Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 965South Africa
Langa v S (A222/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 965 (27 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
27 September 2024
Headnotes
[4]
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Langa v S (A222/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 965 (27 September 2024)
Langa v S (A222/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 965 (27 September 2024)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
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REVISED
VENTURA
JAEMA LANGA
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
APPEAL JUDGMENT
AMIEN AJ
[1]
This is an appeal against a sentence of
life imprisonment on a conviction of rape, imposed on the Appellant
by the Regional Court
in Springs on 14 June 2023.
[2]
The Appellant was charged in the Springs
Regional Court on two counts, namely, rape and robbery with
aggravating circumstances.
A third count of being in South Africa
illegally was withdrawn by the state.
[3]
Count 1 relates to
rape in contravention of
section 3
of the
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32
of 2007
.
[4]
Count 2 relates to robbery with aggravating
circumstances.
[5]
The Appellant pleaded guilty to both counts
against him. Thereafter, the Appellant changed his plea and a plea of
not guilty was
noted by the Magistrate under
section 113
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
[6]
At the conclusion of the trial, the
Appellant was convicted on
both
counts.
[7]
In respect of count 1, the prescribed
minimum sentence of life imprisonment
for
rape was imposed in terms of
section 51(1)
read with
Part I
of
Schedule II of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act 105 of 1997 (hereafter referred to as
the 'amending legislation) in
terms
of which the Appellant was found guilty of raping the Complainant
more than once.
[8]
On count 2,
the
Appellant was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.
[9]
In
terms
of
section 280(2)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, the
Magistrate
ordered both sentences to run concurrently.
[10] The Appellant
was also declared unfit to possess a licensed firearm in terms of
section 103(1)
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
.
Background
facts
[11]
The facts underscoring the convictions and
sentence are summarized as follows:
11.1.
On 10 July 2022, the Appellant telephoned
the Complainant, inquiring about the availability
of
cement
in
a
hardware
store
where
the
Complainant
previously worked.
11.2.
The Complainant informed the Appellant that
she no longer worked at the hardware store whereupon the Appellant
informed her that he had a job for her and
that they should meet at Daveyton Mall.
11.3.
When the Complainant arrived at Daveyton
Mall, the Appellant encouraged her to board
a
taxi
to Springs.
When
the taxi reached
an Engen
garage
in Springs, both the Appellant and the
Complainant alighted from the taxi.
11.4.
The Appellant took the Complainant into an
open veld where he produced an axe, with which he threatened her and
proceeded to rape
her twice.
The
Appellant did not wear a condom during either of the rapes.
11.5.
The Appellant also stole the Complainant's
two cell phones.
11.6.
After the rapes, the Complainant
walked to the main road and obtained
assistance in getting to a hospital and to open a case at a police
station.
11.7.
As a means of capturing the Appellant, the
Complainant's sister telephoned him, advising that she
needed a job. The Appellant indicated that
she should meet him and when he took her to an open veld behind the
Sasol garage in Kingsway,
he was arrested.
Magistrate's
decision
[12]
Section 51(1)
of the amending legislation
requires a minimum prescribed sentence of life imprisonment
to be imposed for a conviction of rape
where the Complainant is raped more than once, unless in terms of
section 51(3)(a)
, substantial and compelling circumstances exist that
justify a lesser sentence.
[13]
In considering whether substantial and
compelling circumstances exist that warrant a reduction of the
minimum prescribed sentence
of life imprisonment,
the Magistrate took the following into
account:
13.1.
Personal circumstances of the Appellant:
13.1.1.
He was 35 years old at the date of
sentencing.
13.1.2.
He was a matric graduate.
13.1.3.
He had no previous convictions.
13.1.4.
He was employed at Cloverdene Constructions
prior to his arrest.
13.1.5.
He was married with three children.
13.1.6.
He was the breadwinner of his family.
13.2.
Nature of the crime and the interests of
society:
The Magistrate
acknowledged the increasing levels of violent crimes in South Africa,
particularly against women. Given the seriousness
of rape and its
high prevalence in Gauteng and elsewhere in the country, the
Magistrate found that it is the duty of the courts
to impose an
appropriate sentence, especially where women are raped.
[14]
The Magistrate concluded that substantial
and compelling circumstances do not exist to warrant a lesser
sentence than the prescribed
minimum sentence of life imprisonment
and accordingly imposed a sentence of life imprisonment on the
Appellant.
Appellant's
case
[15]
The Appellant chooses to appeal only
against the sentence of life imprisonment.
[16]
In his Notice of Appeal, the Appellant
lists the following reasons for his appeal:
16.1.
That an effective sentence of life
imprisonment is shockingly inappropriate in that it induces a sense
of shock.
16.2.
That the Court erred by not imposing a
shorter term of imprisonment.
16.3.
That the Court erred by not considering the
degree of remorse shown by the appellant.
16.4.
That the Court erred in over-emphasizing
the seriousness of the offence and the interests of the community
over the Appellant's
personal circumstances.
16.5.
That the Court erred in finding that there
are no compelling and substantial circumstances justifying a sentence
lesser than the
prescribed minimum sentence as a suitable sentence.
16.6.
That
the Ap
pellant is a family man, and
he was a primary care giver.
Legal background
[17]
In
S
v Malgas,
[1]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal noted that the imposition of a minimum
sentence of
life
imprisonment
for
the crimes specified in
section 51
of the amending legislation, which
includes multiple rapes means that it is 'no longer ... "business
as usual" when sentencing
for the commission of the specified
crimes.'
[18]
The
Supreme
Court
of Appeal later clarified its meaning of no longer business as usual.
In S
v
Kwanape,
[2]
the Court explained
that
a sentence of life imprisonment must be ordinarily imposed to ensure
'a severe, standardised, and consistent response from
the courts' for
the crimes specified in
section 51
, 'unless there were ... truly
convincing reasons for a different response.'
[19]
Under
section 51(3)(a)
of the amending
legislation, the prescribed minimum sentence can be deviated from
only if substantial and compelling circumstances
exist.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal interprets this as meaning:
[3]
'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... the ultimate cumulative
impact
of those
circumstances must be such as to
justify
a departure.'
[20]
In
assessing whether substantial and compelling circumstances exist, the
Supreme Court of Appeal also held:
[4]
'If
the
sentencing
court
on
consideration
of
the
circumstances
of
the
particular
case
is satisfied that
they render the prescribed sentence unjust in that it would be
disproportionate to
the
crime, the
criminal and
the
needs of society,
so
that
an
injustice would be done by imposing that sentence, it is entitled to
impose a lesser sentence. In so doing, account must be taken
of the
fact that crime of that particular kind has been singled out for
severe punishment and that the sentence to be imposed in
lieu of the
prescribed sentence should be assessed paying due regard to the bench
mark which the legislature has provided.'
This
approach was endorsed by the Constitutional Court in
S
v
Dodos.
[5]
[21]
In
determining whether substantial and compelling circumstances
exist,
a factual inquiry is adopted
[6]
by considering the triad of factors identified in
S
v Zinn
[7]
to
determine a sentence that is just and fair namely,
(a)
the nature of the crime,
(b)
the personal circumstances of the person
convicted, and
(c)
the interests of society.
[22]
When
the prescribed sentence is disproportionate to the above triad of
factors thereby rendering the sentence unjust,
a
court is entitled to impose a
lesser
sentence.
[8]
[23]
To
achieve the appropriate balance, the Supreme Court of Appeal enjoins
us to weigh the personal circumstances
of
the convicted person against the interests of society,
[9]
and to consider not only 'the objective gravity
of
the offence but also the impact of the crime on the victim'.
[10]
[24]
When
considering sentence, one must also keep the objectives of sentencing
in mind, which include retribution, deterrence, prevention
and
rehabilitation.
[11]
[25]
Rape
is one of the vilest and most monstrous of crimes that can be
committed against any person. The Supreme Court of Appeal describes
it as 'repulsive',
[12]
and
explains its impact as 'a humiliating, degrading and brutal invasion
of the privacy, the dignity and the person of the victim'.
[13]
The Court notes that rape violates not only the victim's physical
integrity, but also their emotional and psychological well-being,
and
can cause life-long trauma.
[14]
[26]
In
S
v Chapman,
[15]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held unequivocally:
'The rights to dignity,
to privacy, and the integrity of every person are basic to the ethos
of the Constitution and to any defensible
civilization. Women in this
country are entitled to the protection of these rights. They have a
legitimate claim to walk peacefully
on the streets, to enjoy their
shopping and their entertainment, to go and come from work, and to
enjoy the peace and tranquillity
of their homes without the fear, the
apprehension and the insecurity which constantly diminishes the
quality and enjoyment of their
lives ... The Courts are under a duty
to send a clear message to the accused, to other potential rapists
and to the community:
We are determined to protect the equality,
dignity and freedom of all women, and we shall show no mercy to those
who seek to invade
those rights.'
Analysis
and application of law to this
case
[27]
Rape
is a pernicious and pervasive evil within our society. Gauteng alone,
where the rape in this case was committed, accounts for
20.4% of the
national total of rapes in South Africa, which is the highest
contributor
to
the national total.
[16]
[28]
At
a national level, rape comprises 80% of the total sexual offences,
which is the highest contributor
to
the total sexual offences in the country.
[17]
[29]
It is therefore not surprising that the
legislature sought fit to respond to the malicious evil that is rape,
particularly multiple
rapes through the imposition of a minimum
prescribed sentence of life imprisonment.
[30]
The heinousness of the crime in this case
was exacerbated by the fact that:
30.1.
The rapes were premeditated.
30.2.
The Appellant took advantage of the
Complainant's financial vulnerability.
30.3.
The Appellant threatened the Complainant
with an axe.
30.4.
After the rapes, the Appellant robbed the
Complainant of her cell phones.
30.5.
The Appellant responded to the
Complainant's sister's request for a job with
a similar process of meeting and taking her
to a veld, which suggests that his violent attack on the Complainant
may not have been
his first.
[31]
Regarding the impact of the rapes on the
Complainant, while she does not appear to have suffered lasting
physical injuries, one
cannot ignore the physical violation and pain
that is endured during a rape, especially during repeated acts of
rape. Moreover,
one cannot ignore the longer lasting emotional and
psychological trauma that a rape survivor undergoes. In this
case, the Victim
Impact Report confirms that the Complainant
struggles to go to malls and to walk
the streets. She continues to struggle with
the trauma of being raped. Her eight-year-old child was
removed from her care. Women should not
have to be made to feel vulnerable and fearful in their own
neighborhoods, in their own
cities, and in their own countries.
[32]
By violating the Complainant in the manner
that he did, the Appellant violated the Complainant's
constitutional right to freedom and
security of her person, particularly her right to be free from all
forms of violence from private
sources as entrenched in section
12(1)(a) of
the
Constitution. He also violated her section 12(2)(b) right to have her
bodily and psychological integrity protected, which includes
the
right to have security in and control over her body.
[33]
The Appellant suggests that the sentence of
life imprisonment is "shockingly inappropriate", that the
remorse shown by
the appellant was not considered, and the serious
nature of the offence and the interests of the community
were over emphasized above the
Appellant's personal circumstances. Regarding the latter, the
Appellant avers that
the
fact that he is married with children,
and
that he is
their
primary caregiver constitutes substantial and compelling
circumstances.
[34]
Remorse
might be gleaned from the fact that an accused person pleads guilty.
Still, the Supreme
Court
of Appeal distinguishes between remorse in the form of 'genuine
contrition' and feeling sorry for oneself for having been
caught
out:
[18]
'Remorse is a gnawing
pain of conscience for the plight of another. Thus genuine contrition
can only come from an appreciation and
acknowledgement of the extent
of one's error. Whether the offender is sincerely remorseful and not
simply feeling sorry for himself
or herself at having been caught is
a factual question. It is to the surrounding actions of the accused
rather than what he says
in court that one should rather look. In
order for the remorse to be a valid consideration, the penitence must
be sincere and the
accused must take the court fully into his or her
confidence. Until and unless that happens the genuineness of the
contrition alleged
to exist cannot be determined. After all, before a
court can find that an accused person is genuinely remorseful, it
needs to have
a proper appreciation of inter alia: what motivated the
accused to commit the deed; what has since provoked his or her change
of
heart; and whether he or she does indeed have a true appreciation
of the consequences of those actions.'
[35]
By changing his plea from guilty to not
guilty in the middle of the proceedings, the Appellant showed no
remorse, and this was correctly
noted by the Magistrate.
[36]
As for the fact that the Appellant is married with
children and is their primary caretaker, it is trite that
when the
interests of minor children may be
affected, their best interests are of
paramount importance, as enjoined by section 28(2) of the
Constitution.
[37]
Yet,
the Constitutional Court points out that a convicted person who is
also a parent cannot rely on an expectation of receiving
punishment
that is 'least damaging to the interests of children ...
as
a pretext for escaping the otherwise just consequences
of
their own misconduct.'
[19]
[38]
In
fact,
the Constitutional
Court
notes that '[c]hildren have a need and a right to earn from their
primary caregivers that individuals make moral choices for
which they
can be held accountable.'
[20]
[39]
In this respect, it is
clear from the transcripts that the
Magistrate considered the Appellant's personal circumstances,
especially
the
fact that he is a married man and a father of three children. The
Magistrate correctly observed that by
resorting to crime, the Appellant placed
his family in jeopardy.
[40]
Moreover,
the Supreme Court of Appeal has held that when an accused person is
convicted of a serious crime, their personal circumstances
become
overshadowed by the seriousness
of
the crime. The Court found that:
[21]
'Once it becomes clear
that the: crime is deserving of a substantial period of imprisonment
the questions whether the accused is
married or single, whether he
has two children or three, whether or not he is in employment, are in
themselves largely immaterial
to what that period should be and those
seem to me to be the kind of flimsy grounds that
Ma/gas
said
should be avoided. But they are nonetheless relevant in another
respect. A material consideration is whether the accused can
be
expected to offend again.'
[41]
Counsel for the Appellant conceded that the
actions of the Appellant indicated that he had most likely raped
previously. Thus, if
given a lesser sentence, one could reasonably
assume that the Appellant could be expected to rape again.
[42]
Regarding
the Appellant's averment that the sentence of life imprisonment is
"shockingly inappropriate", the Supreme Court
of Appeal in
S
v
Malgas,
[22]
found that:
'[A]n
appellate
court
may
...
be
justified
in
interfering
with
the
sentence
imposed by the trial court ... when ... the
sentence which the appellate court would have imposed had it been the
trial court is
so marked that it can properly be described as
"shocking", "startling" or "disturbingly
inappropriate"'.'
[43]
In
S
v Bogaards,
[23]
the Constitutional Court similarly held that an appellate court is
justified in interfering with a sentence imposed by a lower
court if
the latter misdirects itself or if the sentence is of such a nature
that no reasonable court would impose it.
[44]
The Appellant relies on his status as
father, husband and primary caregiver as comprising substantial and
compelling circumstances
that justify a reduction in his sentence.
[45]
Yet, it is disingenuous
of the Appellant
to not have considered his family when he
threatened the Complainant
with
an axe and committed the atrocious crime
of rape under
circumstances that were clearly premeditated but now wants his status
as father, husband and primary caregiver to
override the seriousness
of the crime and the interests of society.
[46]
The prescribed minimum sentence in the
circumstances
of
this case do not result in an
injustice
to the Appellant. In fact,
to
impose a lesser sentence would be an injustice to the Complainant
and the interests of society given the
seriousness of the crime and its repercussions on the Complainant and
society in general.
Under these conditions, the Appellant's position
as father, husband and primary caregiver do not constitute
substantial and compelling
circumstances.
[47]
I am of the view that the Magistrate
undertook an appropriate balancing of the Appellant's personal
circumstances against the serious
nature of the crime, its increasing
prevalence
in
South Africa and especially against women, and in the interests of
society, the need to hold perpetrators of rape appropriately
accountable.
[48]
Following the above,
the Magistrate did not misdirect himself
and the sentence of life imprisonment
in
the circumstances of this case is not "shocking",
"startling" or "disturbingly inappropriate".
[49]
The objectives of sentencing namely,
retribution, deterrence, prevention and rehabilitation are also met
with the sentence imposed
in this matter. Since it is likely that the
Appellant may have committed the crime of rape
previously, life
imprisonment will prevent him from doing so
again outside the prison system. The sentence further serves as
appropriate punishment
for
the grotesque crime of rape and sends a clear message that such
crimes cannot be tolerated and must be deterred. Rehabilitation
programmes are available within the prison system and
the Appellant can
avail himself of those programmes if he so
wishes.
Order
[50]
In
the
result:
50.1.
The appeal is dismissed.
50.2.
The sentence imposed by the court a
quo
on the
appellant is hereby confirmed.
WAMIEN
ACTING JUDGE OF
THE
HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
I agree,
R FRANCIS-SUBBIAH
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Appellant:
Instructed
by:
MG
Botha
Legal
Aid South Africa, Pretoria
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Instructed
by:
M
Masilo
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria
Appeal number:
A222/2023
Date heard: 31 July
2024
Date of judgment: 17
September 2024
This judgment has been
delivered by uploading it to the court online digital data base of
the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and by
e-mail to the attorneys of
record of the parties. The deemed date and time for the delivery is
17 September 2024.
[1]
[2001)
3 All SA 220
(A) para 7.
[2]
(422/12)
[2012) ZASCA 168 (26 November 2012) para 8.
[3]
S
v Ma/gas
[2001)
3 All SA 220
(A) para 9.
[4]
Ibid
para
25.
[5]
[2001] ZACC 16
;
2001
(3) SA 382
(CC) para 11.
[6]
Kwanape
v The State
(422/12)
[2012) ZASCA 168 (26 November 2012) para 9.
[7]
1969
(2) SA 537 (A).
[8]
S
v Ma/gas
(2001]
3 All SA 220
(A) para 25.
[9]
S
v
Chapman
[1997] ZASCA 45
;
1997
(3)
SA
341
(SCA)
para
3.
[10]
S
v Matyityi
(2010)
2
All SA 424 (SCA) para 17.
[11]
S
v M (Centre for Child Law
as
Amicus
Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2007
(2) SACR 539
(CC) para 109.
[12]
S
v Vilikazi
2009
(1) SACR 552
(SCA) para 1.
[13]
S
v
Chapman
[1997] ZASCA 45
;
1997
(3) SA 341
(SCA) para 3.
[14]
S
v Matyityi
[2010)
2 All SA 424
(SCA) para 10.
[15]
[1997] ZASCA 45
;
1997
(3) SA 341
{SCA) para 4.
[16]
South
African
Police
Service,
Annual
Crime
Report
2022/2023
p37.
See
online
2022-2023-Annual
Cnme-Statistics-Report.pdf (saps.gov.za)
[17]
Ibid
p37.
[18]
S v
Matyityi
[2010]
2 All SA 424
(SCA) para 13.
[19]
S
v M
(Centre for Child Law as Amicus Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2007
(2) SACR 539
(CC) paras 33-34.
[20]
Ibid
para 34.
[21]
S
v
Vi/ikazi
2009
(1)
SACR
552
(SCA)
para
58.
[22]
3
All
SA
220
(A)
para 12.
[23]
2013
(1) SACR 1
(CC) para 41.
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