Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 104South Africa
Abdullah v S (A22/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 104 (8 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Abdullah v S (A22/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 104 (8 February 2023)
Abdullah v S (A22/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 104 (8 February 2023)
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sino date 8 February 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appeal case number:
A22/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 8 FEBRUARY 2023
In the
matter between:
REWAAN
ABDULLAH
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
Mabesele
J and Mdalana-Mayisela J
J U
D G M E N T
MABESELE,
J
:
[1] The appellant and his
co-accused were convicted of two counts of rape, read with section
51(1) of Act 105 of 1997. The
appellant was sentenced to
imprisonment for life and co-accused to 15 years’ imprisonment.
[2] The appellant now
appeal against conviction and sentence. He argues that the
magistrate did not apply the cautionary rules
when he evaluated the
evidence of the complainant who was a single witness. With regard to
sentence, his argument is that the sentence
of life imprisonment
imposed on him is inappropriate and does not have sufficient regard
to his personal circumstances.
[3] It is common cause
that the appellant and co-accused had sexual intercourse with the
complainant. The version of the complainant
on the one hand is
that the appellant and co-accused had sexual intercourse with her,
without her consent. The appellant
on the other hand contends
that the complainant consented to sexual intercourse with him and
co-accused.
[4] The complainant was
17 years old. She testified that on 19 March 2017, on Friday, a
fundraising function was organised
at school. After the
function had come to an end, she and her friend, T[...], joined a
group of fellow scholars at a park
near the school and to entertain
themselves with alcohol. T[...] is a daughter of the
appellant. The occasion at the
park lasted until late that
day. Since it was late for T[...] to go home alone, the
complainant invited her to spend a night
at her home. T[...] agreed
and they both went to the complainant’s place of residence.
T[...] did not go home the following
day, on Saturday. Instead,
she and the complainant went out and had alcohol with friends until
late that day. They again
went back to the complainant’s home
and T[...] spent another night. T[...] was accompanied home by the
complainant on Sunday
night after she had complained about stomach
ache and was given the tablets that made her feel drowsy. On
their way to T[...]’s
home they met a friend, named P[...], who
offered them a lift. After P[...] had parked a vehicle at the
passage near T[...]’s
home, both T[...] and complainant
alighted from the vehicle and entered the house. P[...] waited for
the complainant to come back.
Inside the house they found the
appellant and his friend and were smoking drugs. The appellant
asked them why were they coming
home late and where they had been.
The complainant’s response was that T[...] spent a weekend at
her home. The
appellant went out of the house and saw
P[...] parked next to his yard. P[...] saw him and drove off.
[5] After the appellant
had gone back into the house, the complainant informed T[...] that
she wanted to go home. It was then
agreed that the appellant
would accompany her home. She was reluctant to be accompanied
by the appellant in the absence of
T[...] because he saw the
appellant and his friend smoking drugs in the house. However,
T[...] assured her that she was in
safe hands. After an
assurance was given to the complainant she left T[...]’s home
with the appellant and co-accused.
It was around 23:00.
While they were on their way to the complainant’s home, they
came across a big rock and the appellant
sat on it and instructed the
complainant not to move any further. The appellant then accused
the complainant of bringing
T[...] home late and in pain. He
then said to the complainant that he wanted her to feel the same pain
that T[...] was going
through. Subsequently, the appellant took
a firearm, pointed same at her and the co-accused told her not to
scream.
Thereafter the appellant pushed her to the ground.
While she was lying on the ground the appellant took off her panty,
undress
himself, lay on top of her and put his penis into her vagina
and made up and down movements. After the appellant had had
sexual intercourse with her, she tried to stand up and get dressed
but the co-accused handed a firearm to the appellant and instructed
her to remain on the ground. After she had acceded to the
instruction, the co-accused had sexual intercourse with her.
After hat incident she was ordered to get dressed. The
appellant then placed a firearm against her waist and ordered her
not
to scream. Both the appellant and co-accused walked with her
for a short distance before they ordered her to close her
eyes.
After she had closed her eyes, the appellant and co-accused
disappeared. When she opened her eyes she saw a Toyota
Quantum
not far from her and the driver followed her and asked whether he
could offer help. It was around midnight. At first
she was
reluctant to get assistance from the driver of the Quantum.
However, she eventually got into the vehicle and told
the driver what
she had just encountered. The driver of the Quantum then offered to
take her to the police station but she declined
the offer and asked
that she be taken to her boyfriend’s place of residence.
When she arrived at the boyfriend’s
home she knocked at the
door and her boyfriend, T[...] M[…], opened the door for her.
After she had entered the house
she cried and told T[...] M[…]
what happened to her. After T[...] M[…] had heard the
news he advised her that
they should first go and report the matter
to her father and proceed to the police station, thereafter.
She and T[...] M[…]
proceeded going to her home. Upon
arrival she knocked at the door and her father opened the door and
shouted at her for coming
home late. When she tried to inform
his father about what happened to her, the father showed no
interests. She and
T[...] M[…] ultimately left home and
went to the police station. Upon arrival at the police station,
the police officer
refused to take her statement unassisted by her
guardian, due to her age.
[6] The complainant went
to school the following Thursday. While she was in the
classroom with T[...], she related to T[...]
what the appellant and
co-accused did to her the previous Sunday. Upon hearing the
news, T[...] cried. The complainant
cried, too, and were both
comforted by their class teacher.
[7] T[...] M[…]
testified that the complainant came to his place of residence and was
crying. He asked the complainant
what happened and the
complainant told him that her friend’s father and his friend
raped her. After he had been informed
of that incident he
accompanied the complainant to the police station. Upon arrival
at the police station the police advised
him to fetch her father
because a guardian was needed, due to her age. He went to the
complainant’s place of residence
to fetch the complainant’s
father. He returned with the father and left him and the
complainant at the police station.
[8] T[...] testified that
the complainant accompanied her home after she had spent a
weekend at her home. They arrived home
late and her father suggested
to the complainant to sleep over. The complainant insisted that she
wanted to go home. After she
had realised that the complainant was
refusing to sleep over she asked the appellant to accompany her home.
Both the appellant
and his friend accompanied the complainant home.
She did not know what transpired on the way to the complainant’s
home.
[9] T[...] testified that
the complainant went to school the following Wednesday. While
both of them were in the classroom
the complainant sent her a note to
inform her that the appellant and his friend raped her. After
she had read the note she
cried and both she and the complainant were
taken to the social worker for counselling.
[10] The version of the
appellant is that the complainant and T[...] arrived home late and
T[...] was complaining about stomach
cramps. He asked T[...]
where she had been and she informed him that she spent some time at
the complainant’s home.
He looked outside and saw a
vehicle parked near his house. The driver of the vehicle saw
him and drove off. He suggested
to the complainant to sleep
over but she insisted to go home. While he was accompanying the
complainant home, on foot, he
came across his friend, called M[…].
M[…] asked them to go with him to buy drugs. The
complainant did
not have a problem going with them to buy drugs.
On their way back the complainant asked him about the place that they
were
going to smoke the drugs. He responded that they would
smoke along the way. He informed her that he had money and
asked
her what would she offer him and his friend upon arrival at the
place that they were going to smoke. He said that he was
referring to sexual intercourse.
[11] The appellant
testified that they stopped near a hardware, next to a dustbin.
He then asked the complainant if she would
have sexual intercourse
with his friend and him. The complainant agreed to have sexual
intercourse with both of them.
The appellant said that before
that happened, the complainant smoked drugs. Thereafter she
undress herself, lay on the ground
on top of paper box and had sexual
intercourse with him. After he got off her, she invited his
friend to have sexual intercourse
with her. Thereafter they
accompanied her until Manzini’s tarven. As she parted
ways with them, she kissed both
of them and pleaded with them not to
tell anyone about the incident. He offered her R35 00.
[12] The appellant
testified further that the complainant offered to have sexual
intercourse with them in exchange for the drugs.
[13]
Section 208 of the Criminal Procedure Act
[1]
provides that an accused may be convicted of any offence on the
single evidence of any competent witness. Such evidence should
be approached with caution and be substantially satisfactory in all
material respects
[2]
.
[14] The complainant was
reluctant to be accompanied by the appellant in the absence of T[...]
because she saw the appellant and
his friend smoking drugs in the
house. If, indeed, the complainant was smoking drugs as alleged
by the appellant, the complainant
would have preferred to sleep over
for the sake of drugs or would not mind to be accompanied by the
appellant in the absence of
T[...]. The magistrate correctly
accepted the version of the complainant that she does not smoke
drugs.
[15] The complainant
reported the rape incident to T[...] M[…] on the same day that
it occurred. After the report was
made the matter was referred
to the police the same day. The complainant went further to
report the incident to T[...] when
she met her at school for the
first time after they had parted ways at T[...]’s home the
previous Sunday night.
[16] Counsel for the
appellant has criticised the evidence of the complainant that, she
chose not to go home after the rape incident
whereas she was nearer
home at z[...], P[...] and, instead, preferred to board a taxi and go
to a boyfriend in D[...], z[...].
In this regard, the
complainant advanced two persuasive reasons. Firstly, she
explained that since her grandmother was ill,
she did not want to
stress her about the rape incident. Secondly, her father was
very strict and would possibly chastise
her. Regard should be
had that the complainant was 17 years old and undoubtedly believed
that she could be chastised.
[17] It is common
cause that the appellant and his friend did not take a 17 year old
complainant home. They parted ways with
the complainant on the way
home in the early hours of the morning. The persuasive reason
advanced by the complainant in this regard
is that the appellant and
his friend raped her. On the other hand, the appellant did not
give a reasonable explanation for
his failure to take the complainant
home. The appellant initially testified that the complainant
agreed to have sexual intercourse
with his friend and him because he
promised her money. He later changed his version and testified
that the complainant offered
to have sexual intercourse with them in
exchange for drugs. This material contradiction clearly
demonstrate that the complainant
never consented to sexual
intercourse with the appellant and his friend. Therefore, his
version was correctly rejected as
not been reasonably possibly true
and was correctly convicted on a charge of rape.
[18]
I now turn to sentence. The essential inquiry in an appeal
against sentence is not whether the sentence was right
or wrong, but
whether the Court, in imposing it, exercised its discretion properly
and judicially. An error committed by
the Court in determining
or applying the facts for assessing that sentence, is not by itself
sufficient to entitle the Appeal Court
to interfere with sentence; it
must be of such a nature, degree or seriousness that it shows,
directly or inferentially, that the
Court did no exercise its
discretion at all or exercised it improperly or unreasonably.
Such a misdirection is usually and
conveniently termed one that
vitiates the Court’s decision on sentence
[3]
[19] The magistrate
sentenced the appellant to life imprisonment after he had considered
his personal circumstances and found
that they did not constitute
substantial and compelling circumstances that justify a lesser
sentence.
[20]
The appellant has previous convictions that are unrelated to the
offence he has committed. For this reason, he
should be
regarded as a first offender for the offence that involves bodily
harm. The use of drugs contributed to his disgraceful
conduct.
The complainant did not sustain injuries, according to the medical
examination report. (It must be emphasised that
this factor alone
would not justify a lesser sentence) The magistrate did not take
these factors into consideration. These factors,
taken cumulatively,
constitute substantial and compelling circumstances that justify
deviation from the sentence of life imprisonment.
This implies
that the sentence of life imprisonment should be interfered with.
This, notwithstanding, rape remains a serious
offence and invites
harsh punishment. Goldstein J, in S V Ncheche
[4]
describe this type of offence as an appelling and utterly outrageous
crime, gaining nothing of any worth for the perpetrator
and
inflicting terrible and horrific suffering and outrage on the victim
and her family.
[21] The complainant was
17 years old. She was raped on gun point by the two men and
left in the street in the early hours
of the morning and exposed to
further bodily harm. These are aggravating factors that justify
a lengthy term of imprisonment.
[22] In view of the
above, the following order is made:
22.1 The appeal is
upheld, partially.
22.2 The appeal against
conviction is dismissed.
22.3 The appeal against
sentence is upheld.
22.3.1 The sentence of
life imprisonment is set aside and replaced with
the sentence of 25
years’ imprisonment.
22.3.2 This sentence of
25 years’ imprisonment is backdated to 11
January 2021.
M.M MABESELE
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Local Division)
I concur
M.M.P MDALANA-MAYISELA
(
Judge
of the High Court Gauteng Local Division)
Date of
Hearing
: 28 November 2022
Date of
Judgment
: 8 February 2023
Appearances
On behalf of
Appellant
:
Adv Y. Britz
Instructed
by
: Legal Aid Board South Africa
On behalf of the
Respondent
: Adv R. Williams
Instructed
by
: Director of Public Prosecutions
[1]
51
of 1977
[2]
1967(4)
SA 203(N) at 206 H; See also S V Sauls and Another 1981(3) SACR
172(A)
[3]
S
V Pillay 1977(4) SA531
[4]
2005(2)
SACR 386(W); par. 35
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