SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this document
in compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No: A41/2025
In the matter between:
A[...] Z[...] Appellant
and
THE STATE Respondent
Court: Justice J Cloete et Acting Justice R Mphego
Heard: 8 August 2025
Delivered electronically: 11 August 2025
JUDGMENT
CLOETE J:
[1] The appellant faced three counts in the Paarl Regional Court, namely (1) the
murder of his 10 year old female cousin ; (2) her rape on a prior occasion/s; and (3)
defeating or obstructing the course o r administration of justice by concealing her
body after the murder to prevent discovery thereof. At the time of the murder, which
occurred on 6 January 2023, the appellant was 18 years old (he had attained the
age of 18 years on 21 July 2022 ) and th us, if convicted, he was liable to be
sentenced to life imprisonment in terms of s 51(1) (a) read with Part 1 of Schedule 2
of the Criminal Law Amendment Act (the ‘CLA’ )1. The rape(s) were alleged to have
occurred during the period January to December 2020, when the appellant was 15 or
16 years old, and the deceased only 6 or 7 years old. Given that at the time the
appellant was a minor, in the event of conviction the relev ant provisions of the Child
Justice Act2 were applicable to sentencing on the rape(s) count.
[2] On 1 July 2024 the appellant pleaded guilty to the counts of murder and rape
(but only in respect of a single rape during January 2020) and not guilty to the count
of defeating or obstructing the course or administration of justice. The state accepted
the written contents of his plea explanation in respect of the murder and rape counts
tendered in terms of s 112 (2) of the Criminal Proced ure Act3. It then closed its case
in respect of the third count without adducing any evidence. The trial court convicted
the appellant on the first and second counts and acquitted him on the third count.
[3] On 19 September 2024 the appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment for
the murder and 20 years imprisonment for the rape (the sentence of 20 years
imprisonment was antedated to 31 December 2020). These sentences automatically
run concurrently .4 He now exercises his automatic right of appea l to this court
against the sentence of life imprisonment .5 He has not sought leave to appeal in
against the sentence of life imprisonment .5 He has not sought leave to appeal in
respect of the sentence for rape.
[4] The evidential material before the trial court in respect of the murder
conviction and the appropriate sentence to impose was as follows. At the time of the
1 No 105 of 1997
2 No 75 of 2008
3 No 51 of 1977
4 In terms of s 39(2)(a)(i) of the Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998
5 In terms of s 309(1)(a) of the Criminal Procedure Act
murder the appellant resided with the deceased and her mother who is his maternal
aunt. On the day in question the deceased was left in his care. The appellant and the
deceased were playing game s. According to the appellant’s plea explanation he
became ‘troubled by what had occurred during January 2020 . I choked her, we both
fell over and still overcome by fear of what had happened, I proceeded to force her
head under the water and drown her in a bath. When she was no longer breathing I
placed her in a kist in the bedroom’.
[5] In the same plea explanation, the appellant admitted the contents of the report
of Dr Erasmus who conducted the post -mortem. Dr Erasmus recorded the following
injuries to the deceased: petechial haemorrhages of the lower eyelids; bloody froth in
the nose , mouth and trachea; petechial haemorrhages of the inner aspect of the
scalp with brain swelling; petechial haemorrhages and c ongestion of the lungs;
hyperfluidity of the blood consistent with drowning; congestion of the liver and
kidneys; abrasion on the inner aspect of the left thigh; the introitus red and inflamed
and the hymen absent, and a small contusion of the right vaginal wall. She found the
latter injuries to be consistent with long term sexual intercourse. She also concluded
that the cause of death was consistent with asphyxia due to drowning, but that partial
suffocation/manual strangulation could not be confirmed. The report of Dr Erasmus
thus indicates that the deceased had also in all likelihood been sexually assaulted in
some way immediately prior to her death, and was murdered in a brutal manner.
[6] On 1 June 2023 (about a year before the appellant pleaded) he was
assessed by psychiatrist Dr Prinsloo of the Paarl Hospital Psych iatric Unit at the
request of the appellant’s mother and legal representative in order to determine
whether he was fit to stand trial , seemingly as a result of the difficulty in obtaining
whether he was fit to stand trial , seemingly as a result of the difficulty in obtaining
instructions and his prior admission to a psychiatric unit sometime in 2021 after a
suicide attempt. Dr Prinsloo found that the appellant had a substance abuse
disorder (in partial remission as a result of being incar cerated); that there was no
indication of psychosis or mood disorder ; but that he most likely has an antisoc ial
personality disorder. He found the appellant to be ‘sane and fit to plead’. The report
of Dr Prinsloo was admitted into evidence by consent.
[7] The appellant and/or his mother and/or his legal representative were not
satisfied with the conclusion reached by Dr Prinsloo, and procured a second opinion
from clinical psyc hologist M s Suliman , who delivered her report on 15 April 2024.
This report was also admitted into evidence during the sentencing proceedings at the
request of the trial court. Whereas in the earlier report of Dr Prinsloo no mention was
made thereof, the report of Ms Suliman reflects that the appellant told her he had
sexual intercourse and murdered the deceased on instructions of ‘voices in his head
that told him to do so’. Ms Suliman found the results of his mental status examination
revealed that the appellant’s cognitive ability was not compromised; he presented as
being of average to above average intellect; was able to respond to complex
questions in an acceptable format with above average rationality , and displayed no
signs of aggression. She noted his level of intellectual ability despite the common
cause fact that he effectively dropped out of school in Grade 7 due to behavioural
and truancy issues.
[8] She also reported that the appellant displayed no signs of memory lapse or
distortion but there was evidence of him being manipulative and a liar, particularly
having regard to previous documented conflicting accounts he had given of the
events pertaining to the murder of the deceased. In her opinion there was adequate
evidence to show th e appellant was not truthful about the events on the day of the
murder and his sexual assaults on the deceased over an extended period. She
rejected his explanation of having committed the offences as a result of ‘voices in his
head’, explaining that that this was a feature of psychosis whereas, like Dr Prinsloo,
she found no evidence of this condition , or indeed of any mood disorder. In her
opinion he displayed no remorse . She agreed with Dr Prinsloo’s diagnosis of an
antisocial personality disorder and that he was fit to stand trial.
antisocial personality disorder and that he was fit to stand trial.
[9] The pre -sentence report of the probation officer Ms Adams , who is a social
worker (also handed in by consent) , reflected that the appellant had conveyed his
feelings of rejection and abandonment by his absent father whom he had never met ,
compounded by his mother having told him that a certain man was his father, only
for him to discover this to be untrue. The appellant was not able to inform Ms Adams
whether he had been diagnosed with any illness, but stated that he was taking
medication which helped with ‘the voices’ and was attending ‘psychological services’
in pr ison (the appellant had been incarcerated since the day of the incident on 6
January 2023 after handing himself over to the police and confessing). The appellant
is also a first offender.
[10] The report also described in some detail the devastating effects which the
deceased’s murder had on her biological parents, in particular her mother, who had
become suicidal and was referred for treatment. This was corroborated by the
evidence of Ms Van Wyk who testified in aggravation of sentence. She was the
designated court preparation officer at the Paarl Regional Court who interviewed the
deceased’s mother. Such was her emotional state that Ms Van Wyk was unable to
obtain a written victim impact statement from her. With the permission of the trial
court and consent of the defe nce, Ms Van Wyk played an audio recording of the
account given to her by the victim’s mother of her trauma , which was heart
wrenching. According to the mother she had even visited the appellant in prison to
seek answers for his actions, but he refused to engage with her which compounded
her tra uma. The deceased’s father had described her to Ms van Wyk as ‘a joyful ,
friendly, vibrant little girl’. Both of the deceased’s parents felt particularly shocked
and betrayed by the fact that the a ppellant was a family member who m they had
trusted.
[11] In her evaluation, the opinion of Ms Adams was as follows. The appellant ‘has
deep-seated feelings of alienation and a desire for acceptance which have
significantly impacted his relationships and behaviour. He has a strained relationship
with his mother, contributing to his sense of isolation. In an attempt to fill this void
[the appellant] may have developed an unhealthy obsession with his alleged father .
This may be viewed as a compensatory mechanism to address the feelings of loss
and rejection he experienced due to the absence of a paternal figure in his life … [the
appellant] does take responsibility for his alleged actions but consistently claims that
appellant] does take responsibility for his alleged actions but consistently claims that
voices instructed him to commit this o ffence. This statement indicates a potential
detachment from reality and deflection of responsibility for his actions by blaming the
voices.’ Ms Adams however fairly acknowledged that what also needed to be
weighed into the mix when considering an appropri ate sentence were the
seriousness of the crime, the views of the deceased’s family and the interests of
society. She concluded that only direct imprisonment could be considered , and that
such a sentence ‘could be seen as an opportunity for rehabilitation , where the
access to educational and rehabilitative programs designed to address the
underlying causes of criminal behaviour could be facilitated.’
[12] I am mindful of the practical constraints under which probation officers work. I
must also however assess the opinions expressed by Ms Adams against the
following. She did not conduct any clinical evaluation of the appellant, as did D r
Prinsloo and Ms Suliman. She is also of a different professional discipline to them,
and it was common cause they were eminently qualified to diagnose the appellant .
The appellant’s alleged feelings of abandonment were not mentioned at all in the
report of Dr Prinsloo and it is fair to accept that if they were conveyed to him, he
would have referred to them. The report of Ms Suliman reflects that according to the
appellant, the reason he attempted suic ide was ‘linked to his mother not being
forthcoming as to who his father was …and to him being beaten and starved by his
mother’s partner’. It would seem that the appellant thus gave different explanations
to Ms Suliman and Ms Adams. It would also seem that the ‘remorse’ expressed by
the appellant to Ms Adams was in truth regret , something completely different and
relevant to his prospects of genuine rehabilitation , particularly when regard is had to
his belated reliance on ‘voices’ in his head.
[13] In addition, it was Ms Suliman’s professional opinion in her report that ‘when
an individual suggests that he hears voices in his head giving him instructions of
what to d o, the individual is usually in a state of psychosis , and free will is
compromised [since] specific instructions are provided by the “voices in the head”.
The [appellant], when describing the sequence of events on the day of the murder,
inadvertently on so me occasions, stated that he thought that he should close the
curtains, in case anyone caught him in the act of murder; he stated that strangulation
curtains, in case anyone caught him in the act of murder; he stated that strangulation
was not working, and that drowning was the better option. He thought of how to get
rid of the body…saw the kist and thought it the best option to conceal [it]. He thought
that he should clean the room and house to firstly ensure that they were no traces of
the murder, and secondly to clean the entire house to provide evidence of how he
spent his day’ (it was not disputed this in fact occurred). Ms Suliman found this to be
direct support for no evidence of psychosis , and concluded that at the time of
committing the murder there was no doubt the appellant was aware that what he was
doing was wrong.
[14] The app ellant’s legal representative addressed the trial court ex parte in
mitigation of sentence. She placed on record the appellant’s personal circumstances
as follows. He was by then 20 years old, and the eldest of 4 children aged 11 or 12,
5 and 2 years respe ctively, one of whom was a little girl. His limited employment
experience had been at a carwash. According to him, he had attempted suicide more
than once. He had felt rejected by his absent father. She submitted that he had
already been punished to an ext ent by attempting suicide ‘because this is something
that he cannot come to terms with”, referring to the rape of the deceased back in
2020. She also submitted that the appellant had taken ‘full responsibility for the
offence …and this is set out in both reports’.
[15] In terms of s 51(3)(a) of the CLA a court may deviate from a prescribed
minimum sentence if satisfied that substantial and compelling circumstances exist
which justify the impos ition of a lesser sentence. The appellant’s legal
representative submitted that these circumstances were: (1) his youth; (2) the period
he spent in custody awaiting trial of 20 months; (3) that he had handed himself over
to the police ; and (4) that he ab andoned his bail application. Finally, she submitted
that ‘with a different program in prison…he will be rehabilitated’, presumably referring
to whatever counselling and treatment he was receiving there , although the record is
silent on the exact nature thereof.
[16] On the other hand the state submitted that the particularly aggravating factors
were: (1) the age of the deceased and the brutal manner in which she lost her life ;
(2) the appellant was not only a family member who had been provided with a roof
over his head by the deceased’s mother , but was also in a position of trust: (3) the
over his head by the deceased’s mother , but was also in a position of trust: (3) the
appellant’s actions had escalated from rape to murder over a considerable period of
time; (4) the facts had established premeditation; and (5) the devastating effect of
the murder on the deceased’s parents. These, it was submitted, had to outweigh any
mitigating factors, in addition to which a lesser sentence than life imprisonment
would not be in the interests of society.
[17] The state also pointed out, correctly in my view, that the actual motive for the
murder remained unclear, and the appellant had never come clean in this regard :
‘we do not know what the motivations were and we probably never will, because the
[appellant] has never taken the stand…there is a huge difference between regret and
remorse and the state will submit [he] has not shown the requisite remorse’. To this I
would add it is extreme ly disturbing that , on one of the appellant’s versions ,
conveyed at an early stage to Dr Prinsloo (and reflected in his report) , the appellant
claimed he had deci ded rather to kill the deceased in order to forget he had raped
her way back in 2020 . This, as previously mentioned, was when he had not yet
placed any reliance on ‘voices in his head’. It was also submitted by the state that
the appellant’s belated reliance on ‘voices in his head’ was a contrived attempt to
evade responsibility and was shown by two professionals to have no merit.
[18] The state also referred the trial court to the decision of the Supreme Court of
Appeal (SCA) in Director of Public Prosecutions , Gauteng Division Pretoria v DMS
and Another 6 (‘DMS’). The facts in that matter were briefly as follows. The
respondents, a female aged 21 and a male aged 17 respectively, brutally raped and
murdered their 12 year old female cousin . The 21 year old denied having committed
the offences and the 17 year old claimed that he committed them in the presence of
the 21 year old who had threatened to kill him if he did not do so. The judgment
commences with the following:
‘It is often said that sentencing is the most difficult phase of a criminal trial,
and rightly so. This case brings into sharp focus the dilemma that is often
faced by the trial court when sentencing a minor for violent crimes…’
[19] Both were convicted. In respect of the murder, the trial court had imposed a
sentence of 15 y ears imprisonment on the 21 year old (who by then was 24 years
sentence of 15 y ears imprisonment on the 21 year old (who by then was 24 years
old) and 12 years imprisonment on the 17 year old (who by then was 20 years old).
On appeal, the state appellant submitted that the sentences (along with the other
sentences which are not rele vant for present purposes) were too lenient , induced a
sense of shock and therefore ought to be set aside. I acknowledge of course that in
6 2023 (2) SACR 113 SCA
the case before us the appellant was 18 years old at the time of the deceased’s
murder, and thus an adult in the eyes of the law, but he was nonetheless still young ,
and of an age falling between the two offenders in DMS, which is why it is of
valuable guidance. Further, the following facts in that case are eerily similar to the
one before us: (1) the deceased had been left in the care of the 21 year old; (2) they
were cousins; ( 3) the murder was brutal; (4) the deceased’s body was concealed
after the murder in an attempt to avoid detection ; (5) the 17 year old had
psychological issues ( although the evidence was also that there was a high risk of
him re -offending which is absent in the present matter) ; (6) both had difficult
childhoods; and (7) both were first offenders.
[20] The SCA considered the various mitigating factors, including th e ages of the
two offenders at the time of commission of the offences. It found that the aggravating
factors far outweighed their personal circumstances , and that in respect of the 21
year old the applicable minimum sentence was proportionate to the seriousness of
the offence . It substituted the sentences with life imprisonment for the 21 year old
and 23 years imprisonment for the 17 year old.
[21] In the matter before us, the trial court in its sentencing judgment referred to
the well-known Zinn triad. It took into account the appellant’s personal circumstances
and what it referred to as his ‘tragic’ background of being shunted back and forth
between his mother and aunt , his schooling challenges and his issues about his
father. Against this, it co rrectly placed due weight on the expert opinions of Dr
Prinsloo and Ms Suliman contained in their reports. It referred to the evidence of
sexual assault at the time of the deceased’s murder contained in the post -mortem
report, and the history of her sexual abuse at the hands of the appellant. It also took
report, and the history of her sexual abuse at the hands of the appellant. It also took
into account the sheer brutality of the murder and the trauma and suffering of her
parents as result of her death. It found that the evidence established premeditation
as well as care to avoid detection while the murder was being carried out and
thereafter. It also took into account that the offences are a scourge in South Africa . It
referred to S v Matyityi 7 where the SCA emphasised that courts are duty -bound to
implement the minimum sentences prescribed in the CLA and cautioned that ill -
7 2011 (1) SACR 40 (SCA) at paras 22 to 23
defined concepts such as ‘relative youthfulness’ that appear to fit a court’s personal
notion of ‘fairness’ ought to be avoided. (To this I would add that in DMS the SCA
found in relation to the female perpetrator that ‘ being above the age of 21 [ie , 21
years and 8 months ] at the time of commission of these offences , there was no
suggestion [that they were] committed as a result of her imma turity. Her age was
therefore a neutral factor’ ). Taking all of this into account, the trial court concluded
that there were no substantial and compelling circumstances present to justify a
deviation from the prescribed minimum sentence of life imprisonment.
[22] On appeal before us it was submitted on behalf of the appellant that the trial
court: (1) overlooked the element of mercy; (2) over-emphasised the seriousness of
the offence ‘without proper balance with the offender and the legitimate need s of
society’; and (3) in so doing, imposed a sentence that was shockingly
disproportionate and inappropriate. It is thus necessary to deal with the test for
interference by a court of appeal, and more particularly in relation to sentence.
[23] In DMS8 the SCA reiterated that ‘[i]t is well-established that punishment is pre-
eminently a matter for the trial court’s discretion. Thus, a court of appeal should be
careful not to erode that discretion . Interference is only warranted if it is shown that
discretion has not been judicially exercised. The test is whether the sentence is
vitiated by an irregularity, a material misdirection or is disturbingly inappropriate. This
principle was echoed in S v Van Wyk and Another9 where this Court held that a court
of appeal would interfere with sentences imposed by a trial court ‘only where the
degree of disparity between the sentence imposed by the trial court and the
sentence the appeal court would have imposed was such that the interference was
competent and required’. The crucial question in the enquiry is ‘whether there was a
competent and required’. The crucial question in the enquiry is ‘whether there was a
proper and reasonable exercise of t he sentencing discretion bestowed on the court
imposing sentence’.
[24] Also in the context of the so -called minimum sentence legislation, this was
recently extensively considered by a Full Court of this Division (Sher J, Le Grange
8 At para 22
9 Van Wyk v S, Galela v S 2015 (1) SACR 584 (SCA) at paras 31-32
concurring, Dickerson AJ dissenting ) in MT v S10 (‘MT’) with reference inter alia to
two earlier decisions in this Divisio n (‘GK’ 11 and ‘ CC’12 ) where, as Sher J
summarised, it was held that:
‘The assessment of whether there are substantial and compelling
circumstances present, or not, in a matter where a prescribed minimum
sentence is applicable, involves a value judgment by a sentencing court and
not a discretion’.13
[25] Sher J found that:
‘82. In my view, whilst the sentencin g regime which has been imposed by the
CLA altered the sentencing discretion i.e the powers of and the process which
a trial court must engage in when imposing sentence, at heart that has not
materially and fundamentally altered the process which an appell ate court
must engage in, and its powers, when considering an appeal against a
minimum sentence imposed in terms of the CLA, (save in relation to the
‘striking disparity’ power …); and when interpreting and giving effect to the
CLA care should be taken not to transplant and make applicable to the appeal
court, the process that must be engaged in by the sentencing court. If one
does not honour the distinction between the different processes which the two
levels of adjudication must perform one may inadverten tly rupture long -
standing, well -established principles that have applied for a century in our
criminal law in relation to the powers and functions of sentencing courts vis -à-
vis those of appellate courts. It is the function of the court of first instance i .e.
the sentencing court to arrive at, and to impose, an appropriate sentence and
the function of an appellate court to supervise and regulate this power by
correcting errors made in the exercise thereof, and the roles should be kept
separate and distinct from one another.’
10 2025 [ZAWCHC] 307 (25 July 2025)
11 The majority decision in GK v S 2013 (2) SACR 505 ( WCC)
12 CC v S [2015] ZAWCHC 69
13 At para 80
[26] I fully agree with the reasoning and approach of Sher J and Le Grange J.
Applying that approach to the present matter, I am unpersuaded, in light of what I
have set out earlier in this judgment, that the trial court f ailed to exercise its
sentencing discretion judicially. That leaves the question whether the sentence of life
imprisonment was so disproportionate that it warrants interference in the sense set
out in Dodo14. The answer to this question is no. This appell ant was shown to be an
individual who is a danger; the evidential material indicates that he is either deeply
disturbed or he is a manipulative liar with no true remorse, and there is simply not
enough to persuade me that he has genuine prospects of rehabi litation at this stage
The element of mercy, in the context of proportionality, must necessarily be afforded
less weight. In summary, I am of the view that there was no material misdirection by
the trial court, and nor is the sentence it imposed sh ocking, startling or disturbingly
inappropriate. There is thus no basis to interfere.
[27] The following order is made:
‘The appeal against the sentence of life impr isonment imposed on count
one (murder) is dismissed.’
____________________
J I CLOETE
Judge of the High Court
I Agree
____________________
R MPHEGO
Acting Judge of the High Court
Appearances
14 S v Dodo 2001 (1) SACR 594 (CC)
For Appellant Ms P Andrews (Legal Aid SA)
For Respondent Adv T Kwetane