Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 267South Africa
Batayi v S (Appeal) (A231/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 267 (24 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
24 June 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Rape - appeal against sentence of life imprisonment on multiple acts of child rape – appellant is a sexual predator – life sentence imposed on both counts of rape is not shocking or startlingly inappropriate – sentence confirmed on appeal.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAWCHC 267
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Batayi v S (Appeal) (A231/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 267 (24 June 2025)
Batayi v S (Appeal) (A231/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 267 (24 June 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2025_267.html
sino date 24 June 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO.
: A231/2024
REPORTABLE
In
the matter between:-
ASANDA
BATAYI
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation
:
Batayi v S
(Case no A231/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC (24.06.25)
Coram
:
NUKU J
et
MOOSA AJ
Heard
:
20 June
2025
Delivered
:
24 June 2025 (delivered via email to the respective
Counsel)
Summary
:
Rape - appeal against sentence of life imprisonment
on multiple acts
of child rape – appellant is a sexual predator – life
sentence imposed on both counts of rape is not
shocking or
startlingly inappropriate – sentence confirmed on appeal.
ORDER
On
appeal from
the regional court at Khayelitsha, it is ordered that
the appeal against the sentence on count 1 and count 2 is dismissed.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Moosa
AJ (Nuku J concurring)
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal stemming from a criminal trial held in the regional
court at Khayelitsha.
The appellant was charged with two counts of
rape in contravention of s 3 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act
(Sexual Offences and
Related Matters) 32 of 2007 (the CLAA 32/2007).
He pleaded not guilty to both counts.
[2]
He was convicted on 25 July 2019 on both counts of rape. On 7 October
2019 he was
sentenced to life imprisonment on each count pursuant to
the minimum sentence regime in s 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act
105 of 1997 (the CLAA 105/1997), both of which sentences were
ordered to run concurrently under s 280(2) of the Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977 (the CPA).
[3]
Pursuant to s 309(1)(a) of the CPA as amended by s 10 of Act 42 of
2023, the appellant
exercised his automatic right of appeal against
his conviction and sentence on both counts. However, at the hearing,
appellant’s
counsel, Mr Sebueng, informed the Court that the
appellant no longer seeks to appeal his conviction. Mr Sebueng
informed the Court
that the appellant only pursues the appeal against
the sentence imposed by the trial court. Accordingly, this judgment
relates
to that limited aspect.
[4]
For purposes of evaluating the sentence imposed and whether there are
grounds to set
it aside, it is necessary to traverse key aspects of
the trial record a quo.
Salient
backgrounds facts
[5]
The appellant was charged and convicted with the rape of a minor
female girl (ZM).
[1]
Her birth
certificate showed that she was born on 25 September 2000.
[6]
Pursuant to count 1, the appellant was convicted for unlawfully and
intentionally
committing an act of sexual penetration by inserting
his penis into ZM’s vagina without her consent on two occasions
in 2014.
[7]
Pursuant to count 2, the appellant was convicted for unlawfully and
intentionally
committing an act of sexual penetration by inserting
his penis into ZM’s vagina without her consent on multiple
occasions
during the period August 2011 to December 2011.
[8]
ZM was 18 years old when she testified in the trial a quo. She
testified that the
appellant raped her multiple times during the
latter part of the year 2011, and again twice in and during 2014.
[9]
It is common cause that during 2011, the appellant lived with ZM and
her family at
their Khayelitsha home. The first time ZM was raped by
the appellant during 2011 was towards the end of the year. ZM
testified
that she returned home from school in the afternoon one day
with her brother, A[...]. After they undressed from their school
uniforms
and put on their after-school clothing, A[...] went outside
the house to play. ZM was alone in the house with the appellant. ZM
was doing her school homework. The appellant called her into his
bedroom and told her to climb onto his bed. It was then that the
appellant raped ZM.
[10]
The second time ZM was raped by the appellant in 2011 is also after
she and her brother, A[...],
returned home from school. Again, the
appellant was at home alone. ZM’s parents were at work. The
appellant was entrusted
with ZM and A[...]’s after-school care.
[11]
On the occasion of this second rape, the appellant gave A[...] money
and sent him to the shop
to buy something. The appellant told ZM to
stay with him while A[...] goes to the shop. When A[...] left, the
appellant again told
ZM to go into his room. While in that room, ZM
recounted that the appellant said to her that she must undress
herself and climb
onto his bed. ZM did as she was instructed and the
appellant then raped her. ZM was 11 years old at that time.
[12]
The appellant then raped ZM a further three times on one weekend
during November 2011 when ZM’s
parents went to the Eastern Cape
for her grandfather’s funeral. ZM and her two younger brothers
were left at home alone in
the appellant’s care. ZM’s
parents trusted the appellant with their children’s care.
[13]
The appellant raped ZM on the Friday evening shortly after her
parents left for the Eastern Cape
and while her brothers were asleep.
The appellant fetched ZM from her parents’ room and took her to
his room where he raped
her on his bed.
[14]
The appellant raped ZM on the next day too, being Saturday. She was
alone at home with him. ZM’s
brothers were at the house of a
neighbour whose child was graduating. While ZM was alone at home with
the appellant, he again told
her to go into his room. ZM was
powerless. She did as she was told. There she was raped again.
[15]
The appellant raped ZM for a fifth time in 2011 on the following
evening, being Sunday night.
ZM was sleeping in her parents’
room when the appellant fetched her again. He took her to his room
where he raped her on
his bed. While he was busy raping her, ZM’s
mother phoned and told the appellant that she was close to home.
[16]
When detailing these five rapes, ZM testified that she felt pain on
each occasion in her vagina
and that she told the appellant that this
was painful for her, but to no avail. He continued to rape her
despite her pain.
[17]
The appellant was convicted of these rapes, all of which formed part
of the charge in count no.
2. As stated above, he was sentenced to
life imprisonment.
[18]
ZM testified that her parents sent her to live with her grandmother
in the Eastern Cape. She
stayed there for two years, namely, 2012 to
2013. On her return from the Eastern Cape at the end of 2013, the
appellant was still
living at her parents’ home in Khayelitsha.
On two occasions in and during 2014, and on dates which she could not
recall,
the appellant raped ZM when they were again alone at home.
[19]
The appellant was convicted of these latter rapes which formed part
of the charge in count no. 1. On
this count too, he was sentenced to
life imprisonment which was ordered to run concurrently with the life
sentence imposed on count
2.
Issues
for adjudication
[20]
The trial court did not find substantial and compelling circumstances
to exist. On that basis,
the appellant was sentenced to the minimum
prescribed sentence of life imprisonment on both counts as compelled
by s 51(1) of the
CLAA 105/1997.
[21]
The appellant contends that the trial court erred in its decision not
to find substantial and
compelling circumstances which would merit a
deviation from the statutorily prescribed sentence for rape. He
contends that same
exists so that he is entitled to a lesser sentence
than the prescribed life imprisonment imposed.
[22]
The narrow issue for determination is whether valid grounds exist for
this Court to interfere
with the trial court’s sentence.
Legal
principles on sentencing
[23]
An appellate court must be slow to interfere with a trial court’s
discretion on sentence.
It is a truism that the infliction of
punishment is pre-eminently a matter within a trial court’s
discretion. See
S v Rabie
1975 (4) SA 855
(A) at 857D.
[24]
In
S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 496
(SCA) para 12, it was held:
‘
A
court exercising appellate jurisdiction cannot, in the absence of
material misdirection by the trial court, approach the question
of
sentence as if it was the trial court and then substitute the
sentence arrived at by it simply because it prefers it. To do
so
would usurp the sentencing of the trial court.’
[25]
In
S v Pillay
1977 (4) SA 531
(A) at 535E-F, the
Appellate Division (now Supreme Court of Appeal) held that a
‘misdirection’, for purposes of an
appellate court’s
jurisdiction being triggered,
‘…
means an
error committed by the Court in determining or applying the facts for
assessing the appropriate sentence. As the essential
inquiry in
an appeal against sentence, however, is not whether the sentence was
right or wrong, but whether the
Court in imposing it exercised its
discretion properly and judicially, a mere misdirection is not by
itself sufficient to entitle
the Appeal Court to interfere with the
sentence; it must be of such a nature, degree, or seriousness that it
shows, directly or
inferentially, that the Court did not
exercise its discretion at all or exercised it improperly or
unreasonably
’. (Emphasis added)
Application
of principles to the facts
[26]
Appellant’s counsel relied on the following considerations in
support of his contention
that substantial and compelling
circumstances exist: (i) appellant is a first offender; (ii)
appellant was 27 years old in 2011
when the rapes in count 2 were
committed, and 29 years old in 2014 when the rapes in count 1 were
committed; and (iii) the appellant’s
various personal
circumstances as outlined in the pre-sentencing report dated 27
August 2019 marked Exhibit D.
[27]
With regards to the appellant’s status as a first offender,
this consideration carries
little weight when a court determines if
substantial and compelling circumstances exist. This is clear from
S
v Malgas
supra para 25 where the SCA held as follows with regards
to deviation from minimum sentences:
‘
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.’
(Emphasis added)
[28]
The rape in this case falls squarely within the ambit of Part I of
Schedule 2 of the CLAA 105/1997,
namely, rape committed by an accused
in circumstances where the victim was raped more than once. The
legislature ordained that
even first offenders of such a heinous rape
shall be sentenced to life imprisonment. This is a most appropriate
response in the
context of this case.
[29]
As regards the appellant’s age, his counsel submits that he is
‘fairly young’
and that this is a mitigating factor. The
description of the appellant as ‘fairly young’ is akin to
describing him
as ‘relatively young’, both ill-defined
and vague concepts which cannot play any meaningful role for purposes
of establishing
substantial and compelling circumstances, unless some
content is given to the meaning of ‘fairly young’. See
S
v Matyityi
2011 (1) SACR 40
(SCA) paras 14, 23.
[30]
As regards age being used as a mitigating factor, our courts have
decisively held that ‘a
person of 20 years or more must show by
acceptable evidence that he was immature to such an extent that his
immaturity can operate
as a mitigating factor. At the age of 27
the respondent could hardly be described as a callow youth. At best
for him his chronological
age was a neutral factor. Nothing in it
served, without more, to reduce his moral blameworthiness.’ (
S
v Matyityi
supra para 14).
[31]
No evidence was placed before the trial court as to the appellant’s
level of immaturity,
or any other influence which may have been
brought to bear on him that caused him to act in the manner that he
did. In fact, in
the trial court, the appellant persisted in denying
his guilt. This is further aggravating for purposes of sentencing and
the trial
court was correct in viewing it as such.
[32]
While the appellant’s personal circumstances sketched in the
pre-sentencing report remain
relevant even in cases where a minimum
sentence is involved (see
S v Malgas
supra para 25), I am
guided, however, by the following dictum in
S v Vilakazi
2009
(1) SACR 552
(SCA) para 58 as to the reduced role which an accused’s
personal circumstances will play at sentencing in cases of serious
sexual offences:
‘
In cases of
serious crimes, the personal circumstances of the offender, by
themselves, will necessarily recede into the background.
Once it
becomes clear that the crime is deserving of a substantial period of
imprisonment the question of whether the accused is
married or
single, whether he has two children or three, whether he is employed
are in themselves largely immaterial to what that
period should be
and those seem to me to be what the kind of ‘flimsy’
grounds that
Malgas
said should be avoided.’
[33]
The personal circumstances of the appellant do not, in my view,
qualify as the kind of ‘weighty
justification’ which
would enable this Court to impose a period of imprisonment less than
the minimum sentence prescribed
by law. Consequently, the trial
court’s assessment in this regard cannot be faulted.
[34]
To impose a sentence less than life imprisonment on either count in
this case would be unjust
and, in my view, result in a sentence which
is unfair to the victim and society at large. Indeed, the victim and
society would,
in such circumstance, likely view the lesser sentence
as shockingly or disturbingly inappropriate.
[35]
An enlightened and just sentencing policy or practice requires that
the punishment selected be
one which ‘
best
fits the unique circumstances of the case before court’ and is
sufficiently ‘victim-centred’
(
S v Matyityi
supra para 16)
.
[36]
This is particularly so with rape.
In
S v Matyityi
supra para 16, it was held:
‘
In
South Africa victim empowerment is based on restorative justice.
Restorative justice seeks to emphasise that a crime is more
than the
breaking of the law or offending against the state – it is an
injury or wrong done to another person.
...
As in any true participatory democracy its underlying philosophy is
to give meaningful content to the rights of all citizens,
particularly victims of sexual abuse, by reaffirming one of our
founding democratic values namely human dignity.
It
enables us as well to vindicate our collective sense of humanity and
humanness.’
[37]
The appellant is a sexual predator – he preyed on a
young girl. His appetite for rape knew no bounds. The multiple rapes
perpetrated
by the appellant was appalling and caused outrage,
understandably so. His victim, ZM, was a child and a relative whom
the appellant
had a duty to protect. The appellant was invited into
ZM’s home by her parents when he migrated to the Western Cape
from
the Eastern Cape in search of work. ZM’s parents provided
the appellant with shelter and help to find gainful employment.
They
also trusted him to be alone in their home with their three young
children, including their only daughter (ZM). The appellant
betrayed
that trust by using it to gain access to ZM so that he could violate
her by raping time after time.
[38]
ZM was in the appellant’s care after school when her parents
were at work, and when her
parents went away to the Eastern Cape for
a funeral. He raped ZM no less than five times in 2011 (count 2) and
twice in 2014 (count
1). On the weekend in November 2011 when her
parents went to the Eastern Cape, he raped ZM on the Friday, the
Saturday, and the
Sunday. The appellant was relentless.
[39]
The fact that the appellant on one occasion in 2011 sent ZM’s
brother, A[...], out of the
house to buy something at a nearby shop,
is a telling fact strongly indicating that the appellant did not act
impulsively on this
occasion (nor on any of the other instances too).
He planned ZM’s rape by craftily creating an opportunity to do
so when
he sent A[...] away to the shop. The same aggravating
consideration applies equally when regard is had to the fact that, on
each
occasion when the appellant raped ZM, there were no adults
around in the home who could protect ZM by stopping the appellant.
His
actions were, thus, not only deplorable but calculated.
[40]
In addition to the emotional trauma which ZM, as a rape victim,
necessarily suffered from the
brutal invasion of her bodily (i.e.,
physical) integrity, as a young girl she was burdened with the fear
of reporting the incidences
of rape because of the familial
relationship and out of fear of retaliation from the appellant.
[41]
By all accounts, ZM was a virgin when she was first raped by the
appellant. He robbed ZM of her
innocence, and the wonder and pleasure
of experiencing her womanhood at a time and a place of her choosing
(ie, when she was ready).
[42]
For all these reasons, I find that the magistrate did not misdirect
herself when she found that
there were no substantial and compelling
circumstances which merit a lesser sentence than that prescribed by
law. I am also satisfied
that the sentences imposed were blended with
a healthy dose of compassion and mercy. Counts 1 and 2 involved the
commission of
more than one rape which occurred on different days. As
such, they cannot be considered as one uninterrupted act. In the
exercise
of her discretion for sentencing purposes, the magistrate
treated each of the rapes comprising count 1 and count 2 respectively
as one for sentencing on each count.
[43]
It was for this reason that the appellant was not sentenced to life
imprisonment for each of
the seven acts of rape comprising counts 1
and 2 but to life imprisonment for each count separately. As the
magistrate’s
exercise of her discretion cannot be faulted, and
no valid basis was argued on appeal, interference with the sentences
would be
an overreach. See
HL v S
(A51/2019)
[2019] ZAWCHC 49
(26 April 2019).
Order
[44]
In the result, I would propose that the appeal against the sentence
on both count 1 and count
2 be dismissed.
F.
MOOSA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree, and it is so Ordered.
L.G.
NUKU
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
appellant:
Adv I.M Sebueng
Instructed
by:
Cape Town Justice Centre
For
respondent: Adv. M.J
September
Instructed
by:
Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions,
Cape Town.
[1]
In this
judgment, the personal information of the complainant and her
mother
is protected through non-disclosure.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Bulawa v S (Appeal) (A114/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 526 (13 November 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 526High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
C.W v S (Appeal) (A301/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 198 (13 May 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 198High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
S.M v S (Appeal) (A14/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 221 (27 May 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 221High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
B.B v S (Appeal) (A95/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 270 (25 June 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 270High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
R.F v J.S (Appeal) (A79/2025) [2025] ZAWCHC 323 (31 July 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 323High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar