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2008
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[2008] ZAFSHC 124
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S v Mokoena (A410/07) [2008] ZAFSHC 124 (30 October 2008)
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(ORANGE
FREE STATE PROVINCIAL DIVISION)
Appeal No. : A410/07
In
the appeal between:
NKOSANA
SUNDAY MOKOENA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
_____________________________________________________
CORAM:
EBRAHIM
J
et
MOLOI
AJ
_____________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
BY:
MOLOI
AJ
_____________________________________________________
HEARD
ON:
20
OCTOBER 2008
_____________________________________________________
DELIVERED
ON:
30
OCTOBER 2008
_____________________________________________________
[1] The
appellant was charged with murder in the Regional Court at Welkom in
that on or about 18 November 2005 and at Thabong in
the Regional
Division of the Free State, he unlawfully and intentionally assaulted
one Sonwabile Mzephe by stabbing him with a
knife on his head and
thereby
fatally
wounding him. He was, however, convicted of culpable homicide having
been found to have exceeded the bounds of self defence.
[2] The
following are common cause in this matter: that both the appellant
and the deceased, together with many other people, were
drinking
liquor at a tavern in Thabong on the 18
th
November 2005; that the appellant lent his jacket to the deceased’s
girlfriend after she complained of feeling cold; that
the deceased
became incensed when he realised that his girlfriend is wearing the
appellant’s jacket and became aggressive
towards the appellant;
that the deceased and his friends at a stage chased the appellant
armed with bottles; that the appellant
stabbed the deceased with a
knife on the left side of his forehead and that the deceased died
from this injury later in hospital.
[3] The
first state witness, Oupa Gift Martins, testified he was drinking at
the tavern when he realised an argument had developed
between the
appellant and the deceased over the jacket the appellant lent to the
deceased’s girlfriend. He noticed the deceased
and his friend,
one Nqidisi, armed with bottles, chasing the appellant out of the
tavern and the appellant turning back in the
doorway and from behind
the deceased stabbing him with an Okapi knife on the left hand side
of his (deceased’s) forehead
as a result of which the deceased
fell down. He conceded he was about ten (10) metres away from the
doorway and that there were
many people in the tavern.
[4] The
next state witness, Mncedisi Livingstone Mabuya, confirmed having
noticed the argument between the deceased and the appellant
regarding
the jacket; having seen the appellant and his friend, Kenneth,
leaving the tavern unarmed and followed by the deceased;
and having
seen the deceased coming back into the tavern already injured. He
confirmed that the argument was caused by the deceased.
[5] The
appellant’s version was that, having realised the deceased
wanted to fight him over the jacket he lent to the deceased’s
girlfriend, he wanted to leave the tavern and go home in order to
avoid further quarrels with the deceased. As he was leaving,
he was
charged on by the deceased with some of his friends wielding empty
bottles and one, a knife. He managed to snatch the knife
and as the
deceased was poised to hit him with the bottle, he swung his hand
towards the deceased in front of him and in the process
caused him an
injury to his forehead. He did so because, according to him,
“
... as I
retreated, the deceased is the one that approached me with a bottle
... bottles were coming my direction
.”
though
he did not notice
what the deceased’s friends were doing. He had no intention of
stabbing the deceased. He ran away still terrified he could
be
followed by his attackers.
[6] The court below
accepted the evidence of the first state witness as free of
contradictions or improbabilities though the witness
had not stated
how the appellant, who was behind the deceased, managed to inflict
the wound on the left side of the deceased’s
forehead. The
court below further found the evidence of the second state witness
different from that of the first and declared
it unsatisfactory
without making a finding of contradictory versions in the evidence of
the state witnesses. The court below treated
the evidence of the
first state witness as that of a single witness on which it could
base a finding despite the improbability
pointed out above.
[7] In
dealing with the evidence of the appellant, the court below found it
to be flawed with contradictions and improbabilities
in that he
initially and during cross-examination of witnesses agreed to having
stabbed the deceased. In cross-examination the
appellant testified
that when he was attacked he dispossessed one assailant of the knife
and simply swung it as the deceased approached
him with a bottle
lifted and in the process, inflicted the fatal wound on the forehead
when the deceased was in front of him.
He had neither in
plea-explanation nor in cross-examination of state witnesses
described how the stabbing took place. Fact is
there was a stabbing
of the deceased. I cannot find a contradiction when he later
describes how the stabbing occurred. His description
of how it took
place, is more consistent with the location of the wound than with
direct stabbing which would normally be directed
to the upper body
and not necessarily the head.
[8] Another
improbability noted by the court below is why the appellant disarmed
the person who was a threat to him but directed
the blow at the
deceased instead of the person threatening to stab him. I am of the
view that the attacker was now rendered harmless
after he was
disarmed and the appellant would have no justification to stab him
then as the danger had been averted. The person
holding danger for
the appellant was then the deceased as he had lifted the empty bottle
ready to strike. There is on record sufficient
evidence that the
deceased was enraged and was the aggressor assisted by his friends
armed with bottles. There is no evidence
even from the first state
witness that the deceased’s rage and aggression had abated when
he was stabbed.
[10] In
view of the finding I make hereunder I do not deem it necessary to
deal with the question of a conviction on the competent
verdict of
culpable homicide on the grounds of “ought reasonably to have
foreseen; that he might exceed the bounds of self
defence and that he
might kill his aggressor”.
[11] I
am satisfied that the appellant has discharged the onus on him of
proving that he acted in self defence when he stabbed the
deceased,
neither can his version be said not to be reasonably possibly true.
[12] Consequently the
conviction is set aside.
_____________
K.J. MOLOI, AJ
I
concur.
_____________
S.
EBRAHIM
,
J
On
behalf o
f
appellant: Mr. S. Kruger
Instructed by:
Bloemfontein
Justice Centre
BLOEMFONTEIN
On
behalf of respondent: Adv. R. Hoffman
Instructed by:
Director Public
Prosecutions
BLOEMFONTEIN
/sp