Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 139South Africa
S v Dhliwayo (207/2024; A113/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 139 (25 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
25 March 2025
Judgment
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## S v Dhliwayo (207/2024; A113/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 139 (25 March 2025)
S v Dhliwayo (207/2024; A113/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 139 (25 March 2025)
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sino date 25 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
High
Court Ref No.: 207/2024
Magistrate’s
Serial No.: 02/2024
In
the Special Review
:
THE
STATE
And
DION
DHLIWAYO
Accused
Case
No.: A113/2024
In
the Appeal
:
DION
DHLIWAYO
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
Date
of hearing: 14 March 2025
Date
of judgment: 25 March 2025
JUDGMENT
PANGARKER
J (SHER J CONCURRING)
Introduction
1.
This judgment addresses a review and an appeal which emanate from the
Athlone Magistrates’
Court. The magistrate sent the matter on
special review to this Court in terms of section 16(2) of the Child
Justice Act 75 of
2008
(CJA)
on the premise that an error
occurred regarding the age of the accused, who was accused 2 in
Athlone case number H367/2022. The
magistrate also granted leave to
appeal against sentence and released the accused on bail
pending appeal. The reasons
for doing so become apparent from the
history of proceedings set out below.
2.
The appeal against sentence was due to be heard in August 2024 but
was not heard because
the review was pending and given these
circumstances and others as I explain, the Judge President was
requested to grant permission
that a Court be constituted to hear the
appeal and review simultaneously. The Judge President granted
permission at the end of
January 2025, and written submissions were
requested from the legal representatives and duly provided. In order
not to complicate
matters unnecessarily, Mr. Dhliwayo is simply
referred to as “
the accused”
in this judgment.
History
of proceedings in the Court
a quo
3.
Yanga Botha was accused 1 in the Court
and
according to the
record, a juvenile at the time of the offence and appearance. The
offence of robbery, of which the accused were
charged, occurred on
3
September 2022.
Accused 1 appeared in the Child Justice Court and
subsequently absconded from Court, resulting in the magistrate
authorising a
warrant for his arrest. Subsequently, some seven months
later, on
24 April 2023,
the accused was added as accused 2 to
the matter. Bail was fixed and eventually paid, with the effect that
the accused was on bail,
duly extended, until a sentence of three
years’ direct imprisonment was imposed on him on 4 April
2024.
4.
The accused was always legally represented by a practitioner of the
Athlone Justice Centre.
On 1 November 2023, he pleaded not guilty to
the charge and the trial proceeded. On 11 January 2024, the
magistrate delivered judgment
and consequently convicted the accused
of robbery, as charged. Thereafter, the magistrate requested
probation and correctional
supervision officers’ reports, which
were duly received and submitted to the Court by agreement on 25
March 2024.
5.
On 4 April 2024, and after an
ex parte
address by the legal
aid representative and prosecutor, the magistrate sentenced the
accused to
3 (three) years’ direct imprisonment
. On 9
May 2024, the Court
a quo
heard argument in an application for
leave to appeal against sentence and during this application, the
legal representative submitted
that the accused, whose date of birth
was
16 October 2004
, was a minor at the time of the commission
of the offense, thus making the provisions of CJA applicable to him.
6.
The magistrate subsequently granted leave to appeal and upon
realizing that there was an
error regarding the accused’s age,
she also granted bail pending appeal. According to the record, bail
was paid, and the
accused was released from custody pending the
appeal against sentence.
The
trial in the Court
a quo
7.
The accused was charged with robbery of a Samsung A3 cellphone which
occurred at Vangate
Mall, Athlone on 3 September 2022. He pleaded not
guilty and provided no plea explanation. The complainant, Ms Seliwe,
testified
that on the day, at approximately 14h15, she entered the
parking area at the mall and had her cellphone in her jacket pocket
and
her handbag with her. The cellphone was partially visible. Three
males approached, all armed with knives and one of them who bore
a
scar on his face, demanded her cellphone.
8.
She threw her handbag at them and then threw the phone as well. The
male with the scar picked
up the phone and he and one of the others
ran and jumped over the wall. The third suspect, Yanga Botha
[1]
,
was apprehended by security personnel and arrested by police who
arrived on the scene. The complainant identified the accused
as being
the person with a scar on his cheek. She remembered him because he
threatened her with a knife and
the
day was etched in her memory. He demanded her phone after she threw
her handbag at her assailants. According to the complainant,
the
accused and the other suspects were one and a half metres from her
and armed with knives.
9.
Furthermore, on the morning of the day she testified, she saw the
accused outside court and
asked him what he and his accomplices had
done with her cell phone, and once more saw the scar on the right
side of his cheek.
Upon her enquiry regarding her phone,
he
informed her that they had sold it for R1200
[2]
.
10.
Approximately 3 months after the incident the investigating officer
arrived at her home with a photograph
identification album containing
photographs of suspects with scars on their faces. She identified the
accused immediately from
the photo identification album as the person
who robbed her.
11.
During cross-examination she confirmed that Yanga Botha, when
questioned on the scene by the security
officers, had stated that the
accused had taken the phone. Despite questions regarding her
identification of the assailants, the
complainant maintained that it
was the accused who wanted to stab and kill her and that she could
not forget the incident. As to
why she did not indicate in her
statement after the incident that the person who robbed her had a
scar on his face, she stated
that she did not know she had to mention
everything.
12.
The accused’s
version was put to the complainant, that is, that he and his friends
were intending to purchase socks at the
mall and asked her for R5 and
he denied participating in the robbery. The complainant remained
consistent throughout cross- examination
that it was the accused who
approached her and demanded the cell phone and that after she threw
it at the three suspects, he was
the person who picked it up. No
further witnesses were called.
13.
The accused testified that he and his friends Andisiwe and Yanga
Botha went to the mall to purchase
socks at Mr Price’s but
found that they were R5 short. They proceeded to ask passers-by for
money but were unsuccessful.
The complainant approached and they
asked her for money, but she suddenly swore and shouted at them,
causing them to respond likewise.
Andisiwe suggested that they follow
the complainant because she was so rude.
14.
They proceeded to follow her, and that was when she threw her cell
phone at them. The accused and Andisiwe
clashed when both moved to
retrieve the cell phone from the ground, with Andisiwe coming up
trumps. The three friends then ran
from the scene, but Yanga was
caught by the security guard. The accused denied any involvement in
the robbery and distanced himself
from the cell phone. He said he
parted ways with Andisiwe and confirmed that the complainant’s
cell phone was later sold
for R1200, although he never sold it. The
police were looking for the accused and he demanded to be paid his
share of the proceeds
from the sale of the cell phone.
15.
In cross-examination the accused could not properly explain why, when
they presumably intended to purchase
socks, they would still pursue
the complainant. The accused’s explanation was that the did so
because she shouted and swore
at them. He could furthermore not
explain why he would reach out for the cell phone when he had nothing
to do with any robbery.
16.
The accused could not reasonably explain why he did not inform the
security guard about the commotion
caused by the complainant, why he
ran from the scene and why his version in no way indicated that there
was a robbery. If his version
were to be believed, then the
complainant simply threw her phone at them for no reason. The record
of the trial indicates that
the bulk of his version was never put to
the complainant in cross-examination.
The
magistrate’s judgments on conviction and sentence
17.
In her judgment, the magistrate correctly found that the complainant
was a good witness, and steadfast
and that there was no issue about
the identification of the accused who had placed himself on the scene
of the robbery. The magistrate
found the complainant, as a single
witness, to have given a satisfactory account on all the material
aspects related to the incident
and offence and that there were no
discrepancies in her testimony. The magistrate accepted the
complainant’s account of events.
On the other hand, she found
that the accused’s version about jumping over the wall, selling
the cell phone, demanding payment
in instalments
[3]
and
more, was not reasonably possibly true.
18.
The magistrate accepted the State’s version and rejected the
accused’s version on the basis
that it was improbable. She
found that the accused was the person with the scar on his face and
that it was the accused, armed
with a knife, who robbed the
complainant of her cell phone. The accused was accordingly convicted
of robbery as charged.
19.
In respect of sentence, the record reflects that the magistrate
considered the accused’s personal
circumstances as follows: he
was 19 years old, a first offender, single with no dependents, and
had completed Grade 12 schooling.
He was illegally in South Africa
hence he was not a suitable candidate for correctional supervision.
She regarded the offence of
robbery to be very serious
[4]
in
that the complainant was robbed at knifepoint at a busy shopping mall
and was clearly traumatized by the incident. The magistrate
further
found that it was evident from both pre-sentence reports that the
accused had not taken responsibility for his actions
and had showed
no remorse and thus community service was not suitable as a sentence
option. The magistrate concluded by finding
direct imprisonment to be
suitable and sentenced the accused to three years’ direct
imprisonment.
Issues
to determine
20.
The following issues are to be determined:
20.1
The special review: whether the error in respect of the accused’s
age vitiated the proceedings before
the magistrate.
20.2
The appeal against sentence.
The
magistrate’s referral in terms of
section 16(2)
of the
Child
Justice Act
21.
In
her correspondence addressed to this Court referring the matter on
special review in terms of
section 16(2)
of the CJA read with section
303 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (CPA), the magistrate
explained that the accused was
18 years old when he first appeared in
Court, hence no preliminary enquiry in terms of the CJA was held. At
all times, he maintained
that he was 19 years old, and this age was
reflected on the charge sheet. She was accordingly under the
impression throughout the
proceedings that the accused was an adult,
and it was only during the hearing of the leave to appeal
application, that she was
alerted to the fact that he was 17 years
old when he committed the offence. She was satisfied that indeed he
was 17 years old at
the commission of the offence and that an error
occurred regarding his age. According to the magistrate, the
Child
Justice Act should
have applied.
22.
The magistrate explained further that, had she been aware that the
accused was a minor during the commission
of the offense, she would
have applied the provisions of the CJA and imprisonment would have
been used as “
a
measure of last resort”
,
in that she would have wholly suspended the three year imprisonment
sentence
.
[5]
She
indicated further that she released the accused on bail
subsequent to granting leave to appeal.
The
special review: discussion and findings
23.
The probation and correctional supervision officers’ reports
[6]
record
the accused’s date of birth as being
16
October 2004
.
These reports were before the prosecutor, the accused’s legal
representative and the magistrate during the sentencing proceedings.
In the legal representative’s
ex
parte
address on sentence, and the engagement between him and the
magistrate regarding the accused’s current age, the legal
representative
referred to the accused’s date of birth when
addressing his personal circumstances, but it is apparent that
neither the magistrate,
prosecutor or legal representative were alive
to the significance thereof
[7]
.
Given the date of the incident, it should have been evident to all
that the accused was a minor at the time the offence was committed.
Despite the legal practitioner’s reference to his client’s
age, there seems to have been confusion in that the magistrate
at
some stage believed that this was a reference to accused 1
[8]
.
24.
From the above exposition I conclude that in relation to his age at
the time of the commission of the
offence, the accused was 17 years
and approximately 11 months old. In this regard, the magistrate’s
correspondence and the
record confirm that the accused was sentenced
as if he were a major/adult at the time when he committed the
robbery. The oversight
or error did not end there because during the
later leave to appeal application, the prosecutor stated that the
accused had waited
until such application to raise, for the first
time, that he was a minor at the time of the commission of the
offense. This was
clearly an incorrect submission because the
accused, via his legal practitioner, raised the age at commission of
the offence during
sentencing proceedings on more than one occasion,
only to have the Court, and the prosecutor, not heed the submission
and its significance.
25.
Remarkably and inexplicably, the prosecutor at the leave to appeal
stage then requested the magistrate
to dismiss the averment that the
accused was a minor at the time of the offense. When the leave
to appeal application was
heard, the record included the probation
and correctional supervision officers’ reports and it would
have been a simple task
to refer to them to ascertain and confirm
whether the accused, and his legal representative, were in fact
correct regarding his
date of birth and age at the time of the
offense.
26.
In addition to the reports, the leave to appeal application contained
grounds of appeal that the accused
was a minor at the time of the
commission of the offence, hence the provisions of the CJA applied.
In my view, had the prosecutor
referenced the reports and leave to
appeal application, he/she would have realized at the latest during
such application, that
the accused and his legal practitioner were in
fact correct.
27.
Taking the above factual account of the proceedings in the Court
a
quo
into account, it is evident from
the record and the magistrate’s referral letter that she only
realised during the leave
to appeal hearing that she had made an
error regarding the accused’s age. As indicated above, she then
acted in terms of
section 16(2)
of the CJA read with
section 303
of
the CPA.
28.
From the Court
a quo’s
record, it is common cause that
there was no preliminary enquiry in the Child Justice Court in
respect of the accused as was the
case with accused 1, but this is so
because he was already an adult at the time of his first appearance
on 24 April 2023. To clarify
the age issue in relation to the
accused, the following must be noted:
28.1
the accused’s date of birth is 16 October 2004;
28.2
the offence was committed on 3 September 2022;
28.3
therefore, on the date of commission of the offence, the accused was
17 years and 10 months old;
[9]
28.4
the accused turned 18 on 16 October 2022, approximately six weeks
after the commission of the robbery
[10]
;
28.5
at his first appearance in Athlone Magistrate’s Court on 24
April 2023, the accused was 18 years old;
and
28.6
at the date of sentencing on 4 April 2024, the accused was 19 years
old
[11]
.
29.
Section 16(1)
- (3) of the CJA states as follows:
16.
Error regarding age of child
or adult who is alleged to have committed offence
(1)
If, at any stage during proceedings in terms of this Act, a presiding
officer is satisfied on the basis of evidence placed before
him or
her that the age of a child or adult who is alleged to have committed
an offence (hereafter in this section referred to
as person) is
incorrect, the age must be altered on the record of the proceedings
in accordance with section 14 and the proceedings
must be finalised
in accordance with the provisions of—
(a)
this Act, if the person
is found to be a child; or
(b)
the
Criminal Procedure Act, if
the person is found to be an adult,
unless the provisions of
section 4(2)
are applicable.
(2)
If a presiding officer is of the opinion that an error regarding age
may have caused any prejudice to a person during the proceedings
in
question, the presiding officer must transmit the record of the
proceedings to the registrar of the High Court having jurisdiction,
in the same manner as provided for in
section 303
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act, in
which event the proceedings must be dealt with in
terms of the procedure on review as provided for in section 304 of
the
Criminal Procedure Act.
(3
)
Subject to subsection (1), if a presiding officer is of the opinion
that an error regarding age has not caused any prejudice to
the
person, the presiding officer must continue with the proceedings in
terms of the provisions of this Act, in accordance with
his or her
age, as altered.
30.
In my view, section 16 should not be read in isolation and must be
read with section 4 of the CJA which
states that:
4.
Application of Act
(1)
Subject to subsection (2), this Act applies to any person in the
Republic
who is alleged to have committed an offence and—
(a)
was under the age of 12 years at the time of the commission of the
alleged offence; or
(b)
was 12 years or older but under the age of 18 years when he or she
was—
(i)
handed a written notice in terms of section 18 or 22.
(ii)
served with a summons in terms of section 19; or
(iii)
arrested in terms of section 20,
for that offence.
[S 4(1) subs by s 2 of
Act 28 of 2019 wef 19 August 2022.]
(2)
The Director of Public Prosecutions having jurisdiction may, in
accordance with directives
issued by the National Director of Public
Prosecutions in terms of section 97(4)(a)(i)(aa), in the case of a
person who—
(a)
is alleged to have committed an offence when he or she was under the
age of 18 years; and
(b)
is 18 years or older but under the age of 21 years, at the time
referred to in subsection (1)(b),
direct that the matter
be dealt with in terms of section 5(2) to (4).
(3)
(a)
The
Criminal Procedure Act applies
with the necessary changes as may
be required by the context to any person referred to in this section,
except in so far as this
Act provides for amended, additional or
different provisions or procedures in respect of that person.
(b)
For purposes of paragraph (a), Schedule 5 to this Act, which is not
part of this Act and does not have
the force of law, contains an
exposition of the interface between the
Criminal Procedure Act and
this Act.
31.
The CJA defines “
child”
in section 1 of the Act as “
any
person under the age of 18 years and, in certain circumstances, means
a person who is 18 years or older but under the age of
21 years whose
matter is dealt with in terms of section 4(2)
”.
In terms of section 4(1)(b) of the Act, the provisions of the CJA
also apply to a person who is older than 12 years but
younger than 18
years when he/she was given notice, served with a summons and
arrested for the offence.
32.
Standing still at this point, and with reference to the facts of this
matter, it is apparent from the
legislative provisions that a person
older than 12 but under 18 years who was arrested for the offence, is
also considered as a
child in terms of the CJA. In this matter, one
does not know when the accused was arrested for the offence but given
that his first
appearance was only on 24 April 2023, taken with the
information in the reports, I may conclude that he was arrested the
day prior
to his appearance. That being the case and recalling that
he was already 18 at the time of his first appearance, the accused
would
not have fallen under the provisions of section 4(1)(b)(iii).
In other words, the jurisdictional fact which would have triggered
the protection of the CJA was absent in that at the time of his
arrest, he was not under the age of 18 when arrested for the offence,
thus he was not a child.
33.
Furthermore, section 4(1) of the CJA is subject to sub-section (2),
and section 4(2)(b) allows the prosecution
to be instituted by the
Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) against a person who is older
than 18 years but younger than 21 years
at the time referred to in
sub-section 4(1)(b)
[12]
.
However, as the Act indicates, this only happens in certain
circumstances, the details of which are not relevant for the purposes
of this discussion. Suffice then to indicate that where the offender
falls within this category, the DPP may direct that the provisions
of
section 5(2) to (4) of the CJA would apply to the person even though
he/she was an adult at the relevant time described in section
4(1)(b), such as at the time of arrest
[13]
.
34.
From the facts of this matter and the procedural history, there is no
evidence nor any indication from
the record that the DPP issued a
directive in relation to the accused that the provisions of the CJA
would apply to him. Furthermore,
section 5(2) to (4) refers to the
preliminary enquiry referred to in Chapter 7 of the CJA and to the
diversion process, which the
accused did not benefit from as he
intended to plead not guilty and was an adult at his first
appearance. Thus, in view of the
above legislative provisions in
sections 4 and 5 read with section 1 of the CJA, I conclude that,
firstly, the accused was not
a child within the definition of the Act
at the time when he first came before the magistrate and, secondly,
the provisions of
the CJA in relation to the holding of a preliminary
enquiry and diversion also did not find application.
35.
As the issues in the special review and the sentence appeal overlap
to an extent, the question which
must also be asked is whether the
accused, who was 17 at the time of the commission of the offence but
an adult at the time of
arrest (and subsequent appearance in Court),
should have been the recipient of a sentence applicable to a child?
In answering this
question, I have found the judgment of Binns-Ward J
(with Bozalek J concurrring) in
S
v SN and Another,
[14]
most
helpful. Briefly, the matter came before the High Court as an
automatic review in terms of section 85 of the CJA, emanating
from
the Regional Court. The accused were each sentenced to 10 years’
direct imprisonment after pleading guilty to murder.
They were under
18 at the time of the commission of the offence and, unlike as in
this matter, still under 18 at the time of their
arrest on the
charge.
36.
Binns-Ward J’s concerns included the absence from the record,
of an appreciation by the magistrate
that the accused were to be
treated as children for sentencing purposes even though the Court
a
quo
appreciated
that it sat as a Child Justice Court
[15]
.
Referencing
Mpofu
v Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development and Others
[16]
,
the
judgment addressed,
inter
alia,
the
importance of bearing in mind the provisions of section 28(1)(g) of
the Constitution in that children are to be treated differently
when
it comes to sentencing
[17]
.
37.
At paragraphs [10] and [11] of
SN
and Another
,
the Court stated the following
[18]
:
“
[10]
…
When a person
commits an offence while under the age of 18, their conduct falls to
be judged in the context of these considerations.
It would make
no sense then to treat them as adults for sentencing purposes simply
because the intervening passage of time has
resulted in their being
adults when sentencing occurs. That would mean punishing them
for what they had done as children
as if it had been done when they
were adults
. That such an
approach would impinge on the substance of the rights provided in
terms of s 28 of the Constitution is
axiomatic, or so I would
have thought. …
[11]
It follows that the content of paragraphs 9
-12 of the magistrate’s response to my query is
predicated on a
fundamentally misdirected understanding of the ambit of s 28(1)(g)
of the Constitution.
It
is evident that the magistrate treated the accused as youthful adult
offenders rather than children when he imposed sentence.
The
magistrate placed the accused on the wrong side of the ‘stark
but beneficial distinction between adults and children
created in
terms of s 28 of the Bill of Rights and thus approached the
determination of their punishment on the incorrect
assumption that
s 28(1)(g) was not applicable
.
This demonstrates that there was - to borrow the expression used by
Skweyiya J in Mpofu, quoted above
[19]
- a ‘constitutional failure’ in the sentencing
proceedings. In particular, no consideration was given by the
magistrate to sentencing the accused to compulsory residence in a
youth care centre in terms of
s 76
of the
Child Justice Act.
This
, by itself, necessitates that the sentences imposed must be set
aside and the determination of an appropriate punishment reconsidered
afresh consistently with the children’s rights provisions in
the Bill of Rights and proper regard to the sentence options
and
sentencing objects in the
Child Justice Act.”
(footnotes
omitted)
38.
The circumstances of the accused in
SN
and Another
were that they appeared
in the Child Justice Court and were minors not only at the time of
commission of the offence but also at
the time of arrest, and
subsequently were adults by the date of sentencing. In this matter,
the accused was a minor at the date
of commission of the offence, but
not at the time of arrest. Be that as it may, it is apparent from the
judgment in
SN
and Another
as highlighted above, that the principles applicable when sentencing
an offender who was a minor at the time of commission of the
offence
but subsequently reached the age of majority before or on the
sentencing date, would require of the Court to sentence the
person as
a child offender and not as an adult. To follow the rationale of
Binns-Ward J, with which I agree, the accused is to
be punished for
his deeds committed as a child or minor and is not to be punished as
an adult. I see no reason why such principle
should not apply in this
instance.
39.
To then sum up the discussion,
section 16
, which is the section
utilized by the magistrate to refer the matter on special review,
refers to “
persons”
who appear in terms of the
Act. There was certainly an error or oversight in respect of a
failure to consider the fact that the
accused was under 18 at the
date of commission of the offence, of that I have no doubt. The
question, though, is whether such error
caused the accused prejudice
during the proceedings in question? Section 16(2) of the CJA must be
read with section 304(1) of the
CPA, which addresses reviews and the
determination of whether the proceedings were in accordance with
justice.
40.
In answering the question regarding prejudice, I highlight that the
accused exercised his section 35(3)
constitutional rights as follows:
he was legally represented throughout the trial until its conclusion;
he made an informed choice
to plead not guilty and remain silent in
respect of a plea explanation; he challenged the State’s
evidence through cross-examination
of the complainant; he elected to
testify in his own defence and presented his version to the
magistrate without hinderance or
interference. His fair trial rights
were exercised further by proceeding to appeal against the sentence,
and thus I am satisfied
that certainly in respect of the trial and
until its conclusion, the oversight in respect of his age did not
cause him any prejudice
and the proceedings were in accordance with
justice. To add, and in view of the reasons I set out above, the
accused did not fall
in the categories of persons falling under
section 4(1) or 4(2).
41.
In respect of the sentence, I am of the view that the failure or
oversight to take account of the accused’s
age at the time of
commission of the offence, when it was glaringly obvious from the two
reports, the Department of Home Affairs
refugee status permit
document and the certified copy of birth registered in Zimbabwe which
were handed into Court as evidence,
prejudiced the accused in that he
was sentenced as an adult for an offence committed when he was a
child offender. Not only did
this occur but the sentence imposed was
one of direct imprisonment, which is a sentence of “
last
resort”
in terms of section 77(1)(b) of the CJA.
42.
In my view, the proceedings prior to and during the trial were in
accordance with justice. The prejudice
caused to the accused by the
oversight in realising his age at the time of the offence and failing
to sentence him as a child offender,
was limited only to that aspect
but it had the far-reaching effect that he was imprisoned. At the
time of sentencing, the accused
was already an adult, although a
youthful adult at the age of 19 years. His incarceration lasted from
4 April 2024, when he was
sentenced, to 15 May 2024, when he was
released on R500 bail pending appeal, by all accounts five weeks.
43.
The prejudice, albeit that the Court imposed a sentence of
imprisonment, was limited. While I am satisfied
that the irregularity
did not vitiate the trial proceedings, which were in accordance with
justice, the sentence imposed requires
closer scrutiny under the
appeal. In my view, this is not a situation such as in
SN
and Another
where the entire
proceedings were coloured by the irregularity which resulted in a
finding that those proceedings were not in accordance
with justice. I
intend therefore to confirm the conviction.
44.
To conclude the review part of this judgment, I am of the view that
the submission by counsel for the
accused that the provisions of
sections 84 and 85(2) of the CJA apply, is incorrect as it is based
on an incorrect assumption that
the accused was to be categorized as
a child in terms of the CJA, for the proceedings before the
magistrate. As illustrated and
found above, he was not, and the CJA
did not apply to him except that in respect of sentencing, he should
have been sentenced with
due regard for the fact that the offence
which he was to be punished for was committed when he was still a
minor, and not an adult.
The
grounds of appeal against sentence
44.
The grounds of appeal against the sentence imposed by the magistrate
may be summarized as follows:
44.1
the magistrate erred in over-emphasising the interests of the
community and the severity of the offence and
under-emphasising the
interests of the accused (appellant).
44.2
she did not exercise mercy when imposing sentence in that she imposed
direct imprisonment, which would hinder
the rehabilitation and
reintegration of the accused back into society;
44.3
she failed to take into account the personal circumstances of the
accused in that he was a minor at the time
of the offence and the
provisions of the CJA were applicable to him;
44.4
the magistrate failed to adequately take into account the
recommendation by the probation officer of a suspended
sentence; and
44.5
the sentence was startlingly inappropriate and therefore induced a
sense of shock and another Court may come
to a different conclusion
in the matter.
Discussion
and findings
45.
During argument, counsel for the appellant submitted that should the
appeal succeed, the matter should
not be remitted to the Court
a
quo
for sentencing. In her written
submissions, counsel for the State requested similar relief,
emphasizing that while the trial was
conducted fairly and the
irregularity did not vitiate the proceedings, the sentence should be
set aside. Having regard to the grounds
of appeal and submissions of
counsel, I agree that the sentence imposed by the magistrate should
be set aside for the reasons which
follow.
46.
In
S
v Kekana
[20]
,
the
Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) held that interference on appeal will
only occur in circumstances where the appeal Court is satisfied
that
the sentence imposed was vitiated by a material misdirection or is
disturbingly inappropriate. Having already found that the
magistrate
should have sentenced the accused for his actions as a child, and not
as an adult, a sentence of direct imprisonment
should have been the
last resort.
47.
From my consideration of the record of proceedings, it is apparent
that despite requesting probation
and correctional supervision
reports, the magistrate paid little regard to the probation officer’s
report particularly and
the motivation therein for recommending a
suspended sentence which I deal with below. The accused’s
personal circumstances
were scantily addressed by the magistrate.
When I consider the information in the two reports, it is evident
that both officers
indicated that the accused was employed. The
information in the correctional supervision report indicates that the
accused worked
as a cleaner and caretaker at a creche since January
2024 and earned R2400 monthly
[21]
.
This information was clearly not considered by the magistrate when
she dealt with the accused’s personal circumstances
48.
I am of the view that the accused’s employment status at the
time he appeared before the magistrate
for sentencing was a relevant
factor in the determination of whether a custodial sentence for
someone who was a child at the time
of the offence but who, with the
passage of time, had become an employed adult, should have been
imposed. Furthermore, I agree
with the correctional supervision
officer and the magistrate that the accused, whose permit to remain
in South Africa expired in
September 2022, caused him to be illegally
in the country, and thus rendered correctional supervision in terms
of section 276(1)(h)
of the CPA to be an inappropriate sentencing
option.
[22]
49.
The magistrate emphasized that the accused displayed no remorse for
the commission for the offence nor
accepted responsibility for his
role in the offence. However, she did not address or enquire why the
information on this aspect
differed from one report to the other. In
the correctional supervision report, it is recorded that the accused
admitted his involvement
in the robbery, regretted his actions and
accepted responsibility for the robbery, yet in the probation
officer’s report
which was compiled a month after the other
report, it was recorded that he does not express remorse in
relation to the offence
and the effect it had on the complainant.
50.
The stark disparity in the information provided by the two officers
was simply not addressed and the
record does not indicate that the
magistrate either acknowledged it or that she requested that the
probation officer be called
to testify regarding such information.
Ultimately, it was therefore not correct to have found that the
accused expressed no remorse
for the impact of the offence on the
victim as the finding was premised on incomplete or contradictory
information. I hold the
view that the magistrate should have
interrogated the issue by calling the probation officer to testify,
which she failed to do.
51.
Furthermore, it is also startling that the magistrate only considered
the probation officer’s
recommendation that community service
be imposed
[23]
and
failed to appreciate that the sentence recommended at paragraph 7 of
that report was a suspended sentence in terms of section
297(1)(b)
together with community service at Gugulethu SAPS. Nowhere in her
judgment on sentence was a suspended sentence option
either addressed
or considered and it bears mentioning that the appellant’s
legal practitioner also submitted that a suitable
sentence in the
circumstances was a suspended sentence.
52.
It bears mentioning also that a suspended sentence is one of the
myriad sentence considerations or options
available in terms of the
CJA and is referred to in section 78 thereof. Having regard to the
above discussion, I am of the view
that the magistrate
over-emphasized the seriousness of the offence and the interests of
the community above the accused’s
personal circumstances, and
in addition, her incorrect assessment of certain aspects in the two
reports, and her failure to consider
a suspended sentence, led to a
sentence which was not balanced, not tempered with mercy and was
ultimately startlingly inappropriate.
In doing so, the magistrate
failed to consider that one of the purposes or aims of sentencing is
rehabilitation.
53.
I agree with the State that the aggravating factors were that the
accused was part of a group armed
with knives, that they clearly lay
in wait of the unsuspecting complainant to opportunistically rob her,
and that he gained financially
from the offence. In the accused’s
favour, however, was his youth, that he was employed, that he
intended improving his life
and was taking positive steps in that
direction, that the complainant was unharmed, that he completed grade
12 and that he was
17 at the time of commission of the offence. These
aspects were simply not considered during the sentencing.
54.
In my view, by imposing direct imprisonment, the magistrate failed to
consider the accused’s chances
of rehabilitation within the
community and so imposed a sentence which was inappropriate and
coloured by one or more material misdirection’s.
In the
circumstances, the sentence of direct imprisonment should be set
aside and replaced with a suspended sentence.
Conclusion
55.
As recently as 2023, Lekhuleni J (with Nziweni J) in
S
v LJ
[24]
,
provided guidelines to Courts and sounded a caution to judicial
officers who are faced with a child offender, to comply with the
provisions of section 28 of the Constitution and the CJA. At
paragraphs [14] and [15] of the judgment, the Court set out the
various
sentencing options which the CJA provides for and emphasized
that there should be compliance with the provisions of the Act. I
align myself with the findings in
LJ.
56.
In conclusion, this matter highlights the failure of the role players
to recognize the importance of
heeding the age of the accused, and
the effect and consequences of such failure, which caused prejudice
to the accused in the sentencing
process. While the accused presented
himself as a 19-year-old adult on his first appearance, that
statement in no way absolved
the prosecutor and magistrate from
taking note of the accused’s date of birth at every opportunity
when such information
presented itself.
57.
In conclusion, it is important that magistrates should thoroughly
consider the content of pre-sentence
reports and sentence options and
should address any disparity
and
contradictory information in such reports because a failure to do so,
as seen in this matter, may result in an imbalanced sentence,
tainted
by material irregularities.
Order
58.
In the result, I would make the following orders:
58.1
The special review in terms of
section 16(2)
of the
Child Justice Act
75 of 2008
, read with
sections 303
and
304
of the
Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977
, is dismissed.
58.2
The conviction is confirmed.
58.3
The appeal against sentence is upheld.
58.4
The sentence imposed by the magistrate on 4 April 2024 is set aside
and replaced with the following sentence
which is antedated to
4 April 2024
:
The
accused is sentenced to 3 (three) years’ imprisonment, wholly
suspended for 5 (five) years, on condition that he is not
convicted
of robbery or attempted robbery committed during the period of
suspension.
_________________________
M
PANGARKER
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree and it is so ordered.
___________________________
M L
SHER
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
For
the appellant: Ms S Kuun
Cape
Town Justice Centre
For
the respondent: Adv E Erasmus
National
Prosecuting Authority
Cape
Town
[1]
Accused
1, who absconded
[2]
According
to the charge sheet, the cellphone was valued at R1699
[3]
Particularly
in light of his apparent disassociation with the robbery
[4]
Record,
p151
[5]
Magistrate’s
correspondence, p 205
[6]
Exhibits
F and E
[7]
Record,
p70-71
[8]
Record,
p69-71
[9]
Rounded
off
[10]
The
offence was committed on 3 September 2022
[11]
The
accused turned 19 on 16 October 2023
[12]
In
this instance, at the time of arrest
[13]
See
“
The
legal position of a child charged with a crime who is apprehended as
an adult and the impact of sentencing” by M de
Vos, De Rebus,
1 October 2021
[14]
[2015]
ZAWCHC 5
[15]
S
v SN, par 2
[16]
2013
(2) SACR 407
(CC) par [7]
[17]
Mpofu,
par 61.
[18]
The
entire paragraph [10] is not referenced. All footnotes are omitted
[19]
In
para
Error!
Reference source not found.
.
[20]
2013
(1) SACR 101
SCA 105 par 11
[21]
Record,
p191
[22]
Exhibit
E, p194
[23]
Exhibit
F, p201
[24]
[2023] ZAWCHC 6
par [12]-[15]
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