Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 590South Africa
S v Mtshali (Sentence) (CC59/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 590 (30 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
30 May 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## S v Mtshali (Sentence) (CC59/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 590 (30 May 2025)
S v Mtshali (Sentence) (CC59/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 590 (30 May 2025)
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sino date 30 May 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PALM RIDGE)
CASE
NO: CC 59/2024
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
2025/05/30
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
NKULULEKO
MTSHALI
ACCUSED
SENTENCE
JOHNSON,
AJ:
[1]
This matter was delayed for various reasons during the allocated
trial dates. Part
of the delays were caused by the non-availability
of both advocates during the allocated dates. It is well known that
the justice
system is under scrutiny and heavily criticized for the
delays in the finalizing of cases. It is the responsibility of courts
to
see to it that any delays are restricted to the minimum.
[2]
After conviction Adv Myamane for the accused requested a postponement
to call a probation
officer to testify. What was concerning, is that
the request for the postponement was not based on the calling of a
specific witness,
but rather to go and look for a witness who could
testify. I further gained the impression that she wanted to call a
probation
officer because of the age of the accused.
[3]
Adv Myamane had not taken any steps yet to consult a probation
officer. We all know
that compiling reports and the investigations
that accompany it, takes weeks and sometimes months to complete. This
would cause
a further delay in the completion of the matter.
[4]
Legal representatives should be vigilant in taking on briefs where
they foresee that
they might want to call expert witnesses and plan
and consult such witnesses long before the trial starts or during the
proceedings.
It is unacceptable to wait for the reasons of the
judgement or sentence, and it is not an excuse to argue that it is
unsure what
the presiding officer might say.
[5]
All parties were aware that this trial was set down for 2 weeks, and
all preparations
necessary should have been finalized as far as
possible timeously. In this instance, a probation officer had not
even been identified
or consulted yet.
[6]
A probation officer's primary purpose during the sentencing process,
is to assist
the court in determining an appropriate and effective
sentence by providing comprehensive information and recommendations.
This
involves conducting a pre-sentence investigation, which includes
gathering details about the accused, the offense, and his
circumstances,
to enable the judge to make an informed decision. I
was not informed of any assistance I might get from a probation
officer in
this regard, and the request for a remand was
unsubstantiated.
[7]
A court has a discretion in deciding whether to grant or refuse a
postponement, and
to prevent any further unnecessary delays. To grant
the postponement for the reasons requested by the defence, would in
effect
be to condone the dereliction of duty that occurred here.
[8]
Adv Myamane had the right to address me in mitigation of sentence and
had the right
to place any mitigating factor before court without any
reservation. Even if the application for a remand were to be denied,
the
accused would still get a fair trial, because if anything was
said during argument that warranted a probation officer's evidence,
I
had the discretion to call for the assistance of a probation officer
if it was needed. I subsequently denied the request for
a
postponement before I was addressed in mitigation of sentence.
[9]
As far as sentencing is concerned, the provisions of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act
[1]
is applicable
in respect of both the charges of which you had been convicted.
Section 51 (1) of the Act determines that a high
court shall sentence
a person who has been convicted of an offence referred to in part 1
of schedule 2 (like [i] murder when the
death of the victim was
caused by the accused in committing or attempting to commit rape, and
[ii] rape where the victim was under
the age of 16 years) to a
minimum sentence of life imprisonment, unless you prove on a balance
of probabilities that substantial
and compelling circumstances exist.
[10]
The Court in
S
v Malgas
[2]
discussed the question of substantial and compelling circumstances.
The important part of the
Malgas
-judgment
is the explanation, that the circumstances envisaged by the
expression, need not be exceptional, but must provide 'truly
convincing reasons' (Paras 8 and 25C) or 'weighty justification'
<Paras 18 and 25B) for imposing less than life imprisonment,
or
they must induce the conclusion that the prescribed sentence would in
the particular case be unjust or disproportionate to the
crime, the
offender and the legitimate needs of society.(Paras 22 and 25).
[11]
The general principle is that a Court is required to, in the exercise
of its sentencing discretion,
have regard to the seriousness of the
crime committed, the interests of the community and the personal
circumstances of the offender
to reach an appropriate and just
sentence. It is a well-established principle that the punishment
should fit the criminal as well
as the crime, be fair to society, and
be blended with a measure of mercy. It is not lost out of sight that
a sentence must always
be individualised, considered, and passed
dispassionately, objectively and upon a careful consideration of all
relevant factors.
[12]
In a search for substantial and compelling circumstances, the Court
has regard to the offences
of which you have been convicted, the
motive for committing the crimes, the interests of society, your
personal circumstances or
any other matter of importance which have
been brought to the court's attention. In your instance you did
not truthfully
disclose a motive and left us in the dark.
[13]
A standardized and consistent response is required from our Courts,
aware of the fact that life
imprisonment is called for where there
are no substantial and compelling circumstances.
[14]
As far as your personal circumstances are concerned, you were born on
19 August 2004 and were
18 years of age when you committed the
offences. You are single and have no children. You do not know your
biological parents,
who passed away when you were still young. You
were raised by grandfather, the last defence witness. You left
primary school because
you were a slow learner. You were enrolled at
a special school to learn skills like carpentry and making flowers,
but you also
dropped out. You started working in your grandfather's
tavern. He did not pay you a salary, but only gave you pocket money.
You
did not use drugs until you met Phakiso. You are in good health.
Your advocate requested the court to take the following facts into
account as substantial and compelling circumstances: you have been in
custody for 19 months, you are a first offender, you are
still
youthful, you are a candidate for rehabilitation, you did not know
the deceased, and you were not the mastermind of the offences.
[15]
Rape is on the increase, and there is unfortunately little more that
we can do to safeguard our
women, than what we are currently doing.
It seems that our women have become fair game for ruthless criminals.
In many cases like
in this instance, ruthless rapists like you also
kill their victims without any motive or reason. We will never know
why you acted
in this way, because you failed to take the court into
your confidence. Rape is undeniably a despicable crime. In
N
v T
[3]
rape was described as 'a horrifying crime and is a cruel and selfish
act in which the aggressor treats with utter contempt the
dignity and
feelings of [the] victim.' In
S
v Chapman
[4]
the court said it is 'a humiliating, degrading and virtual invasion
of the privacy, the dignity and the person of the victim.'
[16]
The killing of victims, especially when they are as young and
defenceless as the deceased, is
also a serious and despicable crime.
You had no regard for her life and killed her for an unknown reason.
One can only but imagine
the fear she experienced during her last
moments of life.
[17]
I stress that when an appropriate sentence is considered, the triad
consisting of your personal
circumstances, the interests of society
and the offences of which you have been convicted, must be considered
in a balanced way,
and none must be over - or under emphasized in
favour of the other. The sentence should further not be used as a
kind of sledgehammer
to destroy you. In meting out an appropriate
sentence, the court must do it with a measure of mercy.
[18]
I have taken cognisance of the fact that you have been in custody for
approximately 19 months
awaiting finalization of the trial. The
Supreme Court of Appeal considered the role played by the period that
a person spends in
detention while awaiting finalisation of the case
in
S v
Livanje
[5]
It confirmed what it held in
S
v Radebe
[6]
namely that: "the test is not whether on its own that period of
detention constitutes a substantial and compelling circumstance,
but
whether the effective sentence proposed is proportionate to the crime
committed: whether the sentence in all the circumstances,
including
the period spent in detention, prior to conviction and sentencing, is
a just one."
[19]
The period you spent in prison awaiting trial is longer than one
would expect, but it is superseded
by the ultimate sentence that I
consider to be appropriate. It is however less than the norm, where
accused persons sometimes wait
for years to have their matters
finalized.
[20]
You committed heinous crimes against a young child who was in the
prime of her life. She had
no defence against your attack when you
raped and killed her. One can only make but one finding as far as
your actions are concerned
- you are a danger to society.
[21]
If one look at the photos of the body of the deceased, it is sad to
see how broken the body of
the 8-year-old deceased was after you were
done with her. She had her whole life ahead of her, which was cut
short by a ruthless
criminal to satisfy his own sexual needs. In the
absence of Phakiso, you very conveniently put the blame on him.
Initially your
defence was that he forced you to have sexual
intercourse with her. You then got on top of her and only faked sex.
Your evidence
was so fraught with contradictions and improbabilities
that it was rejected as false. You have only yourself to blame that
you
failed to play open cards with the court. Instead of taking
responsibilities for your deeds, you cunningly tried to evade justice
by putting all the blame on a person who had apparently died.
[22]
You showed her no mercy, and you had no remorse for what you had
done. Advocate Shivuri called
P[...] N[...], who had already
testified, to testify about impact of the death of the deceased on
her family. Her death hurt the
family, and her grandmother is
bedridden after she saw what happened to the deceased. He is also
emotionally affected by her death,
and the community is supporting
him.
[23]
Advocate Shivuri argued that the deceased was eight years of age when
she was raped and murdered.
The offences are prevalent. The attack on
her was brutal. There are no substantial and compelling circumstances
which warrants
the court to deviate from the minimum prescribed
sentences.
[24]
When assessing your personal circumstances, I considered what was
said in
S
v Vilakazi
[7]
:
"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 employed, 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."
[25]
In S v Ro and Another
[8]
the
majority of the Supreme Court of Appeal held as follows:
"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 aim of sentencing, including deterrence and
retribution."
[26]
In
DPP,
North Gauteng v Thabethe
[9]
the Court stated:
"Rape of women and
young children has become cancerous in our society. It is a crime
which threatens the very foundation of
our recent democracy which is
founded on protection and promotion of the values of human dignity,
equality and the advancement
of human rights and freedoms. It is such
a serious crime that it evokes strong feelings of revulsion and
outrage amongst all right
thinking and self-respecting members of
society."
[27]
I have considered all the factors that were argued regarding
sentence. I am not convinced that
a probation officer's report would
have been of any assistance in assessing what an appropriate sentence
would be. It is further
found that there are no substantial and
compelling circumstances which entitles the court to deviate from the
prescribed minimum
sentences. The prescribed sentences are not unjust
or disproportionate to the serious offences of which you had been
convicted.
Despite your youthfulness, you are a danger to society. A
sentence which would protect the community against you, is called
for.
[28]
The State also requested that you should be declared unfit to possess
a firearm. Your advocate
had no response to the request.
[29]
I find that the following sentences are appropriate:
Count 1: Life
imprisonment;
Count 2: Life
imprisonment.
As
a matter of course the two sentences will run concurrently.
[30]
The court makes no finding in terms of section 103 (1) of the
Firearms Control Act 60/2000. You
are therefore regarded as unfit to
possess a firearm
JOHNSON
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PALM RIDGE
[1]
Act 105 of 1997
[2]
2001 (3) SA 1222
(SCA)
[3]
1994 (1) SA 862(C)
at 864G
[4]
1997 (2) SACR 3 (SCA).
[5]
2020 (2) SACR 451 (SCA).
[6]
2013 (2) SACR 165
(SCA) at para 14
[7]
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA) at paragraph 58
[8]
2010 (2) SACR 248
(SCA),
[9]
2011 (2) SACR 567
(SCA) 577g-i
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