Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 256South Africa
Kamfer v S (A73/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 256 (13 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Kamfer v S (A73/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 256 (13 May 2024)
Kamfer v S (A73/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 256 (13 May 2024)
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sino date 13 May 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: A73/2024
District
Case No: GSH 100/2019
In
the matter between:
DONOVAN
KAMFER
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
Coram:
Kusevitsky, J et Katz, AJ
Heard:
10 MAY 2024
Delivered:
13 MAY 2024
Judgment
KATZ, AJ
1
After pleading not guilty, the appellant,
who was legally represented at his trial, was convicted on 30
September 2020 by the Regional
Court, George with four counts of
housebreaking with intent to steal and theft.
2
On 1 October 2021 he was sentenced to 5
years direct imprisonment in respect of each of the four counts. He
accordingly received
an effective twenty-year sentence.
3
The appellant’s application for leave
to appeal was refused by the Regional Court. On petition he was
granted leave to appeal
against the convictions and sentence.
4
The four counts consisted of a person or
persons breaking into four separate residential premises in an
upmarket area in the Wilderness,
near Plettenberg Bay. Iphones and
other electronic equipment was stolen from each house on 25 December
2018.
5
Whether the crimes were committed is not an
issue in this appeal. The evidence concerning the four break ins and
the fact that items
were stolen from each of them was not challenged
by the appellant at his trial.
6
The only issue is whether the appellant was
involved in any or all the four housebreakings.
7
There were no eyewitnesses to the
housebreakings and thefts.
8
Evidence
by the owners (two by way of oral evidence, and the other two by way
affidavits admitted
[1]
by
agreement with the appellant) of the residences broken into and the
items stolen from those homes effectively proved the commission
of
the four housebreakings and the thefts.
9
The appellant testified on his own behalf.
10
The state witnesses linking the appellant
to four housebreakings were Brandon Koopman and Salimino Kifaro.
11
Both
Koopman and Kifaro were what is commonly known as “204
witnesses.”
[2]
A 204
witness is often party to the offence about which he or she
testifies.
12
If the trial court is of the opinion that
the 204 witness has answered all the questions put to him or her
frankly and honestly
the witness shall be discharged from prosecution
for the offence so specified by the prosecutor and for any offence in
respect
of which a verdict of guilty would be competent upon a charge
relating to the offence so specified.
13
The court a quo formed the opinion that
Koopman answered the questions frankly and honestly and accordingly
discharged him for the
offences in issue.
14
Not so with Kifaro. The court a quo formed
the opinion that Kifaro had not answered all the questions honestly
and frankly.
15
In forming these opinions the court a quo
exercised a discretion applying its mind to the facts. It is only in
rare circumstances
that an appeal court may interfere with the trial
court’s exercise of discretion concerning factual findings.
16
Also, the court a quo in his judgment said
he approached the evidence of Koopman with caution as his evidence
was that of an accomplice.
17
Koopman testified that the appellant
came to his home at 4[...] V[...] Street requesting him to do a job
“
Hy het gevra om saam te gaan
werk. Ek het toe ingestem.”
Koopman
accompanied the appellant to the home of Kifaro but was requested to
wait at a distance. The appellant and Koopman went
to the Wilderness.
18
The appellant and Koopman smoked tik, dagga
and mandrax while sitting under a bridge. The appellant left, walking
in the direction
of the houses broken into. After a while he returned
with a black backpack. Koopman did not see the contents of the bag.
They continued
smoking. The appellant left again and later returned
with another bag (blue bag).
19
The appellant phoned one Cliff to pick them
up. The appellant and Koopman walked in direction of the road and
came across a male
person who was interested in buying a cell phone.
At that moment, Cliff phoned the appellant, informing him to wait at
the road
leading to Knysna.
20
Koopman continued to walk to Cliff’s
white Opel Cadet.
21
Koopman, Cliff and his wife drove to the
Caltex garage where Cliff and his wife alighted from the vehicle. The
same person who was
looking for a cell phone, accompanied by another
male approached Koopman. An altercation ensued resulting in Koopman’s
arrest.
22
Kifaro stated that on the day in question,
he was driving back from the beach when he came across the appellant
and gave him a lift
to Crags.
23
The appellant produced a bag consisting of
four iPhones, a small Lenovo iPad, Bose earphones and a Diesel watch.
He wanted to sell
the items for R4000. Kafiro was not able to buy the
items for R4000. He noticed the appellant was desperate and gave him
R1000
with the ‘understanding’ that he would fetch the
items the following day and pay R1200.
24
The following day, Detective Kibido
enquired regarding the appellant and a photograph was shown to him to
identify.
25
Kifaro informed the detective that the
appellant left a bag with items with him. Detective Kibido’s
response was that the
items were stolen.
26
Kifaro testified further that the appellant
phoned him while he was having a conversation with the detective, but
he did not mention
anything to the detective. He denied having any
knowledge of the stolen items.
27
Formal admissions were made in terms of
section 220 of Act 51 of 1977 regarding the items recovered by the
investigating officer,
Detective Sergeant Thando Kibodo, from the
home of Kifaro on 26 December 2018.
28
The court a quo found that Koopman was an
impressive and truthful witness and concluded that his evidence was
satisfactory and reliable
in all material respects.
29
It can hardly be suggested that were
Koopman’s evidence concerning the appellant to be accepted the
State had not proved their
case against the appellant beyond a
reasonable doubt.
30
The appellant argues in this Court on
appeal that Koopman’s evidence lacked detail and that he failed
to answer questions
put to him frankly and honestly.
31
It is further argued by the appellant that
the court a quo misdirected itself by disregarding any possibility of
Koopman having
a motive to falsely implicate the appellant as the
mastermind behind the alleged housebreakings in the Wilderness area.
And the
court a quo disregarded the fact that Koopman was serving a
sentence of imprisonment and that he was arrested on the alleged
counts
possibly facing another conviction.
32
Koopman’s evidence should have been
approached with caution for a variety of reasons.
The cautionary rule to be
applied to accomplices was described in these terms by Holmes JA in S
v Hlapezula & others
1965 (4) SA 439
(A) at 440D–H:
“
It
is well settled that the testimony of an accomplice requires
particular scrutiny because of the cumulative effect of the following
factors:
1)
First, he is a self-confessed criminal;
2)
Various considerations may lead him falsely to implicate the accused,
for example,
a desire to shield a culprit or, particularly where he
has not been sentenced, the hope of clemency;
3)
By reason of his inside knowledge, he has a deceptive facility for
convincing
description, his only fiction being the substitution of
the accused for the culprit.”
33
The court a quo failed to exercise caution
when evaluating the evidence of Mr. Koopman in that;
(a) it failed to
recognise the foregoing dangers (1 – 3 above) in accepting
Koopman’s version as reliable,
(b) failed to safeguard
and reduce the risk of a wrong conviction, and
(c) ignored the
lack of corroboration considering the objective facts tendered during
trial.
34
But the court a quo in terms recognized
that Koopman was an accomplice and did approach his evidence with
caution.
35
The court a quo concluded that Koopman gave
detailed evidence without any contradictions or shortcomings and his
evidence was well
corroborated. It was found that Koopman’s
evidence was truthful and was reasonably possibly true. Koopman gave
clear evidence
on how the housebreakings occurred and his involvement
as a watchdog. His evidence was corroborated by time, date and place
as
well as the items seized from Kifaro. As a result, the court a quo
concluded that the appellant did not falsely implicate the appellant.
36
The court a quo rejected the appellant’s
version. It found the version had inherent improbabilities, taking
into account the
appellants connection with Koopman and Kifaro. He
confirmed his “drug smoking” relationship with Koopman.
The court
a quo found it highly improbable that the appellants
whereabouts were a mystery to him on the day in question.
37
Turning to the role of this Court sitting
as court of appeal, bearing in mind the only issues arising are
factual in nature.
38
The Court's powers to interfere on appeal
with the findings of fact of a trial court are limited. (R v Dhlumayo
and Another 1948(2)
SA 677 (A)).
39
In Masango v S (A175/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC
64 (5 February 2024) the following was stated:
“
The
approach to be taken on appeal
[3]
Well-established principles govern the hearing
of appeals against
findings of fact. An appeal court’s powers to interfere with
the findings of fact by the court a quo is
limited. In the absence of
demonstrable and material misdirection by the trial court, its
findings of facts are presumed to be
correct. Such findings will only
be disregarded if the record shows them to be clearly wrong:
‘
In
the absence of any misdirection, the trial Court’s conclusion,
including its acceptance of a witness’s evidence,
is presumed
to be correct. In order to succeed on appeal, the appellant must
therefore convince the Court of appeal on adequate
grounds that the
trial Court was wrong in accepting the witness’ evidence- a
reasonable doubt will not suffice to justify
interference with its
findings. Bearing in mind the advantage which a trial Court has of
seeing, hearing and appraising a witness,
it is only in exceptional
cases that the Court of appeal will be entitled to interfere with a
trial Court’s evaluation of
oral testimony.’
40
I am of the view that this is not an
exceptional case in which it can be said that the court a quo wrongly
accepted the evidence
of Koopman.
41
In the result I am of the view that the
appeal against the convictions cannot succeed.
42
Turning to the sentences I can appreciate
why it may be suggested that the sentences imposed as a whole are
somewhat harsh. But
that is not the test. The inquiry is
whether the sentence imposed by the trial court was shockingly
inappropriate.
43
There have been different formulations of
when a sentence is considered to be “disproportionate” or
“shocking.”
44
All these formulations are aimed at
determining whether the court could reasonably have imposed the
sentence that it did (see, S
v Sadler
2000 (1) SACR 331
(SCA) at para
[8]).
45
The essential inquiry in an appeal against
sentence is not whether the sentence was right or wrong but whether
the court, when imposing
the sentence, exercised its discretion
properly and judicially.
46
In S v Pillay
1977 (4) SA 531
(A) at 535E -
F, Trollip JA stated that “a mere misdirection is not by itself
sufficient to entitle the Appeal Court to interfere
with the
sentence; it must be of such a nature, degree, or seriousness that it
shows, directly or inferentially, that the court
did not exercise its
discretion at all or exercised it improperly or unreasonably”.
47
The State correctly argues that the
appellant has an extensive list of previous convictions. It argued
that he has made a career
out of breaking into the property of others
and stealing their possessions. The offences for which appellant was
convicted were
well planned and executed with a particular degree of
accuracy concerning their timing.
48
He had previously been sentenced to direct
imprisonment and was on parole for the same offences at the time of
his arrest.
49
The appellant’s personal
circumstances are he is currently 34 years of age, having been born
on 17 August 1989; he is not
married; he has a twelve-year-old child
with whom he has no contact. He was was born and raised in
Plettenberg Bay. He stayed with
his father prior to his arrest. His
father receives a disability grant every month. The Appellant
attained grade 10 at school.
He was unemployed at the time of his
arrest.
50
The appellant argues that he was about 11
years old at the time of his first conviction and that his previous
brushes with the law
could be ascribed to factors, such as poorly
defined life goals and a lack of positive role models.
51
It is argued that the court a quo
misdirected itself and disregarded any potential for ”complete
rehabilitation” and
that the circumstances surrounding the
commission of the offences “appear to be opportunistic in
nature.”
52
I disagree. The court a quo carefully
weighed up all the mitigating and aggravating factors and properly
exercised its sentencing
discretion.
53
In the result I am of the view that the
appeal against the appellant’s sentence should be dismissed.
Katz, AJ
I agree, and it is so
ordered.
Kusevitsky, J
[1]
In
terms of
section 220
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
[2]
Section
204
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
provides witnesses who
are called by the State to be provided with indemnity in answering
questions which may incriminate such
witness.
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