Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1995South Africa
Nyembe v S (A283/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1995 (25 August 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nyembe v S (A283/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1995 (25 August 2023)
Nyembe v S (A283/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1995 (25 August 2023)
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sino date 25 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEAL CASE NO:
A283/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 24/08/23
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
PAULOS
NYEMBE
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
NEUTRAL
CITATION:
KUMALO
ET FRANCIS-SUBBIAH JJ
JUDGMENT
KUMALO
J
[1]
This
is an appeal against both conviction and sentence on counts one and
two.
[2]
The
appellant was charged in the Regional Court for the Regional Division
of Gauteng, Benoni, with three counts namely: count 1
– Robbery
with aggravating circumstances, count 2 – Theft of a motor
vehicle and count 3 – Contravention of section
49(1)(a) of the
Immigration Amendment Act No.13 of 2002 read with sections 25, 34(1)
and 26.
[3]
He
pleaded not guilty to counts 1 and 2 but pleaded guilty to count 3.
The regional magistrate found him guilty as charged after
he had
satisfied himself that appellant admitted freely all the elements of
the offence.
[4]
He
was also convicted of counts 1 and 2 and sentenced to a 15-year
period of imprisonment for both counts. He was sentenced to a
period
of 12 months for the offence in count 3. The sentences were ordered
to run concurrently and was declared unfit to possess
a firearm in
terms of section 103 of Act 60 of 2000.
[5]
Leave
to appeal for both conviction and sentence on count 1 and 2 was
granted by the regional magistrate.
[6]
The
state’s allegations were that on or about 15 November 2018, the
appellant and his co-perpetrators did unlawfully and intentionally
acting in common purpose, assaulted the complainant Ms Poppy Linah
Kekana, and robbed her an amount of R1200, a Nokia cellphone,
identity document and house keys. A firearm was used during the
commission of the offence.
[7]
Ms
Kekana testified that on the day in question she received a call from
the appellant using a cell phone number that she did not
know and
requested to use her husband’s truck to ferry some load of
scrap metals. Her husband was in Malawi on the day in
question. The
appellant arrived at her home in the company of another person by the
name of Andrew.
[8]
She
called her husband to confirm if they can use the truck. She then
left with them to where the truck was parked after her husband
confirmed that they can use it. The truck was parked in Alberton,
Telekom premises.
[9]
She
had gone to these premises in the company of another boy who was
supposed to go with the accused. On arrival at the premises
the boy
decided that he was no longer going because he did not tell his
mother. She then had to go with them because her husband
had told her
that he does not trust the appellant and needed somebody to be with
them all the time.
[10]
She
then drove back home with the appellant and his friend to change her
clothing.
[11]
She
testified that they headed towards Carnival City. On the way the
appellant told her that the truck does not engage gears properly.
She
called her husband over the phone and the husband spoke to the
appellant in Sitawa
[RFS1]
,
a language which she did not understand.
[12]
The
appellant told her that he was going to use his mechanic to fix the
truck. After a while a mechanic arrived driving a Nissan
1400. She
was asked to alight from the truck as they wanted to tilt its head
for the mechanic to assess what needs to be fixed.
[13]
It
was getting late at the time and there was not enough light where
they were. The appellant told her that they needed to move
the truck
to a place with sufficient light so that the mechanic can be able to
fix it.
[14]
Whilst
they were moving with the truck, she saw a petrol filling station and
requested that they park in it because there was sufficient
light for
the mechanic to work. The appellant refused. She was then at some
stage transferred to the Nissan 1400 and the truck
started moving and
took a different direction from theirs.
[15]
She
inquired from the driver of the Nissan 1400 as to where they were
going as she was supposed to go with the truck wherever it
was going.
The driver told her that he was told to take her where he was asked
to take her, and she must not make any noise.
[16]
She
was taken into a Bush and another Nissan 1400 joined and followed
them and parked in front of them. Four boys alighted from
that Nissan
and opened the doors of the vehicle she was in and one of them was in
possession of a firearm. She was pulled out of
the vehicle and her
cellphone, house keys and spectacles were taken from her.
[17]
They
took her further into the bushes, put her on the ground and took off
her shoes. She was then taken back to the other Nissan
1400 bakkie
and later into another private car which drove around with her. She
asked the driver of the vehicle to call the police,
but he refused.
[18]
They
drove around until she saw a filling station and requested that she
be allowed to relieveherself at the filling station. Her
request was
granted. She alighted from this vehicle and ran into the filling
station. She asked the person who gave her the keys
to the toilets to
accompany her into the toilet. She related her ordeal to this person.
[19]
When
they came out, they found the driver of the private vehicle waiting
outside for her. He called her, and she refused. The car
left. The
people at the garage called the police.
[20]
A
case of robbery and theft was finally opened on 8 November 2018. The
appellant had disappeared with the truck and was finally
traced at
Lindelani, near Daveyton. He was arrested on 8 January 2019.
[21]
He
was then charged and convicted of the counts referred to above in
paragraph 2. I have already indicated that he pleaded guilty
to count
3 and the learned magistrate accepted his plea in that regard.
[22]
Although
the evidence of the witnesses indicate that he was not present during
the commission of the offense in count 1, the magistrate
convicted
him relying on the doctrine of common purpose.
[23]
The
main attack against the judgment of the trial court is that it erred
in convicting the appellant oh the robbery with aggravating
circumstances based on common purpose.
[24]
The
question then is whether the trial court correctly concluded that the
evidence implicating the appellant was sufficient to conclude
that he
acted in common purpose with the robbers justifying his conviction.
[25]
In
S
v Mgedezi
,
The Supreme Court of Appeals stated the following:
“
In
the absence of proof of prior agreement, accused #6 who was not shown
to have contributed causally to the killing or wounding
of the
occupants of room 12, can be liable for those events, on the basis of
the decision in S v Sefatsa and Others
1988 (1) SA 868
(A), Only if
certain a requisites are satisfied in the first place, he must have
been present at the scene where the violence was
being committed.
Secondly, he must have been aware of the assault on the inmates of
room 12. Thirdly, he must have intended to
make common cause with
those who actually perpetrating the assault. Fourthly, he must have
manifested his sharing of a common purpose
with the perpetrators of
the assault by himself performing some act of association with the
conduct of others. Fifthly, he must
have had the requisite mens rea
so, In respect of the killing of the deceased, he must have intended
them to be killed or he must
have foreseen that the possibility of
them being killed and performed his own act of association with
recklessness as to whether
or not death was to ensue.”
[26]
Further,
in
S
v Le Roux
,
the Supreme Court of Appeals stated:
“
In
Sv Mgedezi and Others, this court dealt with a situation where there
was no prior plan to commit the offense of public violence.
It was
stated there that agent oral and all-embracing approach regarding all
those charged is not permissible. It was stated failure
that's the
conduct of the individual accused should be individually considered,
with a view to determining whether there is a sufficient
basis for
holding that a particular accused person is liable on the ground of
active participation in the achievement of a common
purpose that
developed at the scene. In that case the following was stated:
a
view after the totality of the defence cases cannot legitimately be
used as a brush with which to tower each accused individually
,
nor
as a means of rejecting the defense version en masse.”
And further:
the
trial court was obliged to consider
,
in
relation to each individual accused whose evidence could properly be
rejected as false, the facts found proved by the state's
evidence
against that accused, in order to assess whether there was a
sufficient basis for holding that accused liable on the ground
of
active participation in the achievement of a common purpose. The
trial court’s failure to undertake this task again constituted
a serious misdirection
.”
[27]
In
S
v Thebus
the constitutional court reiterated the applicability of the doctrine
as follows:
“
If
the prosecution relies on common purpose it must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that each accused had the requisite mens rea
concerning the unlawful outcome at the time the offence was
committed. It means that he or she must have intended that criminal
results or must have foreseen the possibility of the criminal result
ensuing and nonetheless actively associated himself or herself
reckless as to whether the result was to ensue.”
[28]
It
is clear from the findings of the court
a
quo
that the appellant was convicted of count 1 based on common purpose.
What facts were relied upon to reach that conclusion is not
quite
clear. The court
a
quo
relied
upon the fact that the assailants were known to the appellant and
he was present when the crime was committed.
[29]
However,
the evidence led does not support those conclusions. Ms. Kekana was
taken to a bush where she was robbed. A gun was used
in the process.
It is clear from her evidence that the appellant was not there. There
is no evidence that he actively participated
or associated himself
with the crime of robbery apart from the fact that he knew the
assailants. His participation can at best
be regarded as evidence
that he had some knowledge of the robbery but he certainly was not
present at the scene when it was carried
out.
[30]
A
conviction of robbery on this set of facts does not withstand the
ordinary principles of criminal liability and as articulated
by the
SCA in
Beenesh
Dewnath v S
(269/13)
[2014] ZASCA 57
(17 April 2014), in our law, the guilt of an
accused falls to be decided with reference to his own acts and his
own state of mind.
[31]
There
is no basis to conclude that the appellant committed the crime on
count 1. The State must prove its case beyond reasonable
doubt and
the accused does not bear any onus to prove his innocence.
In so far as
count 1 is concerned, the State has failed to prove its case beyond
reasonable doubt and counsel for the State conceded
as much and
correctly so in my view, that common purpose is not applicable in the
set of facts of this case.
,
[32]
The
appeal on count 1 must succeed.
[33]
I
do not intend to delve much into the merits of the appeal on the
second count. Counsel for the appellant conceded in not so many
words
that the State had proven its case beyond reasonable doubt in so far
as it is concerned. From the evidence led, the appellant
was involved
in the theft of the vehicle and as a matter of fact, he was the
mastermind behind it. Therefore, the appeal on this
count cannot
succeed.
[34]
The
difficulty in the current matter is that the learned magistrate, when
sentencing the appellant, did not prescribe a sentence
for each
offence but gave a globular sentence for the count of robbery with
aggravating circumstances and the count of theft.
[35]
Like
Bosielo JA in
Karabo
Rantlai v The State
(1178/2016)
[2017] ZASCA 106
(13 September 2017), this court finds
itself in a difficult situation to unscramble a scrambled egg. I find
his remarks useful
in this regard when he said the following:
“
I
find it opposite to reiterate the warning expressed in Young, Kruger,
Nkosi and Philips that although there is no bar to imposing
a
globular sentence it is imperative for judicial officers to consider
the desirability of such a sentence carefully before imposing
it,
bearing in mind the kind of serious if not intractable problems which
will occur on appeal where some counts are set aside
and there is a
need to alter the globular sentence imposed. We also are now faced in
this appeal with a difficult task of having
to unscramble a scrambled
egg. Although useful at times such a sentence must be imposed in
exceptional circumstances only.”
[36]
Counsel
for the appellant submitted that this court has all the facts and can
impose the sentence it deems fit. This court however,
is inclined to
accept the submission of the State that the matter be remitted back
to the court
a
quo
for
its consideration of sentence.
[37]
In
the result, the following order is made:
1.
The
appeal against conviction on count 1 is upheld.
2.
The
appeal on count 2 is dismissed.
3.
The
matter is remitted back to the court
a
quo
for
its consideration of sentence on count 2.
M.P. KUMALO J
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
I Agree
R FRANCIS-SUBBIAH J
Judge of the High Court
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv
MG Botha
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid Board, Pretoria Justice Centre
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv
V Tshabalala
Instructed
by:
Office
of the Director of Public Prosecutions
Date of hearing: 18 July
2023
Date
of Judgment: 25 August 2023
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