Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 729South Africa
Msiza and Another v S - Appeal (A223/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 729 (16 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Msiza and Another v S - Appeal (A223/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 729 (16 August 2023)
Msiza and Another v S - Appeal (A223/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 729 (16 August 2023)
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sino date 16 August 2023
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Policy
IN
THE
HIGH
COURT
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NUMBER: A223/22
DATE: 16 August 2023
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
YES
/NO
REVISED
JOHANNES
SIYABONGA
MSIZA
First
Appellant
KABELO
DONALD
MOTHLAPE
Second
Appellant
# V
V
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MABUSE
J
(Tshombe AJ concurring)
[1]
This is an appeal by the Appellants against their
conviction and sentence.
[2]
The Appellants appeared before the Regional Court
Magistrate in Soshanguve where they were charged as follows:
[2.1] The First and
Second Appellants (the Appellants) were charged in count 1 with
contravention of s 3 of the Sexual Offences
Act 32 of 2007 (SOA),
Rape:
This count was read
subject to the provisions of s 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act 105 of 1997 (the Minimum Sentence Act).
[2.1.1]
The
allegations
against the
two
Appellants in this
count were
that
on
or about 12
December 2017 and at or near a road in Soshanguve, in the regional
division of Gauteng North, the Appellants did unlawfully
and
intentionally commit an act of sexual penetration with a female
person, to wit, A[...] B[...] M[...] (the complainant) who,
at the
time was twenty years old, by inserting their penises into her
vagina, without her consent;
[2.1.2]
S 51(1) of the
Minimum
Sentence Act was made applicable to this count by reason of the fact
that the complainant
was
raped by more than one person.
[2.2]
Count 2, theft:
According to this count,
it was alleged by the State that the Appellants were guilty of the
crime of theft, read with the provisions
of
s 264
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
the CPA The allegations of the charge were
that on or about the date and at the place mentioned in count 1, the
two Appellants
did unlawfully and intentionally steal a handbag, a
Hisense mobile phone and an undisclosed amount of money, the
property, or in
the lawful possession, of the said complainant.
[3]
The First Appellant was charged, in count 3, with contravention of
s
3
of the SOA
,
rape and in count 4 with theft:
[3.1]
In
count 3, it
was alleged by the State that on or about 24 July 2017 and at or near
a road in Soshanguve,
in
the regional division of Gauteng North, the First Appellant
did
unlawfully
and intentionally commit an act of sexual penetration with a female
person, namely P[...] M[...], (the complaint), who
at the time was 21
years of age, by inserting his penis into
her vagina, without her consent:
[3.2]
the provisions of s 51(1) of the Minimum Sentence Act were applicable
to this count 3 under the following
circumstances:
[3.2.1]
(i)
in circumstances where the victim was raped
more than once, whether by the Appellants or any other person by
penetration or accomplice;
(ii)
by more than one person where such person
acted in the furtherance of a common purpose of conspiracy;
(iii)
where the victim is a person under the age
of 16 years;
(iv)
where the rape involved the infliction of
grievous bodily harm;
(v)
where the victim is a person who is mentally
disabled or as
contemplated
in section 1 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 32 of 2007.
[3.3] Count 4
In
count 4 the First Appellant was charged with theft, read with section
264 of the CPA, it being alleged by the State that on the
date and at
the place mentioned in count 3, the First Appellant did unlawfully
and intentionally
steal
a bag containing a wallet and
a mobile
phone, the property, or in the lawful possession, of P[...] M[...]
(the complainant).
[4]
The Appellants enjoyed legal representation by a certain Mr Makama
throughout the
whole trial. The Appellants both pleaded not guilty to
the counts they were facing. Their pleas were confirmed by their
legal representative.
[5]
Both Appellants made written plea explanations in
terms of s 115 of the CPA:
[5.1] In respect of count
1, the First Appellant made a plea explanation that included the
following admissions, that:
[5.1.1]
he
was the
driver
of
the Toyota
Quantum
in
which
the
complainant
was conveyed;
[5.1.2] he loaded the
complainant as a passenger near McDonald restaurant in Wonderpark;
[5.1.3]
he had sexual intercourse with the complainant;
[5.2] the
First Appellant's defence regarding count 1 was that he had sexual
intercourse with the complainant with her
consent and had paid her
R100.00, R50.00 for himself and the other R50.00 for the Second
Appellant.
In
respect
of count
1, the only dispute between the First Appellant
and the State was
whether
sexual intercourse between the First Appellant and the complainant
took place by consent as stated by the Appellant in his
s 115 plea;
[5.3] there is a hidden
admission that the First Appellant made in his plea explanation, that
hidden admission is that he paid R100.00
for his sexual intercourse
with the complainant. That admission follows in a statement or
explanation that "/
paid R100.00 for sexual favours with the
complainant,
R50.00 for myself and another R50.00 for
Kabelo."
Kabelo is the Second Appellant in this
appeal;
[5.4] the aforegoing
admission, the veracity of which must be determined by the evidence
was the following:
[5.4.1]
the complainant was penetrated more than once;
[5.4.2]
by at least two people.
[6]
In respect of counts 2, 3 and 4 the First
Appellant chose to make no plea explanation.
This is in keeping with s 35(3)(h) of the
Constitution which provides that:
"35(3)
Every accused has
a
right to
a
fair trial which includes the right-
'
(h)
to
be
presumed
innocent,
to
remain
silent,
and
not
to
testify
during
the proceedings."
[7]
S
35(1)
of
the
Constitution
gives
the
Appellant
the
right
to
remain
silent.
According
to
its provisions:
"35(1)
Everyone who is arrested for allegedly committing an offence has a
right-
(a)
to remain silent.
This section does not
indicate the stage at which this arrested person may remain silent.
Is it when the police require him to make
a statement about the
offences arrested for; or when he appears before the court and the
presiding officer requests him to make
a statement or when his
attorney approaches him to make a statement?"
[8]
After Mr Makama had read the contents
of his written plea explanation
into the record, the First Appellant
confirmed it.
The
written plea
explanation
was accepted by the
Court
as Exhibit '1'.
## THEPLEAEXPLANATION,OFTHESECONDAPPELLANT
THE
PLEA
EXPLANATION
,OF
THE
SECOND
APPELLANT
[9]
In respect of count 1, the Second Appellant
also made a written plea explanation in terms of s 115 of the CPA,
which was accepted
by the court a
quo
and marked Exhibit '2' after the Second
Appellant's legal representative had read it into the record and the
Second Appellant had
confirmed it. In the lengthy plea explanation
that he made, the Second Appellant made the following admissions
which were recorded
by the trial court:
[9.1] he admitted that on
the date reflected in the charge sheet he was a passenger in the
Toyota Quantum that was driven by the
First Appellant, Johannes
Msiza;
[9.2] he admitted that
the complainant entered the motor vehicle at or near McDonalds
restaurant in Wonderpark;
[9.3]
he had sexual intercourse with the complainant, without a condom;
[9.4]
Johannes, the
First
Appellant, had
paid
the complainant R100.00 for the sexual
favours, R50.00 for himself,
the
Second Appellant,
and
the other R50.00 for himself,
the
First
Appellant;
[9.5] he
denied that he had threatened, assaulted, raped or kidnapped the
complainant. He denied furthermore that he
had forced the complainant
to have sexual intercourse with him.
[10]
The battlefield between the Second
Appellant and the Respondent was consent.
In other words, there was an onus on the
Respondent
to
dispute, by way of evidence, the defence by the Second Appellant that
he had sexual intercourse with the complainant with her
consent.
OTHER ADMISSIONS
[11] Other
admissions that emanated from the Second Appellant's plea explanation
were that:
[11.1]
the complainant
was
penetrated more than once;
[11.2]
by at least two people.
[12]
In respect
of
count 2 the Second Appellant chose to make no plea explanation.
Instead,
he
chose to remain silent.
[13]
The State then applied for the admission of
the medico-legal report, the J88, to be handed in as evidence. There
was an objection
against the State's application.
The court a
quo
then, brought the provisions of s
212(4) of the CPA to the attention of the legal representative and
asked him to furnish his reasons
why the medico-legal report should,
and could, not be accepted by the court as evidence. The legal
representative persisted with
his objection in the face of the
explanation of the provisions of s 212(4) of the CPA by the
Magistrate.
The
State was asked to comment. The public prosecutor
argued that since the legal representative
had failed to furnish any reasons why the medico-legal
report should not be handed in, he
persisted with his application.
[13.1] The court a
quo
then explained the import of s 212(4) of the CPA to the
Appellants; the duty of the person who objects to furnish the reasons
or
good cause or reasons why the medico-legal report should not be
admitted into evidence and the consequences of failure to do so.
She
thereafter made a ruling in terms of which she admitted the
medico-legal report into evidence as Exhibit 'C';
[13.2]
Thereafter the DNA results, which positively
linked the Second Appellant to the sexual
intercourse
with the complainant in count 3, was handed in into evidence without
any objection. This was, as the court
a
quo
pointed out, even though the Second
Appellant had admitted
having
had sexual intercourse
with
the complainant
on
the date mentioned
in the charge sheet.
[14]
Despite their pleas of not guilty to the
charges
against
them, the court
a quo
found
the two Appellants guilty as charged and sentenced them, upon
conviction, as follows:
[14.1]
The First Appellant
Counts 1 & 3: life
imprisonment;
Counts 2 & 4: each 5
years' imprisonment.
The
court then made an order in terms of s 280(2) of the CPA that the
sentences imposed on the First Appellant in
respect of counts 2, 3 and 4 should run concurrently with the
sentence of life imprisonment
imposed on the First Appellant in
respect of count 1.
[14.2]
The Second Appellant
The Second Appellant was
sentenced to life imprisonment in respect of count 1.
[14.3]
The two Appellants were
disgruntled by their convictions and
sentences.
So,
they exercised their rights to appeal
against both their convictions and sentences.
That is how the matter came before us.
[15]
Subsequent to their sentences, the two Appellants, still through
their same legal representative,
delivered their notice to appeal
against both conviction and sentence on * August 2022. The Appellants
had an automatic right to
appeal, which was granted to them, by s
309(1)(a) of the CPA
ISSUES IN DISPUTE
[16]
Conviction
[16.1] In respect
of counts 1 and 3, we have pointed out somewhere above that, in the
light of the admissions made by them
in Exhibits 'A' and 'B', the
only element that the State had to prove against the two Appellants
in respect of counts 1 and 3 was
that sexual intercourse between the
Appellants and the complainant in count 1 was not with the consent of
the complainant, as put
forward by the Appellants.
[16.2] In respect
of the rest, the State had an onus to prove all the elements of the
offences. In terms of our law, a person
accused of having committed
an offence is presumed to be innocent until his guilt has been
proved. State has a common law duty
to prove beyond reasonable doubt
that the person has committed the offence with which he is charged.
The duty to prove the case
beyond reasonable doubt includes, with
reference to the current matter, the duty to prove that the sexual
offence did not take
place with the consent of the complainants, as
pleaded by the Appellants.
[16.3] As
early as 1883 in
R v Benjamin
3 EDC 337
at 338, Buchanan J,
stated
that:
"But
in criminal trial, there is
a
presumption of innocence in favour of
the accused, or which must be rebutted. Therefore,
there should not be
a
conviction unless the crime
charged has been proved
to
have been committed by the accused.
Where the evidence
is not reasonably
consistent with the prisoner's innocence, or where reasonable doubt
as to his guilt exists, there should be acquittal."
[16.4] It will be
recalled that in
R v Ndlovu
1949 AD 369
the court gave
an authoritative support of the fundamental principle of our law that
the onus rests on the State to prove its case.
Davis AJA, as he then
was, had the following to say:
"In all criminal
cases it is for the Crown to establish the guilt of the accused, not
for the accused to establish his innocence.
The onus is on the Crown
to prove all the elements necessary to establish its guilt."
Consequently, on a charge
of rape, the State must prove that the sexual intercourse was
unlawful and intentional. In other words,
it must prove that the
sexual offences did not take place with the consent of the
complainant. The State can discharge the onus
either by direct or
evidence or by the admissions made by an accused person or by the
facts from which the reasonable inference
may be drawn.
THE EVIDENCE OF THE
RESPONDENT'S WITNESSES
[17]
The evidence of A[...] B[...] M[...]
[17.1] The first
witness who testified for the Respondent in this matter was A[...]
B[...] M[...] ("Ms M[...]").
She was the complainant in
count 1- which involved both the First and Second Appellants. She
also was the complainant in count
2. As on the date of the incident,
Ms M[...] was employed at Parrots, a food selling dealer in
Wonderpark. On that evening she
worked alone until after 21h00. As a
result of that, she knocked off late because, before going home, she
had to tidy up the restaurant.
[17.2] After
knocking off, she walked to the taxi station where, while waiting, a
white quantum minibus arrived. Inside this
minibus, were two male
persons. These two male persons were the First and Second Appellants.
According to her testimony, she did
not know them before but started
knowing them on the occasion that took place on
[17.3] She was
looking for a taxi that would take her
to
ltsoseng, in Erasmus
where she was going. A certain strange boy asked the two Appellants
if the taxi was going to ltsoseng, and
they said "yes·.
[17.4] Because of their
response, she got into the taxi, and it drove off. Along the way the
taxi took a different turn into the
direction she was not going to.
She became unsettled.
She asked the Appellants
if the taxi was going indeed to ltsoseng, because she had paid the
full price for the trip to ltsoseng.
They reassured her that they
would take her home by telling her that they were first going to buy
liquor somewhere in the direction
they had taken, whereafter they
would drive to ltsoseng. They stopped the taxi at a certain tavern,
and both got off, leaving her
alone in the taxi. They returned to the
taxi and drove off, taking the route that led them to ltsoseng.
[17.5] Along the way
there was a Sasol tank station at a T-junction where they were
supposed to proceed straight, if they were in
truth driving to her
destination. Instead of proceedings straight at that T-junction, they
made a tum. She again became concerned.
She asked them again if they
were going to ltsoseng. Instead of answering her, the First Appellant
produced a firearm, showed it
to her and thereafter slapped her and
ordered her to look down. Because of that order, she did not look at
the road anymore as
she had been ordered to face down. She did not
know where the taxi was heading to. The taxi drove for quite a long
distance.
[17.6] She could
hear them talking. She heard them saying that after they had finished
with me, they would throw or drop her
at Tradeway. The taxi continued
until it stopped among some shacks. She could only see shacks around
the taxi.
[17.7] Then the
Second Appellant came to sit with her where she was sitting, just
behind the driver's seat. The First Appellant
ordered her to take off
her trousers and underwear. They instructed her to lie on the seat.
The Second Appellant was the driver
of the taxi. He was the one who
came to sit with her on the seat just behind the driver's seat. It
was the First Appellant who
had instructed her to take off her
clothes and to lie on the seat she was sitting on.
[17.8] The Second
Appellant unzipped his trousers, pulled down his trousers up to the
upper thigh, and inserted his penis
inside her vagina. Thereafter he
informed the First Appellant that he was done having had sex with the
complainant.
[17.9] Thereupon
the First Appellant came to her, unzipped his trousers, pull them
down, and inserted his penis into her vagina.
[17.10] She noticed that
they started panicking. They looked scared. They ordered her to put
on her clothes. They drove off from
where they had stopped and
intermittently looking back. They took money and a cell phone inside
her purse. At this stage she was
sitting up. As they looked back, she
also looked back. She saw a motor car. It looked like this car was
chasing them. It was switching
its headlights dim, bright, dim,
bright repeatedly. The two Appellants stopped the taxi, got off it
and fled on foot.
[17.11]
She got
a
chance to get out of the taxi.
She
ran to the motor vehicle
and
informed the people
in
the motor
vehicle
that
she
had been raped.
The
people in the motor car took her to the police station where she made
a statement
about
the
incident. She
was also taken to a health centre at Block BB, Soshanguve, where she
received medical treatment to prevent her from
getting HIV and
also
from
falling pregnant.
[17.12]
As she testified, she told the court that at the
tavern to which they had driven, it was the First Appellant who got
off the taxi
while the Second Appellant, who was the driver at all
material times, remained in the motor vehicle.
[17.13]
She
does
not
know
whether
the
First
Appellant
was
wearing
a
condom
when he penetrated her.
It was the First Appellant who took her
cell phone and money. She has not recovered her cell phone.
## [18]TheevidenceofTumeloJoseph
Khoza(Khoza)
[18]
The
evidence
of
Tumelo
Joseph
Khoza
(Khoza)
[18.1] He was the State's
second witness. He knew both Appellants. He and them are in the taxi
industry. He testified that in the
morning of 12 December 2017, he
asked the First Appellant to drive the Quantum as the usual driver
had, because of being indisposed,
failed to come to work. He gave the
motor vehicle to the First Appellant around 9h00 and instructed him
to return the taxi at Moosa's
place before 20h00.
[18.2]
He realised at 22h00 that the First Appellant had
not returned the motor vehicle. He became concerned
and called him on his mobile phone.
He did not get hold of him.
His phone was off.
He then called the owner of the Quantum so
that he could
track
it.
The
owner
promised
to
come
back
to
him, which he
did.
They
tracked the Quantum and located it somewhere next to Phutanang Police
Station, which is situated in Block PP, in Soshanguve.
They decided to drive to that spot. Just
before they
could
arrive at Shell Tank Station in Block GG, Soshanguve, they spotted
the motor
vehicle.
They turned around and followed it.
As they were following it, it approached a
place that is referred to as "Stout School".
[18.3] As they were
following it and were expecting it to turn right at Stout School, it
turned left instead. They then decided
to pursue it whilst they were
at the same time flashing their headlights, indicating that it should
stop. It did not stop. They
followed this motor vehicle until they
caught up with it and drove parallel to it. They then lowered the
driver's passenger's window
and screamed at Johannes, the First
Appellant, to stop. The driver of the Quantum slowed it down after
the witness had told him
that they were looking for the motor
vehicle. They moved to the front of the quantum so that they could
park there. To their surprise,
the driver made a u-turn and sped off.
Two persons then alighted from the motor vehicle and ran into the
bush. They also alighted
from their motor vehicle and pursued the two
on foot and whilst he was running after them, he at the same time was
screaming at
them to stop. When he could not catch up with them, the
stopped, turned, and walked back to their motor vehicle.
[18.4]
As
he
was
walking
towards
the
Quantum,
he
saw
a
girl.
This
girl was
crying.
She was, in fact, screaming.
He
arrived where this girl was.
He
realised that this girl was walking barefooted and furthermore that
she was shaking.
He
said that the girl, the complainant in this in this charge, told him
that these people, referring to the Appellants, picked her
up in a
taxi at Wonderpark, pointed her with a firearm and raped her.
It is for that reason that they took the
complainant to the police station.
[18.5]
Before they left the police station, the police
took the statement
of
the owner of the taxi Quantum.
The
First
Appellant
was
supposed
to
bring
the
taxi
back by 20h00.
This taxi was normally parked at Trott's
place at Block DD in Soshanguve and the First Appellant knew this.
But in terms of the arrangements, he was
supposed to bring the taxi to him at Moosa's place.
[18.6] During the time in
which he was trying to stop him, the First Appellant was aware that
it was him who was trying to stop
him. He saw him because the windows
of their motor car had been rolled down.
[18.7] In terms of the
rules of the Taxi Association to which the Quantum taxi belonged, it
was not allowed to pick up passengers
at Wonderpark. That area falls
under Erasmus Taxi Association. It was also not supposed to drop
passengers in and around Erasmus.
The First Appellant did not even
give him the takings for that particular day.
[19]
The evidence of Andries Matlala
[19.1] This witness
was the owner of the Quantum motor vehicle that was involved in this
case; the Quantum motor vehicle in
which the complainant in count 1
was raped; the Quantum motor vehicle that the second state witness,
Mr Khoza, gave to the First
Appellant on 12 December 2017 to go and
convey passengers.
[19.2] On the morning of
12 December 2017, he received a report from Khoza that one of his
motor vehicles, HD4[…], did not
have a driver. He requested
him to decide with someone to take over.
[19.3] Around 20h00 he
received another report from Tumelo that the HD4[…] motor
vehicle had not been brought back as it
should have been and that it
was not where it was supposed to be parked; that he tried to call the
person he gave the motor vehicle
to, but his phone was off. He then
activated the tracking device on his mobile phone to locate the motor
vehicle. He was able to
do so. After a terrific struggle, twists and
turns, the Quantum stopped and two people got off it and fled into
the bushes.
[19.4] A woman came out
of the motor vehicle. She was walking barefooted. She started to cry.
She looked scared. She informed him
that she had been raped. He then
decided to take the woman to the police station so that she could lay
charges against those who
had raped her. They drove to Rietgat Police
Station where the matter was reported.
[20]
The evidence of Obed Malope
[20.1]
This witness was a sergeant stationed at Temba Police Station. He was
the investigating officer of these cases.
He assisted by arresting the two
Appellants. He told the court that when he arrested both Appellants,
firstly the First Appellant
and later the Second Appellant,
on the same day and that before arresting
them he informed them each of the reasons for their arrests and that
both told
him that they remembered the
cases because he, the First Appellant, had consensual sex with the
complainant.
[20.2]
The First Appellant was arrested during the day
while the Second Appellant was arrested later in the evening.
## THEEVIDENCEINRESPECTOFCOUNTS3ANO4;8MARCH2021
THE
EVIDENCE
IN
RESPECT
OF
COUNTS
3
ANO
4;
8
MARCH
2021
[21]
The evidence of P[...] M[...].
[21.1]
This witness was the complainant in count 3, the
count of rape.
At
the time when this incident took place in Soshanguve, she was staying
in Mamelodi.
She
was chasing nice time in Soshanguve. On 24 July 2017 she and some
friends of hers looked for a place where they could carousel.
They
found it in Soshanguve. Having enjoyed themselves, around 03h00 or
04h00 they sought transport to take them back to Mamelodi.
She found a gentleman who volunteered to
take them to Mamelodi for a fee.
That
was the time when the taxis were beginning to operate.
[21.2]
At
the
same time her friends
were
also engaged in
negotiations
with
someone to take them back to Mamelodi.
So, she left this gentleman she wanted to
decide with and went to join her friends. The six of them got into a
Quantum motor vehicle,
three males and three females-. The Quantum
drove off.
She
was sitting on the seat behind the driver's seat with Nthabiseng. She
fell asleep.'
[21.3]
A male passenger who was seated with her in the Quantum suddenly
produced a firearm.
He
ordered them to alight from the motor vehicle.
As they were alighting from the motor
vehicle, he ordered her to remain inside.
He pointed at her and said, "I will
shoot you".
She
wanted to get off the motor vehicle by force but the
man
with the firearm
struck
her
with
the firearm
on
the forehead.
But
still she continued to struggle to get out
of the motor vehicle.
She
grabbed Nthabiseng so as to make it difficult for the gunman to
separate them.
This
time, the gunman hit her with the firearm on the mouth and broke one
of her teeth.
As
a result of the blow, she left Nthabiseng.
The rest went out of the motor vehicle, and
she was left behind.
[21.4]
The gunman then ordered her to go to the second row of the motor
vehicle.
In fact,
he pushed her to that seat and once she was there, ordered her to
bend over.
She
was supposed to stand on her haunches.
She
obliged.
The
gunman then took his trousers off, fished his
penis out of his zip and inserted it into her vagina and raped her.
After finishing, he gave her a piece of
cloth and ordered her to wipe herself with it.
[21.5]
After he finished, he moved over to the driver seat and the driver
came over to the second row.
When
he came over to the second row, he, the driver, asked her if she had
a condom.
She
said that she did not. This second man, the driver, wanted her to
give him a "blow job".
She
injured this person.
He
then said that she should leave him.
The
motor vehicle continued. They drove past a squatter camp
and
as
they were
proceeding, police officers' motor vehicle
appeared.
When
the police appeared the men in the Quantum instructed her to hide so
that the police could not see her.
[21.6] She was then
ordered to get off the motor vehicle. When she got off the motor
vehicle, she asked for her handbag. They
refused to give her the
handbag. Instead, they simply closed the door of the motor vehicle.
Inside the bag were her cell phones
and ID. As the motor vehicle
pulled away, she was unable to see its registration numbers and
letters as the number plate had been
removed. As she was walking, she
met someone who guided her to where the police station was.
[21.7]
She reached the police station
and there
she
explained to
the
police
what
had happened to her.
She made her statement.
A
certain
Mr
Lekalakala
then took her to the clinic at Block BB, Soshanguve, where she was
examined and received medical treatment.
[21.8] The person who
raped her removed her pants forcibly and, in the process, tore them.
He did not use a condom. This is so because
he ejaculated into her
vagina and gave her a cloth thereafter to wipe herself with it. The
First Appellant is the one who produced
a firearm and hit her with
it.
[21.9] After an argument
between the Appellants' legal representative and the public
prosecutor and after the court had intervened
to explain the law
about DNA and J88 medico-legal reports, the DNA medical report was
accepted by the court as Exhibit 'E', while
the J88 medico-legal
report was accepted as Exhibit 'F'.
[21.10]
According to the legal representative of the
Appellants,
the
First Appellant,
who
was driving the Quantum, saw the complainant and a certain Long
through the rear-view mirror having sexual intercourse in the
Quantum.
The
witness denied this.
She
testified that that statement was not true.
Further, according to the legal
representative, the said Long ejaculated and he instructed the First
Appellant to come and sit with
her where the witness was sitting.
On a question by the court, she testified
that the "blow job" did not continue because the person who
wanted it complained
that it was hurting him.
During cross-examination of this witness,
after she had been recalled to the witness box, Exhibit 'G', which is
an Adult Sexual
Assault Evidence Collection Kit, was handed in.
[22]
The evidence of N[...] M[...]
[22.1]
She was the State's sixth witness.
Up to the point
where she and P[...] parted ways, the point
where P[...] was
prevented
from going
ff
the quantum, their evidence is the same and
it is therefore not necessary to repeat it here.
She was adamant with her evidence and never
contradicted herself.
She
never prevaricated.
[22.2]
After the testimony of N[...] M[...], the public
State applied to the court to hand in the chain statement of sexual
intercourse
by a medical doctor and the statement of Obed Malope into
evidence as Exhibit 'K'.
The
application was granted. Thereafter he informed the court that it
would lead no further evidence.
[23]
The evidence of Johannes §iyabonga
Msiza (The First Appellant).
[23.1] He testified that
on 12 December 2017 he was the taxi driver of a Toyota Quantum with
registration number HD 4[…].
On that day, he saw a lady
waiting at a bus stop at Wonderpark. It was raining and there were
not many motor vehicles at the time.
It was around 22h00. He asked
her where she was going, and she told him that she was going to
Erasmus. They told her that their
motor vehicle was not going to
Erasmus, but she said that she would get other taxis where they would
drop her off along the way.
[23.2]
They
were
going to
use the
road to
Vic's
Pub at
Block
TT via Extension. They asked her where she
would get off and she said she would get off at the garage at
Extension 2.
[23.3]
As they were proceeding, Kabelo, the Second
Appellant spoke to her. He asked her who she was, but she did not
want to speak to him.
He
asked her whether she could buy him cold drink or two beers.
He asked her what she would drink. She said
she did not mind if he bought her alcohol.
She also said that she did not mind
if he bought her cold drink.
[23.4]
He asked her if she did not mind if he went and
sat with her at the back.
[23.5] He asked her
where she was from and what she was doing and what type of work she
was doing.
[23.6]
He was with Kabelo, and they had to drop the motor
vehicle at Tumelo, at Block XX, Soshanguve, and they were going to
'chill out'
(township language for 'to cheat time') at a certain
place.
He and
Tumelo were going to buy or pay for her services. She agreed.
[23.7] He testified
furthermore that he said he would give her R100.00 and Kabelo was
going to give her another R100.00 and they
would take her home the
following day.
[23.8]
He asked the complainant
what was in the bag.
There were condoms, lipsticks, and a comb
in the bag.
He
asked
her
if there
was
any problem
if
they
started
sleeping together.
Then
she said no, let us jump to the back seat.
[23.10]
She took off her clothes and he also took off his
clothes and then she took out a condom.
Thereafter, she climbed on top of him, and
they had sexual intercourse with the complainant.
## [24]
TheFirstAppellant'sevidenceonP[...]Mkize
[24]
The
First
Appellant's
evidence
on
P[...]
Mkize
[24.1] The first
Appellant testified that he was involved in the social club at Block
KK, Soshanguve. He was a member of that
social club. He saw P[...]
M[...] fight with her husband.
[24.2] P[...] would
not leave with her husband because she had found someone new.
[24.3] As members of the
social club, they proceeded there to enquire what was happening. They
were told that there was a fight.
[24.4] He was the
driver of the motor vehicle (the Quantum) in which there were three
males and three females when the motor
vehicle left the party or
club.
[24.5] After
Thapelo had alighted, he left the driver's seat and went to sit with
a certain lady, not a witness in this case,
at the back. He then
asked this lady that he had heard that they were from Mamelodi. They
went to sit on the front seat and had
an agreement that they were
going to his place. They were going to sleep together, all five of
them.
[24.6]
As
this
motor
vehicle
was
moving,
and Long was driving
and he was
sitting
on
the front seat, the females in the Quantum, opened the door of the
motor vehicle. He asked Long to stop the motor vehicle.
Long stopped the motor vehicle and the
complainant
opened
the door and fled into the township.
[24.7] The girls
who ran away were two. P[...] was still asleep. P[...] called them
back. Still, they fled into the build-up
area. She then said: "no
let us leave them, let us proceed".
[24.8]
He did not want to have sex with P[...].
He wanted a 'blow job'.
[24.9]
He said P[...] burst out of the motor vehicle without taking her bag.
He disputed that the statement that they
forced her and furthermore that when she asked for her bag, they
refused to give it to
her.
[24.10]
The First Appellant challenged the correctness of the DNA
on the
ground that he never had any sexual intercourse with the complainant.
According to him he only had a 'blow job'
with the complainant and ejaculated into her mouth.
According to her it was Long that the
complainant had sexual intercourse with.
[24.11]
The crucial question now is, if it was Long that had sexual
intercourse with her why did the DNA results point to the First
Appellant
as the person whose DNA was found in the analysis?
[25]
The
evidence of the Second Appellant
[25.1] He testified
that on the day in question they were driving a white motor vehicle
and it was being driven by Johannes
Msiza and himself, Kabelo
Mothlape, who was a passenger. They met a person at a bus stop at
Wonderpark. That person was standing
or waiting near the bus stop. It
was a woman. They stopped the motor vehicle. He opened the door on
the left side and asked her
where she was going.
[25.2]
That person said that she was going to Erasmus and
the driver said to her that they were not going to Erasmus. After she
had said
that she was going to Erasmus, the driver told her that they
will drop her off somewhere else.
She
said that she would not mind it.
[25.3]
That person opened the sliding door, entered
inside the motor vehicle, and sat behind the driver's seat on the
passenger's seat.
They
then drove off.
While
the motor vehicle was
in
motion, he turned
and
asked
her who
she
was.
She
answered
him by saying that she was l[...].
He
proposed
love to her as her name meant 'love' and she answered by smiling,
showing her dimples.
Then
he asked her where she came from?
The
woman said she was from work. He asked the woman about the kind of
work she was doing, because it was late, and she knocked
off late.
The woman said that she was a prostitute.
He said to her, because she said that she
was a prostitute, if he wanted to have one
round
of
sex
with
her,
how much
would one round cost him? The complainant
told him that one round would cost him
R50.00. That woman was the complainant. He stopped asking the
complainant
any
more questions when she said,
"hey
brother, you ask too much, leave me alone”.
Upon that point the complainant
started having a conversation with the
First Appellant.
[25.4]
He testified that when they arrived at Block M, Soshanguve, he
started noticing L[...] doing a 'blow job' on Johannes,
that is the
First Appellant. He saw the complainant climb\ng on top of the First
Appellant.
Then
he saw L[...] lying down on the seat.
While
she was lying down on the seat, the First Appellant came on top of
her. He said thereafter he focused on the road ahead while
the First
Appellant and the complainant were having sexual intercourse until
they finished their sexual intercourse.
He
testified furthermore that after leaving Block XX, he asked the
complainant if there would be any problem if he also paid an
equal
amount so that he could have sex with her. The complainant said there
was no problem. She told him that the First Appellant
had given her
R100.00. The First Appellant confirmed that indeed he had paid
R100.00 and asked her if that
included
a contribution for him.
The
First Appellant said they were together. So, he turned to the
complainant
and
asked her
"madam
would you have a problem?".
She
said
"no,
there
is
no
problem."
she undressed herself and
he also undressed himself and they had
sexual intercourse.
THE
CONVICTION
OF
THE APPELLANTS
[26]
The court a
quo
was satisfied that the State had proved its
case against the First Appellant in respect of counts 1, 2, 3 & 4
and against the
Second Appellant, the court a
quo
ruled in
respect of count 1.
[27]
The Appellants were disgruntled by their convictions by the court
a
quo.
So, on 8 July 2022, they lodged their notice to
appeal against the conviction by the court a
quo
on 10
December 2022 on the following grounds:
[27.1]
In respect of count 1 it is stated
in paragraph 2.4 of their notice of appeal
that:
"The court erred
in failing to properly evaluate the Appellants' oral evidence by
sympathising with the complainants due to
the fact that she was
crying whilst giving evidence and during cross-examination."
This ground is not clear,
this court will, however, accept or assume that the Appellants had
planned to frame their ground of appeal
as follows:
"The court erred
in failing to properly evaluate the evidence of the complainants.
[27.2] The court a
quo
erred in over-emphasising the complainants' evidence due to the
fact that she was crying while giving evidence and during
cross-examination.
In terms of the notice of appeal this is the one
and only ground of appeal raised by the Second Appellant against
their conviction
in count 1.
[28]
The grounds of appeal against the conviction of the First Appellant
in ground 3 was that:
"The court erred in convicting the
Appellant for gang rape even though no such evidence was led. The DNA
results was to
the effect that the semen of Appellant
1
is the only the semen found by the medical
practitioner."
[29]
Additional grounds of appeal were also set
out in the heads of argument,
a
practice that should be discouraged.
Heads
of argument are not notices of appeal.
[30]
This court, being an appeal tribunal
sitting as it was, was guided by the
principle according to which a court of
appeal should consider an appeal as set out in
R
v Dhlumayo
1948 (2) SA 677
(A), 686.
When an appeal is lodged against a
trial court's findings, the trial court, like the present one,
considers the fact that the trial
court was in a more favourable
position than itself to form a judgment because the trial court was
able to observe the witnesses
during their testimony and was absorbed
in the atmosphere of the trial from the beginning to the end.
At the outset the
Appeal Tribunal must therefore assume that
the trial
court's
findings are
correct.
Unless a trial court misdirected itself on the points of law or fact,
the Appeal Tribunal will accept those findings.
See in this regard
S
v Tshoko en Andere
1998 (1) SA 139
(A) at
142.
[31]
The court a
quo
was
aware that the duty to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt lay on
the State.
It was
aware, furthermore, that no duty lay on the Appellants to prove their
case or their innocence.
It
accepted the
principles
that it was enough if their versions were reasonably
possibly
true.
[32]
It is quite clear that the court a
quo,
and quite
correctly so, in our view, accepted the evidence of the complainants
or of the State witnesses. The court a
quo
even made
favourable remarks about the evidence of the complainants. In
accepting the complainants' evidence, the court a
quo
stated
that the single evidence of a competent witness must be approached
with caution. This is no tonger part of our law. The court
a
quo
pointed out that to be acceptable for the purposes of conviction,
such a witness must be credible and reliable. Quite correctly so,
the
court a
quo
referred to the two authorities on the fact that
the cautionary rule is no longer part of our law. These are
S v
Jackson
1998 (1) SACR 470
(SCA)
where the court stated that:
"The
cautionary
rule in sexual
assault
cases
was
based
on
an
irrational
and
outdated perception. It unjustly stereotyped complainants in
sexual
cases."
[33]
The court
a quo
was
satisfied with the evidence of the complainants.
It made favourable remarks about the
complainants as witnesses.
About
the complainant in counts 1 and 2, the court a
quo
observed that at the time these
offences were committed, she was only 20 years old but at the time
she testified in the matter,
she was 23 years old.
It observed further that
when
she testified, she gave an impression of a matured and sensible lady
who testified in a straightforward and forthright manner.
She answered all the questions put to her
by the public protector, the defence attorney, and the court.
It observed furthermore that she was cross
examined extensively and vigorously by the Appellants' legal
representative. She
withstood such questioning and never prevaricated
or contradicted herself in any manner. The court was satisfied with
her evidence.
It
had no valid grounds to reject it. It was satisfied that the State
had successfully proved that the complainant had not consented
to
sexual intercourse with the Appellants.
[34]
With regard to the complainant in counts 3 and 4, the court remarked
that the complainant impressed
it as an honest witness. It pointed
out that during her testimony, she admitted that she was heavily
under the influence of alcohol.
She conceded that she fell asleep in
the motor vehicle up to the stage where a male passenger was dropped
off. She again fell asleep
and woke up when her friends were being
forced out of the motor vehicle. The court
a quo
saw that she
was honest by saying that she was unable to identify the man who hit
her. The court a quo made favourable remarks about
her evidence.
There was no valid basis on which her evidence could be rejected. It
was credible in almost all respects.
[35]
The court
a quo
made adverse remarks about the evidence of the
Appellants. The evidence of the Appellants was a complete
fabrication. It also came
to the fore after all the State witnesses
had testified. For inexplicable reasons it was never put to the State
witnesses while
they were testifying. The court
a quo,
quite
correctly, rejected it. Mr Botha, who appeared for the appellants in
the appeal, acknowledged, when the court asked
fot
his view,
that the Appellants' evidence in the court
a quo
was riddled
with problems. He could not support it. In our view, the Appellants
were correctly convicted. We are satisfied that
the appeal against
conviction cannot succeed, must therefore fail.
SENTENCE
[36]
In their appeal against sentence imposed on
them by the court
a quo,
the
Appellants mentioned several grounds.
There
are eight grounds on which the Appellants challenge their sentences.
At the hearing of the appeal, no reference
was made to any of such grounds by their legal representative,
Mr
Botha, a seasoned legal practitioner.
This was, in our view, an indication of the
correctness of the sentences imposed on the Appellants by the court a
quo.
The
challenge to the sentences imposed on the Appellants faded away
during the hearing of the appeal.
[37]
Mr Botha, however, raised two other
grounds. That was that the court a
quo
did not do enough to obtain the
relevant personal information of the Appellants.
According to him, that prejudiced the
Appellants because it implied that the Appellants did not receive a
fair trial. It will be
recalled that at the trial, the Appellants
were fully represented by an attorney who placed their personal
circumstances before
the court for purposes of their sentence.
Neither of them testified in respect of
sentencing. Their personal circumstances were placed on record from
the bar, which is not
unusual.
What
is of supreme importance though, is that the court
a
quo
had before it pre-sentencing
reports that augmented whatever shortcomings there would have been in
the information of the two Appellants
placed before the court a quo
by the legal representative.
[38] The
Appellants' representative informed the court that while he would
place the Appellants' personal circumstances on
the record, he also
relied on the social worker's reports. So, in our view, the court a
quo
had before it all the information it required to determine
whether there existed any substantial and compelling circumstances to
force it not to impose a lesser sentence.
[39]
While we accept that there is no definition
of substantial and compelling circumstances, we acknowledge that one
circumstance or
two circumstances may amount to substantial and
compelling circumstance or circumstances.
The court
a
quo
was correct in finding that there
were no substantial and compelling circumstances.
Under such circumstances, the Court a quo
was not at large to deviate from imposing the ordained sentence for
flimsy reasons. It
was under
an
obligation to impose the prescribed sentence.
In
S
v Shikunga and Another
1997 (2) SACR 470
(NmSC)
at page 486,
the
court had the following to say:
"It
is trite law that the issue of sentencing is one which vests
a
discretion in the trial court.
An appeal court will only interfere
with the exercise of this discretion where it is felt that the
sentence imposed is not a reasonable
one,
or
where the discretion has not been
judicially exercised. The circumstances in which a court
of
appeal will interfere with the sentence
imposed by the trial court are where the trial court has misdirected
itself on the facts or the law (S v
Rabie
1975
(4) SA 855(A)
,
or
where
the
sentence
that
it imposed
is
one which is manifestly inappropriate and, induces a sense of shock
(S v
Snyders
1982 (2) SA 694(A))
; or is such that a patent disparity exists
between the sentence that was imposed and the sentence that the court
appeal would have
imposed; or where there is an over-emphasis of the
gravity of the particular crime and under-emphasis of the accused's
personal
circumstances."
In
this regard, See
S
v
Maseko
1982 (1) SA 1999
(A) at page 102
and
S
v
Corlet
1990 (1)
SACR 469 (A).
[40]
The personal circumstances of the
Appellants were fully placed on record by the attorney before the
court
a quo
so
that the court
a quo
could
assess the appropriate sentence it would impose on the Appellants.
The court a
quo
had
to decide whether such personal circumstances or any other factors
constituted substantial and compelling circumstances that
would have
enabled it to deviate from imposing the prescribed sentence. The
court a
quo
could
only deviate from imposing the ordained sentences if it was satisfied
that substantial and compelling circumstances existed.
The court a
quo
thoroughly
considered the Appellants' circumstances but could find no such
substantial and compelling circumstances. We agree with
the
Respondent's counsel that the court
a
quo
correctly found no substantial and
compelling circumstances when it assessed the information placed
before it.
[41]
Any Appellant who appeals against sentence
must satisfy the court that the appeal court is justified to
interfere with the sentence
imposed by the court
a
quo.
This he can do by showing the appeal
court that the Judge or Magistrate has committed a misdirection;
or that the Judge or Magistrate misdirected
himself on the law or the facts or has exercised a discretion
capriciously or upon a
wrong principle or so unreasonable as to
induce a sense of shock.
The
discretion is exercised improperly if it is predicated on a
reasonable misdirection.
We
place reliance on the case of
S
v Shikunga
above
in this regard.
[42]
On the facts before us, we have looked in vain for any misdirection.
The appeal against sentence
too cannot succeed.
[43] In the
result, the following order is hereby made:
The
appeal,
against
both conviction and sentence, is hereby dismissed.
PM MABUSE
JUDGE
OF
THE
HIGH
COURT
NL
TSHOMBE
ACTING
JUDGE
OF
THE
HIGH
COURT
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Appellants:
Mr
MG Botha
Instructed
by:
Pretoria
Justice Centre, legal Aid Board
Counsel
for the Claimants/Respondents:
Adv
KM Mashile
Instructed
by:
Director
of Public Prosecution, Pretoria
Date
heard:
16
May 2023
Date
of Judgment:
16
August 2023
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