Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 354South Africa
Mkhabela v S (A137/2015) [2025] ZAGPPHC 354 (17 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 April 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mkhabela v S (A137/2015) [2025] ZAGPPHC 354 (17 April 2025)
Mkhabela v S (A137/2015) [2025] ZAGPPHC 354 (17 April 2025)
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sino date 17 April 2025
IN THE HIGH OF SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No:
A137/2015
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
Date:
17 April 2025
Signature:
In
the matter between:
RAYMOND
MKHABELA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER
J:
1]
The appellant was charged with two counts of rape of an eight-year
old female minor child.
If convicted, the appellant stood to be
sentenced to a minimum of life imprisonment in terms of
s51
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
2]
At the commencement of the proceedings in the Regional Court, Benoni
on 23 September 2014,
the presiding magistrate stated the following:
“…
the
appearances in this matter is as follows; the presiding office is Mr
Makamu, the court in this instance is sitting with two
assessors, Mrs
Ntlam (?) and Mrs Sheboshego (?) and for the state is Mr Marisham and
for the defence Mrs Clarence and the interpreter
is Ms Khumalo.”
(sic)
3]
It appears that the charges were then read to the appellant, who
pleaded not guilty, who
denied all the allegations made against him,
and who elected not to give a plea explanation. The trial then
commenced and over
the following month, the State and the appellant
put on their respective cases and called their respective witnesses.
4]
On 15 October 2014, the appellant was found guilty on both counts of
rape. In convicting
the appellant, the court stated:
“
And
the decision is unanimous with the two assessors and the conclusion
is that the accused is the person that penetrated the complainant
twice…”
5]
On the same date he was sentenced to twenty-five years’
imprisonment for both counts,
taken together for purposes of
sentencing, and also found unfit to possess a firearm in terms of
s103(1)
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
. Lastly, it was
ordered that the appellant’s name is to be recorded in the
National Register of Sexual Offenders.
6]
It is to be noted that the appellant was in custody throughout the
proceedings, having been
arrested on 27 January 2014 and has remained
in custody to date.
7]
It is as against both convention and sentence that this appeal serves
before this court with
leave of the court
a quo
.
8]
It is firstly with utter dismay that this court notes that it has
taken this appeal more
than 10 years to find its way to this date of
hearing on 16 April 2025. There is absolutely no information provided
for this lapse,
other than appellant’s counsel noting that
there may have been an issue with the proper transcription of the
matter being
obtained. Whatever the reason, this is unacceptable. But
given the outcome of this judgment, and the reasons provided, at this
stage we say nothing more on this issue.
9]
The main issue is that it appears that the presiding Magistrate
appointed two assessors to
sit with him. One can only assume that
this was done in terms of
s93
ter
of the Magistrate’s
Court Act 32 of 1944 (the MCA) – as the record does not state
the reason for the appointment
10]
It is however unclear from the record when the assessors were
appointed by the court, their full names,
whether they had been
properly sworn in, or indeed how and whether they participated in any
decision-making process on the facts
as they were required to do.
From the time when the case first came before court on 28 January
2014, it was postponed no fewer
than on ten occasions before it
finally proceeded on trial on 23 September 2014. After the
complainant’s evidence and cross-examination
was concluded, the
matter was adjourned to 8 October 2014 and then to 9 October 2014
where several other witnesses for the State
testified, as did the
appellant and his one witness. The matter was then postponed to 15
October 2014 for argument and judgment
on conviction and sentence.
11]
Apart from the recording on 23 September 2014, there is no indication
on the Magistrate’s notes,
or on the transcript itself, that
the appointed assessors were present on any of the prior or
subsequent occasions, that they participated
in the proceedings or
how they participated in the eventual findings and conviction. This,
in my view, constitutes an irregularity
that taints the entire
proceedings and which renders the proceedings a nullity as it is not
clear from the record that the court
was properly constituted at all
times.
12]
Our courts have set aside proceedings in which the court had
proceeded in the absence of appointed assessors:
a)
in
S
v Van der Merwe
[1]
the
magistrate sat with two assessors. The State case was concluded and
after an adjournment the assessors were not present.
Both the accused
and the prosecutor agreed that the case should continue without the
assessors. There was no evidence that the
assessors had become
unavailable or could not be traced. No reason was given for their
non-attendance. The court was therefore
not properly constituted and
the verdict of guilty was tainted with irregularity. The conviction
was set aside.
[2]
b)
in
S
v Mngeni
[3]
The
appellant appeared in a magistrate's court on a charge of assault
with intent to do grievous bodily harm. He pleaded not guilty
and the
trial proceeded before a magistrate and two assessors. Whilst the
complainant was still under cross-examination, the matter
was
postponed. When the case was called after a further postponement,
the assessors were absent and the clerk of the court
was
requested to contact them and advise them that the matter would be
heard on a subsequent date. On that date the assessors were
again
absent and the court proceeded to hear the matter in their absence.
No reason for their absence was given and the appellant
was convicted
and sentenced in the ensuing trial. The court found that if assessors
absconded during the trial without good reason
and the magistrate
continued with the trial without them, this amounted to a fatal
irregularity which vitiated the proceedings.
And that the amended s
93
ter
(11)
of the MCA did not change the legal position pertaining to the
absence of assessors. Accordingly, the proceedings
had to
be set aside.
14]
One last issue that requires comment is the fact that the
intermediary that was appointed was not sworn
in by the court. The
record simply states the following:
“
COURT:
I know that you have appeared before this court and worked as an
intermediary before and you are a competent and efficient
intermediary
and you are appointed as such in this matter…”
15]
According to
Du
Toit; Commentary on the Criminal Procedure Act
[4]
“
In
S
v QN
2012 (1) SACR 380
(KZP), …
(t)he court in
QN
(supra)
stressed, however, that it did not wish to denigrate
the
practice
that
had arisen since
Booi
and
Motaung
of
swearing in an intermediary. Gorven J insisted that the function of
an intermediary was extremely important—this
being to minimise
the mental stress or suffering of the witness by employing his or her
specific expertise while the witness gave
evidence. And, to require
an intermediary to discharge this function under oath seemed to him a
'salutary practice’ (at [26]).
See, too, Banoobhai &
Whitear-Nel 2013
Obiter
359
and 365, where the authors agree with the court and exhort the
legislature to make provision for the swearing in of intermediaries
subject to the proviso reflected in
Motaung
that
the mere failure to swear in, or to swear in properly, an
intermediary should not in itself render the witness’s
evidence
inadmissible. The legislature has, in the new sub-s (11), met the
wish for a provision for swearing in intermediaries,
but has not
added the proviso wished for by the authors.
S
v QN
was
followed in
S
v Mahlangu
(unreported,
GP case no A382/2014, 17 July 2015), where the court disagreed with
what was said to the contrary in
Booi
,
although Jansen J accepted, too, that it was 'clearly preferable’
that the intermediary be sworn in 'as a precaution to
alert a
mediator to the grave repercussions of misinterpreting or
misrepresenting questions posed’ (at [4]).”
13]
Thus it would appear that it was “clearly preferable’
that the intermediary be sworn in.
However, as a result of the fact
that the court was not properly constituted and that this is an
inescapable irregularity, nothing
more need be said on the latter
issue.
14]
As a result, it is unnecessary to delve
into the merits of this appeal. The result is that the conviction and
sentence must be set
aside.
ORDER
1.
The conviction and sentence are set aside.
2.
The appellant is to be released from custody immediately.
NEUKIRCHER
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I agree
JOHNSON AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
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 email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 17 April 2025.
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff
:
Adv
HL Alberts
Instructed
by
:
Legal
Aid, Pretoria
For the
defendant
:
Adv EV Sihlangu
Instructed
by
:
National Director of
Public Prosecutions
Date of
hearing
:
16 April 2025
Date
of judgment
:
17
April 2025
[1]
1997
(2) SACR 230 (T)
[2]
The
court relied on the statement in
R
v Price
1955
(1) SA 219
(A)
at
224 (C):
'Prima
facie when a decision is entrusted to a tribunal consisting of
more than one person, every member of that tribunal
shall take part
in the consideration of the decision’.
[3]
2001
(2) SACR 20 (E)
;
also S v Daniels & another
1997
(2) SACR 531 (C)
.
[4]
RS
72, 2024 ch22-p114B
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