Dube v S (A831/15) [2016] ZAGPPHC 741 (22 August 2016)

82 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Sentencing — Minimum sentence — Appeal against sentence of 15 years imprisonment for theft — Appellant convicted of theft of goods valued at R2 million and contravention of communications legislation — Magistrate's remarks indicating bias against nationality of appellant and failure to consider personal circumstances — No evidence of appellant acting as part of a syndicate — Court finds misdirection in applying minimum sentence without establishing common purpose — Sentence reduced to 10 years imprisonment.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an appeal against sentence heard in the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria. Leave to appeal was granted on petition.


The appellant was Fortune Dube, who had been convicted in the Regional Court, Benoni. The respondent was the State.


The appellant had been charged on two counts, pleaded guilty, and was convicted in the regional court on the basis of a written plea explanation in terms of section 112(2) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. He was sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment on count 1 (theft) and 12 months’ imprisonment on count 2 (a statutory communications-related offence), with the sentence on count 2 ordered to run concurrently with the sentence on count 1. The appeal was directed at the sentence imposed, particularly the application of the prescribed minimum sentence regime and the manner in which the sentencing discretion was exercised.


The dispute concerned the appropriateness and legality of the sentence imposed for a theft involving goods of high value, including whether the minimum sentence provisions were applicable on the facts accepted by the prosecution through the appellant’s guilty plea, and whether the regional magistrate committed material misdirections (including remarks concerning nationality and an immigration-related directive).


2. Material Facts


The appellant appeared in the Regional Court, Benoni on two counts. Count 1 was theft of goods (including two truck trailers and groceries) to a value of approximately R2 million, property of or in the lawful possession of Spar Stores, and was charged with reference to the minimum sentence provisions in section 51(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997. Count 2 concerned a contravention of section 17H(3)(f) of the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa Act 13 of 2000, read with section 35(1) of the Electronic Communications Act 36 of 2001.


The appellant, who was legally represented, pleaded guilty on 3 March 2015 and was convicted in accordance with his section 112(2) statement. In that statement, he admitted that he intentionally stole the trailer(s) and intended to deprive Spar of its lawful possession. The statement, as recorded in the judgment, did not indicate that he acted with others, or in furtherance of any common purpose or conspiracy.


In sentencing, the regional magistrate made remarks about the appellant’s nationality, including statements generalising about Zimbabweans and linking them to theft, and expressing concern that South Africa would “be like Zimbabwe” economically if such conduct continued. The appeal court treated these remarks as inappropriate and as amounting to a misdirection in the approach to sentence, with the potential to be understood as promoting xenophobia.


In addition, the regional magistrate created an annexure (dated 4 March 2015) recording that the appellant was a Zimbabwean national and stating that “when paroled [he] must be handed to the Department of Immigration.” The appeal court held there was no factual or legal basis for such an order on the record, stated that it was not the magistrate’s function to address immigration issues, and described the directive as unconstitutional, particularly as the appellant’s legal representative had informed the sentencing court that the appellant was legally in South Africa.


The appeal court also accepted as material (in relation to sentence) that the appellant was 34 years old, married, had two children, and supported additional children in the family; that he was self-employed and owned a truck used for deliveries; that he had been in custody for about seven months prior to conviction and sentence; that the stolen goods were recovered in full within hours; and that the appellant did not benefit from the theft and faced the likelihood of forfeiture of his truck.


3. Legal Issues


The central questions were whether the regional court correctly applied the prescribed minimum sentence provisions in sentencing the appellant to 15 years’ imprisonment for theft, and whether the sentencing process was vitiated by material misdirection warranting appellate interference.


A key legal issue concerned the application of law to fact: whether, given the factual matrix established by the guilty plea and accepted by the prosecution, the requirements of Part II of Schedule 2 to the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (as invoked through section 51(2)) were met, particularly the requirement that the offence be committed in execution or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy where the schedule provision is framed to apply to conduct involving a person or group acting in that manner.


Further issues concerned the proper sentencing methodology under the minimum sentence regime: whether the sentencing court properly considered the presence or absence of substantial and compelling circumstances, or instead treated the prescribed sentence as automatic unless exceptional circumstances were shown.


The appeal also raised issues of fairness and judicial impartiality in sentencing, insofar as the regional magistrate’s nationality-based remarks, and the immigration-related direction, were considered by the appeal court to be improper and to reflect a misdirection affecting the sentencing discretion.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The High Court emphasised that the right to a fair trial, entrenched constitutionally, requires that judicial officers avoid bias or conduct suggesting bias based on considerations unrelated to the case. The court held that the regional magistrate had no right to make the nationality-based remarks recorded in the judgment, characterising them as generalisations about Zimbabweans and noting that they could be understood as promoting xenophobia. The court relied on the discussion in Nkabinde v Judicial Service Commission 2016 (4) SA 1 (SCA) (including the cited observation about “judge’s disease”) to contextualise why unnecessary and inappropriate remarks are problematic in the judicial function. These comments were treated as part of the broader misdirection affecting sentence.


On the immigration annexure, the High Court reasoned that the magistrate’s instruction that the appellant be handed to immigration authorities upon parole lacked any stated reasons, had no legal or factual basis on the record, and intruded into a domain assigned to constitutionally empowered executive authorities. The court described the instruction as unconstitutional and stated it had to be set aside, also noting that the appellant’s legal representative had informed the sentencing court that the appellant was lawfully present in South Africa.


Turning to the minimum sentence issue, the High Court considered the reliance on Part II of Schedule 2 to the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, which in relevant part applies to certain offences (including theft involving more than R100 000) where it is proved that the offence was committed by a person or group acting in execution or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy. The High Court agreed with the respondent’s submission that it was not necessary, in itself, that the appellant be part of a “syndicate” for the minimum sentencing regime to be engaged, but stressed that the schedule provision nevertheless required proof that the person acted in execution or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy.


The High Court found that there was no evidence that the appellant acted in execution or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy. The court highlighted that the regional magistrate’s questioning during mitigation suggested that the magistrate had inferred, without evidential foundation, that the offence was syndicate-related or involved group activity. In this respect, the High Court applied the principle stated in S v Van der Merwe 2011 (2) SACR 509 that where an accused pleads guilty and submits a section 112(2) statement accepted by the prosecution, that statement constitutes the essential factual matrix for sentence, and it is unfair to extend or vary that matrix in a way that materially affects punishment. The High Court reasoned that the appellant’s section 112(2) statement contained no indication of group conduct or a common purpose, and therefore it was wrong to apply the minimum sentence on the basis of value alone without proving the additional schedule requirement. This constituted a misdirection.


The High Court then addressed whether the regional court properly considered substantial and compelling circumstances. It held that, on the record, the magistrate approached the matter as if the prescribed sentence would be imposed as a matter of course, unless the appellant showed exceptional circumstances, which the appeal court described as an incorrect approach. The High Court referred to S v Vilakazi 2009 (1) SACR 522 (SCA) in rejecting that methodology, and to S v Malgas 2001 (1) SACR 469 (SCA) for the proposition that all traditional sentencing factors remain relevant in minimum sentence matters and are not excluded from consideration at the outset.


Applying those principles, the High Court held that the magistrate had improperly discounted the appellant’s personal circumstances and had treated them as having no mitigating value, including by suggesting that relatives would look after the children and that “every criminal has got children.” The High Court treated this as a misdirection in the sentencing discretion.


The High Court further found that the magistrate paid insufficient attention to the circumstances of the offence and to mitigating considerations apparent from the record. It disagreed with the magistrate’s reasoning that remorse was absent because the guilty plea was entered seven months after the first appearance, holding that the inference drawn from that delay was incorrect on the facts before the court. The High Court considered it material that the stolen goods were recovered within hours, that the appellant had already spent seven months in custody awaiting finalisation, and that he did not benefit from the theft and faced collateral prejudice such as possible forfeiture of his truck. Taken together, these considerations supported the conclusion that the sentence of 15 years was excessive and “disturbingly inappropriate,” justifying appellate intervention.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court upheld the appeal against the sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment imposed on count 1.


It set aside the 15-year sentence on count 1 and substituted it with a sentence of 10 years’ direct imprisonment on count 1.


The substituted sentence was ordered to be antedated to 4 March 2015. The judgment did not record any alteration to the sentence imposed on count 2 (which had been ordered to run concurrently with count 1 in the regional court), and the operative relief granted related expressly to the sentence on count 1 and its antedating.


No separate costs order was recorded in the judgment.


Cases Cited


Nkabinde v Judicial Service Commission 2016 (4) SA 1 (SCA)


S v Van der Merwe 2011 (2) SACR 509


S v Vilakazi 2009 (1) SACR 522 (SCA)


S v Malgas 2001 (1) SACR 469 (SCA)


Legislation Cited


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, section 51(2) and Part II of Schedule 2


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 112(2)


Independent Communications Authority of South Africa Act 13 of 2000, section 17H(3)(f)


Electronic Communications Act 36 of 2001, section 35(1)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The High Court held that the regional magistrate committed material misdirections in sentencing, including by making inappropriate nationality-based remarks and by introducing an immigration-related directive without lawful basis. It further held that the minimum sentence regime was incorrectly applied because the factual matrix established by the accepted section 112(2) plea did not prove that the theft was committed in execution or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy, as required by the applicable schedule provision relied upon.


The High Court held that the magistrate also misdirected the sentencing enquiry by treating the prescribed sentence as effectively automatic unless exceptional circumstances were shown, by inadequately engaging with substantial and compelling circumstances, and by failing properly to weigh mitigating features such as the guilty plea, recovery of the goods, pre-sentence incarceration, and the absence of benefit to the appellant.


On that basis, the court held that the sentence of 15 years’ imprisonment on count 1 was excessive and disturbingly inappropriate, and substituted it with 10 years’ imprisonment antedated to 4 March 2015.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A sentencing court must respect the accused’s right to a fair trial and must avoid statements or conduct suggesting bias or reliance on irrelevant considerations, including generalisations based on nationality, as such conduct may constitute a misdirection affecting sentence.


Where an accused pleads guilty and submits a written statement in terms of section 112(2) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, and the prosecution accepts the plea, the contents of that statement form the essential factual matrix for sentencing. That factual matrix should not be extended or varied in a manner that unfairly increases punishment by introducing unproven aggravating features.


In applying the prescribed minimum sentence regime under the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, a court must ensure that the statutory requirements triggering the regime are proved on the facts. The sentencing court may not apply the minimum sentence merely because the value of stolen property exceeds a threshold if additional statutory elements (such as commission in execution or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy, where required) are not established.


In minimum sentence matters, the enquiry remains whether substantial and compelling circumstances justify a departure, and all traditional sentencing considerations remain relevant. A court misdirects itself if it approaches the matter as if the prescribed sentence must follow automatically unless the offender demonstrates “exceptional circumstances,” or if it fails to weigh mitigating factors such as remorse evidenced by a guilty plea, recovery of property, time spent in pre-sentence detention, and the offender’s personal circumstances.

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[2016] ZAGPPHC 741
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Dube v S (A831/15) [2016] ZAGPPHC 741 (22 August 2016)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
22/8/2016
Reportable:
Yes
Of
interest to other judges: Yes
Revised.
Case Number: A831/ 15
In
the matter between:
FORTUNE
DUBE
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME
J WITH HIM NKOSI AJ CONCURRING
[1]
This is an appeal against sentence leave to appeal having been
granted by this Court on petition.
[2]
The appellant and one another appeared before the Regional Court in
Benoni on two counts namely count 1: theft of goods read
with the
provisions of
Section 51(
2
) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act No.
105 of 1997
, goods to the value of R2 million being 2 Truck Trailers
as well as groceries the property or in the lawful possession of Spar
Stores. Count 2: Contravention of Section 17H( 3)(f) of the
Independent Communication Authority of South Africa Act No. 13 of
2000
read with Section 35(1) of the Electronic Communications Act No.
36 of 2001.
[3]
The appellant who was legally represented pleaded guilty on the 3'"
of March 2015 and was duly convicted in accordance
with his statement
in terms of
Section 112
(
2
) of the
Criminal Procedure Act No. 51 of
1977
.
[4]
He was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment on count 1 and to 12 months
imprisonment on count 2. The Court ordered that the sentence
of 12
months in count 2 should run concurrently with the sentence of 15
years in count 1.
[5]
In passing sentence the Learned Magistrate made some unfortunate
remarks about the nationality of the appellant. I refer in
particular
to the following statement made by the Magistrate:
"You are the third
Zimbabwean I see today and it is forever housebreaking and theft or
theft. And I can understand why. It
is because maybe in your own
country circumstances are dire, there is no economy left. And now
people seem to steal in this country
before too long we would be like
Zimbabwe, there will be no economy."
[6]
The common law right of each accused person to a fair trial which is
now entrenched constitutionally must be respected and if
there is any
indication that a presiding officer shows bias based on facts that
have nothing to do with the case before him or
her then this right is
being interfered with.
[7]
The Magistrate in the Court below had no right to have uttered the
words referred to above. In uttering the said words the presiding

officer generalised about Zimbabweans.
[8]
That statement may well be understood in certain quarters to be
promoting xenophobia. Nevsa ADP in the matter of
Nkabinde v
Judicial Services
Commission
2016 (4) SA 1
(SCA) at page 5
paragraph 1E-F quoting a pronouncement by Lord Hailsham says the
following:
"That judicial
officers sometimes develop 'judges disease', the symptoms of which
are pomposity, irritability, talkativeness,
proneness to
obiter
dicta."
If
anything the present case demonstrates just that about the
Magistrate. It was unnecessary for the Magistrate to have made such
a
remark and in my view she misdirected herself in dealing with the
sentence that she eventually passed.
[9]
As if what was said in passing sentence was not enough the Magistrate
in an annexure dated the 4th of March 2015 writes as follows:
"Please note Accused
is a Zimbabwean National and when paroled must be handed to the
Department of Immigration."
This
the Magistrate makes without giving reasons why the appellant should
be dealt with in that manner. There is no factual or legal
basis for
that order in any case it is not the Magistrate's duty to deal with
immigration issues. There is a Government Department
that is
constitutionally empowered to deal with such issues. That order is
unconstitutional and must be set aside.  This is
despite the
fact that the appellant's legal representative informed the Court
that the appellant was legally inside South Africa.
[10]
I now turn to deal with the factual and legal grounds on which this
appeal is based. Firstly it is argued that the state did
not prove
that the appellant was part of a syndicate or group of people to
justify the passing of the minimum sentence of 15 years
imprisonment
in accordance with
Part 2
of Schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law Amendment
Act No. 105 of 1997
which reads as follows:
"Any offence
relating to exchange control, extortion, fraud, forgery, uttering,
theft or an offence in
Part 1
-
4
or
Section 17
,
20
or
21
of Chapter 2
of the
Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act 2004
-
(b) involving amounts of
more than R100 000 if it is proved that the offence was committed by
a person, group of persons, syndicate
or any enterprise acting in
execution or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy."
[11]
I agree with counsel for the respondent that it is sufficient for the
appellant to have been acting alone and not necessarily
as part of a
syndicate for him to be sentenced under the minimum sentence regime.
However subparagraph (b) reads further that the
person must have been
acting in execution or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy.
[12]
There is in this matter no evidence that the appellant was acting in
execution or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy.
The
Magistrate in passing sentence did not mention that the appellant was
part of a syndicate however during the address in mitigation
of
sentence the Magistrate posed the following questions to the
appellant's legal representative:
"COURT: 'Ja', but
are you saying then this was a syndicate activity?
MR MAWELA:
Worship ...
COURT: What are you
saying to me, that is the only conclusion I can come to.
COURT: So he was part of
a big operation?
COURT: But I mean he
participated with the group sir."
[13]
It is clear that at the time of formulating the sentence the
presiding officer had concluded in the absence of any evidence
that
the appellant was acting in furtherance of a common purpose with a
group.  In the matter of
S v Van der
Merwe
2011
(2) SACR 509
at 518 paragraph 30 Rampai J writing for the Court said
the following:
"[30] It has been
held that where an accused pleads guilty and hands in a written
statement in terms of
Section 112
(
2
) of the
Criminal Procedure Act
51 of 1977
detailing facts on which his plea is premised and the
prosecutor accepts the plea, the plea so explained and accepted
constitutes
the essential factual matrix on the strength of which
sentence should be considered and imposed. Such an essential factual
matrix
cannot be extended or varied in a manner that unduly impacts
on the measure of punishment as regards the offence. The plea once

accepted defines the lis between the prosecution and the defence.
Once the parameters of the playing fields are so demarcated it

becomes foul play to canvass issues beyond. The rules of fair play
have to be strictly enforced. In this instance it was not."
[14]
In his
Section 112(
2
) statement the appellant said the following:
"All along I knew
what I was doing, stealing was an offence punishable in law however I
reconciled my action and I proceeded
to steal the trailer. I had the
intention to deprive Spar of its lawful possession."
[15]
There is nowhere in the statement where the appellant implies that he
was stealing in furtherance of a common purpose with
other people.
Accordingly Ifind that it was wrong to have decided that simply
because of the value of the stolen items therefore
the minimum
sentence as prescribed in
Part 2
of the Schedule 2 was applicable
without proving that the appellant was acting in furtherance of a
group or a syndicate the Magistrate
misdirected himself in this
matter.
[16]
The next issue to consider is whether the Court
a quo
did
investigate the presence or absence of substantial and compelling
circumstances before imposing the minimum sentence of 15 years.
On
reading the record the impression I get is that the Magistrate
approached the matter on the basis that a prescribed minimum
sentence
would  be imposed  as  a  matter  of
course  unless  the  personal
circumstances of
the appellant disclosed exceptional circumstances. That approach is
clearly wrong as was said in the matter of
S v Vilakazi
2009
(1) SACR 522
(SCA) at page 566.
[17]
S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) has clearly set out the
guidelines to be taken into consideration when dealing with the
minimum sentence. The Court in that
matter said that all factors
traditionally taken into account in sentencing whether or not they
diminish moral guilt continue to
play a role and none is excluded at
the outset from consideration in the sentencing process.
[18]
The appellant was 34 years old at the time of this offence he is
married and has two children besides that he also supports
6 other
children of his brother and a sister who had already passed away. He
was self-employed and owned a truck with which he
did deliveries.
[19]
The Learned Magistrate casually dismissed the appellant's personal
circumstances as playing no mitigating role by amongst others
saying
that his wife and other relatives will look after the children and by
saying that every criminal has got children. In this
regard the
Learned Magistrate misdirected himself and accordingly this Court has
the right to intervene and impose an appropriate
sentence.
[20]
The Learned Magistrate paid little or no attention to the
circumstances around this offence. The Magistrate failed to take
into
consideration that the appellant pleaded guilty and showed remorse
instead he says if indeed the appellant was remorseful
then he should
have pleaded guilty at the first appearance in Court and not some
seven months later. This conclusion that because
of the delay he
therefore does not show remorse is in my view incorrect.
[21]
The further mitigating facts that the Magistrate did not take into
consideration are that the stolen goods were recovered in
full
virtually within hours of the theft, the appellant had been in
custody for seven months prior to the conviction and sentence
and
lastly that the appellant did not benefit anything from the theft
instead there is a likelihood that his truck may be forfeited
to the
state. In other words the appellant has come out worse off as a
result of his actions.
[22]
In my view the sentence of 15 years is excessive and is disturbingly
inappropriate and under the circumstances this court is
entitled to
intervene.
[23]
In the result I propose to make the following order:
(i)
The appeal against the sentence of 15 years in
count 1 is upheld.
(ii)
The sentence of 15 years is set aside and in its
place the following is substituted:
(a)
The accused is sentenced to direct imprisonment
for a period of 10 years on count 1.
(b)
The sentence of 10 years is antedated to the 4th
of March 2015.
Dated
at Pretoria on this the 19
th
day of August 2016.
________________________
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
________________________
N
NKOSI
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NO: A831/15
HEARD
ON: 18 August 2016
FOR
THE APPELLANT: MS. M.M.P. MASETE
INSTRUCTED
BY: Legal Aid Board
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: ADV. J.P. VAN DER WESTHUYSEN
INSTRUCTED
BY: Director of Public Prosecutions
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: