Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 1027South Africa
Hlela and Another v S (A115/2022; SA 21/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 1027 (24 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 November 2022
Headnotes
down fixed employment for a period of seven years, he had lost his job and had been unemployed for about two years before the offences were committed. The second appellant, although unmarried. had seven children. He had reached grade six at school, but had only worked for short periods thereafter and was unemployed at the time of the offences.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Hlela and Another v S (A115/2022; SA 21/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 1027 (24 November 2022)
Hlela and Another v S (A115/2022; SA 21/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 1027 (24 November 2022)
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sino date 24 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A115/2022
DPP
REF NO: SA 21/2022
DATE
OF APPEAL: 15 NOVEMBER 2022
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/ NO
3.
REVISED.
DATE:
24 November 2022
In
the matter between:
PHAKAMANI
HLELA
1
st
Appellant
ROBERT
NDABANDABA
2
nd
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
CAJEE
AJ:
[1]
This is an appeal against two minimum sentences of fifteen (15) years
each against each of the appellants
which were ordered to run
consecutively by the Regional Court in Benoni.
[2]
The appellants were convicted of robbery with aggravated
circumstances in respect of two separate incidents
eight days apart,
namely the pt of March 2017 and the 9th of March 2017 respectively,
which targeted the same business, namely
Rebel Fruit and Vegetables
in Benoni.
[3]
They were part of a much larger group of people. On each occasion a
considerable sum of money was taken, which
was larger in the second
robbery than the first. They were assisted by a security guard in the
employment of the complainant, who
stood trial with them. In each
robbery at least two of the robbers was armed with and used the
threat of a firearm. On the first
occasion the second Appellant was
found to be armed with a firearm.
[4]
The appellants, who were legally represented throughout the
proceedings, pleaded not guilty. The trial lasted
two and a half
years during which time the second appellants was incarcerated for
the entire period while the first appellant was
incarcerated for most
of the period.
[5]
The first appellant is thirty five years old, was thirty two years
old at the time of sentencing, and thirty
years old at the time the
robberies were committed. He was employed as an informal trader at
the time of the robbery. He had three
small children residing in Kwa
Zulu Natal at the time and contributed towards their upkeep. He had a
grade 11 standard of education.
[6]
The second appellant is roughly the same age as the first appellant.
He was a taxi driver and mechanic at
the time of the robbery and had
a grade 10 standard of education. He had two small children.
[7]
At the hearing of this matter Counsel for the Appellants, Mr. Du
Plessis conceded that the Magistrate was
correct in imposing the
minimum sentence of 15 years in terms of section 51(1)(a)(i) read
together with
section 51(3)(a)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105
of 1997
in respect of each count. According to the Act a first
offender convicted of robbery when there are aggravating
circumstances attracts
a minimum sentence of fifteen years unless
there are compelling and substantial circumstances justifying a
lesser sentence. His
complaint however was that the court a quo
misdirected itself by ordering that the sentences on the two
convictions run wholly
consecutively. He submitted that at least a
part of the second sentence should have been ordered to run
concurrently. This in effect
meant that each Appellant was
effectively sentenced to thirty (30) years imprisonment, which he
submitted induced a sense of shock.
[8]
In support of his contention, one of the cases referred to by Mr. Du
Plessis was Muller & Another v
S
2012
(2) SACR 545 (SCA) for his
submission that an effective sentence of 30 years imprisonment was
one that should be reserved for particularly heinous
offences, which
these offences were not.
[9]
In Muller supra the appellants were convicted on three separate
counts of robbery committed within a month
of each other in a
localised area having a radius of about two kilometres. Each was
committed at gunpoint after the two appellants,
and at least one
other accomplice, had entered the business premises of the
complainant on a false pretext.
[10]
At paragraphs [5] to [7] it was remarked that:
"[5] The appellants
did not seek to deny their guilt, but the trial court remarked that
despite their plea of guilty they did
not appear to be truly
remorseful and had rather regarded the court proceedings as something
of a joke. They were both young men
in their twenties, the first
appellant having been 24 years of age at the time of the trial while
the second appellant was five
years older. The first appellant was
married with two children but estranged from his wife as a result of
his drug habit - he testified
that he used 20-30 mandrax tablets per
day. Although he had held down fixed employment for a period of seven
years, he had lost
his job and had been unemployed for about two
years before the offences were committed. The second appellant,
although unmarried.
had seven children. He had reached grade six at
school, but had only worked for short periods thereafter and was
unemployed at
the time of the offences.
[6] Neither appellant is
a stranger to the criminal courts. During the course of 1994, the
first appellant appeared in court and
was convicted in five different
cases involving a total of seven counts of theft - mostly of video
machines and video cassettes
- for which he was leniently treated and
enjoyed the benefit of either wholly or partially suspended
sentences. He informed the
trial court that on 20 February 1996 he
had also been sentenced to a further two years' imprisonment for
theft. The second appellant
also had a number of relevant previous
convictions. In 1993 he was convicted and sentenced on one count of
theft and two counts
of housebreaking with intent to steal and theft.
He served about two years of his sentences before being released on
parole in
June 1994, a year before the present offences were
committed.
[7] Despite their
differing personal circumstances, there is no need to treat either
appellant more leniently than the other. All
these offences were
carefully planned and executed. On each occasion resistance was
overcome by the threat of a firearm. Although
none of the
complainants sustained severe injuries, they must have been
terrified. It hardly needs to be emphasised that armed
robberies of
this nature are a plague in this country and a bane of society. By
their very nature, they are severe offences deserving
of heavy
punishment. It is not without significance that although the
Criminal
Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
was introduced after the incidents
in question, under that Act offences of this nature now attract a
prescribed minimum sentence
of 15 years' imprisonment. In light of
these factors. counsel for the appellants found himself unable to
argue that the individual
sentences were inappropriate. Furthermore,
even though a difference between the individual sentences imposed on
the respective
counts may have been justifiable. the regional court's
jurisdiction at the time was limited to 10 years' imprisonment, and a
sentence
of at least that period was Justified on each count.
[11]
At paragraphs [1O] and (11] the SCA in Muller remarked as follows
"[10] An effective
sentence of 30 years' imprisonment is an extremely severe punishment
that should be reserved for particularly
heinous offences - which
these three offences. even viewed ;n their totality. were not.
Although severe, they were not associated
with the level of extreme
violence or loss of life that unfortunately all too often occurs in
armed robberies. And while not insubstantial,
the value of what was
stolen on each occasion was by no means at the level that is so often
the case in many of the robberies which
daily entertain the courts.
The offences in question therefore cannot be regarded as falling
within the upper echelons of the scale
of severity.
[11] In addition,
although they were by no means first offenders, the appellants were
not hardened criminals who had previously
served long terms of
imprisonment. There is nothing to show that a lengthy period of
imprisonment will not bring home the error
of their ways. It would be
unjust to impose a sentence the effect of which is more likely to
destroy than to reform them. However,
the cumulative effect of the
sentences imposed on the appellants smacks of the use of a
sledgehammer; it seems designed more to
crush than to rehabilitate
them.
[12] Bearing all these
circumstances in mind, in my judgment the effective sentence of 30
years' imprisonment was far too severe
and disturbingly
inappropriate, and a sentence of effectively no more than 18 years'
imprisonment was called for. Such a sentence
would have reflected the
publics righteous indignation, acted as a deterrent, punished the
appellants and hopefully induced them
to walk a straight path when
released back into society. The effective sentence imposed by the
trial court cannot be allowed to
stand and the court a quo erred in
not interfering with it.
[13] An effective 18
years' imprisonment will be achieved by ordering six years of each
sentence imposed on counts two and three
to run concurrently with the
ten years imprisonment imposed on count one.
[12]
In the present appeal, the appellants were also found to have shown
no remorse and to even have displayed a disrespect
and arrogance
towards the court proceedings. They pleaded not guilty and
maintaining their innocence till the very end. However,
as pointed
out above, they spent most of the time during which the trial ran in
prison.
[13]
For the purposes of sentencing they were both treated as first time
offenders, even though a more than ten-year-old previous
conviction
of assault with intent to commit grievous bodily harm was proven
against the first Appellant, unlike the appellants
in Muller. Further
the appellants in the present case were only convicted of two counts
of robbery, while the ones in Muller were
convicted on three counts.
However, they committed the offences and were sentenced at a time
when the minimum sentences regime
ushered in by the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997
was in place.
[14]
In his address Mr. Du Plessis on behalf of the appellants submitted
that an effective sentence of twenty (20) years would
be more
appropriate which would be achieved by ordering ten (10) years of the
second sentence to run concurrently with the first
sentence. Adv.
Shivuri on behalf of the State submitted that no more than five (5)
years of the second sentence should be ordered
to run concurrently
with the first, leading to an effective sentence of twenty-five (25)
years for each appellant.
[15]
In the present case, even though the offences were committed within a
few days of each other and did target the same
business, it would be
inappropriate for the entirety of the second sentence to run
concurrently with the first sentence.
[16]
An effective sentence of twenty (20) years imprisonment is called
for. This can be achieved by ordering that ten (10)
years of the
second sentence be ordered to run concurrently with the fifteen-year
sentence ordered in respect of the first sentence.
[17]
The order of the trial court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
[17.1] The appeal
succeeds only to the extent set out in [17.2] below.
[17.2] In respect of
count two, it is ordered that ten years of the period of fifteen
years imprisonment imposed on such count is
to run concurrently with
the fifteen years imprisonment imposed on count one.
[17.3] The sentences are
otherwise confirmed.
I
hand down the judgment.
CAJEE
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL DIVISION
PRETORIA
I
agree:
MOSHOANA
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL DIVISION
PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Caselines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be 24 November 2022.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANT: Mr. Du Plessis
INSTRUCTED
BY: Legal
Aid Board, Johannesburg.
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT: Adv. Shivuri
INSTRUCTED
BY: Office
of the Director of Public Prosecutions,
Gauteng Provincial
Division, Pretoria.
DATE
OF THE APPEAL: 16 November 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 28 November 2022
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