Moolman v S (A362/2009) [2009] ZAGPPHC 367 (8 December 2009)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Appeal against conviction — Attempted murder — Appellant convicted and sentenced to five years imprisonment — Grounds of appeal included alleged bias of magistrate and failure to properly assess witness credibility — Court found no bias as defense counsel had waived objections during trial — Evidence from state witnesses deemed credible, while appellant’s testimony was inconsistent and rejected — Conviction upheld as state proved guilt beyond reasonable doubt, but sentence deemed appropriate given appellant's status as a first offender and mitigating circumstances.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter was a criminal appeal in the North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, against both conviction and sentence imposed by the Regional Court, Benoni.


The appellant was Kobus Moolman, and the respondent was the State.


Procedurally, the appellant had stood trial in the regional court on a charge of attempted murder, was convicted, and was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment. He then appealed to the High Court, advancing grounds directed at (i) the magistrate’s continued presiding after having dealt with the bail proceedings and (ii) the evaluation of the evidence on the merits, including whether the appellant’s version was reasonably possibly true. The appeal also encompassed the sentence.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned an altercation at the appellant’s mother’s home during which the complainant sustained multiple injuries (notably facial lacerations), and whether those injuries were inflicted in a manner and with an accompanying intent sufficient to sustain a conviction for attempted murder, as opposed to an innocent explanation involving broken glass.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that there was a dispute/altercation at the home of the appellant’s mother, at which the complainant was present. It was also undisputed that glass was heard breaking during the events and that the complainant suffered numerous injuries, particularly to her face, as well as other injuries including superficial cuts to a hand, abrasions to both arms near the elbows, and additional wounds to the head and neck area. The injuries were recorded, including on a J88 medical report, and photographs were available at trial.


There was no direct State eyewitness evidence describing the precise mechanics of how the complainant sustained each injury. The case therefore turned materially on circumstantial features, the medical evidence, and credibility findings.


The appellant’s version was that the complainant’s facial injuries were sustained when she fell onto broken glass, resulting in lacerations to her face. This version was supported to some degree by the fact that glass had broken during the incident and by the general context of a struggle.


The medical evidence, however, was significant. The doctor testified that the wounds were sharp, straight lacerations which, in his view, were not readily reconcilable with a fall into glass shards, because glass would more likely cause irregular wound margins. He further expressed difficulty with the notion that a face-first fall into glass would produce the pattern of injuries observed, including injuries in areas such as under the nose and under the left eye, rather than being concentrated on more protruding facial surfaces.


At the same time, the appellate court noted limitations in the evidentiary picture, including the absence of a detailed description or photographic depiction of the location and spread of the broken glass, which meant that the glass-fall explanation could not be evaluated against a full reconstruction of the scene.


Credibility-related facts were pivotal. The complainant’s daughter, Ms Kleynhans, testified and was described by the trial court as a very good and objective witness. In contrast, the appellant’s evidence, and that of his mother (who testified in support of him), contained numerous internal inconsistencies and contradictions between them on central aspects of what occurred. These contradictions included, among other things, whether the complainant swore at the appellant’s mother, whether the appellant pushed the complainant, whether the complainant ran out and whether the appellant followed her, whether the appellant and complainant waited together at the mother’s house, and whether the floor was wet due to rain or not.


A further material factual feature emerging from Ms Kleynhans’s evidence was that a sharp kitchen knife from her kitchen was later discovered to be missing, and she indicated it was apparent to her that the appellant had been handling/playing with knives that evening. She also remarked on circumstances relating to whether rain would have washed away blood outside, and she observed that the appellant had a small cut mark on his hand and on his face, the origin of which was not explained.


On the totality of these facts, the appellate court accepted that the complainant’s injuries were sustained inside the appellant’s mother’s house, and that while some injuries might have been consistent with contact with glass, the pattern included definite cutting injuries, at least some of which the court considered proven beyond reasonable doubt to have been inflicted with a knife.


3. Legal Issues


The first central legal question concerned judicial recusal: whether the presiding magistrate ought to have recused herself because she had previously dealt with the appellant’s bail application, during which she had been exposed to certain evidence touching on the merits and to photographs of the complainant’s injuries.


The second central legal question concerned the correctness of the conviction on the evidence. This included whether the trial court had properly analysed the State witnesses’ versions and whether it had erred by failing to accept that the appellant’s version was reasonably possibly true, with the consequence that the State would have failed to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.


A further issue, though framed in the appeal against sentence, concerned the limited basis upon which an appellate court may interfere with sentence, and whether the sentence imposed called for interference. The appellate court also considered whether an increase in sentence could properly be contemplated in the absence of prior notice to the parties.


Overall, the dispute involved a mixture of fact (what happened; credibility), the application of the criminal standard of proof to those facts, and a discretionary/value component in relation to sentence.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the recusal complaint, the appellate court emphasised that at the start of the trial the magistrate explicitly alerted the defence that she had already heard certain evidence relating to the merits during the bail proceedings and directly asked whether there was any objection to her continuing. Defence counsel indicated, after taking instructions, that there was no objection. In the appellate court’s view, this on-the-record position significantly undermined the later recusal criticism.


The court also addressed the contention that evidence at bail conflicted with trial evidence. It regarded any such conflicts as vague and, in any event, linked to the investigating officer having given what amounted to hearsay regarding witnesses’ statements at bail. The investigating officer did not testify at trial, which further diminished the significance of any suggested inconsistencies. The appellate court found no basis to treat this as materially affecting the fairness of the trial.


The allegation of subjective bias based on the magistrate having seen photographs during bail was similarly rejected. The appellate court stated that it could find no signs of subjectivity or prejudice on the record and, on the contrary, considered the record to reflect positively on the magistrate in that regard.


On the merits, the appellate court acknowledged that the medical evidence created a difficulty for the State insofar as it was not accompanied by fuller scene evidence (particularly regarding the glass), and the court itself noted that the photographs appeared to show multiple wounds that, viewed superficially, could suggest injury from broken glass rather than necessarily from repeated knife stabs. The court therefore did not treat the medical evidence as eliminating the glass explanation in all respects.


Despite these reservations, the appellate court treated credibility as the decisive feature. It endorsed the trial court’s reliance on Ms Kleynhans as a credible and objective witness and emphasised the extensive contradictions within the defence case, particularly between the appellant and his mother. The court considered these contradictions to be so substantial that it created the impression that they were speaking about different events, and it concluded that the appellant’s version was not acceptable.


In addition, the court found it materially damaging to the defence that, despite cross-examination suggesting the glass was the cause of the facial injuries, the defence witnesses ultimately appeared uncertain about whether the injuries were in fact caused by glass, with the court characterising their stance as speculation because neither had properly seen the mechanism of injury. Against this, the court treated the missing kitchen knife and the evidence about the appellant’s handling of knives, as well as the unexplained injuries on the appellant himself, as part of the cumulative evidentiary picture supporting the State’s case.


Drawing these strands together, the appellate court reasoned that the complainant could only have been injured in the house and that, even if some injuries could have been caused by glass, there were definite cutting wounds; the court held that at least three of the major lacerations were proven beyond reasonable doubt to have been inflicted by a knife. On that basis, it found no basis to interfere with the conviction.


On sentence, the appellate court approached the matter by noting that the only real question, on its view, was whether the sentence might be too lenient, but it declined to intervene. It stressed that there had been no prior notice to the parties that an increase might be considered and also took account of the appellant being a first offender and the role of alcohol in the incident. It expressed satisfaction that the magistrate had exercised a proper discretion and that the sentence was appropriate in the circumstances.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court dismissed the appeal.


The conviction for attempted murder was confirmed, and the sentence of five years’ imprisonment was confirmed.


No separate costs order was recorded in the judgment.


Cases Cited


Moolman v S (A362/2009) [2009] ZAGPPHC 367 (8 December 2009)


Legislation Cited


No legislation was expressly cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were expressly cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that there was no basis for recusal where the presiding magistrate disclosed her prior involvement in the bail proceedings and the defence expressly indicated that it had no objection to her continuing, and where the record disclosed no signs of bias or prejudice.


The court further held that, notwithstanding certain difficulties in the medical evidence and the absence of direct evidence describing precisely how the complainant was injured, the State proved guilt beyond reasonable doubt on the strength of the credibility findings and the cumulative circumstantial evidence, including the rejection of the appellant’s contradictory version and the acceptance of Ms Kleynhans’s evidence. The conviction and sentence were therefore upheld.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that a recusal complaint depends on whether the proceedings disclose a legitimate basis for concluding that the presiding officer could not bring an impartial mind to bear, and that prior exposure to information in a bail context does not, without more, establish disqualifying bias, particularly where disclosure is made and no objection is raised by the defence at the commencement of trial.


The judgment applied the criminal-law approach to proof where the State must establish guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and where an accused’s version cannot be rejected merely because it is improbable but may be rejected when it is not reasonably possibly true, assessed in light of the totality of evidence including credibility and probabilities.


The judgment also applied the principle that an appellate court will be slow to interfere with a trial court’s findings on credibility and with the trial court’s sentencing discretion, and that interference is not warranted where the trial court has exercised a proper discretion and the sentence is appropriate on the facts as found. The judgment further reflected that an increased sentence should not be considered without prior notice to the parties.

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[2009] ZAGPPHC 367
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Moolman v S (A362/2009) [2009] ZAGPPHC 367 (8 December 2009)

IN
DIE NOORD GAUTENG HOE HOF, PRETORIA
[REPUBLIEK
VAN SUID-AFRIKA]
SAAKNOMMER
: A
362/2009: 23.11.2009
DATE: 8 DECEMBER
2009
NOT REPORTABLE
In die saak tussen
KOBUS
MOOLMAN
.....................................................................................................................
Appellant
en
DIE
STAAT
…............................................................................................................................
Respondent
UITSPRAAK
1
Die Appellant het in
die Streekhof te Benoni tereggestaan op 'n aanklag van poging tot
moord en is skuldig bevind en is 5 jaar gevangenisstraf
opgele. Die
Appellant kom nou in hoer beroep teen die skuldigbevinding sowel as
die vonnis.
2
.
Die Appellant se
regsverteenwoordiger het 2 hoofpunte geopper in kritiek teen die
skuldigbevinding. Die eerste een is dat die Landdros
haarself moes
rekuseer van die verrigtinge omdat sy die borgaansoek ook hanteer het
en tweedens dat die Landdros versuim het om
die getuies van die Staat
se weergawes na behore te ontleed en by gevolg nie bevind het nie dat
die beskuldtgde/Appellant se weergawe
redelik moontlik waar kan wees.
3.
By
die aanvang van die verhoor en voordat die klaagster getuig het, het
die Hof a
quo
pertinent
aan die verdediging geste! dat sy reeds sekere getuienis aangehoor
het met betrekking tot die meriete van die saak
tydens
'n borgaansoek. Sy het spesifiek gevra of die verdediging enige
beswaar het dat sy voortgaan met die verhoor.
Die
verdedigingsadvokaat. Mev Botha het duideiik gese en ek haal
aan.

Nee
Edelagbare ek het dit met my klient opgeneem. ons het nie 'n beswaar
nie.'
Die
verdere beswaar teen die Landdros was dat daar sekere getuienis
aangebied is by die borgaansoek wat gebots het met
die getuienis
in die verhoor. Daar mag sulke getuienis wees maar is eerstens
baie vaag en tweedens was dit slegs die ondersoekbeampte wat
in
effek hoorse getuienis gegee het wat die getuies se verklarings
sou behels. Onder daardie omstandighede is die botsings
van geen
wesenlike waarde nie te meer nog omdat die ondersoekbeampte seif
nie by die verhoor getuig het nie. Wat my betref
is daar niks in
hierdie punt nie
4.
Daar is ook betoog
dat die Landdros subjektief was omdat sy die borgaansoek gedoen het
en blootgestel was aan foto's van die klaagster
na die
aanranding en dat sy dus subjektief beinvloed is. Ek kan geen
sodanige tekens van subjektiwiteit en vooroordeel
sien me.
trouens die lees van die rekord maak ‘n goeie indruk in
daardie verband op die Hof
5.
Wat betref die
waarskyniikhede en geloofwaardighede het die Landdros sekere sterk
bevindings gemaak. Sy het die hoofgetuie namens
die Staat naamlik
klaagster se dogter, Mej Kleynhans. as 'n baie goeie en
objektiewe getuie bestempel .Dit is so dat
daar gaan direkte
getuienis is vanaf die Staat se kant oor presies hoe die
klaagster aangerand is nie. Dit is gemeensaak dat daar
'n
stryery was waar die klaagster by die Appellant se moeder se
woning teenwoordig was. Die getuie. Kleynhans. het ook glase

hoor val en breek Dit is die Appellant se weergawe dat die
klaagster geval het op die stukke glas en sodoende haar gesig

geskend het met die verskeie beserings Daar is ten minste 4 snye
op haar gesig wat almal 4 tot 5 sentimeter lank is. Drie van
die
snye kom voor op haar voorkop. Die ander beserings is bokant
haar neus, dan onder haar linker oog dan op haar lip van
die
onderkant van die lip tot teen die regter neusvieuel en dan een
onder die onderste lip feitlik tot op die ken Daar blyk
ook snye te
wees aan die regterkant van haar mond soos inderdaad ook aangedui
deur die dokter en die J88 mediese ondersoekvorm Sy
het ook
oppervlakkige snye gehad aan haar regterhand en skaafwonde op
albei arms naby die elmboog. Daar was ook ‘n snywond
aan die
agterkant van haar kop en 'n skaafwond aan die linkerkant van
haar nek. Daar was ook 'n snywond bo-op die neus
en kleinerige
steekwondjie ook aan die iinkeroog langs die neus en onder die
wenkbrou van die linkeroog en nog een links
van die linkeroog in
'n halfmaan
6
.
Die dokter het
getuig dat hy nie hierdie wonde kan versoen opgedoen deur in
glasstukke te val nie. Hy het ges& die snye sou
meer oneweredig
gewees het terwyl 'n mes duidelik 'n reguit skerp wond maak.
Hierdie wonde was dan ook almal skerp gesnyde
wonde. Verder het
hy ook getuig dat as sy met haar gesig in die glasstukke geval
het. sou mens nie snye verwag op dieper liggende
dele van haar
gesig nie maar eerder aan die uitwendige en uitstekende dele
soos byvoorbeeid haar neus of ken of voorkop, waar
sy geval het.
maar verseker nie ook onder die neus en onder die linkeroog me. Om
daardie redes se hy kan hy nie glo dat
dit veroorsaak kon gewees
het deur die val in die glasstukke nie Daar is ongelukkig nie 'n
foto of 'n beskrywing van
hoe en waar die glasstukke geie het en
oor hoe 'n groot area nie.
7.
Die
dokter se getuienis soos gese was deurgaans dat eerstens 'n glas ‘n
onewe rand maak terwyl n skerp mes 'n ewe of gelyke
rand sou
maak Verder het hy gese dat indien die persoon op glasskerwe op
die grond val. sal daar veelvuldige besenngs
wees Dit punt is
egter dat indien gekyk word na foto 2. soos mgehandig by die
verhoor en soos voorheen gemeld, is daar duidelik
veelvuldige
steekmerke Afgesien van die groot snywonde is daar ook klein
wondjies soos gemeld bokant die linkeroog net onder
die wenkbrou en
ook nader na die neus toe asook die wond op die voorkant van die
neus en op die regterhoek van die mond
en lyk dit ook asof daar
kleiner steekwondjies is bokant die regteroog Die wonde onder
die lip is ook nie in 'n reguit
lyn me maar reghoekig teenoor
mekaar. Dit Is vir my moeilik om te verstaan hoedat n persoon
tydens n struweling so baie steke
sal toedien met ‘n mes
in sulke verskillende posisies Op die oog af van die foto lyk dit vir
my meer soos n persoon
wat steekwonde opgedoen het vanwee
gebreekte glas waarin sy geval het Dit slurt nie noodwendig
messteke ook uit nie maar Indien
daar bevind word dat daar wel
glassteekwonde is en in die lig van die ontkennmg van die
beskuldigde dat hy wel met ‘n
mes gesteek het en sonder enige
ander direkte getuienis is dit vir my moeilik om te s§ dat die
Staat bo redelike
twyfel bewys het dat hierdie wonde
sleos
met
'n mes toegedien is. Maar dit sluit nie n aanranding met 'n mes
ook uit me Dar moet na al die getuienis gekyk word.
8.
Ten
spyte van die voorgaande probleme van die mediese getuienis is daar
een ander belangrike aspek wat aangeraak moet word Oit is
die kwessie
van geloofwaardigheid. veral tussen Me Kieynhans en die
Appellant Soos vermeld het die Hof
a
quo
baie
waarde geheg aan Me Kieynhans se getuienis Aan die ander kant
het hy die Appellant se getuienis verwerp veral vanwee
sekere
weersprekings tussen hom en sy moeder wat ook namens hom getuig
het. By nalees van die oorkonde en veral die getuienis
van
die Appellant en sy moeder kom mens tot die indruk dat die twee
persone amper oor twee verskillende gebeurtenisse
praat, daar is
soveel verskille tussen hulle. Om net ‘n paar voorbeelde
te noem: Appellant s& die klaagster het
sy ma gevloek. Mev
Brown, die ma ontken dit. Appellant se hy het die klaagster gestamp
- Mev Brown s£ dit het nie
gebeur nie, sy het seif by haar, wat
Mev Brown is. se huis mgehardloop en teen die yskas geval.
Appellant s& die klaagster
het uitgehardloop en hy het
agterna gegaan om te kyk of sy reg is -Mev Brown s£ hy het glad
nie uitgegaan nie Die Appellant
se hy het saam met die klaagster
by sy ma se huis gewag dat sy oopmaak - Mev Brown se sy was nie
daar me. sy het eers
mgehardloop nadat die Appellant reeds in
die huis in is. Appellant het gese sy het sy moeder gevloek maar
die moeder s6 sy
het haar nie gevloek nie, maar die moeder se hy
het gese “
come
tell my mother how did you swear at her”.
Appellant
se dit het gereen en die vloer was nat - tydens kruisondervraging se
Mev Brown dat dit inderdaad nie nat was nie.
alhoewel sy vroeer
se dit was nat, toe later verander sy dit dat nie nat was van
die reen nie maar dat dit was nat vanweS
die wyn wat uit kfaagster
se glas geval het. Sy bevestig inderdaad dat die vloer droog was. Dan
blyk dit ook uit in Mev
Brown se getuiems dat die klaagster
inderdaad twee maal met haar gesig in die glasstukke gevai het.
terwyl daar tot op daardie
stadium geen sprake daarvan was nie.
maar slegs een maal. 'n Ander aspek wat uitgekom het is dat ten
spyte van die kruisverhoor
wat aan die klaagster en Me Kleynhans
gestel is dat dit inderdaad die glas is wat haar gesig geskend
het, blyk dit nou
onder kruisverhoor van die Appellant en sy getuie
dat hulle nie eers seker is dit was die glas nie. want nie een het
dit behoorlik
gesien nie. Dit was suiwer spekuiasie van hulle
kant af
9.
In
die lig van die voorgaande kan ek me anders nie as om met die Hof a
quo
saam
te stem dat die Appellant se getuienis hoegenaamd nie aanvaarbaar
is me. Aan die ander kant is daar sekere getuienis wat
uitgekom
het. veral Me Kleynhans se getuienis. wat so spontaan uitgekom
het. dat mens me anders kan nie as om dit as
geloofwaardig te
aanvaar In kruisondervraging meld sy dat een van haar skerp
messe uit haar kombuis weg is en dat sy inderdaad
vir die Appellant
se suster gevra het om dit by haar moeder te gaan kry Drt was vir
haar duidelik dat die Appellant die betrokke
aand met die
messe gespeel het Oit is toe teruggesit in die houer maar die
volgende dag toe sy opruim het sy opgemerk
dat die een mes weg
is. Interessant se sy ook dat as dft sou gereen het in die aand
sou daar nie bloed voor die Appellant
se ma se huis gele het nie
en dat dit weggespoel sou gewees het. Die ander mteressante ding
wat Me Kleynhans gemerk het.
is dat die Appellant ‘n klein sny
merkte aan sy hand gehad het en in die gesig - dit is egter
nooit opgeklaar waar
dit vandaan sou kom nie. Indie giet word op
die skaafmerke. moes daar 'n struweling van ‘n aard gewees
het.
10
Al hierdie faktore
lei my tot die onvermydeiike gevolg dat die klaagster aileen in die
Appellant se ma se huis beseer kon gewees
het. dat alhoewel van
die besenngs miskien deur glasstukke veroorsaak is. was daar
verseker definitiewe snymerke soos
deur die dokter getuig. Ten
minste dne van die groot snymerke was, wat my aanbetref. bo
redelike twyfel aangebring deur ‘n mes.
In die
omstandighede kan ek me foutvmd met die skuldigbevinding me.
11
Wat betref vonnis,
is die enigste vraag eintlik of die vonnis nie te lig is nie.
Daar is nie vooraf
kennis gegee in die verband aan die partye nie en veral in die lig
van die feit dat Appellant ‘n eerste
oortreder is. en dat drank
betrokke was by die hele aangeleentheid. is ek nie die menmg
toegedaan dat drt geregverdig
is om op hierdie stadium in te
meng met die vonnis nie. Origens is ek tevrede dat die Landdros
n behoorlike diskresie uitgeoefen
het en dat die vonnis in die
omstandighede heel gepas is Ek stel dan voor dat die skuldigbevmding
en vonnis bekragtig
word.
Dit word so gelas.
R D CLAASEN
Regter van die
Hooggeregshof
Ek stem saam
L. PHATUDI
Regter van die
Hooggeregshof