Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 918South Africa
Walters and Another v S (A83/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 918 (24 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law – sentencing – application of the minimum sentencing regime envisaged in section 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 in circumstances where the prosecutor and the charge sheet referred to section 51(2) of that Act – conviction pursuant to a plea of guilty after the appellants have duly been informed of their rights and sentencing with reliance on the sentencing regime applicable to murder committed in the furtherance of a common purpose confirmed and appeal dismissed
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Walters and Another v S (A83/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 918 (24 November 2022)
Walters and Another v S (A83/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 918 (24 November 2022)
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sino date 24 November 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: A83/2022
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED.
DATE:
24 NOVEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
KENNETH
WALTERS
First
Appellant
DAVID
MIDDELKOP
Second
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Summary:
Criminal law – sentencing – application of the minimum
sentencing regime envisaged in
section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997
in circumstances where the prosecutor and
the charge sheet referred to
section 51(2)
of that Act –
conviction pursuant to a plea of guilty after the appellants have
duly been informed of their rights and sentencing
with reliance on
the sentencing regime applicable to murder committed in the
furtherance of a common purpose confirmed and appeal
dismissed
ORDER
The
appeals against convictions and sentences are dismissed.
JUDGMENT
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division.
The judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
MOGALE
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This appeal concerns
the question of whether it was competent for a court to apply the
minimum sentencing regime envisaged in section
51(1) of the Criminal
Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (“
the
CLAA
”
)
in circumstances where the charge sheet only referred to section
51(2) of the CLAA but where the subsequent plea of guilty to
the
charge of murder disclosed that the appellants had been acting in the
furtherance of common purpose with each other and other
perpetrators.
The
crime
[2]
On 31 December 2019 and at a shopping center near Tsakane, Gauteng
,
a gang of perpetrators committed a robbery. The robbers were
armed with firearms, and one of them shot and fatally wounded
a
security guard who attempted to foil the robbery. The two appellants
were part of the well-planned robbery. Their duty was to
pose as
Eskom workers while accessing the main electricity supply to the
shopping centre. They used Eskom uniforms and identity
cards for this
purpose, given to them by the mastermind of the robbery. The
appellants then switched off the electricity
supply and thereafter
sealed the electricity box with Eskom seals so that no one else could
gain access thereto, thereby enabling
the rest of the gang to
continue with the robbery without being hindered by alarms and
response units and with the shopping centre
in semi-darkness.
During the course of the robbery, a security guard who attempted to
stop the robbers was wounded in the
upper left leg, severing his
femoral artery. He passed away as a result of this.
The
charge
[3]
The appellants were charged with robbery with aggravating
circumstances as well as
murder. It is the second charge that
forms the crux of this appeal, and for purposes thereof, it is quoted
in full:
“
The
accused are guilty of the crime of murder read with the provisions of
section 51(2)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
in that
upon or about 31 December 2019 and at or near Tsakane in the regional
division of Gauteng, the accused did unlawfully and
intentionally
kill Dumi Zulu Mosai Nqwasho, a male person. The State alleges
that both accused acted with co-perpetrators
in their furtherance and
pursuance of a common purpose”.
The
pleading process
[4]
The Appellants were legally represented and, at the outset, indicated
their intention
to plead guilty.
[5]
Before receiving their plea of guilty, the learned magistrate
interrupted the plea
process and, clearly being cognizant of the
sentencing regimes prescribed by the CLAA, informed the appellants as
follows:
“
I
just verified this since I heard from the charge that the State
alleges common purpose. I also need to make you aware. The
risk
is that I do not even have it at this stage about sentencing but the
court can admit by what the State indicated here.
The fact
remains that the State had shown that the murder the charged you
with, they allege common purpose. And the murder
of common
purpose attracts a minimum sentence of life imprisonment not 15
years. So should the court find you guilty of murder
where the common
purpose is found in the evidence that will come before the court, a
minimum sentence will be life. But if it is
an ordinary murder that
does not include common purpose, the minimum sentence will be 15
years. Do you understand accused 1. Yes
Worship. Accused you too Ja,
I did Ja”
[6]
Hereafter the appellants pleaded guilty and tendered a statement in
terms of section
112 (2) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
(“
the CPA
”). In their plea, they detailed their
involvement in the pre-planned robbery, which they called a
“mission”.
They confirmed that they were part of the
“crew” who pulled off the robbery and that their
contribution facilitated
access to the shopping center, knowing that
this would enable the rest of the perpetrators to continue with the
robbery, which
they did with the use of firearms. They
admitted that the deceased had been killed during the course of this
robbery
in which they had partaken in the furtherance of a common
purpose.
[7]
Having considered and accepted their plea, the appellants were found
guilty as charged.
[8]
Prior to the conviction, however, the magistrate asked the prosecutor
and the appellant’s
legal representative to address him on
whether “
the
court should convict them in terms of section 51 in respect of the
charge of murder read with the provisions of section 51(1)
or
51(2)
”
.
The prosecutor argued that it would be improper to invoke the
sentencing regime envisaged in section 51(1) of the CLAA because
the
Appellants “
were
charged with the provisions of section 51(2)
”
.
For purposes of this argument, the prosecutor relied on
S
v Van Wyk
[1]
,
a decision by a full court of this Division.
[9]
The magistrate considered the sections and the arguments presented
and thereafter
convicted the appellants and sentenced them to 12
years imprisonment each in respect of the charges of robbery with
aggravating
circumstances and 20 years imprisonment each in respect
of the charges of murder perpetrated in the furtherance of a common
purpose.
The respective sentences were ordered to run
concurrently.
The
appeal
[10]
The entreaties made by the prosecutor to the court
a
quo
regarding
the charges of murder having been “only” in respect of
section 51(2), were not only echoed by their legal
representative at
the time but formed the basis of the appellant’s appeal. They
argued that the appellants “
were
charged
”
in
terms of section 51(2) in respect of the charges of murder and that
they had pleaded guilty to those charges, which carry prescribed
minimum sentences of 15 years each and not life imprisonment and as a
result, they argued that the magistrate did not have the
jurisdiction
to consider the prescribed minimum sentence regime provided for in
section 51(1) of the CLAA. Adv. Alberts, who appeared
for the
appellants in the appeal, further argued that the Appellants had been
prejudiced in their defense in having been “
exposed
”
to a substantially
increased sentencing regime whilst having pleaded
to
a specific sub-section of the CLAA. As a result, so the
argument went, the trial court has misdirected itself in convicting
and sentencing the appellants as set out above.
The
law
[11]
Murder is a common law crime. The elements thereof are (a) an
unlawful act; (b) which is
intentional; and (c) which leads to the
death of a person.
[2]
If
all these elements are proven, an accused must be convicted of
murder.
[12]
Murder can, as in this instance where it was coupled with
dolus
eventualis
,
be committed by multiple perpetrators, acting in the furtherance of a
common purpose. The most recent pronouncement of what
constitutes common purpose in criminal law is to be found in
Tshabalala
v State
[3]
wherein the Court also referred to the sentencing regime introduced
by the CLAA. This was labelled “
a
bold step in response to the public outcry about serious offences,
like rape
”
.
[4]
[13]
Sections 51 to 53 of the CLAA came into operation on 1 May 1998.
These sections introduced
a range of minimum sentences in respect of
certain serious offences. The minimum sentences may only be
deviated from when
substantial and compelling circumstances have been
found to exist justifying the imposition of a lesser sentence.
[14]
Section 51(2) of the CLAA provides that a High Court or Regional
Court “…
shall sentence a person who has been
convicted of an offence referred to in (a) Part II of Schedule 2 in
the case of (i) a first
offender, to imprisonment or a period of not
less than 15 years (ii) a second offender … to for a period of
not less than
20 years and (iii) a third or subsequent offender of
such offence, to imprisonment for a period of not less than 25
years”.
[15]
Section 51(1) of the CLAA contemplates higher sentences. It provides
that a Court “…
shall sentence a person it has
convicted of an offence referred to in Part I of Schedule 2 to
imprisonment for life
”.
[16]
Part I of Schedule 2 provides as follows:
“
Murder,
when (a) it was planned or premeditated or … (d) the offence
was committed by a person, group of persons or syndicate
acting in
the furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy”.
[17]
Section 35(3)(a) of the Constitution provides that an accused has a
right to be informed of the
charge against him with sufficient
details to answer it. Should this not be done, an accused’s
Constitutional right
to a fair trial would be breached. The
accused should also be informed of the sentencing consequences of the
charge against
him, should he be found guilty thereof.
[5]
[18]
Whether an accused’s aforementioned Constitutional rights to a
fair trial have been breached
at either the conviction or sentencing
stage can only be answered after a “
vigilant
examination of the relevant circumstances.”
[6]
Evaluation
[19]
It is clear that the accused had been properly informed of the
particulars of the crime with
which they had been charged.
Section 35(3)(a) of the Constitution has therefore been complied with
in this regard.
From the detailed plea explanation tendered by
the appellants whilst being legally represented, it is clear that
they also understood
the charge and that they were in a position to
properly respond thereto. Their Constitutional rights have
therefore not been
breached regarding the charge.
[20]
Having regard to the explanation given to the appellants by the
learned magistrate before they
pleaded, as to what the possible
sentencing consequences could be which could follow upon a finding of
guilty of a charge of murder
committed in the furtherance of a common
purpose, the appellants’ rights to a fair trial in that respect
had also not been
breached.
[21]
One finds often that a reference is made in a charge sheet to the
sentencing regime which conviction
of the offence mentioned in the
charge sheet may attract or where a particular sentencing risk might
follow (such as a declaration
of being a habitual criminal)
[7]
,
but this is not an absolute rule.
[8]
[22]
The appellants’ argument is that the sentencing risk was not
merely mentioned, but that
they had been “
charged
”
in terms of section 51(2). The argument is further that as this
section had explicitly been mentioned in the charge
sheet, this
limited the Regional Court’s sentencing jurisdiction and it was
in respect of that limited jurisdiction that
the appellants had
pleaded guilty. The prosecutor in the court
a quo
was apparently of the same view.
[23]
The argument put forward by the appellants is untenable. An
accused is not “
charged
” with a sentencing regime
but he or she is charged with having committed a particular offence.
That offence and the
elements thereof must be set out in the charge
sheet. Once the elements of such a crime fall within the ambit of
Part I of Schedule
2 of the CLAA, then, upon conviction, the crime
will attract a particular sentencing regime.
[24]
This much was expressly dealt with and set out in
S
v Kekana
[9]
“
It
was for the appellant to lay a factual foundation for a conclusion
that murders were premeditated and the issue was one for the
trial
court to decide. In coming to a decision the court would have
had regard to all the circumstances of the murder, including
the
appellant’s actions during the relevant period. Anything
short of this could not bind the court to the sentence
of section
51(2) of the CLAA. There is no reason why the suggestion that
the court’s power to consider the prescribed
minimum sentence
in terms of section 51(1) can be ousted simply by mere reference to
section 51(2) in a plea explanation is untenable.
The
provisions of the CLAA do not create a different or new offence but
are relevant to the sentence. Thus, murder remains
murder as a
substantive charge, irrespective of whether section 51(1) or section
51(2) applies. Simply put there is no such as
murder in terms of
section 51(1) or 51(2). It follows there can never be a plea to
such a non-existent charge”.
[25]
Despite the fact that the above pronouncement has been made prior to
the appellants’ trial,
it is of concern to this court that
prosecutors, such as the one in question, are still of the view that
an accused can be “
charged
with
”
a
sentencing regime as opposed to being charged with having committed a
particular offence. This concern extends to the attitude
adopted on behalf of the appellants, even in this court. For
this reason and, at the risk of being repetitive, it should
be
clarified that the inclusion of references to the sentencing regimes
contemplated in sections 51(1) and 51(2) in a charge sheet
is merely
to inform the accused of the consequences of the crime or crimes with
which they are charged. This is done to ensure
that an accused
has a fair trial and that, when a plea is tendered, it is done with
full knowledge of possible consequences thereof.
The
inclusion of references to the CLAA, however, does not mean that an
accused is “
charged
”
therewith.
An accused cannot be charged with a sentencing regime but only with
having committed an offence.
Kekana
,
which post-dates
Van
Wyk
on
which the prosecutor relied, had clarified this as well as the debate
about whether a conviction “guilty as charged”
which
featured in
Ndlovu
v S
[10]
(and which was quoted in
Van
Wyk
)
limited the jurisdiction of a court to a particular sentencing
regime.
[26]
In considering the sentences to be imposed, the learned magistrate
found compelling and substantial
circumstances warranting a deviation
from the prescribed minimum sentence of life imprisonment on the
conviction of murder in the
furtherance of a common purpose. This
finding was not attacked by the State, and on the facts before us, it
cannot be faulted.
[11]
[27]
The legal representatives for the appellants conceded that the
offenses that the appellants had
pleaded guilty to were serious and
that long-term imprisonment was unavoidable. After having
accepted the magistrate’s
deviation from the prescribed minimum
sentences, they conceded that the sentences imposed were not shocking
and inappropriate.
Having regard to the facts of the matter,
the pre-sentencing reports and the appellant’s lesser roles in
the robbery, we
agree.
[28]
In the circumstances of the case the trial court had not misdirected
itself and the sentences
of 20 years imprisonment on account of
murder, even with the invocation of the provisions of section 51(1)
of the CLAA, did not
amount to a travesty of justice.
Order
The
appeals against convictions and sentences are dismissed.
K
J MOGALE
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
I
agree, and it is so ordered.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 13
October 2022
Judgment
delivered: 24
November 2022
Appearances
for the Appellants
: Adv.
H L Alberts
Instructed
by the Legal
Aid Board, Pretoria
Appearances
for the State
: Adv.
L A More
Instructed
by the Director
of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria
[1]
S
v Van Wyk
2017
JDR 1352 (GP) (
Van
Wyk
).
[2]
See:
Snyman
,
Criminal Law,
5
th
Edition at
447
[3]
Tshabalala
v S
;
Ntuli
v S
2020
(2) SACR 38 (CC).
[4]
At
para [61].
[5]
See:
Du Toit et al,
Commentary
on the
Criminal Procedure Act
>
at
28 – 2G, commencing on
section 274
of the CPA and
S
v Kolea
2013
(1) SACR 409
(SCA) at [7]
[6]
See:
S
v Legoa
2003(1)
SACR 13 SCA, par. 21
[7]
S
v Brand
2019
(1) SACR 264 (GP).
[8]
S
v MT
2018
(2) SACR 592
(CC) at [40].
[9]
2019 (1) SACR 1
(SCA) para. 21 – 22.
[10]
Ndlovu
v S
2017
(2) SACR 305 (CC).
[11]
See:
S
v Malgas
2001
(1) SACR 469
SCA and S
v
Matyityi
2011
(1) SACR 40
SCA.
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