Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1165South Africa
Malatjie v S (A326/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1165 (13 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 September 2023
Headnotes
“To attempt to justify any period of penal incarceration, let alone imprisonment for life as in the present case, without inquiring into the proportionality between the offence and the period of imprisonment, is to ignore, if not to deny, that which lies at the
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Malatjie v S (A326/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1165 (13 September 2023)
Malatjie v S (A326/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1165 (13 September 2023)
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sino date 13 September 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: A326/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
Date:
13/09/2023
In
the matter between:
NKOSINATHI
LAWRENCE MALATJIE
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MINNAAR
AJ,
[1]
The appellant
was charged with rape
in contravention of section 3 read with sections 1, 55, 56(1), 57,
58, 59, 60 and 61 of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act (Sexual Offences
and Related Matters) 32 of 2007, further read with
section 256
,
257
and
261
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, the provisions of
sections 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
, as
amended, as well as
section 92(2)
and
94
of the
Criminal Procedure
Act 105 of 1977
in that, on or about 25 February 2020 and at or near
KwaThema, Gauteng, the appellant raped the complainant, being seven
years
old at the time of the offence.
[2]
Throughout the trial the appellant was
legally represented. He pleaded not guilty to the charge and elected
not to disclose his
defence. On 14 September 2022 the appellant was
convicted of the rape by the Regional Court, Springs.
[3]
On 1 November 2022 the appellant was
sentenced to life imprisonment. Due to the nature of the sentence,
and as provided for in
section 309(1)(a)
of the
Criminal Procedure
Act, 105 of 1977
, the appellant had an automatic right to appeal.
[4]
The appeal is against both the conviction
and the sentence.
Conviction:
[5]
In the appellant’s heads of argument
it was submitted that there were material contradictions in the
complainant’s testimony.
At the hearing of the appeal, the
appellant’s representative submitted that the alleged material
contradictions are limited
to whether the penetration was in the
front or back (referring to whether the penetration was in the anus
or in the vagina) and
to the date of the incident.
[6]
It is common cause that the complainant is
the appellant’s adopted sister. Her evidence was that she came
back from school,
changed her clothes and went to play outside. The
appellant then called her and as she refused to adhere, the appellant
picked
her up and put her on top of the bed in the bedroom she shared
with her mother. After he undressed the complainant’s legging
and panty, the appellant did silly things to her. The ‘silly
things’ the appellant did, was that he took out his thing,
referring to the appellant’s totolozi, and inserted it in her
anus. The appellant told the complainant that she should not
tell her
mother or else the accused will kill both of them. The appellant then
left the house. The complainant remained in the
house and later the
same evening, when her mother came back home, she told her mother
what had happened.
[7]
The complainant’s mother testified
that on 25 February 2020, when she arrived home, she found the
complainant at the house
and the complainant did not look okay. Upon
enquiring, the complainant said that nothing was wrong but later in
the evening the
complainant complaint that she was in pain ‘here
under’. Upon further enquiry, the complainant told her mother
what
happened but said that the appellant penetrated her in front.
According to the mother, she took the complianant to the hospital
on
the same day of the incident for an examination.
[8]
Doctor Maletando then testified that she
examined the complainant on 28 February 2020. Her findings were that
there were no injuries
on the gynaecological examantion but she did
determine that there was penetration to the complainant’s anus.
In this instance
she noted, and recorded, scarring to the anus at the
6 o’clock and 12 o’clock position.
[9]
The investigating officer, Warrant Officer
Matlabo, testified that she received the complaint on 28 February
2020 and she interviewed
the complainant and the complainant’s
mother on the same date. She further testified that she obtained the
statement from
the complainant on the next day. The investigating
officer was adamant that the complaint was filed on 28 February 2020
and that
this was the same day the complainant told her mother of the
rape.
[10]
The appellant testified in his own defence.
He denied the rape. According to him, his mother had a vendetta
against him as he had
previously threatened her that he would report
her to the social worker as he was informed, by a neighbour, that his
mother would
take the complainant with her to the taverns when she
would go there to drink.
[11]
The appellant further testified that he had
a good relationship with the complainant. It was further his evidence
that three months
after he gave his mother the warning of reporting
her to the social workers, the police came and arrested him for the
rape.
[12]
It was further his testimony that around
December his mother accused his grandfather of raping the
complainant. This aspect was
pertinantely denied by both the
complainant and her mother during cross-examimation.
[13]
If regard is had to the contradiction as to
whether the penetration was in the anus or the vagina, the doctor
found no evidence
of penetration to the vagina during her
gynacological examination. The doctor’s finding was that there
was anal penetration.
This finding of anal penetration corroborated
the complainant’s testimony as to the ‘silly things’
the appellant
did to her.
[14]
On the aspect as to whether the incident
occured on 25 February 2020 or 28 February 2020, this court finds
that nothing turns on
this alleged contradiction.
Section 92(2)
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
caters for situations like
these. In terms of the charge sheet, the appellant was charged with
the offence, which the State alleged
took place on or about 25
February 2020. Had the appellant raised a defence of alibi as to the
date of the rape, he then could
have relied on the provisions of
section 93
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, and this
contradiction as to the exact date of the rape, might then have
opened the door to the appellant to raise an alibi as
to the exact
date of the incident. No such defence was raised by the appellant.
[15]
The learned magistrate correctly accepted
the version of the complainant and her version was corroborated by
both her mother and
Doctor Maletando. The appellant’s version
of some sort of conspiracy by the mother and the complainant was
correctly rejected.
[16]
In
R v
Dhlumayo
1948 (2) SA 677
(A) it was
made clear that a court of appeal will be reluctant to interfere with
the trial court’s evaluation of oral evidence
unless there is a
misdirection by the trial court. A trial court is better suited to
make credibility findings.
[17]
In In
S v
Chabalala
2003 (1) SACR 134
(SCA) at
paragraph 15 Heher JA found:
“
[15]
The trial court's approach to the case was, however, holistic and in
this it was undoubtedly right: S v Van Aswegen
2001
(2) SACR 97 (SCA)
.
The correct approach is to weigh up all the elements which point
towards the guilt of the accused against al
l
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.
”
[18]
When I apply these principles, I find that
the state proved the charge beyond a reasonable doubt. In my view the
magistrate correctly
convicted the appellant and the appeal against
the conviction must fail.
Sentence:
[19]
It was argued on behalf of the the
appellant that the trial court erred by not finding substantial and
compelling circumstances
and as such erred by imposing the prescribed
minimum sentence of life imprisonment.
[20]
A court has to
apply the so-called Zinn-trits when considering an appropiate
sentence as set out in
S
v Zinn
1969
(2) SA 537 (A) where Rumpff JA found at p 540:
“
It
then becomes the task of this Court to impose the sentence which it
thinks suitable in the circumstances.
What
has to be considered is the triad consisting of the crime, the
offender and the interests of society.
”
(My emphasis)
[21]
In
S
v Dodo
[2001] ZACC 16
;
2001 (1) SACR 594
(CC) par 38 Ackermann J held:
“
To
attempt to justify any period of penal incarceration, let alone
imprisonment for life as in the present case, without inquiring
into
the proportionality between the offence and the period of
imprisonment, is to ignore, if not to deny, that which lies at the
very heart of human dignity. Human beings are not commodities to
which a price can be attached; they are creatures with inherent
and
infinite worth; they ought to be treated as ends in themselves,
never merely as means to an end.”
[22]
In
S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
SCA at paragraph 22 Marais JA set out:
“
The
greater the sense of unease a court feels about the imposition of a
prescribed sentence, the greater its anxiety will be that
it may be
perpetrating an injustice. Once a court reaches the point where
unease has hardened into a conviction that an injustice
will be done,
that can only be because it is satisfied that the circumstances of
the particular case render the prescribed sentence
unjust or, as some
might prefer to put it, disproportionate to the crime, the criminal
and the legitimate needs of society.
If that is the result of a consideration of the circumstances
the court is entitled to characterise them as substantial and
compelling and such as to justify the imposition of a lesser
sentence.”
(My emphasis)
[23]
If I apply the
principles as set out in the above
dicta
,
then I have to consider whether in this instance compelling and
substantial circumstances exist to warrant the imposition of a
lesser
sentence.
[24]
I have to
balance the interest of society with the personal circumstances of
the appellant, the seriousness of the crime and the
impact on the
victim to conclude that a balanced and appropriate sentence was
imposed.
[25]
The appellant
is not a first time offender. He was previously convicted or armed
robbery and was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment
on 31 January
2003. He was released on parole on 30 June 2009. Subsequent to his
release on parole, he broke his parole conditions.
He further was
convicted on 13 October 2015 for housebreaking with the intend to
steal and theft and was sentenced to five years
in prison. This
sentence was suspended for a period of five years on conditions that
he not be found guilty on a similar charge.
[26]
At the time of
the offence the appellant was 36 years of age and was the father of
two children. He passed Grade 9 at Eureka High
School and finished
Grade 12 whilst incarcerated on the robbery conviction. He further
obtained a certificate in boiler making
during this incarceration.
[27]
The evidence
was that the appellant had a girlfriend at the time of the rape.
Despite this, he went to his mother’s house
and raped the
complianant on the bed she shared with her mother.
[28]
From the
evidence it is evident that the complainant had a difficult
upbringing and was the adopted sister of the appellant. She
was only
7 years of age when she was raped by a person whom she trusted. The
rape left her with emotional scars and she still displays
symptoms of
trauma and lack of trust for male persons.
[29]
Rape and
violance against woman and children are matters of great concern in
our country. The rape of a 7-year old girl by her adoptive
brother,
who is an adult male, is a cause of great concern. As stated by the
trial court, and in my opinion correctly so, there
is an outcry in
this country that rapists, and more specifically where there are
children involved, should be treated in the manner
in which the law
prescribes.
[30]
The trial
court duly took all factors into account in sentencing the appellant.
It is trite that sentence is a matter best left
to the discretion of
the sentencing court. As stated in
S
v Barnard
2004 (1) SACR (191) (1) SCA at 194c-d a court of appeal should always
guard against the trial court’s discretion when it
comes to
sentencing. A court of appeal should only interfere where the
discretion was not exercised judicially and properly or
where there
was a serious misdirection.
[31]
There is no
basis upon which this court can interfere in the sentence of the
appellant and as such the appeal against sentence stands
to fail.
[32]
In the
premises the appeal against both conviction and sentence is
dismissed.
J
Minnaar AJ
Judge
of the High Court
It
is so ordered,
D
Makhoba
Judge
of the High Court
Case
number :
A326/2022
Heard
on : 23
August 2023
For
the Appellant
: Mr
S Moeng
Instructed
by : Legal
Aid South Africa
Pretoria Justice Centre
For
the Respondent :
Adv M Masilo
Instructed
by : Director
of Public Prosecutions
Date
of Judgment :
13
September 2023
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