Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 738South Africa
J.J.K v S (A266/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 738 (1 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## J.J.K v S (A266/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 738 (1 September 2023)
J.J.K v S (A266/22) [2023] ZAGPPHC 738 (1 September 2023)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: A266/22
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
J
J K
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
## JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
MKHABELA
AJ:
Introduction
[1] This case
involves the ultimate betrayal of a trust relationship, allegedly
committed by a father against his 9 year old
son who had accused him
of rape that allegedly happened when his son visited him at his home
in Heidelberg. The case is before
us pursuant to the leave to
appeal granted by the regional court in respect of the conviction of
the appellant.
The Facts
[2]
The
appellant was convicted of one count of rape
[1]
in the regional court, Greylingstad, Heidelberg. He was sentenced to
twenty years’ imprisonment. The regional court refused
him
leave to appeal against sentence but granted him leave to appeal
against his conviction.
[3]
The events
giving rise to the conviction can be stated briefly. The appellant
lives alone in his house on which he sells alcohol.
On or
about16 December 2016, his son who is the complainant visited
him at his house and both of them slept in the same room
and at the
same
[2]
bed. The complainant
testified that the appellant undressed him, closed his mouth slapped
him on his face and then penetrated him
in his anus with his penis
without using a condom. The complainant then reported the rape
incident to the appellant’s friend
who then took him to his
maternal’s grandfather.
[4] On his arrival
at his grandfather’s place he then told his aunt whom he refers
to as his sister about the rape incident.
He was subsequently taken
to the clinic by his grandfather after having told him about the rape
incident where he was medically
examined and the Police came to see
him. He was also interviewed by a social worker who drafted a report
which was admitted into
evidence by agreement.
[5] The second
state witness that testified was, T L M (M), the complainant’s
aunt who told the court that the complainant
told him that his father
raped him by penetrating him from behind and inserted his penis
inside his anus. The grandfather was not
at home when the complainant
arrived at home and was later informed about the rape incident and
subsequently took the complainant
to the clinic. M refuted the
appellant’s assertion that the complainant’s family do
not like the appellant since he
was allowed to visit and the family
also allows complainant to visit him.
[6] The third and
last state witness was, Ms Rakgwati, a forensic nurse who was working
with the nurse that examined the complainant
but unfortunately had
since passed away. She confirmed the contents of the medical report
which was admitted into evidence by agreement.
In particular,
Rakgwati pointed out that the redness in the orifice must have been
caused by “something that was inserted
or put in at the hole of
the anus”.
[7] Rakgwati
conceded in cross-examination that apart from the redness on the
orifice under section 9 which was the section
dealing with anal
examination there were no other injuries that were marked.
Furthermore Rakgwati accepted that the author of the
medical report
did not write any conclusion about the medical examination of the
complainant. The state then closed its case.
[8] Two witnesses
testified for the defence, the first was the appellant and his
testimony is summarised as follows.
The complainant was his
biological child and he confirmed that the complainant had visited
him on the relevant day on or about
16 December 2016. He went to
bed after 02:00 am in the morning after having closed his liquor
business and confirmed the complainant’s
version that he
undressed him because his witness, being his neighbour, by the name
of T had told him that the complainant had
pimples on his shoulders.
[9] The complainant
testified further that the first time he noticed that the complainant
had pimples was in court and that
the complainant had slept on the
bed and he slept on the couch. He also told the court that the
complainant does not listen to
him and he had observed this when the
complainant was testifying in court. He also told the court that he
suspected that it was
the grandfather of the complainant that had
influenced the complainant to lay a false charge against him.
[10] The next and last
witness for the defence was Ms T M N (N) and her evidence was very
brief. She testified that the complainant
had been visiting the
appellant often and that anyone who would inform the court that the
complainant visited the appellant once
would be telling a lie.
[11] In closing argument
the prosecutor contended that it had proven its case beyond all
reasonable doubt in that the complainant
testified in detail about
how he was penetrated and his evidence was corroborated by the
clinical findings as per the J88 report
which showed redness on the
orifice approximately 10 days after the incident. The prosecution
contended further that the appellant’s
version that he was
falsely implicated was farfetched and that his version of the number
of visits on which the complainant had
visited him was disputed by
his main and only witness in the form of Ms N.
[12] On the contrary, Mr
Venter on behalf of the appellant contended that on the available
evidence there should be doubt in the
mind of the court as to whether
the State had proven its case against the accused beyond any
reasonable doubt and that the accused
should be given the benefit of
the doubt. He submitted that the complainant was lying about the rape
since from the assessment
report the complainant did not tell the
social worker that he was raped.
[13] He submitted further
that there was no medical evidence that the complainant was
penetrated since the redness in the sketch
markings on the J88 shows
redness on an area below the anus. He emphasised that the medical
officer who examined the complainant
could not come to a conclusion
and that Ms Rakgwati could not draw any conclusion since she is not
the person who examined the
complainant.
[14] He submitted that
the contradictions about the number of times the complainant had
visited the appellant are not material.
[15] The regional court
found the complainant’s evidence to be credible in that the
complainant gave a detailed account of
the sexual encounter and made
an overall good witness and that his evidence was given in a
straightforward manner and he was never
hesitant in giving his
answers in cross-examination.
[16] In addition, the
regional court found that there was an explanation for the delay in
reporting the matter since the complainant
first told his father’s
friend about the rape who seem not to have done anything except to
take the complainant to his grandfather
some two days after the
incident.
[17] The Magistrate
observed that there was no internal contradiction in the
complainant’s evidence particularly in respect
of the crucial
aspects dealing with the sexual encounter. There were also no
material contradictions present in the evidence of
the complainant
and that of M.
[18] As to the lack of a
conclusion in the medical report concerning the rape, the court took
into account that the complainant
was penetrated in the anus. The
court also took into account that it was not in dispute that
the examination took place a
week after the incident.
[19]
In the main
the court was satisfied with the demeanour of the state witnesses and
it found them to be reliable and credible witnesses
and took into
account that the evidence of a single and child witness should be
approached with caution and referred to relevant
authorities.
[3]
[20] The court then
evaluated the appellant’s evidence and noted that acceptance of
the state’s case does not mean it
is a sufficient reason to
automatically reject the defence’s version and that the
appellant’s version must be fully
evaluated and if it is found
to be reasonably possibly true, the appellant is entitled to be
acquitted.
[21]
The court
then went on to note the following contradictions
[4]
in the defence’s case. firstly, that the appellant stated that
the complainant visited him only once whilst the neighbour,
Ms N,
testified to the contrary and asserted that the complainant had been
visiting the appellant quite often. Secondly, the appellant’s
assertion that he was being falsely accused by referring to an
incident that happened almost nine years ago was not sustainable.
It
is contradicted by the testimony of the aunt and his neighbour since
the complainant was allowed to visit the appellant.
[22] The Magistrate found
it odd that the grandfather would allow the complainant to visit the
appellant and suddenly after all
those years instigate a child to
falsely implicate the appellant about rape the charge.
[23]
Moreover,
the court also took into account the contents of Exhibit C
[5]
which recorded that the complainant was always hyperactive. However,
his aunt indicated that the mood of the complainant was that
of a
person who was looking tired when he arrived home.
[24]
Ultimately,
the regional court relied on Section 208 of the Criminal Procedure
Act
[6]
which provides that an
accused person may be convicted on the evidence of any competent
single witness and that there was no basis
to find that the
complainant was a liar and that the appellant’s version is not
reasonably possibly true and accordingly
rejected it as false beyond
any reasonable doubt. It then convicted the appellant on one count of
rape.
Issues
[25] The issue that falls
crisply for determination is whether the trial court committed a
misdirection or an irregularity which
would warrant a court of appeal
to interfere with the trial court’s factual findings.
The Law
[26]
It is trite
that a court of appeal should not on the basis of mere assumptions
and in the absence of clear evidence find that a
trial court has
committed an irregularity
[7]
.
[27] The case law is
replete with authorities to the effect that in criminal proceedings
the state bears the onus to prove the guilt
of the accused beyond a
reasonable doubt.
[28]
The
accused’s version cannot be rejected solely on the basis that
it is improbable, but only once the trial court has found
credible
evidence that the explanation is false beyond reasonable doubt.
[8]
The corollary is that, if the accused’s version is reasonably
possibly true, the accused is entitled to an acquittal.
[9]
[29]
The case
law is unambiguous that the “
correct
approach is to weigh up all the elements which point towards the
guilty of the accused against all those which are indicative
of his
innocence taking proper account of inherent strengths and weaknesses,
probabilities and improbabilities on both sides and
having done so,
to decide whether the balance weighs so heavily in favour of the
state as to exclude any reasonable doubt about
the accused’s
guilt.”
[10]
[30]
It is also
well established in our law that the distressed condition of the
complainant in a rape incident is clearly capable
of amounting
to corroboration
[11]
where
this was required and such evidence was also admissible to show that
sexual contact had taken place where this was denied.
Analysis
[31] Before this court
the appellant’s attorney contended that the trial court
misdirected itself in two respects. Firstly,
that the trial court
misdirected itself in relying on the complainant’s single
evidence for which there is little corroboration.
Secondly, that the
trial court misdirected itself in finding that the appellant’s
version could not be reasonably possibly
true.
[32]
In respect
of the first ground, the trial court was alive to the fact that the
complainant was both a single and a child witness
and approached the
evidence with the necessary caution as required.
[12]
In this respect the trial court found that the complainant’s
behaviour was consistent with what one would expect of a person
who
has been sexually penetrated. In particular the complainant reported
the incident the following day to the appellant’s
friend who
took him to his grandfather (albeit two days later).
[33]
The
evidence by the complainant that he had reported the rape incident
the following day to the appellant’s friend was not
challenged
in cross examination. The consequence of the failure to challenge
that evidence is that it could not have been expected
[13]
of the State to call the appellant’s friend to corroborate the
complainant’s evidence.
[34] Furthermore, the
appellant’s contention that there was little corroboration
overlooks the following undisputed evidence.
Firstly, the complainant
averred that he visited the appellant in December 2016 and slept with
him in his bed. That evidence was
corroborated by the appellant’s
assertion in his plea explanation that he slept with the complainant
in the “
same bed as there is no other bed”
.
[35] Secondly, the
complainant asserted that the appellant undressed him and the
appellant confirmed that evidence in
his examination in chief even
though the rational for undressing the complainant was not
satisfactory explained. Thirdly, the complainant
testified that he
had never visited the appellant after the rape incident and the
appellant confirmed that crucial evidence. The
fact that the
complainant had stopped visiting the appellant, who is his biological
father whom he testified that he loved is consistent
with his
assertion that the appellant rape him. The complainant’s
decision not to visit his father after the rape incident
is
consistent with his assertion that the appellant raped him and
accords with common sense as to why he would not be interested
in
vising the appellant after the rape incident.
[36]
Lastly, the
complainant testified that he was alone
[14]
with the appellant in his room when the appellant perpetrated the
rape against him and the appellant confirmed that assertion that
he
was alone with the complainant. In addition the substitute, forensic
nurse, Ms Rakgwati testified that the redness in the orifice
of the
anus meant that something was inserted or put in and that the
complainant was not happy on his arrival at home. All these
factors
when considered cumulatively do not support the appellant’s
contention that there was any misdirection on the part
of the
regional court.
[37] Moreover, the
social worker’s report which was admitted into evidence by
agreement stated as follows “during
the three assessment
sessions that the social worker had documented in the report the
child was consistent about what and
where the alleged incident took
place”.
[38]
The
complainant was also consistent about who the alleged perpetrator
is
[15]
. Since the report was
part of the evidence that was before the trial court, it is
difficult, if not impossible to flout the regional
court’s
reasoned conclusion that the state was able to prove its case beyond
any reasonable doubt and that in the circumstances
the appellant’s
version could not be regarded as reasonably possibly true.
[39] The evidence that
there was redness in the orifice is compatible with the complainant’s
evidence that the appellant had
raped him. The complainant would not
have known that there would be redness in the orifice when he
subjected himself for medical
examination.
[40] Moreover, it was not
disputed in cross-examination that the complainant left the following
day after the rape incident –
just less than a day after having
visited the appellant which was still during the school holidays.
[41] The suspicion or
speculation proffered by the appellant that he was suspicious that
the complainant was instigated to falsely
implicate him has no merit
since it is based on something that happened when the complainant was
only 9 years old.
[42] In the
circumstances, the alleged enmity between the appellant and the
complainant’s family from the complainant’s
mother is not
borne by the objective evidence. The aunt testified that the
appellant is allowed to visit her family and they have
allowed the
complainant to visit him. This evidence was also not challenged in
cross-examination.
[43] I now turn to the
second reason of the alleged misdirection, namely that the trial
court misdirected itself in finding that
the appellant’s
version could not be reasonably true. In respect of this attack, it
is inconceivable that any court could
have found that the appellant’s
version could be reasonably possibly true on the evidence given by
the appellant and his
witness. Firstly, he lied or contradicted
himself about the number of times the complainant visited him and
called a witness who
contradicted him sharply on this aspect.
Secondly, he was not able to explain his assertion that the
complainant was not listening
to him notwithstanding the Magistrate’s
intervention to give him a second chance to answer that question.
Thirdly, he was
not able to explain as to why he undressed the
complainant. His explanation that he was informed by his neighbour
about the complainant’s
so-called pimples was not corroborated
or confirmed by his neighbour, Ms N, who testified on his behalf.
[44] Fourthly and lastly,
the appellant’s assertion that he undressed the complainant
after being alerted about his “
pimples”
on the
appellant’s shoulders or down on the complainant’s body
is not congruent with the objective evidence. On the
appellant’s
own evidence, he arrived in his bedroom at or after 02h00 in the
morning after having closed his liquor business.
It begs the question
as to why a caregiver like a biological father in the form of the
appellant would undress a nine year old
child in the wee hours of the
morning. His neighbour was probably asleep by that time the appellant
went to bed and could not have
reasonably informed the appellant
about any pimples on the complainant’s body.
[45] However, even if
this was so, it would not have made any logical sense to undress the
complainant at 02h00 in the morning without
a reason. This must be so
since it was not the appellant’s evidence that he undressed the
complainant to administer any medication
on him in order to cure the
pimples.
[45] The grandfather had
no qualms in allowing the complainant to visit the appellant and
could not have persuaded the complainant
to lay a false charge of
rape since he was not at home when the complainant arrived at home
and found his aunt.
[46]
There
appears, from the evidence to be no rational basis whatsoever why the
complainant would have lied to the appellant’s
friend, to her
aunt, to his grandfather, to the clinic, to the school, to the police
and to the trial court. The regional court
verified the suitability
of the complainant to give evidence and whether he was able to
distinguish between right and wrong
prior to the complainant giving
evidence
[16]
.
[47]
Similarly,
the social worker was of the same opinion that the complainant was
able to distinguish between right and wrong after
having interviewed
the grandfather and the complainant’s teacher
[17]
.
[48]
In the
absence of an irregularity or misdirection, a court of appeal is
bound by the credibility findings of the trial court, unless
it is
convinced that such findings are clearly incorrect
[18]
.
[49]
The trial
court’s findings on both fact and credibility that the
complainant was a good witness is supported by the objective
evidence. For an example the complainant was willing to give
concessions
[19]
where it was
warranted and there were no contradictions in his testimony.
[50] For all the above
reasons, I am constrained by the objective evidence to come to one
conclusion and one conclusion only, that
there was no misdirection or
irregularity on the part of the regional court. Since the appeal is
in respect of conviction only,
the conviction is upheld.
Order
[51] In the result, I
make the following order:
1. The submissions made
on the appellant’s behalf must fail and the appeal is therefore
dismissed.
R B MKHABELA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION
PRETORIA
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
I concur.
M P MOTHA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION
PRETORIA
Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned
Delivered: This judgment
was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose name is reflected
and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the Parties /
their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of the judgment
is deemed to be
1 September 2023
.
FOR
THE APPELLANT:
H
L Alberts
INSTRUCTED BY:
Legal Aid, Pretoria
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT:
Adv
L F Sivhidzho
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria
DATE
OF THE HEARING: 17 August 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 1 September 2023
[1]
The conviction was in terms of Section 3 of the Criminal law Sexual
Offences and Related Matters Amendment Act 32 of 2004 as
amended
read with the provisions of section 51(1) and part 1 of Schedule 2
of the Criminal Amendment Act 105 of 1997.
[2]
The
appellant gave two contradictory evidence in this regard, in his
plea explanation, he informed the court that he slept in
the room
and in the same bed as there was no other bed. However, in his
examination in chief he testified that he slept on the
couch and the
complainant slept on the bed.
[3]
S v
Sauls and Others
1981
(3) SA 172
(A) 180, was referred to by the Learned Magistrate who
found that the complainant was a child witness and a single witness
in
respect of the sexual penetration incident. The Magistrate
further appreciated that corroboration of a single witness evidence
is not necessary but some other safeguards which eliminates the risk
of conviction is required in such a way that before a Court
could
place reliance on the evidence of a single witness, such evidence
must be clear and satisfactory in every respects.
[4]
As well as inconsistencies.
[5]
The assessment report compiled by the forensic social worker.
[6]
Act 51of 1977.
[7]
State
v Jackson
1998 (1) SACR 470
(SCA) at para 9.
[8]
S v V
(1)
SACR 453 (SCA) 455b.
[9]
S v
Van der Meyden
1999
(1) SACR 447
(W)
(1999 (2) SA 79)
at 448f-h.
[10]
S v
Chabalala
2003 (1) SACR 134
(SCA) at para 15.
[11]
S
v Hammond
2004
(2) SACR 303
(SCA) at 313-314.
[12]
The Magistrate even relied on relevant authorities, in the case of
S
v Sauls & Others
1981 (3) SA 172
(A) at p 180.
[13]
S
v Boesak
CCT
25
00 (2000) ZACC 25
,paragraphs 25-26 and 27
[2000] ZACC 25
; ,
2001 (1) BCLR 36
(1)
912 (1 December 2000).
[14]
As already mentioned it must be appreciated and be borne in mind
that the defence did not dispute the complainant’s testimony
that he reported the rape to the applicant’s friend. Hence it
would have been superfluous for the State to have called
the
appellant’s father since that part of the evidence was
uncontested.
S
v Boesak supra.
[15]
Paragraph
5.4.1 dealing with consistency of the complainant when he was
interviewed. See also paragraph 3.4 of the Social report
which
stated as follows “according to Thapelo (a reference to the
complainant) the alleged perpetrator was his biological
father.
[16]
Page 102 - 104 of the record.
[17]
Paragraph
5 of the Social worker’s report.
[18]
S v
Jackson
(
supra
)
at p 10.
[19]
The
complainant conceded that he told his father that his cousins were
ill-treating him at his grandfather’s place.
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