Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 662South Africa
Erasmus v S (A31/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 662 (7 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 August 2023
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Erasmus v S (A31/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 662 (7 August 2023)
Erasmus v S (A31/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 662 (7 August 2023)
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sino date 7 August 2023
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 DIVISION)
CASE NO: A31/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
7 AUGUST 2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
ERASMUS,
MARIUS ADRIAAN
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Coram:
Millar
J
et
Barit AJ
Heard
on:
22
May 2023
Delivered:
7
August 2023 – 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 10H00
on 7 August 2023.
Summary:
Criminal
law and procedure – Appeal against conviction and the
imposition of 2 life sentences for rape of minor stepdaughter
–
no basis upon which to interfere with conviction – no
substantial or compelling circumstances shown to justify
deviation
from minimum prescribed sentences – Appeals against both
conviction and sentence dismissed.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
Regional Court for Ekurhuleni South held at Tsakane.
It
is ordered:
[1]
The appeal against the conviction on counts 1 and 2 is dismissed.
[2]
The appeal against sentence on counts 1 and 2 is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
MILLAR J (BARIT AJ
CONCURRING)
[1]
On
10 July 2019, the appellant, a 31-year-old man was convicted in the
Regional Court held at Tsakane of two counts of rape of his
minor
13-year-old stepdaughter. On 2 October 2019 he was sentenced to life
imprisonment on both counts.
[1]
[2]
The
appeal before this court is against both conviction and sentence. The
right to appeal is automatic in terms of s 309B read together
with
the proviso to s 309(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act,
[2]
by virtue of the imposition of the sentence of life imprisonment.
THE
EVIDENCE
[3]
The evidence
led at the trial was that of the complainant - the minor - as well as
her mother, her aunt and two police officers.
The appellant also
testified. It is apposite to state at this juncture that the defence
of the appellant was a bare denial that
he had committed the offences
with which he was charged.
[4]
During 2012,
when the minor was about 12 or 13 years of age, the incidents which
formed the subject of the complaint occurred between
the minor and
the appellant.
[5]
The first
incident occurred whilst the family lived in Sundra. In the
early hours of the morning, after the minor had woken
up to go to the
bathroom and was on her way back to her room, the appellant (who had
been making a fire in the living room), advised
her to return to her
room and remove her pyjama pants. She did this and testified
that the appellant had then followed her
to her room and
unsuccessfully tried to penetrate her twice. She never informed
her mother of this occurrence.
[6]
Sometime later
the family relocated to Brakpan. The minor testified that the
appellant’s approaches to her did not start immediately
but
only when both the appellant and her mother began abusing alcohol and
drugs. When the appellant sent her mother to the
Spar to make
purchases and he was alone with her, he would smear vaseline or
butter onto her genitalia and then try to penetrate
her. He kept
trying until he eventually succeeded.
[7]
The minor
testified that she never told her mother or anyone else about these
incidents as she realized that he was too strong for
her to resist
him and furthermore the appellant had threatened to burn down her
grandmother’s house, starve her disabled
brother and kill both
her and her mother if she did.
[8]
Later, while
still living in Brakpan and due to changed economic circumstances the
family were forced to occupy only one bedroom
of the house while
other people moved in as well. There were two bunk beds in this
room – the bottom bunk bed was occupied
by the appellant and
his wife and the minor occupied the top bunk bed. One evening
the minor heard her parents having intercourse
and the appellant
asking her mother if he could please “finish with” the
minor. Her mother did not initially
agree but due to his
insistence and persistence, her mother had then told the minor to lie
on the bed with the appellant.
The appellant had her mother rub
lubricant on the minor’s genitalia whereafter he penetrated
her.
[9]
The family
thereafter moved to a guesthouse owned by a man called “Jannie”.
Whilst at this guesthouse, the appellant
and her mother engaged in
sexual intercourse whilst watching a pornographic film and the
appellant then called the minor to him
and had sex with her.
[10]
The minor
testified that the appellant forced her to steal money from Jannie
and would beat her with a broomstick if she refused
to do this.
The appellant forced her to use drugs with him and her mother and she
would be under the influence of these
whilst he had sexual
intercourse with her.
[11]
The minor also
testified about a sexual assault by Jannie. She said he had
initially asked for sexual intercourse which she
refused, and she
then gave him “hand jobs” in return for money. It was her
evidence that she had been instructed
to do this by the appellant.
The minor explained that she did not always give Jannie hand jobs but
would steal the money and then
give the money to her parents some 10
to 20 minutes after telling them she had given Jannie the hand job
for money.
[12]
While staying
at the guesthouse, the minor informed her aunt, Ms M[...] E[...]
v[...] d[...] M[...] of what had occurred.
After this, the
appellant did not rape her again. Her aunt reported the matter
to the authorities and whilst the minor was
at school, the police
arrived to speak to her. The minor made a report to the police
officer and a teacher and was then taken
to a hospital where a doctor
conducted an examination of her.
[13]
When the minor
was confronted on her different statements regarding Jannie, she
admitted she lied to the police. She also admitted
to lying to the
doctor who had examined her for purposes of completing the J88
medical report by telling him she had had sex with
her boyfriend. In
each instance she explained that she had done so because she was
scared.
[14]
The minor’s
aunt testified that she and her husband had lived with the minor and
her family at the same guesthouse in Brakpan.
One day, during
2012 the minor had run to her whilst she was utilizing the outside
toilet and informed her that her mother had
ordered her to “suck
the private parts” of the appellant the evening before and that
she had done it because her mother
had instructed her to do it.
Whilst relaying this to her aunt, the appellant had shouted to her
mother to retrieve the minor as
he did not want her speaking to the
aunt.
[15]
She testified
that she went to the SAPS to report to them on what the minor had
told her. She also testified that she had personally
witnessed the
appellant and his wife lying in bed with the minor watching a
pornographic film and saw the minor fondling the appellant’s
genitalia. She told her sister to do something about it and the
minor was told to move away from the appellant, but the minor
continued to kiss and tickle the appellant. She also said that
her sister had told her that the appellant had insisted that
both the
minor’s and her mother’s pubic hair be shaven. She
witnessed the owner of the guesthouse fondling the minor
while they
were sitting behind his desk. She also said that the minor told
her that when the appellant wanted sex with her
mother that she would
tell him to go to the minor if she was not in the mood.
[16]
The minor’s
mother testified that she is the biological mother of the minor and
that the appellant is the minor’s stepfather.
She recalled that
whilst they resided in Sundra she awoke one evening to find the
bedroom door locked from the outside and when
she enquired from the
appellant why, he informed her that he did not want to wake her up
whilst he made a fire in the living room.
She said that a few
nights after that, the appellant came into the bedroom dragging the
minor by her hair and holding a knife to
her neck. He ordered
her to get lubricant and rub it onto his private parts and onto the
minor. After this incident
the appellant raped the minor
several times whilst they lived in Sundra.
[17]
She testified
about her and the appellants alcohol and drug abuse and that while
they were doing so the appellant had called the
minor to join them.
She said that she had begged the appellant to stop what he was doing
with the minor but that he had refused
and had also threatened to
kill her if she ever tried to leave him or told anyone what he was
doing.
[18]
When the
family moved to Brakpan, they stayed in a guesthouse. Her
sister and her husband also stayed at the same guesthouse.
She
testified that she had urged the minor to tell someone at school. It
was only after the minor reported the incident to her
aunt that the
police arrived.
[19]
Ms. Govender,
a police officer who went to interview the minor at her school
testified that the principal refused to let her speak
to the minor
and insisted that the Family Violence Unit first be called.
Warrant Officer Duister of this unit was called
to the school.
Whilst waiting for Warrant Officer Duister, she had spoken briefly
with the minor who said she had never seen
her mother or stepfather
naked and that they had done nothing to her.
[20]
Warrant
Officer Duister of the Family Violence Child Protection and Sexual
Offences Unit testified that she attended at the school
where the
minor informed her that her stepfather used to touch her private
parts and her breasts but did not mention the intercourse.
[21]
The appellant
testified that he never raped the minor. He testified that he
had asked his wife for a divorce on 28 May 2014
and believed this to
be the reason behind them implicating him on rape charges. His
evidence was that the minor had many boyfriends
and that he had tried
to guide her albeit unsuccessfully.
[22]
He testified
that he had a long and troubled relationship with his sister-in-law
(the minor’s aunt) and labelled her as “his
enemy”.
He said that she had wanted to marry him but that he had instead
chosen her sister, and that this had angered
her to the extent that
she lied in court.
Evaluation
[23]
In
evaluating the evidence of the minor, “
The
court should be careful not to place an old head on young shoulders,
and it must take into consideration the age, knowledge,
experience
and, most importantly, the judgment of the child and the specific
circumstances facing the child at the time of the
commission of the
prohibited act . . . A child’s age is, obviously, not
something over which the child has control
and so an inquiry into
whether the child could have acted differently is determined solely
by the child’s own subjectively
assessed capacity”
[3]
(footnotes
omitted)
[24]
The
evidence of the minor, aside from some inconsequential contradictions
was consistent. The minor knew what the appellant had
done to her and
with her and was able to testify about this in some detail. In my
view, her evidence was entirely consistent with
her having
experienced what she did. Her evidence was corroborated by her mother
in material respects particularly insofar as she
had herself
witnessed it. The evidence of the aunt corroborated the evidence of
both the minor and her mother.
[4]
[25]
In
S
v V
[5]
it was held that “
Whilst
there is no statutory requirement that a child’s evidence must
be corroborated, it has long been accepted that the
evidence of
children should be treated with caution and that the evidence
in a particular case involving sexual misconduct
may call for a
cautionary approach. Such a cautionary approach is called for where
reasonable grounds are suggested by the accused
for suspecting that
the State’s witnesses have a grudge against him, or a motive to
implicate him falsely.”
[26]
The
attempt by the appellant to impeach the evidence of the minor, her
mother, and her aunt by variously accusing the minor of “having
boyfriends” and being of promiscuous character, her mother of
wanting to punish him for wanting a divorce and the aunt because
she
was spurned by him is simply not reasonably possibly true
[6]
and must be rejected.
THE
CONVICTIONS
[27]
On a
conspectus of the evidence, the court
a
quo
,
correctly in my view concluded that:
“
Yes,
there were a number of contradictions pointed out during the trial
and after the trial when the defence addressed the court
on the
merits. There were numerous contradictions both in the child's
evidence as well as the evidence presented by the mother
and the
aunt.
But the golden thread
that keeps on running through it all is the fact that this child was
repeatedly but at least on the two occasions
as listed in the charge
sheet sexually penetrated by the accused.”
[28]
The
convictions on both counts of the indictment were sound and
unimpeachable
[7]
and for this
reason the appeal against the convictions must fail.
SENTENCE
[29]
It is well
established that in regard to the imposition of minimum sentences:
“
Under
constitutional dispensation it is certainly no less desirable than
under common law that facts State intends to prove to increase
sentencing jurisdiction under the Act should be clearly set out in
the charge-sheet - Matter is, however, one of substance and
not form,
and general rule cannot be laid down that charge in every case has to
recite either in specific form of scheduled offence
with which
accused charged or facts State intends to prove to establish it –
Whether accused’s substantive fair trial
right, including her
or his ability to answer charge, has been impaired depends on
vigilant examination of relevant circumstances.”
[8]
[30]
The enquiry is in two stages. Firstly,
whether the appellant was advised of the charges he was to face and
the sentence that may
be imposed and secondly, whether the
appellant’s right to a fair trial had been impaired.
[31]
The charges faced by
the appellant on the charge sheet both referred to “
Section
51 and Schedule 2 of The
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
”
and
pertinently under the heading “
Penalty
Clause”
that
upon conviction the applicable sentence was “
imprisonment
for life.”
Furthermore,
this was specifically brought to his attention at the commencement of
the trial and before he pleaded.
[32]
The
appellant was convicted, on Counts 1 and 2 of a crime referred to in
Part 1
of Schedule 2 of The
Criminal Law Amendment Act
[9
]
and the court
a
quo
was obliged to impose the prescribed minimum sentence of life
imprisonment in terms of
s 51(1)
of that Act, absent substantial and
compelling circumstances
[10]
.
[33]
The state presented into evidence a victim
impact report in which it was concluded that “..
the
victim suffers the impact of childhood trauma, from the rape. These
include social withdrawal, poor academic achievement, sleeping
disorder, aggression, difficulty forming relationships with peers,
sexual acting out and adolescent pregnancy among others. She
was
deprived of a normal childhood at an early age and may be a
malfunctioning adult.”
[34]
In considerations of the severity of the actions of the appellant,
the observations
of the court in
S
v C
[11]
are pertinent:
"Rape
is regarded by society as one of the most heinous of crimes, and
rightly so. A rapist does not murder his victim, he
murders her
self-respect and destroys her feelings physically and mentally and
her security. His monstrous deed often haunts his
victim and subjects
her to a mental torment for the rest of her life, a fate often worse
than loss of life."
It
must not be overlooked that the appellant is the husband of the
mother of the minor, it is he who should be there to protect
her.
However, it is he who violated her.
[35]
Were there substantial and compelling circumstances justifying the
imposition of
a lesser sentence?
[36]
There was no evidence presented on behalf of the appellant as to the
existence of
substantial or compelling circumstances which would move
the court
a quo
to consider deviation from the minimum
sentence, save to place on record that the appellant was a stepfather
to 3 children, had
no biological children of his own and had been
denied the opportunity to attend his father’s funeral during
the 4 years he
had been in custody. The pre-sentence report submitted
in respect of the appellant concluded that a “
sentence of
direct imprisonment
” be considered.
[37]
There were no submissions made on his behalf in regard to his being
declared unfit
to own a firearm, other than to record he did not own
one. Furthermore, there were no submissions made in regard to a
declaration
that he be declared unfit to work with children or that
his name be included in the National Register for Sex Offenders.
[38]
The court
a quo
found, and indeed there are no substantial and
compelling reasons to depart from the minimum sentence in respect of
either count
1 or count 2. Accordingly, the appeal against the
sentences must also fail.
[39]
In the circumstances, it is ordered:
[39.1]
The appeal against the convictions on counts 1 and 2 is dismissed.
[39.2]
The appeal against the sentences on counts 1 and 2 is dismissed.
A MILLAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I AGREE
L BARIT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
24
MAY 2023
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON:
7
AUGUST 2023
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANT:
ADV
H ALBERTS
INSTRUCTED
BY:
LEGAL
AID SA
PRETORIA
JUSTICE CENTRE
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
ADV
G MARITZ
INSTRUCTED
BY:
THE
STATE ATTORNEY
PRETORIA
REF:
SA16/2020
[1]
The
full sentence was: 1) On Count 01 Life Imprisonment; 2) On Count 02
Life Imprisonment; 3) In terms of
section 103(1)
of Act 60 of 2000
the Court made no order and the accused is therefore deemed unfit to
possess a firearm; 4) In terms of section
120(4) of Act 38 of 2005
the accused was declared unfit to work with children; and 5) In
terms of section 50(1) of Act 32 of
2007 it is ordered that the
accused’s name be included in the National Register for Sex
Offenders.
[2]
51
of 1977.
[3]
Principles
of Criminal Law
,
J Burchell, Juta & Co. Ltd, 4
th
Ed, 2013 at page 258 – said in the context of a consideration
of the criminal capacity of children under the age of 14
but equally
apposite in considering their reaction to criminal acts involving
them.
[4]
See
S
v S
1995 (1) SACR 50
(ZS) at 59f-j and 60a.
[5]
2000
(1) SACR 453
(SCA) at 453f.
[6]
S
v T
2005
(2) SACR 318
(E) at 329b-c referring to
R
v Mlambo
1957 (4) SA 727 (A).
[7]
Ibid
in
R v Mlambo at 738A where Malan JA stated: ”
In
my opinion, there is no obligation upon the Crown to close every
avenue of escape which may be said to be open to the accused.
It is
sufficient for the Crown to produce evidence by means of which a
high degree of probability is raised that the ordinary
reasonable
man, after mature consideration, comes to the conclusion that there
exists no reasonable doubt that an accused has
committed the crime
charged.”
[8]
S
v Legoa
2003 (1) SACR 13
(SCA); see also
S
v Makatu
2006
(2) SACR 587
(SCA);
S
v Ndlovu
2017 (2) 305 (CC);
S
v Mabaso
2014 (1) SACR 299 (KZP).
[9]
105
of 1997.
[10]
S
v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) at paragraph 8.
[11]
1996
(2) SACR 181
(C) at 186 D-F.
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