Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius (950/2016) [2017] ZASCA 158; 2018 (1) SACR 115 (SCA); [2018] 1 All SA 336 (SCA) (24 November 2017)

75 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal law — Murder — Appeal against sentence — Respondent convicted of murder on basis of dolus eventualis — Original sentence of six years' imprisonment deemed inappropriate — Sentence increased to 13 years and 5 months on appeal. Respondent, having shot and killed his girlfriend, was initially convicted of culpable homicide; the conviction was later substituted with murder following appeal. The court found that the sentence imposed by the court a quo did not meet the minimum requirements under the Criminal Law Amendment Act, necessitating an increase in the sentence.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an application for leave to appeal and an appeal against sentence in a criminal case, heard and decided by the Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa (SCA). The appeal was brought by the Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng (as appellant) against Oscar Leonard Carl Pistorius (as respondent).


The proceedings arose after the respondent’s conviction for murder on the basis of dolus eventualis (following an earlier SCA decision substituting a conviction of culpable homicide with murder). The present judgment dealt only with whether the sentence subsequently imposed by the trial court (the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria, per Masipa J) was legally and judicially appropriate, given the applicable minimum sentencing regime.


Procedurally, the respondent was initially tried on a murder charge and three firearm-related charges. He was convicted of culpable homicide and one firearm offence and sentenced accordingly in October 2014. The State pursued questions of law reserved under s 319 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, leading to an SCA decision in December 2015 that replaced the culpable homicide conviction with murder (dolus eventualis) and remitted the matter for fresh sentencing. On remittal, the trial court imposed a sentence of six years’ imprisonment for murder on 6 July 2016. The State then sought leave to appeal that sentence; leave was refused by the trial court, whereupon the State petitioned the SCA under s 316B. The SCA directed that leave and the merits be argued together and ultimately adjudicated both.


The general subject-matter was thus the appropriateness of sentence for murder under the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, specifically whether the trial court was justified in departing from the prescribed minimum sentence and, if not, what substituted sentence should follow taking into account time already served.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the respondent was born with a congenital abnormality affecting his legs and had undergone amputations before his first birthday, resulting in reliance on prosthetic legs. It was also common cause that, in the early hours of 14 February 2013, he shot and killed his girlfriend, Ms Reeva Steenkamp, at his home.


The sentencing court accepted, and the SCA reiterated as relevant background, that the respondent heard a sound in the bathroom area (a window opening) and believed that an intruder had entered the house. He retrieved a 9mm pistol from under his bed and moved towards the bathroom without his prosthetic legs. On reaching the bathroom area, he observed that the toilet door was closed and heard a noise from inside the toilet cubicle. He then fired four shots through the toilet door. He subsequently broke open the door and found the deceased slumped in the toilet cubicle. The evidence further indicated that after the shooting the respondent took steps aimed at attempting to save the deceased’s life.


The SCA recorded expert ballistic evidence that the firearm was designed for self-defence and that the ammunition would penetrate a wooden door and cause devastating injuries to a human target. The evidence also supported that the deceased was standing behind the door when first shot and then collapsed.


A further factual aspect treated as material to sentence was that in the earlier SCA decision on conviction, the respondent’s account contained serious contradictions, leading that court to state that one did not know his true explanation for firing the shots and that he had not offered an acceptable explanation for doing so. In the remitted sentencing proceedings, although evidence was led in aggravation and certain defence witnesses testified, the respondent did not testify, despite the context that the sentencing court would have to consider whether there were substantial and compelling circumstances to deviate from the statutory minimum.


By the time of re-sentencing for murder (6 July 2016), the respondent had already served 12 months’ imprisonment and seven months of correctional supervision pursuant to the earlier culpable homicide sentence. The SCA treated that served portion as a necessary consideration in crafting any substituted sentence.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the trial court’s sentence of six years’ imprisonment for murder committed with dolus eventualis was vitiated by misdirection, irregularity, or was so disproportionate that it warranted appellate interference; and, connected to that inquiry, whether there were substantial and compelling circumstances under the minimum sentencing legislation justifying departure from the prescribed minimum sentence of 15 years for a first offender convicted of murder that was not planned or premeditated.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal principles to established facts, coupled with the exercise of a sentencing discretion and the appellate standard for interfering with that discretion. It required evaluative judgments about (i) the weight properly attributable to personal circumstances and rehabilitation, (ii) whether the respondent’s conduct and stance demonstrated genuine remorse, and (iii) whether the statutory threshold for deviation from the minimum sentence had been met.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The SCA began by identifying the controlling framework for appellate interference in sentencing. It reaffirmed that sentencing lies primarily within the discretion of the trial court, and that an appellate court may interfere only where there has been an irregularity, a material misdirection vitiating the discretion, or where the sentence is disturbingly inappropriate or so disproportionate that no reasonable court would have imposed it.


The SCA then located the sentence within the minimum sentence regime in s 51(2)(a) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, which prescribes a minimum of 15 years’ imprisonment for a first offender convicted of murder that is not planned or premeditated, unless substantial and compelling circumstances exist as contemplated in s 51(3) to justify a lesser sentence. The court evaluated whether the trial court’s conclusion that such circumstances existed was supported by the record and by proper sentencing principles.


In assessing the trial court’s reliance on remorse as a mitigating factor, the SCA referred to the established approach that genuine remorse requires, among other things, a proper appreciation of what motivated the crime and a sincere acceptance of its consequences. The SCA considered the respondent’s failure to provide a clear and consistent explanation for firing the fatal shots, and the fact that he did not testify in the remitted sentencing proceedings, as undermining a finding that he had taken the court fully into his confidence. On that basis, the SCA found it difficult to accept that the respondent was genuinely remorseful, and regarded the attempt to apologise to the deceased’s family as insufficient, on the facts, to demonstrate genuine remorse.


The SCA further held that the trial court had over-emphasised the respondent’s personal circumstances in the context of a serious violent offence. It reiterated that in cases of serious crime, personal circumstances tend to recede into the background, and that sentencing must properly account for broader penal objectives, including deterrence and retribution, alongside rehabilitation. In this regard, the SCA found that the trial court accorded rehabilitation undue weight and treated other purposes of punishment as not playing a dominant role, which the SCA considered inconsistent with the approach applicable to serious offences such as murder.


On the question of whether substantial and compelling circumstances existed, the SCA concluded that there were no such circumstances justifying departure from the statutory minimum. It regarded the six-year sentence as shockingly lenient and as having the effect of trivialising the seriousness of the offence. Given the gravity of the conduct (including firing multiple shots into a small enclosed toilet cubicle knowing there was a person behind the door, using a lethal firearm and ammunition, and without a warning shot), the SCA found that the facts demanded the minimum sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment in principle.


However, the SCA then considered the effect of the sentence already served under the earlier culpable homicide conviction. It held that the substituted sentence should be adapted to account for the time already served, with reference to s 282 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 and the approach adopted in precedent concerning credit for time served and correctional supervision. This adjustment led the court to impose a sentence less than 15 years in arithmetic terms, while still reflecting the court’s view that the minimum sentence was the appropriate benchmark absent substantial and compelling circumstances.


5. Outcome and Relief


The SCA granted leave to appeal and upheld the appeal against sentence.


The sentence imposed by the trial court in respect of murder was set aside and substituted with a sentence of 13 years and five months’ imprisonment, reflecting credit for the respondent’s previously served 12 months’ imprisonment and seven months’ correctional supervision.


The order recorded in the judgment did not include a separate costs order, and the relief was confined to the substitution of sentence.


Cases Cited


Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius (2015) [2015] ZASCA 204; 2016 (1) SACR 431 (SCA).


Director of Public Prosecutions, KwaZulu-Natal v P 2006 (1) SACR 243 (SCA).


S v Boggards (2012) [2012] ZACC 23; 2013 (1) SACR 1 (CC).


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


S v Hewitt (2016) [2016] ZASCA 100; 2017 (1) SACR 309 (SCA).


S v Matyityi 2011 (1) SACR 40 (SCA).


S v Vilakazi 2009 (1) SACR 552 (SCA).


S v RO & another 2010 (2) SACR 248 (SCA).


S v Swart 2004 (2) SACR 370 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, s 51(1), s 51(2)(a), and s 51(3).


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, s 276(1)(i), s 282, s 316B(1), s 316B, s 319.


Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000, s 90, s 120(7), s 120(3)(a), s 120(3)(b).


Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, s 17(2)(d).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The SCA held that the trial court’s sentence of six years’ imprisonment for murder committed with dolus eventualis was affected by misdirection and was disturbingly inappropriate. The SCA held further that no substantial and compelling circumstances existed to justify deviation from the 15-year prescribed minimum sentence applicable to a first offender convicted of murder that was not planned or premeditated. Taking into account the time already served under the earlier sentence, the SCA substituted the sentence with 13 years and five months’ imprisonment.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


An appellate court may interfere with a sentence imposed by a trial court only where the sentencing discretion has been vitiated by irregularity, material misdirection, or where the sentence is so disproportionate that it is disturbingly inappropriate or one that no reasonable court would have imposed.


Under the minimum sentence regime in the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, a first offender convicted of murder (not planned or premeditated) is subject to a prescribed minimum sentence unless the court finds substantial and compelling circumstances justifying a lesser sentence.


A finding of genuine remorse requires more than expressions of apology; it requires that the offender take the court into confidence with a coherent account demonstrating insight into the wrongfulness and consequences of the conduct. A failure to provide an acceptable explanation for the conduct may undermine a conclusion of genuine remorse.


In serious crimes, an offender’s personal circumstances ordinarily recede in significance relative to the seriousness of the offence and the interests of society; sentencing must appropriately reflect the purposes of punishment, including retribution and deterrence, and rehabilitation may play a relatively smaller role.


Where a conviction and sentence are replaced on appeal and a new sentence is imposed, the sentencing court (or appellate court substituting sentence) should account for time already served in custody and related penal measures, with reference to the applicable statutory provisions and precedent governing such credit.

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Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius (950/2016) [2017] ZASCA 158; 2018 (1) SACR 115 (SCA); [2018] 1 All SA 336 (SCA) (24 November 2017)

Links to summary

SUPREME
COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 950/2016
In
the matter between:
THE DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS,
GAUTENG
APPELLANT
and
OSCAR LEONARD
CARL PISTORIUS
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
The
Director of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng
v
Oscar
Leonard Carl Pistorius
(
950/2016
)
[2017] ZASCA 158
(24 November 2017)
Coram:
Bosielo
and Seriti JJA and Lamont, Meyer and Mokgohloa AJJA
Heard:
03
November 2017
Delivered:
24
November 2017
Summary:
Criminal
law and procedure – murder – appeal against sentence
arising from conviction of murder dolus eventualis –
sentence
of six years' imprisonment inappropriate – Increased to 13
years and 5 months' imprisonment on appeal.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria (Masipa J sitting as court of first instance):
1 The application
for leave to appeal is granted.
2 The appeal against
sentence is upheld.
3 The sentence
imposed by the court a quo in respect of murder is set aside and
substituted with the following:
'The respondent is
sentenced to imprisonment for a period of 13 years and five months.’
JUDGMENT
Seriti
JA (Bosielo JA and Lamont, Meyer and Mokgohloa AJJA concurring):
[1] The respondent
appeared on 3 March 2014 in the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria on four counts, ie murder and three
counts of contravening
the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
. On 12 September 2014 the court a
quo made the following order:
'Count
1:Murder, read with
Section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act,
105 of 1997
, the accused is found not guilty and is discharged.
Instead, he is found guilty of culpable homicide.
Count
2:Contravention of
Section 120(7)
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of
2000
and the alternative count, that is contravention of
section
120(3)(b)
of the same act, the accused is found not guilty and
discharged.
Count
3:Contravention of
Section 120(7)
, alternatively
section 120(3)(a)
and further alternatively section 120(3)(b) of the
Firearms Control
Act 60 of 2000
, the accused is found guilty of the second alternative
that is the contravention of
Section 120(3)(b).
Count
4: Contravention of
Section 90
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
the accused is found not guilty and discharged.'
[2] On 21 October
2014, the respondent was sentenced as follows:
'1.
Count 1 – Culpable homicide: The sentence imposed is a maximum
imprisonment of 5 years imposed in terms of
section 276(1)(
i
)
of the Criminal Procedure Act, number 51 of 1977.
2.On
Count 3 – The contravention of section 120 (3)(
b
)
of the
Firearms Control Act, number
60 of 2000: The sentence imposed
is 3 years' imprisonment, wholly suspended for 5 years on condition
that within the period of
suspension the accused is not found guilty
of a crime where there is negligence involving the use of a firearm.
3.The
sentence in count 1 and the sentence on count 3 shall run
concurrently.'
On
9 December 2014 the appellant applied for leave to appeal against the
sentence imposed on the culpable homicide count. The application
was
dismissed by the court a quo.
[3]
The appellant also applied for reservations of three questions of law
in terms of
s 319
of the CPA relating to the conviction of culpable
homicide. The said application was granted by the court a quo on 10
December
2014.
[4] The three
questions of law reserved were as follows:
'1. Whether the
principles of dolus eventualis were correctly applied to the accepted
facts and the conduct of the accused, including
error in objecto.
2.  Whether the
court correctly conceived and applied the legal principles pertaining
to circumstantial evidence and/or pertaining
to multiple defences by
an accused.
3.  Whether the
court was correct in its construction and reliance on an alternative
version of the accused and that this alternative
version was
reasonably possibly true.'
[5]
This court heard the appeal on the reservation of the questions of
law on 3 November 2015 and delivered its judgment on 3 December

2015.  The first two reserved questions of law were answered in
favour of the appellant, which resulted in the conviction
and
sentence on the culpable homicide count being set aside and replaced
with a conviction of murder on the basis of dolus eventualis.
The
court referred the case back to the court a quo to consider afresh an
appropriate sentence in the light of the comments in
this court’s
judgment and taking into account the sentence the respondent had
already served in respect of the conviction
of culpable homicide –
see
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius
[2015] ZASCA 204
;
2016 (1) SACR 431
(SCA) paras 56 and 58.
[6]
Having heard evidence on the appropriate sentence as ordered by this
court, the court a quo sentenced the respondent on 6 July
2016 to six
years' imprisonment for murder on the basis of dolus eventualis.
Aggrieved by this sentence the appellant filed a notice
of
application for leave to appeal against the sentence imposed on the
murder conviction in terms of
s 316B(1)
of the CPA. The respondent
filed a written opposition to the State’s application for leave
to appeal against the sentence
imposed by the court a quo. On 26
August 2016 the court a quo dismissed the application for leave to
appeal.
[7] On 14 September
2016 the appellant lodged an application for leave to appeal in this
court in terms of
s 316(B)
of the CPA, against the sentence of six
years’ imprisonment imposed on the respondent by the court a
quo. On 2 November 2016,
this court issued an order which read partly
as follows;
'1. The application
for leave to appeal is referred for oral argument in terms of
s
17(2)(
d
) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
2.
The parties must be prepared, if called upon to do so, to address the
court on the merits.'
[8]
After the matter was called before us this court directed that the
application for leave to appeal and the merits should be
argued
together as they were both so closely intertwined, that it would be
convenient to hear both at the same time.
[9]
The offence that the respondent is convicted of falls within the
purview of
s 51(2)(
a
)
of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (the CLAA). This
section provides that when an accused, who is a first offender,
is
convicted of murder that is not planned or premeditated, he or she
shall be sentenced to imprisonment for a period of not less
than 15
years, unless there exist substantial and compelling circumstances as
contemplated by s 51(3) of the CLAA justifying the
imposition of a
sentence lesser than the prescribed minimum sentence.
[10]
The background facts of this case are eloquently set out by this
court in
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius
supra. I will not repeat the entire factual background save for those
parts which are relevant to this judgment.
[11]
It is common cause that the respondent was born with a congenital
abnormality affecting his legs which he, before his first
birthday,
had to have surgically amputated. As a result of the amputation he
had to rely on prosthetics. It is further common cause
that the
respondent shot and killed his girlfriend, Miss Reeva Steenkamp (the
deceased) in the early hours of 14 February 2013.
The facts giving
rise to the tragic incident are as follows. On 13 February 2013 the
respondent spent the night at his home with
the deceased.  In
the early hours of the fateful morning he heard the sound of a window
opening in the bathroom which is situated
not too far from the
bedroom. Upon hearing the sound of a window opening he thought that
there was an intruder who had entered
the house through the bathroom
window. He went back to his bedroom and retrieved his 9 mm pistol
from where he kept it under the
bed. Armed with his pistol and
without his prosthetic legs he went towards the bathroom. He peeped
in the bathroom and noticed
that there was no one in the bathroom
itself but that the toilet door was closed. The toilet cubicle is
very small. He heard a
noise emanating from inside the toilet and he
immediately fired four shots at the door. After realising that his
girlfriend was
not in the bedroom, he broke open the toilet door and
found the deceased slumped with her weight on the toilet bowl. The
evidence
shows that after fatally shooting the deceased the
respondent took certain steps to try and save the life of the
deceased.
[12]
According to the evidence of Captain Mangena, a police ballistics
expert, the firearm in question was specifically designed
for the
purpose of self-defence. The ammunition thereof would penetrate
through a wooden door without disintegrating but would
mushroom on
striking a soft, moist target such as human flesh, causing
devastating wounds to any person who might be struck by
it. Captain
Mangena further testified that the deceased must have been standing
behind the door when she was first shot and then
collapsed down
towards the toilet bowl.
[13]
The admitted evidence revealed various contradictions in the
respondent's evidence as to why he shot at the toilet door that

evening. It suffices to state that these contradictions were so
serious that this court in
Director
of Public Prosecutions v Pistorius
supra stated that '[i]n the light of these contradictions, one really
does not know what his explanation is for having fired the
fatal
shots'.  Furthermore this court said that '[h]e paused at the
entrance to the bathroom and when he became aware that
there was a
person in the toilet cubicle, he fired four shots through the door
and he never offered an acceptable explanation for
having done so'.
This court also found that the evidence of the respondent was 'so
contradictory that one does just not know his
true explanation for
firing the weapon'.
[14]
It is common cause that the respondent did not fire a warning shot
and his explanation is that he elected not to fire a warning
shot as
he thought that if the bullet ricocheted it might harm him.
The
respondent was well trained in the use of firearms. Captain Mangena
explained that the firearm the respondent used that morning
was a
heavy-calibre firearm, which was loaded with ammunition.
[15]
I interpose to state that after the case was referred back to the
court a quo by this court for sentencing afresh, the State
called
witnesses to testify in aggravation of sentence. However, although
certain witnesses testified for the defence, the respondent
elected
not to give evidence. This is not withstanding the fact that this
court had said 'one really does not know what his explanation
is for
having fired the fatal shots', and the fact that he had been warned
that for the court to deviate from the minimum sentence
of 15 years'
imprisonment there had to be substantial and compelling circumstances
justifying the imposition of a lesser sentence.
[16]
The court a quo when considering sentence on the murder conviction,
noted that the accused was 29 years old at the time, single
with no
children and he had no previous convictions. After Grade 12 the
respondent enrolled at the University of Pretoria for a
Bachelor of
Commerce Degree in Business Economics but had to leave his studies
due to the demands of his career as an athlete.
He is currently
enrolled for a Bachelor of Science degree with the University of
London.
[17]
In
Director
of Public Prosecutions, KwaZulu-Natal v P
2006 (1) SACR 243
(SCA) para 10, when dealing with the question
whether the sentence imposed by the trial court was appropriate, this
court said
'[t]he test for interference by an appeal court is whether
the sentence imposed by the trial court is vitiated by irregularity
or misdirection or is disturbingly inappropriate'. The Constitutional
Court reaffirmed this approach in
S
v Boggards
[2012] ZACC 23
;
2013 (1) SACR 1
(CC) para 41 when it said
'[o]rdinarily sentencing is within the discretion of the trial court.
An appellate court’s power
to interfere with sentences imposed
by courts below is circumscribed. It can only do so where there has
been an irregularity that
results in a failure of justice; the court
below misdirected itself to such an extent that its decision on
sentence is vitiated;
or the sentence is so disproportionate or
shocking that no reasonable court could have imposed it'.  See
also
S
v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) para 12 and
S
v Hewitt
[2016] ZASCA 100
;
2017 (1) SACR 309
(SCA) para 8.
[18]
The court a quo enumerated the following as mitigating factors: the
accused approached the bathroom in the belief that an intruder
had
entered his house; at the time he was without his prosthetics and
felt vulnerable; behaviour of the accused after the shooting;
in that
the accused immediately took steps to try and save the deceased’s
life; he was distraught and kept on asking God
to save the deceased’s
life and promising to serve him in return. The court further noted
that the respondent requested to
meet the parents of the deceased to
ask for forgiveness and stated that this demonstrated that the
respondent was genuinely remorseful.
[19]
As against the mitigating factors the court a quo took into
consideration the following aggravating factors: the accused used
a
lethal, high calibre firearm and ammunition; he fired four shots into
the toilet door knowing full well that there was someone
behind the
door; the toilet was a small cubicle and there was no room for escape
for the person behind the door; the accused had
been trained in the
use and handling of firearms; he did not fire a warning shot.
[20]
After due consideration of all relevant facts, the triad and the
provisions of the CLAA the court a quo stated 'I have taken
all the
above into consideration and I am of the view that mitigating
circumstances outweigh the aggravating factors. I find that
there are
substantial and compelling circumstances which justify a deviation
from the imposition of the prescribed minimum sentence
of 15 years'.
[21]
I find it difficult on the evidence to accept that the respondent is
genuinely remorseful. In
S
v Matyityi
2011 (1) SACR 40
(SCA) at para 47 this court held as follows: 'After
all, before a court can find that an accused person is genuinely
remorseful,
it needs to have a proper appreciation of, inter alia;
what motivated the accused to commit the deed; what has since
provoked his
or her change of heart; and whether he or she does
indeed have a true appreciation of the consequences of those
actions'. As stated
earlier the respondent has failed to explain why
he fired the fatal shots. The respondent failed to take the court
fully into his
confidence. To my mind the attempt by the respondent
to apologise to the deceased’s family does not demonstrate any
genuine
remorse on his part. He failed to take the court fully in his
confidence despite having an opportunity to do so during the second

sentencing proceedings. It is clear herefrom that the respondent is
unable to appreciate the crime he has committed. The logical

consequence is that the respondent displays a lack of remorse, and
does not appreciate the gravity of his actions.
[22]
Having perused the judgment on sentence by the court a quo I am of
the view that the trial court over emphasised the personal

circumstances of the respondent. In
S
v Vilakazi
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA) para 58 this court said that '[i]n cases of
serious crime the personal circumstances of the offender, by
themselves, will
necessarily recede into the background'. See also
S
v RO & another
2010 (2) SACR 248
(SCA) para 20 where this court said '[t]o elevate
the appellants’ personal circumstances above that of society in
general
and these two child victims in particular would not serve the
well-established aims of sentencing, including deterrence and
retribution'.
Based on the above-mentioned cases I am of the view
that the court a quo misdirected itself in its assessment of an
appropriate
sentence.
[23]
The court a quo also stated that in its view there was an indication
that the respondent was a good candidate for rehabilitation
and that
the other purposes of punishment although important ought not to play
a dominant role in the sentencing process. The court
a quo seemed to
have given rehabilitation undue weight as against the other purposes
of punishment being prevention, deterrence
and retribution. This
court in
S
v Swart
2004
(2) SACR 370
(SCA) para 12 stated the correct legal position as
follows: '[s]erious crimes will usually require that retribution and
deterrence
should come to the fore and that the rehabilitation of the
offender will consequently play a relatively smaller role'.
[24]
I am of the view that there are no substantial and compelling
circumstances which can justify the departure from the prescribed

minimum sentence. In the light of the serious offence committed by
the respondent and the absence of substantial and compelling

circumstances, the court a quo erred in deviating from the prescribed
minimum sentence of 15 years' imprisonment for murder in
the
circumstances. The sentence of six years' imprisonment is shockingly
lenient to a point where it has the effect of trivialising
this
serious offence. The facts of this case demand the imposition of the
minimum sentence of 15 years' imprisonment.
[25]
By the time the court a quo sentenced the respondent on 6 July 2016,
he had however already served a period of imprisonment
of 12 months
and correctional supervision for a period of seven months pursuant to
the initial sentence imposed upon him on 21
October 2014. He should
receive credit for those periods of imprisonment and of correctional
supervision already served. The terms
of our order should therefore
be adapted to take account of both s 282 of the CPA and the length of
incarceration and of correctional
supervision of the respondent. (See
S
v RO
2010 (2) SACR 248
(SCA) para 44.
[26] In the result,
the following order is made.
1 The application
for leave to appeal is granted.
2 The appeal against
sentence is upheld.
3 The sentence
imposed by the court a quo in respect of murder is set aside and
substituted with the following:
'The respondent is
sentenced to imprisonment for a period of 13 years and five months.’
__________________
WL SERITI
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant: Advocate A. Johnson
Advocate
D W M Broughton
Advocate
P Voster
Advocate
Moroka
Instructed
by: Director of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Bloemfontein
For
the Respondent:  Advocate B Roux SC
Advocate
S Jackson
Advocate
R Adams
Instructed
by: Ramsey Webber, Illovo, Johannesburg
Lovius
Block, Westdene, Bloemfontein