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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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[2024] ZASCA 15
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## Mthanti v S (859/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 15;
2024 (1) SACR 335 (SCA) (8 February 2024)
Mthanti v S (859/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 15;
2024 (1) SACR 335 (SCA) (8 February 2024)
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sino date 8 February 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not reportable
Case
no: 859/2022
In the matter between:
SIYABONGA
MTHANTI
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Mthanti
v The State
(Case no 859/2022)
[2024]
ZASCA 15
(8
February 2024)
Coram:
DAMBUZA, HUGHES, and MATOJANE JJA and WINDELL and
MALI AJJA
Heard:
18 August 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and release to
SAFLII. The date for hand down is deemed to be 8 February 2024 at
11h00.
Summary:
Criminal law – sentence –
appeal in terms of s 316B of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
(CPA) against sentences
imposed – appellant convicted of a
series of offences including assault with intent to do grievous
bodily harm, robbery with
aggravating circumstances and rape –
whether there was duplication of sentences – whether minimum
prescribed sentences
applicable under s 51(1) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (CLAA) applicable – whether the
appellant when committing
rape had already been convicted of two or
more offences of rape – appellant not yet sentenced in respect
of such convictions
– involvement of grievous bodily harm as
provided in Part I (c) of Schedule 2 to the CLAA – whether
there were substantial
and compelling circumstances to justify the
imposition of lesser sentences – no substantial and compelling
circumstances
found.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: KwaZulu-Natal Division of
the High Court, Durban (Nkosi and Pillay JJ and Reddi AJ sitting as
court of appeal):
1
Save to the extent set out below the appeal is dismissed.
2
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
2.1
Counts 1, 2, and 5 are taken together for purposes of sentence. The
accused is sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment.
2.2 Counts 3 and 4 are
taken together for purposes of sentence. The accused is sentenced to
life imprisonment.
2.3 In respect of count 6
the accused is sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment.
2.4 All the sentences are
to run concurrently.
2.5 All the sentences are
antedated to 1 April 2015.’
JUDGMENT
Mali AJA (Dambuza,
Hughes and Matojane JJA and Windell AJA concurring):
[1]
The appellant, Mr Siyabonga Mthanti was convicted and sentenced by
the KwaZulu-Natal
Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg, (the
high court) on three counts of robbery with aggravating
circumstances, a count
of assault with intent to cause grievous
bodily harm and two counts of rape. The sentences were imposed as
follows: (a) 15 years’
imprisonment for the three counts of
robbery with aggravating circumstances (counts 1, 2 and 5), (b) life
imprisonment for the
counts of assault with intent to do grievous
bodily harm and the first count of rape (counts 3 and 4), and (c)
life imprisonment
on the second count of rape (count 6). His appeal
to the full court of the same division against the sentences imposed
in respect
of counts 2 to 6 was dismissed. He now appeals, with the
leave of this Court, against the dismissal of his appeal by the full
court.
[2]
The appellant’s convictions and sentences relate to three
incidents that occurred
between June 2014 and January 2015. In all
three incidents the appellant used the same method of enticing the
victim to an isolated
spot under false pretences of employment offer.
There he either threatened to or stabbed them with a knife, and
robbed and raped
them.
[3]
The first incident was preceded by interaction between
the
appellant and the first complainant, on a social media site known as
OLX, a site used by employment advertisers and job seekers.
There the
appellant, pretending to be Siyabonga Ncula, advertised a job. On 16
June 2014 the first complainant, following the appellant’s
instructions, took a taxi from her home in Newlands, eThekwini to
meet the appellant in Pietermaritzburg. The appellant led the
first
complainant to a secluded spot where he robbed her of two cellular
phones at knife point. He then instructed her to undress
whilst
grabbing her, but she managed to wrestle free and run away. The
conviction on count 1 related to this event.
[4]
The second incident occurred on 26 August 2014 when the appellant
assaulted, robbed
and raped the second complainant. In the same
manner as the first incident, this incident too followed
communication between the
appellant (pretending to be a Mrs Zuma) and
the second complainant, on a social media known as Date Club. In that
interaction the
appellant offered the second complainant a job as a
domestic worker. On the appellant’s instructions the second
complainant
arrived at Elandskop Pietermaritzburg, having boarded a
taxi from her home in Port Shepstone. The appellant met her as
arranged
and led her to a spot where he stabbed her on the back with
a knife and robbed her of her money and a cellular phone. Having
threatened
to stab her again he then ordered her to undress and he
raped her.
[5]
Thereafter the second complainant put on her clothes and asked him
for directions
to Mrs Zuma’s house. On following the directions
given to her by the appellant the second complainant walked into a
forest
where, and after having walked a very long distance she
eventually reached an informal settlement where she was taken to a
police
station. She used her rescuer’s cellular phone to call
the phone number that the appellant had given her as Mrs Zuma’s,
only to discover that was, in fact, the appellant’s phone
number. The convictions on counts 2, 3 and 4 related to this
incident.
[6]
The complainant in the third incident travelled from Mthwalume, Port
Shepstone to
meet the appellant in Pietermaritzburg. On this occasion
the appellant had pretended to be a Mr Zikhali when he offered the
third
complainant a job as a childminder. When the appellant came to
meet the complainant, he was in the company of someone referred to
as
Andile. The three of them walked along a footpath to a spot where the
appellant suddenly grabbed the complainant by the neck
from behind.
He then took one of the complainant’s cellular phones and
identity document and ordered her to give her second
cellular phone
to Andile. Thereafter the appellant, while pointing a knife at the
complainant’s neck, proceeded to rape her
in the presence of
his friend Andile, whilst she pleaded with him not to kill her. At
some stage the appellant invited Andile to
also participate in the
rape but the latter refused. Andile gave the complainant’s
cellular phone back to the appellant and
walked away from the scene.
The convictions on counts 5 and 6 related to this incident.
[7]
The approach of the high court in sentencing the appellant was rather
unusual when
imposing sentence, the court took together all three
counts of robbery with aggravating circumstances from the three
different
incidents and sentenced the appellant to a 15 year term of
imprisonment. It then combined the counts of assault with intention
to cause grievous bodily harm and rape from the second incident for
the purpose of sentencing and imposed a sentence of life
imprisonment.
The court then imposed a further life sentence in
respect of the conviction of rape in the third incident.
[8]
The general approach to sentencing is to determine an appropriate
sentence for each
individual offence of which an accused is
convicted. Of particular relevance in this case is that although the
perpetrator in the
three incidents was the same, and the offences
were similar, the victims were three different individuals and the
incidents were
unrelated. On the correct approach the sentences
imposed had to account for the aggravating and mitigating
circumstances attendant
in each offence committed. The
imposition of a single sentence in respect of the unrelated crimes
(counts 1, 2 and 5) was
inappropriate. Nevertheless, it redounded in
the appellant’s favour, and there is no counter-appeal in
respect thereof. In
addition, counts 3 and 4 were considered together
for the purpose of sentencing.
[9]
In this appeal the appellant contends, first, that in respect of the
second incident
there was duplication of convictions and therefore
improper punishment. The argument posits that even though the
appellant was
found guilty of three separate offences (rape, robbery
with aggravating circumstances and assault with the intent to do
grievous
bodily harm), he had a single intent: he used the knife to
subdue the complainant with the intention of carrying out the robbery
and rape of the complainant (counts 1 and 3). Therefore, the
conviction of assault with intention to cause grievous bodily harm
(count 2) resulted from an impermissible duplication of charges which
led to duplication of punishments. The second leg on which
the appeal
stands is that the first rape did not involve the infliction of
grievous bodily harm as provided in item (c) of Part
I in Schedule 2
of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (CLAA) read with s
51(1) of that Act. Therefore, he should not have
been sentenced to
life imprisonment in respect thereof. Thirdly, he contends that when
he was sentenced for the second rape in
the third incident (count 6)
he had not yet been convicted of two or more incidents of rape as
provided in the same law. The second
rape therefore did not attract
the sentence of life imprisonment. Lastly, he contends that his
personal circumstances, when considered
cumulatively, constitute
substantial and compelling circumstances that justify deviation from
the minimum sentences prescribed
in the CLAA.
[10]
The law pertaining to the duplication of punishment has been
established in many cases. In
S
v BM
,
[1]
this
Court remarked that:
‘
It
has been a rule of practice in our criminal courts since at least
1887 that ‘where the accused has committed only one offence
in
substance, it should not be split up and charged against him in one
and the same trial as several offences”. The test
is whether,
taking a common sense view of matters in the light of fairness to the
accused, a single offence or more than one has
been committed.
The
purpose of the rule is to prevent a duplication of convictions on
what is essentially a single offence and, consequently, the
duplication of punishment.’ (Emphasis added.).
[11]
Firstly, it is necessary to highlight that the appeal in this Court
is not against the convictions.
Consequently, any contention advanced
in order to impugn any of the convictions is impermissible. Secondly,
the high court took
count 2 (assault to do grievous bodily harm) and
count 3 (rape) together for purposes of sentence. Thirdly, the
high court
found that the rape in count 3 involved the infliction of
grievous bodily harm that attracted a life sentence.
[2]
The
result was one sentence of life imprisonment in respect of both
counts. Because the two offences were grouped together, this
approach
did not result in the duplication of punishment.
[12]
With regard to the second ground of appeal – that the injury
sustained by the complaint
did not constitute grievous bodily harm,
it is apposite to observe, first, that there is no definition of
grievous bodily harm
in the CLAA. The courts have held that while the
injury should not be trivial or insignificant, it need not be
necessarily life
threatening, dangerous or disabling. The relevant
considerations in assessing whether grievous bodily harm was
inflicted include
the nature of the injury sustained, the seriousness
of that injury, its position on the body, the object used in
inflicting it,
the number of wounds sustained, and the results that
flowed from the infliction.
[3]
In
addition, the meaning of grievous bodily harm must be understood
within the context of its use in the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences
and Related matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007.
[13]
Item (c) of Part I of Schedule 2 of the CLAA, which prescribes the
minimum sentence of life imprisonment
for rape offences ‘involving
the infliction of grievous bodily harm’, must be understood
within the context of the
rampant levels of sexual offences in this
country. The purpose is to ensure that appropriate punishment is
imposed for violent
conduct that is designed to induce submission to
sexual intercourse, given that rape, on its own, is a violent,
degrading act.
The analogy drawn by the appellant between the
infliction of harm in this case and the harm sustained by the
complainant in
S
v Nkomo,
[4]
(Nkomo)
is
therefore inappropriate. In
Nkomo
the court was concerned with injuries
sustained
by the complainant whilst trying to escape from the appellant. In
this case, however, it is common cause that the appellant
stabbed the
complainant with a knife to subdue her so that he could rape her.
The
stab wound sustained by the second complainant was a 0,5 cm wide
laceration. It was located at the level of the T5 (the fifth
thoracic
vertebra), to the left of the vertebral column.
[5]
The
depth could not be ascertained because the wound was sutured at the
clinic before the doctor who gave evidence in court examined
the
complainant.
[14]
There was no
suggestion on appeal that the high court was wrong in its conclusion
that the suturing of the wound meant that it was
not superficial.
Consequently the finding that
that
the rape involved the infliction of grievous bodily harm
cannot be faulted.
Thus, the
appellant
fell to be sentenced as provided in s 51(1) read with Part 1 of
Schedule 2 of the CLAA and the
trial court did not misdirect itself in
imposing the minimum sentence of life imprisonment.
[15]
With regard to the sentence of life imprisonment imposed for count 6,
the high court found that
the offence attracted the minimum
prescribed sentence under s 51(1), Part I
(a)
(iii) of Schedule
2 of the CLAA because it was a second conviction of rape committed by
the appellant. The court erred in this regard.
[16]
In
S
v Mahomotsa
[6]
Mpati
JA set out the correct interpretative approach to Part I
(a)
(iii):
‘
Here
the accused had been arrested on the first count, appeared in court
where he was released in the custody of his grandmother,
but within a
period of just over two months he committed a similar offence in
almost a similar fashion. What must be remembered,
however, is that
at the time of the second rape, the accused had not yet been
convicted on the first count. Again this is, of course,
no excuse.
But the Legislature has itself distinguished him from persons who,
having been convicted of two or more offences or
rape but not yet
sentenced, commits yet another rape. If, for example, the accused in
the first instance had not raped the first
complainant more than once
and he then in the second instance raped the second complainant only
once while awaiting trial on the
first count the prescribed sentence
of life imprisonment would not have come into reckoning.’
[17]
Section
51(1) of the CLAA
provides that a regional court or a high court shall sentence a
person it has convicted of an offence referred
to in Part I of
Schedule 2 to imprisonment for life. Part I
(a)
in Schedule 2 specifies the
circumstances in which the offence of rape will attract the sentence
of life imprisonment. In terms
of that provision the sentence of life
imprisonment becomes applicable where rape is committed ‘by a
person who has been
convicted of two or more offences of rape or
compelled rape, but has not yet been sentenced in respect of such
convictions’.
[18]
It is apparent that the appellant was not yet convicted of rape in
count 4. Therefore, the imposition
of life imprisonment was a
misdirection. The State conceded to the misdirection. This
misdirection
justifies
interference by this Court, and we are entitled to consider the
sentence afresh. Part III of Schedule 2 of the CLAA
provides
for a minimum sentence of 10 years’ imprisonment. Taking
into account, amongst other things, the appellant’s
modus
operandi
and the impact of the rape
as fully discussed below, the sentence of 10 years’
imprisonment does not fit the crime in the
circumstances. Fifteen
years’ imprisonment is the appropriate sentence under the
circumstances.
[19]
The last issue is whether there were substantial
and compelling circumstances that justified deviation from the
minimum prescribed
sentences in this case. It is apparent from the
above description of the events that took place on the three
occasions that the
aggravating circumstances present when committing
the crimes by far outweighed the mitigating factors. The high court
was correct
in considering that the appellant’s criminal
conduct was not ‘fleeting and impetuous’; that it was
‘calculated
and callous’, and that there was no reason to
deviate from the prescribed minimum sentences.
[20]
The only submission made on appeal was that the appellant‘s
mother died when he was 7 years
old. The suggestion was that the
appellant was troubled by the fact that his mother died without
revealing the identity of his
father. But all of this was considered
by the high court. The court also considered in the appellant’s
favour, his personal
circumstances - that he was gainfully employed
at the time of his arrest for the offences in question and supporting
his two minor
children. It considered that although he lost his only
biological parent early in his life, his uncle and aunt gave him a
‘good
and warm upbringing’ until he abandoned his post
matric studies without telling them’. The court considered that
the
appellant was a first offender.
[21]
The appellant ruthlessly
exploited the vulnerabilities of the
most exposed members of our society. He preyed on those most affected
by the high levels of
unemployment in the country. He deceived women,
causing them to leave the security and comfort of their homes. He
caused them to
use their meagre financial resources to travel to
Pietermaritzburg. He robbed them of their scant belongings and then
humiliated
the second and third complainants by raping them. In
respect of the third complainant the rape happened in the most
degrading manner,
in the presence of a third person. He then left the
complainants to their own devices in remote places at night. This he
did repeatedly,
as the high court correctly found. In all three
incidents there was no basis for a departure from the prescribed
minimum sentences.
[22]
Accordingly I grant the following order:
1
Save to the extent set out below the appeal is dismissed.
2
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
2.1
Counts 1, 2, and 5 are taken together for purposes of sentence. The
accused is sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment.
2.2 Counts 3 and 4 are
taken together for purposes of sentence. The accused is
sentenced to life imprisonment.
2.3 In respect of count 6
the accused is sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment.
2.4 All the sentences are
to run concurrently.
2.5 All the sentences are
antedated to 1 April 2015.
_____________________________
N
P MALI
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant:
M M Chithi (with T Khowa)
Instructed
by:
Shoba Sandile Attorneys, Durban
Blair
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent: Elsa Smith
Instructed
by:
The Director of Public Prosecutions, Pietermaritzburg
The
Director of Public Prosecutions, Bloemfontein.
[1]
S v BM
[2013] ZASCA 160
;
2014 (2) SACR 23
(SCA) para 3.
[2]
Item
(c) of Part I of Schedule 2 of the CLAA.
[3]
S
v Rabako
[2007]
ZAFSHC 47
;
2010
SACR 310 (O).
[4]
S v
Nkomo
[2006] ZASCA 139
;
[2007] 3 All SA 596
(SCA);
2007 (2) SACR 198
(SCA)
para 15.
[5]
Dorland’s
Illustrated Medical Dictionary
33 ed 2020 refers to the vertebrae as ‘any of the small
irregular bones of the vertebral column which comprises of seven
cervical
,
twelve
thoracic
,
and five
lumbar
vertebra.’[5] The
T5
is
the
fifth thoracic vertebra closest to the skull
.
[6]
S
v Mahomotsa
[2002] ZASCA 64
;
[2002] 3 All SA 534
(SCA);
2002
(2) SACR 435
(SCA) para 20.
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