Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 250South Africa
S v Moyo (25/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 250 (21 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 April 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Moyo (25/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 250 (21 April 2022)
S v Moyo (25/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 250 (21 April 2022)
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sino date 21 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No:
25/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE:
21 April 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
FITTWELL
SIPHOESIHLE
MOYO
Accused
CORAM:
ISMAIL J and WILSON AJ
#####
JUDGMENT
WILSON
AJ
:
1
The District Court convicted the
accused person, Ms. Moyo, of fraud. The conviction was returned on
Ms. Moyo’s guilty plea.
The District Court sentenced Ms. Moyo
to 18 months’ imprisonment, with the option of a fine of R1800.
The District Court
also imposed a further 18 months’
imprisonment wholly suspended on condition that Ms. Moyo is not
convicted again of the
crime of fraud, attempted fraud, theft or
attempted theft during the period of suspension.
2
The Acting Senior Magistrate placed
the conviction and sentence before us on special review, in terms of
section 304 (4) of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the
Act”). The Acting Senior Magistrate drew our attention to the
sentence imposed.
He suggested that the first term of 18 months’
imprisonment imposed ought to have been expressed as an alternative
to the
fine, and not the other way around; that the R1800 fine was
incommensurate with the term of imprisonment; and that the condition
on which the District Court suspended the second term of 18 months’
imprisonment was so wide as to be prejudicial.
3
I accept that the Acting Senior
Magistrate’s concerns are well-founded, but I consider that the
difficulties that arise in
this case go far deeper that the terms of
the sentence imposed.
The
guilty plea
4
The substrate of Ms. Moyo’s
guilty plea was a written statement handed-in under section 112 (2)
of the Act. That statement
was, in my view, woefully inadequate to
support a guilty plea on a charge of fraud.
5
The first part of the statement does
little more than repeat the elements of the offence. Ms. Moyo admits
that she “unlawfully
and falsely, with the intent to defraud,
and to the potential prejudice of Jet store, gave out and pretended
to one Asnath Sherinda
that [she] was authorised to use” a Jet
store card to purchase a cell phone worth just under R5000.
6
It is trite that a plea explanation
under section 112 (2) of the Act must do more than recite the
elements of the offence (
S v Chetty
2008 SACR 157
(W) at 160i-j). Factual averments that “adequately
support” a conviction on the charge are required (
S
v Shiburi
2018 (2) SACR 485
(SCA) at
paragraph 19). “Adequate support” means nothing less than
the admission of facts which leave the court in
no reasonable doubt
that the accused person has committed the offence on which they stand
charged. Those facts must address both
the accused person’s
acts and their state of mind.
7
The second part of Ms. Moyo’s
statement, in which a narration of that sort is attempted, does not
meet the requirements of
section 112 (2). Ms. Moyo says that she “was
approached by two of [her] neighbours who tasked [her] to assist them
in buying
a cell phone”. They promised to give Ms. Moyo R500
for her help. Despite being “suspicious as the card was not
signed
at the back”, Ms. Moyo agreed to do as she was asked
because she “needed money to survive as [she was] not
employed”.
Ms. Moyo went to the Jet store in Cresta, and
presented the card she had been given to purchase the cell phone. The
cashier (presumably
Ms. Sherinda) saw that the card was not signed on
the back and asked whether the card belonged to Ms. Moyo. Ms. Moyo
said that
it did not belong to her. She said that she had been sent
by her neighbours to buy the cell phone with it.
8
These are the material admissions on
which the District Court accepted Ms. Moyo’s plea. As should be
plain, they do not amount
to an admission that Ms. Moyo committed
fraud.
The
nature of fraud
9
Fraud is the unlawful making of a
misrepresentation, with the intent to defraud, which causes actual or
potential prejudice to the
representee or some other person (see JRL
Milton
South African Criminal Law and
Procedure
Volume 2 3rd edition at page
707). It is not clear to me from Ms. Moyo’s statement either
that she made a misrepresentation,
or that she intended to defraud.
When asked whether the card was hers, Ms. Moyo said that it was not.
She said that she had been
sent by her neighbours to purchase a cell
phone with it. She did not say whether it belonged to her neighbours.
She said simply
that it was not hers.
10
Ms. Moyo does not confirm that she
knew that the card did not belong to her neighbours, or that she had
any knowledge – rather
than suspicions – of their reasons
for sending her to buy the phone. There was, in fact, nothing before
the District Court
that established to whom the card actually
belonged. I am accordingly unable to see, from her statement, at what
point Ms. Moyo
misrepresented anything. It is true that the mere
presentation of the card in the knowledge that it was not hers might
have counted
as a misrepresentation, had Ms. Moyo not immediately
clarified that the card belonged to someone else. I am unable to
locate any
authority on which the mere purchase of goods with the
card of another is an act of fraud. If it is, then that offence must
be
committed thousands of times a day.
11
It is possible, of course, to
read-in to Ms. Moyo’s statement that the Jet card did not
belong to her neighbours, and that
she knew that they were using it
to obtain the cell phone fraudulently. But that is not enough. A
conviction must be based on fact,
not innuendo. Ms. Moyo’s
statement leaves a wide array of other possibilities open. For
example, the statement does not exclude
the possibility that the Jet
card belonged to one of Ms. Moyo’s two neighbours, and that she
used it with their permission.
In that event, no crime has been
committed at all.
12
Plainly, Ms. Moyo’s statement
did not “adequately support” her guilty plea. That being
so, the District Court
was not entitled, without more, to accept that
plea. The District Court ought to have questioned Ms. Moyo on the
statement, with
the aim of satisfying itself that she really was
guilty of fraud. That is what section 112 (2) of the Act requires if
the statement
handed up leaves any room for reasonable doubt of an
accused person’s guilt. In this case Ms. Moyo’s statement
plainly
left a great deal of room to doubt her guilt. Accordingly,
neither her conviction nor her sentence can stand.
Further
requirements for accepting a guilty plea
13
On setting aside Ms. Moyo’s
conviction and sentence, section 312 (1) of the Act requires us to
remit the matter to the District
Court and direct it to comply with
section 112 (2). Given that this is the statutorily prescribed
remedy, it may be of assistance
to restate the further requirements
for accepting a plea of guilty. Apart from the failure of the
statement handed up to adequately
support Ms. Moyo’s guilty
plea, I am not satisfied on the record before me that these further
requirements were fully complied
with either.
14
A court must, as I have said, be
satisfied that
a statement handed up under section 112 (2) of
the Act
leaves no room for reasonable doubt as to
the accused person’s guilt as charged.
If these facts do
not appear from the statement, then the Court must establish whether
they exist by questioning the accused appropriately
on the statement.
15
However, a court must also be
satisfied that the accused person understands that each admission
made in the statement is conclusive
proof of the allegation admitted,
and that the court may convict them on those admissions if they
establish the accused person’s
guilt as charged; that the
statement was made freely and voluntarily, in the absence of any
undue influence; that the accused person
has read and understood each
admission contained in the statement; that the statement correctly
records the facts that the accused
person wishes to admit; and that
the accused person is fully informed of the constitutional rights
waived by a guilty plea. It
must appear on the record that these
requirements have been met (see
S v
Sellars
[1991] 3 All SA 28
(N) at page
29).
16
It appears that the relevant
authorities have until now only stated these requirements in matters
where an accused person is unrepresented.
However, I do not see why
they should not also apply when an accused person has legal
representation. Depending on the facts, it
may be sufficient if an
accused person’s legal representative confirms on the record
that the requirements I have set out
are met. It may also –
conceivably – be sufficient if the written statement handed up
under section 112 (2) confirms
that they are met, is signed by the
accused person, and counter-signed by their legal representative.
Although the way the requirements
are met might change when an
accused person is legally represented, those requirements cannot as,
a matter of law, apply any differently,
or any less stringently.
Ms.
Moyo’s children
17
Finally, since Ms. Moyo is the
primary caregiver to three children, the youngest of which was 2 at
the time sentence was passed,
it is striking that the District Court
had no regard at all to the decision of the Constitutional Court in
S
v M
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2008 (3) SA 232
(CC). That decision
requires a careful and sensitive inquiry into Ms. Moyo’s
children’s best interests, and how they
would be affected by
any term of imprisonment that might be imposed. If the matter in
future progresses to the sentencing stage,
the repetition of that
error ought to be avoided.
18
For all these reasons, I propose the
following order –
18.1
Ms. Moyo’s conviction and sentence
are reviewed and set aside. In the event that Ms. Moyo is in custody,
she is to be released
forthwith, and is directed to appear again
before the District Court when summoned.
18.2
The matter is remitted to the District
Court. The District Court is directed to comply with section 112 (2)
of the Act in further
proceedings consistent with this judgment.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
ISMAIL
J:
19
I agree and it is so ordered.
M
ISMAIL
Judge
of the High Court
RECEIVED
ON: 16 March 2022
DECIDED
ON: 21 April 2022
No
appearances
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