Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1029South Africa
Nkosi v S (A35/2022 ; 43/1077/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1029 (11 September 2023)
Headnotes
the view that the appellant had acted with an element of premeditation, when he demanded that his girlfriend must show him Sikhosana, and proceeded to confront and assault the complainant. The nature of the injuries suffered, are borne out by the medical report which was completed on 09 November 2018.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nkosi v S (A35/2022 ; 43/1077/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1029 (11 September 2023)
Nkosi v S (A35/2022 ; 43/1077/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1029 (11 September 2023)
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sino date 11 September 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 43/1077/2018
DPP
REF: 2022/020
APPEAL
NO: A35/2022
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
In the matter between:
NKOSI,
SKHUMBUZO CLEMENT
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
MDALANA-MAYISELA
et MOOSA JJ
JUDGMENT
MOOSA J:
INTRODUCTION
[1] This is an
appeal against the sentence of 3 (three) years imprisonment imposed
upon the appellant by the Regional Magistrate
– Soweto.
[2] The appellant
enjoyed legal representation during the proceedings; was convicted on
15 October 2021 of assault with intent
to do grievous bodily harm
having pleaded guilty; and sentenced on 26 October 2021 to 3 (three)
years imprisonment.
[3] He noted an
appeal having been aggrieved with the sentence and the fact that the
court,
a quo
, did not make an order in terms of section 280 of
the Criminal procedure Act 51 of 1977, to the effect that the
sentence imposed
must be served concurrently with the sentence the
appellant was serving at the time. He was subsequently granted leave
to appeal
against his sentence on 10 March 2022.
AD EVIDENCE AND
CAUSE OF COMPLAINT
[4] The basis of
the appellant’s plea was that he had been annoyed by the fact
that his girlfriend had been missing
for the whole weekend of 04
November 2018. He subsequently discovered that she had gone to see
her other boyfriend, Phindani Sikhosana
(‘Sikhosana’).
The appellant duly confronted Sikhosana and assaulted him with fists
and a pipe on his face and body,
causing him to suffer grievous
bodily harm.
[5] The court held
the view that the appellant had acted with an element of
premeditation, when he demanded that his girlfriend
must show him
Sikhosana, and proceeded to confront and assault the complainant. The
nature of the injuries suffered, are borne
out by the medical report
which was completed on 09 November 2018.
[6] During the
pre-sentencing proceedings, it emerged that the appellant was serving
sentences on convictions of attempted
murder and robbery with
aggravating circumstances. In essence, the appellant was serving a
sentence of 21 (twenty one) years imprisonment.
[7] The appellant
argues that the trial court erred and misdirected itself when it
failed to order that the sentence of 3
(three) years imposed for the
assault GBH conviction run concurrently with the sentences that he
was currently serving. Further
arguing that the court misdirected
itself in not taking into account the cumulative effect of a sentence
of a total of 24 (twenty
four) years imprisonment, and that such
failure to do so induces a sense of shock.
[8] The appellant
complains that the sentence imposed is shockingly inappropriate and
therefore severe under the circumstances.
Further, requesting this
court to set aside the sentence so imposed, and to substitute it with
a lesser sentence which this Court
deems appropriate under the
circumstances.
THE LAW
[9]
It is trite that the circumstances in which a court of appeal may
interfere in sentencing discretion of a lower court
are limited.
There must be either a material misdirection by the trial court or
the disparity between the sentence of the trial
court and the
sentence of the appellate court would have imposed, had it been the
trial court is so marked, that it can properly
be described as
“shocking”, “startling” or “disturbingly
inappropriate”.
[1]
[10] In
S v
Anderson
1964 (3) SA 494
(A) 495 D-E
Rumpff JA (as he then
was) stated:
"Over the years our Courts of appeal have
attempted to set out various principles by which they seek to be
guided when they
are asked to alter a sentence imposed by the trial
court. These include the following: the sentence will not be altered
unless
it is held that no reasonable man ought to have imposed such a
sentence, or that the sentence is out of all proportion to the
gravity
or magnitude of the offence, or that the sentence induces a
sense of shock or outrage, or that the sentence is grossly excessive
or inadequate, or that there was an improper exercise of his
discretion by the trial Judge, or that the interests of justice
require
it."
[11] In
S v
Rabie
1975 (4) SA 855
(A
) at 857 D – E the following was
stated: “In any appeal against sentence, whether imposed by a
magistrate or a Judge,
the court hearing the appeal –
(a) should be
guided by the principle that punishment is pre-eminently a matter for
the discretion of the trial court and;
(b) should be
careful not to erode such discretion: hence the further principle
that the sentence should only be altered
if the discretion has not
been ‘judicially and properly exercised’.
The test under (b) is
whether the sentence is vitiated by irregularity or misdirection or
is disturbingly inappropriate”.
[12] In
S v
Kgosimore
1999 (2) SACR 238
SCA
it was held that the approach of
a Court of appeal on sentence should be the following:
“
It is trite
law that sentence is a matter for the discretion of the court
burdened with the task of imposing the sentence. Various
tests have
been formulated as to when a court of appeal may interfere. These
include, whether the reasoning of the trial court
is vitiated by
misdirection or whether the sentence imposed can be said to be
startlingly inappropriate or to induce a sense of
shock or whether
there is a striking disparity between the sentence imposed and the
sentence the court of appeal would have imposed.
All these
formulations, however, are aimed at determining the same thing: viz.
whether there was a proper and reasonable exercise
of the discretion
bestowed upon the court imposing sentence. In the ultimate analysis
this is the true enquiry. (Cf
S v Pieters
1987 (3) SA 717
(A) at 727 G – I
). Either the discretion was
properly and reasonable exercised or it was not. If it was, a court
of appeal has no power to interfere;
if it was not, it is free to do
so”.
[13] In
S v
Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) at 478 D – G
the Court
applied a broadened scope for the interference and held that:
“
However, even
in the absence of material misdirection, an appellate court may yet
be justified in interfering with the sentence
imposed by the trial
court. It may do so when the disparity between the sentence of the
trial court and the sentence which the
appellate court would have
imposed had it been the trial court is so marked that it can properly
be described as “shocking”,
“startling” or
disturbingly inappropriate”. It must be emphasised that in the
latter situation the appellate
court is not at large in the sense in
which it is at large in the former. In the latter situation it may
not substitute the sentence
which it thinks appropriate merely
because it does not accord with the sentence imposed by the trial
court or because it prefers
it to that sentence. It may do so only
where the difference is so substantial that it attracts epithets of
the kind I have mentioned”.
[14]
Section 280
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
provides as follows:
Cumulative or
concurrent sentences:
(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 punishment 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 concurrent.
ANALYSIS
[15]
Having due regard to the aforementioned principles set out by the
case authority it is clear that the Court of Appeal
has a very
limited scope to interfere with the discretion of the trial court.
The Court of Appeal is in any event able to interfere
with the trial
Court on sentence in respect of a finding as to substantial and
compelling circumstances even in the absence of
material misdirection
or a failure of the exercise of discretion.
[2]
[16] It is clear
from a proper reading of the judgment on sentence that the court
a
quo
was full well aware of the fact that it was required to weigh
and balance a variety of factors to determine a measure of morale as
opposed to legal blameworthiness of an accused
.
To this end it
is clear that the sentencing court properly applied the principles as
set out in S v Zinn, and duly considered the
personal circumstances
of the appellant.
[17]
It is trite law that once it becomes clear that the crime is
deserving of a substantial period of imprisonment, the question
whether the accused is married or single, whether he has children or
whether he is employed, becomes largely immaterial.
[3]
[18]
It is axiomatic that the determination of an appropriate sentence is
a matter that has to be determined on case by case basis,
and that
the merits and circumstances of each and every case differ. I have
duly noted that the two convictions for which the appellant
has been
sentenced clearly involve the element of violence, on the part of the
appellant. To that it must be added that the conviction
of assault
with intent to do grievous bodily harm also involves an element of
violence. Hence, in the circumstances the inescapable
conclusion is
that the appellant is a violent individual, and accordingly the
public needs to be protected from him, and his violent
tendencies.
[19]
For the purpose of the appeal, it is necessary to determine as to
whether, having due regard to the totality of the evidence,
the court
a quo
imposed
a sentence which was appropriate and in accordance with justice and
equity, and one that is in accordance with what the
Supreme Court of
Appeal would approve. Put differently, was it a just sentence that
was imposed upon the appellant.
[20]
In
S v Kibido
1998 (2) SACR
213
(SCA)
at
216 g - I Olivier JA enunciated the trite principle as follows when
an appellate Court considers sentence on appeal:
“
Now,
it is trite law that the determination of a sentence in a criminal
matter is pre-eminently a matter for the discretion of the
trial
court. In the exercise of this function the trial court has a wide
discretion in (a) deciding which factors should be allowed
to
influence the court in determining the measure of punishment and (b)
in determining the value to attach to each factor taken
into account
(see S v Fazzie and
Others
1964
(4) SA 673
(A
)
at 684A - B; S v
Pillay
1977
(4) SA 531
(A)
at 535A-B). A failure to take certain factors into account or an
improper determination of the value of such factors amounts to
a
misdirection, but only when the dictates of justice carry clear
conviction that an error has been
committed
in this regard (
S
v Fazzie and Others
(supra)
at 684B - C;
S
v Pillay
(supra)
at 535E).
Furthermore,
a mere misdirection is not by itself sufficient to entitle a Court of
appeal to interfere with the sentence; it 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 (see Trollip JA in S v Pillay (supra) at
535E - G).”
See
also S v Moswathupa
2012
(1) SACR 259
(SCA)
at para 4, S v Sadler
2000
(1) SACR 331
(A)
at 334-335 para 8-9;S v Rabie1975
(4) SA 855
(A)
at 857D – F; S v Malgas2001
(1) SACR 469
(SCA)
at
478, para 12, S v Sadler2000
(1) SACR 331
(A)
at
334-335 para 8-9.
[4]
[21]
In S v Moswathupa (supra) it was held that a court must not lose
sight of the fact that the aggregate penalty must not
be unduly
severe when dealing with multiple offences.
Against
this backdrop, in my view there is no merit in the argument that the
trial court misdirected itself in concluding that the
only sentence
to be imposed was direct imprisonment.
All
things considered there is nothing evoking a sense of shock in the
sentence imposed by the trial court requiring any interference
on
appeal.
[22] I have
carefully considered the record of proceedings and the veracity of
the evidence, and am satisfied that the court
a quo
properly
took into account all the relevant factors that needed to have been
taken into account when arriving at, and imposing
the sentence of 3
(three) years imprisonment.
[23]
I do not think that the aggregate penalty is unduly severe, and am
satisfied that the trial court a quo properly considered
the
provisions and purport of
section 280(2)
, and having done so
correctly concluded that the sentence of 3 (three) years not to run
concurrently with the other sentences previously
imposed.
[24] I pause to
mention, that I am satisfied that there is no other sentence to have
been imposed upon the appellant, save
for the one so imposed by the
court
a quo
, In any event the sentence imposed is not out of
kilter with the sentence that we would have imposed, in the
circumstances. It
is clear that this conviction is a separate
conviction, after the appellant was sentenced previously. I am unable
to find any support
for the contention that the trial court
a quo
was duty bound to have ordered that the sentence of 3 (three) years
run concurrently in terms of
section 280
of the
Criminal Procedure
Act.
[25
]
Accordingly in my view, the sentence of 3 (three) years is a just and
equitable sentence that was imposed upon the appellant,
and requires
no further scrutiny.
It follows that the
appeal against the sentence must fail.
ORDER
[26] In the result,
I make the following order:
[a]. Condonation for the
late filing of the appellant’s heads of argument is hereby
granted.
[b] The appeal
against the sentence imposed is dismissed and the sentence of 3
(three) years imprisonment imposed by the trial
court is confirmed.
C I MOOSA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
MONDAY, 11 SEPTEMBER
2023
I agree:
MMP
MDALANA-MAYISELA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
MONDAY, 11 SEPTEMBER
2023
Counsel for Appellant:
Adv L F Musekwa
Instructed by:
Johannesburg Justice
Centre
56
Main Street
Johannesburg
Tel:
0118701480
LutendoM@legal-aid.co.za
Counsel for
Respondent:
Adv MM Mbaqa
Instructed by:
Director of Public
Prosecutions
Johannesburg
Tel:
0112204072
MMbaqa@npa.gov.za
Date of Hearing:
05 June 2023
Date
of Judgment: 11 SEPTEMBER 2023
[1]
S
v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) at 478 d - g
[2]
S
v Tafeni
2016 (2) SACR 720
at 723
[3]
S
v Machaba and Another 2016(1) SACR 1 (SCA) at 40
[4]
Setholo
v
S 2017
(1)SACR
544
(NCK)
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