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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Potgieter v S (A46/2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1148 (7 November 2024)
Potgieter v S (A46/2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1148 (7 November 2024)
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sino date 7 November 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No.
A46 / 2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE:
7/11/2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
JOHAN
POTGIETER
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER, J
[1]
The appellant was charged with one count of
fraud, alternatively theft, amounting to R775 968-48 in the
Regional Court, Springs.
Given that the amount exceeded R500 000-00,
the charge was to be read with
s51(2)(a)
of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997
, which provides for a minimum sentence of
15 years upon conviction.
[2]
On 10 May 2023 the appellant was convicted
and later sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment.
[3]
This appeal lies against conviction and
sentence with leave of this court granted on petition.
The
Charge
[4]
At the outset, it must be pointed out that
although a single charge of fraud was proffered, in actual fact the
evidence clearly
demonstrated that the complaint related to seven
separate incidents. In respect of each incident, the amount in
question never
exceeded R100 000-00. Therefore:
a)
the appellant was incorrectly charged with
a single count of fraud;
b)
the amount was incorrect; and
c)
Act 105 of 1992 was not applicable.
[5]
The
appellant correctly raised this as an issue on appeal. Given that he
was found guilty as charged and Act 105 of 1997 was incorrectly
considered and applied, the court a quo materially misdirected
itself.
[1]
[6]
In
Van
der Walt
, Moseneke J held:
“
.
. . [I]n my view . . . a statutory provision creating a criminal
offence or a penalty clause should be interpreted restrictively.
Its
scope of application should not be extended beyond the ordinary
meaning of its language.
R
v Ackerman
1931
OPD 69.
If
a penal stipulation lends itself to a reasonable or less onerous
interpretation, the court should adopt that construction.’
The
learned Judge continued:
‘
In
my view the words “any offence . . . of fraud or theft . .
.” in Schedule 2 are not open to ambiguity. They
relate to a
conviction on an offence, that is a single offence, which involves
one or more amounts exceeding the prescribed threshold
of R500,000.
The usage of the word “amounts” in Schedule 2 does not
detract from the appropriateness of this construction.
The lawgiver
sought to cover continuous or repetitive acts of theft or fraud,
closely connected in time, place and context and
perpetrated with a
single intent, but within the confines of one offence. Otherwise, it
would be permissible to trigger the minimum
sentence provisions by
adding together an unrelated motley of fraud or theft charges spun
over any period of time, relating to
diverse contexts, bound together
only by the sum total of the amounts charged in the same trial. That
would be untenable. Consequently,
the provisions of section
51(2
)(a)
of
Act 105 of 1997 are not applicable to a person convicted of multiple
counts of theft or fraud, where none of the convictions,
taken alone,
exceeds the prescribed threshold. The court
a
quo
was not entitled, as a matter
of law, to apply the provisions of Part II of Schedule 2 of Act 105
of 1997 to any of the convictions
of the appellant.”
[7]
The State correctly conceded this point.
[8]
Thus it is clear that, if the conviction
stands, the sentence must be reconsidered.
Ad
conviction
[9]
“
Fraud”
has been identified as “the unlawful and intentional making of
a misrepresentation which causes actual prejudice
or which is
potentially prejudicial to another.”
[2]
The elements are:
a)
a misrepresentation;
b)
prejudice or potential prejudice;
c)
unlawfulness and
d)
intent.
[10]
It was common cause in this appeal that the
issue was whether the State has proven, beyond reasonable doubt, that
appellant had
formed the requisite intent.
The
facts
[11]
The appellant was the sole member of JC All
Tech CC (the CC) which was registered in 2006. The CC employed only
one other person
and that was Cherise van der Westhuizen (van der
Westhuizen) who was tasked with the administrative functions of the
CC.
[12]
The CC operated mainly in the agricultural
market and supplied agricultural lime to crop farmers, and traded in
diesel and lubricants.
[13]
During ± September 2014 one Shaun
Powel of CIM Chemicals (Pty) Ltd contacted the appellant with a view
to expanding CIM’s
business. CIM would supply the CC with
ammonium sulphate and the CC would then sell this product on to its
standing customers in
the agricultural market. As a result of these
negotiations, CIM extended the CC a line of credit with which the CC
would purchase
the ammonium sulphate from CIM to on-sell to its
customers.
[14]
The product was not available in small
quantities – purchases were made per ton with a maximum average
load of 34 tons.
[15]
What would happen was –
a)
customers
would contact the appellant and place an order
[3]
;
b)
the order would be completed in a booklet
form in triplicate and in sequential order;
c)
the customer would sign for the order;
d)
once the customer placed an order, the
appellant would contact CIM via a call to Powell to confirm the
quantity of the order and
the availability of the product;
e)
on occasion, the CC would forego step (d)
supra and would place the order via e-mail to CIM;
f)
Once CIM received that order, within a day
or two, CIM would send the CC an OPCH ( or order) number - initially,
only one OPCH number
would be given by CIM no matter how large the
order: to explain this - let's say the CC received ten orders from
ten different
customers, it would place one order with CIM for 340
tons of product. Bearing in mind the load was 34 tons each, ten
trucks would
be required to collect the product. Despite ten trucks
collecting, CIM would only give one OPCH number. Thus at that time,
the
OPCH number was in respect of the entire order placed;
g)
after a time (± 2017) this changed
and CIM would give a separate OPCH number per load which would be
emailed by CIM to the
CC. As appellant states
“…
but
it was always the same, it was just a typed e-mail with all these
numbers listed on the e-mail”;
h)
thus, from ±2017, each load would be
given its own OPCH number;
i)
the collection requests, which reflected
the OPCH numbers, were completed by van der Westhuizen.
[16]
The product would be collected in one of
three ways:
a)
either the customer would collect the
product; or
b)
the customer would arrange for a
sub-contractor to collect the product; or
c)
the appellant would use sub-contractors to
collect the product and then deliver to the client.
[17]
So the manner in which the order was
placed, collected and delivered was the following:
a)
once CIM sent the OPCH numbers, van der
Westhuizen would complete a collection request document;
b)
this
collection request would reflect not only the OPCH number, but the
information of the truck
[4]
that will be used to collect;
c)
the form is then sent by e-mail by van der
Westhuizen to CIM or its sister company Protea Chemicals and to
Impala Platinum - which
is the point of collection;
d)
at the point of collection (ie at Impala)
Impala signs off on the collection. Interestingly, according to Ms
Mabena from Platinum,
the OPCH number was not required by Platinum to
complete the order. Thus it appears that this was an internal process
put in place
by CIM. But, whatever the case, it was not disputed that
JC All Tech never received the signed collection request documents.
Instead,
they would wait for the invoice from CIM and then appellant
would have to also request the dispatch advice from CIM;
e)
the
dispatch advice was used to link the truck and load amount to a
specific customer's order - without the dispatch advice the
appellant
could not link the invoice received from CIM to the order placed by
JC All Tech and, ultimately, the customer's order;
[5]
f)
the dispatch advice was neither completed
by appellant nor signed by him;
g)
the problem arose when CMI failed to issue
prompt invoices to JC All Tech - on average it would take two to four
weeks for CIM to
issue the invoices and then another two to three
weeks to send the dispatch advice.
[18]
All
are result of the inefficiencies of the entire chain, and more
especially the delay by CIM in sending the invoice and dispatch
advices to JC All Tech, on approximately 30 to 40
[6]
occasions collections were duplicated.
[19]
The appellant explained this as follows:
“
Well
what will happen at JC All Tech, is that our client, or customer,
will inform us of a truck-X that is loading for today. An
hour later
we will be informed that for whatever reason, the truck will not be
able to load, we need to replace that truck with,
with the next one
that is able to load, and once that has happened, we will then send
through a new collection request on the same
OPC number with the
different detail of the truck, to Impala and Protea per email, as it
was always done. That email will only
differ in one way, is that we
will say please replace the previous collection request on that order
number with the new one that
was just sent, and then, because the…and
then I also phoned Grace, and my apologies I cannot remember her
surname now, Grace
from Impala. I will then also telephonically phone
her, once that email has been sent through to her, to confirm that
she has received
that, and that she has taken knowledge of that.”
[20]
But the glitch came into this entire
process because, according to Grace Mabena of Impala, Impala does not
work on an OPCH number
for collection.
[21]
Thus, despite appellant calling ahead to
replace the truck/driver it would appear that at every link in the
chain there was a potential
breach and miscommunication which
resulted in the admitted duplications.
[22]
What is important is that at no stage was
any evidence presented that appellant himself either completed any of
the documents (other
than his own direct customer’s order) or
that he emailed orders to CIM or that he signed off on any orders -
this includes
the collection documents. Van der Westhuizen was also
not called to verify any of the chain of events within JC All Tech.
Given
that all the states witnesses had no knowledge of the inner
workings of JC All Tech, this crucial evidence was never led to
establish
the requisite element of intent.
[23]
Interestingly, the appellant admitted that
duplications took place. He also admitted that during the end of
November/beginning of
December 2017 he received a call from Sean
Powell of CIM regarding the duplicated loads that had occurred during
approximately
October 2017. Their discussion was to the effect that
they “must try to make sure it does not happen again”.
[24]
But appellant also explained that, at that
time, when he was notified of the duplicated load, after receiving
the invoice and dispatch
advice, and confirming that the customer had
collected a duplicate load, payment was made to CIM. This was never
disputed.
[25]
But
during approximately April 2018
[7]
the duplications had occurred again and a meeting took place between
appellant, Shaun Powell and Sean McKenzie
[8]
to discuss the duplications and payments. This was during May/June
2018. McKenzie testified that, at that time, appellant told
them he
was not aware of the duplications and that “he took a week or
two to investigate, and subsequently came back and
confirmed that the
collections had happened.”
[26]
What was also not disputed by either
McKenzie or Powell is that, after the May/June 2018 meeting with
appellant, CIM suspended JC
All Tech’s credit, launched a
liquidation application against it and obtained a final liquidation
order during September
2018. That this put pay to the appellant
either recovering JC All Tech’s debts, or paying CIM for the
duplicated loads. However,
it must be stated that nothing stopped CIM
from lodging a claim with the liquidator. The evidence was also not
disputed that the
liquidators never attempted to recover the monies
for the duplicated loads from the customers who had benefitted from
this.
[27]
Thus, the point to the above is that the
seven invoices went unpaid not because appellant intended to defraud
CIM, but because JC
All Tech by then was placed in liquidation and
payment was taken out of appellant’s hands. It was never placed
in dispute
that all JC All Tech’s documents, including those
relevant to these charges, had been given by appellant to the
liquidator
who was also not called to give evidence.
[28]
The important facts to consider regarding
the issue if intent are that:
a)
Brett Gait of CIM confirmed that the
documentation (ie invoices and dispatch advices) were sent late to JC
All Tech;
b)
Ms Mabena, the Dispatch Administrator at
Impala Refineries, conceded that appellant would not have known that
a load had been duplicated
if he did not have the relevant documents
(which we now know was received two to four weeks after the load was
collected);
c)
Sean Mckenzie conceded that past duplicate
loads had been paid by appellant following his investigation and that
before payment
could be made on the outstanding seven invoices, JC
All Tech was liquidated.
[29]
In
convicting the appellant the court a quo correctly found that a
holistic approach to the evidence was required
[9]
:
“
The
correct approach is to weigh up all the elements which point towards
the guilt of the accused against these which are indicative
of his
innocence, taking proper account of inherent strengths and
weaknesses, probabilities and improbabilities on both sides and,
having done so, to decide whether the balance weighs so heavily in
favour of the State as to exclude any reasonable doubt about
the
accused’s guilt.”
[30]
I
must take some issue with the court a quo’s finding that the
State’s witnesses
[10]
all corroborated each other that the appellant had previously sent
duplicated collection requests and had been warned that this
should
not happen again: there is no evidence to show his personal hand in
the former. In fact, the evidence is that he only found
out ex post
facto.
[31]
But the court materially misdirected itself
in rejecting the appellant’s defence as not being reasonably
possibly true, in
the face of all the evidence which clearly showed
that it was.
[32]
Bearing in mind that the onus is on the
State to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt, in my view it failed
to do so. In my view
it failed to prove that the appellant formed the
requisite intent to commit fraud, alternatively, theft and, at
the end of
the argument, the State indeed conceded this.
[33]
Therefore, for all the reasons set out
supra, the appeal must succeed.
Order
[34]
The following order is made:
1)
The Appeal succeeds.
2)
The conviction and sentence are set aside.
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I agree
NCJ MNCUBE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
This judgment was
prepared and authored by the judge whose name is reflected and is
handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 7 November 2024
For
the Appellant
:
Adv M
Van Wyngaard
Instructed
by
:
Matsemela,
Krauses & Ngubeni Inc Attorneys
For
the Respondent
:
Adv
VG Khosa
Instructed
by
:
Office
of the Director of Public Prosecutions
Matter
heard on
:
22
October 2024
Judgment
date
:
7
November 2024
[1]
Van der Walt v S
2003 (2) All SA 587
(T); Evans v S (171/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 123
(26 September 2023)
[2]
CR Snyman; Criminal Law; 5
th
ed; p531
[3]
Sometimes he would go out to the customers and the order would be
completed at that time
[4]
Which
includes the driver's name, the driver's identity number and the
vehicle registration number
[5]
The
exhibits used at trial to prove the chain of events were of poor
quality and very difficult to make out
[6]
According
to the appellant
[7]
The
period from which these charges stem
[8]
The
managing director of CIM at the time
[9]
S
v Chabalala
2003 (1) SACR 134
(SCA) para 15
[10]
From CIM – Mr Gait, Mr McKenzie and Mr Bradley
sino noindex
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