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[1994] ZASCA 162
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S v Boy and Another (258/93, 259/93) [1994] ZASCA 162 (21 November 1994)
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CG CASE NUMBER: 258/93 and 259/93
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (APPELLATE DIVISIONS
In the matter between:
SIPHO BOY Appellant no 1
JOHN SEBONEKO Appellant no 2
and
THE STATE Respondent
CORAM: HOEXTER, HEFER et VAN DEN HEEVER JJA HEARD ON: 1 NOVEMBER 1994
DELIVERED ON: 21 NOVEMBER 1994
J U D G M E N T VAN DEN HEEVER JA
2
Four men stood trial before Lategan J and assessors in the Supreme Court at
Cape Town on a charge of murder. They were Sipho Boy,
John Seboneko, George
Eksteen and Boy de Klerk and were numbered in that sequence at the trial. I
refer in what follows to the first
two as first and second appellants and to
Eksteen en De Klerk according to their designation at the trial, namely accused
nos 3 and
4. They were all at the relevant time convicted prisoners and
inhabitants of cell 545, section B, at Pollsmoor Prison. The State
alleged that
in the small hours of the morning on 7 November 1991 they wrongfully and
unlawfully killed a fellow prisoner and co-inhabitant
of the cell, Johnny
Fisher, by strangling him.
The appellants and accused no 4 were convicted as
charged. Accused no 3 was acquitted. The appellants were both sentenced to
death.
The trial court held that accused no 4 fell into a category different to
theirs in view of psychiatric evidence according to which
he suffered
3
from chronic schizophrenia requiring - and receiving at Pollsmoor
-maintenance treatment and supervision to keep this condition in
a state of
remission. Although it was stable it was possible that he suffered from impaired
judgment which made him more vulnerable
to being influenced than he would
otherwise have been. His record also showed him to be dishonest, not aggressive.
He was sentenced
to life imprisonment. Only the two appellants noted an appeal,
both of them against the sentences imposed on them, but first appellant
also
against his conviction, the ground advanced being that the (State had failed to
establish beyond reasonable doubt that the assault
by those charged had been the
cause of Fisher's death.
At the commencement of the trial all four pleaded
not guilty. The appellants and accused no 3 tendered no explanation of plea.
Accused
no 4 admitted that he had participated in an assault upon Fisher but
alleged that he had been threatened with death by another person
should he not
do so: his own life was therefore allegedly at stake. After the
4
pleas had been recorded the prosecutor handed up a statement, exhibit B, made
by accused no 4 to a magistrate on the 10th of March
1992 and also, with the
consent of counsel for the defence, a set of photographs of the cell and the
corpse.
The State called only one eyewitness to testify to the events which
led to Fisher's death, namely Johannes Godfrey who had at the
time been one of
the 24 inhabitants of cell 545. He and the deceased had slept next to one
another in the centre row in the cell.
He was wakened that night when something
or someone bumped against his leg. This proved to have been Fisher. He saw that
accused
no 4 was sitting on Fisher's stomach, pinning Fisher's arms against his
body. At Fisher's head appellants, one on either side, were
pulling a crepe
bandage which had been wrapped around Fisher's neck. Accused no 3 was in the
vicinity of Fisher's feet. After a while
accused no 4 stood up and said softly,
"The man is dead". The other three also stood up and they all walked away. After
a while first
appellant came back and removed the bandage from
5
around Fisher's neck. Sleep eluded Godfrey where he lay next to the corpse,
for a considerable time. When day broke and he had arisen
and was busy rolling
up his bedding, the two appellants and accused no 4 shifted the corpse to lie
against the wall of the cell where
the warders found it when they came to unlock
the door. At that stage the body was covered from head to toe by a
blanket.
According to Godfrey all four of those charged were members of the
28 gang. He himself and Fisher were both so-called "Franse" - that
is, not
members of any gang within the prison. Godfrey's opinion of Fisher was that lie
was a friendly person, and popular. He knew
of no problems between Fisher and
any of those charged with his murder. Godfrey testified that the 28 gang are
known as "wetslaners",
law breakers. A prisoner aspiring to membership must
commit some act of violence to prove his courage, or risk having violence
inflicted
upon him should he fail such a test.
The prosecution closed its case after medical evidence relating to
6
the post mortem examination; the evidence of detective sergeant Jordaan as to
his investigation; and the tender of a list of formal
admissions made by counsel
for the defence relating to the identity of the deceased and so on.
First
appellant gave no evidence at this stage. His counsel called further medical
evidence. The crux of that was that it is notionally
possible that the deceased
could have been left merely unconscious as the result of strangulation but
asphyxiation followed from
another cause. The cause suggested, namely the
blanket found covering Fisher, would depend on the nature of the material of
which
the blanket was made and the manner in which it covered his face. The
remaining accused, who supported the main features of Godfrey's
account of
events, admitted that deliberate action had been taken aimed at killing the
deceased. They left him when they were satisfied
that that object had been
achieved. The suggestion that they may have failed in what they set out to do
but fate intervened to supplement
their vigorous, but for some unaccountable
7
reason ineffectual, violence, can at best be described as fanciful. The
attention given this defence at the trial was unmerited. Mr
Hitchcock who
appeared for first appellant both at the triad and before us wisely abandoned
the appeal against his client's conviction.
The evidence of second appellant
may be summarized as follows and in doing so, I omit detail which has no bearing
on the ultimate
result. He is 30 years of age, unmarried but the father of one
child. He got as far as sub B at school and can neither read nor write.
In 1978
he joined the 28 gang. (According to his SAP 69 his criminal career commenced in
that year. I return later to the course
of that career.) His exposition of what
one may call the organogram of the 28 gang, was perhaps somewhat confusing to an
outsider
and not necessarily reliable in all respects, particularly in regard to
the names he accords the various ranks within the gang. The
gang has two
divisions catering for two entirely different fields of operations. The military
wing attends to violence, the civilian
wing is to a large extent there to
provide "wyfies" -
8
catamites - for the members of the military wing. In both divisions ranks are acknowledged and there are possibilities of promotion dependant on the commission of offences. At some stage the difference between the operations of the two sections fades somewhat since a member of the civilian division may, once he has reached the rank of lieutenant, participate in the violent activities of the military wing. Until such person has reached that rank, he may not. The civilian line apparently does not initiate offences of violence. Members in that division may not murder but nevertheless on that particular night did so. An applicant for membership undergoes a probationary period. Upon acceptance he is taught the laws of the gang by someone of senior rank. The laws include the provision that a member who disobeys the order of anyone his senior in rank, is liable to punishment. That punishment may even be a death sentence. Second appellant claimed personal knowledge of the implementation of that law: in 1984 when he was also at Pollsmoor "was daar 'n ander man wat die wette oortree het en hy was toe vermoor,
9
sy hart is uitgehaal en sy keel is afgesny". In cell 545 all bar two of the members of the 28 gang were civilian members and those two were mere soldiers, without any rank. In fact there was a measure of doubt as to whether one of these was a member of the gang at all. The 28 member with the highest rank in the cell was accused no 4. He was a captain. Accused no 4 woke second appellant that particular night and instructed him to get dressed. He did so and reported in the corner to the other three who were already sitting on the bed of first appellant or possibly that of accused no 4. There first appellant told of an earlier incident in which a fellow gang member had been murdered, Fisher allegedly having had some part in that crime: he was supposed to have dragged that deceased down stairs by his leg so that his head bumped against each of the steps. As a result of this report by first appellant, accused no 4 decided that Fisher had to be eliminated. Accused no 4 asked each of the others if he was strong enough for the task. All three answered in the affirmative. First appellant, having an injury to his leg, had crêpe
10
bandages in bis locker. It was his suggestion that one of those bandages
should be used as the instrument with which to do the deed.
First appellant
fetched the bandage and wrapped it around Fisher's neck. At the same time
accused no 4 sat on appellant's stomach
and the appellants, one on either side,
pulled at the crossed-over bandage until accused no 4 reported that the man was
dead after
which second appellant removed the bandage.
Although second
appellant under cross-examination unreservedly admitted that the murder was
committed purely from considerations of
revenge, he also alleged that three of
the attackers were members in the civilian line while accused no 3 was still on
probation
at that stage, which suggests that the story of the motive for the
murder may not be the full truth. Second appellant also said that
Fisher had
been a catamite with whom both second appellant and accused no 4 sometimes had
intercourse. Fisher had a few days before
the incident asked to be taken out of
cell 545. He was, but was returned again at the request of
11
accused no 4 (according to what the latter had told second appellant). Second
appellant himself was never informed by Fisher that
he wished to terminate any
relationship with anyone in the cell and second appellant "het maar altyd gekry
wat ek won hê daar
by horn en ek het bale - ek was baie verlief op horn".
He denied that any gang violence is committed out of fear: when you join the
gang you take an oath and appreciate that that oath may lead to your being
obliged to commit murder.
Accused no 3 testified that he had been bom in
1973. He attended school to standard 6 but did not pass that examination. He was
in
a single cell in Pollsmoor when accused no 4, with his consent, arranged for
him to be transferred to cell 545. Although in the juvenile
section he had
apparently become a member of the 28 gang already, there was no member there
with sufficient rank and therefore jurisdiction
to confer effective membership
(after proper instruction) on him. In cell 545 he was accordingly not accepted
as a full blown member,
but regarded as
12
a Frenchman. As regards the events of that night, he was invited by first appellant to participate in a murder and threatened by accused no 4 to do so or feature as a corpse himself. He tried, surreptitiously but unsuccessfully, to make a noise so that people would wake up. He was ordered to hold Fisher's feet and took up) his station there but in actual fact did not obey the order. It was in any event unnecessary. Fisher was effectively pinned down by accused no 4 who sat on him and held down his arms and prevented his struggling. After the cell was opened in the morning the four of them were at first held together in one cell. There he was accepted by the other three as a full member of the 28 gang. That was possible because both first appellant and accused no 4 had sufficient jurisdiction, both being captains though in the civilian line. It was also necessary for them to confer membership on him since they could not acknowledge that they had called in the assistance of a "Frenchman" to commit the murder. That constituted a contravention of the law of the gang. Having been so accepted he was ordered by second
13
appellant to make at statement to the authorities accepting responsibility
for the murder because he, as a minor, would receive a
lighter sentence. He
pretended to agree to do this after he had been threatened with a razor blade
but nevertheless told the truth
in the statement which he made to a major at
Pollsmoor, after which he was transferred to a different section.
Another
inhabitant of the cell at that stage, N Witbooi, was called on behalf of accused
no 3. Witbooi is also a member of the 28
gang and although his evidence was
contradictory and differed in certain respects from a statement he had made
earlier, he was adamant
that apart from four "Frenchmen", the inhabitants of the
cell were all members of the civilian line of the 28 gang and that the murder
of
Fisher was not one committed as gang vengeance. Pollsmoor is a transit
institution from which prisoners are posted elsewhere.
According to gang laws,
gang activities are neither planned nor executed there.
The evidence of accused no 4 followed the same pattern as that of
14
the other inhabitants of cell 545 who testified, with variations in regard to detail. According to him it was second appellant who decided that a murder had to be committed because he was cross with Fisher, with whom he had a relationship, because Fisher wanted to leave the cell. He, accused no 4, was afraid of first appellant who had in the past stabbed him with a knife. (In his statement to the magistrate which had been handed up at the commencement of the trial he alleged that first appellant threatened him with a knife to persuade him to participate in the murder. According to his evidence in court first appellant was in possession of a knife but did not handle it in any fashion which caused accused no 4 to think that he himself was in any immediate danger.) He did not dispute the fact that he had sat on Fisher's stomach while the appellants pulled on the crepe bandage around Fisher's neck. According to him he had to murder or be murdered, there was no escape for him; a claim undermined by his ready concession that the murder was not a procedure ordered in gang "interests" but had been triggered by jealousy.
15
According to him, Fisher had not yet come to Pollsmoor when the event now
offered as the motive for "necessitating" Fisher's death,
had occurred.
In
convicting appellants and accused no 4, Lategan J found that the murder had been
a planned operation and committed with dolus directus.
There was no reason to
regard the explanation of plea proferred by accused no 4 as being reasonably
possibly true. He was no subordinate
in the cell but held a rank at least equal
to that of first appellant. His evidence of alleged compulsion had no foundation
and was
in any event full of contradictions. On the other hand the evidence of
accused no 3 that he had no common purpose with the other
three and had only
pretended to participate while actually performing no action at all against
Fisher, was corroborated by certain
of the other witnesses and could reasonably
possibly be true.
After the appellants and accused no 4 had been convicted,
each of the three admitted an impressive list of previous convictions and
first
16
appellant gave evidence for the first time. He told the court that he was
34 years old, was bom and raised irk the Transkei, by an older
brother,
since he had been orphaned when young. He never attended school.
He
came to the Cape in 1981, got employment as a guard at a factory but
it
is clear from his SAP 69 that that career must have been short-lived.
He
became a member of the 28 gang in 1989. In 1990 there was trouble
between
members of the 26 and the 28 gangs who had been put into the
same cell. He
himself was assaulted and landed in hospital and a fellow
member of the 28
gang was killed. He got no satisfaction from the
prison authorities when he
complained. Instead he was transferred to
Brandvlei. A detective came to him
there and took a statement from him
relating to both the assault upon him and
the death of his fellow gang
member but he never heard what the outcome of
that matter was. The
present deceased had been killed because he had
participated in the 1990
action against the 28 member who died and
"onse wet werk nou so, U Edele as ons weet wie onse lid
doodgemaak het, U Edele, dan moet ons nou ook vir horn
17
doodmaak ... As ons dit nie doen nie, U Edele, dan word dit nou gesê ... dat ons ook nou saamstem ... met wat gebeur-het en dan word ons daarvoor gestraf omrede dat ons gesweer net, U Edele dat ons as een eenheid sal werk,U Edele".
He did not suggest that he had been ordered by anyone to murder Fisher and admitted that the very morning before judgment on the merits was to be given, he had stabbed someone at Pollsmoor with a knife. Asked whether second appellant had also stabbed the person with the knife, he said that he hadn't seen that "want ek was kwaad". Cross-examined on his record he offered a reason for all of his offences, very few of which he conceded were his fault. When it was put to him that if he were returned to prison indefinitely, he as a member of the 28 gang who regarded himself as totally bound by its laws might be instructed to murder again, he glibly replied that that was not possible. The gang would not order him to commit a second murder when he already had one chalked up against him.
In dealing with mitigating and aggravating factors for purposes of
18
sentence the trial court found that appellants' membership of the 28 gang and the influence which that had on the commission of the murder, constituted a mitigating factor. In the relevant judgment, Lategan J then referred to evidence of coercion and of the consequences of disobedience of gang leaders' orders and to argument advanced that second appellant must be found to have obeyed gang orders, in view of his uncontradicted evidence that he was in love with Fisher and had no quarrel with him. From what follows later in the judgment it is clear that the court made no finding that either that evidence or that argument was accepted. That would have conflicted with concessions made by the appellants that none of the participants in the murder were members of, or had received orders from officers in, the military wing of the gang. It follows that the court's finding amounts to no more than that loyalty to fellow members probably made each feel obliged to implement the decision to murder, once that decision had been arrived at. But that decision originated in their own minds and did not come from any "higher authority".
19
It is by now trite law that this court has an independent discretion to
determine whether the death penalty is the only appropriate
one for the offence
committed by these men.
It is unnecessary to look for condemnatory adjectives
to describe the offence committed. The murder was carefully pre-planned and
efficiently executed to ensure success. Not only were the odds against Fisher
overwhelming but he was attacked in his sleep. He had
not a dog's chance of
survival. The motive was reprehensible. Whatever the merits of fourth accused's
evidence that the origin of
the murder lay in resentment that Fisher wished to
terminate his "services", appellants themselves insisted that their motive was
revenge arising out of earlier inter-gang violence. The place where the murder
was committed - within one of the very institutions
created by society to render
criminals either rehabilitated or harmless - places the murder high on the list
within the category
of crimes so serious that they undermine the foundations of
orderly society.
20
Looking at the next leg of the triad relevant to determining
sentence: the criminals, I set out below the SAP 69 of each.
SIPHO BOY
"83.12.20 R30 of 60 dae G/Straf Besit van dagga- 2,5
gram 84.05.21 12 Maande G/S waarvan 8 Aanranding met
maande opgeskort word die opset om ernstig te
vir 3 jaar op voorwaarde dat beseer - stuk yster
besk nie weer skuldig bevind
word aan die volgende mis-
drywe gepleeg gedurende die
tydperk van opskorting; aan-
randing of 'n aanklag waarvan
aanranding 'n bestanddeel is
ten opsigte waarvan besk
veroordeel word sonder 'n
keuse van 'n boete of op-
skorting van G/S
85.02.06 4 maande g.s Besit van dagga - 4 g
85.02.20 R30 of 30 dae g.s Aanranding - stok 85.04.25 R180 of 90 dae g.s opge- Aanranding op polisie skort in die geheel vir 'n - vas gegryp en op tydperk van 3 jaar op grond gegooi voorwaarde dat die besk nie skuldig bevind word
21
aan o/a27 (2)(a) wet 7/58
gepleeg in die tydperk van
opskortingnie.
Gewaarsku en ontslaan. Onregmatige betreding
85.09.19 R150 of 100 dae g/straf. Opsetlike saakbeskadig-
ing, vensterruite, R60
86.05.20 6 maande g/s Besit van dagga-0,5g
Dagga verbeurd aan staat
verklaar
86.10.21 12 Maande g/s Roof,baadjie, horlosie
R30 kontant -waarde R133,00
86.12.19 OPGESKORTE VONNIS [VAN 1984] WORD IN WERKING GESTEL
87.11.05
VRYGELAAT OP PAROOL TOT 87/12/15 35/6298
88.04.07 3 Jaar g/s Roof - Kontant
-mes -
R12
89.05.25 12 Maande g/s Aanranding met die
opset om emstig te beseer - Beker in sokkie
89.06.12 HERTOEGELAAT OM 11 DAE G/A UIT TE DIEN WEENS PAROOLBREUK
89.09.17
6 Maande g/s Opsetlike saakbeska-
diging - 1 Toilet pot in sel R60
91.04.30 ONVOORWAARDELIK VRYGELAAT RAAD
No
22
35/6298
91.10.08 5jaar G/S Strafbare manslag
skerp voorwerp
91.12.12 6maande G/S Opsetlike saakbeskadig-
ing - ruite en buislig -R200" BOY DE KLERK
"72.07.20 R20 of 40 dae g/s Besitvangevaar-
like wapen
73.11.20 R45 of 90 dae g/s Diefstal - kontant
R20
73.11.20 3 Maande g/s Huisbraak met
die opset om 'n misdryf te pleeg en diefstal -klerasie -woonhuis -
R5
74.06.06 6 Maande g/s Huisbraak met
die opset om 'a misdryf te pleeg en diefstal -kontant en koffer - woonhuis -
R40
75.03.12 R20 of 40 dae g/s en Diefstal -
50 dae g/s opgeskort vir horlosie - R4 2 jaar op voorwaarde dat besk nie skuldig bevind
23
word aan diefstal, roof of huisbraak met die opset om te steel wat gepleeg is gedurende die tydperk van opskorting nie.
75.05.01 Ingevolge Art 334 Wet 56/55 Huisbraak met
ter- G/S vir korrektiewe die opset om te
opleiding. steel en poging
tot
diefstal -woonhuis
77.12.12 R60 of 90 dae g/s Besit van ge-
vaarlike wapen
77.12.22 4 Jaar g/s waarvan 3 jaar Huisbraak met g/s opgeskort word op voor- die opset om te waarde dat die besk nie steel en diefstal skuldig bevind word aan - klerasie -enige aanklag wat oneerlik- woonhuis - R151 heid inhou nie, gepleeg binne 5 jaar vanaf vandag.
78.09.12 VRYGELAAT OP PAROOL TOT 78.10.10 -G8/K106/78
79.01.24 3 Jaar g.s. en besk word Huisbraak met die doel gewaarsku dat by 'n latere om te steel en diefstal skuldigbevinding daar 'n - klerasie - woonhuis -wesenlike moontlikheid R325,26 bestaan dat hy as gewoon-
24
te misdadiger verklaar kan word.
79.02.15 OPGESKORTE VONNIS GEDATEER 77.12.22
WORD IN WERKING GESTEL
82.01.24 ONVOORWAARDELIK VRYGELAAT :
RAAD
No 18/3610
82.03.04 5 Jaar g.s. Huisbraak met die
opset om te
steel en diefstal - klerasie bandspeler - woonhuis -R365,13 86.01.29
ONVOORWAARDELIK VRYGELAAT RAAD No 18/3610
86.05.16 4 Maande G/S opgeskort Sodomie
vir 'n tydperk van 2 jaar
op voorwaarde dat die
beskuldigde nie skuldig
bevind word aan (lie
misdaad van sodomie
wat gedurende daardie
tydperk gepleeg is nie. 86.07.24 O/A 286 van Wet 51/77 Huisbraak met die
Tot gewoonte misdadiger opset om te steel
verklaar. en diefktal -
Woonhuis -Klerasie - Laken -Kassetspeler -
25
R300,00"
So at the age of 34, first appellant had been at odds with the law for almost
a decade and his record shows that he has progressed
from violence to combining
that with dishonesty. He had already been responsible for the death of one man
when he killed another
and it is clear that he has learned nothing from the
sentences so far imposed upon him, whether fines, suspended sentences, short
term imprisonment or long term imprisonment. He does not submit to authority or
discipline, is a trouble maker in gaol where he assaulted
someone and damaged
property and was barely out when he was back inside again. Most important is his
admission that once more he
has stabbed another person, after the events which
form the basis of his present conviction. He displays no remorse
whatsoever.
The court a quo correctly pointed out in regard to the third leg
of the triad that the interests of society include the interests
of fellow
prisoners. We are reminded daily in political speeches, journals,
26
judgments, newspapers that Correctional Services have problems with
overcrowding in its institutions. I have difficulty in envisaging
how fellow
prisoners can be protected against first appellant short of putting him in a
cage for life. Apart from that probably constituting
a "cruel and unusual
punishment", a sentence of life imprisonment would lessen both the man-hours and
money available to Correctional
Services to be expended more profitably on
others put under their jurisdiction. Where imprisonment has not in the past
served to
deter him or fellow members of the gangs that hold sway inside
prisons, in my view the interests of society both within and outside
the prison
establishment demand that the death sentence be imposed and executed as the only
appropriate method of dealing with first
appellant. Mere incarceration would
leave fellow prisoners and warders constantly at risk.
The record of second
appellant is in one respect less serious than that of first appellant, in
another respect more so. His offences
relate primarily to dishonesty rather than
to acts of violence. He has however
27
clashed with the law for a far longer period, having started at a younger age. Like first appellant, this man learns nothing from experience: neither fines, suspended sentences nor long-term imprisonment have discouraged him. Released in January of 1986 he was back in months and serving an indeterminate sentence when Fisher was murdered. Although he has not in the past indulged in violence, his evidence that he killed Fisher apparently without any qualms despite being fond of him, is chilling. He has spent more of his life inside prison than outside, in terms of the sentences actually imposed upon him. There is no ground whatsoever to suggest that he is capable of rehabilitation. I cannot envisage life imprisonment as being any deterrent for him whatever. The only effective method of preventing him from killing again (and hopefully of deterring other gang members from ordering or committing prison murders) is by the imposition and execution of the death sentence. I am accordingly of the view that the death sentence is the only sentence which could have any meaning in the present matter. However,
28
in view of the attitude adopted before us in other matters, that the death sentence conflicts with the Constitution of South Africa, Act 200 of 1993, and the fact that counsel in this matter requested an opportunity for their clients similar to that granted in other cases to contest the issue, the following order is made:
1. The appeal of first appellant against his conviction is dismissed.
2. The final determination of the appeal of both appellants against the death sentences imposed on them is postponed to a date to be arranged by the registrar in consultation with the Chief Justice, pending a decision by the Constitutional Court on the issue whether confirmation of those sentences by this court in this matter would be unconstitutional.
L VAN DEN HEEVER JA CONCUR:
HOEXTER JA) HEFER JA)