Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 740South Africa
S v Meshack (SS57/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 740 (27 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Meshack (SS57/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 740 (27 June 2023)
S v Meshack (SS57/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 740 (27 June 2023)
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sino date 27 June 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
SS57/2022
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
MOELETSI
TEBOGO MESHACK
JUDGMENT
BHOOLA AJ
Introduction
[1] Mr. Moeletsi Tebogo
Meshack (‘the accused’) was arraigned in this court on
three charges. According to the indictment,
he was charged as
follows:
a.
Count one: Arson, where the State alleged that the
accused, on the 11
th
of
December 2021, unlawfully and intentionally injured Thabiso Godrey
Kwadi (the deceased) in his property, set fire to it and thereby
damaged or destroyed a house which was his property or in his lawful
possession.
b.
Count
two: Murder
[1]
, where the State
alleged that the accused unlawfully and intentionally killed the
deceased in count 1 on 11 December 2021 at Mohlakeng,
Randfontein.
c.
Count three: Defeating or obstructing the
administration of Justice, where the State alleged on the date and
place mentioned in
Count 1, the accused did unlawfully and with
intent to defeat or obstruct the cause of justice, commit an act, to
wit, instructed
and/or hired other people to clean and paint the RDP
house number 2470 Gumenke Street, Mohlakeng, which is a crime scene
in an
attempt to remove and conceal evidence at the murder scene, and
thus the accused did defeat or obstruct the administration of
justice.
[2]
At the onset of the trial and before the accused
pleaded to the charges, the import, and implications of the penal
provisions of
the Minimum Sentence Act, competent verdicts, and
admissions in terms of section 220 were explained to the accused. He
understood
the import thereof.
The plea
[3]
When the charges were put to the accused, he
pleaded not guilty to all the counts proffered against him and the
provisions of section
115 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
(the Act) applied. He was represented by Advocate Nel, who confirmed
that the plea
was in accordance with her instructions, and she did
not tender any plea explanation on the accused’s behalf. The
accused
exercised his right to remain silent and elected not to
disclose the basis of his defence.
[4]
The defence also made certain admissions in terms
of section 220 of the Act. The statement of Mr. Tiitsetso
Motsuenyane, (Mr. Motsuenyane)
was also admitted into evidence as
part of the probative material. I shall return to this later.
The application in
terms of section 174 of the Act
[5] At the close of the
State’s case, Advocate Nel, moved an application in terms of
section 174 of the Act in respect of
all three charges that the
accused faced.
[6] Section 174 of the
Act provides
“
If,
at the close of the case for the prosecution at any trial, the court
is of the opinion that there is no evidence that the accused
committed the offence referred to in the charge or any offence of
which he may be convicted on the charge, it may return a verdict
of
not guilty.”
[7] Advocate Mongwane,
who appeared for the State initially opposed the application in
respect of all three counts and later conceded
that no evidence was
led in respect of count three which implicated the accused.
Consequently, the application for a discharge
was granted in respect
of count three only being the charge of defeating the ends of
justice. I declined to discharge the accused
on counts one and two.
The accused was, accordingly, placed on his defence for these two
counts.
[8] I shall in this
judgment deal with the evidence relating to counts one and two. In
doing do I shall not deal with the evidence
in the sequence in which
it was led, but rather in a chronological sequence of the narrative.
I will also deal with count two before
count one because the State
first led evidence on count two before leading evidence on count one.
[9]
This case turns on a factual dispute or basis. I shall first consider
the factual disputes of the case before pronouncing
on the
rights, duties and liabilities of the parties engaged in the
dispute.
[2]
Thereafter, I shall
‘test’ and ‘weigh’ the evidence and ascertain
whether the State, who has been burdened
with the onus of proof has
discharged the onus.
The evidence
[10] The National
Prosecuting Authority (the State) led the evidence of six witnesses.
Two of the witnesses Mr. Motsuenyane and
Mr. Katlego Desmond Modikoe
(Mr. Modikoe) alleged they witnessed the accused set the deceased
alight. I will refer to this as scene
one. Two other independent eye
witnesses, Ms Dimakatso Margarette Matamane (Ms. Matamane) and
Mr. Jabulani Thabang (Mr. Thabang)
testified they saw the deceased
running to the tap whilst ablaze past their dwelling and the accused
followed him in proximity.
I will refer to this as scene two.
I will then refer to scene three as to what transpired after
the fire was put out
at the house and the evidence of witnesses Mr.
Jameson Tseke (Mr. Tseke) and Mr. Thapelo Johnson Kwadi, (Mr.
Kwadi) the deceased
brother who testified about the events which
transpired the day after the incident.
[11] Mr. Motsuenyane, a
close friend of the deceased who lived with the deceased on the 11
th
of December 2021, testified that at about 20h00, he was inside
the house, in the kitchen washing dishes, when the accused entered
the kitchen and proceeded to the dining room where the deceased was
seated with Mr. Modikoe. The accused requested his money from
the
deceased. The deceased did not answer him. He subsequently informed
the deceased that he was leaving and will return.
The accused
returned after five (5) minutes, with a five-litre container of
petrol, and poured the petrol over the deceased, who
was seated on
the sofa and set him alight. When this happened, he and Mr.
Modikoe fled the dining room through the window
because the accused
blocked the door. According to him, when they were outside, he
screamed and called the tenants for assistance.
After a while, the
house was ablaze. He and Mr. Modikoe then entered the house through
kitchen door, opened the dining room door
and found the accused
kicking the deceased inside the dining room whilst he was ablaze.
They pulled the deceased outside the house
to take him to the tap.
The accused continued kicking the deceased whilst he was outside the
house. He dragged the deceased to
the tap and the accused followed
them to the tap, still requesting his money from the deceased. The
accused eventually wrapped
the deceased in a curtain to extinguish
the flames, put him inside his car and took him to the hospital.
[12] Mr. Katlego Desmond
Modikoe (Mr. Modikoe), corroborated the narrative of Mr. Motsuenyane
regarding the accused setting the
deceased alight only. This was not
without contradictions. His evidence was that the accused returned
with a two-litre bottle after
twenty to thirty minutes. He was
uncertain whether the bottle contained petrol or paraffin. According
to him when he stood up to
go out, the accused pushed him back and
closed the door. He then jumped out through the window and ran away
from the scene to his
house. He returned to the scene after the
accused took the deceased to hospital.
[13] Ms. Matamane was
visiting a tenant, Ms Nobuntu Zenzhile on the 11
th
of
December 2021, she lived on the deceased’s property. At about
20h15 whilst she, Ms. Zenzhile, and Mr. Thabeng were chatting
inside
the house, she heard a person screaming and saw this person running
in the direction of the tap. This person was on fire.
She opened the
door and went outside. She later realised that the person that was
ablaze was the deceased. She also observed that
the person who
followed the deceased was the accused. She followed them to the tap
and heard the deceased saying to the accused,
he was sorry, and the
accused also told the deceased ‘Those things you have taken
were very expensive’ and the deceased
kept on saying ‘I
am sorry brother.’ Both Ms. Zenzhile and Mr. Thabeng also
followed her to the tap. Whilst they were
with the deceased at the
tap, she noticed the house was burning and that was when the accused,
Mr. Thabeng, Mr. Modikoe and Mr.
Motsuenyane extinguished the fire.
After they extinguished the fire, the accused took the deceased to
the clinic. She did not witness
how the fire occurred and when the
accused took the deceased to the clinic. The next day she noticed
people were painting the house
and it was clean. She had no idea why
they painted the house.
[14] Mr. Thabeng,
testified that on the night of the incident, he was at his
girlfriend’s place Ms Nobuntu Zenzhile and they
were with Ms
Matamane inside the house, chatting. He corroborated Ms Matamane’s
evidence. However, he did not hear what the
deceased and the accused
spoke about. When he went outside, he found the deceased
burning, sitting in a drain under an open
tap with water flowing down
on him and the accused was standing next to him busy talking to him.
He also noticed the deceased’s
friends Mr. Motsuenyane and Mr.
Modikoe who were standing at a distance. He then observed that the
house was burning so he ran
back to his house, fetched a bucket, and
assisted to extinguish the fire from the outside. The accused also
assisted to extinguish
the fire in the house. Thereafter, the accused
took the deceased to the clinic or hospital. He met with him an hour
later and he
informed him the deceased will be fine.
[15] Mr. Tseke, testified
that on the 12
th
of December 2021, he was on his way to
the deceased’s place, when he met Mr. Motsuenyane, who informed
him about the deceased’s
demise. Mr. Motsuenyane further
informed him that the accused arrived in the company of Mr. Modikoe
and requested people to paint
the deceased house and he would pay
them R200.00 each. They continued with the painting, and they never
saw the accused again.
The next day they were short on money for food
and the accused gave him R100.00 to buy food. He did not get paid for
the job he
did, and the word was the deceased had passed on and the
accused was arrested.
[16] Under cross-
examination, he conceded that the accused did not offer him a piece
job and neither did he pay him for painting
and cleaning the house.
He also confirmed that the accused usually gave him money for food.
[17] Mr. Kwadi, the
deceased’s brother testified that on the 12
th
of
December 2021 he received information that his brother was burnt. He
went to his house and noticed Mr. Motsuenyane and others
were
cleaning the house. He enquired from Mr. Motsuenyane about the
whereabouts of his brother, and he informed him that he was
in
hospital, and he was fine. Whist removing the goods from the house he
observed that Mr. Motsuenyane was hiding something from
him. As they
were cleaning the accused arrived greeted them and he and Mr.
Motsuenyane spoke to each other. He did not know what
they spoke
about. Mr. Motsuenyane then returned to them and informed them that
the accused requested that they must clean, and
paint. They continued
to clean the entire day. The following day, they continued to clean
not knowing that the deceased had passed
on. The deceased’s
sister arrived and enquired as to why they were they cleaning and who
had instructed them authority
to clean up. Mr. Motsuenyane said
they were requested to do so by the accused.
[18] That was the
evidence for the state.
[19]
The accused testified and called one witness who was his
alibi
,
Mr. Oompie Pendani.
[20] The accused,
testified that on the 11
th
of December 2021, a Saturday,
he commenced work at 9h00 and took his two children with him to work.
He knocked off work at 18h00.
After knocking off work, he stopped to
buy food at KFC and returned home immediately thereafter. When he
reached home, he opened
the gate and drove in. He was busy dishing up
the food when he heard noise that people were screaming. He
went outside on
the paving to have a look what was happening. He saw
smoke was coming out of the deceased’s house. He ran out of his
gate,
he passed Mr. Pendani on the Street who was screaming ‘its
burning, its burning!’ and entered the deceased’s
premises through the small gate.
[21] As he entered the
premises, the deceased walked out of the kitchen and was burning. He
told the deceased to go to the tap.
No one else was in the vicinity.
He followed the deceased to the tap. When they reached the tap, he
put the deceased under the
tap in the drain and opened the tap for
the water to run on him. He shouted at and scolded the deceased
telling him ‘Do you
see now what you are doing with friends! I
told you they will get you into big trouble.’ This was not the
first time he reprimanded
him about his friends. He asked the
deceased what had happened, and the deceased replied that he was
sleeping.
[22]
When they were at the taps, he noticed Mr. Motsuenyane arrived and
stood about four to five meters away from the tap. There
was also a
female at the tap. People came out of their homes and assisted to
extinguish the fire in the house.
He also
assisted to extinguish the fire after he stopped the deceased from
burning. Someone then asked whether the ambulance was
called.
He said the ambulance will take long and he will
take the deceased to the clinic.
[23] Upon arrival at the
clinic, there were two nurses present. The deceased was talking, and
they asked him if he wanted a wheelchair.
The nurses were at
causality room A. They requested him to wait at the bench. One of the
nurses came out and assisted him, by dressing
his wound. He went to
buy the deceased ‘amahew’
and
bananas and returned to the clinic. He asked the deceased again what
really happened, and the deceased informed him that he
went four days
without any sleep, he was tired and sleepy. He was sleeping with two
friends. The nurse informed him that she was
going to transfer the
deceased to the Leratong Hospital, and that he could leave.
[24]
On the Monday after the incident, the deceased’s sister
approached him and enquired if he took the deceased to
hospital. He
confirmed that he did, and they
requested
him to go to the South African Police Service (SAPS) with them which
he obliged. He went with them to Randfontein SAPS.
He spoke to a
Sergeant and informed the Sergeant that he took the deceased to the
clinic. They asked if he knew what happened and
he informed them that
the deceased said he was sleeping. They thanked him and informed him
that the deceased passed on. The police
did not take his statement.
He received a call on Tuesday from one Godfrey Xaba, a police officer
who informed him he wanted to
see him. He went to the Randfontein
SAPS on the Sunday at 18h00 and was arrested.
He
denied being inside the house when the deceased was set alight and
did not set the deceased alight that evening.
[25] Under cross-
examination he testified he passed Mr. Pendani on the street because
he was running to the scene. He later saw
him standing in the
deceased’s yard with people who assisted to extinguish the
fire, but he did not participate to put out
the fire.
[26] Mr. Pendani, the
accused’s
alibi
, testified he is a tenant at the
accused’s yard. He was in his room when he heard noises
outside. He went out and stood by
the wall fence at the gate. The
accused came from inside his house and passed him at the gate while
he was standing by the wall.
At that time, he saw two ladies who had
buckets of water at the deceased’s place. These ladies were
there before the accused
arrived at the scene. He did not go out of
the yard and did not enter the deceased’s property. The accused
returned to fetch
his car. He put the deceased in the motor vehicle
and left. He did not make a statement to the police because they did
not come
to him to make a statement.
[27] That was the case
for the defence.
[28]
Advocate Mongwane for the State contended that the state witnesses
testified honestly in that the accused was at the deceased
house
before the deceased was set alight. He contended that the
defence witnesses contradicted each other on how the events
happened.
It was submitted that the version of the accused and his
alibi
witness could not be reasonably possibly true as
it had material contradictions and that the State witnesses testified
honestly.
[29]
Advocate Nel for the Defence submitted that the version of Mr.
Motsuenyane was both highly improbable as well as not credible
because his version of the events was contradicted by his own
statement, as well as the remainder of the State’s other
witnesses.
Counsel contended State
witnesses Mr. Tseke and Mr. Kwadi both cast doubt on the honesty of
this witness, more so regarding his
actions on the scene and in
reporting what had happened to the deceased. Counsel submitted of
greater concern was that whilst leading
his evidence in chief, the
State Counsel failed to alert this Honourable Court to the fact that
this elaborated version of the
evidence was divulged to him during
consultation and that it was not contained in Mr. Motsuenyane’s
statement, and this must
result in serious doubt regarding his
credibility.
[30] The defence
submitted that the accused was an honest, reliable, and credible
witness
and that his version was
reasonably possibly true. The State did not succeed in disproving the
evidence that the accused and his
witness testified that the accused
arrived home shortly prior to the commotion at the deceased’s
house, he came from work
and had his two minor children with him, he
was seen on arrival, he was seen when he was inside his house a few
minutes before
the commotion took place and he was seen leaving his
premises to assist, and he was seen assisting.
Issues
[31] The following are
the issues to be determined in this matter:
a.
two mutually destructive versions before the
court.
b.
did the State, prove that the defence of the
alibi
was false beyond a reasonable doubt.
c.
whether the state who was burdened with the onus,
discharged the onus, and proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt
that the accused
was the assailant who committed the offences.
Applicable legal
principles
Two Mutually
destructive irreconcilable versions
[32] In this case,
it is apparent that two mutually destructive versions are before the
trial court. This essentially means
were there are two conflicting
statements or versions before the court, each contradicting the
other, both these versions cannot
coexist or be reconciled with one
another due to their contradictory or conflicting accounts of events.
[33]
The approach by the courts to resolving two irreconcilable, mutually
destructive factual versions is a well-established with
sound
doctrine in our law.
[3]
Simply
put in order to resolve the disputed issues, I must make findings on
the credibility of the various factual witnesses, their
reliability,
and the probabilities. After having assessed the credibility,
reliability, and probabilities, I will then, as a final
step,
determine whether the party burdened with the onus of proof has
succeeded in discharging it.
[4]
[34]
In
S
v Janse van Rensburg and Others
[5]
the
Court said
‘
logic
dictates that where there are two conflicting versions or two
mutually destructive stories, both cannot be true-only one can
be
true. Consequently, the other must be false. However, the dictates of
logic do not displace the standard of proof required in
either civil
or criminal matters. To determine the objective truth of the one
version and the falsity of the other, it is important
to consider not
only the credibility of the witnesses, but also the reliability of
such witnesses. Evidence that is reliable should
be weighed against
the evidence that is found to be false and the process measures
against probabilities. In the final analysis
the court must determine
whether the state has mustered the requisite threshold- in this case
proof beyond reasonable doubt.
[6]
[35]
When assessing two conflicting versions all the evidence should be
considered and none should be ignored.
[7]
Alibi
[36]
The legal principle regarding alibi’s is that the accused bears
no onus to prove his
alibi
[8]
.
Once an alibi is raised the onus is on the State to disprove it or to
prove that it is false beyond reasonable doubt.
[9]
[37]
In
Maila
v The State,
[10]
the SCA referring to the case of
Tshiki
v S
[11]
held:
[20] It is trite that an
accused person is entitled to raise any defence, including that of an
alibi – that at the time of
the commission of the crime, they
were not at the scene of the crime but somewhere else. They can also
lead evidence of a witness(es)
to corroborate them on their
whereabouts at the critical time. Nevertheless, it is trite that an
accused person who raises the
defence is under no duty (as opposed to
that of the State) to prove his defence. If the defence is reasonably
possibly true, they
are entitled to be discharged and found not
guilty.
[21] The only
responsibility an accused person bears with regards to their alibi
defence is to raise the defence at the earliest
opportunity. The
reason is simple: to give the police and the prosecution the
opportunity to investigate the defence and bring
it to the attention
of the court. In appropriate cases, in practice, the prosecution can
even withdraw the charge should the
alibi
defence, after
investigations, prove to be solid.
[38]
The correct approach is that an
alibi
must
be considered in the light of the totality of the evidence in the
case, and the Court’s impressions of the witnesses.’
An
alibi
may
only be rejected by court where it was proven beyond reasonable doubt
that it was false.
[12]
The
effect of a false
alibi
is
that an accused is placed in a position as if he has not testified at
all.
[13]
If there is evidence
of an accused person’s presence at a place and at a time making
it impossible for him to have committed
the crime and if in the
totality of the evidence there is a reasonable possibility that the
alibi
evidence
is true, the effect is that there is a possibility that he has not
committed the crime.
[14]
The
onus does not change; however, it was observed that the vulnerability
of an unsupported
alibi
defence
will depend on the court’s assessment of the truth of the
accused’s testimony.
[15]
Evaluation
[39]
When evaluating the evidence before this court, the proper approach
to be adopted was laid in
S
v M
[16]
where
the court held ‘…the totality of evidence must not
be measured in isolation, but by assessing properly
in the light of
the inherent strengths, weaknesses, probabilities, and
improbabilities on both sides the balance which must weigh
so heavily
in favour of the State that any reasonable doubt about the accused’s
guilt is excluded.
[17]
[40]
The evaluation of evidence adduced is a crucial phase in the
fact-finding process. A court should first determine the factual
basis of a case before pronouncing on the rights, duties and
liabilities of the parties engaged in the dispute, which is
determined
by evaluating all the probative material admitted during
the trial. The weight of the evidence is determined during this
process
of fact-finding to determine whether the party carrying the
burden of proof has proved its allegations in accordance with the
applicable
standard of proof.
[18]
[41] A conspectus of the
evidence on the disputed facts reveal a lot of material
contradictions and inconsistencies on what transpired
in this case.
There are contradictions both by the State and the Defence in
this trial. Some witnesses more frank, honest,
and candid than
others. Ultimately the Court must look at the evidence in totality.
My evaluation of the probabilities are
as follows:
a.
Regarding scene one which related to what
materialized in the house, immediately before and during the alleged
burning. Before
the burning Mr. Motsuenyane’s evidence
was did not consume any illegal substances on the day of the incident
however, Mr.
Modikoe’s evidence was that when he arrived at the
deceased’s house, there were no other people there besides the
deceased
and Mr. Motsuenyane. They were both smoking illegal
substances (mandrax) in bottle necks, and they did not want to share
with him. Mr. Motsuenyane on the other hand testified that
there were many people present and they all ran out of the dining
room when the accused doused the deceased with petrol. Strangely, the
State did not call any independent witness to corroborate
this
version.
b.
Mr. Motsuenyane’s oral testimony, and his
written statement did not corroborate each other. His statement
omitted relevant
material evidence. His oral testimony was
elaborated. For example, according to his oral testimony the incident
occurred at 20h00
yet in his statement he indicated the incident took
place at 09h00. Whilst on the aspect of what time the incident
occurred, there
is a further contradiction in the hospital
records which indicated that the accused was admitted on two
different days at two different
times which I will refer to later.
The independent witnesses and the accused and his
alibi
testified that the incident occurred between 20h00
and 20h15. From the evidence before the court, It was highly
improbable
that the incident occurred at 09h00. When looking at
the evidence I find it is more plausible that the incident occurred
between 20h00 and 20h15 not at 09h00.
c.
Mr. Motsuenyane’s oral testimony
contradicted his written statement in the following respects:
i.
he provided no particularity in his
statement of the events that occurred in comparison to his oral
testimony.
ii.
His statement made no mention about him being in
the kitchen and washing dishes, nor was any mention made about the
fact that the
accused closed the dining room door, which forced them
to jump out of the window.
iii.
He made no mention in his statement that there
were other patrons at the deceased home, who ran out through the
dining room door
when the accused doused the deceased with petrol.
iv.
Furthermore, in his statement he averred after the
accused poured the deceased with petrol, he lit the deceased with a
gun lighter
yet in his oral testimony he stated that the accused
asked him and Mr. Modikoe for matches and Mr. Modikoe gave him a
lighter which
he used to set the deceased alight.
v.
I find that there was no consistency and
corroboration in his oral evidence and the statement he filed in
Court.
d.
What was disturbing was that Mr. Motsuenyane did
not testify, nor did he mention in his statement the events that
transpired at
the deceased house on the 12
th
of December 2023. It was alleged that he
informed Mr. Tseke and Mr. Kwadi that the accused gave him
instructions to obtain
people to clean and paint the deceased
premises. This piece of evidence only surfaced when Tseke and Mr.
Kwadi testified. He conveniently
removed himself from the
activities that transpired on this day.
e.
When comparing Mr. Motsuenyane’s evidence
with that of Mr. Modikoe they contradicted each other in the
following respects:
i.
According to Mr. Motsuenyane when the accused left
the deceased house he returned after five (5) minutes with a
five-liter container
of petrol and according to Mr. Modikoe the
accused returned after twenty to thirty minutes with a two liter of
petrol or paraffin.
Clearly there was no corroboration in this
regard.
ii.
When Mr. Motsuenyane testified in his evidence in
chief his version of how the events unfolded was that the accused
poured the petrol
on the deceased, asked him for matches, he did not
have matches and he then used one of the lighters handed to him by
Mr. Modikoe,
which he used to set the deceased alight. Mr.
Modikoe’s testimony of what transpired, was that Mr.
Motsuenyane,
walked in and out the kitchen and dining room but was
present when the deceased was set alight. According to him, the
accused
poured the deceased with a flammable substance, used his own
lighter and could not set the deceased alight with it. He,
thereafter,
requested matches from him and not Mr. Motsuenyane. He
then took a lighter that was lying on the bed and gave it to the
accused
who used it to set the deceased alight. This is very
suspicious behaviour from witnesses who claim that the deceased was
their friend. The evidence was the deceased was lucid and
incapacitated. Why would they not run out with the other patrons and
make a noise to attract attention that there was a problem at the
house.
iii.
The accused version of this scene was he was not
present when the deceased was set alight, he was not at the crime
scene as alluded
to above. His evidence was at the time of the
incident he was somewhere else doing something else. This aspect of
his testimony
was unchallenged and corroborated by his
alibi
.
The defence did not disprove this aspect of his testimony. In as much
as they contradicted each other on other aspects, this material
issue
was corroborated.
f.
Mr. Motsuenyane testified after jumping out the
window, they screamed for the neighbours to help, and he and Mr.
Modikoe entered
the house again through the kitchen door. They pulled
and dragged the deceased to the tap, and they put him under the tap.
Mr.
Modikoe on the other hand testified when he jumped out of the
window he ran straight home and only returned to the scene later when
the deceased was taken to the hospital. It was highly improbable that
Mr. Modikoe would have assisted in the pulling and dragging
of the
deceased to the tap because he was not on the crime scene. This
contradiction is material to the case.
g.
Scene two refers to what transpired outside the
house. Mr. Motsuenyane testified that he and Mr. Modikoe dragged the
deceased to
the tap and set out the fire. The accused version was
when he got to the deceased house, he was already on fire
coming out
of the kitchen and no one was in the vicinity. He told the
deceased to go to the tap, he opened the tap and made the deceased
sit
under it so that the flames were put off. Bearing in mind Mr.
Modikoe’s evidence was he fled the scene the moment he jumped
through the window. Ms Matamane, and Mr. Thabang were independent
witnesses. Ms Matamane’s testimony was she heard
screams coming
from outside. When she looked outside, she saw a person on flames
running to the tap and another person following
him. Later she
discovered it was the deceased who was on fire and the accused was
following him. She testified she only saw the
deceased at the tap
with the accused. She added she saw Mr. Motsuenyane and Mr.
Modikoe five (5) meters away looking on.
This evidence was
corroborated by Mr. Thabang. Her evidence does not corroborate Mr.
Motsuenyane’s evidence of the narrative
but in fact it
corroborates the accused’s version. Therefore, the State’s
version that Mr. Motsuenyane and Mr. Modikoe
dragged the deceased to
the tap is improbable because if that happened then Ms Matamane and
Mr. Thabang would have at least seen
both these witnesses when she
saw the deceased running past the house on flames and screaming. It
was improbable that Ms Matamane
and Mr. Thabang saw Mr. Modikoe, as
his testimony was that he was not at the scene at that time.
Interestingly, the accused also
did not see him at the scene of crime
at this particular time
h.
Mr. Motsuenyane’s testimony was that the
accused used a curtain to extinguish the fire on the deceased’s
body. This
was denied by the accused. This is improbable because it
contradicts his own testimony that he dragged the deceased to the tap
and opened the tap to put out the flames. There were no other
witnesses corroborated this evidence.
i.
Scene three referred to what transpired after the
fire was put out. it was common cause that after the fire at
the house was
extinguished, the accused put the deceased in his car
and took him to the clinic. None of the clinic personnel were called
as witnesses
and no evidence was tendered regarding what transpired
at the clinic other than the accused version. I was informed there
were
no statements obtained from the clinic personnel. Surprisingly,
the investigation officer elected not to testify in this but and
the
prosecution in argument submitted there were no records from the
clinic. This was speculation and conjecture and cannot be
considered
as evidence. But for the accused’s version there was no
evidence before this court regarding what happened at
the clinic. It
was simply not investigated.
j.
If I accept the States version, that the deceased
was set alight by the accused, it is highly improbable that the very
witnesses
who saw the accused setting the deceased alight, would
allow the accused to take the deceased to the clinic or hospital
alone.
The actions of the accused are not consistent with someone who
just set the deceased alight. At this stage there were lots
of
people present at the scene, Mr. Motsuenyane could have informed
everyone at the scene that it was the accused who set the deceased
alight and insist that the accused does not take the deceased to the
clinic or hospital in his car. If I were to accept his version
that
they feared the accused, which I reject, there was a further
opportunity, for both him and Mr. Modikoe (who had now returned
to
the scene) to inform everyone at the scene that the accused set the
deceased alight, but they did not do so. They could have
reported
this to the police, but they did not do so. This type of behaviour
from the two key witnesses of the State is suspicious
and
questionable regarding factual causation.
k.
Turning to the medical records which the State
accepted as evidence in terms of section 220 admissions. It was
common cause that
the findings of the post- mortem report reflected
the cause of death as ‘severe burns.’ The medical
records and
the post-mortem report reportly reflected that the fire
was caused in the shack by a ‘candle whilst asleep.’
The medical records reveal that the accused was taken to the hospital
by paramedics on 12
th
December 2021 at 01h10 and was admitted on the
same day at 16h25. Part 1 of the Mortuary report reflects the
date and time
of admission as 11
th
December 2021 at 17h58. The post-mortem report
also reflects that patient had slept with a candle on and the shack
caught alight.
Dr. Nkondo who conducted the post-mortem examination
indicated there were no specimens collected and no investigations
conducted.
Despite the inconsistencies in the post -mortem
report, the State did not call any expert witness and relied on the
section 220
admissions made. These section 220 admissions were not
consistent with the testimony of any of the witnesses and the State
left
it unchallenged.
l.
The court then called two expert witnesses Dr
Kodisang from the mortuary and Dr. Nkondo who conducted the medico-
legal post-mortem
examination. Both witnesses maintained the
correctness of their reports which were submitted as admissions in
terms of section
220. Regrettably, the experts did not assist the
State’s testimony as both experts testified that the burn
wounds were consistent
with burns caused by a flammable substance and
was also consistent with burns caused by a house catching alight with
a candle.
They could not with certainty rule out the fact that the
possibility existed that the deceased burns could have been caused by
the candle setting the shack alight.
m.
This then caused me to deduce that the evidence of
the State witnesses when considered in totality, there was no
corroboration with
the version submitted by the State witnesses.
n.
The state did not also lead the evidence of the
EMS/ambulance driver who transported the deceased from the clinic to
the hospital.
This witness was a key witness to complete the chain
evidence especially in the light of the fact that no admission was
made in
terms of section 220 in this regard.
o.
When considering the accused’s version, he
raised the defence of an
alibi
.
There were also contradictions in accused’s testimony and that
of his
alibi.
The
defence version was that the accused was not present in the room when
the deceased was set alight. His version regarding his
alibi
,
was he returned home with his minor children from work. He was
dishing up food for them in the kitchen when he heard noises coming
from outside. He went outside and saw smoke coming from the
deceased’s home. He ran to the deceased home to assist.
Enroute,
he passed Mr. Pendani on the street who was screaming ‘its
burning! Its burning!
The accused’s
alibi
corroborated
the accused’s version in respect of the time he arrived from
work which was shortly before the deceased house
was set alight. He
was seen when he arrived home and he was seen leaving his home going
to crime scene. He confirmed the
accused came running past
him. These issues were not challenged and were material aspects
to the charges before the court.
Up to this stage there was
corroboration of the accused’s version.
p.
Interestingly, the SAPS were informed of the
accused’s
alibi
on
the date of his arrest, but no attempts were made by the police to
verify the accused’s alibi’s version, and no one
even
bothered to obtain his statement.
q.
The accused and his
alibi
did not corroborate each other in
respect of the chronology of events to the effect that the
alibi’s
version was that he never left the accused’s
premises and that at all material times he was behind the closed gate
next to
the wall fence and watched everything from there. He also he
did not scream ‘its burning, its burning!’ These issues
to me are not material.
r.
The
alib
i
also testified that he saw two ladies carrying buckets of water
before the accused arrived at the scene extinguishing the fire.
This
clearly contradicts the narrative of how events unfolded and the
chronology. This was a moving scene, and this bit of evidence
was not
consistent the chronology of the accepted facts.
s.
The
alibi
witness to me was truthful, candid, and sincere.
In so far as these material aspects to the case, I find he was a
credible witness.
[42]
It is so that there are contradictions both by the State and the
defence. In
Mafaladiso
v S
[19]
it was
stated that discrepancy in a statement caused by one sentence
only could be interpreted in one of two ways. It must
be read in
context of the whole statement. It was held that the court must
handle discrepancies between different versions of the
same witness
with circumspection. First the court must ascertain what the witness
meant to say to determine whether there was a
discrepancy and the
extent of the discrepancy. Secondly, not every error by or
discrepancy in the statement affects the witness’s
credibility.
Thirdly, the different versions must be evaluated holistically.
[43]
When considering these discrepancies, the court was guided by the
decision
of
Sithole v The State
[20]
the
court stated at para 4 that
“
It
is trite law that not every error made by a witness will affect his
or her credibility. It is the duty of the trier of fact to
weigh up
and assess all contradictions, discrepancies, and other defects in
the evidence and, in the end, to decide whether on
the totality of
the evidence that state has proved the guilt of the accused beyond
reasonable doubt. The trier of fact also must
take into account the
circumstances under which the observations were made and the
different vantage points of witnesses, the reasons
for the
contradictions and the effect of the contradictions with regard to
the reliability and credibility of the witness.”
[44] Having considered
all the evidence in the matter and the improbability of the narrative
of each scene by the witnesses, holistically,
I find that the pieces
of the puzzle do not fit together to complete the picture. A few
pieces of the puzzle still need to be found.
The anomaly and
the contradictions as indicated above were so material so much so
that they affected the overall credibility
of the States version.
[45]
According to
S
v BM
[21]
,
the Court held that the purpose of a criminal trial is not to obtain
a conviction at all costs. The duty of the prosecution is
to gather
all relevant information and evidence and then decide whether such
evidence is sufficient to result in a conviction.
[22]
# The burden of proof
The burden of proof
[46]
The burden of proof represents the way a court determines whether
sufficient weight can be attached to evidence adduced before
an
accused can be convicted of any crime. In
S
v Van der Meyden
[23]
the
Court held
‘
In
order to convict, the evidence must establish the guilt of the
accused beyond a reasonable doubt, which will be so only if there
is
at the same time no reasonable possibility that an innocent
explanation which has been put forward might be true. The two are
inseperable, each being the logical corollary of the other.’
[47] Three important
concepts play a role in determining whether determining whether a
standard of proof is satisfied in a Criminal
case: ‘beyond a
reasonable doubt’, ‘reasonably possibly true’ and
‘probabilities.’ Additionally,
there must be interaction
between these three concepts:
a. An accused
cannot be convicted if his version can be regarded as
reasonably possibly true.
b.
An accused can only be convicted if the
prosecution is able to prove its case
beyond a reasonable
doubt.
c. The manner to attain
the standards in ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’ and
‘reasonably possibly true’ is dependent
on the degree of
probabilities of the truth of a case, as required by the case
[48]
In
R
v M
[24]
it was
further held in amplification of the concept of ‘reasonable
possibility’ as a defence, does not necessarily have
to be
believed by the court for it to be successful. It also does not have
to believe it in all its details. It is sufficient if
it thinks that
there is a reasonable possibility that it may be substantially true.’
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.
[25]
The corollary is
that, if the accused’s version is reasonably possibly true, the
accused is entitled to be acquitted.
[49] In order for the
State to discharge the onus that it is burdened with; the following
requirements must be proved:
a. compliance with the
principle of legality in that the conduct the accused is charged with
are recognised crimes,
b. the accused must have
committed an act,
c. the act must
comply with each definitional element of the all the counts the
accused is charged with,
d. including the fact
that the act is unlawful in that no grounds of justification have
been raised and
e. the unlawful act must
have been committed with culpability in that the accused was endowed
with the necessary criminal capacity
and possessed the necessary
intention.
[50] Something needs to
be said about the shoddy investigations in this matter.
a. No evidence was
submitted that any investigations or collection of exhibits
were conducted by the Police on the scene
of crime.
b.
No expert evidence was obtained to ascertain what
caused the fire.
c.
No evidence whatsoever was placed on record by the
State to disprove the following:
i.
that
the deceased was walking and talking at the time he was taken to the
clinic,
ii.
that
the accused did indeed take him to the clinic,
iii.
who the nurses or staff at the clinic were neither
what had happened and what conversations took place at the clinic,
iv.
no member of any EMS/ ambulance driver was called.
The only evidence available regarding the deceased’s medical
condition
and treatment was contained in exhibit “C”.
v.
The
State provided no explanation whatsoever regarding the “candle
that set the house alight” by any experts.
vi.
No photograph album was placed before the court.
[51]
In a criminal trial, a court’s approach in assessing evidence
is to weigh up all the elements that point towards
the guilt of the
accused against all that which is indicative of the accused’s
innocence, taking proper account of inherent
strengths and
weaknesses, probabilities and improbabilities on both sides and
having done so, to decide whether the balance weighs
so heavily in
favour of the State as to exclude any reasonable doubt about the
accused’s guilt.
[26]
Considering
the conspectus evidence in its totality, I am satisfied that the
State witnesses were not honest, clear, and truthful.
I find that
both the eyewitnesses who testified in scene one was not credible
witnesses and therefore their testimony was
not reliable having
considered all the probabilities mentioned above. In the light of the
all the evidence presented to me, the
accused’s version, as
dubious as it, his defence of the alibi as alluded to above appears
to be reasonably possibly true
in so far as his whereabouts when the
incident occurred as it remained unchallenged by the State and was
not disproved.I find that
the State failed to prove its case beyond a
reasonable doubt that the accused was the person who had set the
deceased alight thereby
causing his demise and the burning of his
house.
# Order
Order
[50] As the result, I
make the following order:
a.
The accused is found not guilty on count 1.
b.
The accused is found not guilty on count 2.
c.
The accused was found not guilty and discharged in
terms of section 174 of Act 51 of 1977 on count 3.
C B BHOOLA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the State
Adv.
V.H. Mongwane
Instructed
by
Director
of Public Prosecutions
Johannesburg
Counsel
for the accused
Adv.
A Nel
Dates
of Hearing: 20 to 23 February 2023.
March
2023, 6 March 2023, 3 April 2023, 20 April 2023; 29 May 2023
Date of Judgment : 27
June 2023
[1]
read
with section 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
(the Minimum Sentence
Act)
and further read with section 258 of
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of
1977
.
[2]
Schwikkard
and van der Merwe 2005:494
[3]
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and another v Martell & Cie SA and
others para 5, (427/01)
[2002] ZASCA 98
[4]
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and another v Martell & Cie SA and
others para 5, (427/01)
[2002] ZASCA 98
[5]
S v
Janse van Rensburg and Others
2009
(2) SACR 216
(c) at para 8 and S v Singh 1975(1)SA
227(N) at 228
[6]
S v
Saban en ‘n Andere 1992(1) SACR 199 (A) at 203j to 204 (a- b);
S v Van der Meyden 1999
(1)
SACR 447 (W) at 449 g-j – 450 a -b and S v Trainor
2003 (1)
SACR 35(SCA)
at para 9.
[7]
S v
Langeberg [2017] ZAFSH 49.
[8]
S v
Shabalala
1986 (6) SA 734
(A).
[9]
S v Musiker 2013(1) SACR
517 (SCA) para 15-16.
[10]
Maila
v S(429/2022) [2023] ZASCA 3
[11]
Tshiki
v S [2020] ZASCA 92 (SCA)
[12]
Shusha
v S
[2011] ZASCA 171
para 10 and
S
v Musiker 2013(1) SACR 517 (SCA) para 15-16.
[13]
S v
Liebenberg 2005 (2) SACR 335 (SCA)
[14]
See R
v Biya
1952 (4) SA 514
(A) at 521E-D
[15]
S v
Mathebula
2010 (1) SACR 55
(SCA) para 11
[16]
S v M
2006(1)
SACR 135 (SCA)
[17]
Id
footnote 16
[18]
Schwikkard
and van der Merwe 2005:494.
[19]
Mafaladiso
v
S 2003(10
SACR 583(SCA) (593j -594a-g)
[20]
Sithole
v The State (2006) SCA 126 (RSA)
[21]
S
v BM 2014(2) SACR 23
[22]
S v
Masoka
2015
(2)
SACR
[23]
S v
Van der Meyden
1999
1 SACR 447
(W) 448G-H
[24]
R v M
1946
AD 1023
[25]
S v V
2000 (1)
SACR 453
(SCA) at 455B.
[26]
S v
Chabalala 2003(1)SACR 134 (SCA) para 15.
sino noindex
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