Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 227South Africa
M.E.M v S (A67/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 227 (6 March 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## M.E.M v S (A67/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 227 (6 March 2025)
M.E.M v S (A67/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 227 (6 March 2025)
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sino date 6 March 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: A67/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
DATE
2025-03-06
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
M[...]
E[...]
M[...]
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for
handing down is deemed to be 6 March 2025.
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
Introduction
[1]
The appellant was charged with rape
[1]
of a minor 17 year old girl, his biological daughter. The
offence was committed in August 2016 and he pleaded guilty to the
charge on 29 August 2023 and was found guilty as charged. He
was sentenced to life imprisonment. The appellant is before
us
by virtue of his automatic right to appeal his life sentence.
Appellant’s
submissions
[2]
It was submitted that the Magistrate paid lip service to substantial
and compelling circumstances
by taking the position of an “armchair
critic.” In doing so the Magistrate erred in not taking
into account the
interest of the victim, the remorse and personal
circumstances of the appellant. This led to the Magistrate
exercising his
discretion improperly and unreasonably which allows
for this Court of Appeal to interfere with the sentence.
[2]
[3]
As for the interests of the victim, the victim had attempted to have
the charges withdrawn against
the appellant but was unsuccessful.
She had forgiven her father and she and the child born from the rape
were staying with
her father as a family unit. This was not a
coerced situation as they were supporting the appellant; not
being financially
reliant upon him.
[4]
The court
a quo
erred in finding that the evidence of the DNA
conclusively linking the appellant as the perpetrator of the crime
negated the remorse
of the appellant. Despite a strong case
against him, he had expressed sincere remorse.
[5]
The appellant was 42 years when he committed the crime and was a
first offender. He was
sentenced at the age of 49 years old.
He was married to the mother of the victim and from this marriage
four children were
born that he supported before he was arrested.
He had passed grade 12 and from Vista obtained training in motor
mechanics
from General Motors but was retrenched in 2017 when General
Motors closed operations in South Africa. He pleaded guilty.
Submissions
on behalf of the respondent
[6]
The argument went that this Court cannot interfere with the sentence
imposed because the Magistrate
exercised its discretion properly and
judiciously and there was no substantial and compelling circumstances
to deviate from the
sentence.
[7]
It was submitted that the rape was a deliberate self-serving act to
obtain sexual gratification.
In doing so the appellant abused
his position or authority as the father of the complainant and
betrayed her trust. This
prevalent crime of rape and incest,
“has perverted the very bonds of love and trust that the family
relation is meant to
nurture.”
[3]
[8]
The interests of the victim support the sentence imposed because the
factors that the victim attempted
to withdraw the charges and had
forgiven the appellant are neutral facts, not substantial and
compelling facts.
[4]
The
incident had impacted on the victim emotionally and the child born
from the incest shares a father with his mother.
This will
create a crisis for the child.
[9]
As for remorse, the appellant did not voluntary admit to his guilt,
only when he was brought to
book. He had no way to escape the
truth being linked with the DNA. The appellant did not take the
Court into its confidence
as to whether he had a true appreciation of
the consequences of his actions; completely disrupting a family
unit.
[10]
The respondent’s argument thus concluded that the appeal
against sentence should be dismissed.
Decision
on sentence
[11]
This Court’s power to interfere with the trial court’s
sentence imposed is limited to where there
is an irregularity that
results in a failure of justice, the Court misdirected itself, or the
sentence is so shocking or disproportionate
that no reasonable court
would have imposed such sentence.
[5]
[12]
Furthermore, in
S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) par [25]
the Supreme Court of Appeal found that “Courts are required to
approach the imposition of sentence conscious
that the legislature
has ordained life imprisonment … as the sentence that should
ordinarily and in the absence of weighty
justification be imposed for
the listed crimes in the specified circumstances. Unless there
are, and can be seem to be, truly
convincing reasons for a different
response, the crimes in question are therefore required to elicit a
severe, standardised and
consistent response from the courts.
The specified sentences are not to be departed from lightly and for
flimsy reasons.”
With
these principles in mind the Court must entertain this appeal.
[13]
Raping your minor daughter is a heinous crime in that it is the most
dehumanising violation a child can ever
endure, let alone from her
biological father. From his plea explanation he became sexually
aroused, he undressed her and
overpowered her despite his daughter’s
attempts to fight him. From this horrific incident a child is
born who is going
to have to work through how he was conceived and
how he fits in the family. It must also be remembered that only
after the
child was born and the biological mother of the victim
insisted to ascertain who the father was did the victim reveal who
the father
was. The appellant did not come to his senses during
the incident, nor did he show remorse after the incident and confess
it. It was only when the state insisted on prosecution that he
pleaded guilty.
[14]
The interest of the victim was set out in the probation officer’s
report. When confronted with
the incident again she became
emotional and unable to talk audibly. She stated she had cut
herself off from that chapter
and had to confront it again. She
was dreading the day that the child would ask about his identity and
she did not want to
divulge this family secret. It was accepted
that explaining this could “get ugly”. The
probation officer
explained that although the victim did state that
the she forgave the appellant he has left her with the child’s
identity
as “a major problem.”
[15]
The dread of trying to explain the unlawful and terrible way the
child was conceived and who his father is,
negates any forgiveness
the victim might have expressed. She expressed forgiveness “for
the sake of the family and
especially her siblings.” The
interests of the victim does not render it to be a substantial and
compelling reason
to deviate from the prescribed sentence.
[16]
As for the personal circumstances of the appellant there is not a
single factor, or all the factors set out
in paragraph [5] above,
cumulatively, that can sustain classification as substantial and
compelling circumstances. The Magistrate
thus correctly did not
deviate from the prescribed sentence on this basis.
[17]
Despite various programmes from the Government and NGOs rape
statistics belie any success in curtailing rape.
This is also
true of the disturbingly increasing phenomenon of sexual abuse within
the family context. The public expects
harsher sentences to
exact retribution and act as deterrence.
[18]
I have dealt with the fact that the remorse only manifested after the
state persisted with the prosecution
with proof of the DNA evidence
to who the perpetrator was. I can accept the appellant
regretted his actions, but it did not
manifest as genuine remorse.
[19]
I am satisfied that the sentence was individualised with the
punishment fitting the crime, the appellant
and with careful
consideration of all the factors relating to this matter. There
were no substantial and compelling circumstances
and the court
a
quo
did not strive for severity or surrender to misplaced pity.
The appeal against sentence is dismissed.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
M.P.
MOTHA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NO: A67/2024
HEARD
ON: 4 March 2025
FOR
THE APPELLANT: MR. S. MOENG
INSTRUCTED
BY: Legal Aid Board
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: Ms. E. Mafunisa
INSTRUCTED
BY: Director of Public Prosecutions
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 6 March 2025
[1]
Contravention
of Section 3 read with sections 1, 2, 50, 56(1), 56A, 57, 58, 59, 60
and 61 of the Criminal Law Sexual Offences
and Related Matters
Amendment Act 31 of 2007 as amended. Further read with
sections 94
,
256
and
261
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
Further read with
sections 51(1)
or
51
(2)(b) and Schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1977 as amended. Further
read with section 120 of the Children’s
Act 38 of 2005.
[2]
S
v Pieters
1987
(3) SA 717 (A)
[3]
S v
Abrahams
2002
(1) SACR 116
(SCA) at 23C
[4]
S v
Matyityi
2011
(1) SACR 40
(SCA) par [13]
[5]
S v
Bogaards
2013
(1) SACR 1
(CC) at [41]
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