Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 120South Africa
K.L v S (A261/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 120 (13 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
13 June 2022
Judgment
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## K.L v S (A261/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 120 (13 June 2022)
K.L v S (A261/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 120 (13 June 2022)
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sino date 13 June 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: A261/2021
In
the matter between:
K
L
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Coram:
Justice J I Cloete et Acting Justice C N Nziweni
Heard:
10 June 2022
Delivered
electronically:
13 June 2022
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
[1]
On 28 February 2019 the appellant was
convicted in the Wynberg Regional Court on 2 counts, one of rape and
the other of attempted
rape, and sentenced on 5 July 2019 to an
effective 26 years imprisonment. He appeals against both conviction
and sentence
with leave of the trial court.
[2]
The convictions arise from the trial court
having found that the State had proven beyond a reasonable doubt that
during October/November
2014, and on two separate occasions, the
appellant raped and attempted to rape his 9 year old step-daughter in
the bedroom which
they shared with her mother and baby half-brother.
He had pleaded not guilty to both counts and exercised his right to
decline
a plea explanation. During the course of the trial however it
emerged that his defence amounted to a simple denial.
[3]
The State relied on the evidence of the
complainant, her friend S (to whom certain reports were made) and Dr
Ashima Narula, a clinical
forensic medical practitioner with
experience of close to 17 000 cases of sexual trauma, based at
the Heideveld Thuthuzela
Care Centre (“the Centre”), as
well as various exhibits including the affidavit of W/O Luthando
Tiya, handed in by
consent as Exhibit “F”. His conclusion
was that the appellant’s DNA was found on a semen swab taken
from the
complainant’s bedding. The appellant testified in his
own defence and called one other witness, the complainant’s
mother.
[4]
During the course of the trial (which, due
to no fault of the magistrate, ran intermittently over an extended
period from 18 April
2016 until 28 February 2019) the following
facts became common cause. The appellant married the complainant’s
mother on 11 March
2011, a few days before the complainant’s
sixth birthday, when she and her mother took up residence with him.
The couple’s
son was born on 20 February 2013.
[5]
During 2014 they resided in a one-bedroom
granny flat. The appellant and the complainant’s mother shared
a double bed, the
complainant had her own three quarter bed and her
half-brother slept in a cot, all in the same bedroom. It would seem
from the
evidence that the only form of privacy was a cupboard
dividing the space between the couple’s bed and that of the
complainant.
[6]
Despite the predictable problems which the
complainant experienced in adjusting to her new family members and an
ongoing dispute
between her biological parents in relation to primary
care and contact, the complainant developed a parent/child
relationship of
sorts with the appellant. She certainly did not
accuse him or report anything disturbing about his behaviour towards
her for some
3 ½ years, until the latter part of 2014 (“the
relevant period”).
[7]
The complainant and S were close since her
father and his mother were in a relationship. She would spend at
least every second weekend
with her father and S would invariably be
present as well. S is physically disabled, confined to a wheelchair
and attended a school
for children with special needs. They confided
in each other and during 2013 the complainant developed a crush on
him. At a point
they kissed each other and the complainant wrote
letters to him in which she fantasised about their future
relationship.
[8]
These letters did not find their way to S.
The complainant’s mother however discovered them in her school
bag. She was so
concerned about their contents (she subsequently
destroyed these letters) that she took the complainant to see a
social worker,
fearing that although the complainant was only 8 years
old at the time, she might already be sexually active with S. The
social
worker in turn referred her to the Centre where by sheer
coincidence the complainant was examined by Dr Narula on
5 November
2013. Her J88 report (Exhibit “D”) and
her subsequent testimony confirmed that there were no signs of sexual
trauma
or injury at that stage.
[9]
During the relevant period the
complainant’s mother worked shifts. One of these involved her
leaving home at 4am to commence
a 7-hour shift from 5am to 12pm. In
these instances, from 4am to 6.30am the complainant and her
half-brother were left in the sole
care of the appellant, until his
father fetched the children (to take the complainant to school and
her half-brother to the appellant’s
mother to look after him
during the day). The appellant was also in fulltime employment and
would leave for work around 7.30am.
In addition the complainant’s
mother worked late shifts from time to time, either from 12pm to 7pm
or 4pm to 11pm, and on
these occasions the children were also left in
the sole care of the appellant.
[10]
At a stage during 2014 the complainant
reported to S that the appellant had behaved in a sexually
inappropriate manner towards her.
S said that she needed to tell her
father but she replied that she would do so if it happened again. On
16 November 2014,
which was S’s birthday, the complainant
made a further report to him about the appellant. S responded by
saying that if she
did not tell her father then he would do so
himself. She asked him to help her in telling her father. By all
accounts the report
was then also made to her father as well as other
members of his family on the same day.
[11]
On 17 November 2014 the complainant made a
statement in the presence of her father to Sgt Maxine Charles
(Exhibit “G”)
in which she gave the following
information. During 2014 and on a date and at a time unknown, she was
asleep in her bed when the
appellant woke her wearing only a t-shirt.
He got into her bed and lay down next to her. She was wearing only a
nightgown and panties.
He pulled her onto him in a sitting position
‘
on top of his private parts’
and it was very painful. When he ‘
was
finished’
he left her bed and
after going to the kitchen returned to his own.
[12]
The information was further that on a
second occasion in 2014 the appellant again woke her while he was
naked. He got into her bed
and tried to pull down her panties. When
she told him not to do so he returned to his own bed without protest.
On 11 November 2014
her mother was working late and the complainant
was home alone with her half-brother and the appellant. He climbed
into her bed
naked and, jumping out, she told him that she wanted to
move to live with her father. He became angry and told her to lie
down,
which she did and he returned to his own bed.
[13]
About two hours before making this
statement the complainant was again examined by Dr Narula. Her notes
as recorded in her (second)
J88 report (Exhibit “E”)
reflect a ‘
healing/healed
tear/scar’
at the 6 o’clock
position of the posterior fourchette as well as two clefts in the
hymen at the 10 and 4 o’clock positions.
Her report concluded
that her findings were compatible with forcible vaginal penetration
with a penis or object.
[14]
The appellant was arrested on the same day.
On 4 December 2014, S also made a statement to Sgt Charles (Exhibit
“C”)
which reflects that on a date and at a time unknown
the complainant reported the following to him. One night when her
mother was
working late, she woke up to find the appellant in her
bed, naked, and her pants and panties pulled down. She felt what the
appellant
was doing to her because her vagina was very sore. When
making the report to him the complainant was nervous and tearful. She
did
not want to tell her father what had happened but at the
insistence of S, she did so.
[15]
I now turn to deal with the evidence on the
disputed issues. It bears mention that both the complainant and S
testified through
an intermediary and further that, given the delay
in the trial commencing, the complainant’s evidence was only
adduced during
April and July 2016, and that of S during August 2016,
a considerable period of time after the incidents are alleged to have
occurred.
In turn, the appellant and the complainant’s mother
only testified in June and September 2018, roughly two years after
the
State witnesses. This is indeed most regrettable and serves to
highlight the very real challenges faced by judicial officers in
dispensing swift justice in the current system. It also impacts on
the quality of testimony, since recall of detail fades over
time, and
this makes the job of a judicial officer even more difficult,
particularly where one is dealing with child witnesses.
[16]
By the time the complainant eventually
testified she was already 11 years old. It is understandable, in
these circumstances, that
she would not be able to recall specific
dates and times. It is also understandable, given how young she was
at the time when the
incidents are alleged to have occurred, that her
account was not entirely consistent with her reports and her previous
statement.
The same applies to S who only testified when he was 15
years old.
[17]
In summary the account given by the
complainant in her evidence of the incidents themselves was as
follows. On the first occasion
her mother had left for an early
morning work shift. The appellant came to lie in her bed, pulled her
on top of him and, while
she lay face down, started removing her
pyjama bottom and panties. He felt to her as if he were naked. She
pulled her garments
back up and told him that she was warm enough,
thinking this would deter him. He tried again and she responded in
the same manner.
He then left her alone, went into the kitchen and
thereafter returned to his own bed. She later reported this incident
to S when
she saw him on her next weekend visit to her father.
[18]
On the second occasion her mother had also
left for her morning shift. This time the appellant pulled her on top
of him again, removed
her pyjama bottom and panties to below her
knees, and put his penis into her vagina. It felt as if he was
positioning her to make
penetration easier. It was not long
thereafter that he moved her off him, put her onto her bed and got
up, going into the kitchen.
She was frightened and confused but did
not dare tell S because he would insist that she report it to her
father. She did not tell
her mother because she would have sided with
the appellant and refused to believe her. The appellant himself also
told her that
no-one else would believe her either.
[19]
The third incident also occurred when her
mother had left for her early morning shift. The appellant climbed
into her bed and tried
to lift her up. Knowing by now what was going
to happen, the complainant pushed him away, jumped out of bed and
tearfully told
him that she wanted to move to live with her father.
The appellant then offered to buy her a gaming console that he knew
she wanted
if she would climb back into bed with him. She refused and
he left her, going into the kitchen. It was following this incident
that she made the second report to S.
[20]
It is clear from the record that S was an
extremely nervous witness. It is difficult at times to follow his
testimony, and he needed
prompting in cross-examination to recall
additional detail. The impression gained however is not that S was
dishonest, but rather
that his anxiety and lack of recall got the
better of him. That being said, the salient aspects of his testimony
were as follows.
[21]
The complainant made two reports to him,
one in October and the other in November 2014. The first report
pertained to the alleged
rape. The second related to the appellant’s
further attempt to make advances on her which she successfully
rebuffed. The
complainant also told him about the appellant’s
attempt to bribe her with a gaming console.
[22]
As to the rape itself, the complainant told
S that one evening when her mother was working a late shift, she was
asleep in her bed
and ‘
felt
something’
which made her private
parts sore. She realised that she was without her panties and turned
over, only to see the appellant leaving
her bed ‘…
but
he also had nothing on and she told me that he did put his private
part in hers’
.
[23]
Upon critical evaluation there were thus
indeed contradictions between the full account of what the
complainant told the police;
what she said she told S; what S said
she told him; and her subsequent testimony. These pertained to how
many occasions the appellant
made advances; precisely what happened
on each occasion; and whether the incidents occurred in the morning
or evening.
[24]
However as far as the vaginal penetration
itself is concerned, the complainant was consistent that the
appellant forcibly inserted
his penis into her vagina and this made
her private parts sore. She told this to the police, to S, and she
was unshaken on this
aspect in her testimony. So too was S when he
testified about this part of her report to him.
[25]
Furthermore, the evidence of both the
complainant and S that it was a matter of a few weeks after the rape
that she told her father,
as well as the fact of the rape itself, was
borne out by the independent testimony of Dr Narula. She was clear
that the complainant
had suffered sexual trauma between her first
examination on 5 November 2013 and her second examination on 17
November 2014.
That sexual trauma, as detailed in both her second J88
report and subsequent testimony, was consistent with forcible vaginal
penetration
with a penis or object. The complainant’s injuries
were still healing. Dr Narula was of the opinion that they could have
been inflicted within a week or so prior to examination, but
carefully explained why it was not possible from a clinical or
scientific
point of view to pinpoint an exact lapse of time and
testified that it could have occurred earlier than that, i.e. two
weeks before
examination.
[26]
During her evaluation the magistrate
considered the DNA evidence but ultimately decided to exclude it on
the basis that the report
of W/O Tiya gave no indication of when the
semen was deposited on the complainant’s bed and ‘
the
accused and the mother said that they did have sex there on the bed
on a previous occasion’
. I
respectfully hold a different view. The appellant testified that he
and the complainant’s mother slept in the complainant’s
bed when she was spending weekends with her father because hers was
more comfortable than theirs. However he could not say how
often this
occurred and whether or not they had done so on the weekend when the
complainant made the report to her father.
[27]
On the other hand the complainant’s
mother gave a materially different version. She did not mention that
they slept on the
complainant’s bed because it was more
comfortable, but rather that the appellant would sleep there on his
own when she was
upset with him. On the weekend when the complainant
made the report to her father, the complainant’s mother had
later joined
the appellant in the complainant’s bed, and this
was the only occasion on which they had sexual intercourse there.
[28]
None of this had been put to the
complainant and was raised for the first time during the defence
case. It also seems highly improbable
that the couple would have
chosen to sleep in a smaller bed than their own. In addition during
argument it emerged that the semen
sample was collected from the
complainant’s bedding on 21 November 2014, within days of her
report to her father and after
the appellant’s arrest. To my
mind therefore the explanations given by the appellant and the
complainant’s mother were
rather an attempt on their part to
explain away the presence of the appellant’s semen on the
complainant’s bed. They
materially contradicted each other in
their respective versions, and accordingly it is my view that the
presence of the appellant’s
DNA in semen found on the
complainant’s bed provides further independent support for her
version.
[29]
In addition to the appellant’s flat
denial of the allegations against him, he maintained that the reason
why her mother took
the complainant for a medical examination in 2013
was because she had told her mother that S ‘
touched
her’
. This had not been put to
either the complainant or S when they testified and the complainant’s
mother did not mention it
in her testimony either. Accordingly this
too appears to have been a vain attempt by the appellant to suggest
that S might be the
culprit.
[30]
The above analysis of the evidence
demonstrates that as far as the rape count is concerned the appellant
was correctly convicted.
There is also no merit in the criticisms
levelled by the appellant at the magistrate’s approach to the
applicable legal principles,
which are trite, in particular that the
complainant was a single witness to the rape itself and a child to
boot.
[31]
However
the conviction on the count of attempted rape presents with
difficulty. The appellant was charged in terms of s 55
(amongst
others) of the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters)
Amendment Act (“the Act”),
[1]
namely an attempt to commit a sexual offence. The definition of
‘
sexual
offence’
in the Act includes attempted rape. In turn ‘
rape’
is defined in s 3 as the unlawful and intentional act of sexual
penetration without the consent of a complainant.
[32]
The particulars of the charge (in the
charge sheet) read as follows: ‘
attempt…
to commit a sexual offence by putting
[the
complainant]
on top of him, positioning
her over his penis and trying to pull her pants down whilst she was
under the lawful age of consent’.
[33]
It
will be recalled however that in her statement to the police the
complainant’s version was that the appellant raped her
on the
self-same occasion when he pulled her into a sitting position on top
of him. Her subsequent testimony was to similar effect.
Accordingly,
there was no separate incident on the State’s version which
supported the particulars of the charge in respect
of the account of
attempted rape. Despite this the charge was not amended as envisaged
in s 86 as read with s 84 of the
Criminal Procedure Act
(“the CPA”).
[2]
[34]
Section
85 of the CPA provides that where a charge is defective for want of
an averment which is an essential element of the relevant
offence,
the defect shall, unless brought to the notice of the court before
judgment, be cured by evidence at the trial proving
the matter which
should have been averred. In the present case there is simply no such
evidence.
[3]
[35]
Moreover the complainant’s accounts
of what occurred during the other two incidents varied. In her
statement to the police
she conveyed that on one occasion the
appellant climbed into her bed and tried to pull down her panties. On
the other he climbed
into her bed naked. On both occasions he
desisted when she protested.
[36]
In her testimony, her evidence was that on
the one occasion he pulled her on top of him and twice tried to
remove her pyjama bottom
and panties. On the other he climbed into
her bed and tried to lift her up. Again he did not pursue his
attempts on both occasions
in the face of her resistance.
[37]
Having regard to the aforegoing it is my
view that this falls short of proof beyond a reasonable doubt of
attempted rape. On the
evidence the appellant should have instead
been convicted on the competent verdict of attempted sexual assault,
namely the attempt
to unlawfully and intentionally sexually violate
the complainant.
[38]
Turning
now to sentence. I do not intend repeating the appellant’s
personal circumstances as they are fully set out in the
trial court’s
judgment. That court was also in possession of pre-sentence,
correctional supervision and victim impact reports
and clearly had
regard thereto, as well as all other relevant sentencing factors, in
arriving at the conclusion that the prescribed
minimum sentence of
life imprisonment should be deviated from, and the appellant
sentenced to 22 years imprisonment for the rape.
Suffice it to say
that the magistrate’s reasoning cannot be faulted and the
sentence on this count was not vitiated by material
misdirection, nor
was it shocking, startling or disturbingly inappropriate or
disproportionate.
[4]
[39]
As
far as the second count is concerned, for the reasons already given,
this Court is at liberty to impose a fresh sentence. While
of course
the particular circumstances of each case are considered in arriving
at an appropriate sentence, perusal of the more
recent decisions
indicates that in cases of attempted sexual assault sentences have
been imposed of between 2 and 5 years imprisonment.
[5]
It appears however that the victims in question were adults.
Particularly aggravating in the instant case are the following
factors.
The complainant was completely defenceless in the sense that
she was at the mercy of the appellant. The appellant abused his
position
of trust. The complainant was only 9 years old. In my view
an appropriate sentence in all the circumstances would be 8 years
direct
imprisonment, to run concurrently with the sentence imposed on
count 1.
[40]
The following order is made:
1.
The appeal against conviction and
sentence on count 1, namely rape, is dismissed. The conviction and
sentence are confirmed.
2.
The appeal against conviction and
sentence on count 2, namely attempted rape, is upheld and substituted
with the following:
2.1
The appellant is convicted of
attempted sexual assault and is sentenced to 8 years direct
imprisonment.
2.2
The sentence imposed in 2.1 above is
antedated to 5 July 2019 in terms of
s 282
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
. It is further ordered that such sentence
shall run concurrently with the sentence imposed on count 1 in terms
of
s 280(2)
of the aforesaid Act.
J
I CLOETE
NZIWENI
AJ
I
agree.
C
N NZIWENI
[1]
No.32
of 2007
[2]
No.51
of 1977.
[3]
See
also
S
v R and Another
(13919/2013, 17/2013, BSH 9/2013) [2016] ZAWCHC (7 January 2016),
esp at paras [5] to [9].
[4]
See
S
v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA);
S
v Dodo
2001 (1) SA 594 (CC).
[5]
S
v Stevens
2015 JDR0616 (ECG);
S
v Larry
2014 JDR1291 (WCC);
S
v Velaphi
2017 JDR1737 (ECP).
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