Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 60South Africa
S v Bergman; S v Matume (14 /884/2021; T1715/2018) [2023] ZAWCHC 60; 2023 (1) SACR 533 (WCC) (17 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
17 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## S v Bergman; S v Matume (14 /884/2021; T1715/2018) [2023] ZAWCHC 60; 2023 (1) SACR 533 (WCC) (17 March 2023)
S v Bergman; S v Matume (14 /884/2021; T1715/2018) [2023] ZAWCHC 60; 2023 (1) SACR 533 (WCC) (17 March 2023)
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sino date 17 March 2023
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western Cape
Division, Cape Town)
[REPORTABLE]
HIGH COURT REF NO:
269/22
MAGISTRATE’S
SERIAL NUMBER: 39/2022
HIGH COURT REVIEW CASE
NO: 14 /884/2021
In the matters
between:
THE STATE
And
ROYSTON BERGMAN
HIGH COURT REF NO:
343/22
MAGISTRATE’S
SERIAL NUMBER: 06/22
HIGH COURT REVIEW CASE
NO: T1715/2018
THE STATE
And
MPHO MATUME
JUDGMENT
RALARALA AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The two matters were brought before me by way of review in terms of
section 304 of
the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (‘CPA’).
Both matters were dealt with by magistrates in the Cape Town and
Athlone
Magistrates Courts respectively. The accused were
unrepresented and in both cases they pleaded guilty to the charges of
robbery
and contravention of section 65(2) (a) of the National Road
Traffic Act 93 of 1996 (“NRTA”), respectively. The Guilty
pleas prompted the application of the provisions of section 112(1)
(b) of the CPA. The accused were convicted and sentenced based
exclusively on their guilty pleas.
[2]
When both matters came before me,
I
was not satisfied that the proceedings were in accordance with
justice.
Consequently,
in both matters t
he
convictions and the sentences were set aside. I then ordered the
immediate release of both accused. In S v Bergman, I
directed
certain questions to the magistrate.
[3]
In light of the similar manner in which the presiding magistrates
dealt with these
matters, I decided to consider them together. This
court is essentially enjoined to consider whether the proceedings
before the
respective magistrates appear to be in accordance with
justice and equity.
BACKGROUND
S v Bergman
[4]
In this particular case, after the questions and conviction of the
accused by the
Presiding Magistrate, Bergman was sentenced to a
period of 12 months’ imprisonment.
[5]
In his plea, the accused admitted the following:
·
that
he grabbed the complainant’s cellphone;
·
the
complainant resisted;
·
a
scuffle ensued between them;
·
a
security guard intervened and the cellphone was recovered and
returned to the complainant.
[6]
Importantly, the above information satisfied the court a quo that the
accused admitted
the elements of the offence of robbery. The relevant
parts of the plea proceedings reveal the following:
“
Q
in your own words can you tell Court it (sic)
I saw young sitting
with this phone in his hand (sic). I walk past him. I return –
on my return I grab his cellphone. We tostile
(sic) – He pushed
me on the ground and I had still in my hand hit Iphone (sic) on his
head. Both of us fell on the ground
–security came. He told
them what happened. Security kept me until the police arrived and was
arrested.
The phone was given
back to the victim
Public Prosecutor:
State Fact (sic)
Confirmed own xxx with
accused.
Public Prosecutor: SAP
69 –hand court 13 –charge sheet –Exhibit “A”
FINDING
The court is satisfied
that the accused is guilty of the offence to which he has pleaded.”
[7]
A close examination of the plea proceedings reveals that the
questioning did not establish
all the elements of the offence of
robbery. Clearly, the elements of unlawfulness and intention were not
covered by the admissions
made by the accused.
[8]
As mentioned above, on 6 September 2022, I then directed the
following query to the
magistrate:
“
Kindly
explain whether the Presiding Officer in this instance was satisfied
that the elements of unlawfulness and intent in particular
were
sufficiently admitted by the accused?”
On
02 November 2022, in his delayed response, the magistrate conceded
that he had erred in questioning the accused. The following
are the
relevant parts of his response:
“
After
questioning the Accused, the Court, in error, was satisfied that the
Accused has admitted all elements to the charge.
Upon receipt of the
record, which was received by me on the 20 October 2022, post facto,
I am not satisfied that the elements of
unlawfulness and intent were
sufficiently canvassed by the Court and admitted by the Accused.
I submit that it was a
regrettable oversight on my part and request for your indulgence.”
[9]
In my mind, the concession made by the magistrate was correctly made.
S v Matume
[10]
In this instance, the accused, a 42 male inter alia, admitted that:
·
he
was arrested at a road block on Govan Mbeki Road, a public road in
the Wynberg district, for driving a motor vehicle with registration
number CY [. . . ] whilst the concentration of alcohol in any
specimen of his blood was not less than 0,0 5 grams per 100 ml;
·
he
drank five to six beers at a work related party;
·
the
alcohol content in his blood had been determined to be 0.15 grams per
100 ml.
·
Blood
was drawn within two hours.
[11]
However, upon further questioning by the Presiding Magistrate, the
accused indicated that he
had no knowledge that driving a motor
vehicle on a public road while the alcohol content in his blood
stream was not less 0.05
gram per 100 ml was a criminal offence. For
the sake of completeness, I will recite the relevant parts of the
record:
“
Court:
Did you know that it is an offence Mr Matume, to drive a motor
vehicle on a public road while the concentration of alcohol
in your
blood is not less than 0.05 grams per 100 millilitres of blood?
Accused: I did not
know that, Your Worship.
Court: What do you
know?
Accused: What I
thought your Worship, one gets arrested when you drive and busy
drinking with a beer in your hand, Your Worship.
Court: Ms Gangat?
Prosecutor: Yes Your
Worship. Ignorance of the law is not a defence, Your Worship.
Court: Okay
Prosecutor: The
accused … [intervenes]
Court: That is your
answer.
Prosecutor: …
even though he did not know, it is still an offence and he ought to
have known, Your Worship.
Court: Okay I wanted
you to say. Okay. Mr Matume … [intervenes]
Accused: Yes, Sir
Court: You are saying
the only thing that you knew was that you, is that according to your
knowledge is that you cannot drink whilst
you are driving?
Accused: To be honest,
yes, Your Worship.
Court: What do you
think about driving a vehicle whist you have had some drinks?
Accused: I will not
really know, Your Worship, because I will not know, Your Worship, how
a person feels, Your Worship, driving
after …[indistinct],
Your Worship. Because I drive normally, Your Worship, even after I
had something to drink, Your Worship.”
[12]
Subsequent to the above questioning, the magistrate proceeded to
convict the accused and sentenced
the accused to a period of 18
months’ imprisonment or a fine of R6000,00 half of which was
suspended for five years, on condition
that the accused is not
convicted of contravening section 65(2) (a) and section 65(1)(a) of
NRTA. The accused was disqualified
from obtaining a learner’s
licence within the next 6 months. I should further point out that,
the accused was driving without
being in possession of a driver’s
licence, although that was the case the state did not charge him in
that regard.
APPLICABLE LEGAL
PRINCIPLES AND ANALYSIS
[13]
Plea proceedings are by their very nature different from trial
proceedings in that the questioning
is designed to determine whether
the accused admits all of the allegations in the charge sheet to
which he pleaded guilty. The
purpose of the plea proceedings in terms
of section 112(1) (b) of the CPA is primarily to protect the
undefended and uneducated
accused as in the instant cases.
Particularly, in Mr. Matume’s case the court below was informed
that his highest level of
education is grade 6. In
S v M
1982(1) SA 242 D –E Didcott J observed that:
“
Accused
persons sometimes plead guilty to charges, experience shows, without
understanding fully what these encompass. The danger
of their doing
so is obvious in a society like ours, which sees many who are
illiterate and unsophisticated coming before the courts
with no legal
assistance
…”.
See
also
S
v Samuels
2016(2) SACR 298 (WCC) para 21. It follows that the questioning and
answers must cover all the elements of the offence that the
state
would ordinarily be required to prove had the accused not proffered a
guilty plea. In this manner, the court will be in a
position to
determine whether the accused person is indeed guilty and whether a
conviction is justified.
[14]
Back to the matter of S v Bergman, the presiding magistrate in this
matter, clearly did not grasp
that the questioning was not adequate
to establish the existence of all the elements of the offence of
robbery. I must emphasize
that it should appear prominently from the
accused person’s answers that he had the intention to commit
robbery, which means
that he intended to steal the victim’s
property while using force. The essential elements of robbery are
theft, violence,
submission and intention. Embedded in the element of
theft is the intention to deprive the owner permanently of his
property and
making it his own. Thus where force was used to take
one’s property with the aim of borrowing the said property
rather than
to deprive the owner thereof permanently, it cannot be
said that theft was committed and thus no robbery. See
Jonathan
Burchell‘s Criminal Law Fourth Edition
page 707
.
[15] The magistrate had a
duty to establish the intention of the accused in respect of the
appropriation of the cellphone in order
to ensure that the element of
theft was fulfilled. In
casu,
the presiding magistrate did not
enquire about the state of mind of the accused person to determine
mens rea
at the time of the commission of the offence. Most
importantly, it should be borne in mind that the admissions made by
an unrepresented
accused do not absolve the court of the obligation
to satisfy herself or himself of the accused’s guilt
. S v
Adams en Tien Ander Soortgelyke Sake
1986 (3) SA 733
(C)
[16]
As a result of the inadequate and insufficient questioning, which
contributed to the non-compliance
with section 112, the provisions of
section 113 of the CPA should have been invoked.
Mudau v S
[2015] JOL 33536
(SCA). There is therefore an inescapable obligation
on the presiding magistrate to determine whether the accused person
admits
all the allegations in the charge sheet to satisfy her or
himself that the accused is indeed guilty.
S v Witbooi
1978
(3) SA 590
(T) at 594 -595;
Mkhize v S
and another
1981 (3) SA
585
(N) at 586 H -587A. A conviction should not have followed in the
circumstances that played out at the end of the questioning, instead
more questions from the magistrate should have followed. This would
be expected if the magistrate had full appreciation of the
definition
and the elements of the particular offence. This is a clear
indication that particular attention need to be given to
the elements
of the specific offences when magistrates consider plea proceedings,
especially where undefended accused persons are
involved. It should
be emphasized that when considering plea proceedings magistrates need
to be meticulous throughout, and that
should be abundantly clear
throughout the record of proceedings. In order circumvent injustice
to the accused persons, plea proceedings
should not be rushed. In my
view with the necessary appreciation of the offence more questions
ought to have been asked in order
to cover all the elements of the
offence or a plea of not guilty ought to have been noted in terms of
section 113 of the CPA.
[17]
Turning back to the Matume case. The record of this case clearly
reveals that, the court granted the
prosecutor an opportunity to
address the court following the accused's indication of not having
knowledge that the conduct he was
charged with and had pleaded to was
an offence. Following that, the court proceeded with the questioning
in a manner similar to
cross examination, and when it appeared that
the accused maintained his stance, the court proceeded with
conviction. Unlawfulness
as an element of the offence was not
established in these plea proceedings, and what was established was
sufficient to show that
he offered a defense. In that case, the court
should have been skeptical of the accused's guilt.
[18]
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is for the presiding
magistrate to always guard against
an unjustified guilty plea. It
must be borne in mind that the questioning is directed at what the
accused person alleges rather
than the truth of those allegations. It
is for this reason that the questioning cannot assume the nature of
trial proceedings.
If during the questioning, it becomes apparent
that a defence or a justification is advanced by the accused person a
plea of not
guilty must be noted as envisaged in section 113 of the
CPA. See
S v W en Andere 1
999 (2) SACR 640
(C).
[19]
Regrettably, instead of invoking the provisions of section 113 of the
CPA, the presiding magistrate
proceeded to question the accused
person. According to the questions, the accused did not admit that
his conduct was unlawful and
that induced a sense of uncertainty on
the part of the presiding magistrate as to the next step to be taken.
This manifests itself
in the magistrate allowing the prosecutor to
address the court rather than making a decision that only a court can
make in the
circumstances. As already indicated, a not guilty plea
would be appropriate in these circumstances.
[20]
A distinctive anomaly in the sentence that cannot be overlooked, is
that although the period
of suspension and the offences that he
should not be convicted of have been specified by the sentencing
court, the sentence does
not stipulate that these offences are not to
be committed during the period of suspension.
Section 297 (1)(b)
of the CPA
provides for suspension of sentences and stipulates
the following:
“
Where
a court convicts a person of any offence other than an offence in
respect of which any law prescribes a minimum punishment,
the court
may in its discretion- . . .
(b)
pass sentence but order the operation of the whole or part thereof to
be suspended for a period not exceeding five years on
any condition
referred to in paragraph(a)(i) which the court may specify in the
order; or
(c)….”
In my view the sentence
is not a competent sentence, in that the condition is not clear nor
precisely formulated as it does not
specify in relation to what
period is the accused precluded from committing the specified
offences. The primary object is after
all that the accused must
understand what he or she has to do or avoid and for what length of
period.
Hiemstra’s Criminal Procedure Issue 11 28-81.
In
my view the sentence imposed by the magistrate is incongruous to the
provisions of section 297(1).
[21]
It is apparent on the record of both matters that the magistrates did
not adhere to the constitutional
requirement of fairness when
considering the plea proceedings. See section 35 (3) of the
Constitution.
[22]
It is for the above reasons that the convictions and sentences
in both cases were set aside
and this Court ordered the immediate
release from prison of both accused.
N RALARALA
ACTING
JUDGE WESTERN CAPE HIGH COURT
I
concur
C.N. NZIWENI
JUDGE
OF THE WESTERN CAPE HIGH COURT
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