Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 2011South Africa
Ranyani v S (A156/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2011 (18 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
18 December 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ranyani v S (A156/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2011 (18 December 2023)
Ranyani v S (A156/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2011 (18 December 2023)
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sino date 18 December 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
Case Number: A156/2022
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3) REVISED.
18/12/2023
In
the matter between:
TEBOGO
PATRICK RANYANI
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
TSHOMBE
AJ, (with Van der Westhuizen J concurring)
INTRODUCTION:
[1]
The appellant appeared before the regional magistrate at the Tsakane
Regional division
of Gauteng following a charge with 2 counts of rape
in contravention of
Section 3 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 32 of 2007
[1]
read with
the
provisions of
Section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997
[2]
and one count of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm.
[2]
At the trial the appellant was represented and he pleaded not guilty
to all three
charges preferred against him. The appellant confirmed
that the provisions of the Minimum Sentences legislation were
explained
to him and that he understood the explanation.
The
appellant was convicted of one count of rape, read with the
provisions of the Minimum Sentences legislation and found not guilty
and acquitted of the second rape count and the assault with intent to
do grievous bodily harm. Arising from the application of
the Minimum
Sentences legislation, he was, upon conviction sentenced to life
imprisonment, the court
a quo
having found no mitigation or
the existence of substantial and compelling circumstances to support
a deviation from the minimum
sentence in terms of the Minimum
Sentence legislation.
BACKGROUND:
[3]
At the beginning of the trial the appellant’s representative
raised an issue
of duplication of charges with respect to the two
counts of rape. The state denied that there was a duplication and the
trial continued
on the basis of a charge with three counts as set out
in paragraph [1]. I have concluded that there
was
a
duplication because the appellant was charged with a contravention of
section 3 of the Sexual Offences and Related Matters Act,
read with
the provisions of section 51(1) of the Minimum Sentences legislation.
The contravention of section 3 of the Sexual Offences
and Related
Matters Act attracted the provisions of the Minimum Sentences
legislation because it was alleged that the complainant
was sexually
penetrated by the appellant more than once and was assaulted by the
appellant with intent to do grievous bodily harm
as contemplated in
Part 1 of Schedule 2 of the Minimum Sentences Legislation.
Accordingly, the second sexual penetration of the
complainant by the
appellant and the assault to do grievous bodily harm could not be
seen as separate standalone counts as these
are components of the one
rape charge read with the provisions of the Minimum Sentences
legislation.
[4]
However, because the court
a quo
returned a finding of not
guilty for both the second rape count and the count of assault with
intent to inflict grievous bodily
harm, I am satisfied that the
appellant was not subjected to any prejudice during the trial, since
the trial was conducted on the
same facts; neither is there a basis
upon which a duplication in sentencing can be raised.
[5]
Prior to sentencing the court required two reports to be prepared,
that is, a probation
officer’s report which was expected to
deal with the circumstances of the appellant as well as a victim
assessment report,
expected to deal with the effect of the incident
on the victim. The victim impact assessment report was never obtained
and the
state led the evidence of the victim from which the court
made an assessment of the impact of the rape on the victim and her
family.
[6]
With regard to the probation officer’s report, the court
received information
from the prosecutor to the effect that the
social worker who conducted the necessary interviews and prepared the
report had been
approached by the complainant, with an admission that
the complainant did have a sexual relationship with the appellant and
that
there was no rape as the sexual intercourse was consensual. Upon
hearing this report, the court called for evidence by the social
worker. She testified that she had not been contacted by the
complainant but by other anonymous people who claimed to have seen
a
lady that was providing domestic duties to the appellant. Neither the
state nor the court could take the matter forward because
the social
worker testified that the said people wished to remain anonymous,
they were not prepared to come forward to court with
the evidence and
also did not allege that it was the complainant that they had seen
coming out of the appellant’s shack but
a
certain
lady
.
[7]
Post sentencing the court advised the appellant of his automatic
right to appeal the
conviction, sentence and order made by the court
a quo,
that
is, that the appellant was free to approach this court to make an
application for such appeal without getting leave from the
court
a
quo.
GROUNDS OF APPEAL AGAINST
CONVICTION AND SENTENCE:
AD CONVICTION:
[8]
The appellant submitted that the court
a quo
erred in finding
that:
8.1
the state proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt regarding the
non-consensuality of the
sexual intercourse; and
8.2
that the appellant had selective memory in his version of the
evidence relating to the assault
on the victim;
8.3
the appellant’s version of the assault on the victim and the
reason therefor was not
possibly reasonably true.
AD SENTENCE:
[9]
The appellant submitted that:
9.1
the personal circumstances of the appellant;
9.2
the fact that the appellant was convicted of rape for the first time;
and
9.3
the fact that the appellant spent 2 years and 5 months in custody
before being sentenced,
all constitute substantial and
compelling circumstances and the trial court erred in not finding the
existence of such substantial
and compelling circumstances and to
thus depart from imposing the minimum sentence in terms of the
Minimum Sentences legislation.
9.4
The court
a quo
erred in over-emphasizing the seriousness and
prevalence of the offence, and that society needs to be protected
from people like
the appellant.
THE EVIDENCE:
The State called 4 witnesses to prove
the case against the appellant.
[10]
N[...] M[...], the complainant, testified as follows:
10.1 On 9 November
2019 she was sitting with a female friend drinking at George’s
tavern in Langavile. She
and her friend had arrived at the tavern
between 2 and 3pm and at about 7pm, the complainant decided to go
home. She walked alone
and the street was quiet because it was
raining. As she walked, she felt somebody grabbing her neck in a
vice-grip, dragging her
in a particular direction and making it
difficult for her to turn and see who it was. Finally, she was able
to turn and recognized
the person as C[...], the appellant.
10.2 The appellant
dragged her to his shack and because she was resisting and the way in
which he was dragging
her she kept falling, upon which the appellant
would slap her with his open hands. The ground was slippery from the
rain and she
would also slip and fall, upon which the appellant
kicked her on her butt, her whole back, slap her on her face, her
head, dragging
her in the mud until he got her inside his shack and
pushed her in while assaulting her the whole time. The complainant’s
screams for help did not attract any attention from anyone who could
assist her. Once inside the shack he continued assaulting
her with
open hands, fists, kicks on her body, face and head while trying to
take off her pants. He finally took off her pants
and pushed her on
the bed and while still assaulting her, proceeded to rape her until
he (the appellant) fell off the bed. At this
time the complainant was
pleading with him to stop abusing her and in her evidence, she
estimated that he spent about two hours
off her while she continued
begging him to stop.
10.3 The appellant showed
no mercy, instead he stood up, smoked a cigarette and when he was
done, he came back to her,
inserted his penis into her vagina and
proceeded to rape her once more while the assault also continued. He
went on until he fell
off the bed again, and this time he fell asleep
and the complainant cautiously sneaked out of the shack. She did this
with difficulty
because her eyes were swollen and she couldn’t
see and had to feel her way out by leaning against the wall of the
shack until
she reached the door. Once outside she screamed N[...]’s
name, someone she knew who lived close to the premises.
10.4 She testified
that she was in such a state that she never even saw N[...] coming
but only felt her presence
when N[...] hugged her. N[...] called for
help from complainant’s home, and while continuing to help her
handed her over
to her (complainant’s) sister. The complainant
was taken to hospital. The hospital sent her to Tsakane Crisis Care
Center,
a center for the care of sexually abused persons where she
was examined, and a J88 medical report prepared. Thereafter she was
taken back to the hospital where she was further treated for two
weeks before she was discharged.
[11] The
next witness for the state was the complainant’s sister, O[...]
M[...] (“O[...]”)
and she testified as follows:
11.1 Around 5am on
the morning of 10 November 2019, she was awoken by her neighbor,
N[...] who was calling out
her name. She woke up in response and
N[...] drew her attention to the complainant, who was standing at the
corner of a house next
door to N[...]’s place. O[...] found her
sister crying, swollen and covering her face with her hands. The
three of them proceeded
to O[...]’s home and on the way there
the complainant told her sister that she had been beaten up and raped
by C[...]. At
the time, O[...] did not know who C[...] was but it
later transpired that it was the appellant.
11.2 O[...] arranged
for her sister to be taken to hospital. Her (O[...]’s) further
evidence was that the
complainant told her that the appellant applied
glue to her eyes because he did not want her to see him.
11.3 The third
witness for the state was Nontlantla Tuli (“Tuli”). She
lives in the main house on
the premises where the appellant rented a
shack and she testified that on the night of 9 November 2019 she
heard a screaming voice
of a female from the street. This was around
2am and Tuli was inside the house, alone and sleeping. The shack
occupied by the appellant
was about 4 metres from the house in which
Tuli was sleeping and after a while she heard the screaming coming
from inside the shack
with the screaming person shouting “Help
me!”.
11.4 Tuli testified
that she did not do anything because she was alone, it was raining,
windy and she was in fear
for her own safety. At a certain point she
could hear that the people in the shack were in a fight because of
the noise from the
boards, it sounded like people were pushing each
other against the boards of the shack, one of which actually fell.
11.5 After a while,
the noise stopped but Tuli could no longer sleep and stayed up
watching movies from her computer.
At about 5 in the morning, Tuli
heard a lady screaming for N[...]. When she opened the house door,
she saw the lady, who was bleeding,
her eyes closed (as in swollen),
her neck showing signs of strangulation and walking against the wall
of the house to help her
guide herself. M[...] L[...]/N[...] came out
of her place of stay and immediately uttered the complainant’s
name –
Nokubonga! and asking why she was in the state she was
in. Upon seeing the complainant’s injuries N[...] asked ‘who
did this?’ The complainant answered that it was C[...] and Tuli
not knowing who C[...] was, N[...] explained that it was
the
appellant.
11.6 Tuli further
testified that the complainant’s family was called and upon
arrival a community whistle
was blown. As the whistle was blown Tuli
went to the shack and found it in a state, blood on the floor, a
stone with bloodstains,
everything with stains of blood and the whole
place upside down. She had an opportunity to ask the appellant as to
what he had
done and in answer the appellant denied having done
anything. When she confronted him with the information from the
complainant
that she was raped and assaulted by him to the extent
that she even refused being touched because her whole body was in
pain, the
appellant just scratched his head, saying “Eish!
N[...]”’
11.7 Tuli also
testified that she saw bloodstains on the body and head of the
appellant. When the appellant realized
this, he jumped out of bed,
ran to the tap outside and started washing himself after which he
jumped the fence to the neighbour
to ask for water to drink. As he
was drinking the community was standing along the fence asking him to
go closer to them to tell
them what happened here. Realising this,
the appellant finished drinking and ran away. The community members
chased and apprehended
him. Ms Tuli testified that she refused them
entry into the premises with the appellant. According to the witness,
the appellant
was saved by the arrival of the police as the community
was very angrily assaulting him with just about anything.
11.8 In cross-
examination, Tuli was challenged as to how she could hear noises
outside and inside the shack given
the amount of noise that the rain
makes on corrugated iron. Tuli responded that she could hear the
sounds because the rain was
not continuous. She was also challenged
with the version of the appellant which was going to be that she was
not there on the night
that the incident happened, having gone to
Tsakane. Tuli agreed that she had told the appellant she’s
going to Tsakane and
she did go to Tsakane but came back on Saturday
and not on Sunday as initially planned.
11.9 Tuli was
further confronted with the version that she must have spoken to some
community members to have
had the detail that she provided in court
and her response was that she was there, she saw everything for
herself, she was back
from Tsakane. Tuli further testified that when
she saw the complainant, she (the complainant) was wearing a work
suit of the appellant
because she could not find her clothes; and
such clothes were eventually found at the gate of the premises. The
appellant’s
work suit was not bloodstained, it was just
dirty.
11.10 The fourth witness for the
state was Xolisa Beauty Nkosi (“Ms Nkosi”), a registered
nurse employed at Tsakane
Care Crisis centre and who examined the
complainant after the rape. After explaining to the court that she
holds a qualification
in which she was trained to care for and
examine persons that have been subjected to sexual harassment and
abuse, she confirmed
that she examined the complainant in this matter
and completed the J88 Form.
11.11 Ms Nkosi proceeded to walk
the court through the J88 Form, and of relevance to the matter before
the court she dealt
with a section labelled Clinical findings. She
listed the following injuries: (i) a 4 centimeter right upper eye lid
laceration;
(ii) bruises to both upper and lower eyelids, both
swollen and painful to complainant when touched; (iii) Swollen chin
and painful
to complainant when touched; (iv) bruised neck, both
sides and front swollen and painful to complainant when touched; (v)
Bruised
thighs; (vi) multiple bruises on the chest and abdomen; (vii)
bruises on the left and right upper arms; (viii) multiple bruises
to
the back; (ix) abrasions to left and right knees; (x) multiple
bruises to right leg and thigh. The nurse proceeded to explain
that
the complainant was sad but co-operative and well oriented to person,
time and place. The nurse explained that there was no
clinical
evidence of drugs or alcohol influence. The nurse also explained that
the injuries were consistent with the injuries of
physical assault.
There was also a question as to when the complainant last had sexual
intercourse with consent and the complainant
indicated this to have
been 8 November 2019, that is, the day before she was sexually
assaulted.
11.12 The nurse testified
further that there were no injuries to the complainant’s
private parts but also advised that
the absence of injuries does not
exclude non-consensual penetration. The nurse further reported that
there was no anal penetration
and that samples of semen were taken.
Finally, the nurse explained in testimony that the red marks that
were depicted in the human
anatomical drawing in the J88 Form were
indicative of injuries and the injuries that were marked in strong
red, for instance around
the neck, were of a very serious nature.
[12] In
defense, the appellant gave the following testimony:
12.1 He was first
introduced to the complainant by N[...], who is friends with the
complainant. Initially the
complainant used to visit him with N[...]
but after a while the complainant started to visit him on her own. On
9 November, the
complainant showed up at about 10 or 11 am and asked
for two beers. The two of them sat drinking and were joined by
appellant’s
colleague, George.
12.2 At about 2pm
the appellant and George decided to go to the tavern to watch soccer
and the complainant said
she is going with them. They all continued
drinking at the tavern and at about 6 or 7pm the appellant realized
that he had run
out of money. The appellant the told the complainant
that he is going home but will be back and the complainant said she
is going
with him.
12.3 At home the
appellant took his bank card and the two of them went to withdraw
R1000 and went back to the
tavern where they proceeded drinking. At
around 10 or 11 pm the tavern was closing and the appellant and
George decided to change
taverns and go to one called Kappising,
which was an all-night. The appellant told his friend that he would
catch up with him at
Kappising because he (appellant) wanted to go
home to drop his bank card and some of the money he had on him.
12.4 The appellant
testified that once again the complainant went with him and, when
they reached his place, he
(the appellant) decided to ask the
complainant to have sexual intercourse with him as he realized that
by the time they come back
from Kappising it will already be the
following day. The appellant testified that the sexual intercourse
thing was a game that
he and the complainant played, where he would
ask for a sexual favour and thereafter, he would give the complainant
money. According
to the testimony there was no agreement as to the
amount of money – she would state any amount she wanted after
the sexual
intercourse; he would give it to her, the only condition
she had was that her husband must never know about the arrangement.
The
appellant’s testimony was that before the day in question
the complainant had asked for amounts between R250 and R300.
12.5 The appellant
testified further that because he was drunk, he fell asleep after
they had had sexual intercourse
and was woken up in the morning by
the complainant who was demanding a sum of R1000. He told her to wait
for him to properly wake
up and he would give it to her. The
appellant testified further that he indeed woke up and after
searching himself he realized
that he did not have his wallet and
money with him. He asked the complainant where his wallet was and
upon getting a negative answer,
he decided to search her and found a
sum of R350 between her breasts. When he asked her where she got the
money, she told him she
got it from some other guys the day before.
12.6 The appellant
became furious and started assaulting the complainant with open
hands, on her face, her head
and body but according to him using only
his open hands, no fists or kicking. When reminded about the J88 Form
which reflected
a lot of injuries, to wit, to the complainant’s
eyes, neck, arms, thighs, ears, chest and stomach he speculated that
she
may have gotten those from falling and hitting some of the
furniture in his shack. When asked specifically about the bruises and
swelling on complainant’s neck, he denied choking her and once
again speculated that it could have been his open hands that
hit her
neck.
12.7 In further
speculation the appellant conceded that all the injuries reflected on
the J88 Form must have been
caused by him because he was looking for
his money, on the morning after he had had sexual intercourse with
the complainant. The
appellant denied that there was any form of
violence with her when they had sexual intercourse the night before
and denied forcing
her into it. He further testified that he did not
take the R350 from the complainant, instead he assaulted her, chased
her out
and after about 10 minutes she came back with community
members.
12.8 The community
members knocked on his door and upon him opening, they asked him if
he knew the complainant.
He answered in the affirmative and even told
them that she had just left his place. He was then informed that the
complainant said
he had raped her. When he told them that this was
not the truth and that he had assaulted her because of her stealing
his money,
the community members did not understand; did not want to
listen to him and started assaulting him. When he came to, he was in
hospital and badly injured. He testified that he was more injured
than the complainant.
12.9 In cross
examination, the appellant testified that the complainant was never
his girlfriend but someone he
knew through a friend. When he and the
complainant started the sexual intercourse game, it was in exchange
for whatever she needed
and on the first day she asked for R300 and
he gave it to her.
12.10 In further cross
examination the appellant conceded that on the night he came back
with the complainant, he never went
to the main house and accordingly
could not say with precision that the lady who stayed there (Ms Tuli)
was back or not. He was
just under the impression that she was not
there because she had told him she is going to Tsakane on the Friday
before and would
be back on the Sunday. He therefore had to
reluctantly concede that it was possible that Ms Tuli had come back
on the Saturday
and was in the house on the night he took the
complainant to his shack.
12.11 The appellant further
insisted in cross examination that the complainant was not selling
herself to him – they
were merely helping each other; she would
give him the sex and he would give her money, any amount she asked
for. There was no
agreement as to how much he would give at any given
time, no range – he just had to give her whatever amount of
money she
asked for after every sexual intercourse session they had.
He added that he would have given her even the R1000 she demanded on
the day and had in fact already indicated that he was going to give
it to her.
12.12 The appellant did not
remember how much money was left from the R1000 he had earlier
withdrawn when he and complainant
went back to his shack. He
remembered though, that when he came in the night before with the
appellant, he had his wallet and phone,
both of which he put on his
night stand but when he woke up, he could only find his phone. During
further cross examination the
appellant was at pains to explain why
he assaulted the complainant when he discovered that she had R350
between her breasts –
he could not decide whether it was
because she did not buy her own alcohol the night before or because
he was drunk or because
he thought she had stolen the money from him.
He just continued to insist that he was prepared to give her the
R1000 she wanted.
12.13 The appellant also
intimated that he allowed the complainant to take the R350 with her
in spite of his belief that she
had stolen it from him because he
wanted to avoid trouble. Yet, he still saw fit to assault the
complainant. At best, the appellant
told the court that he assaulted
the complainant because he wanted to give her the R1000 she had asked
for and what made him angry
was that he could not find his wallet and
money where he had left it. This angered him because he wanted to
find these two things
so that he could make good on his promise to
her to pay her the R1000. What is puzzling is why he couldn’t
deduct the R350
from the R1000 and make arrangements to give her R650
after he had been to the bank and obtained a new card; in the same
way that
he would have arranged to give her the balance even if his
wallet was there because there would not have been sufficient money
for him to pay R1000 after he had continued buying drinks after the
withdrawal of exactly R1000 earlier the previous evening.
12.14 The appellant was
challenged in cross examination as to how the complainant could have
been injured on her neck if he
was assaulting her with open hands and
nothing else. While the appellant speculated that the neck injuries
must have been caused
by his assault, he was further cross examined
about how he remembered everything else, to wit the time when they
came into the
shack, where he put his wallet and phone, how he
assaulted the complainant with open hands on her face and body –
all except
how the complainant sustained the injuries to her neck. He
also could not account for the laceration above her right eye.
12.15 He was further challenged
with the fact that the complainant was unlikely to call the community
on him if their game
of sex rewarded with money would reach her
husband’s ears. He was further challenged with respect to the
improbability of
the so-called agreement that constituted a blank
cheque to the complainant to demand any amount of money she wanted –
it
was put to him whether he would have given her R10 000 if she
had asked for it and when he answered that he would have told
her he
doesn’t have that kind of money it became clear that the
so-called agreement was improbable.
[13] In
evaluating the appellant’s grounds of appeal against the
conviction, this court notes
that -
13.1 For the
submission that the sexual intercourse between him and the
complainant was consensual the appellant
relies on the fact that the
J88 examination did not show any injuries sustained to the private
parts of the complainant. It goes
without saying that this ground of
appeal cannot be entertained because the absence of injuries in the
genital area does not exclude
penetration without consent. This is
clearly stated by Ms Nkosi in Paragraph 11.12 above.
13.2 The appellant’s
second ground of appeal is that the trial court should have found the
appellant’s
version for his assault on the complainant to be
reasonably possibly true. This is in spite of the fact that the
appellant’s
version was taken apart on cross examination, with
the trial court also showing the improbabilities, the fact that
chunks of the
appellant’s version just did not make sense for
example the agreement/game on sexual intercourse in exchange for
indeterminate
amounts of money. This is in spite of the fact that the
appellant’s assault was purportedly because the complainant had
stolen
money that the appellant did not even know that he had, given
that he didn’t know how much he came back with from the tavern.
This is in spite of the inconsistencies between the complainant’s
injuries and the alleged manner of assault, the appellant’s
loss of memory as to the cause of the complainant’s neck
injuries etc. This court views the appellant’s version of
the
assault as a fabrication that could not reasonably possibly be true
at all.
[14] The
appellant’s grounds of appeal ad sentence rely on:
14.1 Personal
circumstances, none of which had any abnormality, that is, no
physical, psychological or learning
or any inflammatory matter that
could be considered substantial and compelling in the consideration
of a possible departure from
the minimum sentence provided for in the
Minimum Sentence legislation. For this view, it was submitted on
behalf of the appellant
that the phrase substantial and compelling
circumstances has not been defined and therefore the appellant’s
circumstances
can also be seen as substantial and compelling
circumstances. This court finds no substance to this submission.
Clearly, while
substantial and compelling circumstances have not been
defined, sentencing has purposes which are trite, that is,
deterrence, retribution,
reformation and taking cognizance of the
interests of society.
14.2
The second and third points of the
appellant’s reliance on the existence of substantial and
compelling circumstances were
that this was his first conviction of
rape and that he had spent two years and five months in custody
before being sentenced. This
court does not find substance in these
points and same cannot be considered to constitute substantial and
compelling circumstances
within the meaning of section 51(3) of the
Minimum Sentences legislation. Fourthly, the appellant submitted that
the sentence is
disproportional to the crime; and, fifthly that the
trial court overemphasized the seriousness of the offence.
14.3
The appellant cited that this his first rape conviction while all
four of his previous convictions had a
clear thread or element of
violence. In fact, rather than operate in his favour, his previous
convictions reflected someone who
was a threat to society as
envisaged in the Triad of Zinn
[3]
THE LAW:
AD CONVICTION
(a)
Proof beyond a reasonable
doubt:
[15]
In criminal litigation,
the State must prove its case against an accused beyond a reasonable
doubt. The accused bears no onus and
if his version is reasonably
possibly true he is entitled to receive the benefit of the doubt and
be discharged.
[4]
It is also
trite law that proof beyond a reasonable doubt does not mean proof
beyond all doubt.
In
Monageng v S
[5]
the court described
proof beyond a reasonable doubt as:
". . . evidence with such high
degree of probability that the ordinary reasonable man, after mature
consideration, comes to
the conclusion that there exists no
reasonable doubt that the accused has committed the crime charged. An
accused's evidence therefore
can be rejected on the basis of
probabilities only if found to be so improbable that it cannot
reasonably possibly be true."
[16] The
above establishes a tension between proof beyond a reasonable doubt
and the reasonable possibility
that the accused’s version may
reasonably possibly be true. In order to resolve the tension that
exists between the two seemingly
separate but in essence the same
test, the court must look at all the evidence in its totality. In
other words, the court must
not look at the evidence exculpating the
accused in isolation and neither must it look at the evidence
implicating the accused
in isolation. This therefore means that a
court does not base its conclusion, either way, on only part of the
evidence. The
conclusion of the court must account for all the
evidence.
In the van der
Meyden matter
[6]
(
supra)
Nugent
J stated as follows:
“
In order
to convict, the evidence must establish the guilt of the accused
beyond a reasonable doubt, which will be so only if there
is at the
same time no reasonable possibility that an innocent explanation
which has been put forward might be true. The two are
inseparable:
each being the logical corollary of the other. In whichever
form
the test is expressed, it must be satisfied upon a consideration of
all the evidence. A court does not look at the evidence
implicating
the accused in isolation in order to determine whether there is proof
beyond a reasonable doubt and so too does it
not look at the
exculpatory evidence in isolation in order to determine whether it is
reasonably possible that it might be true
”
(emphasis added).
[17] The
classic decision was formulated by Malan JA a couple of decades ago
at a time when the popular
argument that was to the effect that proof
beyond a reasonable doubt requires the prosecution to eliminate every
hypothesis which
is inconsistent with the accused’s guilt or
which, as it is also expressed is consistent with his innocence.
Malan JA rejected
this approach and preferred to adhere to an earlier
approach which was eventually adopted and is now preferred by the
courts.
[7]
“
In my opinion, there is
no obligation upon the Crown to close every avenue of escape which
may be said to be open to an accused.
It is sufficient for the Crown
to produce evidence by means of which such a high degree of
probability is raised that the ordinary
reasonable man, after mature
consideration, comes to the conclusion that there exists no
reasonable doubt that an accused has committed
the crime charged.
He must, in other words, be morally certain of the guilt of the
accused. An accused’s claim to the benefit of a doubt when
it
may be said to exist must not be derived from speculation but must
rest upon a reasonable and solid foundation created either
by
positive evidence or gathered from reasonable inferences which are
not in conflict with, or outweighed by, the proved facts
of the case”
(Emphasis provided)
(b)
The law on the testimony of a
single witness:
[18]
While section 208 of the CPA
[8]
provides that an accused can be convicted of any offence on the
single evidence of any competent witness, it is nonetheless
established
in our law that the evidence of a single witness must be
approached with caution, his or her merits as a witness being weighed
against factors which militate against his or her credibility. The
correct approach to the application of this cautionary rule was
set
out by Diemont JA in S v Sauls and Others
[9]
as follows:
“
There is
no rule of thumb test or formula to apply when it comes to a
consideration of the credibility of a single witness…
The
trial judge will weigh his evidence, will consider its merits and
demerits and, having done so, will decide whether it is trustworthy
and whether, despite the fact that there are shortcomings or defects
or contradictions in the testimony, he is satisfied that the
truth
has been told.”
In the above case, the Judge of Appeal
held the view that the cautionary rule may be a guide to the correct
decision but it does
not mean that any criticism, however slender, of
a single witness’s evidence, is well founded.
(c)
The appeal court’s
powers re: credibility findings:
[19]
With reference to the appeal on conviction, there are three legal
principles that are applicable
to this matter, the first being that
a
court of appeal should only interfere with the findings of the trial
court where there is a material misdirection on the facts
and
credibility findings of the witnesses.
[10]
In the case of S v Monyane
[11]
,
Ponnan JA referred with approval to the case of S v Hadebe and
Others
[12]
and held that the appeal court’s powers to interfere on appeal
with the findings of fact of a trial court are limited. The
learned
Judge of Appeal pronounced further that in the absence of
demonstrable and material misdirection by the trial court, its
findings of fact are presumed to be correct and will only be
disregarded if the recorded evidence shows them to be clearly wrong.
[20]
Similarly to the Monyane case,
in casu,
a thorough reading of
the record does not indicate any doubt as to the correctness of the
findings of the trial court. The trial
court traversed the evidence
of the state witnesses, which corroborated one another in all
material respects and they all came
across credibly well during cross
examination.
[21] The
examples are: (i) the complainant’s testimony to her screams
which were heard by Tuli
during the night of 9 November and not on
the morning of the 10th, the time when the appellant testified he
assaulted the complainant;
(ii) fact that Tuli testified she never
slept after hearing the screaming and the noise from the shack but
sat and watched movies
– to the extent that she heard the
complainant when same was shouting for N[...] and came out,
indicating that if the assault
had happened on the morning of the
10
th
, she would have heard it; (iii) the complainant’s
injuries which were corroborated by both Tuli and the J88 examination
Form
completed by a completely independent nurse; (iv) the evidence
of the complainant’s sister who testified that the complainant
told her she was assaulted and raped by the appellant – this
showing the consistency of appellant’s version; (v) the
inconsistency of the complainant’s neck injuries with being
slapped with open hands but the consistency thereof with a vice-grip
as per the complainant’s testimony.
[22] The
appellant could also not adduce any demonstrable evidence that could
have supported a different
finding by the court
a quo
with
respect to the evidence led by any of the State’s witnesses.
Therefore, not only was the evidence of the state witnesses
credible
and constituted proof beyond a reasonable doubt but the version by
the appellant could not possibly be reasonably true.
Finally, the
evidence of the nurse that examined the complainant was that the
absence of injury in the complainant’s private
parts was not
inconsistent with forced vaginal penetration as per the complainant’s
evidence. Accordingly, the two grounds
of appeal were discussed
largely
in tandem
relating as they both do to proving or
disproving whether there was rape or not.
[23] Coming to
the sentencing of the appellant it is important to first make
reference to the basic elements
which come into play in the
sentencing regime. The said elements have come to be known as
the
triad of Zinn, having been espoused in the Zinn case
[13]
and remain relevant to the exercise of the court’s discretion
when sentencing. The first of these, that is, (i) ‘
the
crime’
is considered the most important and influential element on the
nature and extent of the sentence. The proportionality requirement,
which drew constitutional support for the minimum sentence
legislation, reflects the importance of tailoring the sentence to the
seriousness of the crime.
[24] The
second element is (ii) ‘
the criminal’,
and because
of the nature of the analytic factors involved in considering the
criminal, this element has been referred to as the
‘
individualisation’
of the offender. The third
element is (iii) ‘
the interests of society’.
In
the face of some difficulty in expressing what is actually meant by
this phrase, it has been suggested that this leg be interpreted
to
mean ‘
serving the interests of society’.
[25] The
Minimum sentences legislation
[14]
was passed in order to curb violent crime in South Africa. The
legislature identified certain crimes that fit into this category.
The legislation requires trial courts to impose various minimum
sentences for crimes that fit the legislative description
of what it
considered violent crimes. In order to meet the requirements of
fairness, humanity and constitutionality the legislature
put the
concept of substantial and compelling circumstances as the main
exception to the imposition of minimum sentences in accordance
with
this legislation.
[26]
The
concept is to be found in Section 51(3)(a) of the Minimum Sentencing
legislation. It reads as follows:
“
(a)
if any court referred to in subsection (1) or (2) is satisfied that
substantial and compelling
circumstances exist which justify the
imposition of a lesser sentence than the sentence prescribed in those
subsections, it shall
enter those circumstances on the record of the
proceedings and must thereupon impose such lesser sentence.”
[27]
While there is no definition of what constitutes substantial and
compelling circumstances, the
legislature
has left
it to the courts to decide whether the circumstances of any
particular case call for a departure from a prescribed sentence.
The
above is particularly so because the sentencing regime still requires
the sentencing court to consider all the factors or circumstances
traditionally considered by sentencing officers. In other words, the
elements established in the triad of Zinn, aggravating circumstances,
mitigating circumstances, measure of mercy and all other factors
relevant for consideration by a sentencing court when it imposes
sentence.
[28]
In
S
v Homareda
[15]
Cloete J and Robinson AJ proposed what they referred to as the
correct approach in exercising the discretion conferred on the court
in section 51 of the Amendment Act and it is that:
·
The starting point is that a prescribed
minimum sentence must be imposed;
·
Only if the court is satisfied that
substantial and compelling circumstances exist which justify the
imposition of a lesser sentence
may it do so;
·
In deciding whether substantial and
compelling circumstances exist each case must be decided on its own
facts and the court is required
to look at all factors and consider
them cumulatively;
·
If the court concludes in a particular case
that a minimum prescribed sentence is so disproportionate to the
sentence which would
have been appropriate it is entitled to impose a
lesser sentence.
Substantial and compelling
circumstances may be described as those circumstances the existence
of which would make a prescribed
minimum sentence disproportionate to
the crime.
[29]
Turning attention to proportionality, in S v Dodo
[16]
,
the constitutional court endorsed proportionality as a requirement in
the sentencing regime. The constitutional court explained
that,
“
proportionality
goes to the heart of the inquiry as to whether punishment is cruel,
inhumane or degrading, particularly where, as
here, it is almost
exclusively the length of time for which an offender is sentenced
that is in issue.”
[17]
The court referred to section 12(1)(a) of the Constitution, which
provides that a person “
not
be deprived of freedom arbitrarily or without just cause”
and
found that when a person commits a crime the crime provides the just
cause to deprive the offender of freedom.
[30]
The above jurisprudential approach is the essence of the reasoning of
the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA)
in S v Malgas
[18]
,
which is recognized as the seminal judgment on how courts should deal
with substantial and compelling circumstances. The approach
adopted
by the court in Homareda blends with the view expressed by the SCA
that, in the prescribed minimum sentences regime it
is longer
“
business
as usual”
[19]
,
meaning
that the sentencing court does not start the sentencing process from
a clean slate, but must start by imposing the prescribed
minimum
sentence. In so far as is relevant to the matter
in
casu,
the
SCA further held as follows:
a.
Section 51 has limited, but not eliminated
the court’s discretion in imposing sentence. The section has
left it to the courts
to decide whether the circumstances of any
particular call for a departure from a prescribed minimum sentence.
b.
In deciding whether substantial and
compelling circumstances exist, the court is to consider all factors
relevant to sentence, both
aggravating and mitigating circumstances
cumulatively
and the circumstances do not have to be exceptional in order for the
court to depart from the prescribed minimum sentence. In aggravating
circumstances, some relevant ones for purposes
in
casu
are the seriousness of the crime,
after-effects of the crime, previous convictions, lack of remorse,
vulnerable victims, prevalence
of crime, the need for deterrence and
retribution, the protection of society, punishment to fit the crime.
Mitigating circumstances
could
be having no criminal record, the presence of real remorse (not
regret) coupled with a plea of guilty, various mental and
emotional
factors, financial need and social status, character of the offender,
the reason why the crime was committed, the offender’s
background etc. This court does not find any mitigating circumstances
given the appellant’s lack of remorse, denial of any
wrong
doing and admitting to assaulting the complainant on an improbable
basis intended to steer away from the rape rather than
admit wrongful
behaviour.
[31]
There was no overstating of the seriousness of the offence, the
offence is objectively serious with
very serious
aggravating
circumstances
where the complainant became a nervous wreck after
the incident. A further factor to be considered in this regard is the
interests
of the community. The administration of justice and
the confidence of the public in the courts must not be undermined by
light sentences for serious crimes. This court is of the view that
the
trial court balanced all the factors in this
particular case and upon a
holistic and
cumulative consideration,
the trial
court exercised its sentencing discretion appropriately.
[32] The
effects of this incident as set out by the complainant in her
testimony are indicative of
the need for the administration of
justice to seriously consider the effects of criminal conduct on
communities when exercising
the sentencing discretion.
CONCLUSIONS:
[33]
Having regard to the above the appeal against both conviction and
sentence cannot succeed and
both the conviction and the sentence of
the court
a quo
of life imprisonment is confirmed.
THE ORDER:
The appeal against conviction and
sentence is dismissed.
NL TSHOMBE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
On behalf of the
applicant:
Adv. LA van Wyk
Instructed by:
Legal-Aid Board of
South Africa
On behalf of the
respondent:
Adv. EV Sihlangu
Instructed by:
Director of Public
Prosecutions
Date of Hearing:
17 October 2023
Judgment handed
down:
18 December 2023
[1]
The
Sexual
Offences and Related Matters Act
[2]
The
Minimum Sentences legislation
[3]
S
v Zinn 1969(2) SA 537 (A)
[4]
S v van Der Meyden 1999(1) SACR 447 W; S v Shackell 2002(2) SACR 185
at para [30]
[5]
[2009]
1 All SA 237
(SCA) Para [14]
[6]
Supra
at
448 F - G
[7]
R v Mlambo 1957(4) SA 727 at 738 A-C
[8]
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
[9]
1981
(3) SA 172
(A) at 180E-G
[10]
R v Dlumayo and Another
1948 (2) SA 677(A)
and S v Francis 1991(1)
SACR 198(A) at 198j-199a “The power 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
cases that the court of appeal will be entitled to interfere with a
trial court’s evaluation of oral testimony”.
11
S v Monyane and Others
2008 SACR 543
(SCA) Paragraph [15]
[12]
S v Hadebe and Others
1997
(2) SACR 641
(SCA)
at 645e-f the court held:
“…
..in
the absence of demonstrable and material misdirection by the trial
court . its findings of fact are presumed to be correct
and will
only be disregarded if the recorded evidence shows them to be
clearly wrong.”
[13]
Supra
[14]
Supra
[15]
1999(2)
SACR 319 (W)
[16]
2001
(1) SACR 594 (CC)
[17]
At
paragraph 37
[18]
2001
(1) SACR 469 (SCA)
[19]
At
Paragraph 7
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