S v Tshimbudzi (137/2012) [2012] ZASCA 200; 2013 (1) SACR 528 (SCA) (30 November 2012)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Appeal against conviction and sentence — Appellant convicted of rape of a 13-year-old female and sentenced to life imprisonment — Serious irregularities identified in trial proceedings, including failure to properly assess the complainant's ability to testify and lack of admissible evidence regarding her age — High Court did not confirm the conviction as being in accordance with justice — Appeal upheld, conviction and sentence set aside due to cumulative effect of trial irregularities.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter concerned a criminal appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal against both conviction and sentence. The appellant, Avhapfani Victor Tshimbudzi, appealed against his conviction for rape and the sentence of life imprisonment. The respondent was the State.


The procedural history was materially unusual. The appellant was tried in the regional court, where he was convicted of raping a 13-year-old female. Following conviction, the matter was referred to the High Court for sentencing in terms of section 52 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, and the High Court (Limpopo High Court, Thohoyandou, Hetisani J sitting as a court of first instance) imposed life imprisonment. The appellant pursued an appeal with the leave of the Supreme Court of Appeal.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the appellant’s trial and sentencing process complied with the requirements of fair criminal procedure, including the proper application of the minimum sentence regime, the adequacy of proof of the complainant’s age, the admissibility of the complainant’s evidence (given her minority and the administration of the oath), and the effect of an inadequate and largely inaudible record on appellate and review-type oversight.


2. Material Facts


The appellant was charged with the rape of a female complainant alleged to have been 13 years old, with the incident said to have occurred between 30 April 1999 and 2 May 1999. Following conviction in the regional court, the matter proceeded to the High Court for sentencing under section 52 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act.


A central undisputed feature of the proceedings, as reflected in the appeal record, was that substantially large parts of the transcript were inaudible. The Supreme Court of Appeal accepted that the frequency and duration of these “inaudibles” were such that it could not determine what the proper outcome of the trial proceedings should have been. The court further considered that the High Court judge who sentenced the appellant would have been faced with the same difficulty arising from the poor state of the record.


In relation to the application of the minimum sentencing provisions, it was material that the charge sheet was silent on whether the rape charge was one that fell within the ambit of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, and therefore whether the appellant faced the prospect of life imprisonment. The appellate court treated it as necessary that the appellant should have been advised, whether through the charge sheet or otherwise during the trial and before sentence, that the minimum sentence regime applied and that life imprisonment was the competent sentence absent substantial and compelling circumstances.


It was also material that, while the complainant’s age was recorded as 13 years (including in the medical report), there was, on the court’s assessment, no admissible evidence properly proving that she was below 16 years of age for purposes of engaging the specific minimum sentence provision. The medical report (J88) contained an unsupported opinion as to age, and the doctor did not testify to provide a factual basis for that opinion. Although the report was admitted by consent, the court found it inadequate to prove age satisfactorily.


A further material feature concerned the complainant’s testimony. While the record indicated that she was sworn in, the complainant was a minor, and the regional magistrate did not conduct the enquiries the appellate court considered essential to establish that she could distinguish between truth and lies, and then (if so satisfied) whether she understood the nature and import of the oath. The absence of such enquiry meant, on the court’s reasoning, that the complainant’s evidence was rendered inadmissible.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the conviction and sentence could stand in light of serious procedural and evidential irregularities, and in particular:


The first issue was whether it was competent for the High Court to impose life imprisonment under section 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 where the appellant had not been properly warned that the charge attracted the minimum sentence regime and the possibility of life imprisonment.


The second issue was whether the complainant’s age (as a fact necessary to bring the matter within Part I of Schedule 2 read with section 51(1)) had been proved by admissible evidence, given that the doctor did not testify and the medical report’s age assessment was not supported by an evidential foundation.


The third issue was whether the complainant’s evidence was admissible where the regional magistrate failed to conduct the necessary enquiry (given her minority) to determine her understanding of the distinction between truth and untruth and the consequences of lying, and then her ability to appreciate the import of the oath, as contemplated in relation to testimony under oath.


The fourth issue concerned the effect of a materially deficient record, dominated by extensive inaudibles, on the ability of the sentencing court and the appellate court to determine whether the proceedings were in accordance with justice, and the consequences of the High Court’s failure to confirm that the regional court conviction was in accordance with justice before proceeding to sentence.


These issues primarily concerned the application of law to fact, and the legal consequences of procedural defects for the fairness and validity of the conviction and sentence, rather than a re-evaluation of factual guilt.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Supreme Court of Appeal approached the matter as one involving multiple serious irregularities and assessed both their individual significance and their cumulative effect on the fairness and validity of the proceedings.


A key consideration was the condition of the record. The court found that the transcript was so extensively marred by “inaudibles” that it could not confidently assess what occurred and whether the trial outcome was just. The court inferred that the High Court judge sentencing the appellant would have faced the same inability to evaluate the integrity of the proceedings. This deficiency fed into the court’s conclusion that the High Court could not properly have satisfied itself that the regional court proceedings were in accordance with justice, and the fact that the High Court failed to record that it had so considered and confirmed the conviction was treated as decisive. On this reasoning, the conviction could not stand, and because the sentencing phase depended on a valid conviction properly confirmed, the sentence likewise had to be set aside.


The court further reasoned that, for the imposition of life imprisonment under the minimum sentence regime, it was necessary that the accused be advised—via the charge sheet or otherwise during trial but before sentence—that the offence fell within the ambit of the Criminal Law Amendment Act and that the applicable sentence might be life imprisonment. The court held that absent such notice, it was incompetent to sentence the appellant to life imprisonment in terms of section 51(1). This was treated as a substantive irregularity affecting sentence.


In addition, the court emphasised that for the offence to fall under section 51(1) read with Part I of Schedule 2, there had to be admissible evidence that the complainant was under 16 years. The court held that the medical report’s statement of age, without testimony from the doctor and without an articulated factual basis for the opinion, was insufficient. The admission of the report by consent did not cure the inadequacy of the evidential foundation for the age determination. The court treated the complainant’s age as crucial both to the precise nature of the charge and to the sentencing consequences.


The court also addressed the admissibility of the complainant’s testimony. It accepted that the complainant was sworn in as reflected in the record, but held that this was not sufficient where the witness was a minor. The court considered it essential that the magistrate should have conducted an enquiry to establish, first, whether the complainant understood the distinction between telling the truth and telling a lie, and only thereafter whether she understood the nature and import of giving evidence under oath. Because the magistrate conducted none of these enquiries, the court concluded that the complainant’s evidence was inadmissible, which struck at the heart of the conviction.


Having identified these defects, the court concluded that the proceedings were characterised by serious irregularities affecting both the conviction and sentence, and that their cumulative effect was so profound that it could not be corrected by a remittal.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Supreme Court of Appeal upheld the appeal against both conviction and sentence. The appellant’s conviction and the sentence of life imprisonment were set aside.


No specific costs order was recorded in the judgment.


Cases Cited


S v Legoa 2003 (1) SACR 13 (SCA)


S v Ndlovu 2003 (1) SACR 331 (SCA)


S v Makatu 2006 (2) SACR 582 (SCA)


Legislation Cited


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (sections 51(1), 51(3)(a), 52; Part I of Schedule 2)


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (section 162)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Supreme Court of Appeal held that the proceedings were vitiated by serious irregularities, including an extensively inaudible record preventing proper assessment of the trial’s correctness, the High Court’s failure to confirm that the regional court proceedings were in accordance with justice before sentencing, the lack of proper notice to the accused that the minimum sentence provisions applied and that life imprisonment was competent, the absence of admissible proof of the complainant’s age for purposes of section 51(1), and the failure to conduct the necessary enquiry before administering the oath to a minor witness, rendering her evidence inadmissible.


On the cumulative effect of these irregularities, the conviction and sentence could not stand and were set aside, without remittal.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A court may not competently impose a sentence of life imprisonment under section 51(1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 unless the accused was properly informed, through the charge sheet or otherwise during the trial before sentence, that the charge attracts the minimum sentence regime and that life imprisonment is a possible sentence in the absence of substantial and compelling circumstances.


Where the applicability of section 51(1) read with Part I of Schedule 2 depends on the complainant being under a specified age, there must be admissible evidence proving that age. A medical report’s unsupported opinion on age, without testimony establishing its factual basis, may be inadequate to prove age for this purpose even if the report is admitted by consent.


When a minor testifies under oath, the presiding officer must conduct an appropriate enquiry to establish that the minor can distinguish between truth and lies, and thereafter whether the minor understands the nature and import of the oath. Failure to conduct such an enquiry can render the minor’s evidence inadmissible.


Where the record is materially defective (including extensive inaudibles) such that a court cannot properly determine what occurred and whether proceedings were in accordance with justice, and where serious irregularities cumulatively undermine trial fairness, the conviction and sentence may be set aside and the defects may be incapable of correction by remittal.

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[2012] ZASCA 200
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S v Tshimbudzi (137/2012) [2012] ZASCA 200; 2013 (1) SACR 528 (SCA) (30 November 2012)

THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 137/2012
In the matter between
AVHAPFANI VICTOR TSHIMBUDZI
................................................
APPELLANT
and
THE STATE
...........................................................................................
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Tshimbudzi v The State
(137/12)
[2012] ZASCA 200
(30 November 2012)
Coram:
Heher, Mhlantla and Bosielo JJA, Swain and
Mbha AJJA
Heard:
16 November 2012
Delivered:
30 November2012
Summary: Criminal – appeal against both
conviction and sentence – appellant convicted of rape of a 13
year old female
by regional magistrate – matter referred to
high court for sentencing in terms of
s 52
of the
Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997
– charge sheet silent on whether the
rape is covered by the provisions of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act –
appellant
sentenced to imprisonment for life – high court not
having confirmed the conviction of the appellant by the regional
magistrate
as being in accordance with justice – effect of
failure by the magistrate to enquire into the complainant’s
ability
to distinguish between the truth and lies and the ability to
understand the import of the oath – cumulative effect of
irregularities
– the difference between truth and untruth and
the consequences of telling a lie – the record marred by a
series of
inaudibles.
___________________________________________________________
ORDER
___________________________________________________________
On appeal from:
Limpopo High Court, Thohoyandou
(Hetisani J, sitting as a court of first instance):
The appeal against both the conviction and sentence is
upheld and both are set aside.
___________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
___________________________________________________________
BOSIELO JA (HEHER AND MHLANTLA JJA, SWAIN AND MBHA
AJJA CONCURRING):
[1] This matter is a regrettable comedy of errors. The
record reveals clearly that commencing from the plea stage in the
regional
court culminating in sentencing in the High Court, Limpopo,
nothing was done according to the book. The record is riddled with
irregularities. What must be considered is the nature of the
irregularities and their cumulative effect.
[2] Aggrieved by the conviction and sentence imposed by
the court below (Hetisani J) the appellant is appealing with the
leave of
this court.
[3] This appeal came before us 12 years after the
appellant was sentenced to imprisonment for life. However, this delay
is substantially
due to the appellant’s own inaction as he only
submitted his application for leave to appeal to this court in April
2011.
[4] It is clear from the record that substantially large
parts of it that was put before us were inaudible when it was
transcribed.
These ‘inaudibles’ are so frequent and of so
indefinite a duration that we are unable to determine what the proper
outcome of the proceedings in the trial should have been.
Furthermore, we are of the view that, given the poor state of the
record,
the learned judge in the court below was in the same
situation and that he could not have been able to satisfy himself
that the
proceedings were in accordance with justice. Perhaps this is
the reason why he failed to record that he had considered the
convictions
of the appellant by the regional magistrate and, found it
to have been in accordance with justice. The failure by the court
below
to confirm that the proceedings were in accordance with justice
means that the conviction cannot stand subject to the possibility
of
a remittal to the high court which will be considered below. Because
the trial judge could not in the circumstances properly
proceed to
the sentencing phase the sentence also falls to be set aside.
[5] In addition there are a number of irregularities
which were committed during the trial which in our view are of a
serious nature.
First, the appellant was charged with the rape of a
13 year old female. This offence falls under
s 51(1)
read with
Part 1
of Schedule 2 of the Act. The alleged rape took place between 30
April 1999 and 2 May 1999. Upon conviction the appellant was referred

to the high court for sentencing in terms of
s 52
of the Act. In the
absence of any facts that qualify as substantial and compelling to
justify a lesser sentence, as contemplated
in
s 51(3)
(a),
of
the Act, the appellant stood to be sentenced to imprisonment for
life. However, this could only be done if the appellant had
been
advised either through the charge sheet or in whatever manner during
the trial but before sentence that he faced an offence
which fell
within the ambit of the Act and that the possible sentence was life
imprisonment. A failure so to advise the appellant
means that it was
incompetent for the court below to sentence him to imprisonment for
life in terms of
s 51(1)
of the Act. See
S v Legoa
2003 (1)
SACR 13
(SCA);
S v Ndlovu
2003 (1) SACR 331
(SCA) and
S v
Makatu
2006 (2) SACR 582
(SCA).
[6] Furthermore, it is an essential requirement of the
Act that for the appellant to be convicted of rape under
s 51(1)
read
with
Part I
of Schedule 2 of the Act, there had to be admissible
evidence that the complainant was below the age of 16 years. There
was none.
The doctor also recorded in the medical report that she was
13 years old. The opinion by the medical doctor which is contained in

the medical report, the J88, is inadequate as it is not supported by
any facts. The doctor did not testify. Ordinarily, one would
have
expected the medical doctor to lay down a basis for his opinion
perhaps by reference to the medical examination which he conducted.

Absent such evidence, we find that notwithstanding the fact that the
medical report was admitted as evidence by consent, it is
not
adequate to prove the complainant’s age satisfactorily. The age
of the complainant is crucial in determining the precise
nature of
the offence for which the appellant is charged and the possible
sentence to be imposed upon his conviction.
[7] A further irregularity relates to whether the
complainant was validly sworn in in terms of s 162 of the Criminal
Procedure Act
51 of 1977 (CPA) before she testified. The record shows
that she was sworn in. (‘d.s.s’). However this is not
enough
as the complainant was a minor. Given the age of the
complainant it was essential that the regional magistrate make some
enquiry
to satisfy himself that the complainant understood and
appreciated the distinction of telling the truth and a lie. Only in
the
event that the magistrate was satisfied that the minor possessed
this ability should the magistrate then have proceeded to determine

whether the said minor fully understood the nature and import of
giving evidence under oath. The magistrate conducted none of these

enquiries and as a consequence the complainant’s evidence was
rendered inadmissible.
[8] It should be clear from the above exposition that
the trial was characterised by serious irregularities which strike at
the
heart of the conviction and the fairness of the trial. The
cumulative effect is such as cannot be corrected by any remittal.
[9] In the result, the appeal against both the
conviction and sentence is upheld and both are set aside.
_________________
L.O. BOSIELO
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For Appellant : M Madima
Instructed by:
Justice Centre, Thohoyandou
Justice Centre, Bloemfontein
For Respondent : A Madzhuta
Instructed by:
Director Public Prosecutions, Thohoyandou
Director Public Prosecutions, Bloemfontein