Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 233South Africa
S v Makhenke (SS92/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 233 (12 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 April 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Makhenke (SS92/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 233 (12 April 2022)
S v Makhenke (SS92/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 233 (12 April 2022)
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sino date 12 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No:
SS92/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE: 12 April 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
THEMBILIZWE
MAKHENKE
Accused
#####
##### SENTENCE
SENTENCE
WILSON
AJ
:
1
On 22 March 2022, I convicted the
accused, Mr. Makhenke, of one count of murder, one count of culpable
homicide and one count of
arson. It is now my duty to pass sentence.
2
At the outset of the trial, Mr.
Mavata, who appeared for Mr. Makhenke, confirmed that Mr. Makhenke
had been informed of the minimum
sentences applicable to the offences
charged on the indictment, and to the competent verdicts available on
those charges.
3
Section 51
(2) (a) of the
Criminal
Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
requires me to sentence Mr. Makhenke to
at least 15 years’ direct imprisonment on the murder count,
unless there are substantial
and compelling circumstances that
justify a lesser period. I will accordingly turn to consider the
circumstances placed before
me in mitigation and aggravation of
sentence, before assessing whether they are, individually or in any
combination, substantial
and compelling.
Evidence
on sentence
4
Mr. Mavata and Ms. Mack, who
appeared for the State, were in agreement that no evidence needed to
be led during the sentencing phase
of trial. The facts and
circumstances I will address are uncontested, and were placed before
me through submissions from counsel.
Mr. Mavata informed me that Mr.
Makhenke would not be exercising his right to place a presentencing
report before me, or to testify
in mitigation of sentence.
5
I am generally reluctant to sentence
on such serious charges without the assistance of a presentencing
report, but the delay in
obtaining one (said to be at least six
weeks) has to be balanced against Mr. Makhenke’s patent wish to
proceed to sentencing
as quickly as possible. Mr. Makhenke does not
want to testify in mitigation of sentence, and I cannot insist that
he does so. If
that is so, it seems to me that I cannot compel him to
co-operate with whomever compiles the presentencing report. I am also
swayed
by the State’s failure to insist on a presentencing
report.
6
I am also conscious of the fact that
Mr. Makhenke provided a plea explanation, which he amplified under
oath when he pleaded guilty.
Although I did not accept Mr. Makhenke’s
pleas of guilty on the charges of premeditated murder the State
originally pursued,
there is material in that statement and evidence
which may appropriately be taken into account for the purposes of
sentence (see
S v Cloete
1994 (1) SACR 420
at 428a-c).
7
Accordingly, in the circumstances of
this case, I am satisfied that a presentencing report would be
unlikely to illuminate matters
further.
Mr.
Makhenke’s circumstances
8
Mr. Makhenke is 41 years old. He has
a Grade 10 education. He has no previous convictions. He was arrested
on 16 April 2021. He
has been detained since then. He has a wife, and
two children, aged 3 and 9. He worked as a welder before his arrest
and incarceration.
He earned R1800 per month from that occupation.
Since his incarceration, his family have obviously lost that source
of support.
His wife resides with his children in the Eastern Cape.
The
offences
9
It is clear to me that Mr. Makhenke
truly regrets what he has done. The objective facts yield no other
conclusion. It was not disputed
that Mr. Makhenke tried to control
the fire that killed the two deceased persons in this case, however
ineptly, by patting it with
his bare hands just after he lit it. In
my judgment convicting Mr. Makhenke, I could not exclude the
possibility that Mr. Makhenke
never formed a plan to kill, and that
the decision to set the fire that killed his two victims was a very
stupid attempt to rouse
Mawande Mafuya, who Mr. Makhenke knew to be
in the room behind the curtains he set alight.
10
Mr. Makhenke said that he intended
no more than to burn the curtains to attract Mr. Mafuya’s
attention. But during argument
on sentence, Ms. Mack, who appeared
for the State, relied on crime scene photographs to throw doubt on
Mr. Makhenke’s version
in this respect. Ms. Mack pointed out
that crime scene photographs showed a drape hung over the window into
which Mr. Makhenke
poured the paraffin with which he ignited the
fire. The drape was unburnt, which, it was submitted, undermined Mr.
Makhenke’s
version that he intended merely to set fire to the
curtains. It was further contended that what really happened was a
much more
sinister attempt to ignite items inside the room itself.
11
What strikes me about the crime
scene photographs, though, is that the curtains to which Ms. Mack
draws attention are not just unburnt,
they are completely unsinged.
They are not marked by soot, and do not otherwise show any indication
of ever having been near a
fire. Everything else pictured has been
burnt and damaged very badly indeed.
12
The photographs were taken almost 24
hours after the fire took place. The only reasonable inference to be
drawn is that the drapes
pictured in the crime scene photographs were
not the curtains to which Mr. Makhenke said he set fire. They had
been hung up after
the fire had been extinguished. That negates any
suggestion that Mr. Makhenke was dishonest about having set fire to
Mr. Mafuya’s
curtains.
13
I am satisfied that Mr. Makhenke’s decision to
set the fire was taken in a fit of pique. It was perhaps meant as a
spiteful
prank. But it went horribly wrong. Mr. Makhenkhe attempted
to plead guilty to the premeditated murders of both Mr. Mafuya and
Siphiwe
Buthelezi, who was with Mr. Mafuya in the room. The only
explanation for that decision is that Mr. Makhenke is truly
remorseful,
and was ready to accept the most severe sentence a court
can impose for what he had done. Mr. Mavata told Mr. Makhenke that he
faced a possible life sentence on each count of premeditated murder.
On the facts of this case, Mr. Mavata must also have told Mr.
Makenkhe that a conviction carrying a lesser sentence was not just
possible, but likely, if he pleaded not guilty. But Mr. Makhenke
pleaded guilty anyway.
14
There are decisions suggesting that,
in order to be found truly remorseful, an accused person should
testify in mitigation of sentence
(see, for example,
S
v Matyityi
2011 (1) SACR 40
(SCA),
paragraphs 12 and 13). But I do not think that this can be an
unbreakable rule. Nor do I think that, read fairly and in
context,
those decisions were intended to generate such a rule. Where the
surrounding circumstances clearly point to remorse, and
where, as is
the case here, true remorse is the only reasonable inference to be
drawn from those circumstances, it seems to me
that the accused
person need not necessarily testify in mitigation of sentence. I am,
moreover, unconvinced that the
ipse
dixit
of the accused person facing
sentence is any more reliable than the relevant objective
circumstances. It may be that, in a case
where the surrounding
circumstances do not point strongly either way, an accused person’s
oral evidence may help a court
decide whether they are truly
remorseful. But where the surrounding circumstances are conclusive,
as I believe they are here, it
cannot be right that a finding of
remorse is precluded by Mr. Makhenke’s failure to testify in
mitigation of sentence.
The
needs of society
15
Mr. Makhenke’s obvious remorse
notwithstanding, these were vile crimes. Two people were fatally
burned. They took several
days to die. While they were conscious,
they must have been in agony. All of this was completely foreseeable
and avoidable. Not
only did Mr. Makhenke foresee these consequences,
in the case of Mr. Mafuya, he reconciled himself to them. Society
demands a clear
retributive response.
Substantial
and compelling circumstances
16
Whatever its wisdom, minimum
sentencing legislation must be given effect to. It may not be
departed from for flimsy or trifling
reasons. Although they need not
be exceptional, “substantial and compelling circumstances”
must be clear-cut and weighty
enough to move the sentencer away from
the prescribed minimum (
S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) paragraph 9). They must in some sense be
incommensurable with the factors normally presented in mitigation of
sentence, such
as the ordinary background facts and circumstances of
Mr. Makhenke’s family life and previous good character (see
S
v Vilakazi
2012 (6) SA 353
(SCA)
paragraph 58).
17
That said, I think there are two
substantial and compelling circumstances that justify a departure
from the minimum sentence on
the murder charge in this case. The
first is Mr. Makhenke’s clear remorse, which extended to
putting himself at risk of two
life sentences for crimes that, though
serious, plainly did not warrant penalties of that severity.
18
The second is the time Mr. Makhenke
has already spent in custody. Ordinarily, the time spent in custody
must be, and is, taken into
account when coming to a proportionate
sentence (see
S v Radebe
2013 (2) SACR 165
(SCA) paragraphs 13 and 14). But because trial
courts are not entitled to antedate the sentences they impose (see
Director of Public Prosecutions Gauteng
Division, Pretoria v Plekenpol
[2017]
ZASCA 151
, paragraph 21) I see no alternative, in the context of
minimum sentencing legislation, but to count the time Mr. Makhenke
has already
been incarcerated as a substantial and compelling
circumstance justifying a departure from the prescribed minimum.
19
To hold otherwise would entail
accepting that person’s criminal penalty can be allowed to vary
according to the efficiency
of the criminal justice system itself.
Where it is avoidable, that consequence is unacceptable (in this
respect, my approach is
no different to that of Lewis JA in
DPP,
North Gauteng v Gcwala
2014 (2) SACR
337
(SCA), paragraphs 19, 20 and 28).
The
sentence
20
Absent Mr. Makhenke’s pretrial
incarceration and his patent remorse, I would have sentenced him to
15 years on the murder
count, 10 years on the culpable homicide
count, and 7 years on the arson count. I would have directed that the
sentence for arson
runs concurrently with the sentences on murder and
culpable homicide. I would also have directed that half of the
culpable homicide
sentence runs concurrently with the sentence for
murder. The effective sentence would have been 20 years’ direct
imprisonment.
21
However, I find that Mr. Makhenke’s
remorse, which led to a prompt guilty plea, warrants a four-year
reduction in his sentence
on the murder charge. I will also credit
him a year for the 361 days he has already served in pretrial
detention. I will direct
that half of the sentence for culpable
homicide should run concurrently with the sentence for murder, and
that the sentence for
arson should run concurrently with the
sentences for murder and for culpable homicide.
22
In the result, I sentence Mr.
Makhenke as follows –
22.1
For the murder of Mawande Mafuya, 10 years’
direct imprisonment.
22.2
For the culpable homicide of Siphiwe Chris
Buthelezi, 10 years’ direct imprisonment, 5 years of which will
run concurrently
with the sentence imposed for the murder of Mawande
Mafuya.
22.3
For arson, in setting fire to Mawande
Mafuya’s room, 7 years’ direct imprisonment, to run
concurrently with the sentences
for murder and culpable homicide I
have already imposed.
22.4
The effective sentence is accordingly one
of
FIFTEEN YEARS’ DIRECT
IMPRISONMENT
.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
28 March 2022
DECIDED
ON:
12 April 2022
For
the State:
Ms. Mack
Instructed
by
National Prosecuting Authority
For
the Accused: A Mavata
Instructed by Legal Aid
SA
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