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[1991] ZASCA 154
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S v Bessick (376/90) [1991] ZASCA 154 (21 November 1991)
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(
APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between:
CLIVE BESSICK
Appellant
AND
THE STATE
Respondent
Coram
: SMALBERGER, EKSTEEN, JJA et HARMS, AJA
Heard
: 14
November 1991
Delivered
: 21 November 1991
JUDGMENT EKSTEEN
,
JA :
The appellant was arraigned before the Cape of Good Hope Provincial Division
on an indictment alleging:
(1)
that he murdered one
Michael Smith at or near Valhalla Park on 27 August
1988;
(2)
that, at the same time and place, he
attempted to murder Igshaan Galant;
(3)
that
he unlawfully possessed a fire-arm in contravention of section 2 of Act 75 of
1969; and
(4)
that he was in unlawful
possession of ammu-
nition in contravention of
section 36 of
the same Act.
..../ 2
2
He pleaded not guilty to the first two counts but guilty to the last two. At
the end of the trial he was con-victed on all four counts,
and sentenced to
death on the first count. He now comes on appeal before us in terms of section
316 A of Act 31 of 1977 against his
conviction and sentence on that
count.
The State case rested to a large extent on the evidence of Igshaan
Galant. He was 14 years of age at the time of the incident, and
his friend
Michael Smith (the deceased) was 15 years old. On the night of 27 August 1988 at
about 10 or 11 o'clock, he and the deceased
were walking down Oliver Street in
Val-halla Park. It was a Saturday evening and they were on their way home from a
"braai" held
at a house in
..../ 3
3
Edmund Street and attended, amongst others, by certain members of a gang
known as the Hard Living Kids ("HLKs"). Both Igshaan and
the deceased were
members of this gang. As they walked home in Oliver Street they suddenly saw a
group of between 20-30 people come
running down the street in front of them.
These people were members of a gang known as the Americans, and they were armed
with pick
handles and pangas. In the van was the ap-pellant dressed in a
cream-coloured, fur-lined coat. The deceased and Igshaan stopped in
their tracks
when they saw this gang approaching. When the appellant had advanced to some 20
metres or so from them he stopped; drew
a fire-arm from under his cream-coloured
coat; took aim, and began firing at them. The second shot
..... /4
4
hit the deceased in the mouth and he fell down. Ig-shaan was standing next to
his friend when he fell. He looked at the deceased and
bent down to him, but
then turned and ran away. The appellant continued to fire and Igshaan was hit in
the left shoulder and chest.
He collapsed on the pavement not far from where the
deceased lay. At the time of the shooting Igshaan says he heard the appellant
shouting: "Ek het twee varke. Ek het twee varke". It is not clear whether these
words were uttered while the appellant was shooting
or immediately thereafter.
The trial Court was favour-ably impressed by the evidence of Igshaan and
accepted it as being substantially
true.
He was supported by the evidence of Cecilia
.../ 5
5
Williams. She was a woman who lived in Oliver Street and who happened to be
leaning over her front gate and looking down the street
at the time, while she
smoked a cigarette and listened to the music emana-ting from the "braai" in
Edmund Street that Igshaan had
referred to in his evidence. While standing there
she saw the appellant in his cream-coloured fur—lined coat coming down the
street accompanied by his girl-friend, Zelda Muller, and a group of what
appeared to be his friends. At the corner of Oliver Street
and Edmund Street the
appellant and Zelda became embroiled in an altercation. She was urging him to
come home and not to look for
trouble with "those people". He responded by
drawing his gun and telling her to keep
.../ 6
6
quiet or he would shoot her in the mouth, and then hurling obscenities at the
HLKs and threatening to kill any one of them that he
may come across. The
appellant and his group then turned round and walked back along Oliver Street in
the direction from which they
had come. Some short while later Igshaan and the
deceased appeared and also walked past Cecilia along Oliver Street. She spoke to
them and warned them to be careful. The next thing she noticed was the
appel-lant standing in the middle of the street firing at
Igshaan and the
deceased. This was some distance from her - a distance which she estimates at
some 12 houses further along the street.
The appellant fired two shots at the
deceased and as Igshaan fled he fired
..../ 7
7
a third shot which hit Igshaan. Appellant gave a triumphant shout to the
effect that he had shot two of them. Then he turned and ran
away. One of
appellant's friends then ran to the deceased and hit him on his lower leg with a
panga. Such a wound was indeed found
on the deceased's lower leg at the
post-mortem.
Mrs. Williams also impressed the trial Court as being an
independent and honest witness and the Court accepted her evidence as being
reliable and true, and as supporting the evidence of Igshaan in all material
respects.
The appellant's version of what occurred differed
toto caelo
from that of the State. He says
.... / 8
8
that he took Zelda out for a drink that evening and on their way home at
about 10.30 p.m. they came across a group of some 20 Americans
at the top end of
Oliver Street. Lower down in the street he saw an even larger group of HLKs. The
Americans persuaded him to join
them in attacking the HLKs by reminding him that
they had been responsible for the scar he bore on his face. He succumbed to this
persuasion and asked Zelda to give him his gun which she carried. The HLKs were
armed with pangas and one of them had a "zip-gun"
-apparently a home made gun
which could only fire one shot at a time. The two gangs rushed at each other.
The zip-gun was fired and
appellant returned the fire. After firing six shots he
saw one of his opponents
..../ 9
9
fall but did not know whether anyone else was hit. Although he knew Igshaan
Galant he denied having seen him at all that evening.
After the shooting, he
said, two of the Americans ran to the deceased and chopped at one of his knees
with a panga. Thereafter the
two gangs, which had shortly before been spoiling
for a fight, simply melted away. He and Zelda then walked home.
Zelda Muller
also gave evidence. Her evidence conflicted with that of the appellant in
several re-spects. She denied having carried
appellant's gun that evening. She
said that she and the appellant came across some 6 - 10 Americans in the "veld"
and walked along
with them to Oliver Street. There they
...../ 10
10
saw about 5 HLKs standing outside a house. Appellant, for no apparent reason,
fired two shots in their direct-ion. She and appellant
then turned round and
walked home. In cross-examination the prosecutor put a state-ment to her that
she had made to the police on
the day after the incident, in which she denied
that she had been with the appellant at all on the night in question. Small
wonder
therefore that the trial Court rejected her evidence out of hand and
labelled her "an out and out liar".
Finally the appellant called one Stanley
Thompson. He purported to be one of the Americans who were with the appellant
that night.
He said that there were only 4 of them who joined appellant and
...../ 11
11
Zelda. They walked down Oliver Street right to its intersection with Edmund
Street close to where a "braai" was being held. He saw
Cecilia Williams leaning
over her gate as they walked back along the street. All of a sudden a group of
HLKs ran out of Cecilia's
yard and proceded to attack them. Their attackers
numbered some 30. A shot was fired from one of the yards, whereupon appellant
turned
round and fired two shots in retaliation. The HLKs were armed with pangas
which they scraped on the tarred surface of the street.
They also carried bricks
and stones with which they pelted the hapless Americans. As they were greatly
outnumbered by the heavily
armed HLKs they decided to run away. Despite the fact
that some 5 or 6 shots
..... / 11(a)
11 (a)
were fired at them from various yards, the appellant only fired two shots in
return. The HLKs pursued them to the end of Oliver Street
and then turned round.
He was hit on the head with a brick, and this, on his evidence, seems to have
been the only injury suffered
by anyone that evening. He did not see that anyone
had been hit by any of the shots fired by the appellant.
This version of
Thompson's also differs in many significant respects from that of the appellant.
Moreover much of it was not put to
the State witnesses e.g. to Cecilia Williams.
The trial Court disbelieved him and was left with the impression that he had
tailored
his evidence to fit in as far as he could with the State's case so as
to lend some credibility to his
..../ 12
12
story. It found both him and the appellant to have
been "appalling
witnesses", highly unsatisfactory, un-
convincing and lying - witnesses "whom we simply just
do not believe".
In accepting the evidence of Igshaan and Cecilia
Williams the trial Court
found that on the night in
question the appellant "was in a belligerent frame
of
mind", that "he was out for trouble", armed with a
fire-arm, and that
"when he saw these two youngsters walking along the road towards him, he took
out his fire-arm and shot them in cold blood".
Mr.
Wittenberg
who appeared before us on be-
half of the appellant
sought to attack this finding
on the basis of a number of so-called
"misdirections"
..../ 13
13
by the trial Court. Some of the "misdirections" on which he relied consisted
in the alleged failure of the Court to have regard to
features such as the state
of rivalry between the Americans and the HLKs; the pre-vious assault by the HLKs
on the appellant as alleged
by him; the possibility that Cecilia Williams might
have been prejudiced against the appellant; the suggested improbability of the
two young boys walking home alone in such a dangerous area, or continuing to do
so in the face of Cecilia Williams' warning to them.
These were all relied on as
misdirections simply because the learned Judge a
quo
had not dealt with
them in his judgment. This, however, does not mean that therefore the trial
Court had not been aware of them or
considered them.
..../ 14
14
As Davis AJA held in
R. v. Dhlumayo and Another
1948 (2)
SA 677 (A) at p. 702:
"Indeed, even in a written judgment it is often impossible, without going
into the facts at due length, to refer to all the considerations
that arise.
Moreover, even the most careful Judge may forget, not to consider, but to
mention some of them. In other words, it does
not necessarily follow that,
because no mention is made of certain points in the judgment .... they have not
been taken into account
by the trial Judge in arri-ving at his decision. No
judgment can ever be perfect and all-embracing. It would be most unsafe
invariably
to con-clude that everything that is not mention-ed has been
overlooked."
In the light of the very strong findings of
credibility made by the trial Court in the present case,
it is perhaps understandable that the learned Judge
did not deal specifically with these aspects in his
.... / 15
15
judgment. They were, however, very pertinently before the Court and were such
an integral part of the factual background to the offence
that I find it
difficult to imagine the trial Court not having regard to them. There is
certainly nothing in the judgment to suggest
that the Court ignored them.
The
other so-called misdirections relied on amounted to findings of credibility by
the Court. As I have already indicated the Court
believed Igshaan Galant and
Cecilia Williams and rejected the evidence of appellant and his two witnesses in
strong and un-equivocal
terms. This conclusion of the Court a
guo
seems
to be borne out by a mere reading of the evidence. The submission that the
evidence of the defence witnesses
.../16
16
was wrongly rejected, was not strongly urged on us, and suffice it to say
that I can find no adeguate reason on the record to differ
from the conclusion
to which the trial Court came.
It follows then that the conclusion that the
trial Court came to viz. that the appellant was guilty of murder, cannot be
disturbed,
and that the conviction must stand.
In regard to sentence Mr.
Wittenberg
submitted that the death sentence was not the only proper
sentence to impose and that a lengthy sentence of imprisonment or even
life
imprisonment would also be a proper sentence. In dealing with the mitigating
factors to be taken in-to account he submitted
in the first place that the
../17
17
appellant must have been influenced by a "mob psycholo-gy" which
de-individuated and aroused the appellant and led him to conform
to the
aggressive attitudes of the Americans he felt impelled to join. There was no
evidence on the record to support this theory
and Mr.
Wittenberg
was
driven to seek support for it from extracts from judgments in cases where such
evidence had been had, and from what he seemed
to submit was common knowledge.
In the present instance we have to do with a gang rather than a mob, but in any
event -and quite
apart from the fact that there is no evidence to adumbrate the
ambit and effect of this alleged psy-chological phenomenon - there
is no factual
basis to suggest that it affected the appellant at all. He
../18
18
was not compelled to join the gang of Americans, or "sucked into the vortex
of their aggressive intentions" as Mr.
Wittenberg
put it. He joined them
voluntarily, and having joined them he seems to have taken on a prominent, if
not leading role in their subsequent
act-ivities. He seems to have been the only
one of that group in possession of a fire-arm, and, on Cecilia Williams'
evidence, he
openly displayed it and threaten-ed Zelda with it if she sought to
cross his purpose. It was he who hurled obscene abuse and threats
of death at
the HLKs at the "braai", and when it came to the confrontation with the
unfortunate deceased and Ig-shaan, he occupied
the centre position at the head
of the gang. It would hardly seem, therefore, that he
../19
19
was overawed by the gang or impelled to conform to what-ever pattern of
aggression they may have harboured.
Then it was submitted that the scar the
appellant bore on his face had been inflicted by the HLKs and that this
constituted some form
of provoca-tion. The allegation that he had been attacked
by the HLKs on a previous occasion rests only on the appellant's own defence
which was rejected by the trial Court. But even if his allegation be accepted
the attack must, on his evidence, have taken place
some 16 months earlier. It
could therefore hardly have constituted provocation. In fact it would rather
tend to afford evidence of
a motive for the deliberate and intentional killing
of the deceased also reflected
.... / 20
20
in his threat to kill any HLK he may come across.
The aggravating factors
in this case are over-whelming. Appellant admitted a long list of previous
convictions commencing with one
for robbery in 1977. He was subsequently
convicted on four counts of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm
(during 1979),
on two more counts of robbery (in 1979 and 1981), and of rape (in
1982). In 1989 he was convicted of murder with extenuating circumstances
and
sentenced to 12 years imprisonment. This latter offence was apparent-ly
committed on 11 March 1988 - some 5 months before the
present offence.
The
nature of the offence and the circumstances in which it was committed also seem
to me to constitute
.../ 21
21
aggravating factors. The appellant, as I have indica-ted above, was not
compelled to join up with the gang of Americans but did so
of his own free will.
He was in possession of a fire-arm at the time and his action in going along
with them seems indicative of
his in-tention to seek a confrontation with the
HLKs and to wreak vengeance on any of its members for the imagined grievance he
bore
them. This intention is again re-flected in the way in which he brushed
Zelda's protes-tations aside and the vituperative obscenities
and threats he
shouted at the HLKs near Cecilia Williams' gate. This clearly expressed
intention to kill any HLK he might come across
was given effect to when he
noticed the two young boys in the street and shot the
.../ 22
22
deceased in cold blood. The settled and deliberate nature of his intention,
and his insensitivity as to its effects is once again
reflected in his
contempt-uous shout of triumph at having picked off two of his marked victims.
His intention was deliberate and
sett-led. His action in killing this young boy
was cold blooded and cruel.
In my view there are no mitigating factors
whereas the aggravating factors are overwhelming. In the light of the
appellant's previous
convictions where prison sentences of up to 3 and 4 years
in the past have failed to deter him from his adopted career of serious
crimes
of violence, the prospects of reform-ation seem slim. This is such a heinous and
repulsive
.../ 23
23
crime and the manner of its commission poses such a threat to the interests
of society, that the retribu-tive aspects of punishment
must override all other
con-siderations. Seen against the background of the appellant's previous
convictions, and his total lack
of remorse it seems to me that this is a crime
so evil, so shocking, so clamant for extreme retribution, that society demands
the
destruction of the appellant as the only expiation for his wrongdoing.
(
S. v. Matthee
1971 (3) SA 769
(A) at 771 D.) In the circumstances the
death sentence is the only proper sentence. The appeal is dismissed.
J.P.G. EKSTEEN, JA
SMALBERGER, JA )
concur HARMS, AJA )