Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 657South Africa
Simelane v S (A225/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 657 (3 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Simelane v S (A225/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 657 (3 August 2023)
Simelane v S (A225/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 657 (3 August 2023)
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sino date 3 August 2023
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: A225/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
DATE
2023-08-03
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
Sipho
Lindokuhle Simelane
Appellant
and
The
State
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Botsi-Thulare AJ
Introduction
[1]
The appellant is seeking to appeal the
conviction and sentence for two counts of robbery with aggravating
circumstance, kidnapping
and rape. The appellant was sentenced to 10
years on each count of robbery with aggravating circumstances, 3
years’ imprisonment
for kidnapping and a life imprisonment for
the rape. The sentences were ordered to run concurrently. Pursuant to
sentence for life
imprisonment the appellant had an automatic right
to appeal in terms of section 309(1) of the criminal procedure act 51
of 1977.
[2]
The Appellant argues that the conviction on
rape should be set aside on the basis that the it is based on the
evidence of a single
witness and that such evidence was not reliable.
The appellant further alleges that the complainant was his girlfriend
and the
sexual intercourse was by consent.
[3] The
Appellant was charged together with two other accused who did not
appeal the judgment.
Background
[4]
The evidence led before the Court a quo was to the
effect that on or about the 5 November 2020, in the vicinity
of
Benoni within the Regional Division of Gauteng, the appellant
deliberately and unlawfully engaged in an act of sexual penetration
with a female individual identified as Ms. S[...] N[...], aged 22
years, by forcibly having sexual intercourse with the complainant
without her consent.
[5]
The appellant was in the company of three other co-accused, namely
Accused 2, 3, and 4, alongside other women,
at the location where a
truck driven by Mr. Tumelo Mahlangu experienced a mechanical
breakdown and broke down near the Snake Road
off-ramp from the N12
highway.
[6]
The complainant, Ms.
S[...] N[...], testified that she fell asleep in the cab of the truck
and was later awakened by Accused number
2 and 3. They were
subsequently robbed of their personal belongings, including their
cell phones, at gunpoint. After the robbery,
they were forced into an
Avanza motor vehicle, with the appellant serving as the driver of the
said vehicle. There were other women
present in the motor vehicle,
and these individuals were later dropped off at an undisclosed
location.
[7]
The appellant then took the complainant to
another place, where he intentionally and unlawfully restricted her
freedom of movement
and detained her against her will throughout the
night at an unknown location.
[8]
Furthermore, the appellant perpetrated an act of sexual penetration
by forcibly inserting his genital organ
into the complainant's vagina
without her consent, and the act was performed without protection.
This entire incident occurred
while the complainant was in distress,
crying, and emotionally traumatized. Despite the complainant
expressing her unwillingness,
the appellant callously disregarded her
objections.
[9]
The appellant committed this act on two separate occasions, both
times within a locked room where the complainant
was unable to
escape, thus further depriving her of her freedom of movement.
[10] Around 05h00
in the morning, the appellant abandoned the witness on the road,
leaving her to find her own way home,
despite previously asserting
that she was his girlfriend. The circumstances prompt questions as to
why he did not take her home
and why he resorted to locking her up,
brandishing a firearm, and engaging in sexual intercourse while Ms.
N[...] was in distress
and traumatized.
Issues
to be determined
[11] The issue is
whether the court a quo erred in convicting the appellant based on
the single evidence of a single witness.
Further that the court a quo
erred in regarding the evidence of a single witness to be reliable in
the circumstances. The appellant
argues that he had sexual
intercourse with the appellant with her consent. On the issue of
sentence appellant ‘s argument
is that the sentence of life
imprisonment is shockingly harsh and in appropriate in the
circumstances of this case. The appellant
submits that his personal
circumstances taken cumulatively were substantial and compelling
reasons to deviate from the imposition
of a life imprisonment
sentence, namely-
(a)
He was 38 years old when he was
sentenced. He was in the middle ages and was not above
rehabilitation.
(b)
He was 37 years old when the offence
was committed.
(c)
He was single, not married.
(d)
He cohabited with Ntombifuthi
Nhleko.
(e)
They had 2 minor children to
maintain.
(f)
They also maintained accused’s
minor T[...] K[...] who was also residing with them. His mother
H[...] K[...] is late.
(g)
He passed grade 12 and could not
further huis studies due to financial constraints.
(h)
He was employed as a taxi driver. He
used his income to buy Toyota venture which he used to transport
people to make a living.
(i)
He was involved in a motor vehicle
accident in 2003 which left him limping and with pains when it is
cold.
Applicable
law and facts
[12]
It is trite law that the appeal court not lightly, interfere with the
findings of a trial court, especially findings
of facts. see
S v Francis
1991
(1) SACR 198
(A)
at 204c-e:
“
This
Court’s powers to interfere on appeal with the findings of fact
of the trial Court are limited (R v Dhlumayo and Another
1948
(2) SA 677
(A)).
... In the absence of any misdirection the trial Court’s
conclusion... is presumed to be correct. ...In order
to
succeed on appeal... a reasonable doubt will not suffice to justify
interference with its findings... Bearing in
mind the advantage which
a trial Court has of seeing, hearing and appraising a witness, it is
only in exceptional cases that this
Court will be entitled to
interfere with the trial Court’s evaluation of oral testimony
(S v Robinson and Others
1968
(1) SA 666
(A)
at 675G-H)’’
[13] In this
instance the appellant found the complainant in the company of her
boyfriend while stuck on the truck and
robbed them their belongings.
This was an indication that the appellant and the complainant did not
know each other but started
to see each other when the robbery was
taking place along the road. This refutes the allegations that
the complainant was
a girlfriend of the appellant. Further that it is
a clear fabrication that the complainant summoned the appellant to
come to the
place where she and her boyfriend were parked. After
the rape, the appellant did not show intimacy or expression of love
as he professes to be in a love relationship with the complainant. He
dumped her at 5: 00 am along the road and did not care to
take her to
her house. Therefore, the evidence that there was consent to sexual
intercourse is improbable and false. The court
a quo did not
misdirect himself when it rejected the evidence of the appellant and
accepted the evidence of the complainant.
[14] Regarding the
single evidence of the complainant the case of
S v Sauls and
another
1981(3) SA 172 (A) at para 180E-G said that:
“
There
is no rule of thumb test or formula to apply when it comes to a
consideration of the credibility of a single witness…
The
trial judge will weigh his evidence, will consider its merits and
demerits and, having done so will decide whether there are
shortcomings or defects or contradictions in his testimony, he is
satisfied that the truth has been told. The cautionary rule referred
to by De Villiers JP in 1932 (in R v Mokoena), may be a guide to a
right decision but it does not mean “that the appeal must
succeed if any criticism, however slender, of the witnesses’
evidence where well founded ….” It has been said
more
than once that the exercise of caution must not be allowed to
displace the exercise of common sense”.
[15] The
complainant had been consistent in her evidence, she did not
contradict herself even under cross examination.
Her narration of the
events of the date in question shows that she was not fabricating her
evidence. She was only surprised to
see people robbing them of their
belongings, kidnapping her and locking her inside the house until
early hours of the morning.
She was a credible and reliable witness.
The mere fact that Simelane had authority over the complainant, and
in possession of a
firearm inhibited her from indicating her
unwillingness or resistance to the sexual act and the unwillingness
to participate in
such. As a result, the evidence of a single witness
was satisfactory in all material respects and the cautionary rule was
satisfied.
Therefore, the court a quo did not misdirect itself when
it accepted the evidence of a single witness and convicted the
appellant
on rape based on the evidence of a single but reliable
witness.
Sentence
[16] The
appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment for rape and 20 years
for robbery with aggravating circumstances.
The sentence on count 3
is running concurrently with count 1 of robbery with aggravating
circumstances. The counsel for the appellant
argued that the sentence
imposed on the appellant is shockingly harsh and inappropriate and
that the trial court erred in concluding
that there are no
substantial and compelling circumstances present justifying deviation
from the prescribed minimum sentence. Further
that the personal
circumstances of the appellant should be regarded cumulatively as
substantial and compelling circumstances justifying
deviation from
the minimum sentence.
[17] In S v
Vilakazi
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA) at para 58 Nugent JA said that in
cases of serious crimes as the ones the applicant was change with,
the personal circumstances
of the offenders by themselves will
necessarily recede into the background, once it becomes clear that
the crime is deserving of
substantial period of punishment. The
question whether the accused is married or single, whether he has two
children or three,
whether he is in employment are themselves largely
immaterial to what the period should be and those seems to be the
kind of flimsy
reasons, or flimsy grounds that
Malgas
’
case said should be avoided.
[18]
Considering that the appellant raped the
victim repetitively on the night in question the sentence of life
imprisonment is an appropriate
sentence. Rape is a humiliating
degrading and brutal invasion of the privacy and dignity of the
victim, as such the victims should
be protected and their rights be
respected. In S v Chapman
[1997] ZASCA 45
;
1997 (3) SA 341
(SCA) at 344I the Supreme
Court of Appeal said that:
“
rape
is a very serious offence, constituting as it does a humiliating,
degrading and brutal invasion of the privacy, and dignity
of the
victim.”
[19] The main
concern is whether the court a quo imposed a sentence which is
shockingly harsh and inappropriate.
We do not agree with the
appellant’s argument that the sentence for life imprisonment is
shocking on the basis that the rape
which occurred was brutal in
nature. The complainant was first kidnapped and then locked in the
room and repeatedly raped the whole
night while the appellant was in
possession of a firearm. That on its own is aggravation of sentence
and the sentence is appropriate
in the circumstance. The court a quo
did not misdirect himself when he imposed the life sentence against
the appellant.
[20] Having
considered the above, I proposed that the following Order be made.
Order
[21]
The appeal against the conviction and sentence is dismissed
MD BOTSI-THULARE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
I
agree and it is so ordered.
SELBY BAQWA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
appellant
S
Moeng
Pretoria
Justice Centre
4
th
floor Locarno Building
Nana
Sita Street
Pretoria
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