Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1425South Africa
S v Leema (SS 98/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1425 (8 December 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Leema (SS 98/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1425 (8 December 2023)
S v Leema (SS 98/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1425 (8 December 2023)
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sino date 8 December 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: SS 98/2022
In
the matter between:
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
LEEMA,
TIISETSANG
SILAS
ACCUSED
JUDGMENT ON SENTENCE
BRITZ, AJ
[1]
The accused, Mr Tiisetsang Silas Leema,
have been convicted of the following offences:
Counts 1 and 2: Murder read with the
provisions of s 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 105 of 1997
(‘the CLAA’);
Count 3: Robbery with aggravating
circumstances read with s 51(2) of the CLAA;
Count 4: Possession of a prohibited
firearm of which the serial number or identifying mark has been
altered without permission in
contravention of
s 4(1)(f)(iv)
of the
Firearms Control Act, 60 of 2000
, read with
s 51(2)
of the CLAA;
Count 5: Unlawful Possession of
ammunition in contravention of
s 90
of the
Firearms Control Act, 60
of 2000
; and
Count 6: Being in the RSA illegally in
contravention of
s 49(1)(a)
of the
Immigration Act, 13 of 2002
.
[2]
Because of the operation of the CLAA, the
convictions on counts 1 and 2 each attract a minimum sentence of life
imprisonment, and
that on count 3 and 4 each a minimum sentence of 15
years imprisonment.
[3]
In order to determine an appropriate
sentence, the court has to carefully weigh and balance the nature and
seriousness of the crime,
the interests of society and the personal
circumstances of the accused, without over or under emphasizing any
of these factors.
The court must also blend the sentence with a
measure of mercy as is called for by the circumstances of this case.
(S v Zinn
1969 (2) SA 537
(A); S v Khumalo
1973 (3) SA 279
(A)) In
addition to this the court must also be alive to the purposes of
sentence, which, in general terms, are retribution, prevention,
deterrence and rehabilitation. (S v Rabie
1975 (4) SA 855
(A))
[4]
In S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) the
Supreme Court of Appeal laid down the law as to how sentencing courts
should treat and implement the provisions of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act, 105 of 1997
. The SCA made it clear that when it comes
to sentencing it can no longer be business as usual and that the
prescribed minimum sentences
should be viewed as generally
appropriate for the offences they have been prescribed. The court
further declared that those prescribed
minimum sentences should not
be departed from lightly and for flimsy reasons.
[5]
Both Ms Bovu, and Adv Mack addressed the
court on the issue of sentence, without leading any evidence.
[6]
In her address in mitigation of sentence,
Ms Bovu placed the following on record: The accused is 29 years old,
single and the biological
father of two minor children who are 11
years and 3 years old respectively. The children reside with their
maternal grandmother
in Lesotho. The accused’s highest level of
education is the equivalent of Grade 2 in SA. Prior to his arrest he
was recycling
plastic bottles and generated an income of R50 a day.
He is a first offender.
[7]
She conceded that the accused was convicted
of very serious offences which attract prescribed minimum sentences.
She further conceded
that these offences are very prevalent in the
court’s area of jurisdiction. She also conceded that both
deceased persons
were killed by being shot and that the accused acted
with common purpose with co-perpetrators who were not before the
court.
[8]
Ms Bovu further conceded that the court may
not deviate from the prescribed minimum sentences, unless it find the
existence of substantial
and compelling circumstances. She submitted
that such substantial and compelling circumstances exist in this case
and listed the
following as such: (a) The accused is a first
offender. (b) He has been in custody since his arrest. (c) The
accused is still of
a youthful age and can therefore still be
rehabilitated. (d) The accused’s guilty plea on count 6 is an
indication of remorse.
[9]
Based on the above she requested the court
to deviate from the prescribed minimum sentences, impose lesser
sentences and order these
sentences to be served concurrently. She
submitted that an effective sentence of 20 years imprisonment would
be just and fair in
the circumstances.
[10]
Ms Bovu elected not to offer any address in
respect of
s 103
of the
Firearms Control Act.
[11
]
Counsel for the State pointed out that the
facts found to have been proven in respect of counts 1 and 2 were
that the accused and
his co-perpetrators, who were not before court,
were unhappy with the manner in which the two deceased persons
handled the finances
of the Lesotho nationals’ fund and that
they decided on their own that the penalty for this was death. She
accentuated the
fact that no court in SA has the power to impose a
similar penalty as that imposed by the accused and his
co-perpetrators, and
that at best the court is empowered to sentence
the accused to life imprisonment. She submitted that there are no
substantial and
compelling circumstances in this case and that the
court is therefore bound to follow the decision in Malgas (above).
She argued,
with reference to a number of decided case, which I do
not deem necessary to repeat in this judgment, that none of the
factors
presented by Ms Bovu as substantial and compelling
circumstance fall into that category. She further submitted that the
accused
has not shown any sign of remorse, and that his prospect for
rehabilitation is therefore unlikely. In light of all of this she
implored the court to impose the prescribed minimum sentences on all
the counts attracting such sentences and also not disturb the
prevailing legislation declaring the accused automatically unfit to
possess a firearm.
[12]
The task of determining the appropriate
sentence in any matter is never an easy one, as it always require a
fine balancing act to
be performed by the judge. A judge is required
to act with a firm hand in the interest of society, whilst at the
same time being
mindful of the fact that the accused is a human being
and by his very nature prone to err. If the judge is too lenient when
imposing
sentence, society may decide to take the law into its own
hands. If the sentence imposed by the judge is too severe, society
may
lose its trust in the justice system as a whole. Both these
scenarios can cause irreparable harm to society and the judicial
system
that is in place to guide and protect society.
[13]
There are, in my view, several aggravating
circumstance in this case: It stands to reason that the offences the
accused have been
convicted of are all of a serious nature. This is
reflected in the minimum sentences prescribed for counts 1 to 4. The
evidence
show that the accused and his co-perpetrators have gone on a
crime spree. They acted in common purpose with each other. They
decided
what they were going to do and executed their decisions
without any sign of remorse. They acted callously and shot and killed
both
deceased persons in broad daylight undeterred by the possibility
of being seen or caught. The cause of the killings and robbery
was
nothing more than a lust for money and power. With the two deceased
out of the way the accused and his co-perpetrators saw
their way open
to take over the business by taking the deceased’s money and
book. There is not a single piece of evidence
to show that the
accused and this co-perpetrators made any attempt to resolve the
dispute between them and the deceased persons
in a peaceful manner.
There is also no evidence that any of the deceased persons posed a
threat to the accused or his co-perpetrators.
To this end it is
particularly shocking that the deceased in count 2 was shot in the
head and killed while he was sleeping, clearly
under the influence of
liquor. The version proffered in the confession of the accused
further makes it clear that there was a complete
breach of trust
between his group on the one side and the deceased persons on the
other side. Both deceased were shot with firearms
they had given to
the accused and his co-perpetrators at one time to protect themselves
while working in Magaliesburg.
[14]
With regards to the robbery it is
aggravating that the victims was a woman and her younger brother.
They were confronted and trapped
inside their residence while being
shoved and ordered around at gunpoint. The effect of the crime spree
of the accused and his
co-perpetrators was so severe on Ms Letsokwane
that she left her employment, her house and life she built for
herself in SA and
moved back to her country of origin where she went
into hiding.
[15]
The firearm and ammunition counts also have
aggravating factors to be considered. The firearm was made
untraceable by obliterating
its serial number or any identifying
mark. It was used in the commission of the murder of the deceased in
count 1. Its origin was
right from the onset knowingly to the accused
in contravention with the law. The firearm is a dangerous weapon
being of a semi-automatic
nature. When the firearm was discovered in
possession of the accused it was in a working order and loaded with a
magazine with
no less than 15 live rounds of ammunition.
[16]
Coming to count 6 it is aggravating that
the accused entered SA in 2019 and that right from the onset he did
not have any permit
or authorization to be in the country. Whilst
here, he reaped the fruits of the country without making any
meaningful contribution
to it. Instead he involved himself in the
dealings of an unsavoury part of society where the exchange of
unlicensed firearms clearly
did not even raise an eyebrow.
[17]
It is, in my view, further aggravating that
the accused did not play open cards with the court or took the court
into his confidence.
He maintained and still maintains his innocence
with regards to counts 1 to 5. There is nothing to suggest that he,
at any stage,
attempted to cooperate with the police regarding the
whereabouts of his co-perpetrators. Such behaviour clearly flies in
the face
of any argument suggesting that the accused showed or shows
remorse. It rather shows that his prognoses for rehabilitation is
nothing
more than a fantasy.
[18]
Turning to the personal circumstances of
the accused, I take note of what Ms Bovu placed on record, without
seeing the need to repeat
it all again.
[19]
The accused is the biological father of 2
minor children. This court is enjoined by s 28(2) of the Constitution
to give paramountcy
to the best interests of these children when
determining the appropriate sentence to impose. It is however common
cause that the
accused is not the primary care-giver of these
children as defined in S v M (Centre for Child Law as Amicus Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2007 (2) SACR 539
(CC). I am therefore satisfied that despite
whatever sentence I impose, the children would not be deprived of
their primary care-giver
and that the effect of the sentence on them
would therefore be sufficiently mitigated to give paramountcy to
their best interests.
The accused is in any event not entitled to use
the children as a get out of jail free card.
[20]
The arguments made by counsel for the State
and the case law referred to by her in support of those arguments
showing that the factors
listed by Ms Bovu as substantial and
compelling do not fall in that category, can, in my view, not be
flawed. Individually and
combined those factors pale in comparison to
the aggravating circumstances in this case.
The
rest of the personal circumstances of the accused placed before this
court are nothing but ordinary circumstances which courts
hear in
almost every criminal trial.
Such ordinary
mitigating factors, it was held by this court in S v Speelman 2014
JDR 0916 (GSJ), cannot be elevated to the status
of substantial and
compelling circumstances.
[21]
Individually and taken together, I am
unable to find that there exist any substantial and compelling
circumstances in this case
that would cause me to deviate from the
prescribed minimum sentences, where applicable. The accused’s
personal circumstances
must bow the knee before a sentence focusing
on retribution and deterrence. The accused will have an opportunity
in prison to rehabilitate,
if at all possible, and that may be a
factor determining the length of his incarceration.
[22]
For all the reasons stated herein the
accused is sentenced as follows:
Count 1: LIFE IMPRISONMENT read with
the provisions of s 51(1) of Act 105 of 1997.
Count 2: LIFE IMPRISONMENT read with
the provisions of s 51(1) of Act 105 of 1997.
Count 3: FIFTEEN (15) YEARS
IMPRISONMENT read with the provisions of s 51(2) of Act 105 of 1997.
Count 4: FIFTEEN (15) YEARS
IMPRISONMENT read with the provisions of s 51(2) of Act 105 of 1997.
Count 5: TWO (2) YEARS IMPRISONMENT.
Count 6: THREE (3) MONTHS
IMPRISONMENT.
[23]
I have not heard any submissions why I
should make an order deviating from the ex lege position of s 103(1)
of the Fire Arms Control
Act 60 of 2000 and therefore I make no
order. The accused is automatically, by operation of the law, unfit
to possess a firearm.
____________________________
W J BRITZ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
:
For
the State:
Adv Mack
DPP,
Johannesburg
For
the Defence: Ms Bovu
Legal
Aid, Johannesburg
Date
of judgment
:
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