Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 138South Africa
Cloete v S (A 179/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 138 (1 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
1 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Cloete v S (A 179/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 138 (1 March 2024)
Cloete v S (A 179/23) [2024] ZAWCHC 138 (1 March 2024)
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sino date 1 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case No: A 179 / 23
Reportable
In the matter between:
HENMURY
CLOETE
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON
THIS 1
ST
DAY OF MARCH 2024
De Wet, AJ:
Introduction:
[1]
On a Saturday evening during April 2015,
in a small town in the Western Cape, the appellant broke into the
home of an elderly intellectually
disabled gentleman, Mr S [...], who
was well known to him, and proceeded to assault and rape him. After
reporting the incident
to a neighbour, the victim was taken to
hospital due to his injuries. During November 2016, the appellant
struck again, and the
same victim was once again attacked and raped
by the appellant in his home. Following this
modus
operandi
and during March 2018, also
in a small town in the Western Cape, the appellant violently
assaulted and raped another elderly gentleman,
Mr B [...], in the
street close to his home.
[2]
On 6 November 2020 the appellant was
found guilty on 7 charges, which included 2 counts of rape, in the
Regional Court of Swellendam
and on 11 March 2021 he was sentenced to
life imprisonment pursuant to the provisions of section 51(1) of the
Criminal Law Amendment
Act 105 of 1997 (“the CLAA”) on
charges 4 and 5 (“the rape charges”). It was ordered that
the sentences
imposed in respect of the other charges run
concurrently with the life sentences in terms of section 280(2) of
the Act.
[3]
The appellant appeals against the
imposition of the prescribed minimum sentences of life imprisonment
imposed in respect of charges
4 and 5 only.
Grounds
of appeal:
[4]
It was argued on behalf of the appellant
that there were substantial and compelling circumstances justifying
the imposition of a
lesser sentence than that prescribed by the Act
in respect of the rape charges, and that the court
a
quo
had under-emphasised the
interests of the appellant as it failed to properly consider a
sentence which would allow the appellant
an opportunity to be
rehabilitated and reintegrated back into society one day. It was
further suggested that a long period of direct
imprisonment other
than life imprisonment would address the seriousness of the offences
and strike a balance between the appellant’s
personal
circumstances and the interests of the community. The appellant
mainly relies on the fact that he was still relatively
young at the
time the rape offences were committed with only a previous conviction
for the possession of drugs and no history of
other violent crimes.
[5]
The State opposed the appeal and argued
that the appellant was an adult when he attacked and raped Mr S [...]
and Mr B [...] and
that the court
a
quo
considered all the circumstances
of this particular case before reaching the conclusion that imposing
the minimum prescribed sentence
was appropriate and proportionate to
the offences.
Brief
background:
[6]
As the appeal lies against sentence
only, it is not necessary to deal in any extensive detail with the
evidence on the merits. However,
a brief background of the factual
circumstances is needed to appreciate and understand the ultimate
sentence imposed by the court
a quo
.
[7]
The appellant was 17 years old when he
broke into the home of Mr S [...] and violently raped him. When he
was 18 years old, he again
broke into the home of Mr S [...] and
again attacked and raped him. After Mr S […] was attacked and
raped on the second
occasion, the appellant was arrested during
November 2016. He resisted arrest, threatened the two police officers
with a knife
and told them that he intended killing them. The police
only managed to arrest him after he was shot in the leg by one of the
officers.
The rape charges against the appellant at the time were
provisionally withdrawn pending further investigation.
[8]
During March 2018, when the
appellant was 20 years old, he waylaid an elderly man, Mr B [...],
whom he had been drinking with earlier
in the evening, in the street
outside his home, and proceeded to attack and rape him. The screams
and cries of the Mr B […]
alerted a neighbour who together
with another community member found him lying in the street crying
and bleeding.
[9]
Mr
S [...] is mentally disabled as contemplated in section 1 of the
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment
Act 32
of 2007 (“the SORMA”) and is an elderly person. He
testified in the court
a
quo
with the assistance of an intermediary. According to a psychological
report which was admitted as an exhibit in the court
a
quo
,
Mr S [...]’s intellectual ability is similar to that of a
5-year-old. He is also psychically disabled. Mr B [...], who had
passed away prior to the trial in the court
a
quo
,
was between 62 and 64 years old and living on his own when attacked
and raped. Mr B […] presented as having difficulties
in caring
and expressing himself
[1]
.
[10]
Both victims suffered physical injuries
including but not limited to anal tears and bruises.
[11]
The appellant was charged with 7 counts
ranging from housebreaking with intent to rape, rape, rape
(contravention of section 3 of
the SORMA), housebreaking with intent
to rape, rape (contravention of section 3 of Act 32 of THE SORMA read
with section 51(1),
schedule 2, part 1 of the CLAA), rape
(contravention of section 3 of the SORMA read with section 51(1),
schedule 2, part 1 of the
Act, a
ssault
with the intent to commit grievous bodily harm and resisting arrest.
[12]
The appellant pleaded not guilty to all
charges but was found guilty on all counts.
[13]
Section
51(1) of the Act dictates that a person shall be sentenced to life
imprisonment when convicted of rape as contemplated in
section 3 of
the SO Act if such person has been convicted of two or more offences
of rape but has not yet been sentenced in respect
of such convictions
and if the victim is a
person
who
is mentally
disabled
as contemplated
in
section 1 of the SORMA
[2]
.
[14]
In the court
a
quo
the State requested the
imposition of the minimum sentence in respect of charge 4 as Mr S
[...] was a person that is classified
as mentally or intellectually
disabled and on charge 5 as the appellant had two convictions of rape
in respect of Mr S […]
but had not yet been sentenced. These
convictions related to charge 2 (the rape charge when the appellant
was 17 years old) and
charge 4.
General
principles:
[15]
I
t
is trite that sentencing is generally a matter that falls within the
discretion of a trial court. The appeal court's power to
interfere
with a sentence is limited to instances where the sentence is
vitiated by an irregularity, by misdirection, where the
sentence is
shockingly disproportionate, or where there is a striking disparity
between the sentence and that which the appeal
court would have
imposed, had it sat as the trial court. In the matter of S
v
Pillay
1977
(4) SA 531
(A) at 535 E-F, it was explained as follows:
'
Now
the word misdirection in the present context simply 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.”
[16]
In the well-known and often quoted
matter of
S v Malgas
2001
(1) SACR 469
(SCA) 12 D-H,
Marais JA explained
an appeal court’s jurisdiction as:
‘
A
court exercising appellate jurisdiction cannot, in the absence of
material misdirection by the trial court, approach the question
of
sentence as if it were the trial court and then substitute the
sentence arrived at by it simply because it prefers it. To do
so
would be to usurp the sentencing discretion of the trial court ...
However, even in the absence of
material misdirection, an appellate court may yet be justified in
interfering with the sentence
imposed by the trial court. It may do
so when the disparity between the sentence of the trial court and the
sentence which the
appellate Court would have imposed had it been the
trial court is so marked that it can properly be described as
shocking, startling
or disturbingly inappropriate
.’
[17]
It
is trite that the minimum
sentence
legislation has introduced a sentencing regime in terms of which
certain specified crimes attract minimum prescribed sentences,
and
such sentences cannot be departed from lightly or for flimsy
reasons
[3]
.
Only where it is shown that
there
are
substantial
and
compelling
circumstances
which
merit
the
imposition of a lesser sentence than the one prescribed, would the
sentencing court be justified in imposing a lesser sentence
[4]
.
The
approach which an appeal court must adopt when considering a minimum
sentence imposed in terms of the minimum sentence legislation,
therefore, is whether the facts which were considered by the
sentencing court are substantial and compelling
[5]
.
[18]
The offence of rape was aptly described
in
S v Chapman
[1997] ZASCA 45
;
1997 (3) SA 341
(SCA) at 344I-J
as “
a humiliating, degrading
and brutal invasion of the privacy, the dignity and the person of a
victim
”. In the matter of
S
v C
1996(2) SACR 181 at 186 d
remarked as follows in respect of the devastating effect that rape
may have on victims as “
A
rapist does not murder his victim – he murders her self-respect
and destroys her feeling of physical and mental integrity
and
security, His monstrous deed often haunts his victim and subjects her
to mental torment for the rest of her life – a
fate often worse
that loss of life”
Analysis:
[19]
The appellant’s legal
representative placed the following personal circumstances of the
appellant before the court
a quo
:
19.1
He was 18 years old at the time he
committed the offence pertaining to charge 4 and 20 years old when
committing the offence pertaining
to charge 5. He was 24 years old at
the time of sentence. This is relatively young;
19.2
He is unmarried with no dependants, his
mother passed away when he was 21 (after the offences were committed)
and he has two siblings;
19.3
He left school in grade 6, at the age of
15, after being suspended;
19.4
He resided with his aunt in Barrydale
and he worked as a farm labourer and earned R800 a week at the time
of his arrest; and
19.5
He has a previous conviction for
possession of drugs but no history of violent crimes.
[20]
These personal circumstances had to be
weighed by the court
a quo
against the following aggravating factors in the difficult task of
sentencing, bearing in mind that the minimum sentence of life
imprisonment had been ordained as the sentence which should
ordinarily be imposed.
The appellant’s
relatively young age and the possibility of rehabilitation:
[21]
Ponan JA stated the following in respect
of the age of an accused as a mitigating factor in
S
v Matyityi
2011 (1) SACR 40
(SCA) at
para 11
:
'…
It
is trite that a teenager is prima facie to be regarded as immature
and that the youthfulness of an offender will invariably be
a
mitigating factor, unless it appears that the viciousness of his or
her deeds rules out immaturity. Although the exact extent
of the
mitigation will depend on all of the circumstances of the case, in
general a court will not punish an immature young person
as severely
as it would an adult. It is well established that, the younger the
offender, the clearer the evidence needs to be about
his or her
background, education, level of intelligence and mental capacity, in
order to enable a court to determine the level
of maturity and
therefore moral blameworthiness. The question, in the final analysis,
is whether the offender's immaturity, lack
of experience,
indiscretion and susceptibility to being influenced
by
others
reduce
his
blameworthiness.
Thus,
whilst
someone
under
the age of 18 years is to be regarded as naturally immature, the same
does not hold true for an adult. In my view 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.
'
[21]
In
S v Nkomo
2007 (2) SACR 198
(SCA), the question of whether
youthfulness makes an offender a candidate for rehabilitation was
explored and the following was
stated:
“
But
it is for the court imposing sentence to decide whether the
particular circumstances call for the imposition of a lesser
sentence.
Such circumstances may include those factors traditionally
taken into account in sentencing – mitigating factors –
that lessen an accused’ moral guilt. These might include the
age of an accused or whether or not he or she has previous
convictions.
Of course, these must be weighed together with
aggravating factors, but none of these need be exceptional. The court
below did
not consider the mitigating factors adduced by the
appellant to constituted substantial and compelling circumstances”
.
[22]
In the matter of
S v Phulwane and Others
2003(1) SACR 631
(TPD) at 634 H-J, the view was expressed that it is the
responsibility of judicial officers to ensure that he or
she obtains
all relevant information pertaining to young or juvenile offenders in
order to enable the court to structure a sentence
that will best suit
the needs and interests of the particular youth and that any sentence
should promote rehabilitation and reintegration
into the community at
large. Whilst I agree that a court should explore and ensure that it
considers whether a young or juvenile
offender can possibly be
rehabilitated with the imposition of a lesser sentence than life
imprisonment, I am of the view that the
responsibility of the
presiding officer to obtain information where an accused is
represented and no longer a minor is less onerous.
[23]
It appears from the record that the court
a
quo
was mindful of the fact that the appellant, although not a juvenile
when he committed the acts convicted of in respect of charges
4 and
5, was only 18 and 20 years old respectively when he attached and
raped his victims. In terms of our law children are defined
as minors
under the age of 18. There is however no magic in the statutory
threshold of 18 years
[6]
.
[24]
In this matter, it appears that although the appellant was still
young, he showed no remorse for his conduct in 2015
when he was still
a minor and further bided his time to once again attack the same
elderly disabled man, presumably because there
were no consequences
after the first attack a year and 6 months later. The appellant
further, two years later, after the charges
against him in respect of
Mr S [...] was withdrawn, attacked Mr B [...] when he was already 20
years old, in a similar fashion.
In my view the attacks on these
vulnerable individuals were planned and executed in a cold and
callous manner. His conduct, when
arrested, is equally concerning: he
was aggressive, violent and threatening towards the police officials
and showed no respect
for law and order.
[28]
To make matter worse, and as noted by the court
a quo
, the
appellant knew Mr S [...], knew where he lived and must have known
that due to his mental and physical limitations it would
be difficult
for him to relate his story to the police. The evidence was that he
reported earlier incidents to the police but was
laughed at. It was
further the evidence of Mr S […], which was considered by the
court
a quo
, that he had shouted for help but the appellant
was relentless and simply persisted with the assault. The appellant
similarly followed
Mr B […] home, who was elderly and had been
drinking with him and other community members and attacked him
violently. The
evidence was that Mr B […] was bleeding and
crying when found by the neighbour. The appellant was so confident
about the
inability of Mr B […] to implicate him in the rape,
that he told the neighbour that he had tried to rob the victim.
[29]
How the appellant’s conduct can be interpreted as him
lacking maturity is uncertain. There was nothing to suggest
that he
was influenced, under the influence of any substances or acting in an
immature or irresponsible manner. On the known facts,
the appellant
was calculated, fixed on what he wanted to do and proceeded without
the slightest hesitation to attack his victims.
His conduct remained
consistent as he became older.
[30]
In
S v Lehnberg
1975 (4) SA 533
at para [5]
,
the court held, “
It
would only be in those cases where the evidence establishes an
inherent evil disposition, which could be inferred from the nature
of
the crime, where the mitigating effect of his youthfulness would be
disregarded”
.
The court
a
quo
rightly so, did not disregard
the youthfulness of the appellant.
I
agree with the court
a quo
that the attacks were brazen and indicates that the appellant’s
age, though considered as a mitigating factor, in the circumstances
of this matter does not indicate that a lesser sentence would cause
the appellant to rehabilitate, and on its own does not amount
to
substantial and compelling circumstances.
Conclusion:
[29]
In my view the sentences are appropriate and there is no basis
upon which this Court should interfere with the discretion of the
trial court. In the circumstance the following order is made:
The appeal is dismissed.
DE WET, AJ
I agree and it is so
ordered.
FORTUIN, J
On
behalf of the appellant:
Legal
Aid South Africa
Cape
Town Justice Centre
Adv
I Levendall (IngeL@legal-aid.co.za)
On
behalf of the State:
Director
of Public Prosecutions:
Western
Cape
Adv
J Ryneveld (jryneveld@npa.gov.za)
[1]
The
investigating officer testified that: “
Edelagbare
ek kon agterkom dat Mnr B [..] was nie eintlik, hy was oud gewees en
hy kon nie self, mentally was hy nie lekker om
antwoorder self te
gee, hy het altyd, hy het ondersteuning nodig gehad want hy was nog
kranklik gewees, so sy het hom net geondersteun
oom langsaan hom to
sit
”.
[2]
The
section refers to a person
affected
by any mental disability, including any disorder or disability of
the mind, to the extent that he or she, at the time
of the alleged
commission of the offence in question, was-
(a)unable
to appreciate the nature and reasonably foreseeable consequences of
a sexual act;
(b)unable
to appreciate the nature and reasonably foreseeable consequences of
such an act, but unable to act in accordance with
that appreciation;
(c)
unable to resist the commission of any such act; or
(d)
unable to communicate his or her unwillingness to participate in any
such act;
[3]
S v Malgas (supra) at para 25
[4]
Section 51(3) of Act 105 of 1997
[5]
S v PB
2013 (2) SACR 533
at para 20 and S v GK 2013(2) SACR 505 at
para 51 C-E
[6]
Centre
for Child Law v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development &
Others
2009 (2) SACR 477
(CC) at para 39
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