Mokoena v S (A138/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 368 (26 July 2022)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Appeal against conviction — Appellant convicted of murder and sentenced to 13 years’ imprisonment — Grounds of appeal included alleged misdirection by trial court in accepting single witness testimony and dismissing appellant's alibi — Trial court found single witness credible despite minor contradictions — Court of appeal upheld trial court's findings, emphasizing the limited grounds for interference with credibility assessments — Conviction confirmed as the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict beyond a reasonable doubt.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a criminal appeal to the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein, against a conviction and sentence imposed by the Regional Court held at Bethlehem. The appellant, Tsietsi David Mokoena, appealed against his conviction for murder (read with the minimum sentence provisions), and the respondent was the State.


The procedural history was that the appellant was convicted on 4 October 2019 of murder read with section 51(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, and sentenced to 13 years’ imprisonment. The trial court granted leave to appeal against conviction on 28 February 2020. The appeal was heard on 16 May 2022 and judgment was delivered electronically on 26 July 2022.


The dispute concerned whether the State had proved the appellant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt, in circumstances where the conviction effectively depended on the evidence of a single eyewitness whose account contained contradictions, and where the trial court had treated the matter as capable of proof by inference in the absence of direct evidence of the stabbing.


2. Material Facts


The material facts, as relied upon in the appeal judgment, arose from an incident on 5 August 2017 at approximately 08h00. The State’s case at trial depended primarily on the evidence of Mr Teboho (Tebogo) Nyama, who stated that he was at his home when he was called by Moeketsi Nhlapo to come outside and see what was happening in the street. He then encountered an altercation involving the appellant and another person who was on the ground (later identified as the deceased). Mr Nyama stated that he intervened by grabbing the appellant and removing him, and that he summoned the police and ambulance services. When police arrived, he indicated that he knew who was involved and took them to the appellant’s home, where the appellant was arrested.


A key feature of the State witness’s account, as highlighted by the appeal court, was that it shifted between different descriptions of what he observed. In parts of his testimony he described the appellant as “stepping” on the person on the ground; elsewhere he described the situation as “fighting”; and at points he suggested that he saw the appellant “stabbing” the person. His police statement, which was admitted in cross-examination, recorded that he did not see the fight because, on arrival, the other person was already on the ground, although it also referred to the two as “fighting.” The record also reflected that the prosecutor expressed confusion during examination about how the witness’s various descriptions could be reconciled.


The State led evidence from Sergeant Andries Mzangoa and Captain Petrus Mbambo relating to alleged confessions. However, the trial court accepted the appellant’s explanation of what transpired between him and those officers as reasonably possibly true, with the consequence that this evidence did not advance the State’s case in the manner originally intended. The appeal judgment further remarked that, in any event, the evidence of Sergeant Mzangoa would have been impermissible with reference to section 217 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977.


The appellant’s version at trial was a denial that he was at the scene at the relevant time. He admitted that on 4 August 2017 he had been at Mr Nyama’s premises (after returning from a funeral) and purchased liquor there. He stated that he had a knife which he handed to Mr Nyama and that at approximately 04h00 Mr Nyama returned the knife to him when closing. The appellant then left and went home. He maintained that at about 08h00 (the time of the incident) he was not at the crime scene.


The appeal judgment treated as material the fact that the State’s case ultimately depended on a single witness and that other identified witnesses were not called, leaving the State evidence uncorroborated on the central issue of what the witness actually observed and whether it established the appellant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the trial court was correct in concluding that the State had proved the appellant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt, given that the conviction rested substantially on the evidence of a single witness whose evidence contained contradictions relevant to the actus reus and the identification of the conduct constituting murder.


Closely related issues were whether the trial court properly applied the cautionary approach applicable to single-witness evidence, and whether it correctly treated the matter as capable of proof through circumstantial reasoning (inference) despite there being no direct evidence, accepted by the court, that the appellant stabbed the deceased.


The dispute was primarily one of the application of law to fact, including the assessment of credibility and reliability and whether the proved facts justified the inference of guilt to the exclusion of other reasonable inferences. It also engaged the appellate standard for interfering with factual and credibility findings made by a trial court.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The appeal court began by reaffirming the limits on appellate interference with findings of fact and credibility. It referred to the established approach that an appellate court must recognise the trial court’s advantage in seeing, hearing, and appraising witnesses, and that interference is justified where there has been a misdirection, an irregularity, or where the findings are shown on the record to be patently wrong. In this respect the court referred to authorities including R v Dhlumayo and Another and S v Francis, and reiterated that while appellate restraint is required, the court of appeal must meaningfully examine the record so that the right of appeal is not rendered illusory.


Against that framework, the appeal court evaluated the trial court’s treatment of Mr Nyama as a single witness. The trial court had expressly recognised the cautionary rule and concluded that Mr Nyama’s evidence was “clear and satisfactory in all material respects,” that any contradictions were “minor,” and that the risk of mistaken identification was absent given that the witness and the appellant knew each other and there was sufficient light.


The appeal court disagreed with the trial court’s characterisation of the contradictions as minor. It reasoned that the witness’s evidence, as reflected in the record, moved between several materially different versions of the event, ranging from merely seeing the appellant standing near the person on the ground, to seeing a “fight,” to seeing the appellant “stabbing.” The appeal court considered these discrepancies to be material because they bore directly on whether the witness’s observations established the crucial conduct said to constitute murder. The appeal court noted that even the prosecutor had found the witness’s account confusing, and that the witness’s police statement contained admissions that he did not see the fight because the person was already on the ground when he arrived, which complicated the later account suggesting stabbing.


The appeal court further considered the lack of corroboration significant. It emphasised that no other witnesses corroborated the witness’s version and that other identified witnesses were not called, with the result that the State’s case depended essentially on a single, materially inconsistent account. In addition, the appeal court stated that it is not legally expected of an accused to furnish a “good reason” why a State witness would falsely implicate him, and treated the trial court’s adverse approach to the appellant’s inability to explain the alleged false implication as inappropriate in assessing whether the State had discharged its burden.


On circumstantial proof, the appeal court accepted that the trial court had correctly referred to the principles for inferential reasoning as set out in R v Blom. However, it held that the inferential conclusion of guilt reached by the trial court depended on the premise that the single witness was reliable and credible in the relevant respects. Since the appeal court found that the witness’s contradictions were material and undermined reliability, it held that the factual foundation for drawing the inference that the appellant stabbed the deceased was insufficient to sustain proof beyond reasonable doubt.


In consequence, the appeal court concluded that the conviction could not stand, and that the sentence, being dependent upon the conviction, likewise had to be set aside.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal against conviction was upheld. The High Court set aside both the conviction and the sentence. The judgment did not record a separate order as to costs.


Cases Cited


R v Dhlumayo and Another 1948 (2) SA 677 (AD)


Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius 2016 (2) SA 317 (SCA)


S v Francis 1991 (2) SACR 198 (A)


S v Hadebe 1979 (2) SA (citation referred to in the judgment at 654 e–f)


Elliot Mnguni v The State (Case no A7173/2020, judgment delivered on 29 November 2021) (unreported, Free State Division)


S v M 2006 (1) SACR 135 (SCA)


S v Trainor 2003 (1) SACR 35 (SCA)


R v Blom 1939 AD 188


Legislation Cited


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, section 51(2)


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 217


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The High Court held that the trial court’s conclusion that the evidence of the single witness met the required standard was not sustainable on the record. The contradictions in the witness’s account were considered material and adversely affected credibility and reliability on the core issue of what was observed. In the absence of corroboration and with the State’s case effectively reduced to that single inconsistent account, the State did not prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt. The conviction and sentence were therefore set aside.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that an appellate court will generally defer to the trial court’s findings of fact and credibility because of the trial court’s advantage in observing witnesses, but that it may interfere where the findings are affected by misdirection, irregularity, or are shown by the record to be patently wrong.


The judgment applied the cautionary approach to single-witness evidence, accepting that a conviction may follow on such evidence only if it is clear and satisfactory in all material respects, and emphasising that material contradictions may undermine the reliability required to meet the criminal standard of proof.


The judgment applied the rules governing circumstantial evidence and inferential reasoning as stated in R v Blom, and treated the permissibility of drawing an inference of guilt as dependent on the reliability of the underlying factual findings.


The judgment reiterated that an accused bears no burden to prove innocence or to provide a persuasive explanation for why a State witness would falsely implicate him; the determinative question remains whether the State has proved guilt beyond reasonable doubt on reliable evidence.

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[2022] ZAFSHC 368
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Mokoena v S (A138/2021) [2022] ZAFSHC 368 (26 July 2022)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Appeal
No: A138/2021
Reportable:
YES/NO
Of
Interest to other Judges: YES/NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES/NO
In
the appeal between:
TSIETSI
DAVID MOKOENA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
CORAM:
REINDERS
ADJP
et
DE KOCK AJ
JUDGMENT
BY:
REINDERS,
ADJP
HEARD
ON:
16
MAY 2022
JUDGMENT
BY:
REINDERS
ADJP
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, and released to SAFLII.
The
date and time for hand-down are deemed to be 09:00 on 26 July 2022.
I
INTRODUCTION
[1]
On 4 October 2019 the appellant was convicted in the Regional Court
held at Bethlehem on a charge of murder
read with the provisions of
sec 51(2)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 105 of 1997
and
sentenced to 13 years’ imprisonment. Leave to appeal against
his conviction was granted by the court a quo on 28 February
2020.
II
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
[2]
The grounds of appeal as summarised by the appellant entailed that
the court a quo erred in:

2.1  finding
that the guilt of the appellant was proven beyond a reasonable doubt;
2.2   accepting
the evidence of a single witness despite:
2.2.1
caution to be applied to such evidence;
2.2.2
the witness’s observation changed and contradicted his
evidence;
2.2.3
no further witnesses were called despite being identified;
2.3   in
dismissing the appellant’s version where he carried no burden
of proof.”
III
EVIDENCE TENDERED BEFORE THE TRIAL COURT
[3]
To prove its case the state tendered the evidence of three witnesses,
namely Mr Teboho Nyama, Sergeant Andries
Mzangoa and Captain Petrus
Mbambo. In respect of both Sgt Mzangoa and Capt Mbambo (relating to
alleged confessions) the conclusion
of the trial court was that it
accepted the appellant’s explanation of what transpired between
them, as reasonably possibly
true. There is, therefore, no need to
deal with their evidence save to mention that the evidence of Mr
Mzangoa, being a sergeant,
was in my view in any event impermissible
having regard to the provisions of
s 217
of the
Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977
.
[4]
I find it prudent to deal with the essence of the evidence of Mr
Nyama as it appears from the judgment of
the trial court.  I
will return to his evidence later herein when dealing with the trial
court’s finding in respect
of the credibility and reliability
of this state witness.

The version of the
state as narrated by Mr Tebogo Nyama is that on the 5
th
of August 2017 at about eight in the morning he was at his place when
he was called by Moeketsi Nhlapo. Mr Nhlapo invited him to
come and
see what Tsietsi was doing on the street.
He came out running. He
then saw accused in possession of a knife, stabbing on someone who
was on the ground in order to prevent
him from standing up. This
person was later identified as the accused – as the deceased.
He grabbed the accused and tossed
away the knife.
Accused left and went
home. He summoned the ambulance personnel and the police. When the
police came he told them what he knew –
he told them he knew
who was fighting with the deceased. It is his friend, and he took
them to the accused’s place. The accused
was arrested.
He was cross-examined at
length. The following transpired – that the accused was denying
being at the scene, fighting or stabbing
the deceased. It was put to
the witness that the accused was at his place drinking beer, but he
did not see him when leaving, until
he saw him in the morning when
called by Nhlapo – in possession of a knife and stabbing on the
deceased.”
[5]
The version of the appellant was summarised by the court a quo as
follows:

Accused testified
in is defence and denied that he was seen by the first state witness
stamping – or stabbing on the deceased.
He also denied that he
was at the scene. He admitted that on the 4 August 2017 he was at the
first state witness’s place
coming from a funeral. He bought
four bottles of liquor, as the first state witness was selling
liquor. He had a knife which he
handed over to the first state
witness.
At
about four a.m. the first state witness gave him back his knife,
indicating he was about to close. At around this time he also
left
without telling the first state witness and went home.
At
about eight a.m. until the in the early morning hours of about 04:00
when he left for his home after he was handed back his knife.
He
however denied that he was at the crime scene at the alleged time of
08h00.”
IV
ADJUDICATION OF THE APPEAL
[6]
It has been a long-established principle that a court of appeal must
take into account that the court a quo
was in a more favourable
position to form a judgment and will not interfere with a trial
court’s findings if there is no
misdirection, unless or upon an
examination of the record reveals that those findings are patently
wrong.
See:
R v Dhlumayo and Another
1948 (2) SA 677
(AD) at
705-6.
See also:
Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius
2016 (2) SA 317
(SCA).
[7]
In
S v Francis
1991 (2) SACR 198
(A)
it was reiterated
that a court of appeal’s power to interfere is limited as the
trial court has the advantage of seeing,
hearing and appraising
witnesses (at 204 c-e).
[8]
We are not at liberty to depart from the trial court’s findings
of fact and credibility unless it is
vitiated by irregularity or upon
an examination of the record of evidence it is revealed that those
findings are patently wrong.
See:
S v Hadebe
1979 (2) SA
at 654 e-f.
[9]
This court in the unreported judgment of
Elliot Mnguni v The
State
per Daffue, J (Case no A7173/ 2020 delivered on 29
November 2021) summarised the position (with reference to
S v M
2006 (1) SACR 135
(SCA)
) as follows”

It is accepted
that no judgment is perfect and the fact that certain issues were not
referred to does not necessarily mean that
these were overlooked. It
is accepted that factual errors do appear from time to time, that
reasons provided by a trial court are
unsatisfactory or that certain
facts or improbabilities are overlooked. As shown
supra
the court of appeal should be hesitant to search for reasons that are
in conflict with or averse to the trial court’s conclusion.
However, in order to prevent a convicted
person’s right of appeal to be illusionary, the court of appeal
has a duty to investigate
the trial court’s factual findings in
order to ascertain their correctness and if a mistake has been made
to the extent that
the conviction cannot be upheld, it must
interfere.”
(own emphasis added)
V
EVALUATION OF THE EVIDENCE AND THE PARTIES’
SUBMISSIONS PERTAINING TO CONVICTION
[10]
Relying on
S v Trainor
2003 (1) SACR 35
(SACR) 35
it
was submitted by the appellant that during the evaluation of the
presented evidence the trial court did not account for all the

evidence which affected the credibility and reliability thereof.
[11]
From a reading of the judgment of the court
a quo
it is
evident that it was well appraised thereof that Mr Nyama was a single
witness and quite correctly dealt with the applicable
test in this
regard.
[12]
The court
a quo
in its judgment held as follow:

The first state
witness is a single witness. He is also and dealing with the identity
of the accused. The court must therefore exercise
caution when
dealing with cautionary rules apply to his evidence.
It is so that the Court
can convict on the evidence of a single witness, but such evidence
must be clear and satisfactory in all
material respects. The witness
narrated clearly how he ended up at the scene and what he observed.
He was honest enough to say
he did not see the accused stabbing the
deceased. He did not know the deceased.
I have also noted some
few contradictions on the evidence of this witness, but they were
only minor contradictions with little or
no bearing on the issues in
dispute. I am satisfied that they did not affect his credibility as a
witness. He impressed me as an
honest reliable witness and did not
show any signs of bias against the accused.’
[13]
The learned magistrate concluded:

I am satisfied
that as a single witness he surpassed the threshold of a single
witness. Accused says he was not at the scene. It
was in the morning.
There was enough light, and the witness observed the accused over
some time. As he was approaching he saw the
accused stabbing on the
deceased who was on the ground. He arrived at the scene and removed
the accused from the deceased. The
two parties know each other very
well. As an indication that he had seen the accused – when the
police arrived, without hesitation
he took them to the accused’s
place. There is no basis at all for a mistaken identification of the
accused in the circumstances.
…The accused is the person who
was at the scene.”
She
hereafter dealt with her impression of the appellant:

On the other hand
accused was not an impressive witness. During his evidence he raised
issues that the first state witness was never
confronted about –
which were very essential to his case. Throughout his testimony I
could not find any reason as to why
the first state witness would
mistakenly identify him as the person who was at the scene.”
[14]
Before us it was contended that the state case eventually consisted
of the evidence by a single witness, Mr Nyama, and
notwithstanding
the magistrate’s findings in this respect, the evidence
tendered by him was not sufficient to overcome the
cautionary rule in
respect of a single witnesses - there was no corroboration therefore,
the state witness seriously contradicted
himself in material respects
and that accused’s version of an alibi could not be rejected to
such an extent that it warranted
his conviction.
[15]
In respect of Mr Nyama, the record shows that in evidence in chief he
initially testified that he was called out by Mokoetsi
Nhlapo to take
a look at what was going on in the street. On doing so he saw the
accused has caused “another individual to
be on the ground and
already the knife – and he was carrying a knife in his hand. I
grabbed him and tossed him away. And
when I went to assist the person
who was on the ground I then discovered that things were beyond my
control.”
15.1
Still in evidence in chief, the prosecutor asked him to give the
court a picture of what he observed. He testified:

Your worship, upon
my arrival at the scene I found accused busy stepping on this alleged
person was on the ground.”
The
witness then gave a demonstration and the record reads:

Let the record
shows the demonstration by the witness is accused feet was literally
being lifted up on the high landing on the body
of this person who
was lying.”
15.2
On a question by the prosecutor about when the witness saw the knife,
the witness stated:

During their
fighting, when they were fighting that is when I then saw this
knife.”
15.3
The record after this evidence reads:

PROSECUTOR:
And now I am confused now Mr Nyama, you say when they were fighting.
Explain what do you mean, because the evidence that you gave
earlier
was that you – when you laid your eyes there Mpampu was already
on the ground. So you can explain now when you say
you saw the knife
as they were fighting, so I …[intervenes]
MR NYAMA
:
I simply mean that Your Worship when I got to them after grabbing
accused and throwing or tossing him aside the knife which was
in his
hands ended up scratching me. And I even say to him: ‘Can you
see what you have done?’. After saying that, I
then attended to
this person who was on the ground.
PROSECUTOR:
Again Mr Nyama, you did not really answer my question,
or let me try to rephrase, Your Worship. As you were coming
approaching the
accused, okay as you got to the accused, you
testified that you get to the accused and you see him still stepping
on the person.
That first time you got to him stepping on the person
were you able to see the knife at that stage, the first time you got
to them?
MR NYAMA:
At that stage yes, I saw that the knife was in his
hand. Even when I was grabbing him and forcing him aside the knife
was still
in his hand.
15.4
In cross-examination the witness stated that he informed the police
when they arrived the following:

I told them that I
was being called out and when I appeared or rather when I emerged I
then saw Tsietsi stabbing this person and
already stepping on this
person who was on the ground.”
15.5
The witness admitted making a statement to the police containing the
following:

On 17 August the
5
th
at about 8
o’clock I was at my residential address when Moeketsi called me
as I was inside my house. When I arrive outside
on the street I
noticed an African male lying on the ground and the other one
standing next to him. On my observation I found the
two were
fighting. The African male who was on the feet is well-known to me as
Tsietsi Mokoena. I did not see the fight as when
I arrived at the
street this other African male was already on the ground. I then
phoned the police as well as the ambulance, as
I noticed the person
on the ground was injured. That is all.”
[16]
I am respectfully not in agreement with the learned magistrate that
the aforementioned constituted minor discrepancies.
Even the
prosecutor found it confusing. I say so for the following reasons:
the evidence of Mr Nyama attempts to portray several
different
scenarios, ranging from him only seeing the accused standing over the
deceased, to fighting and stabbing by the accused.
Moreover, there
were no other witnesses who corroborated his version nor were any of
the other identified witnesses called. In
my view the contradictions
by the state witness were material and affected his credibility and
reliability. It is not legally expected
of the appellant to furnish a
good reason why a state witness would falsely implicate him.
[17]
The trial court was well aware of the fact there was no evidence
directly indicating or showing that the accused stabbed
the deceased.
It quite correctly referred to the test for adjudicating
circumstantial evidence as set out in the well-known
dictum
in
R v Blom
1939 AD 188
at pp 202 –
203.
In the absence of direct evidence,
the trial court concluded that an inference could be made of the
appellant’s guilt.
[18]
The trial court however, based its conclusions in this respect on its
finding that the evidence of the single witness
was reliable and
credible, surpassing the applicable cautionary rules for a finding of
guilt beyond a reasonable doubt against
the appellant. Accordingly,
the facts upon which the trial court concluded that “There is
no other reasonable inference to
be drawn on these facts other than
that the accused stabbed the deceased with a knife on the day in
question. The deceased subsequently
died as a result of a stab wound
inflicted by the accused.”, cannot justify such a conclusion
and subsequent finding of the
appellant’s guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt.
[19]
It follows therefore that in my view the conviction and sentence
cannot stand and should be set aside.
[20]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The appeal against the conviction is upheld.
2.
The conviction and sentence are set aside.
C.
REINDERS, ADJP
I
concur and it is so ordered.
D.
DE KOCK, AJ
On
behalf of the appellant:               Adv
JD Reyneke
Instructed
by:                                    Bloemfontein

Justice Centre
Legal Aid South Africa
BLOEMFONTEIN
On
behalf of the respondent:            Adv
M Strauss
Instructed
by:                                    Director:

Public Prosecutions
BLOEMFONTEIN