Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 238South Africa
Makgobo v S (A121/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 238 (8 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
8 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Makgobo v S (A121/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 238 (8 September 2023)
Makgobo v S (A121/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 238 (8 September 2023)
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sino date 8 September 2023
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL – Sentence –
Primary
caregiver
–
Mother
of three children convicted on drug charges – Sentence of 16
years direct imprisonment – Magistrate declaring
that
children would have to be removed immediately from mother’s
care – Magistrate not sitting as a Children’s
Court
and nor did she hold any proceedings in terms of section 47 for
children in need of care and protection – Sentence
set aside
and replaced – Order purportedly made in terms of section 47
of the Children’s Act is set aside –
Children’s
Act 38 of 2005, s 47.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: A121/2023
MAGISTRATE’S
CASE NO: BRC 27/21
In
the matter between:
MINKANA
ELIZABETH
MAKGOBO
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
et
Acting Justice N Ralarala
Date
of Appeal:
8 September 2023
Delivered:
8 September 2023
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
[1]
This is an
appeal against sentence granted on petition to this court. The
appellant is the sole caregiver and biological mother
of three minor
children. On 24 September 2020 she was found in possession of
mandrax tablets stored in a sealed box in her
luggage after the bus
in which she was travelling from Potchefstroom to Mossel Bay was
intercepted by the South African Police
just outside Beaufort West.
The appellant, who after her first appearance was released on bail,
was charged in the Beaufort West
Regional Court on one count of
dealing in drugs and, accordingly, with the statutory offence of
contravening s 5 read with
sections 1, 13, 17, 25 and 64 of
the Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act
[1]
(“DDTA”). The charge sheet reflects that the appellant
was found in possession of 7 215 mandrax tablets with a
street
value of R360 750.
[2]
On 19 July
2022, after numerous postponements, the trial commenced. The
appellant pleaded guilty as charged. Her written plea explanation
in
terms of s 112 of the Criminal Procedure Act,
[2]
read out by her legal representative, was that she had been looking
for work and a friend whom she had approached offered her the
opportunity to transport, purportedly for a company called Herbal
Life, one of its packages from Potchefstroom to Mossel Bay for
which
she would be paid R3 000. However just before she boarded the
bus she was made aware by the person who handed the box
to her that
it contained mandrax tablets.
[3]
She
admitted the goods found in the Herbal Life box were drugs; they were
correctly weighed, packed and sealed and sent for analysis,
and she
had no objection to the handing in of the s 212 affidavit
[3]
(of Warrant Officer Mpandeni, a forensic analyst) who confirmed the
number of tablets found in the appellant’s possession.
However
no evidence was led by the State to prove the street value of the
drugs seized and accordingly, and although this was also
set out in
the charge sheet, the provisions of s 51(2)(a) read with Part II
of Schedule 2 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act
[4]
did not apply. There was also no evidence before the trial court that
the appellant was aware of the quantity of mandrax tablets
in the box
in her possession prior to her arrest. In her plea explanation the
appellant further stated:
‘
7
I
know what I did was wrong and punishable by a court of law and the
consequences of pleading guilty. I am extremely sorry for my
actions
and have deep regret and remorse that is why I am pleading guilty and
accept the fact that I must take responsibility for
my actions. I
have no intention to waste the court’s time and I plead guilty
herein in the hope that the Court will consider
this a mitigating
factor when handing down sentence against me. I herewith place full
confidence in our Criminal Justice system
by playing open cards with
the Honourable court and trust that the Honourable court will deal
with me accordingly.
8
In
mitigation I place before the court, my personal circumstances namely
that I did not waste the court’s time herein and
chose to plea
on the offence. I am 31 years old and have no pending cases. I am
unemployed and have 3 children age 12 years,
8 years, 4 years
old and as well as an elderly mother whom I maintain.
I
pray the Court will have mercy on me when handing down sentence.’
[4]
The State accepted the plea and the magistrate duly convicted the
appellant
as charged. No previous convictions were proven and the
appellant’s legal representative thereafter addressed the
magistrate
in mitigation. He informed her that the appellant was the
sole breadwinner of her children and elderly ill mother who, it
appears
from the record, all resided with the appellant in
Shoshanguve, which is situated about 30km north of Pretoria. She
explained the
reason why she committed the offence was that ‘
(t)he
wolf was at the door, I did not have much of a choice, there was no
food on the table and we were struggling, really struggling
to
survive’.
[5]
It was also placed on record (and similarly not disputed by the
State)
that the children’s father had abandoned them 3 years
earlier; the appellant had only been able to secure intermittent
employment
as a domestic worker; and that, of the appellant’s
two siblings, her elder brother disappeared in 2012 and her 18 year
old
sister lived elsewhere with her boyfriend.
[6]
It was
therefore appropriate for the appellant’s legal representative
to request a pre-sentence report but alarmingly this
request was
simply ignored by the magistrate who, without any forewarning, took
it upon herself to declare that the children would
have to be removed
immediately from the appellant’s care, purportedly in terms of
s 47 of the Children’s Act
[5]
and on the entirely erroneous ground that the appellant had exposed
the children to danger by dealing in drugs in her own home.
She
stated:
‘…
social
workers in Shoshanguve will have to immediately, in terms of
section 191 remove those children immediately. Urgent removal
has to be done. I am going to make that order… I will postpone
for the social workers so that if they need to question her,
they can
do so, they can get the addresses and everything, the contacts for
those people so that they can take those children immediately…’
[7]
In aggravation of sentence the prosecutor submitted that ‘
today
we are dealing with a case of drug dealing with a street value of
R360 000’.
There was simply no evidence before the
trial court to support this. Nor was there any evidence to support
the prosecutor’s
submission that ‘
it is a ruthless act
to transport drugs of that calibre and that street value…
with
the known intention
that it will hit the streets’
(my emphasis)
.
The magistrate then proceeded to make an order
in terms of s 47. When the appellant’s legal
representative requested
that she be released on bail pending
sentence the magistrate, without conducting any enquiry whatsoever,
declared ‘
I can set out a bail for you, R20 000 is a
bail’
and was unmoved when the appellant’s legal
representative informed her that ‘
I do not know where she is
going to get that money from’.
[8]
The magistrate then remanded the appellant into custody and postponed
sentencing to 28 July 2022 in the Oudtshoorn Regional Court. In
her judgment on sentence she repeated the same material error
when
referring to her earlier order that the children had been removed
because the appellant was ‘
dealing in drugs in her own house
where she has children’
and this is what had exposed them
to danger and thus rendered them in need of care and protection.
[9]
While acknowledging that the appellant was a first offender who had
pleaded
guilty, and correctly stating that the offence was serious,
the magistrate remarked ‘
[i]t seems that everyone…
wants to prosper in the business of drugs’.
That the
appellant had committed the offence because she wanted to ‘
prosper’
was simply not borne out by the evidence before the magistrate and,
on its own, regrettably reflects the absence of an individualised
approach to sentencing. Indeed, having regard to the comments which
followed, it seems that the overwhelming consideration in the
magistrate’s mind was the need for deterrence irrespective of
the particular facts of the case.
[10]
She then
proceeded to find that a suspended sentence could not be considered
given that a conviction of this nature carries a prescribed
sentence
in terms of s 17(e) of the DDTA. On appeal before us it was
common cause that she erred in this regard. There is
a long line of
authority that although the aforementioned subsection provides that
the court must impose a term of imprisonment,
it does not preclude
the total or partial suspension thereof.
[6]
She sentenced the appellant to 16 years direct imprisonment.
[11]
The grounds of appeal are that: (a) the magistrate’s refusal to
consider a possible
suspension of the sentence was a material error
of law; (b) the failure to accede to the defence request for a
pre-sentencing report
was a fundamental error; (c) the
children’s summary removal was unlawful and vitiated the
sentencing proceedings; and
(d) the term of direct imprisonment
imposed was shockingly inappropriate.
[12]
On the other hand the State submitted that: (a) since a sentence of
correctional supervision
was not an option there was no reason for
the magistrate to obtain a pre-sentencing report; (b) given the
magistrate’s determination
that a lengthy term of direct
imprisonment was the only appropriate sentence, the appellant’s
three minor children were ‘
affected by’
the
proceedings and thus in need of care and protection as contemplated
in s 47(1) of the Children’s Act, justifying an order
for an
investigation by a designated social worker as prescribed in s 155(2)
of that Act; and (c) the consequences to the public
at large of
transportation of drugs, particularly of a quantity such as in the
present case, should outweigh the personal circumstances
of
individuals such as the appellant.
[13]
I have certain fundamental difficulties with the State’s
submissions. First, s 155(1)
of the Children’s Act
prescribes that it is only a Children’s Court which can decide
the question of whether a child
who was the subject of proceedings in
terms of,
inter alia
, s47 is in need of care and protection.
The magistrate was not sitting as a Children’s Court and nor
did she even hold any
proceedings in terms of s 47 itself.
Second, she ordered summary removal of the children
before
sentencing, and not as a consequence of the sentence she ultimately
imposed. This is because, as I have said, she made a fundamental
error of fact in finding that the appellant had been dealing in drugs
in the home which she shared with the children.
[14]
Third, I
have been unable to find any authority that a pre-sentencing report –
which is routinely called for by trial courts
across the country when
minor children are either involved or may be affected by the
incarceration of an accused person –
are nonetheless only
required in those instances where a sentence of correctional
supervision is an option. Not only was correctional
supervision an
option
[7]
but indeed, if such
authority exists, it would not only offend against the paramountcy
principle in relation to the best interests
of minor children
enshrined in s 28(2) of the Constitution, but would also go against
the ambit of the duty of a sentencing court
outlined by the
Constitutional Court in
S
v M
.
[8]
In a nutshell:
‘
[35]
Thus, it is not the sentencing of the primary caregiver in and of
itself that threatens to violate the interests of the children.
It is
the imposition of the sentence without paying appropriate attention
to the need to have special regard for the children’s
interests
that threatens to do so. The purpose of emphasising the duty of the
sentencing court to acknowledge the interests of
the children, then,
is not to permit errant parents unreasonably to avoid appropriate
punishment. Rather, it is to protect the
innocent children as much as
is reasonably possible in the circumstances from avoidable harm.’
[15]
What is even more concerning is that the record is completely silent
as to what, if any,
feedback the magistrate obtained from the social
workers which she took upon herself to direct obtain certain basic
information
concerning the children from the appellant. There is also
nothing on the record to indicate if the children were summarily
removed
from their home and maternal grandmother just over 1 000km
away and it is particularly aggravating that these are young
children.
We were informed during the appeal (by agreement between
the parties) that the children have in fact not been removed and are
currently
still with their maternal grandmother, although they are
largely having to fend for themselves. Fourth, given her material
error
of law, the magistrate did not even consider the partial
suspension of the sentence she imposed. Put differently, in all the
circumstances
of this case there was regrettably a grave miscarriage
of justice, and the sentence must be set aside.
[16]
The issue which then arises is whether the matter should be remitted
to the lower court
for sentencing proceedings to commence afresh or
whether, as submitted on behalf of the appellant, this court should
substitute
that imposed by the magistrate with a suitable sentence.
Upon careful consideration I have come to the conclusion that the
latter
option, in the particular circumstances of this case, is
appropriate. In arriving at this conclusion I have taken into account
the following: (a) the unlikelihood that the appellant will be able
to afford bail given that she has been incarcerated for over
a year;
(b) the distance between her home in Shoshanguve and the lower court
to which she will be required to travel for further
court appearances
with the attendant cost; and (c) the urgent need for the children to
be returned to the appellant’s care.
[17]
During argument before the magistrate the prosecutor submitted that a
sentence of 10 years
direct imprisonment would be appropriate. Such a
term appears to be in line with a number of decided cases to which we
were referred
and which acknowledge the gravity of offences in terms
of the DDTA and the need to curb the scourge of our drug ridden
society.
However in my view, given the manner in which the
proceedings were conducted in the lower court, and the exceptional
circumstances
which have been created as a result, coupled with the
mitigating factors, to impose direct imprisonment for the full 10
year period
would be to sacrifice the appellant on the altar of
deterrence. It would rather be appropriate to suspend the balance of
the period
which the appellant has not already served.
[18]
The following order is made:
1.
The appeal succeeds and the sentence of 16 (sixteen) years
direct imprisonment imposed by the court a quo is set aside;
2.
The order of the court a quo, purportedly made in terms of
section 47 of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005, is set aside;
3.
The sentence imposed by the court a quo is substituted with
the following:
“
The
accused is sentenced to 10 (ten) years imprisonment of which
8 (eight) years and 11 (eleven) months is wholly suspended
on
condition that the accused is not convicted of any offence in terms
of the
Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992
committed during
the period of suspension”;
4.
The sentence is antedated to 28 July 2022 in terms of
section
282
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
; and
5.
The Head of the Correctional Facility in which the appellant
is currently incarcerated is directed to procure her immediate
release.
___________________
J I CLOETE
RALARALA
AJ
I
agree.
___________________
N RALARALA
For
the appellant: Adv B Prinsloo
Instructed
by: Mathewson Gess Inc. Attorneys (Mr B Mathewson)
For
the respondent: Adv S Galloway
[1]
No 140 of 1992.
[2]
No 51 of 1977.
[3]
I.e.
s 212
of the
Criminal Procedure Act.
>
[4]
No 105 of 1997.
[5]
No 38 of 2005.
[6]
S
v Mqikela
2005 (2) SACR 397
(ECD) at para [3], referring to
S
v Van Zyl and Others
1992 (2) SACR 101
(C);
S
v Mazibuko
1992 (2) SACR 320
(W) at 322j-323b;
S
v Mohome
1993 (1) SACR 504
(T);
S
v Mosolotsane
1993 (1) SACR 502
(O);
S
v Baliso
1991 (2) SACR 366
(T) at 369h-370b;
S
v Zwane
2004 (2) SACR 291
(N). See also
S
v Gcoba
2011 (2) SACR 231 (KZP).
[7]
S
v Van Dyk
2005 (1) SACR 35
(SCA) at paras [12] to [13];
S
v Nel
2013 (1) SACR 155
(GSJ) at paras [12] to [14].
[8]
S
v M (Centre for Child Law as Amicus Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2007 (2) SACR 539
(CC) at paras [27] to [36].
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