S v Babeile (CA&R35/01) [2001] ZANCHC 10 (11 May 2001)

75 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Attempted murder — Appeal against conviction — Appellant convicted of attempted murder after stabbing complainant during a racial altercation at school — Legal issue centered on whether the State proved intent to murder or merely intent to cause grievous bodily harm — Court found that the evidence supported a finding of subjective foresight of the possibility of fatal consequences from the stabbing, leading to the conclusion that the appellant acted with dolus eventualis — Appeal dismissed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a criminal appeal to the High Court of South Africa (Northern Cape Provincial Division, Kimberley) against a conviction for attempted murder.


The appellant was Andrew Itumeleng Babeile, a schoolboy convicted in the Vryburg Regional Court. The respondent was the State.


In the Regional Court, the appellant was convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to five years’ imprisonment, with two years conditionally suspended for five years. The trial court refused leave to appeal. The appellant then petitioned the High Court for leave to appeal in terms of section 309C of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, and leave was granted.


The appeal was limited to conviction only, and further narrowed to the question whether the State proved an intention to murder (in the form of dolus eventualis) as opposed to an intention to cause grievous bodily harm. The dispute arose from a racially charged altercation at Vryburg High School, during which the complainant was stabbed in the neck with a pair of scissors.


2. Material Facts


The court treated certain facts as common cause. On 17 February 1999, there was a racial altercation between groups of white and black schoolboys at Vryburg High School. In the course of events, the appellant stabbed the complainant, Christof Erasmus, in the neck with a pair of scissors. The wound was in a region of the neck close to vital organs and had a 50% potential of being fatal.


On the State’s version, the complainant was among the white schoolboys involved in a verbal confrontation with black schoolboys. One Corné de Bruyn appeared to have been a prominent figure among the white scholars. The appellant was seen to lash out at the complainant with the scissors, inflicting a penetrating laceration of approximately 2 cm to the complainant’s neck. The appellant fled but was tackled by another scholar, taken to the headmaster’s office, and later arrested. The scissors were retrieved and handed in as an exhibit.


The appellant testified and advanced a version that the magistrate rejected as not reasonably possibly true. He claimed he was encircled and shoved by the “de Bruyn group,” that offensive racial language was used, that he took out the scissors to scare the boys away, and that he accidentally stabbed the complainant after being shoved. He also alleged the complainant had slapped him, which was denied by the State’s eyewitnesses. It was, however, common cause that immediately before the stabbing the complainant smacked his fist into the palm of his other hand, producing a loud noise.


For purposes of the appeal, the parties accepted that the enquiry proceeded on the basis that the appellant’s version had been rejected and that the State’s case was accepted. The proved factual premise for determining intention was therefore described by the court as a verbal altercation without physical manhandling, followed by an intentional stabbing by the appellant to the complainant’s neck.


A key factual component of the proved case was the uncontroverted medical evidence of Dr Smit. Dr Smit described the wound as a 2 cm penetrating laceration close to vital organs, with a 50% likelihood of being fatal. The wound indicated that a reasonably severe amount of force had been used, as it penetrated to the complainant’s jaw. In the doctor’s view, a person inflicting such a wound in the neck region should anticipate potentially fatal consequences.


3. Legal Issues


The central question was whether, on the proved facts, the State established beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant had the requisite intention to kill for attempted murder, specifically dolus eventualis, rather than merely an intention to cause grievous bodily harm.


The dispute was primarily one of the application of legal principles to the facts, focused on a value-laden inferential assessment of the appellant’s subjective foresight. The court had to determine what inference about the appellant’s state of mind was the only reasonable inference on the accepted facts, while guarding against substituting objective foreseeability (what a reasonable person would have foreseen) for the required subjective foresight (what this accused in fact foresaw).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter on the basis that the appeal’s narrow scope required it to evaluate intention on the accepted State version and the rejection of the appellant’s testimony. The judgment noted the difficulties that follow when an accused gives an untruthful version and then seeks the benefit of arguments inconsistent with the proved facts, referencing authority that a benefit of doubt must not be grounded in speculation but in a reasonable foundation consistent with the proved facts.


The court accepted that the essential enquiry was the appellant’s subjective foresight when stabbing the complainant. Because subjective foresight is rarely susceptible of direct proof, the court held that the answer had to be reached through inferential reasoning, applied cautiously. In doing so, it emphasised the governing principle that, for intention in the form of dolus eventualis to be proved beyond reasonable doubt, the inference that the accused subjectively foresaw the possibility of death must be the only reasonable inference, and it is insufficient that the accused ought to have foreseen death or even that he probably did so if a reasonable possibility remains that he did not.


In evaluating the appellant’s counsel’s criticisms of the magistrate’s reasoning, the High Court was not persuaded that the magistrate had blurred the distinction between subjective and objective foresight. The appellant relied on factors such as the difference in build between the complainant (a hefty rugby player) and the appellant (smaller and frail), the complainant’s provocative gesture (smacking his fist into his other hand), differences in eyewitness accounts about where the parties stood, and an allegation that the complainant ducked.


The court held that these factors did not undermine the magistrate’s conclusion on intention. It considered it unsurprising that smaller persons might attack larger ones, particularly where the attacker is armed. It further accepted that in a moving and confused school scene, where the bell had rung and scholars were dispersing, eyewitness discrepancies about positions were to be expected and did not materially displace the core proved fact of an intentional neck-stab. The complainant’s provocative gesture did not justify the stabbing and, on the accepted version, there had not been physical manhandling preceding it. The court also endorsed the magistrate’s view that scissors can be as lethal as a knife when used to stab.


Central to the court’s reasoning was the medical evidence, which it treated as particularly significant. The location of the wound near vital organs, the acknowledged 50% fatal potential, and the degree of force necessary to cause the penetration supported the inference that the act carried an obvious risk of fatal consequences. The court noted that the appellant had the scissors in his hand before the attack and intentionally stabbed the complainant in the neck. Given those proved facts, it considered there to be no reasonable possibility that it “never occurred” to the appellant that death could result.


Applying the inferential test with the caution described in the cited authorities, the court concluded that the only reasonable inference was that the appellant subjectively foresaw the possibility that his act might cause death and nevertheless proceeded, reckless of that result. On that basis, the requirements for dolus eventualis were met and the conviction for attempted murder was correctly sustained.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal against conviction was dismissed. The High Court confirmed the appellant’s conviction for attempted murder.


The High Court also confirmed the sentence imposed by the Regional Court, namely five years’ imprisonment, of which two years were conditionally suspended for a period of five years.


No separate order as to costs was recorded in the judgment.


Cases Cited


R v Mlambo 1957(4) SA 727 (AD)


S v Sigwahla 1967(4) SA 566 (AD)


S v Phallo & others 1999(2) SACR 558 (SCA)


S v Lungile & another 1999(2) SACR 597 (SCA)


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act 108 of 1996)


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 309C


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The High Court held that, on the accepted State version and the uncontroverted medical evidence, the only reasonable inference was that the appellant subjectively foresaw the possibility that stabbing the complainant in the neck with scissors might cause death and proceeded regardless. Accordingly, the State proved dolus eventualis and the conviction for attempted murder was upheld. The appeal was dismissed and the conviction and sentence were confirmed.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that dolus eventualis requires proof that the accused subjectively foresaw the possibility of the prohibited consequence (here, death) ensuing from the conduct and nevertheless proceeded, reckless as to that outcome. Proof cannot be satisfied by showing only that the accused ought reasonably to have foreseen the consequence; subjective foresight must be established beyond reasonable doubt, typically by inference from the proved facts.


The court reaffirmed that inferential reasoning in criminal cases must satisfy the standard that the inference relied upon must be the only reasonable inference consistent with the proved facts. If there is a reasonable possibility that the accused did not subjectively foresee the relevant consequence, the inference of dolus eventualis cannot be drawn, even if objective foreseeability is strong or subjective foresight appears probable.


The judgment also applied the principle that an accused’s attempt to obtain a benefit of doubt must not rest on speculation, but on a reasonable foundation derived from evidence or from reasonable inferences consistent with and not outweighed by the proved facts. Where an accused gives false evidence irreconcilable with the proved facts, a court may in appropriate circumstances reject attempts to claim the benefit of doubt on speculative bases not supported by the proved case.

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[2001] ZANCHC 10
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S v Babeile (CA&R35/01) [2001] ZANCHC 10 (11 May 2001)

VERSLAGWAARDIG JA/NEE
SIRKULEER ONDER
REGTERS JA/NEE
SIRKULEER ONDER
LANDDROSTE JA/NEE
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(NORTHERN
CAPE PROVINCIAL DIVISION)
KIMBERLEY
CASE
NO.:CA&R35/01
DATE:
11/05/2001
In the matter between:
ANDREW ITUMELENG
BABEILE APPELLANT
vs
THE STATE RESPONDENT
CORAM:
Steenkamp
J.P et Majiedt J
J
U D G M E N T
MAJIEDT J:
One of the laudable
objectives in enacting our present Constitution (Act 108 of 1996) is
set forth in the preamble thereof as follows:-
“
to heal the
divisions of the past . . . “
This matter before us
vividly illustrates the necessity for that healing process.
It has at its backdrop
the turmoil and turbulence which has earned the Vryburg High School
nationwide notoriety over the past two
years or so. Racial tensions
lie at the heart of this unfortunate event which has left one of the
protagonists herein with a possibly
permanent physical scar on his
neck, the consequence of a stab wound inflicted with the use of a
pair of scissors by the other protagonist.
The emotional
sequelae
of this sad occurrence on both these protagonists are inestimable.
The Appellant was
convicted of attempted murder in the Vryburg Regional Court and was
sentenced to 5 years imprisonment of which
2 years were
conditionally suspended for a period of 5 years. Having been
refused leave to appeal by the Trial Court, the Appellant
successfully petitioned this Court for leave to appeal in terms of
section 309C
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
.
Leave
to appeal was granted against conviction only and was limited to the
question of whether the State had proved an intention to
murder as
opposed to an intention to commit grievous bodily harm.
3. Bearing in mind the
aforementioned narrow ambit of the appeal, it is not necessary to
summarize the evidence in any great detail.
Suffice to say that the
following was common cause at the trial:
on 17 February 1999
there was a racial altercation between a number of white schoolboys
and their black counterparts at the Vryburg
High School;
as a consequence
thereof, the Appellant stabbed the complainant, Christof Erasmus,
with a pair of scissors in his neck;
3.3 this wound was
located in an area of the neck close to vital organs and it had a 50%
potential of being fatal.
4. The State witnesses’
evidence painted a picture (with certain deviations it must be said)
in which the complainant was part of
the group of white schoolboys
who had been engaged in a verbal confrontation with their black
counterparts on the day in question.
It appears from the evidence
that one Corné de Bruyn was the leading figure on the side of the
white scholars. The Appellant was
seen to lash out at the
complainant with what subsequently turned out to be a pair of
scissors, inflicting the penetrating 2cm. long
wound on the
complainant’s neck.
The Appellant thereafter
took flight from the scene, but was rugby tackled by another scholar
and taken to the headmaster’s office,
whereafter he was arrested by
the police.
The
pair of scissors was retrieved at the scene and was eventually handed
in as an exhibit at the trial.
The Appellant testified
and proffered a thoroughly unconvincing version of how he was
encircled by the white schoolboys (which came
to be referred to as
the
“de
Bruyn group”
at the trial) pursuant to the verbal altercation aforementioned. He
was shoved to and fro in the circle after reference had been
made to
the demeaning racial slur
“kaffir”
(though, on his evidence it has not been established that these
words were directed to him in particular).
He
had taken out the pair of scissors from the pocket of his trousers,
where it had been lodged earlier with a view to replacing it
in his
school bag once the interval was over (these events occurred during
interval). His objective in removing the pair of scissors
was to
scare away these boys, but it did not have the desired effect.
The
Appellant averred that, in the course of being shoved to and fro in
the circle, the complainant had slapped him in the face (this
was
denied by all the eyewitnesses who had earlier testified for the
State).
What
is common cause, however, is that the complainant then smacked his
fist into the palm of his other hand, emitting a loud noise.
The
stabbing then followed immediately thereafter with the Appellant
claiming that he accidentally stabbed the complainant with
the
scissors, after being shoved forward again. There is no consensus
among the State’s eyewitnesses as to whether the Appellant
had been
in front, slightly behind or directly ahead of the complainant
immediately prior to having stabbed the complainant with
the
scissors.
Mr.
Hulley, who appeared before us for the Appellant as he had done at
the trial, placed much emphasis on this discrepancy: more
about that
in due course.
The Magistrate rejected
the Appellant’s version as not reasonably possibly true, correctly
so in my view. The Appellant was a
woefully inept witness and his
evidence left this reader with the distinct impression that he was
evasive, untruthful and readily
prepared to embroider as he moved
along in the face of sustained effective cross-examination by Mr.
Nekosie who appeared for the
State at the trial as he did at this
appeal.
In any event, the narrow
ambit of this appeal is premised on the acceptance of the State case
and the rejection of the Appellant’s
version – this much was
understood by Counsel at the hearing of the appeal.
The
effect thereof is that the issue before us requires to be adjudicated
on the proved facts of:
a verbal altercation,
with no physical manhandling involved, preceding:-
an intentional stabbing
by the Appellant in the neck of the complainant.
Mr. Hulley faced an
arduous task in persuading us that the Magistrate’s decision was
wrong – he acquitted himself commendably
well in attempting to do
so. His argument can be paraphrased as follows:- that the
Magistrate had erred in finding, on the proved
facts, that the State
had proved beyond reasonable doubt an intent (in the form of
dolus
eventualis
)
to murder by in effect blurring the distinction between subjective
foresight and objective foresight. In developing his argument,
Mr.
Hulley placed much reliance on:-
the difference in build
between the complainant (a hefty rugby player) and the Appellant
(diminutive and frail in build);
the fact that the
complainant had punched his fist into the palm of his other hand,
immediately prior to the stabbing;
the positions of the
parties prior to the stabbing and the differences in the State case
in this regard; and
the fact that the
complainant had ducked shortly prior to being stabbed.
I do not propose dealing
with each and every one of these propositions – suffice to say
that I am not persuaded that the Magistrate
had erred in his
assessment of these aspects before arriving at his finding. He
correctly in my view found that:
it is not uncommon for
smaller persons to attack bigger ones, particularly where the
former are armed and the latter not;
where there is a moving
scene such as this one where the school bell had announced the
resumption of classes and scholars were
making their way to their
respective classrooms, it is to be expected that eyewitnesses would
differ on the respective positions
of the protagonists;
even accepting the
complainant’s provocative conduct in smashing his fist into the
palm of his hand, it did not justify the
stabbing itself; and
last but not least –
a pair of scissors can be as lethal as a sharp knife in stabbing
someone.
The medical evidence of
Dr. Smit, which remained uncontroverted, is of particular
significance in deciding the issue before us.
The doctor testified
that:-
the stab wound was a
2cm penetrating laceration, located close to vital organs;
there was a 50%
likelihood of this wound being fatal;
a reasonably severe
amount of force was applied to cause the wound, since it had
penetrated to the complainant’s jaw; and
in his opinion, a
person inflicting such a wound in the neck region should anticipate
that the wound can have fatal consequences.
One of the main
obstacles which confronted Mr. Hulley in the course of his argument
was the dilemma which his client’s rejected
testimony had caused.
I can do no better than to quote, in this regard, the following
dictum by Malan JA in his minority judgment
in
R
v Mlambo
1957(4)
SA 727(AD) at 738:-
“
Moreover if an
accused deliberately takes the risk of giving false evidence in the
hope of being convicted of a less serious crime
or even, perchance,
escaping conviction altogether and his evidence is declared to be
false and irreconcilable with the proved facts
a court will, in
suitable cases, be fully justified in rejecting an argument that,
notwithstanding that the accused did not avail
himself of the
opportunity, to mitigate the gravity of the offence, he should
nevertheless receive the same benefits as if he had
done so.”
It is precisely for this
very reason that Mr. Hulley was driven to disavow during argument his
reliance on what can conveniently be
paraphrased as putative
self-defence in his Heads of Argument. There is simply no basis on
the proved facts for such a defence;
in fact the Appellant himself
did not rely thereon in his testimony, nor did Mr. Hulley advance
that as being the Appellant’s case
in the course of his
cross-examination of the State witnesses.
To borrow again from
Malan JA in
R
v Mlambo
(supra)
at 738B-C:
“
An accused’s
claim to the benefit of a doubt when it may be said to exist
must
not be derived from speculation
but
must rest upon a reasonable and solid foundation created either by
positive evidence or
gathered
from reasonable inferences which are not in conflict with, or
outweighed by, the proved facts of the case
”
(emphasis added).
See also:
S
v Phallo & others
1999(2) SACR 558 (SCA) at 562g-563b.
The nub of the enquiry
is therefore the subjective foresight of the Appellant in stabbing
the complainant. In the absence of an
explanation by him, the
answer to the enquiry must of necessity be sought by inferential
reasoning. In doing so, one needs to
remain mindful of what the
test is and guard against blurring the distinction between
subjective foresight and objective foresight:
“
To constitute proof
beyond reasonable doubt the inference must be the only one which can
reasonably be drawn. It cannot be so drawn
if there is a reasonable
possibility that subjectively the accused did not foresee, even if he
ought reasonably to have done so,
and even if he probably did do so”,
per Holmes JA in
S
v Sighwahla
1967(4) SA 566 (AD) at
570E.
See also:
S
v Lungile & another
1999(2) SACR 597 (SCA) at 602h-i.
In applying this
deductive reasoning with the requisite caution, and conscious of its
pitfalls (see
S
v Lungile,
supra
at 603a-b), I am of the view that the only reasonable inference to
be drawn on the proved facts herein is that the Appellant had
subjectively foreseen the possibility of his act of stabbing the
complainant having fatal consequences, but had proceeded reckless
of
such result. The Appellant had held the pair of scissors in his
hand prior to the attack. Having regard to the force of the
attack,
the location of the wound and the prevailing circumstances at that
time on the accepted version of the State, I do not
believe that
there is any reasonable possibility that it had never occurred to
the Appellant that his action may have fatal consequences.
Compare the facts in:-
S
v Sigwahla
(supra)
at 570
G-H.
In the premises, I am
satisfied that the Magistrate had correctly convicted the Appellant
of attempted murder.
In my view, the appeal
should be dismissed.
_________________________
S.A
MAJIEDT
JUDGE
I
agree. The appeal is dismissed and the conviction and sentence is
confirmed.
__________________
M.D.J.
STEENKAMP
JUDGE
PRESIDENT
DATE
OF APPEAL: 07-05-2001
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 11-05-2001
COUNSEL
FOR APPELLANT: Mr. Hulley
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT: Mr. Nekosie