Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 306South Africa
Mokoena v S (A288/22) [2024] ZAGPPHC 306 (20 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 March 2024
Headnotes
at Cullinan. He was convicted on a charge of the rape of a minor and was sentenced to life imprisonment. It was further directed that his name was to be enrolled in the national register of sexual offenders. He was further declared unfit to possess a firearm.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mokoena v S (A288/22) [2024] ZAGPPHC 306 (20 March 2024)
Mokoena v S (A288/22) [2024] ZAGPPHC 306 (20 March 2024)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO.: A288/22
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3) REVISED.
20/03/2024
In the matter between:
PRINCE CHARLES MOKOENA
Appellant
and
THE STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
van
der Westhuizen, J
[1]
The appellant was convicted and sentenced in the Regional Court of
Gauteng held at
Cullinan. He was convicted on a charge of the rape of
a minor and was sentenced to life imprisonment. It was further
directed that
his name was to be enrolled in the national register of
sexual offenders. He was further declared unfit to possess a firearm.
[2]
The conviction followed on the contravention of section 3 of Act 32
of 1997 read with
the provisions of
section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act, 105 of 1997
. The appellant was convicted on the said
charge on 24 November 2020 and sentenced to life imprisonment on 10
February 2021.
[3]
Throughout the criminal proceedings, the appellant enjoyed legal
representation.
[4]
In view of the life sentence, the appellant enjoyed an automatic
right of appeal.
This appeal was directed at both the conviction and
sentence. When the matter was called, counsel appearing on behalf of
the appellant
conceded the conviction and only continued with the
appeal against sentence. The respondent accepted the concession in
respect
of the conviction. It follows that the appeal against
conviction stands to be dismissed.
[5]
The main premises upon which the appeal against sentence was argued
were as follows:
(a)
The appellant was 34 years old at the time
of the commission of the rape and 36 years old when convicted. He was
young and had a
long life ahead of him;
(b)
He was the father of a minor whose mother
had died. The appellant’s daughter did not live with him;
(c)
He was gainfully employed;
(d)
The appellant had as sole provider his
grandmother and never had a father figure in his life;
(e)
He was incarcerated for a period of two
years before being convicted;
(f)
That the appellant was inebriated and the
alcohol induced a lesser blameworthiness upon him. However, no
evidence was presented
in support of that submission and it remained
a mere submission on the part of the appellant’s counsel.
[6]
The complainant was 12 years old when the rape was committed. That
horrific deed was
perpetrated in the bedroom of the minor’s
mother. The latter was heavily inebriated and had passed out on the
sofa in the
lounge. After the rape, the minor could not wake her
mother and was forced to go out in the rain to find help. The
appellant and
his girlfriend were accommodated for the evening in the
home of the minor’s mother. He had a love relationship with the
cousin
of the minor’s mother. After the rape and the reporting
thereof, the appellant was found in the same bed where the minor had
slept. His girlfriend slept in another room that was made available
to them.
[7]
Although the appellant had a previous conviction for possession of
dagga, the learned
regional magistrate considered the appellant as a
first offender. Furthermore, the regional magistrate took into
account that the
appellant was gainfully employed at the time and
that he was incarcerated for a period of two years before being
convicted. Also
the facts that the appellant had no father figure in
his life and that his grandmother was his sole provider were also
taken into
account.
[8]
The court
a quo
found that the appellant did not show remorse
and maintained his innocence on an improbable and implausible
version.
[9]
In my view, the court
a
quo
correctly dealt with all the relevant facts and principles when
considering the issue of sentence, and in particular whether there
existed substantial and compelling reasons to deviate from the
minimum prescribed sentence of life imprisonment on a conviction
of
the rape of a minor.
[1]
The psychological effect of the horrendous deed of rape upon the
minor was further of importance and taken into consideration by
the
regional magistrate. The minor is to suffer the traumatic experience
of the rape for the rest of her life.
[2]
The regional magistrate cannot be faulted in his approach to the
issue of sentence.
[10]
Consequently, the court
a quo
correctly found that no
substantial and compelling circumstances existed to warrant a
deviation from imposing the prescribed minimum
sentence of life
imprisonment for the rape of a minor.
[11] It
follows that the appeal against sentence cannot succeed and stands to
be dismissed.
I propose the following order:
The appeals against
conviction and sentence are dismissed.
C J VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I agree
(Ms) L FLATELA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
It is so ordered
On
behalf of Applicant:
S
Moeng
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid SA
On
behalf of Respondent:
L A
More
Instructed
by:
NDPP
Date
of Hearing:
29
February 2024
Judgment
Delivered:
20
March 2024
[1]
S v
Malgas
20011 SACR 469 (SCA)
[2]
See
S v
Chapman
1997(2) SACR 3 (SCA) 5a-b
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