Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 491South Africa
S v Shoba (SS36/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 491 (29 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 July 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Shoba (SS36/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 491 (29 July 2022)
S v Shoba (SS36/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 491 (29 July 2022)
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sino date 29 July 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
#### Case
No: SS36/2021
Case
No: SS36/2021
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE: 29 July 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
NTUTHUKO
NTOKOZO SHOBA
Accused
#####
##### SENTENCE
SENTENCE
WILSON
AJ
:
1
On 25 March 2022, I convicted Ntuthuko Shoba of the murder of
T [....] P [....]. It is now my duty to pass sentence.
Evidence
on sentence
2
By agreement between the parties, I received three Exhibits.
The first was a victim impact statement prepared by the Department
for Social Development. The second was a presentencing report
prepared by Ms. Jessie Thompson, a social worker in private practice,
who sought to provide insight into Mr. Shoba’s life, family and
circumstances. The third was the standard SAP69 certificate,
which
confirms that Mr. Shoba has no previous convictions.
3
The State cross-examined Ms. Thompson. It asserted that a
number of statements Ms. Thompson made about Mr. Shoba’s
post-conviction
use of a psychologist were unreliable, because they
could only have come from Mr. Shoba himself. Mr. Mohamed asked me to
attach
little or no weight to those statements for that reason.
4
I do not think that it is necessary for me
to assess the weight to be accorded to what Mr. Shoba says about his
sessions with his
psychologist.
Ms. Thompson’s report
placed no reliance on those utterances save to point out that the
trauma of being tried and convicted
of an offence of this nature is
itself a form of retribution. While this is true, that is not the
sort of retribution a court weighs
when it passes sentence.
5
Criminal trials, while obviously deeply affecting for all
involved, including an accused person, are the mechanism we have
chosen
to determine culpability and the legal consequences of that
culpability if any is found. Save where there has been pre-conviction
imprisonment, the vicissitudes of the criminal process will rarely be
relevant to the sentence to be imposed, unless of course
they are
particularly unusual or exceptionally distressing – whether to
the offender, to the victim or to society at large.
In this case
there are no such exceptional features, and the shock and trauma Mr.
Shoba apparently experienced on conviction do
not in themselves bear
on the sentence to be imposed.
6
This is especially so because, in my judgment convicting Mr.
Shoba, I found that Ms. P [....]’s murder was
premeditated.
Section 51
(1) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997
requires me, on reaching this conclusion, to sentence Mr. Shoba
to life imprisonment, unless there are substantial and compelling
circumstances that justify a lesser sentence. Mr. Makhubela did not
suggest, and I would have some difficulty in concluding, that
the
obvious stress involved in being convicted of the offence could
amount, in this case, to such a circumstance.
7
I will now turn to consider the other circumstances placed
before me in mitigation and aggravation of sentence, before assessing
whether they are, individually or in any combination, substantial and
compelling.
Mr.
Shoba’s life and circumstances
8
Mr. Shoba is 33 years old. He was born and brought up in a
loving and supportive environment. He was well-educated and otherwise
well-provided for. He took some time to decide on a career, but after
two years of a law degree and some basic computing courses,
he
eventually alighted on a career as a financial analyst on the
Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Here, by all accounts, he was in
his
element. He found the pressures of the job invigorating, and I have
no reason to believe that he was anything other than very
good at it.
9
In argument before me, Mr. Makhubela emphasised Mr. Shoba’s
productive career, strong family background and his previous good
character. He referred to what he submitted was the “Jekyll and
Hyde” feature of this case: that Mr. Shoba displayed,
in his
character and previous conduct, no indication that he could commit
the offence of which I have convicted him. I accept all
of this. The
apparent asymmetry between Mr. Shoba’s previous good character
and Ms. P [....]’s murder is one
of the very many
troubling features of this case.
10
The fact remains, however, that the evidence placed before me
points overwhelmingly to the conclusion that Mr. Shoba did arrange
and participate in Ms. P [....]’s murder. Previous good
character does not operate as a liability shield or a mitigating
factor where, as in this case, the facts so plainly inculpate Mr.
Shoba in a very serious offence.
11
It is to the nature of that offence that I now turn.
The
offence
12
T [....] P [....] was, by all accounts, a young woman of
style and vivacity. The victim impact statement placed before me
suggests that she was her family’s emotional centre of gravity.
The force of her personality, her optimism, her kindness,
her empathy
and her generosity leap out from the way in which her family describe
her. Her loss has been incalculable. The manner
of her death, the
intense media interest that has followed her murder and the sheer
yawning absence left in her stead have devasted
those who knew and
loved her.
13
It is not necessary for me to set out in any detail the
psychological consequences and emotional pain her family have
suffered.
Suffice it to say those consequences have been particularly
severe. Each of Ms. P [....]’s close relatives suffers
real and continuing anguish as a result of her death. While time may
ease the pain, it is clear to me that each of Ms. P [....]’s
close relatives will live under a real burden of loss for most, if
not all, of their remaining lives.
14
I have said that Ms. P [....] was vivacious. But it is
equally clear to me from the evidence led at trial that she was also
a vulnerable young woman looking for care and attention – a
meaningful connection that she thought a relationship with Mr.
Shoba
might be able to give her. Her vulnerability was not just emotional.
It was material. As her pregnancy progressed, she relied
in no small
measure on financial support from Mr. Shoba. That reliance only
deepened as her pregnancy with Mr. Shoba’s daughter
went on.
15
This vulnerability both animated Mr. Shoba’s decision to
kill Ms. P [....], and formed a critical part of his design
to
do so. It is clear from the evidence that Mr. Shoba wanted to be rid
of Ms. P [....] and the baby. They were an inconvenience
to him
and to his hopes of pursuing a relationship with someone else. But it
was also Ms. P [....]’s dependence on
Mr. Shoba for money
to buy baby clothes and to transport her to and from his home that
gave Mr. Shoba the opportunity to arrange
her abduction and murder.
That is probably the most aggravating feature of this case.
16
That Ms. P [....] was pregnant when she was killed is
also plainly very aggravating, as is the degree of planning and
persistence
Mr. Shoba demonstrated in bringing about Ms. P
[....]’s death. He contracted another to carry out the killing.
He made
two attempts to do so – first by trying to arrange her
abduction from the Ormonde MacDonalds outlet, and then by delivering
Ms. P [....] into her killer’s hands outside his home at
the Westlake Complex.
17
It is clear from all this that Mr. Shoba was the prime mover
in bringing about Ms P [....]’s death. Although
Muzikayise
Malepane inflicted the fatal wounds, the evidence is that
he would not have killed Ms. P [....] unless Mr. Shoba
contracted
him to do so and helped him to carry out that contract. It
has gone unchallenged throughout these proceedings that Mr. Malepane
had no other connection with Ms. P [....] other than through
Mr. Shoba, and no detectible motive to kill Ms. P [....]
other
than to carry out his contract with Mr. Shoba.
18
It is clear, therefore, that this offence is one of the worst
kind: a contract killing that exploited the dependency of a
vulnerable
young woman, and that resulted in the death of a baby very
soon to be born.
The
needs of society
19
It is these features of the case that have excited an unusual
degree of public interest. But even without that interest, the needs
of society would have pointed towards a very lengthy custodial
sentence. I accept that the exploitation of vulnerability inherent
in
this offence is closely connected to the general and unacceptable
level of violence against women and children in our society,
which
the criminal justice system must play its part in addressing. I have
taken this into account when considering the appropriate
sentence.
Substantial
and compelling circumstances
20
While accepting all these aggravating features of the case,
Mr. Makhubela urged me to find that a departure from the statutory
penalty
of life imprisonment was justified. He advanced the
contention that Mr. Shoba should not receive the statutory penalty
because
it was not imposed on his accomplice, Mr. Malepane. Mr.
Malepane was sentenced to 20 years in prison. I was asked to find
that
the need for parity of sentencing between Mr. Malepane and Mr.
Shoba is, in itself, substantial and compelling enough to depart
from
the prescribed life sentence.
21
Other things being equal, this would be a strong argument. It
is a basic principle of sentencing that “one should strive to
punish co-perpetrators equally unless there are circumstances
justifying differential treatment” (
S v Smith
2017 (1)
SACR 520
(WCC) para 109). But in this case other things are plainly
not equal. Mr. Malepane confessed to his part in Ms. P [....]’s
death. Despite initially and unwisely seeking to mislead the police
about the manner of Ms. P [....]’s death, in the
end he
provided information and evidence which assisted the police in
apprehending Mr. Shoba and in successfully prosecuting him.
In my
judgment convicting Mr. Shoba, I pointed out that, despite attacks on
Mr. Malepane’s credibility, the core of that
evidence was left
substantially unchallenged at Mr. Shoba’s trial.
22
These are plainly circumstances that Mokgoatlheng J must have
thought justified a more lenient sentence than Mr. Malepane could
otherwise have expected. There is no comparable factor that would
justify a departure from the prescribed statutory penalty in Mr.
Shoba’s case.
23
I accept that, as Mr. Makhubela submitted, I should not punish
Mr. Shoba merely for pleading not guilty and maintaining his
innocence.
But that does not mean that Mr. Shoba is entitled to the
leniency that was extended to Mr. Malepane. The default legal
position
in respect of both men is that they would both have faced
life imprisonment unless such a sentence would be disproportionate
(
see
S v Dodo
[2001] ZACC 16
;
2001
(1) SACR 594
(CC), para 40 and
S v
Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) para
25).
To say that Mr. Malepane’s co-operation with the
police rendered a life sentence in his case disproportionate is not
the same
as saying that Mr. Shoba is being punished for not
co-operating with the police.
24
I am also persuaded that Mr. Shoba’s role as the prime
mover in the planning and commission of the offence distinguishes his
situation from that of Mr. Malepane. But for Mr. Shoba, Ms. P
[....] would not have been killed. But if Mr. Malepane had
not
accepted the contract on Ms. P [....]’s life, the facts
of this case strongly suggest that Mr. Shoba would have
carried on
looking for a way to kill Ms. P [....] with or without Mr.
Malepane’s help.
25
Accordingly, the need for parity in sentencing does not apply
in this case. While Mr. Shoba and Mr. Malepane killed Ms. P
[....], their roles in perpetrating her murder and their conduct
after it was carried out were quite different. Mr. Shoba was the
driving force behind the scheme and has done nothing since Ms. P
[....]’s murder to merit the kind of leniency that
Mr. Malepane
received.
The
sentence
26
Mr. Makhubela did not identify any other factor that would
justify a departure from the statutory penalty. He drew my attention
to the year or so that Mr. Shoba has spent in pre-trial
incarceration, but accepted that this could not, on its own, justify
a
departure from that penalty (see
S v Ngcobo
2018 (1) SACR 479
(SCA), para 14 and, generally,
S
v Makgopa
[2022] SAGPJHC 470 (18 July
2022)).
27
For all these reasons, I am enjoined to
apply the ordinary sentence for an offence of this nature.
Mr.
Shoba will spend the rest of his natural life in prison, unless the
parole authorities consider him fit for release in the fullness
of
time.
28
Accordingly, on count 1 of the indictment, I sentence Mr.
Shoba to
LIFE IMPRISONMENT
.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
28 July 2022
DECIDED
ON:
29 July 2022
For
the State:
F Mohamed
Instructed by
National
Prosecuting Authority
For
the Accused:
N Makhubela
Instructed by Mophosho
Attorneys Incorporated
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