Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 313South Africa
Zwane v S (A03/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 313 (12 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 May 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Gang Rape – sentence – life imprisonment - appellant aged 19 years and 4 months -factors to be considered cumulatively in determining whether substantial and compelling circumstances exist and proportionality of sentence – interference only if misdirection or trial court’s sentence grossly disproportionate.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Zwane v S (A03/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 313 (12 May 2022)
Zwane v S (A03/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 313 (12 May 2022)
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sino date 12 May 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNEBURG
CASE
NO: A03/2022
DPP
REF NO:
JPV
2005/32
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
12
MAY 2022
In
the matter between:
ZWANE,
SIMPHIWE CHARLES
APPELLANT
And
THE
STATE RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Zwane
v S
(A03/22(12
May 2022)
Coram:
MUDAU, WINDELL and MOLAHLEHI JJ
Date
of Hearing: 25 April 2022
Date
of Judgment: 12 May 2022
Summary:
Gang Rape – sentence – life
imprisonment - appellant aged 19 years and 4 months -factors to be
considered cumulatively
in determining whether substantial and
compelling circumstances exist and proportionality of sentence –
interference only
if misdirection or trial court’s sentence
grossly disproportionate.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court (EM Du Toit AJ), Johannesburg it is
ordered that:
The
appeal is dismissed.
J
U D G M E N T
MUDAU,
J: (Windell and Molahlehi JJ concurring)
[1]
This
is an appeal against sentence. The appellant, who appeared as accused
number 2 in the Regional Court, Boksburg was convicted
on 3 November
2004 by that court of raping a girl who was under the age of 16
years. Pursuant to the provisions of the now repealed
section 52 of
the Criminal Law Amendment Act
[1]
(“the Act”), the appellant and his co-accused were
committed for sentencing to the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Johannesburg. The matter served before EM Du Toit AJ who confirmed
the conviction.
[2]
On
15 November 2005, the appellant and his co-accused were sentenced to
life imprisonment. The court
a
quo
found
no substantial and compelling circumstances justifying the imposition
of a sentence lesser than that prescribed by the Act.
The appellant
qualified for a term of life imprisonment because: (a) the victim was
raped more than once; and (b) the victim was
below the age of 16
years. With leave of the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”),
he now appeals to the Full Court against
sentence only. After an
agreement with counsel, this appeal was disposed of on papers without
further oral submissions in open
court, pursuant to section 19 (a) of
the Superior Courts Act.
[2]
[3]
It
is not necessary to deal in any extensive detail with the evidence on
the merits. However, a brief background is needed in order
to
appreciate the ultimate sentence imposed. On 16 June 2004 at 18h30,
the complainant, then 14 years of age and a male companion
were
accosted by the appellant and his co-accused on their way from a
shop. She knew her assailants by sight. The two grabbed her
by her
arms and started pulling her away. During that process, the appellant
was also kicking the complainant from the back. The
complainant
started screaming and crying but asked her companion to go and report
the incident to her brother.
[4]
The
complainant was taken to an open field where she was tripped by the
co- accused who thereafter took out a knife. After pulling
down his
trousers and undergarments, he proceeded to rape her. Once done, the
appellant also raped the complainant. After the rapes,
the co-accused
left the scene. The appellant was arrested shortly thereafter whilst
in the company of the complainant by the police
who, in the meantime,
were looking for her with the help of the complainant’s mother.
The appellant denied he raped the complainant,
claiming that
intercourse was consensual. This was rightly rejected by the regional
court magistrate and the court
a
quo
.
[5]
It
is trite that sentencing lies pre-eminently in the discretion of the
trial court. A court exercising appellate jurisdiction cannot,
in the
absence of a material misdirection by the trial court, approach the
question of sentence as if it were the trial court and
then
substitute the sentence arrived at by it simply because it prefers
it. To do so would be usurping the sentencing discretion
of the trial
court. Accordingly, this court can only interfere with the sentence
imposed by the trial court where it is vitiated
by a material
misdirection or where the disparity
between
the sentence of the trial court and the sentence that the appellate
court would have imposed, had it been the trial court,
is so marked
that it can be described as 'shocking', 'startling', or 'disturbingly
inappropriate’.
[3]
[6]
The
appellant was 8 months short of his 20
th
birthday at the time the offence was committed. Although single, he
fathered a child born on 20 September 2003. He was not formally
employed but was earning a living doing part time jobs (such as
working at a car wash) earning R30 per day. He was in custody for
1
year and 3 months as an awaiting trial prisoner and was a first
offender. He only reached Standard Seven of his schooling. His
personal circumstances were presented from the bar.
[7]
From
the written heads of argument an appeal, it was contended on behalf
of the appellant that the trial judge erred in finding
no substantial
and compelling circumstances justifying a lesser sentence than the
statutorily prescribed one (i.e. life imprisonment).
It was contended
that all the above factors, cumulatively taken, constituted
substantial and compelling circumstances justifying
a lesser
sentence. He referred in this regard to the relatively young age of
the appellant at the time of the commission of the
offence and the
fact that he was a first offender. It is contended that the victim
did not suffer any serious physical injuries.
The court
a
quo
dismissed all these factors individually and cumulatively. Du Toit AJ
concluded that these factors did not constitute substantial
or
compelling circumstances justifying a lesser sentence than that
prescribed by statute. The court observed that the appellant
was
already an adult at the time of the incident.
[8]
It
was also contended that the victim did not suffer any serious
physical injuries. In this regard counsel also referred to cases
such
as Malgas
[4]
, S v Abrahams
[5]
,
S v Mahomotsa
[6]
, and S v
Vilakazi
[7]
. But, as Bosielo JA
stated in S v PB
[8]
those cased
do not, constitutes a benchmark or a precedent binding other courts
but are nothing more than guidelines. It is trite
that each case must
be decided on its own merits. Sentence must always be individualised,
for punishment must always fit the crime,
the criminal and the
circumstances of the case
[9]
.
[9]
Rape
is a very serious offence. In
S
v Chapman
[10]
it was described as “a humiliating, degrading and brutal
invasion of the privacy, the dignity and the person of the victim”.
[10]
The
approach to be adopted by courts when considering a sentence for a
conviction which attracts a minimum sentence under the Act
is set out
in a number of cases including
Malgas
[11]
.The
court
a
quo
was alive to this issue. Although all the factors traditionally taken
into account in sentencing continue to play a role, courts
are
required to approach the imposition of sentence conscious that the
Legislature has ordained life imprisonment as the sentence
that
should ordinarily, and in the absence of weighty justification, be
imposed for the listed crimes in the specified circumstances.
[11]
Plainly,
and
as
indicated, unless there are and can be seen to be, truly convincing
reasons for a different response, the crimes such as multiple
rapes
involving a child require a severe, standardised and consistent
response from the court.
G
ang
rapes are, and gender based violence cases in general, regrettably,
an all too frequent occurrence in this Division and, obviously
from
reports of cases emanating from other Divisions, throughout the
country as well. The rape of a child, as the complainant was
at the
time, is "an appalling and perverse abuse of male power”
[12]
which strikes a blow at the very core of our claim to be a civilised
society. As Mathopo AJ (as he then was) also observed in
Tshabalala
v S; Ntuli v S
[13]
which
is apt
:
“
for
far too long rape has been used as a tool to relegate the women of
this country to second-class citizens, over whom men can
exercise
their power and control, and in so doing, strip them of their rights
to equality, human dignity and bodily integrity”.
[14]
[12]
Aggravating
in this case is that the appellant and his co-accused, in public,
abducted a child of 14 years going about her business
with a friend
and dragged her away into the veld where they both raped her in spite
of her protestations. There is no suggestion
on record that the
appellant was remorseful for his conduct. The court
a
quo
also took into account the fact that the child, from the reports of
two probation officers who were
ad
idem
,
appeared to be severely traumatised by the rape ordeal from various
symptoms, notably with regard to her school work and antisocial
behaviour. That was almost 18 months after the incidents of rape.
[13]
The
suggestion that the physical injuries were not serious is completely
without merit, the rape of a young girl of that age as
Du Toit AJ
observed, can have serious and long-lasting effects psychologically.
In terms of section 51 (3) (aA) (ii) of the Act:
“[w]hen
imposing a sentence in respect of the offence of rape… an
apparent lack of physical injury to the complainant”
shall not
constitute substantial and compelling circumstances justifying the
imposition of a lesser sentence. In any event, I am
inclined to agree
with the learned AJ in his observation that the psychological
injuries have a negative impact and mar her ability
and enjoyment of
being inter alia, a woman.
[14]
Consequently,
I can find no irregularity or misdirection on the part of the
sentencing trial judge in his consideration of the sentence.
I find
that the sentence is not disproportionate to the rapes committed, but
is proportionate to the crime, the appellant and the
legitimate needs
of society. The community at large is entitled to demand that those
who commit such perverted acts of terror on
the most vulnerable
members of our society be effectively punished and that the
punishment reflect societal disapproval. The court
a
quo
was, in my view, correct in finding that no substantial and
compelling circumstances exist to justify a departure from the
prescribed
minimum sentence of life imprisonment in this case.
[15]
Accordingly,
I make the following order:
[15.1] the appeal against
sentence is dismissed.
MUDAU
J
[Judge
of the High Court]
I
agree
WINDELL
J
[Judge
of the High Court]
I
agree
MOLAHLEHI
J
[Judge
of the High Court]
APPEARANCES
For
the Appellant:
Mr A Mavatha
Instructed
by: Johannesburg
Justice Centre
For
the Respondent:
Adv. C Mack
Instructed
by: DPP
– Johannesburg.
Date
of Hearing: 25
APRIL 2022
Date
of Judgment:
12 MAY 2022
[1]
105
of 1997.
[2]
10
of 2013.
[3]
S
v
Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469
(SCA) at para [12].
[4]
Foot
Note 3 above
[5]
2002
(1) SACR 116
(SCA)
[6]
2002
(2) SACR 435 (SCA)
[7]
2009
(1) SACR 552 (SCA)
[8]
2013
(2) SACR 533 (SCA)
at
539 para 19
[9]
S
v SMM and Others
2013
(2) SACR 292
(SCA)
at
para 13
[10]
1997 (3) SA 341 (SCA)
at 344I–J
[11]
Fn
3 above.
[12]
S
v Jansen
1999 (2) SACR 368 (C)
at 378G.
[13]
2020
(2) SACR 38 (CC).
[14]
At
para [1].
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