Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 571South Africa
Mulaudzi v S (A259/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 571 (14 December 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mulaudzi v S (A259/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 571 (14 December 2023)
Mulaudzi v S (A259/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 571 (14 December 2023)
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sino date 14 December 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
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Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: A259/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
14/12/2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
WILLIAM
MULAUDZI
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authorised by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
parties/their legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Caselines.
the date and
for hand-down is deemed to be 14 December 2023.
JUDGMENT
MOGOTSI,
AJ (with Leso AJ Concurring)
Introduction
[1]
On 6 June 2017, the appellant, who was legally represented during the
duration of
the trial, was convicted by the Pretoria Regional Court
on four counts of contravention of section 3 read with
sections 1
,
55
,
56
(1),
56A
,
57
,
58
,
60
and
61
of the
Criminal Law (Sexual
Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007
and
section 51
read with
sections 92
,
94
,
256
,
257
and
261
of the
Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977
and
section 51
and Schedule 2 of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (Rape) and Housebreaking with intent to
steal and theft. On 13 July
2017, he was sentenced to four terms of
life imprisonment and 12 years’ imprisonment respectively.
[2]
Aggrieved by the conviction and sentence, the appellant exercised his
automatic right
to appeal by virtue of sections 10 and 11 of the
Judicial Matters Amendment Act 42 of 2013 read with
sections 309(1)
and
309B
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
[3]
The record of the proceedings is incomplete. The letter penned by
Adriaan Bekker,
a Regional Co-ordinator; and Regional Magistrate
Pretoria, shows there are no prospects that the same will be
reconstructed. Both
counsels for the respondent and the appellant
applied that the appeal be heard based on the available record
because the crucial
evidence is available, and this court granted the
application.
[1]
Background
[4]
The complainant, a 92-year-old woman, was living alone
at
9[...] F[...] O[...] Street, Groenkloof for 40 years
.
On 18 October 2013, whilst she was in bed preparing to sleep, two
assailants entered the house through the ceiling. The shorter
of the
two assailants had carnal intercourse with her whilst the tallest was
gathering items that they removed from the house.
The appellant was
linked to the commission of the offences by both DNA and fingerprint
evidence.
Evidence for the state
[5]
The complainant testified that
on 18 October 2013, she was in bed ready to sleep when she
heard a
noise in the ceiling and it sounded like a swing. Two unknown male
persons came in through the ceiling. The tallest one
switched on the
light and opened the wardrobe. He pulled out two zip jackets, a
greenwood-proof jacket and a grey one. He
opened the cupboards
and took groceries and anything he wanted. He pulled the telephone
that was on the side of the wall to prevent
her from making calls.
[6]
Whilst the taller intruder was ransacking the house, the shorter one
jumped onto her
bed, put his hands around her throat, choked her and
had carnal intercourse with her. The other one came back to the room
and reprimanded
him to stop raping her to no avail. After the
second or third rape, he stood next to the bed and that is when she
noticed
that he had no condom on. She was raped four times.
[7]
After they left, she went downstairs for another phone and she called
Sunnyside Police
Station. The police officers promised to come but
after some time they did not arrive, she struggled back to the main
bedroom to
get her gardener’s numbers on the dressing table
next to the drawer. She phoned him and reported the matter to him.
[8]
She was put in an ambulance and transported to Little Company of Mary
Hospital where
she was detained for some days.
[9]
Detective Sergeant Labuschagne testified that on 18 October 2013, she
attended the
scene of the crime, interviewed witnesses and arranged
for experts. She witnessed a hole in the ceiling of the complainant’s
bedroom and a duvet which was crumpled up against the wall in the
bedroom.
[10]
Vikus Viviers, the investigating officer, testified that he took the
appellant and accused 2
to Steve Biko Hospital to obtain the DNA
samples. He booked the samples both at Sunnyside Police Station and
Forensic Science Laboratory.
He took the complainant’s sexual
assault kit to the Forensic Science Laboratory. During
cross-examination, it was put to
him that the appellant’s swaps
were never obtained. He was, however, consistent in his version
that the swabs were
obtained.
[11]
Detective Matseko Albertina Nthane testified that on 18 October 2013,
she was on duty. She visited
the scene and later proceeded to Unitas
Hospital to obtain the statement of the complainant. She handed the
sexual kit to Dr Kotze
who was treating the complainant. She later
received back the kit, which was sealed in a forensic bag, and handed
it into the SAP-13
at Sunnyside Police Station.
[12]
Dr Shane Kotze testified that he consulted with the complainant on 18
October 2013 and thereafter
completed the J-88 form. He noticed
multiple injuries consistent with blunt force trauma on the person of
the complaint. The injuries
he observed on her genitals were
consistent with recent forceful penetration.
[13]
Warrant Officer van den Heever testified that he is a police officer
stationed at the Local Criminal
Record Centre. On 18 October 2013, he
attended the scene and uplifted the fingerprints from the wooden
sliding door in the passage
that leads to the dining room and
kitchen. On 19 June 2016, he received the appellant’s
fingerprints and compared them to
those found at the scene. He
discovered eight matching points of similarity. To ensure that the
prints belonged to the appellant,
he took his fingerprints in court
and pointed out the eight similarities. During cross-examination, it
was put to him that the
appellant was at the scene of the crime after
he was apprehended and that explains how his fingerprints landed at
the scene.
[14]
The DNA report compiled by Lieutenant Shane Lesley Willem, a forensic
analyst, was admitted into
evidence as exhibit “Z1” by
virtue of
section 212
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
. He
concluded that the DNA reference sample of the appellant matched with
the results obtained from the vestibule and vulva swabs
of the
complainant, and the results obtained from the semen stains on the
bed sheet. The sheet was collected at the scene by Oosthuizen.
[15]
Dr E G Seller’s evidence was not transcribed. It appears from
the judgment that he testified
that he obtained buccal samples of the
appellant and accused 2 and the same were handed in as exhibits “E”
and “H”
respectively. The version of Veronica Mathonsi,
an exhibit clerk, was not transcribed. It, however, appears from the
judgment that
she received the exhibits from Warrant Officer Viviers
and Sgt. Nthane for safekeeping.
[16]
The affidavit of Stevens Sekwane, who was called by the complainant
after the incident, was admitted
into the evidence as exhibit “O”
by consent of the parties. Briefly, he stated that he was called by
the complainant
and he proceeded to the house. He thereafter called
the complainant’s son and requested assistance from Mr Wessels.
The statement
of Mr Wessels was admitted by agreement as Exhibit “N”.
He confirms that Mr Stevens Sekoane stopped him and requested
his
assistance. He investigated the scene and remained there until the
police arrived. The version of Peter Makwerela was not transcribed,
however, it appears from the judgement that he is a police officer in
the South African Police Service attached to the tracing
unit and he
apprehended both the appellant and the second accused.
Evidence for the
appellant
[17]
The appellant testified that he was at work on the day in issue. He
denies any involvement in
this matter. He denied that he knew accused
2. He further testified that he was taken to the complainant’s
house where he
was pushed around the house and that this explained
how his fingerprints landed at the scene. He denied that the DNA
samples were
taken from him for testing. During cross-examination, he
denied that the bag, jewellery and a duvet he possessed at the time
of
his apprehension belonged to the complainant.
The law
[18]
In
S
v Francis
[2]
the court considered the powers of an appeal court to interfere
with the findings of fact of a trial court and stated the
following:
“
The
powers of a court of appeal to interfere with the findings of fact of
a trial court are limited. In the absence of any misdirection
the
trial court’s conclusion, including its acceptance of a
witness’ evidence is presumed to be correct. In order to
succeed on appeal, the appellant must therefore convince the court of
appeal on adequate grounds that the trial court was wrong
in
accepting the witness’ evidence - a reasonable doubt will not
suffice to justify interference with its findings. Bearing
in mind
the advantage which a trial court has of seeing, hearing and
appraising a witness, it is only in exceptional circumstances
that
the court of appeal will be entitled to interfere with a trial
court’s evaluation of oral testimony.”
Analysis
[19]
Counsel for the appellant submitted that there is insufficient
evidence to prove that the complainant
was sexually penetrated on
four different occasions. The complainant testified that she was
penetrated sexually on four different
occasions and that after the
second or third act of rape, she realised that her assailant was not
using a condom. This issue was
not canvassed by the appellant’s
legal representative during cross-examination of the complainant but
was raised for the
first time on appeal. Counsel for the appellant
did not argue that the complainant was an unreliable witness, and
failed to advance
reasons why this court should doubt her version in
this regard. I am, therefore, not persuaded by the submissions of
counsel for
the appellant in this regard and the same falls to be
rejected.
[20]
Counsel for the appellant, correctly in my view, avoided arguing
strongly about the evidence
that links the appellant to the offences
with which he has been convicted, viz, the DNA and fingerprint
evidence. In my view, the
court a quo correctly rejected the version
of the appellant that his fingerprints were planted at the scene when
he was taken there
after his arrest because the fingerprints that
matched his were uplifted before he was taken to the scene.
[21] Therefore, the
appeal against conviction falls to be dismissed.
Sentence
[22]
In
S
v Bogaards
[3]
the court in dealing with the appellate court’s powers to
interfere with the sentences imposed by courts below stated as
follows:
“
Ordinarily,
sentencing is within the discretion of the trial court. An appellate
court’s power to interfere with sentences
imposed by courts
below is circumscribed. It can only do so where there has been an
irregularity that results in a failure of justice;
the court below
misdirected itself to such an extent that its decision on sentence is
vitiated; or the sentence is so disproportionate
or shocking that no
reasonable court could have imposed it. A court of appeal can also
impose a different sentence when it sets
aside a conviction in
relation to one charge and convicts the accused of another.”
[23]
In considering the appropriate sentences, the court a quo considered
the mitigating and aggravating
circumstances. The complainant was a
92-year-old woman. She was strangled and lost consciousness. She
sustained multiple injuries
and was penetrated on four different
occasions by the appellant. She later suffered a stroke. She was
attacked in the sanctity
of her home.
[24]
In
S
v Chapman
[4]
in dealing with the plight of women stated as follows:
“
Rape
is a very serious offence, constituting as it does a humiliating,
degrading and brutal invasion of the privacy, the dignity
and the
person of the victim. The rights to dignity, to privacy, and the
integrity of every person are basic to the ethos of the
Constitution
and to any defensible civilisation. Women in this country are
entitled to the protection of these rights. They have
a legitimate
claim to walk peacefully on the streets, to enjoy their shopping and
their entertainment, to go and come from work,
and to enjoy the peace
and tranquillity of their homes without the fear, the apprehension
and the insecurity which constantly diminish
the quality and
enjoyment of their lives.”
[25]
The court a quo correctly considered all circumstances impacting the
appellant’s personal
circumstances and the interests of the
community. It took into account the period the appellant spent in
custody awaiting trial,
that there is a thirty-year age difference
between the appellant and the complainant and that despite the
overwhelming evidence
against him, he maintained his innocence. It
was against this backdrop that the court a quo found that there
existed no compelling
and substantial reasons to deviate from the
prescribed minimum sentences.
[26]
In
S
v Malgas
[5]
the court in dealing with the interpretation and application of the
minimum sentencing legislation held as follows:
“
What
stands out quite
clearly is that the courts are a good deal freer to depart from the
prescribed sentences than has been supposed
in some of the previously
decided cases and that it is they who are to judge whether or not the
circumstances of any particular
case are such as to justify a
departure. However, in doing so, they are to respect, and not merely
pay lip service to, the legislature’s
view that the prescribed
periods of imprisonment are to be taken to be ordinarily appropriate
when crimes of the specified kind
are committed. In summary –
A
Section 51 has limited but not eliminated the courts’
discretion in imposing
sentence in respect of offences referred to in
Part 1 of Schedule 2 (or imprisonment for other specified periods for
offences listed
in other parts of Schedule 2).
B
Courts are required to approach the imposition of sentence conscious
that the
legislature has ordained life imprisonment (or the
particular prescribed period of imprisonment) as the sentence that
should ordinarily
and in the absence of weighty justification be
imposed for the listed crimes in the specified circumstances.
C
Unless there are, and can
be seen to be, truly convincing reasons for a different response,
the
crimes in question are therefore required to elicit a severe,
standardised and consistent response from the courts.
D
The specified sentences
are not to be departed from lightly and for flimsy reasons.
Speculative hypotheses favourable to the offender, undue sympathy,
aversion to imprisoning first offenders, personal doubts as
to the
efficacy of the policy underlying the legislation, and marginal
differences in personal circumstances or degrees of participation
between co-offenders are to be excluded.
E
The legislature has
however deliberately left it to the courts to decide whether the
circumstances of any particular case call for a departure from the
prescribed sentence. While the emphasis has shifted to the objective
gravity of the type of crime and the need for effective sanctions
against it, this does not mean that all other considerations
are to
be ignored.
F
All factors (other
than those set out in D above) traditionally taken into account
in
sentencing (whether or not they diminish moral guilt) thus continue
to play a role; none is excluded at the outset from consideration
in
the sentencing process.
G
The ultimate impact of all
the circumstances relevant to sentencing must be measured
against the
composite yardstick (“substantial and compelling”) and
must be such as cumulatively justify a departure
from the
standardised response that the legislature has ordained.
H
In applying the statutory
provisions, it is inappropriately constricting to use the
concepts
developed in dealing with appeals against sentence as the sole
criterion.
I
If the
sentencing court on consideration of the circumstances of the
particular
case is satisfied that they render the prescribed sentence
unjust in that it would be disproportionate to the crime, the
criminal
and the needs of society, so that an injustice would be done
by imposing that sentence, it is entitled to impose a lesser
sentence.
J
In so doing, account
must be taken of the fact that crime of that particular
kind has been
singled out for severe punishment and that the sentence to be imposed
in lieu of the prescribed sentence should be
assessed paying due
regard to the benchmark which the legislature has provided.”
[27]
In my view, the court a quo was correct in finding that there are no
substantial and compelling
reasons warranting a deviation from the
prescribed minimum sentences.
[28]
Counsel for the appellant submitted that the court a quo misdirected
itself by not taking all counts of
rape as one for the purposes of
sentencing. It is clear
ex-facie
the record that the court a
quo erred in not taking all counts of rape as one for the purposes of
sentence. It follows that the
appeal against sentence falls to be
upheld.
Order
1.
Appeal against conviction is dismissed.
2.
Appeal against sentence is upheld. The
order that the appellant is sentenced to life imprisonment in respect
of each count of rape
is set aside and substituted with the
following:
“
Counts
1-4 are taken together for the purposes of sentence, and the
appellant is sentenced to life imprisonment antedated to 13
July
2017.
Count
5 the appellant is sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment. The
sentence in count 5 is ordered to run concurrently with
the sentence
meted out in counts 1 - 4 by virtue of
section 28
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
as amended
.”
3.
In terms of
section 103
of the
Firearms
Control Act 60 of 2000
, the appellant is declared unfit to possess a
firearm.
P J M MOGOTSI
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Appearance
For
the appellant:
Adv J
L Kgokane
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid South Africa, Pretoria
For
the respondent:
Adv G
J C Maritz
Instructed
by:
Director
of Public Prosecution, Pretoria
[1]
See
Schoombee
& another v The State
2017 (2) SACR 1
(CC) at para 29.
[2]
1991
(1) SACR 198
(A) at 198j – 199a.
[3]
2013
(1) SACR 1
(CC) at para 41.
[4]
[1997] ZASCA 45
;
1997
(3) SA 341
(SCA) at 344I-345B.
[5]
[2001]
3 All SA 220
(A) at para 25.
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