Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 247South Africa
J.P v S (Appeal) (A57/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 247 (11 June 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## J.P v S (Appeal) (A57/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 247 (11 June 2025)
J.P v S (Appeal) (A57/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 247 (11 June 2025)
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sino date 11 June 2025
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case No: A57/2023
In
the matter between:
J[...]
P[...]
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SIPUNZI
AJ
[1]
On 25 October 2019, the appellant was convicted in the Regional
Court, sitting at Bonnievale,
on one count of murder, read with
Section 51(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (CLAA),
as well as one count of desecrating
a corpse. On 5 November 2019, he
was sentenced to undergo fifteen (15) years imprisonment for murder
and four (4) years imprisonment
for desecrating of the corpse, to be
served concurrently. He now appeals his conviction and sentence
with leave of this Court.
[2]
According to the appellant’s plea explanation, on 17 April
2017, the deceased, who
was his girlfriend and with whom he lived,
had gone out to attend a party. Upon her return, the appellant was
waiting outside the
house. She entered, and shortly thereafter, he
followed her inside. The deceased was intoxicated and vomiting. In an
effort to
prevent her from continuing to vomit indoors, he forcibly
removed her from the house because he could not stand the thought of
her vomiting inside. She began to bleed after she banged her head
against some furniture and a pole within the house. As they stood
outside, he came to the grim realisation that she was no longer
alive. He refuted the allegation of having raped her.
[3]
Dr. Laurens testified that she examined the body of the deceased on
10 April 2017. The
body was clothed in a long sleeve top and a panty.
The deceased exhibited injuries across her body, with some
appearing to
be superficial while some others were more serious.
Among others, the deceased exhibited extensive contusions on the
lungs, and
the left ventricle of the heart and the left lobe of the
liver was ruptured. During the gynecological examination, it was
observed
that the deceased vagina had two tear wounds located at the
five and six o’clock positions. There was a five-millimeter
tear
above the opening that extended deeply upward in the vagina in
the direction of the three o’clock region. The primary findings
from the post-mortem examination indicated that her death resulted
from the blunt force trauma to the body.
[4]
Based on her observation of various injuries, she noted that some of
them were inflicted
ante-mortem, some peri-mortem and those located
in the
genitalia
were post-mortem. She opined that most of the
injuries resulted from a significant force that compressed the chest,
as the contusion
of the lung tissue was suggestive of a significant
impact. It was proposed to her that the deceased may have
sustained the
fatal injuries from a motor vehicle collision. She
responded by expressing the opinion that the extent of the injuries
the deceased
sustained was such that it would not have been possible
for her to reach home alive from that motor vehicle collision. She
also
opined that overall, the injuries she observed on the deceased
resulted from blunt force trauma and that the deceased might have
been lying on the floor or against a hard surface when the force
applied compressed or pressed her thoracic cavity.
[5]
Van Rhyn was the friend of the appellant and was aware that the
appellant was residing
with the deceased, who was his wife. According
to him, on the day of the incident, during the early hours of
Saturday morning,
he was travelling from the township to Willemse’s
house. As he was approaching, he could hear noise coming from
the
appellant’s house, it was the appellant striking his wife.
He instructed Willemse to go and stop the noise, but Willemse
expressed his reluctance to get involved. Instead, Willemse
called the police, who failed to respond. He could hear
the
appellant repeatedly telling Mammie Magrieta, another woman, that he
was going to kill the deceased. At that stage he also
requested
Mammie Magrieta to call an ambulance.
[6]
Eventually, he and Werner went to stop the fight. The appellant
grabbed a spade,
but they took it away from him. Then they realized
that the deceased had passed away, the body lay on the floor,
exposed. The
police arrived, and the spade was handed over to
them.
[7]
Willemse testified that they lived in the same vicinity as the
appellant, they were neighbours.
Their homes were separated by 2
other homes. During the evening, they were together with the
appellant. When the deceased
arrived at their home, he could
see her from a distance of approximately 10 meters, she appeared to
be intoxicated. The appellant
returned home as well.
Thereafter, he could hear banging sound coming from the
appellant’s house. In past altercations,
the deceased would
raise her voice, yet what troubled him this time was her silence.
During that period, he was accompanied by
Van Rhyn. He
subsequently contacted the police, yet their arrival was delayed.
[8]
Sergeant Bashe of the SAPS, reported that he arrived at the
appellant's home in the early
hours of the morning on 09 April 2017,
he was accompanied by a colleague. They had received a complaint that
the appellant was
allegedly assaulting his girlfriend. Upon arrival
at the residence of the appellant, they spoke to Willemse outside. He
led them
into the appellant’s house. This is where he
discovered the lifeless, unclothed body of the deceased on the floor,
bearing
injuries to her face. Upon enquiring from the appellant
about the circumstances of the injuries sustained to her face, the
response given was that she had struck her face against the door when
she entered. The appellant also informed him that earlier
they
had an argument with the deceased because she had left with one
Lasla. The appellant failed to provide any further detail.
[9]
While at the appellant’s residence, he also spoke to Van Rhyn,
who reported that
he could hear from outside the appellant’s
house that someone was being assaulted with a spade. However,
he did not
give him the spade. Subsequently, he called an
ambulance and additional police officers to facilitate further
investigation.
In his view, the evidence was ample, leading him
to arrest the appellant as well. The appellant failed to specify the
manner
in which the deceased was undressed.
[10]
The appellant also testified and confirmed that the deceased was his
partner, and they were living together
at the time of her death. He
confirmed that earlier in the evening, he was in company of Van Rhyn
and Willemse. They had spent
the evening together almost into
midnight, had been drinking and was intoxicated. Earlier during
the night, he had gone to
look for the deceased at Magrieta’s
house to enquire if the deceased was not sleeping there.
[11]
Around midnight, as he was heading home, he noticed the deceased
approaching from behind. They went to their
residence. As she
entered, the deceased was staggering unsteadily from intoxication.
She was wearing a skirt
paired with a T-shirt. She entered the
bedroom and fell asleep. He made his way to the kitchen to get food.
When he went back to
the bedroom, he observed that the deceased had
white foam coming from her mouth. This infuriated him, and he
reprimanded her for
going out drinking, and as she felt the urge to
vomit, he decided to take her out. The deceased was staggering as
they both stumbled
out of the house. During that process, they bumped
into the walls, at the exit, she struck the door frame and fell to
the ground.
He had a suspicion that it was at that stage her skirt
slipped off. He lifted her and placed her on the sofa in the
sitting
room. At that moment he saw that there was blood and grabbed
the spade to remove it. However, before he did that, he decided to
call an ambulance. He then asked Mamie to contact the police and an
ambulance. At that time, the deceased was lying motionless.
When the police arrived, he was taken into custody.
[12]
The appellant further observed that the deceased was clothed only in
a panty and t shirt when her body was
found on the floor. He
suspected that her skirt might have fallen off when he was trying to
help her out of their house. He could
not recall where the skirt
fell. He also recalled that when he was taking the deceased out of
their house, she hit herself against
the door frame, he was not able
to recall how many times she struck herself against the wall or
furniture. He then took her back
into the house. At that stage, she
was already naked, he also noticed that she was unwell, and he
covered her with a sheet. When
the photos that were depicting
the body of the deceased were shown to him, the appellant testified
that the deceased was wearing
the t-shirt as it appeared in the
photos. He was not able to recall which part of the deceased body hit
against the wall or door
frame as he was helping her out of the
house. He also recalled that at some stage there was blood on the
floor. He decided to get
a spade in order to clean up but never
did. He denied that he told Mamie of his intention to kill the
deceased. He also refuted
the allegation that he assaulted the
deceased.
AD Conviction
[13]
The primary challenge against the convictions, as presented by, and
as argued for the appellant is that
the trial court erred in finding
that the evidence established the guilt of the appellant beyond
reasonable doubt on the following
factors, namely:
a)
The trial court erred when it found that
all the injuries on the deceased body were inflicted by the
appellant, intentionally;
b)
The court erred in finding that the
evidence established the guilt of the appellant on the charge of
murder beyond reasonable doubt.
c)
That the evidence did not provide clarity
on the number of blows that were inflicted by the appellant on the
deceased body , the
amount of force and the instrument used to
inflict the fatal injuries.
[14]
It is common cause that the appellant and the deceased were partners,
and they were cohabiting at the time
of the incident. It is further
common cause that the appellant and the deceased were together inside
their house when the deceased
succumbed to bodily injuries and when
further injuries were inflicted in her
genetalia.
This
occurred during the night, shortly after the appellant and the
deceased had arrived at their home. The appellant was previously
in
the company of his neighbours, where he was consuming alcohol.
Earlier during that night, he had also been searching for
the
deceased among their neighbours but was unable to find her.
[15]
The cause of death is undisputed; the deceased succumbed to blunt
force injuries identified by Dr. Laurens
during her postmortem
examination of the body. What remained to be determined during the
trial was whether the accused had caused
the injuries on the
deceased, with intention to kill and that he thereafter desecrated
the deceased corpse, also causing the vaginal
injuries identified by
Dr. Laurens.
[16]
The fundamental principle in the evaluation of evidence in criminal
trials is that the state
bears the onus to prove beyond a reasonable
doubt that the accused is guilty of the commission of the offence,
while the accused
person does not carry any burden of proof. The test
to apply in such evaluation was articulated in
S
v Van der Meyden
[1]
,
in
that, ‘
The
proper test is that an accused bound to be convicted if the
evidence establishes his guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and
the
corollary is that he must be acquitted if it is reasonably possible
that he might be innocent. The process of reasoning which
is
appropriate to the application of the test in any particular case
will depend on the nature of the evidence which the court
has before
it. What must be borne in mind, however, is that the conclusion which
is reached (whether it be to convict or to acquit)
must account for
all the evidence. Some of the evidence might be found to be false,
some of it might be found to be unreliable;
and some of it might be
found to be only possibly false or unreliable; but none of it
may simply be ignored.’
[17]
Miss Kunju for the appellant submitted that there were no
eyewitnesses who observed the appellant striking
the deceased. She
did not challenge the evidence of the state regarding the banging
sound that emanated from the appellant’s
house whilst he was
with the deceased. She however, cautioned that evaluation of the
evidence in relation to the banging sound
that originated from the
appellant’s house ought to bear in mind that the walls of the
house were made from corrugated iron
sheets and therefore, the sounds
would be louder as opposed to a sound that would be produced from a
brick-and-mortar wall
.
Concerning the nature of the injuries
sustained by the deceased, she conceded that the version of the
appellant contained contradictory
statements and improbabilities. She
argued that evaluation of his version should also take into account
that the appellant and
the deceased were both intoxicated, suggesting
that the injuries to the neck may have occurred while the appellant
was holding
her, and taking her out of the house. She also submitted
that the trial court ought to have accepted the appellant’s
version
that the deceased may have been sustained injuries in a motor
vehicle collision prior to arriving at their home.
[18]
In light of the test established in
Van
der Meyden
and in consideration of the arguments advanced, this court may only
interfere with the factual findings of the trial court if there
has
been a misdirection in the evaluation of the evidence.
[2]
Starting
with the findings of Dr. Laurens during the postmortem examination;
her diagnosis of the cause of death; the opinion on
the nature and
extent of the injuries. By any measure, the deceased had extensive
injuries, in fact, she was injured all over her
body, including the
internal vital organs. She rejected the proposition that the deceased
may have been injured in a motor vehicle
collision. According to her,
it would not have been possible for the deceased to reach her home
after she would have been injured
in a motor vehicle collision. She
further opined that the deceased sustained vaginal injuries after
having already succumbed to
the other injuries.
[19]
The doctor’s opinion found consistency in the evidence provided
by Van Rhyn and Willemse, who were
in close proximity to the deceased
and the appellant before they entered their home. The couple
remained inside until the
appellant exited the house. According to
Willemse and Van Rhyn, shortly after the couple entered their home,
they heard the banging
sound which indicated that there was a fight
going on inside the house. Willemse was concerned that in this
instance, the deceased
was not screaming, as it was often the
case during their fights. It was at that moment that he called
the police, but
they did not arrive. Later, the appellant exited the
house, he requested Mamie to call the police and an ambulance.
[20]
The version of events related by the appellant must also be given due
consideration, in line with
S
v Shackell
[3]
,
that, ‘ In view of the standard of proof in criminal cases, a
court does not have to be convinced that every detail in an
accused’s
version is true. If the accused version is reasonably possibly true
in substance the court must decide the matter
on the acceptance of
that version. Of course, it is permissible to test the accused’s
version against inherent probabilities.
But it cannot be rejected
merely because it is improbable, it can only be rejected on the basis
of inherent probabilities if it
can be said to be so improbable that
it cannot reasonably possibly be true.’
[21]
The extent and severity of the injuries according to the findings of
Dr. Laurens demonstrate that, in the
given circumstance, the
proposition that the appellant may have been injured in a motor
vehicle collision was improbable and unlikely.
If regard is also had
to the contradictory statements of the appellant regarding the manner
in which injuries may have been inflicted
or sustained, the version
of Van Rhyn and Willemse, that the deceased was injured inside her
house and in the hands of the appellants,
stands incontestable and
unassailable. In light of the undisputed evidence in the state case,
it was not necessary for the trial
court to make a determination of
the number of blows that were inflicted by the appellant on the
deceased body. The evidence was
overwhelming, it established that the
deceased was free of injuries when she entered her home with the
appellant, and that all
injuries found on her body were inflicted
whilst she was inside her home.
[22]
It is untannable that the amount of force that caused her injuries
resulted from her body striking against
a door frame or household
furniture. The suggestion that she may have sustained the injuries
when the appellant was trying to get
her out of the house has been
shown not to be only improbable, but unequivocally false. From the
above, the conclusion reached
by the trial court that the deceased
was injured by application of blunt force, at the hands of the
appellant cannot be faulted.
The trial court accurately found that
the appellant was criminally responsible for the pre mortem; peri
mortem and the postmortem
injuries found on the deceased.
AD Sentence
[23]
The main guiding principles in sentencing are well
documented particularly,
S
v Zinn
which is instructive that personal circumstances; that the nature of
the offences committed and the interests of the community
have to be
decisive in the sentences imposed. In appeal cases where the CLAA is
applicable, these traditional principles have become
integrated into
the consideration of a proper approach to substantial and compelling
circumstances that would guide the court
in imposing just and
equitable sentences.
[4]
Upon the
consideration of principles of sentencing in relation to the relevant
factors, the court found no circumstances that were
substantial and
compelling to justify imposing of a lesser sentence. On the charge of
murder, the appellant was sentenced to undergo
fifteen years
imprisonment. On the charge of desecrating a corpse, he was sentenced
to undergo four (4) years imprisonment. The
sentences were ordered to
run concurrently.
[24]
The written heads of arguments and the oral submissions did not
present any significant challenge
to the sentences imposed on both
counts, save to reiterate the personal circumstances of the appellant
at the time the sentences
were considered. There were no
factors pointed out to suggest that the trial court erred or
committed a misdirection in the
consideration of the sentences it
imposed. It was however, submitted that the often-complained
congestion and overcrowding in the
prisons should be decisive in the
appeal against the sentences.
[25]
Nonetheless, the personal circumstances, the nature of the offences
committed, and the interests of
the community remained central in
evaluating whether the trial court imposed appropriate sentences.
Worthy of note was that the
appellant had no previous convictions, he
was advanced in age, being 57 years old; a primary breadwinner for
his family at the
time of arrest and that, he had been diagnosed with
a terminal illness. It is imperative to also recognise the fact that
these
offences were committed in a domestic violence environment. On
reflection of the circumstances in which these offences were
committed,
one is reminded of the observations of the court in
S
v Kekana
[5]
,
that:
“
Domestic
violence has become a scourge in our society and should not be
treated lightly. It has to be deplored and also severely
punished.
Hardly a day passes without a report in the media of a woman, or a
child being beaten, raped or even killed in this country.
Many women
and children live in constant fear for their lives. This is in some
respect a negation of many of their fundamental
rights such as
equality, human dignity and bodily integrity
.”
[6]
Therefore the approach to the sentences that were imposed on the
appellant have to reflect the same observations.
[26] A
closer reading of the reasoning of the trial court judgment and how
it reached its conclusion on the sentences
revealed no error or
misdirection in the application of principles to the unique
circumstances of the appellant. The sentences
imposed on both counts
reflect a considered value judgment, with no factors that justify
interference.
[27]
It is within this context and background that the appeal against the
convictions and sentences should fail.
Order
[28]
Therefore, I proposed the following order:
The
appeal against convictions and sentences is dismissed.
SIPUNZI AJ
Acting Judge of the
High Court
I agree. It is
so ordered.
LE GRANGE J
Judge of the High
Court
Appearances
For
the Appellant
:
Ms Kunju
Instructed by:
Legal Aid South Africa
Cape
Town Local Office
For
the Respondent
:
Ms Engelbrecht
Instructed by:
The Director of Public Prosecutions
Western
Cape
Hearing Date:
30 May 2025
Judgment Date:
11 June 2025
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email.
[1]
S
v Van Meyden
1999
(2) 79 (W) @ 82
[2]
S
v Hadebe and Others 1997(2) SACR 641 SCA, Paragraph 11
[3]
S
v Shackell 2001(4) SA 1 SCA, Paragraph 30
[4]
S v P
B
2013(2) SACR 533 SCA , paragraph 20
[5]
S v Kekana (629/2013)
[2014] ZASCA 158
(1 October 2014)
[6]
S v Kekana, paragraph 20
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