Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 51South Africa
Nkabinde v S (A117/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 51 (21 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nkabinde v S (A117/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 51 (21 January 2022)
Nkabinde v S (A117/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 51 (21 January 2022)
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sino date 21 January 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
21
January 2022
APPEAL
CASE NO: A117/2021
COURT
A QUO
: SH294/2011
In
the matter between:
Phillip
Nkabinde
Appellant
and
The
State
Respondent
This judgment is issued by the
Judges whose names are reflected herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties/their legal
representatives by email.
The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of this
matter on Case lines by the Judges or their
secretary. The date of
this judgment is deemed to be 21 JANUARY 2022.
JUDGMENT
Munzhelele J (van
der Westhuizen J concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The appellant in this matter was convicted of rape of a nine (9)
years old complainant
in the Regional Magistrates' Court of Benoni
and sentenced to life imprisonment in terms of section 51(1) and
Schedule 2, Part I
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
Because of the sentence of life imprisonment imposed on the
appellant, an automatic right to appeal conviction and sentence in
terms
of
section 309(1)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
is
applicable. The appellant brought an appeal only on conviction. The
attack on the appellant's conviction in this Appeal Court
was
premised substantially on how the trial court assessed the identity
evidence to find the appellant guilty. It had been complicated
for us
to understand the submissions found on the heads of argument by the
appellant. The appellant did not put up a clear argument,
except
quoting cases in which he failed dismally to state the relevancy of
those cases to his appeal.
Background of
the case
[2]
The appellant was a resident of the Wattville section. This is the
same place where
the child victim stays. The victim used to play on
the street and in her yard with her siblings. The appellant was
well-known to
the community and the victim. He interacted with the
victim on the date of the rape and some other dates prior to the
rape. Both
the appellant and the victim know each other very well,
and the victim also knows the appellant as Uncle Lazi.
[3]
On 31 March 2011 at Wattville, the complainant, a nine (9) years old
child, was busy
playing in the yard with her siblings when the
appellant called her to come and take a cell phone from him and
money, but she refused.
It was during the night before eight o'clock.
The child testified that it was before generations soapie could play.
Seeing that the
child had refused, the appellant grabbed her and
pulled her to Mngani's place, where there was a shelter. She was
ordered to remove
her clothes, but she refused. The appellant removed
the child's pants and panty. The child remained naked, and the
appellant undressed
himself and penetrated her with his male genital
into her female genital. The child was threatened that the appellant
would kill
her if she would tell anyone about the sexual intercourse
which occurred. The appellant was in possession of a knife when
the
rape occurred. After finishing, he told her to go home. The child
did not tell anyone about the ordeal, but she was severely injured,
as described on the J88. Pinky Mpongwase and Lebohang Khumalo
witnessed the child unable to walk properly due to injuries.
[4]
Pinky Mpongwase, when she saw that the child could not walk properly,
inspected her
private part and found that the child had some
discharges. She then called the child's mother, Morungwe Rivonia
Makweba. Pinky could
not testify because she had passed away before
the case could be heard. Lebohang Khumalo confirmed that she
saw the child on
the date when they were walking together with the
child to the tuck-shop; the child was not walking correctly.
[5]
The child's mother, Ms. Morongwe, came home and took the child to the
hospital. The
child never told the mother who raped her while at
home. A nurse, Jackleen Schouten, attended to the child in the
mother's presence
at the hospital. She asked the child for the name
of a person who raped her, but the child did not divulge the
information. Later
the nurse told the child that if she could tell
her who the person was, then such a person would be taken to prison
where they would
dig a hole and put that person inside such hole and
will never be seen outside again. The child then said okay- ‘the
person’s
name is Malume Lazi’. The child mentioned the name
without any hesitation in the presence of her mother.
[6] The registered
nurse, Jackleen Schouten at Themba Rape and Trauma Centre, examined
the child on 2 April 2011 and found that her
para-urethral folds were
bruised on both sides, labia minora bruised at 3 o’clock and 9
o’clock, fossa navicularis bruised at
6 o’clock, bruised at 8-9
o’clock, her private part was also swollen. The clinical evidence
was that the child was vaginally
penetrated.
[7]
The appellant denied the allegations of rape. He confirmed that
the child knows him and knows the child and the child's
mother. The
appellant also confirmed that he is known as Lazi in the township. He
testified that he stays on the same street with
the child. He lives
only four houses away from the child’ house.
Discussion
[8]
It is trite law that a court of appeal should refrain from lightly
interfering with
the credibility findings of a trial court which is
presumed to be correct. This is so because the trial court had the
benefit of
being steeped in the atmosphere of the trial, observing
and hearing the evidence first-hand. Therefore, the trial court is
“in
the best position to determine where the truth lies”. See
S
v Hadebe and Others
1997 (2) SACR 641
(SCA) at 645e. In considering the judgment of the court
a
quo
, this court has been mindful that a
court of appeal is not at liberty to depart from the trial court's
findings of fact and credibility,
unless they are vitiated by
irregularity, or unless an examination of the record reveals that
those findings are patently wrong.
See
S
v Francis
1991 (1) SACR 198
(A) at 198J
– 199A.
[9]
It is the evidence of the child in this case, which ultimately forms
the crux of the
case and determines the guilt of the accused. It has
long been accepted that the evidence of a child is potentially
unreliable because
of the child's inexperience, imaginations, and
susceptibility to influence, and for that reason, her evidence should
be approached
with caution by the trial court. See
Viveiros v S
(75/98)
2000 ZASCA 95
;
2000 2 All SA 86(A)
para 2. The trial court
must fully appreciate the dangers inherent in accepting such
evidence. Where it is apparent that such appreciation
was absent, a
court of appeal may hold that the conviction should not be sustained.
R v Manda
1951 (3) SA 158
(A) at 163C-F. The trial court has
extensively assessed the evidence of the child in appreciation of
such dangers inherent in the
child's evidence from pages 75 to 86 of
the judgment to the satisfaction of this appeal court. Further,
the cautionary rule
that the trial court applied to the evidence of
this child when assessing the credibility and reliability of her
evidence was apparent
in the judgment from pages 75 to 84. From the
judgment of the court
a quo
, it was evident that the evidence
of the child was well analysed.
[10] The
main issue in dispute is the identity of the perpetrator. Put
differently; the case turned on the
reliability of the complainant's
identification of the appellant. We agree with the court
a quo
that the child could not have wrongly identified the appellant as the
perpetrator. It was common cause that the child knew the appellant,
and the appellant knew the child and the mother. It was further
common cause that the community of Wattville knew Malume Lazi. The
possibility of the child identifying the wrong perpetrator does not
exist. We had no reason to doubt that the State proved beyond
reasonable doubt that the appellant raped the child. Again, we agree
that the court
a quo
did not misdirect itself when it found
that the appellant was the culprit in the rape of the nine (9) years
old child. We again
agree with the court
a quo’s
findings that the child's evidence as a single witness was clear in
all material aspects and had satisfied the cautionary rule applicable
to a single witness.
[11]
On page 84 of the judgment, the court
a quo
had dealt with the
discrepancies regarding whom she
first informed about the rape, whether it
was Pinky, Lebo, or the
mother. The trial court attributed this confusion to the child's age
and even the period elapsed between
the incident and when the child
had to testify. Secondly, the appellant made it an issue that the
child did not want to tell anybody
who the perpetrator was. The
appellant argued that it was because of the fact that she did not
know who the perpetrator was. The
court
a quo
found that it
was not because she did not know but because of fear. There is
evidence that the child was intimidated and threatened
to be killed
if she would tell anybody. However, the nurse Jacleen put her at
ease. When she heard the nurse saying that such a person
who raped
her would be placed in a hole and never be seen again, she felt
protected and then divulged the information. That is typically
the
behaviour of a child. She felt that he would no longer harm her
because he would be in a hole and never come out again. We found
that
the discrepancies regarding the evidence of the child were
sufficiently dealt with by the court
a quo.
Further the court
a quo
found correctly that the State had proved beyond reasonable doubt the
identification of the appellant. We have found that the court
a
quo
did not misdirect itself on this
point, even on this issue.
[12]
It is a common cause that the child was penetrated or raped. An act
of rape is a dehumanizing, invasive,
and humiliating experience for a
child victim. She has been intimidated by the appellant having a
knife. She might have felt helpless
in the circumstances. Rape
has a psychologically shattering effect on the victim, including the
loss of ability to trust other
people that they could help. This
could be seen when the child could not trust her immediate family,
including her mother, for protection
against the perpetrator until
she had an assurance that this person would be put into the hole and
never be seen again. She was relieved
and started to divulge the
information of the culprit's identity.
[13]
The argument by the appellant that the nurse was the first report and
not the mother is flawed. We agree
with the trial court that the
mother could testify as a first report because when the child was
narrating to the nurse who the perpetrator
was, she was present in
the nursing room. She also heard the information about the
perpetrator's identity, and she could testify
as a first report. The
first report issue should not be allowed to inhibit the State's
ability to prevent and combat gender-based
violence and violence
against children, in accordance with the State's constitutional and
international obligations in the protection
of children as the
vulnerable group of our society. If this argument by the
appellant to say, the mother cannot testify as
a first report whereas
she was present when the child was narrating the rape information to
the nurse, this would be arbitrary to
the interest of the child as
protected by the constitution in terms of section 28 of the
Constitution of South Africa. It will
also defy logic and
common sense.
[14]
We have found that the evidence of the child had been consistent with
the evidence found on the J88 where
the nurse examined the child and
found that she was penetrated. The evidence of the child not walking
properly while going to the
tuck shop with Lebohang Khumalo
corroborated that the child was penetrated; however, this issue was
not in dispute it was essential
for the State to adduce it in order
to be seen to have proved all the elements of the offence of rape.
[15]
In conclusion, we find that the State has proved beyond reasonable
doubt that the appellant is the person
who sexually penetrated the
victim. We find that the trial court did not misdirect itself in
assessing the totality of the evidence.
Further, the trial court
adequately assessed the cautionary rule applicable to the child
evidence and single evidence of a single
witness. We agree with the
findings that the victim's evidence was satisfactory in all material
aspects. There is no misdirection
by the trial court in convicting
the appellant based on the totality of the evidence adduced.
Order
[16]
In the results, the following order is made
1.
The appeal against the
conviction is dismissed.
M
Munzhelele
Judge
of the High Court Pretoria
Heard on: 26 October
2021
Electronically
Delivered: 21 January 2022
Appearances
Appellant: Adv. L
Vorster
Instructed By:
Luando Voster Attorneys
Respondent: Adv.
C.P Harmzen
National Prosecuting
Authority
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