Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 326South Africa
Kamhuka and Another v S (A243/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 326 (13 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 May 2022
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
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPPHC 326
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Kamhuka and Another v S (A243/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 326 (13 May 2022)
Kamhuka and Another v S (A243/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 326 (13 May 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2022_326.html
sino date 13 May 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: A243/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
2022-05-13
In
the matter between:
TONEY
KAMHUKA
First Appellant
BRIAN
MLAMBO
Second Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
Background
[1]
Both the appellants were found guilty of robbery with aggravating
circumstances in
terms of section 7 of Act 5 of 1977 read with
sections 155 of Act 51 of 1977 (the Act) and section 51(2) of Act 105
of 1997 as
amended by Act 38 of 2007. Both the appellants were
sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment. The appellants are before
us with
the leave of the court
a quo
.
[2]
It was undisputed that on 2 May 2016 the appellants were pulled off
the road by the
police while they were in an Iveco Truck Registration
number [....] with a trailer. The first appellant was the driver of
the truck
and the second appellant was the passenger next to the
driver.
[3]
What the court
a quo
had to decide was whether the appellants
had earlier stopped the truck by blocking its travel with a vehicle
and then physically
removing the driver of the truck, Mr Bongani
Gola, or whether they had been handed the truck by a Mr Moyo to drive
the truck and
for the purpose of loading goods.
Plea
explanations
[4]
The appellants chose not to testify, but did provide plea
explanations. The first
appellant, Mr. Kamhuka, placed on record that
a Mr. Moyo, a person for whom he on and off drove trucks, had phoned
him to tell
him that he had to drive a truck on 2 May 2014 following
a car which Mr. Moyo drove. He was to meet Mr. Moyo at the garage
next
to the N3 at a four-way stop across from the BP garage.
[5]
The second appellant, Mr. Mlambo, pleaded that a friend of his called
him to help
to load a truck. His friend showed him the truck close to
Heidelberg and when he got into the truck Mr. Kamhuka was the driver
of the truck. He had never met Mr. Kamhuka before. He later changed
his plea explanation that in fact he and the first appellant
and two
other people drove to Heidelberg together in the truck.
Evidence
for the State
[6]
For the state, the driver of the truck, Mr. Gola testified. He was
driving the truck
from Durban to Johannesburg. After stopping at a
stop sign at the BP garage in Heidelberg a vehicle approached him and
people armed
with fire-arms alighted from the vehicle. He was
assaulted in the truck, he was pushed out of the truck through the
passenger door
and fell to the ground. His arm was broken in the
process. He attempted to run away from the robbers, but was caught,
his right
arm and leg were tied with his shoe laces and he was
guarded under a bridge and much later left alone under the bridge
from where
he ran for help. The police had gone back to the robbery
scene to look for Mr Gola and found him there. They took him to the
hospital.
Mr. Gola identified the first appellant at an
identification parade. He did not identify appellant number two.
[7]
Mr. Mtshali testified that he was at the BP garage to buy food. After
buying the food
he passed a Toyota Corolla and saw the person in the
Toyota Corolla stopping the truck. He saw both the appellants on the
scene,
running towards the truck. The second appellant was standing
at the passenger door of the truck. He identified appellant 1,
because
he noticed a tattoo on his neck. He saw the truck driver
running away from the truck and the appellants driving off in the
truck.
He contacted the police and then went with the police to look
for the truck. They caught up with the truck and he identified the
truck. The police stopped the truck. He identified the first
appellant at the identification parade.
[8]
Both Constables Motaung and Singo testified that they were on duty on
2 May 2016 and
attended to a hijacking complaint. They picked up Mr.
Mtshali and he pointed out the hijacked truck. They saw a vehicle in
front
of the truck, but the vehicle just travelled on. The first
appellant informed them that he acted on instructions and the second
appellant explained that he was only a passenger in the truck.
[9]
Constable Malahle testified that he was called to where the truck was
stopped, but
the appellants were already arrested. He then went
looking for the driver of the truck and found Mr. Moyo and took him
to the hospital.
Analysis
of the evidence
[10]
There were substantial contradictions where witnesses not only
contradicted themselves, but also
each other. The court
a
quo
considered
and addressed these contradictions in terms of the established rules
and case law and found that not in isolation, or
taken together, the
contradictions render the witnesses unreliable. The contradictions
were not material. Whether the Toyota was
white or grey, or came from
the front or the back of the truck did not detract from the fact that
a Toyota had a role to play in
the robbery of the truck. Whether
there were two or seven people involved in the robbery, is not
material. The question is whether
the appellants were the
participants in the robbery. Whether the truck took long to react to
the police indicating it must stop
or not, is not material. It is
common cause that the truck was stopped. Contradictions
per
se
do
not lead to the rejection of a witness’ evidence, but under
these circumstances can be indicative of errors due to lateness
of
the hour, the tenseness of the situation and errors. Not every error
made by a witness affects credibility. In taking into consideration
the nature of the contradictions, their importance and bearing on the
evidence in totality I cannot find that the court
a
quo
erred
in finding the witnesses’ evidence reliably and
creditworthy.
[1]
The
lack of the charge-sheet to refer to common purpose
[11]
In oral argument counsel for both appellants conceded that due to the
fact that the appellants
did not testify in the court
a quo
they
had a heavy burden to convince this Court that the state did not
prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. On behalf of the
appellants’ reliance was placed on the fact that the
charge-sheet did not refer to common purpose and that therefore the
appellants could not have been found guilty of aggravated robbery:
i.e. the state did not prove that they had common purpose to
use a
fire-arm in the commission of the offence.
[12]
The court
a quo
found that the appellants were identified as
being on the scene and in fact robbed the driver of the truck. The
identity of the
first appellant was proven beyond doubt. He was
identified by a tattoo on his neck and by the truck driver and eye
witness at an
identity parade. The second appellant was on his own
plea explanation with the first appellant in the truck when it took
off. He
was found in the truck a few kilometres away from the scene
where the robbery took place. It was put to the witnesses, that he
had asked for a lift. Also that he was asked to help load and that he
was picked up at Heidelberg, but then changed his plea explanation
to
that he travelled from where the truck started its journey with the
first appellant. The court
a quo
correctly assessed the
circumstantial evidence against the second appellant to exclude the
reasonable possibility that the explanation
given by the second
appellant was true. The inference that the second appellant was on
the scene to rob the truck - driver of the
truck excluded the
reasonable possibility that the second appellant provided. The court
stated the following regarding assessment
of circumstantial evidence
in
S v Reddy and Others
1996 (2) SACR 1
(A)
at
8c-d:
“
In
assessing circumstantial evidence one needs to be careful not to
approach such evidence upon a piece-meal basis and to subject
each
individual piece of evidence to a consideration of whether it
excludes the reasonable possibility that the explanation given
by an
accused is true. The evidence needs to be considered in its totality.
It is only then that one can apply the oft-quoted dictum
in R v Blom
1939 AD 188
at 202-3, where reference is made to two cardinal rules
of logic which cannot be ignored. These are, firstly, that the
inference
sought to be drawn must be consistent with all the proved
facts and, secondly, the proved facts should be such ‘that they
exclude every reasonable inference from them save the one sought to
be drawn.’”
[13]
Accordingly common purpose need not have been proven; they were the
perpetrators. The question
is whether they had common purpose to rob
with other perpetrators that had fire-arms. I agree with the
respondent’s counsel
that the aggravated robbery lies not only
in the fire-arms present, but also in the violence that accompanied
the robbery. Mr.
Moyo was assaulted, pushed out of the truck, and his
arm was broken. The definition of aggravating circumstances in
section 51
of the Act includes the infliction of grievous bodily harm
or a threat to inflict bodily harm. Robbing the truck from a driver
would foreseeably lead to infliction of bodily harm and the
appellants’ conduct can be ascribed to each other and the other
participants.
[2]
I am thus
satisfied that the appellants were correctly found guilty of
aggravated robbery as charged.
Ad
sentence
[14]
Both counsel for the appellants submitted that the sentence should be
reduced to 10 years if
this court was in agreement with them that the
conviction should be one of robbery only and not aggravated robbery.
If it was aggravated
robbery then the sentence should be reduced
because of their time spent in custody awaiting trial. I am satisfied
that the Magistrate
correctly found that there were no substantial
and compelling circumstances rendering a deviation from the
prescribed sentence
and the time spent awaiting trial on its own did
not constitute a substantial and compelling circumstance.
[15]
I accordingly propose that the appeals against conviction and
sentence are dismissed.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
J.S.
NYATHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NUMBER: A243/2019
HEARD
ON: 19 April 2022
FOR
THE FIRST APPELLANT: ADV. M. VAN WYNGAARD
INSTRUCTED
BY: Legal Aid South Africa
FOR
THE SECOND APPELLANT: MR. H. ALBERTS
INSTRUCTED
BY: Legal Aid South Africa
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: ADV. L.A. MORE
INSTRUCTED
BY: Director of Public Prosecutions
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 13 May 2022
[1]
S v
Mafaladiso and Another
2003
(1) SACR 583
(SCA);
S
v Pistorius
2014
(2) SACR 314 (SCA)
[2]
S v
Cooper
1976
(2) SA 875
(T)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Maphalle v South African Police Service and Others (B38945/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 875 (17 November 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 875High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Khoza and Another v Minister of Police and Another (3507/18) [2024] ZAGPPHC 628 (12 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 628High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Makhubela and Others v Thembinkosi N.O. and Others (43599/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 470 (1 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 470High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
L.K.M and Another v N.F.M and Others (16859/22) [2022] ZAGPPHC 269 (29 April 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 269High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Khoza and Another v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans (205731/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 1214 (14 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 1214High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar