Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 34South Africa
Lehloka v S (A213/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 34 (16 March 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Lehloka v S (A213/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 34 (16 March 2022)
Lehloka v S (A213/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 34 (16 March 2022)
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sino date 16 March 2022
In the High Court of
South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
Case No. A213/21
In
the matter between:
MOTLATSI
LEHLOKA
Appellant
and
THE STATE
Respondent
Date of
Hearing:
11 February 2022
Electronically
delivered:
16 March
2022
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The appellant was convicted in the Regional Court sitting in Blue
Downs on a charge
of murder read with
section 51(1)
of the
Criminal
Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
The regional
magistrate found that there were compelling and substantial
circumstances meriting a deviation from the prescribed
minimum
sentence and imposed a sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment. He
also declared the appellant unfit to possess a firearm
in terms of
section 103(1)
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
.
Subsequent
thereto, the appellant applied for leave to appeal against his
conviction and sentence and his application was refused
by the trial
court. However, on petition to the Judge President in terms of
section 309C of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
(“
the
CPA”
), the appellant was granted leave to appeal to this
court against his conviction only.
[2]
The charge against the appellant is that on 17 December 2017 and at
Green Park, Mfuleni,
the appellant unlawfully and intentionally
killed one Shupani Letseka (“the deceased”) by hitting
him with bricks.
The appellant was legally represented throughout the
trial. He pleaded not guilty to the charge and, in his plea
explanation, he
made formal admissions which were recorded by the
trial court in terms of section 115(2)(b) of the CPA. Amongst others,
the appellant
admitted the identity of the deceased, the contents and
the correctness of the
medico-legal
post-mortem report
, and the fact that the deceased did not
suffer further injuries on his body from the scene of crime to the
place where the autopsy
was performed.
THE
FACTUAL MATRIX
[3]
At the hearing of the matter in the court below, the state’s
case rested principally
on the evidence of two witnesses, namely Ms
Amkelani Sikonana (Ms Sikonana), a single witness, and on the
evidence of Constable
Mdau who was the investigating officer in the
matter. The appellant testified and also called a witness to
corroborate his version.
The evidence that was led at the trial court
can be summarised briefly as follows:
[4]
Ms Sikonana, the deceased’s girlfriend, was the first and only
eyewitness to
testify. The deceased was her neighbour. Their
houses faced each other and are separated by a street. She testified
that
on 17 December 2017 early in the morning around 09h00, she woke
up when she heard noise outside her house. She went outside to
investigate what the problem was and she saw an ambulance and police
officers outside. She inquired from her mother and the latter
informed her that one Mr Ndate had passed away and that his body was
lying on the ground outside the deceased’s yard. There
were
many men in the vicinity standing in front of the deceased’s
yard. The appellant was among the men who were standing
outside the
deceased’s yard. A discussion ensued between the appellant and
his companions regarding a cap of Mr Ndate that
had been found in the
deceased’s yard. The concern was that the lifeless body of Mr
Ndate was outside the deceased’s
yard while his cap was in the
deceased’s yard. Shortly thereafter, the deceased got out of
his house and asked his neighbour
what was going on. One of the men
who was there asked the deceased why Mr Ndate’s cap was in his
yard but the police intervened
and warned these men to back off. The
body of Mr Ndate was then removed and the police left the scene.
[5]
Subsequent thereto, the appellant and three other men entered the
house of the deceased.
At that time, the deceased and one Hewoo were
seated in front of the deceased’s house, drinking alcohol.
After entering the
deceased’s premises, the appellant took four
chairs and placed them in front of the deceased. They sat down and
their sitting
position made it clear to everyone that they were
discussing a serious matter with the deceased. As Ms Sikonana was
watching, she
saw the appellant hitting the deceased with an empty
bottle on his face. She screamed and her sister warned her not to
approach
as she could get injured. The other three men who were
together with the appellant went to fetch bricks and they hit the
deceased
therewith on his head. At that time Hewoo, who was with the
deceased, went into the house fearing for his life.
[6]
Ms Sikonana testified that the appellant also joined the three men in
hitting the
deceased with bricks. When she observed this incident,
she was five meters away from the appellant and his companions. They
continued
to assault the deceased with bricks until they realized
that he was dead and thereafter they left him. She then went to the
deceased’s
house and she got a blanket and gave it to Hewoo to
cover the body of the deceased. Shortly thereafter a mortuary vehicle
came
and fetched the deceased’s body from the scene. She
testified that one Nosisi, who referred to the deceased as his
father,
also witnessed the incident. The police arrived, but Ms
Sikonana was emotional and in shock and she could not explain to the
police
what happened. The detective left his number and told her that
when she was ready she should contact him. That was, in short, her
evidence.
[7]
The evidence of the investigating officer, briefly, was that he
obtained the statement
of Ms Sikonana in December 2017. After he made
inquiries in the vicinity of the crime scene, he managed to locate
the witness but
at that time she was in shock and traumatised. She
could not speak to him and she was also pregnant at that time. He did
not take
her statement on the same day of the incident. He could not
arrest the appellant immediately after the incident as the appellant
was out of the province. He arrested the appellant on 16 January
2017.
[8]
The version of the appellant is slightly different from the version
of the state.
The appellant’s testimony was that on the day in
question he saw the deceased at the time when the police were
cordoning
off
Mr Ndate’s premises.
There were people outside the deceased’s
premises who were shouting at the deceased. These people suspected
that the deceased
was the one who killed Mr Ndate. He testified that
after the body of Mr Ndate was removed, the deceased called him to
his house.
The appellant requested three elderly men to accompany him
to the deceased’s premises. The deceased offered them chairs to
sit. At that time, there was a man who was with the deceased drinking
brandy.
[9]
Appellant testified that the deceased then told him that the Basotho
people were accusing
him of killing Mr Ndate and denied that he
killed him (Mr Ndate). The elders who accompanied him told the
deceased that they would
not blame the deceased for something he did
not do and that they would inform the people outside that he was not
the person who
killed Mr Ndate. They then left the deceased’s
premises and went to a place where they usually had their meetings.
The place
was about 300 meters away from the deceased’s house.
While at that place, one of his companions received a call that there
was a fight at the place where they had come from and they returned
to the scene. Upon arrival, he saw two gentlemen who were in
the
deceased’s yard carrying sticks running out of the yard in the
presence of the police. He saw the deceased’s body
on the
ground which was later collected from the scene. He denied that he
had assaulted the deceased.
[10]
The appellant confirmed during cross-examination that he knew the
deceased’s girlfriend Ms Sikonana.
He confirmed that he saw her
when they arrived at the deceased’s premises and that she was
present on the day the deceased
was killed. It was his testimony that
when they exited the deceased’s yard, Ms Sikonana was in front
of them standing at
her gate and looking at them. He denied that he
was involved in assaulting the deceased as alleged or at all. He
called David Mpale
to corroborate his version. Mr Mpale testified
that he was present when the body of Mr Ndate was removed. He
confirmed the evidence
of the appellant on how the incident unfolded
but testified that he did not see the two men coming out of the
deceased’s
premises carrying sticks as the appellant testified.
That was in brief the evidence that was tendered before the trial
court.
GROUNDS
OF APPEAL
[11]
This appeal is based mainly on facts and the appellant’s
grounds of appeal can be summed up as
follows: First, the appellant
contends that the trial court misdirected itself in relying on the
evidence of a single witness whose
evidence was unsatisfactorily and
was not corroborated. Secondly, it was submitted that despite the
state failing to establish
the motive for the appellant to kill the
deceased, the trial court erred in convicting the appellant for
murder. Thirdly, it was
contended that the court should have invoked
the provisions of section 186 of the CPA and called on one of the
other eyewitnesses
to testify. Fourthly, it was contended that the
trial court erred when it found that the version of the appellant was
not reasonably
possibly true despite the minor discrepancies in the
defence evidence.
ANALYSIS
[12]
The only issue in dispute before the trial court was the identity of
the people or the person who killed
the deceased. It is trite
law that a court of appeal should be slow to interfere with the
findings of fact of the trial court
in the absence of material
misdirection:
R
v Dhlumayo and Another
1948 (2) SA 677
(A) at 705-706). An appeal court’s powers to
interfere on appeal with the findings of fact of a trial court are
limited:
S
v Francis
1991
(1) SACR 198
(A) at 204E. In the absence of a demonstrable and
material misdirection by the trial court, its findings of fact are
presumed to
be correct and will only be disregarded if the recorded
evidence shows them to be clearly wrong. When an appeal is lodged
against
the trial court’s findings of fact, the appeal court
should take into account the fact that the trial court was in a more
favourable position than itself to form a judgment because it was
inter
alia
,
able to observe the witnesses during their questioning and was
absorbed in the atmosphere of the trial:
S
v Monyane and Others
2008
(1) SACR 543
(SCA).
[13]
The basic principles of criminal law and the law of evidence that
applies in this matter are trite.
The first principle is that in
criminal proceedings, the state bears the onus to prove the accused’s
guilt beyond reasonable
doubt:
S v Mbuli
2003 (1) SACR 97
(SCA) at 110D-F;
S v Jackson
1998 (1) SACR 470
(SCA) and
S
v Schackell
2001 (4) SACR 279
(SCA). No onus rests on the accused
to prove his or her innocence:
S v Combrinck
2012 (1) SACR 93
(SCA) at para 15. The accused’s version cannot be
rejected only on the basis that it is improbable, but only once the
trial court has found, on credible evidence, that the explanation is
false beyond a reasonable doubt:
S v V
2000 (1) SACR 453
(SCA)
at 455B. The corollary is that, if the accused’s version is
reasonably possibly true, the accused is entitled to an
acquittal.
Equally trite is that the appellant’s conviction can only be
sustained if, after consideration of all the evidence,
his version of
events is found to be false:
S v Sithole and Others
1999 (1)
SACR 585
at 590.
[14]
The version proffered by the state and that of the appellant at the
trial are diametrically opposed
to each other as far as the identity
of the person or people who killed the deceased is concerned. Ms
Sikonana’s evidence
was that she saw the appellant assaulting
the deceased with a beer bottle and bricks. The appellant on the one
hand contends that
when the deceased was killed he was not there at
the scene, but in the vicinity. The two versions in my view are
mutually destructive.
[15]
The approach to resolving two irreconcilable, mutually destructive
factual versions is well-established
in our law
and
require no repetition:
see
Stellenbosch Farmers' Winery
Group Ltd and another v Martell & Cie SA and others
2003 (1)
SA 11
(SCA) para 5.
Applying these principles
to the evidence above, i
t is common cause that the state
relied on the evidence of a single witness. It is trite that the
evidence of a single witness must
be approached with caution and
should be clear and satisfactory in all material aspects. However,
our courts have stressed the
fact that the exercise of caution must
not be allowed to displace the exercise of common sense:
see S v
Artman and Another
1968 (3) SA 339
(SCA).
[16]
In my view, the trial court was alive to the fact that it was dealing
with the evidence of a single
witness and the applicable cautionary
rule. The court below found that there was no motive for Ms Sikonana
to incriminate the appellant
falsely as there was no bad blood
between them. From her evidence and that of the appellant this
witness was indeed at the scene
at the time of the incident. The
trial court made a finding that Ms Sikonana made a good impression to
the court in her demeanour
and the manner in which she clearly and
directly answered the questions put to her. The trial court found
that there were no contradictions
in her version, both in her
evidence that she gave in court as well as the statement that she had
made to the police. The trial
court was satisfied that she knew the
appellant very well and that this was confirmed by the appellant’s
testimony. More
so, the bulk of her evidence was uncontested. In my
respectful view, these findings by the trial court are beyond
reproach, spot
on and to the point. They cannot be faulted at
all.
[17]
That the evidence of Ms Skonana was clear and unequivocal cannot be
denied. She was at her house very
close to the scene of crime when
this incident happened. She was at a distance of 5 metres from the
deceased when she observed
the assault. Her evidence that she was at
the scene and saw the appellant was corroborated by the appellant who
confirmed during cross-examination that he knew
this witness very well and saw her when they arrived at the
deceased’s premises
and when they exited the deceased’s
yard. She was facing them and was standing at her gate looking at
them. The appellant
admitted in cross-examination that this witness
was present when the deceased was killed and could not deny that she
witnessed
the assault.
[18]
In addition, the appellant’s evidence corroborates the version
of Ms Sikonana on all fours regarding
the sequence of events that
eventually led to the death of the deceased. This is borne out by the
following facts: Ms Sikonana
testified that when she woke up, she saw
people who surrounded the body of Mr Ndate who was lying on the
ground. There was a cap
in the deceased’s premises belonging to
Mr Ndate. The people who were outside wanted to go to the house of
the deceased as
they suspected that he had had a hand in the death of
Mr Ndate. The appellant confirmed this version. The appellant’s
version
further corroborated Ms Sikonana’s evidence that after
the police left and the body of Mr Ndate was removed from the scene,
the appellant and his three companions went into the yard of the
deceased. He confirmed that the deceased gave them chairs and
they
sat around him as Ms Sikonana testified. The appellant’s
evidence is also in congruence with the evidence of Ms Sikonana
in
that upon their arrival at the deceased premises, the deceased was
with Hewoo who was drinking brandy. The only part of her
evidence
that is denied by the appellant is that he and his companions
assaulted and killed the deceased.
[19]
Furthermore, the evidence of Ms Sikonana concerning the manner in
which the deceased was assaulted
was corroborated by the medico-legal
post-mortem report regarding the injuries that the deceased sustained
that led to his death.
Notably, the appellant admitted the medical
evidence.
In the light of the evidence presented to the
trial court, I am of the view that the trial court accounted for all
the evidential
material that was placed before it and there is no
basis in law or fact for this court to interfere with the factual
findings made
by the trial court.
[20]
The same cannot be said with the version proffered by the appellant.
The appellant and his witness
were poor in their testimony,
contradictory and mendacious in certain respects. For instance, when
they arrived at the deceased’s
premises for the second time
after they received a telephone call, the appellant testified that he
saw two men coming from the
yard of the deceased. His witness said he
did not see these people at all. In my view, the appellant was trying
to create an impression
that these two men were the culprits who
attacked the deceased. I have some difficulty with this version in
that the police were
present at the scene and they were stopping
people from entering the yard of the deceased. The appellant was also
stopped from
entering the yard of the deceased. If indeed there were
two males as suggested by the appellant, the question is why did the
police
not arrest them. Ordinarily the police would have arrested
them.
[21]
To my mind, in the light of the solid uncontroverted evidence by Ms
Sikonana, the evidence of the appellant
and his witness that he was
not involved in the murder of the deceased is contrived, far-fetched
and cannot be said to be reasonably
possibly true. It must be
stressed that the incident happened in the morning at 09h00. Ms
Sikonana was 5 metres away from them
when the incident happened. The
appellant and Ms Sikonana knew each other very well. Ms
Sikonana had ample time to observe
what was happening in the
deceased’s yard. She had a clear vision and could identify the
appellant and his friends. This
in my view cannot be a case of
mistaken identity. The fact that other people were not called as
witnesses is inconsequential. Section
208 of the CPA is relevant
herein. It provides that an accused may be convicted of any offence
on the single evidence of any competent
witness. The trial court
cannot be faulted in accepting the evidence of the witness as
satisfactory notwithstanding that she was
a single witness. The bare
denial by the appellant of the assault is to be expected in the
circumstances but cannot be accepted
as true.
[22]
Lastly, the argument that the court should have invoked the
provisions of section 186 and called other
eyewitnesses to come and
testify cannot fly. Section 186 of the CPA provides as follows:
‘
The court may at
any stage of criminal proceedings subpoena or cause to be subpoenaed
any person as a witness at such proceedings,
and the court shall so
subpoena a witness or so cause a witness to be subpoenaed if the
evidence of such witness appears to the
court essential to the just
decision of the case.’
[23]
This section gives a court a discretion to subpoena witnesses or to
cause witnesses to be subpoenaed
if the evidence of such witness
appears to the court essential to the just decision of the case. This
section introduced an inquisitorial
element and essentially caters
for two situations, namely the court’s discretion to call a
witness and the court’s
duty to do so: see Joubert
Criminal
Procedure Handbook
12ed at 335. In the former situation the court
has a discretion which it is bound to exercise judicially bearing in
mind that an
accused has a constitutional right to have his trial
concluded within a reasonable time:
Basson
2007 (1) SACR 566
(CC). In the latter situation the section places a duty on the court
to call a witness if it is essential to the just decision
of the
case:
S v Helm
2015 (1) SACR 550
(WCC).
[24]
In my view, this section does not imply that the court must take over
the prosecution of the matter
to close gaps in the evidence of the
state or to poke holes in the defence’s evidence. The court can
only invoke this section
if upon assessment of all the evidence
placed before it, it considers that unless it hears a particular
witness it is bound to
conclude that justice will not be done in the
end result: see
S v Gabaatlholwe and Another
2003 (1) SACR 313
(SCA) at 316. In other words, the court will call such witnesses if
it appears to the court that the evidence of that witness is
essential to the just decision of the case.
[25]
Taking into account the evidence that was led at the trial and the
fact that the court was satisfied
with the evidence of the single
witness, which was in any event corroborated by the appellant and the
medical evidence, I am of
the view that there was no need for the
trial court to call witnesses. There was nothing at all to suggest
that justice would not
be done at the end of the trial if other
witnesses were not called.
[26]
In the light of the evidence presented to the trial court, I am
satisfied that on the conspectus of
the evidence, the factual
findings made by the trial court were correct and cannot be faulted.
In my judgment, the trial court
was correct in finding that the state
succeeded to prove the guilt of the appellant beyond reasonable
doubt.
ORDER
[27]
In the result, the following order is hereby granted.
The appeal is hereby
dismissed.
LEKHULENI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I agree.
VAN ZYL AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
Appearances:
For
the Appellant:
Adv.
Parries
Instructed
by:
R
Davies Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Adv.
M Koti
Instructed
by:
Office
of the Director of Public Prosecutions
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