S v Booi and Others (CC6/2016) [2016] ZAECPEHC 62 (22 September 2016)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Sentencing — Life imprisonment for murder — Accused convicted of robbery and subsequent murder of witness — Statutory minimum sentence applicable unless substantial and compelling circumstances exist — Personal circumstances of accused deemed insufficient to mitigate against prescribed life sentence due to premeditated nature of the crime and aggravating factors.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The judgment concerns sentence proceedings in the High Court of South Africa, Eastern Cape Local Division, Port Elizabeth, following the accused persons’ convictions on multiple counts.


The parties are the State as prosecutor and Ndumiso Booi (Accused 2), Mzolimo Makisi (Accused 3), and Mawethu Khaka (Accused 4) as the convicted persons before the court for sentencing.


Procedurally, the court had previously delivered a main judgment on the merits, in which it made factual findings regarding the conduct of the accused and returned verdicts of guilt on the relevant counts. The present judgment is confined to the sentencing phase and addresses the applicability of statutorily prescribed sentences.


The general subject matter is the imposition of sentence for offences falling under the minimum sentence regime in section 51 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, including conduct described by the court as an assassination arising from the murder of a witness who had identified her robber.


2. Material Facts


The court relied on the factual findings made in the main judgment. On those findings, Accused 2 was found to have robbed Dr Odufuwa and the deceased of their possessions.


A further material fact accepted by the court was that, when it became evident to Accused 2 that the deceased had pointed him out at an identification parade, Accused 2 initiated a plan to ensure that she would be killed.


The court found that Accused 2 procured the services of Accused 3 and Accused 4 to execute the deceased. The court characterised the murder as a premeditated, planned killing and described it as a “classic case of an assassination”, committed because the deceased had identified her robber.


In the sentencing judgment itself, the court did not draw a detailed distinction between disputed and undisputed facts, but proceeded on the basis of the findings it had already made, emphasising the premeditated nature, modus operandi, and motive for the killing (silencing a witness who had identified the perpetrator).


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the offences for which the accused had been convicted attracted statutorily prescribed sentences under section 51 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, and, if so, whether there existed substantial and compelling circumstances justifying a departure from those prescribed sentences.


This was primarily a question involving the application of law to fact and a sentencing value judgment within the framework created by statute. The court had to evaluate whether the accused’s personal circumstances, considered against the seriousness and aggravating features of the offences, were sufficient to displace the prescribed punishment, particularly life imprisonment for the murder as described by the court.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court applied the sentencing framework created by section 51 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, which imposes prescribed sentences for specified serious offences unless substantial and compelling circumstances are found to justify a lesser sentence.


On the court’s assessment, the case involved aggravating features of a kind the legislature had singled out for severe punishment. The court emphasised that the murder was not incidental or spontaneous; it was premeditated and implemented through a planned arrangement in which Accused 2 enlisted Accused 3 and Accused 4 to kill the deceased. The court treated this as an instance of an assassination, committed for the purpose of eliminating a witness who had identified the robber at an identification parade.


In evaluating mitigation, the court noted that the personal circumstances of the accused were placed before it and were taken into account. However, it concluded that those circumstances “pale into insignificance” when weighed against the aggravating circumstances, particularly the motive for the murder and its deliberate execution. The judgment records that counsel were effectively constrained to concede that the accused’s personal circumstances did not reach the level required to qualify as sufficiently mitigating to avoid the statutorily ordained sentence.


The court ultimately concluded that, given the factual matrix, the offence’s premedititativeness and modus operandi required imposition of the prescribed sentence, specifically life imprisonment in respect of the murder count, alongside determinate terms of imprisonment on additional counts.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court imposed the following sentences.


For Accused 2 (Ndumiso Booi), the court sentenced him to 15 years’ imprisonment on Count 1, 7 years’ imprisonment on Count 2, 1 year’s imprisonment on Count 3, and life imprisonment on Count 5.


For Accused 3 (Mzolimo Makisi), the court sentenced him to life imprisonment on Count 5, 7 years’ imprisonment on Count 6, and 1 year’s imprisonment on Count 7.


For Accused 4 (Mawethu Khaka), the court sentenced him to life imprisonment on Count 5, 7 years’ imprisonment on Count 6, and 1 year’s imprisonment on Count 7.


The judgment, being one on sentence in a criminal matter, did not make an order as to costs.


Cases Cited


No external case authorities were cited in the sentencing excerpt provided.


Legislation Cited


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, section 51.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the sentencing excerpt provided.


Held


The court held that the offences attracted the statutorily prescribed sentences under section 51 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 and that there were no substantial and compelling circumstances warranting departure from those prescribed sentences. It therefore imposed life imprisonment on the murder count (Count 5) for each of Accused 2, Accused 3, and Accused 4, together with determinate terms of imprisonment on the additional counts as set out in the order.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that, where an offence falls within the minimum sentencing regime created by section 51 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, the court is bound to impose the prescribed sentence unless substantial and compelling circumstances are established which justify a lesser sentence.


It further reflects the evaluative approach that personal circumstances of an offender, although relevant and considered, may be outweighed by aggravating features of the offence, particularly where the crime involves premeditation, a deliberate plan, and conduct directed at undermining the administration of justice, such as killing a person because they identified the perpetrator.


The judgment also illustrates the application of the minimum sentencing framework to a murder characterised by the court as an assassination, where the planned nature of the killing and the procurement of others to carry it out were treated as factors strongly supporting the imposition of life imprisonment as the appropriate legislatively contemplated punishment.

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[2016] ZAECPEHC 62
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S v Booi and Others (CC6/2016) [2016] ZAECPEHC 62 (22 September 2016)

REPORTABLE
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN CAPE LOCAL
DIVISION, PORT ELIZABETH)
Case No: CC 6/2016
In the matter between:
THE STATE
And
NDUMISO BOOI
Accused

No. 2
MZOLIMO
MAKISI                                                                Accused

No. 3
MAWETHU
KHAKA                                                                Accused

No. 4
Coram:
Chetty J
Heard:
22
September 2016
Delivered:
22 September 2016
SENTENCE
Chetty
J:
Introduction
[1]
The offences for which the accused have been convicted attract the
statutorily imposed sentences pursuant to the provisions
of s 51 of
the
Criminal
Law Amendment Act
[1]
absent a finding that there are substantial and compelling
circumstances which militate against its imposition. In the main
judgment
I found that accused no. 2 robbed Dr Odufuwa and the
deceased of their possessions. When it became evident to him that she
had
pointed him out at an identification parade, he set in motion a
diabolical plan to murder her and for that purpose procured the

services of accused no’s 3 and 4 to execute her, a classic case
of an assassination. This is an offence which the legislature
has
singled out as one for which imprisonment for life is an appropriate
punishment.
[2]
The personal circumstances of the accused which have been outlined
and which I have taken into account pale into insignificance
when
viewed against the prism of the aggravating circumstances. The
deceased was murdered because she had the temerity to identify
her
robber. Given the factual matrix, counsel were constrained to concede
that their personal circumstances do not pass muster
to be considered
as sufficiently mitigating to ward off the ordained sentence. The
nature of this offence, its premeditativeness
and its modus operandi
imperatively call for the prescribed sentence. In the result
therefore the accused are sentenced as follows:-
Accused No. 2
Count 1
-       15 years imprisonment;
Count 2
-       7 years imprisonment;
Count 3
-       1 years imprisonment;
Count 5
-       Life imprisonment
Accused No. 3
Count 5
-       Life imprisonment;
Count 6
-       7 years imprisonment;
Count 7
-       1 years imprisonment
Accused No. 4
Count 5
-       Life imprisonment;
Count 6
-       7 years imprisonment;
Count 7
-       1 years imprisonment
_________________
D.
CHETTY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Obo
the State: Adv M. Stander
NDPP,
Wool Trust Building, North End, Port Elizabeth
(012)
842 1455
Obo
Accused 2: Adv R. Crompton
Obo
Accused 3: Adv C. Van Rooyen
Instructed
by: Port Elizabeth Justice Centre, North End,
Port
Elizabeth
(041)
408 2800
Obo
Accused 4: Mr Z. Ngqeza
(Private
Instruction)
[1]
Act 105 of 1997