Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 105South Africa
Smith v S (Leave to Appeal) (A290/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 105 (6 February 2025)
Headnotes
the appeal court will be entitled to interfere with the imposed sentence if one or more of the recognised grounds are shown to exist, that the sentence is (i) disturbingly inappropriate; (ii) so blatantly out of proportion to the magnitude of the offence; (iii) sufficiently disparate; and (iv) is otherwise such that no reasonable court would have imposed it.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Smith v S (Leave to Appeal) (A290/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 105 (6 February 2025)
Smith v S (Leave to Appeal) (A290/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 105 (6 February 2025)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO.
A290/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: N0
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
06 FEBRUARY
2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
WELMARIE WILHELMIAH SMITH
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
This judgment is issued
by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties/their legal representatives
by email.
The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of this
matter on CaseLines by the Judge or her Secretary. The
date of this
judgment is deemed to be 06 February 2025.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: The Gauteng Division
Pretoria
1.The appeal against
sentence is upheld.
2. The sentence of life
imprisonment in respect of count 1 is replaced with a sentence of 15
years’ imprisonment.
3. The sentence of 25
years’ imprisonment in respect of count 2 is replaced with 5
years’ imprisonment.
4.
The sentences are ordered to run concurrently.
[1]
5. The effective term of
15 years’ imprisonment is antedated in terms of section 282 of
the Criminal Procedure Act to 29 April
2019.
JUDGMENT
Collis
J (Van Der Schyff J and Le Grange AJ concurring).
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an appeal against the sentence imposed by the Gauteng
Division of the High Court. On 30 May 2019, the Appellant lodged
an
Application for Leave to Appeal against both her conviction and
sentence.
[2]
On the same day the trial Court dismissed the Application for Leave
to Appeal.
[3]
She then petitioned the Supreme Court of Appeal which subsequently
granted her Leave to Appeal to the Full Court of this Division.
Leave, however, was only granted to appeal against the sentence so
imposed and this was done on 24 May 2023.
[4]
As such the trial Court’s factual findings on the conviction
stand and are accepted by this Court.
2.
The Appellant together with her co-accused, being her former husband,
was arraigned in the Gauteng Division of the High Court
on charges of
murder
(read with section 51(2) and PART II
OF SCHEDULE 2(as amended) of the General Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997)
and assault with the intention to do
grievous bodily harm. The assault and murder victim was their three
(3) year old minor child.
3.
On 19 February 2019 the Appellant as well as the erstwhile accused 1,
pleaded not guilty to these counts. On 22 February 2019
she was
convicted on both counts, while the erstwhile accused 1 was convicted
on the assault charge only.
[5]
4.
On 29 April 2019 the Appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment for
the murder and 25 years’ imprisonment for the assault
with the
intention to do grievous harm. The erstwhile accused 1 was similarly
sentenced to 25 years’ imprisonment, for the
assault.
[6]
5.
By operation of law, all sentences imposed with a sentence of life
imprisonment will run concurrently with that sentence.
[7]
6. Before us, it is
unknown as to whether the erstwhile accused 1 pursued any Application
for Leave to Appeal as it does not appear
from the record so
provided. Given the outcome of this appeal, it would appear prudent
if he was to be encouraged to also pursue
an appeal in respect of his
sentence.
7. It is trite law that
the guiding principle is that the sentence is pre-eminently a matter
for the discretion of the trial court.
In S v Rabie 1979 (4) SA
855 (A) at 857 the dictum by Holmes JA states:
‘
1.
In every appeal against sentence, whether imposed by a magistrate or
a judge, the court hearing the appeal-
(a)
Should be guided by the principle that
punishment is
“
pre-eminently
a matter for the discretion of the trial court”;
and
(b)
should be careful not to erode such
discretion hence the further principle that the sentence should only
be altered if the discretion
has not been ‘judicially and
properly exercised.’
8. In S v Mtungwa and
Another
1999 (2) SACR 1
(A), it was held that the appeal court will
be entitled to interfere with the imposed sentence if one or more of
the recognised
grounds are shown to exist, that the sentence is (i)
disturbingly inappropriate; (ii) so blatantly out of proportion to
the magnitude
of the offence; (iii) sufficiently disparate; and (iv)
is otherwise such that no reasonable court would have imposed it.
BACKGROUND
9.
The charges against the appellant have as their origin an incident
that occurred at the home she shared with the erstwhile accused
1;
her deceased minor daughter, as well as her two other minor children.
Notwithstanding that the incident occurred on 29 March
2007,
[8]
the prosecution of the matter only commenced on 19 February 2019,
[9]
some twelve years later.
10. On the day of the
incident, the deceased became unresponsive which resulted in the
appellant contacting an ambulance. The paramedics,
upon arrival
examined the deceased whereafter she was then declared dead. An
undertaker was then summonsed to remove the body.
It was at that time
that injuries to the body of the deceased were noted and the
authorities were alerted. Subsequent thereto,
a police investigation
ensued. Dr. Pharasi, a Pathologist, performed the post-mortem and
during the trial his report was introduced
into the record in terms
of
section 212
(4) of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
, as he
was no longer available to testify. In his report he concluded that
the cause of death was “HEAD INJURIES (ASSAULT)”.
In
addition, the report also reflects multiple bruises and cigarette
burns inflicted to the body of the deceased.
11. During the trial,
Professor Saayman, the Chief Forensic Pathologist testified to his
report which he prepared after considering
the postmortem report and
photos of the body of the deceased. Although he criticized the
postmortem, which in his view was not
optimally performed, he
confirmed extensive external injuries indicative of abuse. He
moreover concluded that these injuries were
inflicted at different
times. As such the Trial Court accepted that the deceased was
severely abused over a period of time.
12. At the trial the
erstwhile accused 1 denied any involvement, or knowledge, of the
circumstances surrounding the physical condition
of the deceased.
13. When the appellant
testified during the trial, she claimed that she was not aware of any
injuries to the deceased. She however
testified to an incident where
the deceased was hit on the head by a Marmite jar, thrown at the
deceased by Accused 1. Accused
1 did not deny this particular
incident but suggested that he accidentally hit the deceased and
therefore downplaying the seriousness
of the injury. As to the day of
the incident the appellant however testified that on the morning of
her death that the deceased
accidentally had fallen out of her cot,
this at a time when she was alone at the house with the deceased.
14. The trial Court in
its judgment accepted the prosecution’s version and rejected
the version of the appellants and albeit
that there was no direct
evidence regarding how the deceased sustained all of her injuries,
the conviction was founded on inferences
drawn from the fact that the
deceased was in the care of the appellant and her husband (accused
1), and as her parents they were
in law responsible for her
wellbeing.
15. The trial Court found
that, although both accused were complicit in the assault of the
deceased; the deceased was in the care
of the appellant on the day
that the fatal injury was inflicted and therefore, she alone was
found guilty on the murder charge.
16.
In determining an appropriate sentence, the court must strike a
balance between the personal circumstances of the accused, the
seriousness of the offence, as well as the interest of the
public.
[10]
In the above
endeavour the sentencing court considered the four pillars in
determining an appropriate sentence, namely deterrence,
prevention,
reformation and retribution. The court was further alive to the fact
that there ought to be a balance of all the above
factors, hence the
following was taken into account by the court a quo:
i. the fact that the
appellant was a first offender;
ii. the comprehensive
pre-sentence reports submitted by the defence, setting out their
personal circumstances;
iii. the lack of remorse
shown by the appellant and her failure to take responsibility for
what happened to the deceased;
iv. the fact that the
offences were committed 12 years ago to the date of prosecution;
v. the court also took
into account the interest of the public and the intensive campaigns
against the abuse of children;
vi. as an aggravating
factor the sentencing court took into account the fact that the abuse
was against their own defenceless child
of only three years and that
it was perpetrated over a period of time.
17. In the end the court
found that whether taken individually or cumulatively, there existed
no substantial and compelling circumstances
to persuade it to impose
a lesser sentence than the prescribed minimum sentence and had in
fact found that given the ambit of its
inherent jurisdiction it had
imposed an appropriate sentence.
18. On behalf of the
appellant it was argued that the trial Court misdirected itself in
ruling that no substantial and compelling
circumstances existed to
justify a deviation from the prescribed sentence of 15 imprisonment.
19. In this regard,
counsel for the appellant had argued that the delay of 12 years in
prosecuting her, together with the fact that
she demonstrated that
she had turned her life around which was evidenced by her subsequent
raising of her remaining children, should
have constituted weighty
substantial and compelling circumstances justifying the court not to
impose the minimum sentence of 15
years; especially when considered
cumulatively with all other factors.
20. It is for this reason
that counsel for the appellant submitted that the exponential
increase by the trial Court of the minimum
sentence of 15 years’
imprisonment to life imprisonment in respect of the murder charge was
not justified having regard to
the facts of the matter. It was
also contended that the court aquo misdirected itself in imposing a
sentence of 25 years’
imprisonment for assault, which is wholly
out of proportion with the norm for that offence.
21. This submission on
behalf of the Appellant, is supported by the conduct displayed by the
Appellant since the commission of the
offence, especially towards her
remaining children, which conduct should serve as a powerful
substantial and compelling circumstance.
22. The Appellant,
therefore, argued that the trial Court misdirected itself in imposing
a sentence of 25 years’ imprisonment
for assault with the
intention to cause grievous bodily harm. It was contended that the
sentence is excessive and an extraordinary
even for severe assault
cases.
23.
The Respondent in turn had argued that there was no misdirection on
the part of the trial Court, as the Court in its judgment
took into
consideration
the prolonged suffering that
had been endured by a defenseless 3-year-old victim. Counsel had
argued that this suffering distinguished
the present matter from
other murders and assaults and that as such the sentence does not
induce a sense of shock.
24.
The cryptic arguments advanced by the Respondent however does not
resonate with this Court. In the present matter the trial
Court
failed to make any clear findings of law or adequately record any
aggravating factors stipulated in the Act, justifying the
sentence
imposed to as falling under a more onerous category demanding life
imprisonment for the murder charge and twenty-five
years for the
assault charge.
[11]
Such failure on the part of the trial Court amounts to a misdirection
which warrants an interference by this Court.
25. This is not to be
misconstrued as implying that this Court fails to appreciate the
seriousness and prevalence of these type
of offences or misunderstood
as this Court paying lip-service to the legislature’s
commitment to fight gender-based crimes,
especially those perpetrated
against children. This Court is alive to fact that the
Appellant was the mother and primary
caregiver of the victim and in
law was obligated to be responsible for the deceased’s
wellbeing.
26. The minimum
sentencing regime provides a statutory guideline and should not be
adjusted upwards capriciously. Any increase in
the minimum sentence
should be suitably substantiated on the facts of the matter.
27.
Support for this position is to be found in the decision S v Msimango
[2017] ZASCA 181
;
2018 (1) SACR 276
(SCA) para 24, where the SCA in
dealing with the imposition of a sentence beyond the prescribed
minimum sentence in terms of the
proviso said the following: ‘In
terms of s 51(2) of the CLAA, the appellant should have been
sentenced to a period of not
fewer than 15 years’ imprisonment
in the absence of substantial and compelling circumstances. It is
true that the regional
magistrate had the power to add a further five
years to the minimum sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment.
However, the increase
is not to be done whimsically but on sound
legal principle which can withstand scrutiny. This requires any
presiding officer who
intends to invoke this power to give reasons
therefore. Regrettably, the regional magistrate gave no reasons for
increasing this
sentence with an additional five years. On the
evidence as it stands, the increase is not justified.’
[12]
28.
In the present matter the trial Court highlighted the aggravating
factors without conclusively stating why such a significant
increase
to life imprisonment would be justified.
[13]
This to my mind, as mentioned, amounts to a misdirection on the part
of the trial Court. Similarly, the trial Court failed to justify
the
imposition of twenty-five years’ imprisonment which is wholly
out of proportion from the norm of that type of offence.
This too
amounts to a misdirection on the part of the trial Court.
29. In the result the
appeal against sentence is upheld and the following order is
proposed:
29.1 The sentence of life
imprisonment in respect of count 1 is replaced with a sentence of 15
years’ imprisonment.
29.2 The sentence of 25
years’ imprisonment in respect of count 2 is replaced with 5
years’ imprisonment.
29.3. The sentence
imposed in respect of count 2 is ordered to run concurrently with the
sentence imposed in respect of count 1.
29.4. The sentence
imposed is antedated to 29 April 2019 in terms of
section 282
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
COLLIS J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
I Agree
VAN DER SCHYFF J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
I Agree
LE GRANGE AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for Appellant:
Mr.
H L Alberts
Instructed
By:
LEGAL
AID SOUTH AFRICA, PRETORIA
Counsel
for Respondent:
Adv.
P C B Luyt
Instructed
By:
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing:
19
August 2024
Date
of Judgment:
06
February 2025
[1]
In
terms of
section 280
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, act
51 of 1977.
(the “CPA”).
[2]
Record
p 367 – 370.
[3]
Record
p 394 l 11 – 112.
[4]
Record
p 482 – 483.
[5]
Record
p 327 l 4 – 22.
[6]
Record
p 363 l 5 – 8.
[7]
In terms of
section 39
(2) (a) (i) of the
Correctional Services Act,
111 of 1998
all sentences are served concurrently with any sentence
of life imprisonment.
[8]
Record
p 2 l 2.
[9]
Record
p 8 l 1.
[10]
S v Zinn 1969 (2) SA 537 (A).
[11]
In terms of
section 51(1)
read with
Part I
of Schedule 2 of the Act.
[12]
Chonco v The State (1247/2018/)
[2019] ZASCA 75
(3 May 2019).
[13]
Record
p 362 l 22 – 25.
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