Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 34South Africa
Matroos v S (A257/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 34 (27 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
27 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Matroos v S (A257/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 34 (27 February 2023)
Matroos v S (A257/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 34 (27 February 2023)
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sino date 27 February 2023
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: A257/2022
In
the matter between:
WILLEM
MATROOS
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
et
Acting Justice E Grobbelaar
Date
of Appeal:
24 February 2023
Delivered
electronically:
27 February 2023
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
[1]
On 26 April 2022 the appellant, who pleaded not guilty and denied any
knowledge of the incident, was convicted in the Oudtshoorn Regional
Court on one count of the rape of his intellectually impaired
daughter, and sentenced to life imprisonment on 13 June 2022. He
appeals only against sentence by exercising his automatic
right of
appeal in terms of
s 309(1)(a)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977
.
[2]
Given availability constraints currently experienced by the parties’
legal representatives, it was agreed that the appeal be determined on
the papers and heads of argument filed. Condonation is also
granted
for the late filing of the appellant’s heads of argument
(counsel for the respondent did not oppose the condonation
sought).
[3]
The proven facts may be summarised as follows. At the time of the
incident
the complainant lived with the appellant and her brother
(her mother had passed away in 2019). On 31 August 2020 a
relative
by marriage, Ms S[...] H[...] who lived across the
road, was told something disturbing about the complainant by a friend
of
her daughter’s.
[4]
This caused Ms H[...] to call the complainant to her home and upon
examining
her, she immediately suspected that the complainant was
pregnant. She took the complainant to the girl’s aunt, M[...],
and
thereafter they went together to another of her aunts, M[...].
After also examining the complainant these two women arrived at the
same conclusion. M[...] asked the complainant who had done this to
her and she tearfully responded that it was the appellant. They
immediately took her to the police station, whereafter she was taken
to Bridgton Clinic. Upon examination by a staff sister it
was
confirmed that the complainant was 17 weeks pregnant.
[5]
With the intervention and assistance of a social worker the pregnancy
was terminated a week later by Dr Heather Ray at the George
Provincial Hospital. Forensic analyst Warrant Officer Fransonette
Slabbert performed a DNA analysis of samples taken from the foetus,
complainant and appellant and concluded that it was a 99.99%
probability that the appellant was the biological father.
[6]
The complainant was assessed by clinical psychologist Colonel Kirsten
Clark on 6 October 2020. She confirmed the complainant’s
previous diagnosis at birth of fetal alcohol syndrome. Colonel
Clark
also found the complainant to be functioning within the range of
moderate intellectual impairment with an estimated mental
age of
between 6 and 9 years. In her professional opinion the complainant
could not lawfully have consented to sexual intercourse
and was also
not competent to testify.
[7]
A conviction of this nature attracts a minimum sentence of life
imprisonment
in terms of
s 51(1)
read with
Part 1
of Schedule 2
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
unless the court is
satisfied that substantial and compelling circumstances exist to
justify the imposition of a lesser sentence.
The appellant did not
testify in mitigation but his legal representative addressed the
court
ex parte
on his behalf. The trial court gave a careful
and fully reasoned judgment (which need not be repeated, save for
certain aspects
highlighted below) and concluded that no such
circumstances existed.
[8]
The appellant’s grounds of appeal are essentially three-fold.
The
first is that his personal circumstances, taken cumulatively,
constituted substantial and compelling ones. These were listed as
follows. He was 57 years old at date of commission of the
offence and 58 years old at the time of being sentenced. He had
been
married to the complainant’s mother for 20 years prior to her
passing away. He has two children including the complainant
(although
according to the correctional supervision report he has four
children). He takes chronic medication. At the time of the
incident
he was unemployed. The complainant’s mother had been unemployed
and he took care of her. He had been in custody
when arrested on the
charge and his possessions were destroyed. The case was previously
withdrawn and he had been on warning awaiting
the finalisation of the
matter which commenced on 25 January 2022. He left school at
primary level. He is a first offender
for this type of offence
(although it is noted that he has a total of 14 previous
convictions spanning the period 1979 to
2013 of which 5 involved
elements of violence).
[9]
Secondly, it was submitted that the trial court failed to take into
account
that ‘
this was not the worst kind of rape and the
complainant had not sustained serious physical injuries as in other
rape cases, nor
was there evidence led to indicate that the
complainant was raped numerous times’
(reliance was placed
on
S v S M M
2013 (2) SACR 292
(SCA) at para [26]). It was
further submitted that although the complainant was ‘
inevitably
traumatised… there is only some thin evidence in which to
measure the emotional impact of the crime upon the victim’.
It was however acknowledged on behalf of the appellant that this was
due to the complainant’s intellectual disability.
[10]
Thirdly, it was submitted that there is no indication that the
offence was premeditated
nor any evidence that the appellant had
threatened or used violence in the commission of the offence. No
pre-sentence report was
obtained to indicate that the appellant was a
sexual predator or has poor prospects of rehabilitation which require
him to be removed
‘
permanently’
from society. The
latter submissions also relate to the proportionality enquiry (
S v
Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) at paras [22] to [25];
S v Dodo
[2001] ZACC 16
;
2001 (1) SACR 594
(CC) at para
[40]
;
S v Vilakazi
2009
(1) SACR 552
(SCA) at para [58]).
[11]
On the other hand the respondent submitted that the trial court, in
considering the totality
of the appellant’s personal
circumstances, was correct in finding that they had to recede into
the background when weighed
against the gravity of the offence:
Vilakazi
at para [58]. It was further submitted that this was
a very serious and heinous crime. The appellant was in a position of
trust
which he abused. He is the complainant’s father and was
supposed to take of and protect her. She was an easy target and
completely
defenceless against him, particularly given her
intellectual age and impairment. The fact that he did not even bother
to use protection,
and impregnated her which led to her having an
abortion, is even more reprehensible.
[12]
It was also submitted that the appellant’s contentions about
‘
not the worst kind of rape’
and the lack of
evidence pertaining to her physical and emotional trauma lack
substance, given that an apparent lack of physical
injury is
expressly excluded by the legislature as a substantial and compelling
circumstance in terms of
s 51(3)(aA)(ii)
of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act, as
well as observations made in cases such as
S v M
2007 (2) SACR (W) at para [99] that ‘
the responses of rape
survivors are surely as complex and multi-layered as are the
individuals who experience rape’
.
[13]
Having considered the totality of the evidence and the parties’
respective submissions,
it is my view that the sentence imposed by
the trial court cannot be faulted. I say this for the following
principal reasons.
[14]
The complainant was to all intents and purposes a young child. She
had lost her primary
attachment figure less than a year before the
rape and would thus have been even more emotionally and
psychologically dependent
on the appellant. Given his flat denial of
any involvement, and the fact that the pregnancy was only discovered,
and the rape revealed,
17 weeks later, coupled with the complainant’s
intellectual impairment, there is no basis from which an inference
can be
drawn that there was no physical injury to her, or that she
was not threatened or subjected to some form of violence. At best for
the appellant this is therefore a neutral factor and the findings of
the Supreme Court of Appeal in
S v M M
in relation to how
s 51(3)(aA)(ii)
is to be interpreted do not come into play. It
is also an aggravating feature that the complainant would have had to
endure continuing
to reside under the same roof as the appellant for
that 17-week period (she was removed from his care as soon as the
rape was revealed).
[15]
It was common cause during the trial that such is the complainant’s
impairment that
she was unable to express how she felt about the rape
other than to produce a simple drawing. Although the copy in the
record is
of poor quality it appears to be a stick-like figure with a
sad face. Having regard to the observations of our courts in relation
to the effects of rape on a victim, there is similarly no basis from
which an inference can be drawn that the consequences to the
complainant are not severe and long-term. The inability of the
complainant to express the trauma experienced by her may well in
itself be an aggravating factor, which will complicate the
therapeutic process ordered by the trial court.
[16]
It is so that the appellant was 58 years old at the time he was
sentenced, but this is
merely one of the factors which the trial
court had to consider, and it would be sending out a completely wrong
message if courts
were to be lenient towards older offenders purely
on that basis. In
S v J A
2017 (2) SACR 143
(NCK) the
appellant was 59 years of age when he was sentenced in the High Court
to life imprisonment for the rape of his 12-year
old daughter. On
appeal to the full court it was contended,
inter alia
, that
his advanced age should have been considered a mitigating factor
since he would only become eligible for parole no sooner
than the age
of 74, and possibly, only when he reached the age of 84 (in terms of
s 73
of the
Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998
).
[17]
After considering a number of authorities, the court concluded as
follows:
‘
[39] The
approach cannot in my view be different where the issue in a
particular case is whether life imprisonment would be
an appropriate
sentence. It is not for the sentencing court to try to work out how
old an offender could be when (if at all) the
executive decides to
release him or her on parole. The fact that “a person who is 25
years old at the time of sentencing
is more likely to serve a longer
period of imprisonment than a person who is 60 years old at the time
of sentencing” if both
were to remain in prison for the rest of
their natural lives, would also not justify a sentencing court to not
“impose a
life sentence of imprisonment where it is statutorily
required”.
[40] I believe
that it is for this reason that the Supreme Court of Appeal in the
Abrahams case, where the applicable prescribed
sentence had been life
imprisonment, held that the age of that appellant (53 years old at
the time of the rape and 54 years old
at the time of sentence) was
not a mitigating factor when it came to the issue of substantial and
compelling circumstances where
such a sentence was concerned.’
[41]
In the circumstances, therefore, I am of the view that the
appellant’s relatively advanced age would not have been
a
mitigating factor in the context of a prescribed sentence of life
imprisonment and in considering whether there are substantial
and
compelling circumstances justifying a lesser sentence.’
[18]
In the circumstances the trial court made no material misdirection,
nor was the sentence
imposed shocking, startling or disturbingly
inappropriate or disproportionate. It follows that the appeal cannot
succeed.
[19]
The following order is made:
‘
The
appeal against sentence is dismissed. The conviction and sentence are
confirmed.’
J
I CLOETE
GROBBELAAR
AJ
I
agree.
E
GROBBELAAR
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