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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2023] ZAWCHC 214
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## Beginsel v S (A200/2022; 849/2018; 01/2021)
[2023] ZAWCHC 214 (8 August 2023)
Beginsel v S (A200/2022; 849/2018; 01/2021)
[2023] ZAWCHC 214 (8 August 2023)
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sino date 8 August 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
High Court appeal case
number: A200/2022
Magistrate’s
Court case number: 849/2018
Magistrate’s
Court appeal number: 01/2021
In the
matter between:
NICKLAAS
BEGINSEL
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 8 AUGUST 2023
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
The appellant, Mr Beginsel, was convicted
in the Robertson Magistrate’s Court on 12 counts of theft.
The appellant had
legal representation throughout the trial, and
pleaded not guilty to the charges.
2.
He was sentenced to 8 months’
imprisonment on each count, half of which was suspended for a period
of 5 years on condition
that he was not convicted of an offence of
which theft was an element committed during the period of
suspension. Effectively,
therefore, the appellant was sentenced
to 4 years’ direct imprisonment. This is because
sentences generally run
cumulatively unless there is an express order
that they are to run concurrently. Sections 280(1) and (2) of
the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the CPA”) provide
as follows:
(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
.
(Emphasis supplied.)
3.
The appellant was aggrieved by the
convictions and sentences. His application for leave to appeal
was unsuccessful in the
Magistrate’s Court. On petition
to this Court, leave to appeal against the convictions was refused,
but leave was granted
to appeal against the sentences imposed.
It is therefore only the issue of sentence that now serves before
this Court.
4.
It appears from the record that the
appellant is on bail pending the determination of this appeal.
5.
I proceed to set out the background to the
matter in relation to the charges brought against the appellant, and
the subsequent sentences.
The charges and the
relevant evidence underpinning them
6.
The appellant was charged in the
Magistrate’s Court with 12 individual counts of theft involving
shortages of sugar or cash
at the store where he had been the
manager, namely the Robertson Shoprite U-Save. The appellant
was, amongst others, responsible
for the financial systems of the
business.
7.
The value of the stolen goods amounted to
just over R27 000,00. Excessive stock shortages over several
months, notably in
relation to the stock of sugar, prompted an
investigation into the specific store.
8.
In terms of a prescribed procedure in-store
which is to be followed in the normal course of business, when a
transaction has been
rung up by a cashier, but could not be completed
for some reason (for example, the customer did not have enough
money), the manager
may “save the transaction”.
This “saving” places the transaction on hold until it is
later “recalled”
by the manager and either completed by
the cashier (where the customer comes to collect the purchase) or
voided by the manager.
9.
The 12 counts against the appellant arose
from instances where transactions had been saved by the appellant,
and later voided by
him, although the stock in question had left the
store. The
modus operandi
underlying the counts were the same.
10.
The appellant was not charged with a
“General Deficiency” as envisaged in section 100, read
with section 243 of the
CPA. Section 100 provides that on “
a
charge alleging the theft of money or property by a person entrusted
with the control thereof, the charge may allege a general
deficiency
in a stated amount, notwithstanding that such general deficiency is
made up of specific sums of money or articles or
of a sum of money
representing the value of specific articles, the theft of which
extended over a period.”
11.
Section 243, in turn, provides for the
evidence that would be sufficient for a conviction on a charge of
“General deficiency”.
12.
He could have been so charged, but that is
water under the bridge, and the magistrate could not interfere with
the manner in which
the State had decided to pursue the case.
13.
The appellant acknowledges that the lower
court could not change the manner in which he had been charged, but
argues that the Court
should, given the nature of the offences and
the fact that the Court had regard to the shortfall or general
deficiency in the stock
in question in convicting the appellant, have
tailored the sentences so as to avoid an excessively heavy sentence
in total, in
the particular circumstances of the case.
Should
the sentences be reduced on appeal?
14.
The test on appeal in relation to sentence is “
whether the
court
a quo
misdirected itself by the sentence imposed or if
there is a disparity between the sentence of the trial court and the
sentence which
the Appellate Court would have imposed had it been the
trial court that it so marked that it can properly be described as
shockingly,
startling or disturbingly inappropriate
” (
S
v Van de Venter
2011 (1) SACR 238
(SCA) at para [14]).
15.
S
entencing is about achieving the right balance
between the crime, the offender and the interests of the community (S
v Zinn
1969
(2) SA 537
(A) at 540G-H). A court should, when determining sentence,
strive to accomplish and arrive at a judicious counterbalance between
these elements in order to ensure that one element is not unduly
accentuated at the expense of and to the exclusion of the others
(see
S v Banda
1991
(2) SA 352
(BG) at 355A).
16.
Where a person is convicted of multiple
offences, such as in the present case, a Court should be careful to
arrive at a balanced
sentence, as was pointed out in
S
v Moswathupa
2012 (1) SACR 259
(SCA) at
para [8]: “
Where multiple
offences need to be punished, the court has to seek an appropriate
sentence for all offences taken together. When
dealing with multiple
offences a court must not lose sight of the fact that the aggregate
penalty must not be unduly severe.
”
17.
The question is essentially whether, on a consideration of the
particular
facts of the case, the sentences imposed are proportionate
to the offences, with reference to the nature of the office, the
interests
of society and the circumstances of the offender.
18.
In
S v Pillay
1977 (4) SA 531
(A) at 535E-F the Appellate Division (as it then was)
held that the word “misdirection” simply means an error
committed
by the court in determining or applying the facts for
assessing the appropriate sentence. As the essential enquiry on
appeal against
sentence is not whether the sentence was right or
wrong, but whether the court that imposed 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. The
misdirection 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. Such a misdirection is usually and conveniently termed
one that
vitiates the court’s discretion on sentence.
19.
In the present matter the appellant contends that the sentences
imposed, viewed as a whole, induce a sense of shock. He submits
that the magistrate should have taken the counts upon which
he was
convicted together for the purposes of sentence.
20.
The appellant suggests, too, that a sentence of correctional
supervision
in terms of section 276(1)(h) should rather have been
imposed.
Should the charges
have been taken together for the purposes of sentence, or should the
magistrate have ordered that the sentences
(or some of them) run
concurrently?
21.
In
S v Mokela
2012 (1) SACR 431
(SCA) at para [11], the Court expressed the view,
in relation to concurrent sentencing, that sentences are to run
concurrently
where “
the evidence
shows that the relevant offences are inextricably linked in terms of
locality, time, protagonists and, importantly,
the fact that they
were committed with one common intent.
”
22.
Akin to this is the possibility of taking the
charges together for the purposes of sentence, given – as
counsel for the appellant
argues – the nature of and
commonalities in the offences. Counsel argues that the
magistrate erred in not doing so
in the present matter.
23.
There is a practice in the courts to take charges
together for the purposes of sentencing. This seems to have
arisen from
the provisions of section 94 of the CPA, namely that
where it is alleged that an accused person, on divers occasions
during any
period, committed an offence in respect of any particular
person, the State can charge that person in one charge with the
commission
of offences on divers occasions during the stated period,
irrespective of the number of charges a person is alleged to have
committed.
As was stated in
S v
Young
1977 (1) SA 602
(A) at 610E-F:
“
Appellant's
counsel contended that counts 1 to 4 should be taken together for the
purpose of imposing one sentence thereon, and
that counts 5 to 7
should be dealt with similarly. That procedure is neither
sanctioned nor prohibited by the Criminal
Procedure Act, 56 of 1955.
Where
multiple
counts are closely connected or similar in point of time, nature,
seriousness, or otherwise, it is sometimes a useful,
practical way of
ensuring that the punishment imposed is not unnecessarily duplicated
or its cumulative effect is not too
harsh on the accused.
But according to several decisions by the Provincial Divisions …
the practice is undesirable and should only be adopted
by lower
courts in exceptional circumstances.”
(Emphasis
supplied.)
24.
This practice has, as is indicated in
Young
,
been discouraged. This issue has been extensively dealt with by
this Court in the matter
of
Maqhaqha v The State
(unreported judgement delivered on 14 December 2021 under case number
837/2021). In paragraph [33] of the judgement the Court
(per
the Honourable Justice Henney) refers to the Supreme Court of
Appeal’s decision in
S v Rantlai
2018 (1) SACR 1
(SCA) where, after having reviewed and summarised a
number of cases on this point over the years the SCA confirmed the
undesirability
of this practice, but also reiterated that there is no
absolute bar against the imposition of globular sentences:
“
[9]
It is widely accepted that there is no law which prohibits or
provides for the imposition of a globular sentence. See S
v
Young
1977
(1) SA 602
(A)
at 610E. The imposition of a globular sentence depends upon the
discretion of the sentencing officer based on the peculiar facts
of
the case. However, our courts have on various occasions expressed
some misgivings about such sentences particularly where an
accused
was convicted after having pleaded not guilty but subsequently having
the conviction on some counts set aside on appeal.
See Director
of Public Prosecutions, Transvaal v Phillips
[2011]
ZASCA 192
;
2013
(1) SACR 107
(SCA)
para 27…See also S v Kruger
[2011]
ZASCA 219
;
2012
(1) SACR 369
(SCA)
para 10.
[10]
As it is clear from Young, Kruger and Phillips that
there is no absolute bar against imposing globular
sentences, there
seems to be some unanimity in our courts that,
depending
on the facts of each case, it can be effectively used in exceptional
circumstances
.
See S v Nkosi
1965
(2) SA 414
(C)
at 416C.
This
is because there will be circumstances where for instance it can be
used to ameliorate the effect of sentences which individually
may
appear to be shockingly inappropriate. Furthermore, such a sentence
may be appropriate where an accused pleaded guilty on multiple
offences which are closely connected in terms of time and common
facts and in respect whereof the individual sentences may,
cumulatively
amount to a sentence that induces a sense of shock.
There may of course be other cases where such a sentence might be
appropriate.
”
(Emphasis
supplied.)
25.
I am in the agreement with these sentiments in
general. In this particular matter, however, I do not regard the fact
that the magistrate
had sentenced the appellant on each count as a
misdirection. The magistrate was entitled to do so given the manner
in which the
appellant had been charged.
26.
The offences were not committed on a single
occasion, and were not closely connected in time. They were
admittedly perpetrated
at the same location and on the basis of the
same
modus operandi
.
The appellant’s actions show some cunning –
the offences were well-planned and premeditated. As
indicated
earlier, the offences were committed over a period of time.
Although they occurred at the same business premises,
they were
discrete offences committed at intervals of about once a month.
On each occasion there was a renewed intent to
steal. No one of
the incidents are inextricably linked to any of the other. The
appellant could have stopped stealing
from his employer at any
stage.
27.
Having considered the evidence led at the trial,
however, and the lower court’s judgment in relation to whether
the appellant
ought to be convicted of the charges, this Court must
be mindful of the fact that detailed evidence had effectively been
led at
the trial on only two of the 12 counts. In relation to
the other counts, the magistrate found the appellant guilty based
upon inferences drawn from,
inter alia
,
the fact that the same plan of action had been followed in each
instance.
28.
There is no denying that there are many
aggravating circumstances in this case. I agree with the lower
court that the appellant
had more than sufficient chance
of discontinuing his conduct.
Yet, he persisted, over a period of time, with the pilfering from the
business. The appellant,
moreover, persistently denied any
wrong-doing in the face of the evidence that existed against him
(unlike in the matter of
Troskie v S
[2016] ZAECGHC 53 (27 July 2016)), where the accused pleaded guilty
from the outset). He has shown no remorse at any stage,
not
even after conviction. He failed to explain what the motive
behind the conduct was. He caused the trial to run
for many
days, and caused blame to be imputed to other persons (in particular
to those of lower “rank” than him) in
the course of the
cross-examination of the State’s witnesses.
29.
The appellant was a manager at the store, and was
to be obeyed and respected by those serving under him. His
employer relied
upon him to oversee the proper control of financial
systems to the benefit of the business. He has not
offered to repay
the stolen money (see, in contrast,
S
v Barnard
[2003] ZASCA 65
(30 May
2003).
Ultimately, the consumer, as an ordinary member of
society – that same society that look up to the appellant –
bears
the brunt of his unlawful actions. As pointed out by
counsel for the State, as input costs increase, so the price of
consumables
increases. T
here is, moreover,
no rule that a first offender should be spared direct imprisonment in
appropriate cases (see, for example,
S v
Krieling and another
1993 (2) SACR 495
(A) at 497A-B).
30.
One must, however, not over-emphasise the crime.
I am of the view that the magistrate has done so. The interests
of
society include not only the broader community, but also the
appellant’s family, who are dependent upon him. He was
a
respected member of the Robertson community, assisting with children
who are abusing drugs, and providing rugby coaching.
He was a
ward councillor in the local municipality – again, a position
of trust in the community – and earned a salary
of R32 000,00
per month.
31.
In the arguments addressed to the lower court on
sentence the personal circumstances of the appellant, the fact that
he was a 47-year
old first offender (for the purposes of the charges
in question) with financial and family commitments were raised in
argument,
even though the appellant himself did not give evidence in
mitigation of sentence. The appellant is the breadwinner of his
household, and has a wife and five children to support. The
sentence imposed will have the effect of his children effectively
being fatherless for a period of 4 years. These aspects were
squarely before the lower court for consideration in the course
of
the sentence proceedings. The personal circumstances of the
appellants as set out in the pre-sentence reports, which form
part of
the record.
32.
The aggravating factors should be carefully
balanced against the mitigating factors. As submitted by the
appellant’s
counsel, the appellant is not a criminal – he
has bettered himself over the years. He is not the type of
person who
should be removed from society. He has community
interests, and, even more importantly, is in fact supporting his wife
and
children.
33.
Considered in context of the facts of the case as
a whole, I do regard the cumulative effect of the sentences imposed
to be unduly
harsh, given the particular personal circumstances of
the appellant. It seems to me, further, that the appellant is
unlikely
to be rehabilitated upon spending time in prison.
Given his apparent desire to be involved in and respected in the
community,
I am of the view that another sentence will properly serve
as a deterrent so as to prevent the appellant from further unlawful
conduct.
34.
I have considered the possibility of correctional
supervision, but I regard the administrative aspects connected
therewith as unnecessary
in this case. Rather, a prison
sentence – such as that imposed by the magistrate – but
wholly suspended for a
substantial period should be as effective.
It is by no means a light sentence. It is onerous. It
will be sword
hanging over the appellant’s head. He will
know that, should he put a foot wrong during the period of
suspension, he
will without doubt undergo direct imprisonment.
Should the appellant refrain from criminal conduct, he will be able
to keep
his employment, retain his involvement with society, and be
able to continue to support his family – a critical
consideration
in today’s socio-economic climate.
35.
Having considered all of the circumstances, I do
not intend to interfere with the manner in which the magistrate
approached sentence,
that is, a sentence in relation to each count,
and the sentence imposed in respect of each count. I do,
however, propose
that the sentences be suspended as a whole, for a
period of 5 years, upon appropriate conditions. That will serve
to lessen
the cumulative impact thereof upon the appellant, and will
have the benefits discussed above.
Section 302 of the
CPA
36.
The appellant’s counsel argues that, “
if
such a long period of direct imprisonment was considered by the court
to be an appropriate sentence, the imposition of such a
sentence
would have triggered an automatic review of the sentence by a judge
in chambers in terms of Section 302 of the CPA
”.
Thus, counsel argues, by sentencing the appellant to a period of
imprisonment just below the threshold for automatic
review on each
count in circumstances where the counts should have been taken
together for purposes of sentence, the appellant
was unfairly
deprived of this judicial oversight of the sentence.
37.
Section 302 of the CPA does provide for the
automatic review of certain sentences. Section 302(1) and (2)
provide, in relevant
part, as follows:
“
(1)
(a) Any sentence imposed by a
magistrate's court-
(i)
which, in the case of imprisonment … exceeds a period of three
months, if imposed
by a judicial officer who has not held the
substantive rank of magistrate or higher for a period of seven years,
or which exceeds
a period of six months, if imposed by a judicial
officer who has held the substantive rank of magistrate or higher for
a period
of seven years or longer;
(ii)
which, in the case of a fine, exceeds the amount determined by
the Minister from time to
time by notice in the Gazette for
the respective judicial officers referred to in subparagraph (i),
shall be subject in
the ordinary course to review by a judge of the provincial or local
division having jurisdiction.
(b) …
(2)
…
(3)
The provisions of subsection (1) shall only apply-
(a)
with reference to a sentence which is imposed in respect of an
accused who was not assisted by
a legal adviser
.”
(Emphasis supplied.)
38.
The appellant had legal representation throughout
the entire trial, both in relation to conviction and sentencing
proceedings.
Section 302 is therefore not applicable to him,
and the Magistrate’s Court did not “unfairly deprive”
the appellant
of any right under section 302 of the CPA (see
S
v Jacobs and six similar matters
2017
(2) SACR 546
(WCC) at para [7]).
Order
39.
In the circumstances, I would propose that an order be granted as
follows:
a.
The appellant’s appeal against the
sentences imposed upon him on 20 March 2020 in relation to 12 counts
of theft is upheld.
b.
The sentences imposed upon the appellant
are set aside and the following sentences are substituted:
“
The
accused is sentenced to eight (8) months’ imprisonment on each
count, which sentences are wholly suspended for a period
of five (5)
years on condition that the accused is not convicted of an offence of
which theft is an element committed during the
period of suspension.
”
c.
The sentences are to be backdated to 20 March 2020.
P.
S. VAN ZYL AJ
I
agree and it is so ordered.
C.
M. FORTUIN J
Appearances:
H.
Scholzel
for the appellant (instructed by Frank van Zyl
Attorneys)
L.
Snyman
for the respondent (Director of Public Prosecutions,
Western Cape)
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