Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 222South Africa
Matlhong and Another v S (A796/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 222 (24 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Matlhong and Another v S (A796/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 222 (24 March 2022)
Matlhong and Another v S (A796/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 222 (24 March 2022)
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sino date 24 March 2022
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/ NO.
(3)
REVISED.
Case
Number: A796/2015
In
the matter between:
PRINCE
THABISO MATLHONG
Appellant 1
BONGINKOSI
REMIS MLAMBO
Appellant 2
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MADIBA
AJ
[1]
The appellants were convicted and sentenced at Sebokeng Renional
Court on the 17
th
of September 2014 on charges of murder
read with the provisions of section 51(1) of Act 105 of 1997 as
amended and housebreaking
with intent to rob and robbery with
aggravating circumstances in contravention of section 51(2) of Act
105 of 1997 as amended.
Both appellants were
sentenced to life imprisonment each on a charge of murder and 10
years for housebreaking with intent to rob and
robbery.
The appellants were
declared unfit to possess a firearm in terms of section 103(1) of Act
60 of 2000.
Leave to appeal was
granted as follows:
The first
appellant’s leave to appeal was limited to sentence only on a
charge of murder. For the second appellant he was
allowed to
appeal both the conviction and sentence on a count of murder.
It should be
mentioned that the appellants were denied leave to appeal on their
conviction and sentence relating to a charge of housebreaking
with
intent to rob and robbery.
The appellants
approached this court to appeal both convictions and sentences meted
out by the court
a quo
.
Factual
background
[2]
On the 3
rd
of March 2012 and at Evaton the deceased was
brutally shot at and died as a result of the gunshot would sustained.
Several
items, cell phones, digital camera, wallet, Absa card and several
pairs of tekkies including Lime Puma tekkies were taken
by the
assailants.
Judith Sidinyane,
the deceased, an old pensioner aged 65 years was peacefully sleeping
in her home together with her grandchildren.
The grandchildren
and the deceased slept in different rooms. All the doors and
windows were locked before the inhabitants of
the deceased’s house
went to sleep.
Their sleep was
abruptly interrupted by three unknown and uninvited people who
managed to break in and gain entry into the deceased’s
home.
One of the
grandchildren, N[....] R[....] , was awoken by the commotion in
the house and suddenly saw an unknown person in his
bedroom who
covered his head.
He was assaulted and
ordered to cover his head with blankets which he did.
[3]
While he was in his bedroom with his head covered with blankets, he
heard a sound of
a gun going off in the house. The person who
was in his bedroom left and reprimanded others that they were not
there to shoot
people.
N[....] R[....]
went to investigate and heard the deceased asking for water.
Along the passage way, he met with
the three assailants and he ran
back to his bedroom.
These unknown people
followed him and ordered him to show them the safe and demanded
R20 000.
When he told them
that there is no money and a safe in the house, they tied his feet to
the bed, assaulted him and poured him with
some liquid threatening to
burn him.
After the assailants
left, N[....] R[....] untied himself and went to the
deceased’s bedroom to check on her.
He was met with a
lifeless body of his grandmother lying on the floor in a pool of
blood. The neighbours and N[....] ’s mother
were alerted and
the police attended the scene.
It was then
discovered that the grandmother has indeed passed on.
[4]
Further investigation revealed that the intruders gained entry by
cutting the burglar
proof on the window and forcefully removed the
door attached to the house’s wall.
During the police
investigations, lime Puma green tekkies were found in a room where
the second appellant was sleeping and the tekkies
were confiscated
and registered in SAPS 13 as exhibit. Fingerprint and palm
print were uplifted form a shoe box written Truworths.
The
fingerprint matched the first appellant’s fingerprint in all
material respects. Both appellant together with a third
person
were arrested and detained.
The first appellant
denied that he was at the scene of incident and alleged that he was
with the third person arrested at a tavern
enjoying themselves with
their girlfriends. When confronted to explain the presence of
his fingerprint uplifted on a shoe box
Truworths, he was unable to do
so.
The second
appellant’s defence was that the lime Puma tekkies found in the
room he was sleeping in during his arrest, belonged to
his brother,
Joel Makhoba. He testified that he was not staying in the house
and only spent that night in his brother’s bedroom
in his absence.
He denied any involvement in the offences. He denied all
charges levelled against him.
[5]
Several witnesses including the police officer who found the lime
Puma tekkies and the
fingerprint experts testified.
The appellants
testified during their trial. Joel Makhoba, the second
appellant’s brother testified that the lime Puma tekkies
belonged
to him. After identifying them at the police station, he was
handed the lime Puma tekkies. The alleged tekkies
were not
brought to court as an exhibit.
The first appellant
did not call any witness and insisted that his fingerprint was
planted on the shoe box – Truworths.
During the second
appellant’s brother’s testimony, the presiding officer ordered
Joel Makhoba to fit N[....] R[....] , the
victim of robbery’s
tekkies he wore, to establish if indeed the lime Puma green tekkies
would be the exact size of second appellant’s
brother Joel Makhoba.
N[....] R[....]
’s tekkies did not fit Joel Makhoba as he wore size 8 while the
victim N[....] R[....] ’s shoe size
was size 7.
The third person
arrested with the appellants was acquitted at the close of the
state’s case as there was no evidence linking him
to the charges as
proffered in this matter.
Issues on appeal
[6]
(i) The appellants
contended that the state failed
to prove its case beyond reasonable
doubt.
(ii)
Whether the court
a quo
misdirected
itself by finding that there are no substantial and compelling
circumstances.
(iii)
Whether the sentences imposed by the court
a
quo
is inappropriate in the circumstances.
(iv)
That the evidence of the complainant, N[....] R[....] , was not
satisfying and was not approached
with the necessary caution.
(v)
Whether the court
a quo
erred
in failing to take into account the period the appellants spent
awaiting trial.
(vi)
That the court erred in finding that the appellants were not suitable
candidates for rehabilitation.
Legal principles
finding application
Ad
conviction
[7]
It is trite law that the guilt of the accused must be proved beyond
reasonable doubt.
The accused does not have to prove his
innocence. What is expected of him is to provide the court with
a version which is reasonably
possibly true. The court does not
have to believe that his version is truthful. It does not have
to be convinced that
every detail of the version is true. See
S
v Chabalala
2003 (1) SACR 134
(SCA);
S v
Shackell
2001 (4) SA 1
(SCA).
The first appellant
raised the defence of alibi contending that at the alleged time of
the offences he was at the tavern with his
friend together with their
girlfriends and thereafter went home in the company of his girlfriend
to sleep.
He disputed the
fingerprint uplifted on a shoe box written Truworths found in the
deceased’s bedroom as his and alleged it was planted.
The
second appellant denied that he committed all charges proffered
against him.
Appellant’s
alibi evidence
It
is indeed so that the appellant does not bear the onus of proving his
alibi. The duty rests on the prosecution to prove beyond
reasonable doubt that the first appellant is the one who murdered the
deceased.
All what the first
appellant had to do is to show that he could not have committed the
offence because he was not present at the time
when the offence was
committed.
The first appellant
alleged that he was not at the crime scene as alleged. For
reasons not explained the first appellant failed
to call any of the
people to corroborate his version. More surprisingly one of the
said people was accused three who was ultimately
acquitted at the
close of their case.
The state called a
fingerprint expert. His findings are that the fingerprint
uplifted on a shoe box – Truworths found in the
deceased’s
bedroom, matched that of the first appellant. There is no
plausible explanation from the first appellant about
his
fingerprint’s presence in the deceased’s bedroom.
Fingerprints and
other traces left behind at the scene of an incident are commonly
used to provide circumstantial evidence of identification.
They
are often of a strong probable value in linking the accused with the
commission of a crime.
Considering the
totality of evidence against the first appellant, his version that he
was not at a crime scene is not possibly true
and I find that it was
correctly rejected by the court
a quo
. The only
inference to be drawn is that the first appellant did kill the
deceased. I hold that the conviction against
the first
appellant should stand.
Evidence against
the second appellant
The state alleged
that the second appellant is linked to offences committed as a result
of the following:
That the Lime Puma
tekkies green in colour were found by the police in the bedroom the
second appellant was sleeping in when he was
arrested. The
tekkies referred to are part of the items stolen from the deceased’s
house on the day she was murdered.
N[....] R[....]
identified the lime Puma green tekkies as his through their
colour, size (7) and that one of the tekkies
resembled his deformed
shape of his foot as he was suffering from bunions. The tekkies
were given back to N[....] R[....]
by the police after he
identified them as belonging to him.
The lime Puma
tekkies were not brought to court as an exhibit during the trial.
During the trial,
the second appellant testified that the lime Puma tekkies belonged to
his brother and denied any involvement in
the commission of the
offences for which he was charged.
[8]
It is settled law that the accused does not have to prove his
innocence. The onus
vests with the state to prove its case
beyond reasonable doubt. The state is expected to provide
credible and reliable evidence
to prove its case against the accused.
N[....] R[....]
could not identify the assailants including the second
appellant. He was ordered to cover his head
with blankets by
the perpetrators of these heinous crimes committed at his
grandmother’s house. As there is no direct evidence
linking
the second appellant to the offences, the state relied on the
circumstantial evidence.
Regarding
circumstantial evidence the court in
R v Blom
1939
AD 188
at paragraphs 202-3 stated that there are two cardinal
rules of logic to be considered in dealing with circumstantial
evidence namely:
(i)
the inference sought to be drawn must be
consistent with all the proven facts; and
(ii)
the proven facts should be such that they exclude
every reasonable inference save the one to be sought.
There are serious
challenges and difficulties in my view in the evidence the state
seeks to rely on in proving its case against the
second appellant.
The respondent
relied on the testimony of N[....] R[....] relating to
his identification of his tekkies without such identification
being
thoroughly tested in court as the identified tekkies were not brought
to court as an exhibit.
Except Joel
Makhoba’s say-so, about the lime Puma tekkies belonging to him, no
extrinsic evidence was tendered to link the second
appellant’s
involvement with the offences. In such instances the police
could have for example obtained DNA samples from
the tekkies linking
the second appellant by his sweat and/or dead cells found in the said
tekkies. More concerning is the fact
that the second appellant
did explain that the lime Puma tekkies found in his brother’s
bedroom does not belong to him but to Joel
Makhoba (his brother).
Joel Makhoba indeed corroborates his version. It is to be noted
that the second appellant does
not even stay at the house he was
found sleeping in as he only spent that night therein. He stays
with his grandmother, the
deceased in her house.
As to why the second
appellant’s brother was not arrested as he clearly stated that the
alleged stolen Lime Puma tekkies belonged
to him is telling.
[9]
The presiding officer in the court
a quo
descended into the
arena and played a role of an investigator and an expert in my view.
After instructing the second appellant
to fit the tekkies N[....]
R[....] was wearing in court (not the stolen lime Puma
tekkies) and did not fit him, the presiding
officer made a finding
that the second appellant was indeed involved in the commission of
the offences. With respect the presiding
officer’s finding
should be rejected as it was not his duty to embark on an
investigation in court as the police are tasked to
do so. The
issue of whether the sizes involved are either size 7, 8 or 9 does
not take this matter any further. It cannot
be said that
N[....] R[....] is the only person in Evaton who owns
lime Puma green tekkies as there is no evidence to
this effect.
Evidence of a single
witness is to be treated with caution and its merits and demerits
should be considered.
I find that the
evidence of N[....] R[....] is not clear and satisfactory
in all material aspects to link the second appellant
to the
commission of the offences.
The state has failed
to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt against the second
appellant in both charges proffered against him.
The inference
sought to be drawn in this matter is not consistent with the proven
facts and does not exclude every reasonable inference
save the one
sought to be drawn.
[10]
The personal circumstances of the first appellant were recorded as
follows:
(i)
The first appellant was 28 years old and he is unmarried. He
dropped out of school
doing Grade 11. The first appellant is a
hawker earning ± R 2 800,00 per month.
(ii)
He has fathered a child who is 7 years doing Grade 1 at school.
He spent two
and a half years in jail, since his arrest and until the
date of his sentence.
(iii)
The first appellant has a previous conviction of
assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm.
It is to be
considered whether the aforementioned factors are indeed substantial
and compelling to justify a deviation from the prescribed
minimum
sentence.
[11]
The first appellant has been convicted of serious offences of murder
and robbery. The conviction
of murder falls within the
provision of section 51(1) of Act 105 of 1977 which prescribed
minimum sentence unless substantial and
compelling circumstances were
found to exist justifying the imposition of a lesser sentence or
whether the court
a quo
misdirected itself or did not exercise
its discretion judicially and properly.
The court
a quo
found no substantial and compelling circumstances in favour of
the first appellant.
It was contended on
behalf of the first appellant that the court
a quo
failed to
attach any weight and insufficiently considered the personal
circumstances of the first appellant.
Pertaining to the
personal circumstances of the offender in matters as serious as the
offence before the court, it was stated in
S v Vilakazi
2009
(1) SACR 552
(SCA)
at page 574 paragraph 58 that:
“
In cases of
serious crimes the personal circumstances of the offender, by
themselves will necessarily recede into the background.
Once it
becomes clear that the crime is deserving of a substantial period of
imprisonment the questions whether the accused is married
or single,
whether he has two children or three, whether or not he is in
employment, are in themselves largely immaterial to what
that period
should be, and those seem to me to be the kind of ‘flimsy’
grounds that
Malgas
said
should be avoided.”
The personal
circumstances of the first appellant were indeed considered by the
court
a quo
and found that they did not constitute substantial
and compelling circumstances. I find no reason to hold
otherwise.
[12]
Ad sentence
Sentencing is a
prerogative of a trial court and that sentence imposed by a trial
court can only be interfered with where the trial
court did not
exercise its discretion reasonably and judicially. The test is
therefore whether the sentence is vitiated by
an irregularity,
misdirection or is disturbingly inappropriate. My reading of
the record reveals that the court
a quo
considered all the
facts required to be considered i.e. first appellant’s personal
circumstances, the interest of society and the
gravity of the
offence. Mitigating and aggravating circumstances were taken
into account.
The court found that
the aggravating circumstances far outweighed the mitigating factors
of the first appellant. It should be
noted that the first
appellant has a previous conviction of assault with the intention to
cause grievous bodily harm.
The first appellant
was given an opportunity when sentenced in his assault case as he was
not directly imprisoned. Instead of
seizing the opportunity to
reflect on his past conduct, murder and robbery charges were
proffered against him thus impacting on the
issue whether the
sentence imposed in his previous conviction of assault charge did
really have any impact on his rehabilitation.
The court
a quo
held that the first appellant was not a candidate for
rehabilitation and I could not agree more.
What is left is for
this court to apply its mind to the question whether the sentence
imposed by the court
a quo
was proportionate to the offence.
The aggravating
factors in this matter are, that a helpless old pensioner was
brutally murdered in a place she thought was her safe
haven. A
dangerous weapon, a firearm, was used against a defenceless woman to
take away her soul for the selfishness and greed
of the heartless
assailants. No amount of words can describe the unprovoked and
senseless attack on the deceased by the first
appellant and his
partners in crime. Statistics reveal the shocking skyrocketing
percentage in murder and robbery offences.
Sooner or later
South Africa will be regarded as the number one country in the world
when coming to murder and robbery offences.
[13]
It is contended on behalf of the first appellant that the court
a
quo
could have considered the period the first appellant spent in
jail since his arrest and until he was sentenced.
As to why the first
appellant was detained for such a period and who contributed to such
detention was not canvassed by the first
appellant.
In view of the
seriousness of the offence committed and the circumstances that led
to the death of the deceased, it cannot be said
in my view, that
failure to take into account the period spent in awaiting trial can
be a determining factor for the appeal court
in this matter to
interfere with the sentence imposed by the court
a quo.
As
stated above, the aggravating circumstances far outweighs the
mitigation factors herein. The yard stick remains, is the
sentence
meted out by the court
a quo
vitiated by irregularity
to an extent that there is a shocking disparity between the sentence
so imposed to which the appeal court
could have imposed? I do
not think so.
Careful reading of
the record reveals that the court
a quo
did consider the issue
of the period the first appellant spent awaiting trial and the issue
of rehabilitation. I am of the view
that the period was not so
great that it can be inferred that the court
a quo
acted
improperly and unreasonably under the circumstances.
[14]
In
S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA)
the court
held that speculative hypotheses favourable to the offender, undue
sympathy and marginal differences in personal circumstances
relevant
to sentencing must cumulatively justify the departure from the
prescribed sentence.
The prescribed
sentences are not to be departed from lightly and for flimsy reasons.
I can find no
reasons to interfere with the sentences imposed on the first
appellant. The sentences imposed by the court
a quo
on
the first appellant do not appear to be shockingly inappropriate and
disproportionate to an extent of inducing a sense of shock.
I therefore find
that the court
a quo
exercised its discretion properly and
judicially when sentencing the first appellant. In the same
breath, the appeal against
the conviction of the first appellant is
devoid of any merit and it falls to be dismissed.
A finding that the
state failed to prove its case against the second appellant on both
charges has been made aforementioned.
[15]
It is trite law that the conclusion of a trial court on factual
findings is deemed to be correct unless
the appeal court is convinced
that the assessment of the evidence is wrong. See
R v
Dhlumayo
1948 (2) 677 (D)
.
[16]
Consequently the following order is proposed:
Regarding the
first appellant
1.
The appeal against the conviction and sentence
against the first appellant on both counts is dismissed.
2.
The conviction and sentence of the court
a
quo
is confirmed.
3.
The sentence imposed on count 2 (housebreaking
with intent to rob and robbery) should run concurrently with the
sentence imposed on
count 1 (murder.
Appeal by the
second appellant:
The conviction and
sentence imposed on both count 1 (murder) and on count 2
(housebreaking with intent to rob and robbery) is upheld.
1.
The appeal against the conviction and sentence in
both counts 1 and 2 succeeds.
2.
The conviction and sentence by the court
a
quo
on count 1 and 2 are set aside.
S.S.
MADIBA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
agree
V.V.
TLHAPI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NUMBER:
A796/2015
HEARD ON: 8
February 2022
FOR THE APPELLANTS:
ADV. R.S. MATLAPENG
INSTRUCTED
BY: Legal Aid Board
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
ADV. M.J. MAKGWATHA
INSTRUCTED
BY: Director of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24 March 2022
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