Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 521South Africa
Mphabantshi v S (A259/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 521 (4 July 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mphabantshi v S (A259/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 521 (4 July 2022)
Mphabantshi v S (A259/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 521 (4 July 2022)
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sino date 4 July 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE
HIGH
COURT
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
A259/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
4/7/2022
In
the matter between:
SIMOSIHLE
MPHABANTSHI
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 of Emfuleni sitting at Vereeniging of
the counts of compelled rape, rape of an adult person, robbery
with
aggravating circumstances, two counts of kidnapping, assault with
intent to do grievous bodily harm, two counts of pointing
a firearm,
possession of a firearm and possession of ammunition.
[2]
The Appellant pleaded guilty on the charges of possession of a
firearm and possession
of ammunition only. At the end of proceedings,
he was found guilty of attempted compelled rape, rape read with the
provisions of
Section 51(1) of Act 105 of 1997, two counts of
kidnapping and the counts of possession of a firearm and possession
of ammunition.
He was acquitted on all the other charges.
[3]
The Appellant was sentenced as follows:
(i)
Count 1 being attempted compelled rape, eight (8) years imprisonment;
(ii)
Count 2 being rape read with the provisions of Section 51(1) of Act
105
of 1997, life imprisonment;
(iii)
Count 4 and 5 being kidnapping, eight (8) years on each count;
(iv)
Count 9 being possession of a firearm, five (5) years imprisonment;
and
(v)
Count 10 being possession of ammunition, three (3) years
imprisonment.
[4]
The court ordered that the sentence imposed in count 5 run
concurrently with that
imposed in count 4. So too was the sentence
imposed in count 10 which was ordered to run concurrently with that
in count 9.
[5]
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.
[6]
The charges arise from an incident which occurred on the night of the
2
nd
December 2016 when the complainant, N[....]1 H[....]
S[....] and her boyfriend X[....] N[....]2 were seated outside the
house where
the complainant lived. They were accosted by an unknown
male person who was later identified as the Appellant, armed with a
firearm.
They were taken to a nearby veld where they were forced to
engage in sexual intercourse at gunpoint.
[7]
The complainant was later taken by the Appellant to a friend's house
where
he had sexual intercourse with her twice without her consent.
The Appellant then walked the complainant halfway home. She was found
by her boyfriend and family. She assisted the police leading them to
the scene of where she had been raped. The Appellant's friend,
Themba
took the police to where the Appellant resided, whereupon, he (the
Appellant) was arrested. The firearm and also ammunition
were found
in the Appellant's possession.
[8]
The record of appeal was found to be wanting in that the evidence of
the
complainant's sister did not form part of it. It was however
agreed by the parties that the appeal should be adjudicated upon as
it was directed only against sentence.
[9]
The ground of appeal against sentence is premised on the court
a
quo's
failure to find substantial and compelling
circumstances to deviate from the mandatory sentence of life
imprisonment. The Appellant
contends that the trial court had
misdirected itself in finding that there were no substantial and
compelling circumstances to
justify a deviation by the Magistrate
from imposing a life sentence on the Appellant in respect of Count 2,
being the contravention
of Section 3 of Act 32 of 2007 (referred to
as the "Sexual Offences Act''). Furthermore, the Appellant
appeals against the
sentences on the ground that they are shockingly
inappropriate and induce a sense of shock.
[10]
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 JA 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 lotter
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 I
so substantial that it attracts epithets of
the kind I have
mentioned."
[11]
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.
[2]
[12]
This
approach was followed by the court in the matter of
S
v
Rabie
[3]
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."
[13]
A trial court considers for the purposes of sentence, the following:
(i)
The seriousness of the case;
(ii)
The personal circumstances of the Appellant;
(iii)
The interests of society.
[14]
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 were
explained to the Appellant prior to him pleading to the charges. The
section states that an offender
shall be sentenced to imprisonment as
per the minimum sentence unless there are compelling and substantial
reasons to deviate from
the prescribed minimum sentence.
The
specified sentences are not to be departed from for flimsy reasons
and must be respected at all times.
[4]
[15]
There is no definition of what constitutes compelling and substantial
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.
[16]
The Appellant's personal circumstances were placed before the court.
They are that the Appellant
was thirty (30) years old at the time of
the commission of the offence. He was unmarried but had two (2)
children who were in his
mother's care. He had dropped out of school
in Grade 11, was not in formal employment at the time of the
commission of the offence
and had no previous convictions.
[17]
Counsel for the Appellant was of the view that because the Appellant
had written a letter of
apology to the complainant and her family, he
had shown remorse and regret. As such, the court
a quo
should
have taken this into account in sentencing the Appellant.
[18]
Counsel for the Respondent was of the view that the aggravating
circumstances far outweighed
the mitigating circumstances. The
complainant was twenty-three (23) years at the time of the rape, she
was at home, supposedly
a safe environment, in the company of her
boyfriend when she was forcibly taken under the threat of a firearm.
[19]
In
the
matter of
S
v Matyityi
[5]
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."
[20]
I am not convinced that the appellant is remorseful. I say this in
light of the Appellant's persistence
of his innocence. He persists
that he had consensual sexual intercourse with the complainant. His
persistence was also confirmed
by the social worker who prepared the
pre sentencing report.
[21]
With respect to the personal circumstances of the Appellant, the
trial Magistrate stated as follows:
“
Mr Mpabantshi, there are many
young men in society who did not have a wonderful relationship with
their fathers, who had suffered
hardships and deprivation, but they
do not prey like monsters on innocent women... your disposition to
your fellow human beings,
specially towards the defenceless was
reflected in the callousness of your actions...”
[22)
Referring to the victims of the Appellant's actions, the trial Court
referred to the case of S v
C
[6]
where
the court held:
“
Rape is regarded by society as
one of the most heinous of crimes, and rightly so. A rapist does not
murder his victim. He murders
her self-respect and destroys her
feeling physically and mental integrity and security. His monstrous
deed often haunts his victim
and subjects her to mental torment for
the rest of her life, a fate often worse than loss of life."
[23]
It is accepted by this Court that the crime the Appellant has been
convicted of is an exceptionally
serious one. The Appellant had been
convicted of rape on more than one occasion. Section 51(3) of Act 105
of 1997 provides that
the court may deviate in sentencing and impose
a lesser sentence than the prescribed sentence only where there are
substantial
and compelling circumstances that justify such deviation.
[24]
Given the seriousness of the crime as well as the mitigating
circumstances and aggravating circumstances
which were taken into
consideration by the 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.
[25]
Accordingly, the following order is granted:
The appeal against
sentence is dismissed.
MOKOSEJ
Judge
of the High Court
of
South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
I
agree and is so ordered
BARIT
AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
of
South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
For
the Appellant:
Miss
MMP Masete instructed by
Pretoria
Justice Centre
For
the State: Adv J Cronje instructed by
The
Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions
Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
19 May 2022
Date
of judgement:
4 July
2022
[1]
[2001] 3 All SA 220
(SCA) para 12
[2]
S v Zinn 1969 (2) SA 537 (A)
[3]
1975 (4) SA 855
at 862 G - H
[4]
S v Matyityi
2011 (1) SACR 40
(SCA) at page 53 E - F
[5]
2011 (1) SACR 40
(SCA) at 47A - D
[6]
1996 (2)SACR 181 (C)
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