Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 194South Africa
Dingezweni v S (A143/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 194 (5 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
5 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Dingezweni v S (A143/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 194 (5 October 2022)
Dingezweni v S (A143/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 194 (5 October 2022)
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sino date 5 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: A143/22
In
the matter between
NCEBA
DINGEZWENI
APPELLANT
AND
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Date
of Hearing: 12 September
2022
Date
of Judgment: 05 October 2022 (to be delivered
via email to the respective counsel)
JUDGMENT
THULARE
J
[1] This is an appeal
against the decision of a magistrate to grant the appellant to bail.
The appellant was charged with one count
of murder and one count of
attempted murder. The State alleged that the commission of the
offences were premeditated.
[2] The issue is whether
the magistrate was wrong to refuse bail.
[3] The applicant was a
39 year old and a sergeant in the South African Police Service
(SAPS). He was in the SAPS since 2008 and
was suspended arising out
of the allegations which led to his arrest. Since 2019 he lived at
the SAPS barracks, NY121 in Gugulethu.
He had lived with his ex-wife,
the deceased, at the barracks. His brother also lived in Makhaza,
Khayelitsha and that was another
available residence for him in Cape
Town.
[4] He comes from
Centani, a rural village outside Umthata in the Eastern Cape. He was
left with the parental home in that rural
village and keep sheep
there looked after by a shepherd. There are other blood relatives
living in the village. His brothers and
sisters lived in the Western
Cape. It is only his youngest daughter that is in the Eastern Cape.
He had one child in his marriage
but in total had five minor children
who were still in school and which he supported. He had no fixed
property in the Western Cape.
He only has a vehicle. His child with
the deceased was affected by his absence. He had no previous
convictions and no pending cases
or warrants. He had been in custody
for three weeks before his bail application.
[5] He was arrested on 3
May at around 10 at night. He was sleeping at the barracks with a
cousin who had come to visit him after
hearing of the killing of his
ex-wife. There was a knock at the locked door and a colleague,
Captain Hendricks from Gugulethu was
the one knocking and introduced
himself. He opened the door and saw three people. Hendricks and
Warrant Officer Jardim were in
SAPS uniform. The third, who he did
not know, was not in uniform but was also a coloured person who
introduced himself as Captain
Martin. Captain Martin arrested him for
the murder of his ex-wife and the attempted murder of a male person.
It was the first time
that all three came to his room and he did not
know who showed them his room. He co-operated fully with the
investigating officer.
He intended pleading not guilty. He did not
want to testify about the merits of the case or to answer questions
thereon.
[6] He used chronic
medication for two medical conditions and although he still had some,
he needed a top-up soon. It is medication
he should use for the rest
of his life and not using it may be life threatening and fatal. He
did not have a passport and did not
know the witnesses. He was aware
that his ex-wife was killed at the residence of one of the witnesses.
This he knew because after
his ex-wife was killed, his ex-wife’s
brother called him and asked him to go there. The brother was at the
scene and called
and directed him to the scene. It was around 10am.
He did not know the place and did not know the face of the witness.
Whilst in
custody, he met two people who he had arrested, both for
murder. Whereas one understood that he was only doing his job, the
other
had to be restrained by other inmates when he tried to attack
him. He complained to the correctional officials and was moved to
a
private section.
[7] In cross-examination
it came to light that he told the investigating officer that he had
only one child. His explanation was
that it was because he was
interviewed when he was still stressed and did not talk about his
other children. He only referred to
the one born in the marriage. It
was also revealed that around 1999 and 2000 he was arrested for
murder in the Eastern Cape, but
the case was withdrawn. There were
also pending cases of attempted murder and assault around 2014, which
he said were withdrawn.
He was not arrested but was given a date to
appear in court in respect of the assault. In respect of the
attempted murder, his
service pistol was taken and was never returned
back to him.
[8] He did not stay with
his wife between 2011 and 2019 as they separated and in 2016 he
divorced her. They reconnected in 2019
and started living together
again in January 2020. They went together to the Eastern Cape for
holidays just prior to her death
as he was on leave. Whilst they were
together in the Eastern Cape, he came across communication on her
phone which indicated that
she was cheating. When he confronted her,
she left his home and escaped to her parental home. He came back
alone from the Eastern
Cape whilst she was still at her home. They
communicated telephonically attempting to sort out the problem.
[9] They agreed and he
sent her the money for her to travel to Cape Town. He sent the money
on Saturday. She was to leave the Eastern
Cape the Sunday and he
expected her back with him on Monday. The Sunday late afternoon at
around 6 she phoned indicating that they
were in Queenstown. That was
the last time that he spoke to her. She was to arrive around 4 or 5
the Monday morning. She did not
arrive on Monday and when he called
her, the phone took him to voicemail. He did not see her until he was
called by her brother
to come and see her after she was killed.
[10] The Monday morning
he was called by one of his colleagues who told him that his ex-wife
was at the police station and needed
police assistance to go and
collect her cellphone, ID, bank cards and other things. He was
surprised because she had left the Eastern
Cape but had not arrived
back home. She had reported him to the police. He had not taken the
things from her forcefully. She had
left them with him when she left
his home at the time that he questioned her about the whatsapp
messages on her phone. She had
used her mother’s phone when
they communicated thereafter. He had also used her mother’s
account when he sent her money
to come back to Cape Town. That was on
Saturday 30 April 2022. It was only on Monday 2 May that he heard
that she was at the police
station, around 12 during the day.
Thereafter he received a call from her mother and later from his own
brother, both requesting
him to hand over her property back to her.
He then agreed with his brother that his brother will come and fetch
her property to
hand over to her. He had taken these personal
belongings of the deceased when he left his parental home and
travelled with them
back to Cape Town.
[11] He did not know the
person who lived in the shack where his ex-wife was killed. He did
not know what his ex-wife was doing
in there. It was the first time
that he saw the shack when he went there after he was directed to the
scene. He was arrested on
the 3
rd
of May in the evening.
He had left the Eastern Cape the week before. He had left the Monday
and arrived in Cape Town the Tuesday
leading up to the end of April.
For the whole of that last week he had been in communication with the
deceased, who was using her
mother’s cellphone. It was during
these conversations that they agreed that he would deposit money for
her and he would use
to travel back to him in Cape Town. He did not
want to hand over her items when he was requested by his colleague at
the police
station after the deceased reported him. It was because he
was shocked and surprised that she would do this to him after he had
sent her money to come back to him, but later he handed them to his
brother.
[12] Linda Dingezweni
(Linda) was the cousin of the appellant who resided for the past 10
years at an address in Khayelitsha. Linda
stayed with his mother and
sister. Linda was willing to accommodate the appellant at his home
for the duration of the case and
would ensure that the appellant
complied with any bail conditions which may be imposed. The deceased
was at the police station
on 2 May when she phoned Linda and asked
him to go and fetch her items from the appellant. She had also called
Linda to come and
collect some money from her. Linda went to the
deceased in Nyanga and met her at Mom’s Place where she
was sitting
and drinking with a friend.
[13] Sergeant Thozamile
Ntabane has 17 years experience in the SAPS, is attached to the
organized crime unit and is the investigating
officer. The victim on
the attempted murder charge was a male. The victim was in an intimate
relationship with the appellant’s
ex-wife. On the morning of 3
May the victim and the girlfriend were in his shack. They had spent
the night together. According
to the victim, there was no longer a
relationship between the appellant and the deceased. The deceased was
in a relationship with
the victim. Early that morning the victim took
a bath, using a bathtub, as part of his preparation to go to work.
After the bath,
the victim opened the door of the shack, carrying the
bathtub in order to throw away the bath water. He left the door to
the shack
open as he moved out. It was around 5H05am. The victim only
had shorts on.
[14] As the victim walked
further from the door to throw out the water, he saw the appellant
approaching him. The appellant drew
a firearm. The victim called the
appellant by name and asked the appellant what he was doing. As the
appellant pointed the firearm
at the victim, the victim dropped the
bathtub. The appellant started shooting at the victim. The victim ran
away and jumped over
a perimeter fence. The victim was hit twice on
his left leg, once on the left arm and once on the right leg before
he escaped.
The victim knew the appellant as the former husband of
the deceased. He also knew him as a police officer who he used to see
patrolling
in his area.
[15] The victim did not
run far off as he became worried as to what was going to happen to
his girlfriend, the appellant’s
ex-wife who was still in the
shack. The victim heard several gunshots emanating from his shack,
from where he had ran leaving the
appellant with a firearm in his
hand, and the appellant’s ex-wife alone in the shack. Although
Ntabane had not yet obtained
a written statement, there was another
witness to whom he had spoken, who was outside and heard the
gunshots, who saw the appellant
leaving the victim’s yard after
the gunshots from the shack that early morning. This witness resided
in one of the three
shacks in the same yard as the victim. In order
to reach the gate, the appellant passed by this witness’ shack.
This witness
knew the appellant by name and that the appellant was a
police officer working at Gugulethu Police station. In total there
were
three witnesses who saw and identified the appellant on the
scene. There were no cartridges found on the scene.
[16] Ntabane’s
investigations had revealed that the deceased was no longer in a good
intimate relationship with the appellant.
The deceased’s
brother and the deceased’s best friend informed Ntabane.
Amongst others, the deceased had disclosed
how on one occasion the
appellant had pointed her with a firearm. The deceased however did
not want to open a case or a protection
order as the appellant was a
police officer and it would according to her turn into a big issue.
The deceased had received threats
from the appellant, some of which
were in writing using a phone. The deceased had forwarded some of
these threats from the appellant
to her own brother. This included in
one instance, where the appellant mentioned killing her. In another
instance the appellant
sent a picture of a firearm and said that he
was going to kill her. It was not a state issue official firearm
picture that was
sent. This picture was also shown to the deceased’s
brother. The deceased feared the appellant. The deceased’s
brother
was also fearful. Both knew that the appellant had access to
a firearm, from the messages sent by the appellant to them.
[17] Before the incident,
the victim had received threats from the appellant. In the threats
the appellant had said that he was
looking for the victim.
After the incident, whilst at the hospital and including
contemporaneous with the bail application,
the victim received
threats. The threats were that he should not think that he had won,
and that they were going to get him. From
a private number, the
victim was told that he must know that the appellant will win the
case, get out and that they were going
to kill the victim. The victim
was told that because the appellant was in custody, he should not
think that he was a free man,
anything could happen to him and his
life was not free at all. The victim fled and was no longer staying
at the shack. The firearm
that was used in the commission of the
offence had not been recovered. The appellant, during his interview
with Ntabane, wanted
the identity of the witness who identified him,
disclosed to him. When Ntabane asked him what he wanted to do
therewith, the appellant
said he will see about that once the name is
disclosed.
[18] The investigation
was almost complete. Ntabane was awaiting the photos of the scene,
the post mortem report and arrangements
for and in respect of
affidavits by persons who wanted to provide statements but did not
want to be named as they said that the
appellant was dangerous. The
appellant had two pending cases, the one for attempted murder and the
other for assault common, which
were with the Independent Police
Investigative Directorate (IPID). In the attempted murder charge, the
allegations against the
appellant were that he had shot at his own
colleague. It is this incident which led to the issue of the firearm
to the appellant
being withdrawn. He was provided with a bulletproof
but not a firearm, at work.
[19] The allegations
against the appellant, if proved, will establish that the appellant
knew the victim and where the victim stayed.
He went to the victim’s
residence. He knew about the affair between the victim and the
deceased and that the deceased was
there at the time. This explained
why he shot at the victim and the deceased. This shooting happened
after the appellant and the
deceased had been in the Eastern Cape,
where the appellant had spent some time during his annual leave. The
investigating officer,
however, had received reports of assault in
which a hammer was mentioned, whilst the deceased and the appellant
were in the Eastern
Cape during that visit.
[20] The victim’s
identity is known and the threats indicated clearly that his life was
in danger. The other witnesses were
potentially available but feared
for their lives, and they specifically feared the appellant. They
were afraid to get involved
in the matter as they feared the
appellant. There was concern that the release of the appellant on
bail would affect the ability
of the investigating officer to obtain
the co-operation of available witnesses and their availability to
testify against the appellant.
The release of the appellant on bail
would influence the witnesses. Amongst these witnesses, was a witness
who met the appellant
at the time that the appellant walked to the
victim’s shack before the shooting, and to whom the appellant
spoke. The appellant
asked him what time it was and the witness was
able to identify the appellant.
[21] The evidence of the
identity of the appellant appears very strong. One witness met the
appellant when the appellant was walking
towards the shack. The
appellant spoke to the witness and the witness recognized and
identified the appellant. The victim met the
appellant, spoke to the
appellant and identified the appellant before fleeing the scene.
After the shots were fired in the shack
where the appellant’s
ex-wife had spent the night with the victim, another witness saw the
appellant walk away from the shack
towards the gate of the yard. The
evidence suggested that the witnesses were in close proximity to the
appellant.
[22] From the available
facts, the main issue between the State and the appellant would be
identity. Section 65(4) of the Criminal
Procedure Act, 1977 (Act No.
51 of 1977) (the CPA) provides as follows:
“
Appeal
to superior court with regard to bail
65(4) The court or judge
hearing the appeal shall not set aside the decision against which the
appeal is brought, unless such court
or judge is satisfied that the
decision was wrong, in which event the court or judge shall give the
decision which in its or his
opinion the lower court should have
given.”
[23] Section 60(11)(a) of
the CPA provides:
“
Bail
application of accused in court
60(11) Notwithstanding
any provision of this Act, where an accused is charged with an
offence referred to –
(a)
In Schedule 6, the
court shall order that the accused be detained in custody until he or
she is dealt with in accordance with the
law, unless the accused,
having been given a reasonable opportunity to do so, adduces evidence
which satisfies the court that exceptional
circumstances exist which
in the interests of justice permit his or her release.”
[24] The appellant had a
constitutionally entrenched right to be presumed innocent, to remain
silent and not to testify about the
merits of the case in his bail
application [section 35 of the Constitution of the Republic of South
Africa, 1996 (Act No.108 of
1996) (the Constitution)]. These rights
do not protect an applicant in the position of the appellant from an
evidentiary burden
which the appellant must discharge where the State
adduced evidence that called for an answer. This is in circumstances
where there
is evidence upon which a court might find for the State.
Such evidence placed an evidentiary onus on the appellant to refute
the
State case [
To speak or not to speak, that is the question:
Does a prima facie evidence place an evidentiary burden on the
accused to lead evidence?
Mahlunbandile Ntontela,
De Rebus,
September 2022, pages 13 and 14].
[25] In
S v Boesak
[2000] ZACC 25
;
2001 (1) SA 912
(CC) at par 24 the Constitutional Court put it
this way in the context of a trial:
“
The
fact that an accused person is under no obligation to testify does
not mean that there are no consequences attaching to a decision
to
remain silent during trial. If there is evidence calling for an
answer, and an accused person chooses to remain silent in the
face of
such evidence, a court may well be entitled to conclude that the
evidence is sufficient in the absence of an explanation
to prove the
guilt of the accused. Whether such a conclusion is justified will
depend on the weight of the evidence. What is stated
above is
consistent with the remarks of Madala J, writing for the Court, in
Osman and Another v
Attorney general, Transvaal,
when
he said the following:
‘
Our
legal system is an adversarial one. Once the prosecution has produced
evidence sufficient to establish a
prima
facie
case, an
accused who fails to produce evidence to rebut that case is at risk.
The failure to testify does not relieve the prosecution
of its duty
to prove beyond reasonable doubt. An accused, however, always runs
the risk that, absent any rebuttal, the prosecution’s
case may
be sufficient to prove the elements of the offence. The fact that an
accused has to make such an election is not a breach
of the right to
silence. If the right to silence were to be so interpreted, it would
destroy the fundamental nature of our adversarial
system of criminal
justice.’”
[26] This approach was
confirmed in
S v Thebus and Another
[2003] ZACC 12
;
2003 (2) SACR 319
(CC) at
para 56. Again in the context of a trial it had been expressed as
follows in
Scagell and Others v The Attorney General, Western Cape
and Others
1996 (2) SACR 579
(CC) at para 12:
“
[12]
It is well established in our law that, when an evidential burden is
imposed upon an accused person, there needs to be evidence
sufficient
to give rise to a reasonable doubt to prevent conviction.”
In a bail application
like the present, where the evidence placed an evidential burden upon
the applicant, and he did not answer
with facts which if proved would
refute, his failure is a factor to be considered in his overall duty
to satisfy the court that
exceptional circumstances exist which in
the interests of justice permit his release.
[27] South Africa is
steadily moving towards a standing amongst the most dangerous country
in the world for women to live. Advocacy
initiatives related to
women’s rights to highlight the vulnerability of women in the
country have not made any serious inroads
into structural machismo
which disrespects and are an existential threat to the women
population. The strong and aggressive masculine
pride, perceived as
power which was often coupled with a minimal sense of responsibility
and disregard of consequences, needs to
be met at all fronts. The
toxic machismo should be met from
isango
, ran after
ethafeni,
chopped
eziko,
bound
ebuhlanti,
exposed
kugumbi
lokulala
and dug out
emasimini.
It must have no
place to hide, including during bail proceedings.
[28] Oxymoronous
narcissism, which thrives in appearing intelligent, smart and
grandeur in public; but manipulative, abusive and
dishonest in
private; and claims of innocence, conspiracy and victimization when
caught out to account and face consequences, should
never have a
place in our constitutional and democratic society. The evidence
showed the strength of the State case against the
appellant. There is
a clear impression that his release would threaten the lives of the
witnesses and their decisions to come forward
and be willing to
present their evidence to the courts. There is a likelihood that his
release on bail would influence the witnesses
and that he will
intimidate them. The firearm used was never recovered and the risk
that he will conceal or destroy other evidence
is very real. In my
view, there is also the likelihood that his release will endanger the
safety of the witnesses and that he may
commit a schedule 1 offence.
[29] Nothing placed
before the court by the appellant made the State case subject to some
serious doubt [
S v Mathebula
2010 (1) SACR 55
(SCA) at
para12]. All the factors and personal circumstances of the appellant,
cumulatively, do not qualify, on a balance of probabilities,
as
exceptional circumstances. At best for the appellant, the evidence
suggests a serious inability to perceive, control and evaluate
his
emotions. Whether that ability can be learned and strengthened, or it
is an inborn characteristic which allow one to handle
interpersonal
relationships emphatically is one thing that our generation should
research and understand as part of the strategy
to camp gender-based
violence and machismo. The interests of justice do not permit the
release of the appellant on bail. The appellant
did not establish
that the decision of the Magistrate was wrong.
For these reasons I make
the following order:
The bail appeal is
dismissed.
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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