Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 15South Africa
Mzinyane v S (A166/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 15 (25 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mzinyane v S (A166/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 15 (25 January 2022)
Mzinyane v S (A166/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 15 (25 January 2022)
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sino date 25 January 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
A166/2019
Reportable
No
Of
interest to other Judges No
Revised:
Yes_
Date:
25/01/2022
In
the matter between:
BONGANI
ARNOLD MZINYANE
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
J
U D G M E N T
LEKOKOTLA
AJ
:
1
The
appellant was charged with kidnapping, 4 counts of rape and assault
with intent to do grievous bodily harm of N[....] M[....]
on the
morning of 27 April 2008. He appeared before the
honourable
magistrate Mpofu in the Protea Magistrates Court.
2
He pleaded not guilty to all
six (6) charges and made a plea explanation in terms of
section 115
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
by making a statement
through his attorney wherein he set out the basis of his defence.
3
At the conclusion of
the trial,
on
20 April 2009,
the
appellant was convicted of kidnapping and three counts of rape. He
was acquitted on the charge of assault
with
intent to do grievous bodily harm. He was sentenced to 25 years
imprisonment in terms of section 51 of the Criminal Law Amendment
Act
Sexual Offences and Related Matters Act, Act 32 of 2007 read together
with sections 256, 257 and 281 of the Criminal Law Procedure
Act, Act
51 of 1977 as well as the Criminal Law Amendment Act, Act 105 of
1997. All counts were taken as one for purposes of sentence.
4
On
25 February 2016 the appellant brought an application for leave to
appeal against the sentence imposed by the learned magistrate.
This
application was granted by the learned magistrate.
5
The appeal against
sentence was set down for hearing in 2020. However, the appeal was
removed from the roll in order to allow appellant
to apply for leave
to appeal against conviction as well. Leave to appeal against
conviction was granted by the court
a
quo
on 12 October 2021.
The present appeal thus lies against conviction and sentence.
6
The complainant’s
evidence was the following: On 27 April 2008 she had gone with her
friends to a street bash or party in
Diepkloof, which is near her
home in Soweto. She then heard about and personally witnessed the
appellant assaulting his girlfriend,
Arlena, who is the complainant’s
friend. The complainant testified that she knew the appellant as the
boyfriend of her friend
Arlena and they also stayed in the same
street. She took the appellant as a friend as he was Arlena’s
boyfriend.
7
Arlena escaped from the
appellant’s assault. Thereafter, the appellant, who was in the
company of a male friend and who were
both carrying golf sticks,
approached the complainant who was with her friend Funani. The
appellant embraced her and he forcibly
pulled her to leave the street
bash with him. When the complainant resisted, he hit her with a golf
club on her knees. The appellant’s
friend was also pulling
Funani, the second state witness in this case, who was likewise
resisting him.
8
The appellant started
dragging the complainant on the tar road. People were afraid to
assist her, since they knew what kind of the
person the appellant
was. Simultaneously, the appellant’s friend was grabbing Funani
behind them and all of them were going
to the same destination.
9
The appellant continued to
drag the complainant on the tar road for approximately 50 meters
until they reached a corner house that
was opposite the garage, which
the appellant stated was his maternal house. Throughout that time
there were a lot of people at
the party or street bash that observed
this but none of them would help her because they were afraid of the
appellant.
10
When they arrived at the
corner house, she was crying and wanted to urinate. She then went to
the toilet. The appellant entered
inside the toilet before she could
complete buckling her belt. When the complainant asked the appellant
to leave the toilet, he
hit her with his open hand. He told her to
undress and she refused. The appellant then undressed her while
hitting her and ordered
her to climb on top of a toilet seat. She
refused to comply.
11
The appellant started
hitting her with a golf club and slapped her with an open hand in her
face. She sustained injuries to her
face and the head; her face was
swollen and red with a slightly open injury on her head.
12
The appellant ordered her to
climb onto a toilet seat and to face the opposite direction. He then
inserted his penis in her vagina
and had sexual intercourse with her.
When he was finished, he said they must move out of the toilet as he
did not ‘feel it’
properly. She was made to lie down on
the lawn after the appellant had dragged her from the toilet to the
lawn, as she was resisting.
The appellant inserted his penis in her
vagina for the second time on the lawn. The appellant appeared to be
nervous while doing
so and he then said they must move away from the
lawn.
13
They subsequently moved to
the
stoep
where he again inserted his penis into her vagina for the third time.
He did not use a condom in any of those instances.
14
Thereafter, the appellant
ordered the complainant to put on her clothes and ordered her to
leave the house with him. The complainant
managed to put on her
trousers but carried her panties and belt in her hands. They arrived
at another house.
15
When they got to the second
house (appellant’s father’s house) there was an elderly
man, who was either the appellant’s
father or uncle who opened
the door for them. This man saw the appellant crying but he said
nothing. The appellant then pushed
the complainant towards the
bedroom.
16
Inside the bedroom at the
appellant’s father’s house, the appellant ordered the
complainant to put her panties and belt
that she had been carrying in
her hands down on the table and to take off her trouser. She put down
the panties and belt but refused
to take off her trouser at which
stage the appellant hit her twice with a golf club in her head and
she started bleeding from her
head.
17
The appellant inserted his
penis into her vagina and had sexual intercourse with her inside the
bedroom. After that, the appellant
informed the complainant that he
had ejaculated. He never got off her after saying he had ejaculated.
Instead, he ordered the complainant
to stop making noise as she was
crying at that stage. He then proceeded to have sexual intercourse
with her for the fifth time,
as the appellant did not take out his
penis from her vagina. He eventually stopped. He allowed her to go to
urinate and that is
when she got a chance to run away from the house
through the kitchen door and into the street. She was still naked,
but kept running.
She ran to her home. When she got there, she found
her younger sister, who was 12 years old at the house. She could not
tell her
what had happened to her as she was too young.
18
At no stage did the
complainant consent to sexual intercourse with the appellant.
19
The following morning,
around 7h30, the complainant’s friend Lebogang came to her home
to check on her. She told Lebogang
about her rape the previous night
after Lebogang enquired from her what was wrong after seeing that she
was crying. Lebogang advised
her to go to the police station. Even
though she was reluctant at the beginning because of the identity of
the appellant, she eventually
went to report the matter to the
police, accompanied by her friend Lebogang. She was then taken to the
doctor at Nthabiseng Centre
for examination. She testified that she
had reported her injuries to the doctor, including an open wound
injury on her head, sustained
as a result of being hit by the golf
stick by the appellant.
20
After her examination, the
police officer drove her home and informed her family about her rape
and that she had attended the street
bash the previous night. Her
family never approved of her going to bashes. They never would have
consented to her going to the
street bash or party the previous
night.
21
The complainant could not
say whether the appellant ejaculated in any of the sexual encounters,
except for the one occasion, after
having sexual intercourse with the
appellant inside the bedroom of his father’s house, whereafter
he had informed her that
he had ejaculated. She testified that she
could not say whether the appellant had ejaculated on the other
occasions, as she did
not know. .
22
The complainant testified
that this incident had been her first sexual encounter. Her testimony
in this regard was questioned in
light of the fact that the doctor
who had examined her after the rape had recorded in the J88, as
confirmed by him during oral
evidence, that during his examination of
her in the afternoon of 27 April 2008, she had informed him that she
had had a previous
sexual encounter six months prior, on which
occasion her partner had used a condom. The complainant denied having
given this information
to the doctor and stated that she did not know
where the doctor got this information from.
23
Immediately after her
testimony, the court, prosecutor and the defence observed that the
complainant was well developed for her
age and appeared slightly
older than 16 years old.
24
She testified that she was
15 years old at the time the offences were committed, and that she
was 16 years old at the time of giving
evidence in court.
25
The state’s second
witness was Funani Matshikiri, who was with the complainant at the
street bash or party on the day of the
incident. She was 16 years old
when she testified. Her testimony was that she knew the appellant
through his girlfriend Arlena,
who was also her friend. She therefore
also considered the appellant her friend as a result. But she had not
known the appellant
for a long time prior to 27 April 2008. In fact,
she had known him since the previous year (2007) because Arlena only
started attending
her school in 2007.
26
She confirmed a lot of the
complainant’s testimony, which is that on 27 April 2008, she
together with the complainant and
other friends attended a street
bash or party when they saw the appellant assault his girlfriend
Arlena, in full view of the people
who attended the party and who did
not help Arlena or intervene in any way. Arlena subsequently managed
to escape.
27
Immediately after Arlena’s
escape, the appellant and his male friend started pulling Funani and
the complainant. The appellant’s
friend slapped Funani as she
was resisting. Neither Funani nor the complainant were drinking.
28
The appellant and his
friend, who were both carrying golf sticks or golf clubs, started
pulling the complainant and Fuani away from
the party, with the
appellant and the complainant being ahead of Funani and the
appellant’s friend. The appellant was assaulting
the
complainant by hitting her with the golf stick on her knees and also
on the head. The complainant started bleeding from the
head and
Funani witnessed this. He was dragging the complainant on the tar
road. All of these events took place in full view of
the street bash
goers who never assisted the complainant or her friend at any stage.
29
The appellant and his friend
took the complainant and Funani to the appellant’s maternal
home in Zone 5, Diepkloof. When they
arrived at the house, the
complainant indicated that she wanted to go to the toilet. She went.
Before the complainant exited the
toilet, the appellant entered the
toilet. She then heard the complainant screaming, asking the
appellant to leave her alone. The
appellant’s friend told
Funani not to bother them as there was nothing going on inside the
toilet.
30
The appellant’s friend
then got distracted by a friend of his whom he decided to go and
speak to on the street, from whom
he was asking for cigarettes. At
that stage Funani managed to run away from that house and thus
escaped the appellant’s friend.
She ran across the street and
went to her friend’s home, Mpumi, as it was close by. When they
opened the door for her at
Mpumi’s home, she managed to sleep
there. She never tried calling for help or calling the police because
there was no one
in the street at that time and also because she was
scared. In any event, when she got to Mpumi’s home everyone
there appeared
drunk, so she simply found a place to sleep and she
slept there.
31
She denied that she and the
appellant’s male friend never went to the corner house next to
the garage (the appellant’s
maternal home) or that they
disappeared to go elsewhere along the way. She confirmed that she did
not see what happened inside
the toilet when the appellant and the
complainant were inside there. She only heard the complainant
screaming asking the appellant
to leave her alone.
32
Funani confirmed that the
complainant has a boyfriend but stated that the complainant has not
had sex with her boyfriend. The prosecutor
raised an objection to
this question, but the court allowed it as it had been raised by the
court.
33
Funani testified that she
next saw the complainant later that day after she returned from the
police station. The complainant told
her that when Funani heard her
screaming from inside the toilet, the appellant was raping her inside
the toilet and that she had
laid a charge of rape against him at the
police station. The complainant never told her about any other place
where she was raped
as Funani only saw them both inside the toilet
and soon thereafter manged to escape from the house.
34
The third state witness was
Lebogang Baloyi, who was 17 years old at the time of her testimony.
She testified that she knows the
complainant because at the time of
the incident, she was living at her (Lebogang’s) home. The
complainant had been living
with Lebogang for two months and was not
living with her grandmother at that time. She also knew the appellant
because he was Arlena’s
boyfriend. Arlena was also her friend.
35
She testified that she did
not go to the street bash that the complainant and her friends went
to. However, when the complainant
arrived back home in the early
hours of 27 April 2008, she (Lebogang) had just woken up. She only
managed to speak to the complainant
later that morning. The
complainant, who appeared heartbroken, told her that the appellant
had raped her four times the previous
night, (i) on top of the toilet
[roof]; (ii) on the lawn [garden]; (iii) on the
stoep
;
and (iv) and (v) twice in the bedroom.
36
In her statement to the
police Lebogang had written that the complainant told her that she
was raped three times, without specifying
the areas where the three
rapes had occurred. From her testimony, it appeared that she
initially forgot the rape on the
stoep
but she soon remembered it afterwards.
37
Lebogang then accompanied
the complainant to the police station where they made a statement.
38
Lebogang noticed that the
complainant’s clothes were dirty, similar to those of a person
who had been dragged on the floor.
However, she did not see any
injuries on the complainant.
39
The fourth state witness was
Doctor Lekhibi, who examined the complainant at the Nthabiseng
Support Centre at the Chris Hani Baragwanath
Hospital.
40
The doctor’s testimony
was that he examined the complainant who was 15 years old at the time
around 14h00 on 27 April 2008.
He observed that she had dirty blood
on her clothes. The complainant informed him that the appellant had
taken her from the street
bash to Zone 5 Diepkloof and had raped her
around 2h00 in the morning. Also, that the appellant had assaulted
her many times on
her face.
41
The doctor testified that
the complainant had no clinical evidence of drugs or alcohol and that
he did not observe any injuries
on the complainant, such as an open
wound injury, which he would have been able to see when he examined
her and would have attended
to it first before completing the rest of
his examination of her. The complainant’s testimony was that
she did not know why
the doctor did not see or record the injury on
her head.
42
The complainant’s
testimony was that she did not get injured on her private parts.
However, the doctor testified that the
complainant’s posterior
fourchette had a fresh tear; that her hymen was gapping and had
swelling and also had a cleft at
three o’clock and five o’clock
and was bruised. All of these injuries were consistent with forceful
and recurring penetration.
The fresh tear indicated recent sexual
intercourse and not the one which she had indicated to the doctor
that she had experienced
six months prior.
43
The complainant had
testified that the first sexual encounter with the appellant was her
first time, which she confirmed under re-examination,
meaning that
she had never had sexual intercourse before. This again is in
contrast to what she told the doctor since she, according
to the
doctor, had told him that she last had sexual intercourse six months
before the incident involving the appellant.
44
The doctor’s testimony
was that the fresh tear on the complainant’s posterior
fourchette, a gapping hymen with a swelling
and a cleft that was
bruised at three o’clock and five o’clock are all
indicative of recent trauma to the tissues and
suggested a lack of
lubrication by the female which is also suggestive of a lack of
consent to sexual intercourse and more than
one round of sexual
intercourse, possibly four or five rounds of sex, although he could
not give the exact number of rounds. In
short, these injuries were
indictive of recent repeated acts of sexual intercourse.
The
appellant’s version in terms of the Plea Explanation
45
The appellant’s
version in terms of the Plea Explanation made by him in terms of
section 115
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
is that on 27
April 2008 he agreed with the complainant to leave the street party.
At all times, he thought that the complainant
was 16 years old and
could give valid consent to sex. He only had sex once with the
complainant. He denied having sex with her
on more than four
different occasions or without her consent. He also denied ever
assaulting the complainant.
46
In his testimony, the
appellant confirmed what he had stated in his plea explanation. He
confirmed that he attended a street bash
and testified that he did
not drink alcohol on 27 April 2008. Neither did the complainant
N[....], her friend Funani or his friend
Stompie, who was with him at
that time. He denied assaulting Arlena on the day in question and in
fact did not even speak to her
because she was in her brother’s
company at the same street bash. He testified that he had been
friends with the complainant
since 2006 even though the complainant
had testified that she was still living in KwaZulu Natal in 2006,
which evidence was confirmed
by her friend Funani. The accused
testified that he also considered Funani a friend.
47
After having spent three
hours at the bash, his friend Stompie and Funani stated that they
were leaving. He then asked the complainant
if she wanted to come
with him and she agreed. Stompie and Funani then went their separate
ways to Stompie’s home.
48
He testified that the
complainant went to his father’s home with him out of her own
volition. It took them twenty minutes
to walk there. When they got to
his father’s house, he (the father) opened the door for them
and asked the complainant who
she was and where she lives, and she
replied to the questions.
49
The appellant’s
testimony was that when they reached his bedroom, he and the
complainant had consensual sex once in his bedroom.
50
When asked why the
complainant would have accused him of rape, the appellant testified
that that was possibly because he had asked
her not tell his
girlfriend Arlena that he had had sex with the complainant. When
asked how this could be the case, given that
he testified that he and
the complainant had had a discussion prior to engaging in sexual
intercourse that because they both had
their own partners, they were
going to keep their sexual intercourse a secret. This was prior to
the sexual intercourse taking
place, on the appellant’s
version.
The
Magistrates Judgment
51
The learned magistrate
correctly recorded all five incidents of sexual penetration in line
with the evidence given by the complainant,
but in her judgment, she
only found the accused guilty of three counts of rape without
specifying which one was excluded from the
four counts with which the
appellant was charged.
52
The learned magistrate held
that she could not brand the complainant a reliable witness, however,
stating that this did not mean
that she should reject her evidence
wholly. She found that the complainant was likely assaulted but had
exaggerated her injuries,
particularly concerning being hit by a golf
stick on the head and bleeding as a result. Even though Funani
confirmed the assault
on the complainant’s head, Lebogang, to
whom the report of rape was first made, did not see any injuries on
the complainant.
Neither did the doctor who examined her. However,
the doctor did observe blood on the complainant’s clothes.
53
In relation to the
complainant’s testimony in court that she had never had sexual
intercourse prior to the rape, while the
doctor had recorded in the
J88, as confirmed in his testimony, that the complainant had informed
him that she had indeed had sexual
intercourse six months prior, the
magistrate found that the complainant’s version on this aspect
was not true.
54
Even though the magistrate
concluded that the complainant had lied about the head injury and her
sexual history, she had to weigh
this against the totality of the
evidence, including the many allegations made by the complainant
which were left unchallenged
by the defence. These included, amongst
others, the evidence that the complainant and Funani were both taken
by the accused and
his male friend from the party to a corner house
next to the garage; the fact that the complainant’s clothes
were dirty,
as observed by the doctor; the fact that the complainant
was sober, as confirmed by the doctor; the fact that the complainant
was
crying after leaving the street bash whilst in the appellant’s
company; what the interaction was with the man that the complainant
and the appellant found at the second (paternal) house, with the
complainant arriving there in a distressed state, crying; and
the
fact that the appellant had entered the toilet at the first
(maternal) house whilst the complainant was still inside the cubicle
and the complainant’s reaction thereto by shouting at him to
leave her alone or to leave the toilet, which de declined to
do.
55
As far as the complainant’s
lie about her virginity is concerned, the magistrate observed that
some young girls wanted to
come and appear chaste before everyone,
which could be the reason why she testified that this had been her
first sexual encounter.
This aspect of her evidence did not, however,
destroy the pivotal evidence that she was violated by the appellant.
The other aspect
that the magistrate found not true about the
complainant’s testimony was that she had been beaten by the
golf stick on her
head and had bled as a result. That is no doubt why
the magistrate acquitted the appellant on the charge of assault with
intent
to do grievous bodily harm.
56
Despite her having concluded
that the appellant had lied about being assaulted with the golf stick
on the head, the magistrate accepted
her evidence about being
violated sexually against her will. The magistrate however found that
the appellant had raped the complainant
three times and not four
times. She did not specify the specific counts of rape that she found
the appellant guilty of, nor on
which count on the appellant had been
acquitted. The magistrate also found the accused guilty of
kidnapping.
57
The learned magistrate
sentenced the appellant to 25 years imprisonment, instead of life
imprisonment that is statutorily prescribed
where an accused is
convicted of more than one count of rape. When the magistrate asked
the appellant’s counsel to address
her on substantial and
compelling circumstances for deviating from the minimum sentence of
life imprisonment, he indicated that
he could find none.
58
It was the prosecutor who in
fact asked the learned magistrate to deviate from the prescribed
minimum sentence on the basis of the
appellant’s youth at the
time of the offence, as he was only 19 years old; and that despite
the appellant specifically testifying
that he had not consumed
alcohol that day, the prosecutor still asked the court to factor in
that alcohol may have heavily influenced
the appellant’s
actions.
59
The learned magistrate also
found that the socio-economic circumstances of the appellant had a
role to play on how he conducted
himself. Instead of imposing the
statutorily prescribed minimum sentence of life imprisonment, she
imposed 25 years imprisonment
on the appellant.
The
Appeal
60
As stated above, the
appellant initially appealed against sentence only, but by the time
the matter was heard, the appeal lay against
conviction as well.
61
The appellant sought
condonation for the late filing of the appeal, which was caused by
the lack of timeous legal representation
as a result of a lack of
financial resources that had to be obtained from his family to pay
for a legal representative to assist
him with the appeal.
62
The application for
condonation was not seriously opposed and considering that no
prejudice was shown, it is in the interests of
justice to grant
condonation for the late filing of the appeal.
Appeal
on conviction
63
The appellant raised five
grounds of appeal on conviction. These are that:
63.1
The age of the
complainant was not proven through documentary evidence and therefore
amounted to hearsay evidence;
63.2
The trial court erred
after concluding that the complainant was not a reliable witness, but
continued to convict the appellant on
three counts of rape based on
her evidence;
63.3
That despite a number
of contradictions in the evidence of the complainant and that of
Funani against that of the doctor and Lebogang
Baloyi regarding the
injuries sustained by the complainant and the history of her previous
sexual encounter, the accused was still
convicted;
63.4
The trial court erred
in finding that the complainant knew what ejaculation is and that the
appellant had ejaculated in all the
instances where he had sexual
intercourse with the complainant;
63.5
The court erred in
finding that the doctor found that there was forced penetration.
64
I deal with each of the
grounds of appeal in turn below.
Age
of the Complainant
65
In his heads of argument as
well as at the hearing, counsel for the appellant contended that it
was hearsay evidence that the complainant
was 15 years old at the
time of the incident. This is after the complainant had testified
that she was born on 11 February 1993
and that she was 16 years old
at the time of her testimony on 20 January 2009. Furthermore, the
doctor who examined the complainant
found that her pelvis was not
well developed at the time of the incident, in line with a person who
was 15 years old at the time.
66
It is common cause that when
the court, prosecutor and the defence observed the complainant, they
recorded that she was well developed
for her age and that she
appeared slightly older than 16 years old. This, counsel for the
appellant used to support the contention
that there was no proof that
the accused was younger than sixteen years old.
67
During the hearing, counsel
for the appellant rightfully conceded that since the issue of the
complainant’s age was never
challenged during the trial, little
purpose is served by questioning it on appeal. In any event, this
argument takes the matter
no further since multiple counts of rape
attract a sentence of life imprisonment irrespective of the age of
the complainant.
Reliability
of the Complainant
68
On the issue of whether or
not she had had previous sexual intercourse, the learned magistrate
found that even though this is inconsistent
with the evidence
presented by the doctor concerning what the complainant had disclosed
to him, namely, that she had indeed had
sexual intercourse prior to
the incident involving the appellant, she may have lied in order to
present herself as chaste. Counsel
for the respondent correctly
argued that the circumstances under which the complainant testified
and the identities of those who
were present when she testified at
trial, remain unknown. But more significantly, counsel for the
respondent also correctly conceded
that the complainant’s
previous sexual history is in any event irrelevant in a matter of
this nature and hence in this appeal.
69
The only remaining issue of
relevance in respect of which the learned magistrate found the
evidence of the complainant to be unreliable,
is in relation to the
complainant’s evidence that she was hit by the golf stick on
the head, suffering an open wound on the
head and resultant bleeding
on the head. The magistrate held that this did not necessarily render
the rest of her evidence unreliable.
In any event, the learned
magistrate acquitted the appellant on the charge of assault with
intent to do grievous bodily harm. Therefore,
this ground of appeal
lacks merit.
70
The
idea
that
where
a court makes a credibility finding and rejects a witness’
version as unreliable, it has the effect of the evidence
being
disqualified from further consideration, consequent to which no
evidential weight can be attached to such witness’s
evidence,
was considered and rejected in the majority decision of the Full
Court in
Molaza
v S
[1]
where
the court affirmed what was stated in Sithole v S
[2]
concerning
the proper approach to the adjudication of evidence, as follows:
“
[8] The
State bears the onus of establishing the guilt of an accused beyond
reasonable doubt and he is entitled to be acquitted
if there is a
reasonable doubt that he might be innocent. The onus has to be
discharged upon a consideration of all the evidence.
A court does not
look at the evidence implicating the accused in isolation to
determine whether there is proof beyond reasonable
doubt nor does it
look at the exculpatory evidence in isolation to determine whether it
is reasonably possible that it might be
true. The correct approach is
set out in the following passage from
Mosephi
and others v R
LAC (1980 – 1984)
57 at 59 F-H:
‘
The question
for determination is whether, in the light of all the evidence
adduced at the trial, the guilt of the appellants was
established
beyond reasonable doubt. The breaking down of a body of evidence into
its component parts is obviously a useful guide
to a proper
understanding and evaluation of it. But, in doing so, one must guard
against a tendency to focus too intently upon
the separate and
individual part of what is, after all, a mosaic of proof. Doubts
about one aspect of the evidence led in a trial
may arise when that
aspect is viewed in isolation. Those doubts may be set at rest when
it is evaluated again together with all
the other available evidence.
That is not to say that a broad and indulgent approach is appropriate
when evaluating evidence. Far
from it. There is no substitute for a
detailed and critical examination of each and every component in a
body of evidence. But,
once that has been done, it is necessary to
step back a pace and consider the mosaic as a whole. If that is not
done, one may fail
to see the wood for the trees’.
In weighing the evidence of a single
State witness a court is required to consider its merits and
demerits, decide whether it is
trustworthy and whether, despite any
shortcomings in the evidence, it is satisfied that the truth had been
told. It must state
its reasons for preferring the evidence of the
State witness to that of the accused so that they can be considered
in the light
of the record. In applying the onus the court must also,
where the accused’s version is said to be improbable, only
convict
where it can pertinently find that the accused’s
version is so improbable that it cannot be reasonably possibly true.”
(Emphasis provided)
71
The magistrate correctly
weighed the totality of the evidence, the merits and demerits of each
side’s versions in determining
whether the appellant’s
guilt was proven beyond reasonable doubt.
Number
of Contradictions on the Evidence of the Complainant
72
Other than the complainant’s
previous sexual history, the other contradictions that were present
in the complainant’s
testimony related to her alleged assault
by the golf stick on the head, suffering an open wound as a result
and bleeding on the
head. For reasons set out above, this ground of
appeal should also be dismissed.
73
In
terms
of
s 208
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
, an accused can be
convicted of any offence on the single evidence of any competent
witness. It is, however, a well-established
judicial practice that
the evidence of a single witness should be approached with caution,
his or her merits as a witness being
weighed against factors which
militate against his or her credibility (see, for example,
S
v Webber
1971
(3) SA 754
(A)
at 758G-H). The correct approach to the application of this so-called
‘cautionary rule’ was set out by Diemont JA
in
S
v Sauls and Others
1981
(3) SA 172
(A)
at 180E-G
as
follows:
“
There
is no rule of thumb, test or formula to apply when it comes to a
consideration of the credibility of the single witness…
The
trial judge will weigh his evidence, will consider its merits and
demerits and, having done so, will decide whether it is trustworthy
and whether, despite the fact that there are shortcomings or defects
or contradictions in the testimony, he is satisfied that the
truth
has been told. The cautionary rule referred to by De Villiers JP in
1932 [in
R
v Mokoena
1932
OPD 79
at
80] may be a guide to a right decision but it does not mean “that
the appeal must succeed if any criticism, however slender,
of the
witnesses’ evidence were well-founded” (per Schreiner JA
in
R
v Nhlapo
(AD
10 November 1952) quoted in
R
v Bellingham
1955
(2) SA 566
(A)
at 569.) It has been said more than once that the exercise of caution
must not be allowed to displace the exercise of common
sense”
74
The correct approach to the
evaluation of evidence in a criminal trial was enunciated by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in S
v
Chabalala
2003 (1) SACR
134
(SCA), at paragraph 15, as follows:
“
The
trial court's approach to the case was, however, holistic and in this
it was undoubtedly right: S v Van Aswegen
2001
(2) SACR 97
(SCA). The correct approach is to weigh up all the
elements which point towards the guilt of the accused against all
those which
are indicative of his innocence, taking proper account of
inherent strengths and weaknesses, probabilities and improbabilities
on both sides and, having done so, to decide whether the balance
weighs so heavily in favour of the State as to exclude any reasonable
doubt about the accused's guilt. The result may prove that one scrap
of evidence or one defect in the case for either party (such
as the
failure to call a material witness concerning an identity parade) was
decisive but that can only be an
ex
post facto
determination
and a trial court (and counsel) should avoid the temptation to latch
on to one (apparently) obvious aspect without
assessing it in the
context of the full picture presented in evidence... .”
75
Higher
courts have cautioned that an accused’s claim to the benefit of
a doubt, when it may be said to exist, must not be
derived from
speculation but must rest upon a reasonable and solid foundation
created either by positive evidence or gathered from
reasonable
inferences which are not in conflict with, or outweighed by, the
proved facts of the case.
[3]
76
In
the determination of its verdict, the trial court considered the
totality of the evidence. See: S v van der Meyden
[4]
.
Secondly, the trial court accepted that the onus was on the
prosecution to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt.
77
The
appellant’s version at trial was that he had consensual sexual
intercourse with the complainant on one occasion only.
The
trial court rejected the defence of consensual sexual intercourse
relating to this single admitted act.
Consensual
sex occurred once, on the appellant’s version, at his paternal
home (i.e., the second house mentioned in the evidence
of the
relevant state witnesses). This version, when weighed against the
totality of the relevant evidence – (such as: (i)
the
complainant’s prolonged state of emotional distress and her
continual crying throughout the ordeal to which she was exposed,
which crying, on the appellant’s own version, was at one stage
so loud that he told her to stop making a noise; (ii) the
complainant’s resistance of the appellant’s advances, as
corroborated by the state witness; (iii) the fact that the
complainant’s version of a first house (at which she was
raped), was corroborated by Funani who had herself been taken to
the
first house and who was present when the appellant entered the toilet
with the complainant still inside; (iv) her running away
from the
appellant at the second house as soon as she was able to, where
further acts of penetration occurred; (v) her visible
and prolonged
state of emotional distress, which endured until the time that she
reported the incidents of rape to her friends;
(vi) the doctor’s
evidence of vaginal injuries, which were consistent with more than
one instance of forceful penetration)
– was correctly rejected
by the magistrate as false. The magistrate considered all the
evidence holistically, and weighed
up elements which pointed towards
the guilt of the appellant against those which were indicative of his
innocence (as evidenced
by the appellant’s acquittal on the
charge of assault GBH),
taking
proper account of inherent strengths and weaknesses, probabilities
and improbabilities on both sides in concluding that the
state had
discharged its onus in proving the guilt of the accused beyond
reasonable doubt.
Whether
the Complainant knew whether ejaculation occurred
78
It is clear from the
complainant’s evidence that she did not know whether the
appellant had ejaculated after each instance
of penetration, save for
the one instance mentioned earlier in the judgment.
79
In
her judgment, the magistrate alluded to the question asked by the
trial court, namely, how the complainant differentiated between
the
five sexual encounters described by her. In the judgment, the learned
magistrate incoorectly recorded the complainant’s
answer as
follows:: “
she
[the
complainant]
indicated
that she knew about ejaculation and that each time he
[the
appellant]
would
ejaculate before he came on her again.”
In
this regard, the magistrate committed a misdirection. She appeared to
be swayed by an incorrect understanding of the complainant’s
evidence, which was to the opposite effect, as indicated earlier in
the judgment.
[5]
The misdirection aforesaid does not, however, affect the outcome of
this appeal, as indicated later in the judgment.
80
Counsel for the appellant
conceded that ejaculation is not a prerequisite for rape.
81
The
vexed question of when an act of rape starts and when it ends was
considered in Molaza
[6]
in
the light of various authorities that were conveniently summarised in
the majority judgment.
82
In
the present case, the complainant testified that the appellant had
“raped” her five times, three times at the first
house,
each instance in a different area on that property, and two times at
the second house, both of which occurred in the bedroom
of the second
house where ejaculation occurred on one such occasion. As was the
case in
Molaza
supra
,
in
the present case, the facts underpinning a conclusion of rape each
time that penetration occurred, were not placed on record
with
sufficient particularity.
[7]
The
magistrate convicted the appellant on three counts of rape even
though the evidence established that five acts of sexual penetration
took place.
There
is no indication in the evidence of how the third act of penetration
at the first house is to be separated from the second
act at the
first house, such as may have enabled the trial court to determine
whether they were distinct acts or part of the same
course of
conduct.
83
The
trial court found that three distinct acts of rape occurred. In terms
of
Part 1
of Schedule 2 (read with
s 51(1)(a))
of the Criminal Law
amendment Act of 1997, as amended (specified in the charge sheet in
respect of each count of rape with which
the appellant was charged),
rape attracts a minimum sentence of life imprisonment 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; and (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’.
84
Counsel
for the appellant submitted that at best, the appellant ought only to
have been convicted of two counts of rape, one rape
having occurred
at the first house and another after the appellant left the first
house to go to the next house, where he formed
a new intention to
rape the complainant. In
S
v
Maxabaniso
[8]
the
evidence showed that the appellant had raped the complainant twice
during the course of one encounter with her. The two incidents
of
rape were separated by an interruption when the appellant went to the
toilet. It was held that the rape was not one continuous
course of
conduct. In
Molaza
supra,
the
majority judgment found
that
the evidence established that the complainant was raped twice in
circumstances where there was a lapse of between 20 to 25
minutes
between the two acts. The first intercourse was with a condom. The
appellant went to the bathroom, he asked his friends
to boil water
for the complainant to drink and then had intercourse again with the
complainant without a condom. In both these
cases, the evidence
suggested that there was an interruption in the sexual intercourse to
constitute two acts of rape. Further
that the interruptions were
initiated by the accused himself. In
Maxabaniso’s
case,
the interruption between the first and second incidents, when the
appellant went to the bathroom (regardless of whether he
ejaculated
or not) was sufficient to conclude that two distinct acts of
penetration occurred and therefore two rapes. The same
reasoning
leads to the same result in this case.
Whilst
the complainant in the present matter described separate instances of
penetration at both houses, in my view, the evidence
established that
the first act of sexual intercourse was completed inside the toilet
at the first house. The fact that the appellant
was dissatisfied with
the quality of the performance, stating afterwards that he did not
‘feel it properly’, does not
derogate from the fact that
nothing interrupted the act once it began until it was finished. The
second act of intercourse commenced
on the lawn, however, the
evidence suggested that it was interrupted by the accused, who wanted
to change locations as he was nervous
to continue on the lawn, hence
he caused the complainant to move to the stoep, where he re-entered
her and completed the act of
sexual intercourse on the stoep. Thus,
two acts of rape occurred at the first house. As regards the second
house, the evidence
of the complainant was that the appellant
informed her that he had ejaculated after sexual intercourse. The
appellant admitted
to having a sexual intercourse once with the
complainant at the second house. The complainant’s evidence
suggests that there
was no interruption between the start and the
finish of the sexual intercourse, precisely because the appellant did
not withdraw
his penis from her vagina when pausing to speak to her.
That he ejaculated during sexual intercourse, was not disputed in
evidence.
On these facts, only one act of rape was proven in
evidence. The learned magistrate accordingly correctly convicted the
appellant
on three counts of rape.
The
Court Allegedly Erred in Finding that the Doctor Found that there Was
Forced Penetration
85
The doctor’s evidence
was that the fresh tear on the complainant’s posterior
fourchette, a gapping hymen with a swelling
and a cleft that was
bruised at three o’clock and five o’clock are all
indicative of the expression of recent trauma
to the tissues and more
than one round of sexual intercourse or penetration, possibly even
four or five rounds of sex even though
he could not give the exact
number of rounds.
86
In short, these injuries
were indictive of a repeated sexual intercourse in a recent period.
The doctor’s testimony was that
he did not write the word
“forced” on the medical report because that is for the
court to determine but these injuries
and bruises demonstrated lack
of lubrication, which may be associated with lack of consent.
87
Even though consensual
intercourse may be ‘forceful’, as conceded by the doctor,
the point was made that such trauma
to the tissues was consistent
with more than one instance of forceful sexual penetration having
occurred at a time when the complainant
was not lubricated. It was
common cause that the complainant was crying and upset during the
ordeal, which is not consistent with
consensual sex. Consequently,
this ground of appeal also lacks merit.
Appeal
against Sentence
88
It
is trite that the imposition of sentence is pre-eminently a matter
that falls within the discretion of the trial court. Consequently,
a
court of appeal can only interfere with the sentence of the trial
court where it is satisfied that the trial court’s sentencing
discretion was not judicially properly exercised. That is, where
there is a misdirection on the part of the trial court in the
imposition of the sentence.
[9]
89
In
S v Malgas
[10]
it
was held in relation to substantial and compelling circumstances,
that “
it
suffices that they are ordinary circumstances which do not qualify as
cogent or sufficiently weighty to offences for which the
appellant
was convicted.”
At
paragraph 26, the SCA however cautioned that::
“
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 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.”
90
In
Radebe v S
[11]
the
court held as follows:
“
If
substantial and compelling reasons are present in cases of the rape
of an under-aged child then it cannot be found only in the
absence of
physical injury. If regard is had to the triad of factors (which must
also accommodate the impact on the·victim)
then I would
venture that something sufficiently extraordinary would have to be
demonstrated by an accused in respect of his reduced
moral
blameworthiness, other personal circumstances the circumstances
surrounding the rape or as unlikely as it may seem possibly
even the
victim's circumstances in order to displace the opprobrium and moral
turpitude which Informs the interests of society
to punish in the
manner reflected in the legislation in cases involving the rape of an
under-aged child.
91
The principles set out above
are what should guide this court on whether to interfere with the
sentence imposed.
92
When it comes to the
sentence, counsel for the appellant acknowledged that the appellant
“
got lucky”
with the sentence of 25 years imprisonment and not the mandatory
sentence of life imprisonment. I agree with this sentiment for
the
following reasons:
92.1
The statutory rape of
a minor child attracts life imprisonment as the minimum sentence. It
was applicable in this case as I have
demonstrated above that there
was no basis for the appellant’s attack on the age of the
complainant;
92.2
Multiple rapes also
attract the statutorily prescribed minimum sentence of life
imprisonment. Counsel for the appellant conceded
during the hearing
that there were at least two counts of rape involved.
93
On these bases, there were
sufficient grounds for the learned magistrate to impose a sentence
for life imprisonment in the absence
of substantial and compelling
circumstances having been shown.
94
Despite counsel for the
appellant stating that he could find no substantial and compelling
circumstances for the learned magistrate
to deviate from the
prescribed minimum sentences, the prosecutor asked the learned
magistrate to deviate from the prescribed minimum
sentence on the
basis of the appellant’s youth at the time of the offence, as
he was only 19 years old; and that despite
the appellant specifically
testifying that he had not drunk alcohol that day, the prosecutor
still asked the court to factor in
that alcohol may have heavily
influenced the appellant’s actions. The learned magistrate also
found that the socio-economic
circumstances of the appellant had a
role to play on how he carried himself. Further, the appellant had no
previous convictions.
These were the facts that were relied on by the
learned magistrate in making a value judgment as to whether or not
there were substantial
and compelling circumstances in order to
deviate from the statutorily prescribed minimum sentences of life
imprisonment.
95
The learned magistrate
granted leave to appeal against the sentence on the basis that she
may have overlooked the appellant’s
age as he was 19 years old
at the time of the commission of the offences.
96
In essence, this means that
the age of the accused was considered twice, i.e. as part of the
substantial and compelling circumstances
for deviating from the
prescribed statutory minimum sentence of life imprisonment. It was
also considered as the sole basis for
granting leave to appeal
against sentence. Since the state has not cross-appealed the finding
of the learned magistrate on sentence
imposed on the appellant, I do
not take this issue further.
97
I
agree with the respondent’s contention that even though the age
of the appellant should be considered but it should not
be over
emphasised as it needs to be considered in the context of other
factors, including the seriousness of the offence and the
interests
of the community.
[12]
The
impact of the crime upon the complainant and the lingering emotional
scars (unseen as they may be) caused by the acts of rape
upon her
psyche, cannot be underestimated and should also properly be
considered when imposing a sentence. The effects of the rapes
were
testified to by the complainant. The magistrate was mindful that a
lengthy term of imprisonment should be imposed, notwithstanding
that,
in her judgment, there were substantial and compelling circumstances
that justified a departure from the statutorily prescribed
minimum
sentence of life imprisonment.
98
An appeal court can only
interfere with the sentence imposed by the court
a
quo
if a demonstrable
misdirection on the part of the learned magistrate is shown or where
the sentence imposed is vitiated by irregularity
or is disturbingly
inappropriate.
99
In
S v GK
[13]
Rogers
J pointed out that whether or not there exists substantial and
compelling circumstances, is not a discretionary issue but
rather a
value judgment which judgment a court of appeal is obliged to bring
to bear on the facts presented in the court
a
quo
.
100
In
S v Nkomo
[14]
Lewis
JA at held as follows:
"But it is for the court imposing
sentence to decide whether the particular circumstances call for the
imposition of a lesser
sentence. Such circumstances may include those
factors traditionally taken into account in sentencing - mitigating
factors - that
lessen an accused's moral guilt. These might include
the age of an accused or whether or not he or she has previous
convictions.
Of course these must be weighed together with
aggravating factors. But none of these need be exceptional."
101
In my view, no misdirection
on the part of the learned magistrate in imposing 25 years’
imprisonment. was shown to have been
committed by the sentencing
court. The magistrate made a value judgment in deviating from the
prescribed sentence. She imposed
a sentence, taking the three counts
of rape and one count of kidnapping on which the appellant was
convicted, as one for purpose
of sentence. The various mitigating and
aggravating factors on the facts of the matter were summarised in the
respondent’s
heads of argument and need not be repeated herein.
Having regard to such factors, it cannot be said that the magistrate
committed
a misdirection or irregularity or that the sentence imposed
induces a sense of shock. Therefore, the sentence should stand.
# 102In all the circumstances and
for the reasons given, I propose that the appeal against conviction
and sentence be dismissed.
102
In all the circumstances and
for the reasons given, I propose that the appeal against conviction
and sentence be dismissed.
_________________
B.
LEKOKOTLA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I
agree and it is so ordered:
_________________
A.
MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
.
Date
of hearing: 23 November 2021
Judgment
delivered: 25 January 2022
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be have been at 10h00 on 25 January 2022.
APPEARANCES:
For
Appellant: Advocate IB Mthembu
Instructed
by: Legal Aid South Africa
For
Respondent: Advocate C Mack
Instructed
by: National Prosecution Authority
[1]
[2020] 4 All SA 167
(GJ), para 85.
[2]
[2011]
ZASCA 85
, para 8.
[3]
See:
S
v Sauls and Others
1981
(3) SA 172
(A) at 182G - H;
S
v Rama
1966
(2) SA 395
(
A)
at 401;
S
v Ntsele
1998
(2) SACR 178
(SCA) at 182b-h.
[4]
1999 (2) SACR 79 (W)
[5]
In
S
v Blaauw
1999
(2) SACR 295
(W)
at 299 C-D and 300 A-D,
the
following was said:
“
Ejaculation
is not an element of rape, though it would seem to me that if the
rapist had indeed ejaculated, withdrawn from the
victim and then
shortly thereafter again penetrated her, he would on the second
occasion be guilty of raping her for the second
time. Not only
is there a second act of penetration, it would be reasonable to
infer that the rapist had formed a new
intent to have
intercourse for the second time…
Mere
and repeated acts of penetration cannot without more, in my mind, be
equated with repeated and separate acts of rape. A rapist
who in the
course of raping his victim withdraws his penis, positions the
victim's body differently and then again penetrates
her, will not,
in my view, have committed rape twice.
Each
case must be determined on its own facts. As a general rule the
more closely connected the separate acts
of
penetration are in terms of time (i.e. the intervals between them)
and place, the less likely a court will be to find that
a series of
separate rapes has occurred. But where the accused has
ejaculated and withdrawn his penis from the victim, if
he again
penetrates her thereafter, it should, in my view, be inferred that
he has formed the intent to rape her again, even
if the second rape
takes place soon after the first and at the same place.”
[6]
Quoted
in fn 1 above.
[7]
The
sentiments expressed by the court in
Molaza
at
para 81 ought to be seriously heeded by prosecutors involved in
presenting evidence in rape cases in future
.
[8]
201
5
(2) SACR 553
(ECP)
[9]
S
v Blank
1995 (2) SACR 62
(A); S v Kgosimore
1999 (2) SACR 238
(SCA);
S v Obisi
2005 (2) SACR 350
(SCA) and S v Moswathupa 2012 (1) SACR
259 (SCA)
[10]
2001
(1) SACR 469
(SCA) p 481, paras 20-22, 25 and 26
[11]
2019
(2) SACR 381
(GP) p 399, para 53
[12]
S
v Obisi
2005 (2) SACR 350
(SCA), p 355, para 14
[13]
S
v GK
2013
(2) SACR 505
(WCC)
[14]
S
v Nkomo
2007
(2) SACR 198
(SCA) at
201e-f.
sino noindex
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