Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 550South Africa
Morotoba and Another v S (Appeal) (A149/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 550 (21 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 May 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Morotoba and Another v S (Appeal) (A149/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 550 (21 May 2025)
Morotoba and Another v S (Appeal) (A149/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 550 (21 May 2025)
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SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appeal
Case Number: A149/22
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
21/05/2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MOTLATSO
LLOYD MOROTOBA
First Appellant
HLENGANI
JOHANNES
RINGANI
Second Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Delivered:
21 May 2025 - 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 e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on
CaseLines
and
by release to SAFLII. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 21 May
2025.
JUDGMENT
MOILA, AJ and NYATHI,
J,
A.
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against conviction and
sentence. The Appellants appeared in the Pretoria Regional Court on
two counts of Rape,
Contravening section 3 of the Criminal Law
(Sexual Offences and related matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007, read
with section 51(1)
of schedule two of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act
105 of 1997
.
[2]
Both Appellants were represented throughout
the trial. They pleaded not guilty on both counts and tendered a plea
explanation in
terms of
section 115(1)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act
51 of 1977
. The plea explanation was later reduced to Admissions in
terms of
section 220
of the
Criminal Procedure Act.
[3
]
The Appellants' admissions were as follows:
On 27 September 2013,
they were both police officers. They conducted a patrol in a marked
vehicle with registration number B[...].
They witnessed an
altercation between the complainant and her boyfriend outside the
Shebeen. They intervened, and the complainant
left with them in the
police bakkie at 23:05. The complainant sat in front of the motor
vehicle with them in the police bakkie.
She wanted to go to the
police station, and they dropped her at 23:18. The second Appellant
was the driver, and the first Appellant
was a passenger. They
indicated that the complainant was under the influence of alcohol.
Both Appellants denied
raping the complainant.
[4]
On 15 September 2017, the two Appellants
were convicted of two counts of Rape; the Court found that it was no
doubt that the two
Appellants acted for a common purpose, and they
were sentenced to two life imprisonment.
[5]
Aggrieved by this, the two Appellants
exercised their right of appeal under
section 309(1)(a)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, seeking
a reversal of the conviction and
sentence imposed by the Court a quo.
[6]
The record of the proceedings is
incomplete. However, it is still possible to decide the case fairly.
B.
Background facts
[7]
On 27 September 2013, the complainant and
her boyfriend, Tebogo, were at the tavern or pub with other friends
drinking alcohol.
The complainant was drinking wine. The complainant
and her boyfriend quarrelled and pulled each other outside the
tavern. The Appellants,
who are former South African police officers
based at Attridgeville police station and holding the ranks of
student constable and
warrant officer, respectively, arrived at the
tavern. They were driving a marked police bakkie. The Appellants
separated the complainant
and her boyfriend and drove off with her.
[8]
On 28 September 2013, at Attridgeville
police station, just before 5:00 am, the complainant reported that
she was raped. The investigating
officer took the complainant for
medical examination. Doctor Naledi Ramopo examined her. The doctor
completed a J88 stating that
the complainant had tenderness inside
her vagina, and it happened after forceful penetration. The identity
of the Appellants is
not in dispute.
C.
Grounds of appeal
[9]
The Appellants raised the following grounds
on conviction:
The learned magistrate
erred in finding that the State had proved its case beyond a
reasonable doubt in that ;
9.1
the
evidence of the state witnesses is credible and not contradictory,
9.2 the appellants
had unlawful sexual intercourse with the complainant despite that
there is no proof, specification, or
confirmation of the alleged
date, time, and place of the sexual intercourse.
9.3 The learned
magistrate erred in finding that the appellants should have
challenged the testimony of
the motor vehicle tracking experts,
despite the fact that the said testimony supported their case, as the
police vehicle in issue
had shown no period of stoppage on that day,
9.4 The learned
magistrate erred in finding the appellants guilty and ignored the
fact that the complainant was not a credible
witness.
9.5 The learned
magistrate erred in not taking into account the evidence of
Tebogo Mashiane,
who testified that he and the complainant were
drunk, and the inconsistencies in the testimony of both the
complainant and Tebogo
Mashiane.
9.6 The learned
magistrate erred in not attempting to analyse the consistency and
credibility of the complainant’s evidence
as presented in
different stages, that is, disciplinary hearing, initial testimony,
and her testimony after being recalled.
9.7 The learned
magistrate erred in believing the complainant when testifying that
she felt the condom inside her vagina without
explaining how she felt
it.
9.8 The learned
magistrate erred in ignoring the DNA report that exonerated the
appellants.
9.10 The learned
magistrate erred in finding that there was no evidence under oath by
the appellants when their bail application
record on which they had
testified under oath was incorporated through the prosecutor's
application to form part of the record
and in finding that version of
the appellants as put forth from the bar by the legal representative
against the state witnesses
testimony is of no value or
consideration, or is not part and parcel of the contestation of the
state witnesses’ testimony
whether appellants did not testify.
[10]
The following are the grounds for sentence
:
10.1 The Court
should have found that substantial and compelling circumstances
justify imposing a lesser sentence.
10.2
T
he court erred in passing a sentence that
is excessively inappropriate and raises a sense of shock
on the following
grounds: the learned magistrate failed to take
into account the personal circumstances of the appellants,
10.3 the court
a
quo
erred in not considering other types of sentences and or
short-term imprisonment,
10.4 the court
erred in effecting a sentence that is shockingly disproportionate by
overemphasizing the deterrent effect of
the sentence, the seriousness
of the crime, and the interest of society,
10.5 the Appellants
were sentenced to two life imprisonments besides the fact that their
capability of being rehabilitated,
10.6 The Appellants
should be granted leave to appeal against the decision of the learned
Magistrate because a different court
may arrive at a different
finding on both conviction and sentence.
D.
Evidence
[11]
The state led the evidence of five
witnesses. The first witness was the complainant, N[...] P[...]. She
was 17 years old at the
time of the alleged rape. She testified that
she was with her boyfriend and other friends at a pub in
Attridgeville. They arrived
there at around 21:00.
[12]
She was drinking wine. She and her
boyfriend had a quarrel and pushed each other until they were outside
the pub. A motor vehicle,
a Chevrolet-marked police vehicle, arrived
and stopped in front of them. Two police officers alighted from the
vehicle and separated
them. The first Appellant fought with Tebogo.
She then went inside the Chevrolet.
[13]
The two police officers took the
complainant and drove off. Tebogo remained in the tavern. She asked
them to go back to fetch her
friend, who was staying two houses away.
The Appellants turned, drove, and stopped in front of her friend’s
house.
[14]
The second Appellant told her to go to the
back of the bakkie in order to sit with her friend. The second
Appellant alighted from
the vehicle and gave her space to alight. She
went to the back of the bakkie. The first Appellant was still sitting
in the motor
vehicle.
[15]
The second Appellant came to the back of
the bakkie, closed the door, and sexually penetrated her. He used a
condom. When he was
done, the first Appellant also sexually
penetrated her. She was crying, but she did not shout or scream. She
had tears on her cheeks.
After they were done, they shouted at her to
go and sit in front. They drove and dropped her off a street away
from the police
station.
[16]
She did not go to the police station
because she thought she would not get help. She walked home, met her
sister, and reported that
police officers had raped her. They went to
her boyfriend, Tebogo, and then went to the police station and
reported the matter.
She was taken to the hospital on the morning of
28 September 2013.
[17]
The second witness was Naledi Ramopo. He is
a medical doctor with 38 years of service. He qualified in 1976. On
28 September 2013,
he was on duty and examined the complainant. He
concluded that there was tenderness on the internal vagina. This is
in keeping
with a forced penetration or rape.
[18]
The third state witness was P[...] P[...].
She testified that on 27 September 2013 at 23:45, she was standing at
the gate with her
friend when she saw the complainant approaching,
crying. The complainant reported that two police officers had raped
her. She related
that she was with Tebogo and Rethabile at the pub.
She had an argument with Tebogo. She saw the police and ran to them.
The case
was reported, they informed Tebogo, and she also accompanied
her to the hospital.
[19]
The next witness was Tebogo Mashego. He
testified that he was the complainant’s boyfriend. On 27
September 2013, he was with
the complainant and friends at the
Tavern. It was approximately 21 hours. They ordered their drinks, and
an incident ensued between
him and the complainant, and they went
outside, pulling each other. That's when the police arrived and
enquired as to what was
happening. The complainant asked them to take
her home, but he declined.
[20]
The first Appellant then started pulling
him around, and he could see that the police officers were drunk. He
could smell the alcohol.
The complainant got inside the police motor
vehicle, and they drove off with her. Later, the complainant came
back, and she was
crying. She alleged that those officers raped her.
She was crying profusely. He did not know those police officers
before this
incident. He did not have sexual intercourse with the
complainant on that day.
[21]
The last witness was Mr Eric Deysel. He
testified that he is employed by Digicor Fleet Management and is a
consultant at the South
African Police Fleet. They put devices on
SAPS motor vehicles to monitor their movements. He referred to
exhibit G, which was handed
in. It is the movement report of the
motor vehicle with registration number B[...] for the period 27-28
September 2013.
[22]
The state closed its case.
[23]
The two Appellants applied to be discharged
under
section 174
of the
Criminal Procedure Act. The
application was
refused.
[24]
Both Appellants elected not to testify. The
defence case was closed.
E.
Submissions
Appellants’
submissions
Conviction
[25]
Counsel for the Appellants, Mr Molatelo
Malowa, submitted that there was a contradiction in the street name
where the complainant
alleged that the police officers dropped her.
The charge sheet stipulates that the crime scene is Mphalane Street.
The complainant
stipulates that the crime scene is behind Maude. At
the bail hearing, evidence alleged the crime scene was at Semenya
Street. He
referred the Court to a map of Attridgeville indicating
the streets.
[26]
Counsel for the Appellants further
submitted that it is not in dispute that the complainant was taken
from the Tavern by the two
Appellants. However, her evidence was not
clear, and it was contradictory. In this manner, she said she had
taken alcohol, but
she was not drunk; yet her boyfriend said they
were drunk.
[27]
Counsel asserted that the Aviation report
handed in by the State does not support the State’s case;
however, it supports the
evidence of the two Appellants regarding
where the Appellants dropped the complainant.
[28]
Counsel referred the Court to the version
of the Appellants as testified in the bail application that the
complainant had requested
them to take her to the police station to
report the assault case against her boyfriend, and not her home
because she had not given
them the address.
[29]
Counsel for the Appellants argued that it
was common cause that she was under the influence of alcohol. The
question is, to what
degree was the influence of alcohol? He also
urged the Court to take into account that she was a minor who was
under the influence.
This is a 17-year-old girl, a school-going
child, a minor for that matter, who was at a tavern at 23:00 under
the influence of
alcohol and involved in sexual activity; who
requires the Court to believe her story.
[30]
Counsel for the Appellants further
submitted that the complainant was probably too drunk to know exactly
what happened, so she could
not be believed. After reporting the case
at 01:00, the police made her sit at the police station until 5:30 to
take her to the
hospital. Which might show they wanted her to sober
up.
[31]
The version by the complainant was that she
was wearing jeans, which were below her knees above her ankle, lying
on her back, and
she could not have been able to open her legs to
allow penetration to her vagina. Hearing that the complainant had
stretched her
legs while the Appellants were standing and having sex
with her in the bakkie is improbable.
[32]
Counsel further argued that the allegation
that the complainant's last sexual intercourse was two weeks prior
could not be true,
because her boyfriend testified that they usually
meet on weekends.
[33]
Mr Malowa submitted that the complainant
was not honest; she testified that she felt a condom inside her
vagina but did not see
it. How do you feel that there is a condom? If
this question is unfair, it determines how untruthful the allegation
is.
[34]
Counsel further argued that the Court a quo
ignored the fact that the complainant was a single, minor witness in
a sexual offence
case. Her evidence must be satisfactory in all
material respects; if not, the court will seek corroboration from
various facts
before allowing such evidence. The credibility finding
seems to have been ignored by the Court a quo, considering the
weakness
in the witnesses in the State’s case.
[35]
In conclusion, counsel submitted that the
Appellants had elected not to testify because DNA results excluded
them from being the
persons who sexually penetrated the complainant.
The Court cannot reject the defence version as averred in the plea
explanation
or put to the state witness as untruthful or false. The
Court must consider this; although the Appellants did not testify,
their
version was put forth to the witnesses, and the bail transcript
was part of the evidence to be considered.
Sentence
[36]
Counsel for the Appellants submitted that
the Court should find that the imposition of the minimum sentence was
very harsh and unjust.
The Court must not take the sledgehammer
approach where presenting mitigating factors is just paying off lip
service. He finally
submitted that the honourable Court should uphold
this appeal against conviction and sentence and set them aside.
Respondent’s
submissions
Conviction
[37]
Counsel for the Respondent, Ms Nazley
January, submitted that the correct approach for the Court to follow
regarding a factual dispute
between evidence of the State and that of
the defence is to apply its mind, not only to the merits and demerits
of the case or
rather of the State and the defence witnesses, but
also to the probabilities of the case.
[38]
Counsel argued that there was no
contradictory evidence about the street name. The complainant
testified that she was raped behind
Maude street. Under
cross-examination, she stated that she did not know all the streets
in Attridgeville. If one examines the AVR
report, it does not give
the exact location, and the expert confirmed that.
[39]
Counsel further submitted that the
Appellants admitted that they were with the complainant. The charge
sheet reads, “at or
near Mphalane Street”. Looking at the
map, Mphalane street is perpendicular to Maude street. If there were
any shortcomings,
they could have been cured by
section 88
of the
Criminal Procedure Act.
[40
]
Counsel for the Respondent asserted that
the complainant, despite having consumed alcohol, could narrate what
occurred that evening
of 27 September 2013. The Appellants admitted
many aspects of her evidence. Her sister and boyfriend corroborated
her version of
what happened before and after the rape. If one smells
of alcohol, it does not mean they are drunk. The Court has to
evaluate her
evidence; she was a school-going 17-year-old girl who
was almost an adult.
[41]
Ms January argued that Counsel for the
Appellants is not an expert on alcohol. There was no evidence from
police officers that she
had to sober up from 1:00 to 5:30a.m. It is
not a material contradiction that the complainant testified that she
asked the police
officers to take her home and her boyfriend said the
police officers volunteered to take her home.
[42]
Counsel further submitted that no DNA
report had been handed in. The allegation was that the Appellants
used condoms in raping the
complainant. The medical evidence also
recorded that condoms were used. The doctor who examined the
complainant corroborated her
version that she was raped. The doctor
concluded that “there is marked tenderness on vaginal
examination. That was in keeping
with forced vaginal penetration”.
[43]
Counsel argued that there is no rule book
on how rape victims must behave. Everyone acts differently. The
complainant testified
that she was crying, tears rolling down her
face. Any sexual history is inadmissible in terms of
section 227
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act. How
do we expect a rape victim to count
time when she is being sexually violated?
[44]
Counsel
for the Respondent reiterated that the complainant was a single
witness.
Section 208
of the
Criminal Procedure Act regulates
whether
a single witness’ evidence can be accepted. In
R
Mokoena
,
[1]
the Court stated:
“
Now
the uncorroborated evidence of a single competent and credible
witness is no doubt declared to be sufficient for a conviction
by
[section 208], but in my opinion, that section should only be relied
on where the evidence of a single witness is clear and
satisfactory
in every material aspect.”
[45]
Ms January further submitted that the
complainant testified that when she was at the back of the bakkie,
she was lying on her back.
She resisted with the second Appellant. He
then pulled down her jeans to below her knees and above her ankles.
He then forced her
legs open and inserted his penis into her vagina
without her consent. She started crying. She also testified that he
was wearing
a condom. The other Appellant then followed and did the
exact same thing. The complainant went as far as demonstrating to the
Court
how the rape was done. She showed the Court how the second
Appellant forced her legs open.
[46]
Counsel asserted that the evidence tendered
in Court meets the definition of rape in terms of section 3 of the
Sexual Offences Act
32 of 2007. She testified that both Appellants
inserted their penis into her vagina without her consent, and both
used condoms.
She did not see it as it was dark, but she felt the
condom.
[47]
Counsel referred the court to section
35(3)(h) of the Constitution, which states that “Every accused
person has a right to
a fair trial, which includes the right to be
presumed innocent, to remain silent and not to testify during the
proceedings”.
[48]
Counsel
referred the Court to
State
v Allan Boesak (“Boesak”)
,
[2]
where the Court stated the following:
“
The
right to remain silent has application at different stages of a
criminal prosecution. An arrested person is entitled to remain
silent
and may not be compelled to make any confession or admission that
could be used as evidence against that person. It arises
again at the
trial stage when an accused has the right to be presumed innocent, to
remain silent and not to testify during the
proceedings. The fact
that an accused person is under no obligation to testify does not
mean that there are no consequences attaching
to a decision to remain
silent during the trial. If there is evidence calling for an answer,
and an accused person chooses to remain
silent in the face of such
evidence, a court may well be entitled to conclude that the evidence
is sufficient in the absence of
an explanation to prove the guilt of
the accused. Whether such a conclusion is justified will depend on
the weight of the evidence”.
(footnotes omitted)
[49]
Judge
Langa (DP), in
Boesak,
also referred to Madala J in
Osman
and Another v Attorney – General, Transvaal
,
[3]
where the following was said:
“
Our
legal system is an adversarial one. Once the prosecution has produced
sufficient evidence to establish a prima facie case, an
accused who
fails to produce evidence to rebut that case is at risk. The failure
to testify does not relieve the prosecution of
its duty to prove
guilt beyond reasonable doubt. An accused, however, always runs
the risk that, absent any rebuttal, the
prosecution's case may be
sufficient to prove the elements of the offence. The fact that an
accused has to make such an election
is not a breach of the right to
silence. If the right to silence were to be so interpreted, it would
destroy the fundamental nature
of our adversarial system of criminal
justice.” (footnotes omitted)
[50]
Counsel for the Respondent argued that the
two Appellants did not testify. In as much as the proceedings of bail
form part of the
trial record, the evidence must be led during the
trial, and a failure to lead such evidence relegates such evidence to
hearsay
evidence, which is inadmissible.
[51]
Counsel
further referred the Court to
S
v Katoo
,
[4]
where Jafta AJA, as he then was, had this to say:
“
The
other issue relates to the weight attached by the trial Judge to the
defence version which was put to the State witnesses under
cross-examination. It was treated as if it were evidence when the
trial court considered its verdict on the merits. As the respondent
failed to place any version before the Court by means of evidence.
The Court's verdict should have been based on the evidence led
by the
prosecution only.”
[52]
In conclusion, counsel submitted that as
indicated previously, the Appellants have no evidence before this
court, even though they
testified in the bail proceedings. For that
evidence to become available, they needed to testify at the trial. It
is clear that
the State discharges the onus of proof in a criminal
case if the evidence establishes the guilt of the accused beyond
reasonable
doubt. The State submits that the prosecution proved its
case beyond reasonable doubt.
Sentence
[53]
Counsel
for the Respondent referred the Court to
State
v Malgas:
[5]
"
Courts
are required to approach the imposition of sentence conscious that
the Legislature has ordained life imprisonment (or the
particular
prescribed period of 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 seen to be, truly convincing reasons
for a different
response, the crimes in question are therefore required to elicit a
severe, standardized and consistent response
from the courts. The
specified sentences are not to be departed from lightly and for
flimsy reasons. Speculative hypotheses favourable
to the offender,
undue sympathy, aversion to imprisoning first offenders, personal
doubts as to the efficacy of the policy underlying
the legislation,
and marginal differences in personal circumstances or degrees of
participation between co-offenders are to be
excluded
."
[54]
Counsel
further referred to
S
v C:
[6]
“
Rape
is regarded by society as one of the most heinous of crimes, and
rightly so. A rapist does not murder his victim - he murders
her
self-respect and destroys her feeling of physical and mental
integrity and security. His monstrous deed often haunts his victim
and subjects her to mental torment for the rest of her life – a
fate often worse than the loss of life. . . . Society demands
protection in the form of heavy and deterrent sentences from the
courts against such atrocious crimes”
[55]
Ms
January, in her submissions that sentence granted by the Court a quo
is proportional to the offence committed, referred to
S
v Vilakazi
,
[7]
where the court, at paragraph 58, stated that in cases of serious
crimes, the personal circumstances of the offender by themselves
will
necessarily recede into the background. Once it becomes clear that
the crime is deserving of a substantial period of imprisonment,
the
questions of whether the accused is married or single, or whether he
has two or three children, or whether or not he is in
employment, are
in themselves largely immaterial to what the period should be, and
those seem to me the kind of flimsy reasons
or grounds that
Malgas
said should be avoided.
[56]
Counsel for the Respondent respectfully
submitted that in terms of
section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997
, the Legislature has ordained these hefty
sentences. Regarding the Appellants’ personal circumstances,
nothing was placed
before the Court that was substantial and
compelling to warrant deviation from the minimum sentence.
[57]
In conclusion, counsel submitted that the
aggravating circumstance was that the Appellants were both police
officers whose job was
to protect the community. The complainant told
the social worker that she saw the Appellants as her rescue; she
trusted them that
evening. The damage inflicted on the complainant,
who was 17 years old at the time, will have a serious impact on her
for the rest
of her life. For all these reasons, she respectfully
submitted that the appeal against conviction and sentence be denied.
F.
AD CONVICTION
[58]
When
evaluating or assessing evidence, it is required that all evidence
must be evaluated. Judge Nugent, as he then was, in
S
v Van Der Meyden,
[8]
stated
that:
“
What
must be borne in mind, however, is that the conclusion which is
reached (whether it be to convict or acquit) must account for
all the
evidence. Some of the evidence might be found to be false; some of it
might be found to be unreliable; and some of it might
be found to be
only possibly false or unreliable, but none of it may simply be
ignored.”
[59]
In
S
v Hadebe and Others,
[9]
the flynote reads:
“
Trial
court's evaluation of evidence – Presumption that trial Court’s
findings of fact are correct - In the absence
of demonstrable and
material misdirection by trial Court, its findings of fact are
presumed to be correct and will only be disregarded
if the recorded
evidence shows them to be clearly wrong - In determining whether the
trial court's findings of fact were clearly
wrong, it is a useful aid
to break the body of evidence down into its component parts, but in
doing so, one must guard against
a tendency to focus too intently
upon separate and individual parts of what is, after all, a mosaic of
proof. Evidence ultimately
to be assessed as a whole.”
[60]
The State presented the evidence of five
witnesses: the complainant, her boyfriend, her sister, the doctor,
and Mr Deysel. The complainant
testified that she was at a pub with
her boyfriend and some friends. They quarreled and pulled each other
outside the pub.
[61]
The Appellants arrived and separated them.
She requested that they take her home and drove off with them. They
drove and stopped
on the street behind Maude street and told her to
go to the back of the bakkie while they went to collect her friend,
as she requested,
so that she could sit with her friend.
[62]
The second Appellant alighted and gave her
space to alight. She went to the back of the Bakkie; the second
Appellant followed her
and sexually penetrated her using a condom.
The first Appellant also came and sexually penetrated her. They
dropped her and left.
[63]
She walked, met her sister at the gate, and
reported the rape to her. They went to her boyfriend and reported the
ordeal. They accompanied
her to the police station and the rape case
was reported.
[64]
She was taken to the hospital and examined
by the doctor. Her sister corroborated her version of what happened
after the rape. The
complainant arrived where she was and reported
that the police raped her. Her boyfriend also corroborated her
version of what happened
before and after the rape. The doctor
supported her evidence by concluding, after examination, that there
was tenderness in her
vagina, and that is in keeping with forced
vaginal penetration.
[65]
The
complainant was a single child witness who was 17 years old.
Experience has shown that most rape victims are single witnesses.
In
the landmark case of
S
v Jackson
,
[10]
the Supreme Court of Appeal’s ruling effectively eliminated the
cautionary rule in sexual assault cases, acknowledging that
it was
discriminatory and inappropriate.
[66]
Section 208
of the
Criminal Procedure Act
provides
that an accused may be convicted of any offence on the
single evidence of any witness. The complainant made a favorable
impression
on the Court a quo. Despite being a minor, her evidence
was found to be clear, satisfactory, and reliable in all material
respects.
[67]
In
S
v Sauls and Others
,
[11]
the Court held that there is no rule of thumb test or formula to
apply when it comes to a consideration of the credibility of a
single
witness. The trial Judge will weigh his evidence, consider its merits
and demerits and, having done so, decide whether,
despite the fact
that there are shortcomings or defects or contradictions in the
testimony, he is satisfied that the truth has
been told.
[68]
The two Appellants made Admissions in terms
of
section 220
of the
Criminal Procedure Act. They
corroborated the
version of the complainant. The only issue in dispute was the sexual
intercourse. The Appellants’ basis
of defence was a bare
denial.
[69]
Counsel for the Appellants submitted that
the Court must not believe the evidence of a school-going child, a
minor who was at the
tavern at 23:00, under the influence of alcohol
and involved in sexual activity. It is impossible for the complainant
to have felt
a condom inside her vagina. It was impossible for rape
to have occurred at the back of the bakkie.
[70]
I am appalled, if not disappointed by
counsel’s submissions. Does the fact that the complainant is
young, drinks alcohol,
and is sexually active make her a bad witness?
How does counsel know that women cannot feel the condom? I agree with
counsel for
the Respondent that an inspection in loco was not done on
the police bakkie to conclude that it was impossible.
[71]
In
S
v Chapman
,
[12]
the Supreme Court of Appeal articulately stated that women in this
country have a legitimate claim to walk peacefully on the streets
to
enjoy their shopping and entertainment, to go and come from work, and
to enjoy the peace and tranquility of their homes without
fear,
apprehension, or insecurity, which constantly diminishes their
quality and enjoyment of life.
[72]
The Appellants elected not to testify.
Counsel for the Appellants submitted that the Court could not reject
the defence version
as averred in the plea explanation or put to the
state witness as untruthful or false. The Court must also consider
the version
of the Appellants’ bail transcript.
[73]
The Appellants’ failure to give
evidence must be considered along with all the other factors in the
matter to ascertain whether
their guilt has been proven beyond
reasonable doubt. The value to be attributed to their failure to give
evidence depends upon
the surrounding circumstances of the matter.
[74]
The
Court agrees with counsel for the Respondent that the bail
proceedings are not admissible in trial proceedings. In
S
v Sibeko
,
[13]
the Court stated:
“
The
District Court record of bail proceedings may have been part of the
record of proceedings that were transferred to the regional
court,
but that did not automatically render it part of the trial record. It
is so that
section 60(11B)(c)
of the CPA not only makes the record of
the bail proceedings part of the record of the subsequent trial
record, but makes any evidence
that the accused elects to give at the
bail hearing admissible against him or her at trial, provided the
court hearing the bail
application had warned the accused of the risk
of such use. The record of the bail proceedings is neither
automatically excluded
from nor included in the evidentiary material
at trial. Whether or not it is to be excluded is governed by the
principles of a
fair trial. The regional magistrate seems to have
mistakenly interpreted this bail provision to mean that the record of
the bail
proceedings is automatically admissible in toto.”
[75]
It is trite that all versions must be
repeated under oath and tested in cross-examination before any Court
can accept any facts
and, in turn, attach evidentiary weight to the
said evidence. Versions put to the witnesses must, alike, be repeated
under oath
and be tested in cross-examination before any party can
argue that the truth was told.
[76]
The Court is mindful of the fact that no
duty rests upon the accused to prove his innocence. However, in light
of the strong evidence
implicating the Appellants, one would have
expected them, in these circumstances, to answer to the allegations
if they are innocent.
The defence put forward during plea
explanation, or cross-examination of the state witnesses, could have
been repeated with ease
and even conviction in the witness box.
[77]
The fact that this was not done, after
proper consideration, the Court found that they knew that its
untruthfulness would have been
exposed during cross-examination.
[78]
As a result, this Court is satisfied that
the trial Court rightly convicted the Appellants. The appeal against
conviction must fail.
G.
AD SENTENCE
[79]
I now turn to the question of sentence. In
terms of
section 51(1)
of Schedule Two of the
Criminal Law Amendment
Act 105 of 1997
, on conviction of rape by more than one person, the
Court was bound to sentence the Appellants to life imprisonment
unless there
were substantial and compelling circumstances justifying
a lesser sentence.
[80]
In
S
v C
,
[14]
the Court stated that rape is regarded by society as the most heinous
of crimes, and rightly so. A rapist does not murder his victim,
he
murders her self-respect and destroys her feeling of physical and
mental integrity and security.
[81]
In
Maila
v S,
[15]
the Court stated that:
“
With
the onslaught of rape on children, destroying their lives forever, it
cannot be ‘business as usual.’ Courts should,
through
consistent sentencing of offenders who commit gender-based violence
against women and children, not retreat when duty calls
to impose
appropriate sentences, including prescribed minimum sentences.”
[82]
The general principles governing the
imposition of a sentence in terms of the Minimum Sentences Act, as
articulated by the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Malgas,
have been endorsed by our Courts and cannot be ignored.
[83]
In
S
v Matyityi
,
[16]
the Supreme Court of Appeal reaffirmed that:
“
The
fact that parliament had enacted the minimum sentencing legislation
was an indication that it was no longer ‘business
as usual’.
The court no longer had a clean slate to inscribe whatever sentence
it thought fit for the specified crimes. It
had to approach the
question of sentencing, conscious of the fact that the minimum
sentence had been ordained as the sentence which
ordinarily should be
imposed, unless substantial and compelling circumstances were found
to be present.”
To avoid these sentences,
the accused must satisfy the Court that substantial and compelling
circumstances exist to justify a lesser
sentence.
[84]
The Court a quo considered the totality of
the evidence, mitigating and aggravating circumstances, and found
that there were no
substantial and compelling circumstances
justifying a lesser sentence. It follows, accordingly, that there is
no misdirection by
the trial Court. There is, accordingly, no merit
in the appeal against the sentence. The sentence of life imprisonment
is, therefore,
confirmed.
[85]
The following order is made;
Appeal against conviction
and sentence is dismissed.
N L MOILA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I AGREE AND IT IS SO
ORDERED
J S NYATHI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Appellants:
Molatelo Malowa SC
Instructed by Zamisa
Shisinga Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondent: Nazley
January
Instructed by the State.
Date of hearing:
19 March 2025
Delivered:
21 May 2025
[1]
1932
OPD 79
at 80.
[2]
[2000] ZACC 25
;
2001
(1) SA 912
(CC) at para 24.
[3]
1998
(4) SA 1224
(CC). at para 22.
[4]
2005
(1) SACR 522
(SCA) at para 19.
[5]
2001
(1) SACR 469
(SCA) at para 25.
[6]
1996
(2) SACR 181
(C) at 186D-E.
[7]
2012
(6) SA 353 (SCA).
[8]
1999
(1) SACR 447
(W) at 450A-B.
[9]
1998
(1) SACR 422
(SCA).
[10]
1998
(1) SACR 470 (SCA).
[11]
1981
(3) SA 172 (A).
[12]
[1997] ZASCA 45
;
1997
(3) SA 341
(SCA) at 345A-B.
[13]
2024
(2) SACR 25
(NWM) at para 17.
[14]
Above
n 6.
[15]
[2023]
ZASCA 3
at para 59.
[16]
2011
(1) SACR 40
(SCA) at para 11.
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