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[2022] ZAECBHC 18
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Buzani v S (CA&R 41/2021) [2022] ZAECBHC 18 (10 June 2022)
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
[EASTERN
CAPE DIVISION, BHISHO]
CASE
NO: CA&R 41/2021
HEARD
ON: 10 JUNE 2022
DELIVERED
ON: 10 JUNE 2022
In
the matter between:
MZOXOLO
DREAD BUZANI
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
APPEAL
JUDGMENT
NHLANGULELA
DJP
[1]
This matter concerns an appeal against the sentence of life
imprisonment imposed by
the regional magistrate of Zwelitsha upon a
conviction of gang-rape.
[2]
The type of rape that the appellant was convicted of is defined in
section 3
of the
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences And Related Matters)
Amendment Act 32 of 2007
, read with the Criminal Law Amendment Act
105 of 1977 (the Act). This offence is punishable by life
imprisonment in terms of s
51 (1) of the Act. In this case the
appellant contends that the magistrate misdirected himself in not
imposing a sentence
lesser than life imprisonment because the
personal circumstances of the appellant constitute substantial and
compelling circumstances
as envisaged in s 51 (3) of the Act.
[3]
The personal circumstances of the appellant are listed in the record
of the sentence
proceedings as follows:
(a)
The accused is 40 years of age;
(b)
He lives with his mother and brother, both who
are sickly;
(c)
He is single, but has a 13 years old minor child
from a woman who is responsible for the maintenance and support of
the child;
(d)
He is unemployed;
(e)
He spent a period of 11 months and 27 days in
police custody before his trial was concluded on 23 July 2013;
(f)
He has a previous conviction for rape dated 08
November 2001, for which he was sentenced to undergo 10 years
imprisonment;
(g)
He has a second previous conviction for a road
traffic offence for which he was caused to pay R300,00 admission of
guilty fine.
[4]
The magistrate took into account that the complaint, 22 years at the
time, was raped
by the appellant together with his friend (Anele) for
the whole night of 22 July 2012; with each taking turns until the
complainant
seized a chance to run away from the bedroom in which she
had been confined. Anele was not prosecuted because the police
have not been able to apprehend him despite numerous attempts to do
so. The magistrate considered the fact that the appellant
did
not show penitence for his immoral and horrific criminal acts.
Having weighed-up the serious nature of the crime committed
by
the appellant against a defenceless and innocent
22
years
old woman, the prevalence of such crimes in our society
and the numerous turns that the appellant took in raping the
complainant
throughout the night, the magistrate saw it fit to impose
the pre-ordained sentence of life imprisonment.
[5]
It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that this appeal trenches
on the statement
made in
S v Zinn
1969 (2) SA 537
(A) that in
search for an appropriate sentence the sentencing courts should find
a balance between the personal circumstances of
the accused, the
nature and extent of the offence and the interest of the community.
This submission is beyond debate, just as
it was stated in
S v
Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) at para [11] that in sentencing
under s 51 (1) of the Act the courts are enjoined to take the
traditional factors into account,
but subject to the following
caveat:
“
D.
The specified sentences [listed in Part 1 of Schedule 2 to Act 105 of
1997] are not to be departed from lightly and for flimsy
reasons.
Speculative hypotheses favourable to the offender, undue sympathy,
aversion to imprisoning first offenders, personal doubts
as to the
efficacy of the policy underlying the legislation, and marginal
differences in personal circumstances or degrees of participation
between co-offenders are to be excluded.”
[6]
The parties did recognise the fact that the offence of gang rape of
which the appellant
was convicted is one of the circumstances listed
in Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Act in which the sentence prescribed
for the crime
is imprisonment for life; unless, in terms of s 51 (3),
substantial and compelling circumstances exist that warrant
imposition
of a lesser sentence. The sentencing regime under the Act
will always require that the factors of the triad, not just the
personal
circumstances of the appellant, be qualified as substantial
and compelling factors of sufficient weight to trigger imposition of
a sentence that is lesser than life imprisonment. In this case
the egregious nature of the offence of rape committed by the
appellant coupled with the strong views held by the members of our
society that rapes must be punished with life imprisonment make
the
appellant’s aversion to his personal circumstances flimsy. See:
S v PB
2011 91) SACR 448
(SCA) at para [21].
[7]
The search for a response to the submission advanced on behalf of the
appellant that
the period of 11 months and 27 days spent by the
appellant in police custody before the conclusion of his case must
invoke recourse
to the principle stated
S v ET
2012 92) SACR
478
(WC) that pre-sentence incarceration is one of those factors that
pale into insignificance if one has regard to the fact that it
alone
is not a substantial and compelling circumstances that require
deviation from imposition of a sentence of life imprisonment
in terms
of s 51 (1) of the Act.
[8]
The argument advanced on behalf of the appellant that the absence of
a victim impact
assessment report ought to have been regarded as a
mitigating factor is unhelpful in the sense that it is unthinkable
that the
complainant who was raped by two men for the whole night
would escape the psychological scars from such violent and demeaning
attack.
In any event, the provisions of s 51 (3)(a)(A) of the
Act renders counsel’s submission moot because an apparent lack
of physical injury to the complainant is no longer a substantial and
compelling circumstance for the purposes of sentencing under
s 51 (a)
of the Act. Put differently, based on
S v Nkawu
2009 (2) SACR
402
(ECG) the absence of proof of psychological or physical injury to
the complainant weighed up together with the triad of factors
does
not make the aggravating circumstances of the appellant any better.
[9]
To succeed in this appeal matter, the appellant had to demonstrate
that the magistrate
committed a misdirection or that the sentence of
life imprisonment imposed is unreasonable failing which this Court
cannot interfere
with sentence. The appellant failed on both tests.
Therefore, the appeal against sentence must fail. The appeal also
fails on the
determinative test that is referred to in
S v
Vilakazi
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA) at para [14] in the following
terms:
“
[14]
It is only by
approaching sentencing under the Act in the manner that was laid down
by this court in
S
v Malgas
which
was said by the Constitutional Court in
S
v Dodo
[2001]
(1) SACR 574
(CC) at 614 -615] to be ‘undoubtedly correct’
that incongruous and disproportionate sentences are capable of being
avoided. Indeed, that was the basis upon which the Constitutional
Court in
Dodo
found
the Act to be not unconstitutional. For by avoiding sentences that
are disproportionate a court necessarily safeguards
against the risk
– and in my view it is a real risk – that sentences will
be imposed in some case that are so disproportionate
as to be
unconstitutional. In that case the Constitutional Court said that the
approach laid down in
Malgas
,
and in particular its ‘determinative test’ for deciding
whether a prescribed sentence may be departed from, ‘makes
plain that the power of a court to impose a lesser sentence …
can be exercised well before the disproportionality between
the
mandated sentence and the nature of the offence becomes so great that
it can be typified as gross’ [and thus constitutionally
offensive]. That ‘determinative test’ for when the
prescribed sentence may be departed from was expressed as follows
in
Malgas
[at 482e] and it
deserves to be emphasised:
‘
If
the sentencing court on consideration of the circumstances of
the
particular case is satisfied that they render the prescribed sentence
unjust in that it would be disproportionate to the crime,
the
criminal and the needs of society, so that an injustice would be done
by imposing that sentence, it is entitled to impose a
lesser
sentence.’”
[10]
In the result the following order shall issue:
The appeal against the
sentence of life imprisonment is dismissed.
Z.
M. NHLANGULELA
DEPUTY
JUDGE PRESIDENT OF THE HIGH COURT,
MTHATHA
I
agree:
A.
BEYLEVELD
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel
for the appellant :
Adv.
A. Giqwa
c/o Legal Aid South
Africa
KING WILLIAMSTOWN.
Counsel
for the respondent :
Adv. C. Giyose
c/o Director of Public
Prosecutions
BHISHO.