Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 403South Africa
Madikizela v S (A79/21) [2022] ZAGPJHC 403 (17 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 June 2022
Headnotes
APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION ON RAPE AND KIDNAPPING. Conviction and sentence confirmed.
Judgment
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## Madikizela v S (A79/21) [2022] ZAGPJHC 403 (17 June 2022)
Madikizela v S (A79/21) [2022] ZAGPJHC 403 (17 June 2022)
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sino date 17 June 2022
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HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case no: A79/21
REPORTABLE: No
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: No
REVISED
17 June 2022
In the matter between:
MADIKIZELA
BONGIKHAYA
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Case
Summary
: APPEAL AGAINST
CONVICTION ON RAPE AND KIDNAPPING. Conviction and sentence confirmed.
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI J (TWALA J
Concurring)
[1]
This is an appeal against conviction on rape and kidnapping of the
appellant by the
Regional Court held at Germiston.
[2]
The appellant was charged and tried for the following charges:
2.1
Contravening the provisions of section 3 of Act 32 of 2007
(Rape)
read with the provisions of section 51(1) of Act 105 of 1997 and
2.2
Kidnapping read with the provisions of section 51(1) of Act
105 of
1997.
[3]
At the trial by court a quo, the appellant was legally represented
and he pleaded
not guilty to the charges on 14 August 2019 and was
found guilty as charged on 26 October 2020.
[4]
On 3 December 2020, the appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment
for rape and
five years for kidnapping. The sentence on kidnapping
was ordered to run concurrently with the sentence on rape.
[5]
The appellant who has an automatic right to appeal, appeals against
his conviction
and sentence. Although the criminal proceedings record
is incomplete in that the record of the proceedings of 14 August 2019
is
missing, the Defense on behalf of the appellant submitted that the
appeal should proceed because on that day, the appellant pleaded
and
his plea explanation was recorded. We have no issue with hearing the
appeal.
[6]
In his plea explanation before court a quo, the appellant in dealing
with the charge
of rape stated that he and the complainant were in a
love relationship and that they had a consensual intercourse.
[7]
The appellant’s ground for appeal is that the trial court erred
in convicting
him on the rape and kidnapping counts. It was submitted
on behalf of the appellant that the court a quo should have given the
appellant
the benefit of the doubt in respect of his version and that
the court erred in rejecting his version and accepting the evidence
of a single witness, the complainant.
[8]
It was also submitted on behalf of the appellant that the complainant
was a single
witness in respect of a rape charge and that the
appellant’s version in his testimony that he did not rape the
complainants
and that the intercourse was consensual should have been
accepted. The appellant further testified that the actions of the
complainant
were vindictive because she became jealous that he was
involved with another lady who was the mother of his child who called
him
by in the presence of the complainant
THE STATE EVIDENCE
(a) The Complainant’s
evidence
[9]
The complainant testified that she was walking to meet her boyfriend
at night past
22h00 who was on a night shift. She testified that she
had an appointment to meet with her boyfriend at the bridge to go to
her
boyfriend’s house. She came across two male persons and
offered them R30 to accompany her to Phumula. She did not know the
two except by sight. As they were walking on the main road, the
appellant behind her and the other taller male in front, the
appellant
placed a knife on her neck from behind. She was ordered to
a concrete farrow where she was instructed to take of her pants and
pantie. She (backed) begged the two assailants not to kill her. She
complied and the two took turns to rape her with the appellant
being
the first one and the taller man last one. The incident took place
after 22h00.
[10]
After she was raped, the two assailants left her. Her white pants
were soiled with dirt and so were her
arms. She dressed herself up
and as she was leaving the concrete tunnel, saw a police car which
she stopped and told the police
officers that she had been raped. She
was given an option of going to the police charge office to lay the
charge, but she opted
to be taken to her boyfriend’s home. Upon
arrival at the boyfriend ‘s home, he was not there.
[11]
As she was being driven and after passing a BP Fuel Station, she saw
her boyfriend disembarking his staff
transport vehicle and asked the
police to stop and leave her with the boyfriend. The police obliged
but she disembarked the police
car before it came to a complete halt.
She was left with her boy-friend and immediately reported the rape to
him. She confirmed
to him that she knew the appellant by sight but
did not know the other assailant.
[12]
A taxi emerged and was flagged down. It took the two to the
complainant’s home at Phumula.
Upon arrival at her home, she
reported the rape to her mother and brother who initially did not
believe her. The police were called
and responded after which she was
take to Alberton police station where she laid charges. She was
subsequently taken to Germiston
Hospital where a J88 form was
completed. She was at all the time in the company of her boyfriend T
[….] E [….] M
[….].
[13]
She was pressed during cross-examination about the inconsistencies in
her statement to the police
(where she told the police officer) that
she did not know who raped and her evidence that she knew the
appellant by sight. She
insisted that she knew the appellant by sight
as he used to visit her brother’s carwash but did not know his
name.
[14]
The complainant was challenged with the doctor’s report on the
J88 which stated that the complainant
was eventually coherent and
mentally stable. The complainant insisted that she felt hurt by the
rape.
[15]
She denied that she was in a love relationship with the appellant.
She denied knowing anyone
of his friends, especially S [....]. She
denied ever visiting the appellant at his home in Phumula. She also
denied that on the
night in question the complainant was at his home.
She denied that the rape was reported after the mother of his child
phoned and
told him that his child was sick and the appellant told
the mother of his child that he would send money. The complainant
denied
all that was put to her because she had never been to the
appellant’s home and was not in relationship with him.
[16]
The complainant testified that her jean was taken at the hospital and
never given back to her.
Under cross-examination she said she was
made to lie down and her jean was wet underneath.
(b
) T [....]
E[....] M[....]’s evidence
[17]
The second witness to testify for the State was T [....]
E[....] M[....], the complainant’s
boyfriend. He testified that
during the year 2016 when the incident took place he was employed by
Nampak Glass at Roodekop. He
confirmed that the complainant was his
girlfriend. He denied he communicated with the complainant on the
night of the incident
as his phone was off. He confirmed that his
shift started at 14h00 and finished at 22h00. He used the staff bus
which usually drops
him at the traffic lights. He was not expecting
her to come to him as his phone was off. He had a good love
relationship with the
complainant and was not aware that the
complainant had any other boyfriend.
[18]
After he was dropped off by his staff buss, he saw the complainant
being followed by a police
car. The complainant reported to him that
she was raped. (He suggested to her that they should use the police
car to which she
declined). A taxi came and took them to Phumula
carwash after which they went to the complainant’s home and
reported the
rape. The police were called and came. He accompanied
the complainant to the Alberton Police Station and later to Germiston
Hospital.
[19]
Whilst at the hospital, a police detective came and took the
statement from the witness. The
police detective offered them
transport and he was dropped at his home well after 05h00 (in) the
following morning. The detective
left with the complainant.
[20]
The witness denied that the complainant was emotionally coherent. He
testified that he knew when
the complainant was well. He observed
that her clothing was soiled and that her hair was unkept. The
complainant was crying and
only calmed down when the police arrived
at her place.
(c) Dr Carol
Ramatsimela’s evidence
[21]
Dr. Carol Ramatsimela Maimela was the third state witness. She is a
medical doctor with Master’s
degree in medicine. She obtained
MBChB at University of Witwatersrand in 2006 and Masters degree from
the same university.
[22]
She examined the complainant and at 05h30 and compiled the J88 form
after the incident.
She could not detect any evidence of trauma
with the complainant’s private parts but did not exclude the
event of penetration.
She confirmed that the complaint reported to
her that she had been raped. The witness testified that penetration
could happen even
if it does not cause injuries. The witness also
confirmed that there was sand between the buttocks of the complainant
but that
the witness was coherent and able to answer questions put
her.
(d) Seargent
Nonhlanhla Zulu’s evidence.
[23]
The fourth witness for the State was Seargent Nonhlanhla Zulu. She is
based at Braamfontein Provincial
Family Violence Child Protection and
Sexual Offences Unit (“FVC”) with 13 years’
experience. She was the investigating
officer in this case. She works
with the unit that deals with DNA linked cases and serial rapists.
[24]
She received a document marked A9. The document was received from the
forensics laboratory and
it informed her that there is a person of
interest that needs to be investigated in Alberton reported in case
469/10/2016. The
DNA found in that exhibit was also the same with the
DNA that was found in Alberton under case 44/11/2016. She testified
that she
went to Alberton and drew the case docket 44/11/2016 to
compare the samples reference and found the samples belonged to the
appellant.
[25]
The samples from victim of rape are kept or stored at the forensic
laboratory’s database.
The perpetrator in case number
469/10/2016 was unknown and this was the present case which the
witness was investigating at the
time she was alerted of the samples
in case 44/11/2016.
[26]
She then followed up the information and found that the suspect in
case number 469/10/2016 was
the appellant who lived in Rondebult.
Upon following up the information, she found the appellant in prison
in Boksburg. She took
his confirmation samples again to confirm
whether he was really the person of interest on the current
investigation. There was
someone else before her who was
investigating the matter. She confirmed that it was police officer
Lobisi. She confirmed that all
the protocols of taking the DNA were
observed.
[27]
The samples taken from the appellant were sent to the forensic
laboratory and they came back
again positive. The DNA reference
sample collection kit was handed in as an exhibit to the trial
court’s evidence in terms
of
section 212
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
as compiled by Warrant Officer Mosimane.
This was accepted by the Defense as well.
[28]
The witness testified that she did not take the complainant to the
doctor and that this was done
by the previous investigating officer.
Under cross-examination, the witness testified that she is the
current investigating officer
in the Alberton CAS number 469/10. She
was accompanied to prison by Seargent Thapedi. The accused involved
in case number 469/10/2016
was the appellant. She confirmed that case
number 44/10/2016 was withdrawn at court as the suspects were
unknown.
[29]
Under cross examination, she told the trial court she saw no need to
conduct the identity parade
because the DNA results were conclusive
that the appellant was the one who raped the complainant. The case
was only reopened for
further investigations after the positive DNA
results linking the appellant to the rape. She gave the complainant
the update and
showed her the picture of the appellant upon which the
complainant confirmed that she used to see the appellant at her
brother’s
carwash.
(e) Nompumelelo Winnie
Lobisi’s evidence
[30]
The fifth State witness was Detective Sergeant Nompumelelo Winnie
Lobisi and she was with the FVC unit in
Germiston at the time of the
incident.
[31]
She confirmed that she received an evidence collection kit related to
the charges. The evidence
collection kit was received from Dr Nkonso
(Maimela) with serial number 15D1AB6530. The evidence collection kit
was then taken
to the forensic laboratory. She compiled an
Acknowledgement of Receipt report. She testified that she had no
knowledge of the content
of the evidence collection kit.
[32]
Under cross-examination, Sergeant Lobisi testified that the
complainant informed her she did
not know the names of the
perpetrators of the rape against her but knew them by sight. The
State closed its case.
THE DEFENSE EVIDENCE
(f) Bongikhaya
Madikizela’s evidence
[33]
The Defense called the appellant to testify. He confirmed that the
incident involving the complainant
occurred at night. The appellant
testified that he knew the complainant because he was in love
relationship with her. He testified
that the relationship started in
December 2015 and that the people who were aware of his relationship
with the complainant was
his father and his friend S [....] D
[....]
[34]
His testimony was that on the day of the incident, the complainant
came to visit him around between 16h00
and 17h00. He was in a
relationship with another lady, the mother of his child who called
him on the phone requesting money for
the child. This caused an
argument between him and the complainant. He testified that the
complainant terminated the relationship
and left after 21h00. At that
time, they had already had sexual intercourse.
[35]
The appellant testified that he was arrested on another matter. The
appellant could not explain
why would the complainant not take the
police to his home if she knew where to find him. He confirmed that
he had no other evidence
to prove that he was in a relationship other
than what he claimed.
[36]
Asked by the trial court if his friend S [....] D [....]
ever visited him in prison,
the witness stated that S [....]
never visited. He did not know his physical address. He stated that
he could not get his
father to testify because he died in 2019. The
Defense closed its case.
TRIAL COURT’S
ASSESSMENT OF EVIDENCE, CONVICTION AND SENTENCE
[37] After considering
the evidence and the heads of arguments by the State and the Defense,
the trial court found the appellant
guilty of rape and kidnapping and
sentenced him to life imprisonment for rape and 5 years for
kidnapping the latter sentence to
run concurrently with the life
sentence.
ON APPEAL
Appellant’s
grounds of appeal
[38]
It was submitted furthermore on behalf of the appellant that the
trial court should have doubted
the version of the complainants
because:
38.1
The incident occurred at around midnight.
38.2
The complainant knew the appellant and his co-perpetrator
who visited
her brother, but when asked on the identity in court, she said it was
at night and she could not identify the accused
as the perpetrator;
38.3
The complainant said she at least saw the appellant three
times a
week when he visited her brother at the carwash.
38.4
The complainant said around 22h00 that evening she had communication
with her boyfriend Thabang who was working that evening and worked
until 22h30. The complainant testified that by agreement they
were
going to meet each other at the bridge used by cars after he knocked
off.
ISSUE FOR
DETERMINATION
[39]
The issue for determination is whether the trial court erred in
convicting and sentencing the
appellant.
THE LEGAL PRINCIPLES
AND REASONS FOR THE JUDGMENT
[40]
Although it is trite that cautionary rule regarding the evidence of a
single witness is a feature
of our law,
[1]
that the rule does not apply automatically to sexual offences.
[41]
In dealing the cautionary rule in
S
v Jackson
[2]
the court held that:
“
In
my view, the cautionary rule in sexual assault cases is based on an
irrational and outdated perception. It unjustly stereotypes
complainants in sexual assault cases (overwhelmingly women) as
particularly unreliable. In our system of law, the burden is on
the
State to prove the guilt of an accused beyond reasonable doubt- no
more and no less. The evidence in a particular case may
call for a
cautionary approach, but that is a far cry from the application of a
general cautionary rule.”
[42]
It is always important for court to assess the credibility of a
single witness. In
S
v Sauls and Others
[3]
the
court held that:
“
If
a complainant was a single witness the further enquiry is whether she
was credible. The evidence of a single witness must be
clear and
satisfactory in every material respect.”
[43]
The appellant’s counsel submitted that the complainant was not
credible because of the
contradictions regarding the fact that she
had seen the appellant visit her brother’s car wash on several
occasions when
she stated in court that she was not certain whether
he was the perpetrator.
[44]
The submission cannot in my view be sustained. The complainant
testified that she knew the appellant
by sight when he used to visit
her brother at the carwash. She also stated that she met the
appellant and his companion at the
traffic light. The contradictions
were not material, and the trial court correctly did not have regard
to them in assessing the
credibility of the complainant. I will later
deal (later) with the law on this aspect.
[45]
The complainant offered them money (for them) to accompany her to
Phumula. They walked together
using the main road with the appellant
walking behind her whilst the taller perpetrator walked in front of
her. One of them stated
he knew her from her brother’s carwash
by sight. The complainant was not certain who of the two knew her.
She testified that
the appellant produced a knife and placed it on
her neck from behind.
[46]
If indeed there was consent for sexual intercourse it is highly
unlikely that the complainant
would have flagged the police for
assistance, failed to inform the police who her assailant was. It is
also highly unlikely that
as claimed by the appellant that the
complainant knew where he stayed, she would have failed to take the
police to the appellant’s
home.
[47]
Having considered the record, I find no basis for the suggestion that
the trial court erred in
not giving the appellant the benefit of the
doubt that he had a relationship with the complainant.
[48]
The trial court was alive to the cautionary rule in respect of the
evidence of a single witness
and this is apparent from the judgment
where the trial court made (under) the following remarks at page 280
of the record:
“
It
is worth noting from the outset that Ms Khotleko is a single witness
regarding the events surrounding how she was accosted by
her
assailants and the subsequent rape incidents. In terms of
section 208
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, an accused person may be
convicted of any offence on the single evidence of any competent
witness.
It is a
well-established judicial practice that the evidence of a single
witness should be approached with caution. Her merits as
a witness
being weighed against her credibility. It must not only be credible
but must also be reliable.”
[49]
Having regard to the trial courts application of the cautionary rule
regarding the evidence of
a single witness, it is my considered view
that the court correctly convicted the appellant as charged. The
submission made on
behalf of the appellant that the trial court erred
is without merit and is rejected.
[50]
As regards the submission that there was contradiction in the
evidence of the complainant which
the trial court ought to have
considered and given the appellant the benefit of doubt, by rejecting
the complainant’s evidence
the law on this point is settled. In
S
v Mkohle
[4]
the court held that:
“
Contradictions
per se do not lead to the rejection of a witness’ evidence …
They may simply be indicative of an error.
(S v Oosthuizen
1982 (3)
SA 571
(T) quoting from 576 G –H:
“
And
it is stated that not every error made by a witness affects his
credibility; in each case the trier of fact has to take into
account
such matters as the nature of the contradictions, their number and
importance, their bearing on the parts of the witness
evidence.”
[51]
The complainant made a report of the rape to her boyfriend at the
first reasonable opportunity
without being forced. She was in a state
of panic and crying. She only calmed down when the police came to her
house and the time
she arrived at the hospital for examination and
completion of the J88 form, she was calm enough to answer the
questions correctly.
Her evidence about the rape was corroborated by
her boyfriend Thabang as the first person report. I have not found
any material
contradictions with her evidence and that of her
boyfriend. There is therefore no basis for submitting that the
trial court
ought to have had regard to the contradictions and reject
the complainant’s evidence.
[52]
The appellant could not support his version that he was in a
relationship with the complainant.
He did little to assist the trial
court to give him the benefit of doubt as he did not know where his
friend, S [....] D
[....], stayed who according to the
appellant, he could (not) corroborate his claim of relationship with
the complainant. Our law
does not require a person accused of an
offence to prove his innocence but simply to give an explanation that
is reasonably possibly
true. The court faced with such version will
assess, after considering the totality of the evidence before it,
whether the version
is reasonably possibly true or whether it can be
rejected out of hand.
[53]
The complainant, after the rape, had soiled pants. She had sand in
her buttocks and although
no trauma was detected in her private
parts, that did not exclude the non-consensual intercourse. The trial
court, in my respectful
view, correctly found that there was no truth
in the claim made by the appellant that the intercourse was
consensual and correctly
rejected the appellant’s defense. She
was taken, at a knife point, against her will to a concrete tunnel
where she was sexually
assaulted by two assailants one of which has
not been apprehended.
[54]
The approach dealing with the evidence that the crime was committed
by more than one person revolves on the doctrine of common
purpose.
This doctrine is defined as follows:
[5]
“
Where
two or more people agree to commit a crime or actively associate in a
joint unlawful enterprise, each will be responsible
for specific
criminal conduct committed by one of their number which falls within
their common design. Liability arises from their
‘common
purpose’ to commit the crime.”
[55]
The Constitutional Court has held that the doctrine of common purpose
can and should be extended to common law crime of rape.
In other
words, it is not necessary for the State to prove that all
participants in the crime physically penetrated the private
parts of
the victim. As long as that the State is able to adduce evidence that
for instance, one of the perpetrators restrained
the victim whilst
another one raped her, it is enough to prove common purpose to commit
the crime.
[6]
[56]
It is therefore now settled that:
“
The
instrumentality argument has no place in our modern society founded
upon the Bill of Rights. It is obsolete and must be discarded
because
its foundation is embedded in a system of patriarchy where women are
treated as mere chattels. It ignores the fact that
rape can be
committed by more than one person for as long as the others have the
intention of exerting power and dominance over
the women, just by
their presence in the room. The perpetrators overpowered their
victims by intimidation and assault. The manner
in which the
applicants and the other co–accused moved from one household to
the other indicates meticulous prior planning
and preparation. They
made sure that any attempt to escape would not be possible.”
[7]
[57]
Having considered the record and the evidence led, there is no basis
for this court to interfere
with the guilty verdict reached by the
trial court on both counts.
[58]
As regards sentence, it is trite that the sentencing is in the
discretion of the trial court
and the court of appeal may only
interfere if the discretion on sentence was not judicially and
properly exercised.
[8]
[59]
The sentence imposed by the trial court was, in my view, correctly
imposed as there is no evidence
of irregularity committed by it. On
the rape count, the sentence imposed is the minimum sentence
prescribed by
section 51(1)
of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of
1997
, which is life imprisonment. The complainant was raped by more
than one assailant.
[60]
The Constitutional Court in
Ntuli
v The State
[9]
restated the law on minimum
sentence and Mathopo AJ (as he then was) held as follows:
“
I
interpose to say that in 1997, Parliament took a bold step in
response to the public outcry about serious offences like rape and
passed the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
which
prescribes minimum sentences for certain specified serious offences.
The Government’s intention was that such
lengthy minimum
sentences would serve as a deterrent as offenders, if convicted,
would be removed from society for a long period
of time. The
statistics sadly reveal that the minimum sentences have not had this
desired effect. Violent crimes like rape and
abuse of women in our
society have not abated. Courts across the country are dealing with
instances of rape and abuse of women
and children on a daily basis.
The media is in general replete with gruesome stories of rape and
child abuse on a daily basis.
Hardly a day passes without any
incident of gender-based violence being reported. This scourge has
reached alarming proportions.
It is sad and a bad reflection of our
society that 25 years into our constitutional democracy, underpinned
by a Bill of Rights,
which places a premium on the right to
equality
[36]
and
the right to human dignity,
[37]
we
are still grappling with what is a scourge in our nation.”
[61]
The aggravating and mitigating factors in sentencing must be weighed
upon cumulatively by the
sentencing court to determine whether
substantial and compelling circumstances exist.
[10]
In
S
v Vilikazi
[11]
it was held that:
“…
in
cases of serious crime the personal circumstances of the offender, by
themselves, will necessarily recede into the background…”
[62]
Commenting on sentence the court in
S
v Mahonotsa
[12]
held that:
“
There
is always an upper limit in all sentencing jurisdictions, be it
death, life or some lengthy term of imprisonment, and therewith
always be cases which, although differing in their respective degrees
of seriousness, nonetheless all call for the maximum penalty
possible. The fact that the crimes under consideration are not all
equally horrendous may not matter if the least horrendous of
them is
horrendous enough to justify the imposition of the maximum penalty.”
[63]
It is also a principle of our law that in sentencing, each case must
be decided on its own merits.
[13]
The sentence must always be individualized, for punishment must
always fit the crime, the offender, and the circumstances of the
case.
[64]
It is equally important that one of the factors to be considered in
sentencing is whether there
are substantial and compelling
circumstances in each case under consideration.
[14]
The period spent in custody before sentencing on its own does not
constitute substantial and compelling circumstance.
[65]
The following aggravating circumstances are present in this case:
(a)
The seriousness of the offence and the fact that the complainant was
19
years old when the offence was committed.
(b)
The complainant was raped by two people.
(c)
A knife was used
(d)
The high prevalence of the offence.
(e)
The appellant showed no remorse.
[66]
There was no compelling circumstances that we find the trial court
ignored.
[67]
As regards the kidnapping charge, a knife was used, and the
complainant was forced into a concrete
tunnel by two assailants.
Although there is no minimum sentence prescribed for kidnapping to
interfere with the trial court sentencing
on the charge.
ORDER
[68]
The following order is made:
(a)
The appeal on conviction and sentencing is dismissed.
M.L. SENYATSI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
I agree :
M. TWALA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Heard:
3
February 2022
Judgment:
17 June 2022
Counsel for
Appellant:
Adv J. Henzen – Du Toit
Instructed by:
Legal Aid South Africa
Counsel for First
Respondents: Adv R. Ndou
Instructed by:
Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions
[1]
See
Van
der Walt v The State
(488/09) [2010] ZASCA (23 March 2010)
[2]
1998
(1) SACR 470
(SCA) at 476 E – F.
[3]
1981
(3) SACR 172
(A) at 173
[4]
1990
(1) SACR 95
(A) at 98F-G
[5]
Burchell:
Principles of Criminal Law 5ed (Juta, Cape Town 2016) at 477)
[6]
See:
Ntuli
v The State
(CCT 323/18: CCT69/19)
[2019] ZACC 48
;
2020 (2) SACR 38
; 2020(5) SA
1 (CC) at para 54)
[7]
See
Ntuli
v The State
above
at n (6) para 54
[8]
See
S
v Rabie
1975 (4) SA 855
(A) at 857 D-E;
S
v Salzwedel and Other
1999 (2) SACR 586
(SCA) at 591.
[9]
(4)
(CCT323/18; CCT69/19)
[2019] ZACC 48
; 2020(2) SACR 38(CC); 2020 (5)
SA (1)(CC)
[10]
See
S
v Matyityi
2011 (1) SACR 40
(SCA) at para 53.
[11]
2009
(1) SACR 552
(SCA) at 574 par [58]
[12]
2002
(2) SACR 435
at 444 par [19]
[13]
See
S
v SMM
2013 (3) SACR 292
(SCA) at para [13]
[14]
See
S
v Radebe
2013 (2) SACR 165
(SCA).
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