Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 234South Africa
Mthunjwa v S (SS132/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 234 (12 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 April 2022
Headnotes
Constable Maswanganye’s identificatory evidence was corroborated by Bongani Sekhale, a security guard on duty in the area at the time. Mr. Sekhale says he saw Mr. Mthunjwa a short distance from the incident when he went to investigate the source of gunfire he heard in Mayfair at 1am on the night of the shooting. 8 On the face of the trial court’s
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 234
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mthunjwa v S (SS132/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 234 (12 April 2022)
Mthunjwa v S (SS132/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 234 (12 April 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_234.html
sino date 12 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No:
SS132/2016
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE: 12 April 2022
In
the matter between:
BANDILE
MTHUNJWA
Applicant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
AJ
:
1
The applicant, Mr. Mthunjwa, seeks
leave to appeal against his conviction and sentence on charges of
murder, attempted murder, robbery
with aggravating circumstances and
illegal possession of firearms and ammunition. The conviction and
sentence were returned by
my brother Monama J, who sadly died just a
few weeks ago. I have decided Mr. Mthunjwa’s application in
terms of
section 17
(2) (a) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
The
record before me
2
When the matter was called on 4
April 2022, Mr. Mosoang, who appeared for Mr. Mthunjwa, applied for a
postponement, on the basis
that the record was incomplete.
The
State opposed the application.
3
The record made available to me
consists of the trial court’s judgments on conviction and
sentence, and the exhibits handed
up at trial. It is the practice of
this court that an application for leave to appeal against one of its
judgments is disposed
of on a record of the orders appealed against
and the reasons given for those orders. Because leave to appeal is
normally sought
from the Judge who issued the relevant orders and
reasons, it will rarely be necessary for a full record of the trial
to be transcribed,
but there is no doubt in my mind that any Judge
seized with an application for leave to appeal may require a full
record of the
proceedings to be made available if necessary. This
principle is recognised, in the context of renewed and special
applications
for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal, by
Rule 6 (6) (b) of the Supreme Court of Appeal Rules. That rule
provides
for Judges seized with application for leave to appeal to
request “the record or portions of it” before disposing
of
the application.
4
In this case, I was
prima
facie
satisfied that the matter could
be argued on the trial court’s judgments on conviction and
sentence. I provisionally refused
the application for a postponement,
but notified the parties that the application could be renewed if,
before judgment, either
party considered that the record should be
placed before me. I also indicated that I would postpone the
application myself if it
became clear to me that sight of the record
was necessary.
5
Ultimately, the parties left matters
in my hands. Having considered the parties’ submissions, I am
satisfied that leave to
appeal against both conviction and sentence
should be granted on the face of the judgments as they stand, and
that it is not necessary
for me to have regard to the trial record. I
have reached this conclusion for two principal reasons, which I shall
set out below.
Absence
of corroboration of single witness evidence
6
Mr. Mthunjwa was convicted of the
premediated murder of a police officer. Mr. Mthunjwa was allegedly
stopped at a roadblock in Mayfair,
Johannesburg. It was said that,
during a search of the vehicle in which he was travelling, and its
occupants, Mr. Mthunjwa pulled
out a firearm. He was then alleged to
have shot and killed Constable Msibi, one of the police officers
conducting the search. Constable
Msibi’s partner on the night,
Constable Maswanganye, testified at Mr. Mthunjwa’s trial, and
identified Mr. Mthunjwa
as Constable Msibi’s assailant.
7
The trial court accepted Constable
Maswanganye’s evidence. The trial court also held that
Constable Maswanganye’s identificatory
evidence was
corroborated by Bongani Sekhale, a security guard on duty in the area
at the time. Mr. Sekhale says he saw Mr. Mthunjwa
a short distance
from the incident when he went to investigate the source of gunfire
he heard in Mayfair at 1am on the night of
the shooting.
8
On the face of the trial court’s
judgment, Mr. Sekhale’s evidence does not directly corroborate
Constable Maswanganye’s
identification of Mr. Mthunjwa as the
man who shot Constable Msibi. Where two people identify a third
person as committing an act
that they witnessed directly, then they
corroborate each other on the point that the third person committed
that act. However,
where, as in this case, two people say they saw
the same person in the same area at around the same time, they
corroborate each
other only on the point that the person was in that
area at that time.
9
Mr. Mthunjwa’s defence was
that he was nowhere near the scene of the crime at the time it was
committed. Mr. Sekhale’s
evidence was accordingly relevant to
the question of whether Mr. Mthunjwa was telling the truth about
that. Having accepted Mr.
Sekhale’s evidence, the trial court
was entitled to reject Mr. Mthunjwa’s alibi, but it does not
follow that Constable
Maswanganye’s identification of
Mr. Mthunjwa as Constable Msibi’s assailant is corroborated.
10
All of this might seem academic, were it not for the
facts that, Mr. Sekhale admitted having failed, initially, to pick
Mr. Mthunjwa
out of an identity parade; that the identity parade was
held over a year after the incident; that Constable Maswanganye did
not
mention in her first statement the identifying features she later
relied upon in court, and which the trial court recorded in its
judgment; that Mr. Sekhale appears himself to have been arrested,
possibly in relation to the incident (the trial court’s
judgment does not say); that neither Constable Maswanganye nor Mr.
Sekhale appear to have seen Mr. Mthunjwa before the night of
the
incident; that the trial court did not explore how long either
witness would have had to gain an impression of the features
of
Constable Msibi’s assailant; and that the trial court did not
record its conclusions as to the lighting conditions at
the scene of
Mr. Sekhale’s alleged sighting of Mr. Mthunjwa. In these
circumstances, there is, in my view, enough room for
what Holmes JA
called the “fallibility of human observation” to have
given the trial court some pause (
S v Mthetwa
1972 (3) SA 766
at 768A).
11
The trial court took solace in the fact that Mr.
Sekhale could describe Mr. Mthunjwa’s clothing at the time of
the incident.
But reliance on clothing to identify a person presents
obvious dangers, against which the trial court ought to have warned
itself,
given the other difficulties I have outlined. The trial court
also appears to have found that it was not disputed that Mr. Mthunjwa
and Mr. Sekhale met near the scene of Constable Msibi’s death
at the time of the incident. But I do not think that can be
true,
given that the trial court’s judgment records Mr. Mthunjwa’s
defence as one of alibi.
The
conviction on premeditated murder
12
The trial court found that Constable
Msibi’s murder was premeditated. However, the trial court’s
judgment does not record
the facts from which an inference of
premeditation can be drawn. On the face of it, the circumstances of
the incident point away
from premeditation. There was an apparently
unexpected stop and search operation, during which Mr. Mthunjwa was
said to have drawn
a weapon and killed a police officer. If he did
not expect to be stopped, it seems to me that he cannot, without
more, be presumed
to have planned to kill Constable Msibi.
13
It is true that a plan to kill can
be formed quite quickly. It was not necessary for the trial court to
have been satisfied that
a plan to kill Constable Msibi was long in
gestation or particularly well thought through. But, it seems to me
that, because the
surrounding circumstances suggested spontaneity,
the trial court ought to have recorded the facts on which it found
that Constable
Msibi’s killing was premeditated.
14
Ms. Ranchod, who appeared for the
State, argued that this was not such an important issue, since, for
the purposes of sentencing,
the murder of a police officer while
discharging their duty attracts the same penalty as premeditated
murder of anyone else. That
is true, but what concerns me is not so
much whether the outcome would have been the same even if the killing
had not been premeditated,
rather than the absence of the primary
facts in the trial court’s judgment from which a conclusion of
premeditation could
be drawn. That, it seems to me, goes to the
paucity of detail on the trial court’s judgment about the
incident itself, the
reliability of the evidence in general, and,
accordingly, the safety of the convictions that the trial court
returned.
Order
15
It follows from all this that there
is, in my view, a reasonable prospect that a court of appeal will
conclude that Mr. Mthunjwa’s
conviction and sentence are
unsafe. There are grounds for concluding that the identificatory
evidence ought not to have been accepted.
If that is so, then the
charge of murder (whether or not it was premediated), and the charge
of attempted murder cannot be sustained.
It is not entirely clear to
me from the trial court’s judgment what the substrate of the
charge of robbery with aggravating
circumstances was, but insofar as
it seems to have inhered in the stealing of a police firearm at the
scene, that charge would
also have to be rejected if the
identificatory evidence was insufficient.
16
Finally, there are the charges
arising from Mr. Mthunjwa having been found in possession of guns. It
appears from the tenor of the
trial court’s judgment that these
guns were linked to the killing of Constable Msibi, but the exact
nature of the link is
not spelt out. Mr. Mthunjwa says that the guns
were planted on him, and that his admission that the guns were his
was beaten out
of him by police officers keen to apprehend Constable
Msibi’s killer. If the identificatory evidence is bad, then Mr.
Mthunjwa’s
version in these respects ought, perhaps to have
been evaluated with more sympathy than the trial court thought
appropriate.
17
I have come to these conclusions on
an evaluation of the trial court’s judgments and Constable
Maswanganye’s statement.
I have not found it necessary to have
regard to the rest of the trial record. There is enough, on the face
of the judgment, to
conclude that there may be errors of fact or of
law that might lead an appeal court overturn the conviction and
sentence. For the
reasons I have given, I am satisfied that the
matter warrants a full hearing on appeal.
18
Having not myself seen and heard the
evidence led at trial, or read the trial record, I do not wish to
limit Mr. Mthunjwa’s
room for argument on appeal. I will grant
leave to appeal against the whole of the trial court’s
judgments on conviction
and sentence.
19
Accordingly, the applicant is
granted leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal against the
whole of the judgments of the trial
court on both conviction and
sentence.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
4 April 2022
DECIDED
ON: 12
April 2022
For
the Applicant: L Mosoang
Instructed
by
Legal Aid SA
For
the State:
P Ranchod
Instructed by the
National Prosecuting Authority
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mthetwa v S (A20/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 330 (11 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 330High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Mthethwa v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (PRASA) (2020/33363) [2023] ZAGPJHC 135 (14 February 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 135High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Makhatholela v Minister of Police and Another (2021/3710) [2022] ZAGPJHC 983 (13 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 983High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Mzinyane v S (A166/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 15 (25 January 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 15High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Mshengu Transport CC v Wesbank, a Division of Firstrand Bank Ltd (2021/20055) [2022] ZAGPJHC 813 (19 October 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 813High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar