Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 767South Africa
S v Neoth and Another (SS52/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 767 (28 September 2022)
Headnotes
no instructions that accused 1 owns a firearm. [14] Adv. Botha on behalf of accused 2 submits that this court must have regard to triad factors and referred this court to the case of S v Lucas[8] where is was said that imposing a sentence is one of the most difficult tasks a presiding officer has to grapple with and has been
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Neoth and Another (SS52/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 767 (28 September 2022)
S v Neoth and Another (SS52/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 767 (28 September 2022)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: SS52/2020
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED
28/9/2022
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
SUSANA
CATHARINA HESTER MAGDALENA NOETH
ACCUSED 1
BERNARD
NOETH
ACCUSED 2
SENTENCE
AFRICA AJ:
[1]
Both accused 1 and 2 have been found guilty of serious offences. Mrs.
Susana Noeth
has been convicted of being an accessory after the fact
to Murder and Mr. Bernard Noeth has been convicted on two counts of
Murder,
read
with the provisions of section 51(2)
[1]
of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, (‘the CLAA’),
as amended
[2]
.
It
is now the unenviable but necessary task of
this court to impose an appropriate sentence.
[2]
In deciding on an appropriate
sentence, the court must consider the “triad consisting
of the
crime, the offender and the interest of society”
[3]
“These elements of the triad contains an equilibrium and
tension.
[3]
The court should, when determining sentence, strive to accomplish and
arrive at a
judicious counterbalance between these elements in order
to ensure that one element is not unduly accentuated at the expense
of
or the exclusion of others. What is necessary is that the court
shall consider, and try to balance evenly, the nature and
circumstances
of the offence, the characteristics of the offender and
their circumstances and the impact of the crime on the community, its
welfare
and concern”
[4]
[4]
The infliction of punishment is pre-eminently a
matter for the discretion of the trial court and it is a cherished
principle that
courts should, as far as possible, have an unfettered
discretion in relation to sentence; which calls for constant
recognition.
This is the hallmark of an enlightened criminal justice
system.
The
statutory mandatory minimum sentencing regime is applicable to
certain serious offenses but the trial courts are permitted to
depart
from the prescribed minimum sentences whenever they find “
substantial
or compelling circumstance
”
warranting a departure. This court is mindful that a criminal
sentence cannot, in the nature of things, be a matter of precise
calculation.
[5]
[5]
It is however commonly accepted that there are many purposes of
sentencing.
Firstly,
is the desire to punish a person who is
the wrongdoer and who has offended against society and caused harm to
others.
Secondly
is the intention to prevent the wrongdoer
from committing a similar offence again.
Thirdly
is to send a
message to other would be offenders not to engage in this kind of
activity and
Lastly
is the aspect of rehabilitation.
[6]
Another factor to be borne in mind is the question of mercy.
[6]
[7]
The
individualization of punishment requires proper consideration of the
individual circumstances of each accused person. This principle
too
is firmly entrenched in our law.
[7]
Punishment must fit the criminal as well as the crime, be fair to
society, and be blended with a measure of mercy according to
the
circumstances.
MITIGATION
OF SENTENCE
[8]
MRS NOETH testified in mitigation that she is 39 years of age,
married to accused
2, with no children born of the said marriage. She
was employed at the time of her arrest and her highest level of
education, is
matric. During her incarceration, neither her mother
nor her siblings visited her but are they still on speaking terms.
She has
been in custody for a period of ±2 years 8 months and
request this court to impose a suspended sentence. She does not abuse
substances and have been put on medication to treat her depression,
anxiety and panic attacks.
On
questions by this court, she intimated that she wants to go home to
tell people to do the right thing and to think before they
act. At
the time of her arrest, she employed as a HR manager for 10 years.
[9]
During cross examination, she said that she was sorry for hiding her
husband but that
was a choice she had made.
[10]
Mr Noeth testified in mitigation that he was born in 1977, married to
accused 1, and has no children.
Prior to his arrest, he opened a pet
shop business. His highest level of education is matric with a
certificate in warehouse management.
Both his parents are deceased
and none of his family members came to visit him, whilst
incarcerated. He has been in custody for
±2 years 8 months and
has lost everything. Mr. Noeth states that his drug use has had a bad
effect on his life but don’t
know how to rid himself of this
habit. He says that he feels sorry for the families of the deceased
but states that he was never
involved.
[11]
M [....] C [....] testified that P [....] C [....] (deceased) is her
sister and they were very
close. The deceased has 2 minor children,
aged 6 and 11 respectively. She has taken over the responsibility for
caring for the
children. The youngest child still believes that his
mother is alive as she can’t bring herself to tell him the
truth; instead
she lies and tells him that his mother will come home.
M
[....] says that looking after the children has been hard and is she
still affected by her sister’s death.
ADDRESS
IN MITIGATION
[12]
Adv. Mvatha on behalf of Mrs Noeth, submits that the court must have
regard to the triad factors
as enunciated in the case of
Zinn.
He requests this court to be mindful of the aims of punishment; that
accused 1 has been in custody for 2 years 8 months and that
she is a
first offender. He argues that the findings of this court should
serve as a mitigating factor, in favour of accused 1.
Further that
the children and family of the deceased are without a doubt
negatively affected, but that such loss can in no way
be attributed
to accused 1 as she was not linked to the murder. He submits that
this court will be doing an injustice, if accused
1 was sentenced to
direct imprisonment, given the time she has already spend in custody.
He requests this court to show mercy,
in allowing accused 1 to redeem
herself and to become the responsible working citizen.
[13]
In terms of section 103 of Act 60 of 2000, Adv. Mvatha held no
instructions that accused 1 owns
a firearm.
[14]
Adv. Botha on behalf of accused 2 submits that this court must have
regard to triad factors and
referred this court to the case of
S
v Lucas
[8]
where is was said that imposing a sentence is one of the most
difficult tasks a presiding officer has to grapple with and has been
described as a painfully difficult problem, which involves a careful
and dispassionate consideration of all the factors.
Notwithstanding
his conviction, accused 2 maintains his innocence and is it argued
that this court may deviate from the prescribed
minimum sentence, if
the circumstances calls for such departure. Being mindful of the case
of
Malgas
[9]
,
the defence requested this court to blend its sentence with mercy.
[15]
This court was requested to have regard to the principles of Ubuntu
which is synonymous with
restorative justice, in deviating from the
minimum sentence regime. It was argued that accused 2 has nothing,
except his life.
[16]
In terms of section 103, the defence request accused 2 not to be
declared unfit to possess a
firearm, as his position in life may
change, one day.
ADDRESS
IN AGGREVATION
[17]
In aggravation of sentence, the state urged this court to be mindful
that the legislature
[10]
deemed fit as punishment, that the accessory can be sentenced the
same as the perpetrator and that in the circumstances of this
case,
accused 1 should be held accountable for the roll that she played.
Adv. Badenhorst argued that by protecting accused 2, accused
1 took
away a families’ right to justice. He argued that she protected
accused 2 over a protracted period and that she rightfully
admitted
to protecting him.
[18]
In respect of accused 2, the state argued that 2 families and 4
children, has been destroyed
at the hands of accused 2. It is argued
that accused 2 has placed no substantial and compelling circumstances
before this court
and neither is the principle of Ubuntu a
substantial and compelling factor. Further, that sight must not be
lost of the fact that
these were cold blooded murders perpetrated by
accused 2, who has shown no remorse.
[19]
" …Women in this country are entitled to the protection
of these rights. They have
a legitimate claim to walk peacefully on
the streets, to enjoy their shopping and their entertainment, to go
and come from work,
and to enjoy the peace and tranquillity of their
homes without the fear, the apprehension and the insecurity which
constantly diminishes
the quality and enjoyment of their lives."
[11]
[20]
There has never been a time when these words ring more true than
today, when this country is
engulfed in a sea of violent crimes
ravaging vulnerable sections of our society like women, with a
never-ending scourge of femicide
and GBV
[12]
,
which continues to plague South Africa.
[21]
This court is mindful of the case of
Mudau
v The State
[13]
where it was stated that:
“…
violence
(
against women
) has become a scourge in our society and should
not be treated light, but deplored and also severely punished. Hardly
a day passes
without a report in the media of a woman or a child
being beaten, raped or even killed in this country. Many women and
children
live in constant fear. This is in some respects a negation
of many of the fundamental rights such as equality, human dignity and
bodily integrity” (emphasis added)
[22]
The state submits that this court must mete out a harsh sentence, in
response to the circumstances
of this case.
Indeed,
courts have a role to play in the promotion and development of
a culture that is founded on the recognition of human rights, in
particular with regard to those rights enshrined in our Constitution.
[23]
Accused 2, in the view of this court, deemed the deceased no more
than objects or things to be
discarded with, as if their lives were
worthless and insignificant. He did not see them as mothers or
daughters or aunts or human
beings but simply refuse to be disposed
of. Their bodies were left to rot, like carcasses, not worthy of
dignity and respect. The
gravity of the violence unleashed on the
unsuspecting deceased was merciless as they ill-fatedly, fought for
their lives. They
say a picture is worth a thousand words, yet words
fail to describe what anguish and suffering the deceased endured,
when they
were so brutally and callously strangled and suffocated to
death, having done nothing wrong to deserve it. The deceased was
defenseless
and helpless not suspecting that their lives would be cut
short, so untimely. These women were simply out looking for a job to
feed their families and ended up trusting a vile stranger who seemed
genuine in extending a helping hand.
[24]
Goldstein J in the case of
S
v Ncheche
[14]
,
stated:
“
I now deal with
the interest of society. The unprecedented spate of violence, and
especially …against women and children,
is escalating at an
alarming rate. Helpless, defenceless women feel unsafe, even in the
sanctity of their own homes, and look to
these courts to protect
their interests and the courts can protect these interests by meeting
out harsh sentences.”
[25]
Accused 2 gained nothing of worth for the perpetrating and inflicting
this wicked, cruel and
horrific suffering on the deceased and their
families. Communities are outraged and if we fail to take account of
that outrage,
we risk encouraging the breakdown of law and order and
communities taking the law into their own hands.
[26]
Indeed ordinary law-abiding citizens in this country are at their
wits end about these ongoing
and senseless crimes involving violence
against women and sight should not be lost of the fact that society
view these crimes as
heinous and abhorrent. Society deserves to be
protected against perpetrators of unprovoked violent crime. Our
courts have held
the view that those who commit violent crime should
be made to account before the law and if found guilty, punished
accordingly.
In
S
v Makwanyane & another
[15]
,
the court stated:
"The need for a
strong deterrent to violent crime is an end the validity of which is
not open to question. The State is clearly
entitled, indeed obliged,
to take action to
protect human life against violation by others
.
In all societies there are laws which regulate the behaviour of
people and which authorize the imposition of civil or criminal
sanctions on those who act unlawfully. This is necessary for the
preservation and protection of society. Without law, society cannot
exist. Without law, individuals in society have no rights. The level
of violent crime in our country has reached alarming proportions.
It
poses a threat to the transition to democracy, and the creation of
development opportunities for all, which are primary goals
of the
Constitution. The high level of violent crime is a matter of common
knowledge and is amply borne out by the statistics provided
by the
Commissioner of Police in his amicus brief. The power of the State to
impose sanctions on those who break the law cannot
be doubted. It is
of fundamental importance to the future of our country that respect
for the law should be restored, and that
dangerous criminals should
be apprehended and dealt with firmly. Nothing in this judgment should
be understood as detracting in
any way from that proposition. But the
question is not whether criminals should go free and be allowed to
escape the consequences
of their anti-social behaviour. Clearly they
should not; and equally clearly those who engage in violent crime
should be met with
the full rigour of the law... "
[27]
This court is mindful that in
R
v Karg
[16]
it
was stated that Serious crimes will usually require that retribution
and deterrence should come to the fore and that the rehabilitation
of
the offender will consequently play a relatively smaller role.
Society’s sense of outrage and the deterrence of the offender
and other potential offenders deserve considerable weight, in cases
of this nature.
[28]
In an effort to curb the wave of violent crimes which threatens to
destroy our society, the legislature
enacted
section 51
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
. Courts are reminded in
Malgas
[17]
that
when considering what sentence to impose,
emphasis
was to be shifted to the objective gravity of the type of crime and
public’s need for effective sanctions against
it.
[29]
The specified sentences were not to be departed from lightly and for
flimsy reasons which could
not withstand scrutiny.
[18]
Traditional
mitigating factors
alone
cannot be considered to be substantial and compelling
circumstances.
[19]
[30]
This court is also mindful in assessing the
proportionality
of the prescribed sentence in a particular case;
the sentencing court must determine what a ‘proportionate’
sentence would be, considering all the circumstances traditionally
relevant to sentencing. The proportionality of a sentence cannot be
determined in the abstract.
[31]
In
S
v Ganga
[20]
it
was stated that,
a
court must still seek to differentiate between sentences in
accordance with the dictates of justice.
Seeking guidance in
Malgas
,
it was stated that the greater the sense of unease a court feels
about the imposition of a prescribed sentence, the greater its
anxiety will be that it may be perpetuating an injustice. That can
only be because it is satisfied that the
circumstances
of the particular case render the prescribed sentence unjust
or,
disproportionate
to the crime, the criminal and the legitimate needs of society
.
[32]
In
S v
Vilakazi
[21]
Nugent JA said the following:
“
In cases of
serious crime the personal circumstances of the offender, by
themselves, will necessarily recede into the background.
Once it
becomes clear that the crime is deserving of a substantial period of
imprisonment the questions whether the accused is
married or single,
whether he has two children or three, whether or not he is in
employment, are in themselves largely immaterial
to what that period
should be, and those seem to me to be the kind of “flimsy”
grounds that
Malgas
said should be avoided.”
[33]
This
court
have regard to the
degree and extent
of the violence used in the commission of this heinous offence, the
nature and weapon used, the brutality and
cruelness of the attack,
the fact that the deceased were trying to earn a living, the nature
and character of the deceased who
was defenseless at the time, the
fact that the attack was unprovoked, the fact that accused 2 acted
with
direct intent
,
the physical, emotional and psychological trauma that the deceased’
families endures every day of their lives, the loss
of a mother a
sister or an aunt and the destruction of innocent children, being
robbed of a mother’s love. The fact that
the families of the
deceased could not find closure, whilst accused 2 was fleeing and
being protected by accused 1.
[34]
In
S v
Rohde
[22]
the following was held:
“
It is the lowered
perception of women as human beings, all of whom are entitled to
human dignity and equality, which results in
the unhealthy social
paradigm that they can be victims, and in fact end up as victims of
crime
because they are women
. The judiciary must guard against
such perceptions and creating the impression that the lives of women
are less worthy of protection.”
[35]
In
Matyityi
[23]
it was stated that remorse is a gnawing pain of conscience for the
plight of another. Thus genuine contrition can only come from
an
appreciation and acknowledgement of the extent of one's error. In
order for the remorse to be a valid consideration, the penitence
must
be sincere and the accused must take the court fully into his or her
confidence. In the present matter neither accused has
not shown
remorse or an appreciation of the consequences of their actions.
This
court is mindful of the case of
S
v Makudu
[24]
where
it was stated that the behavior of an accused during trial may be
indicative of a lack of repentance or intended future defiance
of
laws by which society lives and therefore be a
relevant
factor in considering sentence
…”
[36]
The argument advanced that because accused 1 did not perpetrate the
murders, her actions cannot
be linked to the loss suffered by the
deceased family, is untenable. After becoming aware of the commission
of these heinous offences,
she knowingly and intentionally helped
accused 2 to evade justice, and for him not to be held accountable
for his actions.
[37]
The state correctly argued that accused 1 took away a families’
right to justice and in
my view, closure. Her reason for doing so was
because she loved him. The actions of accused 1 is simply devoid of
compassion, empathy
and understanding of the plight of the deceased’
families, who was left searching for answers. She simply has no
appreciation
and acknowledgement of the extent of her actions. As stated in
S
v Ro and Another
[25]
:
“
To elevate the
personal circumstances of the accused above that of society in
general and the victims in particular, would not serve
the
well-established aims of sentencing, including deterrence and
retribution”
[38]
Having considered all the circumstances of this case, I am of the
view that a suspended sentence
would be wholly inappropriate,
notwithstanding the time spend in custody.
The
sentence to be imposed must send a clear message that offences of
this nature cannot be tolerated in a society where the rights
of all
citizens warrants equal protection of the law.
[39]
On a balanced consideration of the totality of the evidence, this
court finds no substantial
and compelling circumstances to deviate
from the minimum prescribed sentence, nor can this court
deviate
for flimsy reasons which cannot withstand scrutiny.
This
court deems the sentences to be imposed, as
just,
proportionate to the crime, the criminal and the legitimate needs of
society.
[40]
ACCORDINGLY ACCUSED 1 IS SENTENCED TO:
Ad count 3 Accessory
after the fact to murder:
Five (5) years
direct imprisonment
in terms of
section 276
(1)(i) CPA 51 of 1977.
[41]
ACCORDINGLY ACCUSED 2 IS SENTENCED TO:
Ad
count 1 Murder
[26]
:
Fifteen
(15) years
direct
imprisonment.
Ad
count 2 Murder
[27]
:
Fifteen
(15) years
direct
imprisonment.
[42]
In terms of
section 280
CPA 51 of 1977, it is ordered that the
sentences in respect of counts 1 and 2 will run
CONSECUTIVELY.
Ancillary
Orders:
In terms of
section 103(1)
of the
Firearms
Control Act 60 of 2000
, both accused will remain
ex
lege
, unfit to possess a firearm.
Notice in terms of
section 299A
explained
to the family of the deceased.
Appeal rights explained and understood.
A
AFRICA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Date Heard
27 September 2022
Judgment handed
down
28 September 2022
Appearances:
On behalf of the State
Adv Badenhorst
On behalf of Accused 1
Adv Mvatha
On behalf of Accused 2
Adv Botha
[1]
Part
2
of Schedule 2.
[2]
Also
read with
sections 92(2)
,
256
,
258
, of the CPA 51 of 1977.
[3]
S
v Zinn
1969 (2) SA 537
(A) at 540g.
[4]
S v Banda and others 1991 (2) SA 352 (B) 355.
[5]
Crime
and punishment in South Africa 1975 page 150
[6]
S v Rabie
1975 (4) SA 855
(AD) at 862:
[7]
S
v Scheepers
1977 (2) SA 154
(A) at 158F – G
[8]
(CC72/2019)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 346 (13 May 2022).
[9]
2001 (1) SACR 469 (SCA).
[10]
Sec
257
CPA 51 of 1977 “If the evidence in criminal proceedings
does not prove the commission of the offence charged but proves that
the accused is guilty as an accessory after that offence or any
other offence of which he may be convicted on the offence charged,
the accused may be found guilty as an accessory after that offence
or, as the case may be, such other offence, and shall, in
the
absence of any punishment expressly provided by law, be liable to
punishment at the discretion of the court:
Provided
that such punishment shall not exceed the punishment which may be
imposed in respect of the offence with reference to
which the
accused is convicted as an accessory.
[11]
S v Chapman 2020 JDR 0344 p5.
[12]
Gender Based Violence.
[13]
(547/13)
[2014] ZASCA 43
(31 March 2014.
[14]
[2005] ZAGPHC 21
;
2005 (2) SACR 386
(W) @ page 391, 395.
[15]
[1995] ZACC 3
;
1995
(2) SACR 1
(CC), at paragraph 117.
[16]
1961
(1) SA 231
(A) at 378-379.
[17]
2001
(1) SACR 469 (SCA).
[18]
Malgas supra “
Speculative
hypothesis favourable to the offender, maudlin sympathy, aversion to
imprisoning first offenders, personal doubts
as the efficacy of the
policy implicit in the amending legislation, and like considerations
were equally obviously not intended
to qualify as substantial and
compelling circumstances.”
[19]
S
v Obisi 2005 (2) SACR 350 (W).
[20]
2016
(1) 600 (WCC).
[21]
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA) para 58.
[22]
2019 (2) SACR 422
(WCC) para 54.
[23]
2011 (1) SACR 40 (SCA).
[24]
2003
(1) SACR 500 (SCA).
[25]
2010 (2) SACR 248 (SCA).
[26]
read with the provisions of section 51(2) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997, (‘the CLAA’), as amended
.
[27]
read with the provisions of section 51(2) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997, (‘the CLAA’), as amended
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