Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1029South Africa
Mahlangu v S (A136/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1029 (14 October 2024)
Headnotes
his hand over her mouth preventing her from screaming. When he got off from her she noticed that she was bleeding from her vagina. The appellant saw this and handed her a tissue and instructed her to go and wash herself. The appellant told her not to tell anyone what happened because he would throw her in the dam. She believed that he would throw her in the dam because there is a dam at KwaMhlanga where she had to fetch water from for their daily water needs. Her brother P[...] had fallen into this same dam. At that time they were staying in KwaMhlanga and it was during the school holiday. Her mother was not at home at the time and she did
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mahlangu v S (A136/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1029 (14 October 2024)
Mahlangu v S (A136/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1029 (14 October 2024)
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sino date 14 October 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: A136/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
2024-10-14
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
SIMON
MAHLANGU
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
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
handing down is deemed to be 14 October
2024.
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
Introduction
[1]
The appellant, Mr Simon Mahlangu, is appealing against his
convictions on two counts of rape in
terms of the Sexual Offences and
Related Matters Amendment Act, 32 of 2007 and one count of assault
with the intent to do grievous
bodily harm. The two counts of
rape relate to two incidents wherein the same complainant was
respectively 8 and 10 years
old at the time. The assault charge
relates to the mother of this child. The appellant was
sentenced to life imprisonment
on counts one and two and cautioned
and discharged on count 3. The appellant is also appealing
against the two sentences
of life imprisonment.
The
evidence of the State
[2]
The state called the complainant who testified with the help of an
intermediary and was cautioned
to tell the truth. At the time
of testifying she was 12 years old. Her evidence can shortly be
summarised as that the
appellant acted as her stepfather and
initially they had a good relationship. However, that changed
because when she was
eight years old she woke up in the night from
pain with something heavy lying on top of her. She saw it was
the appellant
and realised that his penis was inside her vagina and
he was moving on top of her. He held his hand over her mouth
preventing
her from screaming. When he got off from her she
noticed that she was bleeding from her vagina. The appellant
saw this
and handed her a tissue and instructed her to go and wash
herself. The appellant told her not to tell anyone what
happened
because he would throw her in the dam. She believed
that he would throw her in the dam because there is a dam at
KwaMhlanga
where she had to fetch water from for their daily water
needs. Her brother P[...] had fallen into this same dam.
At
that time they were staying in KwaMhlanga and it was during the
school holiday. Her mother was not at home at the time and she did
not tell her mother because she was scared. This incident took
place in her bedroom. Her siblings shared a bedroom
and her
mother and the appellant slept in a separate bedroom. After
this incident she was scared of the appellant.
She persisted
that he promised her chips and chocolates while he was on top of her
and in fact gave her a Kit-Kat.
[3]
The second incident occurred when she was 10 years old and when her
mother had gone from where
they now stayed to check on the house in
KwaMhlanga. In the new premise she and her siblings all slept
in one room but in
different beds. Again she woke up due to
pain and a heavy object on top of her. It was the appellant
with his penis
in her vagina and the appellant was moving up and
down. She was again prevented from screaming because his hand
was over
her mouth. Directly after the incident she took a bath
because she had to go to school. She encountered her mother on
the way to school and her mother enquired why she was late, she did
not answer and her mom told her that she changed. Later
on her
mother asked her why she had changed and she told her mother about
the incident when she was 10. She did not at that
stage tell
her mother about the incident when she was eight years old because
the appellant had threatened her many siblings by
illustrating with a
finger moving across his neck. She understood this as that he
would kill them. She did not know
why the police did not in her
statement record the threats because she told the police officer.
She did not know when her
statement was read back to her that she had
to correct the statement.
[4]
Her mother and the appellant’s relationship was bad culminating
in verbal and physical fights
between them. She saw an incident
where her mother was talking on the phone and the appellant grabbed
the phone and took
off the cell phone battery. He confronted
the child and poked her on her forehead asking her what she had told
her mother.
She was inside the house and when her mother came
inside the house she noticed that her mother had injuries on her
forehead.
[5]
Her mother confirmed the two different dwellings. She confirmed
that at first the relationship
between her child and the appellant
was good but that it changed. In fact, she had beaten the child
because she thought that
the child disrespected the appellant.
[6]
The child’s behaviour changed. She often requested to
visit her grandmother.
She was not sleeping, nor playing with
her siblings, in fact she showed aggression towards them. The
child was also wetting
her bed. She then noticed a discharge on
the child’s panty while bathing the children.
[7]
After the appellant’s arrest she took the child to the clinic
due to the bed-wetting.
She was as the clinic told to report to
the police if she suspected rape. She then took the child to
the park and asked her
what was wrong. The child informed her
of the rape when she had gone to Kwa-Mhlanga to check on the house.
They went
to the police and then to the doctor.
[8]
While the appellant was in custody the child’s behaviour
returned to normal. Except
when on 29 June they had to fetch
water from the dam. The child refused and she whipped her.
The child then broke down
and told her about the other incident and
that the appellant had threatened to throw her in the dam. She
recalled that the
child had to save P[...], her brother, who was 3 at
the time from the dam. She then called the investigating
officer and
a further statement was taken from the child.
[9]
On 25 February 2019 she and the appellant were sitting outside the
shack. She mentioned
to him that she is surprised by the rapid
female development of the child’s body. The appellant
became aggressive and
walked to the child. He poked her
forehead with his finger while asking her what she had told her
mother.
[10]
He then assaulted the mother by grabbing her around the throat,
picked up a stone and hit her on the forehead
with the stone.
She had an injury on her forehead. She went to the police
station and while she was there he arrived
at the police station and
was arrested. She denied that the charges were trumped up
because the appellant had an accident
with her family’s taxi.
[11]
The state called Dr Moloto whose expertise and experience was
accepted. He confirmed that he completed
the J88. His own
observation was that: “hymen open, vagina admitting one
finger without pain, suggestive of possible
penetration according to
history given.” There was also a discharge from the
vagina. He could not associate breast
development with sexual
activity. Bed-wetting could be a result of urinary or bladder
infection or psychological trauma.
He was surprised that as a
10-year old she did not experience pain when he examined her.
He testified that the discharge
he observed is not normal for a
10-year old girl.
[12]
Sergeant Phasha also testified on behalf of the State. She was
on duty when the mother reported the
assault at the police station.
She observed a swelling on the left and right side of the forehead of
this complainant.
She was not informed about being throttled or
her missing SIM card. She could not see any injuries on the
appellant or that
his shirt was torn when he arrived at the police
station.
The
evidence of the appellant
[13]
The appellant testified that he was in a relationship with the mother
of the child [Ms M[...]] and knew the
child from a very early age.
One night after work the mother told him that she wanted to share a
secret with him. She
took him to a nearby field where she threw
a 30cm rock at him and she pulled and pushed him and tore his shirt.
She accused
him of not sleeping with her, but with the child.
He left and went to his employer to report the assault on him.
He
found Ms M[...] there. He denied that he assaulted her or
that he raped the child. He denied that the child’s
attitude changed towards him and did not know of the bed-wetting.
[14]
He for the first time raised that he was not alone with the children
for three weeks when the mother was
away, they were staying with the
grandmother. He did not call the grandmother because to him it
meant that he would not adhere
to his bail conditions. He
assumed that these charges were laid against him because of the
family taxi that was involved
in an accident and was standing at the
panel beaters for more than two years.
The
conviction
[15]
It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that as a child single
witness her evidence must be accepted
with caution specially because
she did not tell her mother of the rapes and the long delay in
reporting the rapes. She only
reported the rapes after her
mother put some pressure on her.
[16]
The court applied this cautionary rule and correctly found her
evidence to be substantially satisfactory
in every material respect
and found corroboration in the evidence of the doctor. The
contradictions in her evidence were
minimal. She explained that
she told the police that he threatened to kill her siblings and she
did not know when the statement
was read back to her that she had to
correct it.
[17]
The threat to be thrown in the dam was corroborated by there being a
dam in the vicinity and her knowledge
of what can happen in a dam
when she had to save her brother. That incident had clearly
traumatised her and being threatened
with being thrown into the dam
was to her a real threat having experienced the consequences thereof.
[18]
Her evidence was logical and chronological and there were no signs of
rehearsed evidence. The argument
that the evidence of both
incidents was startlingly similar does not render her evidence
unreliable. The action of rape is
similar; inserting a
penis in a vagina with movements up and down. The fact that she
awoke with something heavy on
her does not render her version
improbable; that is how he forced himself on her. She
could not scream because he covered
her mouth and he threatened her.
[19]
The doctor’s evidence corroborated her version. He found
it strange that she felt no pain when
he examined her which was
suggestive of possible penetration.
[20]
The court
a quo
correctly found that the evidence of the child
pertaining to the rape was reliable with no material contradictions
in her evidence.
The fact that she only reported the rapes much
later was satisfactorily explained by her real fear.
[21]
As for the assault to do grievous bodily harm the Magistrate
correctly found the appellant guilty on this
charge. The
evidence of Ms M[...] was reliable. Her injuries were
corroborated by the child and Sergeant Phasha.
The
circumstances that led to the assault is corroborated by the child.
Sentence
[22]
The counts of rape attract a prescribed sentence
of life imprisonment in terms of section 51(1) of Part
1 of Schedule
2 of Act 105 of 1997.
[23]
The court had before it a pre-sentence report for the appellant and
victim impact report of the child.
It was also placed before
the court that the complainants had relocated to Mpumalanga due to
the conduct of the appellant.
[24]
The court considered the appellant’s personal circumstances,
the severe emotional impact on the child
and the interests of
society. The court did not merely give lip service to these
factors.
[25]
The court correctly found a father-figure raping a child “constitutes
deflowering in the most grievous
and brutal sense.”
[1]
The seriousness was compounded by the age of the child, the rape in
her own bedroom on her bed and the position of trust
the appellant
had.
[26]
Society expects courts to appropriately sentence these crimes that
deprive victims of their fundamental rights
to dignity, privacy and
security of person. The prescribed minimum sentence was
promulgated to address these repugnant crimes.
[27]
Pertaining to the appellant’s personal circumstances the court
was aware that the sentence must be
proportional to the crime and the
appellant’s circumstances. The sentence must also take
mercy into account.
The court took into account that the
appellant was 48 years old and a first offender. That he is
married with six children,
one employed, one jobless and the other
four who receive grants. The court correctly found that none of
these factors constitute
substantial and compelling circumstances.
[28]
I make the following order:
28.1
The appeal against the convictions and sentences are dismissed.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
M.J.
MOSOPA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE NO:
A136/2024
HEARD ON:
8 October 2024
FOR THE APPELLANT:
ADV. L. AUGUSTYN
INSTRUCTED BY:
Legal Aid Board
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
ADV. L. SIVIDZHO
INSTRUCTED BY:
Director of Public
Prosecutions
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14 October 2024
[1]
S v Abrahams
2002
(1) SACR 116
(SCA) par [17]
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