About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Free State High Court, Bloemfontein
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Free State High Court, Bloemfontein
>>
2019
>>
[2019] ZAFSHC 132
|
|
Mlenga v S (A08/2019) [2019] ZAFSHC 132 (1 August 2019)
ORIGINAL
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Appeal
Number: A08/2019
In
the matter between:
BONGANI
EPHEUS
MLENGA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
CORAM:
MATHEBULA,
Jet
MOROBANE, AJ
JUDGMENT:
MOROBANE, AJ
H
EA
RD
ON:
15 APRIL
2019
DELIVERED
ON:
1
AUGUST 2019
[1]
The appellant was
convicted on a charge of murder in the Regional Court, Welkom. He was
sentenced to 13 years imprisonment. His
application for leave to
appeal was granted by this Court on petition after it was refused by
the trial court. The appeal is against
the sentence only.
[2]
The appellant pleaded not guilty to the
charge of murder and offered no plea explanation. However, he
admitted to have kicked the
deceased and stabbed him with a sharp
object. These admissions were recorded and admitted in terms of
section 220 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the CPA).
[3]
On 25 January 2015, the appellant and
his two co-accused were relaxing outside their rented house in
Thabong, Welkom. They also
consumed alcohol. They were joined by the
deceased who was holding a bottle of beer in his hand. Although the
deceased was not
their friend, he occasionally socialised with them.
He stayed with them for approximately 15 minutes before he left.
Shortly afterwards
the appellant realised that their cellphones and
his wallet were missing from the house. They walked to the deceased's
parental
home to enquire from him. They found him asleep and
intoxicated. After his mother woke him up, he was assaulted by the
appellant
and his co-accused. At first he denied stealing their
property, but he only confessed after he was stabbed with a sharp
object.
The stolen goods were restored to the appellant and his
co-accused, although the sum of money stolen was less. The deceased
died
due to a stab wound and the appellant and his co-accused were
arrested for murder.
[4]
In
S
v
Malgas
[1]
the
court remarked that a court of appeal cannot approach the question of
sentence as if it were the trial court, unless the latter
has
materially misdirected itself. However, where the misdirection by the
trial court vitiates its exercise of the sentencing discretion,
the
appeal court is entitled to consider the question of sentence afresh.
[5]
It is trite law that an appeal court
will not lightly interfere with the findings of the trial court,
unless the latter has misdirected
itself or has committed an
irregularity. We found that the trial court did not misdirect itself
and thus interference with its
discretion is not justified. The
appellant was convicted of murder in terms of Part 11 of Schedule 2
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
, with the prescribed
minimum sentence of 15 years for a first offender. The trial court
correctly found that substantial and compelling
circumstances existed
which justified a deviation from the prescribed minimum sentence.
Also, the sentence is neither harsh nor
shockingly inappropriate. The
trial court exercised its discretion judicially and reasonably.
[6]
Every person enjoys the right to life
and no one has the right to kill anyone. When the appellant and his
co-accused realised that
their property was stolen, they did not
report the incident to the police. Instead, they led a crusade which
resulted in the death
of the deceased. They took the law into their
own hands and committed a violent crime. If the family of the
deceased were to resort
to retribution, anarchy would prevail. Our
society would become a lawless nation. To prevent lawlessness and
deter future criminals,
only the convicted criminals are punished by
the courts.
[7]
The aggravating circumstances are such
that the appellant and his co-accused forcefully entered the
deceased's parental home; they
demanded to see the deceased who was
asleep in his drunken stupor; and they assaulted him in front of his
mother and sister who
pleaded with them to stop, but to no avail.
Upon conviction of the appellant, the trial court had no discretion
but to apply the
prescribed minimum sentence of 15 years imprisonment
for the first offender.
[8]
That being the case, the trial court
considered the following personal factors as mitigating
circumstances:
(a)
the appellant is a first offender at the
age of 32 years;
(b)
he had a clean criminal record;
(c)
he was still a student at the local
tertiary institution; and
(d)
he formally admitted to committing the
offence.
[9]
Having considered the mitigating
circumstances cumulatively, the trial court found that the
substantial and compelling circumstances
existed. Consequently, the
existence of the substantial and compelling circumstances justified a
deviation from the prescribed
minimum sentence. The trial court then
exercised its discretion and a lesser sentence was imposed.
[10]
It was stated in
S
v Siebert
[2]
that
sentencing requires a willingness on the part of the trial court to
actively explore all the available options and to choose
the sentence
best suited to the crime, the criminal, the public interest, and also
the aims of punishment. The court has the authority
to determine the
extent and nature of the sentence it may impose.
[11]
In
S
v
Bogaards
[3]
the
court said: the court of appeal will only interfere with sentence
where there has been an irregularity that results in a failure
of
justice; that the court below misdirected itself to such an extent
that its decision on sentence is vitiated; or the sentence
is
disproportionate or shocking. In casu, the appellant demonstrated to
the trial court that substantial and compelling circumstances
existed. As a result, the court imposed a lesser sentence of 13 years
imprisonment.
[12]
The sentence imposed is not harsh nor is
it inappropriate. I am satisfied that the trial court exercised its
discretion judicially
in a proper and in a reasonable manner. No
misdirection could be found on the part of the trial court. In the
light thereof, there
is no need to consider the question of sentence
afresh.
[13]
I propose the following order:
1.
The appeal against the sentence is
dismissed.
_______________
V.M.
MOROBANE, AJ
I
concur and it is so ordered.
_______________
M.A.
NATHEBULA, J
On
behalf of the appellant: Adv TB van Rensburg
Instructed
by:
Jacques
Groenewald Attorneys
KROONSTAD
On
behalf of the respondent: Adv MMM Moroka
Instructed
by:
The
Director of Public Prosecutions
BLOEMFONTEIN
[1]
S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) a t para 12
[2]
S v Siebert
1998 (1) SACR 554
(AD) at 559B-D
[3]
S v Bogaards
2013 (1) SACR 1
(CC) at 14C-E