Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1316South Africa
S.B v S (A174/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1316 (13 November 2023)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1316
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## S.B v S (A174/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1316 (13 November 2023)
S.B v S (A174/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1316 (13 November 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_1316.html
sino date 13 November 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL
CASE NO: A174/2015
In the matter between:
S
B
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
MABESELE J ET SIDWELL
AJ
J U D G M E N T
MABESELE J:
[1]
The appellant was convicted in the regional court on a charge
of rape, read with the provision of section 51(1) of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act.
[1]
He was
sentenced to life imprisonment. Exercising his automatic right
of appeal
[2]
, the appellant now
appeals against his conviction and sentence.
[2] The appellant
contends that the court below should have found that the evidence
against him has failed to prove sexual
intercourse between the
complainant and him.
[3] The appellant
was convicted on the evidence of the complainant and three witnesses,
including a professional nurse who
examined the complainant.
[4] The complainant
was 11years old when she was raped. She was doing grade 6 at
school.
[5] The complainant
testified that on 20
th
July 2013, around 19:00, her mother
asked her to go to the place of residence of the appellant to look
for her brother. The
appellant, according to the evidence on
record, stays a street away from the residence of the complainant.
The appellant and the
family of the complainant had a close
relationship. As a result of this relationship the complainant
regarded the appellant
as her uncle.
[6] The complainant
testified that upon arrival at the residence of the appellant, the
latter informed her that her brother,
T, did not come to his
residence. At the same time the appellant pushed her on the
bed, took off her clothes and
raped
her, by inserting his
penis into her vagina and made movements on top of her.
Thereafter the appellant told her to put on
her clothes and to not
tell anyone about the rape incident.
[7] She went back
home and was scared to tell anyone. She later on told aunt E
that the appellant raped her.
She was not exactly sure
when she related the story to her aunt. After the aunt had
received the news she informed her mother
and both of them took her
to the police station and subsequently hospital.
[8] During
cross-examination the complainant testified that on the day of the
incident she had knocked off from school at
14:00. Since it was
common cause that the 20
th
of July was a Saturday the
complainant was asked whether she attended school on Saturday. She
responded that she never attended
school on Saturday. When she
was asked at what stage did the appellant assault her, she said:
“that was the time he
raped
me”
[9] The mother of
the complainant testified. She confirmed the version of the
complainant that the complainant went
to the place of residence of
the appellant to look for her brother, on her instruction.
[10] The mother
testified that the complainant came back home alone. Her
brother, T, came home late that night. The
mother said that after the
complainant had come back from the residence of the appellant she
never went to school from Monday to
Wednesday. She was hiding
her books. She did not find out from the complainant the reasons for
not going to school.
Instead, she assaulted her. On 24
th
July 2013 she called her friend, E, and requested her to ask
the complainant the reason for not going to school. E
took the
complainant to her place of residence for an interview. At
approximately 19:00, E came back and reported to her
that the
complainant informed her that she was raped by the appellant.
On 25
th
July 2013 she took the complainant to the police
station and hospital. She was accompanied by E.
[11] During
cross-examination the mother was asked whether the complainant said
anything to her when she came back home from
the residence of the
appellant. She responded that the complainant never said anything.
It stands to reason that she never
enquired from the complainant
about the whereabouts of T. This is despite the fact that she had
asked the complainant to go and
look for T. She said she has
never confronted the appellant about the rape incident although she
had a close relationship
with him.
[12] Ms E R
testified that indeed she was requested by the mother of the
complainant to enquire from the complainant why she
was not going to
school. She interviewed the complainant privately. During
the interview the complainant informed her
that the appellant
inserted his penis into her vagina. The complainant did not
tell her the date or day on which the rape
took place. She,
too, did not ask the complainant about the day on which the incident
occurred. After the interview
she went to the mother of the
complainant and informed her about the incident.
[13] Ms Helen
Ntshaube, a professional nurse, confirmed the contents of the J88
which she had prepared after she had performed
a gynaecological
examination on the body of the complainant. The examination was
performed on 25
th
July 2013. During the examination
the nurse found that the hymen was irregular and there were old
injuries in the vagina.
Her conclusion was that the injuries in
the hymen were consistent with vaginal penetration.
[14] The appellant took
the stand. He testified that on 20
th
July 2013 he
went to the shebeen at 18:00 and came back at the 22:00. He
testified that the complainant’s brother,
T, frequents his
place of residence. On one occasion T stole his cellphone. He
confronted the complainant’s mother
about this, on the Sunday
the 21
st
. He suspects that the complainant’s mother
has laid the charges against him because he confronted her about the
behaviour
of her son.
[15] The magistrate
was alive to the fact that: (i) the onus rests on the state to prove
its case beyond reasonable doubt
in order to secure the
conviction,(ii) the complainant was a single witness, (iii)
cautionary rule is applicable. The magistrate
correctly stated
that ‘the court must try to find safeguards against the wrong
conviction’.
[16]
The law allows a Court to convict on the uncorroborated evidence of a
single witness provided that the evidence is clear
and satisfactory.
In considering such evidence the Court, as stated in R V Mokoena,
[3]
should investigate closely both the credibility of the witness and
the reliability of the evidence given by that witness.
If the
evidence shows that the witness might have a bias against the accused
or a motive for giving false evidence against the
accused that would
be a very important factor. Even if the witness appears to the
Court to be an honest witness, the accuracy
of the witness’
evidence must be closely examined.
[17] The
complainant testified that on the day of the alleged incident, being
20
th
July 2013, she had knocked off from school at 14:00.
It was brought to her attention that the 20
th
July 2013
was a Saturday and she was asked whether she attended school on
Saturday. Her answer was ‘no’. It stands
to reason
that since the complainant attended school on the day of the alleged
incident and does not attend school on Saturday,
she could not have
visited the residence of the appellant on Saturday 20
th
July 2013. The mother of the complainant and her friend, E R,
were not helpful in this regard. When the prosecutor
asked the
mother of the complainant whether she did ascertain from the
complainant about the date on which the complainant was
raped
the mother responded as follows: “That I did not get your
worship, as to when she was raped, because she was
scared to tell me”
E R responded to the same question as follows: “She did not
tell me about the date your Worship…”The
following
question was asked: Did you ask if this happened the day that she
told you(about rape) or a few days or few months or
few weeks?’
R responded as follows:
‘
I did not ask her
that’
[18] The
complainant, according to the mother, never said anything to her on
her return from the residence of the appellant.
A few days
thereafter, the mother assaulted the complainant for not going to
school and without first enquiring from her
why she was not
going to school. After the complainant was assaulted she
subsequently informed E R that she was raped by
the appellant.
The question that arises is whether the complainant told R the truth
or was influenced by the assault on her.
[19] Considering her age,
it would not be expected of her to have knowledge that what happened
to her constituted rape. The
complainant in her
evidence-in-chief and cross-examination continually accused the
appellant of ‘rape’. What follows
here-under transpired
in Court.
Prosecutor :‘Do
you know the reason why you went to the police station to open a case
?......Yes’
Prosecutor : Can you tell
us that reason, can you tell us what happened ?....It is because M B,
uncle B raped me’
Prosecutor :’Okay
proceed’….Your Worship after undressing my clothes he
raped me’
Defence counsel :
‘…..at what stage did he assault you with open
hands?’…that was the time he raped
me.
[20] The answers which
are stated in paragraph 19 above, with reference to the word ‘rape’,
creates an impression that
the complainant might have possibly been
coached, unless she had explained how she got to know that what
happened to her was rape.
[21] The
professional nurse performed examination on the body of the
complainant on 25 July 2013. Her finding that the
complainant
was sexually penetrated was not disputed. However, her finding
insofar as it relates to the old injuries on the
hymen should not
have advanced the case of the complainant against the appellant.
This is because there is no clear evidence
on the date on which the
offence was committed.
[22] The
magistrate, in his judgment, was of the view that the complainant
made a very good impression to the Court, her evidence
was short and
sweet and she withstood the cross-examination. The question is
whether her evidence was clear and satisfactory.
As I have
stated earlier, the complainant has failed to elaborate and clarify
certain issues which were material in her evidence.
In
particular, the day on which the alleged offence was committed.
It seems to me that the
complainant was treated as an adult during the trial. She was
not assisted, either by the prosecutor
or magistrate, to present her
evidence clearly and satisfactorily. Here are the reasons:
First, the complainant testified
that she went to look for her
younger brother at the residence of the appellant. She was not asked
to tell the Court whether she
reported to her mother that she found
the brother or not, and what happened further. The response
would probably enable the
Court to determine, during that early
stage, whether something sinister happened to the complainant.
Second, it was brought
to the attention of the complainant that the
day of the 20
th
July 2013 which she alleged she was at
school and later at the residence of the appellant, was a Saturday.
Following this
assertion, the magistrate should have asked the
complainant to explain why she attended school on Saturday, instead
of him asking
the complainant whether she attends school on Saturday
or Sunday, thereby suggesting to the complainant that she could not
have
visited the residence of the appellant later that Saturday
because she could not have gone to school on Saturday. Third,
the complainant should have been asked whether she did tell E R about
the day and date on which she was sexually abused and if not,
why?
She should have been asked whether the assault on her by the mother
did not influence her to name the appellant as a
culprit.
[23] My view is
that when the minor testifies in Court the presiding officer has a
duty to ensure that a minor presents evidence
fully and in a clear
and satisfactory manner. The minor should be assisted by being asked
to clarify the material issues which
he or she has testified about.
[24] The mother of the
complainant, too, has failed the complainant. Had she asked the
complainant about the whereabouts of
her younger brother, on her
return from the residence of the appellant, she could have probably
detected something sinister from
the appellant and investigated the
matter further. Further investigation at that early stage could
have probably assisted
the nurse to detect fresh tears on the vagina
of the complainant. Alternatively, the DNA of the appellant,
having been taken
earlier, could have resolved the dispute. For
all these reasons the appellant is given the benefit of doubt that he
committed
rape. In the result, the appeal succeeds.
Accordingly, the conviction and sentence are set aside.
M.M MABESELE
(
Judge
of the High Court Gauteng Local Division)
I agree
G.Y.SIDWELL
(
Acting
Judge of the High Court Gauteng Local Division)
Appearances
On behalf of the
Appellant : Adv Mosang
Instructed by : Legal Aid
Board S.A
On behalf of the
Respondent : Adv. Nel
Instructed by : Director
of Public Prosecutions
Date of Hearing : 6
November 2023
Date of Judgment :
13 November 2023
[1]
105
of 1997
[2]
Section
309(1)(a)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
[3]
1932
O.P.D
at p.79
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
S.N v S.R (2023/036122) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1298 (14 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1298High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
S.B.H v Mncube NO and Another (2025/038564) [2025] ZAGPJHC 424 (29 April 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 424High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
S.M.R v Nedbank Limited and Another (25017/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1159 (13 October 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1159High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
S.M v D.L (2024/129392) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1286 (9 December 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1286High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
S.F.S v A.J.S (11676/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1271 (27 October 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1271High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar