Case Law[2023] ZASCA 154South Africa
Smit v S (1256/2022) [2023] ZASCA 154 (17 November 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
17 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law and procedure – fraud – whether appellant had intent, in the form of dolus eventualis, to commit fraud – whether the appellant, as an unrepresented accused, was given insufficient assistance by the regional court – held – no evidence that the appellant had intent in the form of dolus eventualis at time the agreement of sale was concluded – appellant afforded ample opportunity to obtain legal representation by the regional court.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Smit v S (1256/2022) [2023] ZASCA 154 (17 November 2023)
Smit v S (1256/2022) [2023] ZASCA 154 (17 November 2023)
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sino date 17 November 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 1256/2022
In
the matter between:
GERHARDUS
SMIT
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Smit v The State
(1256/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 154
(17
November 2023)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, MOTHLE, MABINDLA-BOQWANA and
MEYER JJA and
KATHREE-SETILOANE AJA
Heard:
No oral hearing in terms of
s 19
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act
10 of 2013
.
Delivered:
17 November 2023
Summary:
Criminal law
and procedure – fraud – whether appellant
had intent, in
the form of
dolus eventualis
, to commit fraud – whether
the appellant, as an unrepresented accused, was given insufficient
assistance by the regional
court – held – no evidence
that the appellant had intent in the form of
dolus eventualis
at time the agreement of sale was concluded – appellant
afforded ample opportunity to obtain legal representation by the
regional court.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
North West Division of the High Court, Mahikeng (F M
M Snyman and S Gura JJ, sitting as court of appeal):
1
The appeal against conviction and sentence is upheld.
2
The order of the high court is replaced with the following:
‘
The
conviction and sentence imposed by the magistrate are set aside.’
JUDGMENT
Nicholls JA (Mothle,
Mabindla-Boqwana and Meyer JJA and Kathree-Setiloane AJA concurring):
[1]
The appellant was found guilty of fraud by the Regional
Court,
Lichtenburg (the regional court) and sentenced to 15 years’
imprisonment. His conviction was upheld by the North West
Division of
the High Court, Mahikeng (the high court). The appeal is with the
special leave of this Court.
[2]
The facts are undisputed. On 4 and 6 December 2017, the
appellant,
through his business Germa Agri Boerdery, purchased cattle worth R2
078 812.80 from Chris du Plessis (Mr du Plessis),
the complainant.
This was not the first time that the appellant and Mr du Plessis had
done business and all previous transactions
were concluded in a
similar manner.
[3]
The appellant would be given seven days within which
to pay Mr Du
Plessis for the cattle, at a pre-determined price according to
weight. At Mr du Plessis’s farm, the cattle were
weighed and
immediately on-sold by the appellant to Grainvest, another company,
at a profit. The cattle would be loaded on to trucks
belonging to
Grainvest and a copy of the weighbridge would be sent to Mr Du
Plessis to indicate how much he was owed by the appellant.
Based upon
the weight, an invoice would be sent by the appellant to Grainvest
who would pay within three days.
[4]
On this occasion, Grainvest paid the appellant within
the customary
three days. The appellant, however, did not pay Mr du Plessis within
the seven days, as agreed. Instead, the appellant
loaned R1 440
000.00 to his friend, Jan Labuschagne (Mr Labuschagne), with
whom he shared business premises. No loan agreement
was entered into
with Mr Labuschagne, but he promised to pay the appellant
timeously to enable him to pay Mr du Plessis. The
appellant stated
that he had previously loaned money to Mr Labuschagne, which had
always been repaid. The appellant used the remaining
R600 000 to buy
cattle, which he then sold. This money, also, was not allocated
towards paying Mr du Plessis. Instead, according
to the appellant, it
‘disappeared into the system’.
[5]
When he did not receive payment after seven days, Mr
du Plessis
contacted the appellant who justified his non-payment on the basis
that Grainvest had not paid him, but would do so
the following day.
The appellant admitted that this was not the truth. A day or two
later, he then contacted Mr du Plessis
and asked to see him. He
told Mr du Plessis that he could not repay him because the money from
Grainvest had been used to make
other payments. He made a statement
to the police to this effect as well. No mention was made to the
police or to Mr du Plessis
of the loan to Mr Labuschagne.
To date, Mr du Plessis has been paid none of the monies owed to him
and Mr Labuschagne has since
committed suicide.
[6]
The appellant’s defence, throughout, was that he
had no
intention to defraud Mr Du Plessis, or steal from him. He always
believed that Mr Labuschagne would pay him back, at which
point he
would then pay Mr du Plessis the money that was owed to him. Unlike
previous business dealings with Mr du Plessis, this
was merely a
‘transaction which did not go well’. When he entered into
the agreement with Mr du Plessis,
he did not do so on the
basis that he was not going to pay him. Nor did he decide beforehand
not to pay him.
[7]
Both the
regional court and the high court concluded that at the time of the
conclusion of the agreement of sale, the appellant
had no intention
of paying Mr du Plessis. The regional court found that the
appellant had dealt with Mr du Plessis’s
money ‘as if it
was his’. The high court found that the intent to defraud need
not be direct or indirect but could
be established by being
subjectively reasonably foreseeable. Applying the principles of
dolus
eventualis
,
the high court found that even though the appellant may not have had
the direct intention or even the indirect intention not to
pay Mr du
Plessis, ‘but by acting in the manner in which he has, giving
the money to Labuschagne, the appellant has had the
intent in the
form of
dolus
eventualis
.’
[1]
[8]
The state has conceded the appeal on the basis that the
proven facts
do not exclude the reasonable inference that at the time when the
agreement between Mr du Plessis and the appellant
was entered
into, the appellant had every intention of paying the money owed, but
what later transpired, prevented him from doing
so.
[9]
This is a concession well made. Fraud is the unlawful
and intentional
making of a misrepresentation which causes actual or potential
prejudice. In other words, the perpetrator must
have misled the
victim by making a false or unlawful statement. There is no evidence,
nor was it suggested, that the appellant
had any intention other than
to pay Mr du Plessis at the time that he purchased the cattle from
him, nor did he make any such representation
knowing it to be false.
On the totality of the evidence the inference cannot ineluctably be
drawn that the appellant had no intention
to pay the money owed by
him. That he might have been reckless in loaning the money received
from Grainvest to Mr Labuschagne,
cannot possibly, on the available
facts, translate into intent in the form of
dolus eventualis
.
For these reasons, it is plain that the state had failed to prove the
intent to defraud. The appeal must accordingly succeed.
[10]
Insofar as it may have initially been submitted that the appellant,
as an unrepresented
accused, was given insufficient assistance by the
regional court, this submission is without foundation. The appellant
was given
ample opportunity to obtain legal representation. As the
high court pointed out, the trial was postponed on 12 occasions
to
enable the appellant to either obtain legal representation,
consult with his legal representative or change to a different legal
representative. On the day the trial finally started, a legal
representative from Legal Aid was willing and able to proceed with
the case. The appellant, however, terminated his mandate on that very
day and chose to run his own defence. Therefore, the appellant’s
protestation that he was not fit and able to cross-exam witnesses was
disingenuous in the circumstances. The record shows he was
afforded a
fair trial by the regional court and was guided where necessary. It
is noteworthy that the appellant himself did not
proceed with this
line of argument in the heads of argument before this Court, despite
the state conceding this issue as well.
[11]
In the result the following order is made:
1
The appeal against
conviction and sentence is upheld.
2
The order of
the high court is replaced with the following:
‘
The
conviction and sentence imposed by the magistrate are set aside.’
__________________________
C
E HEATON NICHOLLS
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
W W Gibbs
Instructed
by:
Hennie van Biljon Attorneys, Litchenburg
Maree & Maree
Attorneys, Mahikeng
Symington de Kok,
Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
W van
Biljon
Instructed
by:
The Director of Public Prosecutions, Litchenburg
Savage Jooste &
Adams, Mahikeng
The Deputy Director of
Public Prosecutions,
Bloemfontein
[1]
See
para
24 of the high court judgment.
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