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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 418
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## Mathabatha v S (A141/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 418 (13 June 2022)
Mathabatha v S (A141/2021)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 418 (13 June 2022)
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sino date 13 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: A141/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
NO
Date:
13 JUNE 2022
In
the matter between:
KGAUGELO
MATHABATHA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
Introduction
[1]
The appellant was convicted of murder read with the provisions of
Section 51 (2) of
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
and
kidnapping, by the Regional Court sitting in Cullinan on the 27
August 2019.
[2]
On the 29 October 2019 she was sentenced to 15 years’
imprisonment for both
counts. Both counts were taken as one for the
purposes of sentencing.
[3]
She had been legally represented during the trial in which she was
tried with accused
1.
[4]
The appellant then sought leave to appeal against the conviction
only. This was granted
by the trial court on the 28 October 2020. She
is now before this court as a result.
Common
cause facts
[5]
The following background facts are common cause and were not denied:
5.1 The
appellant and the deceased used to have a love relationship and they
cohabited.
5.2
Their relationship ended and the appellant moved in with accused 1.
5.3 On
2 September 2017, the appellant, accused 1 and a group of men went to
the deceased's residence. They called
the deceased since he was at
his next door neighbour's house.
5.4 The
deceased was assaulted and placed on the back of a bakkie. The
deceased jumped off the bakkie when it
was moving.
5.5 The
bakkie stopped and the deceased was loaded on the back of the bakkie
again and they continued assaulting
the deceased.
5.6 The
deceased was assaulted with dangerous items namely, an axe or a pick,
a spade and fists.
5.7 The
deceased was tied with a rope and dumped at a dumping site.
5.8 The
deceased was never seen or heard of again.
5.9 The
family of the deceased searched for him at the mortuaries, hospitals,
dumping site and surrounding villages
without success.
5.10 The deceased
never defaulted on signing the register of correctional services
since he was on parole prior to the day
of the incident.
5.11 The family of
the deceased also searched for the deceased through newspaper
advertisements but deceased was never found.
[6]
The appellant now seeks to have the conviction set aside on the basis
that:
(a)
She never participated in assaulting the deceased and dumping him at
the dumping site even though she
was present during the incident and,
(b)
The State witnesses contradicted each other regarding how the
deceased was assaulted.
Appellant’s
plea and plea explanation
[7]
Having pleaded not guilty, the appellant made a plea explanation in
which she alleged
that when she and the deceased parted, the latter
had taken her two cellphones. On the fateful day of the murder, she
and accused
1 had gone to the deceased’s residence to collect
the cellphones. They found the deceased drunk. She further alleged
that
the deceased insulted them and accused 1's friends picked him up
and placed him at the back of a van. Appellant also got inside
the
van. Deceased got out of the van and assaulted accused 1 with an axe.
Accused 1 and his friends then assaulted the deceased
with open
hands. They then placed the deceased back in the van and accused 1
and his friends continued assaulting the deceased.
They then took the
deceased to the dumping side and left him there.
The
State’s case
[8]
Six witnesses testified for the State. Two witnesses, namely
Elvis
Moakamela
and
Shoke Mogamela
testified about the assault
and the identity of the assailants. The remainder of the State
witnessed dealt with the search for
the deceased.
[9]
Elvis Moakamela testified that on the day of the incident, he was in
company of the
deceased at Charmaine's home drinking liquor. A
vehicle came and stopped in front of deceased home and someone called
the deceased.
He saw 6 people (5 men and the appellant) fighting with
the deceased. He then saw 6 people putting the deceased in a van. The
deceased
jumped out of the van when was driving away. One of Accused
1's friend tried to hit the deceased with an axe but the deceased
managed
to disarm the man and hit him with that axe. All the
attackers got out of the bakkie and assaulted the deceased. The
appellant
assaulted the deceased with an iron bar. The deceased was
also assaulted with a spade but did not see who assaulted the
deceased
with a spade. They then placed him in the bakkie again and
left with him. During the attack, the deceased was crying and asked
for help.
[10]
Shoke Mogamela testified that on 2 September 2017, she was at her
sister’s place. A white
bakkie arrived with 6 to 7 men and a
female. One of the men called the deceased. She saw them wrestling.
They took the deceased
and placed him at the back of the bakkie. At
some stage the deceased jumped out of the bakkie. One of the men also
jumped out of
the bakkie. The appellant was in possession of a spade
and assaulted the deceased with it all over his body. She also saw a
pick,
rope, rake and spades at the back of the bakkie.
Analysis
of the evidence
[11]
There was substantial corroboration of the fact that the appellant
was present at the scene and
took part in the assault that was
inflicted upon the deceased.
[12]
The contradictions regarding the tool or instrument she used to
strike at the deceased is not
material. Elvis testified that the
appellant used an iron bar to hit the deceased while Shoke said she
had used a spade. The fact
of the matter is that an assortment of
garden implements was seen at the scene and were used by some of the
assailants during the
commotion. One has to have regard to what the
court held in
S v Oosthuizen
1982 (3) SA 571
(T)
where it was
held that:
“
Contradictions
per se do not lead to rejection of a witness’ evidence. Not
every error made by a witness affects his credibility,
in each case
the trier of facts has to take into account such matters as the
nature of the contradictions, their number and importance,
and their
bearing on other parts of the witness’ evidence.”
[13]
In
S v Mafaladiso
2003 (1) SACR 583
(SCA)
at 593i -594h it was
held that not every error by a witness and not every contradiction or
deviation affects the credibility of
the witness. Contradictory
versions must be considered and evaluated on a holistic basis.
[14]
There is no cogent reason advanced for this court to interfere with
the trial court’s findings.
The approach by an appeal court has
long been settled in our law. In
S v Naidoo & Others
2003 (1)
SACR 347
(SCA)
the Supreme court of Appeal stated that:
“
a court of
appeal does not overturn a trial court's findings of fact unless they
are shown to be vitiated by material misdirection
or are shown by the
record to be wrong”
(own emphasis).
[15]
I accordingly come to the conclusion that this appeal cannot succeed
and propose the following
order:
The appeal against
conviction is dismissed.
J.S.
NYATHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree.
C.J.
VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NUMBER: A141/2021
HEARD
ON: 1 June 2022
FOR
THE APPELLANT: MR. M.B. KGAGARA
INSTRUCTED
BY: Legal Aid South Africa; Pretoria Justice Centre
E-mail:
BishopK@legal-aid.co.za
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: ADV. L.A. MORE
INSTRUCTED
BY: Director of Public Prosecutions
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 13 JUNE 2022
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