Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 735South Africa
Sangweni v S (A102/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 735 (1 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 July 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sangweni v S (A102/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 735 (1 July 2022)
Sangweni v S (A102/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 735 (1 July 2022)
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sino date 1 July 2022
#
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG
DIVISON, PRETORIA
GAUTENG
DIVISON, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: A102/2021
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
# ANDREW
SIMPHIWE SANGWENI
Appellant
ANDREW
SIMPHIWE SANGWENI
Appellant
AND
# THE
STATE
Respondent
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SARDIWALLA
J
INTRODUCTION:
[1]
[1]
At the outset of this appeal the court
granted the appellant's application for condonation for the late
delivery of his heads of
argument for the leave to appeal to this
court. The application was opposed by the representative of the State
who sought an order
striking the matter from the roll.
[2]
The appellant pleaded not guilty in the
Regional Court Benoni. The appellant was convicted on 19 January 2019
by the presiding Magistrate
Mveli on one count of rape and was
sentenced to ten (10) years imprisonment. The appellant brought an
application for Leave to
Appeal in respect of both conviction and
sentence.
ISSUES
ON APPEAL:
[3]
It is in dispute that the State proved the commission of the crime
which featured in the trial. The central issue
arising, however, is
whether the court a
quo
erred in concluding that the State had
proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant had sexual
intercourse with the alleged
victim. It was the appellant's grounds
of appeal that:
3.1
By finding that the State has proved their case beyond a reasonable
doubt in respect to when and
how penetration took place;
3.2
By finding that the witness Lerato Joyce Ntsani could be relied upon
to convict the appellant;
3.3
By irregularly allowing evidence during the trial and thereby
allowing the magistrate's judgement
to be clouded;
3.4
By using the inadmissible evidence as part of the reasons for his
conviction;
3.5
By imposing a sentence in respect to count 1 which is shockingly
harsh and inappropriate having
light of the circumstances of the
case;
3.6
By over-emphasizing the seriousness of the offence and the interest
of society;
3.7
By failing to take into account the prospects of rehabilitation;
3.8
By finding that the appellant is a second offender for purposes of
the Minimum Sentence Act, Act
32 of 2007 and that the minimum
sentence applicable in the present matter is 15 years' imprisonment
in respect of a second offender
and not 10 years' imprisonment.
3.9
By taking into account aggravating factors which were not presented
to the court through evidence
by the State.
3.10
The Court erred in not applying the determinative test as laid down
in
S v MALGAS
2001 (1) SACR
469 (SCA),
and
therefore erred in not finding substantial and compelling
circumstances to deviate from the prescribed minimum sentence of life
imprisonment.
[4]
The case was advanced by two witnesses for the State, the complainant
Lerato Joyce Ntsani who was allegedly raped by the appellant on 9
March 2019 and the arresting officer Ms Queen Mahlangu.
[5]
The defence's submission is that there was no corroboration of the
evidence
as the complainant was the sole witness. The defence submits
that there was also no evidence before the court as to how much
alcohol
the complainant had consumed and as such the court erred in
finding that both the appellant and the complainant had consumed
equal
amounts of alcohol. Further that the complainant alluded to
other witnesses in her testimony that were present at the tavern but
that the State did not call those witnesses to corroborate the
complainant's version. The appellant also alleges that the court
did
not object to the complainant referring to his previous convictions
in her testimony and or object to cross examination
of such
evidence. The appellant submits that this resulted in an irregularity
of inadmissible evidence that impaired the judgment
of the presiding
officer and led to an unfair hearing. Further that the court erred in
taking this into account when making its
judgment. The defence
averred that it was not clear from the complaint's evidence how she
identified him as her attacker and therefore
failed to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that he indeed committed the offence alleged.
[6]
I turn now to the merits of the appellant's conviction. In convicting
the appellant, I cannot find that the magistrate committed a number
of fundamental misdirections. However, I will refer to once
such
instance that I find of paramount importance to the State's case.
[7]
Firstly, it is common cause that the complainant and the accused were
well known to each other. In this matter the arresting officer was
called to give evidence of the complainant's version regarding
the
identity of the accused and she confirmed that the complainant
identified a person that she was with as the man she left the
tavern
with that night and whom she walked home with in the early hours of
the morning and that he pushed her into the bushes and
raped her. The
evidence of the form J88 dated 10 March 2019 was not objected to. The
complainant was coherent in material aspects
regarding the identity
of the accused as a person known to her and her interaction with him
on the day in question. She was also
not contradictory in her
evidence even under cross-examination when questioned about previous
interactions with the appellant in
December 2019 and during the day
of the incident.
[8]
However, the one thing that the court a
quo
did not do, was question the State
on why the husband or his friend that were present at the tavern to
verify the sequence of events
were not called as witnesses in
corroboration of the complainant's testimony. This especially so as
the complainant submitted that
her husband was at the tavern when she
was with the accused, or called other witnesses that were at the
tavern to corroborate her
version that she left the tavern around 2am
alone and that the appellant followed her. The Court correctly in
terms of
section 186
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
called
Ms Lekhutu as a court witness albeit that she was not cooperative. I
see no reason why the court did not take the same approach
when the
complainant referred to witnesses in her evidence. I agree with the
defence Counsel that they should have been called
as witnesses
especially because caution must be taken in cases were the
complainant is the sole witness.
I
accept that the complainant's husband and friend could not
necessarily corroborate the complainant's version of the alleged rape
but could lend support to her credibility. The Magistrate's failure
is in this regard inexplicable and a plain misdirection as
the onus
is on the State to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. The same
must be said for one Ms Lienkie who found the complainant
the morning
after the alleged rape and no evidence as to her interaction with the
complainant was placed before the Court. Although
the complainant's
version may be reasonable, I am not satisfied that the court
established the complainant's version was true beyond
a reasonable
doubt.
[9]
The State's representative on appeal submitted that there was no
misdirection
by the court as the complainant's identification of the
appellant could not be faulted and that the defence did not prove any
motive
by the complainant to mislead the court or falsely accuse the
appellant. It was also submitted that the issue of the appellant's
previous convictions was only canvassed as a rebuttal to the
appellant's version that he was hospitalized. I am satisfied that
her
evidence was clear in all material respects and that the Magistrate
was aware of the cautionary rules applying to evidence
of a single
witness. However, the State avers that the appellant's testimony that
he was with the complainant during the day of
the incident only
serves to reaffirm that the appellant was with the complainant as
indicated by her evidence and therefore if
someone else had raped
her, there would be no reason to falsely accuse the appellant.
[10]
The complainant's evidence has very little probative value. The
magistrate did consider that a cautionary approach
was necessary. In
S
v Jackson
1998 (1) SACR 470
(SCA) at 474f-475e Olivier JA
surveyed the history of the cautionary rule and the position in other
jurisdictions, and concluded
at 476e-f:
'The
evidence in
a
particular
case may call for
a
cautionary
approach, but that is far cry from the application of
a
general cautionary rule.'
The
learned judge then quoted with approval from the decision of the
English Court of Appeal in R v Makanjuola, R v Easton
[1995] 1 All ER
730
(CA), including the following passage at 477c-d:
'In
some cases, it may be appropriate for the judge to warn the jury to
exercise caution before acting upon the unsupported evidence
of
a
witness. This will not be so simply
because the witness is
a
complainant
of
a
sexual
offence nor will it necessarily be so because
a
witness is alleged to be an
accomplice.
There
will need to be an evidential basis for suggesting that the evidence
of the witness may be unreliable. An evidential basis
does not
include mere suggestions
by
cross-examining counsel.'
The
evidence in this case certainly did call for
a
cautionary approach. Quite apart from
her contradictory evidence to which I have already referred, the
complainant had been seen
by Barnard, her son and some of his friends
in an extremely compromising situation. The lower half of her body
was naked when her
sister-in-law arrived on the scene. Her husband
and her family would undoubtedly have called for an explanation. Rape
was an obvious
answer. These facts alone provide an evidentiary basis
for the suggestion that the version of the complainant that she was
raped
may be unreliable and such evidence accordingly
had to be approached with caution'.
[11]
In
Hammond
v S
(SCA case 500/03 in which
judgment was delivered on 3 September 2004) it was held that the
facts and contents of the evidence of
a complaint in a sexual
misconduct case can be used only to show that the evidence of a
complainant who testifies that the act
complained of took place
without her consent, is consistent. It is relevant solely to her
credibility. The complaint cannot be
used as creating a probability
in favour of the State case i.e. it cannot be argued that because the
complainant complained shortly
after the incident, it is probable
that the incident took place without her consent or that the converse
is true.
[12]
The fact that the complainant was
bleeding is of no significance as it is clear from the medical
evidence that she was menstruating.
As is the reference that was made
to the alleged injury sustained by the complainant to her eye as a
result of the strangulation
and a sore throat which the complainant
indicated that she told the nurse about but the medical report
indicated that there were
no obvious injuries. What does compel
further scrutiny is that the complainant by her own version testified
that after the alleged
rape by the appellant occurred, they continued
to walk home together and that he even carried her shoes. When
cross-examined the
complainant offered an explanation that she did
not run away or call for help as she was too weak and that the
accused threatened
that if she told anyone what had happened he would
kill her. However, she did not allude to any means of any weapons
used but indicated
that she was scared and that the appellant was a
man and therefore larger in built than she was.
[13]
Nugent J said in
S v Van der Meyden
1999 (2) SA 79
(W) 82D-E,
in a passage subsequently approved by this court in
S v Van
Aswegen
2001 (2) SACR 97
(SCA) at 101e:
'What
must be borne in mind, however, is that the conclusion which is
reached (whether it be to convict or to acquit) must account
for all
the evidence. Some of the evidence may be found to be false; some of
it might be found to be unreliable; and some of it
might be found to
be only possibly false or unreliable; but none of it may simply be
ignored.'
[14]
The appellant was a satisfactory witness. He persistently denied that
he raped the complainant but did not deny
that they interacted with
each other on that day or previously and even alluded to a Ms Lekhutu
who could corroborate his version
that they had gone to Kempton Park
together but that the witness as mentioned earlier was unwilling. The
appellant offered a reasonable
explanation of the events and did not
leave a poor impression of his credibility.
[15]
The State's representative submitted in argument that the appellant's
version is so improbable
that it cannot be true because the
complainant had no motive to falsely implicate him. But the
complainant was drunk. So was the
appellant. Their conduct cannot
accordingly be evaluated according to rational norms. It is quite
possible in the circumstances
that the complainant's version is
unreliable as much as her reasoning of not running away or calling
for help is possibility false.
This is also quite possible as the
complainant does not explain why she was with the appellant in the
tavern and not her husband
even though she indicated he was also
there or why she did not leave with her husband when she indicated he
had left at around
20h00. There is no explanation why when she
arrived home did not alert anyone about what had happened as the
accused was no longer
with her and the perceived threat of her life
being in danger was no longer present.
There
is also no explanation why the state whose responsibility is to
ensure that the version placed before the court is proved
beyond a
reasonable doubt would not call the witnesses mentioned in the
complainant's testimony to corroborate even a fraction
of her
version. This fact cannot simply be ignored.
[16]
Considering the evidence on the record as a whole I am not satisfied
that the guilt of
the appellant was proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
The appellant was a satisfactory witness. On the other hand, the
complainant's
evidence was also satisfactory in certain respects,
except for the aspects I have just mentioned, uncorroborated; and she
was furthermore
unreliable on two important aspects of her evidence,
namely, why she had not called for help and why there was no mention
of the
throat injury or red eye in the medical practitioner's report.
A cautionary approach is called for in the circumstances of this
particular case for the reasons I have given. The natural sympathy
which one has for a woman who says that she has been raped,
cannot be
allowed to play any role in deciding whether the onus of proof in a
criminal case has been satisfied. In the present
case, it has not.
[17]
Accordingly, the following order is granted:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is upheld;
2.
The appeal on conviction succeeds and is set aside;
3.
The appeal on sentence is set aside.
SARDIWALLA
J
I
agree
MOKOSE,
J
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant MG
BOTHA
Instructed
by LEGAL
AID SOUTH AFRICA
For
the Respondents S
D NGOBENI
Instructed
by NDPP
Date
of handing down of judgment:
[1]
This
judgment deals with the appeal against the judgment in the court a
quo. It therefore proceeds on the premise that the reader
is
familiar with that judgment, the full details of the individual
charges against the accused as per the indictment and the
categorisation of the charges adopted by the learned Magistrate. In
the interest of brevity evidence led before the court a quo
will not
be repeated in this judgment in any great detail unless material to
the conclusions reached. Readers of this judgment
are referred to
the judgment of the court a quo and the record if any additional
details are required. To facilitate reading,
the same terminology as
adopted in the court a quo will be followed to ensure consistency
and hopefully ease of understanding.
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