Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 116South Africa
Du Plessis v S (A101 / 2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 116 (28 February 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Du Plessis v S (A101 / 2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 116 (28 February 2022)
Du Plessis v S (A101 / 2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 116 (28 February 2022)
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sino date 28 February 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
####
#### Case No: A101 / 2021
Case No: A101 / 2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
DIRK
DU PLESSIS
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
CORAM:
VALLY J and WILSON AJ
#####
JUDGMENT
WILSON
AJ
:
1
The Regional Court convicted the appellant, Mr. Du
Plessis, of attempted robbery with aggravating circumstances, and
sentenced him
to 15 years’ direct imprisonment. With the
Regional Court’s leave, Mr. Du Plessis now appeals against that
sentence.
The
conduct underlying the conviction
2
On 15 August 2017, Mr. Du Plessis had been smoking
crystal meth at his home in Florida. He had then driven to
Braamfontein with
two friends to buy more drugs. In Braamfontein, he
was separated from his friends, and was left alone without money, and
without
any means of transport back to Florida.
3
Mr. Du Plessis established that it would cost R260 to
get a meter taxi back to Florida. Not having that money readily
available,
Mr. Du Plessis decided to induce a taxi driver to take him
back to Florida on the strength of a promise that he would pay the
driver
with money he would collect at his destination. However, Mr.
Du Plessis had no intention of paying the taxi driver. Instead, he
placed a quantity of petrol in a takeaway coffee cup. He planned to
empty the cup out in the taxi and set it alight when he reached
his
destination. This was intended to create a diversion while he escaped
without paying his fare.
4
Mr. Du Plessis got into a taxi driven by Patrick
Mahlambi. Mr. Mahlambi agreed to take Mr. Du Plessis back to Florida
on the assurance
that Mr. Du Plessis would collect the fare at his
destination and then pay Mr. Mahlambi. During the trip to Florida,
Mr. Du Plessis
convinced Mr. Mahlambi to lend him his cell phone,
which Mr. Du Plessis then decided to steal.
5
When the taxi reached its destination, Mr. Du Plessis
poured the contents of the coffee cup onto Mr. Mahlambi and set him
alight.
He then forced Mr. Mahlambi out of the car. According to the
Regional Court’s judgment on conviction, Mr. Mahlambi exited
the car “in flames”, passed out, but then woke up a short
while later on the ground.
6
Meanwhile, Mr. Du Plessis was trying to get away with
Mr. Mahlambi’s cell phone and his car. Mr. Du Plessis could not
start
the car. This delay allowed Mr. Mahlambi to recover to the
extent necessary to pull Mr. Du Plessis out of the car, stripping Mr.
Du Plessis of his shirt in the act of doing so. Mr. Du Plessis then
tried to run away. Mr. Mahlambi pursued him in the car. Where
the
road met a railway line, Mr. Mahlambi stopped the car and pursued Mr.
Du Plessis on foot. Mr. Du Plessis fell, and Mr. Mahlambi
caught up
with him. Mr. Du Plessis then got up, punched Mr. Mahlambi in the
face and attempted to get away again. Mr. Mahlambi
was again able to
apprehend Mr. Du Plessis, push him to the ground and call for help. A
passer-by responded to Mr. Mahlambi’s
calls for assistance. The
passer-by summoned the police and an ambulance.
7
Mr. Mahlambi was taken to hospital, where it was found
that he had suffered burns over a large area of the lefthand side of
his
body and face. He was in excruciating pain and needed multiple
skin grafts. His face and body are permanently disfigured. He was
unable to work for five months after the incident, and he ran up
significant medical bills.
8
These facts are essentially common cause, although Mr.
Du Plessis sought to dispute some of the details of the incident at
trial.
Mr. Du Plessis alleged that he poured petrol onto the taxi’s
centre console, and not directly onto Mr. Mahlambi. He also sought
to
mitigate his conduct by saying he was high on drugs at the time. But,
even if these aspects of Mr. Du Plessis’ version
are accepted
as true (the Regional Court, correctly in my view, found that they
are not true), this was a serious offence. The
conduct admitted by
Mr. Du Plessis would clearly have supported a charge of attempted
murder, or, at the very least, of assault
with the intent to do
grievous bodily harm. This was no run-of-the-mill robbery.
9
Considering all this, the State’s decision to
charge Mr. Du Plessis only with attempted robbery with aggravating
circumstances
raises an eyebrow. However, since the conviction is not
at issue in this appeal, I need not explore that issue further.
The
appropriateness of the sentence
10
Given the seriousness of the conduct underlying the
offence, the Regional Court sentenced Mr. Du Plessis to 15 years’
direct
imprisonment – the very maximum of its sentencing
jurisdiction. Ms. Henzen-Du Toit, who appeared for Mr. Du Plessis
before
us, criticised that sentence as excessive. It was submitted
that an “ordinary” attempted robbery, even with
aggravating
circumstances, would normally attract a sentence of five
years, and that the imposition of ten more years was disproportionate
in the circumstances.
11
I cannot agree. The Regional Court was clearly animated
by the very serious injuries Mr. Du Plessis caused, which were an
entirely
foreseeable consequence of Mr. Du Plessis’ voluntary
and premeditated acts.
12
The Regional Court found that Mr. Du Plessis had raised
fictitious disputes about the extent to which Mr. Du Plessis’
conduct
could have caused all Mr. Mahlambi’s injuries,
especially those to his face. The Regional Court also found that Mr.
Du Plessis’
failure to appreciate and own up to the full extent
of Mr. Mahlambi’s injuries (which could not have been caused by
anything
other than Mr. Du Plessis’ premediated assault)
demonstrated a lack of remorse.
13
The Regional Court could not, in addition, have been
impressed by Mr. Du Plessis’ decision to plead not guilty and
to subject
Mr. Mahlambi to a lengthy and pedantic cross-examination
on facts that were essentially common cause. Mr. Du Plessis, who was
once
an attorney, conducted that cross-examination himself. Ms.
Henzen-Du Toit submitted that Mr. Du Plessis’ exercise of the
right to cross-examination cannot, in itself, aggravate a sentence.
That is of course true. But there are limits to cross-examination.
Cross-examination is all about the exploration of disputed facts. In
this case, there were virtually no material disputes, and
no need for
Mr. Du Plessis to have put his victim through what must have been a
harrowing re-exploration of a deeply painful and
disfiguring assault.
That must have aggravated matters, both because it re-victimised Mr.
Mahlambi, and because it constituted
a further reason to doubt that
Mr. Du Plessis felt any genuine remorse for what he had done.
14
The Regional Court considered Mr. Du Plessis’
personal circumstances, including the fact that he had turned to
drugs when
his professional and family life had broken down. It also
took into account Mr. Du Plessis’ offer to pay Mr. Mahlambi’s
outstanding medical expenses.
15
However, the Regional Court ultimately decided that the
offence was so heinous; that the degree of remorse shown was so
limited;
and that the interests of the community so clearly favoured
a lengthy custodial sentence, that a 15-year term of incarceration
was appropriate. I cannot fault the Regional Court’s
conclusions in this respect. I certainly cannot conclude that the
sentence
was disproportionate or “disturbingly inappropriate”.
(See, for example,
S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) at p
478D-G).
The
contention that the Regional Court imposed a statutory minimum
sentence
16
Ms. Henzen-Du Plessis further
contended that the Regional Court had inappropriately imposed a
statutory minimum sentence of 15 years
in a case to which it did not
apply. The nub of this argument was that both the prosecutor and the
probation officer had conducted
themselves as if Mr. Du Plessis’
offence attracted a statutory minimum sentence of 15 years in terms
of
section 51
(2) (a) (i) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997
. That provision prescribes a minimum sentence of 15 years for a
first offender convicted of robbery with aggravating circumstances,
unless substantial and compelling circumstances justify a lesser
sentence.
17
It is, of course, true that Mr. Du
Plessis was only convicted of an attempt, not of the offence of
aggravated robbery itself. It
is equally true that
section 51
(2) (a)
(i) does not apply to inchoate crimes. However, the Regional Court
was clearly alive to this, and found that the minimum
sentencing
legislation did not in fact apply to Mr. Du Plessis’
conviction. Whatever misconceptions burdened the probation
officer
and the prosecutor in this case, they were not carried through into
the Regional Court’s judgment. There is accordingly
no merit to
the contention that Mr. Du Plessis was impermissibly subjected to a
statutory minimum sentence.
Failure
to credit Mr. Du Plessis for pre-trial incarceration
18
It was finally argued that Mr. Du
Plessis had served 2 years and 3 months in pretrial detention, for
which the Regional Court should
have given him credit when it imposed
sentence. Here, Ms. Henzen-Du Toit was on much firmer ground. It is
plain from the record
that the Regional Court refused to credit Mr.
Du Plessis for his pretrial incarceration. The Regional Court found
that Mr. Du Plessis
had himself caused the delays that extended his
pretrial detention, by seeking a referral for psychiatric evaluation,
and by obtaining
postponements to brief private counsel, before
ultimately electing to represent himself.
19
It is not clear to me from the
record that Mr. Du Plessis either sought a psychiatric evaluation, or
caused any unreasonable delay
in order to obtain legal
representation. But that is beside the point. Even if Mr. Du Plessis
were responsible for the delays attributed
to him, I cannot see why
that would, in itself, disentitle him to credit for pretrial
detention at the sentencing stage.
20
We do not send people to prison for
wasting a court’s time, or for causing undue delay in judicial
proceedings, and it would
not be fair to prolong Mr. Du Plessis’
sentence even if that is what he did. Depending on the context of a
particular case,
there may, of course, be circumstances where an
accused person seeks to delay proceedings as a means to evade an
appropriate conviction
or a proper sentence. For example, delaying
the proceedings might be calculated to bring about the unavailability
of a material
witness, or the destruction of evidence. This, if
demonstrated, might ultimately be an aggravating factor when a court
considers
the sentence it should impose.
21
But that is not the case here, and
there is no reason to deny Mr. Du Plessis credit for the time he
spent in prison awaiting trial.
The Regional Court was bound to give
that credit, and it misdirected itself when it declined to do so.
22
The extent to which pretrial
detention should count towards the sentence finally imposed has been
a point of debate in the cases.
In
S v
Stephen
(1994 (2) SACR 163
(W) at
168F), Goldstein J held, relying on authority produced in Canadian
courts, that “[i]imprisonment whilst awaiting trial
is the
equivalent of a sentence of twice that length”. In
S
v Brophy
(2007 (2) SACR 56
(W) at para
18) Schwartzman J endorsed this conclusion. He bolstered it by taking
judicial notice of the conditions in which awaiting
trial prisoners
are kept and by relying on reports from the Judicial Inspector of
Prisons.
23
However, the Supreme Court of Appeal
has consistently declined to follow this approach. In
S
v Dlamini
(2012 (2) SACR 1
(SCA)),
Cachalia JA questioned its appropriateness, but ultimately left the
issue open. In
S v Radebe
(2013 (2) SACR 165
(SCA)) and in
DPP v
Gcwala
(2014 (2) SACR 337
(SCA)), Lewis
JA rejected it. Lewis JA held that the period of pretrial detention
must be considered, but that there is no general
rule applicable to
determining the credit to be given for it. It may be appropriate to
consider the conditions under which the
pretrial detention was
endured, and any reasons contributing to its prolongation. The
ultimate question, though, is whether the
sentence is, overall,
proportionate to the offence.
24
I have already concluded that the
15-year sentence the Regional Court imposed cannot be criticised as
disproportionate. The problem,
though, is that, because the Regional
Court declined to give Mr. Du Plessis any credit for the time he had
already served, 15 years
was not really the sentence imposed. The
sentence imposed was effectively one of 17 years and 3 months, which
would, in itself,
have been beyond the Regional Court’s
jurisdiction had it been imposed in those terms.
25
Mr. Du Plessis ought to have been
credited in full for his pretrial detention. For that reason, and
only that reason, the appeal
should succeed, and Mr. Du Plessis’
sentence ought to be reduced by 2 years and 3 months.
26
It was contended during argument
that Mr. Du Plessis ought to be given a greater reduction in
sentence, owing to the poor conditions
in which he was incarcerated
before trial. The problem with this contention is that there are no
facts before us to demonstrate
that Mr. Du Plessis’ pretrial
detention was appreciably worse than his incarceration as a sentenced
prisoner. Mr. Du Plessis’
application for leave to appeal makes
some allegations about his pretrial conditions, but none about those
he has had to endure
while serving his sentence. An informed
comparison is accordingly impossible. I am not satisfied that the
difference between pretrial
and post-trial prison conditions is so
well-known as to be capable of judicial notice. However, this does
not mean that, on properly
adduced evidence, and in a proper case,
pretrial detention ought not to count for more than the period
actually served. I conclude
only there are no facts on which I can
reach that conclusion in this case.
Order
27
For all these reasons, I propose
that we allow the appeal and set aside the sentence imposed by the
Regional Court. I would replace
the Regional Court’s sentence
with a sentence of direct imprisonment for 12 years and 9 months, to
run from 17 September
2019.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
I
agree. It is so ordered
VALLY
J
:
.
HEARD
ON:
24 February
2022
DECIDED
ON:
28 February 2022
For
the Appellant:
J Henzen-Du Toit
Instructed by Legal Aid
South Africa
For
the Respondent: VE Mbaduli
Instructed by the
National Prosecuting Authority
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