Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 589South Africa
Jobela v S (A20/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 589 (12 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
12 August 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law – appeal against sentence – appellant found guilty on Murder -- whether a previous conviction of common robbery should be regarded as previous conviction as intended in Section 51(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997- appeal succeeds in respect of count 1- sentence reduced- substantial and compelling circumstances-appeal in respect of count 4 dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Jobela v S (A20/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 589 (12 August 2022)
Jobela v S (A20/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 589 (12 August 2022)
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sino date 12 August 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No. A20/2022
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
/NO
REVISED
NO
In the matter between:
SIPHO NICHOLAAS
JOBELA
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Millar J & Monyemangene AJ
Heard
on
:
27 July 2022
Delivered:
12 August 2022 - This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
representatives by email, by being
uploaded to the
CaseLines
system of the GD and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 10H00 on 12 August 2022.
Summary:
Criminal law – appeal against
sentence – appellant found guilty on Murder -- whether a
previous conviction of common
robbery should be regarded as previous
conviction as intended in
Section 51(2)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment
Act 105 of 1997
- appeal succeeds in respect of count 1- sentence
reduced- substantial and compelling circumstances-appeal in respect
of count 4
dismissed.
ORDER
It
is Ordered
:
1.
The appeal against
sentence in count 1 is upheld. The sentence of the trial court is
replaced with a sentence of 15 years Imprisonment.
2.
The appeal against the
sentence in count 4 is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
CORAM:
MONYEMANGENE, AJ AND MILLAR J
1.
The accused appeared in the Regional Court sitting in Vereeniging. He
was charged
with four counts :Murder read with the provisions of
Section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
,
kidnapping , Attempted murder and Rape in contravention Section3 of
the Sexual Offences Act, ACT 32 of 2007 read with
Section 51(1)
of
the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
2.
He was legally represented during the trial and pleaded guilty to
count 4 and was
accordingly convicted. Evidence was led in respect of
count 1 to 3. He was eventually convicted on the remaining counts.
3.
The following sentences were imposed:
Count 1: 20 years
Imprisonment
Count 2 : 10 years
Imprisonment.
Count 3 : 10 years
Imprisonment.
Count 4: Life
Imprisonment.
In terms of
Section 39(2)
of the
Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998
the determinate
sentences were ordered to run concurrently with the sentence of Life
Imprisonment.
4.
The sentence of Life Imprisonment is subject to automatic right of
Appeal.
5.
He was found guilty against the following factual background. Only
those facts
that are germane to the appeal will be discussed. The
complainant, (NMT) was on 12 March 2017 on her way back from
Residentia train
station when, unsuspecting, was accosted by the
accused who was in possession of a knife. The accused stabbed her and
took her
to a secluded pace in the veld where he assaulted and raped
her. The accused later took her to another house , treated her wound
and further raped her. The accused was linked through DNA. He pleaded
Guilty to the murder charge and not guilty to the other charges.
He
was consequently convicted on all of them.
6.
The appeal is against the sentence only.
7.
Matters pertaining to sentence are pre-eminently falling squarely
within the discretion
of the trial court. There is a plethora of
authority to the effect that:
“
In
any appeal against sentence, whether imposed by a Magistrate or a
Judge, the court hearing
(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 a discretion: hence the further principle that the
sentence should only be altered if the
discretion has not been
‘judicially and properly exercised
8.
The test is whether the sentence is vitiated by irregularity or it is
disturbingly
inappropriate. See
S v Rabie 1975(4) SA855 (AD) at
857 D-E
“
8.
It was further stated in
S
v Anderson 1964(3) SA 494 (A) 495 D-E
that:
“
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 sentence 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 if justice require it.”
9.
See
also Prinsloo v S (827/2011)
[2015] ZASCA 207
;
[2016] 1 All SA
390
(SCA);
2016 (2) SACR 25
(SCA) (4 December 2015)
10.
The appellant’s main contention was that the trial court erred
in imposing a sentence of 20 years’
imprisonment in respect of
the Murder charge. The appellant had a previous conviction of Robbery
with Aggravating Circumstances.
The offence of Murder falls squarely
within the provisions of
Section 51(2)
as contained in
Part II
of
Schedule 2 to the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
. This
section provides thus:
51. (2):
Notwithstanding any other law but subject to subsections (3) and (6).
a regional court or a High Court shall— if
it has convicted a
person of an offence referred to in
Part II
of Schedule 2, sentence
the person. in the case of—
(i) a first offender,
to imprisonment for a period not less than 15 years
(ii) a second offender
of any such offence, to imprisonment for a period not less than 20
years; and
(iii)
a third or subsequent offender of any such offence, to imprisonment
for a period not less than 25 years
.”
11.
Robbery with aggravating circumstances, although listed in the same
schedule, is not a same offence
as intended in
Section 51(2)
of the
minimum sentences Act. It is clear from the record that the learned
Magistrate relied heavily on the fact the accused previous
conviction
qualified him as a second offender and hence imposed a sentence of 20
years. This is clear from the record when he says:
“
According
to section 51(2) where a person is convicted of murder and he is a
second offender, the prescribed minimum sentence is
one of 20 years
imprisonment “at p 120. Absent the previous conviction the
normal sentence he would impose, given the fact
that the accused did
not have a previous conviction would be one of 15 years
imprisonment.”
12.
The court in
S v Qwabe
2012 (1) SACR 347
(WCC)
considered
whether a previous conviction of robbery(common) would trigger the
provisions of section 51(2)(i) resulting in an escalation
of the
prescribed sentence for robbery with aggravating circumstances and
concluded the following :
“
Again,
in the context, it seems to me, "any such an offence" must
be an offence of the same ''kind or degree" (borrowing
from the
Oxford dictionary) as the "kind or degree" of the offence
in question. In other words, I am of the view that
"any such
offence" must be, in the instant case, robbery with aggravating
circumstances. To hold otherwise would result
in the first conviction
of robbery being elevated, for the purpose of sentencing, to a
conviction of robbery with aggravating circumstances.
It could not,
in my view, have been the contemplation of the legislature to impose
the sentencing regime of section 52 on offence
which would not
expressly otherwise fail under its provisions.” At para 38”.
13.
It follows from the foregoing that the offence of robbery with
aggravating circumstances
is not same offence with that of murder and
any suggestion to equate same would me misplaced. For an increased
sentence to be imposed
that exceed the minimum sentence ordained by
the legislature on the basis that the accused has a previous
conviction, the offence
must be a similar offence to the one the
accused is found guilty of, in this case murder. Given the
circumstances of this case
it is clear that the appellant was a first
offender of any such offence and a sentence of 15 years should have
been imposed.
14.
In imposing Life Imprisonment for the offence of rape the learned
magistrate took into account the
fact that the complainant was raped
more than once, in this instance three times. That she was at that
time 14 years old. The appellant
stabbed her with a knife albeit not
before he raped her. Rape involving the infliction of serious bodily
harm on its own attracts
a sentence of Life Imprisonment. Whether the
infliction of serious bodily harm preceded the rape or not is
immaterial. The appellant
threatened to stab the complainant if she
resisted or called for help. She was raped while she was bleeding and
injured. The appellant
showed no remorse and the court rightly
remarked that that this signaled the absence of any mitigating factor
on the part of the
appellant.
15.
The remarks by the court in
S v R
1996 (2) SACR 314
(T)
per
Nasha at 345 (I) are apposite. The court there said:
“
Aggravating
circumstances such as the appellants’ lack of remorse, the use
of violence during the rape and after the rape
as well as the fact
that the appellant left the complainant on her own in a deserted area
after he violated her cannot be ignored
’.
16.
The appellants’ main contention was further that the court
failed to take into account
the appellant’s background and
upbringing. Much reliance was placed on the pre-sentence report which
revealed that the appellant’s
upbringing seemed to be a
contributing factor to the commission of these offences, that he was
exposed to domestic violence at
a young age by his father and abused
his mother and punished them severely as children.
17.
This contention, in my view, is problematic in more than one respect.
There are a lot of people who
were not properly brought up and chose
to distance themselves from this errant behavior in their life. There
is no justification
in blaming an improper upbringing by committing
heinous and horrendous crimes such as the one the appellant
committed. In the absence
of any psychological reports to support
this contention I see no justification in putting much blame in the
appellant’s upbringing.
The trial court took into account the
appellant’s personal circumstances and rightly found that there
were no exceptional
circumstances justifying the imposition of a
lesser sentence than the prescribed minimum sentence.
18. I found no weighty
justification in interfering with the sentence imposed and am of the
view that the sentence imposed in respect
of count 4 is not grossly
proportionate to the gruesome offences the appellant committed. The
court in
S v Malgas
[2000] ZASCA 156
;
2001 (1) SA 1222
(SCA) at P1236
cautioned
against deviating lightly for flimsy reasons.
“
The
specified sentences were not to be departed from lightly and for
flimsy reasons which could not withstand scrutiny…..at
para
D”.
19.
I see no reason in interfering with the sentence in count 4. The
learned magistrate was
correct in finding that there were no
exceptional circumstances.
20. In the result I make
the following order:
20.1
The appeal against the
sentence is count 1 succeeds. The sentence in count 1 is replaced
with a sentence of 15 years Imprisonment.
20.2
The appeal against the
sentences in count 4 is dismissed.
T
J MONYEMANGENE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I AGREE, IT IS SO
ORDERED.
A MILLAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA COUNSEL
FOR
THEAPPELLANT:
ADV. F VAN AS
INSTRUCTED
BY:
LEGAL AID PRETORIA
REFERENCE:
X916624522
COUNSEL FOR THE
RESPONDENT:
ADV. J NETHONONDA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
STATE ATTORNEY PRETORIA
REFERENCE:
SA 20/2022
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