Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1900South Africa
Mangengwa v S (A5/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1900 (8 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 November 2023
Judgment
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## Mangengwa v S (A5/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1900 (8 November 2023)
Mangengwa v S (A5/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1900 (8 November 2023)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# (GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No.
A5/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
08 NOVEMBER 2023
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
BENNY
MANGENGWA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
This judgment is
prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected as such
and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties /
their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for handing
down is deemed to be 8th November 2023.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
RETIEF J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This appeal is brought by way of the
appellant’s automatic right of appeal against his conviction
and sentence which was handed
down in the Regional Court, Benoni
[Court
a quo
].
The Court
a quo
imposed
a minimum sentence of life imprisonment.
[2]
The appellant, a Zimbabwean citizen, was
charged with two counts, the first count was for the pre-meditated
murder of Tebogo Albert
Moletswane [the deceased] in terms of section
51(1) read with part 1 of Schedule 2 of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act 105 of 1997
[murder charge] and the second count for the
contravention of
section 49(1)(A)
of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
for wrongfully entering and remaining in the Republic of South Africa
[immigration contravention].
[3]
The appellant pleaded guilty to the
immigration contravention but not guilty to the murder charge.
[4]
During the trial, the State abandoned the
prosecution of the immigration contravention as the appellant had
already been convicted
on that offence in another court. The Court
a
quo
in consequence, and notwithstanding
the appellant’s plea of guilt, acquitted the appellant on count
2. The decision to acquit
the appellant considering his plea of guilt
is not before this Court on appeal.
[5]
The appellant, however, was found guilty of
the murder charge and duly convicted and sentenced. In consequence,
this appeal traverses
the grounds raised on appeal in respect of the
conviction and sentence in respect of the murder charge only.
[6]
Before
dealing
with
the
grounds
raised
and
argued,
a
brief
overview
of
the evidence before the Court a
quo
is required.
# CONSIDEREDEVIDENCE
CONSIDERED
EVIDENCE
[7]
On 25 February 2019 [incident date] the
deceased was accosted and brutally and repeatedly stabbed at his home
in Marikana. The deceased
died from a penetrating stab wound to his
heart.
[8]
Two days prior to the incident date and on
23 February 2019, Ms Prudence
Numsa
Radebe [Radebe], alleged to have witnessed two altercations at
Thandelele’s Place, a local tavern. The
first altercation was allegedly between the
appellant and
Pardon,
his brother (meaning from the same area in Zimbabwe). The first
altercation was over a young lady and the second altercation
was a
fight which ensued between the appellant and the deceased. The second
altercation with the deceased purportedly drove the
appellant to
vengeance on the incident date.
[9]
A Mr Given Moyo [Moyo] who stayed on the
same premises as the deceased and Radebe, testified that on the
incident date, and at approximately
07h30 in the morning, he
witnessed the appellant in the company of two other males, a one
Matamba and Pardon. The three men entered
the yard. Matamba then
allegedly confronted Moyo, enquiring whether he was the individual
who liked to go around hitting people.
Moyo replied that it was not
him. At which time the deceased then appeared from his room and the
three men turned their attention
to the deceased, confronting him
regarding the second altercation which occurred on 23 February 2023
at the tavern.
[10]
Moyo testified that the mood was
confrontational and that when he was about to re-enter his house, he
observed the appellant whom
he identified as Ben, grabbing the
deceased by his collar. At that time, the appellant had a knife in
his hand. Moyo retreated
into his house. When Moyo came out of his
house again, he noticed for the first time that the deceased was
bleeding and decided
to run away to get assistance.
[11]
Just before Moyo ran for assistance, he
testified that he saw Pardon looking for something in the rubble and
testified that: “
I noticed Pardon
rummaging through the litter, I think for a bottle because he wanted
to help his friend. I heard a bottle break
when I fled looking for
neighbours
”. Moyo did not witness
the deceased being stabbed nor a bottle in Pardon’s hand.
[12]
Daphney Baloyi [Baloyi], testified that she
lived in the same yard as Moyo and the deceased. She testified that
on the morning of
the incident she heard a knock at her door. On her
way to enquire who was there, she found the deceased lying on her
kitchen floor.
She testified that the deceased asked her not to open
the door as the people at the door wanted to kill him. She, however,
did
go to the door. She testified that of three men were at the door,
she only knew Matamba. The other two men were not known to her,
but
she identified the appellant in court as the man who spoke to her
that morning and the man who had a facial injury (cheek area)
at the
material time.
[13]
Baloyi testified further that when the
appellant spoke to her, he confirmed that they were not looking for
her but the deceased.
At that time, she witnessed the appellant
holding a knife in his hand and saw blood on his arm. She chased them
out of her yard.
On her return the deceased had passed away and she
called the ambulance. She went outside to inform the three men who
were still
waiting for the deceased that the deceased had died, they
then ran away.
[14]
Radebe, Moyo and Baloyi were all State
witnesses. Other than their testimony, the State called Dr Beccia
Fortunato [Dr Fortunato],
a medical doctor in the employ of the State
and working at the government mortuary. He testified that he
performed the post-mortem
and authored the post-mortem report.
According to his findings, the deceased suffered multiple stab wounds
and lacerations. Of
the multiple stab wounds, the wound described at
number 8, under paragraph 4 of the post-mortem report was the wound
which penetrated
the deceased’s heart and left lung. This stab
wound he testified, caused the deceased’s demise. He testified
that such
a penetrating wound was caused by a sharp object like a
knife, or something similar. He also testified that the stab wounds
described
at number 3 under paragraph 4 could have been caused by a
broken bottle. His evidence was not disturbed in cross-examination.
[15]
The appellant testified and no further
witnesses were called. Matamba had apparently been murdered and
Pardon was in hiding and
could not be located. The appellant
testified that he was at the tavern on 23 February 2019, but was not
involved in any altercation
with Pardon, but with a young lady who
had bumped into him at the tavern when,
without any apparent reason he was hit from
behind with an unemptied beer bottle. This caused the injury to his
right eye. As a
result of the blow to the back of his head, he
fainted and possessed no further recollection of that evening.
[16]
On the date of the incident the appellant
testified that he was simply on his way to work, when, passing by the
deceased’s
house, he saw his brother Pardon and Matamba. He
witnessed Matamba becoming confrontational with the deceased. Matamba
grabbed
the deceased by his clothes and Pardon had a spoon in his
hand. He attempted to diffuse the situation between the men and then
left. He did not see Baloyi nor did he enter the deceased’s
yard. It was only when the community attacked him later that morning
that he learnt the deceased had been stabbed during an attack and
died.
[17]
Against this backdrop the grounds raised by
the appellant.
# GROUNDS OF APPEAL
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
Ad
conviction
:
The appellant in his
notice of appeal lists six grounds of appeal. However, the thrust of
the attack, and as duly amplified in argument,
can be condensed in
the following grounds for determination:
1.
The Trial Court misdirected itself in
finding that the appellant’s version could not reasonably
possibly be true.
2.
That the Court erred in accepting the
evidence of Radebe with regard to the issue of the appellant’s
identity in respect of
incident 1 on 23 February 2023.
3.
The Court erred in concluding that the
State provided its case against the applicant beyond reasonable
doubt.
Ad
sentence
:
4.
The Court misdirected itself in not finding
substantial and compelling circumstances to deviate from the
prescribed minimum life
sentence and that the sentence was shockingly
inappropriate in that it induces a sense of shock.
5.
The Court erred by relying on the evidence
of Radebe with regard to the identity of the accused in finding that
the defence was
premeditated, warranting imposition of the minimum
sentence of life imprisonment.
# DISCUSSION OF THE
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
DISCUSSION OF THE
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
AD CONVICTION
The
determination
of
all
three
of
the
appellant’s
grounds
raised
as
against
his
conviction.
[18]
In
criminal proceedings, the State bears the onus to prove the accused’s
guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The accused’s
version cannot
be rejected only on the basis that it is improbable, but only once
the Trial Court has found, on credible evidence,
that the explanation
is false beyond a reasonable doubt.
[1]
The collar is that, if the accused’s version is reasonably
possibly true, the accused is entitled to an acquittal. This is
the
thrust of the appellant’s attack on the Court
a
quo
’s
finding of his guilt.
[19]
Equally trite, is that the appellant’s
conviction can only be sustained if, after consideration of all the
evidence, his version
of events is found to be false.
[20]
Moving from the above premise, the evidence
is considered to assess whether the evidence by the State was cogent,
plausible, and
consistent as the Court
a
quo
according to the record found it
could rely on the evidence of the State witnesses to come to its
finding.
[21]
In the assessment of the State witnesses’
evidence, unlike as advanced by the appellant’s Counsel in
argument, a materially
consistent version does emerge. The common
cause material facts together with the consistent material facts
support a credible
version and facts from which the necessary
inferences can and were drawn. This is demonstrated by having regard
to the following:
21.1
Radebe’s version is consistent with
the appellant’s version in so far as on 23 February 2019 the
appellant was at the
tavern and was involved in the first altercation
involving a woman.
21.2
The appellant eventually conceded that on
23 February 2019 he found out it was the deceased who had hit him
during the second altercation
at the tavern.
21.3
The appellant’s face was injured on
23 February 2019. Radebe testified about the appellant being hit in
the face during the
first altercation. The appellant’s
facial
injury
is
consistent
with
how
Baloyi
identified
the
appellant
and what he did, namely: he was the man who was at her front door,
who spoke to her, who had a knife in his hand, who
had blood on his
arm
and
who
was
looking
for
the
deceased.
Moyo
who
knew
the
appellant and called him by name, corroborated Baloyi’s
testimony by
placing
the
appellant
in the
deceased’s
yard, by placing a
knife
in his hand and by noting the presence of
blood from the deceased’s abdomen.
21.4
Both Moyo, Baloyi and the appellant himself
testified that the mood between the men in the yard whilst they were
interacting with
the deceased was confrontational.
21.5
Moyo’s testimony that the appellant
pulled the deceased’s collar during the confrontation was
corroborated by the testimony
of the appellant in so far as he too
stated the deceased was pulled on the clothes.
21.6
Moyo’s testimony that the reason
Matamba, Pardon and the appellant were in his yard was that they were
looking for the person
who “
-likes
going around hitting people
”.
This testimony is consistent with Baloyi’s testimony that the
appellant said they were not looking for her when they
knocked at her
door but for the deceased.
21.7
Baloyi’s uncontested evidence that
the deceased said the men at her door wanted to kill him establishes
the appellant’s
motive and the reason for him being there at
the material time.
21.8
Moyo and Baloyi’s testimony is
consistent in placing a knife in the appellant’s hands at the
material time. Conversely,
the appellant did not testify that Pardon
nor Matamba were in possession of a knife nor for that matter a
broken glass bottle.
21.9
Dr Fortunato’s evidence that the
penetrating stab wound at point 8 of the post-mortem report, is
consistent with the use of
a sharp weapon like a knife. No other
sharp penetrating object was identified.
21.10
Under cross-examination, Dr Fortunata was
referred to the description of a wound at point 3 of the post-mortem
report which was
a 4cm x 2cm penetrating wound inferior and anterior
to the deceased’s right ear. This wound, he conceded could have
been
caused by glass. This wound did not cause the deceased’s
death but is consistent with Moyo’s testimony that he saw
Pardon looking for something and that he heard glass break when he
ran for help.
[22]
The consistent, uncontested and common
cause facts from the assessment of the evidence demonstrated above,
justified the Court
a quo
to
draw the necessary reasonable inference that the appellant was the
one who stabbed the deceased with a knife causing his death.
As for
the appellant’s own version that he knew the deceased hit him
at the tavern together with all the evidence duly amplified
that
Moyo’s testimony of the reason given to him by Matlambs,
justifies the Court
a quo
drawing
the conclusion that the attack on the deceased was premeditated. In
consequence, the appellant’s version is false
and rightfully
stood to be rejected.
[23]
This Court will therefore not disturb the
Court
a quo’s
decision
to convict the appellant on count 1 and these grounds must fail.
AD SENTENCE:
The
Court misdirected itself in not finding substantial and compelling
circumstances
to deviate from the
prescribed minimum life sentence.
[24]
The
appellant being convicted of a premeditated murder, the applicable
sentence falls under the ambit of
section 51(1)
read with
Part 1
of
Schedule 2 of the Criminal Law (Sentencing) Amendment Act, Act 105 of
1997 in that the Court
a
quo
concluded
that it was premediated since the appellant sought out the deceased
to exact vengeance on him. The prescribed minimum
sentence of life
imprisonment was applied in the absence of substantial and compelling
circumstances being presented to the Court
a
quo
at
all to justify a deviation from the prescribed sentence.
[2]
In light of the concession by the legal representative before the
Court
a
quo
acting
for the appellant that there were no substantial and compelling
circumstances to justify a deviation of the prescribed sentence
can
in itself then not constitute a misdirection. The enquiry is whether
the Court
a
quo
in
such absence, nonetheless enquired. No argument was advanced in this
regard.
[25]
Notwithstanding the Court
a
quo
did have regard to,
inter
alia
, the pre-sentence report.
The
Court
a
quo
not
only
considered
the
report,
but
from
the
record
the
personal particulars and circumstances of the accused were taken into
account. The Court
a
quo
stating:
“
The
accused
is
a
first
offender.
That
will
be
reflected
in
the sentence
”.
[26]
Therefore, the ground of appeal advanced in
argument challenging the fact that the Court
a
quo
did not consider the appellant as a
first offender, his age (32 years), was a self-employed mechanic
earning approximately R150
per day, that he left school at grade 10
due to financial difficulties, was in a relationship and had a
7-year-old child, and,
was severely assaulted by a mob that
apprehended him [factors] stands to be
rejected. The Court
a
quo
did take the factors into
consideration and found that none warranted a deviation from the
minimum sentence prescribed.
[27]
The
enquiry which should then follow is if the Court
a
quo
erred
by not considering the factors weighty enough to justify the
deviation of the minimum sentence of life imprisonment, as life
in
imprisonment is the harshest sentence possible in our law. A balanced
approach between the factors and the aggravating circumstances
requires careful consideration. The appellant’s Counsel in
argument invited this Court to consider a number of matters.
[3]
In consequence, in
S
v SMM
[4]
the following principle was emphasised by Judge Majiedt AJ:
“
[13]
…
I hasten to add that it is trite
that each case must be decided on its own merits. It is also
self-evident that sentence must always
be individualised for
punishment must always fit the crime, the criminal and the
circumstances of the case. It is equally important
to remind
ourselves that sentencing should always be considered and passed
dispassionately, objectively and upon a careful consideration
of all
relevant factors. Public sentiment cannot be ignored, but it can
never be permitted to displace the careful judgment and
fine
balancing that are involved in arriving at an appropriate sentence.
Courts must therefore always strive to arrive at a sentence
which is
just and fair to both the victim and the perpetrator, has regard to
the nature of the crime and takes account of the interests
of society
…
[14] … There is
consequently increasing pressure on our courts to impose harsher
sentences primarily, as far as the public
is concerned, to exact
retribution and to deter further criminal conduct. It is trite that
retribution is but one of the objectives
of sentencing. It is also
trite that in certain cases, retribution will play a more prominent
role than the other sentencing objectives.
But one cannot only
sentence to satisfy public demand for revenge – the other
sentencing objectives, including rehabilitation,
can never be
discarded all together, in order to attain a balanced, effective
sentence.”
[28]
The deceased was stabbed repeatedly
(approximately 14 times). This was indeed a vicious and brutal attack
for an altercation which
occurred at a tavern two nights prior where
the appellant, at worst, suffered, on his version, a swollen eye and
one which did
not prevent him from walking to work on the date of the
incident.
[29]
The multiple stab wounds inflicted did not
appear enough and notwithstanding the
deceased’s
condition
after
the
attack
the
appellant
pursued
him
relentlessly, following
him
to
Baloyi’s
home. An
indication
that
he
wanted
to
finish
what
he
had started and that the 14 stab wounds
already inflicted was not enough retribution.
[30]
The appellant showed no remorse for his
actions and fabricated improbable versions to absolve himself from
taking any responsibility
whatsoever. He too showed a flagrant
disregard for South Africa’s immigration policies and laws by
being found guilty of
count 2 by another Court, although acquitted by
the Court
a quo
,
a factor for consideration.
[31]
The deceased on the other hand according to
his father was, as quoted: “
My son
was a shining star in my family.
”
Supporting and maintaining his parents and assisting with the
renovations of his parents’ home.
[32]
The brutality and the intended outcome were
serious and senseless. Nothing can justify this callous and
cold-blooded revenge attack
on the deceased.
[33]
The personal factors raised by the
appellant do not avail him: at best this is a neutral factor.
Secondly, the fact that the appellant
is a first offender is a
mitigating factor for consideration but having regard to all the
evidence it does not appear to override
all the other factors
considered.
[34]
Lastly,
the appellant’s counsel in argument to advance a factor not
considered by the Court
a
quo
in
finding substantial and compelling circumstances invited this Court
to consider the reasons argued in
S
v Vilakazi
[5]
regarding
provocation as a factor, inferring that the accused was acting as a
result of provocation and was not a career criminal
who commits time
and resources to committing an assassination over a period of time,
is not the same as a particular person who
as a result of provocation
plans a revenge attack, as in this case. By provocation, this Court
accepts that Counsel was advancing
that the appellant was provoked by
the revenge attack of 23 February 2019. The difficulty with this
argument is that there is no
evidence on the record nor argument
proffered at any stage, that the accused testified that he was
provoked nor that the attack
was one of vengeance. His defence was
simply a denial. In consequence, this matter must be distinguishable
and does not advance
the appellant’s argument.
[35]
This Court does not wish to disturb the
sentence imposed by the Court
a quo.
In
consequence, the following order follows:
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
# L.A. RETIEF
L.A. RETIEF
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I concur,
# N NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
N NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
ACTING JUDGE, THE HIGH
COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
# Appearances:
Appearances
:
For
the appellant:
Adv
H.L. Albers
Cell:
073 752 1170
Email:
hermana@legal-aid.co.za
For
the respondent:
Adv
P.C.B. Luyt
Cell:
084 294 9070
Email:
pcbluyt@npa.gov.za
Matter
heard:
3
October 2023
Date
of judgment:
8
November 2023
[1]
S
v V
2000
(1) SACR 453
(SCA) at 455B.
[2]
See
S
v Malgas
2001
(1) SACR 496 (SCA).
[3]
S
v Dodo
2001
(1) SACR 301
at 319 G-H;
S
v Tshilo
[2000] ZACC 16
;
2000
(2) SACR 443
9CC0 para 30.
[4]
S
v SMM
2013
(2) SACR 292
(SCA) para 19.
[5]
S
v Vilakazi
2009
(1) SACR 552
(SCA).
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