Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 223South Africa
Mambane and Others v S (A116/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 223 (11 March 2022)
Headnotes
of the evidence of witnesses from both the state and defence can be summarised as follows: [6] It is common cause that the state led the evidence of four(4) security officers in the employ of CPI, namely, Mr Mvumelwano Penny, Mr Jimmy Moloto,Mr Sipho Khehla Mabaso and Mr Michael Ngomane. Their
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mambane and Others v S (A116/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 223 (11 March 2022)
Mambane and Others v S (A116/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 223 (11 March 2022)
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sino date 11 March 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A116/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE:
11 March 2022
In
the matter between:
MAMBANE
LAURANCE
First Appellant
FUNDAMA
GIDEON
Second Appellant
MNISI
WITNESS
Third Appellant
AND
THE
STATE
Respondent
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
legal representatives by email and uploading on case
line. The date
and time for hand- down is deemed to be 11 March 2022.
JUDGMENT
NDLOKOVANE,
AJ (MUNZHELELE J
concurring)
Introduction
[1]
This case turns in essence around copper theft which is prevalent in
the
Gauteng Province and apparently also in other parts of South
Africa.
[2]
The appellants were convicted in the Regional division of Gauteng
held
at Brakpan on 26 March 2019 on two counts, namely the tampering,
destroying or damaging of essential infrastructure('count 1') and
of
theft of ferrous and non-ferrous metal ('count' 2), committed on 4th
January 2018 in the Brakpan area where they damaged and
stole: 150mm
by 3 core XLPE cable, supplying electricity to substation Vulcania 33
and substation Vulcanian south, the property
of Ekurhuleni
Municipality with an estimated value of R60 000,00.
[3]
On 23 March 2019, the learned magistrate sentenced them to effective
period
of 15 years imprisonment, with reference to the minimum
sentence regime contained in section 51(2) of Act 105 of 1997. They
now
appeal against their conviction and sentences with special leave
from this division.
The
Appellants' grounds for appeal
[4]
One of the grounds for appeal in respect of the conviction is that
the
learned magistrate erred in rejecting the evidence of the
appellants and found instead that the state had proved its case
beyond
a reasonable doubt. Their evidence being that, they were hired
to dig the trench and were not aware that their actions were
unlawful.
I hasten to mention that during the hearing of this
application, counsel on behalf of the appellants conceded that this
ground
of appeal is no longer an issue that the appellant raises and
this court need not consider it. Another ground for consideration
raised on behalf of the appellants was that the court a
quo
misdirected itself by convicting them on both counts 1 and 2 ,as
same constitutes duplication of charges.
[5]
Regarding the sentence, the appellants contends that the sentence by
the
court a
quo
is shockingly inappropriate, in that it is out
of proportion to the totality of the accepted facts; and that the
trial court should
have taken the personal circumstances of the
appellants cumulatively in order to find exceptional circumstances to
deviate from
the minimum sentence.
Material
Evidence
A
brief summary of the evidence of witnesses from both the state and
defence can be summarised as follows:
[6]
It is common cause that the state led the evidence of four(4)
security
officers in the employ of CPI, namely, Mr Mvumelwano Penny,
Mr Jimmy Moloto,Mr Sipho Khehla Mabaso and Mr Michael Ngomane. Their
evidence corroborates each other in most material aspects, except
where it relates to which one of them arrested which appellant.
[7]
On the day in question, they reported for duty and amongst their
duties,
they patrolled one of the hot spots in the area of Ekurhuleni
for theft of cables.
[8]
Mr Ngomane, the supervisor, was the driver of the motor vehicle they
were in and as
he approached the area, he saw five (5) people in a
trench. He then accelerated the speed of the motor vehicle, at some
stage he
stopped and his colleagues alighted the vehicle and chased
after the 5 men. Some of the men had the cables handing around their
shoulders whilst running.
[9]
Mr. Nvumelano, chased after the second appellant who had a cable in
his possession and he dropped it on the
ground while running. It is
when he apprehended him and took him back to the trench. Mr. Moloto
also chased and assisted in the
apprehending of the second appellant.
[10]
Mr Mabaso chased after the first appellant, who dropped the cable and
he then apprehended him and then brought him back
to the trench.
[11]
The evidence on record depicts the cable having been stripped and was
rolled, inside the trench, where there were tools.
The pictures of
the appellants, together with the cables, tools as well as the trench
were taken by the security officers. The
appellants were taken to the
police station, the cables and tools were booked into SAP 1315/2018.
[12]
This evidence was corroborated by Mr Heinlein Bernard Buitendag, who
is the Clerk at Brakpan
Police Station. He confirmed having booked
the following items, lasher, spade, two picks, one hacksaw, three
pieces of 9 meter,
158 mm free cord copper cables.
[13]
Mr. Thobane Eric Ramovha a senior operation officer for medium
voltage,in the employ of the Ekurhuleni Electrical Department
testified that he identified the cable as that of the municipality on
10 January 2018 and that the cable supplies power between
two
substations which is Volcania 33 substation and Volcancia South. Due
to the cable theft, the residential area, industrial area
and the
hospital for mentally handicapped were affected by the power cut. The
value of the cable was said to be thirteen thousand
five hundred rand
(R13 500,00) and the repairing costs thereof amounts to sixty
thousans rand (R 60 000,00).
[14]
After the state closed its case, the appellants also testified. Their
evidence is that on the
day in question they met for the first time
at the robots at a certain BP garage to look for odd jobs. While
there, a bakkie arrived
and appellant 1 ran to it with three other
people including the second and third appellants. Whilst inside the
bakkie, the occupants
of the bakkie said that they need only three
people, and the fourth person they were with, alighted.
[15]
They were driven to the place where they were told to dig as those
people who requested them
to dig wanted to take out the old pipes and
put new ones. The driver of the motor vehicle left and they remained
with two other
gentlemen who pointed to them where to dig. They
started digging and later went out of the trench to smoke, then
realized that
the two gentlemen they were with had also left.
[16]
The first appellant was the first to go out for a smoke and then
followed by the second and third
appellants. While the three of them
were outside the trench, a bakkie came at a high speed and stopped
near them. They were informed
that they were being arrested for theft
of cables and photos of them were taken as well as the tools and
cables. The appellants
denied being in possession of the cable and
that they stripped off the outside cover. They contend that they did
not know that
it was illegal to dig the area and were hired by
unknown men in the bakkie and were going to be paid one hundred and
fifty rand
(R150,00) and also deny running away when they saw the
bakkie.
[17]
The issue in this appeal is the question of whether the court a
quo
in convicting them on counts 1 and 2 indeed committed duplication
of charges?
The
Applicable Law
[18]
In
S
v Francis
[1]
,
it
was
reiterated
that the
powers
of
a court of appeal to
interfere
with the findings 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 evidence, is presumed to be correct.
[19]
The evidence of the state witnesses as earlier alluded corroborates
each other in most
material aspects. I see no reason to tamper with
the court a quo's finding in accepting their evidence as true.
[20]
I cannot say the same with the evidence of the appellants. Accepting
their evidence that
the appellants ran away upon being approached. If
they were not aware what they were doing was wrong, one wonders why
they were
running with the cable on some of their shoulders. The
appellants' version that they were hired to dig up and did not know
their
act of digging was unlawful cannot be probable and was
correctly rejected as false by the court a
quo.
A proper
evaluation brings one to safely conclude that the only reasonable
inference one can draw was that for the appellants to
steal the cable
they had to tamper with and damage the cable being the essential
infrastructure. Consequently, they were correctly
convicted.
[21]
A new offence is created in section 3(i)(b) of the Criminal Amendment
Act 18 of 2015 read
with the provisions of section 51(2) 105 of 1997
which reads as follows:
"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."
Evaluation
[22]
As pointed out in the heads of argument on behalf of the respondent,
it was the undisputed
evidence of Ekurhuleni Electrical Department's
employee, Mr. Ramovha, that the service provided by damaged cables is
an essential
service in the infrastructure of the community, in that
the cable supplies power between two substations which is Volcania 33
substation
and Volcancia South. Due to the cable theft, the
residential area, industrial area and the hospital for mentally
handicapped were
affected by the power cut.
[23]
It was also the undisputed evidence of Mr. Nvumelwano, Mr Moloto and
Mr. Mabaso that upon visiting
the scene they
inter alia
found
the cable having been stripped and was rolled, inside the trench,
where there were tools. Moreover, the appellants were found
in
possession of equipment suitable to cut the cabling. The appellants
tried to run away fortunately they were caught and arrested.
It was
conceded during arguments by the counsel for the appellant that the
respondent has proved the case beyond reasonable doubt
and the
conviction of the accused was in order.
[24]
It is therefore clear that, given the theft and damage to essential
infrastructure in the provision
of a basic service, the appellants'
convictions have attracted the prescribed minimum sentence contained
in
Part 11
and not
Part V
of Schedule 2 of the 1997 Act.
Duplication
of charges
[25]
It is necessary to consider the duplication of convictions as Ms.
Moloi on behalf of the
appellants raised the issue in her heads of
argument and oral submissions with specific reference to theft
('count 2)' and tampering,
damaging or destroying of essential
infrastructure in terms of the provisions of section 3 of the The
Criminal Matters Amendment
Act 18 of 2015 (' Act 18 of 2015
')("count1"). Ms. Moloi contends that the appellants should
have been charged with one
of the counts as an alternative to the
other and not as two separate counts. She further submitted that if
one has to look at the
intention of the legislature in respect of the
two counts that the appellants had been charged and convicted of it
cannot be said
that the intention was meant for the perpetrators to
be punished twice for the same offence.
[26]
The respondent in contrast contends that there is no merit·in
the submission of
duplication of charges by the appellant in that
count 1 creates a statutory offence whilst count 2 is a common law
offence The
appellant knew or reasonably ought to have known when
they dug up, that their conduct was unlawful.
[27]
In considering conviction, the court a
quo
accepted that the
appellant's main intent was to steal the electric cable. To steal the
cable, they had to inevitably tamper with
and damage the cable being
the essential infrastructure.
[28]
Theft
is
defined
as
the
unlawful
and
intentional
appropriation
of
inter
alia
moveable
property which belongs to another in order to permanently deprive the
person of such property.
[2]
Whereas, in terms of section 3 of Act 18 of 2015, an offence is
committed if a person unlawfully and intentionally tampers, damages
or destroys essential infrastructure.
There is a
clear distinction between the elements to be proven by the State to
ensure a conviction in respect of these offences.
There is no
single test to consider duplication of convictions, but two
indicators to be used are the test of a single intention,
the
evidence test and the elements required to prove the offence.
[3]
[29]
If the elements constituting the offences differ, there cannot be a
duplication even though
one single act is committed or transaction is
concluded.
[30]
In totality, from the record in the present case clearly demonstrates
that the appellants
were found in possession of the cables, some
dropped them from the shoulders as they were running away from the
officers.by running
with the cables, the intention was to deprive the
owner hence the offence of theft.
[31]
Further a proper consideration of the elements in section 3 , namely,
by digging and cutting
the cables, they were tampering with the
municipality infrastructure meant to supply electricity to the two
substations which is
Volcania 33 and Volcancia South. They knew that
having tampered and destroyed the infrustracture, clearly, the supply
of electricity
will became a huge problem not only to the residence
but also to industries and shops because electricity is an essential
commodity
we cannot live without. This confirms the contravention of
section 3 as charged. Consequently, it follows that there cannot be a
duplication in this regard, even though one single act was committed,
there is a clear distinction between the elements for the
two
offences as proven by the state. Therefore, the appellants were
correctly convicted by the court a
quo.
Accordingly, I see no
reason to temper with its decision.
Sentence
[32]
The Criminal Matters Amendment Act 18 of 2015 ("the 2015 Act")
came into effect
on 1 June 2016. One of its stated purposes (as
reflected in the preamble) was to amend the Criminal Law Amendment
Act 105 of 1997
("the 1997 Act") so as to regulate the
imposition of discretionary minimum sentences for essential
infrastructure related
offenses.
[33]
An
'essential
infrastructure'
is defined in
section 1 of the 2015 Act as follows:
'Any installation,
structure, facility or system, whether publicly or privately owned,
the loss or damage of, or the tampering with,
which may interfere
with the provision or distribution of
a
basic service to the
public
.
..'
[34]
A
'basic service'
is in turn defined as follows:
'a
service, provided
by the public or private sector, relating to energy, transport,
water, sanitation and communication, the interference
with which may
prejudice the livelihood, well-being, daily operations or economic
activity of the public...'
[35]
One of the consequential amendments to the 1997 Act was to introduce,
in Part II of Schedule
2, the following:
'Theft of ferrous or
non-ferrous metal which formed part of essential infrastructure, as
defined in section 1 of the Criminal Matters
Amendment
Act,
2015
-
(a)
if it caused-
(i)
interference with or disruption of any basic service,
as defined in section 1 of the aforementioned Act, to the public; or
(ii)
damage to such essential infrastructure.
..'
[36]
A further consequential amendment to the 1997 Act was the
introduction of Part V, which
refers to:
'Any offence referred
to in section 36 or 37 of the General Law Amendment Act, 1955 (Act No
62 of 1955), involving ferrous or non-ferrous
metal which formed part
of essential infrastructure, as defined in section 1 of the Criminal
Matters Amendment Act, 2015.
Theft, involving
ferrous or non-ferrous metal which formed part of essential
infrastructure, as defined in section 1 of the Criminal
Matters
Amendment Act, 2015, which is not covered in Part II of this
Schedule.'
[37]
With regards to sentence, the appellant was convicted in terms of the
provisions of section
51(2) and Schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997
, in respect of counts 1 and 2.
[38]
Section 51(2)
of Act 105 of 1997, provides for minimum sentences of
categories of offenders who have been convicted of offences reflected
to
in Para. 1, 11, Ill and IV of schedule 2 by providing that:
"Notwithstanding
any other law, but subject to subsections (3) and (6),
a
regional
court or
a
High Court shall sentence a person it has convicted
of an offence referred
to
in
Part
II
of
Schedule
2
to
imprisonment
for
15
years
for
first offender
…..
"
[39]
An escape clause appears under section 51(3) of the Act and provides
that:
"If
any court referred to in subsections 1 or 2 is satisfied that
substantial and compelling circumstances exist which justify
the
imposition of a less sentence than the sentence prescribed in these
subsections, it shall enter those circumstances on record
of the
proceedings and must therefrom impose such lesser sentence".
[40]
In
evaluating
substantial and
compelling
circumstances Marais JA in
S v
MALGAS
[4]
held:
"But
for the rest, I can see no warrant for deducing that the legislature
intended a court to exclude from consideration, ante
omnia as it
were, any or all of the many factors traditionally and rightly taken
into account by courts when sentencing offenders.
The use of the
epithets 'substantial' and 'compelling' cannot be interpreted as
excluding even from consideration any of those
factors. They are
neither notionally
nor linguistically appropriate to
achieve that. What they are apt to convey, is that the ultimate
cumulative impact of those circumstances
must be such as to justify
a
departure."
[41]
The learned Judge continued at 481i to 482a:
"B. Courts are
required to approach the imposition of sentence conscious that the
legislature had ordained life imprisonment
(or the particular
prescribed period of imprisonment) as the sentence that should
ordinarily and in the absence of weighty justification
be imposed for
the listed crimes in the specified circumstances.
C.
Unless there are,
and can be seen to be, truly convincing reasons for
a
different
response, the crimes in question are therefore required to elicit
a
severe, standardised and consistent response from courts.
D. The specified
sentences are not to be departed from lightly and for flimsy reasons.
Speculative hypotheses favourable to the
offender, undue sympathy,
aversion to imprisoning first offenders, personal doubts as to the
efficacy of the policy underlying
the legislation, and marginal
differences in personal circumstances or degrees of participation
between co-offenders are to be
excluded."
[42]
In mitigation, the appellants brought to the attention of the court a
quo
their personal circumstances. From the record, these can
be summarised as follows: The first appellant is a Mozambican
citizen,
He was 38 years old; He is unmarried, He has three children,
aged 24 years old, 18 years old and 16; The mother of his children
is
a South African citizen and they resides together; His children's
mother does odd jobs as a domestic worker; The appellant was
doing
odd jobs fixing swimming pools; He earned four thousand rands (R 4
000,00) per month; The appellant has been in custody for
fourteen
(14) months.
[43]
The second appellant: He was 35 years old; he attended school until
Grade 7; He is unmarried;
He has 2 children aged 9 years old and 6
years old;
The
children resides with their mother in Mozambique; His children's
mother is unemployed; At the time of his arrest he was doing
odd jobs
as a general worker; He spent fourteen (14) months in custody
awaiting trial.
[44]
The third appellants' personal circumstances are as follows;
He
was 26 years old; He is unmarried; has no children, He attended
school until Grade 9 and he dropped out of school in Grade 10;
He was
doing odd jobs as a build and painter; He is a first offender;
[45]
It should however be borne in mind that in cases of serious crime the
personal circumstances
of the offender by themselves, will
necessarily recede into the background. Once it becomes clear that
the crime is deserving of
a substantial period of imprisonment the
questions of whether the accused is married or single, whether he has
two children or
three, whether or not he is employed, are in
themselves largely immaterial to what that period should be, and
those seem to me
to be the kind of 'flimsy' grounds that Malgas's
case said should be avoided. Also see
S v Vilakazi
2009 (1)
SACR 552
(SCA) at para 58.
[46]
The record is depleted with the devastating consequences for the
country and community
as a result of the tampering and theft of these
electrical cables which I alluded to earlier in my judgment and wish
not to repeat
herein.
[47]
Having considered all the above, the trial court made a finding that
there were indeed
no substantial and compelling circumstances which
justifies deviation from the minimum sentence of fifteen (15) years
imprisonment
for counts 1 and 2.
[48]
Despite my diligent search, I have not been able to find any
demonstrable or clear error
on the part of the trial court in respect
of the sentence to justify interference with its findings.
Order
[49]
In the result, the following order is made:
[49.1]
The appeal against both the conviction and sentence is dismissed.
NDLOKOVANE
N
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Heard:
10 February 2022
Electronically
Delivered: 11 March 2022
Appearances:
Applicant
Counsel: Adv. M.B Moloi
Instructed
by: Legal Aid South Africa
Respondent's
Counsel: Adv. K Germishuise
Instructed
by: NPA
[1]
1991 (1)
SACR
198 (A) at p204
[2]
See: CR Snyman,
Criminal
Law,
5th
ed at 483
[3]
See:
S
v McIntyre
1997
(2) SACR 333
(T) at
336-7 and Du Tait
et
al, Commentary on Criminal Procedure Act 14-6 and further
[4]
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) at 477f
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