Director of Public Prosecutions, Kwazulu-Natal v Ngcobo and Others (165/08) [2009] ZASCA 72; [2009] 4 All SA 295 (SCA) (1 June 2009)

75 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Sentencing — Minimum sentences — Appeal against lenient sentences imposed for murder and robbery with aggravating circumstances — Trial court found substantial and compelling circumstances justifying lesser sentences — Supreme Court of Appeal held that trial court misdirected itself in finding absence of premeditation and in considering personal circumstances of offenders as substantial and compelling — Minimum sentences of life imprisonment for murder and 15 years for robbery imposed. The three respondents, young men aged between 20 and 22, were convicted of the premeditated murder of Mr. Andrew Ferguson and robbery with aggravating circumstances. The trial court sentenced them to 18 years’ imprisonment for murder and 12 years for robbery, running concurrently, citing their youth and first offender status as mitigating factors. The Director of Public Prosecutions appealed the sentences as too lenient. The legal issue was whether the trial court correctly applied the principles regarding minimum sentences and substantial and compelling circumstances. The Supreme Court of Appeal concluded that the trial court erred in its assessment and imposed the minimum sentences of life imprisonment for murder and 15 years for robbery, emphasizing the need for deterrence and the seriousness of the crimes.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a sentence appeal brought by the Director of Public Prosecutions, KwaZulu-Natal (the appellant) against sentences imposed in the Pietermaritzburg High Court on Welcome Siyabonga Ngcobo, Hamilton Mondli Zaca, and Lindelani Landslord Maphanga (the respondents). The appeal was heard and decided by the Supreme Court of Appeal.


The respondents had been tried in the High Court, Pietermaritzburg (Gcabashe AJ sitting as court of first instance), and were convicted on 28 July 2005 of murder and robbery with aggravating circumstances. On 29 July 2005 they were sentenced to 18 years’ imprisonment for murder and 12 years’ imprisonment for robbery with aggravating circumstances, with the sentences ordered to run concurrently. The appellant contended that these sentences were unduly lenient, given the applicability of the statutory minimum sentencing regime.


A procedural irregularity arose when leave to appeal was erroneously granted to a Full Bench of the High Court. Because s 316B of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 provides that an appeal by the Director of Public Prosecutions against a sentence imposed by a High Court lies directly to the Supreme Court of Appeal, the error was detected and corrected, and the matter came properly before the Supreme Court of Appeal.


The dispute concerned the application of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 minimum sentences, and in particular whether the trial court had correctly found “substantial and compelling circumstances” justifying a departure from the prescribed sentences of life imprisonment for the murder (in the relevant circumstances) and 15 years’ imprisonment for robbery with aggravating circumstances.


2. Material Facts


During the morning of 26 November 2002, the three respondents, each armed with a knife, entered the home of Mr Andrew Scott Ferguson in Hayfields, Pietermaritzburg. Mr Ferguson was stabbed at least 24 times in the chest and abdomen, and died from the injuries. The physical aftermath recorded by the court (including blood spatter and extensive injuries) indicated a fierce struggle, and the post-mortem revealed severe trauma including fractures and internal perforations.


After the killing, the respondents removed property including cell phones, a video machine, and compact discs containing financial information. They left the scene in the deceased’s Toyota, which they abandoned shortly afterwards. The court recorded that the respondents then moved through a residential area in bloodstained clothing, spoke to acquaintances about what they had done, and used the stolen cell phones to make calls.


One respondent (Ngcobo) had been employed by the deceased as a gardener once a week and had worked for him for about a year. The Supreme Court of Appeal treated this as significant to how entry was gained and how the events unfolded.


The respondents were arrested, prosecuted, and ultimately convicted of murder and robbery with aggravating circumstances. At sentence, the trial court treated factors such as their youth, first-offender status, absence of proof of premeditation, and prospects of rehabilitation as amounting to substantial and compelling circumstances warranting sentences below the statutory minimum.


To the extent the trial court treated the murder and robbery as not shown to have been premeditated, the Supreme Court of Appeal characterised that as a misdirection, holding that premeditation was clear on the record. The Supreme Court of Appeal further treated as materially significant the respondents’ conduct after the offence, their continued maintenance of innocence, and the absence of demonstrated remorse.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the trial court:


Applied the minimum sentencing regime under the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 correctly, given that the applicable prescribed sentences were life imprisonment for the murder (committed in the course of robbery with aggravating circumstances and by a group acting with common purpose, and found by the appellate court also to be premeditated) and 15 years’ imprisonment for the robbery with aggravating circumstances.


Correctly found substantial and compelling circumstances justifying a departure from the prescribed sentences.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal standards to established facts, together with an evaluative judgment as to whether the identified factors legitimately reached the threshold of “substantial and compelling circumstances” as explained in the governing appellate authority.


A further issue, relevant to appellate competence, was whether there had been misdirection in the sentencing court’s approach such that the Supreme Court of Appeal was at large to reconsider sentence afresh.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Supreme Court of Appeal applied the minimum sentence jurisprudence articulated in S v Malgas 2001 (1) SACR 469 (SCA). It emphasised that courts must approach sentence on the basis that the Legislature has ordained prescribed sentences as those that should ordinarily be imposed for specified serious crimes, and that departures are not to occur “lightly and for flimsy reasons”. It reiterated that considerations such as speculative hypotheses favourable to the offender, maudlin sympathy, or generalised aversion to imprisonment for first offenders are not what the statute contemplates as substantial and compelling circumstances.


The court further relied on Rammoko v Director of Public Prosecutions 2003 (1) SACR 200 (SCA), which re-emphasised that a prescribed sentence may be departed from if imposing it would result in an injustice, and that the required injustice need not be framed as a “shocking injustice”. The essential inquiry remained whether the sentence is just in all the circumstances, but within the structured approach required by the minimum sentencing legislation.


On the facts, the court held that the trial court misdirected itself in several respects. First, it found it “clear” that the murder and robbery were premeditated. It reasoned that Ngcobo’s employment relationship with the deceased would have facilitated access to the house, and that the co-perpetrators’ presence with knives was inconsistent with a spontaneous decision. The court also accepted that, from the perpetrators’ perspective, because Ngcobo was known to the deceased, there was an obvious risk of identification, making the killing a foreseeable and necessary step to complete the robbery. The respondents’ counsel did not contend otherwise before the Supreme Court of Appeal.


Second, the court rejected the trial court’s reliance on the general proposition that young people struggle to resist the temptations of a materialistic world. It treated this as an impermissible kind of consideration in the minimum-sentence enquiry, and as inconsistent with constitutional values and with the deterrent purpose the trial court itself had acknowledged.


Third, the court considered the respondents’ youth (they were 20, 20, and nearly 22 at the time) but held that there was no indication of immaturity, undue peer pressure, or other youth-related diminished culpability. Instead, it inferred from the manner of entry, the brutality of the killing, the brazen conduct afterwards, and their continued maintenance of innocence, a calculated and callous disposition inconsistent with youthfulness operating as mitigation in the way the trial court had accepted it.


Fourth, the court discounted the trial court’s treatment of Ngcobo’s co-operation at arrest. Although he had consented to a search, he maintained his innocence throughout, and the court found that the apprehension and proof of guilt resulted from police investigation rather than meaningful co-operation that would justify leniency.


Fifth, on rehabilitation, the court noted that none of the respondents testified in mitigation and none expressed remorse. While acknowledging rehabilitation as a traditional sentencing objective and referring to the White Paper on Corrections in South Africa (2005) and the statutory requirement for sentenced prisoners to participate in programmes under the Correctional Services Act, it cautioned against assuming the availability and efficacy of rehabilitation programmes in an overcrowded prison system. It treated rehabilitation as only one of several sentencing objectives, alongside deterrence and retribution, and reiterated that shorter sentences do not necessarily better serve rehabilitation.


Given these misdirections, the Supreme Court of Appeal held it was at large to consider sentence afresh. It took account of the argument that the respondents had spent about two and a half years in custody awaiting trial, but observed that the trial proceeded over time and that the State had to lead extensive evidence (including forensic DNA evidence) in circumstances where the respondents maintained their innocence, contributing to the length and complexity of proceedings.


In assessing proportionality, the court stressed the brutal and savage character of the murder, the breach of the sanctity of the home and betrayal of trust, and the particularly painful and undignified nature of the death. It also emphasised the public interest in the courts sending a clear message that such serious violence would be met with the full force of the law, consistent with legislative concern reflected in the minimum sentence regime.


The court concluded that there were no substantial and compelling circumstances justifying a departure from the statutory norm. It went further to state that, on these facts, injustice would result only if the court departed from the minimum sentences, and that even taking account of the pre-trial incarceration period, the prescribed sentences were, on the totality of circumstances, the only just outcome.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal was upheld. The sentences imposed by the High Court were set aside and replaced with the prescribed minimum sentences.


Each respondent was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder, and 15 years’ imprisonment for robbery with aggravating circumstances.


The judgment as provided did not record a separate order as to costs.


Cases Cited


S v Malgas 2001 (1) SACR 469 (SCA).


Rammoko v Director of Public Prosecutions 2003 (1) SACR 200 (SCA).


S v Nkomo 2007 (2) SACR 198 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 316B.


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, section 51(1) read with Part I of Schedule 2; section 51(2) read with Part II of Schedule 2.


Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998, section 37.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Supreme Court of Appeal held that the trial court committed material misdirections in its approach to the minimum sentencing regime, including by incorrectly treating the offences as not premeditated and by relying on considerations that did not properly qualify as substantial and compelling circumstances.


It held that, on the established facts and within the framework of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 as interpreted in Malgas and Rammoko, there were no substantial and compelling circumstances justifying deviation from the prescribed sentences.


It accordingly substituted the sentences with life imprisonment for murder and 15 years’ imprisonment for robbery with aggravating circumstances in respect of each respondent.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The minimum sentencing regime under the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 requires sentencing courts to proceed from the premise that the prescribed sentence is the sentence that should ordinarily be imposed for listed offences committed in specified circumstances, and that deviation is permitted only where substantial and compelling circumstances are present.


“Substantial and compelling circumstances” are not established by speculative or emotive considerations, including generalised sympathy, speculative hypotheses favourable to an offender, or broad policy disagreements with the Legislature’s sentencing choices. The enquiry remains rooted in whether, in the particular case, imposing the prescribed sentence would result in an injustice, with the understanding that the threshold is not necessarily framed as a “shocking injustice”.


Youthfulness and rehabilitation may be relevant sentencing considerations, but they do not automatically amount to substantial and compelling circumstances. Their mitigating weight depends on the demonstrated facts, including indications of immaturity, pressure, remorse, and genuine prospects of reform, viewed against the seriousness of the offence and the objectives of sentencing.


Where a sentencing court misdirects itself materially in applying the minimum sentencing framework or in assessing whether substantial and compelling circumstances exist, the appellate court may be at large to reconsider sentence afresh and to impose the statutorily prescribed sentence where the legal threshold for departure has not been met.

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[2009] ZASCA 72
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Director of Public Prosecutions, Kwazulu-Natal v Ngcobo and Others (165/08) [2009] ZASCA 72; [2009] 4 All SA 295 (SCA) (1 June 2009)

Links to summary

THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Case no: 165/08
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Appellant
KWAZULU-NATAL
and
WELCOME
SIYABONGA NGCOBO
First
Respondent
HAMILTON
MONDLI ZACA
Second
Respondent
LINDELANI
LANDSLORD MAPHANGA
Third
Respondent
______________________________________________________________
Neutral citation:
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Kwazulu-Natal v Ngcobo and two others
(165/08)
[2009] ZASCA 72
(1 June 2009)
CORAM:
NAVSA,
VAN HEERDEN and MHLANTLA JJA
HEARD:
26
May 2009
DELIVERED:
1
June 2009
CORRECTED:
SUMMARY: Minimum sentence regime ─
principles to be applied ─ absence of substantial and compelling
circumstances ─ imposition
of minimum sentences justified.
______________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________
ORDER
______________________________________________________________
On appeal from:
High
Court, Pietermaritzburg (Gcabashe AJ sitting as court of first
instance).
In the result the appeal is upheld.
The sentences imposed by the court below are set aside and
substituted as follows:
‘
1. In respect of the murder charge,
each of the three accused is sentenced to life imprisonment.
2. In respect of the charge of robbery
with aggravating circumstances, each of the three accused is
sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment.’
______________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
______________________________________________________________
NAVSA JA (VAN HEERDEN and MHLANTLA JJA
concurring):
[1] During the morning of Tuesday 26
November 2002, three young men, each in possession of a knife,
entered the home of Mr Andrew
Scott Ferguson at 42 Rushmore Road,
Hayfields, Pietermaritzburg. They stabbed Mr Ferguson at least
24 times in his chest and
abdomen, causing his death. One of the
young men was employed by Mr Ferguson (the deceased) as a gardener
once a week.
[2] The walls of the deceased’s home
were blood-spattered. He sustained bruises and scratches on his left
shin, extensive bruising
and abrasions on his face and hands and had
a knife wound on his third knuckle. The deceased also suffered a
fractured sternum,
multiple fractures of his right ribs anteriorly
and multiple perforations of his lung, heart and liver. The
post-mortem examination
revealed that the ribs on the deceased’s
right side were all fractured, resulting in what was described as a
‘flail chest’.
According to the doctor who performed the
post-mortem examination, the flail chest could have been caused by
someone jumping on
it with considerable force. Because of the flail
chest the deceased would have been unable to breathe on the right
side. Photographs
of the body of the deceased show his face and
clothes covered in blood. The clothes of the three young men were
stained with the
deceased’s blood. All of this indicates a fierce
struggle for life by the deceased who was a 55-year old man who had
taken early
retirement from Telkom, a telecommunications company. His
body was found later that day by his friend and neighbour, Mr John

Wilson. The body was lying on its back in a passage in the house with
something stuck in the mouth.
[3] After murdering the deceased, the
three men took his cell phone as well as one left there the previous
night by Mr Wilson. A
video machine and compact discs containing
financial information relating to a social club of which the deceased
was the treasurer
were also taken. The three men drove away in the
deceased’s Toyota motor vehicle which they left in the bush a short
while after
they murdered the deceased.
[4] The three murderers unashamedly
walked through a residential area in a rural setting with their
bloodstained clothes telling
two acquaintances about their misdeeds.
They used the cell phones they had taken to make telephone calls and
allowed others to
do so as well.
[5] The three men were eventually
arrested and were indicted in the Pietermaritzburg High Court,
charged with murder and robbery
with aggravating circumstances. On 28
July 2005 they were each convicted on these charges (Gcabashe AJ). On
29 July 2005 they were
each sentenced to 18 years’ imprisonment on
the murder charge and 12 years’ imprisonment on the charge of
robbery with aggravating
circumstances. The court below ordered the
sentences to run concurrently.
[6] Aggrieved by sentences regarded as
too lenient, the appellant, the Director of Public Prosecutions,
Kwazulu-Natal, applied for
leave to appeal against them. Leave was
erroneously granted to the Full Bench of the High Court. In terms of
s 316B
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, an appeal by the
Director of Public Prosecutions against a sentence imposed by a high
court lies directly to this court. When
the matter came before the
Full Bench of the High Court, the error was detected and corrected.
The appeal by the appellant against
sentence is now properly before
this court.
[7] The three men who perpetrated the
offences referred to above are Messrs Welcome Ngcobo, Hamilton Zaca
and Lindelani Maphanga,
the three respondents in this matter.
[8] In passing sentence, Gcabashe AJ
had regard to the material provisions of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act 105 of 1997 (the CLA),
in terms of which the legislature saw fit
to prescribe minimum sentences for serious offences, unless a court
is satisfied that
there are substantial and compelling circumstances
justifying the imposition of a lesser sentence. The minimum sentence
for a murder
that was (a) planned or premeditated, or (b) was
caused by the accused in committing or attempting to commit or after
having
committed a robbery with aggravating circumstances, or (c)
where the murder was committed by a group of persons acting in the
execution
or furtherance of a common purpose, is a life sentence.
1
The minimum sentence prescribed for a robbery with aggravating
circumstances is 15 years.
2
[9] In considering the appropriate
sentences to be imposed, the court below stated that it had
considered this court’s judgment
in
State
v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA), which sets out how a court is to approach the minimum sentence
regime, and in particular, how the enquiry into ‘substantial
and
compelling circumstances’ is to be conducted.
[10] The learned judge in the trial
court took into account, in favour of the respondents, their
youthfulness at the time that the
offences were committed, that they
were first offenders and that ‘there had not been any proof of
premeditated plans to kill
the deceased or rob him’. Furthermore,
the court considered, once again in favour of the respondents, ‘the
difficulties of
remaining a motivated and focused young person in
today’s very materialistic world, and the possibilities for
rehabilitation
if the accused make something of themselves whilst in
prison’. In respect of the first respondent, Mr Ngcobo, the court
considered
in his favour that, during his arrest, he cooperated fully
with the police.
[11] The court below considered all
the factors referred to in the preceding paragraph as constituting
substantial and compelling
circumstances, justifying a departure from
the prescribed minimum. In counter-balance the court expressed the
following:
‘
I have also considered
the viciousness of the crime and the fact that others who are of
like-mind should be deterred, and very firmly
so.’
It went on to impose the sentences
referred to in para 5 above.
[12]
Malgas
is not only a good starting point but the principles stated therein
are enduring and uncomplicated. In
Malgas
,
this court, whilst recording judicial hostility to legislative
intrusions upon sentencing, rightly nevertheless stated that a
court
was now required to approach sentencing conscious of the fact that
the legislature has ordained life imprisonment or a particular

prescribed period of imprisonment as the sentence which should
‘ordinarily’ be imposed for the commission of the listed crime
in
the specified circumstances.
3
This court noted the statutory requirement that, in the event of a
finding of substantial and compelling circumstances, such
circumstances
should be entered on the record of proceedings. The
following passage is of importance:
‘
The specified
sentences were not to be departed from lightly and for flimsy reasons
which could not withstand scrutiny. Speculative
hypotheses favourable
to the offender, maudlin sympathy, aversion to imprisoning first
offenders, personal doubts as the efficacy
of the policy implicit in
the amending legislation, and like considerations were equally
obviously not intended to qualify as substantial
and compelling
circumstances.’
4
[13] The following passage is equally
deserving of consideration:
‘
But for the rest I can
see no warrant for deducing that the legislature intended a court to
exclude from consideration,
ante
omnia
as it were, any or all of the many factors traditionally and rightly
taken into account by courts when sentencing offenders.’
5
[14] In
Rammoko
v Director of Public Prosecutions
2003
(1) SACR 200
(SCA), a later judgment of this court, it was thought
fit to re-emphasise what was stated in
Malgas
,
namely, that a departure from the prescribed minimum sentence is
justified if, in imposing it, an injustice would result. The

imposition of a prescribed sentence need not amount to ‘a shocking
injustice’.
6
If imposing the minimum sentence would be an injustice it
should
be departed from.
[15] It is necessary, at this stage,
to record the ages of the three respondents as they were at the time
of the commission of the
offences in 2002, and to note their
respective personal circumstances. The first respondent, Mr Ngcobo,
was 20 years old at
the time. When he was arrested he lived with his
mother at Inadi, a rural area in Kwazulu-Natal. He is unmarried but
has one child
who was three years old at the time of the trial. He
had passed Grade 11 at school and did part-time jobs (including
working as
a gardener for the deceased) up until the time of his
arrest. The second respondent, Mr Zaca, was also 20 years old. When
he was
arrested he was unemployed and living with his parents. He has
no children. The third respondent, Mr Maphanga, was almost 22 years

old at the time of the commission of the offence. He has no children.
When he was arrested he was pursuing his high school studies.
All of
the respondents were first offenders.
[16] The court below misdirected
itself in a number of respects. First, it is clear that the murder
and the robbery
were
premeditated. The first respondent, Mr Ngcobo, had worked for the
deceased one day per week for approximately a year before the
latter
was murdered. He must have used his position of trust to gain entry
to the deceased’s house. The first respondent’s
co-perpetrators
did not just spontaneously appear on the fateful day and with him
decide on the spur of the moment to rob the deceased.
Furthermore, Mr
Ngcobo was known to the deceased and the former was therefore at
risk. Hence it would have been necessary, from
the perspective of the
three perpetrators, to murder him. The respondents’ legal
representative, from the Legal Aid Board, to
whom we are indebted for
rendering them representation at short notice, was rightly unable to
argue the contrary.
[17] Second, the court below appears
to have justified the departure from the prescribed minimum sentence
on the basis of the difficulty
that young people have in resisting
the temptations of a materialistic world. These are exactly the kind
of values that detract
from those set out in the Constitution and
which we as a nation should be discouraging. Put simply, the value of
life should not
be degraded by the lure of materialism. It is also at
odds with the stated deterrent effect the court below thought the
sentence
it imposed might have.
[18] Third, the court below took into
account the youthfulness of the offenders. None of the respondents
demonstrated immaturity,
nor was it evident that any one of them was
subjected to peer or undue pressure by one or both of the others. On
the contrary,
the manner in which entry was gained to the deceased’s
house, the brutal nature of the murder, the brazen manner in which
they
walked through a residential area, and the callousness displayed
after the murder, as well as the fact that they each maintained
their
innocence right up to the end showed a complete lack of remorse, and
are all indicative of a calculated bloody-mindedness,
belying their
relative youthfulness.
[19] Fourth, although it is true that
Mr Ngcobo gave his consent to a police search, he maintained his
innocence throughout and
the detection of the perpetrators was as a
result of police work and not his co-operation.
[20] The court below had regard to the
prospect of the rehabilitation of the respondents. None testified in
mitigation of sentence
and each was content to have their personal
circumstances stated by their legal representatives from the bar.
None expressed remorse.
[21] In a White Paper on Corrections
in South Africa (2005) at para 424 the following is stated:
‘
[R]ehabilitation is
best facilitated through a holistic sentence planning process that
engages the offenders at all levels ─ social,
moral, spiritual,
physical, work, educational/intellectual and mental. It is premised
on the approach that every human being is
capable of change and
transformation if offered the opportunity and resources.’
The White Paper also states that
rehabilitation is a result of a process taken by prison authorities
to model the offender’s life
during his time in prison so that,
when he is released, he has been reformed to such an extent that he
is not likely to commit
offences in the future.
Section 37
of the
Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998
requires sentenced prisoners to
participate in various programmes and activities. It is a notorious
fact that our prisons are overcrowded,
often subjecting our prison
population to undignified conditions of detention. It is optimistic
in the extreme to assume that there
are always effective
rehabilitation programmes in place.
7
[22] Traditional objectives of
sentencing include retribution, deterrence and rehabilitation. It
does not necessarily follow that
a shorter sentence will always have
a greater rehabilitative effect. Furthermore, the rehabilitation of
the offender is but one
of the considerations when sentence is being
imposed. Surely, the nature of the offence related to the personality
of the offender,
the justifiable expectations of the community and
the effect of a sentence on both the offender and society are all
part of the
equation? Pre and post
Malgas
the essential question is whether the sentence imposed is in all the
circumstances, just.
8
[23] Having regard to the
misdirections referred to above, this court is at large to consider
the question of sentence afresh.
[24] The legal representative for the
respondents submitted that the period of two and a half years that
they spent in custody awaiting
the finalisation of the trial should
count in their favour. The proceedings in the court below appear to
have been conducted in
fits and starts from November 2004 to July
2005. It should be borne in mind that the respondents maintained
their innocence throughout
the trial and sentencing proceedings. The
State was required to present forensic evidence related to DNA
testing and was put through
the tribulations of a lengthy trial with
many witnesses testifying.
[25] The murder was brutal and savage.
Not only was the sanctity of the deceased’s home breached and his
trust betrayed, but he
was also subjected to what appears to be a
most painful and undignified death. It is the brazen manner and the
brutality of the
acts by the respondents that remain in the memory.
The legal representative for the second respondent, without demur
from his colleagues
representing the other two respondents, conceded
during the sentencing proceedings that offences of the kind currently
under consideration
are committed mostly by youthful persons such as
the respondents.
[26] Courts are expected to dispense
justice. This kind of brutality is regrettably too regularly a part
of life in South Africa.
Courts are expected to send out clear
messages that such behaviour will be met with the full force and
effect of the law. The legislature
is concerned and so too should we
be.
[27] There were no substantial and
compelling circumstances justifying a departure from the statutory
norm. An injustice would ensue
only if there was a departure from the
prescribed minimum. Had there been no statutory prescription in
relation to sentences I
have no doubt that any court having regard to
the totality of circumstances would have regarded sentences equal to
those statutorily
prescribed as being just. In my view, even having
regard to the time spent in custody pending finalisation of the
trial, the prescribed
minimum sentences are, in the totality of the
circumstances described above, compellingly the only manner that
justice can be dispensed.
[28] In the result the appeal is
upheld. The sentences imposed by the court below are set aside and
substituted as follows:
‘
1. In respect of the murder charge,
each of the three accused is sentenced to life imprisonment.
2. In respect of the charge of robbery
with aggravating circumstances each of the three accused is sentenced
to 15 years’ imprisonment.’
_________________
M S NAVSA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
Appellant: Me A Janse van Vuuren
Instructed
by
The
Director of Public Prosecutions Pietermaritzburg
Department
of Justice Supreme Court of Appeal Bloemfontein
For
Respondent: Me M A Oosthuizen (Attorney)
Instructed
by
PMB
Justice Centre Pietermaritzburg
Bloemfontein
Justice Centre Bloemfontein
1
See
s 51(1)
of the CLA read with
Part I
of Schedule 2.
2
See
s 51(2)
of the CLA read with
Part II
of Schedule 2.
3
Paras 1 to 3 at 472
b
-473
b
and para 8 at 476
g
-
h
.
4
Para 9 at 477
d
-
e
.
5
Para 9 at 477
e
-
g
.
6
See
Malgas
para 23 at 481
d
-
e
and
Rammoko
para 4 at 202
h
-
j
.
7
See also in this regard an article entitled ‘The prospect of
rehabilitation as a “substantial and compelling” circumstance
to
avoid imposing life imprisonment in South Africa: A comment on
S
v Nkomo
2007 (2) SACR 198
(SCA) by Jamil Ddamulira Mujuzi 2008
South
African Criminal Justice
pp 1-21. The learned author states at pp 14
et
seq
that rehabilitation is
influenced largely by speculation that the offender, after
undergoing the various training programmes
and attending the
relevant courses in prison, will lead a crime free life. He states
further that in the years preceding his
article the Department of
Correctional Services has failed to meet its rehabilitation targets
and concludes that the prospect
of rehabilitation in South Africa
remains a speculative hypothesis.
8
Of course, post
Malgas
a court imposing a sentence must have regard to the prescribed
minimum sentences and consider whether, in the circumstances,
it is
just to impose the prescribed minimum sentence.