Case Law[2022] ZASCA 108South Africa
ICM v The State (692/2021) [2022] ZASCA 108 (15 July 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
15 July 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law and procedure – evidence – sexual assault and rape of child complainant in terms of the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007 – whether evidence was sufficient to sustain convictions despite contradictions in testimony of single witness – complainant’s motive to lie – admissibility and weight dependent on the facts of a case.
Judgment
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## ICM v The State (692/2021) [2022] ZASCA 108 (15 July 2022)
ICM v The State (692/2021) [2022] ZASCA 108 (15 July 2022)
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sino date 15 July 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Unreportable
Case
no: 692/2021
In
the matter between:
ICM
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
ICM
v The State
(692/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 108
(15 July 2022)
Coram:
Dambuza and Nicholls JJA and Tsoka,
Musi and Salie-Hlophe AJJA
Heard:
10 May 2022
Delivered:
15 July 2022
Summary:
Criminal law and procedure –
evidence – sexual assault and rape of child complainant in
terms of the
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters)
Amendment Act 32 of 2007
– whether evidence was sufficient to
sustain convictions despite contradictions in testimony of single
witness – complainant’s
motive to lie –
admissibility and weight dependent on the facts of a case.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Maakane and Noko AJJ, sitting as court of
appeal):
1
The appeal is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
Musi
AJA (Dambuza and Nicholls JJA and Tsoka and Salie-Hlophe AJJA
concurring):
[1]
The appellant was convicted in the regional court, Pretoria, on five
counts of sexual
assault in contravention of s 5(1) of the Criminal
Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007
(the Act)
and one count of rape, in contravention of s 3 of the Act.
He was sentenced to 6 years’ imprisonment in respect of the
rape
count and 18 months’ imprisonment on each of the sexual
assault counts. It was ordered that three of the sentences imposed
for the sexual assault counts should run concurrently with the
sentence on the rape count; the effective sentence was therefore
9
years’ imprisonment.
[2]
He appealed against the convictions and sentences to the Gauteng
Division of the High
Court, Pretoria (high court). The appeal against
the convictions was dismissed, however, the high court amended the
sentence by
ordering that all the sentences in respect of the sexual
assault counts should run concurrently with the sentence on the rape
count.
The effective sentence was accordingly reduced to 6 years’
imprisonment. This appeal, which is with the leave of this Court,
is
only against the convictions.
[3]
Although the allegations of sexual assault and rape were disputed by
the appellant,
the incidents during which it was alleged they
occurred were not in dispute. The appellant’s defence was
essentially that
the complainant had stretched the truth by
fabricating the sexual assault and rape aspects of the incidents. The
argument was further
that it was at the complainant’s mother’s
instigation that the complainant concocted the lies about the
incidents.
The facts were the following.
[4]
The complainant, having been born on 2 April 2001, was about 11 years
old at the time
of the incidents. She lived with her parents at a
housing complex in Centurion. Their home was opposite that of the
appellant who
lived with his wife. The complainant was very fond of
the appellant’s wife and visited their (appellant and his
wife’s)
home frequently. As neighbours, they got along well
until the events that led to the appellant’s arrest.
[5]
On 5 May 2012, the complainant attended a friend’s party. On
Sunday 6 May 2012,
at approximately 09h00 her mother fetched the
complainant from her friend’s home. When they got home the
complainant cried.
Her mother enquired what was wrong, to which she
replied that her vagina was painful. Her mother examined her and
noticed two ulcers
on her vagina (labia majora). She took a
photograph of the ulcers and asked the complainant who had interfered
with her, using
the Afrikaans word ‘peuter’. Whilst the
complainant did not answer initially, she pointed in the direction of
the appellant’s
house, when her mother persisted with her
enquiry. The mother thereafter enquired whether it was the appellant
and the complainant
confirmed.
[6]
The mother called her husband and on his arrival, they took the
complainant to Unitas
Hospital where she was examined by a doctor.
The doctor prescribed medication and referred them to Ms Preston, a
psychologist.
She bought the medication and her husband took the
complainant to the psychologist the next day.
[7]
On 8 May 2012 the mother laid a complaint against the appellant. The
investigating
officer took them to the Tshwane Medico Legal Crisis
Centre where the complainant was examined by Dr Thosago who referred
them
to a gynaecologist. They contacted the gynaecologist but could
only secure an appointment during June 2012. The mother decided to
consult their family doctor, Dr Sommerville.
[8]
The complainant’s mother testified that the complainant was
initially not very
forthcoming about the details of the incidents but
gradually opened up and told her what the appellant had done to her.
The complainant
told her that the appellant touched and rubbed her
vagina and breasts and that he inserted his finger in her vagina. The
complainant
told her that the last incident occurred on 24 February
2012. It was a few days after her birthday, which is on 21 February.
[9]
The complainant was 13 years old when she testified during 2014. She
pertinently recalled
four incidents but testified that the appellant
touched and or rubbed her vagina and or breasts on more than seven
occasions. The
first occasion was during 2011 when her father fetched
her from school and they drove home. After he parked the car, he went
to
the house while she went to the boot of the car in order to take
out her schoolbag. Whilst standing by the boot of the car the
appellant approached her from behind, touched her shoulder, and
rubbed her breasts with his hands. She felt very uncomfortable.
She
took her bag out of the boot and walked away. There was nobody in the
vicinity and she did not tell anybody about the incident.
She was
afraid that she would be in trouble if she told anyone.
[10]
The complainant was an athlete and also played hockey and netball.
She used to jog in the complex
as part of her exercise routine. One
day, during 2011, after jogging, she went to the appellant’s
house to greet his wife.
The appellant and his wife were home. She
entered and sat on a one-seater couch. He was sitting on a
three-seater couch while his
wife was busy in the kitchen. He
requested the complainant to sit next to him on the three-seater
couch, which she did. They watched
television and the appellant
hugged and then pressed her against him. He asked whether he may
tickle her stomach. She said yes
but that he may do so on her back.
He ignored what she said and started tickling her on her stomach. The
appellant made the complainant
lie on the couch in a supine position
with her head on his lap. He initially tickled her over her clothes
but later he put his
hand under her shirt and tickled her stomach and
rubbed his hand over her breasts. She tried to stand up but he pulled
her back
and continued rubbing her breasts. He then rubbed his hand
over her vagina and ultimately put his finger in her vagina. He
painfully
moved his finger in and out of her vagina followed by
smelling his fingers after removing it from her vagina. While all
this was
happening his wife was cooking in the kitchen. She was
penned down on the couch by his arm. She did not tell anybody about
the
incident because she was afraid.
[11]
During 2011 the complainant was playing with a ball in the street.
She accidentally kicked the
ball into the appellant’s yard. She
entered the yard to retrieve her ball. The appellant and his wife
were preparing to have
a braai. They were sitting outside on camp
chairs. She greeted them and the appellant requested her to sit on
his lap, she obliged.
His wife went into the house. While she was
sitting on one leg he touched and rubbed her vagina with his hand, on
top of her clothing.
He also moved his knee hard up and down against
her vagina in a state of arousal. She removed his hand, stood up,
gave him a dirty
look, took her ball, said goodbye to his wife and
went home.
[12]
On another occasion she went to the appellant’s house and sat
on the couch. She was wearing
ski-pants. The appellant sat next to
her and suddenly rubbed her thigh with his hand whilst also touching
her vagina. His wife
was in the garage when this occurred. She did
not tell anyone about this incident because the appellant threatened
to hurt her
mother if she did.
[13]
She confirmed that she told her mother on 6 May 2012, that the
appellant tampered with her. Although
she told her mother that the
last time that the appellant interfered with her was during February
2012 a few days after her mother’s
birthday, she testified that
nothing happened on that day.
[14]
Dr Thosago’s medico-legal report was handed in as an exhibit
after the defence admitted
its contents. He examined the complainant
on 8 May 2012 and observed two ulcers on her labia majora and a
creamlike discharge.
He referred her to a gynaecologist.
[15]
Dr Sommerville testified that she examined the complainant on 9 May
2012. The complainant presented
two large irregular shaped hyperaemic
ulcers on her right labia majora with a thick non-offensive vaginal
discharge. Her hymen
was still intact and the complainant was not
bleeding. She was of the view that the ulcers were pathological and
might have been
caused by the herpes virus or human papilloma virus.
This could not be determined because no tests were done to detect
viral antibodies
in her blood. According to her these viral
infections can be transmitted by digital penetration or touching. She
explained that
the fact that the hymen was still intact does not mean
that there was no penetration.
[16]
Ms Du Plessis-Emmerich, a psychologist, testified that she
interviewed the complainant, her parents
and the appellant. She did a
forensic assessment of the complainant. She did not do an
intellectual or neurological assessment.
She testified that due to
the complainant’s age and brain development, traumatic events
would not be stored in sequence and
that it would be difficult for
such a young child to remember dates and times. She confirmed the
contents of her discussions with
all the parties, which was contained
in her report.
[17]
The appellant testified that he was born on 12 April 1948. He was 66
years old when he testified
in 2014. He confirmed that he had known
the complainant and her parents since 2007 when he and his wife moved
to the residential
complex in which they lived. He used to play
badminton with the complainant and she frequented their home. He
denied having a three-seater
couch. According to him there are only
two two-seater couches in his house.
[18]
He testified that during 2009 the complainant asked him to tickle her
because her grandfather
used to tickle her, until her mother put a
stop to it. He asked why she did not ask her father to tickle her and
she told him that
her father was busy playing games. He asked what
her mother would say if he tickled her, and she said her mother would
not have
a problem if he did so. His wife was busy making pickled
peaches in the kitchen. He was busy reading a magazine. According to
him,
the complainant merely sat next to him; she later lay on the
couch with her head on his right leg. She pulled her t-shirt up and
pushed her short pants downward and he tickled her stomach. He
testified that he tickled her again in 2010. On this occasion his
wife was in the kitchen while he and the complainant were watching
television. He denied ever touching or rubbing her vagina or
breasts
or inserting his finger in her vagina.
[19]
The appellant’s wife asserted that she would have seen if the
appellant had done anything
untoward to the complainant. She
confirmed that, during 2009, the complainant requested the appellant
to tickle her, which he did.
She further confirmed that the appellant
went to Gqeberha on Monday, 20 February 2012 and returned on
Saturday, 25 February 2012.
On this version, the appellant was not at
home on the 24 February 2012, the day on which, according to the
complainant’s
mother, the last incident of sexual assault
occurred.
[20]
Dr Van Wyk testified that he did not examine the complainant but had
access to the photograph
that was taken by her mother and the medical
reports compiled by Drs Sommerville and Thosago. He was of the
opinion that the ulcers
were not caused by a sexually transmitted
disease. His opinion was that the complainant was not penetrated
because if she was,
her hymen would not be intact and she would have
bled.
[21]
In the high court the appellant submitted that the regional
magistrate erred in the following
respects: (i) by not applying the
cautionary rule when he evaluated the complainant’s testimony;
(ii) by not considering
the testimony of Dr Van Wyk; and (iii) by not
properly assessing the testimonies of Dr Sommerville and Dr Van Wyk.
The high court
rejected the appellant’s submissions and found
that the regional magistrate did not misdirect himself and that he
did not
commit any irregularity in his evaluation of the totality of
the evidence. It found that the regional court’s factual
findings
were correct.
[22]
The complainant was a single witness and a child. Her testimony had
to be approached with caution.
In terms of section 208 of the
Criminal Procedure Act
[1]
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.
[2]
This does not mean that such evidence must be flawless and beyond
criticism. In
S
v Sauls
[3]
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
his 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 common sense.’
[4]
[23]
With regard to the complainant’s age the legal position is that
a court considering the
evidence of a child, must be satisfied that
the child is a credible and reliable witness. The credibility
assessment relates to
the child’s honesty whilst reliability
relates to the child’s cognitive ability or brain development.
The child’s
cognitive ability is assessed by having regard to
factors such as his or her ability to encode, retain, retrieve and
recount information
or an event. The ‘intimidating and
bewildering atmosphere’
[5]
under which the child testified should also be factored in. As with
any other witness, the child witness’ testimony should
be
evaluated in the light of the totality of the evidence.
[24]
Ms Du Plessis-Emmerich’s testimony relating to the
complainant’s brain development
and the difficulty for such a
young child to store and retrieve traumatic events in sequence
provided valuable guidance. The prosecutor’s
guidance kept the
complainant’s testimony focussed and to the point. The
complainant was subjected to lengthy cross-examination.
Her version
remained consistent.
[25]
The complainant’s testimony was not beyond criticism. She could
not remember the last time
the appellant tampered with her. In her
first affidavit, which was taken in the absence of her parents, she
said that the last
time was at the end of 2011. In her second
affidavit she stated that the last occasion was during February 2012.
During cross-examination
she testified that nothing happened during
February 2012 or specifically on 24 February 2012. Much of the
cross-examination centred
around what happened or did not happen on
24 February 2012. It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that he
had prepared his
defence around the dates that the complainant had
given, particularly in relation to the 24 February 2012. At the trial
the appellant
produced a receipt for payment made to a guesthouse in
Gqeberha, as proof that he was not at home on the day in question.
[26]
However, on the complainant’s own version nothing happened on
that day. Only her mother
testified that the complainant told her
that the last incident (the rape) happened on 24 February 2012. This
discrepancy in the
evidence of the complainant and her mother is
immaterial because the rape incident was attached to broader events
which were not
in dispute, such that the appellant was able to recall
the day on which the incidents was said to have happened. With regard
to
the other sexual assault and rape incidents, the complainant
described them also with reference to other incidents that happened
on those respective days. And those other events were not in dispute.
Consequently, the submission that the appellant suffered
prejudice as
a result of uncertainty about the days on which the incidents
happened is misplaced.
[27]
Equally untenable was the criticism of the credibility findings of
the trial court. Apart from
the complainant’s inability to give
exact dates on which the incidents happened, the discrepancies
between the various statements
made by the complainant to the police
and her testimony in court were highlighted. In the statements the
complainant stated that
the appellant had penetrated her digitally
every time when he touched her vagina, which was contrary to her
testimony. The submission
on behalf of the appellant was that this
was a material contradiction.
[28]
The complainant’s testimony that the first statement was taken
in the absence of her parents
or an accompanying adult is
particularly troubling. Although the presence of a parent or an
accompanying adult when a statement
is taken from a child is not a
strict requirement, it is preferred.
[29]
It is also necessary to say something about the relevance of the
medical evidence, obtained from
Drs Sommerville, Van Wyk and Thosago,
when considering the contention that the charges were fabricated at
the instance of the complainant’s
mother. Whilst the report of
the incidents of sexual assault and rape were triggered by the
discovery of the ulcers on the complainant’s
private parts, it
is not correct that the trial court impermissibly found support or
corroboration for the charges in the presence
of the ulcers. On the
evidence of the three doctors the cause of the ulcers was
undetermined, except that Dr Van Wyk, who did not
even examine the
complainant referred to the usual causes thereof, without giving a
firm opinion on the likely cause.
[30]
Dr Van Wyk’s testimony to the effect that because the
complainant’s hymen was intact,
she had never been penetrated
was disputed by Dr Sommerville. Dr Sommerville testified that the
hymen would not necessarily be
torn after penetration because it will
depend on the extent of the penetration. In any event, Dr Van Wyk did
not testify about
sexual penetration as defined in our law. Even
under the common law, when rape was narrowly defined as penile
penetration of the
vagina without consent, the slightest form of
penetration was sufficient to prove penetration.
[6]
‘Sexual penetration’ is defined in the Act as, inter
alia, including any act which causes penetration to any extent
whatsoever by any other part of the body of one person into or beyond
the genital organs or anus of another person.
[7]
It is clear from the definition that the slightest form of
penetration is enough to constitute penetration. Penetration
certainly
does not mean that the hymen must be torn as Dr Van Wyk
testified. Dr Van Wyk’s opinion is clearly untenable and was
correctly
rejected.
[31]
Furthermore the appellant’s suggestion that the complainant was
coached by her mother to
falsely implicate him in allegations of
sexual assault and rape is improbable. To do so the complainant and
her mother would have
had to conspire about what they would tell the
psychologist. The detail and consistency in the evidence of the
complainant and
Ms Du Plessis-Emmerich disproves this contention.
[32]
It is trite that the State bears the onus to prove the guilt of an
accused beyond reasonable
doubt. The decision to convict or acquit
must be based on the totality of the evidence. It has been said that
‘[s]ome of
the evidence might be found to be false, some of it
might be found to be reliable, and some of it might be found to be
only possibly
false or unreliable, but none of it may be ignored.’
[8]
[33]
I agree that generally, as the appellant submitted, it is unfair and
irregular for a judicial
officer to expect an accused to demonstrate
that a complainant had a motive to lie. In most cases this would
amount to calling
on the accused to speculate on the possible motive.
This might amount to inadmissible opinion evidence, because no
witness can
give factual evidence of the motives of another person.
An accused may put a possible motive to a complainant during
cross-examination.
He may testify and be cross-examined on that
aspect. Where an accused alleges and proves a possible motive to lie,
that fact must
be evaluated with all the other evidence in order to
discern whether it should detract from the complainant’s
credibility.
However, the fact that the complainant had a motive to
lie is not proof of the fact that the complainant lied.
[34]
The regional magistrate said the following, in his judgment:
‘
Maar
waarom moet die kind nou verwys na die beskuldigde as dit nie hy was
nie? Waarom het die kind nie na die pa verwys nie, of
die onderwyser
by die skool, of ‘n seun iewers in die kompleks nie; …
Waarom, dit is die vraag.’
[9]
He
then found that the complainant had no motive to lie about the
appellant. Counsel for the appellant submitted that the regional
magistrate harnessed the lack of a motive to lie to make an adverse
credibility finding against the appellant.
[35]
Indeed the absence of a motive to lie should not be used to enhance
the complainant’s credibility. Likewise, it should
not
prejudice an accused. In most cases the absence of a demonstrable
motive to lie would be a neutral factor. Each case must be
judged on
its own facts.
[10]
[36]
In the context of this case, the regional magistrate’s remark
and finding must be considered
in its proper context – that is
that the remark was triggered by the appellant’s testimony that
the complainant and
her mother were protecting the real perpetrator,
whose identity they knew, but concealed to falsely implicate him.
[37]
It was submitted, on behalf of the appellant, that the regional
magistrate did not give due consideration
to the testimony of the
appellant’s wife. Whilst it is true that the regional
magistrate did not refer to her evidence in
his evaluation of the
evidence, this does not mean that he ignored it. The regional
magistrate accepted the appellant’s wife’s
testimony that
the appellant was not at home on 24 February 2012.
[38]
The appellant’s wife’s testimony was not without fault.
During cross-examination
she contradicted the appellant and her own
testimony. The appellant had testified that the complainant told him
and his wife that
her breasts were developing and that she had a
boyfriend. His wife confirmed that the complainant told her that her
breasts are
developing, but she did not mention anything about a
boyfriend. She testified that he tickled the complainant on one
occasion in
2009, whilst it was common cause that he did it twice in
her presence. It was common cause that the appellant tickled the
complainant
while she was laying on the couch with her head on his
lap, his wife testified that he did so while she was sitting next to
him.
She explicitly denied that the complainant lay with her head on
his lap. When she was confronted with the appellant’s version
that the complainant’s head was on his lap, she testified that
she did not see that because she was busy.
[39]
In addition she could not remember the braai incident and testified
that complainant went to
their house and spoke to the appellant. When
she was pressed to give detail about this incident, she could not
remember any detail.
In fact, she could not even remember the year in
which the incident occurred. When the prosecutor put to her that she
cannot remember
what happened, she said it is because nothing
happened. It is clear that she tried to protect the appellant.
[40]
I do not agree that the trial court’s silence on these aspects
of the appellant’s
wife’s testimony constituted a
misdirection. Ultimately the judgment accounted for all the evidence
on record. As it has
been said ‘[n]o judgment can ever be
perfect and all-embracing, and it does not necessarily follow that,
because something
has not been mentioned, therefore it has not been
considered’.
[11]
[41]
It is true that in making the following remarks, the regional
magistrate misunderstood aspects
of the complainant’s mother’s
testimony. In his judgment the regional magistrate’s judgment
said:
‘
Die
beskuldigde het nie oop kaarte met die Hof gespeel nie. Die
beskuldigde is nie ‘n person wat die Hof kan maar maklik glo
wat hy sê nie, die beskuldigde is ‘n person wat ‘n
ander man se vrou snaakse goed op haar BBM stuur. Dit is ‘n
buurman se vrou. Die beskuldigde sê hy is ‘n kerkman,
maar hy probeer die buurman se vrou se borste vat. Watter tipe
man is
hierdie?
Die
Hof is nie oortuig dat die beskuldigde is ‘n persoon wat die
Hof kan glo nie. Sy weergawe is nie redelik moontlik waar
nie. Die
beskuldigde se weergawe is total verwerp.’
[12]
[42]
Contrary to these remarks, what the complainant’s mother
testified was that the appellant
tried to kiss her and not that he
tried to touch her breasts. She further testified that the appellant
sent her ‘strange’
things on her email, and not on
BlackBerry Message (BBM). These remarks do not detract from the fact
that on a conspectus of all
the evidence, the guilt of the appellant
was proved beyond reasonable doubt.
[43]
Other than maintaining that the charges were based on fabrication,
the appellant’s alibi
with regard to 24 February 2012 turned
out to be irrelevant. He admitted that he tickled the complainant on
two occasions, at her
instance, during 2009 and 2010 (rather than
2011 and or 2012), and with the assurance that her mother would be
agreeable. But he
was aware that the complainant’s mother did
not want her to be tickled. On his own version, his belief that the
complainant’s
mother would be agreeable to the tickling was not
reasonably possibly true. His suggestion to Ms Du Plessis-Emmerich
during a consultation
that it was, in fact, the complainant who had
pulled her shirt up and her panty downward, before he tickled her,
was also not reasonably
possibly true. Blaming the 11 year old
complainant for his unlawful conduct cannot be a valid defence. In
addition, the fact that
he continued to tickle her for a long period
(approximately an hour) despite having observed that she seemed to
‘retreat
into fantasy or a trance’ is particularly
disturbing.
[44]
Lastly, counsel for the appellant bemoaned the fact that the
appellant was convicted on five
counts of sexual assault while the
complainant testified about four incidents only. This is not correct.
On the complainant’s
version the first tickling incident
constituted both sexual assault (rubbing her breast) and rape
(digital penetration). I am satisfied
that the State proved the
appellant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt. The high court
properly dismissed the appeal on conviction.
This appeal ought to be
dismissed.
[45]
I accordingly make the following order:
The
appeal is dismissed.
C
MUSI
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
appellant:
D J Combrink
Instructed
by:
Du Toit Attorneys,
Pretoria
Lovius
Block Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
first respondent: J
Cronje
Instructed
by:
Office of the National Director of Public Prosecutions Pretoria
[1]
Section
208
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
reads: ‘An
accused may be convicted of any offence on the single evidence of
any competent witness.’
[2]
R
v Mokoena
1932 OPD 79
at 80;
R
v Mokoena
1956 (3) SA 81
(A) at 85.
[3]
S
v Sauls
1981 (3) SA 172 (A).
[4]
Ibid
at 180E-G.
[5]
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Transvaal v Minister for Justice and
Constitutional Development and Others
[2009]
ZACC 8
;
2009 (4) SA 222
(CC) at para 104.
[6]
S
v K
1972 (2) SA 898
(A) at 900C.
[7]
Section
1 of the Act.
[8]
S
v Van der Meyden
1999 (1) SACR 447
(W) at 450a-b;
S
v Trainor
2003 (1) SACR 35
(SCA) at
para 9.
[9]
‘
But
why would the child refer to the accused if it was not him? Why did
she not refer to her father, or a teacher at school, or
a boy
somewhere in the complex… why is the question.’ (My
translation.)
[10]
Palmer
v The Queen
[1998] HCA 2
– 193 CLR1
[1998] HCA 2
; ;
72 ALJR 254.
R
v Laboucan
[2010] 1 SCR 397.
S
v Lotter
[2007]
ZAWCHC 70
;
2008 (2) SACR 595
(CPD) at para 38.
[11]
R
v Dhlumayo and Another
1948 (2) SA 677
(AD) at 706.
[12]
‘
The
accused did not play open cards with the Court. He is a person whom
the Court cannot easily believe. The accused is a person
who sends
strange BBM’s to another man’s wife. It is his
neighbour’s wife. The accused says he is a churchly
person,
but he tries to touch his neighbour’s wife’s breasts.
What kind of man is this? The Court is convinced that
the accused
that the accused is not a person that the Court can believe. His
version is not reasonably possibly true. The accused’s
version
is totally rejected.’ (My translation.)
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