Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1South Africa
Rasehlapa v S (A26/2021; RC174/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1 (21 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 January 2021
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal Law – rape – appellant convicted on three counts of rape, read with s 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (‘minimum sentence regime’) – as a single witness, the complainant’s testimony was required to be satisfactory in all material respects, or there had to be adequate corroboration for it – did the State prove appellant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Rasehlapa v S (A26/2021; RC174/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1 (21 January 2022)
Rasehlapa v S (A26/2021; RC174/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1 (21 January 2022)
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sino date 21 January 2022
THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL
CASE NO
:
A26/2021
COURT
A QUO
CASE NO
:
RC174/2017
DPP
REF NO
:
10/2/5/1-(2021/023)
DATE
:
21
st
January 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
RASEHLAPA
,
DAVID
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Coram:
Adams J
et
Cowen AJ
Heard
:
11 November 2021 – The matter was disposed of without an
oral
hearing in terms of
s 19(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
Delivered:
21 January 2021 – This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
representatives by email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 11:00 on 21 January 2021
Summary:
Criminal Law – rape – appellant convicted on
three counts of rape, read with s 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act
105 of 1997 (‘minimum sentence regime’) – as a
single witness, the complainant’s testimony was required
to be
satisfactory in all material respects, or there had to be adequate
corroboration for it – did the State prove appellant’s
guilt beyond a reasonable doubt –
Factual
findings of trial court – absent demonstrable, material
misdirections and clearly erroneous findings, an appeal court
is
bound by the trial court’s factual findings –
appeal dismissed – conviction and sentence confirmed –
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The Westonaria
Regional Court (Regional Magistrate R De Bruin sitting as Court of
first instance):
(1)
The appellant’s appeal against his conviction is dismissed.
(2)
The appellant’s appeal against his sentence is dismissed.
(3)
The appellant’s conviction by the Westonaria Regional Court and
his sentence be and are hereby confirmed.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J (Cowen AJ concurring):
[1].
A disturbing and tragic tale – ‘dark and grim’ –
of
two members of the same Christian church, with the one member
ironically accused of being a closet Satanist and the other a
trusting
young mother, who thought that she was about to be
sacrificed in a satanic ritual when she found herself with the other
member
at his place of residence. This describes the story behind
this appeal, which brings to mind the expression that ‘one
cannot
make up this stuff’. In the end, so the one church
member (the complainant) claims, she was not sacrificed and she did
not
have blood sucked from her and drunk by the Satanist, or boiled
in a pot, as he had threatened to do. She was however raped three
times on that fateful night, which, needless to say, left her
devastated and traumatised beyond imagination.
[2].
The appeal by the appellant is against his conviction on three counts
of rape
by the Westonaria Regional Court, as well as against the
effective sentence of life imprisonment imposed by the trial court.
On
23 August 2018 the appellant, who was legally represented, was
convicted on three charges of rape of the complainant, a 27-year-old
female, during the late evening of Wednesday, 31 May 2017, into the
early hours of Thursday, 1 June 2017, whilst holding her against
her
will. The rape charges on which the appellant was convicted was
formulated as a contravention of sections of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act (Sexual
Offences and Related Matters), Act 32 of 2007
(‘the Sexual Offences Act’), read with s 51 and schedule
2 of the Criminal
Amendment Act, Act 105 of 1997. The ‘minimum
sentence regime’ is therefore applicable.
[3].
For purposes of sentencing, the Court
a quo
took the three
rape convictions together and on 19 September 2018 the appellant was
sentenced to direct imprisonment for life.
[4].
In view of the appellant’s sentence of imprisonment for life,
the appeal
is before us on the basis of section 309(1)(a) of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (introduced by s 10 of the Judicial
Matters
Amendment Act, Act 42 of 2013) in terms of which the
appellant has an automatic right to appeal against both his
conviction and
sentence. The trial court has nevertheless granted the
appellant leave to appeal, which, as I have already indicated, was
not strictly
necessary.
[5].
The appeal against conviction principally turns on the reliability of
the evidence
of the complainant and her witnesses as contrasted
against the evidence of the appellant, who claimed, in a brief plea
explanation
in terms of section 115 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977 (‘the CPA’), that the sexual intercourse with the
complainant was consensual. In essence, there are two mutually
destructive versions of the material events which happened during
the
night and early morning in question – one being that of the
State and the other being that of the defence.
[6].
The issue to be decided in this appeal is whether the trial court was
correct
in accepting the State’s version and rejecting that of
the appellant.
[7].
The complainant, who was originally from Mpumalanga, testified that
she had
only been in Gauteng for a mere two weeks when the incident
in question happened on the night of Wednesday, 31 May 2017. By then
she had found employment in Johannesburg and was living on the
premises of her Church in Zuurbekom. She had befriended the
appellant,
whom she had met at the church and he had agreed to
accompany her, whenever it was necessary, from where she was dropped
off by
the taxi she boarded from work to her place of residence. The
appellant agreed to do this because the complainant, who at the time
worked a shift from 08:00 in the morning to 18:00 in the evening,
arrived home from work late at night and after 20:00 in the evening,
and the appellant was concerned on her behalf for the safety of the
complainant.
[8].
On the evening of Wednesday, 31 May 2017, whilst the appellant was
walking
the complainant home, he offered to buy her something to eat,
which they agreed to have at his place. The two of them walked to
the
local spaza shop, bought the food and then went to the appellant’s
house, where things, according to the complainant,
took a sudden and
unexpected turn – she never even got a chance to eat the food
the complainant had so generously offered
her.
[9].
Immediately after they arrived at his place and once they were
inside, the
appellant locked the door and when the complainant asked
him why he did that, his response was in essence to the effect that
she
was way too trusting of people generally and in particular of
him. Her evidence furthermore was as follows:
‘
I
then became surprised, your worship, after hearing those words. And
he further told me that today is the 31
st
and that it is
the day for [him] to sacrifice. “I am a Satanist; I am
practising Satanism”.’
[10].
Needless to say, the appellant became scared – she was
terrified. She expressed surprise
to the appellant and enquired from
him as to how that was even possible since they both were attending
the same Christian church.
His response was simply that, although he
was attending church with her, he was a Satanist at heart. The
complainant testified
that she thereafter ‘begged’ him to
let her go home, and explained to him that her family members would
be worried
about the fact that she had failed to arrive home from
work. Her evidence was that she thereafter started crying and he
warned
her not to scream as that would be her last scream.
[11].
When she tried to phone her family members, they struggled and he
took her cell phone from her.
He also threatened to electrocute her
with an electric cable, which he had disconnected from the plug.
Additionally, he warmed
up a fork on a stove and indicated to her
that he would stab her on the head with the heated fork. He did
however not carry out
any of his threats, but uttered the following
words ostensibly to himself: ‘your mind is smarter than your
face’, and
thereafter changed into a black top, put on a black
beret and put on a black pair of shoes. This he did, so the
complainant testified,
because that was the day on which, according
to his Satanic beliefs, he had to make a sacrifice by drinking human
blood.
[12].
All this time, so the complainant testified, she kept begging the
appellant to let her go home,
but he would have none of that. ‘The
more I kept on begging him, the more I am delaying him to perform his
rituals’,
is how the appellant reacted, according to the
complainant, to her request to be released. At some stage during all
of the drama,
the appellant advised her to cooperate with him and to
become his sex slave. If not, so the appellant threatened, he would
stab
her with an iron bar and he graphically explained to her that
with that iron bar he would pierce her shoulder from her front right
through to her back, and he would leave the iron bar lodged in her
body.
[13].
At some point, the complainant heard footsteps outside the house, and
thought of screaming for
help. She was however warned not to even
think about drawing attention to herself as he would stab her so fast
that she would already
be stabbed to death by the time the person
came to her assistance. She heeded the warning and, fearing for her
life, she did not
scream.
[14].
The appellant thereafter repeated to her that he was going to make
her his sex slave, whilst
pushing her onto the bed. He then undressed
her and raped her by inserting his penis into her vagina without
using a condom. She
tried to resist, but he forced her down and
proceeded to rape her. During this ordeal, she was crying and he told
her to stop crying.
Shortly thereafter, he raped her for a second
time. On both occasions, the appellant ejaculated outside of her and
on top of the
front part of her body.
[15].
After the second rape, so the complainant testified, the appellant
tried calming her down as
she was still crying uncontrollably. He
then apologised to her for what he had done. He explained to her that
he did not want to
lose her as he could see that there were a number
of other guys at church ‘eyeing’ her. He loved her, so
the appellant
proclaimed. He sought to show the appellant that he
could do card tricks and showed her a personal photo album. And then
he raped
her for a third time. This time he used a condom.
[16].
Before the third rape, the complainant was however able to convince
the appellant to give her
back her phone after she explained to him
that she wanted to check her
Facebook
messages. She then used
the opportunity to call her mother in Mpumalanga and, because she did
not want to unnecessarily alarm her
mother, she only asked her not to
forget to withdraw money for her children’s school transport.
By then it was about 01:00
in the morning. After the call to her
mother, the complainant also messaged her sister, explaining her
ordeal to her. The complainant
testified that she explained to her
sister that the appellant had kidnapped her and was keeping her at
his place against her will.
He was threatening to kill her, so she
told her sister, and that he had informed her that he was a Satanist.
She also asked her
sister to please look after her kids if she was
not to make it out alive.
[17].
At more or less the same time, the complainant also received a call
from her sister and the
cell phone of a friend of hers: she answered
the latter at the appellant’s insistence. She and her sister in
fact lived with
this friend at the time on the Church premises. The
appellant assured the friend that she was alright and that she would
see them
the following morning. She did this, so the complainant
explained, because she was scared and did not want to alert the
appellant
to the fact that she had sent messages, calling for help.
She did however explain this in a subsequent message to her sister in
which she told her that she was in fact not ok, but was unable to
talk. The fact that the complainant told her friend on the phone
that
she was ok probably gave the appellant a sense of confidence and this
led to the third rape.
[18].
During the third rape, there was a knock at the gate and the
complainant said to the appellant
that that may very well be her
family members coming to look for her. By then it was the early hours
of Thursday, 1 June 2017.
As it turned out, the people knocking at
the gate were her sister and two of her friends, accompanied by two
security guards. They
then knocked at the door to the appellant’s
house.
[19].
The appellant then got off the complainant. Realising that these
people were being persistent,
the appellant went outside, armed with
an iron rod, telling the complainant to get in a wardrobe. When he
returned to the room,
however, so the complainant testified, she made
a run for it and escaped with all of her clothes and other
belongings. She ran
out of the house, whilst he was re-entering. She
found a security guard outside, as well as her sister and her friend,
with whom
she was staying at the time, and the male friend. She then
left the appellant’s house in the security van. The appellant
also left in the security van, sitting at the back. They went to the
church, where she explained to the security guards what had
happened
to her.
[20].
During her evidence, the complainant testified that during her
attack, she did not sustain any
physical injuries, but, as she puts
it ‘[she] was deeply hurt. Spiritually.’
[21].
At about 05:00, the police were called and the appellant was
arrested. She accompanied the police
to the appellant’s
residence and a used condom was retrieved. After having furnished her
statement at the Bekkersdal Police
Station, the complainant was taken
to the Leratong Hospital, where she was examined and assessed by a
professional nurse.
[22].
The second witness called on behalf of the State was one of the
security guards, who had arrived
at the appellant’s place with
the complainant’s sister and the friends. As rightly pointed
out by the learned Regional
Magistrate, this witness was not a very
good witness. His evidence contradicted most of what was testified to
by the complainant
regarding the circumstances when she was located.
So, for example, his evidence was that they had gone into the
appellant’s
house and retrieved the complainant, which was in
direct contradiction to the evidence of the complainant and the other
state witnesses
who were on the scene, who both testified that the
complainant ran out of the house by herself.
[23].
Most of the evidence of the security guard was disregarded, in my
view rightly so, by the Regional
Court. The Regional Court noted that
the witness was trembling when testifying and appeared to be seeking
to substitute the evidence
of his colleague, who was no longer
employed by the Church and could not be located to testify. It was
his colleague, rather than
him, who had played the more active role
on the night in question. This witness did however afford
corroboration for that part
of the State’s version which
relates to the fact that the complainant had sent to her sister a
message, claiming that she
was being held hostage by the appellant,
which is what caused all of them to go looking for the complainant.
[24].
The complainant’s sister was the next witness for the State.
She corroborated the version
of the complainant in material respects.
[25].
She testified that on the night of Wednesday, 31 May 2017, she went
to bed as usual, only to
be awoken in the early hours of Thursday, 1
June 2017, to find messages sent to her phone by her sister, which
were to the effect
that, should something happen to her (the
complainant), she (the sister) should know that she had been
kidnapped by the complainant,
that her life was under threat and that
she did not want people to know what had happened to her. The witness
confirmed that, after
reading the messages from her sister, she,
together with her friend and another male person, went looking for
the complainant.
They then came across two security guards, who were
busy patrolling the church premises, and they advised them of the
fact that
the complainant was in trouble. Thereafter, they,
accompanied by the two security officers, went to the place of the
appellant,
where, as explained by the complainant, they found her in
a state. The witness confirmed that the complainant came running out
of the house after the appellant went back in after he had come out
to speak to them, whilst brandishing an iron rod. The witness
described this part of the story as follows:
‘
Then
[the complainant] came out of that house, running. Her hair was mixed
up. She was in possession of her shoes, her bag and her
jacket. She
got out of that room crying. [She was clutching all of that stuff to
her chest]’.
[26].
They then all left with the complainant, so the witness testified, in
the vehicle of the security
guards, with the appellant, who also came
along. Later on, so the witness testified, the South African Police
were summoned, who
then proceeded to arrest the appellant. The
complainant’s sister’s evidence was materially
unchallenged.
[27].
The next witness called by the State was the male friend who
accompanied the complainant’s
sister and the friend, when they
went looking for the complainant after the sister had received the
SOS messages. This witness
corroborated the version of the
complainant’s sister in material respects. He confirmed that,
in the early hours of Thursday,
1 June 2017, he received a call from
the complainant’s sister, advising him that the complainant was
in trouble. He then
went to the sister’s house, where she
showed him the messages which she had received from the complainant.
Incidentally,
this witness subsequently became the owner of this
phone after a swop deal with the complainant’s sister. His
evidence was
that the messages could no longer be displayed on the
phone as he had deleted them by mistake after he acquired the phone
from
the complainant’s sister. The messages were also written
in Zulu, so the witness explained, which is another reason why he
deleted them from his phone – he is not fluent in Zulu, and was
unable to produce them at the time of the hearing of the
matter in
the Regional Court.
[28].
The evidence of the witness was of great assistance to the court
a
quo
. Importantly, his testimony, which in the main was not
challenged by the appellant, confirms the events which occurred
immediately
after the complainant had been raped. The extract from
the record relating to the relevant portion of the evidence of the
witness,
which, I emphasise, was undisputed, reads thus;
‘
He
then asked as to what were we wanting. That security officer then
responded by saying we want that girl whom you have kidnapped
inside
there. He first pretended to be surprised, but from there he walked
back into the house. When they both came back or walked
out, I am
talking about him and [the complainant], she then got out running.
She got out there, running and crying, she was in
possession of some
stuff. I was left with that security officer and we asked [the
appellant] to get into the car so that he could
go with us. We then
walked to the gate and from there went to the offices. When we got to
the offices, then police were phoned.’
[29].
The last State witness was the arresting officer, who in a nutshell
confirmed the arrest of
the appellant in the early hours of Thursday,
1 June 2017, after the complainant reported to him that she had been
raped by the
appellant. The extract from the appeal record, which
relates to the important part of the evidence of the Police Sergeant,
which
was uncontested and unchallenged by the appellant, reads as
follows:
‘
We
got to that church, inside the premises of that church next to the
gate. We found security members of the church and some other
church
members there. There was a young lady who was alleging that she was
raped. She alleged that she was raped by the accused
[before court]
and at that stage the accused was standing next to us.
She
alleged that she was raped in a house which is situated there in
Zuurbekom, that is where the accused is staying, according
to her.
That is when we took the accused and arrested him and placed him
inside our motor vehicle.’
[30].
That then brings me to the version of the appellant, whose evidence
was that, at the relevant
time, he ‘had a love relationship’
with the complainant, who he had met for the very first time about
two weeks or
so before the 31
st
of May 2017. His evidence
was that he had ‘proposed love to her’ on 19 May 2017,
which proposal she accepted gleefully
the very next day, whereafter
they met almost on a daily basis. He would collect her from the point
where the taxi dropped her
off after her trip from work in
Johannesburg. They would then go and buy some food (‘bunny
chows’), which they would
enjoy together, whereafter the
appellant would walk her back to her place on the church premises.
[31].
This was also the case, according to the appellant, on the night of
31 May 2017. He collected
the complainant at about 20:00 from the
taxi drop-off point. It was already dark and they walked together to
his place of residence
to get some money so that the appellant could
go and buy the complainant food as had become their daily routine.
Thereafter they
went to the shop, bought food and returned to his
place, to enjoy the food and to spent some time together as they had
agreed,
according to the appellant, the previous day. They arrived at
his place at about 22:00, and the appellant started preparing the
meal.
[32].
The appellant confirmed that he had locked his room and his
explanation for doing so was simply
that the door to his room opened
into a communal kitchen, which he was sharing with other occupants.
Locking the door, I understand,
was to give them some privacy.
[33].
After they had eaten, the evidence of the appellant was that they
started kissing. One thing
led to another and soon, so the evidence
of the appellant went, they were engaged in ‘passionate’
sexual intercourse
without the use of a condom as he had none. The
appellant did however explain that the complainant insisted that he
was not to
impregnate her. After they were done, they were just
chatting, and shortly thereafter they engaged in sexual intercourse
for a
second time. After the second round, so the appellant
testified, the two of them randomly decided on a game of playing
cards.
[34].
After the card game, the appellant took out a box containing some
personal photographs and they
looked at them together – all
lovey-dovey. Whilst going through the box of photographs, the
appellant stumbled onto a condom,
which, so the appellant testified,
was the trigger for the next round of passionate sexual intercourse.
[35].
Thereafter, they sat chatting on the bed. It was during this chat, so
the appellant stated,
that things went wrong, especially after he
mentioned to the complainant that he was getting married to his
fiancé during
December of that year. This infuriated the
complainant and she accused him of using her for sex and as a sex
slave. This, so the
evidence of the appellant went, was the reason
for the complainant making up the whole story about him raping her.
She felt humiliated
and was intent on getting back at him.
[36].
Under cross-examination, the appellant gave a further explanation as
to why, according to him,
the complainant fabricated her story and
made the serious accusations of rape against him. The extract from
the record relating
to that part of his testimony under
cross-examination reads as follows:
‘
Accused
:
Your worship, when I look at the fact that she made mention of the
fact that I am a Satanist, she chose that route, your worship,
or
idea, because she knew that at the Church they are totally against
Satanism and that will hit me hard. The fact that I have
raped her,
it only came later on her mind, after she had spoken about that with
the security guard.
…
… …
Prosecutor
:
Did you hear when the witnesses said that … … from your
place they all left, including yourself, you all left with
the bakkie
… … to the guardroom, I think where you were ultimately
arrested?
Accused
:
Yes.
Prosecutor
:
Now, if all of you were together, do you not think if this thing was
planned, somehow it will (indistinct), other people would
have heard
it, including yourself?
Accused
:
Your worship, when we left my place, myself [and two other persons]
were at the back of the bakkie and the two security guards
were in
the front with [the complainant]. I even explained to the court that
when we left my place we went to the elder's house,
seemingly they
were going to lodge a complaint that I kidnapped [the complainant].’
[37].
In sum, the appellant denied that he raped the complainant at his
place. He admitted that they
had sexual intercourse on three
occasions during that fateful night, but claimed that it was
consensual. His explanation for the
fact that she stormed out of his
place when help arrived, is that she became extremely agitated by the
fact that, after their passionate
lovemaking, he had nonchalantly
announced to her that he was getting married to another woman later
that year. He proffers no explanation,
let alone an acceptable one,
for the fact that, by all accounts, the appellant had sent messages
to her sister during the course
of the night to the effect that she
had been kidnapped by him and that she felt in mortal danger.
[38].
The evidence on behalf of the State I have summarised above. The
question is whether this evidence
is sufficient to prove the guilt of
the appellant beyond a reasonable doubt. Put another way, the
question is whether, at the end
of the trial, the evidence as a whole
was sufficient to ground the conviction of the appellant.
[39].
To determine whether the state had proved the guilt of the appellant
beyond a reasonable doubt,
the whole mosaic of evidence must be
considered. This evidence as a whole should be considered in deciding
whether the version
of the appellant that he had consensual sexual
intercourse with the complainant in his room, is reasonably possibly
true.
[40].
It
is trite that the State bears the onus of establishing the guilt of
the appellant beyond a reasonable doubt, and the converse
is that he
is entitled to be acquitted if there is a reasonable possibility that
he might be innocent (
R
v Difford
[1]
).
In
S
v Van der Meyden
[2]
,
which was adopted and affirmed by the SCA in
S
v Van Aswegen
[3]
,
it was reiterated that in whichever form the test is applied it must
be satisfied upon a consideration
of
all the evidence
.
Just as a court does not look at the evidence implicating the accused
in isolation to determine whether there is proof beyond
reasonable
doubt, so too does it not look at the exculpatory evidence in
isolation to determine whether it is reasonably possible
that it
might be true.
[41].
In the context of this matter, the version of the appellant fails to
account for the evidence
of the events which occurred during that
night in question – the SOS messages sent by the appellant to
her sister, whilst
or shortly after she had been engaged in
passionate sexual intercourse with the appellant, according to him;
the fact that, in
response to those messages, people came looking for
the complainant in the dead of night; and that very shortly after she
was rescued,
the complainant told the security guards and the police
that she had been raped three times by the appellant.
[42].
Additionally, the claim by appellant that the complainant fabricated
and concocted a rape story,
in the hour or so after she was rescued
by the security guards, prompted by a security guard, is far-fetched.
[43].
Section 208
of the CPA provides that a Court is entitled to convict an accused
person on the evidence of a single witness. Although
the complainant
was a single witness in respect of the rape incidents, the court
a
quo
evaluated her evidence with caution in accordance with
well-established judicial practice regarding single witnesses. See:
S
v Stevens
[4]
.
I am of the view that to the extent that the appellant was convicted
upon the evidence of a single witness, it was satisfactory
in all
material respects. Indeed, it was corroborated in important ways,
specifically regarding her rescue, what led to it and
the
photographic evidence.
[44].
Section 60 of the Sexual Offences Act provides: ‘Notwithstanding
any other law, a court
may not treat the evidence of a complainant in
criminal proceedings involving the alleged commission of a sexual
offence pending
before that court, with caution, on account of the
nature of the offence.’ While the Magistrate was alive to
possibilities
of fabrication on the part of both appellant and
complainant, this provision was not breached. Nevertheless, the Court
a quo
correctly found that the complainant's version is
substantially corroborated by independent evidence, notably the
evidence of her
sister and the sister’s friend. I have quoted
an extract from the friend’s evidence
supra
. That
evidence was not disputed by the appellant. The complainant, when she
got the opportunity, hurried out of the appellant’s
place and
shortly thereafter told people that she had been raped. In my view,
this is not the natural behaviour of a young woman
who had consensual
sexual intercourse. In any event, what are the chances of the
complainant making up a story, as claimed by the
appellant, as
elaborate, complicated and dramatic as the version she gave? As I
indicated in the introduction and as the cliché
goes, a story
like that of the complainant one just cannot make up – a
Christian church member (the keyboard player no less),
turning out to
be a practising Satanist, with a scar across his back and who reads
Satanic literature, who was preparing to perform
his belief’s
ritual.
[45].
I am of the view that the court
a quo
, after considering all
the probabilities and improbabilities and particularly the fact that
there is no onus on the appellant to
convince the court of the truth
of his explanation, correctly held that the evidence of the appellant
was not reasonably possibly
true and was false beyond a reasonable
doubt. The learned Regional Magistrate’s finding that
sufficient corroboration existed
for the evidence of the complainant
cannot be faulted. The improbability or implausibility of the
appellant’s version, particularly
the fact that on his version
the facts as testified to by the other state witnesses is not
accounted for, is starkly apparent,
and the motive of the appellant
contended for is far-fetched. The version of the appellant also does
not explain any of the events
and occurrences playing themselves out
outside of the confines of his story of all being well in the land
between him and the complainant
on the night.
[46].
In her written heads of argument, Ms Nel, who appeared on behalf of
the appellant, submitted
that there are a number of discrepancies and
material contradictions in the State’s case, which were not
considered by the
trial court in its assessment of the evidence.
These include the fact that complainant mentioned and referred to
certain important
occurrences for the first time during her
cross-examination. Those included: the fact that the appellant had
shown her a collection
of his personal photographs and in fact
discussed them with her; the fact that the appellant had explained to
her that he was able
to perform magic supposedly because of his
Satanic powers, which he demonstrated with the assistance of playing
cards; and that
she had telephonically spoken to her sister’s
friend and told her that she was ok.
[47].
Ms Nel submitted that these facts and details were purposefully
omitted by the complainant in
her evidence-in-chief in order to fit
in with her allegations of non-consensual sexual intercourse.
[48].
There were also other discrepancies, so it was submitted on behalf of
the appellant, notably
the contradictory versions given by the
complainant and the other State witnesses relating to the SOS
messages transmitted by the
complainant. On the basis of these
discrepancies in the State’s case, we were urged to find that
the version of the complainant
should have been rejected and that
that of the appellant is reasonably possibly true, which entitled him
to an acquittal.
[49].
I am not
persuaded by these submissions. There are almost always some
contradictions to be found in and between the evidence of
state
witnesses. If the inconsistencies and differences which exist are of
a relatively minor nature, which, in my view, is the
case
in
casu
,
and the sort of thing to be expected from honest but imperfect
recollection, observation and reconstruction, if anything the
contradictions points away from dishonesty or any type of conspiracy
between the witnesses. See:
S
v Mkohle
[5]
.
Moreover, the Regional Court was alive to the various discrepancies,
addressed in the judgment in the section 174 application
made after
the State closed its case.
[50].
As regards the criticism levelled against the evidence of the
complainant for her failure to
shout out for help and the fact that,
at least on one of her versions, she did not mention the rape
incidents to anyone until they
had all gathered near the security
offices, I am of the view that there is no merit in such critique.
The first point is that,
in evaluating the evidence before the court
a quo
, one should guard against adopting an armchair critic
approach. As correctly pointed out by the Regional Court, the
complainant
was fearing for her life. She thought that she would
never see her children again. And this fear for her would have been
real.
This is aptly demonstrated by the following excerpt from the
appeal record relating to her evidence-in-chief:
‘
[Complainant]:
I explained to her, your worship, that where I am at the moment, I am
at [the appellant’s] place, he kidnapped me and he
is
threatening to kill me, he is informing me that he is a Satanist.
Should anything happen to me that I do not come back at all,
please
take care of my kids at home.’
Prosecutor
:
Is it all that you wrote in the SMS? … …
Court
:
Do you want to take a short break? Yes,
Court
:
I think so. I see the witness has become a little [emotional], let us
just have a short break so that she can recompose herself.’
[51].
Secondly, as the complainant explained during her testimony,
the appellant threatened
her that if she screamed, that would be her
last scream ever. In the face of these threats, it could hardly be
expected of the
complainant to be a brave heart. So she decided to
comply.
[52].
The version of the complainant is, in my view, to be believed. The
same cannot be said of the
version of the appellant, who is compelled
to contend that the appellant’s version is fabricated on a
motive of revenge of
an angry lover and by a conspiracy of her family
and friends.
[53].
In any
event, as was pointed out by Majiedt JA in
Naidoo
v S
[6]
,
it is essential for an appeal court to remain cognisant of the
strictures on it as far as the trial court’s factual findings
are concerned. Absent demonstrable, material misdirections and
clearly erroneous findings, an appeal court is bound by the trial
court’s factual findings. (
S
v Hadebe & others
[7]
;
S v
Modiga
[8]
).
As was held by the Constitutional Court in
Mashongwa
v PRASA
[9]
,
it is not for an appellate court ‘to second-guess the
well-reasoned factual findings of the trial court’. We, as the
appeal court, are not the triers of fact at first instance.
[54].
The point is that, even if an appeal court has reservations about
certain aspects of a trial
court’s factual findings, it shall
interfere in those findings only in limited circumstances, and only
when there are demonstrable,
material misdirections and clearly
erroneous findings. In this case, I cannot come to such a conclusion.
[55].
I am accordingly of the view that there is no reason for disturbing
any of the factual findings
made by the court
a quo
. The case
against the appellant was overwhelming and the Regional Magistrate
was correct in his finding that the appellant raped
the complainant
three times, as per her evidence.
[56].
I am therefore satisfied that the appellant’s conviction should
be confirmed.
Sentence
[57].
I now turn to deal with sentence. The appellant was sentenced
effectively to direct imprisonment
for life. It is trite that an
appeal court can interfere with sentence only where the sentence is
affected by an irregularity or
misdirection entitling this court to
interfere.
[58].
Rape is a serious offence. Starkly so in this case. A young woman was
forcibly held against
her will by the appellant, whom she trusted, at
his place of residence, where he subjected her to rape on three
occasions.
[59].
A convenient starting point is the fact that the provisions of s
51(1) of the CLAA, read with
Part I of schedule 2 of the said Act,
apply. This means that a minimum sentence of imprisonment for life
finds application.
[60].
Section 51(1) of the CLAA reads as follows:
‘
(1)
Notwithstanding any other law, but subject to subsections (3) and
(6), a regional court or a High
Court shall sentence a person it has
convicted of an offence referred to in Part I of Schedule 2 to
imprisonment for life.’
[61].
Section (3) of the said Act provides as follows:
‘
(a)
If any court referred to in subsection (1) or (2) is satisfied that
substantial and compelling
circumstances exist which justify the
imposition of a lesser sentence than the sentence prescribed in those
subsections, it shall
enter those circumstances on the record of the
proceedings and must thereupon impose such lesser sentence: Provided
that if a regional
court imposes such a lesser sentence in respect of
an offence referred to Part 1 of Schedule 2, it shall have
jurisdiction to impose
a term of imprisonment for a period not
exceeding 30 years.
(aA)
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:
(i)
The complainant's previous sexual history;
(ii)
an apparent lack of physical injury to the complainant;
(iii)
an accused person's cultural or religious beliefs about rape; or
(iv)
any relationship between the accused person and the complainant prior
to the
offence being committed.’
[62].
Part I of Schedule 2 list the crime of ‘Rape as contemplated in
section 3 of the Criminal
Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters)
Amendment Act, 2007-
‘
(a)
when committed-
(i)
in circumstances where the victim was raped more than once
whether by the accused or by any co-perpetrator or accomplice;
(ii)
by more than one person, where such persons acted in the execution or
furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy;
(iii)
by a person who has been convicted of two or more offences of rape or
compelled
rape, but has not yet been sentenced in respect of such
convictions; or
(iv)
by a person, knowing that he has the acquired immune deficiency
syndrome or
the human immunodeficiency virus;
(b)
… … ’ [My emphasis].
[63].
For purposes of sentence, the learned Regional Magistrate took the
three convictions on the
charges of rape as one and imposed a
compulsory minimum sentence of direct imprisonment for life by virtue
of part I(a)((i) and
(iii) of schedule of Schedule 2. The question to
be asked is whether there were any substantial and compelling
circumstances justifying
a deviation from such minimum sentence.
[64].
Before I get to that issue, it may be appropriate at this juncture to
deal with a point raised
by Ms Nel in her heads of argument, which
relates to the fact that at the commencement of the trial, according
to the appeal record,
the appellant was not warned by the Court or
the prosecution that he faced a sentence of direct imprisonment for
life. This argument,
which concerns fair trial rights, can be dealt
with simply because the charge sheet expressly referred to the
provisions of s 51
and schedule 2 of the CLAA. Additionally, during
the trial the appellant was at all times legally represented.
[65].
In any
event, as correctly submitted in his written heads of argument by Mr
Market, Counsel for the State, in
S
v Khoza and Another
[10]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that a sentencing Court should
consider whether any prejudice had been suffered by the fact that
the
provisions of the minimum sentence legislation had not been brought
to the attention of an accused. The court held that prejudice
would
exist if there was a reasonable possibility that the defence or
response of the accused would have been different to that
adopted
during the trial.
In
casu
, I
am satisfied that a reasonable possibility does not exist that the
appellant would have conducted his defence differently had
he been
informed at the outset of the trial of the applicable provisions.
This legal point should therefore fail.
[66].
That brings me back to whether or not any substantial and compelling
circumstances existed in
the case of the appellant.
[67].
I take into
consideration what was stated by the SCA in
S
v Vilakazi
[11]
.
Nugent JA had this to say at par [58]:
‘
In
cases of serious crime the personal circumstances of the offender, by
themselves, will necessarily recede into the background.
Once it
becomes clear that the crime is deserving of a substantial period of
imprisonment the questions whether the accused is
married or single,
whether he has two children or three, whether or not he is in
employment, are in themselves largely immaterial
to what that period
should be, and those seem to me to be the kind of 'flimsy' grounds
that
Malgas
said should be avoided. But they are
nonetheless relevant in another respect. A material consideration is
whether the accused
can be expected to offend again. While that can
never be confidently predicted his or her circumstances might assist
in making
at least some assessment. In this case the appellant had
reached the age of 30 without any serious brushes with the law. His
stable
employment and apparently stable family circumstances are not
indicative of an inherently lawless character.’
[68].
It was necessary for the court to find the existence of substantial
and compelling circumstances
before it was entitled to impose a
lesser sentence. In considering whether substantial and compelling
circumstances were present,
the learned magistrate had regard to the
appellants’ personal circumstances and the fact that the
appellant was not a first
offender.
[69].
I understand Ms Nel’s contention in her written Heads of
Argument to be that the cumulative
effect of the appellant’s
personal circumstances should be regarded and treated as substantial
and compelling circumstances.
[70].
Those personal circumstances are the following: When he was
sentenced, the appellant was 31
years old, with one minor dependent
child, for whose maintenance he was solely responsible; before he was
arrested for the offences
in question, the appellant earned a living
as a self-employed carpenter, earning approximately R4000 per month;
he was a first
offender, having had no previous brushes with the law;
as regards his level of education, he did not complete Grade 12, but
instead
obtained a certificate in Governance; and, by the time he was
sentenced, he had been in custody, awaiting trial, for a period in
excess of one year.
[71].
Therefore, so the argument on behalf of the appellant went,
substantial and compelling circumstances
existed in his case, which
ought to have resulted in a deviation from the compulsory minimum
sentence of life imprisonment. I cannot
agree with this submission.
To borrow from
S v Vilakazi
(supra), because of the
seriousness of the crimes of which the appellant had been convicted,
his personal circumstances, by themselves,
will necessarily recede
into the background.
[72].
I am satisfied that, the learned Regional Magistrate properly
considered whether there were
substantial and compelling
circumstances to deviate from the minimum sentences provided for in
respect of the offences under the
relevant provisions of section
51(1) of the CLAA as read with part I of schedule 2 thereof, and also
carefully considered the triad
of factors relevant to sentencing,
namely the nature of the offence, the personal circumstances of the
appellant, including his
moral blameworthiness and the interests of
society by which I include the interests of the victim.
[73].
The appellant’s appeal against his sentence should therefore
also fail.
Order
In
the result, the following order is made: -
(1)
The appellant’s appeal against his conviction is dismissed.
(2)
The appellant’s appeal against his sentence is dismissed.
(3)
The appellant’s conviction by the Westonaria Regional Court and
his sentence be and are hereby confirmed.
________________________________
L
R ADAMS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
11
th
November 2021 – The matter was disposed of
without an oral hearing in terms of
s 19(a)
of the
Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013
.
JUDGMENT
DATE:
21
st
January 2022
FOR
THE APPELLANT:
Adv A Nel
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Thomas Nel Attorneys, Krugersdorp
FOR
THE RESPONDENT:
Adv G E Market
INSTRUCTED
BY:
The Office of the National Director of Public Prosecutions,
Johannesburg
[1]
R
v Difford
1937
AD 370
at 373, 383
[2]
S
v Van der Meyden
1999
(2) SA 79 (W)
[3]
S
v Van Aswegen,
2001
(2) SACR 97
(SCA)
[4]
S v
Stevens
2004 JDR 0505 (SCA) at 17
[5]
S v
Mkohle
1990 (1) SACR 95(A)
at and see too, e g,
S
v Sithole
(54/06)
[2006] ZASCA 173
(28 September 2006).
[6]
Naidoo
v S
(333/2018)
[2019] ZASCA 52
(1 April 2019)
[7]
S v
Hadebe & others
1997 (2) SACR 641
(SCA) at 645E-F
[8]
S v
Modiga
[2015] ZASCA 94
;
[2015] 4 All SA 13
(SCA) para 23
[9]
Mashongwa
v PRASA
[2015] ZACC 36
;
2016 (3) SA 528
(CC) para 45
[10]
S v
Khoza and Another
2019 (1) SACR 251
(SCA) at paras 10 to 12
[11]
S v
Vilakazi
2009 (1) SACR 552
(SCA).
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