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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2023] ZAGPPHC 429
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## Mogadi v S
[2023] ZAGPPHC 429; A213/2022 (6 June 2023)
Mogadi v S
[2023] ZAGPPHC 429; A213/2022 (6 June 2023)
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sino date 6 June 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
A213/2022
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
6/6/2023
In
the matter between:
HLALEFANG
MOGADI
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOKOSE
J
[1] The
appellant, who was represented in the court
a quo,
was charged
in the Regional Court sitting at Pretoria of one count of murder read
with
Section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
[2] The
appellant pleaded not guilty on the charge of murder. He was
subsequently
found guilty as charged and was sentenced to life
imprisonment. He was also declared unfit to possess a firearm. On an
automatic
right of appeal in terms of Section 10 of the Judicial
Matters Amendment Act 42 of 2013, the appellant appealed against
sentence
only.
[3] The
charge had arisen from an incident which took place on 2 December
2019 at the corner
of Folonga and Malenga Streets in Mamelodi where
the accused unlawfully and intentionally killed Thabo Mahao by
stabbing him. There
had been an altercation between the two as the
appellant alleged that the deceased had taken their betting money
from a game of
snooker. The appellant had followed the deceased out
of the premises of the tavern and stabbed him. The deceased died as a
result
of being stabbed with a sharp object or object resembling a
knife.
[4] The
appellant appeals against the sentence imposed by the Regional
Magistrate on the
basis that the court
a quo
had failed to
find substantial and compelling circumstances to deviate from the
mandatory sentence of life imprisonment. Furthermore,
the appellant
contends that the sentence was shockingly inappropriate, that it
induced a sense of shock and that the court a quo
had over
emphasized the seriousness of the offence and interests of the
society and under-emphasized the personal circumstances
of the
appellant.
[5]
It
is trite law that sentence is pre-eminently at the discretion of the
trial court.
The test
which has been enunciated in numerous cases is whether the sentence
imposed by the trial court is shockingly inappropriate
or was
violated by misdirection. The court of appeal may interfere with the
sentencing discretion of the court of first instance
if such
discretion had not been judicially exercised. Marais AJ in
the
matter of S
v
Malgas
[1]
observed
that:
"A court exercising
appellate jurisdiction
cannot, in
the absence of
material
misdirection by the
trial
court,
approach
the
question
of
sentence
as
if
it
were
the
trial
court
and
then
substitute the sentence arrived at by it simply because it
prefers it.
To do so
would be to usurp the sentencing discretion of the trial court.
Where a
material misdirection by the trial court vitiates its exercise of
that discretion, an appellate court is of course entitled
to consider
the question of sentence afresh.
In so
doing, it assesses sentence as if it were a court of the
first
instance and the sentence imposed by the trial court has no
relevance.
As it is
said, an appellate court is at large.
However,
even in the absence of material misdirection, an appropriate court
may
yet
be
justified
in interfering
with the
sentence
imposed
by
the
court.
It may
do
so only where the disparity between the sentence of the trial court
and the
sentence
which the
appellate
court would have imposed
had it been
the trial court is so marked that it can properly be described as
'shocking', 'startling' or 'disturbingly inappropriate'.
It must be
emphasized
that in the
latter situation the appellate court is large in the
sense in
which it is at large in the
former.
In the
latter
situation, it may not substitute the sentence which it thinks
appropriate merely because it does not accord
with the
sentence imposed by the trial court or because it prefers it to that
sentence.
It may
do so only
where the difference is so substantial that it attracts epithets of
the
kind
I have
mentioned."
#
[6] When
imposing sentence, a court must try to balance the nature and
circumstances of
the offence, the circumstances of the offender and
the impact that the crime had on the community. It must ensure that
all the
purposes of punishment are furthered. It will take into
consideration the established main aims of punishment being
deterrence,
prevention, reformation and retribution.
# S v Zinn
1969 (2) SA 537
(A)
S v Zinn
1969 (2) SA 537
(A)
[7]
This approach was followed by the court in the matter of
S
v Rabie
[2]
where
Holmes JA said:
"Punishment
should
fit
the
criminal
as
well
as
the
crime,
and
be
fair
to
society,
and
be
blended with a
measure of mercy according to the circumstances."
[8] The
trial court considers for the purposes of sentence, the following:
(i) The
seriousness of the case;
(ii) The
personal circumstances of the Appellant; and
(iii) The
interests of society.
[9] The
provisions of Section 51(1) of Act 105 of 1997 (read with Part 1 of
Schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 51 of 1977) and also
read with
Section 256
,
257
and
258
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977
were explained to the Appellant prior to him pleading to the
charge.
[10]
There is no definition of what constitutes substantial and compelling
reasons. The court must consider all
the facts of the case in
determining whether compelling and substantial circumstances exist.
To arrive at an equitable sentence,
this court is enjoined to weigh
the personal circumstances of the accused against the aggravating
factors, in particular, the interests
of the society, the prevalence
of the crime, and its nature and seriousness.
[11]
The appellant's personal circumstances were placed before the court.
They are that the appellant was thirty-five (35)
years old at the
time of the commission of the offence, grew up without a father
figure, had had a tough up-bringing, was unmarried
and had one child
of seven (7) years of age. Furthermore, he was unemployed and made a
living from herding livestock. He had also
been held in custody for a
period of approximately three (3) years awaiting the finalisation of
his trial matter as bail was denied.
[12]
In his submissions, counsel for the appellant contended that the
appellant was remorseful and that he regretted
the commission of the
offence. As such, the court
a quo
should have taken this into
account in sentencing the appellant.
[13]
Counsel for the respondent was of the view that there was no
misdirection on the part of the court
a quo
in that it had
taken all relevant factors into consideration in sentencing the
appellant and that the sentence imposed was fair
in the
circumstances. Evidence was led that the deceased was a bread-winner
to both his minor child and his mother. Since his passing,
they were
both struggling financially.
[14]
In
the
matter of S
v Matyityi
[3]
the Court held:
"There is, moreover,
a chasm between regret and remorse.
Many
accused
persons
might well regret their conduct, but
that does
not
without
more translate
to
genuine
remorse.
Remorse is
a gnawing pain of conscience for the
plight of
another.
Thus,
genuine contrition can only come from an appreciation and
acknowledgment of the extent of one's error.
Whether the
offender is sincerely remorseful and not simply feeling sorry for
himself or herself at having been caught, is a factual
question.
It is to
the surrounding actions of the
accused,
rather than what he says in court, that one should rather look.
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.
Until and
unless that happens, the genuineness of the contrition alleged to
exist cannot be determined.
After all,
before a court can find that an accused person is genuinely
remorseful, it needs to have a proper appreciation of, inter
alia,
what motivated the accused to commit the deed; what has since
provoked his or her change of heart; and whether he or she
does indeed
have a true appreciation of
the
consequences
of those actions.
There is no
indication that any of this, all of which was peculiarly within the
respondent's
knowledge, was explored in this case.”
[15]
I am not convinced that the appellant is remorseful. I say this
considering the appellant's
persistence of his innocence. He persists
that he did not commit the offence and indicated that he is a suspect
only because he
spoke out against the deceased and because he held
him by his clothes at the time when they had the altercation. His
persistence
of his innocence was also confirmed by the social worker
who prepared the pre-sentencing report.
[16]
The appellant also appeals against the sentence on the basis that the
trial court
erred in not considering the fact that he had been in
custody for a cumulative period of 3 years. The appellant contends
that had
this period of time been considered, the court would have
deviated from the prescribed minimum sentence.
[17]
The court
held in the matter of
Ngcobo
v S
[4]
that a
pre-conviction period of imprisonment is not, on its own, a
substantial and compelling circumstance; it is merely a factor
in
determining whether the sentence imposed is disproportionate or
unjust.
The
test is not whether on its own that period of detention constituted a
"substantial and compelling circumstance", but
whether the
effective sentence proposed was proportionate to the crime or crimes
committed: whether the sentence in all the circumstances,
including
the period spent in detention prior to the conviction and sentencing
as a just one.
[18]
Counsel for the appellants failed to explain to the court what the
circumstances
were which led to the delay in the finalisation of the
matter. The submission was merely that the appellant was in custody
for
a period of over three years which constituted substantial and
compelling circumstances which should have been taken into
consideration
is sentencing. In view of the test as set out in the
matter of
Ngcobo v S (supra)
this court cannot make a finding
that the
court a quo
erred in sentencing the appellant to life
imprisonment.
[19]
It is accepted by this Court that the crime the appellant has been
convicted of is
a serious one.
Section 51(3)
of Act 105 of 1997
provides that the court must impose the prescribed sentence unless
there are substantial and compelling circumstances
to deviate from
such prescribed sentence.
[20]
Given the seriousness of the crime as well as the mitigating
circumstances and aggravating
circumstances which were taken into
consideration by the Regional Magistrate in the court
a quo,
I
am of the view that the Magistrate did not err in sentencing the
Appellant. There were no substantial and compelling reasons to
sentence the appellant to a lesser sentence than that prescribed by
the provisions of Section 51(1) of Act 105 read with Part 1
of
Schedule 2 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 51 of 1977 nor is there
any evidence of the discretion of the Magistrate having
been
incorrectly exercised.
[21]
Accordingly, the following order is granted:
The appeal against
sentence is dismissed.
MOKOSE
J
Judge
of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division,
Pretoria
I
agree and is so ordered
MOSOPA
J
Judge
of the High Court
of South Africa
Gauteng
Division,
Pretoria
For
the Appellant:
Mr S
Moeng
Instructed
by
Pretoria
Justice Centre
For
the State:
Adv
S Lalane
Instructed
by
The
Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions
Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
05/09/23
Date
of judgement:
06/06/23
[1]
(2001) 3 All SA 220
(SCA) para 12
[2]
1975 (4) SA 855
at 862 G - H
[3]
2011(1) SACR 40
(SCA) at
47
A - D
[4]
2018 (1) SACR 479
(SCA) at
para 14
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