Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 482South Africa
Pretorius v S (A131/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 482 (5 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
5 July 2022
Headnotes
in Vereeniging, in January 2020. The appellant was sentenced to a fine of R6000 or a period of imprisonment of twelve months.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Pretorius v S (A131/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 482 (5 July 2022)
Pretorius v S (A131/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 482 (5 July 2022)
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sino date 5 July 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE NO: A131/2021
DOH: 5 May 2022
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
2022/07/05
In the matter of:
MARTIN
PRETORIUS
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGEMENT
THIS JUDGEMENT HAS
BEEN HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY
WAY OF EMAIL / UPLOADING ON CASELINES. ITS
DATE OF HAND DOWN SHALL BE
DEEMED TO BE 05 JULY 2022
Bam
J
A.
Introduction
1.
The appellant and his co-accused, Jacques
van Deventer, (van Deventer) were convicted of assault with intent to
cause grievous bodily
harm, in the Magistrates Court for the District
of Emfuleni held in Vereeniging, in January 2020. The appellant was
sentenced to
a fine of R6000 or a period of imprisonment of twelve
months.
2.
The state’s case was led through the
evidence of the complainant, Mr Vusumuzi Dlamini, and one Mr Mokoena,
an eye witness
who was present at the time. The medical report (J88)
of Dr Ongai, including her oral testimony also served before the
court. The
record suggests that at the close of the defence’s
case, the magistrate found that the state had proved its case beyond
reasonable
doubt and convicted the appellant and van Deventer. The
present appeal is only against conviction and is with leave of the
trial
court. The state is opposing the appeal. Van Deventer is not
participating in this appeal.
B. Background
3.
Evidence accepted by the trial court
suggests that at some point in time, the complainant, van Deventer,
and a lady by the name
Chevon Montgommery, (Chevon), had all lived in
the same house in Vereeniging, where the incident took place. At the
time of the
incident, Van Deventer and Chevon had moved out. There is
reference in the record to failure to pay rentals and the owner
having
issued the instruction that they should not be allowed in the
property, however, that is not germane to the present proceedings.
What is important is that the pair knew they were not welcome at the
residence. I shall henceforth refer to the place where the
incident
happened as the residence. The complainant was the caretaker.
4.
On the evening of 17 July 2020, at about
19h00, the complainant, a lady by the name Ms Marie, and Mr Mokoena
were standing outside
the residence, near the gate, but still inside
the premises. The complainant testified that he had spotted van
Deventer and Chevon
at a neighbour’s premises. In no time, they
were in the same premises as the complainant. A remark made by the
complainant
to Ms Marie about van Deventer and Chevon not being
welcome at the residence led to van Deventer stabbing the complainant
with
an unknown object on his left cheek. The force of the attack was
said to have been weakened by Mr Mokoena’s quick intervention
of holding van Deventer’s arm as he lifted it upwards. Mokoena
was trying to stop van Deventer. The complainant was still
stabbed.
He retaliated by striking van Deventer on his left arm with a metal
rod he had been holding before the assault began.
This caused Van
Deventer and Chevon to flee. The complainant later went to secure the
gate after the two had left.
5.
Later that same evening and while the
complainant and Mokoena were standing near the gate, van Deventer and
Chevon returned in a
grey Jeep driven by the appellant. All three
alighted. There is indication that Chevon worked as an informer and
the appellant,
a member of the South African Police Service, (SAPS),
was her handler. Nonetheless, for the three to gain access, the
appellant
shook the gate until it came off the rails. The appellant
and the complainant knew each but upon entering the premises, the
appellant
asked the question, ‘who is Vusi Mokoena?’ The
appellant then began assaulting the complainant with an open hand on
his left cheek. Eventually, the complainant, the appellant and van
Deventer ended up inside the house. It was after the appellant
and
van Deventer had exited the house that Mokoena found the complainant
inside, wounded with his clothes bloody. The court accepted
the
complainant’s version of what had happened inside the house,
that the appellant assaulted him by stabbing him several
times on his
torso while his co-accused, van Deventer, had successfully wrestled
the iron rod from the complainant and used it
to assault him on his
knees. Medical evidence led in court concluded that the complainant
had suffered a fracture of the patellar
with haemotoma. He had
lacerations in the abdomen and on the chest which could have been
caused by a sharp object and lacerations
on the left cheek. Dr
Ongai’s evidence was that falling on the ground or even being
kicked on the knee would not cause a
fracture of the patellar and
only blunt force would do so.
6.
At
the close of the defence case, and after a careful consideration of
all the evidence, the court accepted the version of the state
and
rejected that of the defence. Evaluating the state witnesses and
their evidence, the magistrate concluded that they were competent
witnesses. The complainant had been cross examined extensively on the
question of him being the aggressor and the magistrate found
that he
answered the questions candidly and admitted retaliating by hitting
van Deventer with an iron rod and even chasing him
out of the yard.
As to Mokoena, the second state witness, the magistrate found that he
testified truthfully and did not exaggerate
or try to add facts. With
regard to the three witnesses for the defence and their evidence,
both the appellant and van Deventer
conceded during cross examination
that after van Deventer and Chevon had fled the residence, the
assault was over. Thus, there
was no reason for them to go back to
the residence. The magistrate rejected their defence of private
defence. She also rejected
the claims by the appellant and van
Deventer that the complainant had sworn at them. They had both
confirmed they do not understand
isiZulu, the language spoken by the
complainant at the time. To sum up, all three defence witnesses were
found wanting. As for
Chevon, in addition to rejecting her evidence
and her claims of having been assaulted by the complainant, which was
also rejected,
the court found that whenever she could not answer a
question, she would look at the appellant and van Deventer, to the
extent
that the court reprimanded her. The magistrate was
particularly critical
[1]
of
the appellant’s conduct of taking down Chevon’s and van
Deventer’s statements, in a matter where he is himself
was
implicated and knew he could be charged. As an experienced officer,
the court found, he should not have put himself in a position
where
he could be seen as meddling in a police investigation and trying to
cover up his tracks by obtaining statements favourable
to his case.
That in a nutshell is the background to the conviction and sentence.
C. Grounds of Appeal
7.
I have read the appellant’s grounds
and note that the grounds raised as against the complainant’s
evidence are repeated
word for word in relation to Mr Mokoena’s
evidence. Owing to the view I take of the substance of the grounds, I
have decided
to collapse the criticism levelled against the court’s
acceptance of the complainant evidence with the grounds raised
against
Mokoena’s evidence. I do not aim to address every
single point raised by the appellant, most of the grounds are
repeated.
I summarise the grounds below:
(a)
The appellant submits that both the
complainant and Mr Mokoena not only contradicted each other in court,
their individual evidence
as led in court materially contradicted the
facts they had deposed to in their individual statements to the
police.
(b)
Both the complainant and Mokoena in their
evidence were unable to give a clear and concise description of how
the complainant was
initially assaulted by van Deventer and later
when he was allegedly assaulted by the appellant and stabbed by van
Deventer.
(c)
With regard to Mokoena, the appellant
submits he had motive to protect the complainant because the
complainant had assaulted Chevon.
The appellant however does not
state the motive.
(d)
It is improbable in light of the prevailing
circumstances that both the complainant and Mokoena would not have
been able to describe
the object which van Deventer had in his hand
when he hit the complainant initially and later when he allegedly
stabbed the complainant
if it is to be believed that van Deventer was
indeed in possession of that object.
(e)
The medical doctor Dr Ongai confirmed that
the lacerations on the body of the complainant could have been caused
by the sharp ends
of the iron rod which the complainant had in his
possession. The doctor further conceded during cross examination that
there is
a difference between a laceration and an incised (stab)
wound. The complainant had sustained, according to him, various
lacerations
which could have been caused by the sharp edges of the
iron rod which the complainant possessed.
(f)
The complainant’s version that he did
nothing to Chevon is improbable for she testified about the injuries
which she had sustained.
It is further improbable that she would have
requested the assistance of the appellant if she was not assaulted
and injured by
the complainant.
(g)
The complainant and Mokoena also confirmed
that the appellant had enquired on his arrival as to why the
complainant had assaulted
Chevon.
(h)
The complainant was the initial aggressor
in the matter and assaulted Chevon without any reason.
(i)
The complainant was again the aggressor
when he swore at the appellant and approached him aggressively whilst
having the iron rod
in an attacking mode.
(j)
The medical doctor Dr Ongai confirmed that
the injury sustained by the complainant to his knee could have been
caused as per the
version of the appellant.
(k)
The complainant was arrogant during his
testimony, questions directed to him had to be repeated.
(l)
The complainant was argumentative to such
an extent that he had to be admonished by the learned magistrate.
(m)
The court a quo erred in finding that the
version of the appellant is false and that he gave evidence in an
unsatisfactory manner.
It ought to have found that the evidence of
the appellant was logical and satisfactory in all material aspects
with no contradictions,
discrepancies, or improbabilities.
(n)
The evidence of the appellant was
corroborated by the evidence of Chevon.
(o)
The court ought to have found that not
every contradiction or inconsistency in the evidence of the appellant
and his witness is
indicative of guilt.
(p)
The court a quo erred in that it did not
exercise its discretion judiciously in that it did not adequately
apply the necessary test
applicable to the version of the accused as
was said in van der
Mayden
1999 (1) SACR 447.
8.
The difficulty for the appellant is that
the record demonstrates adequately that the court took into account
the evidence of each
of the witnesses. It took into account the
probabilities, and made credibility findings against the appellant,
van Deventer and
Chevon and resolved to reject their evidence as not
reasonably possibly true. By contrast the court found the two state
witnesses
to have testified truthfully. There was even a trial within
a trial, precisely to consider the contradictions in the statements
made by the state witnesses to the police and the evidence led in
court, and the court still resolved that the truth had been told.
As
for the inconsistencies between the evidence of the two state
witnesses, the record shows that the court carefully considered,
inter alia
,
the number of the inconsistencies and their materiality and still
resolved that the truth had been told. There is simply no merit
to
the appellant’s grounds.
9.
I should further add that the point
referencing the evidence of Dr Ongai has no merit. In this regard,
the record shows that the
court had said:
‘
The
evidence of Dr Ongai does not exclude that the lacerations on the
complainant could have been caused by a sharp or blunt object.
She
however also stated that it was highly unlikely that the lacerations
on the chest were caused by a blunt object because there
was a lot of
muscle in that area. This evidence gives credence to the
complainant’s version of events that he was stabbed
with an
unknown object. Also, stabbing is different from wrestling and this
is just a question of common sense. Dr Ongai further
stated that she
refers to all tears as lacerations whether or not they are caused by
a blunt or sharp object.’
[2]
10.
It is not clear what the appellant means
when he says Dr Ongai confirmed that the injury sustained by the
complainant to his knee
could have been caused as per the version of
the appellant. What is clear though is that regardless of what
interpretation the
appellant places on Dr Ongai’s evidence, it
simply does not upset the court a quo’s findings on the
appellant’s
vicious assault on the complainant.
11.
Each
of the grounds and the points raised in support are an attempt to
undermine the credibility findings made by the trial court.
In
Pistorius
v
The
State
[3]
,
it
was said that:
‘
It
is a time-honoured principle that once a trial court has made
credibility findings, an appeal court should be deferential and
slow
to interfere therewith unless it is convinced on a conspectus of the
evidence that the trial court was clearly wrong.
R
v
Dhlumayo
& another
1948 (2) SA 677
(A) at
706;
Kebana
v
S
2010
(1) All SA 310
(SCA) para 12. It can hardly be disputed that the
magistrate had advantages which we, as an appeal court, do not have
of having
seen, observed and heard the witnesses testifying in his
presence in court. As the saying goes he was steeped in the
atmosphere
of the trial. Absent any positive finding that he was
wrong, this court is not at liberty to interfere with his finding.’
12.
The record proves that all of these points
raised by the appellant were properly considered by the court. The
court cannot in any
way be criticised. What is clear is that all the
bases upon which the appellant was convicted including the
probabilities, which
weighed heavily against his and his co-accused’s
evidence, including that of Chevon, remain undisturbed.
13.
As
to the contradictions between the state witnesses’ evidence and
their individual evidence as against the statements made
to the
police, this too is covered in the record. I may add that in
Damgazela
v
The
State
[4]
it
was said that:
‘
The
discrepancies between the complainant's oral evidence and her witness
statement were subjected to fierce criticism by the appellants'
counsel. But those inconsistencies relate mostly to her description
of the clothing which the appellants wore. This issue becomes
moot
where the first appellant was known to the complainant (and to
Khuduga) and where the second appellant admits intercourse
with the
complainant, as discussed in the previous paragraph. In any event
this case is a classic illustration of the rationale
underlying the
caution expressed by Olivier JA in
S
v
Mafaladiso & others 3
against
the summary rejection of a witness' contradictory evidence vis-a-vis
the witness' police statement, without a careful evaluation
of
underlying factors, such as language and culture differences between
the witness and the author of the statement and the fact
that a
witness is seldom required to explain his or her statement. In this
instance the complainant made her statement in English,
although
according to her, she spoke to the police officer in Afrikaans and
Sesotho. The statement was read back to her by the
police officer in
Sesotho, a language which she testified she did not know very well.
The police officer in turn, informed the
complainant that he does not
understand Afrikaans, which the complainant testified is her home
language. When reading her evidence
on the record, it is plain that
she is an unsophisticated person of a modest educational level. In
these circumstances the contradictions
between her oral evidence and
her statement are mitigated by the obvious language difficulties
outlined above.
The isolated incidences
of contradictions within the complainant's own evidence and between
her and Khuduga are not material, concerning
matters such as the
first appellant's clothing, what was said on the scene and whether
the police were contacted that same evening
or the next morning. The
proper approach to such contradictions is well-established. The
contradictions, of which there are but
a few, are of the type which
suggest absence of fabrication rather than unreliability.’
14.
There is one more matter that must be
addressed. The appellant draws the conclusion in his heads that the
court did not exercise
its discretion judiciously. That criticism
however, is without foundation. In
Florence
v
Government of the Republic of South
Africa
, the court said of appellate
interference with the trial court’s exercise of its discretion:
‘
The
power of an appellate court to interfere with the exercise of a
discretion by a court
a quo
is not without restraint. It is limited by whether the discretion of
the court in issue is discretion in the strict sense, sometimes
called a strong or true discretion. In a land restitution matter in
this Court, Mpati AJ restated the standard for appellate intervention
when the Land Claims Court and later the Supreme Court of Appeal had
exercised a discretion:
“
In
coming to its decision on whether or not to order the return of the
whole of the land claimed, the Supreme Court of Appeal exercised
a
discretion.
The
question whether leave should be granted will therefore require
consideration of the circumstances in which this Court will
interfere
with the exercise by the Supreme Court of Appeal of its discretion.
The
discretion exercised by the Supreme Court of Appeal in this matter is
one in the strict sense, or as was said in
S
v Basson
,
a
‘
strong’
discretion
or
‘
true
’
discretion,
in the sense that a range of options was available to it.
As
such this Court, exercising appellate jurisdiction, will not set
aside the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal merely because
it
would itself, on the facts of the matter before the Supreme Court of
Appeal, have come to a different conclusion.
It
will only interfere where it is shown that the Supreme Court of
Appeal
‘
had
not exercised its discretion judicially, or that it had been
influenced by wrong principles or a misdirection on the facts,
or
that it had reached a decision which in the result could not
reasonably have been made by a court properly directing itself
to all
the relevant facts and principles.
’“
[5]
D. Conclusion
15.
The appellant makes no case whatsoever for
its conclusion on the court having improperly exercised its
discretion. Overall, we conclude
that the appellant was properly
convicted and his appeal cannot succeed. The appeal falls to be
dismissed.
E. Order
16.
The appeal is dismissed.
N.N
BAM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I
agree, and it is so ordered
N
MNGQIBISA - THUSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
DATE
OF HEARING
:
5 May 2022
APPEARANCES
APPELLANT’S
COUNSEL: Adv van Wyngaard
Instructed
by:
BMH Attorneys
Pretoria
RESPONDENTS’
COUNSEL
:
Adv Sivhidzo
Instructed
by:
Director of Public Prosecutions, Church Square,
Pretoria
[1]
Page
647 of the record.
[2]
P
age
646
of
the record.
[3]
(253/13)
[2014] ZASCA 47
at
paragraph 30.
[4]
(633/09)
[2010] ZASCA 69
(26 May 2010)
at
paragraphs 10 -11.
[5]
2014
(10) BCLR 1137
(CC) (26 August 2014)
at
paragraphs 111 to 112.
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