Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 165South Africa
S v Makhenke (SS92/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 165 (22 March 2022)
Headnotes
responsible by the local community for Mawande’s inevitable injuries. He ran away in fear.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 165
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## S v Makhenke (SS92/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 165 (22 March 2022)
S v Makhenke (SS92/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 165 (22 March 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_165.html
sino date 22 March 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No:
SS92/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE: 22 March 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
THEMBILIZWE
MAKHENKE
Accused
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
AJ
:
1
On 28 February 2021, the accused,
Mr. Makhenke, poured a quantity of paraffin into a backyard room at
[....] Rasberry Street Rondebult
Extension 2. He ignited the paraffin
and caused a fire that killed two men who were in the room at the
time. The first man was
Mawande Mafuya, whose twin brother, Wandile,
lives in the main house. The second man was Siphiwe Buthelezi, a
friend of Mawande’s,
who was staying with him at the time.
2
Having started the fire, Mr.
Makhenke ran away. Efforts to rescue Mawande and Siphiwe were delayed
because the only door to the
room was locked or jammed from the
inside. By the time the men were rescued, they had been very badly
burned. Mawande succumbed
to his injuries five days later. He died on
5 March 2021 from severe burns and the complications arising from
them. Siphiwe hung
on until 11 March 2021, but nonetheless died from
the same causes on that day.
3
These facts are undisputed. The
question in this case is not whether Mr. Makhenke was responsible for
the deaths of Mawande and
Siphiwe, but rather the nature of legal
culpability that can be ascribed to him.
Mr.
Makhenke’s story
4
The State indicted Mr. Makhenke on
two counts of premeditated murder and one count of arson. When the
trial commenced before me,
on 8 March 2022, Mr. Makhenke tendered
pleas of guilty to all three charges. However, I was not satisfied,
based on his written
plea explanation, that Mr. Makhenke had admitted
that he had planned the murders, and that he genuinely intended to
kill both Mawande
and Siphiwe.
5
My concerns deepened when I gave Mr.
Makhenke an opportunity to amplify his plea explanation in reply to
questions I put to him
after he was placed under oath. The story Mr.
Makhenke told was of an obscenely stupid attempt to attract Mawande’s
attention
by setting fire to his curtains.
6
Mr. Makhenke said that he had gone
to Mawande’s room to recover a cell phone he had lent to
Mawande. Mr. Makhenke was drunk,
but not so drunk as to be
insensible. He tried to attract Mawande’s attention by shouting
outside his room and knocking at
his door. While he was doing this,
he says, someone in the room turned the lights in the room off. Mr.
Makhenke developed the impression
that Mawande knew that Mr. Makhenke
had come to collect the phone but was avoiding him.
7
Mr. Makhenke says that he then
walked across to his house, which was just next door, and found the
dregs of a container of paraffin.
He decided to pour the paraffin on
the curtains in Mawande’s room, assuming the blaze would make
it impossible to ignore
Mr. Makhenke’s presence. As the
curtains caught fire, they billowed into the room and ignited a
mattress that was propped
up against the wall, and across the bottom
half of the window. It was at this point that Mr. Makhenke realised
that he had started
a life-threatening blaze. He attempted to rescue
Mawande, but, because of the jammed door, he could not. He raised the
alarm, but
soon realised that he would be held responsible by the
local community for Mawande’s inevitable injuries. He ran away
in
fear.
8
Critically, Mr. Makhenke says that,
at the point he set the fire, he did not know that Siphiwe was in the
room at all.
Not
Guilty Pleas
9
Both Ms. Mack, who appeared for the
State, and Mr. Mavata, who appeared for Mr. Makhenke, accepted that
Mr. Makhenke’s allocutions
could not sustain his guilty pleas
on either of the premeditated murder counts. They also accepted,
however, that Mr. Makhenke
had admitted the offence of arson, for
which he had to be convicted.
10
Accordingly, I accepted Mr.
Makhenke’s guilty plea on the arson charge. However, I
exercised my powers under section 113 (1)
of the Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977 (“the Act”) to record a plea of not guilty
to each count of premeditated murder
on Mr. Makhenke’s behalf.
I postponed the trial to 14 March 2022 for the State to lead its
case.
Wandile
Mafuya’s story
11
The State led one witness on 14
March 2022. That witness was Mawande’s twin brother, Wandile
Mafuya. From the outset, Mr.
Mafuya struck me as a unreliable
witness. He did not appear to be entirely well, but I am unable to
say whether this was the result
of nerves, grief, or some other
cause. He gave the impression that he had become aware of Mr.
Makhenke’s version given in
court the week before, and was
intent on contradicting that version. He was, at times, aggressive in
his efforts to do so. He was
evasive under cross-examination, and
often refused to engage with Mr. Mavata’s questions. I was
constrained to warn him that
he ought not to disparage Mr. Mavata,
and should limit himself to engaging with counsel’s questions
to the best of his recollection.
12
According to Mr. Mafuya, Mr.
Makhenke arrived at the house at around 10pm. Mr. Mafuya was asleep
at that time, but he was woken
up by Mr. Makhenke’s efforts to
rouse Mawande. Mr. Mafuya confirmed that Mr. Makhenke had come to
collect a phone from Mawande.
When Mawande did not come to the door,
Mr. Mafuya said that Mr. Makhenke uttered the words “I will
burn them” and left
the property.
13
An hour later, Mr. Mafuya heard
footsteps outside. Mr. Makhenke had returned. He heard Mr. Makhenke
utter the words “I will
burn them” again. Mr. Mafuya
opened the door to his house. Through the burglar bars, Mr. Mafuya
could see that Mr. Makhenke
had a two-litre soft drink bottle that
was half full with what turned out to be paraffin. As Mr. Mafuya was
opening the burglar
bars and trying to remonstrate with Mr. Makhenke,
Mr. Makhenke was throwing paraffin into the open window. The gesture
Mr. Mafuya
made in court was vigorous. It gave the impression of
someone tossing the liquid in the bottle all over the window.
14
Before Mr. Mafuya could reach him,
Mr. Makhenke had ignited the paraffin with his lighter. Mr. Mafuya
says that Mr. Makhenke made
some effort to pat out the flames with
his bare hands. Seeing this was futile, Mr. Makhenke turned and ran
out of the back gate
of the property.
The room quickly caught
fire. Mr. Mafuya took a 20-litre drum of water and tried to
extinguish the fire, but without success. People
living in other
backyard rooms on the property woke up and tried to rescue the men
inside, but Mawande and Siphiwe were only liberated
when an ambulance
arrived.
15
Under cross-examination, Mr. Mafuya
denied that he was present in court when Mr. Makhenke explained his
guilty pleas. He was also
adamant that he was not told about how Mr.
Makhenke explained his pleas. However, Mr. Mafuya’s evidence
appeared tailored
to contradict critical parts of Mr. Makhenke’s
explanation. Regrettably, in attempting to do so, Mr. Mafuya ended up
contradicting
himself. Mr. Mafuya denied that he knew Mr. Makhenke
well. Initially, he vehemently denied that Mr. Makhenke, Mawande and
he were
friends. Yet he admitted occasionally sharing meals with Mr.
Makhenke, and was ultimately constrained to accept that Mr. Makhenke
was “a family friend” before the incident. Mr. Mafuya had
also earlier accepted that Mr. Makhenke and Mawande worked
together,
with Mawande reporting directly to Mr. Makhenke. He nonetheless
refused to agree to Mr. Mavata’s suggestion that
Mr. Makhenke
and Mawande were “close” in any way.
16
Mr. Mafuya initially said that
Siphiwe “lived” with Mawande, and that Mr. Makhenke knew
this. He later accepted, however,
that Siphiwe did not, in fact, live
with Mawande. Siphiwe had his own home elsewhere in the
neighbourhood. Mr. Mafuya insisted,
however, that Siphiwe stayed
“mostly” with Mawande. Mr. Mafuya could not say how Mr.
Makhenke would have known that
Siphiwe was with Mawande in the room
at the time. He nonetheless insisted that Mr. Makhenke had said “I
will burn
them
”
(my emphasis) before setting the fire.
17
These difficulties with Mr. Mafuya’s
version were compounded when Mr. Mavata put Mr. Mafuya’s
statements to the police
to him. Mr. Mafuya had testified that Mr.
Makhenke was gone for about an hour before he returned and set the
fire. However, in
a statement to the police given on 13 March 2021,
he said that Mr. Makhenke was gone for only ten minutes. In his
evidence in chief
and under cross-examination, Mr Mafuya had been
clear that Mr. Makhenke had uttered the words “I will burn
them”. This
was something he also emphasised in his first
statement to the police. However, he failed to mention it in his
second statement
to the police on 1 June 2021. In that statement, Mr.
Mafuya says that he warned Mr. Makhenke that if he set the fire “he
would kill my twin brother”. But he did not say that he warned
Mr. Makhenke that there was anyone else in the room.
18
Ultimately, Mr. Mafuya was unable to
identify any basis on which Mr. Makhenke could have known that
Mawande was not alone. He was
also unable to suggest anything that
Mr. Makhenke did – other than utter the words “I will
burn them” that indicated
Mr. Makhenke knew that there were two
men in the room.
19
The State closed its case at the end
of Mr. Mafuya’s evidence. Mr. Makhenke closed his case without
leading evidence.
Mr.
Makhenke’s culpability
20
To convict Mr. Makhenke of
premeditated murder, I must be satisfied that Mr. Makhenke planned to
kill Mawande and Siphiwe, and that
he set the fire at Mawande’s
room intending to achieve that result. It is not enough, in my view,
that Mr. Makhenke obviously
planned to set the fire which resulted in
Mawande’s and Siphiwe’s deaths. His plan to set the fire
must have encompassed
the deaths of both men.
21
I must be satisfied of these facts
beyond reasonable doubt. In other words, I must be able to exclude
the possibility that Mr. Makhenke
was telling the truth when he said
that his purpose was simply to attract Mawande’s attention, in
an admittedly very stupid
way that went horribly wrong.
22
It is true that Mr. Makhenke was not
cross-examined on his plea explanation, but that does not mean that I
can ignore it. It is
probative material that must be taken into
account (
S v Mjoli
1981
(3) SA 1233
(A) 1247H to 1248C). In
Mjoli
,
the question was whether an admission made in a plea explanation can
help confirm the veracity of an informally recorded confession.
The
Appellate Division held, by a majority, that it could. If that is so,
I see no reason why the State’s version may not
be tested
against a statement made in a plea explanation. In a proper case, the
State may be required to lead evidence that excludes
the reasonable
possibility that what is said in the statement is true. That is,
after all, part of the purpose of any plea explanation:
to identify
the basis on which the accused pleads as they do, and to put the
State on notice of the facts it may have to address
when it presents
its case.
23
This is also surely the corollary of
what the Supreme Court of Appeal found in
S v Mazina
[2017]
ZASCA 22
(24 March 2017) at paragraph 11: that facts not formally
admitted by an accused in their explanation of plea must be proved by
the State. If that is so, then it seems to me that the State’s
evidence ought to exclude the reasonable possibility that exculpatory
statements in a plea explanation might be true, whether or not the
accused ultimately testifies under oath.
24
In
S v Phuravhatha
1992 (2) SACR 544
(V) 554A–B
it was held that a trial court “cannot close its eyes to
a plea explanation given by an accused in terms of s 115 . . . when
considering an application for the discharge of that accused under s
174”. By the same token, when considering whether the
State has
met its burden in showing that Mr. Makhenke is guilty of premeditated
murder, I cannot disregard the explanation Mr.
Makhenke gave when he
tendered his guilty plea. If parts of that explanation suggest the
absence of premeditation, it is, in my
view, permissible to test the
State’s version against them.
25
The question is accordingly whether
the State’s evidence excluded Mr. Makhenke’s version that
he did not plan or directly
intend to kill Mawande, and that he did
not know that Siphiwe was in the room.
26
It seems to me that the State’s
evidence did not meet that standard. Mr. Mafuya was a single witness
to the facts he asserted.
To accept his evidence I have to be
satisfied that it is clear and satisfactory in every material respect
(see section 208 of the
Act). I am not so satisfied. For the reasons
I gave above, the State’s lone witness was dogmatic,
self-contradictory and
unreliable. I cannot accept, on Mr. Mafuya’s
testimony, that Mr. Makhenke uttered the words “I will burn
them”
or that Mr. Makhenke knew that Siphiwe was in the room at
the time he set the fire. I cannot be satisfied, beyond reasonable
doubt,
that Mr. Makhenke’s planning to set the fire encompassed
the deaths of either man.
27
It follows that Mr. Makhenke must be
acquitted on the charges of premeditated murder. The arson was
premediated, but the State has
not excluded the possibility that the
fire was set as part of a spectacularly stupid effort to rouse
Mawande.
28
A premediated plan to kill Mawande
also sits uncomfortably with the admissions made in Mr. Mafuya’s
testimony that Mr. Makhenke
tried, however ineptly, to put the fire
out with his bare hands and that Mr. Makhenke was a family friend at
the time of the incident.
Mr. Mafuya also advanced no explanation of
why a family friend would suddenly form a plan to kill Mawande over a
cell phone.
29
It is equally clear, though, that
when he set the fire Mr. Makhenke must have foreseen the possibility
of the death or serious injury
to anyone who was in the room. He must
also have reconciled himself to that possibility. He plainly knew
that Mawande was in the
room at the time, and accordingly accepted
that he would likely kill or seriously injure Mawande if the fire
spread into the room.
Mr. Makhenke is accordingly guilty of murdering
Mawande, even though that was not his plan.
30
As far as Siphiwe is concerned, it
was at least foreseeable that Mawande was not alone in the room when
Mr. Makhenke set the fire.
Not knowing that Mawande was in fact with
Siphiwe, Mr. Makhenke could not have reconciled himself to Siphiwe’s
death. He
recklessly caused it, however, and for that reason is
guilty of Siphiwe’s culpable homicide.
31
For all these reasons, I formally
record the following verdicts –
31.1
The accused is
GUILTY
of the murder of Mawande Mafuya.
31.2
The accused is
GUILTY
of the culpable homicide of Siphiwe Chris Buthelezi.
31.3
The accused is
GUILTY
of arson.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
8 and 14 March 2022
DECIDED
ON:
22 March 2022
For
the State:
Ms. Mack
Instructed
by
National Prosecuting Authority
For
the Accused: Mr. Mavata
Instructed by Legal Aid
SA
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
S v Makhenke (SS92/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 233 (12 April 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 233High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
S v Mokwena and Others (SS152/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1060 (28 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 1060High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
S v Mokwena and Others (SS152/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1059 (30 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 1059High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
S v Mbanjwa and Another (SS16/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 581 (11 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 581High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
S v Mokgola (SS31/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 976 (19 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 976High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar