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[1992] ZASCA 146
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S v Mafu (378/91) [1992] ZASCA 146 (15 September 1992)
CASE
NO 378/91
/CCC
IN THE
SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the
matter between
FANO
MAFU
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
CORAM
:
NESTADT, VAN DEN HEEVER JJA et HARMS AJA
DATE HEARD
: 3
SEPTEMBER 1992
DATE DELIVERED:
15 SEPTEMBER 1992
JUDGMENT
NESTADT, JA
:
This is an
appeal against the death sentence. It was imposed by PAGE J sitting
on circuit in the Natal Provincial Division consequent
upon the
appellant having
2
been found
guilty of murder.
The crime
took place in the district of Port Shepstone on 16 January 1990. At
about 5 pm that day a group of young persons known as
the "comrades"
apprehended 62 year-old Ndokuzempi Mkhize (the deceased). The
appellant was the leader of the group. He
was then aged 21. The
deceased was escorted to his kraal. He was accused of practising
witchcraft. The appellant gave instructions
that the kraal be
searched for herbs or muti. None was found. Certain members of the
group then said that the deceased should be
freed. The appellant
however demanded that he be killed. The deceased's son, Kenneth, aged
17, was present. The appellant handed
him a bottle containing petrol.
He told him to pour the petrol over his father. Kenneth refused to do
so. The appellant, who
3
was in
possession of a knife, threatened to stab Kenneth
if he did
not. Kenneth complied and poured the petrol
over the
deceased. The appellant gave Kenneth some
matches
and told him to set the deceased alight.
Kenneth
threw the matches to the ground and fled.
Thereafter
the appellant himself set the deceased
alight. It
was in these circumstances that the
deceased
was killed.
In favour
of the appellant is his
comparative
youth and perhaps the fact that he had had
no
schooling. A further mitigating factor is that
though he
has two previous convictions, they do not
relate to
crimes of violence and were in any event
committed
many years before. Against this background
PAGE J,
with justification, said:
"(Y)ou
are a young man who, despite your lack of education, has evinced
qualities of leadership, and who is not basically criminal
by nature.
There is
4
accordingly
reason to believe that there is room for your rehabilitation if I am
justified in passing a sentence which gives an opportunity
for that
to take place."
The
learned judge, however, went on to find
that
despite this, the death sentence was, because of a
number of
aggravating factors, imperatively called for.
We have to
decide whether this is so. Clearly there
are
serious aggravating factors. This is not a case of
the
accused having been emotionally swept up by the
occurrence
or even influenced by the conduct or example
of others.
On the contrary, and as I have said, the
appellant,
was the leader of the group. It was he who
insisted
that the deceased be killed. His denial of
this and
his version that he was compelled by members of
the group
to set the deceased alight was rejected.
And, of
course, he played the dominant if not sole role
in the
actual murder. He acted with
dolus
directus.
5
The crime
was obviously a planned one. It was not impulsively committed. The
appellant's motive arose from it having come to his attention
that
the deceased had, shortly before, disapproved of his son's membership
of the comrades. As a result, Kenneth ceased attending
meetings of
the group. It would seem that the appellant wished to punish the
deceased for this; or that his aim was to intimidate
others from
acting similarly. In either event, his motive was a base one. The
manner in which the deceased was put to death was cruel
and savage in
the extreme. He, elderly and defenseless, was shown no mercy.
Involvement by the appellant of the deceased' s son in
the manner I
have described was especially abhorrent.
During the
course of argument in the Court below, it was submitted on behalf of
the appellant that
6
account should also be taken of
the possibility that the
appellant
was a creature of his times and background and
had become accustomed to violence
as a part of his daily
life. Perhaps one could add to
this the possible
influence or effect of the unrest
environment which I
will
assume existed in the area at the time. Even so,
and as the trial judge put it, it
is difficult to
believe that the appellant's
sensitivities "could have
been so blunted as not to fully
appreciate the enormity
of (his) deed". It seems to
me, therefore, that the
aggravating factors in this case
far outweigh those in
mitigation. It does not, of
course, follow that the
death sentence should be imposed.
But this is a
particularly bad case. In his
judgment on sentence,
PAGE J said:
"I cannot conceive of any
right-minded member of society thinking that anything less than the
death sentence would be a fitting
retribution for your
7
deed or
would furnish an effective deterrent against similar crimes."
After much
anxious consideration I have come to the
conclusion
that this is the correct approach. In my
opinion,
therefore, the death sentence is the only
proper
sentence.
The appeal
is dismissed.
H H
NESTADT JA
CASE NO 378/91 J VD M
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
(
APPELLATE DIVISION
)
In the matter between:
FANO MAFU
Appellant
and
THE STATE
Respondent
CORAM
:
NESTADT,
VAN DEN HEEVER, JJA et
HARMS, AJA
HEARD
:
3
SEPTEMBER 1992
DELIVERED
: 15 SEPTEMBER
1992
JUDGMENT
HARMS, AJA:
I have had the opportunity of
reading the judgment of my brother NESTADT and am in respectful
2
agreement
with his exposition of the salient facts as well as his summation of
the aggravating and mitigating factors. I am, however,
unable to
agree with his ultimate value judgment namely that the death penalty
is, in the circumstances of this case, the only proper
sentence. Lest
there be any misunderstanding, that sentence is no doubt a proper
sentence especially if regard is had to the appellant's
callousness
and his method of execution of the murder.
The
learned trial judge could not conceive of any right-minded member of
society who could think that anything less than the death
sentence
would be a fitting retribution for the crime and therefore imposed
that sentence. I am unable to endorse the reasoning and
wish to deal
with two issues that arise from it.
In the
first instance, the reference to all the right-minded members of
society may create the impression that the "reasonable
man"
test is an
3
appropriate
test in the present context. It is not. In any event and with respect
to the learned judge, I am able to conceive of persons
who would not
share his view. The fact that they may not be like-minded does not
mean that they are not right-minded. Also, the views
of the majority
of right-minded persons are not known to me. As Alf Ross,
On
Guilt, Responsibility and
Punishment
(1975) p 59 said,
"the professed
opinio
communis
is of course a
fancy. All we can say is that there is a certain unanimity within a
certain cultural group". The sentencing judicial
officer has to
make (within the relevant legislative context) his own value
judgment. He will obviously, in the words of NIENABER
JA in
S v
Majosi and Others
1991 (2) SACR 532
(A) at 541, take into account
the "perceptions, sensibilities and interests of the community"
(insofar as he can surmise
what they are) but, in dispensing penal
justice he is not only obliged to protect society against the
4
accused
but also to protect the accused against society. Cross,
The
English Sentencing System
(3rd ed) p 201 pointed out that "(t)he
position of the judges is certainly a little ambivalent, for they
claim to be the mouthpiece
of the public and yet there are instances
in which their views are probably more moralistic than those of a
considerable sector,
if not a preponderance, of the public." The
other side of the coin is that the public can often be rather
vindictive and vengeful,
sentiments a court has to ignore. The
experience of O' LINN J as recounted by him in
S v Heita and
Another
1992 (3) SA 785
(NmHC) illustrates rather vividly the
point I am trying to make.
The next
aspect on which I wish to express some views relate to the question
of retribution. I do endorse the proposition underlying
the learned
judge's finding that where a crime is as horrendous as the present
and is
malum per se
, the only moral
5
justification
for the sentence can be retribution. The other so-called "theories"
or "aims" of punishment may
have little, if any, role to
play. (See in general on the question of the concept of "theories"
of punishment: Rabie &
Strauss
Punishment, An Introduction to
Principles
(4th ed) p 18 and on its "aims": Alf
Ross,
op cit
, p 60 - 65.) That does not mean that one adopts
"sentencing nihilism" as a philosophy (see Mueller
The
Future of Sentencing : Back to Square One
in Grosman
New
Directions in Sentencing
p 13) but simply that one has regard to
the realities and effectiveness of sentences. Accepting, as I do,
that retribution must in
this case justify the nature of the
sentence, it may be useful to recall that retribution in this context
means requital for evil
done (
The Concise Oxford
Dictionary
(1990) s v "retribution"; Stockdale & Devlin,
Sentencing,
p 23), or, in the terminology of Du Toit,
Straf
in Suid-Afrika
, p 102 - 105, "vergelding
6
in verhewe
sin". And although there must be a certain proportionality
between punishment and the crime, that does not "imply
that the
punishment be equal in kind to the harm that the offender has caused"
(Rabie & Strauss, opcit, p 21).
Against
that background I now wish to assess the question whether the death
sentence is the only proper sentence. In this regard I
do believe
that this Court cannot close its mind to what is happening beyond its
portals. Regard should be had to the fact that the
crime was
committed, not only with a political motive but also in what can be
described, without any hyperbole, a combat zone; an
area where sense
and sensibilities do not govern political thought or action; a place
where political intimidation is a part of life;
where moral
principles have become blunted. It seems to me that any attempt to
impose, ex
cathedra
, in this case the civilized standards in
which one
7
believes,
is doomed. I do not wish thereby to condone or create new or lesser
standards of morality or to formulate a rule applicable
to all cases
of "political" murders but merely to verbalise my innate
conviction that the death sentence is not imperatively
called for in
this instance and that a sentence of 18 years' imprisonment would do
justice to the case.
L T C
HARMS
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
CG
CASE
NUMBER: 378/91
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA (APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between:
FANO MAFU
Appellant
and
THE STATE
Respondent
CORAM
: NESTADT, VAN DEN
HEEVER JJA et HARMS AJA
HEARD ON
: 3 SEPTEMBER 1992
DELIVERED
ON
: 15 SEPTEMBER 1992
JUDGMENT VAN DEN HEEVER JA
2
I have had the advantage of
reading the judgments of both my colleagues. I agree with that of
Nestadt JA, and would wish to add to
the exposition of the salient
facts by him only three further ones.
The middle-aged deceased was
degraded and made to sing what Kenneth said "are usually
referred to as toyi-toyi slogans"
as he was marched home by the
group of young men of which appellant was the leader.
Before Kenneth was instructed to
pour petrol on his father, the latter had already been severely
injured. He had head wounds which
were bleeding profusely, a broken
leg, and according to his son's description "part of his heel
was not in place".
When appellant produced a knife
and threatened to stab Kenneth were he to persist in his refusal to
pour petrol on his father, the
nobility of the father's intervention
"by saying that I should pour petrol over him since I could do
nothing" roused no
compassion in appellant.
3 The
murder committed by appellant was not committed with a political
motive. Appellant at no stage claimed that to have been the
case. The
acts done by him and those he incited do not fall within the
dictionary definition of "politics" ("science
and art
of government") or "political" ("of or affecting
the State or its government; of public affairs ... engaged
in civil
administration" etc). The Concise Oxford Dictionary defines a
"terrorist" as "one who favours or uses
terror-inspiring methods of governing or of coercing government or
community". Appellant was not the victim of terrorism but
its
imaginative perpetrator, moreover corrupting others to follow in his
footsteps.
VAN DEN
HEEVER JA
CG
CASE
NUMBER: 378/91
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA (APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between:
FANO MAFU
Appellant
and
THE STATE
Respondent
CORAM
: NESTADT, VAN DEN
HEEVER JJA et HARMS AJA
HEARD ON
: 3 SEPTEMBER 1992
DELIVERED
ON
: 15 SEPTEMBER 1992
JUDGMENT VAN DEN HEEVER JA
2
I have had the advantage of
reading the judgments of both my colleagues. I agree with that of
Nestadt JA, and would wish to add to
the exposition of the salient
facts by him only three further ones.
The middle-aged deceased was
degraded and made to sing what Kenneth said "are usually
referred to as toyi-toyi slogans"
as he was marched home by the
group of young men of which appellant was the leader.
Before Kenneth was instructed to
pour petrol on his father, the latter had already been severely
injured. He had head wounds which
were bleeding profusely, a broken
leg, and according to his son's description "part of his heel
was not in place".
When appellant produced a knife
and threatened to stab Kenneth were he to persist in his refusal to
pour petrol on his father, the
nobility of the father's intervention
"by saying that I should pour petrol over him since I could do
nothing" roused no
compassion in appellant.
3 The
murder committed by appellant was not committed with a political
motive. Appellant at no stage claimed that to have been the
case. The
acts done by him and those he incited do not fall within the
dictionary definition of "politics" ("science
and art
of government") or "political" ("of or affecting
the State or its government; of public affairs ... engaged
in civil
administration" etc). The Concise Oxford Dictionary defines a
"terrorist" as "one who favours or uses
terror-inspiring methods of governing or of coercing government or
community". Appellant was not the victim of terrorism but
its
imaginative perpetrator, moreover corrupting others to follow in his
footsteps.
VAN DEN
HEEVER JA