Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 124South Africa
Kasongo v S (Appeal) (A 98/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 124 (20 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
30 January 2025
Headnotes
Summary of evidence and findings of the court a quo:
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Kasongo v S (Appeal) (A 98/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 124 (20 March 2025)
Kasongo v S (Appeal) (A 98/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 124 (20 March 2025)
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FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL – Murder –
Premeditation
–
Sentenced
to life imprisonment despite indictment not explicitly stating
that murder was premeditated – No evidence
of planning or
premeditation prior to commission of crime – Actions
demonstrated intent to kill but did not establish
premeditation –
Trial court improperly relied on inadmissible hearsay evidence –
Failed to adequately consider
appellant’s potential for
rehabilitation – Sentence was disproportionate – Set
aside and replaced with
sentence of 25 years’ imprisonment
.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
(Coram:
Henney, J et Cloete, J et Nziweni, J)
Case No.:
A98/2024
In
the matter between:
MUEPA
PAUL
KASONGO
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Heard: 24 January
2025, supplementary notes delivered on 30 January 2025 and 7 February
2025
Delivered
electronically: 20 March 2025
JUDGMENT
HENNEY,
J (CLOETE, J concurring, NZIWENI, J dissenting)
:
Introduction:
[1]
I have considered the judgment of my colleague and whilst I agree
with some of her
findings, I am unable to agree firstly, with her
finding that the court a quo was correct in concluding that the
murder that was
committed by the appellant was planned and
premeditated. The facts require some further elaboration and
elucidation in order to
have a proper understanding of the evidence
placed before the court a quo, which it took into consideration and
upon which it made
its factual findings. Secondly, I am also
unable to agree that the sentence imposed by the court a quo, of life
imprisonment
was an appropriate sentence.
[2]
In coming to the conclusion that there was premeditation in relation
to the murder
of the deceased, the court a quo stated at paragraph 37
of its judgment … “The course of action in which the
killing
of the deceased was carried out, the circumstances under
which it was carried out and the putting into effect of a performance
to mislead the police and everyone on how her life came to an end,
established premeditation.” Accordingly, the court a quo
found
in effect that premeditation can, as a matter of law, also be
established by evidence as to what occurred during the commission
of
an offence and thereafter. Before I deal with this aspect, it is
however necessary at the outset to state the following.
[3]
It is well established that when leave to appeal is granted only
against sentence as was in this case,
a court of appeal may not, save
possibly in exceptional instances, deal with the merits of the case.
Although considered within
the context of an attempt to appeal a
conviction when leave had only been granted against sentence in:
S
v Matshoba and Another
1977 (2) SA 671
(A);
S v Heller
1970 (4) SA 679
(A);
S v Cassidy
1978 (1) SA 687
(A) 690, it
follows logically that an appeal court is not at liberty, without
more, to delve into the merits of the case again
and make fresh
factual findings not dealt with in the trial court’s judgment
on conviction, when considering whether interference
with the
sentence imposed is warranted. Put differently, the sentence imposed
must be evaluated within the “constraints”
of the trial
court’s factual findings in its judgment on conviction.
[4]
Accordingly, we must consider whether on the facts found proven by
the trial court
, premeditation was established, which in my
view is not the case. Even if this could be regarded as an
exceptional case,
the court a quo did not set out on what facts it
concluded that there was planning and premeditation.
Summary
of evidence and findings of the court a quo:
[5]
Unfortunately, I have to deal with the merits of this case in
considering whether
there were facts upon which the court a quo
correctly concluded that premeditation was established since my
colleague has made
separate factual findings on the merits that were
not included in the court a quo’s judgment on conviction to
support her
conclusion that the court a quo was correct in finding
that there was planning and premeditation.
[6]
The case for the prosecution was not confined to evidence when the
murder was committed,
being the evening of 3 December 2018, but also
on certain events and occurrences that happened in particular on the
evening of
1 December 2018, at the house in Silversands that the
deceased was house sitting; and to a lesser extent, the events of 2
December
2018, and the morning of 3 December 2018, when the appellant
tried to have contact with the deceased at her place of employment
at
Poetry, Tygervalley Centre.
[7]
On the evening of 1 December 2018, a friend of the deceased, Zintle
Fekisi (“Zintle”)
who was a student at the University of
Western Cape (“UWC”) together with her boyfriend Xolela
Nosana (“Xolela”)
and another male person visited the
deceased at the house in Silversands that she was house sitting for
the owners. After their
arrival at the house, the deceased and the
appellant were involved in an argument. This, according to the
appellant, related
to the deceased being dissatisfied with messages
that were sent on her cellular phone to her about the appellant’s
alleged
infidelity the previous evening. Another version given
by one of the state witnesses was that she had been told by the
deceased
that the appellant was upset and jealous because of
information contained on her cellular phone which he believed was
evidence
that she was unfaithful to him.
[8]
At some stage while they were sitting in the lounge the cellular
phone of the deceased
disappeared, and after some search it was found
under the seat where the appellant was sitting in the lounge. Shortly
after that,
the appellant disappeared from the company and went to
one of the bedrooms. The deceased after some time followed him into
the
bedroom and both stayed away for about 15 minutes.
[9]
Zintle was annoyed by their absence and went to look for them and
heard them in the
bedroom with the door closed where she heard the
deceased shouting, and she could hear that the appellant and the
deceased were
involved in an argument. There was some tussle
and movement, and it sounded like he wanted to take away her cellular
phone.
Zintle opened the door and observed that the appellant held
onto the one hand of the deceased and in his other hand, he was
holding
onto her cellular phone which he did not want to give back to
her. The deceased told her that the appellant had strangled her, but
the appellant denied it. And in response to this, the deceased was
laughing. Zintle did not take this allegation seriously.
She
left them alone in the room to talk things out while she was standing
outside. At some stage after that, she again heard the
deceased
screaming and once again opened the bedroom door.
[10]
The appellant insisted that he wanted to continue speaking to the
deceased, whereupon Zintle
said that she had given him a chance to
talk to her and refused that he continue speaking to her. At that
same time the two other
male persons intervened as well, and the
appellant was forced to give the cell phone back to her. Zintle
then dragged the
deceased away and requested her to pack her things.
After the appellant was separated by the two male friends who were
present,
the appellant wanted to go back to her, and he had to be
restrained by the two male persons, who dragged him outside.
[11]
Zintle and her two friends, the deceased and the appellant left the
house and the deceased spent
the night with them at the hostel of
UWC. The deceased’s friends did not want the appellant to go
with them, but the deceased,
however, begged Zintle to take the
appellant with them, and he accompanied them in the car to UWC. But
due to the appellant’s
earlier conduct the deceased’s
friends did not want to be in the appellant’s company and
refused that he join them
at UWC. He was dropped off at UWC and had
to take an Uber taxi, to where he wanted to go.
[12]
The deceased later discovered that her cellular phone was missing and
thought that the appellant
may have taken it. It needs to be stated
that certain hearsay evidence was given by State witnesses and taken
into account by the
court a quo without the trial judge making a
ruling on its admissibility. Especially, where Zintle stated that the
deceased on
more than one occasion told her that the appellant
strangled her. Xolela confirmed more or less what she
testified, except
that he heard that the deceased whilst in the room
shouted “Ouch Muepa you are slapping me.” He furthermore
testified
that after he went to the room he observed that the
appellant was pulling the arm of the deceased. The deceased
furthermore told
the appellant “No I don’t want to talk
because you are strangling and biting me.”
[13]
At that stage Xolela and the other male friend separated the
appellant and the deceased from
each other. This, however, did not
deter the appellant from scratching the deceased at the back of her
shoulder. Thereafter
all of them left and went to UWC. The
appellant was in the car, and he continued to reach out to the
deceased and was pulling and
scratching at her. The appellant was
warned that should he continue doing this, he would be asked to leave
the car and be left
at the side of the road. After they arrived at
UWC, the appellant took an Uber taxi and went on his own way.
[14]
Accordingly the only evidence about the deceased allegedly being
strangled was inadmissible hearsay
evidence, emanating from Zintle
who said that when she entered the room the deceased said she was
strangled, which the appellant
denied, and the deceased in reaction
to this just laughed.
[15]
Further hearsay evidence that was taken into account by the court a
quo was of a witness, Denzil
Cupido, a policeman to whom the deceased
allegedly reported the next day that the appellant strangled her in
front of her friends,
which apart from being hearsay is inconsistent
with the evidence of Zintle who did not see it happening, and neither
did Xolela.
[16]
There was also evidence that on the next day, 2 December 2018, the
appellant tried to see the
deceased at her place of work at Poetry
Store, Tygervalley, but she refused to speak to him. On the morning
of 3 December 2018,
he made another attempt to see her at her place
of work, this attempt was also unsuccessful. Two witnesses, her
colleagues from
Poetry, gave evidence which is hearsay and was
basically about what the deceased had told them, and does not take
the matter any
further. The only useful pieces of this evidence is
that the deceased had no cellular phone which caused her to ask one
of her
colleagues to lend her phone to the deceased in order for her
to send a message to the appellant to return her cellular phone; and
that the appellant on these two days came to the Poetry Store where
he wanted to speak to the deceased. She refused to speak
to him
and he insisted that he wanted to. He was asked to leave when
he did not respect her wishes.
[17]
Little if any value can in my view be attached to this evidence,
because it is mainly based on
hearsay evidence of the deceased. None
of the witnesses, especially those who were present on the evening at
the house on 1 December
2018 observed that the deceased had been
strangled by the appellant or bitten by him. What is, however, clear
from their evidence
was that he pulled her arm, lashed out at her and
that he scratched her while they argued.
[18]
My colleague in her judgment states without any substantiation that
‘Evidence (sic) shows
that amongst other things he strangled
her’. On the further evidence of the appellant himself he later
on the evening of
3 December 2018 visited the deceased at the place
where she was house sitting, and where he killed her. The appellant
described
what happened between him and the deceased which eventually
led to him stabbing her 11 times.
[19]
Caroline Visser, a neighbour living in a house not far from where the
incident occurred, was
sleeping inside her house and heard a lady
crying which she described as if she was badly hurt. She was
not sure where it
came from and thought that if something should
happen her children would alert her. She later fell asleep
while the crying
continued. Her son, Curtley Visser who
was standing outside testified that he heard an argument between two
persons.
He heard a girl shouting and saying, ‘why are you
doing this to me’. He further testified he heard nothing else.
He
and his friends saw two persons at the house and at one stage they
went to the shop and walked past the house, but they could only
see
two persons but could not see any faces.
[20]
His further evidence was that on the next day the appellant came to
their house and told him
that his girlfriend was lying in the passage
of the house and that there is blood on the floor. He went to the
house and observed
that the front door was partially open, but the
burglar gate was still closed, and they could not gain access to the
house. They
used a hammer and managed to break open the burglar gate
and gained entry to the house, where they found the body of the
deceased.
It is clear, unlike the court a quo found, that the Vissers
did not observe what happened. There is no evidence as the court a
quo found that the appellant went back into the house. Or that he was
carrying a knife, whilst doing so.
[21]
A further concern is that although the legal representative of the
appellant did not challenge
the contradictions in the evidence of the
Vissers, the court a quo also did not deal with it. It seems that the
son Curtley did
not hear a person crying as if she was hurt, like his
mother who was inside did, although he was outside and closer to
where the
deceased and the appellant were.
[22]
I agree that the appellant’s version was correctly rejected by
the court a quo where he
tried to proffer a version that it was the
deceased that attacked him first and he tried to defend himself,
although there were
no other witnesses to the incident.
Clearly, even if the deceased was the one who attacked him, his
conduct in retaliation
far exceeded the bounds of self-defence.
[23]
However the court a quo further misdirected itself by concluding that
the conduct of the appellant
on the day after he committed the murder
by ‘putting into effect of a performance to mislead the police
and everyone on how
her life came to an end’, was indicative of
planning and premeditation. The conduct of a perpetrator not prior
to, but after,
the commission of an offence cannot be regarded as
evidence of planning and premeditation.
[24]
It is well established
[1]
that
the conduct to be considered of a perpetrator of a crime for the
purposes of planning and premeditation must be the conduct
before
(although not even long before), but not during, or after the
commission of the offence. A person cannot plan or premeditate
to
commit an offence whilst such a person is in the process of
committing it through the conduct or the manner in which it was
committed, in the absence of any evidence to substantiate such a
finding. Further, the conduct of the person afterwards cannot
be
regarded as conduct to establish or infer planning and premeditation.
[25]
It is clear from the record that the evidence of the circumstances
under which the killing of
the deceased was carried out is sparse and
was principally based on the version of the appellant, who was not an
honest and trustworthy
witness and the court a quo was correct to
reject his version of events as ‘beyond reasonable doubt
false’. However,
what is not clear are the circumstances under
which the trial court considered that the killing took place. These
circumstances
were not dealt with by the court a quo, and nor was any
factual basis set out by the trial court as to what those
circumstances
might be in concluding that there was premeditation.
On a conspectus of the evidence, I am not persuaded that the trial
court
was correct in its finding that there was planning and
premeditation.
The
findings and decision of my colleague with regard to whether there
was planning and premeditation
:
[26]
In my respectful view, my colleague impermissibly delved into the
merits of the case again and
made fresh factual findings not dealt
with in the trial court’s judgment on conviction, when she
sought to make factual findings
as to the circumstances, which the
court a quo did not make, in concluding that the murder was
premeditated.
[27]
She refers to the numerous stab wounds the appellant had inflicted
upon the deceased in committing
the murder to substantiate that there
was planning and premeditation, which the trial court did not do. As
I understand her judgment,
what my learned colleague is saying is
that planning and premeditation to murder on the part of a
perpetrator can also be
formed during the commission of the
offence, and is not limited to events preceding it, i.e that by
having regard to the consequences
(the violence meted out) of a
perpetrator’s action during the commission of the murder and
not prior to it, one can ex post
facto conclude that there was
planning and premeditation.
[28]
Put differently, and in the absence of evidence proving premeditation
(whether direct or by inferential
reasoning) it cannot be inferred
only from the manner in which the violence was meted out that there
was planning and premeditation.
Such an approach is contrary to the
trite legal principle that this inferential reasoning must exclude
every other reasonable inference,
especially in the absence of any
other evidence, which the state did not adduce. In other words, based
on the trial court’s
own factual findings, one cannot exclude
the possibility that the murder could also have been committed in the
heat of the moment.
(
R v Blom
1939 AD 188
at
202
).
[29]
As previously stated my colleague’s approach is also not
consistent with the well-established
principle that planning and
premeditation occur before the commission of the offence, and as
stated in
Kekana
(2014
[2]
),
even where the planning and premeditation occurred minutes before the
commission of the offence, and that there should
be clear
evidence about that to establish premeditation beyond reasonable
doubt. In this regard Mathopa AJA (as he then was) stated
…
“
[13]
In
my view it is not necessary that the appellant should have thought or
planned his action a long period of time in advance before
carrying
out his plan. Time is not the only consideration because even a few
minutes are enough to carry out a premeditated action.
The
appellant pertinently admitted that after he saw his clothes, he
formed an intention and in his own words he decided to end
it all and
kill the deceased. He then gave effect to this decision. He went
outside to fetch petrol. He re-entered the house and
poured it on the
bed of the deceased while at the same time telling her of his
intention. He set it alight with the petrol. He
locked the deceased
in the room. He spilled the petrol in the passage, kitchen and dining
room. The locking of the door and further
pouring of petrol show that
he was carefully implementing a plan to prevent her escape and to
ensure that she died in the blaze.
To my mind, this is proof of
premeditation on his part. It follows that the appellant was
correctly convicted of premeditated murder
.”
[30]
Accordingly, even if the time frame between planning and
premeditation and the commission of
the offence was for a relatively
short period
it
must occur before the commission
.
The timeframe before the commission plays a role. In
Jordaan
[3]
,
Binns-
Ward stated the following about the definition of premeditation …
“
Indeed,
the definition of 'premeditation' in the Oxford Dictionary of
English suggests that the concept of planning is
wrapped up in
that of
'premeditation':
viz 'the action of planning something (especially a crime)
beforehand;
intent':
the defendant said
there
was no planning or premeditation
.”
(own emphasis)
[31]
A full bench of this court in
Raath
[4]
(Bozalek
J; Louw J and Goliath J concurring) said definitively that “
The
concept of a planned or premeditated murder is not statutorily
defined. We were not referred to, nor was I able
to find
any authoritative pronouncement in our case law concerning this
concept. By and large it would seem that the question of
whether a
murder was planned or premeditated has been dealt with by the court
on a casuistic basis. The Concise Oxford English
Dictionary 10
ed, revised,
gives
the meaning of premeditate as 'to think out or plan beforehand'
whilst 'to plan' is given as meaning 'to decide
on,
arrange in advance, make preparations for an anticipated event or
time'. Clearly the concept suggests a deliberate weighing-up
of the
proposed criminal conduct as opposed to the commission of the crime
on the spur of the moment or in unexpected circumstances
.
There is, however, a broad continuum between the two poles of a
murder committed in the heat of the moment and a murder which
may
have been conceived and planned over months or even years before its
execution.
In
my view only an examination of all the circumstances surrounding any
particular murder, including not least the accused's state
of mind,
will allow one to arrive at a conclusion as to whether a particular
murder is 'planned or premeditated
'.
In such an evaluation the period of time between the accused
forming the intent to commit the murder and carrying out this
intention is obviously of cardinal importance but, equally, does not
at some arbitrary point, provide a ready-made answer to the
question
of whether the murder was 'planned or premeditated
”
(emphasis
added)
[32]
In my view, by having regard to the ‘violence meted out’
and the number of stab wounds
inflicted as referred to by my learned
colleague in great detail in her judgment, these factors are instead
indicative of
an
intention to murder
and
not indicative of premeditation. In
Taunyane
[5]
it was aptly stated that
…
“
In
deciding whether or not appellant killed the deceased in
circumstances where such killing was planned or premeditated, the
test
is not whether there was an intention to kill. That had already
been dealt with in finding that the killing was an act of murder
.”
[33]
The SCA said the following with regards to the distinct differences
between planning and premeditation
and intention in
Peloeole
[6]
:
“
It
is thus trite that in order for the State to secure a conviction on a
murder charge, it must prove all the common law elements
of the
offence, including the element of intent (dolus).
The
number of shots a perpetrator fires at the deceased is one of the
factors a court would consider as indicative of the intent to
kill; the determination to end life.
The
phrase ‘planned or premeditated’ is not an element of
murder. It is a phrase introduced by the minimum sentence
legislation
(the Act), as one of the aggravating factors in the commission of
murder
.
In the instance where one or more of these aggravating factors are
found to be present,
the
courts are enjoined to impose a sentence not less than the minimum
prescribed. In the case of murder, such a sentence would
be life
imprisonment. These aggravating factors are listed in s 51(1) of
the Act. In S v Malgas this Court
held that it is
permissible to depart from the sentence prescribed by the Act, should
the court find that there are substantial
and compelling
circumstances justifying a deviation from the prescribed minimum
sentence
.
The question whether the murder was planned or premeditated is thus
relevant for sentencing, and not for conviction. Though the
perpetrator in his state of mind may have both the intent and
premeditation to commit the crime, the intent has to be
present during the
commission of the crime, while
premeditation is, as a matter of logic, limited only to the state of
mind before the commission
of the crime
.
It is for that reason that premeditation would not exist in the case
of negligence (culpa). There is, therefore, a symbiotic relationship
between the two concepts, in that they both relate to the state of
mind of the perpetrator. The submission by appellant’s
counsel
that the Learned Judge in the high court conflated the two concepts
is thus incorrect. I will return to the question of
the appellant’s
state of mind before he committed the murders
.”
(emphasis added)
[34]
It is accordingly clear that by having regard to violence meted out
and the multiple times the
appellant in a very violent manner stabbed
the deceased to death are factors a court would consider as
indicative of an intention
to kill. And as stated in the
Peloeole
case “
the determination to end life
”.
[35]
In my view, the trial court as well as my learned colleague with
respect conflated the concepts
of premeditation and intent to murder.
The conduct of the appellant during the attack on the deceased
clearly demonstrated that
he had direct intention to murder the
deceased if regard is to be had to the gruesome and violent manner as
described by my colleague
how he killed the deceased and the multiple
times he stabbed her. Thus, it was said in
Dlodlo
[7]
in respect of drawing an
inference of an intention to murder:
“
The
subjective state of mind of an accused person at the time of the
infliction of a fatal injury is not ordinarily capable of direct
proof, and can normally only be inferred from all the circumstances
leading up to and surrounding the infliction of that injury.
Where,
however, the accused person's subjective state of mind at the
relevant time is sought to be proved by inference, the inference
sought to be drawn must be consistent with all the proved facts, and
the proved facts should be such that they exclude every other
reasonable inference save the one sought to be drawn. If they do not
exclude every other reasonable inference, then there must
be a
reasonable doubt whether the inference sought to be drawn is the
correct one. (See R v Blom,
1939 AD 188
at pp. 202 - 3.)
”
[36]
In dealing with intention to murder, a court deals with the
subjective state of mind of the perpetrator
at the time of commission
of the offence, whereas when dealing with the question whether there
is planning and premeditation, the
court deals with the state of mind
of a perpetrator to give effect to his murderous intent, before the
commission of the offence.
There is in my view no
evidence, direct or circumstantial, from which an inference be drawn
that in the present case the murder
of the deceased was premeditated
when regard is had to the established legal principles referred to
above.
[37]
None of the circumstances and facts referred to by the court a quo
established planning and premeditation.
It is trite that there is an
onus on the prosecution to prove beyond reasonable doubt planning or
premeditation. The state did
not attempt to do so because firstly, it
never alleged in the indictment that the murder was committed with
planning and premeditation;
and secondly, because it could not have
had such evidence, or it would have been adduced. This concession was
made by counsel for
the State during argument in the appeal, and
rightly so. It is for all of these reasons that I am unable to
agree with my
learned colleague as well as the court a quo that the
murder was planned and premeditated.
Jurisdiction
to impose sentence of life imprisonment
[38]
My colleague has comprehensively dealt with the legal position where
an indictment or charge
sheet does not specifically refer to
premeditation when proffering a particular charge against an
accused. I agree with her
assessment. In my view, given
what is stated earlier in this judgment, there was no need for the
court a quo to conclude
there was planning and premeditation, or even
for the prosecution to allege and prove that it was such, in order
for the court
as a High Court to impose a sentence of life
imprisonment. In any murder case or crime where there is
justification or sufficient
aggravating circumstances to impose a
sentence of life imprisonment the High Court may impose such a
sentence. This
is because of the High Court’s
inherent power to impose a sentence of life imprisonment. See
Peloeolo
[8]
where the minority
judgment found that the absence of planning and premeditation is not
a jurisdictional fact that has to be established
for a High Court to
impose a sentence of life imprisonment, where there are sufficiently
aggravating circumstances by the High
Court to impose such a
sentence: It is different in the case of a Regional Court which
ordinarily, but for the provisions of section
51(1) of the Criminal
Law (Sentencing) Act 105 of 1997, does not have jurisdiction to
impose a sentence of life imprisonment.
In this regard, Du
Toit, De Jager, Paizes, Skeen and Van Der Merwe
[9]
state the following in this regard, with reference to
Baloyi
and
Peloeolo
:
“
It should be
noted that, in these cases, the trial courts were High Courts, which
had the jurisdiction to impose life imprisonment,
even when the
minimum sentences were not involved. Had the trial court been a
regional court, the judgment in S v Ndlovu
2017 (2) SACR 305
(CC) is
clear: without a finding by the trial court that the murder had
been planned and premeditated, a regional court cannot
establish the
increased jurisdiction to impose life imprisonment during the
sentencing
”.
In
my view, therefore the court a quo was entitled to impose a sentence
of life imprisonment. The question however remains whether
this was
an appropriate sentence.
Whether
the sentence imposed by the court a quo should stand
[39]
It is trite that in an appeal against sentence that the principle
that should guide the appeal
court is that punishment is
pre-eminently a matter for the discretion of the trial court, and a
court of appeal should be slow
to interfere with such discretion.
Furthermore, that a court of appeal can only interfere with a
sentence imposed by the trial
court under the following
circumstances. Firstly, where there is a material misdirection by the
trial court that vitiates the exercise
of that discretion. Secondly,
where there is a disparity between the sentence that was imposed by
the trial court and that which
the court of appeal would have imposed
had it been the trial court, to the extent that such a sentence can
be characterized as
shocking, startling or disturbingly
inappropriate.
[40]
In my view, the trial court made findings against the appellant in
aggravation of sentence that
were not based on admissible evidence,
like hearsay evidence, when it found that the deceased was strangled
and bitten by the appellant.
No one testified that they were
witnesses to such conduct on the part of the appellant. The only
evidence that was placed before
the court of this conduct was based
on inadmissible hearsay evidence which should in the first place
never have been admitted,
other than in terms of the proper
application of
section 3
of the
Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of
1988
.
[41]
The appellant in any event denied these allegations and no signs of
any strangulation or biting
were recorded on the postmortem report.
It is true that the conduct of the appellant on the evening of 1
December 2018, was deplorable
which resulted in the cancellation of
their social get together. But besides the evidence of him pulling
her arms and tightly holding
her wrists, there is no other positive
evidence of an assault on her. His main aim it seems on that evening
was not to assault
her but to get hold of her cellular phone.
[42]
The court a quo in my view was influenced by generalized extraneous
factors based on studies
of the conduct in general of perpetrators
and victims of gender-based violence that was not borne out by the
evidence regarding
the behaviour of the appellant and that of the
deceased as a victim, and in my view unfairly attributed those
factors to the appellant.
There was no admissible evidence presented
that the appellant had a history of abusing the deceased.
[43]
I agree with the submissions of counsel for the appellant that in the
absence of any other evidence,
on the evidential material before the
trial court, the only reasonable inference to be drawn is that the
offence was committed
in the heat of the moment. There is no
evidence, as I pointed out earlier, that the appellant went to visit
the house where the
deceased was to hunt her down and kill her. Apart
from what happened on 1 December 2018 the only real and substantial
evidence
of violence committed by him on the deceased is the brutal,
cold-blooded and abhorrent manner in which he killed the deceased.
This repulsive conduct together with his conduct on 1 December 2018
nonetheless does not justify the generalized and unsubstantiated
aggravating findings the court a quo made against him in relation to
the scourge of gender-based violence. By making these findings
in
aggravation, the court a quo materially misdirected itself.
[44]
I agree with the court a quo and my colleague, that for perpetrators
of gender-based violence
who callously murder their intimate
partners, a strong message needs to be sent out that acts of
gender-based violence are taken
seriously by our courts. Such a
sentence should however not be disproportionate to the crime, the
offender and the interests of
society. Sentencing is always an
individualised exercise.
[45]
The appellant was a young man and was 19 years old when he committed
the offence. He was barely an adult at the
time of the commission of
the offence. If he had committed the offence a year and a few
months earlier (approximately 20
months) the provisions of the
Child
Justice Act 75 of 2008
, and in particular
s 77
thereof, would
have applied. This is a strong factor that the trial court should
have taken into consideration. He is also a first
offender and was
never previously on the wrong side of the law. He comes from a
stable family. He completed matric and tried
to gain a post-matric
qualification. He also was employed in various capacities from a
petrol attendant to a part time model. He
had been in an intimate
relationship with the deceased for a long time. His abhorrent conduct
appears to have been fuelled by jealousy
and possessiveness when the
deceased rebuffed his attempts to reconcile with her. This does not
necessarily translate into an individual
with a deep rooted,
irreversible, propensity for violence against women such as to place
society at large at risk, particularly
given the absence of any
evidence before the trial court to this effect.
[46]
Whilst he may not have been honest and upfront with the Vissers and
the police, he nonetheless
went back to the scene the next day. He
could have stayed away. It is equally reasonable to infer from this
conduct that he realized
the consequences of his actions which
greatly concerned him, and he wanted to process what he had done. He
was sad and crying when
he realised the consequences of his actions.
This was not the conduct of a totally heartless individual.
[47]
In my view, there was an over-emphasis only on the offence that was
committed even if it was
horrific and abhorrent. When imposing
a sentence, the court must strive to impose a balanced sentence and
avoid imposing
an exemplary sentence. Just like an overemphasis
on the crime is deprecated, a sentencing court should guard against
placing
an overemphasis on the public interest and to appease public
opinion.
[48]
In
S v Maseko
1982 (1) SA 99
(A) at 102E-F the court
held:‘…What has to be guarded against when exemplary
sentences are imposed (concerning which
see
S v Khulu
1975 (2)
SA 518
(N) at 521-2) is the danger that excessive devolution by a
judicial officer to furtherance of the cause of deterrence may so
obscure
other relevant considerations as to result in very severe
punishment of a particular offender which is grossly disproportionate
to his deserts. (See also
S v Christodoulou
;
S v Savides
;
S v Temple; S v Zwyssig
1979 (3) SA 523
(A) at 536E-F
.)’
[49]
And in
S v Khulu
(at 521B-522C) the court held:
‘
It is clear
from the magistrate’s reasons in this case that he decided to
impose what I might
call
an exemplary sentence. He regarded it as “a need” because
of the tendency described by the witness called by him.
The accused
was to be punished in such a way that the punishment would
demonstrate to those disposed to deal in dagga that youths
would not
necessarily induce a court, because of their youth, to “avoid”
the punishment described by Act 41 of 1971.
In Smith and Logan,
Criminal
Law
,
2
nd
ed.,
p. 12, Asquith L.J., is reported to have said:
“
Everyone
has heard of an ‘exemplary’ sentence: and nearly everyone
agrees that at times such sentences are justified.
But it is not
always observed that an exemplary sentence is unjust, and unjust to
the precise extent that it is exemplary. Assume
a particular crime is
becoming dangerously frequent. In normal times the appropriate
sentence would be, say, two years. The Judge
awards three; he awards
the third year entirely to deter others. This may be expedient; it
may even be imperative. But one thing
it is not; it is not just. The
guilt of the man who commits a crime when it happens to be on the
increase is no greater than that
of another man who commits the same
crime when it is on the wane. The truth is that in such cases the
Judge is not administering
strict justice but choosing the lesser of
two practical evils. He decides that a moderate injustice to the
criminal is a lesser
evil than the consequences to the public of a
further rise in the crime-wave.”
It is implicit in the
observations of the learned Lord Justice that an “exemplary”
sentence may be justified only where
the injustice thereby done to
the individual is “moderate”; a degree of injustice in
that sense may be a lesser evil
than the neglect of the broad
interests of society which sometimes require that severe sentences,
possibly in excess of the true
deserts of the offender in the
particular service circumstances of his case, should be imposed for
deterrent effect. But I cannot
conceive of any principle which could
justify, for the sake of deterrence, the imposition of a sentence
grossly in excess of what,
in the circumstances of a particular case
and having regard only to the crime and the degree of the particular
offender’s
moral reprehensibility, would be a just and fair
punishment. This would be to lose sight of the fundamental principle
of sentencing;
“
What
has to be considered is the triad consisting of the crime, the
offender and the interests of society”. (
S.
v. Zinn
,
1969 (2) S.A. 537
(A.D.) at p. 540). This crisp but comprehensive
dictum
by
Rumpff, J.A. (now Chief Justice), has been quoted and applied times
without number. Some further observations made by the learned
Judge
of Appeal in the course of his judgment sometimes appear, however,
not to be fully appreciated, to judge by cases which come
up for
review. It should be remembered that the learned Judge of Appeal also
pointed out that the over-emphasis of one of the constituents
of the
triad and the under-estimation of another constituted a misdirection
and that it was wrong to exaggerate “beyond permissible
limits”
the nature and effect of the crime.
It is, I think, a
truism that just as a court should not, in an excess of compassion or
pity, show a criminal convicted of a serious
and prevalent type of
crime undue leniency at the expense of the best interests of society,
so it should not by over-zealous protection
of society denigrate the
concepts of justice and fairness in relation to the individual
offender. That, when all has been said,
remains the true function of
the court in any criminal case---to do justice to the State and to
the man in the dock---to acquit
him if he is not guilty but to
convict him if he is guilty and then to sentence him, within the
framework of the law, according
to what is just and fair in all the
circumstances. Where it is not possible to reconcile with the need to
protect society a sentence
which, having regard only to the crime and
the offender, appears to be appropriate, a court would disregard its
duty and abuse
its powers if it did not ensure that the deviation
from justice (in the sense of imposing punishment more severe than
the particular
offender merited) was no greater than was necessary in
the public interest and that the sentence, though more severe than it
would
otherwise have been, was nevertheless not unreasonable in all
the circumstances.’
[50]
Our country and society without a doubt suffers a scourge of
gender-based violence in the form
of either rape or femicide and all
other horrific forms of abuse against women In
S
v SMM
[10]
the
following was said about this in the context of deterrence and
retribution in cases like these:
'Our
country is plainly facing a crisis of epidemic proportions in respect
of rape, particularly of young children . . . The public
is rightly
outraged by this rampant scourge. There is consequently increasing
pressure on our courts to impose harsher sentences
primarily, as far
as the public is concerned, to exact retribution and to deter further
criminal conduct. It is trite that retribution
is but one of the
objectives of sentencing. It is also trite that in certain cases
retribution will play a more prominent role
than the other sentencing
objectives.
But one cannot
only sentence to satisfy public demand for revenge—the other
sentencing objectives, including rehabilitation
,
can never be discarded
altogether, in order to attain a balanced, effective
sentence
’
.(emphasis
added)
[51]
I endorse the sentiments expressed in this case. To impose a sentence
of life imprisonment on
a young man with a clean track record and who
is barely an adult which means that he has to be removed from society
for the rest
of his life, induces a sense of shock and it is a
disturbingly inappropriate. Such a sentence unduly places an emphasis
on the
retributive aspects of punishment and pays scant regard to the
appellant’s prospect of rehabilitation. There is no evidence
that the appellant cannot be rehabilitated and that he should
therefore spend the rest of his life in prison. Not even the expert
witness on gender-based violence called by the State during the
sentencing proceedings suggested this. In fact she was candid that
she was simply not qualified to comment on rehabilitation programs
available to sentenced prisoners and whether there was no likelihood
that the appellant could be rehabilitated.
[52]
I am of the view that the interests of society, the seriousness of
the offence as well as the
retributive and deterrent aspects of
punishment can be satisfied by imposing a sentence of long-term
imprisonment other than a
sentence of life imprisonment. In the
result, the following order is made:
1)
The appeal against the sentences imposed on counts 1 and 2 is
dismissed.
2)
The appeal against the sentence imposed on count 3 (Murder)
is upheld
and replaced with the following sentence:
“
That the
accused is sentenced to Twenty-Five (25) years imprisonment
.
The
sentences imposed on counts 1 and 2 shall run concurrently with the
sentence imposed on count 3.
”
3)
The sentence on count 3 is antedated to 4 November 2022.
R.C.A. HENNEY
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
J.I. CLOETE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
NZIWENI,
J
:
Introduction
[53]
This
is an appeal with leave from the trial court, against a sentence of
life imprisonment that was imposed upon the appellant after
a
conviction for premeditated murder. The case was tried before Thulare
J. The appellant, who was legally represented, was convicted
of
(count one) assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm; (count
two) theft; and (count three) murder. Although the convictions
on the
three counts involved the same victim, they were committed on
different occasions and were only consolidated for trial purposes.
[54]
It
is common cause between the parties that the indictment expressly
indicated that the murder charge was read with the provisions
of
section 51 (2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (“CLAA”)
[in essence, the State invoked the mandatory
minimum term of
imprisonment of 15 years for a first offender ]. It was also common
cause before the court a
quo
that
facts alleged in the indictment did not fall within the purview of
section 51 (1) of the CLAA, as the indictment did not expressly
mention that the murder was committed with premeditation. Thus,
the
appellant
was not forewarned in the indictment about the possibility of such a
finding by the trial court.
[55]
Notably,
in respect of the
murder
charge,
the trial court in its verdict made a specific finding that the
circumstances of the case established premeditation. In
the result,
notwithstanding the fact that the State did not invoke the provisions
of section 51 (1) of the CLAA, the appellant
was sentenced to a term
of life imprisonment in terms of section 51 (1) of the CLAA.
[56]
So
far as the provisions of section 51 (1) are concerned, the appellant
asserts that it was incumbent on the State to specify the
case to be
met in such a way that an accused person properly appreciates the
charges against him and the consequences thereof.
The appellant
further asserts that the trial court exercised its discretion
unreasonably by imposing life imprisonment. Accordingly,
the
appellant asserts that the life imprisonment sentence is
disproportionate to the relevant crime.
[57]
Therefore,
the central issue that falls to be considered in this appeal is
whether, in the circumstances, the trial court was correct
to invoke
the provisions of section 51 (1) of the CLAA. And whether there were
substantial and compelling circumstances that warranted
the trial
court to deviate from the prescribed sentence.
[58]
It
is necessary to briefly recite the background and the circumstances
of each offence.
Events
of 01 December 2018 to 04 December 2018
[59]
The
appellant was convicted mostly on the following facts. The deceased
was searching for her phone and it was found where the appellant
was
seated; the appellant and the deceased went to the bedroom because of
what was on the deceased’s phone; the appellant
had
the
deceased’s phone when they were in the bedroom; the deceased
never got her phone back; the appellant never handed the
deceased’s
phone to her; that the friends of the deceased did not want the
appellant and the deceased to be in the same place;
that the
appellant was asked to leave the house of the deceased. The appellant
saw a message on
the
deceased’s
phone,
kept her phone, assaulted her on 01 December 2018. Evidence shows
that amongst
other
things
,
he strangled her. He had to be taken away to the University of
Western Cape and the party the deceased was hosting had to be
abruptly stopped because of the
actions
of the
appellant.
[60]
On
02 December 2018, a police man who had been a neighbour of the
deceased, observed that she was fearful of the appellant, when
she
went to him to seek advice about what to do concerning the events of
01December 2018.
[61]
On
the very same day [02 December 2018], the appellant went to the
deceased’s place
of
work,
notwithstanding the fact that the deceased refused to see him; he
remained
there
.
As a result, he had to be escorted out of the store where the
deceased worked.
[62]
On
03 December 2018, the deceased related to a co-worker that the
appellant still had not returned her phone to her and that she
was
fearful of the appellant.
[63]
On
the evening of 03 December 2018, the appellant went to the deceased’s
place and an argument ensued inside the house. The
altercation
proceeded outside and
a
neighbour
is
reported to have
heard
the deceased asking the appellant why he was doing
the
things he was doing
to
her.
[64]
When
the altercation went back inside the house, the appellant stabbed the
deceased 11 times with
a
knife
he had in his possession and left her to die.
[65]
On
04 December 2018, the appellant contacted the police and acted as if
he discovered the body of the deceased, and
that
he
did not know what
had
happened
to her.
The Law
[66]
The
question concerning failure to inform an accused person beforehand
regarding the applicability of the provisions of the
CLAA
imposed upon him or her; or in an instance where the indictment
incorrectly states an offence as one of contravening s 51
(2) instead
of s 51 (1) of the CLAA, have been the subject of judicial scrutiny
both in the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”)
and the
Constitutional Court.
[67]
In
this regard, the SCA has developed an established jurisprudence on
this issue. Thus, there is a long line of cases stemming from
the SCA
that state that incorrect stating or not mentioning applicability of
the CLAA, does not mean to say that the sentencing
court cannot
impose a sentence that falls within the purview of the applicable
penalty regime. However, the SCA has repeatedly
emphasised that
each case must be assessed on a case-by-case basis and in the light
of its particular circumstances.
[68]
The
SCA also stressed that emphasis must be at substance and not just at
form. The breadth of its [SCA] authority demonstrates that
if an
accused person was not prejudiced in the defence of his case, the SCA
will
show
reluctance
in
overturning
the
result of a fair trial where there was no denial of accused's
constitutional rights.
[69]
The
SCA, for obvious reasons, eschews and is also quite wary to lay
ing
down
a general rule that the indictment or chargesheet must
recite
in
every case either the specific form of the scheduled offence with
which the accused is charged, or the facts the State intends
to prove
to establish it. In my view, it makes absolute sense that our courts
avoid rigidity and formalistic application of the
law so as to
elevate form over substance. In essence, the SCA concluded that
despite a flaw in the indictment or chargesheet, the
defect may be
curable if it would not affect the
accused
person’s
fair
trial. At this point, a detailed discussion of the SCA cases is
necessary.
[70]
In
S
v Mashinini and Another
2012
(1) SACR 604
(SCA) (21 February 2012), the appellants, who were
legally represented were charged in the Regional Court, with
rape
read
with the provisions of s 51(2) of the CLAA. The accused pleaded
guilty to the charge. The accused were ‘convicted as
charged’.
Pursuant to the conviction, the Regional Magistrate stopped the
proceedings and referred the matter to the High
Court for sentencing.
[71]
In
the High Court, the indictment reflected that the accused were
convicted of an offence referred to section 51 (2) of the CLAA.
During the sentencing proceedings, no evidence was led in mitigation
or aggravation of sentence. The High Court proceeded and sentenced
the accused to life imprisonment. The accused appealed their sentence
to the SCA. The argument before the SCA, proceeded on the
footing
that the sentencing judge acted incorrectly in sentencing the
appellants to life imprisonment in terms of section 51 (1)
of CLAA,
where the appellants were convicted of rape read with the provisions
of s 51(2) of the CLAA and whether the sentence imposed
rendered the
trial unfair.
[72]
The
SCA found that there was a misdirection which vitiated the sentence.
According to the SCA, the misdirection stemmed from the
fact that the
appellants were sentenced for an offence different from the one for
which
they were convicted
.
As such, the SCA found that in the
Mashinin
i
matter, there was absolutely no basis for the matter to be referred
to the High Court as the Regional Court Magistrate had the
necessary
competence to sentence the appellants. The
Mashinini
matter,
is similar in some respects to the Constitutional Court case of
S
v Ndlovu
2017
(2) SACR 305
(CC), where the Regional Court Magistrate, when
sentencing the appellant, made reference to the fact that the
appellant was charged
with Rape read with section 51 (2) of the CLAA.
And when the Regional Magistrate pronounced the verdict, he stated
that the appellant
was found ‘guilty as charged.’ Based
on that, the Constitutional Court held that the magistrate’s
statement that
the accused was found ‘guilty as charged’,
means that he was convicted of rape read with the provisions of
section
51 (2) and not an offence referred to part I of schedule 2.
[73]
The
questions presented by the
Mashinin
i
case in the SCA and the
Ndlovu
matters,
are readily distinguishable from the present one because the trial
court in the instant case, before the conviction, specifically
indicated in its judgment that it had made a finding of
premeditation, notwithstanding the failure of the State to invoke the
appropriate statutory penal provision under section 51 (1) of the
CLAA.
[74]
In
S
v Legoa
[2002]
4 All SA 373
(SCA);
2003 (1) SACR 13
(SCA) (26 September 2002), the
SCA dealt with two issues. The first
one
related
to the elements of the offence set out in the schedule of the CLAA.
The second one dealt with failure to warn an accused
with the correct
applicable penalty regime.
[75]
In
the
Legoa
matter,
the SCA, through Cameron JA, stated the following at para 20-21:
“
Under
the common law it was therefore ‘
desirable
’
that
the charge sheet should set out the facts the State intended to prove
in order to bring the accused within an enhanced sentencing
jurisdiction.
It
was not, however, essential
.
The Constitutional Court has emphasised that under the new
constitutional dispensation, the criterion for a just criminal trial
is ‘a concept of substantive fairness which is not to be
equated with what might have passed muster in our criminal courts
before the Constitution came into force’. The Bill of Rights
specifies that every accused has a right to a fair trial. This
right,
the Constitutional Court has said, is broader than the specific
rights set out in the sub-sections of the Bill of Rights’
criminal trial provision. One of those specific rights is ‘to
be informed of the charge with sufficient detail to answer
it’.
What the ability to ‘answer’ a charge encompasses this
case does not require us to determine.
But
under the constitutional dispensation it can certainly be no less
desirable
than
under the common law that the facts the State intends to prove to
increase sentencing jurisdiction under the 1997 statute should
be
clearly set out in the charge sheet.
The
matter
is
however one of substance and not form,
and
I
would be reluctant to lay down a general rule that the charge must in
every case recite either the specific form of the scheduled
offence
with which the accused is charged, or the facts the State intends to
prove to establish it.
A
general requirement to this effect, if applied with undue formalism,
may create intolerable complexities in the administration
of justice
and may be insufficiently heedful of the practical realities under
which charge sheets are frequently drawn up
.
The accused might in any event acquire the requisite knowledge from
particulars furnished to the charge or, in a superior court,
from the
summary of substantial facts the State is obliged to furnish. Whether
the accused’s substantive fair trial right,
including his
ability to answer the charge, has been impaired, will therefore
depend on
a
vigilant examination of the relevant circumstances
.
The
question thus remains whether the accused had a fair trial under the
substantive fairness protections afforded by the Constitution
.
In this regard, the judgment of the Full Court of the Transvaal
Provincial Division in
S
v Seleke
,
though delivered before the Constitution, remains instructive. The
Full Court held under the provisions of the Dangerous Weapons
Act 71
of 1968 that although it was desirable for the charge to contain
reference to the penalty, this was not essential, and its
omission
not irregular: the test was whether the accused had had a fair trial
(681-2). The Full Court observed (my translation
from the Afrikaans):
‘
To
ensure a fair trial it is
advisable
and desirable
,
highly
desirable in the case of an undefended accused
,
that the charge sheet should refer to the penalty provision. In this
way it is ensured that the accused is informed at the outset
of the
trial, not only of the charge against him, but also of the State’s
intention at conviction and after compliance with
specified
requirements to ask that the minimum sentence in question at least be
imposed.’
(682H).
[24]
. . . Although the legislature had not created new offences, it had
to appear at conviction that elements in question were
present. Botha
J observed (I translate):
‘
The
words in my opinion convey the meaning that the facts that must be
present to make the minimum sentence compulsory must be established
at conviction in the sense that they must be included in the facts on
which the conviction is based.’
[76]
While
I readily accept that the circumstances of the case would more
readily lend themselves to the
Legoa
matter,
however, the
Legoa
matter
is distinguishable from this matter merely because the evidence to
enhance penalty jurisdiction was led after
a
verdict
on guilt. As already mentioned in paragraph three that, the finding
of premeditation in this matter was made before
the
verdict.
Thus, the trial court acted correctly in doing so.
[77]
In
S
v Tshoga
2017
(1) SACR 420
(SCA), the matter was heard by a panel of five judges,
and it was a split judgment. The majority judgment is penned by
Schoeman
AJA with Dambuza JA and Nicholls AJA concurring. In
Tshoga
,
in charging the appellant, the charge sheet only made mention of the
fact that the
complainant
that
was raped was a 10 - year- old. There was no mention of the
provisions of the CLAA. The majority decision at paras 13-16; 20,
22
and 23 the following is stated:
“
[13]
In dealing with the contents of the charge sheet and what should be
contained therein, and comparing the position
pre- and post-
Constitution, the court found that the salient facts the State
intended to prove in order to increase sentencing
jurisdiction under
the Act ought to be clearly set out in the charge sheet. But, the
court continued, the matter was one of substance
and not form and as
a result concluded that a requirement that every charge must set out
either the ‘specific form of the
scheduled offence with which
the accused is charged, or the facts the State intends to prove to
establish it, if applied with undue
formalism may be insufficiently
heedful of the practical realities under which charge sheets are
frequently drawn up.
[14]
As stated
above, a vigilant examination of the relevant circumstances is
necessary to determine whether an accused has had a fair
trial.
Thus,
Legoa
pertinently required
that the evidence, before conviction, should encompass all the
elements that bring it within the purview of
s 51 of the Act and the
increased penal regime.
It
was not a requirement that the provisions of the Act should be set
out in the charge sheet, but the enquiry remained whether
the accused
had a fair trial, which included his ability to answer the charge.
[15]
Later in S v Mthembu this court (Ponnan JA and Petse AJA writing for
a full court) stated, with reference to
Legoa
and
Ndlovu
,
that 'a
fair trial enquiry does not occur in vacuo, but . . . is first and
foremost a fact-based enquiry'
.
[16]
In
S v
Ndlovu
the
issue whether a firearm was a semi-automatic weapon was not mentioned
in the charge sheet. The prosecutor did not lead evidence
in that
regard and a policeman, in response to a question by the magistrate,
casually mentioned that the firearm in question was
a semi-automatic
firearm, without providing a basis for this conclusion. In setting
aside the compulsory sentence of 15 years’
imprisonment and
substituting it with three years’ imprisonment, Mpati JA said:
‘
The
enquiry, therefore, is whether, on a vigilant examination of the
relevant circumstances, it can be said that an accused had
had a fair
trial
.
And I think it is implicit in these observations that where the State
intends to rely upon the sentencing regime created by the
Act
a
fair trial will generally demand that its intention pertinently be
brought to the attention of the accused
at
the outset of the trial
,
if not
in
the charge sheet
then
in some other form
,
so that the accused is placed in a position to appreciate properly in
good time the charge that he faces as well as its possible
consequences. Whether, or in what circumstances, it might suffice if
it is brought to the attention of the accused only during
the course
of the trial is not necessary to decide in the present case. It is
sufficient to say that what will at least be required
is that the
accused be given sufficient notice of the State’s intention to
enable him to conduct his defence properly.’
[20]
This court in
Kolea
thus digressed from
the other cases that
stated
that there had to be
a vigilant examination (
Legoa
and
Mashinin
i);
'a fair trial enquiry does not occur in vacuo, but . . .
is
first and foremost a fact-based enquiry' (
Mthembu
);
that ‘[T]he enquiry, therefore, is whether, on a vigilant
examination of the relevant circumstances, it can be said that
an
accused had had a fair trial’
;
and ‘. . . at
least be required that the accused be given sufficient notice of the
State’s intention to enable him to
conduct his defence properly
(
Ndlovu
).
The court however found, in
Kolea
,
that the appellant had not been prejudiced. The court considered the
fact the appellant did not raise any prejudice in the conduct
of his
trial due to the failure to refer to s 51(1) of the Act in the charge
sheet in the regional court. Nor was this an issue
on two occasions
in the high court on sentencing and appeal. It was raised for the
first time in this court. The court also had
regard to the fact that
the State had, at the outset, made it clear that it intended to rely
on the Act in the charge sheet. It
is this latter factor that
distinguishes
Kolea
from the instant
matter: no reference to the Act was made in the charge sheet.
[22]
In Kolea the court was not saddled with, and it did not pronounce
upon, what the position would have been had the Act not been
mentioned, as it had been mentioned. Therefore, the pronouncement
that the Act had to be mentioned in a charge sheet at the outset
of a
trial was
obiter
dictum
for
it was not necessary for the decision of this Court in determining
whether or not there had been prejudice. Since it decided
that there
was a reference to the Act, any discussion as to what the
position would have been had there been no reference
to the Act,
‘could not advance the reasoning by which the decision was
reached.’ It is also clear that the discussion
in Kolea as to
the possibility of prejudice considered that substance was of
paramount importance and that form was secondary.
I am of the view
that a pronouncement that the Act had to be mentioned in the charge
sheet or at the outset of the trial would
be elevating form above
substance. Every case must be approached on its own facts and it is
only after a diligent examination of
all the facts that it can be
decided whether
an
accused had a fair
trial or not.
[23]
The appellant in this matter had opportunities in five separate
proceedings to raise a complaint of possible prejudice in the
proceedings: in the regional court after conviction, during two
sentencing procedures in the high court and during two appeals
to the
full court. He failed to do so and only belatedly raised it in this
court.
He was not ambushed as the charge sheet set out that he was
charged with the rape of a ten-year-old girl,
[I thought this
argument is related to this case before you because you started the
sentence with “The appellant in this
matter…”
maybe you should say “The appellant in the Legoa…”]
which brought the offence within the
ambit of s 51(1) of the Act as
was required in
Legoa
. He was convicted of the rape of a girl
under 16 years, which is a conviction that attracts the minimum
sentencing regime in terms
of the Act. He had effective legal
representation throughout the trial until his conviction and the
transfer to the high court.
Furthermore, he was legally represented
during both sentencing proceedings in the high court and in both
appeals to the full court.
There was no objection in the regional
court after his conviction to the fact that the matter was being
transferred to the high
court and to the prospect of life
imprisonment being imposed. He participated fully in the trial and
pleaded not guilty. He did
not raise any prejudice prior to either of
the two sentencing procedures in the high court or raised it in
either of the two appeals
to the full court. In both sentencing
proceedings he knew the consequences of his conviction, as the
magistrate informed him that
he faced life imprisonment, but he chose
not to testify during the sentencing procedures.” Footnotes
omitted and emphasis
added.
[78]
Again
recently, the SCA has emphasised and recognised in the case of
Benedict
Moagi Peloeole v The Director of Public Prosecutions
,
2022 (2) SACR 349
(SCA);
[2022] 4 All SA 1
(SCA) (16 August 2022),
that the ultimate question remains ‘whether the accused had a
fair trial under the substantive fairness
protections afforded by the
Constitution’.
[79]
From
the aforegoing, it is evident that in a series of decisions beginning
almost two decades ago, the SCA has held the view that
though it is
desirable, it is not essential that the facts the State intends to
prove to increase sentencing jurisdiction under
the CLAA be clearly
set out in the chargesheet or to warn an accused with the correct
applicable penalty regime. This then means
that in such
circumstances, the correctness of the impugned sentence does not
depend on the form but on whether the accused person
received a fair
trial.
[80]
Adopting
the view of the SCA, I do not believe that the fact that the State
invoked an incorrect statutory penal provision is the
deciding factor
in this case. Instead, as mentioned above, the answer to the question
raised in paragraph five of this judgment
in turn depends upon the
relevant circumstances of the case.
Premeditation
[81]
Premeditation
is an aggravating factor that falls within the statutory criteria set
out in section 51 (1) of the CLAA. To that end,
the absence or
presence of premeditation is an important sentence feature.
[82]
Dealing
with the issue of premeditation, the question that arose during the
hearing of the appeal was whether the proven facts justified
the
inference that the killing of the deceased was not a momentary flare
up and whether the trial had sufficient evidence to infer
premeditation. In as much as cases that present direct evidence
showing a resolution to kill are rare, in most instances the resolve
to kill is inferred from the proven facts of each case including the
behaviour of the accused person at the critical time.
[83]
For
the State to prove premeditation it is not necessary to prove that an
accused person was in a certain mind set at a certain
point before
the commission of the crime. The element of premeditation can be
present even if the act of killing happened quite
fast. Premeditation
does not take long to form in the mind of the accused. Furthermore,
there is nothing wrong with consideration
of preceding events as
forming part of premeditation. In this matter, the State had wealth
of evidentiary foundation, to show premeditation.
While the
appellant may not have started out that particular evening intending
to kill the deceased, by the time he stabbed her
11 times that was
his intention.
[84]
I
have considered the submission that there was no evidence of
premeditation in relation to the murder. The violence meted upon
the
deceased is one of the factors that point to the fact that the
appellant premeditatedly set out to kill the deceased.
So far
as this case is concerned, the facts clearly indicate that the attack
on the deceased was vicious and gruesome and involved
use of a
weapon. Judging by the injuries that were sustained by the deceased,
it is far more likely that a substantial weapon was
used to inflict a
wound that measured 110 mm x 10mm and to stab her through her
clothing and into her stomach, kidney and lungs.
The weapon used does
not suggest that it was a spontaneous pick of an object that happened
to be there by chance. The ferocity,
extent and the nature of
violence inflicted upon the deceased was of the most severe kind. The
ferocity of violence meted out on
the deceased suggest that the
appellant was prepared for trouble and, judging by the weapon, it is
evident that the appellant was
prepared to cause serious injury with
it. At least moderate force had to be used for the type of injuries
that were sustained by
the deceased. This was a deliberate, callous
and calculated killing.
[85]
The
injuries were inflicted in the most vulnerable area of the body. The
persistent stabbing was inflicted with the clearest possible
intention to kill and the injuries inflicted upon the deceased do not
point to spontaneity. If there was one or three stab wounds,
perhaps
it could be said that the stabbing of the deceased was an impulsive
act taken
in
a
sudden
moment of rage. The appellant continued stabbing the deceased 11
times. By all accounts, committed over an extended period
of time.
[86]
Moreover,
the actions of the appellant show that he was determined and resolved
to complete his murderous intent. The injuries depicted
in the
pathologist’s report evince the amount of rage exhibited on the
deceased. As such, this demonstrates that the attack
on the deceased
was cold-blooded and without mercy.
[87]
On
top of that or perhaps more importantly, the evidence also reveals
that the appellant had stabbed the deceased in such a way
that she
was incapacitated to seek help, that was also a significant factor to
take into account when assessing whether the appellant
had the
requisite intention and whether the killing was premeditated. Given
the nature of the injuries sustained by the deceased,
it is apparent
that at the time the appellant intended to kill her, and not merely
to seriously hurt her.
[88]
Furthermore,
on his own version the appellant’s evidence evinces that after
he had stabbed the deceased, the deceased was
in a perilous state. It
is not the evidence of the appellant that when he left the deceased,
she was already dead or was standing
on her own. He knew that the
deceased was in immediate danger of losing her life.
[89]
Given
the infliction of clearly serious injuries upon the deceased that
obviously rendered her immobile; helpless; unable to raise
alarm;
bleeding and more so without any phone. In the circumstances, surely
before the appellant left the premises, at this point
he must have
stopped and thought about the clearly precarious state of the
immobilised deceased; and then resolved that he was
going to leave
the deceased to die from the serious injuries that he had just
inflicted on her. The appellant callously abandoned
the
seriously injured deceased alone and during the night while she was
dying. As such, the deceased bled from her injuries.
[90]
It
is perhaps, at this point, appropriate to set out the injuries that
were inflicted to the deceased by the appellant: The deceased’s
body exhibited the following wounds:
1.
she had an incised
wound to the right side of her skull.. The wound extended to
the thickness of the scalp and measured approximately
110 x 10mm.
2.
About 200
millimetres
to the left posterior
midline a further sharp force stab wound measuring 22 mm x 11 mm was
noted on the left side of the thoracic
part of the back. The wound
track continued to the third intercostal space, perforating the upper
lobe of the lung and the aortic
arch.
3.
An inverted “V”
shaped incise wound on the left side of the occipital part of the
scalp posterior of the left earlobe,
measuring 25 mm x 3mm and 20 mm
x 2mm.
4.
She also had a sharp
stab wound to the left side of the abdomen that measured 20 mm x 7mm
and penetrated the lobe of the liver.
The track of the wound
perforated the muscle of the abdomen, the left kidney and the aorta
inferior to the renal vessels.
5.
A stab wound to the
left side of the thoracic part of the back which measured 40mm x
11mm. The wound was located 180 mm to the left
posterior midline.
6.
Another stab wound
measuring 13mm x 7mm was noted to the lateral aspect of the left side
of the back. The track of the wound perforated
the underlying
intercostal muscles.
7.
An incised wound
measuring 17mm x 3mm on the right side of the thoracic part of the
back superiority.
8.
Another incised
wound measuring 18 mm x 3mm was noted to the right side of the
thoracic part of the back.
9.
A small stab wound
measuring 4 mm x 3mm on the left side of the abdomen.
10.
Another stab wound
measuring 15 mm x 6mm, on the left upper arm, perforating the muscles
of the left upper arm.
11.
A large stab wound
measuring 30mm x 18mm on the lateral aspect of the left upper arm.
12.
There were abrasions
to her right elbow posterior, on the right and the left breasts.
There were also abrasions to the third finger
on the right hand.
[91]
As
regards the appellant deciding to leave the deceased in the position
she was in and with those injuries that he had inflicted,
that proved
a moment of calm reflection about him deciding to seal the deceased’s
fate. It is important in this context
to bear in mind that by
leaving the deceased alone in the state she was
in
,
he knew of the grave danger which he placed the life of the deceased
in. She did not give her an opportunity to survive. He knew
of the
deceased’s vulnerability state due to the injuries that he had
inflicted.
[92]
At
the cost of repetition, of more significance is the fact that the
appellant took a deliberate step to seal the fate of the deceased.
He
took no steps to obtain assistance. It is quite clear in my mind that
in such circumstances, the appellant was able to think
and appreciate
the obvious inevitable consequences of his action. It is thus an
inescapable inference that the appellant had at
least made
preparation for the death of the deceased by seriously
injuring her and then living her alone to die. This
in my mind shows
the murder of the deceased was not an opportunistic crime but
premeditated.
[93]
Furthermore,
in order to prove premeditation, the State also does not need to show
that the weapon used was organised at a certain
time before the crime
was committed. In this case, the weapon used to attack the deceased
was never discovered. The evidence also
reveals that owners of the
house where the deceased was murdered did not miss a knife.
[94]
It
would appear therefore, that from the aforegoing evidence, it is
evident that there were sufficient proven objective facts that
make
it irresistible to infer and justify a finding of premeditation and
intentional killing. Consequently, the only inference
possible from
the proven facts of this case is that the killing of the deceased was
committed with premeditation.
[95]
Thus,
I do not accept that in the present case there was any error on the
part of the trial judge in finding an element of premeditation.
In
this matter, there was sufficient evidence to justify a finding of
premeditation.
Fair
trial
[96]
It
is central to the principle of fair trial that the Constitution of
the Republic of South Africa Act,1996 “the Constitution”,
is the supreme statute of the Land. The Constitution embodies
and safeguards the fundamental right to fair trial. In terms
of
section 35 (3) of the Constitution, the right to fair trial includes
the right to be informed of the charge with sufficient
detail to
answer it. The record reflects that the appellant understood
the charge he was facing. He understood the allegations
levelled
against him by the State. The appellant stated that he understood the
charge against him. It was never asserted during
the trial
proceedings that the appellant did not understand the nature of the
charges he was facing.
[97]
The
question that aptly arises is whether the appellant was aware of the
direct consequences of the charges he faced, notwithstanding
the fact
that the indictment did not indicate that count three was read with
the provisions of section 51 (1) of the CLAA.
[98]
Despite
the flaw in the indictment, however, it is easy to conclude that the
flaw was in fact cured by
a
wealth
of evidence that plainly indicated that there was an element of
premeditation in this case.
[99]
As
far as this case is concerned, just by looking at the facts of this
matter it becomes evident that the actions of the appellant
were
egregious. Certainly,
one
does
not
need a statute to be aware of that. That together with the fact that
the appellant was arraigned in the High Court, plainly
indicates that
life imprisonment was a reality that was facing the appellant if
convicted. This conclusion is buttressed by the
SCA decision in
Tshoga
supra.
Furthermore, there is nothing to suggest that the appellant would
have handled his defence any differently had he been made
aware in
the indictment that he was facing life imprisonment and an allegation
of premeditation. Importantly, even the appellant
does not claim
that. In the circumstances of this case, it cannot be said that the
appellant was deprived of a fair trial guaranteed
to him by the
Constitution.
Substantial
and compelling circumstances
[100]
The
brutal stabbing of the deceased was entirely unnecessary. The words
to describe the horrific nature of this crime are insufficient.
It
need hardly to be pointed out that this particular case is gruesome.
The events of 01 December 2018, to 03 December 2018 point
in one
direction. They reveal a sinister pattern of physical abuse and
control. Clearly the evidence here reveals that the incident
of the
03 December 2018 was not a random event. Particularly, in light
of what happened in the days leading to the incident
of 03 December
2018.
[101]
The
actions of killing the deceased, who was defenceless, were
particularly bloody, brutal and indicative of wanton cruelty and
impunity. The courts cannot allow impunity for serious crimes.
[102]
Our
country has an epidemic of violence against women. This matter
involves a gender-related offence. The deceased was intentionally
killed by someone who was closely related to her. Hence, the
appellant’s actions are a form of femicide. Despite efforts
by
courts to address the continuing scourge of femicide; this type of
offence remains prevalent. The prevalence of femicide
cannot be
ignored in sentencing proceedings. Sentences imposed by courts are
one of the measures used in an effort to deter and
prevent
gender-based violence. There is therefore a need for deterrent
sentences.
[103]
It
is not fanciful to think that the deceased suffered significant
mental and physical trauma before her untimely death. The deceased
was alive at the time of stabbing as indicated by her defensive
wounds. The deceased’s killing was committed with intense
violence. The photographs of the scene depict a scene of gruesome
violence. The deceased lost her life under terrible and unnecessary
circumstances. It is frightening to know that another person can do
this to another human being, particularly to a woman.
Youthful offender
[104]
The
appellant was 19 years old at the time of conviction and sentence.
Our law treats young offenders aged 19 as adults. However,
it is a
fact that they are youthful offenders. It is thus in the interest of
the community that a youthful offender should be afforded
a second
chance for a fresh start. Equally, it is in the interest of society
that with youthful offenders the aim should always
be rehabilitation.
There is no question about this. However, a youthful offender should
be deserving of the benefit of a second
chance. It is paramount that
the circumstances of each case must demonstrate that the youthful
offender is not incorrigible but
eligible to rehabilitation. The
question that aptly arises in this case is whether
the
appellant’s age ought to have operated in his favour.
[105]
It
is, of course, the case that the appellant’s age makes him a
relatively young person.
[106]
Insofar
as the age of the appellant there was no evidence led to show that
the appellant was an immature 19-year-old. There was
nothing that
could have reduced his moral blameworthiness. Instead, the appellant
had demonstrated himself as someone who is callous
and ruthless, who
does not hesitate to unleash extreme violence on a woman. In fact,
the deceased’s suffering did not stop
the appellant or make him
get help.
[107]
Furthermore,
the events from 01 December to 04 December demonstrate the appellant
as someone who always gets what he wants and gets
away with it. The
appellant showed no regard for the sanctity of human life. To stab a
woman in that fashion and leave her to bleed
to death, by almost any
measure, was atrocious. In my mind, it is aggravating that this
offence occurred within the deceased’s
‘place’ and
involved a gross abuse of trust and the worst kind of betrayal. What
the appellant did is a socially reprehensible
act.
[108]
The
sign of repentance is the desire to help fix the harm one has caused.
For remorse, there must be some kind of accountability
and
responsibility. In the present case, the appellant has not admitted
responsibility for the offences. It is also aggravating
that the
appellant after committing the brutal offence, was unrepentant and
tried to cover his track
s
by
attempting to mislead the police. He has shown no remorse for what
happened, and he continued to lie. During the trial, instead
of
taking responsibility, he blamed the victim. Blaming her own murder
on her. Certainly, the actions of the appellant do
not exhibit
immaturity. In
S
v Dlamini
1991
(2) SACR 655
(A), it was stated that the youthfulness of an offender
will invariably be a mitigating factor, unless it appears that the
viciousness
of his or her deeds rules out immaturity. See also S
v
Matyityi
2011
(1) SACR 40
(SCA) at paragraph 14.
[109]
The
appellant's premeditation and lack of remorse were also aggravating
features. There was absolutely no iota of self-reproach.
In my mind
the chilling act of remorse reflects lack of accountability and shows
that the appellant was not willing to admit his
wrongdoing.
[110]
Hence,
it is difficult to believe that the appellant would be reluctant to
reoffend. The type of criminal who has committed such
a brazen crime
is capable of the worst. I agree with the respondent’s counsel
that the fact that the appellant comes from
a decent and caring
background
makes
the situation all the more worrying. In my view, that is clearly so
when regard is had to the fact that there was no remorse.
[111]
The
only mitigating factors in favour of the appellant’s are his
age coupled with the fact that he is a first offender. That
said,
however, in the circumstances of this case, the appellant’s age
cannot, in my firm view, lower the degree of culpability
he bears for
this grave crime he
has
committed.
It is striking that the appellant’s first offence involves
significant aggravating factors and is one of high
culpability.
Additionally, there is nothing to show that the appellant has a good
potential to be rehabilitated within the community.
[112]
It
is important to keep in mind that, after everything the appellant did
to the deceased, he left
her
lying
alone on the ground
bleeding
to death from the stab wounds
as
if
her
life counted for nothing
.
The pathologist testified that the deceased lost a lot of blood and
as a result her organs were pale. There was no hint
of contrition. It
may be so that
the
appellant
did something out of character. However, he has also shown himself to
be capable of a diabolical behaviour.
[113]
No
amount of sentence would be enough to make up for what the appellant
did. Any sentence other than life will depreciate the seriousness
of
the offence committed by the appellant. I am therefore of
the
view
that
if the trial court did not give a life sentence for this type of
case, then it would be difficult to imagine the kind of perpetrator
deserving of such sentence. Certainly, the sentence imposed should
not demonstrate a lack of comprehension of the magnitude and
severity
of the crime. Undoubtedly, the aggravating circumstances should
be reflected in the sentence imposed.
[114]
The
next question which arises concerns whether substantial and
compelling circumstances exist that warrants departure from the
sentence of life. In the circumstances of this case, the age of the
appellant and the fact that the appellant is a first offender
were
not sufficient to constitute substantial and compelling
circumstances. These two mitigating factors are overshadowed
by
the serious impact of the offence. Thus, the appellant’s
personal circumstances pale in comparison to the gravity of the
offence.
Conclusion
[115]
This
court
should not overturn the decision merely on the ground that this court
would have reached a different one. It must be persuaded
that the
sentencing decision involved an error of principle or was outside the
range of conclusions which were properly open to
the
sentencing
judge.
[116]
In
the result, I would have made the following order:
Appeal is dismissed
C.N. NZIWENI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Counsel
for Appellant
:
Adv. Leandra
N. Adams
Instructed
by
: Legal
Aid South Africa
Counsel
for Respondent :
Adv. Pulane A. Thaiteng
Instructed
by
: The
Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions
[1]
See Jordaan, Kekana and S v Raath 2009(2) SACR 46(C)
[2]
S v Kekana
[2014] ZASCA 158(1 October 2014 at paras 13 -14
[3]
S v Jordaan and others 2018 (1) SACR 522 WCC at para 129
[4]
S v Raath
2009 (2) SACR 46(C)
at para 16
[5]
S v Tuanyane 2018(1) SACR 163 (GJ)
[6]
Benedict Moagi Peloeole v Director of Public Prosecutions. Gauteng
(740/2021) [2021] ZASCA117;2022(2) SACR 349 (SCA) at para
9
[7]
S v Dlodlo 1966(2) SA 401 (AD) at 405 G-H
[8]
See paragraphs 78 and 79 Du Toit, De Jager, Paizes, Skeen and Van
Der Merwe
[9]
Commentary on the Criminal Procedure Act at 28-18D Service Issue 70,
2023
[10]
S v MM
2013
(2) SACR 292
(SCA) at [14]
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