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[2016] ZASCA 26
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Pillay v S (453/15) [2016] ZASCA 26 (18 March 2016)
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THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case
No: 453/15
In
the matter between:
RONSON
PILLAY
APPELLANT
and
THE
STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation
:
Pillay v The State
(453/2015)
[2016]
ZASCA 26
(18 March 2016)
Coram:
Tshiqi, Petse and
Zondi JJA
Heard:
24 February 2016
Delivered:
18 March
2016
Summary:
Criminal
law and procedure - Assessment of evidence – trial court’s
failure to evaluate evidence of a child witness
who is also a single
witness by overlooking various contradictions in the evidence and
their effect on its credibility constituted
misdirection.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal
Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg (Pillay and Mbatha JJ
sitting as court of appeal):
The
appeal succeeds and the conviction and sentence are set aside.
JUDGMENT
Zondi JA (Tshiqi and
Petse JJA concurring):
[1]
The appellant was convicted in the regional court, Verulam on a
charge of indecent assault read with s 94 of the Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977 (the Act). He was found to have indecently assaulted
the complainant, a 13 year old girl, over the period June 2006
to May
2007 by making her touch his penis and by showing her a picture of a
penis on his cellular phone. On 26 November 2009 he
was sentenced to
four years’ imprisonment in terms of s 276 (1)(i) of the Act.
He appealed to the KwaZulu-Natal Division
of the High Court,
Pietermaritzburg. On appeal the conviction was confirmed, but the
appeal against sentence was allowed to the
extent that the sentence
imposed by the trial court was set aside and replaced with one of two
years’ imprisonment in terms
of s 276(1)(i) of the Act. The
appeal against conviction and sentence is before this court with the
leave of the court a quo. (This
was prior to the enactment of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 which came into effect on 23 August
2013).
[2]
It is common cause that the appellant, a 30 year old metro police
officer, was a tenant at the complainant’s residence
from 2004
to June 2007. He stayed in the main house with the complainant and
her family from 2004 to October 2006 and later in
the outbuilding
from November 2006 to June 2007. The events giving rise to the charge
are alleged to have occurred during the appellant’s
stay at the
complainant’s residence.
[3]
The relationship between the appellant and the complainant’s
father was not only that of a landlord and tenant but they
were also
friends and colleagues. As he was experiencing financial problems the
complainant’s father assisted him financially
and secured a
loan on his behalf to help him get on his feet. In due course the
appellant’s financial situation worsened
and in consequence he
fell into arrears with his rent and failed to repay the loan secured
by the complainant’s father on
his behalf. This was the
beginning of the end of their friendship.
[4]
Although the charge sheet refers to a single incident, the
complainant, who was 15 years when she testified, referred to the
following four incidents: She alleged that the first incident
occurred on a Sunday shortly before midnight around June 2006. When
the appellant arrived from work she was watching television in the
lounge. As he walked into the house she switched off the television
and went to the bathroom before going to bed because, as she put it,
she did not want to give the appellant the wrong impression.
On her
way back to her room she stopped for a chat with him in his room.
They sat on his bed and started chatting. During the course
of the
conversation the appellant asked her to ‘play’ with his
penis. She refused. The appellant closed the door and
after undoing
his pants grabbed hold of her hand and asked her to ‘play’
with his penis, which act she performed reluctantly.
According to
her, she did not see the appellant’s penis despite the fact
that the appellant had exposed it to her. Thereafter
the appellant
asked her if she had ever seen a boy’s penis. When she answered
in the negative the appellant offered to show
her how it looked like.
He then asked her to leave his room for a moment and wait outside at
the door and she complied. Shortly
thereafter the appellant called
her in and showed her a picture on his Nokia cellular phone depicting
an object which he said was
his penis.
[5] The second incident
is alleged to have occurred when she was in the appellant’s
bedroom to collect her clothes. The appellant
asked her to ‘play’
with his penis but on this occasion she refused and walked away from
him. She alleged that the
third incident occurred when she collected
her face towel from the appellant’s bedroom. On this occasion
he found him sitting
on his bed onto which he pulled her and fondled
her. He also forced her to perform oral sex on him. She alleged that
during the
fourth incident the appellant made her ‘play’
with his penis.
[6]
She alleged that she did not report these acts of sexual assault
perpetrated on her to her parents after they occurred. They
were only
brought to her mother’s attention on 1 June 2007 through her
friend, Moodley, in whom she allegedly confided. There
is a dispute
between Moodley and the complainant’s mother as to whether the
complainant was also present in the room when
the report was made to
her mother, but what is clear is that her mother had a discussion
with her in connection with the allegations.
Her mother in turn
informed her father of the allegations and he suggested that the
complainant write everything down which she
did. When the appellant
returned from work the complainant’s mother confronted him with
these allegations but he denied them.
The following day the
complainant accompanied by her father went to the police station and
laid a charge of indecent assault against
the appellant. Consequent
upon these allegations against the appellant, the complainant’s
father terminated his tenancy and
evicted him from the property.
[7]
The appellant testified in his defence. He denied all of the
allegations against him contending that the charges were orchestrated
by the complainant’s father in an attempt to force him to pay
the debt and arrear rental. A further possible reason suggested
by
the appellant for the complainant’s father to use her to
instigate malicious charges against him was that he suspected
that
the appellant was spying on him for his wife. The trial court
rejected the appellant’s version as false and accepted
that of
the complainant as truthful. On appeal the court a quo confirmed the
conviction, but reduced the sentence.
[8] As
the appellant’s conviction was based on the evidence of a child
witness who was also a single witness, it is useful
to set out the
legal principles applicable in relation to such evidence. It has long
been accepted that the evidence of a child
is potentially unreliable
because of the child’s inexperience, imaginations and
susceptibility to influence and for that
reason it should be
approached with caution.
[1]
The trial court must fully appreciate the dangers inherent in the
acceptance of such evidence and where it is
apparent
that such appreciation was absent a court of appeal may hold that the
conviction should not be sustained.
[2]
[9]
In my view, the trial court misdirected itself in two respects.
First, it failed to properly apply the cautionary rule in analysing
the complainant’s evidence. Her evidence on the first incident
was improbable. It seems improbable that after the appellant
had
allowed the complainant to ‘play’ with his penis, he
would send her out of the room when he wanted to take a photograph
of
it. It is incomprehensible why she would agree to wait outside while
the appellant took a photograph of his penis after he had
made her to
perform what she described as a disgusting act. According to her the
act occurred in a room inside the house where
her parents were
present and her own room was also in the same house. It is thus not
clear why she elected to remain outside, wait
for the appellant and
then return to his room and again look at the picture on his cellular
phone after she had been exposed to
the disgusting act. The State
conceded that her behaviour in that regard is inexplicable and that
the court should reject her evidence
concerning that incident.
[10]
There were also discrepancies between the complainant’s
evidence-in-chief and the statement she made to the police on
2 June
2007. In that statement the complainant only referred to the first
incident and that incident only referred to the touching
of his
private part. No mention is made of the appellant showing the
complainant a photograph of his penis. There is also no mention
of
the other later incidents. In her handwritten statement she stated
that, during the third incident, the appellant called her
into his
bedroom, but when she was cross-examined on it, she testified that he
called her, but she did not go. Regarding the fourth
incident the
complainant testified that the appellant made her ‘play’
with his penis. But when she was cross-examined
on it, her reaction
was that she could not remember it very clearly. The State could
offer no explanation for these inconsistencies
and agreed that there
is lack of clarity on which of the incidents the appellant was
convicted.
[11]
The complainant also contradicted herself materially regarding when
the appellant stopped perpetrating the acts of sexual assault
on her.
In her evidence-in-chief, she testified that they ended when he moved
into the outbuilding. But under cross-examination
she testified that
the fourth incident occurred in the outbuilding. Her mother on
the other hand suggested that the relationship
between the appellant
and the complainant soured after he moved into the outbuilding,
thereby suggesting that whatever happened
probably occurred during
that time period. Moreover, the complainant and Moodley, the person
to whom she allegedly reported the
indecent assault, contradicted
each other as to how it came about that the report was made and on
the content of that report.
[12]
The trial court did not deal with these apparent contradictions and
improbabilities in the complainant’s evidence. It
unreservedly
accepted her evidence. From the reasoning of the trial court, it does
not appear that it fully appreciated the dangers
inherent in the
acceptance of the complainant’s evidence and the need to
subject her evidence to proper scrutiny to avoid
the risk of a wrong
conviction.
[13] The trial court’s
failure to carefully scrutinise the complainant’s evidence is
demonstrated by the following passage
in its judgment:
‘
Be
that as it may, the Court is focused on the interests of justice.
Looking at the evidence in its totality, looking at the demeanour
of
the complainant, looking at the nature of her evidence, looking at
her evidence-in-chief, tested by cross-examination, looking
at the
basic content of the statement that she made to the police and the
basic content of the handwritten statement she made for
her parents
to read, the Court can only find that in material substance they are
the same.’
The
analysis of the complainant’s evidence makes it clear that the
trial court’s finding that the evidence that was
before it was
‘in material substance . . . the same’ cannot be correct.
The evidence was not substantially the same.
The inherent
contradictions undermined the reliability of the complainant’s
evidence and her trustworthiness as a witness.
[14]
The trial court also misdirected itself by applying the wrong
standard of proof in determining the guilt of the appellant.
The
trial court rejected as far-fetched and fanciful the appellant’s
suggestion that the charge against him was orchestrated
to get him
evicted from the complainant’s home. It reasoned that it was
‘highly improbable [and] against the totality
of the evidence
that [the complainant’s] parents would put [her] through this
difficult experience of testifying in court
. . . .’
This approach is incorrect and was deprecated by this Court in
S
v Shackell
[3]
in which the following was stated at para 30 regarding the standard
of proof:
‘
It
is a trite principle that in criminal proceedings the prosecution
must prove its case beyond reasonable doubt and that a mere
preponderance of probabilities is not enough. Equally trite is the
observation that, in view of this standard of proof in a criminal
case, a court does not have to be convinced that every detail of an
accused’s version is true. If the accused’s version
is
reasonably possibly true in substance, the court must decide the
matter on the acceptance of that version. Of course it is permissible
to test the accused’s version against the inherent
probabilities. But it cannot be rejected merely because it is
improbable;
it can only be rejected on the basis of inherent
probabilities if it can be said to be so improbable that it cannot
reasonably
possibly be true.’
[15]
If regard is had to the shortcomings in the State’s case,
mainly the unreliability of the complainant’s evidence
and the
misdirections displayed in the judgment of the trial court, it cannot
be said that the guilt of the appellant was proved
beyond reasonable
doubt. The State conceded, correctly so, in my view, that these
contradictions in the complainant’s evidence
were serious and
that in consequence it could not support the conviction.
[16] In the result the
following order is made:
The
appeal succeeds and the conviction and sentence are set aside.
_________________
D H
Zondi
Judge
of Appeal
Appearances
For
the Appellant:
J H Du Plessis
Instructed by:
Maniklall Ravindra
& Co, Verulam
Hill, McHardy &
Herbst Inc, Bloemfontein
For the
Respondent:
A A Watt
Instructed by:
The Director of
Public Prosecutions, Pietermaritzburg
The Director of Public Prosecutions,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Viveiros v S
(75/98)
[2000] ZASCA 95
;
[2000] 2 All SA 86
(A) para 2.
[2]
R v Manda
1951
(3) SA 158
(A) at 163C-F.
[3]
S v Shackell
380/99
[2001] ZASCA 72
;
2001 (4) SA 1
(SCA).