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[1993] ZASCA 185
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S v Ntusi (566/92) [1993] ZASCA 185 (29 November 1993)
CG CASE NUMBER: 566/92
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between:
NEBRON NTUSI
Appellant
and
THE STATE
Respondent
CORAM
: VAN HEERDEN, VAN DEN HEEVER JJA et NICHOLAS AJA
HEARD
ON
: 23 NOVEMBER 1993
DELIVERED ON
: 29 NOVEMBER 1993
JUDGMENT VAN DEN HEEVER JA
2
Bongane Kunene ("the complainant") is a salesman in the employ of
Trans-Atlantic Tobacco Company in Industria in the Transvaal. He
delivers
cigarettes to various shops, collects money for deliveries previously made, and
solicits fresh orders. Normally he is accompanied
by a member of the Soweto City
Council Police as an armed escort.
During the mid-morning of 17 April 1990 he
went to Khanyane Store in Zola North, accompanied by constable Risimati Atlas
Ndlovu who
was armed with a pump gun. In the boot of his Jetta were a small safe
containing about R700,00 collected from other outlets that
morning, and four
cases of Peter Stuyvestant, Mills, Van Rhyn and Lexington cigarettes worth about
R600,00 each.
Leaving Ndlovu in the Jetta, Mr Kunene went in to do business
with the proprietor of Khanyane Store, Ms Mabaso. While inside the shop
he heard
a gunshot. When he went out to investigate, he was seized by one man who
3
deprived him of the keys to his car and the money he had just received from Ms
Mabaso - about R400,00 - while another pointed Ndlovu's
pump gun at him. One of
these, along with others who had been standing on either side of and next to the
Jetta, entered it and drove
off. He then saw Ndlovu lying on the ground in a
pool of blood. There were a few other people in the vicinity coming in and out
of
the shop while this was happening. Ms Mabaso's driver took the complainant
first to summon an ambulance and then to the Jabulani
police station. He was
still at the latter place when a report came in that his Jetta had been found
abandoned in Dobsonville. He
accompanied the police there. The safe had been
broken open. Its contents, the cartons of cigarettes, the Jetta's spare wheel
and
the car radio were gone. Ndlovu died in Baragwanath hospital on the same
day. He had been shot in the head at close range.
Arising out of this
incident, various charges were brought against Nebron Ntusi in the
Witwatersrand
4
Local Division, namely
1.
The murder of constable
Ndlovu, hereinafter referred to as the deceased.
2.
Robbery with aggravating circumstances as defined in section 1 of Act
51 of 1977. The victims are alleged to be "Ndlovu and/or Kunene",
the booty
listed including a Winchester pump action shotgun with serial number L 2029456.
(This is the firearm that had been issued
to constable Ndlovu on the 17 April.
It featured as exhibit 1 at the trial, having come into the possession of the
State during the
night of 29 April 1990 when a policeman on patrol approached a
man in Naledi who fled and in his flight discarded the firearm. This
man was
however neither caught nor identified.)
3. and 4.
Unlawful possession of a firearm and of
ammunition, both the type of the
firearm and the
quantity and calibre being unknown (this related to
the
murder weapon).
5 A fifth charge alleged that Ntusi on 18 April 1990
was in possession of a 9 mm short Astra pistol without being the holder of a
valid licence to do so.
When the matter was called on 24 August 1992 Ntusi's
pro Deo counsel who had been appointed only two days earlier asked for and was
granted a postponement to enable her to consult with witnesses in support of his
then defence, namely that at the relevant time not
only was he in hospital being
treated for gunshot wounds but was guarded there by constables from the Jabulani
police station. On
26 August Ntusi pleaded not guilty to all the counts laid
against him. He proffered no formal statement in terms of sec 115 of the
Criminal Procedure Act.
Ntusi was identified as having been the gunman who
shot the deceased by two youths who had been in the street outside Khanyane
Store
that morning. Both admitted leaving in the Jetta when it was driven from
the scene after the murder but claimed to have done so
6 under duress. They
were regarded by the prosecution as accomplices, and were duly warned in terms
of sec 204 of the Criminal Procedure
Act before testifying.
The State was in
the invidious position that a remarkable number of important witnesses had died
or disappeared. It had to rely on
the evidence of these two for the conviction
it sought, and obtained. The court (Sutej J and assessors) convicted appellant
on counts
1, 2 and one count of being in illegal possession of a firearm but
acquitted him on the other. He was sentenced to death on the murder
charge, to
13 years' imprisonment in respect of the robbery, and one years' imprisonment in
respect of the firearm, the latter to
run concurrently with the sentence on the
second count.
He noted an appeal against the conviction and sentence on count
1 and subsequently leave having been granted to appeal in respect
of counts 3
and 4, he noted an appeal on those counts also. The only issue in the appeal
before us as regards the merits, is whether
the
7
State proved the identity of the killer beyond
reasonable doubt in the
light of criticism levelled
against the testimony of the two accomplices.
Hoffmann and Zeffertt in their
SOUTH AFRICAN
LAW OF EVIDENCE
3rd ed at p 452 n 8 suggest that
"The Law Reports should declare a moratorium upon statements of the
cautionary rule. There can hardly be a judge in the country who
has not had his
version in print."
Nevertheless, it is helpful to look again at the reasons
advanced as the
foundation of the general proposition
that accomplice evidence should be treated with caution,
in order to consider which if any apply in this case.
The cautionary rule
is one of common sense, not a rule
of thumb. I find the following reasons in
the cases and
textbooks:
1.
The accomplice is a
self-confessed criminal.
2.
He may have a
motive to implicate the accused falsely. Possible motives that have been
suggested are -
8
(a)
a desire to shield the real
culprit;
(b) a hope of clemency from the State by assisting it to obtain the conviction
it seeks;
(c)
some grudge against the accused.
3.
Inside knowledge giving him a deceptive facility for
convincing description - his only fiction being the
substitution of the accused for the culprit.
The first reason may or may not carry weight,
depending on the circumstances; but the weight should
at least not be
overestimated. In 1844 already Chief
Baron Joy,
EVIDENCE OF
ACCOMPLICES
(quoted in Wigmore
3rd ed Vol 7 para 2057 p 323) pointed out the
illogicality of requiring the evidence of a witness with
a long string of
previous convictions - unbeknown, of
course, to the court - to be dealt with
differently from
that of the co-perpetrator of some minor offence, on
this ground.
"Moral guilt, then, can never afford any rational foundation for a rule which
applies indiscriminately to the highest and to the lowest
degrees of that guilt
- But an
9
accomplice, we are told, comes forward to save himself, and his credit is
affected by the temptation which this holds out to forswear
himself. But who is
it that establishes his guilt? He himself - he is his own accuser; and the
proof, and often the only proof which
can be had, of his guilt, comes from his
own lips. He is generally admitted as a witness from the necessity of the thing,
and from
the impossibility without him of bringing any of the offenders to
justice. If this be the foundation of the rule, it rests on a shifting
sand. The
temptation to commit perjury which influences his credit must be proportioned to
the punishment annexed to the crime of
which the witness confesses himself
guilty."
The reasons listed under paragraph 2 must
also vary in the weight attached to them, depending upon the circumstances of
each case;
save that 2(c) should be discounted as being a valid reason for
suspicion in the case of an accomplice as such. It becomes a valid
ground for
suspicion against any witness once some foundation for such suspicion is laid in
the facts presented to the court.
The reason given in paragraph 3 is the important one, in my view, not by
itself but read with
10 2(a) and (b) . Inside knowledge makes an accomplice a
dangerous witness because it arms him too well with all the accoutrements
needed
to sell a lie: that the detail is so good may lead to the false inference that
the identification of the perpetrator must
be good too. But this reason is
hardly appropriate to a situation such as we have here, where the detail is to
all intents and purposes
common cause, since the murder and robbery were
committed in broad daylight and the complainant told the court almost everything
that happened before the two accomplices testified. He did not, it is true, see
any other car (but would not have done so had it
been round the corner of the
building where the accomplices placed it) and could not identify the murderer,
his assistant or any
of those who went off in his Jetta.
The only further
comments I wish to add, perhaps unnecessarily, are:
1. That there is nothing in principle which prevents a court accepting that
one accomplice may corroborate
11 another. What weight is to be attached to the evidence of each as always
depends on all the circumstances of the case.
2.
That "if one had to wait for
an accomplice who turned out to be a witness of that kind" (i.e. one wholly
consistent and wholly reliable,
or even wholly truthful in all that he says) "-
or indeed anything like it - one would, I think, have to wait for a very long
time"
(
R v KRISTUSAMY
1945 AD 549
at p 556).
3.
That "circumstantial evidence may relieve an accomplice's evidence
from the suspicion which a priori adheres to it". (
R v GUMEDE
1949 (3) SA
749
(AD) 760.)
To come then to the
evidence.
Sergeant William Mabasa took a photograph of the scene as pointed
out to him by the complainant in May 1990. Khanyane "shopping centre"
consists
of an unplastered brick building on a corner stand with one
12
large opening giving access leading to three shops, one of them being that of
Ms Mashobo.
The gist of complainant's evidence has already been given: it was
not challenged.
Mrs Juliet Lembete lives in house no 1845B in Zola 2. About a
year before the day in question, the appellant whom she knew variously
as
Stembiso, Mjita, and Nebron Ntusi, came looking for accommodation. She let what
she called the "garage room" to him. He lived
alone there, and was given the
only key to it. On 18 April 1990 at about 14h00 a number of policemen arrived at
her house. Only four
of them entered the yard, asking for Mjita. He was not
there. She herself is not always home, since she makes clothes and then goes
off
to sell them. She had seen neither appellant, who kept irregular hours, nor his
car on the premises on the morning of the 17th.
The last time she had seen him
had been during the late afternoon of that day. He was then alone. The police
wanted to search his
room when
13 they came on the 18 April. Since she had no
key, she gave permission for them to break a window to gain entry. From inside
they
opened the roll-up door of the garage. She also went inside. The police
searched the room, in the course of which one lifted the
mattress from the bed,
after which a white policeman said "Here is the thing that we wanted" and she
saw that he was holding a handgun.
She did not see the actual finding of this,
nor could she identify the 9 mm Astra pistol, exhibit 3, shown to her in court
as the
firearm she saw in appellant's room on that day. All appellant's
possessions were in his room when the police searched it, to the
best of her
knowledge. She saw no cartons of cigarettes. After the police had gone,
appellant never returned to the room. The first
time she saw him again, was at
Baragwanath hospital after he had been injured. After that his sister came to
fetch all his belongings.
Mzwandile Cyprian Mthemba ("Cyprian") who was 16 years old in 1990, was the
first of the two
14 accomplices who gave evidence after having been properly
warned. They had originally also been charged with murder and robbery
but the
charges had been withdrawn. The story Cyprian told, was the following.
On 17
April 1990 at about 10hl5 he was standing at the corner of the building
containing Ms Mashobo's store. The friends with him
were Jerry Malohle,
Thembakile Madolo, Sydney Radebe, Amos Majwayi and Frans Julius, some of whom
were playing with a tennis ball,
when a fawn Jetta drew up and stopped next to
the entrance to the building. It had two occupants. The driver got out and went
into
the building. Cyprian did not see him again. The passenger opened his door
but remained seated. Then a white Golf arrived and stopped
around the corner
from the Jetta. Where he himself was at the corner Cyprian could see both
vehicles. He knew both occupants of the
Golf. The driver, appellant, he knew by
sight and as Mjita, and the passenger, Sam, "from the soccer field".
Appellant
15 got out of the Golf and went towards the Jetta. The passenger
noticed appellant approaching him and got out himself and stood up,
armed with a
weapon as long as exhibit 1. Appellant produced a handgun from the front of his
trousers and when he came face to face
with him fired at the passenger, who
fell. Appellant then pointed the gun at Cyprian and his friends and ordered them
into the Jetta.
They obeyed. He thought perhaps one of his friends picked up
deceased's pumpgun and put it in the Jetta, but "I cannot remember well".
(What
happened to it subsequently he did not know.) Mjita drove off with them in the
Jetta to an address in Zola 2. When they arrived
there Amos and Thembakile were
no longer with them but Cyprian could not remember whether they had been dropped
off en route. There
appellant opened the boot of the car and asked Cyprian and
his friends to carry boxes of cigarettes into an outside room. From this
Cyprian
inferred that this was appellant's home. He gave Cyprian two cartons of
16
Consulate cigarettes for his trouble.
Cyprian, Jerry, Sydney and Frans
returned on foot to the scene of the shooting and heard that Sam had left with
the Golf. They stayed
there until the deceased was removed. Cyprian went to the
police of his own accord on the following day, i.e. the 18th, after receiving
a
report that the police were looking for him: he surmised "there could have been
some other people who saw me also, as we were being
forced into the car".
One of the assessors asked him "Have you been
to the place where you off-loaded the cigarettes" to
which he answered
"no", but later explained that he had
misunderstood the question:
"I told the police the name of the person who had fired the shot and they
then asked me to go and show them that place.
And you did so? — Yes."
When his previous reply was put to him, he
said
"I thought the question was, did you get there
alone.
The question was, were you ever again back to
the place
where the cigarettes were offloaded.
17
-- I went there with the police, not on my own."
Under cross-examination the strength of Cyprian's acquaintance with appellant
was tested. He said that he had seen appellant during
a period of about three
weeks immediately preceding the incident. Appellant came to visit men who lived
in the vicinity of Cyprian's
home, whom he appeared to know well. These men were
not friends of Cyprian's, being much older than he, but he listened in to their
conversations which were spiced with jokes which Cyprian enjoyed. It was during
such episodes that he heard appellant being called
Mjita.
He could give no explanation as to where two of the youths left the car. He
was sure that the cigarettes that were his reward were
Consulate. He said that
he had
inferred
that someone had picked up the deceased's gun: The last
he saw of it was as it dropped to the ground, but when the group got into
the
Jetta it
18
was no longer where it had fallen. In reply to the
question:
"... The story that you have told the court . . . was it not and is it not
meant to assist you to keep you out of prison, while implicating
the accused in
the offence?"
he said
"No, not that I wanted to press the accused, but I was just telling them what
happened."
No reason suggests itself why he should have chosen to falsely incriminate
the accused in particular nor how this would have helped
Cyprian himself. There
was no suggestion that this 16-year old himself was implicated as the person who
actually shot the deceased,
and he had incriminated himself already by admitting
that he had been one of the group who at least helped appellant remove the
stolen
goods.
He was adamant that he was making no mistake
in having identified appellant as the person who shot
the deceased:
"I say I saw him. I fail to understand if he says he knows nothing about
that. ... I saw
19
him shooting. ... He was there because I saw him firing. ... I say he was there
or else what could I have seen if I did not see him?
Q: He will further say that
he thinks he is being falsely implicated in the commission of these crimes for
reasons unknown to him.
— I say I saw him. Now what did I see if I did not
see him there?
The accused will also say that he did not have any distinct relationship with
you and he does not particularly know you apart from
seeing you in the area.
— I was not his friend either, I only used to see
him."
Questioning by the Court
reflected what
problems in his evidence troubled the court. Firstly,
he did not see
complainant being robbed at gunpoint at
the entrance to the building despite
having been in the
immediate vicinity; and inferred "if something happened
so close to me, it
is impossible for me not to see it.
... 1 would say that thing did not happen because I did
not see it". Then
he was given a further opportunity to
explain how it could have come about that two of the six
who got into the
car at the shop, were not in the car
when the car stopped at appellant's
home. He could not
20 do so.
His evidence reads well. Bearing in mind that
he had seen a man shot at pointblank range, it is to my mind excusable that he
should
be unaware of other events not far from that one, where events were
moving rapidly. Nor is he necessarily mendacious in, more than
two years later,
not remembering that two of his companions had been dropped off en route to
appellant's home, as Thembakile explained
had happened.
What I do find
unusual, is that neither pro Deo counsel nor the court challenged his implied
excuse for his own participation in what
followed on the shooting, namely that
he had been threatened by appellant. The lack of challenge is most likely due to
the inherent
improbability of the story. An educated guess would be that the
youngsters were roped in to keep a lookout on behalf of the robbers,
and perhaps
even to carry cartons from the Jetta to the Golf though that plan changed. But
again, it is not unnatural for an
21
accomplice to try to paint himself prettier than he was. The crucial question
is whether there is any danger that such an attempt
might lead to his
transferring
blame from himself to another.
The second accomplice was
Thembakile Madolo, 19 years old at the time of the murder and without doubt a
poorer witness than Cyprian
had been. He was one of the five youths in the open
area outside the "shopping complex", but was around the corner from the entrance
to that building when he saw a white Golf arrive with two occupants. He pointed
out the appellant as having been the driver. He saw
appellant get out holding a
gun which he tucked into the front of his trousers as he did so. Appellant then
moved towards the front
of the building and shortly afterwards Thembakile heard
a shot. He had earlier seen a Jetta arrive at the shop, the driver of which
got
out while the passenger, whom he afterwards heard bystanders refer to as a
policeman, remained behind. When Thembakile went to
investigate
22
after hearing the shot "I found the policeman already lying down"; though two
sentences later he says he saw deceased bending down
over the car with his face
downwards after he had climbed out of the car. He saw appellant there, between
the shop wall and the Jetta,
holding a handgun. The only other person in the
immediate vicinity was Frans Julius, coming from the direction in which the
Jetta
was facing.
Then appellant "called us to the car to help him take the
cigarettes". They did. The cigarettes were lying on the ground. They picked
them
up and placed them in the boot. "Then he asked us" (which he soon changed to
'ordered' us) "to get inside the car and go away
with him." He, Cyprian, Jerry,
Amos and Mjita himself (i.e. the appellant - he had heard from Cyprian that that
was appellant's name)
did so. After a leading question from the prosecutor, he
added Sydney to the list. Frans, he says, did not accompany them. They drove
away. Appellant dropped the witness and Amos off
23
at Emdeni, complaining that the car was over-full. What
happened further
to the Jetta and its occupants he did
not know. His younger brother told him
later that same
day that the police were looking for him, and
the
following day he went to the Jabulani police station of
his own
accord.
He did not see the actual shooting, nor how
cigarettes came to be outside the Jetta on the ground,
nor what happened
to the deceased's firearm. He had
obeyed appellant's order to help him
through fear:
" I was afraid because I saw that the accused was in possession of a firearm and
I also saw the other man lying on the ground."
The
prosecutor, as in duty bound, put to this witness a statement he had made to the
investigating officer Warrant Officer De Waal,
on the 23 April 1990 which
differed from his oral testimony in the following respects: In that, he had said
deceased remained in
the car. In court he said deceased got out of the car.
In that he said he saw the gunman shooting the
24
deceased. In court he said he only heard the shot.
In that, he said the
gunman picked up the deceased's firearm and put it in the Jetta. In court he
said he did not know what had happened
to the security-guard's
firearm.
Thembakile explained these discrepancies by saying: "I think it was
the policeman who wrote down my statement who did not hear me
clearly". Under
cross-examination further self-contradictions emerged - for example, whether he
was playing ball in the company of
four friends or five on that day - in other
words whether Frans was part of the group or, as I infer, was fortuitously on
the scene;
and what Thembakile could see at certain stages of the events. Of
note is that his evidence in court is watered down, compared with
his earlier
statement; which one would hardly expect from someone out to incriminate an
accused falsely.
He too did not see complainant being confronted and robbed by a second man,
armed with
25
deceased's pumpgun. He admitted without hesitation that
appellant was a
stranger to him.
"The accused will say in this court that he does not have any particular
relationship with you. He will say, however, that in the
course of his living in
the area and driving taxi's in the area, he has seen you on various occasions
and there is a great likelihood
that you also know him as a taxi driver? —
No, I do not even know him. It was my first time to see him. He does not know my
home. I also do not know where he
stays."
The last state witness was
Warrant Officer De
Waal. He testified mainly as to the problems the State
experienced with
witnesses. Sydney Radebe was in
Leeuwkop Prison. Frans Julius was dead.
Samuel Simila,
who had not been charged along with appellant, Cyprian
and his friends, was untraceable, nor had Amos Mazwayi
yet been found
despite a warrant being out for his
arrest. The pistol before court, exhibit 3, he had
received from constable Bouwer. The latter, constable
Maringa and
constable Radebe had been together when
Bouwer found it but there was no link to pinpoint this
26
weapon as the one Mrs Lembete had seen in appellant's room on the afternoon
of the 18 April since all three these police witnesses
had died. Two had been
shot and one killed in a motor accident. De Waal could not discover who the
fourth policeman had been that
Mrs Lembete saw in her yard on that day. Nor had
any bullet been recovered from the corpse which could form the basis of any
expert
ballistic testimony. It was this gap in the chain of evidence that led
the trial court to acquit the appellant on a second charge
of illegal possession
of a firearm: the handgun found in appellant's room was probably the one used to
kill the deceased, not one
in addition to another different murder weapon.
De Waal visited appellant in hospital after he had been shot. His evidence
that this was after his arrest by Bouwer, while attempting
to escape, was
clearly inadmissible hearsay, but appellant's evidence of how he had come to be
injured and why he was guarded
27
in hospital was nonsensical and raised no other
reasonable possibility. Indeed, under cross-examination
as to why he had
not reported the assault upon him to
the police, he to all intents and
purposes admitted what
Bouwer said:
"The fact that I got injured and was guarded by the policeman at the hospital
who thereafter left me did not give me the idea that
I should go to the
police"
though he changed his evidence later. De
Waal succeeded
in taking a statement from appellant and obtaining his
fingerprints only a year later when appellant was living
at Orange Farm.
He had not been in custody before then
and after De Waal saw him in
hospital.
Appellant gave evidence in his own defence.
In evidence in chief, he said that he had a family in
Msinga in Natal,
where he was born. The trial judge's
comment: "The home of faction fighting", put ideas in
appellant's head. When asked whether he knew why he had
been falsely
implicated in events of which he knew
28
nothing, he said he thought it was perhaps "because of
this faction
fighting". (This suggestion caused him
problems under cross-examination,
during which he
rambled and evaded questions. ) He said he did not even
know where
Khanyane Store is, had only heard its name.
Asked by his counsel where he had
been when the murder
and robbery were said to have been committed, he
replied:
"When I am in the township I move about. I cannot precisely say where I was
at a certain time except in the morning when I washed
the car."
That was in the garage at Ekwezi station. This story
was never followed
up. He said that he had never owned
a firearm.
Asked whether he knew Cyprian, he said "His
face is familiar, m'lord, I am used to his face because
... I am operating a taxi and I pick up every passenger
on the road". Thembakile' s face was familiar, but he
could not say for sure that he had seen him.
29
He operates a taxi from First Gate in Emdeni (and it will be remembered that
Thembakile said he had been dropped off in Emdeni).
He had been hospitalized
at Baragwanath after having been shot from behind while doing repairs to his
car. When he came to in hospital,
constable Radebe was guarding him.
Under
cross-examination he admitted that his nickname is Mjita; that he possesses two
vehicles, a white Golf and a Combi taxi, and
that he had owned the Golf already
on the day of the robbery. He had laid no criminal charges, arising either out
his having been
shot, about which he had consulted a lawyer, nor about his room
having earlier been broken into although he did not believe that
the persons
responsible for that really were members of the force. His reasons for not
reporting the shooting range from that quoted
earlier, through "I never believed
there was anything the police could do for me" to "I was waiting to recover
fully".
30 He admitted that after he discovered that the police had broken
into and searched his room on 18 April 1990 he had not returned
to stay there
but moved first to Kagiso in Krugersdorp, an inconvenient distance from his area
of operations as a taxi owner, having
been told that the police were looking for
him. On his discharge from hospital in the absence of his guard, he fled
further, leaving
Kagiso and moving to Orange Farm.
The reason he gives for
not having collected his possessions from his room at Mrs Lembete' s, is a
complete non seguitur. And he admits
that he was on the run but because of some
unexplained fear for his life, not fear of the police.
His story of how he
discovered that the police were on his track also varied. His first version was
that Mrs Lembete had told him
that the police were looking for him. When
confronted with her evidence that she did not see him until much later, in
hospital, he
became vague: he could not say precisely who gave him
31
the information since many people lived on the premises, she and her sons;
and he had been confused at that stage.
He admitted Mrs Lemete's evidence
that he had lived alone in her garage room, had the only key to it and always
locked it when he
left. He knew of no one who could have left a gun
there.
The court a quo accepted the evidence of complainant and Mrs Lembete
unreservedly and held appellant to have been evasive and his
tale of either
police lawlessness or police impersonators to explain his flight from home,
untrue. And the trial court was aware
of the flaws in the evidence of both
accomplices and its duty to regard that evidence with caution.
In my view it
cannot be faulted for having accepted the truthfulness of the evidence of
Cyprian, backed up by Thembakile, that appellant
was the person who had shot
deceased. There is no room for a merely wrong identification having been made
here. Even if
32
the evidence of the two youths, that they did not see a person other than
appellant rob complainant at the entrance to the building,
were false, that
could mean only that they wished to shield that other, whether Sam or one of
their own group. It does not affect
appellant's position. The inference that he
was not implicated falsely in the events, is in my mind unavoidable. Appellant
did not
suggest that there was any reason why Cyprian should have known where
appellant lived. Cyprian after having reported himself to the
police, led them
there as being Mjita's home where cigarettes had been off-loaded. None were
found, but sufficient time had elapsed
for appellant to have disposed of them.
What the police did find, was evidence that appellant had had the wherewithall
with which
he could have done the deed. And, most telling, appellant's immediate
flight, leaving behind all his possessions, and his lies, clinch
the matter.
That leaves the matter of sentence to be
33 considered. The murder was carefully pre-planned, committed with direct
intent, to enable the appellant and his accomplice or accomplices
to perpetrate
a robbery. It constituted both a cold-blooded execution of a man taken by
surprise and given no opportunity to defend
himself, and an assault on the
foundations on which an orderly society rests. The only mitigating circumstance
is that appellant
was a first offender. The trial court commented on the
escalation of this type of ruthless crime within its jurisdiction. In my view
the rehabilitation or potential rehabilitation of the appellant must yield to
the needs of retribution and deterrence. The death
sentence is therefore the
only proper sentence for the offence committed. The appeal is dismissed.
L VAN DEN HEEVER JA CONCUR:
VAN HEERDEN JA) NICHOLAS AJA)