S v Rabie[1] is an important case in South African law, heard in the Appellate Division on 12 September 1975, with judgment handed down on 23 September. The presiding officers were Holmes JA, Corbett JA and Kotzé AJA. The case is significant primarily in the area of sentencing, with its determination that the punishment should
The court held that in every appeal against a sentence, whether imposed by a magistrate or a Judge, the Court hearing the appeal
The test under the second of these points is whether the sentence is vitiated by irregularity or misdirection or is disturbingly inappropriate.
The appellant had been convicted on nineteen counts of fraud, which had been taken together for the purposes of sentence, the appellant having been sentenced to
In addition he had been convicted and fined on three counts of overcharging.
In an appeal against the sentence on the nineteen counts of fraud, it was contended that they amounted substantially to the same offence of overcharging in contravention of the Rents Act,[2] [3] for which the appellant had merely been fined on the other three counts on which he had been convicted.
The Court, however, found that the fraud was intended to be and was a cover-up for the unlawful overcharging of rents, and held that there was no basis for appellate interference with the trial Judge's sentence. The Appellate Division did not have an overriding discretion to ameliorate the sentences of trial Courts. The discretion was pre-eminently theirs, alterable only on the grounds mentioned above. The appeal was accordingly dismissed.