Mokoena and Others v S (A201/2017) [2019] ZAFSHC 270 (31 May 2019)

85 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Appeal — Conviction and sentence — Appellants convicted of multiple counts including murder and robbery — Appellants appealed against convictions and sentences imposed by trial court — Evidence included eyewitness identification and forensic links to the crimes — Court found that the trial court properly evaluated the evidence and the convictions were upheld.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned a criminal appeal to the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein, against convictions and sentences imposed by the trial court (a single judge of the same division). The appeal was heard by Musi JP, Loubser J, and Moeng AJ.


The appellants were Mohlalefang Cyril Mokoena (Accused 1), Lehlohonolo Phillip Moloi (Accused 5), and Moeketsi Elliot Radebe (Accused 6). The respondent was the State. Leave to appeal was granted by the trial court.


The dispute concerned whether the State had proved the guilt of each appellant beyond reasonable doubt, largely through a combination of identification evidence, cellphone call-data evidence, possession and recovery of stolen property/keys, and (in relation to Accused 6) an alleged statement placing him on the scene. The appeal also raised an important issue regarding the competence of an order directing partial concurrency between a determinate sentence and a life sentence, in light of the Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998.


Accused 1 had been convicted of three counts of murder, three counts of robbery with aggravating circumstances, and one count of attempted murder, receiving three life sentences plus 55 years’ imprisonment, with the trial court ordering 25 years of the determinate term to run concurrently with the life sentences. Accused 5 had been convicted of murder, robbery with aggravating circumstances, and attempted murder, and sentenced to an effective 21 years’ imprisonment. Accused 6 had been convicted of two counts of murder and two counts of robbery with aggravating circumstances, and sentenced to an effective 24 years’ imprisonment.


2. Material Facts


The court considered multiple incidents occurring in 2009 in and around Qwa-Qwa/Phuthaditjhaba, involving violent attacks, killings, and the taking of property. A significant portion of the State’s case depended on circumstantial links between accused persons, recovered items, and cellphone activity.


On 9 May 2009 at approximately 22h00, Mr Lehlohonolo David Ramaditse was sitting in his car at De Bult, Qwa-Qwa, with Tshepiso Radebe. Two men approached the vehicle. One (described as “fat”) requested a lift to Phuthaditjhaba; after refusal, the other shot Mr Ramaditse three times and Tshepiso once. The assailants got into the vehicle and forced Mr Ramaditse to sit between the front seats while one drove. Mr Ramaditse later escaped while shots were fired; he returned to find Tshepiso dead. His JVC car radio was stolen and was later shown to him by police on 21 July 2009, when he identified it as his property.


A material disputed fact at trial (and relevant on appeal) was the identity of the “fat” assailant. Mr Ramaditse identified Accused 1 as that person, stating he had sufficient opportunity to observe him, assisted by the car’s interior light and a nearby mast light. The post-mortem confirmed Tshepiso’s death was caused by a gunshot resulting in a fractured skull.


A separate incident occurred on 12 June 2009 late at night. Mr Chami Japhta Mokoena left Lerato Kaloi in his Volkswagen Golf near De Bult Jazz Club. After being notified that the battery had been tampered with, he discovered the car missing. He later saw the vehicle involved in a collision near Riaholo school, and it was taken to the police station. On 14 June 2009, he identified a set of keys recovered in relation to this incident as belonging to him (including car keys and other keys).


In connection with that collision scene, Constable Zwane testified that he saw Lerato in the Golf and that she was deceased with a neck wound. Importantly, an LG cellular phone in the vehicle rang; he answered, and the caller asked where “Mahlalefane” was. Zwane later heard that a person named Mahlalefane had been arrested, being Accused 1. The post-mortem indicated Lerato died from a cervical spine fracture caused by a gunshot, with a severed vein.


Further evidence related to the murder of Mr Isaac Mokoena. Matshosane Ntsane, an employee of Isaac Mokoena, described that on 12 June 2009 he and the deceased arrived at Bodibeng sports bar with Lerato; after Ntsane went to close the business, the deceased’s BMW disappeared. Ntsane phoned the deceased, but someone answered claiming the deceased was asleep. The next morning, Ntsane saw the deceased’s corpse at Riaholo school.


Sergeant Mthimkhulu testified that on the morning of 13 January 2009 he discovered a BMW bumper and the corpse of Mr Mokoena with a gunshot wound through one eye at Riaholo school. It was common cause that the BMW was later found burned.


Evidence also dealt with the movement of stolen property. Inspector Sibeko testified that he had left his combi with his brother-in-law, Mr Motloung, without a radio installed. On 9 June 2009, he found the combi at Accused 2’s house with a radio installed; Motloung confirmed he had given the combi to Accused 2 for conveying passengers. Mr Khuthatso Molefe testified he saw Accused 1 and Accused 2 at Makeneng Tavern in that combi on 8 June 2009.


Regarding recovered property linked to the deceased Isaac Mokoena, Ms Mokoena (the deceased’s wife) identified keys and a cellphone as her husband’s property when shown them by Captain Moshoadiba on 7 October 2009; it was common cause that the cellphone was retrieved from Accused 3’s brother.


The State also relied on cellphone call-data analysis presented by Inspector Bierman. The evidence established communication patterns between phones associated with accused persons and a phone attributed to the deceased (Mr Mokoena), including calls made after the deceased’s death. It was also material that the LG phone found in the Volkswagen Golf was used with Accused 1’s SIM card.


A key factual development concerned searches and recoveries on 17 June 2009. Captain Kobane testified that Accused 1 took police to Accused 2’s house, and later to premises associated with Accused 6. A search of a second house on those premises led to the discovery of keys linked to vehicles, including a BMW key and a Citi Golf key, among other keys.


A further material fact concerned a statement allegedly made by Accused 6 to Captain Moshoadiba on 19 June 2009, in which Accused 6 placed himself with Accused 1 and another person, described events involving a black Golf with a woman believed asleep who was then discovered dead after an accident near a BP, and later described travelling in a damaged silver BMW and setting it alight, with a shot fired at the vehicle.


Accused 1’s defence was that he lived in Gauteng and had travelled to Qwa-Qwa on 12 June 2009, that he had lent his phone to a friend over Easter, and that he had lent his phone to Lerato because her phone battery was flat. His mother and brother testified in support of his movements (arrival home that afternoon, leaving in the evening, returning at midnight). The trial court rejected this version as not reasonably possibly true, and this rejection formed part of the appeal record.


3. Legal Issues


The central questions were whether each appellant’s convictions were supported by evidence meeting the standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt, and in particular whether the trial court correctly assessed circumstantial evidence and drew permissible inferences.


In relation to Accused 5, the dispute primarily concerned the application of law to fact: whether the pattern, timing, and frequency of cellphone calls between Accused 1 and Accused 5 could, as a matter of inferential reasoning, sustain the conclusion that Accused 5 participated in the relevant crimes as the only reasonable inference.


In relation to Accused 6, the issues concerned both fact (whether the statement to Captain Moshoadiba was made and what weight it carried) and the application of legal principles governing the consequences of an accused person’s silence in the face of evidence calling for an answer.


In relation to Accused 1, the appeal raised issues of fact (the reliability of the identification by Mr Ramaditse and the credibility of Accused 1’s version about his phone) and the application of legal standards governing the evaluation of competing versions and the drawing of inferences from proved facts.


A further legal issue (principally concerning sentence administration and competence of orders) was whether the trial court could competently order that part of a determinate term of imprisonment run concurrently with a life sentence, given the statutory scheme in section 39 of the Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The appeal court reiterated as trite that the State must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and that this assessment requires weighing the totality of the evidence. Where doubt remains after evaluating the entire body of evidence, the accused must receive the benefit of that doubt.


Because significant portions of the case against some appellants were based on circumstantial evidence, the court applied the two logical principles articulated in R v Blom 1939 AD 188, namely that the inference sought must be consistent with all proved facts, and that the proved facts must exclude every reasonable inference except the one sought to be drawn. The court explained this as a process requiring firmly established base facts, followed by inferential reasoning to a main fact (guilt), and emphasised that guilt must be the only reasonable inference.


Applying those principles to Accused 5, the court accepted that the base facts included calls between Accused 1 and Accused 5 before, after, and on 9 May 2009, including several calls around the time Mr Ramaditse estimated the attack occurred. However, the court found that those facts did not logically and exclusively establish Accused 5’s involvement as the only reasonable inference. The court pointed to several considerations drawn from the record: the apparent oddity of Accused 1 phoning Accused 5 at times when (on the State’s case) they would have been together at the scene; the fact that the stolen radio ended up in Sibeko’s combi through Accused 2, without an explanation of how Accused 2 obtained it; Accused 5’s evidence that he and Accused 1 spoke regularly about various topics; the inclusion of voicemail instances in the call records without clarity on how many calls were actual conversations; and the absence of evidence placing Accused 5’s location at the times of the calls. On this reasoning, the court held that the inferential link was too weak, and that other reasonable explanations remained, meaning that guilt could not be inferred beyond reasonable doubt.


In relation to Accused 6, the court relied on evidence that placed him on the scene and connected him to stolen goods, including the recovery of vehicle keys at premises where he stayed and the content of the statement attributed to him by Captain Moshoadiba. The court also considered that Accused 6 did not testify, and it invoked the principle described in S v Boesak 2001 (1) SACR 1 (CC) that although an accused is not obliged to testify, remaining silent in the face of evidence calling for an answer may permit a court to conclude that the evidence is sufficient in the absence of an explanation, depending on its weight. The court stated that Accused 6 had to face the consequences of his silence and concluded that the trial court’s approach to this was correct. On that basis, the appeal court upheld Accused 6’s convictions and sentence.


In relation to Accused 1, the court found no basis to fault the trial court’s evaluation. It accepted that Accused 1 had been positively identified by Mr Ramaditse, that Accused 1 had pointed out the house where the Golf and BMW keys were found, and that the evidence undermined Accused 1’s explanation for how his LG phone and SIM card were connected to the vehicle. The appeal court endorsed the trial court’s rejection of Accused 1’s version as not reasonably possibly true, including the finding that his evidence was inconsistent with probabilities and proven facts. It accordingly dismissed Accused 1’s appeal against conviction and sentence.


On sentence, the court accepted that the offences were extremely serious, involving cold-blooded murders and serious violence. It noted that counsel for the appellants conceded there was no basis to interfere with sentence, and it held that the trial court had considered relevant factors without misdirection and that the sentences were not shockingly inappropriate.


However, the court identified a discrete legal error in the trial court’s order regarding partial concurrency for Accused 1. It held that the issue was definitively governed by section 39 of the Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998, which provides (as emphasised by the appeal court) that any determinate sentence runs concurrently with a life sentence. The appeal court regarded the trial court’s order that 25 years of the additional 55 years should run concurrently as contrary to the statutory prescripts and therefore incompetent. In support of this statutory interpretation, the court referred to S v Mashava 2014 (1) SACR 541 (SCA), which stated that determinate imprisonment imposed in addition to life imprisonment is subsumed by the life sentence, because a person has only one life.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal by Accused 5 against both convictions and sentence succeeded. His convictions and sentence were set aside.


The appeals by Accused 1 and Accused 6 against their convictions and sentences were dismissed.


In relation to Accused 1, the appeal court set aside the trial court’s order directing that 25 years of the determinate sentence run concurrently with the life sentence, on the basis that concurrency between determinate imprisonment and life imprisonment is governed by statute and the impugned order was incompetent.


The judgment did not record any order as to costs.


Cases Cited


R v Blom 1939 AD 188.


S v Boesak 2001 (1) SACR 1 (CC).


S v Makhoka [2019] ZACC 19.


S v Mashava 2014 (1) SACR 541 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998, section 39(1) and section 39(2)(a)(i) and (ii).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the circumstantial evidence implicating Accused 5, consisting primarily of cellphone call patterns with Accused 1, did not satisfy the inferential requirements for proof beyond reasonable doubt because it did not exclude other reasonable inferences and did not establish guilt as the only reasonable inference.


The court held that the convictions of Accused 6 were supported by evidence placing him on the scene and connecting him to recovered items, and that in the face of evidence calling for an answer, his decision not to testify attracted adverse consequences consistent with the applicable principle concerning silence.


The court held that the convictions and sentences of Accused 1 were sound, relying on the reliability of the identification evidence, the pointing-out of premises where keys were found, and the rejection of Accused 1’s version as not reasonably possibly true.


The court held that the trial court’s partial concurrency order in respect of Accused 1 was incompetent because section 39 of the Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998 governs the relationship between determinate sentences and life sentences, with determinate imprisonment running concurrently with life imprisonment by operation of law.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that the State must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt, assessed on the totality of the evidence, and that any residual reasonable doubt must benefit the accused.


Where guilt is sought to be established through circumstantial evidence, the court applied the inferential rules in R v Blom 1939 AD 188, requiring that the inference be consistent with all proved facts and that the proved facts exclude every reasonable inference other than guilt. The judgment articulated this through the distinction between firmly established base facts and the main fact inferred (guilt), requiring the inferential step to be logically compelling and exclusive of other reasonable hypotheses.


The judgment applied the principle (as described in S v Boesak 2001 (1) SACR 1 (CC)) that while an accused is not obliged to testify, a failure to answer evidence calling for an explanation may permit the conclusion that the evidence is sufficient to prove guilt, depending on the weight of that evidence.


On sentencing administration and the competence of concurrency orders, the judgment applied section 39 of the Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998, holding that determinate imprisonment imposed in addition to a life sentence runs concurrently with the life sentence by operation of law, and that a court order purporting to direct partial concurrency contrary to this statutory scheme is incompetent. The judgment relied on S v Mashava 2014 (1) SACR 541 (SCA) for the proposition that determinate imprisonment is subsumed by life imprisonment in this context.

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[2019] ZAFSHC 270
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Mokoena and Others v S (A201/2017) [2019] ZAFSHC 270 (31 May 2019)

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,
FREE
STATE DIVISION. BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
No.: A201/2017
In
the matter between:-
MOHLALEFANG
CYRIL MOKOENA (Accused 1)
1
st
Appellant
LEHLOHONOLO
PHILLIP MOLOI (Accused
5)
2
nd
Appellant
MOEKETSI
ELLIOT RADEBE (Accused
6)
3
rd
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
CORAM:
MUSI, JP
et
LOUBSER, J
et
MOENG, AJ
HEARD
ON:
03 MAY 2019
JUDGMENT
BY:
MUSI, JP
DELIVERED
ON:
31 MAY 2019
[1]
The three appellants were convicted on various counts and sentenced
to lengthy terms of imprisonment [by a single Judge of this

division]. The first appellant [accused number 1] was convicted of
three counts of murder, three counts of robbery with aggravating

circumstances and one count of attempted murder. He was sentenced to
three terms of life imprisonment and 55 year's imprisonment.
The
court a
quo
ordered that 25 years of the 55 year's
imprisonment should run concurrently with the life imprisonment.
[2]
The second appellant [accused number 51 was convicted of murder,
robbery with aggravating circumstances and attempted murder.
He was
sentenced to undergo an effective prison term of 21 years.
[3]
The third appellant [accused number 6] was convicted of two counts of
murder and two counts of robbery with aggravating circumstances.
He
was sentenced to an effective term of 24 year's imprisonment.
[4]
All three appellants now appeal against their respective convictions
and sentences. Leave to appeal was granted by the court
a
quo.
[5]
I will for the sake of convenience refer to the appellants as
accused 1, 5 and 6 respectively. I will not traverse all the evidence

that was led in the court a
quo.
However, I will refer to all
the evidence that implicated the accused or purported to do so.
[6]
On 9 May 2009, at approximately 22H00, Mr Lehlohonolo David
Ramaditse was at De Bult Qwa-Qwa. He was sitting in his car with his

lady friend Tshepiso Radebe (Tshepiso). Two persons approached his
car. The fat one knocked on the driver's side window of the
car and
asked him to take them to Phuthaditjhaba. He refused. The other
person shot him thrice and Tsephiso once with a firearm.
They entered
the car and pushed him to sit between the two front seats. One of
them drove the motor vehicle.
[7]
Tshepiso screamed and mentioned one of the two assailants'
name. He could not clearly remember the name but it sounded something

like "Shema". She also argued with the men and it was clear
to him that she knew them. After driving a while, the driver
stopped
the vehicle. The assailants climbed out of the car and stood in front
of it. He managed to escape through the left rear
door and ran for
dear life. A shot was fired at him while he was running. He hid in
the bushes. Whilst there he heard another shot
being fired. After a
while he returned to the car and discovered that Tshepiso was shot
dead.
[8]
He went to a nearby house from where the police and an
ambulance were called. His car radio, a JVC, was taken from the
vehicle.
On 21 July 2009, the police brought the radio to him and he
identified it as his property.
[9]
Mr Ramaditse identified accused 1 as the fat person who he saw
at his car. He testified that he had ample time to identify accused

1. The light sources were the interior light of his car as well as a
nearby mast light.
[10]
The
post mortem
report confirmed that Tshepiso died due
to a fractured skull caused by a gunshot.
[11]
Constable Maleme testified that on 10 May 2009 at 02H30 he
received a phone call as a result of which he went to a house at
Elite
residential area. He found Mr. Ramaditse who was injured at
that house. He called the ambulance that took Mr. Ramaditse to
hospital.
He subsequently went to Mr. Ramaditse's car where he found
a lady, Tshepiso, who was already dead.
[12]
Mr. Chami Japhta Mokoena testified that on 12 June 2009 at
23H30 he and Lerato Kaloi went to De Bult Jazz Club to meet a friend.

Lerato could not enter because she was not appropriately dressed. He
went in and left her in the car, a Volkswagen Golf with registration

numbers and letters […] FS. Approximately five minutes after
he entered the club he received a phone call from his vehicle

tracking company and he was informed that somebody tampered with his
vehicle's battery. He went out and discovered that his vehicle
was
not there. He decided to report the incident to the police. En route
to the police station he saw that his car was involved
in a collision
next to Riaholo school. The vehicle was damaged and it was later
taken to the police station.
[13]
On 14 June 2009, he went to the Phuthaditjhaba Organized Crime
division's offices where he identified the keys that were in his car.

It was his car's keys, a friend's flat's keys and his shop's keys.
[14]
Constable Zwane testified that on 13 June 2009 at
approximately 01H30, he was on his way home from the police station.
He noticed
a black Volkswagen Golf that was involved in a collision.
It was standing against a pavement. There were other police officers
on the scene. He investigated and saw the deceased, Lerato, in the
vehicle.
[15]
She presented a neck wound. A LG cellular phone that was in
the car rang and he answered it. The person who called asked him
where
Mahlalefane is. A few days after this incident he heard that a
person with the name Mahlalefane was arrested. It was accused 1.
[16]
The
post mortem
report stated that the deceased,
Lerato, died due to a cervical spine fracture caused by a gunshot.
Her right external jugular vein
was severed.
[17]
Matshosane Ntsane testified that he worked for Mr. Isaac
Mokoena at Bodibeng sports bar Phuthaditjhaba. On 12 June 2009 at
approximately
22H00 he met his employer at a restaurant in
Phuthaditjhaba. At approximately 23H00 they went to his place of
employment with a
lady, Lerato. When they arrived there, his employer
sat in the car, a BMW, while he went to go and close the business. He
went
out and noticed that the BMW is not where it was parked. He
called his employer and someone else answered the phone and informed

him that his employer was asleep. He called again but the phone went
unanswered. The next morning, he saw his employe'rs corpse
at the
Riaholo school.
[18]
Sergeant Mthimkhulu testified that on the morning of 13
January 2009, whilst patrolling, he went to the Riaholo school where
he
saw a bumper of a BMW with registration numbers and letters […]
FS. He also saw the corpse of Mr. Mokoena and it had a gunshot
wound
through one eye. It is common cause that the BMW was later found,
where it was burned.
[19]
Inspector Sibeko testified that on 13 March 2009 he took his
combi to his brother-in-law, Mr. Motloung. It did not have a radio
installed in it. On 9 June 2009, he went to accused 2's house where
he found his combi and noticed that it had a radio in it. Mr.

Motloung confirmed that he gave the combi to accused 2 to convey
passengers.
[20]
Mr. Khuthatso Molefe testified that on 8 June 2009 at 20H30 he
saw accused 1 and 2 at Makeneng Tavern, in Inspector Sibeko's combi.
[21]
Ms Mokoena testified that she was the deceased, Isaac
Mokoena's wife. On 7 October 2009 Captain Moshoadiba showed her keys
and a
cell phone which she identified as her husband's property. It
was common cause that the cell phone was retrieved from accused 3's

brother.
[22]
Manana Kaloi testified that the deceased Lerato Koloi was her
sister. Lerato left their parental home with her boyfriend. She had

her cell phone with her. She knows accused 1, 4 and 6.
[23]
Magiel Bierman is an Inspector stationed at the Phuthaditjhaba
Organised Crime unit. He analysed calls made between some of the
accused. The deceased's (Mokoena) cellular phone number ended with
the numbers 4421, accused 1's with 6600, accused 3's with 7431,

accused S's with 7264 and accused 6's with 6123.
[24]
On 13 June 2009 the deceased phone called accused 3 at 4H45.
At 4H46 and 5H23 deceased phone called accused 1's phone. On 4 May
2009 accused 1 called accused 5 at 21H08. On 5 May 2009 at 8H07,
11H19 and 14H45 accused 1 called accused 5. On 6 May 2009 accused
1
called accused 5 three times at 6H55. On 7 May 2009 at 08H11 accused
1 called accused 6. On 8 May 2009 at 16H06 and 17H38 accused
1 called
accused 6.
[25]
On 9 May 2009 accused 1 called accused 5 at 10H00, 17H18,
22H39, 22H40 and 22H41.
[26]
On 10 May 2009 accused 5 called accused 1 at 00H31. Accused 1
called accused 5 at 00H34 and 03H08. Accused 1 called accused 6 at

12H19.
[27]
On 31 May 2009 accused 6 called accused 1. On 5 June 2009
accused 5 called accused 1 at 9H41. Accused 1 called accused 6 at
14H07.
On 11 June 2009 accused 1 called […]8 at 17H15. This
number was also called from the deceased phone after he was killed.

Another number of interest is […]5, which was called from the
deceased phone on the day of the deceased's death. Accused
1 called
the number ending with 1935 five times and the one ending with the
numbers 9558 thirteen times. The owners of these two
numbers could
not be traced.
[28]
He further testified that the LG phone that was found in the
Volkswagen Golf was used with accused 1's simcard.
[29]
Captain Kobane testified that on 17 June 2009 at 7H30 he
reported for duty. He accompanied Col Sekupa to the Crime
Intelligence
offices where they saw accused 1 and 3. Accused 1 took
them to accused 2's house where they met accused 2 and 5.
[30]
Accused 2 made a report as a result of which they went to
Inspector Sibeko's house and removed a JVC radio from a minibus. They
went to accused 6's house, where they searched the main house and
found nothing. Accused 1 told them something as a result of which

they searched a second house, which is 3m from the main house, on the
same premises with the permission of Radebe the owner of
the main
house. In the second house they found a BMW motor vehicle's key and a
Citi Golfs key as well as an immobilizer for a Citi
Golf. The Citi
Golf’s key was broken. There was a bunch of other keys as well.
He received a call from Tseseng police station
and was informed that
accused 6 is there. He went there and found accused 6. They went to
accused 4's house where he arrested accused
4.
[31]
On 21 June 2009, he showed the radio to Mr. Ramoditse who
identified it as his property.
[32]
Captain Moshoadiba testified that he was the investigating officer of
this case. On 18 June 2009 after the accused were arrested
he spoke
to accused 1 who informed him that the LG phone was his and that it
fell when they ran from the accident scene. Accused
1 told him that
his cellular phone number was […]0. He realized that it is the
same number as the SIM card in the LG phone
that was found in the
Volkswagen Citi Golf.
[33]
On 19 June 2009 accused 6 indicated that he wanted to make a
statement. He explained to accused 6 that he is a commissioned

officer in the South African Police Service. At 14H00, on the same
date he took a statement from accused number 6. In the statement
he
said:
"Op 2009-06-13 het
ek Mohlalefang Mokoena en Mokejane Mahleke het na die bell toe gegaan
om te gaan drink. Na ons klaar gedrink
het, het Mohlalefang my
meegedeel dat ek moet verder loop hulle sal my volg. Ek het nag by
die pad gestap het 'n swart Golf by
my gestop en Mahleke het my
geroep. Toe ek in die voertuig inkom het ek vir Mahleke op die agter
sitplek gevind. Mohlalefang het
die voertuig bestuur.
En daar was 'n vrou wat
by die passasier sitplek gel het en ek het gedink dat sy slaap.
Mohlalefang het verder gery tot by BP vulstasie
en hy het beheer van
die voertuig verloor en die voertuig het die sypaadjie wal gestamp en
beskadig. Dit is waar ek opgemerk het
dat die vrou wat by die
passasier sitplek was dood is. Toe het Mohlalefang ons meegedeel dat
ons moet die voertuig daar los en
weghardloop. Ons het toe
weggehardsloop na die verskillende rigtings toe. Toe het ek na
Manaung toe gehardloop. Later toe ek nog
op die pad was het
Mohlalefang Mokoena en Mokejane by my weer gekom met 'n silwer BMW
wat voor beskadig is en hulle by my gestop
om te klim. Toe ek in
die,voertuig kom het ek vir Jan Radebe daar binne gekry en daar was
baie bleed in die voertuig. Ons het saam
gery tot by Thabang waar ons
die voertuig aan die brand gesteek het. Toe ans daar staan en na die
voertuig kyk het Mahleke Mokejane
vuurwapen uitgehaal en die skoot op
die voertuig geskiet. Ons is toe weg na ons woning toe."
[34]
Accused 1 testified that he stayed in Gauteng and that his parental
home is in Qwa-Qwa. He borrowed his phone to his friend
Madjadji
during the Easter weekend of 2009. On 12 June 2009, Madjadji gave him
his phone back. On the same day he travelled to
Qwa-Qwa from Gauteng.
[35]
He arrived at Qwa-Qwa and went to De Bult in the evening where he
consumed alcohol. When he left the drinking place deceased
(Lerato
Koloi) called him while she was sitting in a motor vehicle. He went
to her. She told him that her cellular phone's battery
is flat. He
borrowed her his cellular phone so that she could call her boyfriend.
He then saw an acquaintance, Matikela. He went
to the latter and they
spoke for approximately 15 minutes. He forgot about his phone and
took a lift home with Matikela. He arrived
home at midnight and
slept. He was arrested on 17 June 2009. He denied committing any of
the crimes.
[36]
Lucia Mokoena, accused 1's mother, testified that on the afternoon of
12 June 2009 accused 1 arrived home from Katlehong, Gauteng.
He left
in the evening and returned at midnight.
[37]
Tsietsi Mokoena testified that he is accused 1's brother. He lives in
Villa Lisa Gauteng. On 12 June 2009 he was living in
Katlehong with
accused 1. On that day accused 1 travelled to Qwa-Qwa.
[38]
The trial court found that the version put up by accused 1 is not
reasonably possible true. It comprehensively evaluated the
evidence
and found that accused 1 was correctly identified by Mr Ramoditse as
one of the people who attacked him. The trial court
was satisfied
that the identification of accused 1 was indeed reliable and that
there was sufficient light in order to identify
accused 1.
[39]
The trial court rejected the accused version that he borrowed his
cell phone to the deceased, Lerato Kaloi. It found that accused
6
pointed out the house where the keys of the Golf and the BMW were
found. It further accepted Constable Zwane's testimony that
the LG
phone which was in the Golf rang and the person on the other side
requested to speak to Mahlalefane, accused 1.
[40]
It analysed the cellular phone data and found that the deceased phone
was used to call accused number 1's phone. The deceased
phone was
also used to call the phones with the following numbers, […]5
and […]8. Prior to the death of the deceased
accused 1 phoned
these numbers regularly.
[41]
With regard to accused 5, the trial court analysed the cellular phone
data and found that the timing and frequency of the calls
between
accused 1 and 5 leads it to the only reasonable inference being that
accused 5 was involved during the incidents involving
Mr. Ramaditse
and the deceased, Tshepiso.
[42]
In respect of accused 6 the trial court found that the keys to the
Golf and BMW were found at the premises where accused 6
stays. It
further found that accused 6 made a statement to Capt. Moshoadiba
wherein he put himself on the scene. It further utilized
the cellular
phone data to link accused 6 and accused 1, by pointing out that on
11 June 2009 and 13 June 2009 there where cellular
phone
communication between the two. Accused 6 did not testify. There was
therefore no explanation from him with regard to the
evidence that
patently pointed to him being involved in the crimes.
[43]
Ms Kruger, on behalf of the appellants, contended before us that the
evidence against accused 5 is very thin. She argued that
the trial
court erred in finding that the evidence against him ineluctably
supports the inference that he was guilty of any crime.
She also
contended that the court a
quo
erred in accepting the evidence
of Capt. Moshoadiba with regard to accused 6 making the statement to
him, because accused 6 denied
making the statement. She further
contended that the trial court erred in rejecting accused 1's
version.
[44]
Mr. Steyn, on behalf of the respondent, was constrained to concede
that the link between conviction of accused 5 and the commission
of
the crimes is tenuous. He supported the convictions of accused 1 and
6.
[45]
It is trite that the state must prove its case beyond a reasonable
doubt against the accused. The Court must be certain that
the accused
have committed the offenses. Certainty is reached after the Court has
weighed the totality of the evidence and not
only certain parts of
the evidence against an accused person. If after analysing all the
evidence there is doubt as to the guilt
of the accused, the accused
should be given the benefit of the doubt.
[46]
If the
State endeavors to prove the guilt of the accused by dint of
circumstantial evidence, such evidence should be subjected to
the two
principles of logic as set out in
S
v Blom
[1]
where it was said 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 a doubt whether the
inference sought to be drawn is correct."
[2]
[47]
Circumstantial evidence therefore necessitates a finding of a fact or
facts (base fact or facts). The base facts should be
firmly
established. Once the base facts have been established it is then
used by way of inferential reasoning to establish another
fact (main
fact) in order to prove the guilt of an accused beyond reasonable
doubt. The base facts should be consistent with the
main fact. The
one must lead logically to the other. The main fact should be the
only reasonable inference that can be drawn from
the base facts. In
other words, the main fact must not be susceptible to other
reasonable hypotheses or theories. If the main fact
is not the only
reasonable inference to be drawn from the base facts, then the
inference of guilt cannot be drawn.
[48]
The phone calls between accused 1 and 5 happened before, after and on
9 May 2009, the date of the incidents. On the evening
of 9 May 2009,
accused 1 called accused 5 at 22H39, 22H40 and 22H41. According to
Mr. Ramaditse the incident, when they knocked
on the car's window,
happened at approximately 22H00. These are the base facts. Do they
establish as the only reasonable inference
that accused 5 was
involved in the commission of the offenses? I think not.
[49]
I say so because, first why would accused 1 phone accused 5
when they were together at the scene? Second, the radio which was
stolen
from Mr. Ramaditse's vehicle was put in Sibeko's combi by
accused 2. He did not explain how he came in possession of the radio.

Third, accused 5 admitted that he and accused 1 called each other
regularly and spoke about various subjects. Fourth, the records
also
include instances where the phoned went to voicemail. It was not
determined how many of those calls were actual conversations.
Fifth,
the respondent ascertained that accused 1 was in Phuthaditjhaba when
he made the calls, but it led no evidence as to where
accused 5 was
when he called or received calls from his phone.
[50]
In my view the link between the base facts and the inference
sought to be drawn in this case is too tenuous. The fact that accused

5 was involved in the commission of the crimes is not the only
reasonable inference to be drawn from the calls between him and

accused 5.
[51]
In
Boesak
[3]
it was said:
"The fact that an
accused person is under no obligation to testify does not mean that
there are no consequences attaching to
a decision to remain silent
during the trial. If there is evidence calling for an answer, and an
accused person chooses to remain
silent in the face of such evidence,
the court may well be entitled to conclude that the evidence is
sufficient in the absence
of an explanation to prove the guilt of the
accused. Whether such a conclusion is justified will depend on the
weight of the evidence...
"
[4]
[52]
Accused 6 made a statement that puts him on the scene of the
crimes and in the company of the perpetrators. Some of the stolen
goods
were found in the house where he stays. Faced with this
evidence, he decided not to testify. He must face the consequences of
his
silence. I am satisfied that the trial court visited accused 6
with the correct and deserved consequences.
[53]
The trial court's reasoning cannot be faulted when it comes to
accused 1. He was positively identified by Mr. Ramaditse. He pointed

out the house where the keys of the Golf and BMW were found. He
patently lied about how his LG phone landed in the Golf. He was
a
pathetic witness who lied and contradicted himself. His evidence was
dissonant with the probabilities and proven facts.
[54]
Accused 1 was 21 years old when the crimes were committed. He
passed grade 12 and he was unmarried with no children. He studied at

Boston College to become a computer technician. He repaired cellular
phones and earned between 4000 and 5000 rand per month.
[55]
Accused 6 was 28 years old when the crimes were committed. He
passed grade 12. He was married and has one child who was born on 29

September 2009. His wife, who lived at her maternal home after his
arrest, was unemployed. He was in custody for almost two years

awaiting the finalisation of the trial.
[56]
It cannot be gainsaid that the appellants have been convicted
of very serious offences. The deceased were murdered in cold blood

probably because they knew the accused and would have identified
them. That is certainly the case with Ms Kaloi and Ms Radebe.
These
were harmless and defenceless women. Mr Ramaditse was shot four times
in the abdomen and miraculously survived. The appellants
showed scant
regard for human life.
[57]
The trial court found that accused 1 was centrally involved in
the commission of the crimes and could be seen as a leader whilst

accused 6 played a lesser role. I am not sure whether this finding is
correct with regard to accused 6. That finding led the trial
court to
conclude that there are substantial and compelling circumstances
present with regard to accused 6. There is no appeal,
on sentence, by
the respondent. In my view the finding that there are no substantial
or compelling circumstances present with regard
to accused 1 is
beyond question. He deserves a sentence of life imprisonment for any
and all the murder convictions.
[58]
Ms Kruger conceded that there is no basis for the appeal on
sentence. The trial court considered all the relevant factors, it did

not commit an irregularity, it did not misdirect itself and the
sentence is not shockingly inappropriate. It is proportionate to
the
crimes that were committed.
[59]
There
remains one last thing to deal with. The trial court ordered that 25
year's imprisonment of the additional 55 years imprisonment
imposed
on accused 1 should be served concurrently with the life sentence.
This in effect means that he must serve 20 years' imprisonment
after
serving the life imprisonment. To state the obvious, he only has one
life. This issue is governed by the Correctional Services
Act
(Act).
[5]
Section 39 thereof
reads as follows:
"(1) Subject to the
provisions of subsection (2) a sentence of incarceration takes effect
from the day on which that sentence
is passed, unless it is suspended
under the provisions of any law or unless the sentenced person is
released on bail pending a
decision of a higher court, in which case
the sentence takes effect from the day on which he or she submits to
or is taken into
custody.
(2)
(a)
Subject to
the provisions of paragraph
(b),
a person who receives more
than one sentence of incarceration or receives additional sentences
while serving a term of incarceration,
must serve each such sentence,
the one after the expiration, setting aside or remission of the
other, in such order as the National
Commissioner may determine,
unless the court specifically directs otherwise, or unless the court
directs such sentences shall run
concurrently but-
(i)
any determinate sentence of incarceration to be served by any person
runs concurrently with a life sentence or with a sentence
of
incarceration to be served by such person in consequence of being
declared a dangerous criminal;
(ii)
one or more
life sentences and one or more sentences to be served in consequence
of a person being declared a dangerous criminal
also run
concurrently;...”
[6]
[60]
The order stating that a portion of the 55 year's imprisonment should
run concurrently with the life imprisonment ought to
be set aside
because this issue is definitively governed by the Act. The order is
contrary to the prescripts of the Act and therefore
incompetent.
[7]
In
Mashava
[8]
it was said, with reference to section 39(2)(a)(i):
"The provision is
clear. Any determinate sentence of incarceration, Imposed in addition
to life imprisonment, is subsumed by
the latter. This is logical and
practical. A person only has one life and a sentence of life
imprisonment is the ultimate penal
provision”
[9]
.
[61]
I accordingly make the following order:
1. The second appellant's
(accused 5) appeal against his convictions and sentences is upheld.
2. The second appellant's
(accused 5) convictions and sentences are set aside.
3. The first and third
appellant's (accused 1 and 6) appeals against their respective
convictions and sentences are dismissed.
4. The order of the court
a
quo,
in respect of accused 1, with regard to the 25 (twenty
five) year's imprisonment that must be served concurrently with the
life
sentence, is set aside.
________________
C.J.
MUSI, JP
I
concur.
________________
P.J.
LOUBSER, J
I
concur.
________________
L.B.J.
MOENG, AJ
Appearances:
For
the Appellants: Ms S. Kruger
Legal
Aid South Africa
Bloemfontein
For
the Respondent: Adv C.F. Steyn
Director
Public Prosecutions
Bloemfontein
[1]
R v Blom
1939 AD 188
at 202-203.
[2]
At 202- 203.
[3]
2001(1) SACR 1 (CC).
[4]
Ibid para 24.
[5]
Act 111 of 1998.
[6]
Sections 39(1), 39(2)(a)(i) and (ii).
[7]
S v Makhoka (2019] ZACC 19 at paras 16 to 18.
[8]
S v Mashava 2014 (1) SACR 541 (SCA).
[9]
Ibid para [7].