Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 506South Africa
Barker v S (A282/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 506 (27 May 2024)
Headnotes
of the relevant evidence adduced at the trial. [5] The appellant shared a home with his fiancé, Ms Bettina-Ann Coke and her 21 year old daughter - Adrianne Coke.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Barker v S (A282/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 506 (27 May 2024)
Barker v S (A282/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 506 (27 May 2024)
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sino date 27 May 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: A282/23
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
27 MAY 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
CHARLES
PETER BARKER
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Cox
AJ
Heard
on:
13 MAY 2024
Delivered:
27 May 2024 - This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives
by email, by being
uploaded to the
CaseLines
system of the GD and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10H00 on 27
May 2024.
ORDER
It
is Ordered:
[1]
The appeal against both sentences is dismissed
JUDGMENT
COX
AJ:
[1]
The appellant was convicted in the High Court of Gauteng at Pretoria
of one count of premeditated murder and one
of attempted murder for
which he was sentenced to life- and 18 years imprisonment
respectively. In addition, the court
a
quo
fixed a non-parole period of 25 years in terms of section 276B(1)(b)
of the Criminal Procedure Act
[1]
(the CPA).
[2]
The Supreme Court of Appeal granted him leave to appeal both
sentences.
[3]
In the morning of 5 March 2018, the appellant inexplicably lost his
temper and stabbed
both his fiancée and her 21year old
daughter several times with a knife. After being stabbed the 21 year
old succumbed to
her injuries almost immediately.
[4]
Subsequent to a trial the appellant was convicted despite pleading
not guilty to the
two counts. What follows is a summary of the
relevant evidence adduced at the trial.
[5]
The appellant shared a home with his fiancé, Ms Bettina-Ann
Coke and her 21
year old daughter - Adrianne Coke.
The
morning of the dreaded incident the appellant had gone to the kitchen
to iron a pair of trousers which he intended to wear to
work that
day. His fiancé went to check on him as he took longer than
usual. She found the appellant in the kitchen and
asked him why he
took so long. He replied that he had some difficulties with ironing
the trouser and threatened to tear it up and
threatened to burn her
with the hot iron. She left him in the kitchen and went to the
bedroom as she was also busy preparing for
work.
[6]
Shortly afterwards the appellant entered the bedroom without the
trousers. Ms Coke
left the bedroom and went to the kitchen to iron
her dress and found the trousers on the ironing board, torn in two.
She took it
to him in the bedroom, threw it onto their bed and told
him that his behaviour was unacceptable whereafter he took the
trousers
outside and returned to the room without it.
[7]
Upon his return he informed Ms Coke that he was going to leave her
and started packing
his belongings. As he took a certain towel to
pack, she said that she would fetch him another as the one that he
had taken was
not his property. She fetched one from the study and as
she gave it to him, he put a belt around her neck. She managed to
remove
it and went to the bathroom.
He
followed her into the bathroom whereafter the deceased also entered
and asked the appellant to leave her mother alone. Ms Coke
asked him
to leave the bathroom and the two succeeded in pushing him out of the
bathroom. He however managed to force his way back
in.
[8]
The deceased stood in front of her mother, shielding her from the
appellant. He grabbed
the deceased behind her head by her hair and
slammed her head against the toilet seat. He pulled her back up and
as Ms Coke tried
to intervene, she was pushed against the bath. He
held the deceased against his body with his arm around her neck from
behind.
She struggled to breathe and the appellant said that he was
going to kill her and dragged her to the kitchen where he took a
knife
from the kitchen counter and told Ms Coke that he was going to
show her who he really is. While the deceased could not say anything
and was struggling to breathe her mother begged the appellant to stop
what he was doing and to leave the deceased alone.
[9]
The deceased was pulled back to the bedroom where she was dragged to
the bed and was
stabbed twice on her upper body causing her to fall.
Ms Coke tried to reach her but the appellant punched her in the face
and stabbed
her on her chest.
[10]
The deceased managed to get up from where she had fallen and begged
the accused to stop what
he was doing. He asked her whether she was
going to send him to prison and she said yes. He took hold of the
deceased once again
and she fell down and as Ms Coke attempted to
assist her the appellant grabbed hold of her, Ms Coke, who fell too.
In
an attempt to protect herself from being stabbed again, she grabbed
hold of the knife. It cut her hand and during the subsequent
struggle
he stabbed her on her right arm close to her elbow saying, 'sorry
Jesus I am going to do this'. She managed to get up
from the floor
and begged the appellant to find help for the deceased.
[11]
The appellant then phoned his mother and told her that he had stabbed
the deceased and threatened
to stab himself. The deceased got up from
where she lay and fell by the dressing table. The appellant then
performed CPR on her
and he and Ms Coke tried to stop the bleeding
with anything that they could find. While the appellant put on
another pants Ms Coke
ran out of me house to get some help.
While
she was outside the accused came from the house, opened the
motorgate, got into his vehicle and drove off. She screamed for
her
neighbour to call an ambulance and shortly thereafter paramedics and
an ambulance arrived. The deceased was declared dead on
the scene and
Ms Coke was transported to Tambo Memorial hospital.
[12]
The J88 form which was completed by Dr Manyoni shows that she
sustained five lacerations in the abdominal area, two on the
anterior
elbow area and one each on her index and middle finger. The latter
caused permanent damage to her right hand.
[13]
The post mortem report of the deceased indicates that she had
sustained four stab wounds to the chest of which two penetrated
her
right lung hence the cause of death was found to be stab wound to the
chest.
[14]
The conviction of premeditated murder triggered the provisions of
section 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act
[2]
-
(the CLAA) providing for a minimum sentence of life imprisonment
unless the court finds substantial and compelling circumstances
to
exist
[3]
.
[15]
In considering a suitable sentence, the trial court correctly
accepted that the appellant was
the aggressor and neither the
deceased nor her mother provoked him. There was no valid reason for
the senseless attack on them.
[16]
The deceased and her mother have become part of the statistics in the
scourge of gender based
violence in the country. Gender based
violence in domestic relationships has increased at an alarming rate
and caused the legislature
to recently effect amendments to the CLAA
to also provide for minimum sentences in cases of murder involving
domestic relationships.
The deceased paid the ultimate price for
attempting to protect her mother against the appellant
[17]
The imposition of sentence lies within the discretion of the trial
court. Hence courts of appeal are reluctant to interfere
unless the
trial court misdirected itself or imposed a sentence that is
shockingly inappropriate in the circumstances.
[18]
In
Kumalo
[4]
Holmes JA stated, "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."
[19]
It would have been incorrect to sentence the accused without first
establishing who he is and
why he committed the offences, his
personality, background, criminal capacity, health, expected future
behaviour including other
relevant aspects.
[20]
The trial court had the benefit of various reports providing it with
all the relevant information. It set out the appellant's
personal
circumstances inclusive of his mental health issues. Psychologists
diagnosed him with antisocial personality disorder
indicating
that the possibility of his rehabilitation is compromised.
[21]
Importantly the appellant has a previous conviction of assault with
the intent to do grievous
bodily harm, one for murder and robbery
with aggravating circumstances; the latter two convictions stem from
one incident. He was
released on parole in 2015 and was still on
parole when the current offences were committed.
Noteworthy
is that in all the offences a knife was his weapon of choice and the
victims in all the instances were people near and
dear to him.
[22]
The trial court considered the main aims of punishment as well as the
Zinn
[5]
triad.
[23]
Offences referred to in section 51 of the CLAA have been singled out
for severe punishment
[6]
. That
was confirmed in
Nkabinde
[7]
which stated:
'.
. . the prescribed minimum sentences should not be departed from
lightly and for flimsy reasons. The legislature has ruled that
these
are the sentences that ordinarily, and in the absence of weighty
justification, should be imposed for the specified crimes,
unless
there are truly convincing reasons for a different response.'
Similarly,
according to
Netshivhodza
[8]
,
'[t]he minimum sentence has been set as a benchmark prescribing the
sentence to be ordinarily imposed for specific crimes and
should not
be departed from for superficial reasons.'
In
this case, the odds were heavily stacked against the appellant.
[24]
The point of departure for a sentencing court is the minimum
sentence. The follow up question
is whether substantial and
compelling circumstances can be found to exist, which is answered by
considering whether the minimum
sentence is disproportionate in the
circumstances of the case.
In
the trial court counsel for the state and the defence were in
agreement that there were no such circumstances which warranted
a
departure from the prescribed sentence.
[25]
Before us counsel for the respondent was hard pressed to concede that
and argued that the court
should differentiate between a planned and
premeditated murder and therefore there should be a distinction
between the sentences
imposed for a premeditated murder as opposed to
a planned one. The argument was that a lesser sentence should be
imposed in cases
of premeditated murder.
I
cannot agree with the contention. Premeditated murders are more often
than not more brutal than planned ones causing more suffering
by the
victim than planned ones. The legislature thought it well not to make
any distinction between the two and is it my view
that the argument
by counsel is fundamentally flawed.
[26]
The trial court was correct when it found that there were no
substantial and compelling circumstances
which warranted a departure
from imposing the minimum sentence of life imprisonment and was it
not unjust for the appellant to
be sentenced in terms of s 51(1) of
the CLAA in respect of the first count.
[27]
It is convenient to now deal with the charge of attempted murder. It
was contended on behalf
of the appellant that the sentence of 18
years imprisonment was shockingly inappropriate.
[28]
I pause to mention that sentencing lies within the discretion
of the trial court. The
law with regard to the limited point of
interference was set out as follows in
Hewitt
[9]
:
'the
appellate court must be satisfied that the trial court committed a
misdirection of such a nature, degree and seriousness that
shows that
it did not exercise its sentencing discretion at all or exercised it
improperly or unreasonably when imposing it. So,
interference is
justified only where there exists a 'striking' or 'startling' or
'disturbing' disparity between the trial court's
sentence and that
which the appellate court would have imposed. And in such instances
the trial court's discretion is regarded
as having been unreasonably
exercised.'
[29]
The court
a quo
considered the sentence in line with the
principles set out in
Zinn
. The offence committed by the
appellant remains serious. These kind of violent crimes should be met
with sentences that would deter
the appellant and others from
committing them. These factors need to be considered in conjunction
with the nature and seriousness
of the offence, the interests of
society and those of the accused person. In this regard, I am of the
view that the sentence of
18 years' imprisonment is appropriate in
the circumstances.
[30]
The state requested the court a quo to fix a non- parole
period in terms of section 276B
of the Criminal Procedure Act
[10]
(the CPA), and the court obliged by ordering that the appellant is
not eligible for parole prior to serving 25 years of his sentence.
[31]
The fixing of a non-parole period sparked a hefty argument from the
appellant's counsel, arguing
that it was unreasonable and that it
should be scrapped in its entirety. He added that the court was free
to order that the court
record and concomitant reports be forwarded
to the Department of Correctional Services for submission to the
parole board when
the appellant qualifies for parole.
In
Jimmale
and Another
[11]
the Constitutional Court
confirmed that a non parole order should not be resorted to
lightly. Considering section 73(6)(b)
of the Correctional Services
Act
[12]
it may appear that the
order in terms of section 276B of the CPA was superfluous. The
section provides that when a person has been
sentenced to life
imprisonment the person may not be considered for parole before
serving 25 years of the sentence. It is however
silent on the
remission of sentences by the President of the country, hence it may
in exceptional circumstances and on good cause
shown be required that
a nonparole period be fixed despite a person being sentenced to
life imprisonment.
The
court
a quo
considered all relevant factors and did not make
the order lightly and was there no misdirection when it was so
ordered.
[32]
There was no error or misdirection on the part of the trial court in
sentencing the appellant.
There is no reason for this Court to
interfere with the sentence.
Accordingly,
I propose the following order:
The
appeal against both sentences is dismissed.
I
COX
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
AGREE AND IT IS SO ORDERED
J
HOLLAND-MÜTER
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
AGREE
J
MOGOTSI
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD ON:
13 MAY 2024
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ON:
27 MAY 2024
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPELLANT:
ADV. H J ALBERTS
INSTRUCTED BY:
PRETORIA JUSTICE
CENTRE
REFERENCE:
COUNSEL FOR THE
RESPONDENT:
ADV. HARMZEN
INSTRUCTED BY:
DPP, PRETORIA
REFERENCE:
NOT FURNISHED
[1]
151 of 1977
[2]
The
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
[3]
Section 53(1)(a)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
[4]
S v
Kumalo
1973 (3) SA 697 (A)
[5]
S v
Zinn
1969
(2) SA 537 (A)
[6]
S v
Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469 (SCA)
[7]
Nkabinde
and Others v S
[2017) ZASCA 75
[8]
Netshivhodza
v S
[2014] ZASCA 145
[9]
Hewitt
v S
2017
(1) SACR 309 (SCA)
[10]
The
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
[11]
2016 (2) SACR 691 (CC)
[12]
The
Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998
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