Case Law[2022] ZASCA 120South Africa
Siphelele Goodman Nene v The State (466/2021) [2022] ZASCA 120 (5 September 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
5 September 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal against refusal of petition for leave to appeal by the high court – whether leave ought to have been granted.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Siphelele Goodman Nene v The State (466/2021) [2022] ZASCA 120 (5 September 2022)
Siphelele Goodman Nene v The State (466/2021) [2022] ZASCA 120 (5 September 2022)
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THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
reportable
Case
No: 466/2021
In
the matter between:
SIPHELELE
GOODMAN NENE
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
Siphelele
Goodman
Nene v The State
(466/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 120
(5
September 2022)
Coram:
ZONDI JA and WEINER and MOLEFE AJJA
Heard:
18 August 2022
Delivered:
5 September 2022
Summary:
Appeal against refusal of petition for leave
to appeal by the high court
–
whether
leave ought to have been granted.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court,
Pietermaritzburg (Van Zyl and Mnguni JJ, sitting as court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The applicant is
granted leave to appeal to the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High
Court, Pietermaritzburg, against his conviction
and sentence by the
Durban Regional Court.’
JUDGMENT
Zondi
JA (Weiner and Molefe AJJA concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against the refusal by the KwaZulu-Natal High
Court, Pietermaritzburg
(the high court), of the appellant’s
application for leave to appeal to that court against his conviction
and sentence. He
was convicted in the Regional Court (Durban) of
robbery with aggravating circumstances as read with s 51(2) of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (count 1), possession of goods
suspected to have been stolen in contravention of s 36 of Act 62 of
1955
(count 6), unlawful possession of a firearm in contravention of
s 3 of the Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000 (count 7) and unlawful
possession of ammunition in contravention of s 30 of the same Act
(count 8).
[2]
After his conviction, the appellant was sentenced
as follows:
(a) in respect of robbery with
aggravating circumstances (count 1), 15 years’ imprisonment;
(b) in respect of possession of
stolen property in contravention of s
36 of Act 62 of 1955 (count 6), five (5) years’ imprisonment;
(c) in respect of unlawful
possession of a firearm (count 7),15
years’ imprisonment and; (d) in respect of unlawful possession
of ammunition (count
8), two (2) years’ imprisonment.
[3]
It was ordered that the two (2) years’ sentence imposed
on count 6 run concurrently with the sentence imposed on count 1. It
was further ordered that 11 years of the sentence imposed in count 7
and the whole sentence imposed on count 8 run concurrently
with the
sentence imposed on count 1. This means that the appellant’s
effective sentence was 22 years’ imprisonment.
The appellant’s
application to the trial court for leave to appeal to the high court
against conviction and sentence, under
s 309B
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, did not succeed. Consequently, the
appellant petitioned the Judge President of KwaZulu-Natal Division in
terms of
s 309C
of the same Act for such leave. Van Zyl and Mnguni JJ
dismissed his petition.
[4]
Aggrieved by this decision, the appellant lodged an application for
special leave
in this Court against his conviction and sentence in
terms of s 16(1)
(b)
of the Superior Court Act 10 of 2013. Such
leave was granted by this Court on 8 February 2021. The issue before
this Court is whether
the appellant should have been granted leave to
appeal to the high court against his conviction and sentence.
[5]
The
approach to be followed in cases such as the one under consideration
where leave to appeal is sought against the refusal of
the petition
by the high court was authoritatively set out in
S
v Khoasasa
.
[1]
In addition, this Court in
Mthimkhulu
v S
held as follows:
[2]
‘
This
court has in a number of decisions stated that what is to be
adjudicated upon is whether the decision of the high court dealing
with the refusal of the petition was correct in terms of s 309C of
the CPA and if it is,
cadit quaestio
.
However, if the court erred in holding that there were no reasonable
prospects of success then leave to the full bench will have
to be
granted on the merits to be adjudicated by the court. The test in an
application of this nature is whether there are reasonable
prospects
of success in the envisaged appeal. It is not desirable to traverse
the merits in detail.’
Consequently,
this Court cannot determine the merits of the appeal but must confine
itself to the question whether leave to appeal
to the high court
should have been granted.
[6]
This Court in
S
v van Wyk
held that:
[3]
‘
An
applicant for special leave to appeal must show, in addition to the
ordinary requirement of reasonable prospects of success,
that there
are special circumstances which merit a further appeal to this court.
This may arise when in the opinion of this court
the appeal raises a
substantial point of law, or where the matter is of very great
importance to the parties or of great public
importance, or where the
prospects of success are so strong that the refusal of leave to
appeal would probably result in a manifest
denial of justice.
See
Westinghouse
Brake and Equipment v Bilger Engineering
1986
(2) SA 555
(A) at 564H-565E.’
[7]
With this background, I briefly set out the events which led
to the appellant’s conviction and sentence. On 4 November 2015,
at Burlington Heights Drive (Marrianhill, Durban), the complainant,
Mr Phakama Hlatshwayo, a sales representative of British Tobacco
Corporation, was robbed at gunpoint of a VW Caddy vehicle with
registration number [....] valued at R250 000 and a Blackberry
cellular phone valued at R1 500 by four unknown male suspects driving
in a Hyundai Accent vehicle with registration number [....].
The VW
Caddy vehicle was loaded with boxes of an assortment of cigarettes to
the value of R50 000.
[8]
The Hyundai Accent overtook the complainant and blocked his path of
travel. He was
ordered to get out of the vehicle, and he complied.
After loading the boxes of cigarettes into the Hyundai Accent, the
suspects
drove away with both vehicles. They abandoned the
complainant’s vehicle not far from the scene. The incident was
reported
to the police, who arrived at the scene shortly after the
occurrence of the incident. The police found the complainant at the
scene,
and he related to them what had befallen him. He gave the
police a description of the vehicle involved in the robbery. The
police
followed the direction in which both the vehicles had
travelled. They saw a vehicle matching the description of the vehicle
which
was involved in the robbery. When the police signalled for it
to stop, it sped off.
[9]
The police gave chase, and one of the suspects in the vehicle, with
his hands protruding
through the window, fired shots at the police.
After a high-speed car chase, the driver of the Hyundai Accent lost
control, causing
the vehicle to crash. About four male suspects got
out of the vehicle and fled in the same direction. One of the
suspects fired
shots at the police as he ran away. The police
returned fire hitting the suspect in the leg. The suspect threw an
object into the
bushes along the footpath and disappeared.
[10]
With the assistance of the Durban Metro Police Dog Unit (Dog Unit),
the suspect with a gunshot
wound, who turned out to be the appellant,
was tracked down by a police dog handled by Inspector Botha of the
Dog Unit in one of
the houses in the vicinity of the site where the
Hyundai Accent had crashed. Inspector Botha apprehended the appellant
and handed
him to the police at the scene. The police arrested him,
whereafter he was conveyed by ambulance to the hospital to be treated
for dog bites and the gunshot wound. Sergeant Beckett proceeded to
the spot where the appellant was seen dropping an object. He
found a
Glock firearm loaded with ammunition. It emerged during the police
investigation that the Hyundai Accent vehicle had been
reported
stolen in Chatsworth under ‘CAS 517/10/2015 robbery’.
[11]
In consequence of these occurrences, the appellant
was charged, among others, with the offences set out above and after
the trial,
he was convicted and sentenced as set out in the preceding
paragraphs.
The appellant denied all the allegations against
him. His version, in short, was that he was accidentally shot during
a shoot-out
between the police and the fleeing suspects while walking
on the road. He was not one of the suspects, but a passer-by. Two of
the police officers at the scene set a police dog on him, and it bit
him.
[12]
The appellant attacked his conviction by the trial
court on a charge of possession of goods suspected of being stolen in
contravention
of s 36 of Act 62 of 1955 (the Act). He argued that the
trial court misdirected itself regarding the application of s 36 of
the
Act. His contention was that s 36 is aimed at instances where the
state is unable to prove that the goods concerned were indeed
stolen,
and in support of this proposition, he referred to CR Snyman in
Criminal Law 5 ed at 524, para 2. The appellant argued
that, in the
matter under consideration, the state had no difficulties in proving
that the motor vehicle concerned had been stolen.
Its difficulty was
that the complainant was unable to identify the thieves. The
appellant argued further that the elements of the
crime under s 36
were not established in this matter, regard being had to the fact
that at no stage was he ever asked by the police
about the Hyundai
Accent.
[13]
In
convicting the appellant of a crime of contravening s 36 of the Act,
the trial court stated that it was satisfied that the evidence
adduced established beyond reasonable doubt that ‘all four
accused were travelling in the said Hyundai Accent and that they
failed to give a satisfactory account of their possession’.
This finding cannot be supported in the absence of evidence by
the
police that after his arrest, the appellant was asked to give an
account of his possession of the Hyundai Accent and that he
failed to
give a satisfactory account of such possession.
[4]
This needs to be established for a conviction under s 36 to be
sustained.
[14]
The second ground of the attack of the conviction was based on the
contention that there was
no evidence that the appellant was one of
the occupants of the Hyundai Accent who exited it shortly after it
capsized. This contention
related to the sufficiency of the
identifying evidence of the witnesses. In this regard, the trial
court’s finding was that
the police did not lose sight of the
suspects who exited the vehicle and fled. The appellant relied upon
certain inconsistencies
in the State case in this regard.
[15]
As regards the sentence, it was submitted by the
appellant that the effective sentence of 22 years induces a sense of
shock. This
was so, the appellant argued, because most of the loot
was recovered; the complainant was not harmed during the robbery, and
he
was relatively young when the offences were committed.
[16]
As far as the sentence is concerned,
the evidence was that the
appellant was 30 years of age, single with five minor children; had a
cleaning company, his income was
between R6000 and R7000 per month,
and he was a first offender.
The armed robbery
charge was subject to
s 51(2)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105
of 1997
, which prescribes a minimum sentence of 15 years’
imprisonment upon conviction in the absence of substantial and
compelling
circumstances that would justify the imposition of a
lesser sentence.
[17]
The trial court considered the appellant’s personal
circumstances and concluded that they did not constitute substantial
and
compelling circumstances and for that reason, imposed a sentence
of 15 years’ imprisonment. It justified the sentence of 15
years it imposed in respect of the charge of unlawful possession of a
9mm calibre Glock semi-automatic pistol on the basis that
such
sentence was not out of proportion to the gravity of the offence
committed. The appellant argued that the sentences should
have all
run concurrently, in the circumstances of the case.
[18]
On the facts of this case, it could be said that
the appellant does have reasonable prospects of success, and the high
court should
have granted him leave to appeal. In the result, the
appeal must succeed.
[19]
It is ordered that:
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
applicant is granted leave to appeal to the KwaZulu-Natal Division of
the High Court, Pietermaritzburg, against his conviction
and sentence
by the Durban Regional Court.’
DH
Zondi
Judge
of Appeal
Appearances
For
appellant:
L Barnard
Instructed
by:
T Mpanza Attorneys, Durban
Blair
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent: Z Dyasi
Instructed
by:
Director of Public Prosecutions, Pietermaritzburg
Director of Public
Prosecutions, Bloemfontein
[1]
S
v Khoasasa
[2002] 4 All SA 635
(SCA);
2003 (1) SACR 123
(SCA). The latter has
been followed in various cases such
S
v Matshona
[2008] ZASCA 58
;
[2008] 4 All SA 68
(SCA);
2013 (2) SACR 126
(SCA),
Tonkin v S
[2013] ZASCA 179
;
2014 (1) SACR 583
(SCA),
Van
Wyk v S, Galela v S
[2014] ZASCA 152
;
[2014] 4 All SA 708
(SCA);
2015 (1) SACR 584
(SCA)
and
Mthimkhulu
v S
[2016] ZASCA 180.
[2]
See
Mthimkhulu
v S
[2016] ZASCA 180
para 5.
[3]
Van
Wyk v S, Galela v S
[2014]
ZASCA 152
;
[2014] 4 All SA 708
(SCA);
2015 (1) SACR 584
(SCA)
para
21.
[4]
S v
Kajee
1965 (4) SA 274
(T) at 276. See also JRL Milton
South
African Criminal Law and Procedure, Volume III, Statutory Offences
,
Part Two 2 ed (2003) at 15-16 under the heading ‘inability to
give satisfactory account’.
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