S v Kai (R20/2022) [2022] ZAFSHC 143 (6 June 2022)

80 Reportability
Criminal Procedure

Brief Summary

Criminal Procedure — Maintenance — Failure to pay maintenance — Accused convicted of contravening the Maintenance Act — Accused ordered to pay maintenance for two minor children and former spouse, but failed to comply, resulting in arrears — Accused sentenced to two years imprisonment on multiple counts, with one count exceeding statutory penalty limits. Convictions confirmed; sentence on count 3 set aside and replaced with one year imprisonment to run concurrently.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter was an automatic review conducted in terms of section 302 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. The review was undertaken by the High Court of South Africa, Free State Division, Bloemfontein, constituted by Opperman J and Van Rhyn J.


The proceedings arose from a criminal prosecution in the Excelsior Magistrates’ Court in which the State prosecuted Adriaan Jacobus Kai (the accused). Mr Kai faced two counts of contravening section 31(1) of the Maintenance Act 99 of 1998 (failure to comply with maintenance orders), and a third count of contravening section 39 of the Maintenance Act 99 of 1998 (failure to give notice of a change of address or employment as required).


The procedural history was that the accused was arrested on 18 February 2021, appeared in court on 22 February 2021, and the trial commenced on 5 July 2021, at which stage he appeared in person and elected not to participate verbally in the proceedings. He was convicted on all counts and sentenced on 5 July 2021. The trial magistrate transmitted the record for automatic review on 6 July 2021. The review process was delayed because the review file was misplaced at the Registrar’s office and only reached the reviewing judge on 2 June 2022.


The general subject-matter of the dispute on review was whether the convictions and, in particular, the sentence imposed (notably on count 3) were in accordance with law and justice, given the statutory sentencing limits in the Maintenance Act.


2. Material Facts


It was alleged in the charge sheet that, on 9 November 2015, the accused was ordered by the Durban Magistrates’ Court to pay maintenance for his two minor children in the amount of R2 800 per month from 25 November 2015. It was further alleged that he failed to make the required payments for the period August 2018 to January 2020, having paid R25 200 when he ought to have paid R50 400, resulting in arrears of R25 200.


A second maintenance obligation was recorded as having been made on 27 February 2020, requiring payment of R1 000 per month in respect of the complainant (the accused’s former wife and the mother of the two minor children), and R2 800 in respect of the two children. The arrears in relation to this second count were stated as R49 400.


Count 3 concerned an alleged failure by the accused to give notice of a change of address (place of residence or employment) as required by section 16(4) of the Maintenance Act 99 of 1998, constituting an offence under section 39 of that Act.


The trial court accepted as established that the maintenance orders themselves were not placed in dispute, and that the accused failed to comply with them. The evidence summarised by the reviewing court included that only payments received by the complainant were made during the period when the accused was employed and a garnishee order operated against him, and that once he became self-employed he failed to adhere to the maintenance orders.


An aggravating feature recorded for sentencing purposes was that the accused had a previous conviction for failure to pay maintenance. On 30 July 2018, in the Excelsior Magistrates’ Court (case number 106/2017), he was convicted of contravening section 31 of the Maintenance Act and sentenced to a fine of R3 000 or six months’ imprisonment, wholly suspended for three years on conditions linked to non-reoffending.


The material fact that triggered the review intervention was that the accused was sentenced on 5 July 2021 to two years’ direct imprisonment on counts 1, 2 and 3 taken together for purposes of sentence, notwithstanding that the offence in count 3 (contravention of section 39) carries a maximum term of imprisonment of one year.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question on review concerned the competency and lawfulness of the sentence imposed, particularly whether the sentencing court could impose a term of imprisonment on count 3 that effectively exceeded the statutory maximum prescribed by section 39 of the Maintenance Act 99 of 1998.


The dispute on review was predominantly a question of law, namely the correct application of the statutory sentencing provision in section 39 to the sentence imposed. It also involved the application of law to the sentencing order actually made by the magistrate, because the trial court had grouped the counts for purposes of sentence and imposed a single term of imprisonment.


The review court also had to determine, within its automatic review function, whether the convictions and the remaining sentence components (counts 1 and 2) were in accordance with justice, although the specific legal defect identified related to the penalty limitation applicable to count 3.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The reviewing court approached the matter as an automatic review under section 302 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, which entails scrutiny of the regularity and legality of the proceedings and sentence. The reviewing judge recorded that the trial magistrate explicitly drew attention to the sentencing limitation in section 39, signalling that the sentence imposed on count 3 might be incompetent.


The court applied the statutory text of section 39 of the Maintenance Act 99 of 1998, which provides that a person who fails to give notice of a change of residence or employment as required by section 16(4) is liable on conviction to a fine or to imprisonment “for a period not exceeding one year”. On this basis, the court reasoned that any sentence imposed for a contravention of section 39 may not lawfully exceed 12 months’ imprisonment.


Against that statutory framework, the court evaluated the sentence that had been imposed. Because the magistrate sentenced the accused to two years’ direct imprisonment on counts 1, 2 and 3 taken together, the reviewing court held that the sentence attributable to count 3 necessarily exceeded what section 39 permits. The court therefore concluded that the sentence on count 3 was not in accordance with the law and had to be set aside to the extent of the excess.


The reviewing court expressly stated that it considered the convictions on all three counts to be in accordance with justice. It did not identify any reviewable irregularity affecting the findings of guilt. The intervention was therefore confined to correcting the sentence so that it complied with the applicable statutory maximum, while leaving intact the lawful components of the sentencing structure.


In formulating a corrected sentencing order, the reviewing court confirmed the two-year imprisonment sentences on counts 1 and 2 and addressed count 3 by substituting a sentence of one year’s imprisonment, with the further directive that the sentence on count 3 run concurrently with those imposed on counts 1 and 2. This ensured both statutory compliance (by keeping count 3 within the one-year ceiling) and coherence in the overall punishment structure as ordered.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court confirmed the convictions on counts 1, 2 and 3.


The court confirmed the sentence on counts 1 and 2, namely two years’ imprisonment on each count, ordered to run concurrently.


The court set aside the sentence imposed on count 3 and substituted it with one year’s imprisonment, ordered to run concurrently with the sentences on counts 1 and 2.


No separate costs order arose from the automatic review disposition reflected in the judgment.


Cases Cited


No cases were cited in the judgment.


Legislation Cited


The Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 302, was cited as the basis for the automatic review.


The Maintenance Act 99 of 1998, sections 31(1) and 39, and section 16(4) (as incorporated by section 39), were cited in relation to the offences and the applicable penalty provision.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the sentence imposed on count 3 was not competent in law because section 39 of the Maintenance Act 99 of 1998 limits imprisonment for that offence to a period not exceeding one year. As a result, the sentence on count 3 had to be set aside and replaced with a sentence within the statutory maximum.


The court further held that the convictions on all three counts were in accordance with justice, and that the sentences on counts 1 and 2 were confirmed, with concurrency maintained to regulate the effective term of imprisonment.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A sentence must fall within the statutory maximum prescribed for the offence of conviction; where legislation limits imprisonment to a specified period, a longer term is unlawful and must be corrected on review.


In an automatic review under section 302 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, the High Court may confirm convictions and sentences that are in accordance with justice, but must set aside or vary any component of sentence that is not in accordance with law, including where a sentencing court exceeds the penalty jurisdiction provided by statute.


Where multiple sentences are imposed or adjusted, a reviewing court may direct that terms of imprisonment run concurrently in order to preserve the structure of the punishment while ensuring statutory compliance for each individual count.

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[2022] ZAFSHC 143
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S v Kai (R20/2022) [2022] ZAFSHC 143 (6 June 2022)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Reportable:
YES/NO
Of
Interest to other Judges: YES/NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES/NO
REVIEW
NUMBER
R20/2022
In
the review case of:
THE
STATE
And
ADRIAAN
JACOBUS
CORAM:
OPPERMAN,

J et I VAN RHYN, J
DELIVERED:
6
JUNE
2022
JUDGMENT
BY:                I
VAN RHYN, J
[1]
This is a automatic review in terms of the provisions of section 302
of the Criminal
Procedure Act, Act 51 of 1977 (“CPA”).
The accused in this matter, Mr. Adriaan Jacobus Kai was arraigned in
February
2021 in the Excelsior Magistrate’s Court on two
charges of contravening
section 31(1)
of the
Maintenance Act 99 of
1998
and a third charge, count 3, of contravening section 39 of the
Maintenance Act 99 of 1998 (the “Act”).
[2]
As per the charge sheet it is alleged that:
On
9 November 2015 the accused was ordered by the Magistrates Court,
Durban to pay maintenance in respect of his two minor children
in the
amount of R2 800.00 per month from 25 November 2015. The accused
failed to make such payments for the period from August
2018 to
January 2020 in that he paid maintenance in the amount of R25 200
where in fact he ought to have paid the amount of
R50 400.00.
The arrears amount to R25 200.00. With regard to count 2, the
accused was ordered by this court on 27 February
2020, to pay
maintenance in the monthly amount of R1000.00 in respect of the
complainant, Valdi Heloise Kai (the accused former
wife and mother of
his two children) and R2 800 in respect of his two children. The
amount in arears regarding count 2 is
R 49 400.00. Count 3
relates to the accused’s failure to give notice of a change of
address of his place of residence
or employment as required in terms
of the provisions of section 16(4) of the Act.
[3]
The accused was arrested on 18 February 2021 and appeared in the
Magistrate’s
Court for the district Excelsior on 22 February
2021 on the above-mentioned charges. The trail commenced on 5 July
2021. The accused
appeared in person during the trial. He furthermore
elected not to speak during the court proceedings. The accused
consulted with
an attorney from Legal Aid prior to the commencement
of the proceedings who then indicated to the court that the accused
understands
the court proceedings, and does not want to be
represented by an attorney.
[4]
When the charges were put to the accused, he failed to respond
whereafter the court
recorded a plea of not guilty in respect of all
the charges against him. The evidence of the complainant was
presented during the
trial. According to the complainant the parties
were married during 2009 and she and the two minor children left the
accused during
2014. The complainant obtained maintenance orders in
the Magistrates Court at Durban prior to the divorce order being
granted by
the High Court, Bloemfontein. The complainant furthermore
elaborated upon her endeavours to trace the accused in order to
assist
the members of the South African Police Service to arrest the
accused.
[5]
The complainant ascertained that, subsequent to the accused losing
his employment,
he started selling the parties’ assets of which
she did not receive any reimbursement even though they were married
in community
of property. Evidence regarding the accused’s
postings on Facebook, where he advertised his work as a handyman, was
delivered
by the complainant regarding the accused’s income
during the relevant period. The court found that the maintenance
orders
granted against the accused were not placed in dispute and
that the accused failed to comply with such orders. The accused was
convicted as charged on all three counts.
[6]
An aggravating factor taken into consideration by the presiding
magistrate, is a previous
conviction relating to his failure to pay
maintenance towards his children. On 30 July 2018 the accused was
convicted on case number
106/2017, at Excelsior, for contravention of
section 31 of the Act and was sentenced to a fine of R3000.00 or six
months imprisonment
suspended wholly for three years on condition
that he is not convicted of contravening section 31(1) read with
sections 31(2),
31(3), 31(4) of the Act committed during the period
of suspension.
[7]
The trial court found that the only payments received by the
complainant was at the
time when the accused was in the employment of
his former employer and payments were made in terms of a garnishing
order against
him. Since he became self- employed, he failed to
adhere to the maintenance orders. On 5 July 2021 the accused was
sentenced to
two years direct imprisonment on counts 1, 2 and 3,
taken together for purposes of sentence.
[8]
On 6 July 2021 Magistrate E de Lange, who adjudicated upon this
matter during the
trial at Excelsior, forwarded the record of
proceedings to the Registrar of the High Court, Free State Division
at Bloemfontein
for purposes of an automatic review. Due to the
review file being misplaced in the Registrar’s office, the
matter was only
handed to me on 2 June 2022.  In her letter, the
Magistrate indicated that section 39 of the Act provides for a
penalty clause
of a fine or imprisonment for a period not exceeding
one year. The sentence on the third count is therefore not a
competent sentence.
[9]
Section 39 of the Act provides as follows:

39 Offences
relating to notice of change of address
Any person who refuses or
fails to give notice of any change of his or her place of residence
or employment as required by section
16(4) shall be guilty of an
offence and liable on conviction to a fine or to imprisonment for a
period not exceeding one year”
[10]
In the circumstances the sentence imposed on count 3 exceeds the
period of one year and thus
the sentence imposed on this count is not
in accordance with the law and falls to be set aside. I am of the
view that the conviction
on all three counts is in accordance with
justice.
[11]
In the result, I would make the following order:
ORDER:
1.
The convictions on counts 1, 2 and 3 are confirmed.
2.
The sentence imposed on counts 1 and 2 of two years imprisonment on
each count,
to run concurrently, is confirmed
3.
The sentence imposed on count 3 is set aside and the accused is
sentenced to
one year imprisonment to run concurrently with the
sentences imposed on counts 1 and 2.
VAN RHYN, J
I
agree and it is so ordered.
OPPERMAN,
J