Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 31South Africa
Khonjwayo and Another v S (Appeal) (AR 187/21) [2023] ZAKZDHC 31 (5 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
5 June 2023
Judgment
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## Khonjwayo and Another v S (Appeal) (AR 187/21) [2023] ZAKZDHC 31 (5 June 2023)
Khonjwayo and Another v S (Appeal) (AR 187/21) [2023] ZAKZDHC 31 (5 June 2023)
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sino date 5 June 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
Appeal
No: AR 187/21
In
the matter between:
LONWABO
"PRO" KHONJWAYO
FIRST APPELLANT
LUPHELILE
NQOBILE "MANAGER" KHONJWAYO
SECOND APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
ORDER
The
following order is issued:
1.
The appeal against the first appellant's sentence is upheld;
2.
The sentence imposed by the court a quo is replaced with the
following: 'Accused
1 is sentenced to 20 years' imprisonment,
ante-dated to 30 October 2019.'
3.
The appeal by the second appellant is dismissed.
APPEAL
JUDGMENT
Hiralall
AJ (Chetty J concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The appellants were convicted of murder read with Part I of Schedule
2 of the Criminal
Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (the Act) in the
Regional Court, Ntuzuma. The State alleged that the offence was
committed by the
appellants acting in common purpose. Both appellants
were sentenced to life imprisonment on 30 October 2019. Mr
Chiliza
,
counsel for the appellants, confirmed that the appeal is against
sentence only.
[2]
The deceased in this matter was 69 years old at the time of her
death. She was a pensioner
and lived alone on the property that she
owned, where she rented out premises to various tenants, including
the second appellant.
According to the deceased's tenants, Bongeka
Maduna (Maduna) and Nathi Mabhungu (Mabhungu), the deceased was
asleep in her home
on the evening of 4 August 2018 when at
approximately 22h00 she was awoken by the first appellant knocking on
her door. She answered
the door and let in the appellants as they
were known to her. The deceased was stabbed repeatedly by the second
appellant, and
assaulted with a hammer. Maduna testified that the
second appellant stabbed the deceased repeatedly and the first
appellant went
to fetch a hammer with which he proceeded to assault
the deceased. Mabhungu testified that it was the second appellant who
stabbed
the deceased and then went to fetch a hammer with which he
proceeded to assault the deceased. She stated that prior to the
arrival
of the appellants, she had heard chanting of words to the
effect, 'We want to kill the witch'. The post mortem report confirmed
that the deceased sustained multiple stab wounds and deep scalp
bruising, and that the cause of death was an incisional wound of
the
chest.
[3]
It was correctly conceded on behalf of the appellants that it would
be difficult to
contend for a case of mistaken identity against the
overwhelming evidence presented by the State witnesses. Both
appellants lived
in the vicinity of the crime scene and were known to
the State witnesses. The witnesses had ample opportunity to observe
the appellants
before, during and after the attack on the deceased.
It was also correctly conceded that although there is a contradiction
as to
the exact role that was played by the first appellant, the
State witnesses placed both appellants at the scene of the crime. I
agree with the trial court's findings that it was proved beyond a
reasonable doubt that both appellants acted with a common purpose
and
intention to kill the deceased.
[4]
The court a quo correctly found both appellants guilty on the charge
of murder.
Sentence
[5]
It is trite that the task of imposing sentence is pre-eminently a
matter which falls
within the domain and discretion of the trial
court, and an appeal court should be slow to interfere with such
discretion unless
it 'has not been judicially and properly
exercised'. The test 'is whether the sentence is vitiated by
irregularity or misdirection
or is disturbingly inappropriate'.
[1]
I consider the trial court's judgment on sentence with this in mind.
[6]
The trial court took into account the three primary considerations in
the well
known triad in
S
v Zinn
,
[2]
namely, the crime; the offender and the interests of society.
[7]
In respect of the mitigating circumstances, the following factors
were considered:
the appellants were brothers aged 27 and 28 years'
respectively at the time of sentencing; both have only a grade 7
education,
and both were employed earning R5 000 per month. Both
appellants are in good health, and each lived with his girlfriend.
Their
parents are still alive. Their mother is a housewife and their
father, who is a responsible person and was gainfully employed, is
now a pensioner.
[8]
The first appellant has no children but assisted his parents and four
siblings financially.
He has no previous convictions and was out on
bail whilst awaiting trial. The second appellant has two children,
aged two and one.
Up until his arrest he maintained his household,
his girlfriend and two children, but there was evidence that his
girlfriend and
the children have moved back in with her family and
that she receives child support grants. He has a previous conviction
for culpable
homicide in 2007 where he apparently shot and killed his
friend with a firearm. He had been in custody for one year and two
months
whilst awaiting trial.
[9]
The court took into account the interests of the community, the fact
that this was
a prevalent crime in the court's jurisdiction, the
seriousness of the crime, and that the deceased was a member of a
vulnerable
group in society.
[10]
In respect of aggravating circumstances, the trial
court considered that this was a heinous crime; a brutal
and vicious
attack on a vulnerable elderly woman in her own home. The appellants
invaded that space, repeatedly stabbing her even
though she was
defenseless and posed no threat to them. The appellants on the other
hand were two young and very strong men. The
court found that there
was no reason to kill the deceased. She was the second appellant's
landlord and provided housing for him.
She was a productive member of
society and a breadwinner for her own family. They gave no motive for
their actions. The only motive
to be inferred was from the evidence
of Simphiwe Khonjwayo, their cousin, who testified that the second
appellant went to a traditional
healer who told him that the reason
his children were not sleeping was because his landlady 'sent things
that would be walking
on the roof of his room'. The appellants were
26 and 27 years of age respectively at the time of committing the
offence and were
sufficiently mature adults to appreciate the
consequences of their conduct.
[11]
The trial court found that both appellants showed no remorse
whatsoever and professed their innocence
until the end. In
S
v Seegers
[3]
the following was stated with regard to remorse:
'Remorse,
as an indication that the offence will not be committed again, is
obviously an important consideration, in suitable cases,
when the
deterrent effect of a sentence on the accused is adjudged. But, in
order to be a valid consideration, the penitence must
be sincere and
the accused must take the Court fully into his confidence. Unless
that happens the genuineness of contrition alleged
to exist cannot be
determined.'
[12]
The probation officer's report confirmed the personal circumstances
of the appellants and recorded
that the first appellant's parents and
his cousin, Simphiwe Khonjwayo, spoke positively about him. They said
that he was humble,
supported the family financially, and was not
violent. According to their knowledge, and from the information from
the second appellant,
the first appellant had done nothing wrong, it
was the second appellant who was responsible for the death of the
deceased. They
described the second appellant as a violent and
aggressive person, especially when he consumed alcohol, and someone
who did not
fulfil his promises and was not a first time
offender.
[13]
According to the probation officer, it was an aggravating factor in
respect of both appellants
that they refused to take responsibility
for the offence committed and showed no remorse. Therefore,
imprisonment was viewed as
an appropriate sentence since this would
afford each of them an opportunity to take responsibility for their
actions and rehabilitate.
[14]
In an interview with the deceased's son, Njabulo Duma, the probation
officer established that
the family was not coping well emotionally
and financially since the family members were close to the deceased
and she had been
supporting the family financially.
[15]
Having considered all of the above, the trial court found no
substantial and compelling circumstances
to depart from the minimum
sentence prescribed bys 51(1) of the Act and sentenced both
appellants to life imprisonment.
Submissions
[16]
It was submitted by Mr
Chiliza
that, whilst both appellants
were convicted on the charge of murder, it was only the second
appellant who inflicted injuries on
the deceased. He relied on the
version of Mabhungu who stated that it was the second appellant who
had stabbed the deceased and
then went to fetch a hammer with which
he assaulted her. He submitted that it was the stab wound to the
chest, reflected on the
post mortem report as an incisional wound,
which was the cause of death. He confirmed that although he
represented both appellants
there was little to argue in relation to
the sentence imposed on the second appellant. He had a previous
conviction and he was
the one who reacted to information from a
traditional healer that the deceased was the reason his children were
not sleeping. He
was the one, so it was submitted, who stabbed and
assaulted the deceased, whereas the first appellant had no previous
convictions
and did nothing to the deceased, according to Mabhungu.
[17]
Ms
Ramkhilawon
, counsel for the State, acknowledged that there
were two versions as to who assaulted the deceased with the hammer.
She submitted
that irrespective of this, the first appellant was
equally guilty of the crime as he prevented the deceased from
escaping despite
the injuries which she had already sustained.
Although the first appellant had no previous convictions, it was
submitted that he
participated in a cowardly act when he showed no
compassion to an elderly woman. Ms
Ramkhilawon
also submitted
that Mabhungu testified that she had heard chanting of words to the
effect, 'We want to kill the witch', which showed
that the two
appellants had a common purpose, and it was the first appellant who
had knocked on the door of the deceased..
[18]
Responding to the State's submission about the chanting, Mr
Chiliza
submitted that one cannot selectively choose portions of Mabhungu's
testimony. According to Mr
Chiliza
, Mabhungu was the only
person who testified that she heard chanting prior to the commission
of the offence. However, Mr Chiliza
also relied on Mabhungu's version
that it was not the first appellant who went to fetch the hammer as
will be seen later in this
judgment.
Evaluation
[19]
The charge of murder, read with Part I of Schedule 2 of the Act,
calls for a minimum sentence
of life imprisonment on conviction
unless there are substantial and compelling factors which warrant a
deviation from the prescribed
minimum sentence.
[4]
It has already been mentioned that the trial court found no
substantial and compelling factors.
[20]
Commenting on the offences listed in Part I of Schedule 2, the court
in S v
Malgas
[5]
stated as follows:
'...an
alarming burgeoning in the commission of crimes of the kind specified
resulting in the government, the police, prosecutors
and the courts
constantly being exhorted to use their best efforts to stem the tide
of criminality which threatened and continues
to threaten to engulf
society. It was of course open to the High Courts even prior to the
enactment of the amending legislation
to impose life imprisonment in
the free exercise of their discretion.
The very fact that this
amending legislation has been enacted indicates that Parliament was
not content with that and that it was
no longer "business as
usual" when sentencing for the commission of the specified
crimes.'
(My emphasis.)
[21]
The court went on to state in
Malgas
that deviation from the
prescribed minimum sentences should not be done for flimsy reasons.
However, if the prescribed sentences
would be unjust or
disproportionate to the offence, then it must be departed from.
[22]
In
S v
Vilakazi
,
[6]
Nugent JA held as follows:
'In
cases of serious crime the personal circumstances of the offender, by
themselves, will necessarily recede into the background.
Once it
becomes clear that the crime is deserving of a substantial period of
imprisonment the questions whether the accused is
married or single,
whether he has two children or three, whether or not he is in
employment, are in themselves largely immaterial
to what that period
should be, and those seem to me to be the kind of "flimsy"
grounds that
Malgas
said should be avoided.'
[23]
Mr
Chiliza
submitted that the first appellant was less culpable because of the
role he played in the murder of the deceased. He relied on
Mabhungu's
version who said that it was the second appellant who went to fetch
the hammer and proceeded to assault the deceased
with it, and not the
first appellant as Maduna had testified. The trial court commented
that discrepancies in the two witnesseses'
testimony could be
attributed to inter alia the time that had passed since the incident
and the lighting as it was late at night.
The incident was described
as a 'moving scene' where the two eye witnesses, although
standing together at the same doorway
in close proximity to the
entrance of the deceased's room, had different points of view as to
what was happening inside the room.
However, there was a distinct
difference in the two versions as to which of the appellants left the
scene and went to fetch the
hammer with which to assault the
deceased. The trial court did not deal with this particular
discrepancy. Although the finding
that Maduna and Mabhungu made a
good impression on the court as honest witnesses, cannot be faulted,
Mabhungu's version of events,
that it was the second appellant who
fetched the hammer and assaulted the deceased with it, which was
confirmed by Simphiwe Khonjwayo
in material respects is an important
fact. In fact, the court also recorded incorrectly in the judgment
that 'the second witness
(Mabhungu) elaborated on the fact that the
hammer or the item
accused
1
went
to fetch... looked like a hammer'. Mabhungu testified that it was the
second appellant who did so. The trial court's failure
to deal with
this discrepancy made no difference to the common purpose between the
appellants, but it was a relevant factor in
consideration of the
sentence that was to be imposed.
[7]
The trial court clearly erred in this regard.
[24]
The court may deviate from the prescribed minimum sentence where
there are substantial and compelling
factors which warrant a
deviation, and the role played by an accused person can be such a
factor. In
S
v Ngwadla,
[8]
it was held that the absence of evidence that the accused had landed
the fatal stab wound was sufficient to warrant a deviation
from
imposition of a life sentence:
'[23]...Chances
are that it was not the appellant that actually landed the blow to
the head of the deceased that caused the blade
of the knife to stick
in the head of the deceased because he was still in possession of his
knife.
[26]
The absence of clear and satisfactory evidence that it was indeed the
appellant who landed the fatal stab wound in the head
of the deceased
to the extent that the blade broke off from the handle is in my view,
compelling enough to warrant a deviation
from imposing life
imprisonment as a sentence.'
The
court found that a sentence of 18 years' imprisonment was just and
appropriate in the circumstances of the case.
[25]
In
S v
Ntshaba and others
,
[9]
the court found that it was significant that the accused's role in
the actual attack was confined in comparison to that of her
co
accused:
'[11] Similar substantial
and compelling circumstances exist in the case of Ms Kwakwa. In
addition to pleading guilty and being
a first offender, Ms Kwakwa's
role in the actual attack was confined in comparison with Mr Ntshaba.
This is significant. In
S v Ngwadla
, the court held that
absence of evidence that the appellant had landed the fatal stab
wound was sufficient, seemingly on its own,
to warrant a deviation
from imposition of life imprisonment. Similarly, in
S v Skhosana
,
the "oblique" intent of the appellants, who had been
convicted of murder based on common purpose, coupled with their
lack
of previous convictions, resulted in the court deviating from the
prescribed minimum sentence and imposing 18 years' imprisonment
for
murder.
[12] Nevertheless, Ms
Kwakwa acted with common purpose on the evening in question,
participating in the discussion that preceded
the murder and actively
involved in tripping and holding down the deceased.' (Footnotes
omitted.)
The court imposed a
sentence of 17 years' imprisonment.
[26]
Ms
Ramkhilawon
was correct in submitting that even if the
first appellant did not assault the deceased with a hammer, he was
the one who knocked
on her door and was heartless in his actions in
preventing the deceased from escaping the attack despite her serious
injuries.
He also provided a false alibi and showed no remorse for
his actions. However, something must be said for the fact that the
first
appellant had no previous convictions and that there was no
clear and satisfactory evidence that he inflicted any injuries on the
deceased.
[27]
I find that the trial court's imposition of a sentence of life
imprisonment on the second appellant
cannot be faulted. However, the
court erred in its finding that there were no substantial and
compelling circumstances permitting
a deviation from the prescribed
minimum sentence in respect of the first appellant, taking into
account his diminished role in
the attack on the deceased in contrast
to his co-appellant. In the circumstances, I find that a sentence of
20 years' imprisonment
in respect of the first appellant is just and
appropriate.
Order
[28]
Accordingly, I propose the following order:
1.
The appeal against the first appellant's sentence is upheld;
2.
The sentence imposed by the court a quo is replaced with the
following:
'Accused 1 is sentenced
to 20 years' imprisonment, ante-dated to 30 October 2019.'
3.
The appeal by the second appellant is dismissed.
Hiralall
AJ
Chetty
J
APPEARANCES
Counsel for
Appellant:
E Chiliza
Instructed by:
Durban Justice
Centre
Email:
emmanuelc@legal-aid.co.za
Counsel for
Respondent:
B Vika
Instructed by:
DPP Durban
Tel:
083 77 333 74
Email:
Bvika@npa.gov.za
Date of hearing:
10 March 2023
Date of delivery:
05 June 2023
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email, and released to SAFLII. The
date
for hand down is deemed to be on 5th JUNE 2023 at 10:00
[1]
S
v Combrink
2012
(1) SACR 93
(SCA) para 20; S v Rabie
1975 (4) SA 855
(A) at 857D-E.
[2]
S v
Zinn
1969 (2) SA 537
(A) at 540G-H.
[3]
S v
Seegers
1970 (2) SA 506
(A) at 511G-H.
[4]
Section 51(1) and 51(3)(a),
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
[5]
S
v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) para 7.
[6]
S
v Vilakazi
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA) para 58.
[7]
S
v Ngwadla
2021
JDR 1423 (NWM) para 23-6
[8]
Supra.
[9]
S v Ntshaba and others (57/2021) [2022] ZAECMKHC 22 (18 March 2022).
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