Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1145South Africa
Monnagadise v S (A13/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1145 (4 November 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Monnagadise v S (A13/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1145 (4 November 2024)
Monnagadise v S (A13/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1145 (4 November 2024)
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sino date 4 November 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: A13/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3) REVISED.
04/11/2024
In the matter between:
ABRAHAM GOITSEMODIMO
MONNAGADISE
Appellant
and
THE STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
van
der Westhuizen, J
[1]
The appellant was arraigned in the Regional Court, Benoni, on two
charges of the rape of a minor.
He pleaded not guilty to both
charges.
However,
he was convicted on one charge of rape and acquitted on the second
charge of rape. The appellant was sentenced to life
imprisonment. The
appellant enjoyed legal representation throughout the trial. The
appellant has an automatic right to appeal where
life imprisonment
was imposed.
[1]
[2]
The appeal is against both conviction and sentence. The three main
grounds of appeal are that:
(a) the Trial court
did not duly apply the cautionary rule pertaining to the evidence of
a single minor child witness and
erroneously accepted the
complainant’s evidence without sufficient corroboration;
(b) the
complainant of sexual abuse was not voluntary made and subsequently
erroneously accepted by the trial court
as evidence against the
appellant
(c) the trial
court erred in rejecting the appellant’s evidence as not being
reasonable true in the circumstances.
[3]
At the time of the alleged rape the minor child was 10 years old when
the alleged sexual deed
was committed. She was 12 years old when she
testified. Her evidence was presented through an intermediary. Due
process was followed
prior to admitting the intermediary. In
admitting the intermediary, due process was followed.
[4]
It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that the record patently
indicated that the learned
regional magistrate had clearly
misdirected himself during the trial and in his judgment on important
issues.
[5]
It is clear from the record that the learned regional magistrate
neglected to ascertain whether
the minor fully comprehended the
distinction between right and wrong, the difference between the truth
and a lie, and
what
was expect of her when testifying. In this regard the record reveals
the court’s approach as follows prior to hearing
the evidence
of the minor:
“
Court:
Can we have the child’s name please?
MS M[...]: M[...]
M[...] (through interpreter) (through intermediary)
Court:
How old are you?
MS
M[...]: I am 12 years old. Your Whorship.
Court:
Do you know what it means to take the oath?
Ms
M[...]: Yes I do know, Your Whorship.
Court:
Do you have any objections to taking the oath?
Ms
M[...]: No objection. Your Whorship.”
[6]
From the foregoing it is apparent that the learned regional
magistrate did not enquire whether
the minor understood right from
wrong and the difference between telling the truth and telling a lie.
It was not determined whether
the minor understood the concept of
what it meant to take the oath. In my view this constituted a
fundamental and material misdirection
on the part of the learned
regional magistrate. That material misdirection tarnished the
evidence of the minor throughout the trial.
[7]
In my view, that misdirection warrants the appeal against conviction
to be upheld. Furthermore,
in what follows, that misdirection was
exacerbated
by other misdirections perpetrated by the learned regional
magistrate.
[8]
In respect of when determining whether the first report of the
alleged rape was voluntary made,
the following is of importance.
[9]
The minor testified that she had voluntary and of her own accord
reported the commission of the
alleged rape to her grandmother where
after her grandmother went to confront the appellant.
[10]
The grandmother testified that the minor did not report the alleged
rape to her. The minor refused to say
what had happened at the
appellant’s home. Due to the silence on the part of the minor,
the grandmother approached the appellant
and confronted him. The
appellant denied raping the minor, despite being told by the
grandmother that she would report him to the
police.
[11] On
the grandmother’s return to her house, she found that an uncle
of the minor had beaten the minor
with a sjambok. She was allegedly
beaten because she did not speak of the alleged rape and remained
silent when questioned. Only
after being severely beaten did the
minor report being raped by the appellant.
[12]
The grandmother remained adamant that the minor did not report the
alleged rape to her prior to the grandmother
approaching and
confronting the appellant. The grandmother testified that only after
being beaten did the minor report the alleged
rape. The grandmother’s
evidence was accepted. The clear discrepancy was glibly glossed over
by the learned regional magistrate.
[13]
The learned regional magistrate’s acceptance of the minor’s
evidence unreservedly under the foregoing
circumstances constitutes a
fundamental and material misdirection.
[2]
[14] In
his judgment, the learned regional magistrate, in respect of the
cautionary rules that should find application,
paid mere lip service
thereto. A mere gloss over the cautionary rules applicable to single
and child witnesses was made, a mere
casual reference thereto. The
learned magistrate failed to properly apply the trite rules in
respect thereof and did not venture
into the how the rules were to be
applied and failed to consider the effect thereof in the present
instance. The learned regional
magistrate casually recorded in his
judgment that all that a court sitting in a matter where the
cautionary rules apply is “
that
it: means that the Court must find guarantees for reliability of her
evidence, Guarantees for reliability of the child’s
evidence
can be found in any evidence presented to the Court.”
[3]
[15]
Further in this regard, the evidence led in this matter were replete
with important contradictions. The point
at which the report was made
was subject to material contradictions. The manner in which the
report was made was further in dispute.
The evidence revealed that
the report was not made voluntary. A severe beating preceded the
report. The J88 relied upon by the
learned regional magistrate was
inconclusive in respect of whether a sexual assault was perpetrated
upon the minor. The findings
were merely that it could not be
excluded. In this regard, the respondent did not present the evidence
of the person who compiled
the report.
[4]
The J88 confirmed the physical assault on the minor by the uncle with
a sjambok. A clear indication that she had been struck with
a weapon,
in this instance the evidence revealed that the minor was
beaten
with a sjambok.
[5]
The J88
recorded bruises on the private parts of the minor with no further
detail being provided.
[16] In
my view the recorded misdirections on the part of the learned
regional magistrate constitute fundamental
and material
misdirections. The reasonings of the learned regional magistrate in
his judgment are consequently flawed. The recorded
material
misdirections impacts negative upon the learned regional magistrate’s
findings and the subsequent conviction. The
State had miserably
failed to prove the alleged rape perpetrated by the appellant.
[17]
Accordingly, the conviction of the appellant on the charge of rape of
a minor stands to be set aside. It
follows that the sentence also
stands to be set aside.
I propose the following
order:
1.
The appeal against conviction and sentence is upheld;
2.
The conviction and sentence is set aside;
3.
The order of the court
a quo
is substituted with the following
order:
“
The accused is
found not guilty”
4.
The appellant is to be released immediately.
C J VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree,
H KOOVERTJIE Ms
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
On
behalf of Appellant:
Adv
F van As
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid S A
On
behalf of Respondent:
Adv
E Mafunisa (Ms)
Instructed
by:
DPP
Date
of Hearing:
29
October 2024
Judgment
Delivered:
04
November 2024
[1]
Section 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 105 of 1997Noyour
Whorship objection.
[2]
R
v Mandla
1951(3)
SA 158 (A) at 163D-E
[3]
S v
Hanekom
2011(1) SACR 430 (WCC) at [15];
S
v Mahlangu et al
2011(2) SACR 164 (SCA) at [21];
S
v Gentle
2005(1) SACR 420 (SCA)
[4]
NS v
THE State
(20642/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 139
(30 September 2015); see in particular
S
v MM
2012(2)
SACR 18 (SCA) at [15]
[5]
S v MG
2010 (2) SACR 66
(ECG) at [73]
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