Case Law[2022] ZASCA 35South Africa
Baloyi v S (739/2021) [2022] ZASCA 35; 2022 (1) SACR 557 (SCA) (1 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal Law and Procedure – whether the murder was premeditated – life sentence – appropriateness of sentence.
Judgment
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## Baloyi v S (739/2021) [2022] ZASCA 35; 2022 (1) SACR 557 (SCA) (1 April 2022)
Baloyi v S (739/2021) [2022] ZASCA 35; 2022 (1) SACR 557 (SCA) (1 April 2022)
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sino date 1 April 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 739/2021
In
the matter between:
RASIMATE
SAMUEL
BALOYI
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Rasimate Samuel
Baloyi v The State
(739/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 35
(01 April 2022)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, HUGHES JJA
AND MAKAULA, SMITH AND WEINER AJJA
Heard:
18 February 2022
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email. It has been published
on the Supreme Court
of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be handed down on
01 April 2022.
Summary:
Criminal Law and Procedure
– whether the murder was premeditated – life sentence –
appropriateness of sentence.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Limpopo Division of the High Court of
South Africa, (Ledwaba AJ and Phatudi J, sitting as court of appeal):
The
appeal is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
Makaula
AJA (Mocumie and Hughes JJA and Makaula, Smith and Weiner AJJA
concurring):
[1] This is an
appeal against the judgment and order of the Limpopo Division of the
High
Court, Polokwane (Ledwaba AJ and Phatudi J sitting as full
bench), with leave of this Court granted on the following limited
ground:
‘
The
sentence imposed and whether the state established that the murder
was premeditated.
The
appeal was dealt with in terms of s 19(
a
)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
as (amended). The parties
agreed to the adjudication of the appeal by this Court without
hearing oral argument as provided for under
the practice rules of
this Court during the National State of Disaster Regulations of 2020
which are still in operation’.
[2] The
appellant and his erstwhile accused (accused 2) were charged and
convicted of murder
by the Regional Court (the trial court). The
trial court found no substantial and compelling circumstances and
sentenced both to
life imprisonment. The appellant appealed against
the conviction and sentence to the full bench of the high court,
which dismissed
his appeal. Leave to appeal was granted to this Court
on petition.
[3] The
appellant's charge before the trial court was murder, read with the
provisions of
s 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
(CLAA), which prescribed the imposition of life imprisonment. The
appellant
was appraised of the applicability of the CLAA as the
murder was planned and premeditated or committed in the execution of
a common
purpose. The trial court warned the appellant accordingly.
[4] I briefly
set out the following material facts. On 4 March 2012, at about
20h30, Mr
Thabo Letsoalo (Mr Letsoalo) and Mr Nicholas Molepo (Mr
Molepo) were with the deceased at a tavern sitting under a tree
drinking
liquor. The appellant arrived in the company of accused 2.
The appellant approached the deceased from behind and hacked him with
a panga on his head. He hit him more than once, and the deceased fell
to the ground. Accused 2 joined the assault by hitting the
deceased
with a weapon that looked like a steel bar (or a pick-handle) while
the deceased was lying on the ground. They also kicked
him. After
assaulting the deceased, the appellant and accused 2 left the scene.
An ambulance and the police were called in vain.
Mr Thabo Alfred
Sithole (Mr Sithole), the tavern owner, was called to the scene. He
found the deceased lying in a pool of blood.
He conveyed the deceased
to Mankweng hospital, where the latter died a few minutes after
arrival.
[5] The
appellant’s evidence is different from that of both eyewitnesses.
The Appellant
denied that he assaulted the deceased, let alone with a
panga. He stated that in the late afternoon he was involved in a
scuffle
with the deceased when the latter fell against a fence,
injuring his forearm. He testified that he never saw accused 2 on
that day.
He only learnt the following day that the deceased had
died.
[6] The
appellant said that he was at the tavern on the same date, at about
16h00 to 17h00.
He sat there for about 35 minutes before other local
young men joined him, and later the deceased. The deceased took an
empty crate
of beers and went to join other patrons. The appellant
stood up and purchased a ‘long tom of Hansa’ and a cigarette.
When he
returned, the chair he was sitting on was not there. He was
told that it was taken by the deceased. He saw the chair, fetched it,
and took it to where he had been sitting. After a while, he again
went to buy a cigarette. When he returned, he found the deceased
standing next to where he had sat. The deceased confronted him about
the chair. He told the deceased that he (the appellant) was
the first
to use it. They then quarrelled over the use of the chair. The
appellant said they were both drunk at that stage. He said
that the
deceased pushed him, and they ended up pushing each other. He
testified thus:
‘
We
put our arms around each other grabbing each other and I tripped him
he fell onto the fence.’
People who were present separated them. He thereafter
bought a cigarette and snacks and left the tavern. He did not return
to the
tavern that day.
[7] During
cross-examination regarding whether the deceased was injured during
this alleged
scuffle, he said:
‘
The
injuries I saw on him I think they would have been caused by the
fence and the witness is indicating to his left forearm’.
[8] The
appellant and accused number 2’s
evidence
was rejected by the trial court because their ‘evidence was
unconvincing and simply did not have the ring of truth about
it.
Their version can safely be rejected as false’. The trial court
further found that ‘accused’s untruthfulness is a guarantee
of
the truthfulness of the state witness’. In my view, the trial court
correctly analysed the evidence and cannot be faulted for
finding the
appellant guilty of murder. However, it did not say whether the
murder was planned or premeditated in its judgment on
conviction. It
is only in sentencing the appellant that the trial court mentioned
premeditation for the first time. It said:
‘
This
is (sic)
a
premeditated murder. You came to this tavern armed with a panga and
an iron rod or bar. Your purpose was to kill the deceased and
that is
just what you have done. You had ample opportunity to restrain
yourself. This poor deceased had no chance whatsoever.’
[9] The full
court dismissed the appeal. It agreed with the finding by the trial
court in
its judgment on sentence that the murder was premeditated.
The full court reasoned that because the appellant went to the tavern
armed with a panga, with which he killed the deceased, he had formed
the intention to kill the deceased before going to the tavern.
[10] The evidence of Mr Letsoalo
and Mr Molepo was found to be acceptable and credible by the trial
court.
From that, it is ineluctable that the trial court was correct
in convicting the appellant and accused 2 as charged. Although this
Court has not had the benefit of a post-mortem report, the judgment
of the full court reflected on the injuries as follows:
‘
The
injuries sustained included (sic) 6 x lacerations, a fracture to the
coronal suture, fractures of the left mandibular bone over
the front
of the middle aspect.’
These are serious injuries which were inflicted on the
head and are indicative of the force used. The cause of death was
recorded
as ‘blunt force head injuries’.
[11] The issue before this Court
is whether the state established that the murder was premeditated. It
is
clear that nowhere in the trial court's judgment prior to the
imposition of the sentence was any reference made to planning or
premeditation
of the murder by the appellant. The full court did not
make any pronouncement on the issue as well, save to use the trial
court's
words that the murder was premeditated. Therefore, it behoves
this Court to reflect on the issue and determine whether the murder
was indeed planned or premeditated, as well as the legal significance
of the fact that the issue was not decided by the trial court
prior
to sentencing. These issues must be considered by looking at the
evidence presented by the two eyewitnesses in conjunction
with the
appellant's version.
[12] On the accepted evidence of
the two reliable eyewitnesses, the appellant hacked the deceased from
behind
with a panga and continued to assault the deceased while he
was lying on the ground. This to me, was a sequel to their prior
fight
three or so hours earlier. There is no evidence that he was
armed with a panga earlier during the fight. He left for a few hours
and came back armed with a panga and attacked the deceased with it.
The appellant thus had time to think about the attack. The attack
did
not occur on the spur of the moment.
[13]
It is necessary to point out that not in every instance, that an
accused is armed with a weapon, will
it be an indication of
premeditation. The Appellant relied on
S
v Makatu
[1]
in its submission that there was no premeditation on the part of the
Appellant. In
Makatu,
the appellant went to the deceased’s office armed with a firearm
for which he had no licence. Paragraph 12 of the judgment captures
precisely what occurred and reads:
‘
When
the appellant went into the deceased’s office she immediately told
him that she was not interested in him and that he should
move out of
the house that he was busy renovating for them. This triggered bad
memories of what she had done and said in the past.
“It was then at
that spur of the moment that I felt hurt and started shooting at
her.” After firing shots at her the appellant
had turned the gun on
himself, apparently shooting himself through the chin, the bullet
exiting through his forehead.’
[14] In accepting the
appellant’s version in
Makatu
, the court reasoned as
follows:
‘
.
. . the evidence does not support a finding that the appellant had
taken the firearm with the intention of shooting his wife, nor
that
he was motivated by the fear of losing her share in the joint estate.
It cannot be said that the State established that his
version was not
reasonably true.’
[2]
[15] The appellant's evidence
must be evaluated together with the acceptable evidence of the two
eyewitnesses,
who undoubtedly knew both him and accused 2. His
evidence that he fought with the deceased earlier that day speaks to
the reason
why he came back in the evening and assaulted the deceased
without saying a word. The appellants attack was thus a continuation
of
the fight that had occurred earlier.
[16]
It is trite that a court can accept certain portions of the evidence
of a witness as the truth and reject
others. This Court in
Rex
v Gumede
held
that:
[3]
‘
There
may be motives inducing a witness at one stage to tell falsehoods and
subsequently to confess the truth, and it would be arbitrary
rashness
to hold that the later evidence must necessarily be rejected.’
[17] Having outlined the above,
it is essential to state that a finding of premeditation requires
inferential
reasoning. The trier of facts (a presiding officer) has
to interrogate the facts of each case and then deduce from them
whether the
commission of the offence was premeditated or not. That
is partly due to the legislature not having defined ‘planned’ or
‘premeditated’
in the CLAA.
[18]
Intrinsic in the question this Court posed, when it granted leave to
appeal, is the issue that seems
to continue to perplex presiding
officers in criminal trials where planning or premeditation is
alleged by the State. The question
arises: must a trial court
determine whether the murder was planned or premeditated at
conviction? The answer lies in what this Court
said in
Michael
Legoa v State
[4]
when it determined whether at the trial of an accused charged with
dealing in dagga, ‘the State is entitled to prove the value
in
question after conviction but before sentencing, so as to invoke the
minimum sentences’. Cameron JA said that the court
acquires
the jurisdiction in respect of the minimum sentences legislation
‘only if the evidence regarding all the elements of the
form of the
scheduled offence is led before verdict on guilt or innocence, and
the trial court finds that all the elements specified
in the Schedule
are present’. Our courts have consistently followed this approach.
However, the ultimate question remains ‘whether
the accused had a
fair trial under the substantive fairness protections afforded by the
Constitution’.
[5]
[19]
A similar question arose in
S
v Taunyane
.
[6]
As in this case, the trial court failed to mention at the conviction
stage that the accused was guilty of planned or pre-mediated
murder.
It was only at the sentencing stage that mention was made. The full
court found that such omission constituted a misdirection.
[20] Similarly, I find that the
trial court in this matter, misdirected itself in pronouncing that
the murder
was premeditated only at the sentencing stage. What
remains to be determined is whether the appellant was prejudiced by
such misdirection.
In
Legoa
this Court found that the
Appellant received an unfair trial as a result of the misdirection by
the trial court.
[21] The question of whether an
accused is prejudiced by the failure of a trial court to refer to an
offence
in Part 1 of Schedule 2 varies from case to case. This Court
held in
Legoa
that such failure would not, in every case,
result in an accused being prejudiced. Whether an accused has been
denied a fair trial,
as a result, depends on the facts of each case,
as I shall demonstrate below.
[22] Failure to make a
pronouncement at the verdict stage as to which of the provisions of
Part 1 of Schedule
2 of Act 51(1) of the CLAA are applicable to the
accused’s conviction
constitutes a
misdirection in every case it occurs. However, such failure will not
always prejudicially affect the accused to an extent
that the accused
will avoid being sentenced to the minimum sentence of life
imprisonment. If that were to be the case, it would result
in a
miscarriage of justice.
[23] There will undoubtedly be cases where the proved
facts compellingly and ineluctably point to premeditation. In such a
case there
cannot be any conceivable prejudice to an accused person
if the minimum sentence is imposed despite the fact that a finding
regarding
premeditation had not been made prior to conviction. In my
view, this is such a case. The accused was duly warned of the
applicability
of the minimum sentencing legislation on the basis of
premeditation and, as I have said previously, the proved facts
incontrovertibly
established that the murder was premediated.
Accordingly, there can be no conceivable basis on which he can
complain about the fairness
of the trial.
[24] To conclude on this aspect,
a court of appeal cannot overlook that, despite the misdirection of a
trial
court, in failing to make a finding at the verdict stage, that
the murder was planned or premeditated. Justice should not only
be done or seen to be done to the accused,
it has to be meted out to the victims and those affected by
the actions of an accused, as well. The court of appeal should rather
focus on the appropriateness of the sentenced imposed. It cannot be
that an inappropriate sentence should be imposed simply because
of a
misdirection on the part of the sentencing court, particularly when
the accused is not prejudiced
[25] A minimum sentence imposed
will stand only if the accused had been properly apprised in the
charge sheet
and informed by the court of the relevant provisions of
the CLAA before the trial begins. Furthermore, the state will not be
relieved
of the duty to prove planning or premeditation before the
verdict. In that event, the accused will be made aware of which
evidence
will be led and the kind of sentence likely to be imposed.
That will allow the accused to prepare his defence and
cross-examination
of the state witnesses accordingly. This is exactly
what happened in this case. It is accordingly not unjust for the
appellant to
be sentenced in terms of s 51(1) of the CLAA.
[26] I have accepted that the
appellant returned to the deceased with a clear intention to kill
him. Unlike
in
Makatu
, I have found that the motive behind the
appellant's action was to continue with the fight that had occurred
in the late afternoon.
Clearly, under those circumstances, the
appellant had premeditated the attack on the deceased.
[27] Though superfluous in the
light of the finding regarding premeditation, I am satisfied that on
the proved
evidence, the appellant had also acted in execution of a
common purpose with accused 2.
[28] Having established that the
murder was premeditated, I have to determine whether the trial court
erred
in respect of the sentence it imposed. The trial court
correctly took into account and balanced the appellant’s personal
circumstances,
the seriousness of the offence and the interest of
society. The full court found that the trial court did not err. I
agree with that
finding.
[29]
It is trite that the issue of sentence is predominantly in the
discretion of the trial court. The powers
of the appeal court are
circumscribed to this extent, and the crux of the appeal against a
sentence is not whether the sentence was
right or wrong.
[7]
An appeal court will thus not interfere with that discretion unless
there is a clear misdirection or the sentence is manifestly
disproportionate
to the extent that no reasonable court would have
imposed it. In my view, the aggravating circumstances far outweigh
the appellant's
personal circumstances, which are not out of the
ordinary. In the circumstances of this matter, the sentence of life
imprisonment
is appropriate.
[30] Consequently, I make the
following order.
The
appeal is dismissed.
M MAKAULA
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
appellant:
L M Manzini
Instructed
by:
Polokwane Local Office Legal Aid SA
Bloemfontein Local Office Legal Aid SA
For
respondent:
J J Jacobs
Instructed
by:
Director of Public Prosecutions, Polokwane
Director of Public Prosecutions, Bloemfontein.
[1]
S v Makatu
2006
(2) SALR 582 (SCA).
[2]
Ibid
at 588.
[3]
Rex v Gumede
1949 (3) SA 749
(A) at 755.
[4]
Michael Legoa v State
[2002] 4 All SA 373
;
2003 (1) SACR 13
(SCA) para 1.
[5]
Ibid
para 18.
[6]
S v Taunyane
2018 (1) SACR 163 (GJ).
[7]
See
S v Pillay
[1977] 4 All SA 713
(A);
1977 (4) SA
531
(A) at 535 (E).
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