Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 136South Africa
Sogoni v S (A243/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 136; 2023 (1) SACR 290 (WCC) (18 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
18 July 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Sogoni v S (A243/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 136; 2023 (1) SACR 290 (WCC) (18 July 2022)
Sogoni v S (A243/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 136; 2023 (1) SACR 290 (WCC) (18 July 2022)
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sino date 18 July 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE HIGH COURT, CAPE TOWN)
Case
no: A243/21
In
the matter between:
THEMBELANI
SOGONI
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Coram:
Binns-Ward and Savage JJ
Date
of hearing: Decided on the papers in terms of s 19(a) of Act 10
of 2013
Date
of judgment: 18 July 2022
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD
and SAVAGE JJ:
[1]
The appellant, who was legally represented, was convicted by the
regional
court, Wynberg, Western Cape on 14 December 2020 of four
counts of the rape of a 12-year-old girl in contravention of section
3
of the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Relates Matters) Amendment
Act 32 of 2007.
[2]
The appellant, who was given notice that the minimum sentence of life
imprisonment applied in the matter given that the victim was under
the age of sixteen years at the time of the commission of the
offences, pleaded not guilty to all four counts against him.
Following his conviction on all counts, and on the same day that he
was convicted, the appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment, all
four counts being taken as one for purposes of sentence. In
terms of
section 103(1)
of the
Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000
he was declared
unfit to possess a firearm. This appeal, with the leave of the
magistrate, is against his both his conviction and
sentence.
[3]
The evidence of the complainant was that she was raped on four
occasions
by the appellant between June 2018 and August 2018 in the
one-roomed house in which she lived with his family in Kosovo,
Philippi.
In her evidence the complainant did not waver in her
identification of the appellant as the person who had raped her on
each of
the four occasions. The first incident, in June 2018,
occurred while she was asleep in bed next to the appellant’s
mother.
The appellant got into the bed from the foot of the bed,
pulled down the complainant’s panties and pyjamas down, got on
top
of her and raped her, cautioning her not to make a noise while
his mother slept. After he had raped her the appellant gave the
complainant a face towel to clean herself and told her to keep what
had occurred between them. The complainant did not report the
incident to anyone. The following day, while she was alone at home
with the appellant, he inserted his finger into her vagina.
[4]
In July 2018, while the complainant was again alone at home with the
appellant,
he got into his mother’s bed and raped her. The
complainant reported the incident to a young man who was boarding at
the
address, one Onke, who in turn told the appellant’s older
brother, who told the appellant’s mother. Her response was
that
the appellant would not do such a thing.
[5]
In August 2018 the complainant was once again alone at home with the
appellant
when he undressed and raped her. She attempted to kick him
away, but he managed to pull her panties down and raped her
vaginally.
He then told her to lie on her stomach and he proceeded to
rape her vaginally and anally. After the complainant reported the
incidents
to her aunt, the matter was reported to the police and the
complainant was medically examined on 11 August 2018. Fresh vaginal
injuries sustained within the past 72 hours were identified. In
addition, injuries consistent with a history of anal penetration
by a
blunt object or penis were identified.
[6]
The appellant denied raping the complaint. On his version he would
leave
for work at 05h00. He described his relationship with the
complainant as good and stated that there were not opportunities
presented
for him to be alone with the complainant. Although in
cross-examination he stated that he had previously reprimanded the
complainant
for arriving home late, on his version the complainant
had not taken issue with this. No evidence was advanced that the
complainant
had any reason to falsely implicate the appellant as the
perpetrator. Equally, since he was well known to her, it was not
suggested
that the complainant may have been mistaken in her
identification of the appellant.
[7]
The regional magistrate recognised that the complainant was not only
a
child witness but also a single witness. In spite of the caution
with which her evidence was approached, the complainant was found
to
have been a confident, coherent and logical witness whose evidence
could be relied upon, in contrast to the appellant who was
found by
the trial court to have not make a good impression as a witness. The
court noted that the appellant denied raping the
complainant and had
attempted, without success, to create the impression that the
complainant was truant and had not been attending
school, when his
own mother, with whom both the complainant and the appellant both
lived, had no similar concerns. In addition,
it was noted that new
aspects of his defence were advanced for the first time in his
evidence, which had not been put to the state’s
witnesses. This
led the court to reject the appellant’s version that he had not
repeatedly raped the complainant as not being
reasonably possibly
true. The magistrate found that the state had discharged the burden
which rested on it to prove its case against
the appellant beyond
reasonable doubt. Consequently, the appellant was found guilty on all
counts.
[8]
The appeal against conviction proceeds on three grounds: that the
state
failed to prove its case against the appellant beyond
reasonable doubt; that the magistrate failed to apply the necessary
caution
in respect of the testimony of the complainant as a single
witness; and that in rejecting the version of the appellant, the
magistrate
erred.
[9]
We are not persuaded that there is merit in any of these
grounds. The complainant was clear and cogent in her identification
of
the appellant as the person who had raped her on four occasions.
There was no support for any suggestion that she had wrongly
identified
or falsely accused the appellant as the perpetrator of the
rapes or that her evidence was untrue or unreliable.
[10]
The trial court, while exercising caution in its approach to
the evidence of the complainant as a child and a single witness,
cannot
be faulted for accepting the state’s version and
rejecting that of the appellant. From a careful consideration of the
evidence
placed before the trial court, it is clear that the state
discharged the burden of proof which rested upon it.
[11]
It was telling that both the appellant and his mother
attempted to place the blame for the sexual assaults on the young man
who
was boarding at their address, Onke. Onke had since left the
address and his whereabouts were apparently unknown. It was obvious
that this was a stratagem adopted to deal with the difficulty for the
appellant’s case occasioned by the strong objective
evidence in
support of the complainant’s allegations provided by the
results of the medical examination. There was, however,
no suggestion
by either of them that they had reported this to the investigating
officer, as might have been expected had Onke
made a confession, as
claimed by the appellant’s mother. The version put up by the
appellant and his mother was far-fetched
because it necessarily
implied a case of misidentification by the complainant. As already
noted, such a possibility was unrealistic
in the circumstances of the
case.
[12]
There
can, in our mind, be no doubt that “moral certainty”
exists as to the guilt of the appellant, in the manner discussed
in
S
v
Mavinin
i,
[1]
in the sense that his conviction on the application of the rules of
evidence, interpreted within the precepts of the Bill of Rights,
was
properly attained through a proper application of the rules of the
system. It follows for these reasons that the appeal against
conviction must fail.
[13]
In
relation to the issue of sentence, we are not however similarly
persuaded. It has become all too prevalent in our courts to rely
on
minimum sentencing legislation to impose the most severe of
sentences, being life imprisonment, without any more than scant
regard to whether substantial and compelling circumstances exist
which would warrant the imposition of a reduced sentence; or whether
the minimum sentence, if imposed, would constitute a disproportionate
response to the crime committed
,
the criminal and the needs of society. As has been made clear in a
number of cases, including
S
v De Beer
[2]
and
S v
Vilakazi
,
[3]
although the minimum sentencing legislation weighs upon a court’s
discretion, it does not eviscerate its obligation to safeguard
that a
just sentence is imposed when the task of the court is to guard in
every case against an injustice being committed.
[14]
The complainant testified that following the rape she had felt like
less of a child and
that the appellant had taken her girlhood from
her. The court had regard to the physical injury and emotional
distress suffered
by the complainant in circumstances in which the
appellant was known to her. Yet, no effort was made by the state, for
reasons
which are entirely unclear, to obtain a victim impact
assessment report or any other pre-sentencing report in relation to
the appellant
in order that a proper investigation of all factors
relevant to sentencing could be undertaken before sentencing and made
available
to the trial court for its consideration. Somewhat
surprisingly, the court also did not see fit to request that any such
pre-sentencing
reports be obtained but elected to move straight into
sentencing immediately following and on the same day as the appellant
was
convicted. In proceeding to sentence the appellant in such
circumstances, the court was constrained in its task. It lacked the
necessary material to have regard to the pertinent issues relevant to
the weighty task of sentencing and to consider these issues,
with due
care and appropriate caution, in order to allow it to arrive at a
just sentence.
[15]
In considering whether substantial and compelling circumstances
existed which may have
warranted the imposition of a sentence reduced
from the minimum prescribed, the court took note of the fact that the
appellant
was a first offender, was 33 years old and had been
incarcerated since 2018 when he was sentenced on 14 December 2020.
The lack
of remorse shown by the appellant, his dishonesty in denying
the repeated rape of the complainant, the fact that the rapes
occurred
when she lived in the same home as he did, were all
considered to be aggravating factors. These factors, considered in
the context
of the shocking prevalence of instances of rape in the
country, led the trial court to conclude that no substantial and
compelling
factors existed which would warrant the imposition of a
sentence reduced from the minimum.
[16]
Having regard to the judgment of the trial court on sentence one is
left concerned that
the approach to sentencing appeared to have been
a mechanical one in which scant regard was had to all of the factors
relevant
to sentencing. Where the state seeks the imposition of the
most severe of punishments, life imprisonment, a thorough case must
be made out to justify the imposition of the most severe sanction.
This requires at the least proper preparation to allow a convincing
motivation to be advanced that the imposition of such maximum penalty
is appropriate and proportionate.
[17]
In this matter, the sentencing of the appellant proceeded with undue
haste, in a manner
which in our view undermined the process of
sentencing itself. Having regard to the material before the trial
court, we are of
the view that it was unjust and disproportionate to
impose a sentence of life imprisonment on the appellant.
[18]
One has only to glance through the list of sentences imposed in
broadly comparable cases
in
Juta’s Sentencing Reports
to
recognise that the ultimate sentence of life imprisonment was grossly
inappropriate in the circumstances of the current case.
The
information before the magistrate was too scant for her to be able to
discharge the court’s sentencing function judicially,
but the
indications upon the limited material that was available was that a
sentence of somewhere between 10- and 15-years’
imprisonment
would have fallen within the appropriate range. This court is,
however, under the same disability as the trial court
in determining
where in the aforementioned range it would be appropriate to fix the
sentence that should be imposed on the appellant.
[19]
Pre-sentencing reports would have allowed for all factors relevant to
sentencing to have
been placed before the trial court and enabled the
court to engage in a careful consideration of these factors. Included
would
have been the lasting impact of the crimes on the complainant,
of which there is little to be gleaned from on the record, as well
as
the appellant’s propensity for rehabilitation given that he was
a first offender. In the absence of such information,
and without a
careful investigation of all relevant factors and circumstances, the
decision to find no substantial and compelling
circumstances and to
impose the most severe of the minimum sentences on the appellant in
our view cannot be sustained. For these
reasons, the appeal against
the sentence imposed on the appellant must succeed.
[20]
Having
regard to the limited material placed before the trial court
pertinent to sentencing, the interests of justice require that
the
matter should remitted to the trial court for a sentence to be
imposed on the appellant afresh in the light of this judgment.
Such
sentence should be imposed only after consideration by the court of
expert witness reports on victim-impact and the amenability
of the
appellant to rehabilitation and safe reintegration into society. In
computing the determinate sentence it imposes, the trial
court must
take into account, and make full allowance for, the period that the
appellant already will have served under the sentence
of life
imprisonment that this court hereby sets aside; cf.
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius
(2015)
[4]
and
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Gauteng v Pistorius
(2017).
[5]
In this regard, the appellant is entitled to be credited with the
period in imprisonment served by him between 14 December
2020
and the date upon which sentence is imposed afresh.
[21]
It is also necessary to say something about the manner in which in
which the trial was
conducted by the magistrate.
[22]
There was an unfortunate tendency by the presiding officer to curtail
questioning by the
defence attorney. We do not think that it was
sufficiently serious to affect the fairness of the trial in the
current case, but
it is important that any judicial officer should
not allow their interventions to inhibit the full and effective
ventilation of
the issues in the matter. For similar reasons we
consider that the magistrate was wrong not to hear what the
appellant’s
mother wished to add at the end of her evidence.
The standard of the examining of the witnesses, whether in chief or
in cross-examination,
was not impressive on either side and in such a
situation a witness might be justified in wanting to draw to the
court’s
attention an aspect that may not have been canvassed
with him or her. In our view, the magistrate should have recognised
that possibility
and treated the witness more sensitively.
[23]
The other matter we need to raise is the keeping of the record. Any
judicial officer presiding
over a trial is duty bound to ensure that
a record of proceedings is kept in a manner that will give a coherent
reflection of the
evidence should the matter go on appeal. There were
some shortcomings in that respect in the current matter. At some
stage a witness
was asked to illustrate the layout of the
single-roomed structure in which the complainant testified she had
been assaulted. A
sketch was made, and evidence adduced in relation
to its contents. The sketch was not admitted as an exhibit, however,
and this
court was consequently handicapped in its ability to fully
appreciate the evidence given in relation to it. Similarly, there was
more than one occasion during the trial on which a witness would
indicate distances with reference to the spatial characteristics
of
the court room or points within it and the court omitted to record
such distances in objective terms. The omissions left this
court
clueless on appeal as to the precise import of the indications made
by those witnesses.
[24]
An order is made in the following terms:
1.
The appeal against conviction is dismissed.
2.
The appeal against sentence succeeds.
3.
The sentence of life imprisonment imposed on the appellant by the
trial court
is set aside.
4.
The matter is remitted to the trial court for sentence to be imposed
on the appellant
afresh in the light of this judgment and after
consideration by the court of expert witness reports on victim-impact
and the amenability
of the appellant to rehabilitation and safe
reintegration into society.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the
High Court
KM
SAVAGE
Judge
of the High Court
Appearances
:
For
appellant: Adv N Kunju
Legal Aid, Cape Town
For
State:
Adv M J September
Director of Public
Prosecutions, Cape Town
[1]
[
2009]
2 All SA 277
(SCA) at para 26.
[2]
[2017] ZASCA 183
;
2018 (1) SACR 229
(SCA).
[3]
2012 (6) SA 353 (SCA); [2008] ZASCA 87; [2008] 4 All SA 396 (SCA) ;
2009 (1) SACR 552 (SCA)
[4]
[2015] ZASCA 204
;
[2016] 1 All SA 346
(SCA);
2016 (2) SA 317
(SCA);
2016 (1) SACR 431
(SCA) at para 56.
[5]
[2017] ZASCA 158
;
2018 (1) SACR 115
(SCA);
[2018] 1 All SA 336
(SCA)
at para 25.
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