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[2018] ZAFSHC 206
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Ndaba v S (A120/2018) [2018] ZAFSHC 206 (23 August 2018)
FREE
STATE HIGH COURT, BLOEMFONTEIN
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
No. :
A120/2018
In
the matter between:-
SIPHIWE
NDABA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
CORAM:
DAFFUE, J
et
MOLITSOANE,
J
HEARD:
6 AUGUST 2018
JUDGMENT
BY
P.E. MOLITSOANE
DELIVERED:
23 AUGUST 2018
[1]
The appellant was convicted and sentenced in the Regional Court held
at Harrismith on a charge of robbery with aggravating circumstances.
He was sentenced to 15 (fifteen) years imprisonment. Leave to appeal
against his sentence was dismissed by the trial court. This
appeal on
sentence is with leave of this court.
[2]
The facts surrounding this appeal are briefly as follows:
On
the 9
th
November
2012 the appellant was at Harrismith. He robbed the complainant of
his truck and stock valued in total at R477 174.00.
He used a firearm
to commit this robbery. The appellant then drove the truck to Mooi
River where he offloaded the stock. He dumped
the truck and the
driver on the road. He was later apprehended and charged. He was
convicted on the strength of his guilty plea.
[3]
In sentencing, the court
a quo
found that the appellant was a second offender as envisaged in
s51(2)(a)(ii)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
The offence which is the subject of this appeal was committed on the
9
th
November 2012.
The ‘previous conviction’ referred to by the court was
committed on the 20
th
December 2012 and thus this offence, which is the subject of this
appeal, was committed prior to the ‘previous conviction’.
“A previous conviction may be described as one which occurred
before the offence under trial.”- See
S
v Zonele and Others
1959(3) SA 319(A) at 330
C-D. Ms. Moroka on behalf of the respondent conceded, in my view
rightly so, that the court
a quo
erred in finding that the appellant was a second offender and thus
the minimum sentence of 20 years was applicable to him.
[4]
Ms. Kruger who appeared for the respondent contended that the offence
was not premeditated and was committed in the spur of
the moment. She
further submits that the court
a quo
erred by not ordering that the sentence herein should run
concurrently with the sentence of 30(thirty) years imprisonment the
appellant is already serving.
[5]
On the other hand, Adv. Moroka aligns herself with the finding of the
court
a quo
that this offence was not committed in the spur of
the moment. She submits that the court
a quo
did not err when
it did not order the sentence herein to run concurrently with the
sentence the appellant is already serving. She
submits that there is
no close connection between this conviction and the one the appellant
is already serving. She argues that
the two differ in time and place.
[6]
Appellant relies on the following grounds of appeal:
1.
That the Court
a quo
erred in finding that no compelling and substantial circumstances are
present to deviate from the prescribed minimum sentence;
2.
That the Court
a quo
erred by not ordering that the sentence imposed
in
casu
should run concurrently with the
sentence the Appellant is currently serving.
[7]
Punishment is pre-eminently
in the discretion of the trial court. The court exercising appellate
jurisdiction will not lightly
interfere
with the said discretion
unless such a discretion is vitiated by irregularity or is
disturbingly inappropriate. See
S
v Rabie
1975(2)
SA 855(A) at 857 D-F;
S
v Fhetani
2007
(2) SACR 590
(SCA) at para [5].
[8]
The appellant was charged with robbery with aggravating circumstances
read with the provisions of
s51
(2) (a) of Act 105 of 1997. The
appellant was a first offender as alluded above. The court was
obliged to impose an imprisonment
term of 15 years imprisonment
unless the court found that there existed substantial and compelling
circumstances warranting the
imposition of a lesser sentence. The
court
a quo
started with an erroneous finding that the accused
was a second offender and that it was incumbent to impose a minimum
sentence
of 20 years imprisonment.
[9]
The court in its judgment on sentence said the following:
“
The
Court having noted that you have pleaded guilty, in spite the fact
that there was a strong case against you that is another
way of
showing remorse. Furthermore that the driver in question is not
injured; items were recovered. The court is of the opinion
that it
will take a note that substantial and compelling.”
[This
sentence seems to be incomplete]
The
above quoted paragraph, save for the submissions by Counsel seem to
be the only reference concerning substantial and compelling
circumstances.
[10]
Section 51(3) of Act 105 of 1997 obliges the court where substantial
and compelling circumstances are found to exist to minute
them on
record. The court
a quo
must have found that such circumstances existed in this case hence it
deviated from imposing the prescribed sentence of 20 years
imprisonment and imposed 15 years imprisonment. I am unable to
agree with the finding of the court
a quo
that
there are substantial and compelling circumstances in this case.
[11]
Contrary to the submission that this offence was committed in the
spur of the moment, the inference sought to be drawn is difficult
to
sustain on the objective facts of this case. It is apparent that the
appellant was armed with a firearm. He saw this truck
full of
baby nappies. On his version he decided to rob it as he wanted to
make a profit. After the robbery he drove it to Mooi
River to deliver
them and thereafter he dumped the driver and the truck. It is
clear that he already had a market for these
stolen properties.
Harrismith is well known for its traffic of trucks. One is tempted to
draw an inference that the appellant knew
that trucks pass the area
and he took advantage of an unsuspecting truck driver. There must
have been a measure of planning to
successfully pull this robbery.
I am thus unable to agree that this offence was committed in the spur
of the moment.
[12]
If one weighs the aggravating circumstances against the mitigating
ones and taking them cumulatively I find that no substantial
and
compelling circumstances exist herein warranting the imposition of a
lesser sentence.
[13]
At the time of sentencing, appellant was already serving an effective
term of 30 years imprisonment. It is contended on his
behalf that if
the court does not order that this sentence should run concurrently
with the sentence the accused is already serving,
the effect thereof
will be severe and thus shockingly inappropriate.
[14]
Section 280(2)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
provides that
a punishment consisting of imprisonment shall commence one
after the other unless the court directs that such
sentences of
imprisonment shall run concurrently. The rational for ordering the
sentences to run concurrently is to obviate
the
severity and harshness of the sentences if their cumulative effect is
not taken into consideration.
[15]
It has been submitted on behalf of the respondent that because the
conviction and sentence the appellant is already serving
differs in
time and place, this court should not order that the sentence the
accused is serving should run currently with the sentence
to be
imposed herein. This argument seems to ignore the fact that the
appellant is already serving 30 years imprisonment and it
ignores
what the cumulative effect of the sentence would be if this court
does not order these sentences to run concurrently. The
previous
conviction of an appellant is part of his personal circumstances and
it cannot be ignored.
[16]
There is a general scepticism that lengthy prison terms can deter or
rehabilitate criminals from committing further offences.
The court in
S v Mhlakaza
1997(1) SACR 515 at 519 f-g said the following:
“
Deterrence has two aspects:
deterring the prisoner and deterring others. The effectiveness of the
latter is unclear (Walker &
Padfield
Sentencing Theory, Law
and Practice
2 ed(1996) at 101) but, according to judicial
precedent, it remains an important consideration( R Swanepoel
1945 AD
444
at 453-5 and the debate in
S Nkambule
1993(SACR(1) 136 (A)
.As far as deterring the accused is concerned ,it should be borne in
mind that ‘there is no reason to
believe that the deterrent of
a prison sentence is
always
proportionate to its length(
S
v Skenjana
1985(3) SA 51(A) at 54I-55A.( My emphasis).Whether
long-term imprisonment has any rehabilitative effect, has also been
doubted.”
In
S v Muller
2012(2)
SACR 545 at 550 par [11] the court further said:
“
There is nothing to show that a
lengthy period of imprisonment will not bring home the error of their
ways. It would be unjust to
impose a sentence, the effect of which is
more likely to destroy than to reform them. However, the cumulative
effect of the sentences
imposed on the appellants smacks of the use
of a sledgehammer: it seems designed more to crush than to
rehabilitate them.”
[17]
The need to avoid unnecessary lengthy prison terms should not be seen
as a licence for an accused person to commit serious
offences
believing that the courts will, as of routine, order that sentences
shall run concurrently. Society expects the courts
to sentence the
accused appropriately and to send out clear messages that certain
conduct will not be tolerated.
[18]
I am not aware of the circumstances pertaining to the sentence of 30
years imprisonment the appellant is serving. I am, however,
of the
view that imposing a sentence of 15 years in this case will not be
shockingly inappropriate. If the entire sentence in this
case is
ordered to run concurrently with the sentence the accused is already
serving, that exercise will send out a wrong message
to society at
large. To ameliorate the harshness of the effect of the length to be
spent in prison by the appellant, I am of the
view that part of this
sentence should run concurrently with the sentence the appellant is
already serving.
[19]
Having regard to the triad of the personal circumstances of the
accused, the crime, the interest of society as well as the
cumulative
effect of the sentence I am of the view that the following sentence
is not disproportionate and I accordingly make the
following order:
ORDERS
[20]
The following orders are made:
1. The appeal against the
sentence is upheld and the sentence imposed is altered as follows:
1.1
The sentence of 15
years imprisonment is confirmed;
1.2 In terms of
s280(2)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
it is ordered that 10(ten)
years of this sentence shall run concurrently with the sentence the
accused is already serving.
1.3 An order made in
terms of
s103(1)
of the Firearms control Act 60 of 2000 is confirmed.
1.4 The sentence is
deemed to have been imposed on the 6 December 2013.
____________________
P.E.
MOLITSOANE, J
I
concur
____________________
J.P
DAFFUE, J
On
behalf of appellant: Ms S Kruger
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid, South Africa
Bloemfontein
On
behalf of the respondent: Adv M M M Moroka
Instructed
by:
Director
of Public Prosecutions
BLOEMFONTEIN