Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 179South Africa
Austin v S (A245/2021; GSH (2) 50/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 179; 2022 (2) SACR 615 (WCC) (12 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
12 September 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Austin v S (A245/2021; GSH (2) 50/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 179; 2022 (2) SACR 615 (WCC) (12 September 2022)
Austin v S (A245/2021; GSH (2) 50/2018) [2022] ZAWCHC 179; 2022 (2) SACR 615 (WCC) (12 September 2022)
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sino date 12 September 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
CASE
NO:
A245/2021
LOWER
COURT CASE NO: GSH (2) 50/2018
APPEAL:
10/2021
In
the matter between:
CHIFONDO
AUSTIN
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
Coram:
Gamble J et Grobbelaar AJ
Dates
of Hearing: 5 August 2022
Date
of Judgment: 12 September 2022
JUDGMENT
# GROBBELAAR, AJ
GROBBELAAR, AJ
[1]
The appellant was charged in the Parow Regional
Court with a contravention of Section 3 of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act (Sexual
Offences and Related Matters), 32 of 2007 (“the
Act”) read with the provisions of Section 51(1) and Schedule 2,
Part
I of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 105 of 1997
.
[2]
The charge reads that the appellant contravened
the said Act by inserting his penis inside the vagina of the
11-year-old complainant
more than once in the period May 2016 up
until the year of 2017, thus committing rape.
The
appellant was legally represented.
[3]
The appellant pleaded not guilty, admitting that
he had sexual intercourse with the complainant, but pleaded that he
had her consent
to do so.
A
trial followed, and the Appellant was found guilty as charged on 14
October 2021.
[4]
On 14 October 2021 the appellant was sentenced to
life imprisonment in terms of
Section 51(1)
of the Act.
[5]
The following further orders were made:
[6.1]
in terms of
Section 103(1)
of the
Firearms
Control Act, 60 of 2000
the appellant was declared unfit to possess a
firearm;
[6.2] in terms of
Section
120(4)(a)
of the Children’s Act, 38 of 2005 the appellant was
declared unsuitable to work with children;
[6.3] in terms of
Section 50(2)(a)(i) of the Sexual Offences Act, 32 of 2007 the
particulars of the appellant were ordered
to be included in the
National Register for Sex Offenders.
[6]
Due to the sentence of life imprisonment, the
appellant has an automatic right to appeal against the conviction and
sentence and
the appellant now comes on appeal against his conviction
and sentence.
[7]
Condonation is granted for the late filing of
appellant’s heads of argument.
The Plea
[8]
The appellant pleaded not guilty. His defence was
that the complainant’s father had given him the complainant as
a child-bride
in accordance with Malawian custom. He later
testified that he was led to believe that she was 15 at the time.
The
Evidence
[9]
I will first deal with the evidence in the case.
[10]
The appellant made several formal admissions in
terms of
Section 220
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
.
[11]
Importantly, it was admitted that the complainant
was eleven years old at the times that the appellant had sexual
intercourse with
her.
[12]
The observations and findings in a report of a
medical examination of the complainant by Dr D M Andrews on 12
September 2017 were
admitted. The report stated that the complainant
had old tears in her hymen consistent with vaginal penetration and
that she was
visibly pregnant.
[13]
The Biology Report-DNA, which concluded that the
probability of the appellant being the father of the complainant’s
child,
is 99.95%, was also admitted.
[14]
It is further admitted that the complainant gave
birth to the child on 24 November 2017.
[15]
The State led the evidence of Mr N L[....], the
father of the complainant. Mr L[....] testified that the complainant
was born in
Malawi and came to stay with him in South Africa. Her
mother remained in Malawi.
[16]
In 2016 he and the complainant moved to Langa from
Muizenberg. They stayed in a small shack which barely contained
their two
beds. He had stomach problems and had to jump over
the bed of the complainant to relieve himself and sometimes even
messed
on her.
[17]
In 2016 he went to his friend the appellant, who
was his neighbour, and they agreed that the complainant would move
into the second
bedroom of the appellant’s shack. They further
agreed to cook and eat together in the appellant’s shack, which
had
a kitchen.
[18]
In evidence in chief he testified that he told the
appellant that the complainant was eleven years old when they made
this arrangement.
He testified that in September 2017 he
noticed that the complainant was pregnant, and he took her to another
neighbour, Ms Nokobongwa.
She advised him to purchase a pregnancy
test kit. This was done and the complainant tested positive for
pregnancy.
[19]
When he asked the complainant who made her
pregnant, she started crying and told him it was his friend, the
accused.
He asked her why she did not tell him about this
and she replied that she was afraid to because the appellant told her
he was going
to slap her, kill her and throw her into the river.
[20]
She told him the appellant slept with her on three
occasions. He was very sad, went home and cried. He did
not sleep
all night. The next day he went to the
appellant’s place of employment and took him back to Langa.
[21]
There the community asked the appellant who was
sleeping with the girl (the complainant) and the appellant replied
that it was him,
adding that it was a mistake. The
community asked the appellant how he can sleep with the complainant
while he is staying
with his wife.
[22]
According to Mr L[....] the appellant was living
with a girlfriend in his shack. The community started
assaulting the
appellant. Mr L[....] ran to the police
station to inform them that the community was assaulting someone who
raped
his daughter. The police went to the scene, thereafter he, the
complainant, the appellant and Ms Nokobongwa went to the police
station.
[23]
Ms Nokobongwa pointed the appellant out as the
person who raped the complainant. Mr L[....] denies
giving the appellant
permission to marry the appellant or to have
sexual intercourse with her because, according to him, she was very
young at the time.
[24]
During cross examination he denied that he asked
the appellant to marry the complainant. It was put to him
that the
appellant’s shack had only one bedroom and a kitchen,
he denied this. He stated that the complainant moved to
the appellant’s shack in July 2016. He denied that
it only happened in 2017.
[25]
When it was put to him that the appellant never
stayed with a girlfriend and that there was no extra bed in the
appellant’s
shack, he denied this. It was put
to him that the agreement was that the complainant would sleep in the
appellant’s
bed, he denied this.
[26]
He admitted that when he initially noticed that
the complainant put on weight and complained of stomach pains, she
said nothing
about being raped. It was put to him that the
reason why he wanted the complainant to move out of his shack, was
because
she complained when he had intercourse with his girlfriend,
he denied it.
[27]
He stated that he went to buy the pregnancy test
kit. He did not go to the police on the day he found out
she was pregnant
because he was in shock and crying.
[28]
It was put to him that he agreed that the
complainant will be married to the appellant, and he denied it.
It was put
to him that the appellant will come and testify that he
told the appellant at work that he gave him his daughter to marry and
now
he has made her pregnant, he must pay the necessary fine, he
denied this.
[29]
He admitted that he brought the appellant home to
Langa but denied that he wanted to talk about a fine, he wanted to
know who slept
with the complainant.
[30]
It was put to him that he knew that the
complainant was pregnant even before Ms Nokobongwa brought it to his
attention, he denied
that he gave consent for the appellant to marry
the appellant. It was put to him that he told the appellant that the
complainant
was sixteen years old, he denied this.
[31]
He admitted that he ran to the police station
because he did not want the appellant to be assaulted. He
again stated
that the reason he allowed the complainant to move into
the appellant’s house was because the appellant’s
girlfriend
was staying there with him. He denied that the
complainant was doing appellant’s laundry.
[32]
It was put to him that it is cultural practice in
Malawi for parents to give their children to older people to marry
irrespective
of the child’s age, he denied it and stated that a
small child cannot be married to an old or older man.
[33]
It was put to him that the defence will bring
research to demonstrate to the court that in Malawi parents give
their daughters,
as young as ten years old, to older men to marry, he
denied this.
[34]
During cross-examination he testified that he told
the appellant that the complainant is 15 years old at the time when
the crime
happened and then changed his evidence to state that he
told the appellant the age of 15 in relation to a party not the
marriage,
he goes on to state that he has a problem explaining
himself.
[35]
The State then called the complainant. She
testified that at the time of testifying she was fourteen years old,
it was not
disputed that she is a competent witness.
[36]
She testified in camera with the assistance of an
intermediary. She testified that she was ten years old when she
moved to
Langa with her father. She initially lived with
her father in their shack and then moved to the appellant’s
shack.
The appellant’s girlfriend lived with them on
weekends because in the week she had a sleep-in job. The
appellant’s
shack had two bedrooms and a kitchen, she had her
own bedroom and bed.
[37]
One day the appellant called her to his room, she
thought he wanted her to go to the shop for him. She went
to his room,
and he said he loved her, he started touching and
kissing her. She told him to stop it. The appellant
started to take
off her clothes and she started to cry.
[38]
The accused put her own hand on her mouth, and she
could not speak or scream. He had sexual intercourse with
her, and
she cried because it was painful, and she could not think
that the appellant was doing this to her. When he was finished, she
bled.
[39]
The appellant then told her that she must not tell
anybody and that if she told her father the appellant would kill her.
She
did not tell anybody about this incident because she was
scared.
[40]
She testified that the appellant raped her three
times. The further two instances of rape occurred in her bedroom and
bed.
[41]
On the second occasion the appellant was naked
when he came into her room, he took off her clothes and raped her,
she again cried
because it was painful, he again told her that he
would kill her if she told her father what happened. She
was afraid
and did not tell anybody about this incident.
[42]
The last rape also took place in her own room and
bed. The appellant came in, took off his and her clothes and raped
her, she cried
because of the pain and bled. The appellant
again told her that he would kill her if she told her father what
happened. The
next day at dinner she wanted to tell her
father what the appellant did, but she was too scared.
[43]
The complainant testified that she did not give
the appellant permission to have sexual intercourse with her on any
of the occasions
that it happened. The appellant told her
he was going to marry her, but she said she was too young. The
appellant
did not use a condom on the three occasions that he raped
her. The rapes came to light when she became pregnant.
[44]
Nokobongwa told her that she was pregnant after
she tested her with a pregnancy kit. She then told her
father that the
appellant made her pregnant. She was examined
by a doctor but could not have an abortion because she was already
seven months
pregnant.
[45]
The complainant gave birth to a boy. She
briefly held him before he was taken away from her. She said
she cried because
she never thought this was going to happen in her
life.
[46]
After that the social worker took her to see the
child on one occasion. She herself was taken into foster
care and is
still in foster care.
[47]
She never washed the appellant’s clothes.
[48]
During cross examination she testified that she
was not present when her father negotiated with the appellant about
her moving into
his shack. She moved because her father’s
shack was too small. In her bedroom at the appellant’s
place there were also tyres, car seats and a chair.
[49]
She did not attend school while she lived in
Langa. When she told her father that the appellant made her
pregnant she was
afraid of the appellant because of his threats, her
father said she must not tell anybody else.
[50]
That evening she still slept at the appellant’s
shack, but her father said she must not tell the appellant that she
is pregnant.
She did not want to sleep there but her
father said she had to because her bed was there. The next day
her father went to
the police station and after that she slept at the
house of her father’s girlfriend.
[51]
Since she has been in foster care her father had
visited her on weekends, the last time he visited her was on the
previous Sunday.
[52]
She was cooking and cleaning the appellant’s
shack. She also dished up his food for him, but she did not iron his
clothes.
The appellant’s girlfriend only slept in his
shack over weekends. When she was raped, the girlfriend
was working.
She denied that the appellant’ shack only
had one bedroom.
[53]
She does not know about her father asking the
appellant to marry her. She denied that she agreed to be
the appellant’s
wife.
[54]
Ms Nokobongwa Mbekela testified that she was a
neighbour of the accused, the complainant, and her father in Joe
Slovo camp, Langa.
[55]
The complainant lived in an L-shaped shack with
the appellant. They each had their own room. In the early
evening on
a day in September 2017 the complainant was brought to her
by her father because he suspected that she was pregnant.
[56]
She spoke to the complainant, who informed her
that she could feel kicking in her stomach. She concluded
that the complainant
was pregnant and asked her who made her
pregnant, the complainant answered that it was the appellant. She
then asked
the complainant how this was possible because the
appellant had a girlfriend. The complainant told her that
the appellant
had intercourse with her three times and that the
appellant’s girlfriend was not present when it took place.
[57]
She further testified that the complainant told
her that the appellant gave her twenty rand after intercourse on each
occasion.
She asked the complainant why she did not tell
anybody about what the appellant did to her and she answered that the
appellant
told her that she must not mention it to anybody and that
he will kill her.
[58]
The complainant’s father wept and
slept at his shack. Ms Mbekela did a pregnancy test on the
complainant, which indicated
she was indeed pregnant. She
phoned the police, and they told her to come to the police station
the next morning
[59]
According to her the complainant slept with her
father’s girlfriend that evening. The next morning,
she told another
woman of the community the story of the
complainant. They were overheard and the members of the
community said that the complainant’s
father must rent a
vehicle for them to fetch the appellant from his work.
[60]
They left and brought the appellant back to his
shack. He was undressed and assaulted by the members of the
community.
He cried and initially he said he did nothing and
then said that it was a mistake.
[61]
The police arrived and asked them what happened.
After they told the police what happened the police took the
appellant to the police
station. She never heard the
appellant referring to the complainant as his wife.
[62]
During cross examination she testified that the
complainant’s father has his own shack and that his girlfriend
was staying
with her (Ms Mbekela). The complainant
originally lived with her father in his shack in Langa and later
moved into
the appellant’s shack. The appellant’s
shack had two bedrooms, the appellant and the complainant each had
their own room. She was under the impression that the appellant
rented his room and that the complainant’s father rented
the
complainant’s room for her.
[63]
She concluded that the appellant raped the
complainant because the complainant told her he would just climb into
her bed and gave
her twenty rand afterwards. The complainant also
told her that the appellant slapped her on her thighs to open them.
[64]
The accused testified that he was born in Malawi
and is 30 years old. He knew the complainant’s father from work
where he
was doing landscaping. At that time, they both lived in
Capricorn, Muizenberg and became friends.
[65]
The complainant’s father borrowed money from
him. They both moved to Langa, he moved there in the beginning of
2017 and the
complainant, and her father moved there approximately a
month later. Their houses were very close to each other.
[66]
He thought that about a month later the
complainant and her father came to his house. The father told him
that he was giving the
complainant to him as his wife because the
complainant was unhappy about what the father was doing with his
girlfriend. The
father told him that the complainant was
fifteen years old.
[67]
He then started living with the complainant as his
wife, they slept together in his bed, she cooked his food, they ate
together,
she did his laundry and ironed his clothes.
According
to him everything was going nicely and smoothly.
[68]
After about four months the complainant’s
father asked him if he would pay to send the complainant home to
Malawi
He said he could not, and everything continued
smoothly as before. He and the complainant went to the shops together
and did things
as man and wife. The complainant’s
father was happy with the way they were living.
[69]
On the evening of 11 September 2017, he greeted
the father at his house and went home. The complainant
started cooking
and went to fetch her father to come and eat. Nothing
seemed to be wrong. The next day he went to work.
[70]
At work the security guard came to call him.
The father, three Xhosa men and one Malawian man were waiting for
him,
they told him to come home with him in their vehicle.
In the vehicle everything was normal.
[71]
When they arrived back in Langa they went into his
house. The men asked him why he raped the complainant.
He answered
that he does not know them, only the father can ask him
questions.
[72]
Further men came into his house, and they
assaulted him. The complainant’s father tried to
stop the assault and
said the others must go outside so that he can
talk to him. The others kept on assaulting him. He was slapped and
hit with a sjambok.
His landlord came and stopped the
assault in the house.
[73]
They then took him outside, undressed him, and
kept on assaulting him until the police arrived. He got
dressed and they
took him to the police station where he was
eventually charged with raping the complainant. He admitted to
the police that
he slept with the complainant but did not force her
saying she was his wife who was living with him. He did
not have
another girlfriend.
[74]
He had no relationship with the complainant before
her father gave her to him as his wife. According to him that is how
a marriage
starts, there was no ceremony. He was going to save up for
a small ceremony with the respective families.
[75]
He testified that there is in fact another bedroom
in the shack, but the landlord’s sister lived there. The shack
has two
entrances and they each used one. He had sexual
intercourse with the complainant for the first time on the night that
her father brought her to him to be his wife.
[76]
They had a meal together, watched television in
his bedroom. He testified that he then asked her for permission to
have intercourse
with him. She answered that there is no problem.
They undressed themselves and started touching each other, “like
lovebirds” and proceeded to have sexual intercourse and went to
sleep. The next day he went to work.
Thereafter they had intercourse again while the complainant lived
with him. He cannot remember how many times.
[77]
The complainant was present when her father told
him she was fifteen years old, she heard this and did not disagree.
He believed
her father. Where he comes from that is old
enough to be married.
[78]
Three months after the complainant became his
wife, he became aware that she was pregnant, he called her father and
gave him the
good news. He never said anything about a
mistake while he was being assaulted by the community members.
[79]
The accused was cross examined. This was not
done comprehensively. It mostly amounted to putting the evidence of
the State
witnesses to him insofar as it contradicted his version,
and he denied it.
[80]
He testified that they were all getting along, and
everything went well. Even when it was discovered that
the complainant
was pregnant there were no problems between him, the
complainant, and her father.
The
Conviction
[81]
It is apparent from the appellant’s plea and
evidence that his defence is that he is not guilty of rape because he
believed
the complainant to be 15 years old and she consented to
sexual intercourse.
[82]
On behalf of the appellant, Mr Strauss argued
before us that the appellant’s evidence in this regard should
be accepted, and
that the Regional Magistrate erred in finding the
appellant guilty of rape in terms of Section 3 of the Act.
[83]
He argued that the conviction should be set aside
and substituted with a conviction of consensual sexual penetration of
a child
who is 12 years or older but under the age of 16 in terms of
Section 15(1) of the Act.
[84]
This cannot be done because it is not in dispute
that the complainant was 11 years old when the appellant had sexual
intercourse
with her, and Section 15(1) of the Act specifically
refers to the victim being a person of 12 years or older.
[85]
Section 57(1) of the Act provides that
“Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any law contained,
a male or female person
under the age of 12 years is incapable of
consenting to a sexual act.”
[86]
This does not mean that a person who has sexual
intercourse with a person under the age of 12 is automatically guilty
of rape in
terms of Section 3 of the Act. Such person may
not have the required intent to rape because he or she lacks
knowledge
of unlawfulness if he genuinely believes that the other
person is capable of giving consent to sexual intercourse and gave
such
consent.
[87]
Be that as it may, the Regional Magistrate
rejected the evidence of the appellant and found that the complainant
in fact did not
consent to sexual intercourse. The court must
consider whether the Regional Magistrate erred in making this
finding.
[88]
When addressing the court Mr Strauss did not
persist with his argument that the Regional Magistrate erred in not
calling the girlfriend
of the complainant’s father and the
girlfriend of the appellant to give evidence in terms of
Section 186
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
.
[89]
In my opinion she was correct in doing so.
The evidence of the girlfriend of the complainant’s father as
to where the
complainant slept on the evening when it was established
that she is pregnant is not essential to the just decision of the
case
in view of the strength of the evidence against the appellant.
[90]
The appellant denied that he had a girlfriend at
the time of the rape. The Regional Magistrate was accordingly not
able to have
a summons issued and served on such person.
[91]
In his heads of argument Mr Strauss further argued
that the Regional Magistrate should have treated the evidence of the
complainant
with more caution due to the cautionary rules applicable
to single and child witnesses, the complainant being 11 years old
when
the offence was committed and 14 years old when she testified.
[92]
From her judgement, it is however clear that the
Regional Magistrate did not lightly accept the evidence of the
complainant.
She correctly found that the complainant appeared
to be credible and convincing and that her version was not
discredited by any
material contradictions or obvious
improbabilities. The Regional Magistrate further found that the
complainant’s version
of the events was corroborated in
material respects by the other State witnesses.
[93]
It must be noted that there are contradictions
between the evidence of the State witnesses, for example, who
purchased the pregnancy
testing kit and where the complainant slept
the evening that she tested positive for being pregnant.
These
contradictions, however, do not relate to the
material aspects of the case.
[94]
The evidence of the State witnesses remained
consistent and uncontradictory on the material aspects of the case,
that the appellant’s
shack had two bedrooms, that the appellant
and the complainant each had a room, that the appellant had a
girlfriend, that the complainant’s
father did not give her to
the appellant as his wife on any occasion when the three of them were
together, that he did not treat
the complainant as his wife, that the
complainant told them she had sexual intercourse with the appellant
on three occasions and
that the appellant threatened to kill the
complainant if she told others that he had intercourse with her.
[95]
I cannot find that the Regional Magistrate erred
in finding that the other State witnesses corroborated the
complainant’s
version in material respects. The
Regional Magistrate also correctly found the appellant not to be a
credible and convincing
witness. This is a further factor
in favour of the credibility of the complainant.
[96]
The Regional Magistrate was correct in finding
that there were contradictions between the version of the appellant
as put to the
State witnesses during cross examination and his
version when he testified.
[97]
It was put to the State witnesses that the
appellants shack had only one bedroom and a kitchen. The complainant
therefore had to
sleep with him in his bed and bedroom.
[98]
During his evidence he testified that his shack
did in fact have two bedrooms but that another person occupied the
second bedroom.
It was never put to any state witness
that there was a second bedroom.
[99]
It was put to the complainant’s father that
he informed the appellant that the complainant is 16 years old.
During
his evidence the appellant testified that the complainant’s
father told him that she is 15 years old.
[100]
It was never put to a State witness that the
appellant did not have a girlfriend at the time that the complainant
lived in the shack
with him. It was in fact only put to the
complainant’s father that he never lived with a girlfriend.
[101]
It was put to the complainant’s father that
he came to the appellant’s workplace to negotiate the payment
of a fine
because the appellant made her pregnant and that he was not
upset or angry because the complainant was pregnant. In
his evidence the complainant did not mention anything about a fine.
[102]
It was put to the complainant’s father that
it is cultural practice that parents give their daughters to older
men to marry
them, irrespective of the age of the daughters, even as
young as ten years old. The appellant gave no such
evidence.
His evidence was only that where he comes from
a 15- or 16-year-old girl is old enough to get married.
[103]
There was no evidential basis for the appellant’s
instructions to his legal representative that it is cultural practice
in
Malawi that parents give their daughters to older men to marry
them, irrespective of the age of the daughters, even as young as
then
years old.
[104]
The Regional Magistrate was also correct in
finding that the appellant’s version is not reasonably possibly
true. The
following improbabilities arise.
[105]
Why would the father, out of the blue, suddenly
decide to start mentioning a fine at the appellant’s workplace
if he had been
given the “good news” months before, that
the appellant made the complainant pregnant, and the complainant and
her
father was happy with this?
[106]
Why would the members of the community have become
involved in fetching him from work to interrogate and assault him
regarding the
complainant if his evidence is true that he openly
lived with the complainant in one bedroom and bed, and they acted as
man and
wife?
[107]
One cannot lose sight of the fact that the
complainant was only 11 years old when she moved into the house with
the appellant, and
he started having sexual intercourse with her.
Not only was she physically 11 years old but she had the mental
maturity
of an 11-year old.
[108]
How the appellant, who was more than 25 years old
at the time, and according to him was living with this 11-year-old
child as husband
and wife on a permanent basis could have thought
that she had the mental maturity and capacity to consent to sexual
intercourse
is beyond comprehension.
[109]
The Regional Magistrate did not err in making the
above findings and she was correct when she rejected the version of
the appellant
and accepted the version of the complainant.
[110]
I am accordingly satisfied that there is no basis
for interference with the finding of the Regional Magistrate that the
appellant
is guilty of rape.
The
Sentence
[111]
No oral evidence was led regarding sentence. A
victim impact statement regarding the complainant was handed in by
consent as evidence
regarding sentence.
[112]
There are two reasons why a discretionary minimum
sentence of life imprisonment as prescribed in
Section 51(1)
read
with
Part I
of Schedule 2 of The
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 105 of
1997
is applicable in this case.
[113]
Firstly, the appellant raped the complainant more
than once and secondly, the complainant was below the age of sixteen
when the
rape took place.
[114]
The appellant was therefore required to show that
substantial and compelling circumstances existed which justified the
imposition
of a lesser sentence in terms of
Section 51(3)(a)
of The
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 105 of 1997
.
[115]
In
S v Malgas
2001
(1) SACR 469
(SCA) the court held that in determining whether there
are substantial and compelling circumstances justifying a lesser
sentence
than life imprisonment, the court must consider that the
default position for certain offences is life imprisonment unless
there
are truly convincing reasons for a lesser sentence. The
reasons do not have to be exceptional and the court must consider
all
the particular circumstances of the case including the traditional
mitigating factors. The court must also not
lose sight of
the aggravating factors.
[116]
Mr Strauss argued on behalf of the appellant that
the Regional Magistrate erred in under-emphasizing the interests of
the appellant
by failing to impose a sentence which will allow the
accused to be rehabilitated and re-integrated in society.
[117]
He further argued that there were compelling and
substantial circumstances to justify a lesser sentence to be found in
appellant’s
personal circumstances.
[118]
The Regional Magistrate took rehabilitation, one
of the chief objectives of sentencing, into account when she
considered which sentence
to impose. She correctly found
that the appellant’s failure to accept responsibility for the
offences, even up
to sentencing, impacted negatively on his prospects
of rehabilitation. She also considered the personal
circumstances
of the appellant, the seriousness of the offence and
the interests of society.
[119]
Except for the fact that the appellant has no
previous convictions, there are no other significant mitigating
circumstances in his
favour.
[120]
He is a thirty-year-old unmarried male with no
children, he was employed but lost his employment due to his arrest
in this case,
he lost his parents when he was young and was raised by
his aunt. He has not expressed any remorse for his
actions.
[121]
When I consider all the particular circumstances
of the case, I have no hesitation in concluding that it falls within
the most serious
categories of rape. The complainant was
very young when she was raped. She was raped three times and the
indications
are that it was not done on the spur of the moment.
[122]
The appellant exploited the fact that the
complainant was residing with him in the shack. He called her to his
room before raping
her the first time and went into her room on the
two subsequent occasions to rape her. This constitutes a pattern of
abuse.
The appellant abused the trust of the complainant
and his friend, her father, when he raped the complainant while she
was entrusted
to live with him in his shack.
[123]
It appears that the complainant was a virgin
when the first rape occurred, she experienced pain, she cried and
bled from her vagina
during each rape. The appellant
threatened to kill her if she told anybody of incidents of rape.
She was specifically
traumatised by the fact that her father had his
meals with her and the appellant, but she could not inform him of the
incidents
due to the death threats, while the appellant sat there
acting as if nothing has happened.
[124]
The complainant’s child could not be aborted
because she was 7 months pregnant when the pregnancy was discovered.
She had
to endure giving normal vaginal birth to a child when she
herself was still a young child. She bled excessively during the
birth
and had to stay in hospital for 7 or 8 days after giving birth,
due to loss of blood.
[125]
She only held her son briefly before he was taken
into foster care, she was crying because she had never thought “that
this
is going to happen in my life”. She was told to say
goodbye to him and thereafter she only saw him once.
She
herself was taken away from her father and placed into foster care
and is currently still in foster care.
[126]
In this matter the effect that the rape had on the
complainant is devastating. In her victim impact statement, the
complainant
states that the appellant destroyed her life. She has
become an angry child and carries this burden wherever she goes.
[127]
It must be stressed that gender-based crimes have,
with justification, in recent times been highlighted as particularly
prevalent
and serious offences. This type of crime must
be combated on all fronts in South Africa by making use of every
suitable
means, even more so when the victim is a young child.
[128]
Where justified, the other chief objectives of
sentencing, being the prevention of crime, the protection of society
and retribution,
will prevail over rehabilitation of offenders. This
is such a case, I cannot find that the Regional Magistrate erred in
finding
that there are no compelling and substantial circumstances to
justify a lesser sentence than imprisonment for life.
I
can therefore not interfere with the sentence of life imprisonment.
[129]
The further orders made by the Regional Magistrate
regarding the appellant being unfit to possess a firearm, unsuitable
to work
with children and his particulars being included in the
Register for Sex Offenders were not challenged on appeal.
[130]
In the result I would make the following order:
(a)
The appeal against conviction and sentence is
dismissed
(b)
The appellant’s conviction and sentence are
confirmed.
E
S GROBBELAAR
Acting
Judge of the High Court
I
AGREE. IT IS SO ORDERED.
P
A L GAMBLE
Judge
of the High Court
Attorney
for Appellant
MR
M W STRAUSS
Attorneys
for Applicant
Cape Town Justice Centre
Counsel
for Respondent
ADV M J SEPTEMBER
Attorneys
for Respondent
The Director of Public Prosecutions, Cape Town
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