CHEDA J: This matter
has been forwarded to me for review.
The accused, a man of 37 years of age was charged with contravening
section 157 (1) (C) of the Criminal Law Codification and Reform Act [Chapter
9:23]
The brief facts are that the accused a farmer in the Lalapansi area was
found with 157 dagga plants measuring between 1.2 and 1.3metres.
He pleaded guilty, was convicted and sentenced as follows:
“24 months
imprisonment of which 6 months imprisonment is suspended for 5 years on
condition accused does not within that period commit an offence of which
Cultivation of dagga is an element and for which upon conviction is sentenced
to imprisonment without the option of a fine.
A further 18 months imprisonment is suspended on condition accused
completes 630 hours of community service at Makute Primary School on the
following conditions:
The community
service starts on 3 June 2010 and must be completed within 19 weeks. The community service shall be performed
every Monday to Friday which is not a public holiday between 8am to 1pm and 2pm
to 4pm, to the satisfaction of the person in charge of the said institution who
may for good cause shown grant accused leave to be absent on certain days
during certain hours. Such leave of
absence shall not count as part of the Community service to be performed. The remaining....... months imprisonment is
suspended on condition accused pays restitution to the complainant in the sum
of $...... through the Clerk of Court, Gweru on or before.................”
The sentence is incomplete and this
shows the lack of seriousness of the learned trial magistrate. As it is, it is not capable of full
compliance by the accused.
This sentence appeared too lenient to me and I solicited the learned
trial magistrate's response to which he stated:
“My reasoning at
that time was that Community Service was appropriate and that accused had acted
out of ignorance to the fact that such was unlawful.
However, going
through the proceedings I may have been excessively lenient, but my reasoning
of Community Service was to do with accused being a breadwinner, the sentence
also being effective in rehabilitation for 1st offenders and to
correct accused's ignorance.
I stand guided”
”Signed”
Possession of dagga of this magnitude can only lead to one conclusion
and one conclusion alone, that is, the accused intended to sell the dagga. It was therefore, for commercial purposes. In
view, of such irresistible conclusion, the court should have viewed the case in
the most serious light and therefore treat it as such, see S v Inken Nyamaha HB 121/10.
To sentence an accused who was found in possession of such a large
quantity of dagga to community service defeats the spirit and purpose of
community service. Infact this is a
serious and brazen abuse of the court's jurisdiction. I must remark that this is the second case
see S v
Inken Nyamaha HB 121/10 to come before me from the same magistrate, Mr I. T. Mhlanga within a week. In that case I questioned the reasons given
for an apparently lenient sentence. I
again re-iterate that judicial officers should take their work seriously as
failure to do so will shake society's confidence in the judiciary.
There is a plethora of cases that show the court's views on drug related
cases. The following are some of them:
(1) S v Asereta
HH 2/90 where a 50 year old was found in possession of 6 plants of dagga. The trial court, after conviction sentenced
him to 6 months imprisonment which was wholly suspended. On review it was held that the appropriate
sentence would have been 6 months imprisonment of which 4 months imprisonment
was suspended on the usual conditions:
(2) In S v
Kondo HH 56/91, a 38 year old, first offender was convicted of a drug
related offence and was sentenced to pay a fine of $100-00. Again, upon review it was held that the
sentence was inadequate. The court went
further and remarked that magistrates were lacking in terms of knowledge of the
current legal position in sentencing.
There is a need for magistrates to familiarise themselves with
precedents. The following cases will be
of much help in the circumstances, S v
Sibanda HH 45/88; S v Marufu HH
62/88 and Attorney General v Sibanda and
others S 94/88.
There has been gross injustice in this matter, particularly if serious
consideration is taken of the fact that the court would have either seen the
exhibit or at least visualised what 157 plants of dagga look like to assist
him, 157 plants is a substantial harvest for any dagga farmer and is indeed
pricey. Had he applied his mind to the
case before him, he would no doubt have properly considered that cultivation of
such quantity of dagga was destined for sale and nothing else. The appropriate sentence in my view should
have been no less than 3 years effective.
In view of such injustice, the following order is made:
(1)
my certificate is withheld.
Cheda
J.............................................................
Mathonsi J agrees
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