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[2009] ZANCHC 65
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Abertooi v S (K/S/ 38/09) [2009] ZANCHC 65 (16 September 2009)
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IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(NORTHERN
CAPE HIGH COURT, KIMBERLEY)
Case No: K/S/
38/09
Delivered:
16-09-2009
THE STATE
V
RICHARD ABERTOOI
JUDGMENT
MJALI
AJ:
[1] The accused, a 19
year old man, is charged with the murder of Lesley Milo. It is
alleged that on the evening of 14 July 2006,
the accused unlawfully
and intentionally stabbed the deceased with a knife and thereby
caused his death.
[2] He pleaded not guilty
to the charge. In amplification of his plea of not guilty the accused
gave the following explanation.
The deceased attacked him with a
sharp object and he stabbed him in self defence. Further, in terms of
section 220
of the
Criminal Procedure Act No. 51 of 1977
the accused
admitted the following.
2.1 That the deceased is
Lesley Milo.
2.2 That he stabbed the
deceased once with a knife.
That the deceased died
as a result of the stab wound inflicted by him on the deceased.
[3]
H
is written
plea explanation statement
was handed in and admitted as exhibit A. The post mortem report as
well as the photo album and plan were handed in by consent between
the parties and admitted as exhibits B and C respectively.
The chief post mortem findings were one stab wound on the left side
of the neck and laceration on the left carotid. The cause of
death
was hypovolemic shock.
[4] Thus the only issue
that remains to be determined is whether or not the accused acted in
self defence when he stabbed the deceased
on the evening of 14 July
2006. Three witnesses testified for the state namely Elmarie Botha
(Elmarie), Elvicious Botha (Elvicious)
and Inspector Edmund Block.
The accused testified in his defence. As best as can be discerned
from the contradicting evidence adduced
by three state witnesses as
well as that of the accused, the salient facts are essentially as
follows. At 23hoo on 14 July 2006
the accused, deceased, Elmarie and
Elvicious were together at Blesbok Street when the deceased asked for
a puff from the cigarette
smoked by Elvicious. According to Elmarie,
she as well as the accused also asked for a puff from Elvicious and a
quarrel ensued
between the deceased and the accused as to who should
smoke first. This quarrel culminated in the accused retreating and
stabbing
the deceased once on the neck. At the time of the stabbing,
the deceased was standing and had not physically attacked the accused
in any manner. Elviciousâs version differs from Elmarieâs.
According to him prior to the incident he had been drinking with
the
accused and some other friends inside a certain room. At a certain
stage they decided to go outside to watch people making
noise in the
street. As they were standing outside with the accused, the deceased
appeared and asked for a puff from him, the accused
simply stabbed
the deceased for no reason at all (without any quarrel and any attack
by the deceased). Neither the accused nor
Elmarie did at any stage
ask for a puff from his cigarette nor was there any quarrel between
the accused and the deceased regarding
who should smoke first.
The two (Elmarie and
Elvicious) are however ad idem about the fact that the deceased had
no weapon in his possession and had not
attacked the accused prior to
the stabbing. After being stabbed the deceased ran and fell at a
spot, 69,6m away from the scene.
The accused also ran to his home.
The police were summoned. They found the deceased still alive but his
pulse was very low and
summoned an ambulance. The deceased was later
certified dead on the spot by the ambulance personnel. No weapon was
found in the
deceasedâs possession and on the spot where he fell.
Inspector Block is one of the policemen that were summoned to the
scene.
They found the deceased at the spot where he fell. According
to him no sharp object was found in the deceasedâs possession and
at the spot where he fell. The police did not go to the spot where
the stabbing took place.
[5] After the deceased
was removed to the mortuary, Inspector Block and his crew went
searching for the accused. They found him
at his home with his hand
full of blood. The accused gave them the knife he used to stab the
deceased. He had a cut on his finger
which according to inspector
Block looked like a stab wound. They took the accused to the hospital
for treatment and then detained
him. In inspector Blockâs
observation the accused smelled strongly of alcohol and was drunk.
[6] The accused testified
that prior to him stabbing the deceased, a quarrel ensued between him
and the deceased. This was caused
by the fact that the deceased
grabbed a cigarette that Elvicious gave him. The deceased refused to
give the cigarette to him. The
quarrel progressed to the stage where
they shouted and swore at each other. The deceased advanced and made
a stabbing motion at
him. He warded off the blow with his hand. He
did not see any weapon in his possession but assumes from the cut he
sustained on
his finger after warding off the blow that the deceased
was armed with a sharp object. The deceased continued advancing
towards
him. At some stage he had to hold onto the fence and pull
himself up from a kneeling position. It is then that he took out an
okapi
knife from his pocket with one hand, opened it using his mouth
and stabbed the deceased once on the neck. When he stabbed he did
not
aim at any particular part of the deceasedâs body. According to him
the whole incident happened fast.
[7] The remarks of Brand
AJA in S v Shackell
2001 (2) SACR 185
@194g-i, are particularly
apposite in evaluating the evidence in this matter:
âIt
is a trite principle that in criminal proceedings the prosecution
must prove its case beyond reasonable doubt and that a mere
preponderance of probabilities is not enough. Equally trite is the
observation that, in view of this standard of proof in a criminal
case, a court does not have to be convinced that every detail of an
accusedâs version is true. If the accusedâs version is
reasonably
possibly true in substance the court must decide the matter on the
acceptance of that version. Of course it is permissible
to test the
accusedâs version against the inherent probabilities. But it cannot
be rejected merely because it is improbable;
it can only be rejected
on the basis of inherent probabilities if it can be said to be so
improbable that it cannot reasonably
possibly be true.â
[8] It is trite that
there is no obligation upon an accused person, where the State bears
the onus, âto convince the courtâ.
If his version is reasonably
possibly true he is entitled to his acquittal even though his
explanation is improbable.
[9] It is not necessary
for a court to believe the version of an accused person, nor is it
required that a court believes the details
of such a version. This is
trite in our law. See inter alia:
S
v Jaffer
1988 (2) SA 84
(C) at 89DâE. S v Mhlongo
1991 (2) SACR 207
(A) at 210d.
[10] What is required in
a matter such as this is a holistic analysis of all the evidence, the
weighing-up of those elements which
point to the guilt of the accused
as against those which point towards his innocence, while having
regard to inherent strengths
and weaknesses, probabilities and
improbabilities on both sides and, having completed this exercise, to
take a decision as to whether
the balance weighs so heavily in favour
of the State as to exclude any reasonable doubt about an accused
personâs guilt. See
in this regard
S
v Chabalala
2003 (1) SACR 134
(SCA) at 139Iâ140A
.
[11] Moreover, a trier of
fact should also examine independently verifiable evidence, if any,
to determine whether it supports any
of the evidence tendered. See in
this regard
S
v Trainor 5
2003 (1) SACR 35
(SCA) at 41DâC
whereat Navsa JA states the following:
â
A
conspectus of all the evidence is required. Evidence that is reliable
should be weighed alongside such evidence as may be found
to be
false. Independently verifiable evidence, if any, should be weighed
to see if it supports any of the evidence tendered. In
considering
whether evidence is reliable, the quality of that evidence must of
necessity be evaluated, as must corroborative evidence,
if any.
Evidence, of course, must be evaluated against the onus on any
particular issue or in respect of the case in its entirety.
The
compartmentalised and fragmented approach of the magistrate is
illogical and wrong.â
[12] Mr Mashuga for the
State has argued for the conviction of the accused. In support of
that contention he argued that the mere
fact that no weapon was found
in deceasedâs possession and at the place where the deceased fell
proves that the deceased was
unarmed. He further relies on the
evidence of the two state witnesses as well as on the fact that the
accused himself did not see
any weapon in the deceasedâs
possession. He argued further that a period of time elapsed between
the stabbing of the deceased
and the arrest and that the accused
could have sustained the injury on his finger subsequent to the
stabbing of the deceased and
before his arrest.
[13] In my view this
argument cannot stand for the following reasons:
The objective evidence
that the accused sustained a stab wound when he warded off the blow
is totally at odds with Elmarieâs
and Elviciousâ evidence that
the deceased was unarmed.
The differing versions
of the state witnesses as to how the events unfolded on the night
in question.
The police did not
search the spot where the deceased was stabbed for any weapon. No
reliance can be placed on Elmarieâs evidence
that there was no
weapon on the murder scene as she left the scene immediately after
the stabbing to summon an ambulance.
It was never the
Stateâs case that subsequent to the stabbing of the deceased and
after leaving the scene the accused sustained
an injury on his
finger.
The accusedâs
evidence as to how he sustained the injury on his finger went
unchallenged. The two eye witnesses did not see
it happen. Elmarie
stated that it could have happened but she did not see it and later
changed to say it never happened. This
casts some doubt about her
reliability. Elvicious saw the injury when the accused was released
from custody.
There is no evidence
that the accused sustained the injury other than he has testified.
Mr Mashugaâs submission that the accused
might have sustained the
injury subsequent to the stabbing of the deceased but prior to his
arrest amounts to asking this court
to embark into the field of
conjecture. It is common cause that when the police arrived at the
accusedâs place they found
him injured and took him to hospital
before detaining him. It was never put to the appellant that he
sustained the injury otherwise
than he has testified and that he
showed it to the police so as to dupe them into believing that he
acted in self defence.
On the Stateâs
description of events the accused behaved like a lunatic, stabbing
the deceased without reason. It is improbable
that the accused
would behave in this most blatantly murderous fashion in full view
of witnesses and immediately thereafter
hand over the knife and
report to the police that the deceased injured him, well-knowing
that his version was false and would
probably be contradicted. This
is particularly so, if one considers that, on the Stateâs version
of events, there appears
to have been no apparent trigger for the
accusedâs alleged behaviour.
[14] Having considered
all the evidence in this matter, I am not convinced that the
accusedâs version is not reasonably possibly
true. Not only do the
state witnesses contradict each other materially, but a conspectus of
all the evidence does not persuade
me that the appellantâs version
can be said to be false beyond reasonable doubt. In fact Elmarieâs
evidence that there was
an altercation between the accused and the
deceased as to who should smoke first, lends credence to the
accusedâs version of
the quarrel over a cigarette. Further,
Elmarieâs testimony that the accused first retreated before he
stabbed the deceased negates
the stateâs version that the deceased
was simply standing when the accused stabbed him. Independently
verifiable evidence in
this matter of Inspector Block that the
accused sustained an injury on his finger on the night in question.
All these facts lead
to a conclusion that this is one matter where it
cannot be said that the balance weighs so heavily in favour of the
State as to
exclude any reasonable doubt about the accused personâs
guilt.
It is a well-established
value in our law that in search for the truth it is better for a
guilty person to go free than for one
innocent victim to be
convicted. On this basis the accused is given the benefit of doubt
and must walk.
[15]
In the
result;
The accused is found
not guilty and discharged.
_________________
G N MJALI
ACTING JUDGE
On
behalf of the State
Adv.
Mashuga
Instructed
by
The
Director of Public Prosecutions
For
the defence
Adv.
Van Tonder
Instructed
by
The
Legal Aid Board
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