Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 174South Africa
S v Kwaza and Others (CC68/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 174; 2023 (1) SACR 335 (WCC) (6 September 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## S v Kwaza and Others (CC68/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 174; 2023 (1) SACR 335 (WCC) (6 September 2022)
S v Kwaza and Others (CC68/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 174; 2023 (1) SACR 335 (WCC) (6 September 2022)
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sino date 6 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
REPORTABLE
CASE
NO: CC68/2018
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
PATIENCE
KWAZA
ACCUSED 1
LOYISO
LUDIDI
ACCUSED 2
THANDO
CHWAYI
ACCUSED 3
SIVUYILE
SHASHA
ACCUSED 4
Bench:
P.A.L. Gamble J
Heard:
31 August 2022
Delivered:
6 September 2022
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives via email and release to SAFLII. The
date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on Tuesday 6 September
2022.
JUDGMENT
– LEAVE TO APPEAL
GAMBLE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
The accused in this matter were all
convicted on 19 May 2022 of the murder of Mr. Pasika Kwaza. In
addition, accused no 1 was convicted
of defeating or obstructing the
course of justice, while accused no’s 2 and 4 were also
convicted of robbery with aggravating
sentences and the unlawful
possession of a firearm and ammunition.
2.
On 22 July 2022 accused 2, 3 and 4 all
received life sentences in respect of their murder convictions while
accused no 1 was sentenced
to 12 years’ imprisonment on that
count and 18 months’ imprisonment on the count of defeating or
obstructing the course
of justice, with the sentences being ordered
to run concurrently. In addition to the life sentences, accused no’s
2 and 4
were each sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment on the
robbery count, 3 years’ imprisonment for unlawful possession of
a firearm and 18 months’ imprisonment for unlawful possession
of ammunition.
3.
On 11 August 2022 accused no’s 3 and
4 lodged applications for leave to appeal their respective
convictions and sentences,
while accused no 2 did likewise the
following day, 12 August 2022. Leave to appeal was sought to the Full
Bench of this Division.
4.
The applications were heard jointly on 31
August 2022, with the parties represented as before. At that hearing,
Ms. Levendall informed
the Court that she had established informally
from counsel who had represented accused no 1 at trial (Ms. Verster)
that her client
did not intend lodging an application for leave to
appeal. In the result, the application proceeded in respect of
accused no’s
2, 3 and 4 and for the sake of convenience I shall
refer to them as such.
THE CONVICTION OF
ACCUSED NO 2
5.
On behalf of accused no 2, Ms. Levendall
accepted that there was no misdirection by the Court upon which he
could rely for purposes
of challenging his conviction. Rather, it was
submitted that there was room for error on the part of Kwaza jnr in
the identification
of no 2 at the scene of the shooting which
rendered the conviction assailable on appeal.
6.
On that score, it was submitted, as was
argued in the main case, that the situation was charged with emotion,
lasted for “only”
about 10 minutes and was very mobile.
Maybe Kwaza jnr just got it wrong, was the suggestion made by Ms.
Levendall. This argument
was dealt with in the Court’s judgment
and, furthermore, given that there is no attack on the Court’s
favourable credibility
finding in respect of Kwaza jnr, I do not
believe that there is a reasonable prospect that another Court may
find otherwise on
this aspect.
7.
Ms. Levendall then turned to the alibi
defence of accused no 2. It was submitted that the alibi defence put
up before this court
was adequately corroborated by accused no 2’s
witness, Fanele. That submission is only partly correct in that
Fanele differed
from the accused on arguably the critical aspect of
the alibi – the reason that the dance crew (of which he and no
2 were
members) left for the Festival so early. This allegation
clearly called out for a cogent explanation by the accused and his
witness
and yet their evidence was clearly divergent on that score.
8.
But the main problem with the alibi put up
by accused no 2 is that it has changed materially over time. Until
the time that he appeared
before this Court, no 2’s version
regarding his whereabouts on 23 June 2016 was consistently that he
was in Cape Town. Although
he did, on occasion, mention that he went
to Grahamstown to attend the Festival – on a date after the
commission of the offence
- accused no 2 consistently relied on a
different alibi to that ultimately put up in Court. For this reason
the Court dismissed
his alibi as not reasonably possibly true (
S
v Thebus
[2002] 3 All SA 781
(SCA) at
[13]). I consider that a court of appeal is unlikely to interfere
with this finding.
9.
Lastly, I consider it unlikely that a court
of appeal is likely to interfere with the findings made in respect of
accused no 2’s
interactions with Nobuntu Tikilili both before
and after the crime. Further, the identification of accused no 2 by
Tikilili during
the photo ID parade was fairly conceded by Ms.
Levendall as problematic for the defence, particularly in the
circumstances where
the Court’s positive credibility and
demeanour findings in regard to Tikilili are not sought to be
attacked on appeal.
10.
In the circumstances, I am of the
considered view that accused no 2 has not shown that he has
reasonable prospects of success on
appeal and his application thus
cannot succeed on the issue of conviction.
THE CONVICTION OF
ACCUSED NO 3
11.
The thrust of Mr. Koester’s
submissions was that the evidence did not establish any direct
participation of accused no 3 in
the commission of the offence of
murder. It was suggested that he had in fact been instrumental in
thwarting a fatal attack on
accused no 1, before “the tables
were turned”. It was further submitted that the guilt of
accused no 3 had not been
established beyond reasonable doubt on the
basis that he was an accessory, either before or after the fact.
Further, it was said
that the Court’s finding that he was the
kingpin in the killing was wrong and that this constituted a
misdirection.
12.
The State answered this argument by
pointing out that, in effect, were it not for the involvement of
accused no 3, there would not
have been a trial in respect of this
victim. It was said that it was, after all, no 3 who told no 1 of the
plot to kill her, that
it was he who arranged for the meeting between
Tikilili, no 1 and the killers and, importantly, after that meeting
no 1 was told
by no 4 to deal further with no 3 and not him.
13.
I agree with the Prosecutor that accused no
3 was very much involved in the planning of the offence in the
aspects just referred
to and, importantly, that he played a prominent
role after the killing in that he collected the money from accused no
1 and also
attempted to dissuade Tikilili from testifying. Further,
there is no attack by no 3 on the credibility finding in respect of
Tikilili
who testified so persuasively about the role of no 3 behind
the scenes. Against that there is the pitiful performance of accused
no 3 in the witness box, particularly with regard to the manner in
which he attempted to dissociate himself from Tikilili and accused
no
1.
14.
In my view, the evidence conclusively
establish that accused no 3 was very much part of the plot to do away
with the deceased and
that he is clearly linked to the commission of
the killing through the doctrine of common purpose. In the result, I
am not persuaded
that accused no 3 has established reasonable
prospects of successfully appealing his conviction on the count of
murder.
THE CONVICTION OF
ACCUSED NO 4
15.
The submissions of Mr. Koester in relation
to the conviction of accused no 4 were limited to two aspects.
Firstly, there was the
general submission that the identity of the
accused had not been established beyond reasonable doubt. I have
already dealt with
the submission above in relation to Ms.
Levendall’s submission on identification. The same findings
apply in respect of accused
no 4.
16.
In addition, there is the compelling
evidence of Tikilili regarding meeting accused no 4 before the
killing, their contact thereafter
where he attempted to scare her off
from testifying and her identification of him at the photo ID parade.
In the result, I do not
believe that there is a reasonable prospect
of another court coming to a different conclusion on the question of
the identification
of accused no 4.
17.
The second submission was in relation to
the conviction of accused no 4 on the firearm and ammunition charges.
While there was certainly
an inference to be drawn, on the strength
of the authority set forth below, that accused no 4 took a proper
firearm with him to
the scene, on the basis that no self-respecting
killer would take anything but a functioning firearm along with him
in order to
commit a planned murder, accused no 4 was given the
benefit of the doubt regarding actual possession of a firearm as
defined under
the relevant legislation.
18.
As para 451 of the judgment reflects, the
conviction of accused no 4 on these counts was based on the
principles of common purpose
and joint possession: that he and
accused no 2 went to the home of the deceased with the direct
intention to assassinate him and
that they jointly possessed the
firearm used by no 2. The evidence of Tikilili was that before the
killing she and no 1 met accused
no’s 3 and 4 at Endlovini and
that no 4 had introduced no 2 to them as a person with whom he
worked. We know, too, as pointed
out above that no 2 admitted to
Tikilili after the shooting that he was the gunman who had killed the
deceased.
19.
In
advancing a case for leave to appeal these convictions, Mr. Koester
relied in argument on the decisions in
Mbuli
[1]
,
Molimi
[2]
and
Makhubela
[3]
for the submission that it could not be inferred from the facts of
this case that the firearm with which the deceased was killed
was
possessed by accused no 2 on behalf of the group of killers and,
further, that the State had failed to prove that the group
jointly
intended to exercise possession of no 2’s firearm.
20.
All
of those cases confirmed that the test for joint possession of
firearms and ammunition was correctly set out in
Nkosi
[4]
which is to the following effect.
“
The
issues which arise in deciding whether the group (and hence the
appellant) possessed the guns must be decided with reference
to the
answer to the question whether the State has established facts from
which it can probably be inferred by a Court that:
(a) the group had the
intention (
animus
) to exercise possession of the guns through
the actual detentor and
(b) the actual detentors
had the intention to hold the guns on behalf of the group.
Only if both requirements
are fulfilled can there be joint possession involving the group as a
whole and the detentors, or common
purpose between the members of the
group to possess all the guns.”
21.
In particular, counsel referred to
Makhubela
in which the Constitutional Court found, after reviewing a number of
the relevant decisions (including
Mbuli
and
Molimi
)
that -
“
[55]
These cases show that there would be very few factual scenarios which
meet the requirements to establish joint possession set
out in
Nkosi
.
This is because of the difficulty inherent in proving that the
possessor had the intention of possessing a firearm on behalf of
a
group. It is clear that according to established precedent, awareness
alone is not sufficient to establish intention of jointly
possessing
a firearm or the intention of holding a firearm on behalf of another
in our law.”
The enquiry regarding
joint possession of a firearm is thus factually based.
22.
It must be borne in mind that the cases
which the Supreme Court of Appeal (‘SCA”) considered, and
the decisions with
which the Constitutional Court dealt, were all
cases involving robbery where the some of the robbers were armed and
where there
was the loss of life in the course of the robberies: the
intention was to rob and the murders were essentially incidental
thereto.
Here we are dealing with the just the opposite: the
intention was to kill and the robbery of a bystander (Kwaza jnr) was
incidental
thereto. The instant case is thus distinguishable on the
facts.
23.
While
there was no evidence to establish just how the killers planned the
attack, the Court was entitled to draw an inference in
that regard.
In so doing the following
dictum
of
Brand JA in
Humphreys
[5]
is apposite.
“
[13]
…Moreover, common sense dictates that the process of
inferential reasoning may start out from the premise that, in
accordance with common human experience, the possibility of the
consequences that ensued would have been obvious to any person of
normal intelligence. The next logical step would then be to ask
whether, in the light of all the facts and circumstances of this
case, there is any reason to think that the appellant would not have
shared this foresight, derived from common human experience,
with
other members of the general population.”
24.
In the circumstances, it was thus
reasonable to infer that, given his leading role in organizing the
plot to kill the deceased,
accused no 4 either conspired with accused
no 2 that the latter would be the shooter or, at the very least that
no 4 knew that
no 2 was armed with a firearm as defined under the
legislation and foresaw that he would use it in the planned attack on
the deceased.
Further, considering his utterances after the fact to
Tikilili, it cannot be disputed that accused no 2 not only associated
himself
with the group but, importantly, he actively advanced the
interests of the group for purposes of executing the contract
killing.
25.
In the result, I am satisfied that the
conviction of accused no 4 on the firearm and ammunition charges is
sound, both in law and
on the facts, and that the accused has not
shown a reasonable prospect of success on appeal in regard to those
convictions.
SENTENCE
26.
Both
Ms. Levendall and Mr. Koester focused on the lengthy period of
pre-sentence detention in respect of their clients as constituting
substantial and compelling circumstances under the Criminal Law
Amendment Act, 105 of 1997 (“the CLAA”) for the avoidance
of the imposition of the life sentences on them. Ms. Levendall urged
the Court to follow the line of reasoning in the SCA in
Kruger
[6]
rather than
Radebe
[7]
upon which the Court had relied.
27.
In respect of accused no 2 it was suggested
that, notwithstanding that his moral blameworthiness was of the
highest order, his clean
record and lengthy period of pre-sentence
detention were substantial and compelling circumstances to avoid the
mandatory sentence
of life imprisonment.
28.
In respect of accused no 3, Mr. Koester
submitted that his client’s age, clean record, lesser degree of
moral blameworthiness
and lengthy period of pre-sentence detention
were factors which, when considered collectively, constituted
substantial and compelling
circumstances warranting avoidance of the
mandatory sentence under the CLAA.
29.
In respect of accused no 4, counsel
candidly accepted that there was little by way of mitigation other
than the period of pre-sentencing
detention and his chronic
ill-health as a TB sufferer.
30.
The
cases which have served before the SCA on the aspect of the relevance
to sentence of pre-sentencing detention all related to
instances of
finite sentences, where adjustments to the imposed sentences were
notionally possible. This Court was unable to find
any instances
where that factor was considered by the SCA in respect of an
indeterminate sentence such as life. As the judgment
reflects, this
Court followed the decisions in
Solomon
[8]
and
Kammies
[9]
in declining to find that the pre-sentence detention period
per
se
qualified as a substantial and compelling reason to avoid the
prescribed sentence under the CLAA. Those are both judgments of
single judges in Provincial Divisions and provide guidance rather
than binding precedent.
31.
The period of pre-sentence detention in
this matter was extraordinarily long – close on 6 years –
and the Court was
unable to find any comparable period of time which
had been considered by any other court. Notwithstanding the
proclamation by
some that this is the best run Division of the High
Court in the country, long delays in the conclusion of criminal
trials in particular
have become endemic in the Western Cape and
delays of between two to three years and more are not uncommon; in
fact they are by
and large the norm. The question of the plight of
awaiting trial accused who have not been granted bail and who must
thus remain
incarcerated before their sentences actually commence is
thus a matter of very real concern.
32.
In my considered view, the sentences
imposed on each of accused no’s 2, 3 and 4 were appropriate in
the circumstances and
would otherwise not warrant the consideration
on appeal. But in light of the fact that the SCA has not yet spoken
on the consideration
of pre-sentencing detention in cases where the
sentence ultimately imposed was life imprisonment warrants, in my
respectful view,
that leave be granted in this matter only against
the sentences of life imprisonment imposed on accused no’s 2, 3
and 4.
33.
In light of the provisions of s315(1)(a)
read with
s315(2)(a)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
, I
consider that this aspect of the case should enjoy consideration by
the Supreme Court of Appeal.
IN
THE CIRCUMSTANCES THE FOLLOWING ORDERS ARE MADE
:
A. Accused No 2,
Loyiso Ludidi
1. Leave to appeal
against the convictions is refused.
2. Leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Appeal is granted against the sentence of life
imprisonment imposed in respect of the
conviction for murder on count
3.
3. Leave to appeal
against the remaining sentences is refused.
B. Accused No 3,
Thando Chwayi
1. Leave to appeal
against conviction is refused.
2. Leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Appeal is granted against the sentence of life
imprisonment imposed in respect of the
conviction for murder on count
3.
C. Accused No 4,
Sivuyile Shasha
1. Leave to appeal
against the convictions is refused.
2. Leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Appeal is granted against the sentence of life
imprisonment imposed in respect of the
conviction for murder on count
3.
3. Leave to appeal
against the remaining sentences is refused.
GAMBLE,
J
[1]
S
v Mbuli
2003 (1) SACR 97 (SCA)
[2]
S
v Molimi
[2006] ZASCA 43
;
2006 (2) SACR 8
(SCA)
[3]
S
v Makhubela and another
2017 (2) SACR 665 (CC)
[4]
S
v Nkosi
1998 (1) SACR 284
(W) at 286H - I
[5]
S
v Humphreys
2013 (2) SACR 1 (SCA)
[6]
S
v Kruger
2012
(1) SA 369 (SCA)
[7]
S
v Radebe
2013 (2) SA 165 (SCA)
[8]
S
v Solomon and others
2021 (1) SACR 533 (WCC)
[9]
S
v Kammies and another
[2019] ZAECPEHC 86 (13 December 2019)
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