begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 167
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## S v Khumalo and Another (Sentence) (SS 031/2021)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 167 (16 March 2022)
S v Khumalo and Another (Sentence) (SS 031/2021)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 167 (16 March 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_167.html
sino date 16 March 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: SS 031/2021
Reportable:
NO
Of
interest to other Judges: NO
Revised:
NO
16/03/2022
IN
THE MATTER BETWEEN:
THE
STATE
VERSUS
SPHAMANDLA
KHUMALO
Accused No: 1
BERTHWELL
NKOSI
Accused No: 2
JUDGEMENT:
SENTENCE
MOILA
AJ:
[1]
Mr Khumalo on the 09th of March 2022, this court found you guilty of
Murder
of Luciano Tapers, Rape of a minor, attempted rape and
housebreaking with intent to rob and robbery with aggravating
circumstances.
Mr
Nkosi, this court found you guilty of murder of Luciano Tapers and
house breaking with intent to rob and robbery with aggravating
circumstances.
[2]
The court will now hand down an appropriate sentence for the crimes
you
have been convicted of.
[3]
In considering an appropriate sentence, the court is mindful of the
foundation
sentencing principle, that the punishment should fit the
criminal as well as the crime, be fair to society and be blended with
a measure of mercy.
In
addition to this, the court also considers the purposes of
punishment, namely deterrence, prevention, rehabilitation and
retribution.
In
S v Swart
[1]
the court held that
in our law retribution and deterrence are proper purposes of
punishment and they must be accorded due weight
in any sentence that
is imposed.
[4]
In order to impose a sentence in which all objectives are embodied,
the
court has to consider and balance evenly, the nature and
seriousness of the crimes committed, the personal circumstances and
your
needs and the impact of the crimes on the community and the
victims in particular.
[5]
I will now turn to the triad factors, starting with your personal
circumstances:
[6]
Mr Khumalo, you testified that you are 32 years' old and you have
passed
grade 7. You are single but residing with the mother of your
children. You have six (6) children who are residing with their
mothers.
Prior to your arrest you were a painter, earning R180,00 per
day. You intended to plead guilty from the beginning to all counts,
to show remorse and to apologise to the people you have wronged. Your
wish is for them to forgive you. You apologize to all the
women
living on this earth and to victim you raped.
Your
legal representative has conceded that you have been convicted of
serious offences. The victims were attacked in the sanctity
of their
homes. You have pleaded guilty and admitted that you have committed
these offences, and that you are a candidate for rehabilitation.
[7]
Mr Nkosi, you testified that you are thirty (30) years old, from
Zimbabwe.
You were self-employed before arrest, working as a painter
and a plumber. You are married with two (2) children, a boy and a
girl,
your wife is in Zimbabwe. You do not know why accused no one
(1) is implicating you. You have never broken into a person's house
nor killed a person. You are in South Africa legally.
[8]
I now turn to the second factor to be considered being the crimes you
have been convicted of, the seriousness of the offences and the
impact thereof.
The
serious nature of the offences need no undue emphasis. What makes the
accused's action all more reprehensible is that the complainant's
were supposedly safe in the sanctity of their homes, with doors
locked and windows closed. The one place in a troubled world where
everyone is entitled to feel safe and secure.
[9]
Murder is essentially a violation of the victim's constitutional
right
to life. You carried out a vicious assault without regard to
the consequences therefore and specifically whether he dies or not.
You
have both informed the court that you were employed prior arrest.
What
aggravates this matter is that you could only have been motivated by
greed.
[10]
It
is
true that
rape is a serious offence,
constituting
as it does a humiliating, degrading and brutal invasion of the
privacy, dignity and the person of the victim. (see
S v Chapman
[2]
).
[11]
The court will be failing in its duties if it ignored the interest of
the community and
the expectations and demands of the community about
crimes of this nature.
In
S v
Mhlakaza
and
another
[3]
,
The court
held that given the high level of violence and serious crimes in this
country the emphasis in sentence should be on retribution
and
detention.
It
is undeniable that we are experiencing high levels of violent crimes
and in particular violent crimes against women and children.
There
is a general outcry for protection from criminals who commit violent
crimes.
The
court also takes into account the interest of the deceased family and
the impact of these crimes on the victims.
[12]
Mrs D[....], the deceased mother testified that the late Luciano was
22 years old when
he passed away and her daughter was 14 years old
when she was sexually penetrated. Further that they are still
tormented by the
events of that night. Her daughter will never be the
same again. When she hears sounds at night she goes to the curtains
to peep.
She doesn't sleep.
They
had to move out of their house at 84 Great Britain, children had to
relocate schools.
They
attended counselling as a family.
[13]
The
legislature has recognized that certain serious crimes must be met
with a minimum sentence.
You have
both been convicted of murder falling under part I of schedule 2 of
the Criminal Law Amendment Act
[4]
and housebreaking with intent to rob and robbery with aggravating
circumstances falling under part II of schedule 2 of the Criminal
law
Amendment Act.
[14]
Mr Khumalo, you have also been convicted of rape of a minor which
also fall under part
I of schedule 2 of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act.
The
courts have a discretion in terms of section 51(3) of the Criminal
Law Amendment Act to impose a sentence lesser than the prescribed
minimum sentence if it is satisfied that substantial and compelling
circumstances exist, which viewed cumulatively will justify
the
imposition of a lesser sentence.
[15]
The court
has a duty to implement these sentences unless there are truly
convincing reasons for departing from it. (see
S
v Malgas
[5]
and S v
Matyityi
[6]
It
held that, in determining whether there are substantial and
compelling circumstances present, a court must be aware that the
legislature has set a benchmark of the sentence that should
ordinarily be imposed for a specified crime, and that there should
be
truly persuasive reasons for a different response.
In
deciding whether substantial and compelling circumstances exist, the
court is required to look at all the mitigating and aggravating
factors, and consider the cumulative effect thereof.
[16]
Other than your personal circumstances there is not much that can be
said in your favour.
On the other hand, the intrusion into the home
of people cannot be disregarded. Neither can the physical attack on
them. Indeed,
these factors serve as aggravation. Nothing lends
itself to sympathise with you. The injuries sustained by the
complainants/victims
illustrate the brutality with which the attack
on the defenceless people occurred.
Mr
Khumalo, you alleged that you are remorseful. Before a court can find
that an accused person is genuinely remorseful it needs
to have a
proper appreciation of what motivated the accused to commit the deed,
what had since provoked his change of heart and
whether he does
indeed have a true appreciation of the consequences of those actions.
The accused is expected to place detail before
the court of his
remorse. Which was not done.
[17]
In S v
Beyi
[7]
the court held that I
quote
"appellant,
as a father and the sole breadwinner of 8 children, should have
known, more than anyone else that he was placing
the wellbeing of his
family in jeopardy by resorting to crime"
[18]
The following are found to be aggravating in the circumstance:
I
am satisfied that the prescribed sentence of 15 years' imprisonment
is fully justified in respect of the robbery committed by
both of
you. The robbery was planned; knives were used to subdue the victims.
Life
of a young man was cut short. The family is still tormented and had
to relocate.
[19]
In the
Supreme Court of Appeal decision,
S
v PB
[8]
,
the
court confirmed the trial court's decision that, as no substantial
and compelling circumstances were present, there was no justification
to deviate from the minimum sentence.
Of
further relevance in
S v PB
(supra) is an issue which all our
courts should be taking into consideration and which is of particular
relevance in this matter,
where the appellant did not use a condom.
Tshiqi JA stated at 455: 'The appellant did not use a condom. This is
yet another aggravating
factor, specifically at a time when the whole
world is grappling with the scourge of the HIV and Aids pandemic. The
majority of
rape victims are not only left to deal with the physical,
emotional and psychological trauma of the rape, but are also exposed
to the possible hardships associated with living with HIV, its side
effects and stigma. The only manner in which victims may be
protected
is through anti-retroviral drugs, which also have side effects. It is
not clear ex facie the medical report (J88) whether
or not this
precaution was taken with regard to this young girl. No evidence was
led in this regard.'
[20]
No condom was used
in casu.
This is yet another aggravating
factor which counts against Mr Khumalo.
[21]
Having considered all the evidentiary material, I'm of the view that
there are no substantial
and compelling circumstances justifying the
imposition of a lesser sentence. On the contrary, there are more
aggravating features
in the evidence than mitigating circumstances.
The
court considered various decided cases for guidance in giving an
appropriate sentence including
Madiba
v
S
[9]
.
The
court is, after careful consideration of all the factors placed
before it, of the opinion that in the circumstances an appropriate
sentence is:
[22]
Accused no one (1)
Count
no 1-murder: life imprisonment Count no 2-Rape: life imprisonment
Count
no 3 -Attempted rape: 5 years' imprisonment
Count
no 7 - Housebreaking with intent to rob and robbery with aggravating
circumstances: 15 years' imprisonment
In
terms of section 280(2) Criminal Procedure Act
[10]
the sentences in count 2, 3 and 7 shall run concurrently
with the
sentence in count 1.
[23]
Accused no two (2)
Count
1-Murder: life imprisonment
Count
7- Housebreaking with intent to rob and robbery with aggravating
circumstances: 15 years· imprisonment
In
terms of section 280(2) Criminal Procedure Act the sentences in count
7 shall run concurrent with the sentence in count 1.
[24]
Orders:
a)
In terms of
section 103(1) of Firearms Control Act
[11]
-
no order is
made. (Both accused automatically deemed unfit to possess a firearm)
b)
In terms of
section 50(2) (a)(i) of Criminal Law (sexual offences and related
matters) Amendment Act
[12]
the
court orders that the particulars of the accused number one (1) be
included in the National Register for Sexual Offences.
c)
In terms of
section 120(4) Children's Act
[13]
accused
number one (1) is found unsuitable to work with children and his
particulars must be included in Part B of the National
Child
Protection Register.
d)
If the complainant is present or the mother of the deceased, the
court informs them that in terms of section 299A Criminal Procedure
Act they have a right to make representations when placement
of the
accused on parole or under correctional supervision is considered or
to attend any relevant meeting of the parole board.
N.L
MOILA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
On
behalf of accused 1: Mr S. Nobangule
Instructed
by Legal Aid South Africa
Accused
2: Advocate Thipe
Instructed
by Legal Aid South Africa
On
Behalf of the State: Adv. V Maphiri
Instructed
by Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP)
Date
Judgement handed down:
16 March 2022
[1]
S v Swart
2004 (2) SACR 370 (SCA).
[2]
S v
Chapman
1997(2)
SACR 3 SCA.
[3]
S v
Mhlakaza
and
another
1997(1) SACR 515 SCA.
[4]
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
[5]
S
v
Malgas
2001
(1) 469 SCA.
[6]
S
v
Matyityi
2011(1)
SACR 40 (SCA).
[7]
S v
Beyi
2011
(2) SACR 23.
[8]
S v PB
2011
(1) SACR 448 (SCA)
[9]
Madiba
v
S
2015
JOL 33686 SCA.
[10]
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
[11]
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
.
[12]
Criminal Law (sexual offences and related matters) Amendment Act 32
of 2007.
[13]
Children's Act 38 of 2005
.
sino noindex
make_database footer start