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[2020] ZASCA 94
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Ngakantsi v S (1020/2020) [2020] ZASCA 94 (19 August 2020)
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
reportable
Case No: 1020/2020
In
the matter between:
KEDUMETSE MACWILLIAM NGAKANTSI
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Kedumetse
M Ngakantsi v The State
(1020/2020)
[2020] ZASCA 94
(19 August 2020)
Coram:
Ponnan
and Schippers JJA and Ledwaba AJA
Heard:
19
August 2020
Delivered:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email and publication on the
Supreme Court of Appeal website. The date and time of hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on 19 August 2020.
Summary:
Appeal to Supreme
Court of Appeal against refusal by the high court of a petition
seeking leave to appeal against conviction and
sentence by the
regional court – leave to appeal to the high court should have
been granted – merits of the appeal
to be determined by the
high court.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
North
West Division of the High Court, Mahikeng (Djaje J and Morwane AJ
sitting as court of appeal):
1
The
appeal is upheld.
2
The
order of the high court refusing the appellant leave to appeal in
terms of
s 309C
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, is set
aside and replaced with the following order:
‘
The appellant
is granted leave to appeal to the full court of the North West
Division of the High Court
against:
(a)
his
convictions in respect of the contraventions of
s 72
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
and the sentences imposed pursuant thereto;
and
(b)
the
sentence imposed on him in respect of his conviction of corruption in
terms of
s 4
of the
Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities
Act 12 of 2004
.’
JUDGMENT
Schippers
JA (Ponnan JA and Ledwaba AJA concurring):
[1]
The
issue in this appeal, with the special leave of this Court, is
whether the appellant’s petition for leave to appeal in
terms
of s 309C of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the CPA) ought to
have been refused by the North West Division of the
High Court,
Mahikeng
(the
high court). The parties have agreed that the appeal may be disposed
of without the hearing of oral argument, in terms of s
19(1)
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[1]
[2]
The
facts are largely common ground. The appellant, a constable in the
Stock Theft Unit (the Unit) of the South African Police Service
(the
SAPS) was charged in the Vryburg Regional Court with one count of
corruption under s 4(1) of the Prevention and Combating
of Corrupt
Activities Act 12 of 2004 (the Corrupt Activities Act). The State
alleged that in January 2012 the appellant corruptly
sold a stray cow
for R3 000 in cash for his own benefit. The court convicted him of
contravening s 4(1) of the Corrupt Activities
Act. The appellant was
sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for this offence.
[3]
In the
course of the trial the appellant, who had been released on warning,
failed to appear in court on two occasions, namely 8
October 2015 and
18 April 2016. A week before he had to appear in court on 8 October
2015, the appellant consulted Dr Mbabane,
his family doctor, who
referred him to Dr Tshabalala, a psychiatrist. The latter admitted
him to hospital where the appellant remained
for three weeks. Dr
Tshabalala certified that he was unable to attend the court
proceedings from 5 October 2015 to 9 December 2015.
Regarding his
failure to appear on 18 April 2016, the appellant said that his body
had become weak and he submitted a medical certificate
by Dr Mbabane,
stating that he was suffering from psychosis and indisposed from 15
to 19 April 2016.
[4]
At the
enquiry into his failure to appear in court in terms of s 72(2) of
the CPA, the appellant adduced the evidence of Dr Ntawisi,
a
psychiatrist whom he consulted on 16 May 2016. His diagnosis was that
the appellant suffered from a severe major depressive disorder
that
could cause a number of physical conditions, and that he had suicidal
tendencies. The appellant testified that he became very
anxious close
to each court date when he was due to be sentenced. His body became
weak and he consulted a doctor. He denied that
this was planned and
said that his body reacted in that way. The trial court concluded
that the appellant’s failure to appear
was wilful, found him
guilty on two counts of contravening s 72(2) of the CPA and sentenced
him to a fine of R200 000 on each
count.
[5]
The
appellant’s application for leave to appeal was dismissed by
the regional court. He then petitioned
the
high court in terms of s 309C of the CPA. Djaje J and Morwane AJ,
who considered the
petition, dismissed it in chambers on 13 February 2019. The appellant
thereupon petitioned this Court for special
leave to appeal the
dismissal of his petition by the high court. The order of the two
judges of this Court, who considered the
appellant’s petition
and referred it to this Court, was limited to the convictions and
sentences relating to the contraventions
of s 72 of the CPA, and the
sentence imposed for the contravention of s 4(1) of the Corrupt
Activities Act.
[6]
The
judgment sought to be appealed against is a judgment of the regional
court. Since the petition for leave to appeal was refused
by the high
court, this Court is not called upon to consider the substantive
merits of the appeal, but whether the high court should
have granted
leave to appeal.
[2]
The test is
whether there are reasonable prospects of success in the envisaged
appeal.
[3]
[7]
Section
72(2) of the CPA provides, inter alia, that an accused released on
warning who fails to appear, shall be guilty of an offence
and liable
to the punishment prescribed in subsection (4).
In
terms of s 72(4), if a court is satisfied that an accused was duly
warned to appear and has failed to do so, it may,
‘
.
. . in a summary manner enquire into his failure and, unless such
accused or such person satisfies the court that [
there
is a reasonable possibility that
]
his failure was not due to fault on his part, sentence him to a fine
not exceeding R300 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding
three months.’
In
S v
Singo
,
[4]
the Constitutional Court said that the italicised words in the above
quotation should be read as if incorporated in s 72(4). This
means
that the accused need merely satisfy the court that there is a
reasonable possibility that his failure to appear was not
due to
fault on his part.
[5]
[8]
The
argument advanced in respect of the appellant’s conviction on
these charges is that on the evidence in its totality, and
in
particular the medical evidence adduced, there is a reasonable
prospect of a court on appeal arriving at the conclusion that
his
failure to appear in court on the two occasions in question, was not
due to any fault on his part. As to the sentence imposed
upon the
appellant by the regional court for his conviction on each of these
two counts, the argument is that the sentence appears,
on the face of
it, to have exceeded the maximum amount prescribed by the section.
[9]
Regarding
the sentence for the contravention of s 4(1) of the Corrupt
Activities Act, the appellant’s counsel made the following
submissions. The charge, albeit serious, was a single count that did
not involve a large amount. The appellant was a first offender.
He
was not dismissed from the SAPS after disciplinary proceedings were
brought against him, and at the time of sentencing was still
employed
at the Unit. There is a reasonable prospect that an appellate court
may alter the sentence imposed, or consider another
form of sentence
to meet the legitimate expectation of society that corrupt officials
be duly punished, having regard to the particular
circumstances of
this case.
[10]
There
is accordingly much to be said for the argument that there are
reasonable prospects of success in the envisaged appeal.
[11]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The
appeal is upheld.
2
The
order of the high court refusing the appellant leave to appeal in
terms of
s 309C
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, is set
aside and replaced with the following order:
‘
The appellant
is granted leave to appeal to the full court of the North West
Division of the High Court
against:
(a)
his
convictions in respect of the contraventions of
s 72
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
and the sentences imposed pursuant thereto;
and
(b)
the
sentence imposed on him in respect of his conviction of corruption in
terms of
s 4
of the
Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities
Act 12 of 2004
.’
_______________________
A
Schippers
Judge of Appeal
APPEARANCES
For
appellant: P J S Smit
Instructed
by:
Herman
Scholtz Attorneys, Mafikeng
Rossouws
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
No
appearance for respondent
[1]
Section 19(
a
)
provides: ‘The Supreme Court of Appeal or a Division
exercising appeal jurisdiction may, in addition to any power as may
specifically be provided for in any law - dispose of an appeal
without the hearing of oral argument.
[2]
S v Khoasasa
2003
(1) SACR 123
(SCA) paras 19-22;
S
v Tonkin
[2013] ZASCA
179
;
2014 (1) SACR 583
(SCA) para 3.
[3]
Tonkin
fn
2 para 3;
De Almeida v
S
[2019] ZASCA 84
para 5.
[4]
[2002] ZACC 10
;
2002 (2) SACR 160
(CC) para 44.
[5]
A Kruger
Hiemstra’s
Criminal Procedure
(Service
Issue 12) at 10-2.