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South African Law • Jurisdictional Corpus
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Livanje v The State

Citation(378/2018) [2019] ZASCA 126 (27 September 2019)
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Criminal Law
Criminal Procedure
Sentencing

Facts of the Case

Bernard Antony Livanje, a Mozambican national, was convicted in the Regional Court, Hoopstad, of contravening s 49(1) of the Immigration Act 13 of 2002 and sentenced to two months imprisonment. He was also charged with housebreaking with intent to commit a crime unknown to the State. The facts showed that on 9 October 2014, in the early morning hours, Mr Ettienne Le Roux of Witpan Farm was alerted to intruders by his alarm system and later by breaking windows. He fired shots at a silhouette behind the curtain at his mother's bedroom window. Police found three broken windows, a spade outside, and shoeprints. Four co-accused were found in bushes, and the appellant was found bleeding under a tree, having been shot. His shoeprints matched those at the scene. The appellant's vehicle was found abandoned 12 km away in Tikwana suburb. The appellant claimed he was there to purchase gold from a seller and was cheated, but his version was rejected as improbable. He was convicted of housebreaking with intent to rob and sentenced to 10 years imprisonment under s 51(2) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997. His appeal to the High Court, Bloemfontein, failed. He appealed to the Supreme Court of Appeal with special leave.

Legal Issues

  • Whether the evidence established beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant intended to commit robbery, as opposed to a crime unknown to the State
  • Whether the conviction for housebreaking with intent to rob was properly proven when the charge was for housebreaking with intent to commit a crime unknown to the State
  • Whether the failure to warn the appellant of the applicability of the Minimum Sentences Act before sentencing constituted an irregularity and whether it led to an unfair trial
  • Whether the trial court misdirected itself in imposing a sentence under the Minimum Sentences Act when the charge sheet made no reference to it and neither party addressed the court on its application
  • Whether time spent in custody should be considered in sentencing

Judicial Outcome

1. The appeal succeeded. 2. The orders of the court a quo were set aside and replaced with: 2.1 The appeal succeeds. 2.2 Accused No 3 (the appellant) is found guilty of housebreaking with intent to commit an offence unknown to the State. 2.3 Accused No 3 is sentenced to five years imprisonment, antedated to 17 July 2015.

Ratio Decidendi

1. When an accused is charged with housebreaking with intent to commit a crime unknown to the State under s 262(2) of the CPA, the conviction must reflect that offence unless the evidence proves intent to commit a specific offence beyond reasonable doubt and as the only reasonable inference. 2. The imposition of a sentence under the Minimum Sentences Act without the charge sheet referencing its applicability, without inviting submissions from the parties, and without warning the accused constitutes a material misdirection requiring reconsideration of sentence. 3. An irregularity in criminal proceedings warrants setting aside a conviction under s 322(1)(a) of the CPA only if it results in a failure of justice. The test is whether, on the evidence unaffected by the irregularity, there is proof of guilt beyond reasonable doubt. 4. For housebreaking with intent to commit a crime, the elements that must be proved are: (a) the 'breaking' of premises by displacement of obstruction to entry; (b) entry of the premises by any part of the person or instrument; (c) unlawfulness of the conduct; and (d) intention to commit an offence. 5. Time spent in custody is a relevant factor in sentencing, but the test is whether the effective sentence proposed is proportionate to the crime, not whether the period of detention alone constitutes a substantial or compelling circumstance.

Obiter Dicta

The Court made observations about the improbability of the appellant's version that he traveled from Gauteng to Hoopstad (not a mining town) to conduct a R14,000 gold transaction at 1-2 am on a remote farm with complete strangers, coincidentally at the exact time and place where a housebreaking occurred. The Court noted the objective facts showing this was a planned criminal excursion: the vehicle was abandoned 12 km away, the alleged dealer and driver were never found, and the appellant's shoeprints were found in close proximity to the house despite his claim he was 500 meters away. The Court also observed that the breaking of windows in three parts of the house after the alarm had been triggered showed persistence and determination to break into the house at all costs despite knowledge of occupants being present, which supported the inference of intent to commit a crime. The Court remarked that for a gold transaction involving such a large sum to be conducted in an isolated place under cover of darkness with unknown persons was inherently improbable.

Legal Significance

This case clarifies important principles in South African criminal law and procedure: (1) It reiterates that for housebreaking convictions, the State must prove the specific intent alleged in the charge, and where the charge is for intent to commit a crime unknown to the State, the conviction cannot be for intent to commit a specific crime (like robbery) unless the evidence supports that as the only reasonable inference. (2) It emphasizes the constitutional right to a fair trial under s 35(3) of the Constitution, including the right to be informed of charges with sufficient detail. (3) It establishes that failure to warn an accused of the applicability of minimum sentence legislation before sentencing constitutes a material misdirection requiring fresh consideration of sentence. (4) The case demonstrates the proper application of s 262(2) of the Criminal Procedure Act regarding housebreaking charges. (5) It confirms that not all irregularities in criminal proceedings amount to a failure of justice warranting setting aside a conviction - the test is whether, on the evidence unaffected by the irregularity, there is proof of guilt beyond reasonable doubt. (6) The judgment reinforces the principles governing when an appellate court may interfere with sentence, requiring a material misdirection or a sentence that is 'shocking', 'startling' or 'disturbingly inappropriate'.

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This case references

Applies

  • Ndlovu v The State[2017] ZACC 19
  • S v MalgasCase No: 117/2000

Cites

  • The State v Wessel Albertus Vermaas and The State v Johan Petrus Lafras Du PlessisCase CCT 1/94 and Case CCT 2/94 (decided 8 June 1995)

Follows

  • S v MalgasCase No: 117/2000

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