S v Sewbhajan (428/93) [1996] ZASCA 77 (16 August 1996)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Theft — Sentence — Appellant convicted of theft alongside co-accused for orchestrating a fake robbery of employer's wages — Appellant sentenced to two years' imprisonment; appeal against sentence only — Magistrate found offence serious due to planning and breach of trust — Appellant's personal circumstances considered but deemed insufficient to warrant correctional supervision — Appeal dismissed, sentence upheld as appropriate and not excessively severe.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an appeal in the Supreme Court of South Africa (Appellate Division) concerning sentence only following a conviction for theft. The appellant, Mohanprakash Sewbhajan, appealed against the sentence imposed upon him, while the State was the respondent.


The appellant and a co-accused, Vishnu Ramlakan, were convicted in the Durban regional court on a charge of theft. Ramlakan was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment and the appellant to two years’ imprisonment. Both accused appealed to the Natal Provincial Division, where their appeals against conviction and sentence were dismissed. The appellant was, however, granted leave to appeal further to the Appellate Division, but only in respect of sentence.


The dispute concerned whether the sentencing court exercised its discretion properly in imposing direct imprisonment, and specifically whether a non-custodial sentence (advanced on appeal as correctional supervision) should have been preferred given the appellant’s personal circumstances.


2. Material Facts


The material facts relied upon by the court were described as “essential” and “no longer in dispute”. The appellant and Ramlakan were both employees of a firm, Versatile Interiors, the appellant being employed as a painter and Ramlakan as a machinist. They approached a driver employed by the firm, Naidoo, whose duties included drawing the firm’s wages on Fridays, and proposed a plan to appropriate the firm’s wages and fabricate a robbery narrative.


The plan, discussed over several days, contemplated that Naidoo would attend the bank in Florida Road, Durban on the Friday morning, draw the wages, meet the appellant and Ramlakan at a nearby bus stop, hand over the firm’s vehicle and the wages, and then report to the employer that he had been robbed. The plan was revisited on the Tuesday and Wednesday prior to the intended execution.


On the Friday morning, 28 August 1992, Ramlakan did not report for work and the appellant left work shortly after arriving, apparently after a telephone call about a family funeral. Naidoo, believing that the plan would nonetheless proceed, reported the scheme to his employer. The police were informed and it was decided that Naidoo would proceed as planned while the police followed.


Naidoo drew wages of R7 725-05 and, upon exiting the bank, found the appellant and Ramlakan waiting as arranged. The three drove off in the firm’s vehicle. During the drive, the wages were divided amongst them. The appellant took Naidoo’s portion as well, stating that he would keep it for Naidoo because Naidoo should not have money on him when returning to work. The appellant placed his own share and Naidoo’s share in the cubbyhole of the vehicle.


The plan had contemplated that the appellant and Ramlakan would drop Naidoo after a short distance, but after Naidoo formed the view that the police had lost them, he persuaded them to stop at hotels (first the Brittannia Hotel, then the Belgica Hotel) where they consumed drinks. On each occasion, Naidoo managed to slip away and telephone his employer, who alerted the police. The police later arrived and found the appellant and Ramlakan drinking in the bar of the Belgica Hotel. Upon search, R2 500-00 was found in Ramlakan’s shirt pocket and the keys of the firm’s vehicle were found in the appellant’s pocket. The remainder of the wages, except for approximately R200, was found in a bank bag in the cubbyhole of the vehicle.


No material disputes of fact were identified by the appeal court in relation to the events, as the facts relevant to sentence were treated as no longer contested.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the regional magistrate committed a misdirection in the sentencing process and whether the sentence of two years’ direct imprisonment was so severe as to justify appellate interference.


Within that inquiry, a specific question was whether the magistrate erred by failing to consider or by wrongly rejecting correctional supervision as an appropriate sentence in light of the appellant’s personal circumstances.


The dispute was primarily concerned with the application of sentencing principles to the established facts and the evaluation of whether the sentencing discretion was properly exercised, rather than the determination of factual disputes.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Appellate Division summarised the regional magistrate’s approach as one treating the offence as serious. The magistrate had emphasised the prevalence of robberies in the district and the ease with which an employee could persuade an employer that a genuine robbery had occurred, making such schemes a recurring concern in the magistrate’s experience. The magistrate also treated as aggravating the fact that the appellant had stolen from his own employer, thereby abusing a position of trust, and had attempted to persuade Naidoo to do the same. The magistrate characterised the appellant’s motive as greed and concluded that, having regard to societal interests in adequate punishment for this type of offence, a sentence other than direct imprisonment was not appropriate.


The Appellate Division endorsed this approach and added a further aggravating consideration, namely that the offence was carefully planned over at least a week, affording the appellant time for reflection and reconsideration. This planning aspect supported the conclusion that the conduct was not impulsive and that the moral blameworthiness was correspondingly increased.


The court then dealt with the appellant’s personal circumstances as they were known: he was to be regarded as a first offender, was married with three young children, and had been in fixed employment at the time of trial earning R1 000 per month. These circumstances were treated as relevant mitigation, but not as outweighing the seriousness and planned nature of the offence and the breach of trust involved.


On the argument that the magistrate erred by not considering correctional supervision, the court rejected the contention that silence on that sentencing option amounted to an oversight. It reasoned that the magistrate’s statement that he did not see his way clear to keeping the appellant out of prison implied that he had considered alternative sentencing options that would avoid imprisonment. The court stated that it must therefore be assumed that the magistrate considered such alternatives, including correctional supervision. The Appellate Division further agreed with the magistrate’s apparent conclusion that correctional supervision would not be appropriate in the circumstances.


Ultimately, the court held that there was no misdirection in the magistrate’s choice of imprisonment as the appropriate sentence and that the two-year term was not so severe as to warrant interference on appeal.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Appellate Division dismissed the appeal. The sentence of two years’ imprisonment imposed on the appellant by the regional court accordingly remained in place. The judgment, as transcribed, did not record any separate or additional order as to costs in relation to the appeal.


Cases Cited


No cases were cited in the transcribed reasons for judgment.


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the transcribed reasons for judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the transcribed reasons for judgment.


Held


The Appellate Division held that the regional magistrate’s sentencing approach disclosed no misdirection, that a sentence of direct imprisonment was justified given the seriousness of the theft, the abuse of trust, the prevalence of such schemes, and the careful planning over time, and that correctional supervision was not an appropriate sentence on the facts as accepted. It further held that the sentence imposed was not so severe as to justify appellate interference, with the result that the appeal against sentence was dismissed.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that sentencing is primarily a matter for the discretion of the trial court, and that an appellate court will not interfere in the absence of a material misdirection or unless the sentence is so severe that interference is justified.


In evaluating whether imprisonment was appropriate, the judgment treated as materially aggravating the combination of pre-planning, dishonesty directed at an employer, and a breach of trust arising from employment-related access to the employer’s money and operational arrangements.


The judgment also applied the principle that a sentencing court’s failure to expressly mention a particular sentencing option does not necessarily establish that the option was overlooked. Where a court states that it does not see its way clear to avoiding imprisonment, it may be inferred that the court has considered, and rejected as inappropriate, alternatives that would keep the offender out of prison, including (on the facts of this case) correctional supervision.

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[1996] ZASCA 77
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S v Sewbhajan (428/93) [1996] ZASCA 77 (16 August 1996)

Case No 428/93
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between
MOHANPRAKASH SEWBHAJAN
APPELLANT
and
THE STATE
RESPONDENT
CORAM: VIVIER, EKSTEEN et OLIVIER JJA. HEARD: 16 August 1996. DELIVERED: 16 August 1996.
TRANSCRIPT OF REASONS ORALLY DELIVERED IN OPEN COURT ON FRIDAY 16 AUGUST 1996, BY VIVIER JA AND CONCURRED IN BY EKSTEEN JA AND OLIVIER
JA.
2
VIVIER JA:
The appellant and one Vishnu Ramlakan ("Ramlakan") were convicted in the Durban regional court on a charge of theft. Ramlakan
was sentenced to three years' imprisonment and the appellant to two years' imprisonment. Their appeals against their convictions
and sentences to the Natal Provincial Division were dismissed but leave was granted to the appellant to appeal to this Court against
his sentence only.
The essential facts which are no longer in dispute are the following. The appellant and Ramlakan were both employed by a firm called
Versatile Interiors, the former as a painter and the latter as a machinist. On Monday 24 August 1992 the appellant and Ramlakan approached
die firm's driver, one Naidoo, whose duties included drawing the firm's wages on Fridays, with a plan which involved appropriating
the coming Friday's wages for
3
themselves and fabricating a version of robbery. The plan was that Naidoo would go to the firm's bank in Florida Road, Durban as usual
on the coming Friday morning, draw the wages and then meet up with the other two at a bus stop opposite the bank. He would hand over
the firm's vehicle and the wages and report to the firm that he had been robbed. The plan was further discussed on the Tuesday and
Wednesday of that week.
On Friday morning 28 August 1992, Ramlakan did not turn up for work and the appellant left again soon after arriving at his work after
having received a telephone call ostensibly summoning him to a family funeral. Naidoo, obviously realising that the other two intended
going ahead with the plan, then got cold feet and reported die whole scheme to his employer. The police were informed and it was
decided that Naidoo should go ahead as planned and that the police would follow Mm. Naidoo duly drew
4
the wages in an amount of R7 725-05 and when he came out of the bank Ramlakan and the appellant were waiting for him as arranged.
He picked them up in the firm's vehicle and drove off. Along the way the wages were divided amongst the three of them. The appellant
took Naidoo's share as well saying that he would keep it for him as he should not have the money on him when he arrived back at work.
The appellant put his and Naidoo's share of the money in the cubbyhole of the vehicle. The plan was that the other two would drop
Naidoo off after a few kilometres but he soon realised that the police had lost them and persuaded them to stop at the Brittannia
Hotel where they had a few drinks. At the hotel Naidoo managed to slip away and he reported his position to his employer by telephone.
From there they drove to tile Belgica Hotel where Naidoo again managed to slip away and to phone his; employer who alerted the police.
The police eventually arrived
5
and found the appellant and Ramlakan drinking in the bar of the hotel. They were searched and the amount of R2 500-00 was found in
Ramlakan's shirt pocket and the keys of the firm's vehicle in the appellant's pocket. The rest of the money, with the exception of
about two hundred rand, was found in a bank bag inside the cubbyhole of the vehicle.
In his judgment on sentence the magistrate said that he regarded the offence as a serious one. He said that robberies were so prevalent
in his district that it was easy for an employee to convince his employer that a real robbery instead of a faked one had taken place.
He knew of quite a few cases in his court where employees had attempted to get their hands on money in this way. The magistrate further
pointed out that the appellant had stolen from his own employer and had in this way abused his position of trust. He had, moreover,
tried to persuade Naidoo to do the same. His
6
motive was greed. The magistrate said that in all the circumstances, and having regard to the demands of society that an adequate
punishment be imposed for this type of offence, he was not prepared to impose a sentence oilier than one of direct imprisonment.
In my view the magistrate's approach cannot be faulted. To the aggravating factors mentioned by him should be added the fact that
the offence was carefully planned over at least a week so that the appellant had enough time for reflection and reconsideration.
The known personal circumstances of the appellant are that he must be regarded as a first offender, he is married with three young
children and he was in fixed employment at the time of the trial, earning Rl 000 per month. Counsel for the appellant submitted that
the magistrate erred in not considering a sentence of correctional supervision which he submitted was the appropriate
7
sentence in all the circumstances of the case. I cannot accept that the magistrate did not consider imposing a sentence of correctional
supervision. The fact that he does not expressly mention in his judgment that he did so does not mean that he overlooked such a sentence.
As I have mentioned, the magistrate said that he did not see his way clear to keeping the appellant out of prison. It must be assumed,
therefore, that he considered all the alternative sentences which would keep the appellant out of prison, including one of correctional
supervision. I agree with the magistrate that such a sentence would not be appropriate in the circumstances of this case.
In my view the magistrate has not misdirected himself in deciding upon a sentence of imprisonment as the appropriate sentence, nor
can it be said that the sentence is so severe that it
8
justifies interference by this Court. The appeal is dismissed.
W. VIVIER JA.