the evidence must establish the guilt of the
accused beyond a reasonable doubt, which will be so only if there
is
at the same time no reasonable possibility that an innocent
explanation which has been put forward might be true. The two are
inseparable: each being the logical corollary of the other. In
whichever
form
the test is expressed, it must be satisfied upon a consideration of
all the evidence. A court does not look at the evidence
implicating
the accused in isolation in order to determine whether there is proof
beyond a reasonable doubt and so too does it
not look at the
exculpatory evidence in isolation in order to determine whether it is
reasonably possible that it might be true
”
(emphasis added).
26.3
The classic decision by Malan JA came in the midst of a popular
argument that was to the effect that proof
beyond a reasonable doubt
requires the prosecution to eliminate every hypothesis which is
inconsistent with the accused’s
guilt or which, as it is also
expressed is consistent with his innocence. Malan JA rejected this
approach and preferred to adhere
to an earlier approach which is now
preferred by the courts.
[10]
In other words, the court must be morally certain of the guilt of the
accused.
26.4
Before the Minimum Sentencing legislation,
planning and pre-meditation of an offence has always been recognized
as an aggravating
factor. In terms of the Minimum Sentence
legislation, this factor has now become one of the elements that must
be proved beyond
a reasonable doubt in order to convict and impose a
sentence in terms of the said legislation. This stems from the
provisions of
Section 51(1), which reads:
“
notwithstanding
any other law but subject to subsections (3) and (6), a regional
court or a high court shall sentence a person it
has convicted of an
offence referred to in Part I of Schedule 2 to imprisonment for
life.”
In terms of Part I of
Schedule 2, the above provisions apply when the murder is “
planned
or pre-meditated”.
Therefore, the question of whether
murder was planned or pre-meditated is a crucial consideration in the
context of the application
of the Minimum Sentences Legislation when
adjudicating and imposing sentence in a murder trial.
26.5
The phrase has not been authoritatively explained either in statute
or case law but what it really means
is that the court needs to
strike a difference between ‘spur of the moment’ action
and that which has been planned
and decided upon. In Raath v S
[11]
the court spent some time providing some detail to the issue of
premeditation.
[12]
The court
came to the conclusion that an answer to the question requires an
examination of all the circumstances surrounding a
particular murder,
during which evaluation the amount of time it takes the offender
between forming the intent and carrying out
his intention is of
cardinal importance.
26.6
While in the Raath case the appeal court did not find that the
appellant conceived an intention or plan to
kill the deceased either
before or on the night in question,
in casu
by at least Monday
morning the appellant had taken the decision to kill the deceased.
Not only had he taken the decision, he was
brash and brazen enough to
go looking for the deceased, carrying his deadly weapon and to
actually communicate his intention to
the deceased’s friend and
neighbour, Medupi.
26.7
After establishing that the deceased was not at Medupi’s place,
the appellant actually seated himself
in a spot where he knew without
any measure of doubt that the deceased was going to pass though on
his way to the game. While sitting
there, he had his deadly weapon,
which he had no reason to carry on that day at that time except to
use to kill the deceased. When
the deceased finally showed up with a
young grandchild, the independent evidence of the two ladies Joyce
and Annie is to the effect
that the appellant had no words, no issue
to resolve with the deceased except to kill him. There doesn’t
seem to be any doubt
that the appellant planned the execution of the
killing of the deceased.
[27]
The requirements of the defense of
self-defense
27.1
In his grounds of appeal the appellant has submitted that he acted in
self-defense. In other words, he had
no intention to kill deceased.
In Nene v S
[13]
, Henriques J
referred to the definition of Private defense and quoted as follows:
“
a
person acts in private defense, and her act is therefore lawful, if
she uses force to repel an unlawful attack which has commenced,
or is
imminently threatening upon her or somebody else’s life, bodily
integrity, property or other interest which deserves
to be protected,
provided the defensive act is necessary to protect the interest
threatened, is directed against the attacker,
and is reasonably
proportionate to the attack”
[14]
27.2 In
the same case the court articulated the requirements for the defense
of private defense and I quote:
“
(a)
it must be directed against the attacker;
(b)
the defensive act must be necessary. Here one considers whether there
is a duty to flee and the
defensive act must be the only way in which
the attacked party can avert the threat to his/her rights or
interest;
(c)
There must be a reasonable relationship between the attack and the
defensive act. Here it is not
necessary that there be a proportional
relationship between the nature of the interest threatened and the
nature of the interest
impaired;
(d)
the attacked person must be aware of the fact he/she is acting in
private defense.”
[15]
27.3
In order to succeed with this defense, the appellant needs to show
that there was an unlawful and violent
attack on him. This means that
there must have been the use of force or the threat of force against
the appellant. The defense
must be necessary and appropriate.
In
casu,
it is clearly evident that the appellant was not facing any
danger from an old man carrying a wooden mop stick and his grandson
who had no weapon with him. Once again from the independent evidence
of the ladies who had no cause for bias in the incident, there
was no
attack on the appellant by either the deceased or his grandson, who
merely started hitting the appellant with the mop stick
after the
fatal wound had been inflicted.
THE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES -
Ad Sentencing
[28]
Before the enactment of the Minimum Sentence legislation, common law
had developed to a point where courts
were, for sentencing purposes
obliged to have regard to three basic elements, which came to be
known as the triad of Zinn, as these
were espoused the case of S v
Zinn
[16]
and
remain relevant, to the exercise of the court’s discretion when
sentencing. The first element, that is ‘
the
crime’
is
considered the most important and influential element on the nature
and extent of the sentence. The proportionality requirement,
which
drew constitutional support for the minimum sentence legislation,
reflects the importance of tailoring the sentence to the
seriousness
of the crime.
[29]
The second element to be considered by a sentencing court in terms of
the triad of Zinn is ‘
the criminal’,
and because
of the nature of the analytic factors involved in considering the
criminal, this element has been referred to as the
‘
individualisation’
of the offender. Although this
kind of investigation is often not done, it is nonetheless an
important aspect as it enables the
sentencing officer to get to know
the offender, his/her character and motives. The necessary
information in this regard includes
age, marital status, the presence
of dependents, level of education, employment and health. Owing to
the shortcomings of this process
and the lack of exposure time
between the sentencing officer and the offender, this aspect of the
elements needs a system of rigorous
pre-sentence reporting which
would assist the presiding officer to have a better understanding of
the offender, personal circumstances,
character, motives and why the
crime was committed.
[30]
The third leg of the triad of Zinn is ‘
the
interests of society’.
In
the face of some difficulty in expressing what is actually meant by
this phrase, it has been suggested that this leg be interpreted
to
mean ‘
serving
the interests of society’.
It
has been cautioned that this leg must not be interpreted to mean the
satisfaction
of public opinion
,
[17]
instead
its value must be in the deterrent and retribution effects of a
sentence, the protection of the society and the reformation
or
rehabilitation of the offender
.
[31]
The Minimum Sentence legislation was passed in order to curb violent
crime in South Africa. The legislature
identified certain crimes that
fit into this category. The legislation requires trial courts to
impose various minimum sentences
for crimes that fit the
legislative description of what it considered violent crimes. In
order to meet the requirements of fairness,
humanity and
constitutionality the legislature put exceptions to the imposition of
minimum sentences in accordance with this legislation,
the effect of
which is that where there are substantial and compelling
circumstances identified by the sentencing court, a sentence
lesser
than the prescribed minimum sentence may be imposed. There are
challenges in the identification of crimes that fit in the
category
so well that there can be no room for finding the existence of
compelling and substantial circumstances.
[32]
The above is particularly so because the sentencing regime still
requires the sentencing court to consider
all the factors or
circumstances traditionally considered by sentencing officers. In
other words, the elements established in the
triad of Zinn,
aggravating circumstances, mitigating circumstances, measure of mercy
and all other factors relevant for consideration
by a sentencing
court when it imposes sentence
[33]
The concept of substantial and compelling circumstances comes from
the exception contained in Section 51(3)(a)
of the Minimum Sentencing
legislation. It reads as follows:
“
(a)
if any court referred to in subsection (1) or (2) is
satisfied
that
substantial and compelling circumstances exist which justify the
imposition of a lesser sentence than the sentence prescribed
in those
subsections, it shall enter those circumstances on the record of the
proceedings and must thereupon impose such lesser
sentence.”
(Emphasis provided).
[34]
The fact that before applying the exception the court must be
‘satisfied’ requires some attention
as to what being
satisfied
means. This has been considered in a number of cases
even before the minimum sentence legislation given that the word
‘satisfied’
is often used in the CPA as well. Having
looked at a number of cases, which do not provide consistency, this
standard of proof,
that is, ‘being satisfied’ is
preferred by the courts and academics justified by its flexibility
and the fact that
it is commonly used by the legislature as a
standard in connection with sentencing. This is because a court
may proceed on
the basis of being ‘
satisfied’
as
it relates to the appropriate sentence because some considerations
involve more than just facts but other factors such as considerations
of the future and the making of a value judgment with reference to
which there can be no onus of proof.
[35]
From a constitutional perspective, the Constitutional Court endorsed
proportionality as a requirement in
the sentencing regime in the case
of S v Dodo
[18]
,
The
Constitutional Court explained that,
“
proportionality
goes to the heart of the inquiry as to whether punishment is cruel,
inhumane or degrading, particularly where, as
here, it is almost
exclusively the length of time for which an offender is sentenced
that is in issue.”
[19]
The court referred to
section 12(1)(a) of the Constitution, which provides that a person
“
not be deprived of freedom arbitrarily or without just
cause”
and found that when a person commits a crime the
crime provides the just cause to deprive the offender of freedom.
[36]
[In
S
v Homareda
[20]
Cloete
J and Robinson AJ proposed what they referred to as the correct
approach in exercising the discretion conferred on the court
in
section 51 of the Amendment Act and it is that:
·
The starting point is that a prescribed minimum
sentence must be imposed;
·
Only if the court is satisfied that substantial
and compelling circumstances exist which justify the imposition of a
lesser sentence
may it do so;
·
In deciding whether substantial and compelling
circumstances exist each case must be decided on its own facts and
the court is required
to look at all factors and consider them
cumulatively;
·
If the court concludes in a particular case that a
minimum prescribed sentence is so disproportionate to the sentence
which would
have been appropriate it is entitled to impose a lesser
sentence.
[37]
The above jurisprudential approach is the essence of the reasoning of
the Supreme Court of Appeal in S v
Malgas
[21]
,
which is recognized as the seminal judgment on how courts should deal
with substantial and compelling circumstances. The approach
adopted
by the court in Homareda blends with the view expressed by the
Supreme Court of Appeal that, in the prescribed minimum
sentences
regime it is no longer “
business
as usual”
[22]
,
meaning
that the sentencing court does not start the sentencing process from
a clean slate, but must start by imposing the prescribed
minimum
sentence. The Supreme Court of Appeal further held that Section 51
has limited, but not eliminated the court’s discretion
in
imposing sentence.
[38]
The above becomes endorsed by the proviso in section 51(3) of the
Act, which requires the sentencing court
to consider and be
“
satisfied that substantial and compelling circumstances
exist…”
in order to depart from the minimum sentence
prescribed. This indicates that the sentencing court is vested with
not just the power
but the obligation to consider whether the
particular circumstances of the case require a different sentence to
be imposed. Further,
in deciding whether substantial and compelling
circumstances exist, the court is to consider all factors relevant to
sentence,
both aggravating and mitigating circumstances
cumulatively
and the circumstances do not have to be exceptional in order for the
court to depart from the prescribed minimum sentence.
[39]
In the above exercise, the court is required to consider the
seriousness of the crime, after-effects of the
crime, planning or
pre-meditation, previous convictions, motive, lack of remorse,
vulnerable victims, prevalence of crime, the
need for deterrence and
retribution, the protection of society, punishment to fit the crime,
rehabilitation etc.) In other words,
the sentencing court is called
upon to
individualise
the offender.
[40]
The sentencing court must then balance all the factors that come into
play in a particular case and upon
a
holistic
and cumulative consideration,
exercise
the sentencing discretion. As difficult as this exercise may be,
sentencing courts are required and obliged to take into
account what
courts call the cumulative effect. In S v Muller
[23]
the court noted that “
a
sentencing court must
have
regard
to
the totality of the offender’s criminal conduct and moral
blameworthiness.”
[24]
CONCLUSIONS:
[41]
In his grounds of appeal and heads of argument the appellant
submitted that the trial court
did not exercise
its discretion judiciously because it over emphasized the crime and
did not balance the crime element with his
personal circumstances and
the interests of society as set out in the
triad
of Zinn (supra).
In other words, the
appellant's submission is to the effect that the court failed to
individualise him. One of by-products of this
ground is for the
appellant to be given the opportunity to rehabilitate and blend into
society again. This ground does not take
account of the fact that the
court required a pre-sentence report in addition to the court’s
observation of the accused during
trial.
[42]
More importantly, the evidence indicates that the appellant thought
about this over a sufficient amount of
time as opposed to a spur of
the moment thing – he had the weekend to mull over it. He slept
over it and thought it out,
his starting point being to establish the
presence or otherwise of the deceased at Medupi’s house until
he decided to catch
the deceased on his way to the game by waiting
for him at a spot where the deceased was sure to pass.
[43]
This court believes that this ground of appeal is defeated by a
number of realities regarding the appellant:
(i) his age is at a
mature level where he is expected to have control .; (ii) he spent
the weekend thinking about; (iii) pleaded
self-defense, in the face
of circumstances where there was clearly no danger posed to him by an
old man with his very young grandson,
carrying pieces of a broom
stick, did not display a character that will take responsibility for
his actions; even in his application
for appeal he is on the one hand
pleading self-defense and on the other he says he wanted to scare the
deceased off. There is therefore
no remorse in him at all for what he
has done.
[44]
The second ground of appeal is that the appellant submits the
existence of substantial and compelling circumstances.
One of these
is the appellant’s age, which has already been characterized as
more of an aggravating circumstance (
supra).
Section 51(3)(a),
the legislative underpin that gives rise to this concept as a ground
of appeal against the imposition of a minimum
sentence is not
required to be the norm but a departure therefrom requires weighty
justification. Case law, building from the seminal
judgment of
Malgas, has established a sequence to the effect that the prescribed
sentence should be the point of departure. The
process which follows,
that of deciding whether there are substantial and compelling
circumstances must be a function of the consideration
and weighing of
all the traditional sentencing considerations, that is, mitigating
circumstances, aggravating circumstances, proportionality,
consideration of mercy etc.
[45]
This court does not find any mitigating circumstances. The fact that
the appellant is a first offender is,
to the extent it could have
been in his favour, is totally neutralized by the fact that his age
is at that mature stage that he
should have respect for life,
especially in this case he had a relationship with the family and
knew that the deceased was the
pillar thereof. The appellant
displayed no remorse, there are no indications that he made any
advances to the family or Medupi
to mediate some kind of apology or
peace-making with the wife and the whole family that the deceased was
looking after. In the
Pre-Sentence report, the appellant is said to
have 13 children, and no contact with any of them or their mothers.
He is also reported
to have insisted that the deceased started the
fight and he had to defend himself. Therefore, there can be no
prospects of rehabilitation
for a personality like that.
[46]
This court finds the aggravating circumstances very serious,
serious enough to tip the scale against the appellant even if there
was any one mitigating factor in his favour. The Victim Impact
Report, which identifies the real victims of the appellant’s
actions is telling. Apart from the trauma to the family and the
community (given the high regard in which the community held the
deceased) (i) the wife was reduced to a beggar; (ii) deceased’s
daughter’s life thrown financially upside down; (iii)
negative
psychological effects on the children who felt poorly regarded by
friends, lost their associates and became constantly
unhappy, this
being particularly noticeable to the grandson who witnessed the
killing. The fact that the family viewed the appellant
as a friend
makes it even more difficult for them and worst of all they all carry
feelings of guilt that they could have done something
to prevent the
tragedy.
[47]
The above picture shows how negative the effects of that single act
committed by the appellant had on the
whole family, their lives, self
- esteem and human dignity. It speaks squarely to the interests of
society element of the triad
of Zinn discussed above.
ORDER:
[48]
In the circumstances, it is ordered that:
48.1
The appeal against both the conviction and sentence is dismissed;
NL
TSHOMBE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
agree,
R
TOLMAY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances:
Counsel
for Appellant:
J L
Kgokane
Attorney
for Appellant:
Legal-Aid
South Africa
Counsel
for Respondent:
M
Marriot
Attorney
for Respondent:
State
Attorney
Date
of hearing:
30
May 2023
Date
of Judgment:
4
th
October 2023
[1]
Section 51(1) read with
Paragraph
(a), Part I of Schedule 2
[2]
Exhibit
H3 Page 22 of Record
[3]
Record
Pages
229 - 231
[4]
R v Dlumayo and Another
1948 (2) SA 677(A)
and S v Francis 1991(1)
SACR 198(A) at 198j-199a “The power of a Court of appeal to
interfere with the findings of fact
of a trial Court are limited. In
the absence of any misdirection the trial Court’s conclusion,
including its acceptance
of a witness’ evidence is presumed to
be correct. In order to succeed on appeal, the appellant must
therefore convince
the court of appeal on adequate grounds that the
trial court was wrong in accepting the witness’ evidence-a
reasonable
doubt will not suffice to justify interference with its
findings. Bearing in mind the advantage which a trial court has of
seeing,
hearing and appraising a witness, it is only in exceptional
cases that the court of appeal will be entitled to interfere with a
trial court’s evaluation of oral testimony”.
5
S v Monyane and Others
2008 SACR 543
(SCA) Paragraph [15
[6]
S v Hadebe and Others
1997
(2) SACR 641
(SCA)
at 645e-f the court held:
“…
..in
the absence of demonstrable and material misdirection by the trial
court . its findings of fact are presumed to be correct
and will
only be disregarded if the recorded evidence shows them to be
clearly wrong.”
[7]
S v Van Der Meyden 1999(1) SACR 447; S v Shackell 2002(2) SACR 185
at para [30]
[8]
[2009]
1 All SA 237 (SCA).
[9]
1999
(1) SACR 447
W at 448 F – G
[10]
R v Mlambo 1957(4) SA 727 at 738 A-C “
In
my opinion, there is no obligation upon the crown to close every
avenue of escape which may be said to be open to an accused.
It is
sufficient for the Crown to produce evidence by means of which such
a high degree of probability is raised that the ordinary
reasonable
man, after mature consideration, comes to the conclusion that there
exists no reasonable doubt that the accused has
committed the crime
charged…
An
accused’s claim to the benefit of a doubt when it may be said
to exist must not be derived from speculation but must
rest upon a
reasonable and solid foundation created either by positive evidence
or gathered from reasonable inferences which
are not in conflict
with, or outweighed by, the proved facts of the case…The
evidence must reach the same degree of cogency
as is required in a
criminal case before an accused person is found guilty.
That degree is
well settled. It need not reach certainty, but it must carry a high
degree of probability. Proof beyond a reasonable
doubt does not mean
proof beyond the shadow of a doubt. The law would fail to protect
the community if it admitted fanciful possibilities
to deflect the
cause of justice.”
(Emphasis
provided)
[11]
2009(2)
SACR 46 (C)
[12]
Clearly
the concept suggests a deliberate weighing up of the proposed
criminal conduct as opposed to the commission of the crime
on the
spur of the moment or in unexpected circumstances. There is,
however, a broad continuum between the two poles of a murder
committed in the heat of the moment and a murder which may have been
conceived and planned over months or even years before its
execution. In my view only an examination of the all the
circumstances surrounding any particular murder, including not least
the accused’s state of mind, will allow one to arrive at a
conclusion as to whether a particular murder is “planned
or
premeditated.” In such an evaluation the period of time
between the accused forming the intent to commit the murder
and
carrying out this intention is obviously of cardinal importance but,
equally, does not at some arbitrary point, provide a
ready-made
answer to the question of whether the murder was “planned or
premeditated” at Paragraph 16
[13]
[2018]
ZAKZPHC 46 (4 May 2018)
[14]
CR
Snyman Criminal law 6 ed (2014)
[15]
At Paragraph 11
[16]
S
v Zinn 1969(2) SA 537 (A)
[17]
S
v Mhlakaza 1997(1) SACR 515 (SCA)
[18]
2001
(1) SACR 594 (CC)
[19]
At
paragraph 37
[20]
1999(2)
SACR 319 (W)
[21]
2001
(1) SACR 469 (SCA)
[22]
At
Paragraph 7
[23]
2012(2)
SACR 545 (SCA)
[24]
At
Paragraph 9; see also S v Mthethwa
2015 (1) SACR 302
(GP) at
Paragraph 21
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Ndlangamandla v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 418; A145/2022 (24 April 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 418High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Msimang N.O and Another v Maoto N.O and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 568; 038277/2022 (14 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 568High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mzikhona v S (Appeal) (A425/2016) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1118 (21 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1118High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mhlanga v S (A231/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2027 (12 December 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 2027High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mnisi and Others v Mawulu Communal Property Association and Others (083533/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1888 (2 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1888High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar