Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 882South Africa
Mamba v S (A 235/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 882 (6 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mamba v S (A 235/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 882 (6 September 2024)
Mamba v S (A 235/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 882 (6 September 2024)
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sino date 6 September 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number: A
235/2023
Date of hearing: 12
August 2024
Date delivered: 6
September 2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 6/9/24
SIGNATURE
In
the appeal of:
RICHARD
SMANGALISO MAMBA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J
:
(MOSHOANA
J concurring)
[1]
This is an appeal against the appellant’s conviction and
sentence in the Regional Court
sitting at Soshanguve. The appellant
was charged with rape in terms of section 3 of the Criminal Law
(Sexual Offences and Related
Matters) Amendment Act, 32 of 2007 (“the
Sexual Offences Act”). Section 51 (1) of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act, 105
of 1997 (“the Act”), was applicable by
virtue of the fact that the complainant was alleged to have been
raped twice.
The State therefore sought a minimum sentence of life
imprisonment.
[2]
The appellant pleaded not guilty and, although he admitted having
intercourse with the complainant
twice, he contended that the liaison
had been by mutual consent. The trial court rejected the appellant’s
version, and on
26 July 2022 the appellant was convicted as charged.
On 26 September 2022 the appellant was sentenced to the minimum
sentence imposed
by section 51 (1), namely life imprisonment.
[3]
The complainant’s version is briefly the following: During the
late hours of the evening
of 20 September 2020 the complainant
was at a tavern together with a few of her friends. Sometime after
midnight she left the tavern
to check on a friend and to buy
cigarettes. As she left the tavern the appellant grabbed her and
started pulling her with him.
He slapped her and punched her whilst
pulling her some 25 to 30 meters away from the tavern entrance.
[4]
Having dragged the complainant away from the tavern, the appellant
pulled her skirt upwards all
the while continuing to beat and choke
her. He pulled her to her knees, and then he raped her from behind.
The complainant says
that the assault went on for between 30 and 40
minutes.
[5]
Once the appellant had finished, he told the complainant to follow
him. They approached a tar
road. When the complainant tried to run
away the appellant tripped her. He dragged her to a vegetable stall
where he threatened
to stab her. The complainant realized that she
could not run away. When the appellant suggested that they go to his
house, her
resistance had evidently been broken down, because she
agreed to accompany him. The appellant was then living with his
grandmother.
He entered the house with the complainant, he took her
to his bedroom, and he raped her again.
[6]
The following day the appellant apologized to her, and allowed her to
leave. The complainant took
a taxi to her home. Her two uncles were
home when she arrived there. They immediately noticed that the
complainant had a bruise
on her eye. She had blood on her knees from
being dragged by the appellant. The complainant was taken to the
police station where
she reported the rape.
[7]
The appellant says that he happened to meet the complainant in a
passage near the tavern. She
was crying. When he asked the
complainant what was wrong, she said that she had been raped or that
there had been an attempt to
rape her. The appellant was not certain
which it was. The person who had raped her had allegedly dragged her
on her knees resulting
in the injuries to her knees. The appellant
offered to take her back to the tavern, but when they got there it
was closed. The
appellant then invited the complainant to go with him
to his house, which invitation she accepted.
[8]
When they got to the appellant’s house they twice had
intercourse by consent. The following
morning the appellant gave the
complainant R 220.00, and she left to
go home. The appellant suggested
that the complainant had been under
the influence of alcohol, and that her version should,
therefore, not be believed.
[9]
There are two conflicting versions in this case. The court a quo
accepted that the complainant
had been intoxicated at the time of the
incident. However, it also accepted that:
[9.1] The
complainant and the appellant had met each other that night for the
first time;
[9.2] The
complainant had injuries to her knees and eye that were consistent
with her version of events;
[9.3] The
appellant admitted having had intercourse with the complainant twice;
[9.4] The
vaginal injuries sustained by the complainant would have been
extremely painful, making it unlikely that she
would have agreed to
have intercourse;
[9.5]
Immediately upon returning home she reported the rape to her uncles
and she laid charges with the police.
[10]
From the appellant’s evidence of the complainant’s
behavior, the court a quo deducted that the
complainant could not
have been as intoxicated as the appellant suggested.
[11]
The court a quo also pointed out the implausibility of the
complainant, having just been raped and assaulted,
seeking out the
comfort of a stranger instead of seeking out her friends.
[12]
The court a quo provided a thorough analysis of the parties’
evidence, and concluded that the appellant’s
evidence was false
beyond a reasonable doubt. I cannot fault the trial court on any of
its findings, and it is not for a court
sitting in an appeal to
second-guess the trial court’s findings on credibility, unless
such findings are clearly incorrect.
The trial court obviously has
the advantage of being able to assess the witnesses first hand.
[13] In
my view the appellant’s version is so far-fetched as to be
rejected out of hand as false beyond
a reasonable doubt. The notion
that the complainant, having just been raped and beaten would agree
to a romantic liaison with a
stranger is beyond belief.
[14]
The appellant’s conviction of contravening section 3 of the
Sexual Offences Act, coupled with the fact
that the complainant was
raped twice, brings with it the minimum sentences provided for in
section 51 (1) of the Act, which provides
that a person who is
convicted of committing an offence contained in Part 1 of Schedule 2
to the Act is liable to be sentenced
to life imprisonment. One of the
offences listed in Part 1 of Schedule 2 is rape, where the
complainant is raped more than
once.
[15]
A court may only deviate from the minimum sentence when it is
satisfied that substantial and compelling
circumstances exist to
justify the imposition of a lesser sentence.
[1]
[16]
The meaning of the phrase “substantial and compelling”
has been the subject of many judgments.
Most authoritative was the
judgment in
S
v Malgas
[2]
.
There
it was pointed out that the legislature did not provide any guidance
as to what constituted ‘substantial and compelling
circumstances’:
“
It signals that
it has deliberately and advisedly left it to the courts to decide in
the final analysis whether the circumstances
of any particular case
call for a departure from the prescribed sentence. In doing so they
are required to regard the prescribed
sentences as being generally
appropriate for crimes of the kind specified and enjoined not to
depart from them unless they are
satisfied that there is weighty
justification for doing so.”
[17]
The Court went on to say
[3]
:
“
Moreover,
those circumstances had to be substantial and compelling. Whatever
nuances of meaning may lurk in those words, their central
thrust
seems obvious. The specified sentences were not to be departed from
lightly and for flimsy reasons which could not withstand
scrutiny.
Speculative hypotheses favourable to the offender, maudlin sympathy,
aversion to imprisoning first offenders, personal
doubts as to the
efficacy of the policy implicit in the amending legislation, and like
considerations were equally obviously not
intended to qualify as
substantial and compelling circumstances. Nor were marginal
differences in the personal circumstances or
degrees of participation
of co-offenders which, but for the provisions, might have justified
differentiating between them. But
for the rest I can see no warrant
for deducing that the legislature intended a court to exclude from
consideration, ante omnia as
it were, any or all of the
many factors traditionally and rightly taken into account by courts
when sentencing offenders. The use
of the epithets “substantial”
and “compelling” cannot be interpreted as excluding even
from consideration any
of those factors. They are neither
notionally nor linguistically appropriate to achieve that. What they
are apt to convey, is that
the ultimate cumulative impact of
those circumstances must be such as to justify a departure.
It is axiomatic
in the normal process of sentencing that, while each
of a number of mitigating factors when viewed in isolation may have
little
persuasive force, their combined impact may be considerable.”
[18]
It is necessary to consider the three considerations that guide
sentencing, the personal circumstances of
the convicted person, the
nature of the offence, and the interests of society.
[19]
The appellant was 28 years old at time of sentencing. He is a first
offender. A probation officer’s
report showed that he is the
eldest of three siblings with whom he has a good relationship. He was
brought up in a loving household
by his mother and grandmother (the
latter since deceased). He has never had a relationship with his
father.
[20]
The appellant completed matric and then pursued tertiary studies at
the Tshwane South College. He did not
complete his studies. He was
unemployed, single, with no dependants. The appellant apparently has
a brief work history, and although
he had managed to obtain
employment, he lost his employment for reasons that are not
explained. He is healthy, and although he
consumes alcohol, there is
no evidence of abuse of alcohol or any other substance.
[21]
There is nothing remarkable about the appellant’s personal
history, and especially nothing that one
can describe as substantial
and compelling enough to deviate from the minimum sentence.
[22]
On the other hand, society has a substantial interest in rapists
being punished severely. Gender based violence
(which is most often
what rape entails) is a scourge that harms our nation and especially
the women of our nation. For that particular
reason the legislature
thought it fit to provide for minimum sentences. Society expects the
Courts to impose the sentences provided
for in the Act, unless there
are clear, substantial and compelling reasons not to do so.
[23]
The court a quo also heard evidence on the devastating effect that
the offence had on the complainant, and
it is not necessary to
emphasise how demeaning and intrusive rape is. It is an offence the
effects of which a victim carries with
him/her forever. It is a scar
that will never heal.
[24]
In my view there were no circumstances present that justified the
trial court imposing a lesser sentence
than the minimum prescribed by
the Act.
[25]
In the circumstances, I propose the following order:
[25.1] The appeal is
dismissed.
SWANEPOEL J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I agree:
MOSHOANA J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
AND
IT IS SO ORDERED:
Counsel
for the appellant:
Adv.
H. Alberts
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv.
N. January
Date
heard:
12
August 2024
Date
of judgment:
6
September 2024
[1]
Section
51 (3) (a) of the Act
[2]
2001 (2) SA 1222 (SCA)
[3]
At
1230 I
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