About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Eastern Cape High Court, Makhanda
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Eastern Cape High Court, Makhanda
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAECMKHC 53
|
|
Mapoe v S (Appeal) (CA&R 214/2022) [2023] ZAECMKHC 53 (4 May 2023)
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
EASTERN
CAPE DIVISION, MAKHANDA
Case
No.: CA&R 214/2022
Date
Heard: 3 May 2023
Date
Delivered: 4 May 2023
In
the matter between:
LEE
ROY ARIN MAPOE
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGEMENT
ON APPEAL
RONAASEN AJ:
Introduction
[1]
On 26 August 2022, in the Regional Court,
Gqeberha, the appellant was convicted of the following offences:
1.1.
Count
1 - murder, for which he was sentenced to imprisonment for 15 years;
1.2.
Count
2 - the unlawful possession of a firearm, for which he was sentenced
to imprisonment for 5 years; and
1.3.
Count
3 - the unlawful possession of ammunition, for which he received a
sentence of imprisonment for 3 years.
[2]
The Regional Court directed that the
sentences in respect of counts 2 and 3, would run concurrently with
the sentence in respect
of count 1.
[3]
This appeal, however, proceeds solely on
the question of the conviction of the appellant on the three counts
mentioned, with the
leave of the Regional Court.
The evidence
adduced by the State at the trial
[4]
At the trial the State presented the
evidence of three witnesses whose evidence I summarise, below.
Aubrey Jantjies
[5]
On the evening of 23 April 2017 at
approximately 21:00, he was at his home in C[…] Street, G[…],
G[…].
[6]
He saw the appellant walking in the street
in the company of one Cadwin Campher, the third witness for the
State. The appellant
had a firearm in his possession which was
visibly displayed by him.
[7]
He later heard one gunshot being fired and
thereafter the sound of multiple gunshots. He later saw the
appellant running and
discharging a firearm, shooting in the air.
He told his wife to call the police.
[8]
He responded to cries from Jadine Jansen,
the second witness for the State that his son had been shot and went
to a house in the
same street, where he encountered his son, the
deceased, lying on the ground. He had clearly been shot.
[9]
The witness confirmed that he knew the
appellant well - he had grown up in front of him in the area in which
he lived.
Jadine Jansen
[10]
This witness testified that she was the
girlfriend of the deceased. On the evening in question she was
walking in Chamois
Street with the appellant. She also knew the
appellant well as they had grown up together in the vicinity.
They were
going together to buy “tik”. As they walked,
they were joined by Campher, the third witness for the State.
[11]
While they were walking the deceased
approached from the opposite direction and started chasing the
witness, whereupon she ran into
the nearby home of her aunt, closely
followed by the deceased. She ran through the house into the
backyard, followed by the
deceased and the appellant.
[12]
In the backyard of her aunt’s home
the deceased started to assault her. Whilst he was in the
process of doing so the
appellant brandished the firearm in his
possession and told the deceased to stop assaulting her and that if
he did not cease doing
so, he would shoot the deceased. The
witness remembered the deceased throwing a stone at her, which hit
her in the stomach
causing her to double over. While she was
doubled over, she heard a shot being fired and saw the deceased
falling.
She also saw the appellant holding a firearm.
From her observations it appeared that the deceased had been shot in
the head.
[13]
The witness tried to grab the firearm from
the appellant, but he resisted. He again shot at the deceased.
She was uncertain
as to the number of shots which had been fired.
[14]
She ran out of the house shouting and
encountered the first State witness, the deceased’s father
coming in the opposite direction
towards the house where the shots
had been fired. She also saw the appellant run away in the
opposite direction to which
she had run.
Cadwin Edwin
Campher
[15]
The witness confirmed having seen the
appellant enter the house of Jansen’s, aunt, following the
deceased and Jansen.
[16]
He confirmed that the appellant had a
firearm with him. He also knew the appellant, who had grown up
with him in the area.
[17]
He heard shots being fired, after the
appellant, the deceased and Jansen had entered the house of Jansen’s
aunt.
The evidence
adduced by the appellant at the trial
[18]
The appellant gave evidence in his defence
but did not call any other witnesses to give evidence.
[20]
The appellant’s defence was one of an
alibi. In his evidence he confirmed the plea explanation made
on his behalf by
his defence counsel at the commencement of the
trial, in which he had admitted knowing the deceased. He denied
having killed
the deceased or that he had been in possession of a
firearm on the night in question. He was not in Gelvandale when
the deceased
was killed. He stated that he had previously
resided in Gelvandale, but that he had moved away from there in 2015,
when he
went to live with his father in Kuyga, where he was on the
night that the deceased was killed.
Common cause facts
[21]
At the commencement of the trial the
appellant made certain admissions in terms of
section 220
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
, including that:
21.1.
the
deceased died on 23 April 2017 as a result of a head injury caused by
a gunshot;
21.2.
the
post-mortem report conducted in respect of the deceased was accurate
and could go in as evidence without any further proof.
This
report confirmed the existence of two gunshot wounds to the head of
the deceased, one of which would have caused his death.
Legal principles
[22]
The following principles emerge from the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Tshiki
v The State
[2020] ZASCA (18 August
2020) at [13]
22.1.
in
criminal proceedings the State throughout has the onus to prove an
accused’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt;
22.2.
an
accused’s version cannot be rejected only on the basis that it
is improbable, but only once the trial court has found,
on credible
evidence, that the explanation is false beyond a reasonable doubt;
22.3.
thus,
if the accused’s version is reasonably possibly true, he/she
would be entitled to an acquittal: and
22.4.
the
conviction of an accused can accordingly only be sustained if, after
the consideration of all the evidence, he/version of events
is found
to be false.
Discussion
[23]
The evidence of the witnesses Jantjies and
Campher was not upset in cross-examination to any material extent and
can be accepted
as being credible. Crucially their evidence
corroborates that of Jansen in the following material respects:
23.1.
they
knew the appellant well;
23.2.
the
appellant was present at or in the vicinity of the location where the
deceased was shot; and
23.3.
the
appellant was visibly in possession of a firearm at the time; and
23.4.
they
heard shots being fired from the vicinity of the location where the
deceased was shot.
[24]
Campher, further, adds credibility to the
version of Jansen by testifying that he saw Jansen running to the
house of her aunt, followed
by the deceased and the appellant and
thereafter hearing shots being fired from that vicinity.
[25]
Jansen’s version as to how the
deceased was shot is corroborated by the post-mortem report.
Generally, her evidence
cannot be faulted and was not materially
challenged in cross-examination. She knew the appellant well
and it is improbable,
given the corroborative evidence referred to
above, that she was mistaken as to the identity of the person who
caused the death
of the deceased.
[26]
On a consideration of all the evidence
adduced at the trial I am satisfied that:
26.1.
the
appellant’s version presented at the trial was not reasonably
possibly true;
26.2.
the
version of the appellant, in fact, was false, beyond a reasonable
doubt;
26.3.
the
State, at the trial, had established the guilt of the appellant, on
all counts, beyond a reasonable doubt.
Conclusion and
order
[27]
Thus, no grounds exist on which the
conviction of the appellant on the three counts concerned can be
disturbed. I accordingly
make the following order:
The appeal is
dismissed.
O
H RONAASEN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Lowe
J: I agree
M
J LOWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances:
For
the Appellant:
Adv
H Charles
Instructed
by:
Grahamstown
Justice Centre
For
the Respondent:
Adv
H Obermeyer
Instructed
by:
Director
of Public Prosecutions
Grahamstown
Date
heard: 3 May 2023
Date
delivered: 4 May 2023