S v Msizi and Another (637/92) [1993] ZASCA 155 (29 September 1993)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Murder — Appeal against death sentences — Appellants convicted of murder, attempted murder, and theft — Involvement in attacks on police resulting in deaths of two officers and a civilian — Appellants' participation established through confessions and evidence of prior criminal conduct — Court finds no mitigating factors to warrant leniency — Death sentences upheld as appropriate in light of the severity of the crimes and the need for deterrence.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an appeal in the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa (now the Supreme Court of Appeal) concerning sentence in a criminal matter, specifically an appeal directed only at the imposition of the death sentence on multiple murder counts.


The parties were Kwanele Msizi (first appellant) and Phakamile Cishe (second appellant) as appellants, and the State as respondent.


The matter came before the Appellate Division after the appellants were tried in the South Eastern Cape Local Division before a judge sitting with assessors. They were convicted of three counts of murder, four counts of attempted murder, and six counts of theft. The appeal was noted in terms of section 316A(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (as amended), and it was confined to the death sentences imposed on the three murder counts (counts 2, 3 and 4).


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether, on the facts found proven and having regard to aggravating and mitigating features, the trial court was correct in concluding that the death penalty was the only appropriate sentence for the murders arising from attacks on police patrols in Zwide, Port Elizabeth.


2. Material Facts


On the evening of 18 November 1990, two police officers, Constable C J De Wet and Sergeant J S Gerber, were on patrol in Zwide near Port Elizabeth. A third person, Gotyana, was also in the police vehicle, although the evidence did not explain how he came to be there. During that patrol, the vehicle was fired upon with AK-47 rifles, and all three occupants were fatally shot.


On 26 December 1990, there was a further attack on police in Zwide. On that occasion, shots were fired and hand grenades (“stokgranate”) were thrown at police members. No one sustained significant injuries, but the incident gave rise to the attempted murder charges.


The appellants’ participation in both attacks was in issue at trial, but the Appellate Division recorded that it was clearly proved, primarily through statements made by the appellants after their arrest in January 1991, together with other evidence. The judgment noted that, at trial, the appellants opted for a denial of involvement coupled with explanations for their statements that were found to be transparently false, and the court treated their post-arrest statements as central to proof of participation.


The proven narrative, as accepted by the court, was that toward the end of 1990 the appellants were involved in the theft of multiple motor vehicles in and around Port Elizabeth. At some stage the second appellant travelled to King William’s Town for an unknown purpose. After his return, the first appellant took him to a scrapyard where two heavily armed PAC “terrorists” were hiding. There the appellants received basic training in the handling of AK-47 rifles.


On the night of the first attack, the appellants travelled in a stolen vehicle to the scrapyard. It was already agreed that they would assist the two armed men to attack police. The two armed men got into the back of the vehicle with AK-47s. The first appellant drove, and the second appellant sat in front, with a third AK-47 between them. They searched for police in New Brighton and Soweto, found none, and then proceeded to Zwide. When a police vehicle approached, they stopped; everyone except the first appellant got out and fired at the police vehicle. They then drove away, dropped the two armed men at the scrapyard with their weapons, and the appellants hid the vehicle.


On the night of 26 December 1990, they again used another stolen vehicle to collect their associates at the scrapyard, and they also had training in the use of hand grenades. Each appellant was given a grenade. While the two armed men again carried AK-47s in the back, the group searched for police in Zwide. They found two police vehicles parked next to each other with police members in and around them. At close range, their associates fired at the police. The group could not drive away because the first appellant lost control of the vehicle, which collided with a fence, forcing them to flee on foot. While fleeing, each appellant threw a grenade at the vehicles.


3. Legal Issues


The central question before the Appellate Division was whether, on the murders in counts 2, 3 and 4, the trial court correctly found that the death sentence was the only appropriate punishment after weighing aggravating and mitigating factors.


The dispute was primarily one of the application of sentencing principles to the facts found proven, and it involved an evaluative judgment concerning the relative weight of alleged mitigation. In particular, the court had to evaluate whether factors advanced on the appellants’ behalf, including an alleged political motive, the second appellant’s youth (19 years old), his lack of previous convictions, and alleged influence by the first appellant and/or the armed men, materially reduced moral blameworthiness so as to justify a sentence other than death.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Appellate Division approached the matter as one of sentence, requiring consideration of both aggravating and mitigating features, and determining whether any mitigating circumstances were sufficiently weighty to justify a punishment other than death. The court expressly aligned itself with the trial judge’s conclusion that, in the circumstances, the death penalty was the only fitting sentence for the murders.


On mitigation, the court accepted that the second appellant was 19 years old at the time and had no previous convictions, but found that, beyond these features, there was “really nothing” that could properly be treated as mitigating in the case. The court rejected the argument that the murders were committed with a political motive and as a symbolic act of resistance. It reasoned that whatever the armed men’s motives might have been, those could not simply be imputed to the appellants. The court emphasised that the only direct source regarding the appellants’ reasons for participation was their own statements, and those did not support the political motive advanced on appeal. Instead, the statements indicated that the appellants were eager to receive weapons training and even hoped to obtain weapons for themselves, seeing them as useful tools in relation to the wrongdoing in which they were already engaged. The court regarded their participation as likely aimed at impressing the armed men by assisting in attacks on police.


The court also dealt with the submission that the second appellant was probably influenced by the first appellant, and that both were later influenced by the armed men. It described this contention as pure speculation, finding no indication in the statements or other evidence of such influence. In assessing the second appellant’s conduct, the court pointed to his demonstrated willingness to use the firearm available in the front of the car without encouragement, which the court considered inconsistent with a narrative of domination or coercion.


On aggravation, the court identified several prominent features. It stressed that two victims were police officers engaged in their ordinary duties of community protection (including protection of the community of which the appellants themselves were members), and the third was an innocent bystander. The court highlighted the cold-blooded search and “hunt” for a police vehicle, which proceeded from searching in other areas to continued pursuit in Zwide. It also emphasised the nature of the attack itself, carried out at close range with three semi-automatic rifles, with the police vehicle hit by 47 bullets, and with at least five bullets fired by the second appellant. The court further treated the appellants’ attitude as aggravating, noting evidence that they derived enjoyment from the act, boasting the next day about how pleasant it was to shoot the police, and participating in a further attack about a month later.


In the overall balancing exercise, the court found that the aggravating features far outweighed the limited mitigation. It considered that, in such a case, punishment had to be directed at retribution and prevention, and had to reflect the community’s revulsion. The court held that this conclusion applied also to the second appellant despite his youth, because his conduct did not reflect impulsive youthful rashness; the judgment referred to his disappearance from schooling near year-end and his subsequent full-time involvement in criminal activity with the first appellant, as well as his committed participation in the attacks. The court described the matter as an extreme case calling for the ultimate retributive punishment for both appellants.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Appellate Division dismissed the appeal. The effect was that the death sentences imposed on the appellants for the three murder convictions (counts 2, 3 and 4) remained in force.


The judgment, as provided, did not record any separate or additional order in relation to costs in the appeal.


Cases Cited


No external cases were cited in the provided judgment text.


Legislation Cited


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (as amended), section 316A(1).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the provided judgment text.


Held


The court held that, after weighing the aggravating and mitigating factors, there were no substantial mitigating circumstances beyond the second appellant’s age and clean record, and that the aggravating features—particularly the deliberate “hunt” for police, the lethal close-range AK-47 attack killing two police officers and an innocent third person, the appellants’ own active participation, and their subsequent boasting and repeated involvement—overwhelmingly justified the conclusion that the death penalty was the only appropriate sentence. The appeal against the death sentences was accordingly dismissed.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Sentencing for murder required an evaluative balancing of aggravating and mitigating factors, and the appellate court would consider whether, in the circumstances found proven, the trial court was correct to conclude that the ultimate sentence was the only appropriate one.


An alleged political motive could not be accepted as mitigating on the basis of assertion alone; it had to be supported by the evidentiary material relied upon by the court. Where the accused’s own statements did not support such a motive, and where any political motivations might instead have belonged to co-perpetrators, the court would not attribute those motives to the accused without a proper basis.


Claims that an accused acted under influence or manipulation, whether by a co-accused or others, required an evidential foundation; absent indications in the statements or other evidence, such influence was treated as speculative and not mitigating.


Youth and the absence of prior convictions could constitute mitigating considerations, but youth would not necessarily reduce moral blameworthiness where the conduct demonstrated deliberate, sustained, and active participation in grave violence rather than impulsive youthful recklessness.

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[1993] ZASCA 155
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S v Msizi and Another (637/92) [1993] ZASCA 155 (29 September 1993)

MG
SAAK NO 637/92 IN DIE HOOGGEREGSHOF VAN
SUID-AFRIKA
APPèLAFDELING
In die saak tussen
KWANELE MSIZI
Eerste Appellant
PHAKAMILE CISHE
Tweede Appellant
en
DIE STAAT
Respondent
CORAM
:HEFER, EKSTEEN ARR et KRIEGLER Wnd AR
AANGEHOOR
:24 September 1993
GELEWER
:29 September 1993
UITSPRAAK
HEFER AR
:
Die appellante is in die Suidoos-Kaapse Plaaslike Afdeling deur 'n regter en
assessore skuldig bevind aan drie aanklagte van moord
(aanklagte 2, 3 en 4),
vier van poging tot moord (aanklagte 9, 10, 11 en 12)
2
en ses van diefstal. Die appêl wat ooreenkomstig art 316(A)(1) van die
Strafproseswet 51 van 1977 soos gewysig aangeteken is,
is gemik teen die
doodvonnisse wat op aanklagte 2,3 en 4 opgelê is.
Die betrokke
aanklagte het voortgespruit uit die dood van twee polisiemanne - konstabel C J
De Wet en sersant J S Gerber - en 'n derde
persoon - ene Gotyana -die aand van
18 November 1990. Daardie aand het Gerber en De Wet patrolliediens gedoen in
Zwide aan die buitewyke
van Port Elizabeth. Hoe dit gekom het dat Gotyana saam
met hulle in die voertuig was, blyk nie uit die getuienis nie. Terwyl hulle
met
hierdie taak besig was, is daar met AK 47 gewere op die voertuig gevuur. Al drie
die insittendes is noodlottig getref. Op 26
Desember 1990 was daar weer 'n
aanval op die polisie in Zwide. By hierdie geleentheid is daar nie net op hulle
gevuur nie maar is
daar _ ook stokgranate na hulle geslinger. Niemand het egter
noemenswaardige beserings
3
opgedoen nie. Hierdie voorval het aanleiding gegee tot aanklagte 9, 10, 11 en
12.
Appellante se aandadigheid aan die aanvalle was in gedrang by die verhoor
maar is duidelik bewys hoofsaaklik aan die hand van verklarings
wat hulle na
hulle arrestasie gedurende Januarie 1991 gemaak het. Dit blyk uit die
verklarings en ander getuienis dat hulle teen
die einde van 1990 betrokke was by
die diefstal van etlike motors wat in Port Elizabeth en omgewing gesteel . is.
Op 'n stadium is
tweede appellant vir 'n onbekende doel na King William's Town.
Na sy terugkeer het eerste appellant hom na 'n skrootwerf geneem waar
twee swaar
gewapende PAC terroriste geskuil het. Daar het die appellante elementêre
opleiding in die hantering van AK 47 gewere
ondergaan. Die aand van die eerste
aanval op die polisie is hulle met 'n gesteelde voertuig na die skrootwerf. Op
daardie stadium
was dit reeds afgespreek dat hulle die twee terroriste sou help
om die polisie aan
4
te val. Soos tweede appellant dit in sy verklaring
uitgedruk het -
"....hulle sien die polisie is volop in-die woonbuurt besig om te patrolleer
en die swart polisie patroleer nie so baie in die dorp
nie. Daardie
polisie
moet dan geskiet word Ons willig in om dit te
doen...."
By die skrootwerf het die twee terroriste agter
in die voertuig geklim. Albei was gewapen met AK 47s.
Eerste appellant het
bestuur en tweede appellant het voor
langs hom gesit met 'n derde AK 47 tussen hulle. Eers
het hulle na polisie gaan soek in New Brighton en Soweto
maar niks gekry nie. Daarop is hulle Zwide toe. 'n
Polisievoertuig het van voor aangekom. Toe dit naby was
het hulle stilgehou. Almal behalwe eerste appellant het
afgeklim en op die voertuig gevuur. Daarna het hulle
weggejaag. Die twee terroriste het by die skrootwerf
afgeklim met die wapens en die appellante het die
voertuig gaan "bêre". Die aand van 26 Desember 1990 is
hulle weer met 'n ander gesteelde voertuig na die
5
skrootwerf waar hulle makkers weer opgelaai is omdat, soos tweede appellant
dit in sy verklaring uitgedruk het, hulle weer sou "gaan
jag maak op die
polisie". Intussen het hulle ook opleiding gekry in die gebruik van stokgranate.
Daardie aand het elkeen van hulle
so 'n granaat gekry. Gewapen daarmee en met
die twee terroriste met AK 47s agter in die voertuig het hulle weer in Zwide na
die polisie
begin soek. Hulle het op twee polisievoertuie afgekom wat langs
mekaar geparkeer was. Die bemanning was in en langs die voertuie.
Op kort af
stand het die appellante se trawante met die gewere op die polisie losgebrand.
Hierdie keer kon hulle egter nie wegjaag
nie want eerste appellant het beheer
oor die voertuig verloor. Dit het teen 'n heining vasgeloop sodat almal
genoodsaak was om te
voet te vlug. Maar selfs in die vlug het elke appellant 'n
stokgranaat na die voertuie geslinger.
6
In al die omstandighede van die saak is ek, met inagneming van die
strafverswarende en versagtende faktore, dit met die verhoorregter
eens dat die
doodstraf die enigste gepaste vonnis vir die moorde is. Behalwe dat tweede
appellant slegs 19 jaar oud was ten tye van
die voorval en geen vorige
veroordelings het nie, is daar werklik niks wat as versagtende faktore aangemerk
kan word nie. Dat die
moorde, soos namens hulle aangevoer, gepleeg is met 'n
politieke motief en as 'n simboliese daad om hulle verset teen die owerhede
te
weerspieël, is nie korrek nie. Wat ook al die twee terroriste se dryfveer
mag gewees het, kan dit nie aan die appellante
toegedig word nie. Die
enigstê bron van inligting oor die rede vir laasgenoemde se deelname is
hulle eie verklarings. (By die
verhcor het hulle 'n vals ontkenning van
aandadigheid gepaard met deursigtelik leuenagtige verduidelikings vir die
verklarings bo
die waarheid verkies.) Hulle motief word nie uitdruklik in
enige
7
verklaring gemeld nie maar wat duidelik na vore kom, is
dat
hulle begerig was om opleiding in die hantering van
wapens te ondergaan en
selfs gehoop het om wapens van
hulle eie te kry wat hulle as handige
toerusting beskou
het met die oog op die wandade waarmee hulle reeds
besig
was. Dit is waarskynlik waarom hulle die terroriste
wou
beïndruk deur aan die aanvalle op die polisie deel te
neem.
Verder ïs aangevoer dat tweede appellant
waarskynlik deur eerste
appellant, en beide appellante
daarna deur die twee terroriste beïnvloed
is. Dit is
egter pure bespiegeling. Nóg in die verklarings nóg
in
die ander getuienis is daar enige aanduiding van
beïnvloeding.
Word tweede appellant se manhaftigheid
boonop in ag geneem toe hy, sonder
enige aanmoediging,
die geweer gebruik het wat voor in die motor tussen
hom
en eerste appellant was, blyk dit dat daar geen rede is
om
beïnvloeding te vermoed nie.
8
Aan strafverswarende omstandighede ontbreek dit nie. By die oorweging van die
getuienis is daar vier aspekte wat veral na vore kom.
Die eerste is die feit dat
die slagoffers twee polisiemanne (wat besig was met hulle gewone pligte ter
beskerming van die gemeenskap
waarvan die appellante self lede was) en 'n
onskuldige buitestaander was (wat toevallig goed aan hulle bekend was maar van
wie se
teenwoordigheid in die voertuig hulle waarskynlik nie vooraf bewus was
nie). Die tweede is die koelbloedige soektog na en jag op
'n polisievoertuig.
Soos reeds aangedui het die soektog eers deur New Brighton en Soweto gegaan;
daarna is daar gedrink en vlels
gebraai en vervolgens is dit met dodelike erns
in Zwide voortgesit. Derdens is daar die aanval self. Op kort afstand is met
drie
semi-masjiengewere op die polisievoertuig losgetrek. Nie minder nie as 47
koeëls het dit getref. Minstens 5 daarvan is deur
tweede appellant gevuur.
Die afgryslike effek op die
5
insittendes blyk uit 'n aantal fotos wat by die verhoor ingehandig is.
Vierdens is daar die appellante se gesindheid. Dat hulle werklike-genot
geput
het uit hulle daad is nie te betwyfel nie. 'n Dag na die voorval het hulle by 'n
kennis gespog met hoe lekker hulle die polisie
geskiet het; en ongeveer 'n maand
later het hulle weer aan 'n dergelike jagtog deelgeneem.
Dat die verswarende faktore die versagtendes totaal oorskadu is duidelik. In
'n geval soos dié moet die straf klaarblyklik
gemik wees op vergelding en
voorkoming en die afsku van die gemeenskap weerspieël. Dit geld ook vir
tweede appellant ongeag
sy jeugdigheid ten tye van die moord. Sy optrede getuig
nie van die ondeurdagte voortvarendheid wat die gedrag van jeugdiges soms
kenmerk nie. Dit is insiggewend dat hy volgens sy moeder met sy studies (std 7)
besig was toe hy eenvoudig verdwyn het. Dit was teen
die einde van die jaar.
Blykbaar het hy geen belang gestel om eksamen af te lê
10
nie want, sovér bekend, het hy hom na sy geheimsinnige besoek aan King
William's Town voltyds aan sy misdadige vennootskap
met eerste appellant gewy.
Later het hy net so ywerig soos sy vennoot - wat 6 jaar ouer as hy was
-deelgeneem aan die aanvalle op
die polisie. Dit is 'n ekstreme geval wat luid
roep om die uiterste vergelding ten opsigte van beide appellante.
Die appèl word van die hand gewys.
J J F HEFER AR
EKSTEEN )
Stem saam.
KRIEGLER Wnd AR )