Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 513South Africa
T.M v S (A124/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 513 (27 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## T.M v S (A124/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 513 (27 May 2024)
T.M v S (A124/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 513 (27 May 2024)
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sino date 27 May 2024
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL CASE NO:
A124/2020
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
3.
REVISED.
In the
matter between:
T[…]
D[…]
M[…]
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
MABESELE J ET KUNY J
JUDGMENT
MABESELE
J:
[1] This is an
appeal against conviction and sentence. The appellant was convicted
of several counts of rape of his 12 years
old stepdaughter. He was
sentenced to imprisonment for life. The conviction followed on the
evidence of the complainant and her
mother and two medical
practitioners. The appellant contends that the state has failed to
prove its case against him beyond reasonable
doubt and the sentence
imposed on him is shockingly inappropriate.
[2] The complainant
was a single witness. She testified on how she was raped several
times by the appellant, in May 2014 and
beyond. It is common cause
that the complainant and her two siblings, aged three and six, and
her mother resided at the same house
with the appellant. The
appellant was unemployed. He spent most of the time at home with the
children. The complainant’s
mother was employed. She reported
to work on shifts, that is, reporting to work in the morning until
afternoon and night to morning.
The complainant was attending school,
daily. The school transport picked her up every morning to school and
transported her back
home after school. After school she spent most
of her time at home doing her schoolwork. She always found her
siblings and the
appellant home when she arrived from school.
[3]
The complainant testified that in May 2014 she arrived home from
school and found the appellant in the sitting room. The
siblings were
watching television in the dining room. She greeted the appellant and
went to her bedroom. After she had closed the
door she took out her
school uniform and wore a T-shirt and jeans and began studying. The
appellant opened the door and called
her to his bedroom. After she
had entered the bedroom the appellant closed the door and told her
that he loved her. Thereafter
the appellant pushed her gently against
the wall. While she was leaning against the wall the appellant came
closer and touched
her breasts, buttocks and vagina. The appellant
again told her that he loved her and should not tell her mother. The
appellant
hugged her, squeezed her and said that she, too, should hug
him. Thereafter the appellant moved his body forward and backward and
asked her to do same. She complied because she was scared of the
appellant. While they were busy moving their bodies forward and
backward someone opened the door of the sitting room. They stopped
their actions and the appellant asked her to leave the bedroom.
She
went into her bedroom and studied. She went to school the following
day. When she came back from school she went into her bedroom.
As she
was about to do her schoolwork the appellant opened the door and
called her to his bedroom. She became frightened and thought
that the
appellant was going to beat her up as he always did. After she had
entered the bedroom the appellant again told her that
he loved her
and should not tell her mother. Should she tell the mother, he will
beat her up. The appellant asked her to take off
her T-shirt, jeans
and panty and lie on the bed with her eyes closed. After she had
obeyed the instructions, she felt the appellant’s
weight on her
body. It became difficult for her to breath but was afraid to tell
the appellant because she was extremely terrified.
The appellant made
up and down movement on top of her and told her that he loved her.
She felt something hot enter through the
lips of her vagina. The
‘thing’ was moving sideways. The whole incident lasted
for approximately an hour. Her eyes
were closed. After some time the
appellant asked her to open her eyes and climb off the bed. The
appellant again told her that
he loved her and should not tell her
mother or anyone, to avoid trouble. She agreed. The
appellant
told her to wear her clothes and leave the bedroom. She dressed and
left the room. She got into her bedroom, sat on the
chair and tried
to study. It became difficult for her to concentrate because she
always thought of what happened to her.
[4] The complainant
testified that few days after the said incident, she arrived home
from school and found her siblings playing
in the bedroom. The
appellant was seated in the dining room. After she had entered her
bedroom the appellant shouted her name.
She quickly rushed to the
dining room. Upon arrival the appellant asked her to clean his shoes.
She undertook to clean the shoes
but forgot to do so because her mind
was occupied by schoolwork. After the appellant had realized that his
shoes were not cleaned
he approached her and slapped her with an open
hand. She fell on the floor. When she stood up the appellant said to
her that her
mother made a big mistake by allowing her to reside with
them. The appellant grabbed her by the neck and dragged her into his
bedroom.
She pleaded with the appellant not to assault her. At that
stage the siblings were in the bedroom. The appellant pushed her into
his bedroom and closed the door. He instructed her to undress, lie on
the bed and close her eyes. Thereafter the appellant pulled
her legs
towards the edge of the bed and opened them roughly. She told the
appellant that he was hurting her. She was told to “shut
up”.
Subsequently, she felt an object forcefully penetrating her vagina
and she screamed. The appellant hit her with a fist
and steel rod
several times and she ended up bleeding on her buttocks. The
appellant told her to get out of the bedroom and go
and wipe off the
blood. The appellant pushed her out of the room. She went to her
bedroom, took a facecloth and wiped off blood.
She could not do her
schoolwork due to pains on her buttocks. At approximately 22:00-23:00
the mother arrived home and entered
her bedroom to ascertain whether
she and her siblings were well. She told the mother that the
appellant gave her hiding for not
cleaning his shoes. She did not
tell the mother about rape incident because she was scared of the
appellant. The mother applied
certain medication on her body and felt
sorry for her. Thereafter the mother went into her bedroom. The pain
was unbearable. She
testified that one evening the appellant came to
her bedroom while she and her siblings were asleep. The appellant
asked her to
take off her pyjamas. After she had done so, the
appellant climbed on top of her and told her to close her eyes.
Subsequently she
felt an object penetrating her vagina. After 30
minutes the appellant got off her and told her to wear pyjamas and
open her eyes.
Thereafter the appellant left the room. She became
frustrated and did not know who to resort to because the appellant
had promised
to beat her up should she ever tell anyone about the
rape incident. On the other occasion the appellant visited her room
after
she had taken a bath and was about to wear a panty. The
appellant closed the door and pulled her gently towards him. The
appellant
kissed her, rubbed her vagina, touched her breasts and
squeezed her buttocks. The appellant asked her to climb on top of the
bed.
After she had done so, she felt an object penetrating her
vagina. She told the appellant that he was hurting her. In response,
the appellant asked her whether she felt butterflies.
[5] The complainant
testified that one day she came home from school and found her
mother. During conversation with the mother,
the mother advised her
to stay away from boys. The mother said that not far away from her
home a five-year-old girl was raped.
She told her mother that she
heard news that a sixteen-year-old girl was raped by her father. The
mother said to her that such
things do happen. The mother told her
about the three-year old baby who was raped by her uncle. She
testified that the mother said
to her that she should not be scared
to tell her anything that is not right. She then said to her mother
that she wanted to tell
her something. She proceeded to tell her
mother that the appellant had been having sexual intercourse with
her. The mother became
shocked and cried. She was free to tell her
mother about the incident because the appellant was not present at
home. The mother
phoned the family of the appellant in Mpumalanga.
The appellant arrived home late that day. She was taken to the
clinic. It was
put to her, during cross examination, that indeed
there was a time the family of the appellant came to her home to
discuss the
report that was made to them by her mother.
[6] The mother of
the complainant testified. She said that the appellant left
employment in 2013. The appellant spent most
of the time at home. He
took care of the children while she was at work. Around 2015 she had
a conversation with the complainant
about a child who was raped in
their neighbourhood and the three years-old baby raped in Ivory Park.
She advised the complainant
to be careful. The complainant, too, told
her about an article she had read wherein the story of a pastor who
raped a child was
reported. The complainant then told her that she
wanted to tell her something. The complainant looked at her and said:
‘Daddy
has been raping me, daddy has been sleeping with me,
daddy has been putting his penis into my vagina’. She asked the
complainant
since when did that happen. The complainant said since
Moriting where they initially resided. She then phoned one of her
in-laws
to come to her place of residence. When the in- laws arrived
she informed them that the complainant told her that the appellant
raped her. The appellant was present. One of the in-laws fetched the
complainant from the bedroom and asked her to relate the story
in the
presence of the appellant and other family members present. The
complainant indeed confirmed what she (her mother) told
the in-laws
about. It was then agreed that the complainant be taken to the doctor
the following morning. The complainant was taken
to Dr Thandisa, a
private medical doctor. The doctor examined the complainant. His
clinical findings revealed signs of vaginal
penetration. Thereafter
the complainant was referred to Tembisa hospital. Upon arrival, she
was examined again by doctor Ngobeni.
His clinical findings did not
exclude sexual assault. He testified during cross-examination and
clarified his findings. He explained
to the court that if sexual
assault is not excluded, penetration could have taken place.
[7] The appellant
testified. He confirmed the version of the appellant that the latter
always found him home when she came
back from school. He had good
relations with the complainant. He agreed that complainant was 12
years old in 2014. He denied that
he had sexual intercourse with the
complainant. He said that the complainant has never entered his
bedroom. He said that the complainant
did not play with other
children. She devoted her time on school work.
[8]
The state relied on evidence of single witness who was a minor then.
Section 208 of the Criminal Procedure Act
[1]
makes provision for conviction of accused, of any offence, on the
single evidence of any competent witness. Such evidence should
be
approached with outmost care. The evidence should be clear and
satisfactory in all material respects. The magistrate correctly
warned himself of the danger inherent in the evidence of a child
witness. He was alive to the fact that some safeguard is required
to
reduce risk of a wrong conviction on the evidence of the child
witness. He relied on S V Artmann and another
[2]
.
[9] The undisputed
clinical findings of the medical doctors revealed that the
complainant was sexually penetrated. According
to the complainant,
she was sexually penetrated on several occasions at home. It is
common cause that the appellant was the only
male person who always
looked after the complainant and her siblings when the mother was at
work. The appellant was unemployed.
The complainant was going to
school and back home. At no stage that she ever came home late from
school or spent a night elsewhere.
She had no boyfriend. It is also
common cause that the mother of the complainant called the family
members of the appellant to
her place of residence after she received
a report of the rape incident from the complainant. The appellant did
not dispute the
version of the complainant’s mother that the
complainant related the rape incident to his family members in his
presence.
The complainant, young as she was, explained in detail how
she was raped by the appellant on each occasion. The magistrate
correctly
found that the evidence of the complainant was clear and
satisfactory in all material respects. For all these reasons the
appellant
was correctly convicted of rape.
[10]
The essential enquiry in an appeal against sentence is not whether
sentence was right or wrong, but whether the court
exercised its
discretion properly and judicially or whether the sentence is
shockingly inappropriate
[3]
. It
stands to reason that the court can only interfere with sentence if
it is satisfied that the trial court had not exercised
its discretion
reasonably.
[11] The magistrate
took into account the personal circumstances of the appellant. The
appellant was a first offender. He
has 5 minor children who reside
with their mothers. He was unemployed. The appellant was a pastor. It
was correctly found that
these facts do not constitute substantial
and compelling factors that satisfy deviation from the prescribed
minimum sentence. In
fact, the status of the appellant as a pastor
and assault that he inflicted on the complainant are aggravating
factors. All these
reasons justify non-interference with the
sentence.
[12] In the result,
the following order is made:
12.1 The appeal against
conviction and sentence is dismissed.
M.M MABESELE
(
Judge
of the High Court Gauteng Local Division)
I agree
KUNY
(
Judge
of the High Court Gauteng Local Division)
Appearances
On behalf of the
Appellant
: Adv.T.K. Malatji
Instructed
by
: SH Maake Incorporated
On behalf of the
Respondent
: Adv. C. Britz
Instructed
by
: Director of Public Prosecutions
Date of
Hearing
: 20 May 2024
Date of
Judgment
: 27 May 2024
[1]
51
of 1977
[2]
1968(3)
SA 339(A)
[3]
See
Director of Public Prosecutions, Kwazulu-Natal V P,
2006 (1) SACR
243(SCA)
at P. 250(b)
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