Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1090South Africa
A.W.P v S (A350/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1090 (25 October 2024)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1090
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## A.W.P v S (A350/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1090 (25 October 2024)
A.W.P v S (A350/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1090 (25 October 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_1090.html
sino date 25 October 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: A350/2023
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3) REVISED
DATE:
25 October 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
P[...],
W[...] A[...]
APPELLANT
AND
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Millar
J
et
Suder AJ
Heard
on:
17
October 2024
Delivered:
25
October 2024 - This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by
being
uploaded to the
CaseLines
system of the GD and by
release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
12H00 on 25 October 2024.
ORDER
It
is Ordered that
:
[1]
The appeal against conviction and sentence is dismissed.
[2]
The appellant’s bail is revoked, and he is ordered to report to
the Wierdabrug
Police Station within 48 hours of the handing down of
this order in order to commence serving the sentence of life
imprisonment
imposed upon him by the
Court a quo
. If he does
not so report, the South African Police Services are directed to
forthwith arrest him for that purpose.
JUDGMENT
SUDER
AJ (MILLAR J CONCURRING)
Introduction
[1]
On
14 June 2019, the Appellant was arraigned before the
Regional
Court in the Regional Division of Pretoria
on
a count of rape in terms of Section 3 of the Criminal Law (Sexual
Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act
[1]
read with Section 94 of the Criminal Procedure Act
[2]
.
The Appellant pleaded not guilty on the charge of rape.
[2]
The
Appellant
was subsequently convicted on the charge of rape and the
minimum
prescribed sentence of life imprisonment was imposed.
Section
276
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 1977
[3]
provides for the sentences which courts can impose.
[3]
This is an
appeal against the conviction and sentence. The appeal comes before
this court in terms of
Section 309(1)(a)
of Act 51 of 1977.
[4]
[4]
The Appellant was granted bail pending the outcome of the Appeal and
is
currently out on bail.
[5]
The Complainant’s evidence was heard by the
Court a quo
through an intermediary to avoid the complainant being subjected to
undue mental stress. At the time of giving evidence, the Complainant
was 18 years old.
[6]
The issues for determination before this Court are whether the
appellant was
correctly convicted and whether an appropriate sentence
was imposed.
The
Evidence
[7]
There were four witnesses who testified at the trial. The
Complainant, her mother
and Dr Ubisi testified for the Respondent.
The Appellant testified in his own defence.
[8]
The Appellant, during September 2014 and April 2017, and on several
occasions during this period (recorded as approximately 20 times)
unlawfully and intentionally committed several acts of sexual
penetration with the Complainant - a 12-year-old female child at the
time, by inserting his penis into her vagina without her consent,
committing the offence of rape.
[9]
The Appellant was the Complainant’s step-father when the
offence
was committed. The Complainant’s mother and the
Appellant have subsequently divorced. The Appellant has a biological
daughter
from his marriage with the Complainant’s mother,
[10]
During the period 2014 to 2017 the Appellant, the Complainant, the
Complainant’s
mother and the Appellant’s biological
daughter lived in a three-bedroom house in Clubview. The Complainant
initially shared
a room with her younger sister, the Appellant’s
biological daughter, but at a later stage, during 2015-2016, the
Complainant
got her own room.
[11]
The evidence of the Complainant was that, on the day of the first
incident, during
September 2014, she was sick with a stomach bug. The
Complainant’s mother, who was away from home on a course,
suggested
that the Complainant sleep downstairs in her and the
Appellant’s bedroom. The reason for this was that a bathroom
was attached
to their bedroom, which made it convenient for the
Complainant to have access to a bathroom. The Appellant told her that
he will
sleep in her bedroom.
[12]
The complainant testified that on the night of the first incident,
she went to sleep
after taking her medication. In the middle of the
night, the Appellant, who indicated that he would sleep in the
Complainant’s
bedroom, entered the bedroom around midnight
while the Complainant was asleep. The Complainant woke up to the
Appellant being on
top of her, with his penis in her vagina. The
Complainant could not breathe and was in terrible pain. The
Complainant looked the
Appellant in the face and did not know what to
do. The Appellant made up and down movements. When the Appellant was
finished, he
got up, put on his underwear and pants, went out of the
room and closed the door. The next morning the Appellant pretended as
if
nothing happened. The Complainant identified the Appellant by a
light shining from outside the bedroom window.
[13]
The Complainant’s evidence was that, being 12 years old at the
time, she did
not realise or comprehend what happened. The
Complainant did not tell anyone because she knew the Appellant would
become aggressive.
The Complainant did not think it would happen
again but over a period of three years, the Appellant raped the
Complainant about
20 times, usually in her bedroom at night when the
Complainant’s mother was at work or worked late, and sometimes
while the
Complainant’s mother was in the house. The rapes in
the room took place in her sister A[...]’s presence, usually
between
and 8 and 11 at night. They shared a room upstairs.
[14]
The Complainant testified that one night the Appellant and the
Complainant’s
mother were fighting downstairs and the
Complainant’s sister, unable to sleep, went downstairs. Thirty
minutes later the
Appellant entered the room carrying her sister. He
placed her sister on her bed, approached the Complainant’s bed,
picked
her up and then lay underneath her. He pulled off his trousers
and underwear as well as the Complainant’s pants and panties,
placed his penis in her vagina and just lay there. After a while he
got up and left the room, closing the door behind him. The
following
morning the Appellant acted as if nothing happened.
[15]
The Complainant moved to her own bedroom in 2015 and the rapes
continued.
[16]
The Complainant further testified that after the first incident the
Appellant would enter the
bathroom and would try and wash the
Complainant’s body if she was in the bath and shower. The
Appellant in one instance entered
the shower when the Complainant was
showering and made her touch his penis. The Appellant would buy the
Complainant teddy bears
and clothes. Whilst this was disputed under
cross-examination, the Appellant confirmed this in his examination in
chief.
[17]
The Complainant did not tell her mother about the incidents because
the Appellant was very
aggressive and she feared for her life and
that of her sister and mother. The Complainant told her friend M[...]
about the incidents
while it continued as she had a similar
experience. The Complainant’s evidence was also that she did
not tell her mother
about the incidents because she was not ready to
tell her and because she did not know how her mother would react to
the news.
The Complainant’s mother was told of the incidents
after a rumour was spread about the Complainant and the Appellant
during
the end of 2017 until early 2018.This was confirmed by the
Complainant’s mother.
[18]
The incidents stopped in 2017 when the Appellant started working late
hours.
[19]
The Complainant, her mother and sister left the home they lived in
with the Complainant
in 2018. The Appellant testified that the reason
for them leaving the home was the incidents for which he was before
court.
[20]
The Complainant’s mother testified that the Appellant had a
temper.
[21]
She testified that she became aware of the rape when she received a
forwarded message from the
Complainant, through which she
inadvertently discovered that the Appellant had raped the
Complainant. She tried calling the Complainant
to find out what was
going on but the Complainant was crying and unable to talk. She
managed to secure an appointment with a medical
practitioner the next
day as her concern at the time was to ensure the physical well- being
of the Complainant.
[22]
Dr Ubisi, the medical practitioner who examined the Complainant,
testified that although no
injuries were noted, intercourse could
have taken place without any visible injuries. The Complainant was
examined in 2018, four
years after the first incident. Dr Ubisi
further testified that the absence of injuries does not exclude
penetration. At the age
of 14 years, which was when the first
incident of rape occurred, the hymen can stretch so the Complainant
may have had sexual intercourse
without any injuries because of the
oestrogen. Dr Ubisi also testified that factors which could also
influence injuries would be
lubrication, the perpetrator’s size
and if the erection was weak. This was neither challenged nor
disputed by the Appellant.
[23]
The Appellant denied the rape. He admitted to the Complainants
testimony that he used to enter
the bathroom while she was bathing.
He testified that he had done so on occasion to check on her and he
regarded this as entirely
normal.
Ad Conviction
[24]
In deciding the appeal on conviction, this Court can only interfere
with the findings
of the
Court a quo
if it decides that there
were patently wrong findings and/or misdirection by the
Court a
quo
which led to a failure of justice.
[25]
In
S
v Mabena
[5]
the following was said in paragraph [11] as regard allegations of
errors in the judgement of the
Court
a quo
:
“
[11]
On appeal it was argued that the regional magistrate ought to have
accepted that the evidence of the
appellant was reasonably possibly
true. It was, however, not suggested that the regional magistrate
misdirected herself in any
respect.
The power of an appeal
court, to interfere on fact with the findings of the court below, is
limited. Interference in this regard
is only permissible where the
findings of the court below are vitiated by misdirection or are
patently wrong.
I find no basis for interference in the
present case. I think that the regional magistrate was correct in her
finding that intercourse
had in fact taken place and, in the light of
that finding, rightly rejected the appellant's evidence. The appeal
against conviction
must therefore fail.”
[26]
The Court
a quo
extensively assessed the evidence presented by
both the Appellant and the Respondent.
[27]
When evaluating the evidence before it, the
Court a quo
took
cognisance of the fact that the Complainant was a single witness and
applied the cautionary rules when assessing the Complainant’s
evidence. This is notwithstanding the position crystallised by the
Legislature in
s 60
of the
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related
Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007
, which provides that:
‘
Notwithstanding any other law, a court may not treat the
evidence of a complainant in criminal proceedings involving the
alleged
commission of a sexual offence pending before that court,
with caution, on account of the nature of the offence.’
[28]
The Complainant’s evidence was found to be credible and
reliable in all
material respects and the Appellant’s evidence
to be full of material contradictions and inherent improbabilities.
It was
found that the Appellant’s evidence was not reasonably,
possibly true. In fact, the Appellant’s evidence corroborated
the evidence of the Complainant.
[29]
Although the Complainant was a single witness, the Complainant’s
mother corroborated
the Complainant’s evidence on certain
aspects more especially the aggression of the Appellant. She was also
found to be an
impressive and credible witness. There were no
material improbabilities or contradictions in the evidence of the
Complainant’s
mother.
[30]
The important evidence provided by the Complainant was not disputed
by the Appellant, viz.
the Complainant’s evidence that the
Appellant told the Complainant on the night of the first incident in
September that he
would sleep in her room.
[31]
During cross-examination of the Complainant the Appellants version
was that he denied
entering the bathroom, although he testified that
he had done so and regarded it as being normal. Furthermore, it
was never
put to the Complainant that the Appellant would testify
that he did not rape the Complainant although he also testified to
this
in his evidence.
[32]
The Appellant’s legal representative argued that the cautionary
rule was applicable
as the Complainant was a single, child witness.
The
Court a quo
considered that the Respondent called three
witnesses whose evidence was found to be honest, credible and
satisfactory. The
Court a quo
, whilst applying the cautionary
rules providing that the evidence of a single witness, in this case a
child witness, must be treated
with caution, acknowledged that
section 208
of the
Criminal Procedure Act allows
for a conviction on
the single evidence of a competent witness.
[33]
The Court
a quo’s
application of the cautionary rule
cannot be criticised. This matter was not canvassed in argument by
Appellant’s counsel,
although mentioned in the Heads of
Argument as a ground for appeal.
[34]
Although
the incidents took place several years before, the Complainant proved
to be a competent witness in that she narrated events
in a clear and
satisfactory manner. In
Woji
v Santam Insurance Co
[6]
,
Diemont J stated that in determining if a young person’s
evidence is trustworthy, it is necessary to assess the capacity
of
the child to tell the truth. This capacity depends on whether the
child is intelligent to observe, as well as on his or her
ability to
remember events.
Maila
v The State
[7]
the court stated that “satisfactory in all respects” does
not mean the evidence line-by-line. But, in the overall
scheme of
things, accepting the discrepancies that may have crept in, the
evidence can be relied upon to decide upon the guilt
of an accused
person.
[35]
In
S
v Jackson
[8]
,
Olivier
J
stated that the cautionary rule was based on an irrational and
outdated perception, because it unjustly stereotypes complainant’s
in sexual assault cases as unreliable
.
Kirk-Cohen
J, in
Director
of Public Prosecutions v S
[9]
questioned whether the same conclusion should apply to children. The
learned judge acknowledged that it is common cause that problems
do
occur with the testimony of small children. The Court held that these
problems arise from the fact that witnesses are young.
In
casu
,
the Complainant was 18 years old when giving her testimony so can
hardly be described as a small child.
[36]
It was argued that certain important parts of the Appellant’s
version were
not put to the State’s witness due to the error of
his legal representative. Counsel for the Appellant argued that the
Appellant
was a layperson who was reliant on being guided by his
legal representative’s questioning to amplify his answers,
sometimes
monosyllabic in nature, on certain issues, such as the
Appellant’s failure to amplify his denial of the offence and
the fact
that his versions were not put to the Complainant. Despite
the Appellant’s counsel submitting that the Appellant was
reliant
on the questioning by his legal representative, the Appellant
in some instances amplified on his answers without being prompted
by
any follow up questions.
[37]
There is nothing to indicate that the trial was not conducted
properly. The legal
representative engaged with the Appellant to
ensure that all aspects were being addressed in cross-examination.
The Appellant had
ample opportunity to address discrepancies and
contradictions in the Complainant’s and witness testimonies and
to make sure
that his version was put to the witnesses.
[38]
Honing in on the first incident during September 2014 when the
Complainant was raped in
the Appellant’s bedroom, this was a
significant event. Most significant events remain imprinted in one’s
mind, Despite
the Complainant giving a detailed account of the events
of that day, the Appellant failed to challenge the Complainant’s
version or to put his version to her under cross- examination. This
is inexplicable considering that the Appellant was aware of
the
seriousness of the charge. The argument made by Appellant’s
counsel that he was a layman and was required to be guided
by his
legal practitioner is without merit. The legal practitioner cannot be
expected to put words into the Appellant’s mouth.
There is no
suggestion that the Appellant was unable to understand the
consequences of not providing a reason or explanation for
the
allegations (at the time) against him. In respect of key questions
the Appellant furnished non-specific answers.
[39]
It is implausible that the Appellant would have a general
conversation with the Complainant
about her day after opening the
bathroom door and standing in the bathroom while the Complainant was
bathing. Entering the bathroom
to oversee a child’s activity is
plausible to a certain extent, but such an act is improbable in
relation to the Complainant’s
age. This is consistent
with the Complainant’s version as to the real purpose of the
Appellant entering the bathroom.
[40]
The
Court a quo
questioned the Appellant on why he did not
wait for the Complainant to finish in the bathroom and then talk to
her. The Appellant’s
response was that children will be
children and they must learn to listen to their parents that is the
way he was taught. This
response is concerning and supports the
Complainant’s expressions of fear for the Appellant.
[41]
The Appellant criticised the Court
a quo’s
acceptance of
the medical evidence yet the medical evidence was not challenged and
was undisputed. This was despite Appellant’s
counsel commenting
that the 20 incidents of rape could not have taken place without
causing any injuries.
[42]
The medical evidence presented was that the absence of injuries did
not exclude
penetration. High oestrogen in a child of the age of the
Complainant makes the hymen stretchy making sexual intercourse
possible
without injuries. Under cross-examination, Dr Ubisi further
testified that even before oestrogen levels increase, the noting of
injuries could be influenced by factors such as the perpetrators size
and the strength or weakness of an erection. This court notes
that
the evidence, although neutral, did not exclude the fact that
penetration did take place.
[43]
It was not evident from the records and Counsel for the Appellant
could not
demonstrate to this court where in the records this was
challenged by the Appellant indicating that he was prepared to
subject
himself to an examination which could have proven that
injuries would have been caused by penetration. Counsel for the
Appellant
responded by stating that as a lay person the Appellant
would not have known that he could ask his legal representative to
subject
him to an examination.
[44]
The Appellant was being tried for a serious offence, which he denied
without explanation
or challenge to the Complainant’s version,
and even as a lay person (although legally represented) he would have
known to
take whatever steps necessary to dispute the Complainant’s
version. The Appellant’s legal representative went so far
as to
accuse the Complainant of fabrication, yet this was not addressed by
the Appellant in his examination in chief.
[45]
Counsel for the Appellant submitted that even if the Appellant’s
case was without
scrutiny, the medical evidence was uncorroborated
and unsubstantiated. This is not necessary in a case where the
evidence is not
placed in issue. The medical evidence was not placed
in issue and the explanation by Dr Ubisi stands unchallenged.
[46]
The
Court
a
quo
found contradictions but did not find the contradictions to be
material or improbable., These were expected from an honest but
imperfect recollection and reconstruction. The Court
a
quo
’s
finding that this did not affect the Complainant’s credibility
cannot be faulted.
[10]
[47]
In
R
v Mthembu
,
[11]
the Court expressed the test for the evaluation of the evidence in a
case such as the present as follows:
“
I
am not satisfied that a trier of fact is obliged to isolate each
piece of evidence in a criminal case and test it by the test
of
reasonable doubt. If the conclusion of guilt can only be
reached if certain evidence is accepted or if certain evidence
is
rejected then a verdict of guilty means that such evidence must have
been accepted or rejected, as the case may be, beyond reasonable
doubt. Otherwise, the verdict could not properly be arrived
at. But that does not necessarily mean that every factor
bearing on the question of guilt must be treated as if it were a
separate issue to which the test of reasonable doubt must be
distinctly applied. I am not satisfied that the possibilities
as to the existence of facts from which inferences may be drawn
are
not fit material for consideration in a criminal case on the general
issue whether guilt has been established beyond reasonable
doubt,
even though, if the existence of each such fact were to be treated by
the test of reasonable doubt, mere probabilities in
the Crown’s
favour would have to be excluded from consideration and mere
probabilities in favour of the accused would have
to be assumed to be
certainties. Circumstantial evidence, of course, rests
ultimately on direct evidence and there must be
a foundation of
proved or probable fact from which to work. But the border-line
between proof and probability is largely
a matter of degree as is the
line between proof by a balance of probabilities and proof beyond a
reasonable doubt. Just as
a number of lines of inference, none
of them in itself decisive, may in their total effect lead to a moral
certainty (Rex v. de
Villiers)
(1944, A.D. 493
at p. 508) so, it may
fairly be reasoned, a number of probabilities as to the existence of
the facts from which inferences are
to be drawn may suffice, provided
in the result there is no reasonable doubt as to the accused’s
guilt.”
[48]
In
Vilakazi
v S
[12]
the court stated as follows:
‘
. . .
[O]ur courts have not considered the lack of evidence of a voluntary
complaint (also referred to as a “first report”)
to be
fatal to a charge of rape. In this regard, Milton, in South African
Criminal Law and Procedure, says: “It is not mandatory
that
there should be evidence that the woman has complained that she has
been raped. However, if she has, such [a] complaint is
admitted in
evidence to show consistency and to negative a defence of consent,
but not as proof of their contents nor to corroborate
the
complainant. But it is not essential that consent should be in issue;
the complainant may, for instance, be a girl of under
12 years of
age. The purpose of admitting evidence of a complaint is that it
serves to rebut any suspicion that the woman has lied
about being
raped. The corollary is, of
course, that should a woman not
complain, or not complain timeously, the conclusion may be drawn that
she is lying in her evidence
that she was raped. The conclusion may
well be unfair to the victim, since women may hesitate to complain of
rape for reasons of
shame, embarrassment or fear.”’
[49]
In
S v Ntsele, Eksteen AJA (as he then was)
stated the
following
:
“
Prove guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt- not beyond a shadow of doubt- if only
remote possibility is in his favour which can be dismissed
with the
sentence “of course it is possible, but not in the least
probable”, the case is proved beyond a reasonable
doubt.”
[50]
The Complainant presented as a trustworthy witness and her testimony
was satisfactory in
all respects. Having heard argument on the
grounds of appeal on the conviction and having evaluated the record
of the proceedings
and the Court
a quo’s
assessment of
the evidence, the Court
a quo
correctly found that the
Respondent proved the Appellants guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
[51]
The Appellant was properly convicted on the evidence
presented. There
is accordingly no reason for this court to interfere with the Court
a
quo
’s finding on the conviction.
Ad Sentence
[52]
Turning to the question of the prescribed minimum sentence of life
imprisonment imposed
by the Court
a quo
, it is trite that
sentencing is pre-eminently a matter for the discretion of the trial
court.
[53]
An appeal
court is only entitled to interfere with a sentence where there has
been a material misdirection by the trial court. A
court exercising
appellate jurisdiction cannot, in the absence of a material
misdirection by the trial court, approach the question
of sentence as
if it were the trial court and then substitute the sentence out of
preference. Such an act will usurp the sentencing
discretion of the
trial court. A material misdirection by the trial court vitiates its
exercise of that discretion and an appellate
court is then entitled
to consider the question of sentence afresh. In doing so, it assesses
sentence as if it were a court of
first instance and the sentence
imposed by the trial court has no relevance.
[13]
[54]
Even in the
absence of a material misdirection, an appellate court may be
justified in interfering with the sentence imposed by
the trial
court. It may do so when the disparity between the sentence of the
trial court and 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’
[14]
[55]
It is trite
that when determining an appropriate sentence, a court should be
mindful of the foundational sentencing principle that
‘punishment
should fit the criminal as well as the crime, be fair to society, and
be blended with a measure of mercy.
In
seeking to achieve the aforesaid objectives, courts are enjoined to
temper the punishment with a measure of mercy.
[15]
[56]
The
approach of the courts to sentencing is that judicial officers should
not approach punishment in the spirit of anger because
doing so would
make it difficult to achieve the delicate balance between the crime,
the criminal and the interest of society. The
general purpose of
imposing a sentence is to achieve the following objectives:
rehabilitation,
deterrence, prevention and retribution
[16]
.
[57]
The object of sentencing is not to satisfy public opinion, but to
serve the public interest.
[17]
The public interest in this and other rape cases involves ensuring
the protection of women and children and ensuring that decisions
are
taken by the courts in cognisance of the constitutional rights of
privacy and dignity, particularly
every
child’s right to be protected from maltreatment, neglect, abuse
and degradation
.
[58] In
deciding the appeal on sentence, it is apposite to consider whether
substantial and compelling circumstances
exist to deviate from the
prescribed minimum sentence.
[18]
The appeal against sentence is opposed on the grounds that no
substantial and compelling circumstances were demonstrated to the
Court
a
quo
to
evaluate and none of the circumstances submitted to this court are
sufficient to deviate from the minimum sentences imposed
by the Court
a quo
.
Court
a quo
on Sentencing
[59]
The Appellant cites the absence of physical injuries as per the
medical report as a substantial and compelling
factor for deviating
from the minimum prescribed sentence. I do not agree with this given
the neutrality of the medical evidence
presented by Dr Ubisi, which
was not challenged. It was held in
S
v Chapman
[19]
that
when imposing a sentence in respect of the offence of rape, an
apparent lack of physical injury to the complainant and any
relationship between the complainant and accused prior to the offence
being committed are not, on their own, considered to be substantial
and compelling circumstances justifying the imposition of a lesser
sentence. For this reason, the appeal against sentence must
also
fail.
[60] In
the circumstances, I propose the following order:
[60.1]
The appeal against conviction and sentence is dismissed.
[60.2]
The appellant’s bail is revoked, and he is ordered to report to
the Wierdabrug Police Station
within 48 Hours of the handing down of
this order in order to commence serving the sentence of life
imprisonment imposed upon him
by the Court
a quo
. If he does
not so report, the South African Police Services are directed to
forthwith arrest him for that purpose.
F SUDER
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I
AGREE, AND IT SO ORDERED
A MILLAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD ON:
17 OCTOBER 2024
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON:
25 OCTOBER 2024
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPELLANT:
MR ANTHONY RUDMAN
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MESSRS
ANTHONY RUDMAN
ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR.
RUDMAN
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
ADV.
PCB LUYT.
INSTRUCTED
BY:
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
– PRETORIA.
REFERENCE:
10/2/5/1/3-PA34/2023
[1]
Act
32 Of 2007.
[2]
Act
51 Of 1977
(‘the
CPA’).
[3]
Act
51 of 1977 (‘the CPA’).
[4]
Section
309(1)(a) of Act 51 Of 1977 provides for an automatic right to
appeal against the conviction and sentence where a regional
court
imposes the minimum sentence of life imprisonment.
[5]
2012
(2) SACR 287 (GNP).
[6]
1981
(1) SA 1020
A.
[7]
(429/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 3
(23 January 2023).
[8]
1998
(1) SACR 470
SCA.
[9]
2000
(2) SA 711
TPD.
[10]
S
v Mkohle1990 (1) SACR 19 (SCA) 98f-g; S v Oosthuizen1982 (3) SA 571
(T) 576B-C
[11]
1950
(1) SA 670
(A) at 679-680.
[12]
Vilakazi
v S
[2016] ZASCA 103
;
2016 (2) SACR 365
(SCA) para 15.
[13]
Maila v
The State
(429/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 3
(23 January 2023).
[14]
S v
Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) para 12.
[15]
S
v Rabie
1975 (4) SA 855
(A).
[16]
Ibid.
[17]
S
v Mhlakhaza and Another
[1997] 2 All SA 185
(A) at 189. Also see S v
M (Centre for Child Law as amicus curiae) 2007 (2) SACR 539 (CC).
[18]
See
Radebe v The State [2019] ZAGPPHC 406 at para 12
[19]
[1997] ZASCA 45
;
1997
(2) SACR 3
(SCA) at 5B.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
W.A.P v S (A3502/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1053 (25 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1053High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
A.W.F v K.S.R (2024/052216) [2025] ZAGPPHC 890 (6 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 890High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
L.S.M.M v S (A307/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 787 (12 August 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 787High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
G.J.W v L.W (2023-114308) [2024] ZAGPPHC 823 (8 August 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 823High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Ntuli v S (A307/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1064 (11 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1064High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar