Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 639South Africa
D.P.N v S (A296/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 639 (19 June 2024)
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Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## D.P.N v S (A296/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 639 (19 June 2024)
D.P.N v S (A296/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 639 (19 June 2024)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION
,
PRETORIA)
CASE
NO:A296/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
19/06/2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter of:
D[...]
P[...] N[...]
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
This
judgment is prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected as such, 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 of handing down is deemed to be the
19
June 2024
.
JUDGMENT
BALOYI
-
MERE
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The Appellant was convicted
on a charge of rape read with the provisions of section 51(1) where
life imprisonment was applicable.
The Appellant pleaded not guilty to
the charge as preferred against him and a trial commenced
.
At the end of
the trial the Appellant was found guilty as charged and sentenced to
life imprisonment. As the Appellant was arraigned
at the Regional
Court and sentenced to life imprisonment, he had an automatic right
of appeal to the High Court on both conviction
and sentence. This
appeal is heard by this court of appeal on those basis
.
The
State Case
[2]
The State called the
Complainant who at the time of testifying was 14 years old and she
testified that when the incident occurred
she was 12 years of age
.
The
Complainant testified that the Appellant was her uncle who has been
asked by her father to come and look after the Complainant
and her
siblings between February 2019 up until July 2019. The Appellant is
therefore
the
Complainant's
father
'
s
brother
.
[3]
The Complainant testified
that the Appellant called the children
,
the
Complainant included
,
one by one to
his room and asked them about the money that was allegedly stolen
.
[4]
When it was the
Complainant's turn to be asked
,
the
Complainant testified
that
the Appellant
then took off her clothes and penetrated her with his penis
.
The
Complainant further testified that after the rape she then later
wrote a letter explaining what happened to her and left it
on a sofa
where her father could find it.
[5]
The State further called the
Complainant's father who corroborated the Complainant's testimony on
the letter that was written by
the Complainant. The Complainant
'
s
father further testified that he asked the Complainant about the
contents of the letter and verified that she understood what
she
wrote in
the
letter
.
The
Complainant's father further confronted the Appellant who
denied
having had any
sexual intercourse with the Complainant.
[6]
The Complainant's father
then took the Complainant to the Far East Hospital where the
Complainant was medically examined
.
[7]
The
State
further called Doctor Madonsela who examined the Complainant at the
Far East Hospital. Doctor Madonsela testified that upon
examining the
Complainant
,
his clinical
findings were consistent with previous penetration.
The
Defence Case
[8]
The defence cailed the
Appellant who testified that indeed he did call the Complainant and
he was alone with the Complainant when
he asked her about the alleged
stolen money. Appellant further testified that there was no reason
why the Complainant and her father
could falsely implicate him with a
rape accusation.
[9]
I now proceed to dea
l
with the
grounds of appeal as raised by the Appellant.
Single
Witness and Cautionary Rule
[10]
The Appellant alleges that
the court
a
quo
only
paid lip service to the cautionary rule and incorrectly applied it
when it rejected the version of the Appellant as being reasonably
possibly true
.
[11]
The
only witness called by the State who could give a first-hand account
of the rape incident is the Complainant who was 12 years
old when the
incident occurred
.
The
issue of a single witness has been considered on a number of
occasions by our courts and there is a plethora of cases that deals
with single witnesses. In
S
v Hadebe
[1]
and
cited with approval
i
n
the matter of
S
v Mbuli
[2]
by
the SCA
,
it
was held as follows:
"the
question for determination is whether, in the light of all the
evidence adduced at the trial
,
the
guilt of the appellant was established beyond
reasonable
doubt. The breaking down of a body of evidence into its component
parts is obviously a useful aid to a proper understanding
and
evaluation of it
.
But
,
in
doing so
,
one
must guard against a tendency to focus too intently upon the separate
and individual part of what is, after all
,
a
mosaic of proof. Doubts about one aspect of the evidence led in a
trial may arise when that aspect is viewed in isolation. Those
doubts
may be set at rest when it is evaluated again together with all the
other available evidence
.
That is
not to say that the broad and indulgent approach is appropriate when
evaluating evidence. Far from it
.
There
is no substitute for a detailed and critical examination of each and
every component in a body of evidence. But
,
once
that has been done, it is necessary to step back a pace and consider
the mosaic as a whole
.
If that
is not done
,
one may
fail to see the wood from the trees
"
.
[12]
The
court
a
quo
followed
exactly what S v Hadebe
supra
instructed
.
The
court considered the evidence as a whole in order to come to a
finding
[3]
.
The
court further held that if there is any doubt in the court
'
s
mind
,
the
accused must then get the benefit of the doubt and also that if the
version of the Appellant is reasonably possibly true then
the
Appellant was entitled to his acquittal. In this regard the court
a
quo
cannot
be faulted
.
[13]
Section 208 of the Criminal
Procedure Act provides that an accused may be convicted of any
offence based on evidence of a single
competent witness
.
The court
a
quo
found
that the Complainant was a competent witness whose evidence was of
such clar
i
ty
that the court could rely on in order to
come to a finding
.
[14]
The
issue of a child witness who is a single witness was also considered
in
Woji
v Santam Insurance Co Ltd
[4]
,
State v Reddy
[5]
,
and
State
v Jackson
[6]
where
the court held that a court may not treat the evidence of a
complainant in a sexual offence with caution on account of the
nature
of the offence. The court further held that a court should not easily
convict unless the evidence of the child has been
treated with due
caution.
[15]
In
this instance, the court
a
quo
acknowledge
that the Complainant in the matter is a child and that she is also a
single witness. The court
a
quo
further
indicated that the evidence must be approached with caution and the
cautionary rules applicable to the evidence of a child
and that of a
single witness.
[7]
[16]
The
court further found that
the
Complainant's
evidence was corroborated by firstly the J88 form that was admitted
as an exhibit. The court further found that the
Complainant gave so
much detail when she testified and her evidence was
,
to
a large extent corroborated by the Appellant himself.
[8]
[17]
It should also be borne in
mind that the court
a
quo
was in
a better position to observe the demeanour of the witnesses
,
appraised the
witnesses and also see and hear the words from the mouths of the
witnesses
,
unlike an
appeal court
.
Late
Reporting of the Rape Incidence
[18]
There
is no time limit for reporting a rape case, unlike other sexual
offences that have a 20 year time limit. In
Monageng
v State
[9]
in
the majority judgment
,
the
court had an opportunity to look at the delay
i
n
reporting a rape charge
.
The
court held that:
"
it
has been firmly established in a number of studies on the impact of
violence
,
including
rape
,
against
women that victims display individualized emotional responses to the
assault. Some of the immediate effects are frozen fright
or cognitive
dissociation
,
shock
,
numbness
and disbelieve. It is therefore not unusual for a victim to present a
facade of normality.
[10]
[19]
A
delay in reporting a rape is not necessarily fatal to the
prosecution
'
s
case
.
In
S
v Cornick and Another
[11]
the
SCA upheld convictions where the complainant had laid charges 19
years after the event. In that case
,
the
delay was fully explained and the complainant was also found to have
been a credible w
i
tness
.
[20]
From the facts in this
present case
,
it is clear
that the Complainant's father was away from home attending to his
initiation and had left the Complainant togethe
r
with her
siblings in the care of the Appellant. The Complainant's father only
came home some months later and it was only then that
the Complainant
informed the Complainant's father about the rape. Also
,
the method
with which the Complainant employed to inform the father clearly
indicated that the Complainant was scared
,
hence she
wrote her story on a
piece
of paper and left it where she knew that her father would find it.
The court
a
quo
found
this explanation satisfactory and plausible.
The
Evidence of the State Witnesses
[21]
The court
a
quo
found
that
the
evidence of the state witnesses was truthful and credible. The two
state witnesses who testified were the Complainant's father
and the
doctor that examined and confirmed that the Complainant had been
penetrated
.
There
is
no reason why
the court
a
quo
should be
faulted for accepting the truthfulness and credibility of the
evidence by the state witnesses.
[22]
A
court of appeal should be slow in
interfering
with
the findings of a trial court unless if the appeal court finds that
the trial court's findings of fact and credibility are
vitiated by
irregularity, or unless also that an examination of the record
reveals that those findings are patently wrong. The
trial court
'
s
finding of fact and credibility are presumed to be correct because
the trial court, and not the court of appeal
,
has
had the advantage of seeing and hearing the witnesses and it is in
the best position to determine where the truth
lies.
[12]
[23]
In my view, the appeal
against the conviction must fail.
[24]
The Appellant was sentenced
to life imprisonment. A sentence of life imprisonment
is
prescribed for
rape and it can only be deviated from if the court finds substantial
and compelling circumstances and impose a lesser
sentence.
[25]
The court
a
quo
did
not find any substantial and compelling circumstances to afford
it
to deviate
from imposing a life sentence
.
It is
submitted on behalf of the Appellant that the following circumstances
should be considered as substantial and compelling:
24.1
The Appellant was 25
years of age during sentencing
;
24.2
The Appellant was a
first offender
;
24.3
The Appellant was
unmarried and has one child aged 2 years
;
24.4
The Appellant was
unemployed and was relying for maintenance and financial support from
his father who was employed as a farm labourer
;
and
24.5
The Appellant had
good prospects of being self-rehabilitated without undergoing long
term imprisonment.
[26]
The
fact that Parliament enacted the minimum sentencing legislation is an
indication that it was no longer business as usual. A
court no longer
has 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.
[13]
[27]
In
paragraph 23 of S v Matyityi
[14]
the
court held as follows
:
"
Courts
are not free to subvert the will of the legislature by resort to
vague
,
ill-
defined
concepts such as
"
relative
youthfulness
"
or
other equally vague and ill-founded hypothesis that appear to fit the
particular sentencing office
r'
s
personal notion of fairness. Predictable outcomes
,
not
outcomes based on the whim of an individual judicial officer
,
is
foundational to the rule of law which lies at the heart of our
constitutional order
.
[28]
The court
a
quo
considered
all the factors and did not find any substantial and compelling
circumstances that would compel the court to deviate
from the minimum
sentence that is prescribed by legis
l
ation
.
[29]
Considering the absence of
compelling and substantial circumstances and having regard to the
best interest of the Complainant at
the age of 12
,
who was raped
in her home environment
,
by an uncle
,
the sentence
imposed by the court
a
quo
is
proportionate to the crime perpetrated and thus it
i
s
just.
[30]
In the circumstances this
court does not wish to disturb the sentence discretion of the court
a
quo.
In
the circumstances I propose the following o
r
der
:
1.
The appeal against the conviction and sentence is dismissed
.
EM Baloyi-Mere
Acting
Judge of the High Court
I
agree
NP
Mali
Judge
of the High Court
Appearances
for the Appellant
Mapanga
BM
Email
:
brianm1attorney@gmail.com
Cell:
082 971 6655
Appearances
for the Respondent
GJ
C Maritz
Cell:
084 257 9436
[1]
1998
(1) SACR 422
(SCA) at para 426 F - H.
[2]
ZASCA
78 (07 June 2002).
[3]
Record judgment page 63 para 20.
[4]
1981
(1) SA 1021(A).
[5]
1996
(2) SACR 1 (A).
[6]
1998
(1) SACR 470 (A).
[7]
Record
judgment page 64 para 1.
[8]
Record judgment page 64 para 2.
[9]
[2008]
ZASCA 129
(01 October 2008).
[10]
Monganeg
supra
at
para 23.
[11]
2007
(2) SACR 115 (SCA).
[12]
S
v Jackson 1998 (1) SACR 470 (SCA).
[13]
S
v Matyityi
[2010] ZASCA 127
(30 September 2010).
[14]
S
v Matyityi
ibid
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