Case Law[2025] ZASCA 54South Africa
Phogole v S (370/2023) [2025] ZASCA 54 (9 May 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
9 May 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law and procedure – evidence of a single witness in a rape case – whether evidence was sufficient to sustain conviction despite contradictions in the testimony of a single witness – whether there are substantial and compelling circumstances justifying the imposition of a lesser sentence than life imprisonment.
Judgment
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## Phogole v S (370/2023) [2025] ZASCA 54 (9 May 2025)
Phogole v S (370/2023) [2025] ZASCA 54 (9 May 2025)
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sino date 9 May 2025
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THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 370/2023
In the matter between:
Charles
PHOGOLE APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Phogole v The State
(370/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 54
(9 May 2025)
Coram:
MAKGOKA, MOKGOHLOA and MOTHLE JJA
Heard
:
20 May 2024
Delivered
:
9 May 2025
Summary:
Criminal
law and procedure – evidence of a single witness in a rape case
– whether evidence was sufficient to sustain
conviction despite
contradictions in the testimony of a single witness – whether
there are substantial and compelling circumstances
justifying the
imposition of a lesser sentence than life imprisonment.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Khumalo J and Matthys AJ sitting as court
of appeal):
1
The appeal against conviction is dismissed.
2
The appeal against sentence is upheld.
3
The order of the full bench in respect of sentence
is set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
(a)
The appeal against sentence is upheld.
(b)
The sentence imposed by the trial court is set aside and replaced
with the following:
“
The
accused is sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment”.’
4
The sentence in paragraph 3 (b) is antedated to 12 February 2015 in
terms of
s 282
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
JUDGMENT
Mokgohloa JA (Mothle
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This appeal concerns the rape of an 8-year-old girl, which occurred
in 2010 or 2011, in a toilet at
a tavern. The rape occurred during
the day whilst she was playing with her friends.
[2]
The appellant was convicted in the Regional Court Johannesburg, held
in Alexandra (the trial court)
on 26 November 2014. The conviction
was for rape, in contravention of s 3 of the Sexual and Related
Matters Amendment Act 32 of
2007 (the Act). He was sentenced to life
imprisonment on 12 February 2015. In terms of s 309(1) of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977 (the CPA), read with s 10 and s
43(2) of the Judicial Matters Amendment Act 42 of 2013, once the
regional court imposes
a sentence of life imprisonment, the appellant
was entitled to an automatic right of appeal to a full bench of the
high court.
The Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg, per
Khumalo J and Matthys AJ (the full bench), dismissed the appeal on
both
conviction and sentence. The appeal before us is against the
judgment of the high court, with special leave of this Court.
[3]
Counsel for the appellant contended that the State did not prove its
case beyond reasonable doubt; that
the trial court failed to apply
the cautionary rule in evaluating the evidence of a single child
witness; and that the evidence
of the complainant was not
satisfactory and reliable and was inconsistent. Counsel contended
further, that it was improbable in
that the complainant was raped in
light of the delay in her reporting of the incident; that she could
be raped in the toilet at
a tavern with no eyewitness; that she did
not initially indicate that the appellant lifted her up during the
rape; and that she
informed her grandmother that she was bleeding and
the grandmother did nothing. According to counsel, the trial court
misdirected
itself by not accepting the evidence of the appellant as
being reasonably and probably true in that the mother of the
complainant
influenced the complainant to falsely implicate him.
[4]
The issues for determination before this Court are whether the
appellant was properly convicted on the
evidence of a child single
witness; whether the trial court was correct to reject the evidence
of the appellant as not being reasonably
and probably true; and
whether the sentence of life imprisonment imposed on the appellant
was shockingly inappropriate.
[5]
In the trial, the state led evidence of three witnesses, the now
11-year-old complainant, her mother
Ms S[...] P[...] (Ms P[...]), and
Ms Mashudu Nemotanzila (Ms Nemotanzila), a forensic nurse who
examined the complainant. The appellant
testified in his defence. It
is common cause that the appellant is well known to the complainant
as her mother’s friend.
It is further common cause that the
complainant was approximately eight years old when the incident
occurred, and she testified
about an incident that occurred four or
five years before.
The
facts
[6]
The facts of this case can be summarised as follows. During the year
2010 or 2011, the complainant was
playing a game of ‘hide and
seek’ with her friends outside her grandmother’s house.
The appellant approached
her at the hiding place, pulled her away and
took her to a toilet at a nearby tavern. The appellant undressed her,
undressed himself
and raped her. According to the complainant, the
appellant lifted her and pressed her against the wall and raped her.
This happened
inside the toilet, and it was daylight. Thereafter, the
appellant ordered her to go home.
[7]
She went home and did not tell her grandmother about the rape as she
was afraid that she will give her
a hiding. She only revealed this
incident to her mother much later when there was another incident of
children being raped in her
community.
[8]
Ms P[...], the complainant’s mother, testified that, on 5
January 2014, she learnt about the rape
of children who had been
friends with the complainant. She enquired from the complainant and
her sibling if they were ever rape
or touched by the person accused
of raping the other children. The complainant and her sibling denied
being raped or touched. Ms
P[...] indicated that she would take them
to the doctor to confirm that they were not raped. It was at that
point that the complainant
started to cry and informed her mother
that the appellant had raped her. Ms P[...] reported the rape to the
police and the complainant
was taken to the clinic for her to be
examined.
[9]
Ms Nemotanzila, confirmed that she examined the complainant on 6
January 2014. Upon her examination,
she found that the complainant’s
hymen was not intact and had a cleft. She testified that her findings
were consistent with
a history of previous penetration. Ms
Nemotanzila testified that the complainant reported to her that,
during 2011, a man known
to her took her to a toilet at a tavern
where he undressed and did naughty things with her.
[10]
The appellant testified in his defence and denied having raped the
complainant. His defence was that he had been
in a secret love
relationship with Ms P[...] for about ten years. The last time he saw
Ms P[...] was on 31 December 2013 when they
were at his house. Ms
P[...] asked him for money. He told her that the did not have money
and this made her angry. The appellant
testified that he was arrested
on 5 January 2014. He believed that Ms P[...] influenced the
complainant to lay false charges against
him and falsely implicate
him because he refused to give her money that she requested on 31
December 2013.
[11]
Both the full bench and the trial court accepted the evidence of the
complainant, Ms P[...] and Ms Nemotanzila
and rejected that of the
appellant. While they found some inconsistencies with the evidence
provided by the complainant and Ms
P[...] relating to the position
the complainant was in when she was raped, both courts were satisfied
that the evidence of the
complainant was satisfactory and sufficient
to convict the appellant of rape.
Conviction
[12]
It is common cause that the complainant was a single witness and a
child. For some years, the evidence of a chid
witness, particularly
as a single witness, was treated with caution. This was because it
was stated that a child witness could
be manipulated to falsely
implicate a particular person as the perpetrator thereby substituting
the accused person for the real
perpetrator. In
Woji
v Santam
Insurance
Co Ltd
(
Woji
),
[1]
this Court stated that, to ensure that the evidence of a child can be
relied upon, a court must be satisfied that the evidence
is
trustworthy. The Court noted factors which must be taken into account
to come to a conclusion that the evidence is trustworthy.
In this
regard, the Court held as follows:
‘
Trustworthiness .
. . depends on factors such as the child’s power of
observation, his power of recollection, and his power
of narration on
the specific matter to be testified. In each instance the capacity of
the particular child has to be investigated.
His capacity of
observation will depend on whether he appears “intelligent
enough to observe”. Whether he has the capacity
of recollection
will depend again on whether he has sufficient years of discretion
“to remember what occurs” while
the capacity of narration
or communication raises the question whether the child has the
“capacity to understand the questions
put, and to frame and
express intelligent answers” . . . There are other factors as
well which the Court will take into account
in assessing the child’s
trustworthiness in the witness-box. Does he appear to be honest –
is there a consciousness
of the duty to speak the truth? Then also
“
the nature of the
evidence given by the child may be of a simple kind and may relate to
a subject-matter clearly within the field
of its understanding and
interest and the circumstances may be such as practically to exclude
the risks arising from suggestibility”
. . .
At the same time the
danger of believing a child where evidence stands alone must not be
underrated.’
[2]
[13]
In terms of s 208 of the CPA, it is competent for a court to convict
on the evidence of a single witness. However,
the evidence of a
single witness must be clear and satisfactory in every material
respect.
[3]
This does not mean
that such evidence must be flawless and beyond criticism. In
S
v Saul
(
Saul
),
[4]
it was held that:
‘
There is no rule
of thumb test or formula to apply when it comes to a consideration of
the single witness . . . The trial Judge
will weigh the evidence,
will consider its merits and demerits and, having done so, will
decide whether it is trustworthy and whether,
despite the fact that
there are shortcomings or defects or contradictions in the testimony,
he is satisfied that the truth has
been told. The cautionary rule
referred to by De Villiers JP in 1932 may be a guide to a right
decision but it does not mean “that
the appeal must succeed if
any criticism, however slender, of the witnesses’ evidence were
well founded” . . . It has
been said more than once that the
exercise of caution must not be allowed to displace the exercise of
common sense.’
Section 60 of the Act
prevents the use of caution in evaluating the evidence of a
complainant because the offence is sexual in nature.
However, in
respect of a child, the court should not convict unless the evidence
is treated with caution especially if the child
is a single witness.
[14]
With regard to the complainant’s age, this Court held as
follows in
ICM
v The State
:
[5]
‘
[The] court
considering the evidence of a child, must be satisfied that the child
is credible and reliable witness. The credibility
ability relates to
honesty and reliability to the child’s cognitive ability or
brain development. The child’s cognitive
ability is assessed
having regard to factors such as the ability to encode, retain,
retrieve and recount information or an event.
The “intimidating
and bewildering atmosphere” under which the child testified and
be evaluated in light of the totality
of the evidence.’
[15]
There was no psychological evidence adduced relating to the
complainant’s brain development and the difficulty
for such a
young child to stare and retrieve traumatic events in sequence.
However, the complainant gave her evidence in a coherent
manner.
Although she could not recount the actual date of the incident, she
provided a detailed account of the events. The State
prosecutor’s
guidance kept the complainant’s testimony focused and to the
point. Even during her cross-examination,
which was adjourned for
almost five months, (cross-examination of the complainant was
adjourned from 21 May 2014 until 23 October
2014) her version
remained consistent.
[16]
The complainant’s testimony was not beyond criticism. She
testified that she was standing with her back against
the wall when
the appellant raped her. However, her mother testified that the
complainant informed her that the appellant penetrated
her from
behind. In, my view, this contradiction is not material. Rather, as
the full bench stated, it is indicative that the complainant
and her
mother did not collude with each other in providing their testimony
in court.
[17]
As regards the position the complainant was when she was raped,
she
testified that:
‘
At
the toilet he undressed me of all my clothes. He then put his thing
and put it on me. The thing was his penis and he placed it
in my
vagina. When he inserted his penis into my vagina I was standing with
my back to the wall, and I was facing Makhaya. As he
inserted his
penis into my vagina he was making certain movements. At that stage,
I felt pain in my vagina. He didn’t use
a condom. He was also
totally naked.’
Under cross examination
she stated:
‘
Makhaya
is much taller than you are, how can he rape you if he is also
standing? --- He would lift me up and pressed me against
the wall.
Why didn’t you tell
Mrs Reddy that he had lifted you up? --- Yes because she didn’t
ask me that.’
[18] In this
regard the trial court stated:
‘
The
court takes into account that the first State witness didn’t
testify in chief that the accused, while raping her, threatened
her,
or that he had picked her up and pressed her against the wall when he
inserted his penis into her vagina.
The
first witness explained her failure to do so was because the
prosecutor in chief did not ask her those questions. It is this
court’s opinion that the court must take into account that the
child was only 12 or 13 years old, that she would not know
that she
was supposed to explain in detail what had happened on the said date
when the incident took place. Therefore, it is this
court’s
opinion that it is not improbable that she would not volunteer
evidence if she was not asked by the prosecutor to
do so’.
I fully agree with the
trial court.
[19] In my
view, this was not a contradiction, but she was merely answering the
questions put to her by the prosecutor.
Due to her age, and ‘the
intimidating and bewildering atmosphere’ under which she
testified, she could not have formed
an opinion that she had to tell
the prosecutor or the court the details of how she was raped. She did
not know that she had to
be precise about the position she was in
when she was raped. It may well be that, when she stated that ‘I
was standing’,
she meant that she was not lying down as many
rapes occur.
[20] Counsel
for the appellant argues that it is improbable that the complainant
was raped in a toilet, at a tavern
yet there were no eyewitness.
However, there was no evidence regarding the distance between the
toilet and the tavern and the position
of the toilet. There is no
evidence that there were patrons at the tavern or not; whether or not
the toilet had cubicles which
have doors, such that a person or
persons would not be visible in the cubicle. In my view, nothing
turns on this argument.
[21] As
regards the delay in reporting the rape, counsel for the appellant
did not, correctly so in my view, pursue
this argument. This is
because the offence of rape has no prescription period. Furthermore,
s 59 of the Act is specific that no
inference can be drawn from the
delay between the commission and the reporting of the rape.
Therefore, the delay in reporting the
rape could not be decisive in
the adjudication of the veracity of the allegation of the
complainant.
[22] Applying
the principles in
Woji
and
Saul
to this case, I find
that the complainant’s evidence is reliable and trustworthy
and, thus, satisfactory in all material
respects. Despite her age,
her evidence was consistent and clear. She was able to respond to
questions appropriately. During cross-examination,
the complainant
broke down in tears and the cross-examination was adjourned for
almost five months. Despite this, she resumed her
testimony and
remained adamant and consistent that the appellant was the one who
raped her.
[23] The
complainant’s evidence was supported by independent medical
evidence. The forensic nurse who examined
her noted that her hymen
was not intact and had a cleft. According to the forensic nurse, her
finding was consistent with a history
of previous penetration. The
forensic nurse further found that the complainant had a vaginal
discharge, and the complainant would
scratch her private parts. It
was put to the forensic nurse during cross-examination that the
injury on the hymen could have been
caused by the complainant
scratching herself. This, the forensic nurse disputed. According to
her, the hymen is deep in the vagina,
and it is also protected by the
labia minora
and therefore, the complainant could not scratch
herself far or deep enough to reach the hymen and cause it to be
injured.
[24]
Coming to the appellant’s version, it is trite that the proper
approach to evidence is to look at the evidence
holistically to
determine whether the guilt of the accused has been proved beyond
reasonable doubt. In
Tshiki
v S
,
[6]
this Court explained this approach as follows:
‘
In
a criminal trial, a court’s approach in assessing evidence is
to weigh up all the elements that point towards the guilt
of the
accused against all that which is indicative of their innocence
taking proper account of inherent strengths and weaknesses,
probabilities and improbabilities on both sides and having done so,
to decide whether the balance weighs so heavily in favour of
the
State as to exclude any reasonable doubt about the accused’s
guilt. . .’
[25] The
appellant’s suggestion that the complainant was couched by her
mother to falsely implicate him in the
allegation of rape is
improbable. To do so, the complainant and her mother would have had
to conspire about what they would tell
the court. The detail and
consistency in the evidence of the complainant disproves this
contention. Furthermore, it is highly improbable
that the
complainant’s mother would protect the real perpetrator and
subject her child to police investigation, medical examination
and
testifying in court, merely to execute her intention to falsely
implicate the appellant for R50. Having regard hereto, the
trial
court was correct to reject the appellant’s version.
[26]
Having stated the above, I find, undoubtedly so,
that the trial court was correct to accept the evidence of the
complainant as satisfactory
in all material respects to justify a
conviction. And, thus, the appellant was properly convicted on the
evidence of a single witness.
As a result, and taking the
evidence in its totality, I am satisfied that the guilt of the
appellant has been proved beyond reasonable
doubt.
Sentence
[27]
It is trite that sentencing is pre-eminently a matter of discretion
of the trial court. An appeal court cannot,
in the absence of a
misdirection by the trial court interfere with this discretion merely
because it would have imposed a different
sentence. To do so would be
to usurp the sentencing discretion of the trial court.
[28]
The starting point regarding sentence in these circumstances is in
the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (the
CLAA). Section 51
prescribes a minimum sentence of life imprisonment on an accused who
has been found guilty of an offence which
falls under Part 1 of
Schedule 2. A court may deviate from imposing such a sentence only
when it finds that there exists substantial
and compelling
circumstances justifying the imposition of a lesser sentence. Rape of
a minor child falls within the offences under
Part 1 of Schedule 2.
[29]
When considering the sentence imposed by the trial court, it appeared
that the trial court failed to warn the appellant
of the
applicability and the consequence of the CLAA. Counsel were requested
to file supplementary heads of argument relating to,
amongst others,
this issue. Counsel complied with this request, for which we are
grateful.
[30]
In his supplementary heads of argument, counsel for the appellant
conceded to the submission that the provisions
of the minimum
sentence were mentioned in the charge sheet. He however argued that
the appellant’s right to a fair trial
was infringed in that he
was not warned of the applicability of the minimum sentence at the
time when he tendered his plea. This,
according to counsel, resulted
in a serious misdirection that vitiated the proceedings and rendered
the trial unfair in respect
of sentence.
[31]
Counsel for the respondent, on the other hand, submitted that the
record of this appeal was reconstructed from
the magistrate’s
notes. The reconstructed record was accepted by both the appellant
and the respondent. She conceded that
there was no indication, on the
reconstructed record, that the appellant was warned of the
applicability of the minimum sentence
at a stage when he tendered his
plea. She however submitted that this did not infringe the
appellant’s right to a fair trial
as the provisions of the
minimum sentence was explained to him on his first appearance date in
court.
[32]
The rule that the accused person should be informed of the minimum
sentence that is applicable in the case, owes
its genesis to
S
v Legoa
,
[7]
where this Court held that it was desirable that the facts which the
State intended to prove the sentencing jurisdiction, under
the CLAA,
should be clearly set out in the charge sheet. The Court concluded by
stating that the matter is one of substance and
not form, and a
general rule could not be laid down that the charge sheet in every
case had to recite either the specific form
of the scheduled offence
with which the accused was charged, or the facts the state intended
to prove to establish it.
[8]
[33]
In
Khoza
& Another v S
,
[9]
this Court stated:
‘
As a general rule,
fair-trial rights require that an accused person should be informed
at the outset of the trial of the provisions
of the Minimum Sentence
Act . . . that the state intends to rely upon or which are
applicable. The accused person should generally
be so informed in the
indictment or charge sheet; by notification by the presiding officer
or in any other manner that effectively
conveys the applicable
provisions to the accused before or at the commencement of the
trial.’
[34]
The charge sheet in this matter states that ‘. . . the accused
is guilty of the crime of contravening the
provisions of Section 3
read with Sections 1, 56(1), 57, 58, 59, 60 and 61 of Act 32 of 2007.
Also read with
Sections 256
and
261
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977
– RAPE (read with the provisions of
Sections 51
and
Schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
, as
amended). It further states that ‘the said accused did
unlawfully and intentionally commit an act of sexual penetration
with
the complainant . . . (A MINOR FEMALE by INSERTING HIS PENIS IN HER
VAGINA . . .’ The record of proceedings states that,
on the
appellant’s first appearance in court, the ‘minimum
sentence legislation’ was explained to him.
[35]
It is indeed desirable that the charge sheet refers to the relevant
provisions of the CLAA. Further desirable that
this should also be
explained to the accused at the time when he tenders his plea. This
would enable the accused to appreciate
and understand the nature and
seriousness of the charge he is facing. It is not sufficient to state
that this was explained to
the appellant, the record of the
proceedings has to show that he was indeed so warned. The
reconstructed record does not state
that the appellant was warned of
the penal provisions of the minimum sentence. In my view, this is a
serious misdirection which
warrants this Court to interfere and
consider the sentence afresh.
[36]
Rape is a serious, cruel and heinous offence. It is degrading,
humiliating and a brutal invasion of a person’s
most intimate
privacy. What I find more aggravating is the fact that the appellant
took advantage of the age and vulnerability
of the complainant. He
abused the trust the complainant had in him as her mother’s
friend. His conduct, in my view,
was sufficiently reprehensible
to fall within the category of offences calling for a sentence both
reflecting the court’s
disapproval and hopefully acting as a
deterrent to other like-minded people who satisfy their canal desires
with helpless children.
[37]
I turn to personal circumstances of the appellant. There is nothing
exceptional about the appellant’s personal
circumstances. He is
a first offender, 37 years old (in 2015), single with two children.
The appellant was self-employed
and enjoyed good healthy life. As
Nugent JA stated in
S
v Vilakazi
(
Vilakazi
),
[10]
‘[i]n cases of serious crime the personal circumstances of the
offender, by themselves, will necessarily recede into the
background’. I agree. In my view, the personal circumstances of
the appellant pale into insignificance when weighed against
the
seriousness of this offence.
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1
The appeal against both conviction is dismissed.
2
The appeal against sentence is upheld.
3
The order of the full bench in respect of sentence is set aside and
replaced with the
following:
‘
(a) The appeal
against sentence is upheld.
(b) The sentence imposed
by the trial court is set aside and replaced with the following:
“
The accused
is sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment
4
The sentence in paragraph 3 (b) is antedated to 12 February 2015 in
terms of
s 282
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
F E MOKGOHLOA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Makgoka
JA (dissenting):
[38]
I have read the judgment prepared by my Sister, Mokgohloa JA (the
first judgment). Regrettably, I disagree with
the conclusion it
reaches and the reasoning underpinning it. In my view, the appeal
against the conviction must be upheld. Below,
I set out my reasons
for that conclusion. The first judgment has summarised the basic
facts. However, to give context to this judgment,
I set out the facts
as follows.
[39]
The complainant testified through an intermediary in terms of
s 170A
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act.
[11
]
In chief, she testified that during the time of the incident, she was
living with her grandmother in a flat. Her mother did not
live with
them but occupied a backroom shack in proximity of the flat. The
complainant had known the appellant for about 8 years
as a person who
often visited her mother.
[40]
On ‘on a certain day’, she was playing with three of her
friends, whom she identified by name. The
appellant ‘pulled’
her away and took her to a toilet situated at a tavern. Once inside
the toilet, he undressed her
completely naked, and he also took off
all his clothes. Thus, both were completely naked. He then took out
his penis and inserted
it into her vagina and made certain movements.
They were both in a standing position facing each other. In her own
words, ‘[w]hen
he inserted his penis into my vagina I was
standing with my back to the wall and I was facing [the appellant]’.
The complainant
testified that the appellant ‘didn’t use
a condom’. After he had finished, he told her to go home. She
went home
and did not tell anyone because she was afraid ‘
they
will give me a hiding
’. (Emphasis added.)
[41]
Under cross-examination, the complainant testified that the distance
between where the appellant pulled her from
and the tavern, was about
50 meters. When the appellant dragged her, she resisted, and was
crying softly. She did not scream as
she was afraid because she
‘didn’t know what he was going to do’. When it was
put to her that, that was more
the reason to scream, she testified
that the appellant had placed his hand over her mouth. Despite this,
she was still able to
scream. She was asked whether she had mentioned
to the police that the appellant had closed her mouth with his hand,
which she
confirmed. It was then pointed out that this was not in her
witness statement. She persisted in her answer that she did inform
the police.
[42]
The evidence of the complainant’s mother mirrored that of the
complainant about the first report. However,
she parted ways with the
complainant about what the latter told her about the alleged rape.
She testified that the complainant
told her that the appellant had
made her face the wall and penetrated her from the back. The forensic
nurse who examined the complainant
completed the State’s case
and testified about the clinical findings upon such examination. I
will revert to her evidence
later.
[43]
In his defence, the appellant denied the charges against him and
speculated that the complainant was influenced
by her mother who had
begrudged him because he had previously refused to give her money.
The regional court was satisfied with
the State’s case, and
accordingly, convicted the appellant and subsequently sentenced him
to imprisonment for life. On appeal,
the high court dismissed the
appellant’s appeal on the basis that the factual findings of
the trial could not be faulted.
[44]
In my view, the appeal should succeed because both the trial court
and the high court failed to consider adequately,
or at all, issues
which were crucial in the determination as to whether the State had
proved its case against the appellant beyond
a reasonable doubt. The
issues, which I consider in turn, are:
(a)
evidence arising only in cross-examination;
(b)
material contradictions in the evidence;
(c)
the evidence of the forensic nurse;
(d)
failure to call other witnesses and impact on corroboration;
(e)
probabilities; and
(f)
the cautionary approach to the evidence of a single and child
witness.
The
evidence which emerged during cross-examination
[45]
In her evidence-in-chief, the complainant testified that when the
alleged rape took place, she and the appellant
were standing
face-to-face.
In cross-examination,
it was pointed out to her that it was impossible for
penetration to occur in that position, given the appellant’s
height and
her small stature. Only then,
a
very different version emerged.
The complainant testified that
the appellant had lifted her up and pressed her against the wall.
When confronted with why she only
mentioned this discrepancy in
cross-examination, the complainant said that she was not asked about
it by the prosecutor, and that
she did not know that she was expected
to give a detailed explanation.
[46]
The trial court accepted the complainant’s explanation. In
addition, the court reasoned that because of her
age, the complainant
would not know that she was supposed to explain in detail what had
happened to her. On that basis, the court
concluded that ‘it
[was] not improbable that she would not volunteer evidence if she was
not asked by the prosecutor to do
so’. The first judgment
agrees with the trial court, and adds that ‘this was not a
contradiction, but she was merely
answering the questions put to her
by the prosecutor’.
[47]
I disagree. A careful analysis of her evidence-in-chief shows that
the prosecutor asked her only two questions,
one in chief and another
in re-examination. In her evidence-in-chief, she asked the
complainant whether she knew why she was in
court. The complainant
then narrated her evidence without any interruption whatsoever,
during which she volunteered detailed information.
No one asked her
about how: (a) she was pulled away from where she was playing; (b)
she was forced into the tavern toilet; (c)
she was undressed by the
appellant. Similarly, she testified without prompting that (a) both
she and the appellant were completely
naked; (b) she was standing
against the wall facing the appellant; and the appellant did not use
a condom.
[48]
Viewed in this light, the court’s acceptance of her explanation
that she did not mention those issues because
she was not asked about
them, does not bear scrutiny. She
did
provide detailed information without being asked. The first judgment
concludes that the complainant ‘could not have formed
an
opinion that she has to tell the prosecutor or the court the details
of how she was raped. She did not know that she had to
be precise
about the position she was in when she was raped. . .’. The
question is: how did she know she had to provide the
details she
provided in the first place, eg the position she was penetrated in;
the fact that they were both naked; the fact that
he did not use a
condom? The trial court and the high court overlooked these issues,
and so, with respect, does the first judgment.
[49]
What is more, the first judgment concludes that the discrepancy might
have been due to ‘. . . “the
intimidating and bewildering
atmosphere”’ under which the complainant testified’.
The complainant testified through
an intermediary. There is no
evidence on record that she found the environment ‘intimidating
and bewildering’. That
assertion would more readily apply to a
child who testifies in an open court, and not through an
intermediary.
[50]
This Court has drawn a negative inference from the fact that some of
the points in a complainant’s evidence
arose only in
cross-examination. In
S v Smit
(
Smit
),
[12]
it was held that
had
the events occurred as the complainant alleged in cross-examination,
it was surprising that she only volunteered this information
at that
stage. Her failure to testify about them in her evidence-in chief,
said the Court, ‘smacks heavily of an attempt
to gild the
lily’.
[13]
I
n
S
v Gentle
,
[14]
as is the case here, there was an attempt to explain such
discrepancy. This Court had this to say about it:
‘
[T]he
complainant did not give more detail in cross-examination, nor did
she clarify what she had said in her evidence in chief.
She gave
contradictory versions. These contradictions in the complainant’s
evidence were simply ignored by the magistrate.’
[15]
[51]
This is an apt observation in relation to the present case because
the complainant’s version that she had
been picked up during
the alleged rape, as opposed being in a standing position
face-to-face with the appellant, was not an explanation
of the
latter, but a deviation from it. The trial court’s failure to
give due weight to the contradiction amounts to a material
misdirection.
[52]
Equally not borne by the evidence, is the reasoning by the trial
court that because of her age, the complainant
could not have known
that she would be expected to give a detailed explanation. This is
especially so of her unsolicited evidence
that the appellant ‘didn’t
use a condom’ during the alleged rape. The complainant would
have been about 7 or
8 years old then, and 11 years old when she
testified. Ordinarily, the use of condoms would be beyond the
comprehension and grasp
of a child of that age. This explains why, in
many cases of child rape, a child witness would be carefully led and
guided by the
prosecutor with age-appropriate questions. But not this
child witness. Thus, in the light of this unsolicited evidence, the
reasoning
by the trial court loses its force.
[53]
The first judgment also posits that the discrepancy in the position
the complainant was in when she was penetrated,
‘may well be
that when she stated that “I was standing” she meant that
she was not lying down as many rapes occur’.
We do not know. We
would not be in an invidious position to resort to speculation had
this been clarified with the complainant.
This is typical of the many
issues left hanging in the air in the evidence of the complainant.
Had the prosecutor done her job
by seeking clarity from the child on
this issue in re-examination, this speculation would not arise.
Contradictions
[54]
The complainant’s evidence was contradicted by her mother’s.
It also suffered internal contradictions.
I set out those instances
below, and how they were treated by the trial court. The
complainant’s evidence contradicted that
of her mother as
regards how the appellant allegedly penetrated her. According to her,
she was penetrated from the front, irrespective
of whether in
standing position (as she testified in chief) or in a lifted position
(as testified in cross-examination). However,
the complainant’s
mother testified that the complainant had told her that the appellant
had made her face the wall and penetrated
her from behind. This is
how the trial court dealt with this material contradiction:
‘
[The
complainant] testified that when she was raped her back was facing
the wall, and according to what she told her mother, the
accused
penetrated her from behind. In the light that the third state witness
confirmed that there was penetration, it is this
court’s
opinion that the contradiction is not sufficient to reject her
evidence as false.’
[55]
With respect to the learned regional magistrate, this is circular
reasoning. It begs the question: how was the
complainant penetrated?
Was it from the front or from behind? By glossing over an issue which
it had identified as a contradiction,
the trial court committed a
material misdirection. The first judgment, with respect, commits a
similar error, by holding that ‘this
contradiction is not
material’. In my view it is material. The first judgment also
holds that this contradiction is indicative
that the complainant and
her mother did not collude with each other in providing their
testimony in court. With respect, this does
not resolve the material
difference in their evidence.
[56]
A court faced with a contradiction between the evidence of two
witnesses must resolve it by critically examining
the differences,
with a view to establishing whether the complainant’s evidence
was reliable.
[16]
If the court
prefers one version, it must explain why that version is preferable
to the other, and what impact the contradiction
has on the overall
evidence. Simply put, the two versions cannot live side by side.
[57]
In addition, the complainant’s evidence suffered two internal
material contradictions. First, she testified
in-chief that when she
was dragged to the tavern toilet, she was crying softly. She did not
scream because she was afraid as she
did not know what the appellant
was going to do. In cross-examination, it was put to her that, that
was more the reason for her
to scream. She changed tune and proffered
a new reason: she, in fact, screamed, but the appellant had closed
her mouth by putting
his hand over it, to mute her screams. In my
view, this amounted to the tailoring of her evidence by the
complainant under cross-examination.
[58]
Second, the complainant testified she went home after the alleged
rape. Her grandmother asked her where she was.
She told her that she
had been out playing. She was afraid to tell her grandmother about
her ordeal as the appellant had ‘threatened
her not to tell
anybody’. This contradicted the reason she proffered in-chief.
There, she gave as a reason for not informing
her grandmother and her
mother about the alleged rape, the fact that she feared getting a
hiding. This part of the complainant’s
evidence is troubling.
It escapes me why she would be given a hiding for having been raped.
That is, unless in her mind, the real
reason for where she had been
that evening would call for a hiding. This is one of the issues which
were never investigated during
the trial. It was simply left hanging.
The
evidence of the forensic nurse
[59]
The trial court placed much store on the evidence of the forensic
nurse as corroboration of the complainant’s
evidence about
being penetrated. As I demonstrate below, such evidence is far from
satisfactory. The forensic nurse testified that
all was normal upon
the examination of the child, except for two things: there was a
cleft in the child’s hymen, and a vaginal
discharge. The cleft
was an old injury which was consistent with previous vaginal
penetration by a blunt object like a penis or
finger. She could not
indicate how old the injury was.
[60]
In cross-examination, it turned out that the nurse did not ask the
complainant whether she had been aware of the
discharge before the
examination, and if so, when the discharge started. The witness
fairly conceded that she ‘made a mistake’
in failing to
ask this of the child. When pressed why she did not do so, her answer
elicited something she had not stated in her
evidence-in-chief. This
is what the record reflects:
‘
[Legal
representative]: [D]id you also ask her whether she was aware of this
discharge before the day you examined her?
[Witness]:
I didn’t record [it] here, because she said she was scratching,
scratching, scratching on the private parts. I
didn’t document
it here.’
[61]
Further, in cross-examination a proposition was put to her that since
a finger was one of the blunt objects she
had identified as having
penetrated the child, it could well be the child’s own finger
which had caused the cleft. This was
relevant in the light of her
evidence that the child told her that she had been scratching her
private parts. She answered that
the hymen was too far to be reached
by a finger. It was pointed to her that this was a material deviation
from her earlier testimony
in which she testified that a finger could
be a possible cause of the cleft.
[62]
The record is not clear in this regard, but it seems that the witness
suggested that
only
the finger of ‘the suspect’
could have caused the cleft, and not of the complainant. When pressed
to explain this, she
immediately withdrew her absurd proposition.
Having correctly done so, one would have expected that it would
follow that the complainant’s
own finger could not be ruled out
as a possible cause of the cleft in the hymen. But that was not to
be. When that proposition
was put to her, the nurse obstinately
refused to concede the point.
[63]
Apart from these difficulties, some of the nurse’s answers were
plainly nonsensical. For example, when asked
by the court what could
have caused the discharge, she answered:
‘
There
[are] a lots of things, My Worship, that can cause the discharge in
the child.
According to my examination, I find the cleft to the
child, and the child didn’t tell the mother what happened, that
can also
cause the discharge to the child.’
(Emphasis
added.)
[64]
How a failure to inform the mother about the alleged rape could be
the cause of the discharge is difficult to fathom.
Again, no one
asked her to clarify this glaringly ludicrous statement. Overall, one
gets an impression that the nurse was bent
on ensuring a conviction
against whomever the child accused of rape, instead of assisting the
court as an independent forensic
witness. This is demonstrated in her
illogical reasoning that while a finger could be a possible cause of
the clef on the hymen,
this excluded the complainant’s own
finger but included a suspect’s finger.
[65]
There are rarely cases with similar facts.
Maemu
v S
(
Maemu
),
[17]
comes eerily close to the present case. There, the appellant had been
convicted of rape of a child. The latter had alleged that
she was
walking home, after playing with the other children, when the
appellant grabbed her and dragged her into the house where
he raped
her. The medical examination, made after two months after the alleged
rape, indicated that there was a small cleft on
the upper edge of the
vaginal wall and that there was possible penetration with an object.
This Court held that the presence of
a cleft did not corroborate the
child’s version, observing as follows: ‘If anything the
medical report shows inadequate
proof of penetration at best the
evidence of penetration is neutral. The doctor who testified was
unable, to say whether the cleft
was old or fresh, natural or
inflicted. The child was taken to a doctor for examination about two
months after the event. Her mother
did not examine her private parts
after she arrived home.’
[18]
[66]
The situation in the present case is worse as the medical examination
on the child was done after three or four
years after the alleged
event. In my view, this case is not distinguishable from
Maemu
,
and we are bound by the latter case. As pointed out in
Patmar
Explorations (Pty) Ltd and Others v Limpopo Development Tribunal and
Others
,
[19]
this Court does not depart from its own previous judgments unless it
is satisfied that they are clearly wrong. There is no suggestion
that
Maemu
is clearly wrong. We are thus bound by it.
Failure
to call other witnesses and lack of corroboration
[67]
There were four potential witnesses whom the State could have called,
namely the three friends she was playing
with when she was allegedly
dragged to the tavern toilet, and the complainant’s
grandmother. Her friends could have been
called to testify, not
necessarily that they had seen her being dragged, but that she
suddenly disappeared while they were playing
with her on the day of
the alleged rape. This would have corroborated her evidence about
being dragged away, and in a crucial manner,
added weight to her
evidence that she was taken into a tavern toilet where she was raped.
[68]
The complainant’s grandmother was the first person to encounter
the complainant shortly when she arrived
home after the alleged rape.
She would have given her own impression about the complainant’s
emotional state when she arrived
home. Evidence of the victim’s
distressed condition can, in appropriate cases, serve as
corroboration. See, for example,
S
v S
[20]
and
S
v Hammond.
[21]
In the latter case, this Court considered the distressed condition of
the complainant as capable of amounting to corroboration
where this
was required, and such evidence was also admissible to show that
sexual contact had taken place where this was denied.
[22]
[69]
Therefore, by failing to call the grandmother as a witness to testify
about the complainant’s emotional state
when she arrived home,
the State denied itself a crucial building block in its case against
the appellant. Tellingly, and in any
event, the complainant did not
say in her testimony that she was in a distressed condition when she
arrived home. There is also
nothing in her testimony that her
grandmother noticed that there was something amiss about her
emotional state. On the contrary,
it appears that she had a normal
conversation with her grandmother, who merely asked her where she had
been.
[70]
For these reasons, one cannot exclude the possibility that the
prosecutor had considered that the grandmother would
not have
testified that the complainant was in a distressed condition when she
arrived home. Hence, she was not called. In
Smit,
[23]
this Court considered, among other things, the fact that the
complainant showed no signs of distress at school the next day.
[71]
There was a more compelling reason to call the complainant’s
grandmother. The complainant testified that
later the night of the
alleged rape, she was bleeding. She told her grandmother about it,
who kept quiet and did nothing about
it. This was crucial because,
had the grandmother testified and confirmed the complainant’s
evidence that she was bleeding,
it would have added potent credence
to her testimony about the ordeal she had allegedly gone through
earlier that evening. It must
be borne in mind that, where there is a
measure of corroboration, even if it is small, one is no longer
dealing with a single witness
on the issue.
[24]
[72]
The prosecutor placed nothing on record as to whether the grandmother
was available, and the reason why she was
not called. Such conduct
was deprecated in
S v Kubeka
.
[25]
The court remarked that it was an ‘unsatisfactory state of
affairs for matters simply to be left in the air without any material
being placed before the [c]ourt, whether by way of testimony from the
investigating officer or otherwise, indicating whether any
efforts
were made by the police to find these witnesses’.
[26]
In
S v
Teixeira
,
[27]
it was held that where the State’s case rested on the evidence
of a single witness, the failure of the State to call other
witnesses
– who had been identified and were available, justified
the inference that in State counsel’s opinion
their evidence
could have given rise to contradictions adversely affecting the
credibility of the single witness. This must be
the case here.
Probabilities
[73]
In evaluating the evidence of a single witness, a final evaluation
can hardly be made without considering whether
such evidence is
consistent with the probabilities. In the present case, I identify
the five improbabilities in the evidence of
the complainant. First,
that she was dragged for about 50 meters, crying, with her mouth
closed, without a member of the public
noticing such a suspicious and
strange conduct. Second, I find it highly improbable that the
complainant’s grandmother kept
quiet and did nothing when she
informed her that she was bleeding the night of the alleged rape.
[74]
Third, like Leach JA in
Smit
,
[28]
I find the complainant’s description of the sex act itself
unconvincing and improbable. In the first version, she mentioned
that
she was standing face-to-face with the appellant during the alleged
rape. This is almost impossible, as the complainant conceded
in
cross-examination, and suggested a new version, which is similarly
improbable. It is difficult to comprehend how the appellant
would
lift her up, press her against the wall, manage the penetration, and
rape her, especially for as long as the complainant
testified the
alleged rape lasted. According to the appellant, the rape took ‘a
long time, because when he took me [it was]
during the day and when I
left it was night’.
[75]
Fourth, it is highly improbable that a rape could take place in a
toilet of a tavern for as long as the complainant
testified it took,
without someone noticing the extra-ordinary length the toilet would
have been occupied. Ordinarily, one would
expect a toilet of a tavern
to be a busy place. With patrons drinking, they would need to
frequent it. The first judgment says
that nothing turns on this
argument. It holds so because there was neither evidence regarding
the distance between the toilet and
the tavern and the position of
the toilet, nor that there were patrons at the tavern or not. That is
correct. But that is a weakness
in the State’s case, rather
than a difficulty for the appellant. The answers to the questions
raised in the first judgment
could simply have been elicited from the
one and only witness who was able to provide them, namely, the
complainant. Yet the prosecutor
failed to do so. The result is these
lingering questions. In a criminal trial, any doubt in the evidence
must redound to an accused.
[76]
Fifth, the complainant is young and was allegedly a virgin when the
alleged rape occurred. She had just been raped
for ‘a long
time’, in a tavern toilet. It must be assumed that she would
have been extremely traumatised, and in a
distressed emotional state.
She went straight home after the alleged rape, and therefore while
trauma was still raw. But it appears
that when she arrived home, she
had a normal conversation with her grandmother, who merely asked her
where she had been. Her evidence
did not suggest that she was
traumatised. If she was not in a distressed emotional state upon her
arrival home, it would be highly
improbable that she had, shortly
prior to her arrival home, been raped. Unfortunately, the prosecutor
failed to lead her on this
normally crucial question.
The
cautionary rule
[77]
The complainant was both a child witness, and a single witness. As a
single witness, the complainant’s evidence
had to either be:
(a) substantially satisfactory in every material respect,
[29]
or (b) corroborated.
[30]
Her
evidence had to be approached with caution. In its judgment, the
trial court did not refer, at all, to the cautionary rule
and related
authorities. Of course, the fact that something was not mentioned in
a judgment does not mean it was not considered.
[31]
But here, even a textual analysis of the judgment does not suggest
otherwise. Instead, the trial court slavishly accepted the evidence
of the State witnesses as satisfactory without any critical analysis.
As I have demonstrated, the complainant’s evidence
was riddled
with inconsistencies, improbabilities and material contradictions.
This calls to mind what this Court said in
S
v Heslop
:
[32]
‘
It
is cause for concern to find laudatory epithets applied by a trial
court to witnesses when the record shows that their performance,
judged by the written word, was obviously far from satisfactory. In
such a case an appeal [c]ourt will more readily interfere with
the
findings of the trial court as to the weight to be attached to the
witnesses’ evidence and its ultimate conclusion based
on such
findings.’
[78]
The high court did not fare any better. It misconstrued the
application of the cautionary rule. This is what it
said:
‘
Evidently
the learned magistrate adopted a cautionary rule approach to the
child’s witness’ single evidence (sic) with
regard to her
identification of the appellant as the perpetrator who raped her. She
observed that the complainant’s recognizing
of the appellant as
well as the perpetrator was with clear certainty and without
hesitation. The appellant was well known to her
for 8 years. The
incident happened during the day and rape being an offence that
involves contact and intimacy it could never have
imposed any
difficulty for the complainant to recognise the perpetrator.’
[79]
This is emblematic of the many defects in the high court’s
judgment. Identification was never an issue in
the case. At the heart
of the case was whether it was the appellant who allegedly raped the
complainant on the day. It was that
part of the complainant’s
evidence which had to be approached with caution, and not the
complainant’s identification
of the appellant.
Conclusion
[80]
In view of these difficulties, I conclude that the appellant’s
evidence, being that of a single witness,
was not satisfactory in all
material respects. It follows that the State had failed to discharge
the onus resting upon it.
[81]
As I conclude, it remains to observe how the trial was handled. This
Court cautioned in
Vilakazi
:
[33]
‘
The
prosecution of rape presents peculiar difficulties that always call
for the greatest care to be taken, and even more so where
the
complainant is young. From prosecutors it calls for thoughtful
preparation, patient and sensitive presentation of all the available
evidence, and meticulous attention to detail. From judicial officers
who try such cases it calls for accurate understanding and
careful
analysis of all evidence. For it is in the nature of such cases that
the available evidence is often scant and many prosecutions
fail for
that reason alone.’
[82]
This caution was not heeded in the present matter. The prosecutor did
not demonstrate the necessary conscientiousness
and forensic skill in
presenting the State’s case. She failed to properly lead the
child complainant by canvassing relevant
and crucial issues. Most of
them were left in the air or were canvased on behalf of the appellant
in cross-examination. I have
demonstrated several difficulties which
arose in the cross-examination of the complainant, which called for
clarification in re-examination.
Surprisingly, the prosecutor did not
deem it necessary to do so. She asked only one tangential and
peripheral question in re-examination
about where the complainant’s
mother lived. But the ultimate duty to see to it that justice is
done, rests with the presiding
officer. The regional magistrate in
the present case failed in this duty. She allowed issues to hang
without clarification. I have
pointed out those instances in this
judgment.
[83]
Rape is a stubborn scourge in our country. It is an affront to the
values we hold as a nation. Its victims and
survivors are, in the
main, the vulnerable members of our society – women and
children. The natural inclination is therefore
one of sympathy for
those who claim to have been sexually violated. However, this does
not lessen the onus resting on the State
to prove the guilt of those
accused beyond reasonable doubt. This is especially in the light of
the heavy sentences prescribed
in the
Criminal Law Amendment Act
[34
]
upon conviction. The duty remains with trial courts to ensure, by
proper evaluation of the evidence, and the application of proper
forensic skills, that the onus which rests on the State, is met
before conviction. A wrong conviction, especially one which results
in a sentence as heavy as one of imprisonment for life, is the
highest form of injustice.
[84]
Had I commanded the majority, I would have upheld the appeal against
the conviction, and set aside the sentence
of life imprisonment.
T
MAKGOKA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
the appellant: M P Malibu
Instructed
by: Legal
Aid, Johannesburg
Legal Aid, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent: N Kowlas
Instructed
by:
Director of Public Prosecutions, Johannesburg
Director of Public
Prosecutions, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Woji v
Santam Insurance Co Ltd
[1980] ZASCA 134
;
1981 (1) SA 1020
(A) at 1028B-D
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
R v
Mokoena
1956 (3) SA 81
(A) at 85 quoting
Rex
v Mokoena
1932 OPD 79
at 80.
[4]
S v
Saul
1981 (3) SA 172
(A) at 180E-G.
[5]
ICM v
The State
[2022] ZASCA 108
para 23.
[6]
Tshiki
v S
[2020] ZASCA 92
para 23.
[7]
S v
Legoa
[2002] ZASCA 122
;
[2002] 4 All SA 373
(SCA);
2003 (1) SACR 13
(SCA)
para 21.
[8]
Ibid.
[9]
Khoza
and
Another v S
[2018] ZASCA 133
;
2019 (1) SACR 251
(SCA) para 10.
[10]
S v
Vilakazi
[2008] ZASCA 87
;
[2008] 4 All SA 396
(SCA);
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA);
2012 (6) SA 353
(SCA) para 58 (
Vilakazi
).
[11]
Section 170A(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 135 of 1991 (as
amended), provides:
‘
(1)
Whenever criminal proceedings are pending before any court and it
appears to such court that it would expose any witness under
the age
of eighteen years to undue mental stress or suffering if he
testifies at such proceedings, the court may, subject to
subsection
(4), appoint a competent person as an intermediary in order to
enable such witness to give his evidence through that
intermediary.’
[12]
S v
Smit
[2010] ZASCA 84
;
2010 (2) SACR 467
(SCA) (
Smit
).
[13]
Ibid para 15.
[14]
S
v Gentle
[2005] ZASCA 26; 2005 (1) SACR 420 (SCA).
[15]
Ibid para 16.
[16]
Ibid para 18.
[17]
Maemu
v S
[2011]
ZASCA 175.
[18]
Ibid para 13.
[19]
Patmar
Explorations (Pty) Ltd and Others v Limpopo Development Tribunal and
Others
[2018] ZASCA 19
;
2018 (4) SA 107
(SCA) para 3.
[20]
S
v S
1990
(1) SACR 5 (A)
at
11A–C.
[21]
S
v Hammond
[2004] ZASCA 71; [2004] 4 All SA 5 (SCA); 2004 (2) SACR 303 (SCA).
[22]
Ibid paras 21 and 22.
[23]
Smit
para 22.
[24]
S
v Letsedi
1963
(2) SA 471
(A) at 473F.
[25]
S
v Kubeka
1982
(1) SA 534
(W).
[26]
Ibid at
538F-G.
[27]
S v
Teixeira
1980
(3)
SA 755 (A)
at
763D-764B.
[28]
Smit
para 20.
[29]
R
v Mokoena
1932
OPD 79
at 80.
[30]
S
v Gentle
[2005]
ZASCA 26
;
2005 (1) SACR 420
(SCA) para 18. See further
R
v Mokoena
1956
(3) SA 81
(A) at 86;
R
v T
1958
(2) SA 676
(A) at 676;
S
v Sauls and Others
1981
(3) SA 172
(A) at 180E–H; and
S
v Banana
2000
(2) SACR 12
(ZS);
2000 (3) SA 885
(ZS) at 892H-893A.
[31]
Mahlangu
and Another v S
[2011] ZASCA 64
;
2011
(2) SACR 164
(SCA) paras 23-24.
[32]
S v
Heslop
[2006] ZASCA 127
;
[2007] 4 All SA 955
(SCA);
2007 (4) SA 38
(SCA);
2007 (1) SACR 461
(SCA) para 13.
[33]
Vilakazi
para 21; see also
S
v Stevens
[2004] ZASCA 70
;
[2005] 1 All SA 1
(SCA) para 1.
[34]
Section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
provides
for the imposition of a minimum sentence of life imprisonment for a
conviction of rape of a person under the age of
16 years.
sino noindex
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