Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 399South Africa
Hlongo and Others v S (A140/2020;SA53/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 399 (3 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 March 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Hlongo and Others v S (A140/2020;SA53/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 399 (3 March 2022)
Hlongo and Others v S (A140/2020;SA53/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 399 (3 March 2022)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A140/2020
DPP
REF. NO: SA53/2020
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED:
YES/NO
03
March 2022
In
the matter between:
ARMANDO
HLONGO
1
ST
APPELLANT
STEVE
MASINGA
2
ND
APPELLANT
LAPITO
NYALUNGE
3
RD
APPELLANT
JITO
ARTUK NYAMASHE
4
TH
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
PHAHLANE,
J
[1]
This is an
appeal against the sentence imposed by the Benoni Regional Court on 2
November 2018. The appellants who were legally
represented during the
trial proceedings were convicted of two counts of robbery with
aggravating circumstances (ie. counts 1 and
2) and count 3 for
contravening the provisions of
section 49(1)(a)
of the
Immigration
Act 13 of 2002
.
[2]
The first, third, and fourth appellants
were each sentenced to fifteen (15) years' imprisonment on counts 1
and 2 respectively,
and six (6) months' imprisonment on count 3. The
court ordered that ten (10) years of the sentence on count 2 and the
sentence
on count 3 should run concurrently with the sentence on
count 1, giving an effective sentence of twenty (20) years
imprisonment
for each appellant. The second appellant was sentenced
to twenty (20) years' imprisonment on counts 1 and 2 respectively,
and six
(6) months' imprisonment on count 3. It was ordered that the
sentences on counts 2 and 3 should run concurrently with the sentence
on count 1, also giving an effective sentence of twenty (20) years
imprisonment. This appeal comes with leave granted by the trial
court
on sentence only. Leave to appeal in respect of sentence is also
confirmed by the Notice of Appeal filed on behalf of the
appellants.
[3]
As this appeal is against sentence only,
the factual findings of the trial court must be accepted, and it is
therefore not necessary
to deal in detail with the evidence on the
merits. However, one needs to have a background of the facts in order
to appreciate
the ultimate sentence. It should be noted that all the
appellants tendered a plea of guilty in respect of count 3 for
contravening
the provisions of the
Immigration Act in
that on 28 June
2017, they entered and remained in the Republic of South Africa
without being in possession of the required valid
documents.
[4]
The offences for which the appellants were
convicted and sentenced as regards counts 1 and 2 occurred on 28 June
2017, at or near
Daveyton in the regional division of Gauteng. The
State alleged that the appellants acted in the furtherance of a
common purpose
and robbed D[....] N[....] ("D[....]") and
Busisiwe Sesoko ("Busisiwe") of their properties. The
aggravating
circumstances being that a firearm and a knife were used
when D[....] was robbed and a knife was used when Busisiwe was
robbed.
[5]
On the day of the incident around 4:30,
D[....] and her 16-year-old cousin B[....] N[....] were on their way
to catch a taxi to
where D[....] work as a vendor. As they were
walking, a silver motor vehicle coming from the same direction as
them, passed them
and suddenly made a u-turn coming to their
direction. They crossed the road next to an Indian shop and two men
alighted from the
vehicle and also crossed the road. One of these men
took out a knife and placed it on B[....] N[....]'s neck and the
other pointed
a firearm at D[....], by placing it on her neck.
D[....] and her cousin dropped the bags they were holding and the men
demanded
all their items. D[....] took out the money she had on her
breast and cellphone and gave it to the man who was pointing her with
a firearm. The men took their bags from the ground and went back to
the motor vehicle.
[6]
As D[....] and her cousin were still
standing there, they noticed a woman coming from one of the premises
about 20 meters away,
further down the street. This woman was robbed
by the same people driving in the same vehicle which robbed them. She
went to the
police station to report the matter and informed the
police that she was able to recognise appellants 2 and 3 who were
accused
2 and 3 respectively at the court a quo. She explained that
she knew them from Eskwereni at the Daveyton Mall. She stated that
she and the second appellant knew each other very well and that they
attend the same church.
[7]
After she
opened the case, she went with her husband to the Mall to try and
trace the appellants. She spotted them and noticed that
they were in
the same silver motor vehicle they were travelling in on the day she
was robbed. They went to the police station to
inform the police that
the people who robbed her were at the mall. The police went with them
to the mall and some of her robbed
items were found in the vehicle of
the appellants.
[8]
With regards
to Busisiwe Sesoko, she explained that around 4:30 she was standing
outside her gate waiting for a taxi to go to work
when she noticed a
silver TSI Polo motor vehicle approaching. The vehicle drove past her
and suddenly reversed and two men alighted
from the back of the
vehicle. She dropped her bag when she heard the sound of knives and
saw the manner in which they were approaching
that they were going to
rob her. The men searched her and took her cellphone and the jacket
she was wearing. She screamed and her
mother came outside and the two
men picked up her bag from the ground and got into the vehicle and
drove off. She went to the police
station around 5:00 to report the
matter and told the police that she would be able to point out the
people who robbed her and
gave a description of their clothing.
[9]
At the police station she met D[....] who
also came to report her matter and explained that D[....] saw when
she was robbed. She
testified that the day the appellants were
arrested, she found them already arrested, handcuffed, and lying on
the ground next
to the silver Polo TSI motor vehicle they were
driving on the day of the incident, and were also wearing the same
clothes which
they were wearing when she was robbed. She identified
the first and fourth appellants as the people who robbed her. It was
not
in dispute that some of the robbed items belonging to the two
complainants were found where the appellants were arrested and some
were found at the homes of the first and third appellants
respectively.
[10]
The grounds of appeal as noted in the
notice of appeal on behalf of the first and third appellants is that
the trial court failed
to take into consideration that the appellants
were first offenders and that substantial and compelling
circumstances existed which
justified a deviation from the imposition
of the prescribed minimum sentence. It was submitted that the
effective sentence of twenty
(20) years imprisonment is strikingly
inappropriate and induces a sense of shock. On behalf of the second
appellant, it is averred
that the trial court misdirected itself in
finding that the appellant is a second offender, and that the
effective sentence of
twenty (20) years imprisonment is strikingly
inappropriate and induces a sense of shock.
[11]
With regards to the fourth appellant, it is averred that an effective
term of twenty (20) years
imprisonment is strikingly inappropriate,
and that the trial court erred in not imposing a shorter term of
imprisonment, coupled
with community service and further suspended
sentence.
[12]
In order to deal with the grounds of appeal
relating to the alleged misdirection by the trial court, it is
important to restate
the legal principles on sentencing. It is trite
law that the imposition of sentence falls within the discretion of
the court burdened
with the task of imposing the sentence and the
appeal court will only interfere with the sentence if the reasoning
of the trial
court was vitiated by misdirection, or the sentence
imposed induces a sense of shock, or can be said to be startling
inappropriate.
Nonetheless, a mere misdirection is not by itself
sufficient to entitle the appeal court to interfere with the
sentence. The sentence
must be of such a nature, degree, or
seriousness that it shows that the trial court did not exercise its
sentencing discretion
at all, or exercised it improperly, or
unreasonably. This court must also determine, as a court of appeal,
whether the sentence
imposed on the appellants was justified.
[13]
In
dealing with the court's approach in appeals against sentence,
Boshielo JA in
Mokela
v The State
[1]
stated
that:
"It is well
established that sentencing remains pre-eminently within the
discretion of the sentencing court. This salutary
principle implies
that the appeal court does not enjoy carte balance to interfere with
sentences which have been properly imposed
by a sentencing court.
This includes the terms and conditions imposed by a sentencing court,
on how or when the sentence is to
be served. The limited
circumstances under which an appeal court can interfere with the
sentence imposed by a sentencing court
have been distilled and set
out in manyjudgments of this Court". (See: S v Pieters 79876) SA
717 (A) at 727F-H; S v Malgas
2001 (7) SACR 469
(SCA),
(2001 (2) SA
7222
;
[2007] 3 All SA 220)
para 72; Director of Public Prosecutions v
Mngoma 2070 (7) SACR 427 (SCA) para 77).
[14]
Mr Kgokane argued on behalf of the first
and third appellants that the two counts of robbery were committed
not far apart in terms
of time and place, and that the trial court
should have considered that both robberies were part and parcel of
one action or one
offence, where the principle of single intent
should be applicable to warrant a cumulatively sentence to be served.
He submitted
in his heads of argument that the effective sentence of
20 years' imprisonment imposed on the appellants is startlingly harsh
and
inappropriate, in that it serves the same deterrent purpose as
would the minimum sentence set for repeated offenders of a similar
offence of robbery with aggravating circumstances. Put differently,
that the sentence imposed treats the first and third appellants
as
repeated offenders because there are no glaring aggravating
circumstances that were applied or stated by the trial court that
justify the imposition of the sentence in excess of the minimum
sentence set by the legislature.
[15]
Mr Kgokane further submitted that as
opposed to the second appellant who is a repeated offender for the
offence of robbery with
aggravating circumstances, the trial court
erred in finding that the personal circumstances of the appellants
taken together with
the surrounding circumstances of the case do not
constitute substantial and compelling circumstances. He also
submitted that the
trial court misdirected itself in not ordering
that the whole sentence imposed on count 2 should run concurrently
with the sentence
imposed on count 1, taking into account that the
trial court clearly indicated during trial proceedings that there
should be a
line of distinction drawn between appellants 1, 3, and 4
from appellant 2.
[16]
While Mr Tshole on behalf of the fourth
appellant indicated that the foundation of his submissions is based
on conviction, he conceded
that since the notice of appeal only
relates to sentence, he shares the same sentiments as Mr Kgokane
regarding sentence. He also
submitted that the trial court erred in
not considering the personal circumstances of the appellant as not
constituting substantial
and compelling circumstances justifying a
deviation from the imposition of the prescribed minimum sentence of
fifteen (15) years
imprisonment.
[17]
The respondent on the other hand submitted
that the appellants were correctly sentenced because the trial court
was obliged to impose
the prescribed minimum sentence in respect of
counts 1 and 2 of robbery, having found that there were no
substantial and compelling
circumstances justifying the imposition of
a lesser sentence. In support of Mr Kgokane's submission, Mr Maritz
further submitted
that in respect of the first, third, and fourth
appellants, the trial court should have ordered the whole sentence on
count 2 to
run concurrently with the sentence on count 1, giving an
effective sentence of 15 years' imprisonment, taking into account
that
the trial court indicated that there should be a distinction
between these appellants and the second appellant whom the court
already
ordered his sentence on count 2, to run concurrently with the
sentence on count 1, making it an effective term of 20 years
imprisonment.
Counsel also submitted that the trial court should have
ordered that the sentence of 15 years imposed on the second appellant
on
2 November 2017, and is currently serving, should run concurrently
with the 20 years' sentence, because the trial court had had
a duty
to make such an order.
[18]
It
is clear from the record of the trial proceedings that the appellants
were warned of the provisions of Minimum Sentences Act.
In
considering the appropriate sentence to impose, the trial court took
into consideration the appellant's personal circumstances,
and was
also mindful of the 'triad' factors pertaining to sentences as
enunciated in
S
v Zinn
[2]
namely:
'the crime, the offender and the interests of society. With that in
mind, it is important to heed to the purpose for which
legislature
was enacted when it prescribed sentences for specific offences which
falls under section 51 (2) for which the appellants
were convicted
and sentenced for.
[19]
The
contention that the trial court erred in not imposing a shorter term
of imprisonment coupled with community service and a further
suspended sentence on behalf of the fourth appellant, is in my view,
misplaced. The offence of robbery which the fourth appellant
was
convicted and sentence for, falls under the purview of the Act 105 of
1997 which carries a prescribed sentence of fifteen (15)
years
imprisonment and cannot be deviated from lightly and for flimsy
reasons, as enunciated by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
the case of
S
v Malgas
[3]
.
This principle was reaffirmed by the court in
S
v Matyityi
[4]
when
it held that a court imposing a sentence in terms of Act 105 of 1997
is not free to inscribe whatever sentence it deems appropriate,
but
the sentence that is prescribed for the specified crime in the
legislation.
[20]
It is on record that when the trial court
imposed the sentence on all the appellants, and having found no
substantial and compelling
circumstances which warranted a deviation
from the imposition of the prescribed minimum sentence of fifteen
(15) years imprisonment
on appellants 1; 3; and 4, and twenty (20)
years imprisonment on appellant 2, it held that as a measure of
mercy, it will consider
ordering the sentences to run concurrently.
[21]
It is common cause that the trial court
ordered ten years in count 2 to run concurrently with the sentence in
count 1. This having
been done, meant that the first, third and
fourth appellants received the same sentence as the second appellant
who is a repeated
offender, and thus showing no distinction between
the appellants. In the circumstances, I am inclined to agree with the
submissions
made by Messrs. Kgokane and Maritz that the trial court
should have ordered the whole sentence in count 2 to run concurrent
with
the sentence on count 1, in respect of the first, third, and
fourth appellants, rather than a part of it, having regard to the
fact that the two counts of robbery were committed not far apart in
terms of time and place, as argued by Mr Kgokane.
[22]
Section
280 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 ("CPA")
provides the sentencing court with a discretion, when sentencing
an
accused to several sentences, to make an order that such sentences
run concurrently to have cumulative effect of such sentences.
[5]
It
follows that a court of appeal can only interfere with the exercise
of such a discretion by the sentencing court where it is
satisfied
that the sentencing court did not exercise its discretion properly or
judicially, and where the sentence imposed is not
justified.
[23]
It
has been indicated by our courts in a number of cases that sentences
should be ordered to run concurrently when there is a close
link
between offences, and where the elements of one are closely bound up
with the elements of another. In the case of
S
v Mthetwa And Other
[6]
,
the accused committed two separate armed robberies, 30 minutes apart,
and the appeal court found that the robberies were sufficiently
closely linked in terms of the locality, time and the overall intent
in respect of the crimes to satisfy the need for concurrent
running
of sentences.
This
court stated as follows:
"[22] An order
that sentences should run concurrently is called for where the
evidence shows that the relevant offences
are 'inextricably linked in
terms of the locality, time, protagonists and, importantly, the fact
that they were committed with
one common intent' (S v Mokela
2012 (7)
SACR 437
(SCA), (12017] ZASCA 766) para 7 7). Put differently, where
there is a close link between offences, and where the elements of one
are closely bound up with the elements of another, the concurrence of
sentences in particular should be considered (S v Mate
2000 (7) SACR
552
(T)).
[23] In the
present case there was indeed an inextricable link between the
offences in terms of the locality, time and
the protagonists. There
was also a substantial overlap in the overall intent in respect of
the crimes. The failure of the trial
court to take these factors into
consideration resulted in the cumulative effect of the sentence being
disturbingly inappropriate.
These factors justified an order of
concurrence in the sentences. This is a further basis for
interference by this court".
[24]
The question whether the trial court
misdirected itself in not directing that the whole sentence imposed
on count 2 in respect of
the first, third and fourth appellants
should run concurrently with the sentence imposed on count 1, gives
rise to the same issue
which every court of appeal sitting on appeal
against the sentence has to decide, namely, whether the sentence
imposed is an appropriate
sentence.
[25]
In light of the circumstance of this case,
and the fact that the first, third and fourth appellants, are first
offenders, I am of
the view that the trial court did not exercise its
discretion properly or judicially. Consequently, the trial court
misdirected
itself in not making an order of full concurrence in the
sentences as the circumstances justify an order of concurrence in the
sentence, which is the basis upon which this court is entitled to
interfere with the decision of the trial court. Be that as it
may,
the interests of justice demand an interference with the trial
court's decision in this regard.
[26]
With regards to the submission made by the
respondent that the effective sentence of twenty (20) imposed on the
second appellant
should have been ordered to run concurrently with
the sentence of fifteen (15) years that he is currently serving,
section 280
of the CPA also makes specific provision that the later
sentence can be served concurrently with a sentence previously
imposed
by another court. I am inclined to agree with the submission
because if no such order is made, the effect of such sentences will
be such that when a person who is already convicted and is serving
sentence is sentenced again for another offence, such sentence
will
commence after the expiration of the sentence he is already serving.
The statutory expression in section 280(1) and (2) of
the CPA applies
whether the offender is still serving a sentence for the earlier
conviction.
[27]
Having given proper and due consideration
to all the circumstances in as far as the second appellant is
concerned, I am of the view
that failure by the trial court to order
the sentence of twenty (20) years to run concurrently with the
sentence of fifteen (15)
years imprisonment which the second
appellant is already serving, was a travesty of justice. In the
ultimate, this is a further
basis for interference by this court.
[28]
In the circumstances, the following order
is made:
1. The appeal succeeds to
the extent that the sentences are varied by the order in the
following terms:
1.1
In respect of the first, third and fourth
appellants, the sentence of fifteen (15) years on count 2 and six (6)
months on count
3, shall run concurrently with the sentence of
fifteen (15) years on count 1.
1.2
The effective term of imprisonment to be
served by the first, third and fourth appellants is fifteen (15)
years.
1.3
In respect of the second appellant, the
effective sentence of twenty (20) years shall run concurrently with
the sentence of fifteen
(15) years imprisonment imposed on the second
appellant on 2 November 2017.
1.4
The effective sentence to be served by the
second appellant is a period of (20) years imprisonment.
1.5
The sentences are antedated to 2 November
2018 in terms of section 282 of the CPA.
# PD. PHAHLANE
PD. PHAHLANE
# OF THE HIGH COURT
OF THE HIGH COURT
# GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I
agree,
M.
MOTHA AJ
# ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
# GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
Appellants 1, 2 and 3
Advocate JL. Kgokane
Instructed
by
Legal Aid South Africa
Locarno House
Francis Baard Street,
Pretoria
Email:
Letauk@legal-aid.co.za
For
Appellant 4
: Advocate ME. Tshole
Instructed
by
: Wiseman S Khalishwayo Attorneys
Email:
mtshole@webmail.co.za
For
the Respondent
: Advocate GJC Maritz
Instructed
by
Director of Public Prosecution, Pretoria
Tel: 012 351 6832
Email:
gicmaritz@npa.gov.za
Date
of hearing
: 25 November 2021
Date
of delivery
: 03 March 2022
[1]
2012
(1) SACR 431
(SCA) at para 9.
[2]
1969
(2) SA 537 (A)
[3]
2001
(1) SACR 469 (SCA).
[4]
2011
(1) SACR 40 (SCA).
[5]
Section
280 - Cumulative or concurrent sentences:
(1)
When a person is at any trial convicted of two or more offences or
when a person under sentence or undergoing sentence is
convicted of
another offence, the court may sentence him to such several
punishments for such offences or, as the case may be,
to the
punishment for such other offence, as the court is competent to
impose.
(2)
Such punishments, when consisting of imprisonment, shall commence
the one after the expiration, setting aside or remission
of the
other, in such order as the court may direct, unless the court
directs that such sentences of imprisonment shall run concurrently.
[6]
2015
(1) SACR 302
(GP).
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