Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 184South Africa
Temmies and Another v S (Appeal) (A35/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 184; [2025] 3 All SA 876 (WCC) (29 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
30 April 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law – appeal - test for trial court misdirection – sentence announced by trial court different to sentence recorded on charge sheet – determining official sentence – ‘open justice’ principle applied – appeal court sentencing afresh – applicable principles – theft of essential infrastructure – electricity - minimum sentence
Judgment
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## Temmies and Another v S (Appeal) (A35/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 184; [2025] 3 All SA 876 (WCC) (29 April 2025)
Temmies and Another v S (Appeal) (A35/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 184; [2025] 3 All SA 876 (WCC) (29 April 2025)
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sino date 29 April 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
CASE
NO.
:
A35/2025
REPORTABLE
In
the matter between:
CAYTON
TEMMIES
FIRST APPELLANT
MALIXOLE
YOSE
SECOND APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation
:
Temmies and Another v S
(case no A35/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC (29
April 2025)
Coram
:
ALLIE J
et
MOOSA AJ
Heard
:
25 April 2025
Delivered
:
30 April 2025
(delivered via email to the respective
Counsel)
Summary
:
Criminal law – appeal - test
for trial court misdirection –
sentence announced by trial court different to sentence recorded on
charge sheet – determining
official sentence – ‘open
justice’ principle applied – appeal court sentencing
afresh – applicable
principles – theft of essential
infrastructure – electricity - minimum sentence
ORDER
On
appeal from the regional court at Stellenbosch, the following is
ordered:
(a)
Condonation is granted for the late
filing of the respondent’s heads of argument.
(b)
The
appeal against the court a quo’s sentence of the First
Appellant on count 1 and count 2 is upheld. The court a quo’s
order on sentencing for both counts is set aside and is substituted
with the following in its stead:
‘
(i) On count 1,
accused no. 1 is sentenced to 10 years direct imprisonment;
(ii) On count 2, accused
no. 1 is sentenced to 15 years direct imprisonment;
(iii) The sentences for
count 1 and count 2 shall run concurrently.’
(c)
The
appeal against the court a quo’s sentence of the Second
Appellant on count 1 and count 2 is upheld. The court a quo’s
order on sentencing for both counts is set aside and is substituted
with the following in its stead:
‘
(i) On count 1,
accused no. 2 is sentenced to 8 years direct imprisonment;
(ii) On count 2, accused
no. 2 is sentenced to 15 years direct imprisonment;
(iii) The sentences for
count 1 and count 2 shall run concurrently.’
and
(d)
The
appeal against the court a quo’s declaration that the First
Appellant and Second Appellant respectively are unfit to possess
a
firearm is dismissed.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Moosa
AJ (Allie J concurring)
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is a criminal appeal stemming
from proceedings in the regional court at Stellenbosch. Appellants
pleaded not guilty and were,
after a trial, convicted on 13 July 2023
and sentenced on 19 September 2023 for two charges emanating from the
Criminal Matters
Amendment Act 18 of 2015 (the CMAA).
2.
After unsuccessfully petitioning the
trial magistrate for leave to appeal, the Appellants successfully
petitioned the high court
for leave to appeal. They were granted
leave, but only for their sentences. This judgment relates to that
appeal.
3.
When the hearing commenced,
respondent’s Counsel, Ms Monis, moved for an order condoning
the extremely late filing of her
heads of argument. That application
was unopposed and was granted only to avoid further prejudice to the
Appellants in the pursuit
of their appeal.
4.
At the hearing, this Court expressed
its displeasure at the fact that the respondent filed its heads of
argument only a few court
days before the hearing, bearing in mind
the rule of court regulating the filing of heads in a criminal
appeal. This conduct is
seriously prejudicial to the Appellants and
their right to prepare timeously for this appeal, and it is
disrespectful to this Court
and its rules which are designed to
promote fairness in the administration of justice. The failure by the
Office of the Director
of Public Prosecutions to appoint a substitute
legal practitioner to draft and file heads of argument while Ms Monis
was unable
to do so for personal reasons is conduct that this Court
views in a most serious light. It cannot be countenanced.
5.
It is also necessary to record that,
prior to the hearing, a written communication was sent to the
Appellants’ Counsel drawing
his attention to the fact that he
ought to be prepared to address this Court on the issue of a possible
increase in the sentence
imposed on the Second Appellant by the trial
court on count 2.
SALIENT
BACKGROUND FACTS
6.
In count 1, the
appellants were charged with the offence of tampering, damaging, or
destroying essential infrastructure
[1]
that provides a basic service
[2]
to the public. It was alleged, and later proved at trial, that on 19
February 2022 at the Stone Hill Farm in Devon Valley, they,
acting in
concert, cut and removed 600 metres of seven strand overhead copper
conductor cables valued at about R41 886 which
was owned by
Eskom (the property).
7.
In terms of s 3(1)(a) of the CMAA, an
accused is liable, upon conviction of this offence, to be sentenced
‘to a period of
imprisonment not exceeding 30 years’.
Both appellants were convicted on count 1 and sentenced to 15 years
each.
8.
On appeal, respondent’s Counsel
argued for the first time that a minimum sentence applies to count 1.
Appellants’ Counsel
objected, and for good reason. On being
asked by this Court whether, in the court a quo, Appellants’
attention was drawn
to the possible application of a minimum sentence
on count 1, Ms Monis was constrained to concede that this was not
done.
9.
In fact, the trial record
shows that, on 24 November 2022, the magistrate informed the
appellants that count 1 carries a maximum
sentence of 30 years.
[3]
No minimum sentence was mentioned at all. As a result, the appeal was
argued on the basis that a minimum sentence only applies
to count 2.
This appears to be the correct legal position, regardless of the
charge sheets’ contents.
10.
In count 2, the appellants were
charged with theft of the property, being ferrous or non-ferrous
metals forming part of essential
infrastructure as defined in the
CMAA. As stated above, they were convicted on this count too.
11.
By virtue of Part II in Schedule 2 to
the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (the CLAA), minimum
sentences are prescribed for
persons convicted of theft of ferrous or
non-ferrous metals forming part of essential infrastructure. The
prescribed minimum sentence
varies, depending on whether an accused
is a first, second, third or subsequent offender of any such offence.
12.
It is common cause that both
appellants were first offenders as regards their conviction of theft
of ferrous or non-ferrous metals
forming part of essential
infrastructure. As such, a prescribed minimum sentence of ‘not
less than 15 years’ applies
ex lege, unless a court finds
substantial and compelling circumstances exist in relation to a
particular accused.
13.
Argument on sentencing occurred in the
court a quo on 18 September 2023. The transcribed record reveals that
at this crucial stage
of the proceedings, neither the State
prosecutor nor the appellants’ Attorney reminded the trial
court that a different sentencing
regime operated by law in respect
of counts 1 and 2. This may have contributed to some of the seemingly
bona fide errors made by
the trial magistrate at the time of
sentencing.
14.
The appeal record read as a whole
reveal that a regrettable series of errors occurred on 19 September
2023 when the case resumed
for sentencing. The impact of the errors
on the sentences is discussed later in this judgment.
15.
At the time of sentencing the First
Appellant on count 2, the trial magistrate informed him that she had
found substantial and compelling
circumstances meriting a deviation
from the mandated minimum sentence of 15 years. However, for reasons
unexplained in the record,
she then handed down a sentence of 15
years direct imprisonment.
16.
This relevant part of the record (at
page 246 lines 8-12) reads as follows:
‘
I have approach
your case with an element of mercy Mr Temmies and in the result I
have … [indistinct] … in regards
to count one your
sentenced to 15 years imprisonment
with
regards to count two you are sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.’
(my emphasis)
17.
Notwithstanding this utterance to the
First Appellant, ex facie the front page of the J15 form, the trial
magistrate recorded ‘Twelve
(12) years’ as his sentence
for count 2. This is less than the minimum sentence prescribed by law
and less than the sentence
which the trial court informed the First
Appellant is the actual sentence imposed on him for count 2.
18.
While the sentence recorded on the J15
for count 2 is consistent with the trial magistrate’s finding
of substantial and compelling
circumstances relating to the First
Appellant, it gives rise to a legal problem, namely, what is the
official sentence in relation
to count 2 for all purposes in law,
including for this appeal: is it 12 years or 15 years imprisonment?
Appellants’ Counsel,
Mr Calitz, urged this Court to find that
the former is the legally binding sentence.
19.
Mr Calitz argued further that the
gravity of the problem increases manifold when regard is had to the
magistrate’s failure
to order that the sentences on both counts
for the First and Second Appellants respectively run concurrently
under s 280(2) of
the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the CPA).
20.
On this basis, Mr Calitz contended
that the trial magistrate misdirected herself in a material way
which, so he argued, justifies
this Court intervening on appeal.
ISSUES
FOR ADJUDICATION
21.
Three crisp issues arise for
determination. The first is a novel question of law, namely, when an
inconsistency arises between the
sentence announced by a trial court
to an accused and that recorded on the J15 form contemporaneous with
the sentence uttered in
court, then which sentence takes precedence
for purposes arising under the CPA – is it the sentence
communicated to an accused
in court, or the sentence recorded by the
judicial officer on the J15 form?
22.
The second issue arising for
adjudication is whether the trial magistrate misdirected herself and
did so to such a degree that it
impels this Court to set aside the
sentences imposed on the appellants, or either of them.
23.
If this latter issue is decided in the
affirmative and the sentences are set aside in whole or in part, then
the third issue arising
for determination is: what would an
appropriate sentence be in the circumstances of this case in
substitution of the sentence(s)
set aside by this Court?
24.
I now turn to deal in turn with each
of these issues.
THE
FIRST ISSUE: A NOVEL QUESTION OF LAW EXAMINED
25.
Mr Calitz was unable to cite any
authority for his proposition that the 12-year sentence recorded on
the J15 form has the force
of law for purposes of the CPA over the
sentence announced in open court to the First Appellant.
26.
My research has also not yielded any
case law directly on point. However, I consider that
S
v Mbewu
(case no. 214517)
[2009] ZAECHC 8
(29 January 2009) as providing some useful guidance.
I shall revert thereto later.
27.
Section 35 of our Constitution, 1996
entrenches the right of every accused to a fair trial. This includes
the rights to a fair trial
in public and to fairness in sentencing.
See, for eg, the right in s 35(3)(n) to the least severe punishment
imposed by law, if
certain constitutionally imposed requirements are
met.
28.
It would be a violation of an
accused’s right to a fair trial in public if a trial court were
permitted to announce one sentence
in court and then be permitted to,
in effect, alter that sentence by recording a completely different
sentence on a J15 form without
any obligation to inform an affected
accused of the sentence so recorded and sought to be imposed on
him/her.
29.
I find that, as a matter of principle,
it would be egregiously unfair if the latter sentence recorded on a
J15 form has the force
of law and prevails over the sentence
announced in a courtroom to an accused (and the public, if any).
30.
If a sentence recorded on a J15 form
automatically, and without more, prevails over that communicated to
an accused and members
of the public in court at the relevant time,
then this would put at risk the accused’s and the public’s
confidence
in the judiciary and our criminal justice system. This is
because such a legal position would create fertile opportunity for
potential
abuse of judicial power through the imposition of sentences
out of the public eye and in secret.
31.
In
S
v Jaipal
[2005] ZACC 1
;
2005 (4) SA 581
(CC) para 29, the apex court held as follows:
‘
The right of an
accused to a fair trial requires fairness to the accused, as well as
fairness to the public as represented by the
State. It has to instil
confidence in the criminal justice system with the public, including
those close to the accused, as well
as those distressed by the
audacity and horror of crime.’
32.
I find that the passing of a sentence
in secret (as distinct from passing sentence in camera) is
incongruent with the ‘open
justice’ principle applicable
in the context of s 35(3) of the Constitution. Such a practice may
have a pre-constitutional
vintage and may hark back to a by-gone era
when the rights of accused were routinely trampled upon, resulting in
a real need to
entrench a universal fair trial rights regime for all
accused persons within s 35 of the Bill of Rights located in Chapter
2 of
our final Constitution.
33.
The principle of ‘open justice’
in judicial proceedings serves the public interest and, in criminal
proceedings, protects
accused by ensuring that justice is
administered openly and transparently (not in secret). See
Savoi
and others v NDPP and another
2024
(1) SACR 343
(CC) para 1;
E.
Sat (Pty) Ltd and others v Lucken NO and others
2024
(2) SACR 377
(KZD) para 96.
34.
The imposition of legally binding
sentences on accused persons through acts by judicial officers
occurring out of the public eye
in a non-transparent process is a
slippery slope en route to the administration of criminal justice in
ways antithetical to s 35(3)
of the Constitution. This cannot be
tolerated.
35.
The recording of a
sentence on the J15 form must align in every material respect with
the sentence announced by a judicial officer
in court. If there is a
material inconsistency between them, as in casu, then an irregularity
exists which warrants setting aside
the sentence in every respect. In
practice, this can occur on appeal, or on automatic review in cases
where judicial error cannot
be rectified under s 298 of the CPA (as
happened in
S
v Mbewu
supra).
[4]
36.
S v Mbewu
is
an unreported review judgment in which the sentence appearing ex
facie the J15 is ‘a fine of R500 or …
imprisonment
for 30 years
’
and
that in the trial record is ‘a fine of R500 or …
remain
in jail for at least 30 days
’
.
(my emphasis) The review court corrected this error at the request of
the presiding magistrate who accepted that he was
functus
officio
by the time that
the bona fide error came to his attention. At para 5, the court
usefully explained that a J15 form is no more than
an annexure to the
record of the trial proceeding.
37.
In
S
v Mbewu
supra, Nhlangulela
J (Petse ADJP concurring) held (at para 5):
‘
Whereas the record
is a device, as in tapes, discs or paper, in which everything that
happens during the trial is captured, the
charge sheet is a document
that is drawn by the prosecutor before the trial and presented to the
court to show the nature of the
charge which has been preferred
against the accused. The recordal of the imposed sentence on the
charge sheet can only take place
at the end of the trial when the
verdict and sentence would have already been recorded in the tapes,
disc or on paper.’
38.
All this gives rise to the obvious
question: what purpose is served by a trial court recording on a J15
form an already announced
verdict and sentence, and then appends
his/her signature to that form?
39.
The answer to this question lies in an
understanding of the role which a signed J15 form plays in the
administrative processes involved
in our criminal justice system
after an accused is convicted and sentenced in a criminal court.
40.
For present purposes, it is
unnecessary to provide an exhaustive explanation. It suffices to say
that a signed J15 form containing
details of an accused’s
conviction and sentence is used for several administrative purposes
(such as, enabling a determination
to be made whether a sentence
imposed is reviewable under s 302 of the CPA). See
S
v King
(56/2023)
[2024]
ZAWCHC 122
(7 May 2024) para 1.
41.
An appreciation of the role played by
a signed J15 form in the administration of justice makes it clear
that the recordal of a sentence
thereon is an administrative step by
a judicial officer aimed, inter alia, at facilitating the convicted
and sentenced person to
be processed in the next phase of our
criminal justice system.
42.
Accordingly, a signed J15 form serves
as documentary evidence that an accused has been convicted on a
particular charge and sentenced
thereon in a particular way. However,
that document does not serve as conclusive evidence for all purposes
under the CPA of the
sentence imposed on an accused. Where an
inconsistency exists between the sentence recorded on a signed J15
form and the sentence
read out in court to an accused, then, in my
view, the latter sentence must, for all purposes under the CPA,
prevail until it is
set aside on appeal or review, or by way of a
correction under s 298 of the CPA, if correction is possible in the
circumstances
of a particular case.
43.
The view expressed here accords with
our Bill of Rights demanding fairness in the administration of
justice and the promotion of
‘open justice’ in the open
and democratic society established by our supreme Constitution. The
fact that a lesser sentence
than the minimum sentence prescribed by
law was recorded on the J15 form on count 2 which benefits the First
Appellant is of no
moment.
44.
For the reasons outlined above, I find
that written recordal on the J15 form of a 12-year sentence for count
2 has no binding legal
force or effect.
In
these circumstances, I conclude that the 15-year sentence announced
in court to the First Appellant is the actual, official sentence
for
purposes of the CPA, including for this appeal. That
sentence
cannot be ignored nor wished away.
45.
Mr Calitz urged this Court to set
aside the 15-year sentence imposed if his
submission
related to the 12-year sentence recorded on the J15 form is rejected.
I now turn my attention to that issue.
THE
SECOND ISSUE: SHOULD THE SENTENCES BE SET ASIDE?
46.
Having adjudicated the first issue
formulated above, it is now ripe to determine whether valid grounds
exist for this Court to interfere
with the sentences imposed by the
trial court in relation to counts 1 and/or 2.
47.
At the onset, the applicable legal
principles emerging from case law will be outlined. Thereafter, those
principles will be applied
to the facts in casu.
48.
An appellate court must be slow to
interfere with a trial court’s discretion on sentence. It is a
truism that the imposition
of punishment is pre-eminently a question
for a trial court. See
S v
Rabie
1975 (4) SA 855
(A)
at 857D.
49.
In
S
v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 496
(SCA) para 12, this salutary legal principle was expressed as
follows:
‘
A
court exercising appellate jurisdiction cannot, in the absence of
material misdirection by the trial court, approach the question
of
sentence as if it was the trial court and then substitute the
sentence arrived at by it simply because it prefers it. To do
so
would usurp the sentencing of the trial court.’
50.
An appellate court can only interfere
with a trial court’s sentence if it failed to act judicially
and properly within legal
limits. See
S
v Rabie
supra
at 857E.
51.
The prerogative of a trial court on
sentencing is jealously guarded. Therefore, an appellate court can
interfere with a sentence
in the following circumscribed instances
relevant to the present appeal against a sentence (not a conviction):
(a)
if the sentence is vitiated by an
irregularity during the trial or sentencing process that results in a
failure of justice. See
S v
Bogaards
2013 (1) SACR 1
(CC) para 41; or
(b)
if a trial court misdirects itself in
relation to the sentence imposed and does so in such a nature,
degree, and seriousness that
the trial court cannot be said to have
exercised its sentencing discretion at all, or exercised its
discretion improperly or unreasonably,
thereby vitiating the sentence
imposed. See
S v Hewitt
2017 (1) SACR 309
(SCA) para 8; or
(c)
if the sentence imposed by a trial
court ‘is one to which no reasonable court could have come, in
other words, one where there
is a striking disparity between the
sentence imposed and that which this Court considers appropriate’
(
S v Petkar
1988
(3) SA 571
(A) at 574C).
52.
As regards the ground in (b), in
S
v Pillay
1977 (4) SA 531
(A) at 535E-F, the former Appellate Division (now Supreme Court of
Appeal) held a ‘misdirection’
‘…
means an
error committed by the Court in determining or applying the facts for
assessing the appropriate sentence. As the essential
inquiry in
an appeal against sentence, however, is not whether the sentence was
right or wrong, but whether the Court in imposing
it exercised its
discretion properly and judicially, a mere misdirection is not by
itself sufficient to entitle the Appeal Court
to interfere with the
sentence; it must be of such a nature, degree, or seriousness that it
shows, directly or inferentially, that
the Court did not
exercise its discretion at all or exercised it improperly or
unreasonably’.
Application of the
relevant principles to the facts in casu
53.
For the various reasons articulated
below under this heading, I find that the trial court exercised its
discretion on sentencing
unreasonably and imposed sentences
strikingly disproportionate to the crimes. This Court is not only
entitled but obliged to intervene.
Any failure to intervene would be
tantamount to an abdication of this Court’s constitutional duty
to avert the injustice
which would ensue if the unjust sentences
imposed were to be served by the appellants. Hence, I propose the
orders formulated below
in this judgment.
(i)
Ad the First and the Second
Appellants jointly
54.
Appellants’
Counsel, Mr Calitz, pointed out that the magistrate’s judgment
is silent on s 280(2) of the CPA.
[5]
He argued that this silence indicates an omission by the trial
magistrate to consider this question. He reasoned that this failure
is a serious misdirection which, he contends, led to a further
misdirection, namely, the magistrate’s failure to order that
the sentences imposed on the appellants respectively for counts 1 and
2 shall run concurrently.
55.
Respondent’s Counsel, Ms Monis,
conceded that the trial court appears to have misdirected itself in
the manner contended by
Mr Calitz. However, she left this question of
law for determination by this Court, although she stated that the
respondent does
not object to the sentences running concurrently.
56.
It is correct, as argued by Mr Calitz,
that the trial magistrate’s judgment does not refer to s 280(2)
of the CPA, nor does
the printed transcript give any indication that
the magistrate considered the question whether the sentences imposed
on the appellants
respectively ought to run concurrently.
57.
I am mindful that no judgment can ever
be entirely exhaustive. Merely because the trial court’s
judgment does not refer to
s 280(2) of the CPA nor to the question of
concurrent sentences does not in and of itself mean that the trial
magistrate did not
consider the question of whether the sentences
ought to run concurrently. See
R
v Dhlumayo and another
1948
(2) SA 677
(A) at 702.
58.
However, the fact that
the sentences imposed on the appellants were not ordered to run
concurrently is a serious misdirection which
culminated in the
imposition of imprisonment for durations that can, in respect of both
appellants respectively, be aptly described
as shocking, or
‘disturbingly inappropriate’ (
S
v
Narker
and another
1975
(1) SA 583 (AD)
at 585C).
59.
The trial magistrate’s failure
to order that the sentences run concurrently means that the First
Appellant was sentenced to
an effective 30-year imprisonment
(ignoring the 12 years noted on the J15 form); the Second Appellant
was sentenced to an effective
25 years in prison. All this is unjust
– it gives rise to a real sense of shock because of the
disproportionality with the
crimes charged and the other factors
relevant when a fair and just sentence is determined.
60.
In this context, one must not lose
sight of the fact that a sentence ought to have a deterrent effect on
would-be criminals. However,
if a sentence imposed is, as shown by
the appellants to be the case here, so shockingly disproportionate to
the offences charged
when balanced against the factors relevant to
the determination of an appropriate sentence, then the sentence
imposed will likely
lose its potential for having an effective
deterrent outlook.
61.
Logic and common-sense dictate that
this must be so because the shock caused by the sentences imposed
would be so overwhelming that
a would-be criminal is likely not to
view the sentences with seriousness but rather see the sentences for
what they truly are –
unjust and unfair.
62.
This consideration fortifies my view
that the magistrate’s misdirection in failing to issue an order
under s 280(2) of the
CPA is of such a sufficient degree of
seriousness as to warrant this Court’s interference with the
sentences imposed on both
appellants. However, there are additional
grounds which impel this Court to intervene by sentencing the
appellants afresh, rather
than to remit the case back to the trial
court for re-sentencing. These individualised grounds will henceforth
be dealt with, albeit
separately in relation to each appellant.
(ii)
Ad the First Appellant only: count
1
63.
The trial magistrate committed a
misdirection by the manner she approached the relevant facts for
purposes of assessing an appropriate
sentence for the First Appellant
on count 1.
64.
A consideration that played a key role
in determining the 15-year sentence emerges from the following
extract on sentence (at page
246 lines 3-7):
‘
With
regards to accused number one you are not a first offender to this
Court you
have
been given numerous opportunities
by
the court in order to rehabilitate yourself but it seems that have
fallen on deaf ears.’ (my emphasis)
65.
The reference to ‘numerous
opportunities’ given to the First Appellant is wrong. This is
not borne out by his SAP 69.
It reveals that the First Appellant only
had two convictions for theft: one in 2008 and another in 2016.
66.
The trial magistrate
misdirected herself when she failed to consider that one of these
convictions occurred more than 16 years before
the offence charged in
the current indictment. The magistrate also erred when she said that
‘in 2006’ the First Appellant
was convicted of a ‘similar
offence of theft’.
[6]
67.
This alleged third conviction does not
appear on the First Appellant’s SAP 69 in Exhibit E and is a
serious error that contributed
to the magistrate finding considerable
aggravation and an absence of the potential for rehabilitation.
68.
Under these circumstances, the trial
magistrate misdirected herself by wrongly determining that the First
Appellant had committed
‘numerous’ crimes and was given
‘numerous opportunities’ to rehabilitate himself but
failed to do so.
69.
The trial magistrate’s
assessment of this as an aggravating factor for sentencing purposes
is a misdirection that contributed
to the imposition of a
disturbingly inappropriate sentence for count 1 which, in my view, no
reasonable court would have imposed
if a proper, judicious evaluation
were made of the triad of factors to be considered when determining a
fair and just sentence.
70.
On this basis, I propose that the
sentence imposed on the First Appellant for count 1 be set aside and
that he be re-sentenced afresh
by this Court.
(iii)
Ad the First Appellant only: count
2
71.
In the context of this case, the
finding by the trial magistrate that substantial and compelling
circumstances exist for the First
Appellant meriting a deviation from
the prescribed minimum sentence is a material misdirection that
cannot remain intact. The legal
and factual basis for my view appears
below when I deal with the re-sentencing of the First Appellant on
count 2.
72.
The trial magistrate found there to be
substantial and compelling circumstances meriting a deviation from
the minimum mandated sentence
for count 2. Based on this finding, the
First Appellant was entitled to, but did not receive, a sentence less
than the 15-year
prescribed minimum.
73.
The pronouncement by the trial
magistrate of the 15-year sentence is an irregularity to a
significant degree because ‘
a
different sentence [to that mandated by law] must be imposed if the
court is satisfied that substantial and compelling circumstances
exist which “
justify”
…
it’ (
S
v Malgas supra
para
14).
74.
For the reasons already discussed
above in relation to the first issue, the fact that the trial
magistrate recorded a 12-year sentence
on the front page of the J15
form for count 2 does not cure the irregularity, nor does it cure her
misdirection. Indeed, I find
that it compounds the severity thereof.
This is because there is a material inconsistency between the 12-year
sentence recorded
on the front of the J15 form and the 15-year
sentence announced to the First Appellant while he was in the dock at
the time of
being sentenced.
75.
The two sentences apparent from
different parts of the record in relation to count 2 are entirely
incompatible with one another.
This fact on its own vitiates the
sentence for count 2. Both the sentence and the sentencing process is
tainted with irregularity
leading to a failure of justice. As a
result, I propose to set aside the sentence and re-sentence the First
Appellant afresh on
count 2.
76.
It is common cause that the
discrepancy between the sentence announced in open court on count 2
and that recorded on the J15 form
was brought to the trial
magistrate’s attention during the First Appellant’s
failed bid for leave to appeal served
before her on 29 November 2023.
Despite this, the magistrate decided not to correct the situation,
nor refer the matter for review.
This failure on the magistrate’s
part is inexplicable and is a further misdirection which justifies
intervention in the manner
which I propose in the preceding
paragraph.
77.
It is not open to this Court to
resolve the problem by interpreting the transcribed judgment with a
view to determine which sentence
the trial magistrate truly intended
to impose (viz, the 15 years announced in court, or the 12 years
written on the J15). This
is not a question of construction –
it is one of misdirection.
(iv)
Ad the Second Appellant only: count
1
78.
After considering the sentence imposed
on the Second Appellant in relation to count 1 and the factors which
the trial court took
into account in the determination thereof, I
find that there is merit in Mr Calitz’s argument that the trial
magistrate misdirected
herself by underplaying the Second Appellant’s
personal circumstances.
79.
I am satisfied that this misdirection
contributed significantly to the imposition of a 15-year imprisonment
sentence which does
not bear the hallmarks of a healthy blend between
the well-rehearsed triad of factors listed in
S
v Zinn
1969 (2) SA 537
(A).
Therefore, the sentence imposed for count 1 in relation to the Second
Appellant ought to be set aside. I propose that it be
so ordered.
(v)
Ad the Second Appellant only: count 2
80.
When sentencing the Second Appellant,
the trial magistrate informed him that she could not find substantial
and compelling circumstances.
However, for reasons unexplained in the
record, she imposed ten years direct imprisonment (as opposed to at
least the mandatory
15-year minimum sentence).
81.
The relevant part of the record (at
page 246 lines 16-21) on sentence reads:
‘
Unlike Mr Temmies
… [indistinct] …
I
could not find any substantial or compelling circumstances to deviate
from the prescribed minimum sentence
in your case with
regards to count one I make the following order you are sentenced to
15 years imprisonment
with
regards to count 2 you are sentenced to 10 years imprisonment.’
(my emphasis)
82.
It was for this reason that the
written communication referred to in paragraph 5 above was sent to
the Second Appellant’s
Counsel prior to the appeal hearing.
83.
The deviation from the minimum
sentence of 15 years is irregular. That sentence flies in the face of
the magistrate’s express
finding that she did not find
substantial and compelling circumstances which merited deviating from
the minimum 15-year sentence
prescribed by law. In these
circumstances, I would propose that an order setting aside the
10-year sentence be granted.
84.
The trial magistrate’s
deviation from the prescribed minimum sentence does not pass muster
of the settled test enunciated
in
S
v Malgas supra
para
25 (and approved in
S
v Dodo
[2001] ZACC 16
;
2001
(1) SACR 594
(CC)), which test was aptly described by Navsa JA as
being ‘enduring and uncomplicated’.
[7]
85.
In her heads of argument, Ms C Monis
submitted that the imposition of the 10-year sentence is an exercise
of the trial magistrate’s
‘inherent jurisdiction’
and ought not to be interfered with on appeal. At the hearing, Ms
Monis did not persist with
her argument, correctly so. Her submission
on this score is untenable as a matter of law and is rejected.
86.
Regional courts are part of the
magistracy. All magistrates’ courts are creations of statute.
Therefore, all magistrates are
imbued with only those powers granted
unto them by an empowering statute passed by a competent legislative
body. Unlike judges,
magistrates lack any inherent powers at common
law. See
CC (Nee O) v DGC
2024 (3) SA 109
(WCC) para 17.
87.
Accordingly, the trial court was bound
by law to impose the mandatory minimum 15-year sentence on the Second
Appellant, unless it
found substantial and compelling circumstances
within the meaning of that expression. It did not. Therefore, its
failure to impose
the 15-year minimum sentence on the Second
Appellant on count 2 is a material misdirection obliging this Court
to intervene by
setting aside the 10-year sentence. I propose an
order to this effect.
THE
THIRD ISSUE: SETENCING THE APPELLANTS AFRESH
88.
At the hearing, Mr Calitz and Ms Monis
were in agreement that if this Court finds a misdirection of the kind
which vitiates the
sentences imposed on the appellants or either of
them for counts 1 and/or 2, then if this Court sets aside the
relevant sentences,
then it ought to re-sentence the appellants
afresh without remitting the matter back to the trial court. As a
result, they argued
the appeal on this basis.
89.
Consequent on my proposed setting
aside of the sentences imposed on the appellants for counts 1 and 2
respectively, and in the light
of the common cause position referred
to in the preceding paragraph, it is incumbent on this Court to
consider the question of
a just and appropriate sentence afresh. To
this end, some first principles are recited upfront.
Basic sentencing
guidelines
90.
S v Zinn supra
remains
the
locus classicus
for the guidelines to be applied at
the sentencing phase of a criminal proceeding. The punishment imposed
must fit the crime and
the criminal, and it must be fair to the
broader society.
91.
The
Zinn
trifecta of traditional factors apply
irrespective whether the sentencing relates to an offence for which
there is a minimum mandated
sentence, or not. See
S
v Malgas supra
para 25
(approved in
S v Dodo
supra
para
40).
92.
Thus, when determining sentence, this
Court is enjoined to focus on inter alia: (i) the crime: its nature,
seriousness, and prevalence;
(ii) the offender: his personal
circumstances, and prospects of rehabilitation; and (iii) the
interests of society. These considerations
are to be carefully
calibrated to ensure that none is over-emphasised, and none is
under-emphasised. Each consideration must be
given its due weight to
arrive at a well-balanced, just sentence.
93.
Dispensing justice through sentencing
under the aegis of the CMAA, read with the CPA and CLAA, demands the
promotion of the ideals
of restorative justice (
not
retribution). Age-old principles of
punishment have been jettisoned by our Constitution and its values
favouring a more human-centric
approach to sentencing infused with
modern notions of justice and fairness.
94.
As a result, when determining a fair
and just sentence, this Court must moderate its evaluation with a
healthy mix of, on the one
hand, mercy and compassion, and, on the
other, judicious consideration of the appellants’ respective
personal circumstances
and potential for rehabilitation. This has
appropriately been described as “an awesome responsibility”
vested in courts
of law (
S v
Banda and others
1991 (2)
SA 352
(BG) at 353C).
95.
It is trite that there is no magic or
scientific formula for determining with surgical precision the length
of imprisonment that
would, in any case, pass the litmus test for a
fair and just sentence. The circumstances related to every accused
person must be
considered separately to ensure that an appropriate
individualised sentence is determined.
(a)
Consideration of the crime and
broader societal interests
96.
At the onset, I consider the crimes
involved and fairness to the interests of society. In this context,
the legislature’s
objectives under the CMAA are relevant. The
sentences to be imposed should, as far as is reasonably possible,
further the attainment
of those aims and not undermine them –
ie, to protect essential infrastructure for the benefit of
communities and society
at large.
97.
Counts 1 and 2 of the indictment
comprise serious offences. Both are contained in the CMAA. Ms Monis
argued, correctly so in my
view, that a sentencing court cannot
overlook the fact that these statutory offences are, by design,
legislative responses to a
‘scourge’ in our society,
namely, the tampering with, damaging, destroying and theft of
essential infrastructure which
play a critical role in the proper
functioning of our society for public benefit.
98.
For this reason, so Ms Monis argued,
criminal conduct of this nature is singled out for special attention
in the CMAA. I agree.
Although the periods envisaged by the statutory
provisions differ, imprisonment is foreshadowed as an appropriate
punishment. This
shows the legislature’s serious intent and
society’s attitude towards the crimes in question.
99.
To achieve the legislative aim in the
furtherance of societal interests, a relatively high minimum sentence
is prescribed for theft
of ferrous and non-ferrous metals forming
part of essential infrastructure (count 2), and an even higher
maximum prison sentence
is imposed for tampering, damaging, or
destroying essential infrastructure providing a basic service to the
public (count 1).
100.
When sentencing the appellants for
these crimes, I am mindful of the serious effects flowing from their
actions, and the public’s
need for courts to deter these crimes
through, inter alia, the imposition of stiff prison sentences. Too
light a sentence would
undermine the public interest and the
achievement of the legislature’s aims to protect essential
infrastructure for public
benefit. However, a shockingly
inappropriate sentence would likely, as discussed elsewhere above in
this judgment, undermine the
deterrent effect of a criminal’s
sentence.
101.
The State proved that the appellants’
actions in
casu
prejudiced
not only Eskom, as owner of the stolen copper cables, but also the
broader business and residential community in the
Devon Valley of
Stellenbosch.
102.
The oral evidence of Mr Ruaan
Engelbrecht, duly supported by Exhibit B, shows that it cost Eskom no
less than R80 316,01 to
repair the damage to essential
infrastructure caused by the appellants’ tampering and theft of
copper cabling worth about
R41 866. In addition, Mr
Engelbrecht’s evidence taken with his statement in Exhibit C
shows that Eskom incurs a recurring
financial expense to employ him
and other private investigators as part of it’s on-going,
much-needed operational plan to
prevent, combat, and investigate
widespread copper cabling theft perpetrated by criminals (such as,
the appellants).
103.
Logic and common-sense dictates that
all this has a knock-on effect for the general public, namely, higher
electricity prices and,
as the facts of this case shows, Eskom’s
inability, from time to time, to deliver an essential service to
members of the
public, namely, the provision of electricity. All this
is important as part of the adverse financial and societal impact
considerations
arising from the commission of crimes of the nature
with which the appellants were convicted. This cannot be ignored at
the time
of sentencing.
104.
When considering an appropriate
sentence in cases involving either tampering, damaging, destroying,
and/or theft of essential infrastructure,
it is incumbent on courts
to look beyond the traditional narrow interests of the directly
affected complainant (such as, Eskom
in casu).
105.
It is necessary to take cognisance of
the broader socio-economic impact of an accused’s conduct, and
of the fact that the
victims of the crime may comprise a wider array
of persons. A failure to do so may, in appropriate cases, qualify as
a misdirection
in sentencing. This approach to sentencing aligns with
that advanced in the instructive dictum originating in
S
v Matyityi
supra para 16:
‘
An
enlightened and just penal policy requires consideration of a broad
range of sentencing options from which an appropriate option
can be
selected that best fits the unique circumstances of the case before
court.
To
that should be added, it also needs to be victim-centred.
’
(my
emphasis)
106.
To this end, the
following testimony by Mr Ruaan Engelbrecht about the impact of the
appellants’ actions on the other affected
victims is
significant:
[8]
‘
Yes, all the
properties from where the links were pulled on the line to switch the
line off. All properties including a hotel, a
winery, a private
residence, all were without power until the line was fixed which was
approximately two days later. The replacement
value on just the
cabling according to all the lists that is with Eskom is R47 000,00.’
107.
Mr Denver Marlin Pedro
also provides useful testimony about the impact of the power outage
on the surrounding business and residential
communities:
[9]
‘
The cable that was
stolen forms part of Eskom’s essential infrastructure and it is
used to distribute electricity from one
place to another. This
specific line supplied the farms as well as the Devon Valley Golf
Estate which include the hotel and the
restaurant at the farm side. …
The cables were cut … on a Friday night. I went out the
Saturday morning. I was called
out. And the electricity was only
restored to those areas on the Tuesday due to the fact that over
weekends we only work on a skeleton
staff … Obviously people
are going to be without electricity for the duration of the repairs
because we could not feed from
another point. … The farmers
and the farm workers especially, like I said, it basically created an
opportunity for criminals
as well due to the fact that it is dark
after hours.’
108.
Mr D.M. Pedro was not cross-examined.
Hence, his afore-quoted evidence stands unchallenged. Although Mr R.
Engelbrecht was cross-examined,
his afore-quoted testimony was
undisputed and remains intact.
109.
The evidence established
that the appellants (together with four others who ran away when they
were confronted)
[10]
used bolt
cutters to remove 600 metres of copper cabling from Eskom’s
functional power line infrastructure that provides
electricity to
parts of the Devon Valley in Stellenbosch. They stole the cabling,
weighing about 260 kgs, by placing it onto the
back of a bakkie and
then riding away with it. Their actions caused a severe power outage
which affected the business and neighbouring
residential community
for a whole weekend.
110.
The appellants’ conduct left a
community in darkness. As testified by Mr Pedro, this placed farmers
and farm workers at risk
– they were vulnerable to attack by
criminals. This impact on community members is an aggravating factor.
111.
In
S
v Matyityi
supra para 16,
it was held:
‘
In
South Africa victim empowerment is based on restorative justice.
Restorative justice seeks to emphasise that a crime is more
than the
breaking of the law or offending against the state – it is an
injury or wrong done to another person.
...
As in any true participatory democracy its underlying philosophy is
to give meaningful content to the rights of all citizens,
particularly victims of sexual abuse, by reaffirming one of our
founding democratic values namely human dignity.
It
enables us as well to vindicate our collective sense of humanity and
humanness.’
112.
As a matter of principle, all victims
of crime matter. In this case, the dignity of all the affected
victims of the appellants’
crimes (such as, farmers and
farmworkers) are entitled to no less consideration for sentencing
purposes. Mr Calitz was constrained
to concede that the appellants’
crimes to some degree adversely impacted the Devon Valley business
and residential community,
although he argued that the full extent
and nature of that impact is unknown.
113.
While Mr Calitz’s latter point
is well made, there can be no doubt that the power failure resulting
from the appellants’
actions directly rendered to residents and
visitors in the affected Devon Valley area being vulnerable to attack
in the dark and
some parts of the community were unable to enjoy a
dignified living for an entire weekend by not having access to a
supply of electricity.
114.
As a result, the affected victims of
the appellants’ crimes were unable, inter alia, to cook hot
food; to boil water; to frost
items in a freezer or to keep them cold
in a fridge; or to operate necessary home appliances and/or tools.
This is the pernicious
effect of what the appellants did - this
justifies their prosecutions.
115.
Moreover, it cannot be overlooked that
access to electricity is pivotal for the fulfilment of the
Constitution’s promise of
a better quality, dignified life for
its beneficiaries. Eskom is the parastatal tasked with this important
responsibility.
116.
O
ur
courts infer the existence of a constitutional right to electricity
by drawing on a cluster of rights entrenched in the Bill
of Rights
including, but not limited to, the right to human dignity in section
10 thereof. See F
Dube
& CG Moyo “The right to electricity in South Africa”
2021 (24)
Potchefstroom
Electronic Law Journal
at
page 9.
117.
This right in the hands of the
affected Devon Valley residents and other persons in that community
on the weekend in question was
violated by the appellants’
actions. This is a serious aggravating factor for sentencing
purposes.
118.
Accordingly, I am satisfied that a
sentence of direct imprisonment for both appellants is warranted on
counts 1 and 2. In the circumstances,
I propose that an order to this
effect be granted.
119.
The question now arising is the
following: for how long should each appellant be imprisoned? I now
turn to deal with this issue.
(b)
Consideration of the First
Appellant’s personal circumstances
120.
First Appellant’s personal
circumstances are: he is 39 years old, unmarried, with three children
(ages 16, 6 and 4 years),
all of whom reside in Grabouw. He is a
self-employed mechanic and was so employed for about 11 years when
the offences were committed.
He earned an income of about R4 000
pm. His highest educational qualification is matric. He is a
repeat offender, having
one relevant previous conviction in 2016 for
theft. In 2020, he was convicted twice for offences under the
Drugs
and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992
, although these drug related
offences do not serve as aggravating factors in this case.
121.
I consider the First Appellant’s
age to be a mitigating factor. He is a mature adult at aged 39 years.
As such, his age does
not diminish his moral blameworthiness.
However, as a middle-aged man, this age suggests to me that his
prospects of rehabilitation
during incarceration are good. This shows
potential that, on release, he may not pose a danger to repeat his
crime.
122.
Another mitigating factor that ought
to be factored into the equation when deciding on the length of his
incarceration is that the
First Appellant has two young children
(ages 4 and 6 respectively), and a child-teen aged 16, all of whose
best interests should
not be overlooked. The period of imprisonment
ought, as far as is reasonably possible, to allow these children to
still enjoy some
relationship with their father post his
incarceration (and vice versa). In my view, a 10-year period of
imprisonment under
s 276(1)(b)
of the CPA read with
s 3(1)(a)
of the
CMAA would still enable this to occur.
123.
A further mitigating factor is that
the First Appellant was, at the time of his sentencing in the court a
quo, an awaiting trial
prisoner for about 18 months. See
S
v M
2007 (2) SACR 60
(W)
para 113.
124.
An aggravating factor is
the First Appellant’s lack of remorse for his actions.
[11]
He pleaded not guilty, as is his right. See
S
v Dzukuda and others; S v Tshilo
2000
(4) SA 1078
(CC) para 40. However, he and his co-accused were caught
red-handed and had no real defence. Despite this, they proceeded to
waste
the trial court’s time and valuable judicial resources by
causing a nine-day trial to be run at taxpayers’ expense until
its completion at sentencing.
125.
Mr Calitz argued that another
mitigating factor is that the stolen copper cables were recovered.
This fact, so he argued, reduces
the financial loss suffered by
Eskom. I endorse the view expressed by Ms Monis who argued that the
appellants ought not to benefit
from the recovery of the stolen
copper cables because there is no evidence that they can be re-used
by Eskom, nor that they have
any monetary value for Eskom.
126.
Ms Monis argued further, with merit,
that the appellants did not surrender the copper cables of their own
volition. They were caught
red-handed. In other words, the stolen
copper cables were recovered through good investigative work by Mr
Ruaan Engelbrecht and
his team of investigators, rather than by
reason of any good conduct on the part of the appellants, or either
of them. Thus, so
Ms Monis argued, this ought to be viewed as an
aggravating factor.
127.
Having regard to all the foregoing, I
conclude that a 10-year period of imprisonment ought to be imposed on
count 1 for the First
Appellant. This duration is mixed with a
healthy dosage of mercy and compassion, when due consideration is
given to the maximum
sentence allowed by law, as well as the degree
of aggravating and mitigating considerations highlighted above.
(c)
Consideration of the Second
Appellant’s personal circumstances
128.
The Second Appellant’s personal
circumstances are, in the main, substantially similar to that of the
First Appellant, except
he has no prior conviction. This latter fact
accounts, albeit in part only, for the different period of
imprisonment imposed on
him in relation to count 1.
129.
Second Appellant’s Counsel
emphasised the following personal circumstances: Second Appellant is
38 years old, unmarried, with
three children (ages 1, 7, and 15
years). He is a seasonal farmworker in Grabouw who, when he worked,
earned about R3 000
pm.
130.
The Second Appellant is a first
offender and a middle-aged man. As with the First Appellant, I
similarly hold the view that the
Second Appellant’s age is a
mitigating factor. His prospects of rehabilitation during
incarceration appear to be good.
131.
As with the First Appellant, another
mitigating factor when fixing the period of incarceration is the best
interests of the Second
Appellant’s children and the promotion
of an opportunity to maintain and build a parent-child bond
post-incarceration. To
impose a prison sentence of such length that
any prospect of nurturing such a bond in the future would be
impossible, is in my
view a sentence that is disproportionate to the
crimes in the context of this case.
132.
As with the First Appellant, another
mitigating factor is that at the time of his sentencing, the Second
Appellant had been an awaiting
trial prisoner for about 18 months.
133.
As with the First Appellant, an
aggravating factor is the lack of remorse and the waste of valuable
court time and judicial resources
on a nine-day trial.
134.
In the light of all these relevant
considerations, I propose an 8-year period of imprisonment under
s
276(1)(b)
of the CPA read with
s 3(1)(a)
of the CMAA.
Count
2: prescribed minimum sentence - does substantial and compelling
circumstances exist for deviation from the minimum sentence?
135.
On the issue of imposing minimum
sentences, the SCA emphasised the following in
S
v Matyityi
supra para 23:
‘
Our courts derive
their power from the Constitution and like other arms of state owe
their fealty to it. Our constitutional order
can hardly survive if
courts fail to properly patrol the boundaries of their own power by
showing due deference to the legitimate
domains of power of the other
arms of state. Here parliament has spoken. It has ordained minimum
sentences for certain specified
offences. Courts are obliged to
impose those sentences unless there are truly convincing reasons for
departing from them.’
136.
Accordingly, I must yield to the
sentencing regime in the CMAA by imposing on each appellant at least
the minimum prison sentence
of 15 years for count 2, unless I find
substantial and compelling circumstances for one or both of them.
137.
It goes without saying that when
sentencing the appellants on count 2, I must bring an unbiased,
impartial, independent mind to
bear on this issue.
138.
I am not bound by the trial
magistrate’s decision in which she found substantial and
compelling circumstances in relation
to the First Appellant, and not
so in relation to the Second Appellant. Nor should I be influenced by
either of those decisions.
I must consider the issue at hand de novo
through my own lens.
139.
For purposes of the charge in count 2,
both appellants are first offenders. As such, the statutorily
specified sentence of at least
15 years for first offenders applies.
It is now settled law that a minimum prescribed sentence must “not
be departed from
lightly and for flimsy reasons …, and
marginal differences in personal circumstances or degrees of
participation between
co-offenders are to be excluded” from
judicial consideration. See
S
v Malgas supra
para 25.
140.
In the trial court and on appeal, the
appellant’s Counsel relied on their personal circumstances
sketched above as the basis
for his contention that substantial and
compelling circumstances exist for each and that a deviation from the
mandatory, statutorily
ordained sentence is merited. I disagree.
141.
The personal circumstances of both
appellants do not, in my view, qualify as weighty justification for
imposing a period of imprisonment
less than the minimum sentence
prescribed by law. To do so would be unjust and incongruent with the
legal principles that have
developed over time in authoritative
jurisprudence emanating from both the SCA and our apex court.
142.
To this end, I rely on the oft-quoted
dictum in
S v Vilakazi
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA)
para 58:
“
In cases of
serious crimes, 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 question of whether the accused is
married or
single, whether he has two children or three, whether he is employed
are in themselves largely immaterial to what that
period should be
and those seem to me to be what the kind of ‘flimsy’
grounds that
Malgas
said should be
avoided.”
143.
Therefore, I find that the imposition
of the prescribed minimum sentence of 15 years in relation to count 2
would be a just sentence
in relation to both appellants. I propose
that it be so ordered.
144.
Finally, the trial court’s
declaration, in accordance with
s 103
of the
Firearms Control Act 60
of 2000
, that the appellants are both unfit to possess a firearm
cannot be faulted. Probably for that reason, the appellants did not
persist
with their challenge against that decision at the hearing of
this appeal.
ORDER
OF COURT
:
145.
In the result, I would make the
following orders:
(a)
Condonation is granted for the late
filing of the respondent’s heads of argument.
(b)
The
appeal against the court a quo’s sentence of the First
Appellant on count 1 and count 2 is upheld. The court a quo’s
order on sentencing for both counts is set aside and is substituted
with the following in its stead:
‘
(i) On count 1,
accused no. 1 is sentenced to 10 years direct imprisonment;
(ii) On count 2, accused
no. 1 is sentenced to 15 years direct imprisonment;
(iii) The sentences for
count 1 and count 2 shall run concurrently.’
(c)
The
appeal against the court a quo’s sentence of the Second
Appellant on count 1 and count 2 is upheld. The court a quo’s
order on sentencing for both counts is set aside and is substituted
with the following in its stead:
‘
(i) On count 1,
accused no. 2 is sentenced to 8 years direct imprisonment;
(ii) On count 2, accused
no. 2 is sentenced to 15 years direct imprisonment;
(iii) The sentences for
count 1 and count 2 shall run concurrently.’
and
(d)
The
appeal against the court a quo’s declaration that the First
Appellant and Second Appellant respectively are unfit to possess
a
firearm is dismissed.
FAREED
MOOSA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree, and it is so ordered.
ROSHENI
ALLIE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances:
For
appellants:
M
Calitz
Instructed
by:
Cape
Town Justice Centre
For
respondent:
C
Monis
Instructed
by:
Office of the Director of Public
Prosecutions, Cape Town.
[1]
In
this context, the term ‘essential infrastructure’ is
defined in
section 1
of the CMAA to mean ‘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’.
[2]
In
this context, the term ‘basic service’ is defined in
section 1
of the CMAA to mean ‘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’.
[3]
Record:
page 30 lines 9 - 14.
[4]
Section
298
reads: ‘When by mistake a wrong sentence is passed, the
court may, before or immediately after it is recorded, amend the
sentence.’
[5]
For
present purposes, the relevant portion of
s 280
reads:
‘
(1) When
a person is at any trial convicted of two or more offences or when a
person under sentence or undergoing sentence
is convicted of another
offence, the court may sentence him to such several punishments for
such offences or, as the case may
be, to the punishment for such
other offence, as the court is competent to impose.
(2) Such
punishments, when consisting of imprisonment, shall commence the one
after the expiration, setting aside or
remission of the other, in
such order as the court may direct, unless the court directs that
such sentences of imprisonment shall
run concurrently.’
[6]
Record:
page 244 (line 14).
[7]
DPP
KZN v Ngcobo
2009
(2) SACR 361
(SCA) para 12 (cited with approval in
S
v Matyityi
2011
(1) SACR 40
(SCA) para 11).
[8]
Record:
page 53 lines 5 - 11.
[9]
Record:
page 72 lines 5 – 20.
[10]
Record:
page 87 lines 13 - 18.
[11]
The
concept of remorse and how to evaluate if an accused is remorseful
has been explained as follows: ‘
Many accused
persons might well regret their conduct but that does not without
more translate to genuine remorse.
Remorse
is a gnawing pain of conscience for the plight of another. Thus
genuine contrition can only come from an appreciation
and
acknowledgement of the extent of one’s error.
Whether
the offender is sincerely remorseful and not simply feeling sorry
for himself or herself at having been caught is a factual
question.
It is to the surrounding actions of the accused rather than what he
says in court that one should rather look.
In
order for the remorse to be a valid consideration, the penitence
must be sincere and the accused must take the court fully
into his
or her confidence.’ (
S
v Matyityi
supra
para 13)
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