Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 418South Africa
Ndlangamandla v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 418; A145/2022 (24 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 April 2023
Headnotes
(per Sachs J) that: 'Jurisprudence in this country and abroad abounds with reference to the special consideration that needs to be given to the manner in which sexual abuse of children, especially if prolonged, can provoke delay in their later lodging complaints as adults about such abuse.'[2] Furthermore, in my view one should consider in this case the approach taken by Cameron JA (in a minority
Judgment
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## Ndlangamandla v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 418; A145/2022 (24 April 2023)
Ndlangamandla v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 418; A145/2022 (24 April 2023)
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sino date 24 April 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: A145/2022
Date
of hearing: 23 February 2023
Date
delivered: 24 April 2023
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
REVISED
DATE:
24/4/23
In
the matter between:
THABANG
NDLANGAMANDLA
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J: (Cowen J concurring)
[1]
The
appellant
appeals
against
his
conviction
on
two
counts
of rape, and
against the sentence of life imprisonment
imposed on him.
The evidence of the State witnesses
[1]
is briefly to the
following effect:
[1.1] On 18
July 2019 the complainant, then a fifteen-year old girl, met the
appellant at her parents' home. She had
planned to undergo training
to become a sangoma, and the appellant was the person responsible for
her training, her so-called 'gobela'.
The complainant believed that
the appellant was taking her to the initiation school. However,
instead of taking her there, the
appellant took the complainant to
his home. On the way to his home the appellant told the complainant
that there was a rumour circulating
that he had sexual relations with
the initiates.
[1.2] The
complainant says that upon arriving at the appellant's home he told
her to get undressed and to get into bed.
The accused got into bed
with her and forcefully pulled down her panty, whereafter he raped
her, despite her attempts to fight
him off. The following morning,
the appellant told the complainant that she should not tell anyone of
the incident. He said he
would not be caught and if she told anyone,
she might vanish. He told her that he uses muti. He said that if she
tried to run,
she might end up in a car accident or be bumped by a
car.
[1.3] On 20
July 2019, at approximately 10h00, the appellant again approached the
complainant at his home. He told her
to go into the bedroom, which he
also entered. He told her that he loved her, to which the complainant
responded that if he loved
her, he would not abuse her. He again had
sexual intercourse with her despite her efforts to resist.
[1.4] The
complainant kept her secret for more than a year, until shortly
before her initiation process was over. During
her initiation she was
residing at the initiation school, the home of Ms Mbonane. The
appellant was there much of the time. On
29 August 2020 another
initiate, Zibusiso Motha, asked the complainant whether she had had
sexual intercourse with the appellant.
Initially she denied that they
had had intercourse. Motha told her not to be embarrassed and that
she should tell him the truth,
mentioning that the appellant had told
him that he had sex with 'the children'. The complainant ultimately
told Motha of the incidents
of 18 and 20 July 2019.
[1.5] They
were
joined later in the conversation by one Dabulamanzi. The
complainant was evidently upset, which drew the attention of her
mother,
who was present to witness the initiation ceremony. The
complainant's mother overheard the conversation and asked what was
wrong.
The complainant ultimately told her mother what had happened.
Her mother confronted the appellant who told her to go and lay
charges
against him, because they never "stick". He also
asked her what was so special about her daughter. The complainant and
her mother thereafter reported the incident to the police, and the
complainant was taken to the Far East Rand Care Centre for a
medical
examination conducted by a professional nurse, Sister Julia Segodi.
[1.6] Both
Motha and the complainant's mother materially confirmed the
complainant's version. Sister Segodi testified
about the results of
her examination recorded in a J88, which corroborated previous
vaginal penal penetration.
[2]
The appellant, in his testimony, denied the substance of the
State
evidence, both in its detail and denying ever having intercourse with
the complainant He said that the complainant's family
had made up the
allegations in order to escape having to pay initiation fees to the
appellant. The Court called a witness to testify,
one Ms Mbonane, at
whose home the initiation had taken place. She testified that the
appellant was not entitled to discuss initiation
fees with the
complainant's family, and that he was not owed any money. Her
evidence effectively put paid to the appellant's defence.
The
appellant's version was rejected and he was convicted as charged.
[3]
The offences attract a minimum sentence of life imprisonment
by
virtue of the provisions of section 51 (1), read with Part 1 of
Schedule 2 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 105 of 1997 ("the
Act"), unless substantial and compelling circumstances are
found. The Court a quo could not find substantial and compelling
circumstances, and consequently considered itself bound to impose the
minimum sentence of life imprisonment, which the Magistrate
regarded
as a proportionate punishment. The charges
were taken
together
for purposes of sentence and life imprisonment was imposed.
[4]
On appeal against conviction the appellant raised several grounds
of
appeal, the following being central:
[4.1] The
appellant argued that the Court had erred in rejecting his version,
that the motivating factor behind the
false charges was the
complainant's family's wish to escape payment of the initiation fees.
[4.2] The
appellant contended that the Court a quo had not taken into
consideration at all, alternatively did not properly
consider, that
it took the complainant more than a year to report the rapes.
[5]
Before us the appellant's counsel indicated that she could not
sustain any grounds of appeal against
conviction. However, she had no
instructions to abandon the appeal against conviction and it is
accordingly apposite to deal herein
with the two central aspects. I
have considered the other grounds: there is no merit in them and in
any event, some are too broadly
stated to constitute good grounds.
[6]
In terms of
section 59
of the
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and
Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007
, in criminal proceedings
involving the alleged commission of a sexual offence, 'the court may
not draw an inference
only
(italics added) from the length of
any delay between the alleged commission of such offence and the
reporting thereof.' Courts are
not at liberty to draw adverse
inferences from only the length of a delay in reporting. The point
thus has no self-standing relevance.
[7]
To the extent that the appellant suggests that it corroborates
his
evidence including on false implication, the point must fail. It is
so that the complainant kept silent on the rapes for more
than a
year. However, a few factors explain her silence. This is a classic
case where there is a massive imbalance of power between
the
complainant and the appellant. He was 27 years old at the time of the
offence; the complainant was 15 years old. The appellant
was a
'gobela' who was supposed to assist with the initiation of the
complainant. As an initiate she looked up to him as an older
person
with standing in that community. This statement is confirmed by the
fact that the complainant referred to the appellant
as "baba",
a respectful term of address used towards an older person. It was as
the initiation process was coming to
a close, during which period she
was residing in close proximity to the appellant, that she spoke out.
[8]
This case concerns
an alleged sexual offence against a child.
In Bothma the
Constitutional Court held (per Sachs J) that: 'Jurisprudence in this
country and abroad abounds with reference to
the special
consideration that needs to be given to the manner in which sexual
abuse of children, especially if prolonged, can
provoke delay in
their later lodging complaints as adults about such abuse.'
[2]
Furthermore, in my
view one should
consider
in
this case
the
approach
taken
by Cameron
JA
(in
a
minority
judgment) in
S
v M
2006 (1) SACR 135
(SCA)
where
he considered the impact of youth, vulnerability, authority and
subordination on a rape victim's conduct. In approving of
this
approach Mlambo JA (as he then was) said
[3]
:
"I cannot accept the
suggestion that L should be disbelieved simply because she did not
behave in the manner suggested. This
approach, in my
view,
unfairly puts her, as a rape complainant, in the position of an
accused in which the appellant, as the real accused, stands to profit
should it be found that the complainant's failure to conduct herself
in a certain manner means she either consented or is simply
falsely
implicating the appellant."
[9]
It must also be borne in mind that the appellant threatened
the
complainant with harm should she tell anyone of the events. He told
her that he used powerful muti to protect himself, and
as an initiate
in these circumstances, that threat must have
weighed heavily on the complainant.
As was
pointed out in
Vilakazi
v The State [2015 J
ZASCA
103
(10 June 2016)
a rape victim's reluctance to report
the crime is not necessarily an indication that the offence had been
contrived:
"Firstly, as Milton
states, reluctance on the part of rape survivors, or some of them, to
report the rape at the first opportunity
is a firmly recognised fact.
It is also
generally accepted that with
young children the
reluctance is compounded. In this
case the
complainant
testified that
she
was
afraid
of
the appellant."
[4]
[10]
Ultimately, there are many reasons why a rape victim might be
reluctant to report the crime: fear, as in
this case, a feeling of
helplessness, shame, and a plethora of other reasons. In this case
there is a substantial body of evidence
supporting the appellant's
conviction. In my
view
the complainant's delay in reporting
the offences is completely understandable and there is no plausible
basis to suggest that it
can corroborate the appellant's denial of
the events or his evidence of alleged false implication.
[11]
Indeed, counsel for applicant, quite correctly, also did not persist
in the argument that the Court a quo
did not properly consider the
fact that there were fees outstanding and the family's desire to
escape payment of the fees provides
the motive for a false complaint.
It was suggested that there may have been a dispute regarding
initiation fees. In my view the
magistrate's rejection of the
appellant's version in this regard cannot be faulted. The appellant
testified that on 29 August 2020
he had had a discussion with the
complainant's mother regarding the fees. He said that a disagreement
on fees had led to the complaint.
Upon being asked why this
conversation had not been put to the State witnesses in
cross-examination, the appellant sought to suggest
that he may not
have not told his attorney of the discussion. The appellant's
evidence leaves one with the distinct impression
that this was a
last minute fabrication.
[12]
The evidence of Ms Mbonane put the sword to the appellant's version.
She testified that the appellant had
no right to any payment, and
that all negotiations regarding payment were to be had with her, and
not with the appellant. Even
if one accepts he may in due course have
received a share of any payment made, her evidence disposes of the
appellant's suggestion
that the complaint was motivated by a desire
to avoid payment of initiation fees.
[13]
In my view the Court a quo correctly accepted the complainant's
version, and rejected the appellant's evidence
as false beyond a
reasonable doubt. It follows then that the appeal against conviction
must fail.
[14]
As far as the appeal against sentence is concerned, the Act is
peremptory when the facts of the case fall
within the provisions of
Schedule 2 to the Act. That is the case here, due to the fact that
the complainant was under 16 years
of age at the time of the rapes
and the appellant raped the complainant twice. It is then for a Court
to consider whether there
are substantial and compelling
circumstances which would justify a deviation from the prescribed
minimum sentence. In this regard,
the appellant's counsel submitted
that substantial and compelling circumstances were present and
proposed that a proportionate
and just sentence would be 20 years.
[15]
The Supreme
Court of Appeal set out the approach to be followed in S
v
Malgas
[2001]
ZASCA 30
;
[2001] 3 All SA 220
(A) at 1235E-J In
a paragraph
(paragraph 25) endorsed by the Constitutional Court in S v Dodo.
[5]
The paragraph
reads:
'A.
Section 51 has
limited but not eliminated the courts' discretion in imposing
sentence in respect of offences referred to in Part
I of Schedule 2
(or imprisonment for other specified periods for offences listed in
other parts of Schedule 2).
B.
Courts are required to approach the imposition of
sentence conscious
that the legislature has ordained life imprisonment (or the
particular prescribed period of imprisonment) as
the sentence that
should
ordinarily
and in the absence of weighty justification
be imposed for the listed crimes in the specified circumstances.
C.
Unless there are, and can be seen to be, truly convincing
reasons for
a different response, the crimes in question are therefore required
to elicit a severe, standardised and consistent
response from the
courts.
D.
The specified sentences are not to be departed from lightly
and for
flimsy reasons. Speculative hypotheses favourable to the offender,
undue sympathy, aversion to imprisoning first offenders,
personal
doubts as to the efficacy of the policy underlying the legislation,
and marginal differences in personal circumstances
or degrees of
participation between co-offenders are to be excluded.
E.
The legislature has however deliberately left it
to the courts to
decide whether the circumstances of any particular case call for a
departure from the prescribed sentence. While
the emphasis has
shifted to the objective gravity of the type of crime and the need
for effective sanctions against it, this does
not mean that all other
considerations are to be ignored.
F.
All factors (other than those set out in D above)
traditionally taken
into account in sentencing (whether or not they diminish moral guilt)
thus continue to play a role; none is
excluded at the outset from
consideration in the sentencing process.
G.
The ultimate impact of all the circumstances relevant
to sentencing
must be measured against the composite yardstick ("substantial
and compelling") and must be such as cumulatively
justify a
departure from the standardised response that the legislature has
ordained.
H.
In applying the statutory provisions, it is inappropriately
constricting to use the concepts developed in dealing with appeals
against sentence as the sole criterion.
I.
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.
J.
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 mart< which the
legislature has provided.'
[16]
This court is exercising appellate jurisdiction in respect of the
exercise of the Magistrates discretion,
[6]
and does so in
light of the grounds of appeal.
These are very
broadly stated.
The
only specific ground is that the Magistrate overlooked that the
appellant had been in custody since his arrest.
On a consideration
of the Magistrate's reasoning, and on a conspectus of all
circumstances, I am satisfied that there is no basis
for overturning
the sentence imposed.
[17]
As to the appellant's personal circumstances, he was 27 years old
when he committed the offences. Although
both his parents died when
he was 9 years old, he was raised by his grandmother and has extended
family. He completed Grade 12
and has been formally employed from
time to time induding during the periods 2015 to 2017 and during 2018
to 2019. The appellant
earns a living as a traditional healer. He has
a chronic illness for which he takes medication. He has no previous
convictions
and no pending cases. He has two children by two
different mothers. The children are ten and four years old
respectively. The appellants'
circumstances were duly considered by
the Magistrate.
[18]
As opposed to his personal circumstances, which do not, viewed alone,
ground a deviation, the case concerns
not only gender-based violence,
far too prevalent
in
our society and profoundly damaging to
its victims and survivors, but rape of a child of 15, a formative
time of life. The specific
circumstances in which the offences were
committed are,
in
my view, egregious. In order to become a
sangoma, an initiate is expected to leave her parents' home and to
find a new home in the
initiation school. The young women who go
through this process are especially vulnerable to abuse. They find
themselves away from
their normal support structures, and they are
exposed to strangers whom they had never known before. The appellant
took full advantage
of the complainant's youth and vulnerability. He
also took advantage of his position of authority over the
complainant, when it
was in fact incumbent on him to protect and
guide her. The victim impact statement - considered by the
Magistrate - speaks
vividly to the traumatic impact on the
complainant
[20]
After the two rapes had occurred, the complainant was forced to see
the appellant on
a
daily basis over a period of a year while
undergoing initiation, adding, as she explains, to the trauma of the
rapes. The appellant
forced the complainant to remain silent by
threatening her with harm, further adding to her trauma. In my view
the appellant's
conduct was abhorrent. At no stage has the appellant
demonstrated any remorse, continuing to deny the events and accusing
the complainant
of fabrication.
[21]
It is no doubt
clear from the above that I do not find any substantial and
compelling circumstances that would have justified the
Magistrate
deviating from the minimum prescribed sentence.
Nor is the
sentence disproportionate, as the Magistrate concluded.
It is correct,
that the Magistrate did not expressly deal in the judgment with the
period the appellant spent in custody pre-sentence.
In this regard, it
appears from the record that the appellant was arrested over a year
after the events in question in December
2020.
He was sentenced
on 23 February 2022. However, even assuming the pre-trial
incarceration was not specifically considered, this consideration
does not in my view, justify any deviation on the facts and in the
circumstances
of
this
case.
[7]
The appeal against
sentence must also fail.
[22]
In the premises I make the following order:
"The appeal against
conviction and sentence is dismissed."
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I
agree.
COWEN
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
COUNSEL
FOR APPELLANT
Adv.LA
Van Wyk obo Legal Aid SA
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT:
Adv.
S Lalane
DATE
HEARD:
23
February 2023 2023
DATE
HANDED DOWN:
24
April 2023
[1]
The complainant's evidence was given
in
camera
in
view of her age.
At
the time she testified she was in Grade 12 and 17 years old.
[2]
Bothma v Els and Others
[2009] ZACC 27
;
2010 (2) SA 622
(CC);
2010 (1) SACR 184
(CC) ;
2010 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) at (37] and see more fully the
discussion and reference to case law in the judgment more fully.
[3]
Ins
v
Egglestone
[2008] ZASCA 77
;
2009
(1)
SACR 244
(SCA)
at para 25
[4]
At para 19
[5]
S
v
Dodo
(2001)
l.ACC 16
[2001] ZACC 16
; ;
2001
(3) SA 382 (CC);
2001
(5)
BCLR 423 (CC)
at
para 10 and 11. The Constitutional Court said of the process set out
in Malgas:
'It
steers an appropriate path, which
the
Legislature
doubtless
intended,
respecting
the
legislature's
decision
to
ensure that
consistently heavier sentences are imposed in relation to the
serious crimes covered bys 51 and at the same time promoting
'the
spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights.'
See too
S
v
Vilakazi
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA)
(2012
(6) SA 353;
(2008)
4
All
SA 396).
[6]
For the test applicable to sentencing on appeal, see
Bogaards
v S
[2012]
ZACC 23
;
2013 (1) SACR 1
(CC);
2012 (12) BCLR 1261
(CC) at para
41,
set
out as follows: (footnotes omitted). 'Ordinarily, sentencing is
within the discretion of the trial court. An appellate court's
power
to interfere with sentences imposed by courts below is
circumscribed. It can only do so where there has been an
irregularity
that results in a failure of justice; the court below
misdirected itself to such an extent that its decision on sentence
is vitiated;
or the sentence is so disproportionate or shocking that
no reasonable court could have imposed it. A court of appeal can
also
impose a different sentence when it sets aside a conviction in
relation to one charge and convicts the accused of another.'
[7]
S v Radebe and another
2013 (2) SACR 165
(SCA) at para 14.
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