Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 2000South Africa
Sangcozi v S (A302/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2000 (11 December 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: In this appeal against conviction the appeal was dismissed. The appellant was correctly found guilty of the murder of his girlfriend whose body he hid under the base of a bed in the house they had shared together. His reliance on an alibi of having visited his mother was refuted by the evidence of his mother herself and his alternate explanation that, in his alleged absence a housebreaker must have murdered his girlfriend was rejected as being too fanciful and unsupported by evidence that it could constitute a reasonably possibly true version.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sangcozi v S (A302/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2000 (11 December 2023)
Sangcozi v S (A302/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2000 (11 December 2023)
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sino date 11 December 2023
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: A302/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
11 DECEMER 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
BEN
SANGCOZI
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Summary
:
In this appeal
against conviction the appeal was dismissed. The appellant was
correctly found guilty of the murder of his girlfriend
whose body he
hid under the base of a bed in the house they had shared together.
His reliance on an alibi of having visited his
mother was refuted by
the evidence of his mother herself and his alternate explanation
that, in his alleged absence a housebreaker
must have murdered his
girlfriend was rejected as being too fanciful and unsupported by
evidence that it could constitute a reasonably
possibly true version.
ORDER
1.
The appeal against conviction is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The appellant was convicted on a charge of murder read with the
provisions of
s 51
(2) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment by the Regional Court for the
district of Ekurhuleni South East held at Benoni on 16 August
2021.
He is with leave of the
court a quo
appealing against his
conviction. His application for leave to appeal against sentence had
been denied. The deceased was
one Zandile Ngumane, the
appellant’s girlfriend whose body was found wrapped in plastic
and hidden under the base of a bed
in the bedroom of the house she
had previously shared with the appellant.
[2]
In the trial the appellant was legally represented. He pleaded not
guilty to the charge
of murder. Formal admissions in terms of
Section 220 of the Criminal Act, 51 of 1977 that included the name
and identity
of the deceased were tendered. The State was found to
have proven the Appellant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
The
State’s case
[3]
The State case was reliant on the evidence of 6 witnesses, that
included the appellant’s
mother. The first prosecution witness
was Mr Simon Bukhali. He testified that a girl named Nonxolo
directed him on 13 June
2020 at approximately 08h45am to go and see
what was happening at the appellant’s “RDP house”
on the same street.
Upon knocking, the appellant refused to
open. Simon went to collect another neighbour, Mr Mokoena and
returned to the appellant’s
house. The appellant opened a
window and a smell like something was rotten emerged. Simon was
present when subsequently a
lady identified as Beauty entered the
house and at that stage, he stood guard at the door of the house to
prevent the appellant
from running away, which appellant indeed
subsequently attempted. Beauty lifted up the base of the bed and
found the deceased underneath.
Simon further testified that for the
past 3 weeks neighbours had been enquiring from the appellant what
had happened to the deceased
who was his girlfriend. Simon
confirmed that when the body of the deceased was discovered she was
wrapped in a blanket and
a sheet of plastic and when the plastic was
removed some of her flesh came off. The gory scene formed the
subject of the
subsequent police investigation who were at the scene
taking photographs until the night came. Simon had known the deceased
for
approximately 7 years and saw her passing his place daily whilst
she was living with the appellant. He also knows the appellant
and his mother as well as the rest of his family. In
cross-examination Simon repeated that when the appellant had
initially opened
the window he attributed the bad smell to meat which
had gone bad. According to Simon the appellant had initially in the
preceding
3 weeks maintained that his girlfriend had left with
another boyfriend but later admitted to having killed the deceased.
[4]
The next State witness was Ms Emily Lebogo. She testified that
on the same day,
that is 13 June 2020 she left her house to go and
buy some vegetables. On the way she met two ladies, Beauty and Licia,
Lerato’s
mother. On the way the three also encountered
Simon (whom Emily also referred to as Simon Mokabini) who had
approached them
to say he is looking for assistance because there is
“a problem” on the street where he is residing. They then
went
with him to the appellant’s place of residence where they
were puzzled by the bad smell emerging from his house. At that time
the appellant also arrived and went into his house. He then
came out holding a small transparent plastic bag which contained
some
chicken skins from which he said the smell was coming from. The smell
coming from the house was however so bad that Emily
could smell it
from outside the yard where she was still standing. At that
time Beauty arrived who was a friend to the appellant’s
girlfriend. She went into the house and called the appellant to show
her what was going on inside the house. While everyone
else
stood outside the house Beauty started screaming and calling for
help. When Simon went to assist her it was found that
the
deceased was wrapped in a blanket and tied with a rope underneath the
base of a bed. Ms Lebogo then went closer to the
house and
peered through a window and indeed saw the deceased lying on her back
partially wrapped in a blanket with a rope around
her body which had
been partially untied on the instruction of Simon. She
confirmed in cross-examination that there was a
broken window in the
house but added that when she had confronted the appellant and asked
why did he kill the deceased he said
“it was a mistake”.
[5]
Ms Beauty Hadebe was the third State witness referred to by the
preceding witnesses.
Her testimony was that when she came across the
appellant in early June 2020 she asked him about the whereabouts of
the deceased.
The appellant told her that the deceased was in
Springs. She and the appellant then arranged to see each other
on the 13
th
of June 2020 about some work that the
appellant would perform. On the day in question however she
came across neighbours
at the appellant’s place of residence
who told her that there was a bad smell emanating from the place but
that the appellant
refused to open the door. She then said that
the appellant would open because he knew her. When she got to
the yard
of the appellant’s residence, a Mr Mokobane and other
people were already there. The appellant opened the door at her
request and then proceeded to show her meat which he claimed was the
source of the smell. Disbelieving him, Beauty entered
the
house. In the kitchen she found an empty drum. In the first
bedroom she found nothing but then in the second bedroom
she found
the base of a bed lying on the floor without any support underneath.
On top of the base were two television sets, a spade
and some of the
deceased’s clothing. When she asked the appellant about this he
proceeded to run out of the house but was
apprehended by neighbours
outside. The base was lifted and Beauty found blankets underneath
which she pulled to the side.
Underneath the blankets a shiny
plastic emerged which was tied around with a rope in similar fashion
as people would do when collecting
firewood. The rope was
around what later emerged to be the head and feet of the deceased.
She unwrapped the body and identified
the deceased who was wearing a
striped blue jean and a top which was maroonish or brownish in
colour. At that stage the smell was
suffocating. She went out
the house and asked the accused who had been apprehended by the
neighbours, her evidence is recorded
as follows: “
I
said
Bongosi why did you do something like this and he said I apologise
mama. I said no you are not supposed to be apologising to
me
”.
[6]
The next state witness was Ms Noxolo Mbekembe. She testified that the
deceased was
her friend. On or about March 2020 the deceased came to
her house and told her about an altercation she had with the
appellant
that turned violent, with the appellant at some stage
strangling her with a speaker cable. This was reported to her
neighbour
Beauty who thereafter accompanied the deceased to the
appellant’s residence where the appellant had admitted to the
argument.
As to the version of having strangled the deceased
with a speaker cable to the extent that she passed out and had to be
revived,
his explanation was that the deceased fainted and that is
why he poured water on her. Noxolo said that after this discussion
the
deceased told her that she was going to rent a place somewhere
else, which she did for the months of March and April but in May
she
returned to the appellant’s place of residence. The explanation
for this return was that the appellant had convinced
her to return.
He had apologised for what he had done and the deceased had forgiven
him. The relationship was however still
troublesome and this she
reported to Noxolo saying that although she loved the appellant she
feared that he might kill her. It
was apparently something the
appellant had said often by saying that if he can’t have her no
other man would have her.
During May and June 2020 she had
either visited or come across the appellant and asked him about the
whereabouts of the deceased.
The appellant told her that the deceased
had gone to a place called Slovo and also gone to stay with the
appellant’s mother
for a while. On the 13
th
of June
2020, Noxolo came across a neighbour who enquired on the whereabouts
of the deceased and reported that there was a damaged
window at the
appellant’s home and a rotten smell emanating from the house to
such an extent that no one could come close
to it. At this
stage during her evidence and at the behest of the appellant’s
counsel, the Magistrate remarked that
portions of Noxolo’s
evidence amounted to hearsay. The Prosecutor then asked Noxolo
to explain what happened on the
13
th
of June to her
knowledge. That is when she testified that she had gone to the
appellant’s place on that day but found
him outside from where
he again explained that the deceased was in Slovo. Noxolo asked
whether she could enter the house
and talk as they would normally
do. The appellant refused and said it was not “fine in
the house”. After
they had spoken a bit Noxolo left and
told the neighbour that the appellant’s house has been broken
into but that there was
a funny smell around the house. She
asked the neighbour as an elder to go there to find out what was
happening. She
returned with the elder and other community
members where she also found Beauty. The appellant went into
the house and emerged
with some meat telling the community members
that that was what they were smelling. After this Noxolo saw Beauty
entering the house
and a few minutes later she saw the appellant
running out of the house. He was however apprehended by neighbours
and community
members and that is when she heard the report that
there was a body inside the house. Noxolo was cross-examined about
her relationship
with the deceased and the allegations of arguments
between the deceased and the appellant, all of which would be denied
by the
appellant.
[7]
The next witness was the District Surgeon Mohamed Sarang. He
testified that
he has been a District Surgeon since 1998 and
estimated that he had already performed approximately 2000
post-mortems before examining
the deceased. His key post-mortem
findings on the deceased which he read out to Court was “
the
cause of death was determined to be a decomposed body with multiple
injuries
”. He further gave the gruesome descriptions
relating to the decomposed body and the presence of maggots eating
tissue away.
He did however determine that the body has
suffered a neck fracture and that her ribs were fractured interiorly
on both sides.
A long debate took place, both in chief- and in
cross-examination regarding the estimated time of death which he
testified becomes
increasingly difficult from the onset of
petrification or decomposition. Although not being an
entomologist, the District
Surgeon explained that between 36 to 48
hours after death maggots start developing. In this case
maggots had already eaten
away some of the neck tissue and all the
orbits of the body. Maggots were also found in the mouth,
tongue and pharynx area.
[8]
The next prosecution witness was the mother of the appellant, Ms
Elizabeth Madonsela.
She was residing in Slovo where the
appellant would visit her from time to time for a stay of 2 – 3
days. She also
recalled that the appellant had arrived on the
10
th
of June 2020 for a visit and left again in the
morning of the 13
th
of June 2020. She was adamant
that he had only visited her for 3 days and not for two weeks. During
cross-examination it
was put to her that she is a diabetic sufferer
and that her memory is fallible. After conceding that she
sometimes gets confused,
the further cross-examination regarding the
Appellant’s visit at the time in question went as follows:
“
Mr
Lehabe: Now just one aspect, the police came to you to obtain a
statement regarding the incident or regarding this case.
Ms
Madonsela: Yes they did come and I was from Sundra on that day when
they arrived.
Mr
Lehabe:
Do you recall what the purpose was for their visit, what
question did
they asked, what information did they require from you?
Ms
Madonsela: They asked me when last did I see the
deceased person referring to Zandile and I told them that
I was with
them or I saw her in December. They arrived and we spent
Christmas day and New Year’s day together.
Mr
Lehabe:
Did they ask you when last did the accused visit you?
Ms
Madonsela: They did.
Mr
Lehabe:
And did you give them the information as you testified today
that in
June the accused came to your place on the 10
th
of June
and left on the 13
th
?
Ms
Madonsela: Yes
Mr
Lehabe:
Thank your worship, no further questions
”
.
The
evidence for the defence
[9]
The appellant testified in his own defence and as the only witness
for the defence.
He admitted that the deceased was his
girlfriend and they lived together. He however stated that the last
time he saw her
was on a Tuesday in April 2020. They had an
argument whereafter the deceased left, only to return 3 days later to
fetch her
clothes. After this brief explanation of the relationship
the appellant was asked about the day in question. He alleged that he
had been away for two weeks prior to the 13
th
of June and
gave an explanation as follows: “
When I arrived on the 13
th
of June I was from my parental home in Springs. When I got home
I found that there had been a break in. I went around
the house
I could see some footprints around in the yard. I got into the house
and when I got into the house I found it was messed
up and ransacked
inside the house. When I got into the bedroom I found Zandile’s
body on the floor in the bedroom. That is
when I went out. I went to
Nomtobeko who is a friend of my mother. When I got to
Nomtobeko’s place it was locked and
there was nobody. I went
back to my house and when I got there I found people, many people
standing by the gate. I approached them
when I got to them and they
started assaulting me hitting me … as I was opening the door
your worship they continued hitting
me. We went inside the
house as they were still beating me up they saw her body on the
floor. I then managed to escape
from them your worship.
They apprehended me and continued assaulting me until the police
arrived
”.
Evaluation
[10]
After having giving the version as above, the appellant was
confronted with the evidence of the
prosecution witnesses and
cross-examined as to his version.
[11]
Even if one were to disregard all the other circumstantial evidence
regarding the appellant’s
rocky relationship with the deceased,
his defence boils down to the version that he had been away for two
weeks and in his absence
someone must have broken into his house,
found the deceased there and killed her and hidden her body under the
base of the bed.
Although it is said that truth is sometimes
stranger than fiction, the appellant’s version is too fanciful
to be reasonably
possibly true. His alibi version based on his
two weeks’ absence of visiting his mother has been clearly
refuted by
her and her denial of a two week period was not further
tested or placed in dispute. His alleged version of how a break
in
would have taken place goes no further than a small broken window
at the back of the house and some foot-prints. There is
no
explanation as to when this would have occurred, as to what would
have been stolen or how, during a ransacking of a house, the
deceased
would have ended up wrapped in plastic and a blanket and placed under
the base of a bed. For this version to further
survive
scrutiny, the appellant would have had to give a reason for the
deceased’s presence in the house if, as he alleged,
she had
departed therefrom in April. There was no such explanation. It
is also telling that neither the breaking in nor his
finding of the
body of the deceased at his house was reported by the appellant to
the police.
[12]
The attempt at discrediting the District Surgeon by placing the time
of death during the appellant
actual absence from the 10
th
of June also did not succeed. The evidence was that during the period
from 36 to 48 hours maggots start to congregate on a decomposing
body
and thereafter continue to remain in situ. This is exactly what
the District Surgeon had found. After the maggots
had started
congregating they continued to feed on the flesh of the decomposing
body which would be the position if the deceased
had been killed by
the appellant, wrapped in plastic and then in blankets and placed
under the base of a bed before he left for
his 3 days visit to his
mother on 10 June 2022.
[12]
Even if one were to discount the allegations regarding the bad
relationship between the appellant
and the deceased as already
mentioned above, we find no basis to reject the evidence of numerous
neighbours regarding the appellant’s
attempted explanation for
the smell by referring to either chicken or other meat left on the
kitchen table. The slight differences
in the descriptions
strengthen rather than detract from that evidence. It was clearly not
a fabricated version by the neighbours
but one observed by various of
them with their own recollections. Once this is accepted then it
cannot reasonably possibly be true
that someone who enters into a
house where a smell of decomposition is so strong that it could be
smelled by various people outside
the house would think that the
smell emanates from meat scraps. That explanation was clearly
proffered as an attempt to hide
the truth.
[13]
On a conspectus of all the evidence we find that the learned
Magistrate had correctly rejected
the appellant’s version as
not reasonably possibly true, and agree that the murder of the
deceased by the appellant and his
attempt to hide her body has been
proven beyond reasonable doubt.
Conclusion
[15]
Our conclusion is that the conviction was correct in law, based on
the evidence and the facts
presented.
Order
[16]
The appeal against conviction is dismissed.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
I agree.
N V KHUMALO
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date of
Hearing:
10
August 2023
Judgment delivered:
11
December 2023
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellant:
Adv L
A van Wyk
Attorney
for the Appellant:
Legal-Aid
SA, Pretoria
For
the Respondent:
Adv D
Molokomme
Attorney
for the Respondent:
Director
of Public Prosecution, Pretoria
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