Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 899South Africa
Phaladi v S (A74/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 899 (11 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Phaladi v S (A74/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 899 (11 August 2023)
Phaladi v S (A74/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 899 (11 August 2023)
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sino date 11 August 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A74/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
Date:
4 August 2023
In
the matter between:
PHALADI:
TEBOHO PAULOS APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
ALLY
AJ
[1]
The Appellant was arraigned in the Regional Court, Randfontein on two
counts of the contravention of Section
3 of the Criminal Law and
Sexual Offences and Related Matters Amendment Act 32 of 2007 both
read with the provisions of Section
51(1) and part 1 of schedule 2 of
the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
.
[2]
The Appellant pleaded not guilty and was ultimately found guilty as
charged and sentenced to life imprisonment
on both Counts with the
sentence on Count 2 ordered to run concurrently with the sentence on
Count 1. Furthermore, the Appellant
was found
ex lege
unfit to
possess a firearm in terms of
Section 103(1)
of Act 60 of 2000.
[3]
This matter serves before this Court as an automatic appeal in terms
of Section 309(1), the Appellant having
been sentenced to life
imprisonment. Accordingly, the appeal relates to conviction and
sentence.
[4]
The Appellant was represented in this Appeal by Adv. Musekwa and the
State by Adv. MM Maleleka.
[5]
At the outset the Appellant applied for condonation for the late
filing of his heads of argument. After hearing
Counsel for the
Appellant and the State not having opposed the application, the Court
granted condonation in the interests of justice.
[6]
Whilst the sequence in respect of the charges against the Appellant
were dealt with differently in the Court
a quo
, I intend
following the logical sequence in respect of the different charges.
[7]
In respect of Count 1 the State led the evidence of the victim, Ms
Z[....] M[....], who testified that whilst
she was in bed, she felt a
person was behind her and she assumed that this person was her
boyfriend. It soon turned out that it
was not her boyfriend because
as she testified, this person had a black plastic over his face. She
further testified that this
person was a male person.
[8]
This male person and her started ‘struggling’ or as she
put it started ‘wrestling’.
This person choked her and
told her to stop screaming otherwise he was going to kill her.
[9]
Ms M[....] testified that she asked this person what he wanted to
take and he stated that he wanted to have
sex with her. This person
also stated that “
if
I love my boyfriend and also what I was carrying in my belly –
are you going to give me what I want, then I can go
.”
[1]
At the time she had on her pyjamas and this person ordered her to
undress. She then testified that this person raped her by putting
his
penis in her vagina without her consent. This person pulled out his
penis after he ejaculated. At the time, this person did
not use a
condom when he penetrated her with his penis.
[10]
This person then told her to wash herself in the bath and she did so
by washing her vagina. He then wanted to repeat
the act of having sex
and ordered her to face the wall. He then had sex with her again
without her consent. When he was finished,
he ordered her to wash
herself again.
[11]
During the time of being raped, Ms M[....] did not indicate that she
knew the person that raped her but in further testimony,
she said a
certain Tebogo, came knocking on the door after she was raped and
asked her for a tap.
[12]
On being questioned by the Court as to who Tebogo was, as she had
previously only mentioned that a person had raped her,
she indicated
that it was Tebogo that raped her as she recognised him from his
voice. She also pointed out the Appellant as being
Tebogo who raped
her.
[13]
Ms M[....] also testified that after she had given the Appellant the
tap and he had finished drinking water, the Appellant
returned the
tap and left through a ‘short cut’ and on his way he met
his wife and they both came to her shack.
[14]
The Appellant’s wife asked if she was fine to which she
answered that she was raped by an intruder. The Appellant’s
wife, Mamoketi, then asked if she had telephoned her boyfriend, whom
she referred to as Nico and she said no. Nico was phoned and,
on his
arrival, he wanted to know whether she had telephoned the police to
which she answered no.
[15]
Ms M[....] testified that she was fetched by the police and she made
a statement. She was also medically examined and
a swab was taken
from her vagina.
[16]
The second witness to be called in respect of Count 1 was Mr Samuel
Tswayedi, Ms M[....]’s boyfriend. His testimony
was to the
effect that he had gone out with friends and was later contacted to
come home and, on his arrival, he found Ms M[....]
crying. He was
then told that she was raped and he enquired whether the police were
contacted and on hearing no, contacted the
police who fetched Ms
M[....].
[17]
Mr Tswayedi further testified that after Ms M[....] returned from the
hospital, she told him that his cousin, the Appellant
had raped her.
He wanted to know why she did not tell him earlier and she said she
was afraid. He testified that he was angry and
fought with the
Appellant. The community intervened during the fight.
[18]
The third witness in respect of Count 1 was Sergeant Nkosi of the
South African Police Services who was called to testify
in respect of
the chain of evidence. She testified that she was the person that
fetched Ms M[....] from her house on 13 December
2015 and took her to
the Doctor for examination. She further testified that after the
Doctor examined Ms M[....], she took the
sexual evidence collection
kit and booked it in at SAP 13 on the morning of 14 December 2023.
[19]
Sergeant Nkosi testified that the evidence collection kit had a seal
number 14[....]2 and was placed in a bag with another
seal number
PA[....]9. She further testified that the bag was not tampered with
and entered on the SAP 13 as 421.
[20]
The next witness to testify in respect of Count 1 was Sergeant Mpiko.
She testified that at the time of the incident
she was stationed at
the Family Violence, Child Protection and Sexual Offences Unit
situated at Krugersdorp.
[21]
Sergeant Mpiko testified that on 17 December 2015 she collected the
evidence collection kit with seal number 14[....]2
and
seal number PA[....]9 from the SAP 13 to take to the Forensic Science
Laboratory in Pretoria. She also confirmed that the seal
was not
tampered with.
[22]
The next witness to testify was Sergeant Mosoba who was stationed at
the Family Violence, Child Protection and Sexual
Offences Unit in
Krugersdorp. He testified that that he obtained a buccal sample from
the Appellant whilst the Appellant was at
Randfontein Court Cells. He
testified further that he was accompanied by Constable Magwai during
the obtaining of the buccal sample.
[23]
The buccal sample was obtained with the consent of the Appellant and
sealed with seal number 11[....]0 inside a forensic
bag with seal
number PA[....]2 and this bag was also sealed. The forensic bag was
handed in and confirmed in the SAP13.
[24]
The collection of the buccal sample was captured on a document and
handed in as Exhibit “F” and the SAP 13
was handed in as
Exhibit “G”
[25]
The following witness to testify in respect of Count 1 was Warrant
Officer Van Tonder who was stationed at the Family
Violence, Child
Protection and Sexual Offences Unit in Krugersdorp and was a Sergeant
during 2015. She testified that she collected
the forensic bag with
seal number PA[....]2 on 23 December 2015 and transported it to
Pretoria. She handed the forensic bag over
at the Forensic Science
Laboratory in Pretoria and received a receipt for it. This
information was then entered in on the SAP 13
on her return from
Pretoria.
[26]
Warrant Officer Van Tonder confirmed the information relating to her
on the SAP 13 handed into Court previously as Exhibit
“G”
in column 6 thereof.
[27]
The State then called Sergeant Au who testified in relation to an
adult sexual assault kit with serial number 15[....]3
with the pack
serial number being PA[....]5 which was collected and handed in on
the SAP 13. That was the extent of his role.
[28]
The State thereafter called Constable Magwai who was stationed at the
Family Violence, Child Protection and Sexual Offences
Unit in
Krugersdorp. His testimony centred around the collection of a buccal
sample from the Appellant on 14 September 2016 with
the consent of
the Appellant who signed the buccal collection form. Constable Magwai
confirmed that Sergeant Mosoba had co-signed
the buccal collection
form with serial number 11[....]F.
[29]
The buccal sample was collected from the Appellant at Randfontein
Court Cells and handed in in on the SAP 13.
[30]
The State then called Warrant Officer Strooh whose testimony centred
around the taking of the buccal sample with serial
number 11[....]3
to the Forensic Science Laboratory in Pretoria. She confirmed that
the buccal sample was handed in at the Forensic
Science Laboratory
and it was not tampered with.
[31]
The State called Sergeant Ramokgadi who confirmed that he transported
the sexual assault kit with serial number 15[....]3
with the pack
serial number being PA[....]5 to the Forensic Science Laboratory in
Pretoria and same had not been tampered with.
[32]
The State the called Warrant Officer Makapan from the Forensic
Science Laboratory in Pretoria who examined the sexual
assault kits
of the complainants and the buccal samples of the Appellant. Her
evidence confirmed that the buccal samples taken
were a match to the
sexual assault kit in respect of the two complainants.
[33]
In respect of Count 2, the State called the complainant, Keitumetse
Judith Phika. The complainant testified that she
had gone to look for
her boyfriend, Mike at the tavern unsuccessfully. Whilst walking, she
telephoned Mike who indicated that he
was loading people in town.
[34]
It was not long after she had spoken to Mike that a man came up from
behind and grabbed her. She tried to fight him off
to no avail. He
throttled her and she lost, as she put it, ‘power’. This
man then told her he was going to take her
to the graveyard and rape
her. At the graveyard he started assaulting her and ordered her to
undress which she refused. He then
undressed her himself. He then
raped her through her vagina and penetrated her through her anus.
[35]
When this man was finished, he told the complainant that she must go
to the car because they are going to Carltonville.
The complainant
resisted and this man grabbed at her at her back and they returned to
the graveyard. She was then raped again and
the complainant indicated
that all in all she was raped at least four times at the graveyard.
As she explained it, she was raped
three times outside the graveyard
and one time inside the graveyard.
[36]
When he was finished with the complainant, he helped put on her
clothing and told her to leave. When she told him that
she does not
know the way, he explained to her how to find her way and she went
home.
[37]
At home she found Mike, her boyfriend and told him about her ordeal.
Mike then took her to the police station where she
made a statement.
After her statement was taken, she was then taken to Leratong
Hospital where she was examined. She was also provided
with pills and
told to take them regularly.
[38]
The complainant recalled that the rape started around 22H00 on 12
February 2016 and she got home at around 03H00 on 13
February 2016.
[39]
The complainant testified that she sustained bruises during the rape
but they were not serious.
[40]
The State then called Mike, Michael Molabisi, the boyfriend of the
complainant in Count 2. Mike corroborated the testimony
of the
complainant relating to the time she arrived at home and that he took
her to the police station. The complainant was then
taken to Leratong
Hospital.
[41]
The cross-examination of the state witnesses in respect of Count 1
and Count 2 centred around the fact that it was not
the Appellant
that raped the complainants and in respect of the chain of evidence
witnesses the cross-examination centred around
the fact that the
Appellant stated that he did not consent to his buccal sample being
taken and that it was not his buccal sample.
[42]
The Appellant testified in his own defence. In respect of Count 1,
the Appellant testified that he was not the person
that raped the
complainant and stated that it was not possible because the
complainant was in a relationship with his ‘brother’,
Nico. He explained that at the time that the complainant stated she
was raped he was asleep at Mpai’s house, in the children’s
room. Mpai is his cousin.
[43]
The Appellant stated that he woke up the next morning at about 03H00
and he left without alerting his cousin. On arrival
at home, he was
about to sleep when his ‘wife’ told him that there was a
commotion in the yard and she thereafter accompanied
him to Nico’s
yard where the complainant explained that she was raped but did not
indicate who did it.
[44]
The Appellant also confirmed the testimony of Nico to the effect that
the police were called although the Appellant testified
that he
telephoned the police and Nico grabbed the phone from him and spoke
to the police.
[45]
The Appellant also confirmed that when the complainant returned from
the police, Nico came after him and assaulted him
with a spade. He
had a cut on his hand and the family intervened. The Appellant
testified that he was arrested about two days later
after the
complainant had returned from the police.
[46]
When the Appellant was asked how his semen was found in the body of
the complainant, he stated that he does not know
because he never had
sexual intercourse with the complainant. The gist of the Appellant’s
testimony in relation to Count
1 is that he was not the rapist and he
was asleep at his cousin’s place when the complainant was
raped.
[47]
The Appellant’s testimony in relation to Count 2 is that he
never knew the complainant and at the time of the rape,
he had left
for the North West on 15 January 2016 and only returned three months
later. He therefore stated that he could not have
raped the
complainant because she was raped on 13 February 2016 when he was in
the North West.
[48]
It is opportune to indicate that the defence of the Appellant was one
of an alibi in respect of both Counts preferred
against him, although
this defence was not made known to the Court
a quo
and the
time of pleading to the charges.
[49]
The Appellant raised the following grounds of appeal as can be
gleaned from his Counsel’s Heads of Argument. To
paraphrase the
grounds, the following was raised:
49.1.
the Court erred in rejecting the version of the Appellant as false;
49.2.
the Court erred in placing reliance on the evidence of a single
witness in respect of both counts of rape;
49.3.
the Court misdirected itself in law by concluding that there were
multiple rapes in respect of both counts.
49.4.
the Court erred in concluding that the State proved beyond reasonable
doubt that the DNA evidence is conclusive and
can be relied upon as
evidence against the Appellant.
[50]
It
is trite that an Appeal Court is loath to overturn a trial Court’s
findings of fact, unless they are shown to be vitiated
by a material
misdirection or are shown by the record to be wrong
[2]
.
[51]
The Appellant raises the issue of the two complainants being single
witnesses to their rapes and that the Court
a quo
did not give
due consideration to the cautionary rule in respect of single witness
testimony.
[52]
Now Section 208 of the Criminal Procedure Act
[3]
provides guidance in this regard:
“
An
accused may be convicted of any offence on the single evidence of any
competent witness”
[53]
In evaluating the evidence, the presiding Magistrate warned himself
of the dangers of convicting an accused based on
single witness
testimony
[4]
.
[54]
I am satisfied that the Court
a quo
gave due consideration to
the principles regarding single witness testimony and in fact went
further to deal with the other evidence
implicating the Appellant.
This other evidence was the DNA evidence directly implicating the
Appellant.
[55]
The Court
a quo
dealt in detail with the chain of evidence for
the reason that the Appellant disputed that the buccal sample was his
and that he
consented to his buccal sample being taken.
[56]
Juxtaposed to the forensic DNA evidence, the Appellant’s
defence in respect of Count 1 is that he does not know
how his semen
was found on the body of the complainant and that he never had sexual
intercourse with the complainant. Furthermore,
the Appellant
testified that he did not give consent for his buccal sample to be
taken.
[57]
The Court
a quo
as stated above dealt extensively with the
chain of evidence in both counts and came to the conclusion that the
buccal samples
from the Appellant were a match to the sexual assault
kits in both counts. I cannot fault the reasoning of the presiding
Magistrate
in the Court
a quo
nor is there any misdirection
that can be attributed to the findings made in respect of the
forensic DNA evidence.
[58]
With regard to the consent of the Appellant for the buccal samples to
be taken and whether he had signed the respective
forms in relation
to both counts, the presiding Magistrate in the Court
a quo
found
that the signatures appearing on the buccal sample forms were those
of the Appellant. Once again, I cannot fault the reasoning
of the
Court
a quo
in coming to the finding of the signature and I
can find no misdirection that can be attributed to the presiding
Magistrate in
making this finding.
[59]
The next issue raised by the Appellant is that the presiding
Magistrate in the Court
a quo
erred as a matter of law in
finding that the Appellant committed multiple rapes in respect of
both counts. In this regard the Court
a quo
dealt in detail
with the evidence of the complainants and came to the conclusion that
indeed in respect of Count 1 multiple rapes
occurred because the
evidence showed that the complainant in Count 1 was made to wash
herself before the Appellant again raped
her. Accordingly, in my
view, the Court
a quo
applied the law correctly by finding
that multiple rapes did exist in respect of Count 1.
[60]
In respect of Count 2, the Court
a
quo
once again dealt with the evidence of the complainant that she was
raped on separate occasions at the graveyard and was also sexually
assaulted anally. I cannot fault this finding of the presiding
Magistrate and I am of the considered view that the law has been
correctly applied insofar as the principles to be applied when making
a finding in respect of multiple rapes
[5]
.
[61]
Accordingly, it is my view that the appeal against his convictions on
both counts must fail.
[62]
The next issue to be dealt with is the sentence of life imprisonment
as imposed by the Court
a quo
which triggered the automatic
appeal.
[63]
The Court
a
quo,
in
sentencing the Appellant took into account that he was charged with
rape as read with
Section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act
[6
].
Section 51(1)
read with
Part 1
of Schedule 2 enjoins a Court,
including the Court
a
quo
to
impose a sentence of life imprisonment in circumstances as pertains
in the Appellant’s case.
[64]
Section 51(3)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act, however
, provides a
Court with a discretion to impose a lesser sentence than life
imprisonment where it is satisfied that ‘substantial
and
compelling circumstances exist’ for a lesser sentence.
[65]
The presiding Magistrate in the Court
a quo
was of the view
that substantial and compelling circumstances did not exist in this
case. The Appellant broadly speaking is of
the view that the
presiding Magistrate erred in this regard.
[66]
In considering an appropriate sentence in circumstances such as the
present, the case of
S v Malgas
is
enlightening and guides a Court in evaluating the evidence for or
against the imposition of a minimum sentence in accordance
with
Section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act:
“
The
specified sentences were not to be departed from lightly and for
flimsy reasons which could not withstand scrutiny. Speculative
hypotheses favourable to the offender, maudlin sympathy, aversion to
imprisoning first offenders, personal doubts as to the efficacy
of
the policy implicit in the amending legislation, and like
considerations were equally obviously not intended to qualify as
substantial and compelling circumstances.”
[7]
[67]
Now in this case, the Appellant raises the point that the complainant
in Count 1 did not suffer any injuries and no victim
impact report
was presented. This point fades into obscurity when one has regard to
Section 51(3)
(aA) (ii) of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act:
“
When
imposing a sentence in respect of the offence of rape the following
shall not constitute substantial and compelling circumstances
justifying the imposition of a lesser sentence: …an apparent
lack of physical injury to the complainant”
[68]
In
S
v Kgosimore
[8]
1999 (2) SACR 238
SCA
it was held that the approach of a Court of Appeal on sentence should
be the following
:
“
It
is trite law that sentence is a matter for the discretion of the
court burdened with the task of imposing the sentence. Various
tests
have been formulated as to when a court of appeal may interfere.
These include, whether the reasoning of the trial court
is vitiated
by misdirection or whether the sentence imposed can be said to be
startlingly inappropriate or to induce a sense of
shock or whether
there is a striking disparity between the sentence imposed and the
sentence the court of appeal would have imposed.
All these
formulations, however, are aimed at determining the same thing: viz.
whether there was a proper and reasonable exercise
of the discretion
bestowed upon the court imposing sentence. In the ultimate analysis
this is the true enquiry. (Cf
S v
Pieters
1987 (3) SA 717
(A) at 727 G – I
).
Either the discretion was properly and reasonable exercised or it was
not. If it was, a court of appeal has no power to interfere;
if it
was not, it is free to do so”.
[69]
Taking the above principles into account, it is my considered view,
that the presiding Magistrate in the Court
a quo
did not
commit a misdirection in finding no substantial and compelling
reasons. The Court
a quo
did take the personal circumstances
of the Appellant in line with the trite triad principles of the
criminal, the crime and the
interest of society and applied them
correctly in the circumstances of this case.
[70]
Accordingly, it is my view that in this case, this Court, having
found no misdirection on the part of the presiding Magistrate,
is
duty bound to uphold the sentence imposed in the Court
a quo
and
the appeal against the sentences imposed in both counts must fail.
[71]
In the result I propose the following Order:
a). The appeal
against the conviction of the Appellant in respect of Count 1 and
Count 2 is dismissed;
b). The appeal
against the sentence imposed in respect of Count 1 and Count 2 is
dismissed.
G
ALLY
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
I
concur
W.
KARAM
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down in Court and circulated
electronically
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for hand-down is deemed to be
11
August 2023
.
Date
of hearing: 13 March 2023
Date
of judgment: 11 August 2023
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Appellant:
MS
MUSEKWA
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid South Africa
sindisah@legal-aid.co.za
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv. M.M. MALELEKA
MMaleleka@npa.gov.za
Instructed
by:
OFFICE
OF THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS JOHANNESBURG
[1]
Record:
paginated page 65 lines 4-6
[2]
S
v Naidoo & Others
2003 (1) SACR 347
SCA @ para 26
[3]
51
of 1977
[4]
Record:
page 510: lines 20 – 25 and page 511: lines 1-4
[5]
S
v Blaauw
1999 (2) SACR 295
(W) at 299 C
[6]
105
of 1997
[7]
2001
(3) All SA 220
(A) at 227 para 9
[8]
1999
(2) SA 238
SCA at 241 para 10
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