Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 504South Africa
Phate v S (A17/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 504; 2024 (2) SACR 421 (GJ) (16 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 May 2024
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Phate v S (A17/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 504; 2024 (2) SACR 421 (GJ) (16 May 2024)
Phate v S (A17/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 504; 2024 (2) SACR 421 (GJ) (16 May 2024)
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sino date 16 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL – Common purpose –
Dissociation
–
Mob-justice
murder – Appellant argued that withdrawal from scene
exonerated him from culpability – Leader of murderous
mob –
Cannot hide behind mask of not being present during actual killing
– Had intention to find and punish deceased
–
Directing mind behind killing – Absence of any misdirection
or irregularity by court below – Sentences
are balanced and
fair – Appeal dismissed.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: A17/2023
1.
REPORTABLE: YES
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
3.
REVISED: NO
In
the matter between:
PHATE,
SHEA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Coertse CJ, AJ
[1]
This is an appeal against conviction and sentence imposed on 5 June
2018 by Mokgoatlheng J, with leave to appeal granted
by the trial
court. The appellant was charged in the Gauteng Local Division of the
High Court of South Africa, Johannesburg with
three (3) other accused
on several charges.
[2]
Appellant was convicted and sentenced as follows:
2.1. Count 1,
kidnapping and sentenced to five [5] years imprisonment;
2.2. Count 2,
attempted murder and sentenced to eight [8] years imprisonment;
2.3. Count 3,
kidnapping and sentenced to five [5] years imprisonment;
2.4. Count 4,
murder and sentenced to life imprisonment; and
2.5. Count 5,
defeating the ends of justice and sentenced to five [5] years
imprisonment.
[3]
The trial court ordered that counts 1 and 3 should be taken together
for the purpose of sentence.
[4]
The court of appeal was referred to the indictment and specifically
the allegation of the state relying on the doctrine
of common purpose
where it is stated:
“
The state alleges
that the accused, at all relevant times, committed the
above mentioned
offences
in the execution of a common purpose
.
Precisely when, where and in what manner the common purpose was
formed, is at present unknown to the state. The state will, however
allege that the common purpose existed, at the very least,
immediately prior to the commission of the offences
and
continued for the duration thereof.
"
[Emphasis added.]
[5]
The Constitutional Court
in the
Jacobs
-matter
[1]
dealt extensively with the necessity of having the doctrine of common
purpose as well as what it is.
[6]
Theron J: at para [59] had this to say about the doctrine of common
purpose:
“
The doctrine of
common purpose is a set of rules of the common law that regulate
joint criminal liability. It is important to note
that Superior
Courts are protectors of the common law. Moseneke J, speaking for the
Court in
Thebus
,
said: “
Absent
the rule of common purpose, all but actual perpetrators of a crime
and their accomplices will be beyond the reach of our
criminal
justice system, despite their unlawful and intentional participation
in the commission of the crime. Such an outcome would
not accord with
the considerable societal distaste for crimes by common design.
Group, organised or collaborative misdeeds strike more harshly at the
fabric of society and the rights of victims than crimes perpetrated
by individuals.
Effective
prosecution of crime is a legitimate, ‘pressing social need’.
The need for ‘a strong deterrent to violent crime’ is
well acknowledged because ‘widespread violent crime is
deeply
destructive of the fabric of our society’. There is a real and
pressing social concern about the high levels of crime.”
(Footnotes omitted by me as well.) [emphasis added].
[7]
Zondo DJC, as he then was, at paragraph 135 referred to an article
about the doctrine of common purpose
“
In an article
titled: “Thebus and Tadic: Comparing the application of the
doctrine of common purpose in South Africa to its
application in the
Yugoslav Tribunal” Pieter du Toit compares two decisions on the
doctrine of common purpose, namely, this
Court’s decision in
Thebus and the decision of the International Criminal Tribunal for
the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in Prosecutor
v Tadic. He then concludes
thus in part: “The ICTY Appeals Chamber and the South African
Constitutional Court both upheld
a rather broad notion of common
purpose liability. Policy considerations are at the heart of the
doctrine of common purpose at
the international and domestic level.
Society must respond effectively against collaborative misdeeds and
the role of any participant
therein should not be understated. The
focus of criticisms against this approach is that it casts the net of
criminal liability
too widely and ignores the fundamental principle
of individual culpability.” The policy considerations referred
to in this
passage are public policy considerations. I agree that
public policy considerations are at the heart of the doctrine of
common
purpose.” [Emphasis added] [footnotes omitted.]
[8]
With respect, I agree with these statements by Zondo DCJ as he then
was, and Theron J, setting out the law pertaining
to common purpose
as well as the community’s values underpinning it.
[9]
The doctrine of common
purpose
[2]
is:
“…
[A] set
of rules of the common law that regulate the attribution of criminal
liability to a person who undertakes jointly with another
person or
persons the commission of a crime.
Burchell
and Milton
define the doctrine of common purpose in the following terms:
‘
Where two or more
people agree to commit a crime or
actively
associate in a joint unlawful enterprise
,
each will be responsible for specific criminal conduct committed by
one of their number which falls within their common design.
Liability
arises from their ‘common purpose’ to commit the crime’”.
[Emphasis added.]
[10]
The appellant held a common purpose or goal with his co-accused to
seek the alleged perpetrator and to punish him even
to the point
where he illegally sentenced the deceased to death when he said
“nobody is going to leave this room alive and
further whatever
happens, happens …”. I am of the view that the appellant
was part and parcel of this mob-justice
that took place where the
deceased suffered his ultimate fate with the acquiescence of the
appellant; it was their common desire
that the deceased should be
punished. I find that the appellant actively associated with the
other accused to seek the perpetrator[s],
to punish them even to the
point of death. I am further of the view that the appellant was the
“ringleader” of the
murderous mob.
[11]
I agree with Prof.
Snyman’s
[3]
explanation of
common purpose and found it to be directly applicable to the instant
matter:
“
The essence of the
doctrine is
that
if two or more people,
having a common purpose to commit a crime,
act
together in order to achieve that purpose
,
then the conduct of each of them in the execution of that purpose is
imputed to the others.” [Emphasis added.]
[12]
It was argued that the appellant’s “withdrawal or
departure from the scene” exonerated him from culpability.
The
trial court “erred” in its interpretation of the
existence of common purpose. I find that this so-called “withdrawal”
is superficially effective but in substance and reality the
appellant’s saying that “… nobody is going to
leave
this room alive …” was effectively an illegal
death penalty and he reconciled himself with the possibility of the
deceased being killed; he cannot now hide behind this mask of him
being not present during the actual killing of the deceased. The
appellant was the “leader” of this murderous mob; after
all it was his house that was broken into and items stolen
from it
and he had the intention to find the perpetrator and to punish such a
person. He was the directing mind behind the killing
of the deceased.
His words shortly before he left the scene are chilling and
foreboding of unspeakable evil that culminated in
the killing of the
deceased.
[13]
The way a person, such as the appellant, withdraws or departs from a
criminal scene depends on the circumstances prevailing
at the time.
It is clear from those words he uttered, that he did not dissociate
himself from the common purpose to find the perpetrators
and to
punish them. In fact he foresaw that the deceased might be seriously
injured and possibly be killed and then he left the
scene. Can he now
rely on his withdrawal and say to the court of appeal: “I had
nothing to do with the killing of the deceased”?
The appellant
actively participated in preparing the tense moving scene which left
a person killed. The only thing the appellant
did not do was to kill
him.
[14]
It is clear that for a
departure from the scene to favour an accused, more is required than
merely going away. In this instant,
he did not dissociate himself
from the dire consequences that he himself predicted would befall
those present at the interrogation
which led to death. One would
expect that if he really withdrew with an intent to dissociate
himself, he should have expressed
it clearly and forcefully. The
question was posed in
S
v Ndebu and Another
[4]
when the court posed the question of “… what is meant by
the word ‘dissociate’?” Is it enough to
have left
the scene immediately after he uttered those words for him to escape
criminal liability? I don’t think so. I find
that him leaving
the scene for his co-accused to complete the task of killing the
deceased renders him culpable and the trial court
rightly found him
guilty and found that he acted in common purpose with the other
accused. Although he was absent when the deceased
was killed, I find
that, in the words of the court in
Chabalala
,
[5]
the
accused was still the “prime mover” of the offence.
[15]
Did the trial court err in its finding that the appellant acted with
a common purpose to kill the deceased? For all of
the above reasons,
I agree with the trial court’s finding that the appellant acted
with common purpose with his co accused.
[16]
The State submitted that
the witnesses at the scene were faced with a tense moving scene and
that eyewitnesses ordinarily lay emphasis
on different details.
[6]
The Supreme Court of Appeal had this to say about tense moving scenes
and the alleged contradictions:
"In my view the
contradictions referred to do not detract from the trial court’s
findings in respect of Mhlambi, Miya
and Twala.
The
contradictions are not material and relate to details. It must be
borne in mind that we are dealing with a tense moving scene
.”
[7]
[Emphasis added.]
[17]
I find that the trial
court’s approach was correct that it should not evaluate the
evidence with mathematical exactness. It
is often stated that
evidence should not be evaluated piecemeal or in isolation but the
evidence as whole should be evaluated.
I should look holistically at
the evidence of the entire case before me as I was reminded by Nugent
J in
S v
Van der Meyden
[8]
where he said the following:
“
The proper test is
that an accused is bound to be convicted if the evidence establishes
his guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and the
logical corollary is that
he must be acquitted if it is reasonably possible that he might be
innocent. The process of reasoning
which is appropriate to the
application of that test in any particular case will depend on the
nature of the evidence which the
court has before it.
What
must be borne in mind, however, is that the conclusion which is
reached (whether it be to convict or to acquit) must account
for all
the evidence
.
Some of the evidence might be found to be false; some of it might be
found to be unreliable; and some of it might be found to
be only
possibly false or unreliable; but none of it may simply be ignored.”
[Emphasis added.]
[18]
During the argument, it
was strenuously argued by Adv Potgieter that the question whether the
appellant was an integral part of
the murderous group who killed
Lucky Titus is the decisive question? The gist of appellant’s
arguments is that his cell phone
records prove that he was not
present at the scene when the deceased was killed. The state argued
that the appellant’s version,
that he dissociated from the
murder, is disingenuous. I agree with the state. It was submitted
that this riddle of whether the
appellant was present at the scene
would be satisfactorily unlocked through close scrutiny of the cell
phone records of the appellant.
This argument applies the fine
callipers of the mind by measuring and evaluating evidence piecemeal
and using the result to argue
the case on appeal.
Nugent
J reminded me that the trial court as well as the court of appeal
should have regard to the totality of the evidence.
[9]
[19]
It was argued that when
the appellant left the “meeting”, he distanced himself
from what happened to the deceased. To
the contrary, I take the view
that the evidence shows that the appellant was an integral part of
the events that resulted in the
death of the deceased. It was
submitted that the appellant left the “meeting” during
which the deceased was “interviewed”
regarding who
burgled the appellant’s home. I find it was not a friendly
meeting of friends to find the culprits who burgled
the appellant’s
home; he had a “vested interest” in finding the
perpetrator[s]. It would be more appropriate
to class the “interview”
as an “interrogation”. The evidence that he said, when he
left the room, “nobody
is going to leave this room alive and
further whatever happens, happens,” is chilling. The appellant
has not, by leaving
the room and leaving the dirty work to his
associates, managed to secure for himself an escape route. All he did
was leave the
dirty work to his co-accused. He actively foresaw the
possibility that someone was going to die and he reconciled himself
with
that possibility. The appellant pronounced an illegal death
sentence upon “someone”. I find that he had the necessary
dolus
directus
.
In
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius
,
[10]
at
paragraph 26, the Supreme of Appeal re-stated what
dolus
directus
is:
“
In
cases of murder, there are principally two forms of dolus which
arise: dolus directus and dolus eventualis. These terms are nothing
more than labels used by lawyers to connote a particular form of
intention on the part of a person who commits a criminal act.
In
the case of murder, a person acts with dolus directus if he or she
committed the offence with the object and purpose of killing
the
deceased.
”
[my
emphasis].
[20]
In light of the above, I find that the accused is guilty of murder
with him having had criminal intent in the form of
dolus directus
.
[21]
It is further argued that three midnight cell phone calls on the
appellant’s cell phone records that are marked
“call
forward” are clear proof that he was not present and therefore
he is not part and parcel of the murderous intentions
and actions.
The essence of this argument is that the appellant was not physically
at the scene and therefore he should go free.
This argument is not
persuasive. The fact that a call was forwarded does not mean that the
call was not received or taken, by being
forwarded to another number.
The fact that the appellant received calls from his associates
throughout the night may show that
he was not there, but not that he
was not involved, considering the rest of the evidence against him.
Once again, I am reminded
of the
dictum
of
Nugent J in
S v Van der Meyden.
[22]
I am of the view that the long and strenuous argument about the
content or non content and the relevance of the
appellant’s
cell phone records is a red herring. It was debated with the
appellant’s representative that it is
abundantly clear from the
trial record that appellant was a continuous part of this murderous
group. I hasten to add that I do
not exclude the cell phone records.
I look at the evidence as a whole presented by the state and the
evidence presented by the
accused inclusive of the appellant.
[23]
The appellant’s cell phone records are private documents and
the provisions of both the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
and the
Civil Proceedings Evidence Act 25 of 1965 are applicable.
Section 222
of the
Criminal Procedure Act
(“the CPA”) makes sections
33 to 38 of the Civil Proceedings Evidence Act [“the CPEA”]
mutatis mutandis
applicable in criminal proceedings. Section
33 defines “document” to include any book, map, plan,
drawing or photograph;
and “
statement” includes
any representation of fact, whether made in words or otherwise
[emphasis added]. The following portions of section 34(1) are
relevant:
“
In any civil
proceedings where direct oral evidence of a fact would be admissible,
any statement made by a person in a document
and tending to establish
that fact shall on production of the original document be admissible
as evidence of that fact, provided—
(a) the person who
made the statement either—(
(i) had personal
knowledge of the matters dealt with in the statement; or
…
(b) the person who
made the statement is called as a witness in the proceedings…”.
[24]
The effect of the CPA on section 34(1) of the CPEA would be to refer
to criminal proceedings and that the direct oral
evidence of the
appellant pertaining to his cell phone records are admissible as
evidence of that fact. The appellant had personal
knowledge of the
cell phone calls that he made or received; the cell phone records
were downloaded directly from his cell phone.
And it was argued that
appellant was not present during the killing of the deceased. I find
that it is common cause that he was
not physically present at the
killing, but that does not exonerate him from this gruesome killing.
I am mindful of Nugent J’s
dictum
in the
Van Der
Meyden
case and my finding is that the appellant had the
necessary intention to kill albeit with
dolus eventualis
. In
light of these findings, I reiterate that the long and strenuous
argument about the interpretation of the cell phone records
is a
red-herring.
[25]
It was submitted on behalf of the state that the guilty finding of
attempted murder on count 2, ought to have been a
finding of guilty
of assault with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, a competent
verdict, as the injuries suffered by the complainant
were not
life-threatening.
[26]
The charge contained in the original indictment was of assault with
intent to do grievous bodily harm, although by the
time it was put to
the accused, it was a charge of attempted murder. I am satisfied that
the evidence supports the charge and the
verdict that the appellant
was guilty of attempted murder.
[27]
The next question to be answered is whether the court of appeal can
intervene in the trial court’s conviction.
It is trite, and the
law reports are replete with references pertaining to the court of
appeal’s approach to intervening
in a trial court’s
conviction. The court should not lose sight of the totality of the
evidence and not to consider contradictions
in isolation. I am bound
to conclude that the appellant’s guilt was proven beyond
reasonable doubt. Looking at the facts
as a whole, it is inescapable
that the appellant was an integral part of this murderous mob and
therefore rightly convicted in
that they were acting with the
necessary common purpose. In my view, it was correctly rejected by
the trial court. I am satisfied
on the evidence, as a whole that the
appellant was correctly convicted by the court
a quo
and
consequently, I cannot interfere with the trial court’s
finding.
[28]
Furthermore, in the
absence of any misdirection or irregularity, there is no basis upon
which I can interfere with the findings
of the trial court in respect
of the conviction. It follows that the appeal against conviction
fails.
[11]
[29]
It was argued that the court
a quo
further erred in that the
brutality of the case was overemphasised. This was with reference to
the fact that the body of the deceased
was mutilated when the train
ran over it. The appellant’s argument was that the trial court
sacrificed the appellant on the
proverbial altar of deterrence. The
State's case was that the deceased was already dead when his body was
placed on the railway
lines. It was argued that this act was designed
to hide how the deceased was killed. The argument was that a sentence
of life imprisonment
is shockingly disproportionate to the role that
appellant played during the commission of the offences. I disagree
with this argument.
I am of the view that the appellant was the prime
mover of this murderous mob even when he left them.
[30]
The offence of murder in furtherance of a common purpose is subject
to a minimum sentence of life. A trial court may
impose a lesser
sentence if there are substantial and compelling circumstances.
[31]
It was argued for the appellant that the failure by the State to
specify in the indictment which subsection of
section 51
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
applies, resulted in an
irregularity. The State submitted that there was no prejudice because
it is not as if the incorrect subsection
which indicated a different
minimum sentence had been cited. If the appellant was not warned at
all, it would have been held against
the respondent as well.
[31]
In
Dube
v S
[12]
it was stated at paragraph 20:
“
Turning to the
question of sentence:
The
imposition of sentence is a matter falling pre-eminently within the
judicial discretion of the trial court. The test for interference
by
an appeal court is whether the sentence imposed by the trial court is
vitiated by an irregularity or misdirection or is disturbingly
inappropriate
.
In this case the provisions of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997
are applicable. The prescribed minimum sentence in respect of a
conviction of robbery with aggravating circumstances is 15 years’
imprisonment. A court may impose a lesser sentence if there are
substantial and compelling circumstances.” [Emphasis added.]
[32]
At para 7 (d) of the
Dube
case the court of appeal found that
the appellant who “… had been legally represented, was
at all times aware that
the minimum sentence legislation was
applicable.” It is common cause that the appellant in this
matter was at all times legally
represented. He was also aware that
the minimum sentence legislation was applicable. I don’t find
that the sentence imposed
by the trial court is vitiated by an
irregularity or misdirection or is disturbingly inappropriate. The
trial court did not find
any substantial and compelling circumstances
to deviate from the prescribed minimum sentences and I agree with
that as well.
[33]
The respondent argued, rightly so, that in respect of a serious
offence, the personal circumstances of the offender recede
into the
background. I am of the opinion that the trial court was correct in
not attaching undue weight to the age and previous
non-criminal
behaviour of the Appellant. The sentences imposed by the trial court,
with reservation to the custodial sentence of
8 years for the
non-lethal assault on Matsotso, is well balanced and fair. There was
no basis on which to deviate from the minimum
sentence as far as the
murder charge is concerned.
[34]
The sentence the trial court imposed is fair and cannot be interfered
with. I order as follows:
The
appeal against conviction and sentence is dismissed.
COERTSE CJ,
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Yacoob, S
Judge
of the High Court of South Africa
Moosa, C
Judge
of the High Court of South Africa
Date
of Hearing: 26 February 2024
Date
of Judgment: 16 May 2024
Appearances:
For
the Appellant:
Adv. H. Potgieter
Instructed
by:
Attorney H.J. Groenewald, Pretoria
For
the Respondent: Adv
F. Mahomed
Instructed
by:
The NPA, Johannesburg.
[1]
Jacobs
and Others v S
[2019]
ZACC 4; 2019 (1) SACR 623 (CC); 2019 (5) BCLR 562 (CC)
[2]
Jacobs
and Others v S
[2019] ZACC 4
;
2019 (1) SACR 623
(CC);
2019 (5) BCLR
562
(CC) at paragraph 128.
[3]
Criminal
Law
5
ed (LexisNexis, Durban 2008) at 265.
[4]
1986
(2) SA 133
(ZS) at 136F.
[5]
S
v Chabalala
2003
(1) SACR 134
(SCA) at para 21.
[6]
S v Sithole
[2006] ZASCA 173
at para
12.
[7]
Ibid
[8]
1999
(2) SA 79
(W) at 82C-E. This case is often quoted with approval by
the SCA.
[9]
See
S
v Van der Meyden
at
n 8 above.
[10]
[2015]
ZASCA 204
;
2016 (2) SA 317
(SCA) at para 26.
[11]
Dube
v S
[2011]
ZASCA 236
at para 19.
[12]
Id at
para 20.
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