Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 56South Africa
S v Moyo (SS25/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 56 (4 February 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Moyo (SS25/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 56 (4 February 2022)
S v Moyo (SS25/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 56 (4 February 2022)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
SOUTH
GAUTENG HIGH COURT
CASE
NUMBER : SS25/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
4/2/2022
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
SAMSON
MOYO
ACCUSED
JUDGMENT
DOSIO
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The accused is arraigned on two counts. The counts are as follows,
count 1 murder
read with the provisions of s51(1) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (‘Act 105 of 1997’), and count
2 attempted
murder.
[2]
In respect of count 1 the State alleges that on the 3
rd
of
August 2020 the accused was involved in the murder of Lewis Pereira,
an 83 year old male by hitting him with a hammer and an
unknown
object. In respect to count 2, the State alleges that on 3 August
2020, the accused attempted to kill Mrs Rosa Pereira,
an 80 year old
female, by strangling her and assaulting her.
[3]
Prior to the accused pleading, the court apprised the accused of the
provisions of
the minimum prescribed sentence of life imprisonment in
respect to count 1. The accused understood. The court also apprised
the
accused of his right to have an assessor as count 1, is a charge
of murder. The accused elected to proceed without an assessor.
[4]
The accused is represented by Advocate Milubi. The State is
represented by Advocate
Ngubani. The accused understood both counts
and pleaded not guilty in respect to both counts. No plea explanation
was made.
[5]
At the inception of the trial formal admissions in terms of section
220 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (hereinafter referred to
as the “
Criminal Procedure Act&rdquo
;) were handed in by
agreement.
[6]
The following exhibits were handed in, namely:
Exhibit A (i) and (ii) –
the formal admissions together with photos of the injuries sustained
by the complainant Mrs Rosa
Pereira.
Exhibit B – the
declaration of death of the deceased
Exhibit C – the
chain statements in connection with the body of the deceased and the
post-mortem report of Dr Hlalele.
Exhibit D - the
Photographs of the various scenes and exhibits found
Exhibit E - a sketch of
the scene where the murder and attempted murder took place.
Exhibit F – a
medical report J88 depicting the injuries sustained by the
complainant Mrs Rosa Pereira.
[7]
The accused confirmed the admissions which were marked as exhibit
‘A’.
The formal admissions consist of the following:
a).That the deceased is
the person mentioned in the indictment, to wit Mrs Lewis Pereira an
adult white male person.
b).That the deceased was
assaulted several times on his body on 03 August 2020 with an unknown
object at [....] Queen Street, Little
Falls Roodepoort and that the
deceased died on the scene.
c).That Mc Murray Ryan
Paul who is employed as a Healthcare Professional at EMER-G-MED
certified the deceased dead on the crime
scene as per exhibit B.
d).That Phatlhane Samnuel
Mtimkulu of the Roodepoort Government Mortuary received the body of
the deceased from W/O Rademeyer and
marked the body as DR 680/2020.
e).That Gavin Keith
Pereira identified the body of the deceased which was already marked
DR 680/2020.
f).That Buti Lucas Molefe
who is a Senior Forensic Officer in the department of health and
employed at Roodepoort forensic Pathology
Services handed the body of
the deceased to Dr Oumakie Sannah Hlalele.
g).That Dr Oumakie Sannah
Hlalele conducted a medico-legal post mortem examination on the body
of the deceased marked DR 680/2020
on the 04 AUGUST 2020.
h).That the cause of
death was determined to have been ‘Multiple blunt force
injuries to the head and face’ as per Post-mortem
report
paragraph (iv) of Exhibit “C”.
i).The correctness of the
findings of Dr Oumakie Sannah Hlalele were admitted, and the contents
of the medico-legal post-mortem
examination report were admitted and
accepted as Exhibit C.
j).the photographs,
annexed hereto as Exhibit D, are photographs depicting the body of
the deceased on the scene of the crime.
k).That Sgt B Mathebula
photographed the scene on 03 August 2020 at [....] Queen Street,
Little Falls, Honeydew and that he further
photographed items found
at [....] Poortjie Avenue, as reflected in Exhibit D.
l).That Captain Motaung
pointed out the scene of crime to Sgt B Mathebula to photograph on 03
August 2020 as reflected in Exhibit
D.
m). That Sgt B Mathebula
compiled a key to the photo plan as reflected in Exhibit D and that
this key to the photo plan is accepted
as being correct.
n).That Sonja Kairuz is
the daughter of Mrs Rosa Pereira and that she visited her mother at
Flora hospital on 03 August 2020 and
that she used her cell phone to
take the pictures of the injuries on her mother. The photographs are
admitted as correct and that
it depicts the injuries sustained by the
victim (Mrs Rosa Pereira). The content and the correctness of the
statement of Sonja Kairuz
was admitted.
THE
EVIDENCE
[8]
The following witnesses were called, namely Mrs Rosa Pereira,
Nicholas Carreira, Maruping
John Sekwati, Makome Edward Sekwati,
Tyrone Wayne Richard, Donovan Matlou, Christiaan Pieter Rheerder,
Captain Johannes Paulus
Van Wyk, warrant officer Bongani and
Zamakwakhe Ngcobo, That ended the State’s case. The accused
then came to testify.
Rosa
Pereira
[9]
This witness testified that she lived at [....] Queen Street, Little
Falls. She stated
that the gardener she employed was indisposed due
to covid so she gave someone else an opportunity to work in her
garden and this
man’s name was Jafta.
[10]
Jafta came three times to work for her, she had accordingly met him
three times. On a Sunday
night prior to this incident, Jafta sent her
a Whatsapp message and said he had no money and no food and could she
help him out.
She replied and told him to come on Monday. She
received the Whatsapp message on 2 August 2020 stating that Jafta had
his brother
from Malawi and he wanted to show him how to work.
[11]
On 3 August 2020, her husband, namely Lewis, got up and made her
coffee and she went to open
up for the two men that were already
standing at her gate. The two people were Jafta and the other person
Jafta had mentioned the
night before.
[12]
When this witness got to the outside room she asked the other man
what his name was and he replied
his name was Samson. She even
remarked “like the strong man”, and he replied “yes”.
The time was around
08h00 in the morning and she was facing Samson
who stood between a meter and a meter and a half away from her.
[13]
As she was about to open up the room outside, one of the men put his
arm around her neck and
throat and put his other hand over her nose
and mouth so that she couldn’t scream. She couldn’t
breath and passed out,
losing consciousness.
[14]
At this stage her husband was still inside the house getting dressed.
[15]
She regained consciousness and felt this man pushing her down and it
felt like he wanted to break
her neck. She could hear her
teeth/dentures grinding as he pushed her face down into the paving.
She managed to pull the one finger
on this man’s left hand and
she bit him on the side of his left palm. This is when she managed to
breathe a little. She then
lost consciousness a few times and she
regained consciousness when she was in the hospital. Her face was
badly bruised and damaged.
She had lots of cuts and bruises inside
her mouth. She was 80 years old when this incident happened. She was
also bruised around
her scapula and around her neck. She had two
broken vertebrae in her back and two broken ribs. She was kept in the
hospital from
23 August to 28 August 2020.
[16]
This witness heard later that her husband had been bludgeoned with a
hammer on that day whilst
still inside the house.
[17]
She returned to her home a month after the incident had happened and
noticed that there was some
money missing which she kept in her
wardrobe as well as a bag of R5 coins in her side drawer near her
bed. A ring of hers was missing
as well as her husband’s watch.
[18]
As a result of her injuries, this witness cannot stand for long
periods as her back gets very
sore and she tires easily. She never
experienced these problems prior to the assault.
Nicholas
Rodrigues Carreira
[19]
This witness stated that he visited [....] Poortjie Avenue in Little
Falls which is where his
parents stay. On 3 August 2020 he heard a
commotion at Queen Street. He saw vehicles of the security company
and security officers
on the street and they appeared frantic. He
returned to the back of the premises of [....] Poortjie Avenue and
then walked to the
driveway. Inside the property and standing next to
the gate he found an unknown person. The witness questioned the
unknown person
who he was. At first there was no reply. This witness
then asked what he was doing in the yard to which the unknown person
responded
“open the gate”. This witness pressed the
remote to let this person out.
[20]
This witness was in the company of this unknown person for 30 seconds
and he noticed the man
was wearing light blue shorts and a navy blue
top. He was dark in complexion and his hairstyle was short shaven
hair on the sides
and spikey dreadlocks on the top. He was also
wearing hi-top shoes resembling boots.
[21]
After this witness opened the gate the unknown person walked into the
road and as soon as he
passed the security gate he started sprinting.
This witness ran out into the street and started shouting to get the
attention of
the security officers. He also pointed to the man that
was running.
[22]
The security chased this man. This witness also ran after the unknown
person. There were no other
people running. At the corner of Poortjie
and Rapid’s Avenue the unknown person was caught by the
security officers. During
the chase, this witness stated he never
lost sight of the unknown person. The security officers then escorted
the unknown person
up Poortjie Avenue towards Queen Street.
[23]
The security officers accompanied this witness to check whether there
was anyone else hiding
at [....] Poortjie Avenue. In that garden, and
placed next to a tree, clothes were found which were unknown to this
witness. The
clothes are those depicted on photos 39, 40, 41, 42 and
43 of Exhibit D.
[24]
This witness stated that he would be able to identify this unknown
person if he saw him again.
Maruping
John Sehoko (“Mr Sehoko”)
[25]
This witness stated he is a security officer and on 3 August 2020 he
was on duty at Little Falls.
At 07h20 he received a panic signal from
[....] Queen Street. When he arrived at [....], the owner of these
premises told him he
had heard a scream next door at [....] Queens
Street. This witness went to [....] Queen Street where he found a
black male standing
inside the premises of [....] Queen street in
front of the door of the house. This witness was standing outside the
gate when he
was joined by the neighbour of [....]. This witness
asked the man in the premises of [....] Queen street what he was
doing in the
yard but he did not respond. Later this man replied that
he was a gardener and that his owner had opened up for him. The owner
of [....] Queen street then stated that the man standing in the yard
of [....] Queen street was not the gardener. That is when the
witness
went to his vehicle and called for backup. His backup was Eddie
Sekwati.
[26]
When backup arrived this witness pushed open the gate at [....] Queen
street and the man standing
in the yard ran to the back of the house.
[27]
This witness stated that when he was speaking to the man in the
premises of [....] Queen street,
he was 6 meters away from him. The
man was facing the door of the house but every now and again he would
turn towards the witness.
The conversation lasted for 4 minutes.
During the conversation the man told him that the owner of [....]
Queen street was still
looking for the tools he would use in the
garden and that the owner was busy making tea for him.
[28]
This witness stated that the man he saw at [....] Queen street was
wearing a pair of jeans and
a blue top. He had short hair on the
sides and on the top of his head he had short dreads. This man was
also wearing a small round
hat and he had a schoolbag or rucksack.
This witness was shown photo 41 of Exhibit D whereupon he stated the
accused was wearing
something red on his hands. He was not sure if it
was the red gloves that were depicted on photo 41.
[29]
This witness pointed to the accused and stated that the accused is
the man he saw standing in
the premises of [....] Queen street.
[30]
After the accused started to run away this witness chased him but the
accused jumped over the
wall of [....] Queen street into other
premises.
[31]
Upon entering the premises of [....] Queen street this witness saw a
lady lying on the floor
and she was bleeding. Although this lady was
asked if she was ok, she did not respond.
[32]
This witness compiled a sketch which was marked Exhibit E. On this
sketch the following points
were marked, namely:
Point A is where
the security officer was standing.
Point B is where
the accused was standing.
Point C is where
the lady was found lying on the floor.
Point D is the
front door of the house at [....] Queen street.
Point E is where
the accused was later apprehended.
[33]
This witness stated that where he was standing, namely point A, one
could not see the front door
which was at position D. The witness
also stated that from point A one would not be able to see the lady
lying at point C. However,
the accused who was standing a meter away
from point C would have clearly seen the lady lying on the floor.
[34]
This witness stated that when the accused jumped the wall he did not
follow the accused. Instead
he went back to help the lady who was
lying on the floor. It is at this point that this witness heard
someone screaming at [....]
Poortjie Avenue. This witness saw the
accused coming out of the gate at [....] Poortjie Avenue and he and
Eddie Sekwati chased
the accused and captured him at the corner of
Rapids Avenue and Poortjie Avenue. The distance from [....] Queen
street to where
the accused was caught was approximately 39 meters.
When the accused was caught he said his name was Samson Moyo.
[35]
When the accused was caught he had changed his clothing that he had
worn at [....] Queen street.
The clothing the accused was wearing at
[....] Queen street was found at [....] Poortjie Avenue. The clothes
consisted of a blue
top and jeans. At the time of the accused’s
arrest he was wearing a light blue short trouser and a blue T-shirt.
He was still
having the same hairstyle which depicted shaved sides
and dreadlocks on the top of his head.
Makome
Edward Sekwati (“Mr Sekwati”)
[36]
This witness was on duty as a security officer on 3 August 2020 at
Little Falls. He received
a call that his colleague Mr Sehoko needed
backup at [....] Queen Street. When he arrived at [....] Queen Street
he saw a person
wearing blue jeans, a blue jacket and a woollen hat
which was blue in colour with white stripes. Whilst talking to this
person,
the woollen hat was continuously put on and removed.
[37]
This witness then grabbed the gate at [....] Queen Street and pulled
it thereby opening it. This
is when the man ran away. This witness
gave chase and then saw the lady lying on the floor, her face was
covered in blood. He then
went to the vehicle to call the paramedics.
He, together with Mr Sehoko then walked up and down Queen Street
looking for the man
who ran away. At this point he saw a white man
who informed him an unknown person had been standing in his garden at
[....] Poortjie
avenue and that when this white man opened the gate
the man ran away towards Rapids Avenue. He, together with Mr Sehoko
shouted
to the man who was running to stop, but he did not. This man
was wearing blue boxer shorts and a blue T-shirt. When they grabbed
this man he said “it was not him”. The man they caught at
Rapids Avenue was the same man they had spoken to at [....]
Queen
Street. This man informed them that he had come with Jafta to do
gardening at [....] Queen Street.
[39]
This witness identified the person they spoke to at [....] Queen
Street and the person they apprehended
at Rapids Avenue as being the
accused before court.
[40]
This witness was shown, photo 36 on Exhibit D and he stated that the
rucksack depicted on this
photo was the very same rucksack that the
accused was carrying while he spoke to him at [....] Queen Street.
[41]
This witness was shown photo 40 on Exhibit D which depicts blue jeans
and a blue top and he answered
that these clothes were found at
[....] Poortjie avenue and that they were the clothes the accused had
been wearing at [....] Queen
Street when he spoke to him. The woollen
hat depicted on photo 41 of Exhibit D was identified by this witness
as being the same
hat the accused had been wearing at [....] Queen
Street.
Tyrone
Wyne Richards
[42]
This witness is a medical doctor who was on duty on 3 August 2020 at
the Life, Flora Emergency
Unit. He examined Mrs Rosa Pereira and
completed the medical J88 form. Mrs Rosa Pereira had multiple bruises
on her face, abrasions
to her left elbow, abrasions to the upper part
of her back, a fracture of the second and third thoracic vertebra, a
fracture of
the 9th rib on the left side and contusion of the lungs.
The CT scan revealed bleeding inside the chest which was related to
the
fracture of the second thoracic vertebra.
[43]
This witness explained that the fracture of the rib was potentially
life threatening in that
had the rib pierced the lung of Mrs Rosa
Pereira it would have caused her death.
Donovan
Matlou
[44]
This witness stated that he is a constable employed at the Honeydew
SAPS. On 3 August 2020 he
was on duty and he attended an incident at
[....] Queen Street in Little Falls. When he arrived he entered the
house and found
an old white male lying on the floor who had passed
away. The man had blood on his head.
[45]
Whilst at [....] Queen Street, a suspect was brought to him. This
witness asked the suspect what
his name was and the suspect replied
it was Samson Moyo and he was from Malawi. This witness pointed to
the accused as being the
suspect who was arrested on 3 August 2020.
Christiaan
Pieter Rheeder
[46]
This witness testified he lived at [....] Queens Street which is next
door to [....]. He heard
his dog barking and he went into his yard
and whilst going back into his house he heard a noise like a thump
from [....] Queens
street which sounded similar to the sound of
something heavy being moved around. He then decided to summon the
security company.
[47]
When the security arrived he accompanied them to the front gate of
[....] Queen Street whereupon
they found a person inside the yard of
[....] Queen street. There was initially only one security officer
who questioned this man.
The man inside the yard of [....] Queen
street replied he was a gardener. This witness informed the security
officer that the man
was not the usual gardener who worked at [....]
Queen street. At this point another thumping noise was heard inside
the house of
[....] Queen street. When the second security officer
arrived, the questioning of the man in the yard of [....] Queen
street continued
and this witness could see that from the demeanour
of the second security officer that he was now more alert and that he
was trying
to peer into the gate to get a better view. That is when
the man in the yard started running away towards the back of the
house
and the security guards started pushing the gate. This witness
did not give chase. He stood at the gate and never saw anyone else
exiting the gate of [....] Queen street.
[48]
This witness was able to see the person that was caught by the
security officers and he immediately
noticed that the man was wearing
short trunks which looked more like underpants than normal clothes.
He also noticed a blood stain
on the lower leg.
Captain
Johannes Paulus Van Wyk
[49]
This witness stated he is a captain stationed at Honeydew SAPS. He
also attended the scene at
[....] Queen Street on 3 August 2020.
Constable Matlou showed him the body of the deceased who was in the
main bedroom.
[50]
This witness then proceeded to the Flora Clinic where he obtained the
statement from Mrs Rosa
Pereira. He did this as he was afraid Mrs
Rosa Pereira may die as she was severely injured. Mrs Rosa Pereira
mentioned only 2 names
to him, namely, Jafta and Samson. He stated
even though the name Samson does not appear in the statement of Mrs
Rosa Pereira, this
witness was adamant that she had mentioned this
name.
Warrant
Officer Bongani Zamokwakhe Ngcobo
[51]
This witness stated he is a warrant officer stationed at the Honeydew
SAPS. When he arrived at
the scene, the accused had already been
arrested. The accused was wearing a blue T-shirt and short pants blue
in colour. This witness
questioned the accused whether the clothes
found at [....] Poortjie avenue were his and the accused said they
were not his clothes.
The accused told him the clothes he was wearing
when he was arrested were the same clothes he had on when he arrived
with Jafta
to do gardening work at house [....] Queen Street.
[52]
This witness asked the accused if the clothes he was wearing were
suitable to do gardening work,
the accused replied that his work suit
was in the bag that Jafta had been carrying. The accused also told
him that Jafta ran away
when the security officer came. When this
witness asked the accused why Jafta ran away the accused was evading
the question. When
this witness asked the accused how he left the
property at [....] Queen street, the accused also evaded this
question.
[53]
The accused took this witness to where Jafta lived but the owner of
those premises said Jafta
had left.
[54]
This witness stated that a hammer had been used to kill the deceased
and that this hammer was
found with blood on it. The hammer was taken
to forensics.
[55]
The state then closed its case and the accused came to testify.
The
accused - Samson Moyo
[56]
The accused stated that prior to August 2020 he did not know Jafta.
In the month of August 2020
he was residing in Honeydew at Plot 52.
His version is that he met Jafta on 3 August 2020 and that Jafta
offered to pay him R300
for the day. He accompanied Jafta and another
man to Jafta’s bosses’ place. They alighted a taxi on
route to Clearwater
Mall and they then walked from there to [....]
Queen Street. The accused was speaking in Zulu to Jafta. The accused
was unaware
that Jafta was a Malawian citizen. He only became aware
of that when he took the police to Jafta’s home and a Malawian
passport
belonging to Jafta was found. The accused described the 3rd
person as being the same height that he was. When they arrived at the
gate at [....] Queen street an old white lady came to the gate and
unlocked the gate for all 3 of them. The accused was adamant
3 people
arrived and not 2. He also stated he never gave his name to the old
lady. The white lady told them to go and change while
she spoke to
Jafta and showed him what to do.
[57]
The accused stated he then entered an outside room which he pointed
as being depicted on photo
1, 2 and 3 of Exhibit D.
[58]
The accused stated he removed his top which had the inscription
“Adidas Valentine”
as well as his blue jeans. He was
wearing a blue short beneath his trouser.
[59]
The accused placed the rucksack he was carrying on the floor and at
this stage he heard a noise
outside as if someone was crying. He went
outside and left his trousers on the rucksack in the room. The crying
appeared to be
close to the house. He called for Jafta and walked
towards the gate. When he got to the gate the security vehicle
arrived and the
security came out and asked him his name and how he
had got there. He told them his name was Samson. He also informed the
security
officers that they were 3 people who had arrived at [....]
Queen street and that the old lady had opened the gate for them and
that this old lady was now inside.
[60]
The accused stated that the 3rd person that he had arrived with then
asked the accused who he
was talking to and he replied he was talking
to the security. The 3rd man looked scared. The accused stated that
where the security
were standing they could not see this 3rd person,
and neither could this 3rd person see the security. The security were
only able
to see this 3rd person when the 3rd person ran away, this
3rd person had been standing at the door depicted on photo 5 of
Exhibit
D. When this 3rd man ran away the security got into the
vehicle and drove after the 3rd person in an attempt to apprehend
that
person.
[61]
The accused stated he only saw 2 security officers, he did not see
the neighbour from [....]
Queen Street.
[62]
The accused was adamant he did not run away. He remained at the gate.
He also did not see a lady
lying on the floor.
[63]
The accused stated the security came to the gate 4 times, they were
coming and going. On the
4th occasion the accused opened the gate and
Jafta came behind him and asked why was he not running away. Jafta
then went past
the gate and turned round the bend and the accused did
not know where Jafta hid. Jafta was wearing a big yellow jacket and
he was
running very fast. The accused did not believe he needed to
run away.
EVALUATION
OF THE EVIDENCE
[63]
The witness Mrs Rosa Pereira impressed the court. She recalled
everything that transpired that
day with much detail. She was adamant
that there were only 2 people who arrived that day and she was
adamant that the accused did
tell her his name was Samson. She even
remarked during the cross examination that she had a good memory.
This witness did not state
it was the accused who strangled her as
she said the person who did it to her was standing behind her. As a
result this witness
did not implicate the accused falsely. This
witness was a single witness and the cautionary rule has been applied
to her evidence.
Having considered her evidence, I am convinced that
in the absence of any contradictions in her evidence, or any motive
to falsely
implicate the accused that she was a credible witness and
I accept her evidence as being true and correct.
[64]
Nicholas Carreira, Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati also impressed the court
with their evidence. This
court could find no reason for Mr Sehoko
and Mr Sekwati to falsely implicate the accused as being the person
they had seen in both
the yards of [....] Queen street and later at
the corner of Rapids and Poortjie avenue where he was apprehended.
Neither could
this court find any reason why Nicholas Carreira would
want to falsely implicate the accused. The evidence of Dr Richard was
not
disputed. Constable Matlou, Christiaan Rheeder, Captain Van Wyk
and warrant officer Ngcobo also impressed this court.
Contradictions
amongst state witnesses
[65]
It is true that Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati testified that the accused
was standing at point B on
the sketch plan marked exhibit E, whereas
Mr. Reeder testified that the person the security guards were talking
to was standing
just a foot away from the gate at [....] Queen
street. This is not a material contradiction as Mr Rheeder was
standing behind the
wall and did not have a clear vision of the man
inside the yard. Each witness may view a scene from different angles.
Common
cause
[66]
It is common cause that:
1. The accused was
wearing blue jeans when he arrived at [....] Queen street.,
2. He had short
dreadlocks and his hair was shaven on both sides.
3. He arrived at the
house of Mrs Pereira with Jafta.
4. The accused had a
conversation with the security guards who were standing outside the
gate of [....] Queen street
5. From the house [....]
Poortjie avenue the accused ran away from the security and he was
caught by the security officers.
The
accused
[67]
The accused did not impress the court. There are certain aspects of
his evidence which are contradicted.
1.
The accused stated that he did not leave the yard at [....] Queen
street, yet
later in his evidence in chief he stated that he went to
the house at [....] Poortjie avenue which is depicted as point F on
exhibit
E.
2.
The accused initially says he never saw the man at [....] Poortjie
avenue, then
later he says he did see him speaking to the security
guards.
3.
During cross-examination the accused stated he did not run away, yet
in his evidence
in chief he stated he did run, yet he says he ran
towards the security to tell them about Jafta. Yet during
cross-examination he
admitted that he did run from the security
officers as Jafta had told him that he must run away so he was
scared. Later he said
he was scared because Nicholas Carreira was
shouting. If he had not done anything this Court cannot understand
what he would be
scared of.
Probabilities
[68]
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.
[69]
In
S v Mthethwa
1972(3) SA 766 (A) at 768 a-c Holmes JA said
‘Because of the fallibility of human observation, evidence of
identification
is approached by the Courts with some caution. It is
not enough for the identifying witness to be honest: the reliability
of his
observation must also be tested. This depends on various
factors, such as lighting, visibility, and eyesight; the proximity of
the witness; his opportunity for observation, both as to time and
situation; the extent of his prior knowledge of the accused; the
mobility of the scene; corroboration; suggestibility; the accused's
face, voice, build, gait, and dress; the result of identification
parades, if any; and, of course, the evidence by or on behalf of the
accused. The list is not exhaustive. These factors, or such
of them
as are applicable in a particular case, are not individually
decisive, but must be weighed one against the other, in the
light of
the totality of the evidence, and the probabilitie’”.
[70]
The incident occurred in broad day light and Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati
were in close proximity
to the accused when they spoke to him at
[....] Queen street. They had sufficient opportunity to observe the
accused before he
ran away. The court has as already declared these
two witnesses as honest witnesses. The circumstances, under which the
identification
was made, were favourable to amount to a reliable
identification.
[71]
Both Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati corroborate each other that the accused
whilst at [....] Queen
street, before he ran away, was wearing blue
jeans and a blue top and he had a hat which the accused was
continuously removing
and putting back on his head. Both witnesses
state that the man at [....] Queen street was dark in complexion and
that he had short/shaven
hair on the sides with short dread locks on
the top of his head and that he was carrying a rug sack. Nicholas
Carreira also corroborates
Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati that the man he
saw in the yard at [....] Poortjie avenue had shaven hair on the
sides and dread locks
on top. Both Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwato state
that when they caught the accused he was wearing blue shorts and no
longer the long
jeans.
[72]
The clothing of the accused as noted by Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati is
to a certain extent confirmed
by the accused in that in the accused’s
evidence in chief he states when he arrived at work he was wearing
jeans and that
below the jeans he was wearing blue shorts. The
accused also stated that when he entered the room to change he placed
his trousers
on the rucksack and then he heard a scream and he went
out towards the gate to look for Jafta. If this is the case then both
Mr
Sehoko and Mr Sekwati would have seen the accused wearing these
blue shorts before he ran away, however, they did not say that.
Both
Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati corroborate each other that the accused
still was wearing the long jeans when they saw him within
the yard at
[....] Queen street. Furthermore, the accused never stated that he
went back to put the jeans on, so by implication
he must have been
wearing the shorts according to his version when he was first seen by
the security guards. However, this version
of the accused wearing
shorts when the security officers first saw him was never put to
either Mr Sehoko or Mr Sekwati. When asked
by the State Advocate why
this version was never put to either Mr Sehoko or Mr Sekwati the
accused replied “I don’t
know”. It important to
note that on photo 3 and photo 4 of exhibit D, which is the room
where the accused allegedly changed
and took off his trousers, there
is no jeans in this room. This means they were never left there. In
addition, if he did put his
trousers on top of the rucksack that he
was carrying in the room depicted on photo 3 and 4, then it is
unexplained why his rucksack
was photographed in photo 37 of Exhibit
D as lying outside the garden of [....] Queen street and not inside
the room depicted on
photo 3 and 4 of exhibit D. It was never put to
the security or Constable Donavan Matlou that they tempered with the
scene before
photographs were taken, in fact it makes no sense for
the securities to have moved the rucksack from inside the house and
place
it outside. The accused also never moved the rucksack,
therefore his version that he left it in the room depicted on photo 3
and
4 of exhibit D is improbable. The Court rejects this version of
the accused taking off his jeans and putting it on the rucksack
and
leaving it in the change room and then wearing shorts whilst he was
in the yard at [....] Queen street as completely false
and not
reasonably possibly true.
[73]
The clothes found in the garden at [....] Poortjie avenue were a pair
of jeans and a blue top
as well as a woollen hat which the witness Mr
Sekwati stated he saw the accused was wearing at [....] Queen street.
These clothes
are the same clothes that were found at [....] Poortjie
avenue. The man identified by Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati sported a
hairstyle
which had shaved sides and short dread locks on top of the
head. Nicholas Carrreira also saw a man sporting the same hairstyle
in the property at [....] Poortjie avenue. If the same clothes were
found at [....] Poortjie avenue which Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati
saw
the accused wearing and due to the fact that the description of the
accused’s hairstyle seen by Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekawti
is the
same hairstyle which Nicholas Carreira saw the man having at [....]
Poortjie avenue, then the only reasonable inference
the court can
draw is that it is the accused who was seen at [....] Queen street
and who later entered the yard of [....] Poortjie
avenue and who
later removed these clothes leaving them behind in the garden at
[....] Poortjie avenue. At no stage did the accused
state that either
Jafta or this 3
rd
person had a hairstyle that was shaved
on the sides with dread locks on top, therefore, the only person who
had this hairstyle
and who was seen by the 2 security officers in
[....] Queen street and by Nicholas Carreira inside the yard at
[....] Poortjie
avenue was the accused and no one else.
[74]
The accused admitted in cross-examination that he had a hair style
which consisted of shaved
sides and short dreads on the top. The
accused also stated that he never saw the hairstyle of the 3
rd
person as that person had a hat on all the time. There is no reason
for Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati to falsely implicate the accused
by
stating that the accused was the one who had the hairstyle as
mentioned in their testimony. Accordingly, the inability of the
accused to positively give any credible identifying features of this
3
rd
person makes his version improbable. The fact that
this version of the 3
rd
man wearing the woollen hat was
never put to either Mr Sehoko or Mr Sekwati suggests that this was a
recent fabrication of the
accused and accordingly the court rejects
it as false.
[75]
The accused’s version that he never saw Mr Nicholas Carreira at
[....] Poortjie avenue
is rejected by this court as false. In fact,
during the cross-examination the accused stated that Nicholas
Carreira did alert the
police. It is common cause Nicholas Carreira
did not know the accused prior to this incident, therefor there is no
reason for Nicholas
Carreira to have alerted the security officers
and to point out the accused if he did not suspect the accused of
having been in
the yard at [....] Poortjie avenue. This court finds
it was the accused who was in the yard at [....] Poortjie avenue and
whom
Nicholas Carreira let out of the yard by opening the gate.
[76]
The version of the accused that he stood outside the gate of the
property situated at [....]
Poortjie avenue was never put to Nicholas
Carreira for his comment. When he was confronted with this version
the accused stated
he was waiting for his turn to come and explain
this. The fact that the accused’s counsel never put it to
Nicholas Carreira
is because the accused never told his legal
representative and accordingly this amounts to a recent fabrication
and is rejected
by this court as false.
[77]
There is an additional piece of clothing that this court would like
to refer to and this is the
red garden gloves that were also found at
the premises of [....] Poortjie avenue. The accused says he never saw
these gloves on
the 3
rd
man that ran away, he only saw
that this 3
rd
man wearing the woollen hat that was found
in photo 41 of exhibit D. Mr Sehoko stated that he saw that the
accused had something
red on his hands. The fact that these gloves
were found with the other items of clothing at [....] Poortjie avenue
suggests to
this court suggests that it was the accused who was
wearing them.
[78]
The accused’s version is that when the security officers asked
him where the owner of the
house was the accused replied that the
lady was in the house. This version is similar to what Mr Sehoko and
Mr Sekwati say was
the response by the accused. The only additional
aspect which the two security officers state is that the accused told
them what
his name was and that the accused informed that that the
lady was inside the house making tea. The court rejects this as false
as immediately after he ran away, both Mr Sehoko and Mr Sekwati found
the lady lying on the floor severally injured and motionless.
According to Mr Sehoko the accused was standing at point B on exhibit
E while he was talking to him. The old lady was lying at
point C on
exhibit E. This short distance of roughly a meter between where the
accused was standing at point B and point C where
Mrs Rosa Perreira
was lying makes it impossible for the accused not to have seen Mrs
Rosa Perreira. Accordingly, the accused’s
version that he did
not see her is rejected by this court as false and not reasonably
possibly true.
[79]
The accused stated that there was a third person who ran away and
that the security officers
must have seen this person. The accused
also states that Jafta also ran away and that he last saw him when
Jafta reached the T-junction
and that he was wearing a yellow jacket.
Firstly, in regard to this version of Jafta wearing a yellow jacket
he would have been
highly identifiable. In addition, if he was
running at the T-junction and he ran out of the yard of [....] Queen
street, then the
neighbour at [....] Queen street would have seen
Jafta running out of the yard as the neighbour remained at the gate.
Mrs Rosa
Perreira was a highly credible witness and I find no reason
to dispute that she saw only saw 2 people, namely the accused and
Jafta
that morning. None of the State witnesses saw Jafta or this 3
rd
person running away which means either Jafta managed to escape before
the security arrived and that possibly the accused was still
trying
to finish up what had been started. Therefore, the version of the
accused that there were 3 people and that the other 2
other men ran
away whilst the accused remained at [....] Queen street is rejected
as false and not reasonably possibly true.
[80]
The accused states that he was arrested at the cul
de sac in Queen street. His reason for returning back
to the house at
[....] Queen street was “My thinking was that the security
would infer I was running away so I decided to
go back to the house”.
The court rejects this as false and not reasonably possibly true as
Mr Sehoko, Mr Sekwati and Nicholas
Carreira all saw the accused was
caught at the corner of Rapids Avenue and Poortjie avenue. In
addition, Mr Rheeder who was living
at [....] Queen street did not
see the accused being arrested at the cul de sac in the street where
he lives.
[81]
The accused’s version is that he did not know anything untoward
that was going on at [....]
Queen street. The accused himself stated
in his evidence in chief that he was thinking of going to the
security to tell them that
Jafta had run away. If the accused was
aware of Jafta running away and another 3
rd
person running
away, then the opportune time to tell anyone was when he was being
questioned by the 2 security officers at the
gate. Yet he did not do
this. The question this court must ask is why did he not. Instead
according to his evidence he just went
towards [....] Poortjie avenue
and then he walked back to [....] Queen street. This version does not
make sense, and the reason
why it does not make sense is because the
accused did not want to alert the security as to what was going on at
[....] Queen street
as he was involved in the commission of the
offences that had occurred there. In addition, if he wanted to help
the security to
find Jafta, then why did he run away forcing the
security to chase him. The only inference the court can make is that
the accused
ran away because he was involved and was caught at the
scene. The inability of the accused to point out on the sketch,
namely exhibit
E, where Jafta came out of the house at [....] Queen
street suggests to this court that it was a mere fabrication on the
part of
the accused. Accordingly, the version of the accused wanting
to tell the security about Jafta is rejected as false and not
reasonably
possibly true.
[82]
There are two main questions that this Honourable Court has to
decide. These are:
1.
Whether the accused took part on the attack of the complainant and
the deceased.
2.
Whether the accused is guilty of the crime of murder and attempted
murder based
on the doctrine of common purpose.
FINDINGS
[83]
It is true that there is no evidence that the accused and Jafta knew
one another prior to the
3rd August 2020. It is also true that there
is no evidence that there were any weapons that were brought to the
residence by the
accused or that any fingerprint evidence or DNA
evidence was obtained to link the accused to the commission of the
offences.
[84]
The defence counsel also argued that the fact that the accused ran
away from the scene does not
necessarily mean that there was common
purpose to commit any crime.
[85]
This Court must look at the context in which the accused ran away,
namely:
1. The accused was aware
that Mrs Rosa Pereira was lying motionless on the floor very close to
him.
2. The accused failed to
alert the security officers of Mrs Rosa Pereira lying in the yard and
failed to ask for assistance to help
Mrs Pereira.
[86]
This is not the behaviour of someone who wants to exculpate himself.
On the contrary it depicts
the actions of someone who wants to
conceal the commission of a crime.
[87]
What is clear is that the accused was either guarding the outside of
the property while the crimes
were being committed or he had
committed them himself and it was too late to leave the property
before he was noticed by the security
officers. If the accused was as
innocent as he says he was, why would he run away and jump over the
wall of [....] Queen street
into the property of [....] Poortjie
avenue. In addition, the removal of his jean trouser and blue top and
the fact that he ran
away from the security officers wearing shorts
that resembled underpants, demonstrates the actions of someone who
did not want
to be recognised.
[88]
This is not the behaviour of an innocent person who wanted to alert
the police as to the crimes
that had been committed by Jafta at
[....] Queen street. His actions are more of someone who was caught
red handed and accordingly
had to escape.
[89]
The doctrine of common purpose allows for the imputation of the
conduct of one party (the immediate
party) to another party (the
remote party) in either of two situations.
[1]
The first is where there is an agreement or 'mandate’, express
or implied, between those parties to do the act in question,
and the
act falls within the borders of what has been so expressly or
impliedly agreed upon
[2]
. The
second is where, even if no actual agreement, whether express or
implied, existed between the parties, the remote party actively
associated himself with the conduct of the immediate party by
actually committing some act of association with the intention of
associating himself with the conduct of the immediate party
[3]
.
In both forms of common purpose, it must be shown that the requisite
mens rea
or fault was present in respect of the remote party
[4]
.
Where
mens
rea
in
the form of intention (or dolus) is required, as in the case of
murder, either
dolus
directus
or
dolus
eventualis
will suffice
[5]
.
[90]
In
S v Mgedezi
1989 (1) SA 687
(A) the court stated that in
order for common purpose to be proved certain factors should exist:
1.
The accused must be present where the violence was committed;
2.
He must have been aware of the assault on the victims;
3.
He must have intended to make common purpose with those perpetrating
the assault;
4.
He must have manifested his sharing of the common purpose with the
perpetrators of the assault
by himself performing some act of
association with the conduct of the others;
5.
He must have had the requisite
mens rea
.
[91]
In the case of 'active association’, it must be shown,
inter
alia
,
that the remote party was not merely present at the scene but that he
committed some act of association and that he intended to
associate
himself with the act of the immediate party
[6]
.
[92]
The Supreme Court of Appeal warned that 'care needs to be taken to
avoid lightly inferring an
association with a group activity from the
mere presence of the person who is sought to be held criminally
liable for the actions
of some of the others in the group’
[7]
.
[93]
Mere approval of the conduct of others is not enough to constitute
active association
[8]
. There
must be a close proximity between the conduct constituting the active
association and the result, and the conduct must be
significant and
not a limited participation removed from the actual execution of the
crime.
[94]
In the present case the accused has not played open cards with the
court and accordingly this
court must make certain inferences as to
his involvement from the set of facts presented before this court.
This form of inferential
reasoning is based upon the available
circumstantial evidence. The cardinal rules of logic were set out in
the case of
R v Blom
where the learned Watermeyer JA stated
that:
‘
(1) the inference
sought to be drawn must be consistent with all the proved facts. If
it is not, then the inference cannot be drawn.
(2) 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 dawn is correct.’
[95]
Mrs Rosa Periera stated that Jafta sent her a whatsapp the night
before to state that his brother
was in South Africa and that he came
from Malawi and could he bring him to work the next day. The
accused’s version that
Jafta was unknown to him prior to the
incident is improbable as it cannot be mere coincidence that the
person he brought to work
was a Malawian. As a result, the Court can
infer that the accused was known to Jafta prior to this incident. The
fact that Jafta
had mentioned he would bring a second person to work
the next day implies that Jafta and the accused had discussed the lay
out
at [....] Queen street and what would transpire on 3 August 2020.
A stated by Mrs Rosa Pereira, immediately after Jafta and the
accused
had entered the premises at [....] Queen street and after she had
opened the outside room she was immediately attacked
from behind.
[96]
I find that the accused was present when Mrs Rosa Pereira was grabbed
from behind as it happened
almost immediately when he and Jafta
entered the premises at [....] Queen street. In no way did the
accused attempt to stop what
was happening. Neither did the accused
call out for help to stop the attack from happening. Whether or not
it is the accused or
Jafta who grabbed Mrs Rosa Pereira from behind,
thereby strangling her and assaulting her, it is clear that the
accused must have
been aware of the assault on Mrs Rosa Perreira. In
addition, due to the close proximity where the accused was seen
standing when
the security officers spoke to him and where the
lifeless body of Mrs Rosa Perriera lay, it is clear he was aware that
she had
been severally assaulted and that she could die. AIthough I
cannot find that the accused either committed the act of strangling
Mrs Rosa Perreia himself, what the court can find is that at most he
intended to make common purpose with the assault on Mrs Rosa
Perreira. Whether it is the act of directly administering the blows
to Mrs Rosa Periera or just standing guard while Jafta did
this, it
is clear that there was conduct on the part of the accused and that
there was
mens rea
in the form of
dolus eventualis
that
Mrs Rosa Perreira could be killed due to the severe strangling and
suffocating actions applied to her elderly body and the
many blows
administered to her body which fractured the vertebra and rib. I am
according satisfied that the accused actively associated
in the
commission of attempting to kill Mrs Rosa Perreira.
[97]
As regards the count of murder, it is important to note that in
murder cases there will be a
causal connection between the conduct of
the immediate party and the death of the victim, and since the
conduct of the immediate
party is attributed to the remote party, a
causal connection between the actual (i.e. non-attributed) conduct of
the remote party
and the death of the victim need not be proved. It
should be noted that the doctrine of common purpose lends itself to
use in crimes
that are known in our law as 'consequence crimes’,
where a causal nexus is required to exist between the conduct of the
accused
and a specific, prohibited result. Since the doctrine has the
effect of imputing to one party (the remote party) the conduct of
another (the immediate party), the doctrine has great efficacy in
helping the prosecution to prove its case when it is unable to
establish a causal nexus between the accused’s own conduct and
the result in question.
[98]
If two or more persons decide to murder Y, for all of them to be
liable as co-perpetrators it
is not necessary that each of them
should stab Y or fire a shot at him. It is not even necessary for
each of them to touch Y, or
be present at the scene of crime. There
may, for example, be a causal connection between X’s act and
Y’s death even
if he merely transports Z to and from the scene
of crime, or supplies him with information about Y’s
whereabouts, or stands
next to him while he attacks Y, ready to help
if necessary, or stands guard outside the building while Z does the
killing, or merely
encourages or incites him to shoot Y, or merely
gets him to do it. To be merely a passive spectator or witness of the
murder is,
of course, insufficient
[9]
.
It should be noted that the crucial requirement is that the persons
must all have had the intention to murder and to assist one
another
in committing the murder
[10]
.
[99]
Once again, due to the accused not playing open cards with the court,
this court needs to make
certain inferences on the circumstantial
evidence that has been presented.
[100]
The post-mortem report states that the cause of death was multiple
blunt force injuries to the head and face.
As a result, this was not
a single blow, but many blows. This must have taken a considerable
amount of time. If this took some
time, the question the court must
ask is what was the accused doing during this time. Whether or not it
is the accused or Jafta
who administered the deadly blows to the
deceased, the fact remains that the accused knew what was going on
because if it is Jafta
who had administered the blows then because
this murder happened inside the house the accused must have noticed
that Jafta had
vanished and gone inside the house which would have
been abnormal in the circumstances. Furthermore, because Jafta and
the 3
rd
person, according to the accused’s version,
came out looking scared then the accused should have realised
something bad had
happened inside the house and should have started
screaming for help. He did not do this, instead when asked by the
security officers
where the owner was, he lied by saying she was
inside the house making tea. Whether it is the accused who
administered the blows
to the deceased or not, this court finds there
is enough evidence at least to find that he actively associated
himself with the
heinous crime that was being committed inside the
house.
Count
1
[101]
In respect to count 1, on the basis of common purpose the accused is
found guilty as a co-perpetrator of the crime
of murder as it is
clear that there was an unlawful killing and that due to the number
of blows inflicted to the head and face
of the deceased there was an
intention to kill the deceased. Even if the court is wrong as regards
the culpability of the accused
in respect to count 1, there can be no
doubt that the accused is guilty of being an accessory after the fact
to the crime of murder
in that he concealed what had happened inside
the house. Accordingly, on count 1, the accused is found guilty as
charged for the
crime of murder.
[102]
In respect to count 2 the evidence presented by the doctor confirms
that due to the old age of Mrs Rosa Perreira
and due to the serious
injuries that were inflicted on her, she could have died. Once again,
it is not clear whether the accused
or Jafta inflicted these
injuries, however, on the basis of common purpose the court finds
that the accused actively associated
himself with the assault that
was taking place and that on the basis of
dolus eventualis
he
could have foreseen that the victim may have died. Accordingly on
count 2 the accused is found guilty of attempted murder of
Mrs Rosa
Perreira.
____________________
D
DOSIO
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Date
Heard
2 February 2022
Judgment
handed down 4
February 2022
Appearances:
On
behalf of the State
Adv Ngubane
On
behalf of the Accused Adv Milubi
[1]
See
Shange
& others v S
[2017] 3 All SA 289
(KZP) at [45], where the court distinguished
clearly between the two situations; see also
S
v Sithole & another
(unreported, GP case no 777/15, 20 February 2017) at [24]);
Tshikila
& others v Minister of Police
(unreported, GJ case no 16/06499, 23 April 2019) at [12]).
[2]
McKenzie
v Van der Merwe
1917 AD 41
46;
R
v Duma & Another
1945 AD 410
at 415;
R
v Mkize
1946 AD 197
at 205; R v
Shezi
& Others
1948 (2) SA 119
(A) at 128.
[3]
S v
Safatsa & Others
1988 (1) SA 868
(A),
S
v Mgedezi & Others
1989 (1) SA 687
(A) and
S
v Singo
1993 (1) SACR 226 (A).
[4]
S v
Sithole & Another
(supra) at [24] and [26].
[5]
S v
Mgedezi & Others
at 705;
S
v Papu & Others
2015 (2) SACR 313
(ECB) at [14].
[6]
S v Le
Roux & Others
2010 (2) SACR 11
(SCA) at [17]–[19] and
Scott
& Others v S
[2011] ZASCA 121
(unreported, SCA case no 473/10, 31 August 2011).
[7]
S v
Safatsa & Others
1988 (1) SA 868
(A) and
S
v Mgedezi & Others
1989 (1) SA 687
(A). In
S
v Toya-Lee van Wyk
[2012] ZASCA 47
(unreported, case no 575/11, 28 March 2013).
[8]
S v
Dewnath
[2014] ZASCA 57
(unreported, SCA case no 269/13, 17 April 2014).
[9]
S v
Barnes
1990 (2) SACR 485
(N) at 419b
[10]
See
S v
Nkabinde
2017 2 SACR 431
(SCA)
sino noindex
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