Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 294South Africa
Nkadimeng v S (Appeal) (A48/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 294 (12 March 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nkadimeng v S (Appeal) (A48/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 294 (12 March 2025)
Nkadimeng v S (Appeal) (A48/2024) [2025] ZAGPPHC 294 (12 March 2025)
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sino date 12 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: A48/2024
(1) REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE:
DATE:
12/03/2025
In
the matter between:
SYLVESTER
MPHO NKADIMENG
APPELLANT
V
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judges whose names are
reflected and is handed down electronically by
circulation to the
parties/their legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Caselines.
The date for
hand-down is deemed to be.......
JUDGMENT
MOSOPA,
J
INTRODUCTION
1.
The appellant was convicted of one count of Rape in contravention of
section
3 of Act 32 of 2007 read with the provisions of section 51(1)
of Act 105 of 1997. As a sequel of such conviction, the appellant
was
sentenced to life imprisonment and further an order was made that his
name be recorded in the Sex offenders register because
of the fact
that he was convicted of a rape of a minor child, who was 10 years
old at the time of the commission of the offence.
2.
The appellant was legally represented during his trial matter and
pleaded not
guilty to the charge levelled against him. It is because
of the sentence imposed that appellant has an automatic right to
appeal
such conviction and sentence.
BACKGROUND
3.
The evidence that led to the conviction of the appellant can be
summarized as
follows, the complainant "KSM" (identity
concealed because of the age of the complainant) was 10 years old
when he was
raped and 12 years old at the time of his testimony, he
testified with the assistance of an intermediary in the intermediary
room.
He testified that on the day of the rape incident, he was
coming from the soccer field, and he came across the appellant who
said
to him that he must go with him to his place of residence. He
knew the appellant at the time, as the appellant was in a
relationship
with his aunt and they were all staying in the same yard
but in different shacks. He did not know the reason why the appellant
said he must go with him to his place of residence.
4.
His mother was home at that time and his aunt was not at home as she
was in the
villages in Botswana and was staying there at that time.
When he met with the appellant, it was starting to become dark. He
further
testified that the appellant forced him to drink liquor which
he describes in evidence as Black Label beer and he consumed three
cups, after that he felt drunk.
5.
The appellant then pushed him to his bed and told him to take off his
T-Shirt,
which he did but he did not tell him the reason why he had
to take his T-Shirt off. The appellant then undressed his trousers
and
underwear he then inserted his penis into his anus, he said that
it was sore and that he also cried. The appellant then told him
that
if he screams and if he tells his mother about what happened, he will
stab him with a knife. He testified that he believed
the appellant
when he was saying all these things to him. He could not scream as
the appellant had tied a cloth around his mouth.
Before the appellant
penetrated his anus, he spit saliva on his hand and then smeared it
on his anus. The appellant put his penis
into his anus until the
following morning. In the morning the appellant instructed him to put
on his clothes.
6.
The complainant then went to his mother's place and the appellant
went to work.
He then took a bath and thereafter went to school. When
he came back from school, he found his mother sitting with Mahlatsi,
who
is his mother's friend. He was not walking properly at that time,
as he was walking with his legs apart and Mahlatsi requested his
mother to examine him to determine what happened to him. His mother
examined him on the anus and that is when he told her that
the
appellant did "naughty things" on him and that he raped
him, by inserting his penis into his anus.
7.
His mother waited for the appellant to return from work and then she
called the
police and the members of the community, and the appellant
was eventually arrested by the police. At the end of
examination-in-chief,
he was brought into the courtroom for purposes
of identifying the appellant who was made to sit with other male
persons inside
the accused dock. He was not informed to look at the
dock before identification and he identified the appellant in that
dock amongst
the other people that he was sitting with.
8.
In cross-examination, he testified that he knew that his mother was
at their
home, because she came looking for him at the appellant's
place and the appellant indicated to her that he wanted him to sleep
over at his place and thereafter his mother left leaving him behind
and went home. When his mother arrived at the appellant's shack
looking for him, the appellant had not yet made him consume three
cups of beer. He further testified that after the appellant inserted
his penis into his anus, he did the up and down movement on him. His
mother came in the morning and knocked at the appellant's
shack to
wake them up so that he could come home and bath before he goes to
school.
9.
When he arrived home his mother noticed that there was something
wrong with him,
but she thought that it was due to a medical
operation that he underwent. At school, he could not stand up from
the chair and the
school called his mother and told her that he was
not doing his schoolwork and that he was not right at school.
10.
The mother of KSM confirmed the love relationship that the appellant
has with one of her
relatives, but she described the relationship
differently from what KSM described. She also confirmed that the
appellant was staying
with them in the same yard but in a different
shack, but currently they are no longer staying at that place where
the incident
happened. She also confirmed that her son went to the
soccer field on the day of the incident. She visited her sister that
day
and arrived back home at 18h00 and started to prepare food and
found that her son was not present at home. She finished preparing
food at approximately past 20h00 and her son had not yet arrived
home. That is when she went to the appellant's place of residence
to
look for him. Initially, the appellant told her that her son was not
there, and she then went to her sister's place to look
for him and
could not find him.
11.
She went back to the appellant and informed him that she could not
find her son and that
she could not go to sleep without knowing where
he was. The appellant then laughed and said to her that he would show
her a miracle
and he then called out the name of the complainant and
he emerged. He was also laughing when he emerged, and he had a soccer
ball
with him and said that she nearly collapsed when she could not
find her son. The appellant asked if the complainant could spend
the
night with him as he had already prepared food.
12.
She agreed to the request but informed the appellant that the
complainant will be going
to school in the morning, and he said that
he will also be going to work. Her son also did not have a problem
spending a night
at the appellant's place of residence. She saw the
appellant during the day consuming liquor, but he was not intoxicated
when he
requested her son to spend a night with him. The following
day she went to knock at the appellant's shack to wake the
complainant
up so that he could not be late for school. She knocked
there for a long time before the appellant could hear her knock.
13.
As the complainant was ba!hing, she noticed that as he bent down, he
appeared to be feeling
pain, and she thought that it was because of
an operation that he underwent on his stomach. She asked him what the
problem was
and whether he was feeling any pain and he said no. It
was raining on the day and when her son left, she could not observe
how
he was walking. Her son came back from school earlier than his
return time as he usually arrives home between 15h00 to 15h30.
14.
At that time, she was sitting outside her shack together with
Mahlatsi and she observed
that her son was not walking properly, he
was walking with his legs apart. She asked him what was wrong and if
he was having pain
and he said no. She then became angry and started
shouting at him. Mahlatse entered the shack with him, and she stood
at the door,
but she could not see them while inside the shack, but
she could hear them when they were talking to each other. She could
hear
her son saying to Mahlatse that the appellant inserted his
"thing" into his buttocks, that is when she entered the
house
and then pulled down her son's trousers and then started to
inspect the complainant. She then saw some blood and some substance
that looked to her like "sperm", she also saw some blood
coming out of the cuts.
15.
She was speaking loudly and people started gathering at her place.
She took Mahlatse's phone
and phoned the police as her phone's
battery died. The police informed her that they would wait until the
appellant arrived from
work. The appellant denied ever raping the
complainant. The appellant was then arrested, and the police took her
to the police
station leaving her son behind and they only fetched
him the following day. The complainant was only examined the
following day
of the rape incident by the police, and he was still
complaining of pains. Before he was taken to the doctor, the
complainant bathed
first, as he took a bath the following day of the
rape incident before he went to school.
16.
Her son told her that when the appellant raped him, he was in
possession of a knife, which
he described that when you press a
button, the blade comes out, he also told her about a pink towel and
a piece of cloth that the
appellant had. The appellant threatened him
with the knife if he screamed. The appellant was wiping him off with
that towel. Prior
to this incident, she never encountered any
problems with the appellant, and they were at a certain stage working
together in the
same company. Her son never spent a night at the
appellant's place in the past.
17.
In cross-examination, she confirmed receiving a telephone call from
the complainant's school
about him not doing the schoolwork but that
was after the rape incident, and it is not correct that it was made
on the Monday following
his rape incident on Sunday night. When her
son was bathing in the morning after spending the night at the
appellant's place, when
he bent down, he said "eish", and
when she asked him if there was a problem, and he said no. After she
inspected the
complainant and went to the police, the complainant did
not take a bath thereafter. It was put to her that the DNA results
show
that no semen was detected.
18.
The doctor who examined the complainant and compiled a J88
medico-legal examination report,
could not testify as she was
suffering from a serious neurological condition, and she was no
longer in service of the department.
Her supervisor Dr Eales from the
Department of Family Medicine, University of Pretoria in
collaboration with the Gauteng Provincial
Government testified on her
behalf instead. The appellant through his legal representative, did
not have an objection with the
J88 medico-legal examination being
admitted into evidence and also Dr Eales testifying pertaining to
such report.
19.
Dr Eales confirmed that Dr Schehle examined the complainant on 20
November 2018 and completed
the J88 medico-legal examination report.
That the medicolegal report on clinical findings found the
presence of a fresh bruise
on the right thigh meaning that the skin
was still intact but there was bleeding underneath the skin which
resulted in discoloration.
The bruise is attributed to be as a result
of blunt force trauma. The patient told the examining doctor that he
bathed, washed,
urinated, and changed clothing since the incident of
rape.
20.
On anal examination, it was found that there was redness on the skin
around the orifice.
This can be caused by multiple things like poor
hygiene, some infection, trauma etc. A tear was noted at 1 o'clock
which is a sign
of a high suspicion of trauma in that area. It is a
kind of a specific injury that they observe in sexual assault case,
because
the buttocks need to be opened in order to injure that area.
Swelling or thickening of rim of the opening of the anus was noted
and the doctor attributed that to sexual assault that happens over a
long time with repeated trauma. The doctor noted no funneling
which
also signals repeated penetration. A discharge was noted but not
specified. No digital examination was conducted which is
commonly
done to adults and not children, being the insertion of a finger into
the rectal canal. No active bleeding was found on
anal examination.
21.
The doctor excluded the possibility of the injury to be caused by
constipation as the injury
was not in the inside of the rectal canal
but on the outside of the rectal canal.
APPELLANT'S
CASE
22.
The appellant testified that on the day of the rape incident, he
spent almost the entire
day consuming alcohol and at approximately
18h00 the clouds started to gather, and he thought about his laundry
which he left on
the washing line. He found the complainant in the
yard and when he entered his house, the complainant also entered. He
consumed
alcohol that he brought but denied forcing the complainant
to consume alcohol. He confirmed that the complainant's
mother came looking for him and he told her that he was not there and
on the second occasion, he told her that he was inside the
house.
23.
The complainant told his mother that he was going to sleep at the
appellant's place and
his mother asked the appellant if her son was
going to sleep at his place and he said yes. They then all went to
sleep and the
following day in the morning he went to his workplace.
He also confirmed that the complainant's mother woke him up so that
he could
go to school and for the fact that he overslept. When he
arrived back from home, the community members started asking him
questions
about the complainant and started to assault him and he was
eventually arrested by the police. He denied ever penetrating the
complainant
on his anus with his penis.
ANALYSIS
AND APPLICABLE LEGAL PRINCIPLE
24.
In
Rex v Dhlumayo
1948 (2) SA 677
(A) at 705
the court when
dealing with the appeal court's powers stated that;
"Ordinarily the
appellant in a criminal appeal has to satisfy the appellate court
that the verdict was wrong, at least to the
extent that the trial
court should have had a reasonable doubt as to his guilt...
Where there has been no
misdirection on fact by the trial Judge, the presumption is that his
conclusion is correct; the appellate
court will only reverse it where
it is convinced that it is wrong."
25.
From the above, it is clear that the court of appeal powers are
circumscribed, only to the
extent when the trial court has
misdirected itself in its factual findings. This is so because the
trial court has advantages,
which the appeal judges do not have in
seeing and hearing witness being steeped in the atmosphere of the
trial. Not only has the
trial court the opportunity of observing the
demeanor, but also their appearances and whole personality. (see Rex
v Dhlumayo (supra)).
26.
In
S v Chabalala
2003 (1) SACR 134
(SCA) at 140 A - B
, the
court when dealing with the approach to be adopted on appeal, stated
that;
"The correct
approach is to weigh up all the elements which point towards the
guilt of the accused against all those which
are indicative of his
innocence, taking proper account of inherent strengths and
weaknesses, probabilities and improbabilities
on both sides and,
having done so, to decide whether the balance weighs so heavily in
favour of the State as to exclude any reasonable
doubt about the
accused's guilt. The result may prove that one scrap of evidence or
one defect in the case for either party (such
as the failure to call
a material witness concerning an identity parade) was decisive but
that can only be an ex post facto determination
and a trial court
(and counsel) should avoid the temptation to latch on to one
(apparently) obvious aspect without assessing it
in the context of
the full picture presented in evidence."
27.
It is common cause that before the complainant could meet with the
appellant on the day
of the incident of rape, there was nothing wrong
with him and that will include the time when the complainant's mother
found him
at the appellant's place. It is also common cause that both
appellant and the complainant slept on the same bed that night of the
incident. Also, that when his mother woke him and the appellant up in
the morning, she did not realise that there was a problem
with him.
The complainant did not make any report of being sexually assaulted
by the appellant to his mother, until he returned
from school earlier
than the usual time the following day of the rape incident.
28.
In the morning as the complainant was taking a bath, when he bent
down he showed signs of
feeling pains and he also even said "eish".
Still at this stage, he did not make any report to his mother even
though
his mother asked him whether he was fine to which he responded
with a "yes". The mother thought that the signs that her
son demonstrated was because of the two groin operations that he
underwent.
29.
It is only after the complainant returned from school walking with
his legs apart that,
with the assistance of Mahlatse, he mentioned
that he was raped by the appellant. The complainant confirmed the
presence of Mahlatse
when he returned from school. Despite walking
with difficulty when asked what his problem was, he answered by
saying that he was
fine. This can be attributed to a number of
aspects at the time when he was raped. he was threatened with a knife
and was told
not tell her mother about the incident.
30.
What is critical is the fact that without the name of the appellant
suggested to him, he
said that it was the appellant who raped him.
There was no animosity between the appellant and the complainant as
well as the mother.
We are alive to the fact that there was a stage
when the complainant's mother was angry and shouted at him, but there
was evidence
that can suggest that such conduct influenced the
complainant to falsely implicate the appellant. The appellant in
addition to
that, was in a love relationship with a family member of
the complainant and he was also staying in the same yard though in
different
shacks. The two shacks were situated very close to each
other. Even when the community members were assaulting the appellant
because
of allegations made against him, the mother still intervened
and assisted the appellant and take him to her shack.
n
31.
The complainant is a single witness to the rape incident. Section 60
of Act 32 of 2007 declares
irrational and outlaws the fact that the
evidence of the child in sexual offences matters be treated with
caution and makes the
following provisions;
"[60]
Notwithstanding any other law, a court may not treat the evidence of
a complainant in criminal proceedings involving
the alleged
commission of a sexual offence pending before that court, with
caution, on account of the nature of the offence"
However,
this does not suggest that the evidence of the child witness must be
accepted with less scrutiny placed to such evidence.
32.
Having said the above, section 208 of Act 51 of 1977 also needs to be
mentioned as it provides
as follows;
"[208] An accused
may be convicted of any offence on the single evidence of any
competent witness, the reliability of the complainant's
witness and
its competency also need to be looked at."
33.
Criticism was levelled on the fact that the medico-legal report (J88)
does not corroborate
the evidence of the mother of the complainant
that when she examined the complainant, she saw a substance which
looks like "sperms"
and also that she saw blood on the
complainant's buttocks. This is despite the conclusive conclusion of
the doctor who examined
the complainant that he was raped as she
noted blunt force trauma which can be caused by the penis,
corroborating the complainant's
evidence that the appellant
penetrated him anally.
34.
No "sperms" were noted on examination, but no specified
discharge was noted. A
tear at 1 o' clock on anal examination was
noted by the doctor. The complainant bathed on the morning after
returning from the
appellant's place and changed his clothes. It is
common that despite the mother of the complainant reporting the rape
to the police,
he was only taken to the doctor the following day, his
mother was given an instruction that he need not bath until taken to
the
doctor for examination. There is nothing to gainsay that the
complainant's mother acted contrary to that instruction or the
complainant
himself.
35.
Taking into account the above, it would have been highly impossible
for the doctor to have
noted blood and "sperms" on
examination, however, the doctor corroborated the complainant's
mother when she said that
she saw cuts on the anus of the complainant
as the doctor noted tear at 1 o'clock. It is for the above that it is
found that the
criticism levelled lacks merit and should be rejected.
36.
In his testimony the complainant testified that the appellant
sexually penetrated him the
whole night without sleeping. This I find
to be improbable, but sight should not be lost of the fact that we
are dealing with the
evidence of a complainant witness who was 12
years old when he testified and 10 years old when he was sexually
penetrated. This
sound to be an exaggeration but it is not in our
considered view material to vitiate the state's case. Uncontested
evidence is
that the appellant would wake up early which would lead
to the complainant's mother waking the complainant up. The appellant
on
his version, states that he overslept which is quite strange
considering the fact that he went to bed while the complainant was
playing games on his phone. The incident might have prolonged until
late in the night which slightly confirms the version of the
complainant that it was for a prolonged time but not the whole night.
37.
The trial court did not misdirect itself when convicting the
appellant of rape of the complainant
and it cannot be faulted. There
is nothing to suggest that the evidence of the child cannot be relied
on. Items which were apparently
used by the appellant in committing
the rape act were found but because of the police ineptness those
exhibits could not be secured
to court and used as evidence against
the appellant. The complainant did not contradict himself despite
being subjected to vigorous
cross-examination, this evidence was to a
large extent corroborated by his mother.
SENTENCE
38.
In S v
Boggards
2013 (1) SACR 1
(CC) at para 41
, the
Constitutional court when reaffirming the principle that sentencing
ordinarily is within the discretion of the trial court,
stated that;
"An appellate
court's power to interfere with sentences imposed by courts below is
circumscribed. It can only do so where there
has been an irregularity
that results in a failure of justice; the court below misdirected
itself to such an extent that its decision
on sentence is vitiated;
or the sentence is so disproportionate or shocking that no reasonable
court could have imposed it."
39.
The trial court enumerated the appellant's personal circumstances as
follows;
39.1. That
when the appellant was arrested, he was 29 years of age and at the
time of sentence he was 31 years old,
39.2. He has
been in custody awaiting finalisation of his trial matter for two and
half years as bail was denied,
39.3. He is
not married but is the father of two children aged five and two years
old respectively,
39.4. He grew
up without a father figure in his life and was raised by his mother
on her own. His father is unknown
to him and,
39.5. He
obtained grade 12 in 2014. and he has been temporarily employed since
that time.
40.
Also, in the pre-sentence report used in favour of the appellant, the
following is enumerated;
40.1. That he
is the third born from a family of five children and was raised by
his maternal grandmother as his mother
was employed and only come
home during month end.
40.2. The
appellant's children are born of different mothers, and
40.3. The
appellant does not take responsibility of the offence and does not
acknowledge guilt or remorse.
41.
The pre-sentencing report compiled on behalf of the complainant
indicates that since the
incident he has developed deviant and
violent behaviours towards his siblings. He also assaults his younger
siblings, the conduct
that he did not display before the rape
incident. This aspect was confirmed by the complainant's mother,
which necessitated her
to change the school of the complainant he was
attending. He does not longer trust male persons. The complainant
suffered both
physical and psychologically because of the offence. He
was left traumatised after the incident and has difficulty in
sleeping
due to the nightmares that he experiences. He could no
longer concentrate at school and his schoolwork was affected as he
has lost
interest in doing his schoolwork.
42.
In imposing sentence, the trial court did not find the period the
appellant spent in custody
awaiting finalisation of his trial matter
consisting substantial and circumstantial circumstances. Also, the
fact that he is a
first offender.
43.
It is trite that the period spent in custody is not itself a factor
constituting substantial
and compelling circumstances, but it must be
cumulatively taken into consideration with other factors as it was in
our view, correctly
stated in
S v Ngcobo
2018 (1)
SACR 479
(SCA)
were the following was stated:
"The test was not
whether on its own that period of detention constituted a substantial
and compelling circumstance, but whether
the effective sentence
proposed was proportionate to the crime or crimes committed; whether
the sentence in all the circumstances,
including the period spent in
detention prior to conviction and sentencing, was a just one."
Furthermore;
"The period in
detention pre-sentencing is but one of the factors that should be
taken into account in determining whether
the effective period of
imprisonment to be imposed is justified."
44.
The complainant suffered abuse at the hands of the person who was
supposed to have protected
him at a young age in his life. The
complainant had trust on the appellant and his mother, hence when the
request was made by the
appellant that he sleeps at his place, they
did not object to such. Despite the trial court's pronouncements on
his guilt, the
appellant refused to take responsibility of his
actions and denied raping the complainant. This is indicative of the
fact that
the appellant is not a suitable candidate for
rehabilitation. In the result the trial court cannot be faulted on
its findings and
the sentence need not be interfered with.
ORDER
45.
In the result, the following order is made;
1. Appeal against both
conviction and sentence is hereby refused.
MJ
MOSOPA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
I
agree
P
PHAHLANE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT
: MS MMP
MASETE
INSTRUCTED
BY
: LEGAL-AID SOUTH AFRICA
FOR
THE RESPONDENT
: ADVOCATE GJC MARITZ
INSTRUCTED
BY
:
THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Date
of Hearing: 21 January 2025
Date
of Judgment:
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