Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 886South Africa
S v Dube (SS100/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 886 (2 August 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Dube (SS100/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 886 (2 August 2023)
S v Dube (SS100/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 886 (2 August 2023)
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sino date 2 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER: SS100/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
02/08/23
In the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
VUSI
MICHAEL DUBE
ACCUSED
JUDGMENT
DOSIO J:
Introduction
[1] The
accused is arraigned on a count of murder read with the provisions of
s51(1) of Act 105 of 1997. It is alleged
that the accused murdered
Patricia Babekile Tshabalala on 13 July 2021 at 3065 Kaalfontein,
Extension 5, Ekurhuleni.
[2] Prior to the accused
pleading, the court apprised the accused of the provisions of the
minimum prescribed sentence of life imprisonment
as the charge is one
of murder envisaged in terms of s51(1) of Act 105 of 1997. The
accused understood. The court also apprised
the accused of his right
to have an assessor, however, the accused elected to proceed without
an assessor.
[3] The accused is
represented by Advocate Qoqo and the State is represented by Advocate
Deoraj. The accused understood the
charge and pleaded not
guilty. No plea explanation was made.
[4] At the inception of
the trial, formal admissions in terms of s220 of Act 51 of 1977 were
handed in by agreement and marked as
exhibit A. The s220 admissions
are the following:
(a) That the
deceased is the person named in count 1 of the indictment, to wit,
TSHABALALA BABEKILE PATRICIA.
(b) That the
deceased died on 13 July 2021 as a result of injuries consistent with
sharp force to the neck, which the deceased
sustained on 13 July 2021
at or near 3065 Kaalfontein 05, in the district of Ekurhuleni North.
(c) That the
body of the deceased sustained no further injuries from the time on
which the injuries were inflicted
on 13 July 2021 until a post mortem
examination was conducted thereupon on 15 July 2021.
(d) That Dr. E.A
Apatu conducted a post mortem examination on the deceased, TSHABABALA
BABEKILE PATRICIA on 15 July 2021
and recorded her findings on
Exhibit ‘B’.
(e) That the
correctness of the facts and findings of the post mortem examination
as recorded on Exhibits ‘B’
by Dr. E.A Apatu are
admitted.
(f) That a photograph
album depicting the crime scene- attached hereto as Exhibit ‘C’,
correctly and accurately depicts
the crime scene and observations
recorded.
(g) A statement of Lesibe
Andrew Kekae marked as exhibit ‘D’.
The evidence
[5] The following
witnesses were called by the state namely, Nonhlanhla Kekae,
Charmaine Sbongile Tshabalala, Tebogo Nelson
Monyelo, Phaladi
Nonyana, Lesiba Andrew Kekae, Doctor Emefa Apatu and Nosipho Ngcobo.
The accused then testified.
Nonhlanhla Kekae
[6] This witness
testified that on 13 July 2021 at 18h00 she received a call from her
younger sister Charmaine asking her to go
to her mom’s place.
She proceeded with her husband to her mom’s place. They met her
uncle outside her mom’s house
who informed them he was going to
call an ambulance. She then went into the house and saw Vuyisele (the
accused) in the bathroom.
She asked the people in the house to go
outside. The accused was sitting in the bathroom behind the toilet
and his legs were preventing
the door being opened. This witness’s
husband, by the name of Andrew had to push the door open enabling
access to the bathroom.
There was blood on the floor, door and
toilet. On the floor were broken bottles. Right behind the door lay
the deceased, who is
this witness’s mother. The deceased was in
a mess. She was wearing a torn t-shirt and her breasts and stomach
were exposed.
This witness believed that a fight had ensued between
the accused and the deceased. On the deceased’s neck was a
black cotton
cloth which was wrapped around her neck. There was a
visible stab wound to the neck. This witness asked the accused what
was going
on and he merely mumbled saying ‘my wife, my wife’.
This witness was unable to call an ambulance so she decided to take
her mother to the clinic herself. When she returned into the house
she saw the accused wrapping her mother up with a blanket in
order to
carry her to the car. The accused accompanied them to the clinic. At
the clinic they were told that the deceased had passed
away and they
were asked why did they take so long to bring the deceased as she had
passed on long before.
Charmaine Sbongile
Tshabalala
[7] This witness
testified that on 13 July 2021 whilst at a party at a friend’s
house, someone came up to her at around 18h00
and told her that her
mother was lying on the floor in the toilet and that she was
deceased. This witness rushed home and telephonically
called her
older sister called Nonhlanhla. She found her mother lying on the
floor in the toilet. The toilet seat was full of blood.
She later
established her sister had taken her mother to the clinic. She was
later told her mother had passed away. This witness
stated when she
initially arrived at her parent’s house there were a lot of
people talking inside the house. This witness
did not pay attention
to the neck and as a result she did not notice whether there was
anything around the deceased’s neck.
This witness stated that
the accused and the deceased had a good relationship, but during
weekends they would fight about her sister,
Chantal, that used to
steal. Every weekend her parents would consume liquor. On one
occasion, the accused assaulted the deceased
with an axe on the head.
This witness was later recalled as the defence wanted to put a
certain version to her, namely, that this
witness had never mentioned
in her statement that at some point the accused had hit the deceased
with an axe, to this, the witness
replied that she had never been
asked that question before. She was adamant that every time the
accused had consumed alcohol he
would become abusive towards the
deceased and hit her and that on one occasion he even hit her with a
spade.
Tebogo Nelson
Monyelo
[8] This witness stated
that on 13 July 2021 he went to visit friends who were fighting
amongst themselves. He asked one of his
friends Phaladi to intervene.
Phaladi came out of the house where the couple were fighting and had
nothing to say. The friends
this witness was talking about was the
accused and his wife who is the deceased. When he got there he found
the accused and the
deceased drinking. He did not notice any
animosity between the accused and the deceased as they were loved by
everyone. The accused
went into his own house followed by the
deceased. He did not see what happened. He was told by a certain
person by the name of
Vumile that a fight started between the accused
and the deceased. This witness knows the accused and the deceased for
15 to16 years.
This witness stated that when the accused and deceased
would drink alcohol they would fight.
Phaladi Nonyana
[9] This witness stated
that he arrived at the house of the accused and deceased on 13 July
2021 at four in the afternoon. He stated
the deceased was already
drunk. The accused and the deceased were sitting across their house
in the neighbour’s premises.
The deceased then left and went to
her house followed by the accused. Vumile then came to this witness
and said that the accused
was busy strangling the deceased. This
witness went in to the house of the accused and the deceased and he
saw the accused strangling
his wife. Both the hands of the accused
were criss-crossed in front of the deceased’s throat. He then
separated them. The
accused stopped strangling his wife. The accused
told him that the deceased had made him lose his job and that his
kids do not
listen to him. This witness saw the deceased wiping blood
from the side of her head. This witness stated that the accused had
used
a broomstick to strike the deceased on her head.
Lesiba Andrew Kekae
[10] This witness stated
that on 13 July 2021 at 18h00 he and his wife Nonhlahla were called
by Nonhlahla’s little sister,
Charmaine, to go to the mother of
his wife as the mother had been stabbed. When they arrived at the
mother’s house, there
were a lot of people there and they met
his wife’s uncle who informed them he was going to call the
ambulance. They went
into the house and found the mother seated in
the bathroom. She had been stabbed. This witness told everyone in the
house to get
out. The accused was also seated in the bathroom and
when this witness asked him to open the door the accused refused.
This witness
then forcefully pushed the door open. The accused was
seated on the left side of the bathroom with his legs behind the
door. The
toilet walls and floor were covered in blood. His wife
stepped into the bathroom to check the pulse of her mother. He also
checked
the mother’s pulse but there was no pulse. Whilst doing
this, he had to slide down a dark black/bluish cloth, which looked
like a t-shirt, that was around the deceased’s neck. The cloth
was tightly twisted around the deceased’s neck. He then
noticed
wounds on her neck and upper part of the deceased’s chest. This
witness and his wife then called the ambulance. The
accused tried to
prevent this witness’s wife from going out but this witness
held the accused’s shoulder and they exited
the house. They
then decided to take the mother to the clinic. They returned to the
bathroom and they found the accused wrapping
up the deceased in a
blanket. This witness and Tshiamo then lifted the deceased and
carried her, using the blanket, to the car.
After lifting her, they
saw a lot of blood on the floor and it looked like it had been there
a long time as it had already clotted.
Dr Emefa Abra Apatu
[11]
This witness is a medical doctor who examined the deceased during a
post-mortem held on 15 July 2021.
The death
had occurred on 13 July 2021. Her findings depict a 3.5cm x
1.5cm penetrating incised wound to the left neck of
the deceased. The
wound went through the skin into the deeper parts of the body and it
was caused by an instrument with at least
one sharp edge. This injury
caused further problems in that it caused injuries to the deeper
lying structures of the left neck.
This witness found that there was
an injury to the left subclavian vein, which is under the collar
bone, and which meets the left
common jugular vein which goes up into
the neck and splits into two. The cause of the death was the sharp
instrument which had
created the neck injury.
[12] As regards the
internal examination of the deceased, this witness established a deep
scalp laceration with an underlying intracranial
haemorrhage. This
haemorrhage would have been caused by considerable force to the
brain. This witness stated it would most likely
be caused by the
deceased being struck with a blunt instrument on her head.
[13] The only internal
injuries were those to the neck and head. There had been a great loss
of blood.
[14] Although this
witness did not observe a ligature around the deceased’s neck
when she examined her, she did state that
such a cloth would not be
put to prevent further loss of blood as such a cloth would obstruct
the airways and prevent the deceased
from breathing. In addition to
the neck and head injuries, this witness saw the following injuries
to the deceased:
(a) a 3 cm x 1cm abraded
penetrating incised wound on the left chin.
(b) a 3cm x 1cm wound on
the front chin.
(c) a 5cm x 0.5cm
laceration to the top of the skull.
(d) a 4cm x 0.5cm
laceration to the left skull. As regards the laceration wounds, this
witness stated it was caused by a blunt
object.
(e) a 2cm x 0.5cm
wound on the underlying left frontal lobe. This was a wound caused by
a sharp instrument which went through
the skin and stopped on the
bone.
(f) a 4cm x 0.5 incised
wound on the underside of the chin on the left caused by a sharp
instrument.
(g) a 3cm x 1cm
penetrating incised wound to the right front neck.
(h) a 4cm x 1cm
abraded penetrating incised wound.
(i) a 2cm x 1,5
penetrating incised wound on the right shoulder caused by a sharp
instrument.
(j) a 1.5cm x 0.6cm
abrasion on the upper right chest.
(k) a 4cm x 3cm
incised wounds below the left shoulder.
(l) a 8cm x 4cm abraded
penetrating incised wound to the left breast.
(m) a 2cm x 0.5cm
superficial incised wound.
(n) a 2cm x 0.5
penetrating incised wound to the left buttocks.
(o) a 3cm x 1cm
penetrating incised wound to the right buttocks.
Nosipho Ngcobo
[15] This witness stated
that her friend Lunka came to call her on 13 July 2021 telling her
that someone was injured. This witness
stated that she is a nurse.
When she entered the house she found the accused inside the bathroom.
He initially did not want to
grant her access, but Lunka informed the
accused that this witness was merely there to check on the deceased.
This witness checked
the pulse of the deceased and it was beating
very slowly. This witness saw scars on the neck of the deceased and
the neck was reddish.
She told the family to take the deceased to the
clinic. The time was six in the afternoon.
[16] At the end of the
State’s case an application was made by the defence counsel for
a discharge of the accused in terms
of
section 174
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
. The application was denied.
The accused
[17] The accused came to
testify and he stated that the previous day to this incident there
had been a country wide looting and
much alcohol had been stolen. As
a result, people were seated all over drinking and many were very
drunk. On the day of the incident
a certain child had come to call
him and he went to Mr Ntombela’s house where he sat drinking
alcohol. At some point he went
to the shops of the Tshangaans to buy
airtime. They did not have any airtime so he went to extension 4 to
look for airtime. At
some point he received a phone call. He saw
Thabo and Mr Phaladi speaking. Ntombela’s child, called Fazeka
came up to him
and asked him where is Shandu’s mother,
referring to the deceased. The accused told the child to go inside
his house and
look for her. The child left and returned screaming.
The accused went into his house and he found a whole lot of people
who had
followed him. The bathroom door was open and inside was his
wife. He pushed the door open and inside he found broken bottles on
the floor of the bathroom. He found a trouser wrapped around the neck
of the deceased and although he asked the deceased what had
happened,
she did not respond. The people behind him were screaming at him and
saying he had killed his wife. He gave his phone
to Charmaine and
asked her to phone her sister and an ambulance. The accused stated he
never prevented anyone from entering the
bathroom.
Evaluation
[18] When considering a
criminal case, it is important to consider the totality of the
evidence and then to assess the probabilities
emerging from the case
as a whole. The court must evaluate the evidence of the State and the
defence.
Nonhlanhla Kekae
[19] During
cross-examination, this witness impressed the court. The version put
to this witness that the accused was blocking the
door to prevent the
community from assaulting him was denied by this witness. This
witness stated the accused was blocking the
door to prevent them from
entering the toilet. This witness denied the accused’s version
that the family beat him up at the
clinic. She did however admit that
the accused had blood on his clothes.
Charmaine Sbongile
Tshabalala
[20] During
cross-examination, this witness stated that the axe that the accused
had used to assault her mother was 50cm long. She
could not remember
the name of the friend whom she had visited the night before her
mother passed away. She stated that it was
Fazeka who told her she
had seen her mother lying down as if dead. Fazeka lives 8 meters away
from her house. This witness stuck
to her version and she impressed
this Court. She mentioned that the accused was always abusive to the
deceased on weekends after
he drank and that on one occasion he hit
her with an axe and that on another occasion he hit her with a spade.
This Court cannot
find any reason why she would want to fabricate
this evidence and falsely implicate the accused.
Tebogo Nelson
Monyelo
[21] This witness agreed
that this incident happened the day after the insurrection had
occurred and after much alcohol had been
looted. This witness stated
that he was with the accused and the deceased and he could not
comment if there were 10 people who
went into the house of the
accused with the intention of assaulting the accused. This witness
only heard the day after the incident
that there were 10 people who
were sitting at the house next door to that of the accused and the
deceased. He was adamant that
he had gone to visit the accused and
the deceased on the day of the incident. He added that had he not
been there on the day of
the incident, he would not have been called
as a witness. He stated he never saw the accused killing the deceased
and he was aware
they loved each other.
Phaladi Nonyana
[22] This witness
impressed the Court. He was chronological as to what transpired on
that day. During cross-examination he was adamant
that he had seen
the accused strangling his wife. This witness did not remember that
the accused received a call whilst he was
at Ntombela’s place.
Lesiba Andrew Kekae
[23] This witness
was adamant that the accused did prevent him from going inside the
bathroom and that the accused could not
have been scared to open the
door, besides, he had no reason to be scared as the accused was
talking to Nonhlanhla, Tshiamo and
to this witness. This witness was
also adamant that no one assaulted the accused at the house or at the
clinic. This witness impressed
this Court.
Doctor Apatu
[24] This witness
also impressed this Court. During cross-examination she was certain
that there were no pressure marks to
the deceased’s neck and
that she saw no ligature wrapped around the deceased’s neck
when she examined her. She also
stated she did not see any fractures
of any bones in the neck to support strangulation.
Nosipho Ngcobo
[25] This witness
also impressed the court. Neither the deceased or the accused were
known to her prior to this incident,
therefore there is no reason for
her to fabricate a version that she saw scars and reddish marks on
the deceased’s neck when
she examined the deceased.
[26] The accused did not
impress this court. His version of not blocking the door and not
preventing people from entering the bathroom
is rejected as false and
not reasonably possibly true. There is no reason for Lesiba Andrew
Kekae and Nonhlanhla Kekae to fabricate
this evidence. In fact, no
version was put to them why they would fabricate this evidence. The
version of the accused not being
violent towards his wife is equally
rejected as false and not reasonably possibly true.
[27] The accused’s
version is a complete denial. The witness Phaladi Nonyana saw the
accused strangling the deceased and even
though doctor Apatu saw no
marks on the deceased, this court must bear in mind that the
post-mortem took place long after this
assault had taken place. The
version of Phaladi Nonyana is corroborated by the version of Nosipho
Ngcobo who saw reddish marks
and scars on the deceased’s neck.
Due to the fact that doctor Apatu stated no bones in the neck were
broken, she could not
say that strangulation was the cause of death,
however, from the version of Phaladi Ninyana and Nosipho Ngcobo, this
court accepts
their version that the accused did try to strangle the
deceased on the day of this incident.
[28] There is no reason
why Phaladi Nonyana would fabricate evidence that he saw the accused
hitting the deceased with a broom stick
and strangling her on the day
she passed away. Phaladi Nonyana was a friend of both the accused and
the deceased. No version was
put to him why he would want to falsely
implicate the accused who was his friend. The accused’s
daughter, namely, Charmaine
Sbongile Tshabalala also had nothing to
gain by saying when the accused became drunk he would hit the
deceased with an axe or a
spade as witnessed on previous occasions.
No version was also put to Charmaine why she would want to falsely
implicate the accused
in this regard. The accused’s version of
being assaulted at the clinic is equally rejected as false and not
reasonably possibly
true as there is no reason for Nonhlanhla Kekae
and Lesiba Andrew Kekae to say the accused was not assaulted. If he
was indeed
assaulted he would have received medical attention at the
clinic, yet the accused never said he received medical attention at
the
clinic.
[29] The accused’s
version that he and the deceased did not have a quarrel on the day of
the incident is rejected as false
and not reasonably possibly true.
The pattern of drinking was clearly present on the day of the
incident as the accused admits
he was drunk and as stated by
Charmaine, this is exactly when the accused would start quarrelling
with the deceased. Unfortunately
for the deceased this time the
accused went too far. The version of the accused leaving to go and
buy airtime is also rejected
as false. In addition, Tebogo Nelson
Monyelo, who has known the accused for 15 or 16 years saw them
quarrelling. There is no reason
for this witness to state they were
quarrelling. No reason was put to him why he would want to falsely
incriminate the accused.
[30] The accused’s
version that it was someone else who had killed the deceased is
rejected as false. The version of this
alleged suspect having
assaulted the accused’s child on a previous occasion and that
this alleged suspect was possibly watching
the house on the day was
never put to any of the State witnesses. The accused did not even
have this man’s name. This is
all a recent fabrication and not
reasonably possibly true. If the accused had told the police about
this man they would have done
certain investigations in this regard,
yet nothing was done. The reason why nothing was done is because the
accused never told
the police or his counsel about this other alleged
suspect.
[31]
There is no direct evidence linking the accused to the crime
committed, accordingly the State is solely relying on circumstantial
evidence. In the matter of
R
v Blom
[1]
the Supreme Court of Appeal established two cardinal rules. The first
rule is that the inference sought to be drawn must be consistent
with
all the proved facts. If it is not, the inference cannot be drawn.
Secondly, the proved facts should be such that they exclude
every
reasonable inference from them save the one sought to be drawn. If
they do not exclude other reasonable inferences, then
there must be
doubt whether the inference sought to be drawn is correct. The
learned authors Zeffert DT, Paizes AP and St. Q Skeen
A in
The
South African Law of Evidence
state that circumstantial evidence is no less cogent than direct
evidence. It can in many instances be more compelling.
[2]
Each case must be determined on the facts presented as there are
cases where the inferences will be less compelling and direct
evidence more trustworthy.
[32] The circumstantial
evidence is to a large extent based on the medical findings made by
doctor Apatu. Doctor Apatu stated that
she observed a deep scalp
subdural haemorrhage with an underlying intracranial haemorrhage to
the deceased’s deeper part
of the scalp which would have been
caused by considerable force being applied to the brain which was
caused by a blunt object.
The evidence of Phaladi Nonyana
corrobortates the medical findings of doctor Apatu in that he saw the
accused striking the deceased
on the head with a broomstick which is
a blunt object and this would cause lacerations to the scalp as
testified by doctor Apatu.
The blunt force is also attributable to
the subdural haemorrhage noticed by doctor Apatu. The injuries
depicted on the top of the
scalp must have been caused by an injury
inflicted from the top. Even though there are broken bottles seen in
the toilet, there
is no way the deceased could have sustained these
injuries to the top of her scalp noted at (c), (d) and (e) in
paragraph [14]
supra
, from bottles that were below her. It is
more likely that they were inflicted from being hit on her from
above. The injuries depicted
at (i), (j) and (k) paragraph [14]
supra
also could not have been caused from the bottles underneath as it is
a penetrating incised wound to the right shoulder, the upper
chest
and left breast, respectively. In fact, doctor Apatu stated that it
was not likely that the big injuries would be caused
by small broken
glass lying on the floor. It is this Court’s finding that it is
more likely these injuries were inflicted
from someone assaulting the
deceased with a sharp instrument which could be a broken bottle.
[33] Doctor Apatu was of
the opinion that the majority of the injuries sustained by the
deceased were consistent with an attack
on the deceased. The only
injuries which could have been sustained by the deceased sitting on
broken bottles would be the incised
wounds to the left and right
buttock which are depicted at (n) and (o) at paragraph [14]
supra.
[34] The accused’s
version of not stabbing the deceased in the neck with a sharp object
is rejected as false. In addition,
his version that someone else
killed the deceased is equally rejected as false and not reasonably
possibly true. The Court’s
reasons are as follows:
(a) the accused was in
the bathroom when Nosipho Ngcobo entered and examined the deceased.
This evidence was not disputed in cross-examination.
One question was
posed to the Nosipho Ngcobo by the defence counsel and that was
‘
After you introduced yourself the accused allowed you to
inspect the deceased
’ to which Nosipho Ngcobo stated ‘
Yes,
even though initially he did not want me to’
. No questions
were asked pertaining to the condition of the deceased’s neck
and whether there was any bleeding to the neck.
(b) Nosipho Ngcobo did
not see a stab wound to the neck when she examined the deceased,
which means that it must have been inflicted
after she left. The
accused according to Nosipho Ngcobo was still in the bathroom after
she examined the deceased. The accused
never gave instructions to his
counsel to give any version of what may have transpired after Nosipho
Ngcobo left the bathroom,
which means, the accused agreed with the
version of Nosipho Ngcobo that she left the accused in the bathroom
whilst the deceased
was still alive, which means the fatal stab wound
was inflicted by the accused and no one else after Nosipho Ngcobo
left the bathroom.
[35] In the matter of
Stellenbosch Farmer’s Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martel
& Cie
SA
and others
[3]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
‘
The
technique generally employed by the courts in resolving factual
disputes of this nature may be conveniently summarized as follows:
To
conclude on the disputed issues, a court must make findings on (a)
credibility of the factual witnesses, (b) their reliability
and (c)
the probabilities. As to (a) the court’s findings on the
credibility of a particular witness will depend on its impression
about the veracity of the witness. That in turn will depend on a
variety of subsidiary factors, not necessarily in order of
importance,
such as:
(i) The witness’s
candour and demeanour in the witness box,
(ii) His bias,
latent and blatant,
(iii) Internal
contradictions in his evidence,
(iv) External
contradictions with what was pleaded on his behalf or with
established fact or with
his
own ……. statements or actions,
(v) The probability
or improbability of particular aspects of his own version,
(vi) The calibre and
cogency of his performance compared to that of other witnesses
testifying
about
the event or incident.
As to
(b), a witness’s reliability will depend, apart from the
factors mentioned under (a) (ii), (iv) and (v) above; on
opportunities
he had to experience or observe the event in question
and (ii) the quality, integrity and independence of his recall
thereof. As
to (c) this necessitates an analysis and improbability of
each party’s version on each of the disputed issues. In the
light
of (a), (b) and (c), the court will then, as a final step
determine whether the party burdened with the onus of proof has
succeeded
in discharging it
’
.
[4]
[36]
The witnesses for the State impressed the Court. This Court is
according satisfied that the State had proven the
guilt of the
accused beyond reasonable doubt. He is accordingly found guilty of
murder in terms of
s51
of Act 105 of 1997, in that he had the
intention in the form of
dolus directus
to kill the deceased on 13 July 2021 and he is found guilty as
charged.
D DOSIO
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date Heard: 28 July
2023
Judgment handed down:
2 August 2023
Appearances:
On behalf of the State:
Adv A. Deoraj
On behalf of the Accused:
Adv L. Qoqo
[1]
R
v Blom
1939 AD 188
at 202 and 203.
[2]
The
South African Law of Evidence
,
Zeffert DT, Paizes AP, St. Q Skeen A, Lexis Nexis Butterworths, 2003
at page 94.
[3]
Stellenbosch
Farmer’s Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martel & Cie SA
and others
2003 (1) (SA)11(SCA) paragraph 5.
[4]
Ibid paragraph 5.
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