Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 363South Africa
Kock v S (A174/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 363 (24 October 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Kock v S (A174/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 363 (24 October 2024)
Kock v S (A174/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 363 (24 October 2024)
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sino date 24 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
HIGH
COURT CASE NO: A174/2024
LOWER
COURT CASE NO: ORC78/2022
SET
DOWN DATE: 13 SEPTEMBER 2024
DIVISION
1
In
the appeal between
ELJU-NICK
KOCK
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGEMENT
DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON 24 OCTOBER 2024
1.
The appellant appeals against his
conviction on one count of murder as well as the sentence of 15
(fifteen) years of direct imprisonment
imposed by the Regional
Magistrate S Mandla of Oudtshoorn on 7 June 2023.
2.
The tragic events leading to the
appellant’s conviction illustrate the unacceptably high rates
of unlawfulness, violence and
alcohol abuse that are prevalent in
many of our rural areas and townships.
THE
CHARGE, CONVICTION AND PETITION
3.
The charge against the appellant reads
as follows:
“
That
the accused is guilty of the crime of Murder (read with the
provisions of
section 51(2)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997
:
IN
THAT upon (or about) the
25.12.2021
and (or near)
OUDTSHOORN
,
in the REGIONAL DIVISION OF THE CAPE, the accused did unlawfully and
intentionally assaulted
ABRAHAM MAY
, a male person, by
HITTING
HIM WITH A SPADE
as a result of which he died on 27.12.2021.”
4.
The appellant pleaded not guilty and
made the following formal admissions at the commencement of the
trial:
4.1.
The appellant admitted that he hit the
deceased once with a spade, which resulted in the death of the
deceased.
4.2.
The accused alleged that he and his
family were under attack and that he defended himself and/or his
family.
4.3.
In the process, he accidentally hit the
deceased, who was standing next to him.
5.
The accused, in addition to the formal
admissions made, admitted Exhibit A being the post-mortem report
compiled by Dr Christa Hattingh
reflecting the cause of death being a
blunt force head injury. The main postmortem findings included:
“…
.Deep
scalp bruising, intracranial haemorrhage, brain contusions and
intraventricular haemorrhage as well as brain swelling.
”
6.
The Court
a
quo
convicted the appellant of
murder in the form of
dolus
eventualis
on 31 May 2023 and, after
hearing arguments by Counsel, found no substantial and compelling
circumstances justifying a deviation
from the prescribed minimum
sentence of 15 (fifteen) years.
7.
The appellant was sentenced on 7 June
2023 to 15 (fifteen) years imprisonment. Leave to appeal was denied,
but Justices Fortuin
and Cloete granted the appellant’s
petition against his conviction and sentence on 25 March 2024.
EVIDENCE
THE COURT
A QUO
- CHRISTMAS DAY 2021
8.
The State presented only Ms Udene
Campher's evidence, and the appellant testified on his own behalf.
9.
According to Ms Campher, she was at home
on 25 December 2021, sitting outside her house in the yard.
Children were throwing
stones at a house in Campher Street. One
of the children went to the deceased’s house, and he (the
deceased)
came out of his house and went to the house from where the
stones were being thrown. A quarrel of sorts ensued between the
deceased and the bystanders.
10.
A neighbour, David Julies, came out of
his house with a spade in his hand. The deceased was standing
on the street corner,
talking to his son to stop throwing stones at
the houses. According to Ms Campher, the appellant walked up to
David Julies
and the deceased from another street. The
appellant took the spade from David Julies and hit the deceased with
the back of
the spade. Ms Campher denied that the deceased was
struck with the spade by accident or that the deceased or the
bystanders
were attacking the appellant.
11.
After the deceased fell to the ground,
people started throwing stones at the appellant, and a stone struck
him on the right side
of his head.
12.
The appellant testified in his own
defence that he was returning from a local tavern where he had at
least 4 (four) beers and other
liquor.
13.
On his way home, he saw that some people
were attacking his brother-in-law. The appellant attempted to
walk towards his brother-in-law
but was attacked.
14.
Under cross-examination, the appellant
testified as follows regarding the moments before he struck the
deceased with the spade:
“
PROSECUTOR:
No, sir you already told us you saw David Julies standing there, so
your focus was on David at some stage. Right next
to David is a
man standing why did you not see that man?
TOLK
:
..
BESKULDIGDE
:
Want is nie hy daar, hy was mos nie alleen daar nie, daar was nog
mense by, rondom ons almal daar.
INTERPRETER
:
Because it was not only he who was there, A YOUR WORSHIP, there were
also a lot of people around us, your worship.
PROSECUTOR
:
Yes, there were people around you.
COURT
:
So you will be able to see even the people that were around there?
TOLK
:
So u kon die mense daar rondom ook sien?
BESKULDIGDE
:
Ja.
INTERPRETER
:
Yes your worship.
PROSECUTOR
:
But you did not see the deceased standing right next to David?
TOLK
:
...
BESKULDIGDE
:
Ek het die oorledene eers gesien toe hulle sê hy is oorledene,
maar ek het nie hom daar gesien of met hom gepraat
of in kontak
gewees met hom of enigsins iets nie.
INTERPRETER
:
Yes your worship, I only saw the deceased after I was told that he is
deceased. Your worship, I did not have any contact
with him or
see him when I was there, your worship.
PROSECUTOR
:
I think, I think it is for the sake of convenience that you did not
see the deceased next to David.
TOLK
:
..
PROSECUTOR
:
But let us, let us proceed. The deceased was standing next to
David, you might not have seen him.
TOLK
:
...
PROSECUTOR
:
Now you are running away from people chasing you.
TOLK
:
...
PROSECUTOR
:
They are pursuing you; they are following you; they are about to
corner you.
TOLK
:
...
BESKULDIGDE
:
Ja, besig om te slaan en dan my vas ja sê maar ja.
INTERPRETER
:
Yes, your worship also hitting at me your worship.”
[1]
15.
And further,
“
TOLK
:
Nou u vat die graaf by Dawid; jy draai om om die persone te slaan wat
jou agtervolg.
PROSECUTOR
:
So you hitting in the opposite direction of where Dawid is, because
these people are coming from behind.
TOLK
:
So u slaan nou in die teenoorgestelde rigting van wat Dawid is want
hierdie mense kom van agter af.
BESKULDIGDE
:
Ja.
“
PROSECUTOR
:
Yet you missed all those people and connected with someone standing
right next to David who is now behind you.
TOLK
:
...
PROSECUTOR
:
Next to David next to David.
TOLK
:
...
BESKULDIGDE
:
Dit is, met die swing het ek nie, ek het mos net omgedraai en
geswing, ek het nie gekyk waar wie staan, waar wie is; ek
het net die
swing gedoen, dit is al.
INTERPRETER
:
Your worship, I only swinged. I did not check as to where who
was standing, your worship.
PROSECUTOR
:
Yes, you only swung, but I mean you were not swinging in David’s
direction?
TOLK
:
...
BESKULDIGDE
:
Presies.
INTERPRETER
:
Precisely your worship.
PROSECUTOR
:
But that is what happened sir, you must have swung in his direction,
because the deceased was standing right there next
to him.
TOLK
:
...
BESKULDIGDE
:
Kan dit wees dat die oorledene, soos hy ook gevra het, miskien kan
beweeg in die graaf in.
INTERPRETER
:
Now as the prosecutor also put it earlier, your worship, it could
also be that the deceased moved into the spade.
PROSECUTOR
:
You are a logical man, but the evidence suggest, the witness who saw
you hitting the deceased says the deceased did not
move, he was
standing right next to David. You went to David; you took the
spade; picked it up; and hit the deceased.
TOLK
:
...
BESKULDIGDE
:
Dit is nie waar nie.
INTERPRETER
:
That is not true, your worship.
PROSECUTOR
:
But you, you will agree on your version it would have been difficult
to connect with someone standing next to David.
TOLK
:
...
BESKULDIGDE
:
Ja.
INTERPRETER
:
Yes your worship.”
[2]
16.
The appellant embellished his version
during cross-examination by alleging that the bystanders cornered him
and even attacked him
with a knife, causing him to act in
self-defence. He moved away from the alleged attackers and turned to
take the “wild swing”.
COMMON
CAUSE FACTS AND ALLEGED CONTRADICTIONS IN THE EVIDENCE
17.
The cause of death of the deceased after
being struck with a spade against the head by the appellant on 25
December 2021 is common
cause. The deceased was hospitalised on
the same day and died on 27 December 2021. The cause of the
deceased death,
as per the medico-legal postmortem examination, is a
further common cause fact.
18.
The appellant’s version that he
took a “
wild swing”
with
the spade in the direction of unidentified persons (not the deceased)
who were attacking him forms the essential basis upon
which the Court
a quo
rejected
his version.
19.
The
only issue to be decided regarding the appellant’s conviction
is if the State proved murder in the form of
dolus
eventualis
beyond a reasonable doubt. In
S
v Naidoo
[3]
the emphasised 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.
In this regard, it was argued on behalf of the
appellant that the
Regional Magistrate misdirected herself in not recognising that the
single State witness, Ms Campher, made material
concessions during
cross-examination.
20.
I cannot agree with the appellant’s
submissions. The concessions, if they are indeed concessions,
were correctly made
and pertained to aspects that neither disproved
the state’s case nor supported the appellant’s version.
21.
Regardless of any criticism against the
State witness, the appellant’s testimony was even more
dissatisfactory. The
conspectus of the evidence indicates that
the bystanders did not attack the appellant before he hit the
deceased with the spade;
the appellant could not recall the number of
attackers and their identities. The appellant could not provide the
Court with any
corroborating evidence.
22.
It may be that some children were
throwing stones at houses, but this does not constitute circumstances
under which the appellant
could have acted in self-defence by
“swinging wildly” with a spade at a person who posed no
threat. The appellant never
claimed that the deceased had threatened
him, participated in throwing stones, or pursued him. The deceased
stood beside the man
from whom the appellant took the spade. Neither
one of these men posed a threat to the appellant, yet he decided to
swing the spade
wildly in their direction. He missed David Julies,
from whom he took the spade, but hit the deceased against the head.
This is
not a case of a mere mistake.
DOLUS
EVENTUALIS
AND SELF-DEFENCE
23.
The
first question to be determined is whether the State has shown beyond
a reasonable doubt that the accused did not believe that
he was
lawfully entitled to strike the deceased with the spade in
self-defence. In
S
v Naidoo
[4]
the Court held that if death results from an accused’s
negligence, i.e.
culpa
and
not from an unlawful intention, i.e.
dolus,
it cannot be said that he was unlawfully intending to use such
excessive force. However, this defence should not be taken
further and applied in circumstances where a person is not under
attack and does not need to defend himself but genuinely and
reasonably believes that he is under attack. In the Naidoo
matter, the accused shot his own father mistakenly. He thought
his father was a burglar who attempted to access a kitchen back door.
24.
In
S
v Maarohanye and another
[5]
the Full Court of the Gauteng Division affirmed that the
determination of
dolus
eventualis
was,
in essence, a subjective value judgment that was reliant on
inferential reasoning and based on what the person thought, not
on
what he should have foreseen. The Court confirmed the comment
by Holmes JA in
S
v De Bruin & Another
regarding the distinction between objective foreseeability (
culpa
)
and subjective foresight (
dolus
eventualis
),
as follows:
“
The
fact that objectively the accused ought reasonably to have foreseen
such possibility is not sufficient. The distinction
must be
observed between what actually went on in the mind of the accused and
what would have gone on in the mind of a bonus paterfamilias
in the
position of the accused. In other words, the distinction
between subjective foresight and objective foreseeability
must not
become blurred. The factum probanda is dolus not culpa.
These two different concepts never coincide.”
[6]
25.
The
state of mind relevant to determining dolus must not be confused with
motive. If an accused person honestly but erroneously
believed that
his conduct in killing another was justified, then dolus is
excluded
[7]
.
26.
There are no grounds for this Court to
reject the findings of the Court
a
quo
. The deceased posed no
threat to the appellant. The accused intentionally took the
spade from David Julies, and he
offers no explanation for why he did
not see the deceased standing next to Mr Julies. Taking account
of the consequence of
the blow, namely that death ensued, the
evidence does not support the appellant’s version of merely
taking a “
wild swing
”
at perceived attackers. He intentionally took the spade and hit
the appellant, demonstrating dolus. The Court
a
quo
’s conviction of murder
with
dolus eventualis
does
not fall to be rejected, and the conviction should stand.
THE
APPELLANT’S PERSONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
27.
The appellant was 27 years of age at the
time of his arrest. He is not married but in a relationship
with his girlfriend of
6 years. They have a 2-year-old son, but
the appellant also supported 2 (two) children of his girlfriend from
a previous
relationship. The appellant attained Grade 12 and
was employed as a barber at the time of the offence. He has no
previous
convictions.
28.
The traumatic and psychological impact
of the deceased’s untimely demise on his family cannot be
understated. It is
even more tragic when one considers that the
deceased was an elderly defenceless man who was busy attempting to
stop children from
throwing stones on Christmas day at the
surrounding houses.
EVALUATION
OF THE LAW REGARDING SENTENCING
29.
The
court must consider the seriousness of the offence, the personal
circumstances of the accused, and the interests of society
when
determining the sentence. There must be compelling circumstances that
warrant the deviation from the prescribed sentence.
[8]
30.
In
State
v Kekana
[9]
The Supreme Court of Appeal held regarding the deviation from minimum
sentences that, as a general proposition, an accused who
wishes for a
lesser sentence to be considered must set out the facts on which such
a conclusion can be premised.
31.
In the matter of
State
v SMM
2013
Vol.
2, SACR 292
SCA at paragraph 13 the following was stated:
“
It
is also self-evident that sentence must always be individualised, for
punishment must always fit the crime, the criminal and
the
circumstances of the case. It is equally important to remind
ourselves that sentencing should always be considered and
passed
dispassionately, objectively and upon a careful consideration of all
relevant factors. Public sentiment cannot be ignored,
but it can
never be permitted to displace the careful judgment and fine
balancing that are involved in arriving at an appropriate
sentence.
Courts must therefore always strive to arrive at a sentence which is
just and fair to both the victim and the perpetrator,
has regard to
the nature of the crime and takes account of the interests of
society. Sentencing involves a very high degree of
responsibility
which should be carried out with equanimity.”
32.
Lastly, in
State
v Nkomo
2007
(2) SACR 198
SCA
,
the Court reaffirmed:
"In
Malgas, however, it was held that in determining whether there are
substantial and compelling circumstances,
a court must be
conscious that the Legislature has ordained a sentence that should
ordinarily be imposed for the crime specified,
and that there should
be truly convincing reasons for a different response."
REGARDING
THE PROPORTIONALITY OF THE SENTENCE IMPOSED
33.
Sentencing
is inherently within the discretion of a trial court. This Court's
powers to interfere with the trial court's discretion
in imposing
sentence are limited unless the trial court's discretion was
exercised wrongly or where the sentence is shockingly
disproportionate to the offence. The essential enquiry in an
appeal against a sentence is not whether the sentence was right
or
wrong, but whether the court exercised its discretion properly and
judiciously. There must be either a material misdirection
by
the trial court or a gross disparity between the sentence and the
nature of the offence. This Court can interfere with
a trial
court's sentence in a case where the sentence imposed was
disturbingly inappropriate
[10]
.
34.
The appellant has shown no real or true
remorse, and although he is young, he was not a child or even a youth
at the time of committing
the murder. The Court
a
quo
highlighted the circumstances
throughout why a deviation for a sentence less than the prescribed
minimum of 15 years was not justified.
35.
There
are no substantial and compelling circumstances which may
cumulatively justify a departure from the sentence prescribed by
the
Act.
[11]
The Court
a
quo’s
finding
regarding the objectives of sentence, including reformation,
rehabilitation, prevention, and deterrence, was correctly considered
by not deviating from imposing the prescribed minimum sentence.
36.
The prescribed minimum sentence of 15
years undoubtedly reflects a comprehensive, correct and careful
balance between the personal
circumstances of the appellant, the
seriousness of the offence and the interest of the victim’s
family and community. No
amount of sentence will bring the life of
the deceased back. The appellant should be confronted with the
consequences of
his crime and receive a sentence that will deter
other people from committing similar offences.
37.
There is no gross disparity between the
sentence which the appeal court would have imposed had it been the
trial court and that
imposed by the Court a quo. The sentence is not
disturbingly inappropriate.
38.
In the result, I propose that the
following order is granted:
[1]
The appeal is dismissed.
VAN
DEN BERG AJ
ALLIE,
J:
I
concur.
ALLIE
J
[1]
Record,
pp 138, line 17 to 140, line 8
[2]
[2]
Record
pp140, line 9 to pp 143, line 4
[3]
2003
(1) SACR 347
(SCA) at para 26
[4]
[1998] JOL
1958
(TK) at pp 12
[5]
2015 (2) SA
73 (GJ)
[6]
S
v Maarohanye
2015 (2) SA 73
(GJ) at [16] 79I to 80C
[7]
S
v Dougherty
2003 (4) SA 229
(WLD) at p240, para 34
[8]
State
v Zinn
1969 (2) SA 537
(A) at 540G
[9]
2019 (1) SACR
1
(SCCA) at para 19
[10]
S
v Salzwedel and others
1999 (2) SACR 586
at 588A-B [also reported at [1999] JOL 5809 (A);
[2000] 1 All SA 229 (A)
[11]
S
v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) para 25
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