Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 761South Africa
Made v S (A81/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 761 (29 July 2024)
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Made v S (A81/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 761 (29 July 2024)
Made v S (A81/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 761 (29 July 2024)
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sino date 29 July 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No: A81/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
29 JULY 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
VUSI
SIDWELL MADE
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Basson, J, Lenayi J and Mpshe AJ
Heard
on:
22 July 2024
Delivered:
29 July 2024 - This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by being uploaded
to the
CaseLines
system of the GD and
by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
10H00 on 29 July 2024.
ORDER
It
is Ordered:
The
appeal against sentence is upheld and replaced with the following:
"1. The sentences
imposed in respect of count 2,3 and 4 are to run concurrently with
the sentences imposed in respect of count
1. The accused is thus
sentenced to an effective 35 (thirty-five) years' imprisonment.
2. In terms of
s 282
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
the sentence is antedated to
18 May 2010 being the date he was sentenced by the trial court."
JUDGMENT
BASSON,
J (LENYAI, J AND MPSHE, AJ CONCURRING)
[1]
The appellant was convicted and sentenced by the High Court of South
Africa (Eastern Circuit Local
Division of the Eastern Circuit
District) on 8 and 18 May 2010 respectively ("the trial court")
on the following charges:
Count 1: Murder read with
section 51 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act "the Act").
[1]
Count 2: housebreaking
with the intent to rob and robbery with aggravating circumstances
read with section 51 of the Act.
Count 3: Unlawful
possession of a firearm.
Count 4: Unlawful
possession of ammunition.
[2]
On 8 May 2010, the appellant was convicted on all charges by Kgomo, J
and on 18 May 2010 the following
sentences were imposed:
Count 1: 35 years' of
imprisonment.
Count 2: 20 years' of
imprisonment.
Count 3: three years' of
imprisonment.
Count 4: one year of
imprisonment.
[3]
The trial court ordered that only the sentences in respect of counts
3 and 4 be served concurrently
with that in respect of count 1 - the
effective sentence being 55 (fifty-five) years' imprisonment.
Brief
background
[4]
The appellant (accused no 1 in the trial court) was one of three
accused. He, together with the
second accused were found guilty on
all three charges. Accused no 3 was discharged on all counts.
[5]
The charges emanated from an incident that took place on or about 29
- 30 January 2009, when the
appellant and his co-accused broke into
the shop of Mr Wilson Shongwe (the brother of the deceased) and
murdered Mr Jan Zacharia
Shongwe ("the deceased") who was a
security guard at his brother's shop. They murdered him and robbed
the shop of various
items.
[6]
The state called 10 witnesses. The stolen goods, that had peculiar
price markings on them, were
found in the possession of the appellant
(and accused no 2). The firearm that was used in the murder was
subsequently retrieved
from accused number 2's possession and was
also positively linked to the murder
[7]
The appellant's application for leave to appeal his conviction and
sentence was refused by the
trial court. Following a petition, the
appellant was granted leave to appeal to this court by the Supreme
Court of Appeal ("SCA")
against both conviction and
sentence. The appellant has now abandoned the appeal on conviction
and had instructed Legal Aid SA
to only pursue the appeal on
sentence.
Submissions
[8]
It was submitted on behalf of the appellant firstly that the sentence
of 35 years imposed in respect of count 1 (murder)
should be reduced
to 25 years. Secondly, the court must order 10 years of the 20 years'
prison sentence imposed in respect of count
2 to run concurrently the
25 years' imprisonment imposed in respect of count 1 bringing the
total effective sentence to 35 years
instead of 55 years, effective
prison sentence.
Ad
sentence
[9]
Section 51(1) of the Act provides for a minimum sentence of life
imprisonment, while section 51(2) provides for a minimum
sentence of
15 years of imprisonment for a first offender robbery with
aggravating circumstances. In terms of section 51(3) a court
must
impose a lesser sentence when substantial and compelling
circumstances are found to exist by a trial court.
[10]
No previous convictions were approved against the appellant. At the
time of conviction, the personal circumstances of the appellant
were
placed before the trial court. He was a 24 at the time when the
crimes were committed. He also has no children and was mostly
unemployed.
Test
on appeal
[11]
It is trite that a court sitting in an appeal may only interfere with
the sentence imposed by the trial
court if the court on appeal is
satisfied that the trial court had misdirected itself in respect of
the sentence imposed, or if
the sentence imposed is so disturbingly
inappropriate or disproportionate that "no reasonable court
would have imposed it''.
It is trite that the test is not whether the
trail court was wrong or whether the appeal court would have imposed
a different sentence,
the test is whether the trial court has
exercised its discretion properly.
[2]
These principles are succinctly set out by the court
S
v Rabie
:
[3]
"1 In every appeal
against sentence, whether imposed by a magistrate or a Judge, the
Court hearing the appeal –
(a)
should be guided by the principle that punishment is "pre-eminently
a matter for the discretion
of the trial Court";
and
(b)
should be careful not to erode such discretion: hence the further
principle that the sentence should
only be altered if the discretion
has not been "judicially and properly exercised".
2 The test under
(b)
is whether the sentence is vitiated by irregularity or misdirection
or is disturbingly inappropriate."
[12]
I have considered the sentences imposed in respect of counts 1 and 2.
Although this bench may have arrived
at a lesser sentence than those
imposed in respect of counts 1 and 2, this is not the test. As
already pointed out, in order to
interfere with the sentences imposed
in respect of counts 1 and 2, this court must first find that the
trial court has misdirected
itself in imposing the sentences in
respect of these two counts. Having regard to the sentences imposed
on the different charges
and the reasoning for doing so, I cannot
find that the trial had misdirected itself in imposing the sentences
it did on the different
charges. But, the enquiry does not end here.
Cumulative
effect of the sentences
[13]
The remaining issue in this appeal against sentence is whether the
cumulative effect of the effective sentence
of 55 years' imprisonment
is unduly harsh, induce a sense of shock and/or is disproportionate
to the offenses committed by the
appellant.
[14]
On any interpretation a sentence of 55 years is extremely lengthy.
Ultimately, however, the question of sentence
must be considered in
the circumstances of this particular case
[4]
and bearing in mind that the imposition of sentence lies primarily
within the discretion of the court.
[5]
[15]
Whilst I agree that the trial court correctly took into account the
seriousness of the crime of murder and
robbery. I am of the view that
the cumulative effect of the imposed sentences was not properly
considered and is shockingly disproportionate
and too harsh in the
circumstances. Proportionality is determined by considering the
circumstances of a particular case as explained
by the court in
S
v Vilakazi
:
[6]
"[16] It was
submitted before us that in
Malgas
this court 'repeatedly
emphasised' that the prescribed sentences must be imposed as the norm
and are to be departed from only as
an exception. That is not what
was said in
Malgas
. The submission was founded upon words
selected from the judgment and advanced out of their context. The
court did not say, for
example, as it was submitted that it did, that
the prescribed sentences 'should ordinarily be imposed'. What it said
is that a
court must approach the matter 'conscious [of the fact]
that the Legislature has ordained [the prescribed sentence] as the
sentence
that should
ordinarily
and in the absence of weighty
justification be imposed for the listed crimes in the specified
circumstances' ... In the context
of the judgment as a whole,
and in particular the 'determinative test' that I referred to
earlier, it is clear that the effect
of those qualifications is that
any circumstances that would render the prescribed sentence
disproportionate to the offence would
constitute the requisite
'weighty justification' for the imposition of a lesser sentence."
[16]
I am of the view that the trial court did not attached sufficient
weight to the harsh effect the imposition
ear's imprisonment would
have on the appellant. Although the robberies and the particular
heinous nature of the violence that accompanied
it, should by no
means be diminished, I am not persuaded that it warranted an
effective prison sentence of 55 years' imprisonment.
[7]
On that basis, this court is at liberty to interfere and reconsider
the cumulative effect of the sentence afresh.
[17]
I am thus persuaded that there was a misdirection by the trial court
in that the cumulative effect of the
sentence induces a sense of
shock and warrants interference insofar as the length of time of such
incarceration is concerned. In
my view, the court
a quo
ought
more appropriately to have ordered that all the sentences run
concurrently.
[18]
I therefore propose the following order:
The
appeal against sentence is upheld and replaced with the following:
"1.
The sentences imposed in respect of count 2,3 and 4 are to run
concurrently with the sentences imposed in respect of count
1. The
accused is thus sentenced to an effective 35 thirty-five) years'
imprisonment.
2.
In terms of
s 282
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
the
sentence is antedated to 18 May 2010 being the date he was sentenced
by the trial court."
A
BASSON
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
AGREE AND IT IS SO ORDERED
M
LENYAI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
AGREE AND IT IS SO ORDERED
M
MPSHE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD ON:
22 JULY 2024
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ON:
29 JULY MAY 2024
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPELLANT:
ADV. L VAN WYK
INSTRUCTED BY:
LEGAL AID
COUNSEL FOR THE
RESPONDENT:
ADV K GERMISHUIS
INSTRUCTED BY:
OFFICE OF THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
[1]
Act 105 of 1997.
[2]
S v
Romer
2011 (2) SACR 153
(SCA) paras [22] - [23].
[3]
1975 (4) SA 855
(A) at 857 D-F.
[4]
See
S v
Rabie
1975 (4) SA 855
(A) at 857 D-F: "1 In every appeal against
sentence, whether imposed by a magistrate or a Judge, the Court
hearing the appeal
–
(a)
should be guided by the principle that punishment is "pre-eminently
a matter
for the discretion of the trial Court";
and
(b)
should be careful not to erode such discretion: hence the further
principle that
the
sentence should only be altered if the discretion has not
been
"judicially and properly exercised".
2
The test under (b) is whether the sentence is vitiated by
irregularity or misdirection or is disturbingly inappropriate."
[5]
S v
Romer
2011
(2) SACR 153 (SCA).
[6]
2009 (1) SACR 552 (SCA).
[7]
See also
S
v Matlala
2003 (1) SACR 80
(SCA) at para 9 and 10 and the cases cited therein.
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