Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 257South Africa
Peni v S (Appeal) (A280/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 257 (20 June 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal – Murder – Self-defence – appellant stabbed by the deceased with a knife – appellant also stabbed the deceased with a knife and the deceased died as a result of one of the stab wounds – appellant pleading self-defence – trial court misdirected itself in convicting the appellant where the evidence led by the prosecution established that (a) it was the deceased who attacked the appellant first, (b) the appellant acted in self-defence when he stabbed the deceased, and in the absence of evidence to establish that the attack upon the deceased had ceased when the appellant stabbed the deceased or the appellant exceeded the bounds of self-defence – conviction and sentence set aside.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Peni v S (Appeal) (A280/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 257 (20 June 2025)
Peni v S (Appeal) (A280/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 257 (20 June 2025)
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sino date 20 June 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: A280/2024
In the matter between:
PHELELANI
PENI
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Peni
v The State
(Case no A280/2024)
[2025]
ZAWCHC 250
(20 JUNE 2025)
Coram:
NUKU J and ROUX AJ
Heard
:
6 June 2025
Delivered
:
20 JUNE 2025
Summary:
Criminal – Murder – Self-defence –
appellant
stabbed by the deceased with a knife – appellant also stabbed
the deceased with a knife and the deceased died as
a result of one of
the stab wounds – appellant pleading self-defence – trial
court misdirected itself in convicting
the appellant where the
evidence led by the prosecution established that (a) it was the
deceased who attacked the appellant first,
(b) the appellant acted in
self-defence when he stabbed the deceased, and in the absence of
evidence to establish that the attack
upon the deceased had ceased
when the appellant stabbed the deceased or the appellant exceeded the
bounds of self-defence –
conviction and sentence set aside.
ORDER
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
The conviction and sentence are set aside.
3
The appellant is found not guilty and is
accordingly acquitted.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
NUKU, J (ROUX AJ
concurring):
[1]
The appellant was charged with one count of
murder, it being alleged that on or about 29 November 2020 and at or
near Bashe Street,
Saldanha, Western Cape, he unlawfully and
intentionally killed the late Tina Gcwabe (deceased) by stabbing him
with a knife.
[2]
The appellant appeared at the Vredenburg Regional Court (trial court)
where he pleaded
not guilty to the charge. He was convicted as
charged on 23 July 2023. On 6 September 2023, he was sentenced to 12
years imprisonment.
He was refused leave to appeal by the trial
court. The appeal was brought with leave obtained from this court
(per Allie J and
Van Leeve AJ) on petition. Leave to appeal was
granted in respect of both conviction and sentence.
[3]
The evidence on the basis of which the appellant
was convicted comprised of the oral testimony of one eyewitness, the
photographs
of the crime scene, the post mortem report as well as
photographs taken during the post mortem examination. The appellant
also
made certain formal admissions in terms of section 220 of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977 (Criminal Procedure Act),
admitting
(a) the date and place where the deceased incident took
place, (b) the identity of the deceased, (c) the correctness of the
facts
and conclusions as contained in the post mortem report, and (d)
the cause of death as recorded in the post mortem report, namely
that
the deceased died as a result of a penetrating incised wound on the
left chest anterior with hypovolemic shock.
[4]
A brief plea explanation that was given on behalf of the appellant by
his legal representative
was to the effect that (a) the deceased
entered the premises where the appellant was at, (b) the deceased had
a knife with him,
(c) the appellant acted in self-defence when he
stabbed the deceased, and (d) the appellant was also stabbed by the
deceased.
[5]
The evidence of the eyewitness was that: on 29 November 2020 he was
at his house with
the appellant, Asavela and Ayanda where they
started drinking some alcoholic beverages from about 15h30. At about
23h00 in the
evening the four of them decided to go to a house
situated in Ryland Street where they sat and continued with their
consumption
of the alcoholic beverages. The deceased, who was with
Zibella at the time, arrived at this house in Ryland Street whilst
the appellant
and his company were still there. The deceased and
Zibella wanted to help themselves to the alcoholic beverages that the
appellant
and his company had been consuming. This resulted in an
argument after which the eyewitness, the appellant and their company
left
to go back to the house of the eyewitness where they had been
sitting initially. Upon their return to his house, they closed the
door and sat on the couch. Not long after their return the deceased
came and kicked the door open. Upon his entering the house,
the
deceased stabbed the appellant on the head with the knife he had in
his possession. The appellant then in response stabbed
the deceased
with a knife that had been on a table in the house. The eyewitness
could not say how many times the appellant stabbed
the deceased. He
explained, however, that the appellant stabbed the deceased on his
front side of the chest as they were facing
each other (that is the
deceased and the appellant) at the time.
[6]
The witnesses responded in the negative when asked by the state
prosecutor whether
there was a time when the deceased had his back
towards the appellant. He also did not know anything about wounds
that the deceased
had on his left upper arm as well as on his back.
The evidence was further that at some point in time the deceased ran
out of the
house and at that stage the witness closed the door again.
Later on, the witness heard someone saying that the deceased was
dying.
He went out of his house and saw that the deceased was lying
next to the gate. He took out his jersey and tried to close the wound
that the deceased had. Both the deceased and the appellant were then
taken to Vredenburg hospital for medical treatment.
[7]
The prosecutions closed its case after leading the oral evidence
referred to above
whereafter the appellant applied for a discharge in
terms of
section 174
of the
Criminal Procedure Act. The
application
was refused whereafter the case for the appellant was closed without
leading evidence.
[8]
The trial court gave a very short judgment where other than
recounting the oral evidence
it said the following:
‘
The
witness who testified for the state was clearly protecting his
nephew, this is evident in all, in most of the concessions that
he
made inter alia whether the knife was on the table, in the drawer,
how many times the accused was stabbed.
He testified that he
cleaned, he helped the accused with injuries but only testified with
regards to one injury. When it was put
to him that the accused had
more injuries, he could not really answer that. The witness was not
really clear, he was more trying
to protect his nephew, but the fact
of the matter there is no justification for the stabbing.
During the plea
explanation the accused offered the defence of self-defence or
private defence, this was not followed up with the
evidence so it
could not be tested. If the Court then applies then State v Boesak,
in that case the state’s case was also
undisputed as the
defence had closed its case before putting, before having the accused
testify. If the Court applies that case,
then the state’s case
is undisputed. And the accused is therefore found guilty on the count
of murder…’
[9]
Before us it was submitted on behalf of the appellant that the trial
court erred in
not evaluating the evidence to establish whether the
prosecution had proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt. In this
regard,
reference was made to the decisions of the Constitutional
Court in
S
v Boesak
[1]
(Boesak)
and this Court in
S
v Van Den Berg and Another
[2]
(Van
Den Berg).
[10]
It was submitted on behalf of the respondent that the appellant was
correctly convicted because
(a) the appellant failed to testify and
the questions that were put to the witness cannot be regarded as his
evidence, (b) the
evidence established that the appellant exceeded
the bounds of self- defence when considering the fact that the
appellant only
had only one stab would on his head whereas the
deceased had three stab wounds, and (c) it was unclear how the
deceased sustained
the other two stab wounds and the appellant failed
to take the court into his confidence by explaining how the deceased
sustained
these injuries.
[11]
There are a number of difficulties with the trial court’s
judgment on conviction. Firstly,
the evidence was clear that it was
the deceased who attacked the appellant who had been sitting at the
home of his cousin, the
witness. Unprovoked, the deceased stabbed the
appellant. That the appellant stabbed the deceased is thus
self-evident from the
evidence presented by the prosecution. The
judgment of the trial court does not engage with this aspect.
[12]
The evidence by the prosecution having established that the deceased
attacked the deceased who
then stabbed the deceased, the only basis
upon which the appellant could be convicted would be if the evidence
established that
either the attack had ceased by the time that the
appellant inflicted the wound that resulted in the death of the
deceased or he
exceeded the bounds of self-defence. On my reading of
the record no such evidence was presented. To the contrary, the trial
court
was critical of the only state witness that testified on the
basis that the witnesses appeared to tailor his evidence in order to
protect the appellant.
[13]
Whilst there might be some merit in the trial court’s criticism
of the only state witness,
that in itself presents a further
difficulty for the prosecution’s case in that there was no
other clear evidence on the
basis of which the court could justify
that the appellant either attacked the deceased at a time when the
appellant’s life
was no longer in danger or that the appellant
exceeded the bounds of self-defence.
[14]
The trial court clearly failed to do a proper evaluation of the
evidence and in that regard,
it misdirected itself. Had it done a
proper evaluation of the evidence it would have realised that the
state had failed to prove
that there was no justification for the
manner in which the appellant acted which unfortunately resulted in
the death of the deceased.
[15]
The court’s reliance on the appellant’s failure to
testify as a basis of the conviction
was also mistaken in the absence
of evidence that called for an answer from the appellant. Conviction
does not automatically follow
from the failure of an accused person
to testify, but will only follow where the prosecution has presented
evidence establishing
the guilt of an accused person. In my view, the
conviction of the appellant is unsustainable, and the appeal should
succeed. With
the success of the appeal in respect of conviction, it
follows that the sentence must fall away.
Order
[16]
In the result I make the following order:
16.1
The appeal is upheld.
16.2
The conviction and sentence are set aside.
16.3
The appellant is found not guilty and is accordingly acquitted.
L G NUKU
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
W
ROUX
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For appellant:
Ms
Levendal
Instructed by:
Legal Aid South Africa, Cape Town
For
respondent:
Mr
Koti
Instructed
by:
Director of Public Prosecutions, Cape Town
[1]
[2000] ZACC 25
;
2001
(1) SACR 1
(CC)
[2]
2009
(1) SACR 661
(C)
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