Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 208South Africa
Molamudi v S (A184/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 208 (8 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 February 2024
Headnotes
behind his back.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Molamudi v S (A184/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 208 (8 February 2024)
Molamudi v S (A184/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 208 (8 February 2024)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
## Case
number: A184/2022
Case
number: A184/2022
Date:
08 March 2024
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
DATE:08/03/2024
In
the matter between:
PAULOS
MOLAMUDI
APPELLANT
##
## and
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
BRAND
AJ (with PHAHLANE J CONCURRING)
Introduction
[1] The
appellant, Paulos Molamudi, was on 13 April 2022 convicted of rape in
the Regional Court in Pretoria.
On 4 July 2022, he was sentenced to
life imprisonment, in terms of section 51(1) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997
(‘the Act’). He was also
declared unfit to possess a firearm and his name was to be registered
on the National Register
for Sex Offenders.
[2] On
11 July 2022, the appellant noted appeal against his sentence,
utilising his right to do so in terms
of
section 309
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
. It is this appeal that is now before us.
Background
[3] The
appellant committed the rape for which he was convicted and sentenced
on 22 November 2014. He was
charged with this rape only in 2022,
while in custody concerning another charge of rape, when a DNA sample
taken from the complainant
of the 2014 rape was matched to him.
[4] It
is necessary to relay how the rape occurred in some detail, to enable
proper evaluation of the sentence
against which this appeal is
brought. It happened as follows:
[4.1] On
22 November 2014, at around 19:00, the complainant was on her way
back home from work, on foot.
She reached a passage at a train bridge
and as she entered this passage, she noticed a man to her left, with
a stocking pulled
over his face and a knife held behind his back.
[4.2] The
man asked her whether she had arrived at her destination. When she
answered that she had, he told
her to turn back and come with him. He
also instructed her not to scream, as he would stab her if she did.
After she turned back
with him, the man asked her who her boyfriend
was. She gave her boyfriend’s name (Given) and the man asked
her where he lives.
When she said that he lives in Mamelodi, the man
said that Given was having an affair with his girlfriend and that
they were going
to go to Given in Mamelodi to confront him about
that.
[4.3] The
man instructed her to go with him down a flight of stairs at the
railway bridge. When they reached
the bottom, he told her to take off
her jersey and lie down on top of it. As she did, he took out another
stocking from his pocket.
He told her to stretch her hands out behind
her head and cross them. He then tied her hands to the fence behind
her with the stocking.
[4.4] He
proceeded to pull down her trousers. When the trousers came down to
her knees, she tried to resist
him pulling them off altogether. He
said that when she sleeps with Given, she allows him to take it all
off and then pulled the
trousers fully from her legs and cast them to
the side.
[4.5] When
at this point she started crying, he told her to keep quiet or she
would make him angry. He then
took off her long-sleeve T-shirt and
tied it over her mouth, stuffing part of it into her mouth.
[4.6] Next
the appellant took off his trousers and took out his penis. He sat
down on his knees in front
of the complainant and tried to push his
penis into her but couldn’t. He asked her why it is that she
does not feel him and
forced his penis into her, saying that it is
now in. He proceeded to push in and out of her. After a while, he
pulled out and went
to a nearby tree, where he ejaculated.
[4.7] Next,
the appellant came back to the complainant. He said that it was time
for ‘round two’,
that the first round was only an
introduction and that both she and he would enjoy the second round.
He proceeded again to try
to push his penis into her but couldn’t.
He tried to stimulate the complainant orally on her vagina, again
asking her why
she does not feel him. He then managed to insert his
penis into her, pushing in and out of her. This time he said that he
could
now feel her and that it was so nice. He asked her why she was
not his girlfriend. She could of course not answer, as her mouth
was
still gagged. This second time, he also after a while pulled out,
went to the nearby tree, and ejaculated there.
[4.8] The
appellant proceeded to put on his clothes. He untied the
complainant’s hands and used the
stocking with which they had
been tied to wipe her off. Once she had dressed herself, the
appellant offered to accompany the complainant
to where she was
going, but she refused. He left her at the scene of the rape. She
proceeded to her home, where she told her parents
what had happened.
The
appeal
[5] The
Regional Court sentenced the appellant to life imprisonment by virtue
of
section 51(1)
of the Act read with Schedule 2 of the Act. This
section determines in relevant part that a person convicted of rape
that was committed
‘in circumstances where the victim was raped
more than once whether by the accused or by any co-perpetrator or
accomplice’
shall be sentenced to life imprisonment.
[6] The
Regional Court found that, although part of the same sequence of
events, the appellant raped the
complainant twice – penetrating
her, after some time pulling out and ejaculating against the tree and
then coming back, penetrating
her again and again pulling out after
some time and ejaculating against the tree.
[1]
[7] The
appeal against sentence is not directed at this finding. The
appellant accepts that there were two
rapes and that this brings his
case within the purview of section 51(1). The appellant instead
invokes section 51(3) of the Act.
This section authorises a court
‘where it is satisfied that substantial and compelling
circumstances exist that justify the
imposition of a lesser sentence’
than the life imprisonment prescribed in this case, to impose such
lesser sentence. The
Magistrate considered whether there were any
such substantial and compelling circumstances; found that there were
none; and consequently,
imposed the prescribed sentence.
[2]
[8] The
appellant on appeal argues that she erred in this. He submits that,
as a point of departure in determining
sentence, life imprisonment
‘should be reserved for the more serious and violent [rapes],
unlike the one [he] was convicted
of’.
[3]
He then proceeds to point to the following that the magistrate should
have considered as substantial and compelling circumstances
and that
should have persuaded her to impose a lesser sentence:
[8.1] His
age (26 when he committed the rape, 32 at time of conviction and
sentencing).
[8.2] The
fact that he has no children.
[8.3] His
show of remorse for the rape.
[8.4] The
potential for his rehabilitation.
[8.5] The
fact that he didn’t have a father figure growing up.
[9] He
also submits that the magistrate overemphasised ‘the interest
of society and the seriousness
of the offence.’
[4]
For all these reasons he concludes that the life imprisonment
sentence imposed on him is shockingly inappropriate.
Discussion
[10] I
consider the appellant’s appeal against sentence below
cognisant of the general approach courts
should apply in appeals
against sentence: ‘
that
the imposition of sentence is the prerogative of the trial court for
good reason and that it is not for appellate courts to
interfere with
that exercise of discretion unless it is convincingly shown that it
has not been properly exercised’.
[5]
Appellate
courts should interfere in the trial court’s exercise of its
sentencing discretion only where that court is found
to have
materially misdirected itself, or, failing that,
where
the trial court’s sentence diverges from the sentence which the
appellate court would have imposed had it been the trial
court to
such a degree that it may be described as ‘shocking’,
‘startling’ or ‘disturbingly inappropriate’
.
[6]
[11] The
appellant’s point of departure, that life imprisonment should
be reserved for more serious
and violent rapes than this rape was,
accords neither with the law nor with the facts. That is, neither
does the law recognise
any such point of departure (quite the
contrary), nor is this rape indeed somehow less violent and serious
than others that resort
under section 51(1) read with Schedule 2 of
the Act.
[12] Since
the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
S
v Malgas
,
[7]
it is settled that the sentence of life imprisonment is the sentence
that should
ordinarily
be imposed on any crime that resorts under section 51(1) read with
Schedule 2 of the Act.
[8]
This
is the proper point of departure. Unless there are substantial and
compelling circumstances indicating otherwise, life imprisonment
should be imposed for any instance of rape in which the complainant
was raped twice or more, whatever the degree of violence or
so-called
seriousness involved. The degree of violence and ‘seriousness’
accompanying a rape in which the complainant
was raped twice or more
has no bearing whatsoever on the question whether it resorts under
section 51(1) of the Act so that the
prescribed minimum sentence
applies to it. This applies also to the appellant: he raped the
complainant twice (this is not in dispute),
so that the sentence that
should be imposed is life imprisonment, unless he can point to
substantial and compelling circumstances
that justify a lesser
sentence.
[13] Of
course, any of the factors that usually play a role in determining
sentence, such as, indeed, the
degree of violence and seriousness of
the rape can be considered as substantial and compelling
circumstances justifying, in consort
with others, departure from the
minimum prescribed sentence.
[9]
But that would only be so where a) the appellant is able to prove the
factor relied upon, and b) seen in the circumstances of the
specific
case, that factor, considered with others indicate that imposition of
the minimum prescribed sentence would cause an injustice.
[10]
[14] In
this case, despite the appellant’s claim to the contrary, the
rape is both violent and serious.
[15] It
is violent for two reasons.
[15.1] First,
although any rape, as the physical imposition of one person upon
another is in and off itself
violence,
[11]
the appellant’s rape was particularly such: he could not at
first attempt enter the complainant and had to force himself
into
her; his act of rape was explicitly itself violent.
[15.2] Second,
although, apart from the rape itself, no additional act of violence
was exerted on the complainant
by the appellant, the rape was only
possible because of the constant explicit threat of violence.
- When
he first accosted the complainant, the appellant showed her the knife
and told her that should she
scream, he would stab her.
- When,
after he had forced her to pull down her trousers completely instead
of only to her knees, the complainant
started crying. The appellant
told her that she should stop or else he would get angry.
- The
appellant also pulled her T-shirt over her face and stuffed it into
her mouth, gagging her.
[16] In
sum, violence was front and centre throughout her ordeal, although
she was in the event not stabbed
or punched or physically assaulted
in another way than through the rape itself. Of course, that the
absence of any such overt additional
acts of violence does not render
her rape somehow non-violent (or non-serious) is explicitly gainsaid
by 51(3)(Aa) of the Act,
which determines that the absence of
apparent physical injury (ie evidence of acts of violence) to a rape
complainant may not be
regarded as a circumstance justifying
imposition of a sentence lesser than the prescribed minimum.
[17] The
rape, in addition to being violent, was serious because of the extent
to which it was pre-planned
and pre-meditated
[12]
and because of the extent to which the appellant exerted his control
over the complainant over an extended period of time, through
the
threat of violence. This appears from the following:
[17.1] The
appellant came to the rape fully prepared. He not only had a stocking
to pull over his head and
a knife with which to threaten the
complainant but brought along an additional stocking with which to
tie the complainant up.
[17.2] There
is a clear inference to be drawn from the testimony of the
complainant about how the rape unfolded
and particularly how the
appellant instructed the complainant what to do, that the appellant
had scouted the area beforehand and
had pre-planned the rape, step by
step; also, that he had not randomly selected the complainant but had
watched her beforehand
and made himself familiar with her movements.
[17.3] Once
the appellant had the complainant fully under his control (having
tied her hands above her head
to the fence and gagged her with her
own t-shirt) he exerted that control to its full extent, proceeding
at a leisurely pace to
rape her twice.
[17.4] The
faux familiarity and chumminess with which he did so (ie, his remarks
about them both going to
enjoy the second round and his attempt to
stimulate her orally so that she would ‘feel’ him)
constituted a particularly
egregious invasion of her privacy and
dignity, in addition to the rape, further illustrating the extent to
which he was exerting
his control.
[17.5] Equally
so, the fact that he was twice able in the midst of the deed to pull
out and go and ejaculate
against the tree, illustrates how calculated
and controlled his actions during the course of the rape were.
[18] In
sum, the appellant cannot rely on any absence or lesser than usual
degree of violence and seriousness
to the rape as a circumstance
justifying imposition of a lesser sentence than the prescribed
minimum, because the rape was not
particularly devoid of violence and
in no way non-serious – quite the contrary.
[19] What
remains is to consider whether the other factors that the appellant
lists as substantial and compelling
justify departure from the
prescribed minimum sentence.
[20] In
S
v Malgas
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that the ordinary factors that can
play a role in a trial court’s determination of sentence
are
not excluded from the evaluation in terms of section 51(1) of the Act
by virtue simply of the fact that the section refers
to ‘substantial’
and ‘compelling’ circumstances. A trial court at
sentencing where a crime resorts under
section 51(1) must, against
the background of the assumption that the prescribed minimum sentence
ordinarily applies, simply consider,
in the ordinary course of
deciding whether the punishment is proportionate to the crime,
whether there are circumstances which
viewed cumulatively and in the
context of the specific case indicate that imposition of the
prescribed minimum sentence would amount
to an injustice. If so, then
the minimum prescribed sentence should be departed from. The reasons
for deciding so, although they
need not be extraordinary, may not be
light or ‘flimsy’.
[13]
[21] None
of the circumstances listed by the appellant, whether taken
individually or in consort with the
others, justify departure from
the prescribed minimum sentence.
[21.1] The
appellant doesn’t indicate at all why the fact that he has no
children justifies imposition
of a lesser sentence.
[21.2] The
fact that he was relatively young at the time that he committed the
rape (26 years) also does
not
per
se
count against imposition of the prescribed minimum. As held by Ponnan
JA in
S
v Matyiyiti
,
[14]
when
someone older than 20 years of age relies on youth as a mitigating
factor in sentencing, they must with acceptable evidence
show that
they are or were at time of commission of the crime so immature that
it could mitigate sentence. The appellant provides
no such evidence.
[21.3] The
appellant’s supposed remorse comes several years after he raped
the complainant, only once
he had, by a stroke of luck, been caught
out. The veracity of his remorse is also brought into question by the
extent to which
he had planned and then in cold blood executed the
rape.
[21.4] The
probation officer’s sentencing report does not show any
particular propensity for rehabilitation
of the applicant; but it
does show that, although the appellant grew up without a father
figure, his childhood was uneventful,
settled, and stable.
[22] Against
this must be weighed the violent, premeditated, and calculated nature
of the rape and the clearly
debilitating impact that the rape has had
on the complainant (she testified that she moved away after the rape,
left her job and
is still unemployed, and is fearful, hardly ever
going out).
[23] In
this light, there is nothing to indicate that the sentence imposed by
the trial court is anything
but appropriate, let alone that it is
‘shocking’, ‘startling’ or ‘disturbingly
inappropriate’.
As it was not alleged (and nor was it found)
that the trial court had misdirected itself, materially or otherwise,
this means that
the minimum prescribed sentence of life imprisonment
imposed by the trial court, should be left undisturbed.
[24]
In
the circumstances, the following order is made:
1. The
appeal is dismissed.
JFD
Brand
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
I
agree
PD
Phahlane
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Appellant :
Adv. M.G. Botha
Instructed
by
: Legal
Aid South Africa
Counsel
for the Respondent :
Adv. C. Pruis
Instructed
by
:
Director of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria
Date
of the Hearing
:
01 February 2024
Date
of Judgment
: 08
February 2024
[1]
Sentencing
judgment
a
quo
p
5, Record p 123.
[2]
Sentencing
judgment
a
quo
p 4-5, Record p 122-123.
[3]
Appeal
notice, Record p 128.
[4]
Appeal Notice, Record p 126.
[5]
S
v Malgas
117/2000)
[2001] ZASCA 30
;
[2001] 3 All SA 220
(A) at para
[13]
.
[6]
S
v Malgas
(above)
at para [12].
[7]
S
v Malgas
(above).
[8]
S
v Malgas
(above)
at para [8].
[9]
S
v Malgas
(above)
at para [10].
[10]
S v
Malgas
(above)
at para [22] and [23].
[11]
Mudau
v S
[2013]
ZASCA 56
;
2013
(2) SACR 292
(SCA) at para [17].
[12]
Premeditation
of a rape, as with other violent crimes, is regarded as an
aggravating factor for purposes of sentencing. See
S
v L.M.M
(CCD14/2022)
[2022] ZAKZDHC 13 (18 March 2022) at p 9.
[13]
S
v Malgas
(above)
at para [25].
[14]
S
v Matyiyiti
2011
(1) SACR 40
SCA at paras [9]-[14].
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