Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 150South Africa
S v Heugh (A99/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 150 (27 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
27 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## S v Heugh (A99/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 150 (27 March 2025)
S v Heugh (A99/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 150 (27 March 2025)
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sino date 27 March 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
CASE NUMBER: A99/2023
REGIONAL
COURT CASE NUMBER: SSD52/20218
In the matter between
MARLON
HEUGH
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Date of scheduled
hearing: 14 March 2025
Date of judgment: 27
March 2025
Coram: Fortuin J,
Bhoopchand AJ
BHOOPCHAND AJ:
1.
Even in a society dulled by the ceaseless
hum of violence, some
nights carve themselves onto the tombstones of senseless killings
occurring in our midst. A young man, twenty-one,
steadies his hand,
the metallic click of his weapon echoing twice. Two lives fall
silent, their stories abruptly severed. A third,
cloaked in the mercy
of shadows, slips away from the grasp of fate. That night, heavy with
sorrow, leaves behind a silence that
screams louder than words, a
haunting reminder of the dark side of humanity.
2.
The
Appellant was charged with murder under
sections 51(2)
,
52A
, and
52B
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
, also known as the
minimum sentencing provisions. On 3 September 2017, the Appellant
unlawfully and intentionally murdered Dominique
Smith, an adult, by
shooting him with a firearm at the corner of Tracy and Annike Street,
Strand. He was also charged with the
provisions of
sections 51(1)
,
52
(2),
52A
and
52
B of Act 105 of 1997. He shot and killed Regan
Phillips, an adult male, at the same location. The killings occurred
in quick succession.
The State did not rely on premeditation on the
first charge but did so on the second charge.
[1]
The Appellant was found guilty. He was sentenced to eighteen years
imprisonment on the first charge and life imprisonment on the
second
charge. He appeals his sentence.
3.
The Appellant qualified for an automatic right
to note an appeal
under section 309(1)(a) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977,
given that he received a life sentence on the
second charge of
murder. The parties agreed that this Court could decide the appeal on
the appeal record and the heads of argument
submitted by the parties.
The Appellant has not defined the grounds of appeal regarding the
sentence. He made general references
to the conventional triad of
factors a Court considers in its sentencing procedure. The Appellant
referred to his personal circumstances
and the interests of the
community. He also referred to the purpose of punishment and
emphasised that a Court imposing sentence
should not ignore the need
for rehabilitation. He urged this Court to intervene and impose an
appropriate, just, and balanced sentence.
4.
The Appellant recognised that a departure
from the prescribed minimum
sentences should not be made for insubstantial reasons. The Appellant
submitted that there were substantial
and compelling circumstances
warranting a deviation from the prescribed sentence. He emphasised
his personal circumstances. He
referred to his age, his employment
status, his child and the need for him to play an active role in her
upbringing, and the two-year
period he spent in prison awaiting
trial. He also referred to him being a first offender. The Appellant
submitted that the sentence
imposed on him would serve two of the
three purposes of sentencing, namely deterrence and retribution. It
did not serve the third
purpose, namely reformation and
rehabilitation. The appeal record suggests that the Appellant’s
submissions are unsustainable,
as the Regional Magistrate carefully
considered all these factors before imposing the sentence. This Court
shall briefly outline
the background circumstances that led to the
Appellant's conviction before addressing the presentencing procedure
and the imposition
of sentence.
5.
The evidence led by the State was both compelling
and conclusive of
the Appellant’s guilt. The deceased were two of a group of
three young men who went in search of alcohol
late on that fateful
night. The surviving member of that group, Heinrich Carelse,
testified. The three were directed to a house
where they could obtain
alcohol. In their unsuccessful attempts to attract the occupants'
attention, they eventually threw stones
on the roof of the house. The
three abandoned their attempts to secure the occupant’s
attention at this venue and were departing
when four persons,
including the Appellant, emerged from the house. The two groups began
arguing with each other when the Appellant
pulled out his gun and
shot Dominique Smith in the head. The two others began running. The
Appellant pursued Regan Phillips. Phillips
fell and lay on his
stomach on the ground. The Appellant shot him in the back of his
head. The group of four that emerged from
the house then went in
search of Carelse, who escaped by hiding.
6.
Martino Herschel Siebrits was with the Appellant
from earlier that
night. His testimony was that the group of four were drinking in the
informal structure at the back of the house
at the corner of Tracy
and Annike Street when a brick landed on the roof. They rushed out to
investigate and saw three boys walking
away. The Appellant and
another pursued them. The Appellant shot the first and then the
second, who had slipped and fallen whilst
running away. The Appellant
had the gun for about one year and walked around the area with it.
The Appellant handed the gun to
him after the shootings with
instructions to hand it to another member of the community. Anwill
Wewers was also with the Appellant
that night. He confirmed Siebrits
testimony that the Appellant and the three went out after they heard
stones landing on the roof.
The Appellant shot the two.
7.
The Appellant admitted in his plea explanation
that on 2 September
2017, the victims were assaulted with a gun and that both were shot
in the head. Dominique Smith and Regan
Phillips died of gunshot
wounds to their head. He admitted the post-mortem findings, the photo
plan and key, as well as the ballistic
report. In his changed plea
explanation, the Appellant raised an alibi stating that he was at a
party in Beverley Hills informal
camp from 6 pm till quarter past ten
and could thus not have been on the scene where the murders occurred.
The Appellant remained
steadfast in his testimony that he was not at
the scene of the murders. He testified that he proceeded to his
grandmother’s
house, where he remained until the following
morning. The grandmother, Ms Maria Heugh, confirmed his testimony.
Her evidence was
most unsatisfactory. The Court
a quo
found
him guilty of both murders.
8.
In the presentencing process, the defence
called the Appellant and
his mother to testify. The Regional Magistrate had access to the
probation officer’s report. The
Appellant was 23 years old. He
was 21 when the offences occurred. He completed grade 9 at school.
His child was a year old. The
child’s mother maintained contact
with him whilst he was in prison. He was employed at the time of his
arrest for committing
the offences. He worked for a subcontractor to
the City of Cape Town doing landscaping. He had been imprisoned for
two years since
September 2017.
9.
The Appellant confirmed that he was a first
offender. He denied
knowledge of a firearm or the murders, insisting that he was not at
the place where it occurred. The Appellant
declined to express any
remorse despite the direct testimony that placed him on the scene,
being the one who fired the fateful
shots, and being convicted on
both charges. The Appellant was reminded that he faced sentences of
at least fifteen years and a
life sentence. He denied that he was a
gang member or a follower of one either when he was outside or in
prison, although he had
a ‘27’ tattooed on his wrist. He
considered himself an adult.
10.
The Appellant’s mother received a social security disability
grant. She wanted to reach out to the deceased’s families, but
she detected their heartache and restrained herself. She felt
disappointed at her son but asked for mitigation of the sentence as
the Appellant had a child. She was caring for the child for
about a
month when she testified. She confirmed that the Appellant lived the
life of an adult
11.
The Regional Magistrate summonsed the head of the Detective branch
of
the area to testify about the circumstances relating to the type of
offences committed by the Appellant. Colonel Plaatjies testified
about the proliferation of gangs, drugs, and murders committed with
firearms. He, together with the Regional Magistrate, regretted
the
deterioration of the Strand area, which was once a pleasant seaside
village.
12.
The mother of the first deceased, Dominique Smith, testified. The
deceased was twenty years old. The news of Dominique’s murder
shattered their family. Her husband and only other son have
not come
to terms with their loss. She often encounters her living son sitting
alone at night, deep in thought. He had lost interest
in his usual
activities and has been ill, resulting in his absence from work. She
fights with the Appellant in her sleep.
She is angry with him. She
demands to know from him what right he had to take the life of her
youngest child. She wanted the Court
to impose the harshest sentence
on the Appellant.
13.
The mother of the second deceased, Regan Phillips, also testified.
Regan was two months short of his twenty-first birthday when he was
killed. He was the eldest of three children. The deceased had
an
injury on his right shoulder from a shooting that occurred at a
party. He was unemployed as he was unable to use his hand as
a result
of the previous shooting. Regan drew a disability grant. He was
the father of a two-year-old child. The mother suffered
from
nocturnal epilepsy. Regan attended to her when she experienced a
seizure in her sleep.
14.
Regan’s mother was disturbed by the Appellant’s refusal
to be truthful. His friends implicated him in the murders. She could
not understand why he could not make full disclosure about
what
happened on the night her son was murdered. The mother testified that
If a child is mischievous, then he should be disciplined,
not shot
and killed. Regan was still alive after the shooting. The doctor at
the hospital informed her that Regan was brain-dead
and asked for
permission to switch off the life-sustaining machine. She found
extreme difficulty in explaining to her daughter
that although
Regan’s heart was still beating, she had to consent to the
doctors switching off the machine and bringing his
life to an end.
She could not cradle Regan’s head and bid him farewell because
it had burst open like an egg. She asked why
children could not go
out of their homes without fear and socialise and enjoy themselves.
On every occasion that she entered the
Court during the trial, she
developed panic attacks. She wanted the trial to end so that her soul
could rest and she could get
closure.
15.
The profound impact of crimes like murder extends far beyond the
immediate act, leaving families of victims grappling with loss,
trauma, and unanswered questions—yet these voices often remain
unheard within the trial and sentencing process. Addressing this gap
requires a more inclusive approach, such as giving victim
impact
statements greater prominence and ensuring that restorative justice
practices are integrated, allowing families to participate
meaningfully and find some measure of closure.
16.
The
Regional Magistrate considered the conventional triad of factors: the
crime, the criminal, and the community in her sentencing
judgment.
She also considered the objectives of sentencing, including
retribution, deterrence, prevention, rehabilitation, and
restoration.
She cited case law that allowed her to emphasise one factor at the
expense of the others.
[2]
She
reminded herself that the Court has a difficult task of harmonising
and balancing the principles and applying them to the facts
in any
given case.
17.
The Regional Magistrate viewed the offences in a serious light. The
Appellant stood before the first deceased and killed him with direct
intent. It was nothing more than a cold-blooded execution.
The
Magistrate asked rhetorically what the necessity was to kill someone
if they threw stones on the roof. It reflected on how
little the
Appellant valued the life of another. The Appellant could have
stopped after shooting the first deceased, but it was
insufficient
for him to take one life. He proceeded to take another. If the first
witness had not hidden, he would have also been
killed. The Court
a
quo
would not have had the benefit of his testimony to piece
together the events that unfolded on the fateful night. The Appellant
felt at ease carrying a firearm around. If the Appellant was not a
gang member, then he was a follower of one. Unlicensed firearms
are a
bane of the Strand community. The people in that community live in
fear. They cannot even attend church on Sunday, as they
are hiding
under their beds to avoid flying bullets.
18.
The Magistrate considered all of the factors raised by the Appellant.
She considered the Appellant’s age, his youth, his status as a
first offender and the time he had already spent in prison
awaiting
trial. She carefully analysed whether the Appellant was a candidate
for rehabilitation. The aggravating circumstances
outweighed the
mitigating factors, including the Appellant’s personal
circumstances. The nature of the crimes committed by
the Appellant
moved the scales of justice away from being favourable to him.
19.
The Magistrate was at pains to explain to the Appellant that the
minimum sentence on the first charge was fifteen years and the
maximum twenty years. On charge two, the sentence was life
imprisonment.
The Magistrate informed the Appellant that she had to
impose the prescribed sentences unless she found substantial and
compelling
circumstances to justify deviation from them. She could
not.
20.
The Appellant’s legal representative at the presentencing
hearing acknowledged the increase in firearm-related offences in the
Strand community. She also acknowledged that she would be
hard-pressed to argue for mercy after the Court
a quo
had
heard the testimonies of the victim's families. She stated that the
Court
a quo
would not be wrong to impose the minimum
punishment as there were few mitigating facts.
21.
The
Respondent referred to the brazen way in which the Appellant
committed the crimes. The victims were unarmed and defenceless.
The
Appellant could have arrested his insensible action after the first
murder but proceeded to kill the second victim. There could
have been
a third victim but for his good fortune in finding a hiding place in
time. A person over eighteen years of age must demonstrate
that they
are immature before it can be considered a mitigating factor.
[3]
A first offender is typically considered a person without a history
or predilection for committing a crime. It usually counts in
their
favour.
[4]
Neither of these
factors could turn the scales in favour of the Appellant. The
Appellant did not appeal against his conviction,
meaning he accepted
he committed the murders. Had the Appellant pleaded guilty at the
outset and spared the affected families the
secondary trauma of a
trial, he may have elicited the mercy of the Magistrate.
22.
The transcript of proceedings in the Court
a quo
indicates
that the Court conducted an in-depth investigation into the factors
impinging on the sentence, namely the crime, the
community, and the
criminal. The Regional Magistrate considered the objectives of
sentencing. She also allowed the voices of the
mothers of the victims
to be heard. After exploring a wide range of factors, the Court
a
quo
pronounced on sentence.
23.
There is no
discernible reason to interfere with the sentence imposed by the
Magistrate. The minimum sentence legislation requires
a Court to
consider all the circumstances of the case, including those
traditionally relevant to sentencing.
[5]
The court a quo carried out this task in an exemplary manner.
This Court cannot fault the Regional Magistrate for the sentence
she
imposed. The sentence is fair, procedurally correct and legally
compliant. In answer to the Appellant, it is also appropriate,
just
and balanced. It was carefully thought through and warranted.
24.
In the premises, I propose the following order.
ORDER
The appeal against
sentence is dismissed.
________________________
Bhoopchand AJ
I agree, and it is so
ordered.
________________________
Fortuin J
Judgment was handed down
and delivered to the parties by e-mail on 27 March 2025
Appellant’s
Attorney: M W
Strauss
Instructed by
Adendorff Attorneys
Respondent’s
Counsel: State Advocate
Instructed by the NDPP
[1]
The State and the Defence argued
whether the appropriate charges were correctly identified
as
sections 51(2) on the first charge of murder and 51(1) on the second
charge. Section 51(1) carried a sentence of life imprisonment,
whereas section 51(2) had a minimum sentence of 15 years and a
maximum of 20 years in this case. Once the Appellant had shot
the
first deceased, he formed the intention to kill not only the second
deceased but the third person who escaped death and testified
in
Court about the events that unfolded that night.
[2]
S v van Wyk 1992 (1) SASV 14 NHC
[3]
S v Matyityi 2011(1) SACR 40 (SCA) at
para 14
[4]
S v Van Breda (SS17/16)
[2017] ZAWCHC
120
(31 October 2017)
[5]
S v Fatyi 2001(1) SACR 485 (SCA), S v
Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA)
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