Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 576South Africa
Mashile v S (A217/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 576 (26 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mashile v S (A217/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 576 (26 June 2024)
Mashile v S (A217/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 576 (26 June 2024)
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sino date 26 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A217 / 2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE:
26 June 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
Mpho
Mashile
Appellant
and
The
State
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Neukircher
J
:
1]
This is an
appeal directed against the conviction of the appellant on one count
of rape
[1]
of the11-year old
victim (BM). He was represented at trial and ultimately convicted as
charged and sentenced to 10 years’
imprisonment.
2]
This court granted him leave, on petition, against
conviction only.
The
test on appeal
3]
It is
against the background of
S
v Monyane & Others
[2]
this appeal stands to be adjudicated:
“
This court’s
power to interfere on appeal with the findings of fact of a trial
court are limited… In the absence of
demonstrable and material
misdirection by the 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.”
The
Facts
4]
The State called 3 witnesses:
a) BM –
the victim;
b) Mrs
Mashile; and
c)
Ms Mbatha, the operational manager and sexual assault care
practitioner at the Daveyton Care Centre Main
Clinic (Daveyton
Clinic).
5]
BM’s evidence was given through an intermediary.
She testified
that she, the appellant, her 7-year old younger brother (BM), mother
and stepfather stayed in an RDP house. Although
BM sometimes slept
with her, that night he slept with her parents. Her door was locked.
She noticed the door being opened at approximately
midnight when she
saw a basket positioned in front of the door fall over. Her parents
were playing loud music in their room so
she knew they would not hear
her scream.
6]
There was enough light from the streetlights to
see the appellant.
She saw the appellant had a cloth in his hand which he used to cover
her mouth. He took the blankets off her
and took off her pyjama pants
and panty and he then undressed himself, climbed on top of her and
inserted his penis into her vagina.
She testified that “
it
was painful
”. When he was done, he threatened to kill her
and then went back to the dining room where he was sleeping.
7]
The following day she noticed that the lock to her
room had been
tampered with. When her mother asked her about the lock she told her
that the lock had been broken for some time.
8]
But after the incident she became quieter and approximately
a month
later her mother noticed and asked her what was wrong. In the
beginning she did not tell her, but eventually she told her
the
truth.
9]
Her parents confronted the appellant who denied
everything and her
mother sent him to the homelands to his biological father – but
he did not go. Instead, he went to stay
with his friends. When her
mother found out she was very angry and went to the police – BM
was taken to the Daveyton Clinic
where she was examined and given
medication.
Mrs
Mashile
10]
She
testified that on the morning of 12 January 2019 she went to wake BM
and her younger brother and noticed that the door handle
to their
bedroom was broken
[3]
. She woke
BM and asked her if appellant had been in the room and raped her –
BM denied this.
11]
By 11 February 2019 she noticed that BM had become quiet and she
sat
her down and asked her what wrong – BM then told that the
appellant had raped her and that he had tied a cloth
around her
mouth and hands. Mrs Mashile then took BM to the Daveyton Clinic and
she then went to report the rape to the police.
12]
Mrs Mashile conceded that she reported the rape after she found out
that the appellant had not returned to his father after the incident
despite her ultimatum to him to do so. She testified that
she’d
felt disrespected by him.
13]
She also testified that the appellant admitted the rape to her and
her husband and that he told them that “
it was a mistake
”
and that “
after that he started disrespecting us. That is
why we ended up getting him arrested.
”
Ms
Mbatha
14]
Ms Mbatha’s evidence was, in essence that she examined BM on
3
February 2019 and completed the J88 at that time. Her finding was
that BM’s hymen was irregular due to the presence of
a cleft
(which was not a natural cleft) at 9 o’clock. She testified
that the irregular hymen indicates that there was a tear
at some
point on the hymen that has now healed and left a scar which forms a
“V” shape and that this was caused more
than 72 hours
prior to the examination. Her conclusion was
“
Genital
findings are consistent with previous vaginal penetration with a
blunt object.”
15]
She could not speculate what the “
blunt object
”
was but testified that the “
blunt object
”
penetrated inside the vagina. She could also not say when the injury
had occurred ie whether it was in 2019 or prior to
that.
The
Appellant
16]
The appellant also testified. He denied the charges against him. His
evidence was that he went out and
when he got home he found a laptop
and enquired who the owner was but no-one told him
[4]
.
He then went into the bedroom where he found “them” in
the bedroom. His stepfather called him aside and told him that
his
mother had said he had raped BM, which he denied. He was told he
would be given taxi money to go back home.
[5]
17]
His evidence was that his younger brother slept in the room with BM;
that his mother hit BM with a wooden
spoon until BM said he had raped
her and that these allegations stem from incidents in 2016 when he
was first chased from the family
home having been accused of raping
BM then already. His version was also that his mother accused him of
being a Satanist which
is why she did not trust him around BM.
The
Court a quo
18]
In my view the court a quo correctly summarised the evidence before
it as well as the trite legal principles
applicable in matters such
as this:
a)
that the
evidence of a victim that is a minor and a single witness must be
treated with caution
[6]
;
b)
that a
trial judge will weigh the evidence and decide whether it is
trustworthy and whether - despite any shortcomings, defects
or
contradictions in the testimony - the truth has been told;
[7]
c)
that not
every error made by a witness will affect his or her credibility and
the court must weigh up the totality of the evidence
to decide
whether the State has proven the guilt of the accused beyond
reasonable doubt
[8]
.
19]
In my view the only contradictory evidence was whether or not BM’s
younger brother was sleeping
in his parents’ room or not. This
discrepancy, when viewed against the totality of the evidence, does
not disturb the overall
credibility of either Mrs Mashile or BM who
corroborated each other in material respects:
a)
the door handle was tampered with;
b)
BM told her mother that appellant had entered her
room and tied a
cloth over her mouth;
c)
BM’s changed demeanour after the rape that
prompted Mrs
Mashile’s concern.
20]
The findings of Ms Mbatha that BM had been penetrated with a blunt
object also confirm the rape.
21]
I am also of the view that the appellant’s version was
correctly rejected as not being reasonably
possibly true. His
accusations that he was accused of a prior rape in 2016 and that this
somehow played into the 2019 accusation,
were correctly rejected by
the court a quo which disregarded that accusation when weighing up
the evidence on the charge before
it.
22]
I can also find no fault with the court a quo accepting Mrs Mashile’s
evidence that appellant
initially denied the rape but then admitted
it and said it was a mistake.
23]
Given all this, the court a quo correctly convicted the appellant as
charged.
Order
24]
In the result the order made is that the appeal is dismissed.
NEUKIRCHER J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I agree
BALOYI-MERE 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
26 June 2024
For the appellant:
Adv LA van Wyk
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid South Africa
For
the respondent:
Adv M
Masilo
Instructed
by:
Director
of Public Prosecutions
Matter
heard on:
4
June 2024
Judgment
date:
26
June 2024
[1]
Section 3
of the
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters)
Amendment Act 32 of 2007
as read with
s1
,
55
,
56
(1),
57
,
58
,
59
,
60
and
61
of Act 32 of 2007; as well as s256, 257, 281 of Act 51 of
1997 and s92(2) and 94 of Act 51 of 1977
[2]
2008 (1) SACR 543 (SCA)
[3]
The nails had been removed
[4]
Not put to any of the State’s witnesses
[5]
He’d be living with his family since December 2018
[6]
S v S
1995 (1) SACR 50
(25); S v V
1995
(1) SACR 173
(T); S v Vumazonke
2000 (1) SACR 619
(C);
[7]
S
v Weber
1971 (3) SA 754
(A) at 758
[8]
S v Mkohle
1990 (1) SACR 95
(A)
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