Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1400South Africa
Biyela and Another v S (A48/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1400 (1 December 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Biyela and Another v S (A48/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1400 (1 December 2023)
Biyela and Another v S (A48/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1400 (1 December 2023)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NUMBER: A48/2022
DPP
REF NUMBER: 10/2/5/1-2022/28
DATE OF APPEAL: 9 OCTOBER
2023
In the matter of:
BIYELA, SAKHISENI
1ST
APPELLANT
BIYELA, ZOTHINI
2ND
APPELLANT
Versus
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
COERTSE AJ
INTRODUCTION
1.
The Appellants stood trial on various charges in
the Protea Regional Court, Johannesburg, where they were legally
represented, and
they pleaded not guilty to all of the charges
against them on 13 August 2018. No plea explanation was provided at
the trial. On
16 April 2019 both Appellants were found guilty by the
trial court on various charges whilst the 2nd Appellant was acquitted
on
counts 6 and 7.
2.
Both Appellants were prosecuted on the following
charges:
2.1.
Count 1, Robbery with aggravating circumstances as
intended in
section 1
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
as
amended (CPA), read with the provisions of
section 51(2)
(a) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
2.2.
Count 2, Attempted Murder, read with the
provisions of 51(2) (c) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997
.
2.3.
Count 3, Attempted Murder, read with the
provisions of
section 51(2)
(c) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105
of 1997
.
2.4.
Count 4, Attempted Murder, read with the
provisions of
section 51(2)
(c) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105
of 1997
.
2.5.
Count 5, Attempted Murder, read with the
provisions of
section 51(2)
(c) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105
of 1997
.
2.6.
Count 6, Contravention of
section 3
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
unlawful possession of firearm.
2.7.
Count 7, Contravention of
section 90
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
– unlawful possession of
ammunition.
3.
Biyela, Sakhiseni, the 1st Appellant, and Biyela,
Zothini, the 2
nd
Appellant were found guilty, except that the 2
nd
Appellant was found not guilty on counts 6 and 7.
4.
The First Appellant was sentenced as follows:
4.1.
Count 1, 13 years’ imprisonment,
4.2.
Count 2, 5 years’ imprisonment.
4.3.
Count 3, 10 years’ imprisonment.
4.4.
Count 4, 5 years’ imprisonment.
4.5.
Count 5, 5 years’ imprisonment.
4.6.
Count 6, 4 years’ imprisonment.
4.7.
Count 7, 1 year imprisonment.
5.
It was further ordered that the sentences in
counts 2, 4 and 5 should be served concurrently with the sentence in
count 3. The total
effective sentence was 28 years’
imprisonment.
6.
The Second Appellant was sentenced as follows:
6.1.
Count 1, 13 years’ imprisonment,
6.2.
Count 2, 5 years’ imprisonment.
6.3.
Count 3, 10 years’ imprisonment.
6.4.
Count 4, 5 years’ imprisonment.
6.5.
Count 5, 5 years’ imprisonment.
6.6.
The trial court once again ordered that the
sentences in counts 2 and 4 be served concurrently with the sentence
in count 3, and
that 3 years’ imprisonment of the sentence in
count 5 be served concurrently with the sentence on count 1.
Therefore, the
effective total sentence was 25 years’
imprisonment.
FACTS
7.
The facts of this matter fall into three distinct
parts and yet these three parts are inseparable and completely
interrelated and
I will refer in this judgment to:
7.1.
The first part as the Mofolo-incident.
7.2.
The second part is the highway chase of the
vehicle with registration number [...]GP.
7.3.
The third part is the scene where [...]GP was
recovered and the appellants were arrested in Parktown, Johannesburg.
8.
These three parts played out on the same day 18
November 2017 starting at about 18h30 and culminating later the same
evening when
the two Appellants were arrested in the immediate
vicinity of [...]GP where this vehicle was recovered and identified
by its owner
as his vehicle.
9.
THE MOFOLO INCIDENT
9.1.
Mr. Zondo was driving vehicle with registration
number [...]GP operating it as a taxi, and whilst doing so, he picked
up various
passengers in Mofolo Soweto. Doing so he picked up
inter
alia
Ms Margaret Nkhombeni and her
sister. Other people boarded [...]GP as well. Three men came on board
and sat behind them. At one
point Ms. Nkhombeni heard someone
speaking and all of a sudden, she saw an arm extended past her
pointing a gun at the driver and
the person holding the firearm
started shooting. She got out while the taxi was in motion and so did
the driver.
9.2.
They were shot at and her sister, Ms. Silvia
Nkhombeni, was left a paraplegic, as a result of the gunshot wounds
she suffered.
9.3.
The driver of the taxi also got out while this
vehicle was in motion and fled to a nearby house where he phoned the
owner of the
taxi and that set the ball rolling for the highway chase
which culminated in the recovery of the vehicle in Parktown,
Johannesburg.
10.
THE HIGHWAY CHASE:
10.1.
Soon after the robbery the driver of the taxi
[...]GP, Mr. Sipho Zondo, found himself with police officers
travelling in a police
vehicle and certain reports were made to them
that the taxi was on the M1 freeway driving in a northerly direction
towards Johannesburg.
The owner of the taxi Mr Solomon Khumalo
confirmed the evidence of Mr Zondo; Khumalo saw his vehicle with a
number of people inside
driving on the freeway. When he arrived on
the scene where the taxi was recovered, he inspected his vehicle and
found some bullet
holes in it. That was in Parktown where the taxi
was recovered.
11.
THE ARREST OF THE APPELLANTS AND RECOVERY OF
[...]GP
:
11.1.
Neither of the Appellants before the trial court
disclosed their defences, nor did they provide plea explanations to
the trial court.
During the trial it became clear that their defences
were alibis.
11.2.
Briefly, Ms Silvia Nkhombeni informed the court
that she was the complainant in respect of count 3. She informed the
court that
on 18 November 2017 about 18h30 in the evening she was in
the taxi [...] GP with her sister.
11.3.
The
photographs in Exhibit F before the magistrate were taken on the
scene where the taxi was recovered. Photograph 19 clearly shows
the
registration number of the taxi [...]GP. These photographs were taken
in Parktown where the appellants were arrested. This
is the taxi that
was hi-jacked in Soweto and on photos 13, 14, 16 & 19 the bullet
holes described by the owner are clearly
visible on the body of the
vehicle [...]GP. The trail of [...]GP from the scene in Soweto to
where it was recovered in Parktown
is so vividly described by the
witnesses that there can be no doubt at all that this is the very
vehicle that was involved during
the hi-jacking where the
complainants were shot.
11.4.
The passengers on board [...]GP sustained injuries
as a result of the shooting during the robbery, one of them is now
permanently
disabled and in a wheelchair. Her sister Ms. Margaret
Nkhombeni sustained injuries to her ankle. The passenger in front
next to
the driver was shot in the back and his left shoulder blade
was fractured.
ISSUES
12.
The identities of the Appellants were put in issue
and it eventually became clear during the trial that the defence of
both Appellants
was in essence an alibi for each one. The first
Appellant alleged that he was walking in Parktown when the police
encountered him
and arrested him. The second Appellant alleged that
he was walking in Parktown when he was shot and he fled and took
refuge in
a police van. The two Appellants denied that they were
together that evening in Parktown.
13.
It has been stated that neither Appellant offered
any plea explanation at all.
14.
The issue in respect of the hi-jacked vehicle:
14.1.
The swift actions of both the driver of [...]GP
and the owner thereof and the efficient and effective action of the
different police
officers dove-tailed perfectly culminating in the
recovery of vehicle [...]GP that was hi-jacked in Mofolo Soweto from
Mofolo Soweto
to where the vehicle was found in close proximity of
the two accused in Parktown.
14.2.
There can be no doubt that the vehicle that was
hi-jacked in Mofolo Soweto on the day in question, that was driven
during a shoot-out
between the occupants of the taxi and the Police,
and that collided with another vehicle in Parktown is the same
vehicle that was
hi-jacked in Mofolo a couple of hours earlier being
vehicle [...]GP.
14.3.
The clothing of the hijackers described by the
witnesses in the taxi in Mofolo matched the clothing of the men who
were arrested
in Parktown in close proximity to the vehicle [...]GP.
14.4.
The second Appellant admitted wearing a grey
hooded sweatshirt with the world UZZI on the top, on the evening in
question.
14.5.
The versions of the two Appellants are materially
the same in that they were innocently walking in Parktown where
suddenly they
were “harassed” by the Police and
eventually they found themselves under arrest. The State evidence was
that the police
found the second Appellant in the police van, in an
injured condition. He alleged that he had been shot out of the blue.
Can these
versions reasonably possibly be true? I am of the view that
they are so farfetched and a wild flight of their imaginations that
they cannot reasonably possibly be true and should be rejected.
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
15.
Where there is an alibi defence one of the
factors that may be taken into account by a trial court, is that the
accused did not
take the court into his confidence by providing a
plea explanation. This court is aware of the constitutional right to
remain silent.
In essence each Appellant had an alibi defence. They
could have disclosed their alibis to the court at the start of the
trial in
plea explanations. This would have given the investigation
officer a fair chance of following them up and providing the trial
court
with an opportunity to assess them.
16.
Neither Appellant called any witnesses to
support his alibi and that may be a factor that should be taken into
consideration as
well. The trial court rejected these alibis as
false.
17.
In
Thebus v State
[2003] ZACC 12
;
2003 (6) SA 505
CC
the
Constitutional court took a close look at the defence of an alibi. I
am of the view that this court should apply the principles
set out
therein.
18.
At para 4 of that case, it is stated that neither
appellant disclosed his alibi beforehand and only did so during the
trial. The
Constitutional court had to decide if a court could draw a
negative inference from an accused’s failure to disclose an
alibi
defence prior to trial, in violation of his right to silence as
contained in the Constitution [see para. 9 of the judgement]. It
is
clear from this case that there is no definitive and easy answer to
these questions and it should be assessed with regard to
the totality
of the evidence that is presented to a trial court.
19.
The Court said at para [65] “The rule of
evidence that the late disclosure of an alibi affects the weight to
be placed on
the evidence supporting the alibi is one which is well
recognised in our common law.” Applying this passage to this
case
it is clear that the alibis could not stand, in the light of the
chain of evidence from the moment of the hi-jacking of the taxi,
to
the highway chase and the eventual recovery of the taxi where the
Appellants were found still wearing the clothes described
by
witnesses, at the Mofolo scene.
20.
The failure of the Appellants to disclose their
alibis until the State witnesses were called, and the failure to call
witnesses
in support of the alibis, were items of circumstantial
evidence to be taken into account, together with the rest of the
evidence,
in determining the veracity of the alibis. The direct
evidence as set out above is beyond reasonable doubt and the identity
of
the Appellants was also proven beyond reasonable doubt.
21.
This court is satisfied that the State proved its
case beyond reasonable doubt, and that the Appellants versions are
far-fetched
and a figment of their imaginations. The magistrate was
correct in finding that the only inference to be drawn from the
circumstantial
evidence was that the Appellants were the hijackers.
22.
This court is further satisfied that the trial
court weighed the evidence in its entirety and came to the correct
conclusion that
the guilt of the Appellants was proved beyond
reasonable doubt.
SENTENCE
23.
The First Appellant was convicted on counts
1 to 7 and the Second Appellant was convicted on counts 1 to 5. Terms
of imprisonment
were imposed in respect of all the offences. The
effective total sentence for the First Appellant was 28 years
imprisonment, and
23 years for the second Appellant.
24.
The provisions of the Criminal Law Amendment Act
no 105 of 1977 were applicable to this case. The prescribed minimum
sentence for
count 1, the robbery, was 15 years imprisonment. For
counts 2,3,4 and 5, the attempted murders, 5 years imprisonment, and
for count
6, the unlawful possession of a firearm, 15 years
imprisonment.
25.
The magistrate applied these provisions in
considering the question of sentence, and he also applied section 51
(3) of Act No 105
of 1997 relating to substantial and compelling
circumstances. It is clear that he applied his mind to all the
mitigatory and aggravating
facts before him and that he accorded each
factor due weight. He took into account the nature of the crimes, the
interests of the
Appellants and the interests of society.
26.
Punishment is pre-eminently a matter for the
discretion of the trial court. The test on appeal is whether the
sentence is vitiated
by irregularity such that the trial court did
not exercise its discretion reasonably, or whether the sentence is
disturbingly inappropriate,
or totally out of proportion to the
gravity or magnitude of the offence.
S
v Salzwedel
1999 (2) SACR 586
SCA.
27.
In cases of serious crime, the personal
circumstances of the offender, by themselves, will necessary recede
into the background.
S v Vilakazi
2009 (1) SACR 552
SCA at [58].
This
is such a case.
28.
This court is of the view that the magistrate was
not misdirected in coming to the conclusions he reached, such that no
reasonable
court would have imposed the sentences imposed in this
case. The effective sentences imposed on the Appellants were
appropriate
in all the circumstances and not disproportionate to the
crimes, the criminals and the legitimate needs of society. The appeal
against sentence accordingly fails.
THE ORDER
[1]
The appeal of both Appellants against the
convictions and sentences of the magistrate is dismissed, and
[2]
The convictions and the sentences are hereby
confirmed.
G.Y SIDWELL
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Local
Division, Johannesburg
I
Agree
C.J
COERTSE
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Date of Hearing: 09
October 2023
Judgment was delivered: 1
December 2023
Appearances:
For
Appellants:
Adv. T.P Ndlovu
Legal Aid Board
Johannesburg
For
Respondent:
Adv. P.T Mpekana
Office of the Director of
Public Prosecutions
Gauteng Local Division
Johannesburg
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00
on ... November 2023.
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