Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 712South Africa
Tito and Another v S (A320/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 712 (18 August 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tito and Another v S (A320/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 712 (18 August 2023)
Tito and Another v S (A320/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 712 (18 August 2023)
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sino date 18 August 2023
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL – Essential infrastructure –
Electricity
cables
–
Appellants
caught digging trench at 1am – Requirements of knowledge of
essential infrastructure satisfied – High
incidence of this
crime which poses a risk to public safety, electricity supply,
communications and transportation –
Harm to economy and
expense of replacement cables – 15 years imprisonment –
Appeal on both conviction and sentence
is dismissed –
Criminal Matters Amendment Act 18 of 2015, s 3.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number: A320/22
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES/
NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE : 18/08/2023
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
TAMELA
TITO
1
st
Applicant
GALITO
NGWENYAMA
2
nd
Applicant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Delivered: This
judgement was prepared and authored by the Judges whose names are
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 18 August 2023.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Following
their conviction and sentence to 15 (fifteen) years of imprisonment,
apropos count 1, for contravening section 3(1) and
(2) of the
Criminal Matters Amendment Act 18 of 2015, read with the provision of
section 51(2) of Schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 51 of
1997
, the Appellants, Mr. Tito Tamela and Mr. Galito Ngwenyama,
sought leave to appeal against their conviction and sentence. The
trial
court refused the application.
[2]
Dissatisfied with the refusal of leave to appeal, the Appellants
petitioned the Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria, as
contemplated in
section 309C
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of
1977
; and were granted leave to appeal against both the conviction
and sentence. Since they are not appealing against count 2, to which
they had already pleaded guilty, the only focal point for this court
is count 1.
[3]
The state alleged t
hat
on 15 January 2021 at Daveyton in the Regional Division of
Gauteng, the Appellants unlawfully and intentionally tampered
with,
damaged or destroyed the essential infrastructure whilst they knew or
ought to have reasonably known or suspected, as defined
in subsection
2, that it was an essential infrastructure; to wit, it interferes
with power transmission or electricity supplied
to the community as a
basic service.
[1]
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
[4]
In
casu
,
the first state witness, Mr. Velaphi Vincent Skosana, testified that
he was in his second year of employment as a security officer
for
Bidvest. He was stationed at Daveyton with his crew. On the day in
question, he was working the nightshift. Just before 12
midnight,
they noticed that some digging had started and observed the movement
of people. They called for backup. At or about 01h00
they pounced on
the diggers.
[5]
He testified that the diggers used a pick and shovel to expose the
cable which was
buried deep underground. The second Appellant was
inside the trench and the first Appellant was standing outside the
trench they
were digging, he testified. His testimony is that he
chased after and arrested the first Appellant. Under cross
examination he
stated that the cable was already exposed when they
arrested the Appellants. It was also his testimony that the second
Appellant
was arrested inside the trench by Mr. Ndenze.
[6]
The second state witness, Mr. Luvuyo Ndenze, testified that he was
also employed as
a security officer at Bidvest. On that fateful day,
he stated that he, in the company of his superior, received a call
for backup
from Mr. Skhosana. Without any waste of time, they drove
to Gumbi. He testified that he arrested the second Appellant, who was
busy digging inside the trench.
[2]
[7]
The Appellants were arrested at 01h00 am by Bidvest Security officers
on 15 January
2021 at Daveyton. Counsel for the Appellants conceded
that the second Appellant was arrested inside the trench by Mr.
Luvuyo Ndenze.
AD CONVICTION
[8]
Not
wanting to squander the court’s time, Counsel for Appellants
conceded upfront that on the facts the state witnesses’
evidence was beyond reproach and their version was sound. To quote
him he said: “I didn’t delve into the facts of the
matter
for the simple reason that upon my reading, my Lords, of the record,
I couldn’t advance any meaningful argument in
so far as the
credibility or otherwise of the state witnesses.’’
[9]
Indeed,
there is no ring of truth to the Appellants’ version that they
were arrested at 9h30 pm enroute home from work, whilst
in possession
of digging instruments, namely: a spade and pick. Their version that
they were made to roll on the ground, hence,
they were covered in mud
proved to be unsustainable because it was not put to the witnesses
who arrested them. As if that was not
enough, Appellants’
Counsel put to the state witnesses that they would deny having been
arrested by them. Yet, in their evidence
in chief the Appellants
contradicted their Counsel by insisting that they were arrested by
the selfsame witnesses. To illustrate
the point, we refer to the
record:
[10]
Counsel put to the state witnesses the following:
“
Ms.
Clarence: In fact, they say that when they were walking, they met
five security officers and they say that Skosana, the first
state
witness as well as yourself you were not amongst those security
officers that arrested them.”
[3]
[11]
During evidence in chief, the first Appellant stated:
“
Accused
1: Your worship the people who arrested us were two.
Ms.
Clarence: So, you do not know if the security guards that came to
testify if they are the ones that indeed they arrested
you. Is that
what are you saying?
Accused 1: These two are
the ones.
Ms. Clarence: Are they
the ones that arrested you?
Accused 1: Yes
Ms. Clarence: Are you
sure about that?
Accused
1: Yes, I am.”
[4]
[12]
The comedy of errors did not end there; the Appellants did not put it
to the first two state
witnesses that they assaulted them during the
arrest. However, in their evidence in chief they submitted that they
had been assaulted.
It is, therefore, not surprising that Counsel for
the Appellants conceded that they were arrested in the manner
described by the
state witness. In short, they were caught
in
flagrante delicto
.
[13]
Counsel for the appellants narrowed down the appeal on conviction to
the interpretation of the
Criminal Matters Amendment Act no 18 of
2015. Perhaps it is appropriate to refer to the section in question:
“
Offence
relating to essential infrastructure:
3.
(1) Any person who unlawfully and intentionally—
(a) tampers with, damages
or destroys essential infrastructure; or
(b) colludes with or
assists another person in the commission, performance or carrying out
of an activity referred to in paragraph
(a),
and who knows or ought
reasonably to have known or suspected that it is essential
infrastructure, is guilty of an offence and liable
on conviction to a
period of imprisonment not exceeding 30 years or, in the case of a
corporate body as contemplated in
section 332(2)
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act, 1977
, a fine not exceeding R100 million.
(2) For the purposes of
subsection (1), a person ought reasonably to have known or suspected
a fact if the conclusions that he or
she ought to have reached are
those which would have been reached by a reasonably diligent and
vigilant person having both—
(a)
the general knowledge,
skill, training and experience that may reasonably be expected of a
person in his or her position; and
(b)
the general knowledge,
skill, training and experience that he or she in fact has.’’
[14]
Counsel
for the Appellants submitted that the state failed to prove the
requirements of knowledge as contemplated in Section 3(2)
(a) and (b)
of the Act. Buttressing his point, he referred us to the passage of
the court
a
quo
’s
judgment at page 186 para 11 in which the court said the following:
“
The
court is satisfied that after analysis of the evidence relating to
assault and the place where they were arrested, that the
version of
the accused cannot stand. After having said all this and take into
account the definition which relates to tampering
essential
infrastructure and basic services, the court is satisfied that on the
evidence tendered by the state, count one has been
proved beyond a
reasonable doubt.”
[15]
He
submitted that this passage captures the essence of their criticism.
Having conceded that the state proved beyond reasonable
doubt that
the Appellants tampered with the essential infrastructure,
Appellants’ counsel questioned whether the state had
proven
beyond reasonable doubt that the Appellants knew that which they were
digging was an essential infrastructure.
[16] Upon
being questioned by the court about his submission that the
Appellants embarked on digging the trench at 1:h00
am without knowing
what they were looking for, he offered no resistance and conceded
that he would not be able to answer the court’s
question. To
quote the Appellants’ counsel: “the Appellants case
actually falls on the court’s questions. The
only irresistible
answer is that they must have known.”
[17]
The entire case, subsequently, crumbled. It stands to reason that all
the elements of the offence were proven
beyond reasonable doubt.
It
is trite that in criminal cases the onus rests on the State to prove
its case against the accused beyond reasonable doubt. In
S
v Van Der Meyden
[5]
the
court said:
“
The
onus of proof in a criminal case is discharged by the state if the
evidence establishes the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable
doubt. The corollary is that he is entitled to be acquitted if it is
reasonably possible that he might be innocent (see, for example,
R v
Difford
1937 AD 370
at 373 and 383).”
[6]
[18]
In the matter of
S
v Trainor
[7]
the
court said the following:
“
A
conspectus of all the evidence is required. Evidence that is reliable
should be weighed alongside such evidence as may be found
to be
false. Independently verifiable evidence, if any, should be weighed
to see if it supports any of the evidence tendered. In
considering
whether evidence is reliable the quality of that evidence must of
necessity the evaluated, as must corroborative evidence,
if any.
Evidence must of course be evaluated against the onus on any
particular issue or in respect of the case in its entirety...”
[8]
[19]
Summarizing the approach of an appeal court to findings
of fact by trial court, Smalberger JA in
S
v Francis
[9]
stated:
“
The
power of a court of appeal to interfere with the finding of fact of a
trial court are limited. In the absence of any misdirection
the trial
court’s conclusion, including its acceptance of a witness’s
evidence, is presumed to be correct.”
[10]
[20] The
court
a quo
concluded that the Appellants’ version was
improbable and stood to be rejected. The court found that there was
sufficient
corroboration on the part of the evidence of the state
relating to all the essential elements of the offence. Having looked
at
the evidence in its totality, we are of the view that the trial
court’s decision cannot be faulted. Accordingly, this court
does not find any misdirection on the part of the court
a quo, a
fortiori
the appeal against conviction must fail.
AD SENTENCE
[21] The
Appellants are convicted of an offence which falls within part 2,
schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
which
provides for a minimum sentence of 15 (fifteen) years imprisonment.
In order to deviate from the minimum sentence, the court
must find
substantial and compelling circumstances present which will justify
the imposition of a lesser sentence than the one
prescribed.
[22]
The issue of sentence falls exclusively within the discretion of the
trial court. There is a plethora of cases
to the effect. In the
matter of
S
v Rabie
[11]
the
court said:
“
1.
In any 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]
[23]
In
S
v Anderson
[13]
the
court stated the following:
“
Over
the years our courts of appeal have attempted to set out various
principles by which they seek to be guided when they are asked
to
alter a sentence imposed by the trial court. These include the
following: the sentence will not be altered unless it is held
that no
reasonable man ought to have imposed such a sentence, or that the
sentence is out of all proportion to the gravity or magnitude
of the
offence, or that the sentences induces a sense of shock or outrage,
or that the sentence is grossly excessive or inadequate,
or that
there was an improper exercise of his discretion by the trial Judge,
or that the interest of justice require it.”
[14]
[24]
The triad highlighted in
S
v Zinn
[15]
is
still good law. The court said:
“
What
has to be considered is the triad consisting of the crime, the
offender and the interest of society
[16]
.”
APPELLANTS’
PERSONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
[25] The
following personal circumstances of the Appellants were placed before
the trial court:
25.1 The first Appellant
was a 35-year-old first time offender.
25.2
He is
not married and does not have any children.
He
did not
attend any form of schooling. He is a Mozambican citizen. He did not
go to school in Mozambique.
25.4 He was employed as a
contract worker earning between R1000 (one thousand rands) and R2000
(two thousand rands) per week, since
2001.
25.5
The second Appellant
is
36-year-old first time offender.
25.6 He is a father of
three children aged: 21, 18 and 14. All these children are in South
Africa. He is not married.
25.7 He also does not
have any form of formal schooling. He is a Mozambican citizen.
25.8
He
was
gainfully employed as a
contract
worker earning between R1000 (one thousand rands) and R2000 (two
thousand rands) per week.
He has
been working with the first Appellant
since
2001.
SERIOUSNESS OF THE
OFFENCE
[26] The
destruction of the essential infrastructure is a serious problem in
South Africa. Not only does it affect the
supply of electricity to
households, but it also affects the economy of the country, which
leads to job losses, unemployment, and
pits locals against foreign
nationals.
[27]
These cables are very expensive to replace. They easily run into
millions of rands. In
casu
,
the entire cable costs R6 000 000.00 (six million rands) to replace
and R5 750.00 (five thousand seven hundred and fifty
rands) to
repair.
[17]
That
is not counting the amount spent on security costs to deter people,
such as the Appellants, from interfering with the essential
infrastructure.
[28]
The cable in question was used to supply Buffalo substation in
Mayfield from Daveyton and from Daveyton substation
to Buffalo
substation. In brief it supplied electricity to Buffalo substation
which feeds the community around Daveyton and Mayfield
including
businesses, Industrial Telkom Towers and water pump substations.
[18]
INTEREST OF THE
COMMUNITY
[29] The dangers posed by
open trenches are innumerable. Children can fall into these trenches
and get electrocuted by the exposed
wires. Vandalism results in
failure of service delivery which in turn causes civil unrest. This
necessitated the enactment of Criminal
Matters Amendment Act, whose
preamble is worth mentioning in
toto
:
‘’
PREAMBLE
WHEREAS the Bill of
Rights in the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996,
guarantees certain rights and enshrines the
right to freedom and
security of the person;
AND WHEREAS the
Constitution places a duty on the State to respect, protect, promote
and fulfil the rights in the Bill of Rights;
RECOGNISING the
importance of essential infrastructure in providing basic services to
the public;
HAVING REGARD to the
unacceptably high incidence of crime relating to essential
infrastructure in the Republic which poses a risk
to, among others,
public safety, electricity supply, communications and transportation;
AND RECOGNISING the
harmful consequences to the livelihood, well-being, daily operations
and economic activity of the public if
basic services cannot be
provided due to loss, damage or disruption caused by essential
infrastructure-related offences;
AND SINCE essential
infrastructure-related offences are becoming increasingly more
organised and are often committed by armed and
dangerous criminal
groups;
AND SINCE essential
infrastructure-related offences on occasion manifest themselves in
offences which of themselves are relatively
minor but cause
considerable damage to essential infrastructure;
MINDFUL of the
negative impact of these offences on South Africa’s economy and
society and on peace and stability in the country’’
[30] The import of
this preamble is self-explanatory, we, therefore, don’t find
any substantial and compelling circumstances
for the court
a quo
to depart from imposing the minimum sentence. We are firmly of the
view that the sentence should not be disturbed. In the result
we make
the following order:
ORDER:
[31] The
Appellants’ appeal on both conviction and sentence is
dismissed.
M. P. MOTHA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA
I Concur
J. S. NYATHI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA
Date of hearing: 2 August
2023
Date of judgement: 18
August 2023
APPEARANCES:
ADVOCATE FOR APPELLANTS:
J. L. KGOKANE
INSTRUCTED BY: LEGAL-AID
ADVOCATE FOR RESPONDENTS:
P.C.B LUYT
INSTRUCTED BY: NATIONAL
PROSECTING AUTHORITY
[1]
page
2 of the record
[2]
Page 43 of the record
[3]
Extract
from the record page 49 paragraph 10
[4]
Record
page 109 paragraph 10
[5]
1999(1)
SACR 447
[6]
Supra
at page 448 para f-g
[7]
2003
(1) SACR 35 (SCA)
[8]
Supra
para 9
[9]
1991 (1) SACR 198 (A)
[10]
Supra page 198 para j
[11]
1975
(4) SA 855 (AD)
[12]
Supra page
857
para-D-E
[13]
1964
(3) AD 494
[14]
1964 (3) SA 494 (A) 495 D-E
[15]
1969
2 537 (AD)
[16]
Supra
Page
540 para G
[17]
Page
61 of the record
[18]
Page
57 of the record
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