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[2010] ZASCA 22
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Van der Watt v S (488/09) [2010] ZASCA 22; [2010] 3 All SA 434 (SCA) (23 March 2010)
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Case No:
488/09
J
G VAN DER WATT
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
Respondent
Neutral
citation
:
Van der Watt
v The State
(488/09)
[2010] ZASCA 22
(23March
2010)
Coram:
CLOETE,
TSHIQI
JJA
and SALDULKER AJA
Heard:
15
February 2010
Delivered:
23
March 2010
Updated:
Summary:
Rape
â single witness â many indications that complainantâs evidence
fabricated â accusedâs version reasonably possibly
true.
____________________________________________________________________________________
ORDER
On
appeal from:
North Gauteng High Court (Pretoria) (Legodi and Jooste JJ sitting as
court of appeal).
1. The
appeal is upheld.
2. The
order of the court a quo is set aside and substituted with the
following:
âThe
appeal is upheld. The conviction and sentence are set asideâ
JUDGMENT
___________________________
__________________________________________
TSHIQI
JA (CLOETE JA and SALDULKER AJA concurring):
[1] On
21 July 2003 the appellant was convicted in the regional court,
Pretoria, of having raped the complainant, Mary Sesane, his
domestic
worker. The rape was alleged to have taken place in her room which
was inside his yard at a distance of 10 metres from the
main house,
where he lived with his wife and children. On 30 September 2003 he
was sentenced to 10 yearsâ imprisonment. The appellant
admitted
that sexual intercourse had taken place but pleaded consent. On 26
September 2005, his appeal to the Pretoria High Court
was dismissed
and he now appeals with leave of that court, against both conviction
and sentence.
[2] The
layout of the appellantâs home is relevant in assessing the
credibility of both the appellant and the complainant for reasons
that will become apparent. The layout of the appellantâs home was
described by the appellant and his evidence in this regard was
confirmed by his wife. He testified that the main house was situated
in the middle of the erf which measured 24 metres wide. A flat
which
was occupied by his son was also situated on the erf approximately 10
metres away from the right side of the main house. The
complainantâs
room was attached to the flat and the two rooms were separated by a
kitchen measuring two by three metres. The complainantâs
room was
situated approximately two metres from the flat and approximately ten
metres from the nearest room in the main house. The
nearest room of
the main house was occupied by one of the appellantâs children. The
childâs room nearest to the complainant was
directly next to a
bathroom and then there was the main bedroom. The complainantâs
room was approximately two metres from the neighbouring
wall. On the
neighbourâs property, the neighbourâs domestic workerâs room
was the closest to the complainantâs room. Her
room was
approximately two metres from the wall, then another two metres from
the wall to the complainantâs room. The neighbourâs
main bedroom
window was approximately nine metres from complainantâs room. The
neighbourâs domestic worker was working on the
night of the
incident. This evidence on the lay-out remained unchallenged except
in relation to whether there was a garage or not.
According to the
complainant there was a garage. According to the appellant, whose
version was corroborated by his wife, by the time
that the alleged
rape took place the garage had been converted into a flat in which
his eldest son was sleeping.
[3] The
complainant was a single witness in regard to the rape. She testified
that during the early hours of 30 January 2000 at approximately
01h40, while she was sleeping in her room the appellant knocked on
the door of her room and called her name. She quickly put on
a
T-shirt and skirt. She opened the door and the appellant came in
carrying a small fire-arm wrapped in a T-shirt and a 2 litre coke.
His upper body was naked and he wore short pants and slippers. The
appellant then instructed her not to make a noise, but to obey
his
instructions. He placed the 2 litre Coke on top of the table together
with the firearm. He locked the door and told her that
he wanted to
have sexual intercourse with her. She asked him why he wanted to
sleep with her as he had a wife. The appellant told
her that his wife
was drunk. She told him that she would not be in a position to do so
because she did not come there to work for
him and to sleep with him
as well. He then ordered her to lie on top of the bed, he put on a
condom, took off her panties and lifted
up her skirt and started
having sexual intercourse with her. While he was having sexual
intercourse with her, he heard the garage
door open and the appellant
said he would go and check who was opening it. The appellant went
outside and she locked the door. After
a while he came back,
knocked, shouted her name and asked her to open the door. She did not
do so and kept quiet.
[4] The
following morning at 07h30 he returned and asked her to open the door
which she did. She noticed that his slippers were still
there. He
asked her if she was alright and told her that she should not tell
anybody what had happened earlier that morning. He came
back for a
second time and requested her politely to go to the kitchen to clean
the dishes and sweep the floor. He returned for
a third time and
borrowed R20 from her because he wanted to go to a doctor. She gave
him the R20 and he again told her never to tell
anybody of what had
happened.
She did what he had requested her to do
in the kitchen and after she had taken a bath, went to Atteridgeville
to ask her younger
sister to show her where the police station in
Pretoria West was. Her sister accompanied her to the police station
where she laid
a charge of rape against the
appellant. The police sent her
for a medical
examination.
[5] A
completed report by an authorised medical practitioner on the
completion of a medical legal examination form (form
J88) was handed in by agreement and the doctor who had completed it
was not called to testify. On the J88 the doctor described the
injury
to the complainantâs labia minora as an âabrasion 5 oâclock
positionâ and concluded that her genital injuries were
âcompatible
with forcible penetration of vagina with large object like penisâ.
The schematic drawing of the findings section
of the form reflects a
single abrasion as described. No further injuries were noted and no
other substantial medical conclusions
can be gleaned from the J88.
The magistrate dealt with these injuries in the following manner:
â
The
evidence of the complainant is furthermore supported in some respects
by the medical evidence. The medical report showed swelling
on the
private parts as well as abrasions. The doctorâs comment was that
the injuries were compatible with forceful penetration
of the vagina
with a large object like a penis.â
This
summation of the doctorâs findings by the magistrate is inaccurate.
The medical report makes no mention of âswellingsâ
on the private
parts and refers to âabrasionâ and not âabrasionsâ as stated
by the magistrate. The magistrate also does not
state in what
respects the evidence of the complainant is supported by the medical
evidence. It was common cause that sexual intercourse
had taken
place. The doctorâs conclusion is not that the injury she found was
only compatible with forceful penetration.
[6] The
version of the appellant was that he went to the complainantâs room
late in the evening of 29 September 2000 after his wife
and youngest
son had gone to bed. They started chatting, which was not unusual
between them because on occasions when he worked night
duty, he would
be at home during the day and they usually sat together watching
television whilst his wife was at work. Whilst they
were chatting
that evening he saw her breasts through her blouse which was not
buttoned up and asked her whether she did not want
to have sexual
intercourse. He stated that such a thought had previously occurred to
him whilst they were alone in the house. She
responded that she was
afraid of his wife. He told her that she was asleep and offered to
give her money. She agreed on condition
that they used condoms
because she was not on contraceptives. He stated that the complainant
had condoms in a margarine container
but he decided not to use them
because some of them had already been used. He told her he had
condoms and would go and fetch them
from the house. He asked if she
wanted anything from the house and she said that she only wanted
cooldrink. He came back with the
cooldrink and a condom and they had
sexual intercourse. At some stage he informed her that he was tired.
They changed positions and
he climbed on top and they continued. He
again told her he was too tired to continue and they ended the
intercourse before he ejaculated.
He took a sip of the cooldrink,
took off the condom, put on his clothes and left, leaving his
slippers and the condom behind.
[7] The
following morning he went back to her room and knocked. She opened
the door for him and he borrowed R20 from her to buy milk.
He told
her that he would go to the garage to buy milk. She gave him his
slippers. After he had coffee he again went to the room
to tell her
that he was going to the bank to withdraw money. He asked her if she
was fine and whether she was cross with him and
she said she was not.
When he came back at approximately 13h00, the complainant had left.
[8] The
version of what happened in her room the following day is for the
most part common cause. On either version, it is clear that
when the
appellant came to her room the following morning she opened for him
without resistance. It is also not in dispute that she
gave him a
loan of R20 willingly. The complainant came back to his home the
following Tuesday in the company of three police officers.
He stated
that on this day he could not pay her salary because he did not have
enough money but only paid her R70; comprised of R50
for the sexual
intercourse and R20 for the loan. The payment of R50 and why it was
paid became a bone of contention because the complainant
denied that
she accepted the R50 and also denied that there was an agreement to
pay it in exchange for the sexual intercourse. The
appellantâs wife
corroborated his version that they paid the R50 to the complainant.
Although his wife could not testify that this
was indeed paid in
consequence of an agreement between the appellant and the
complainant; her testimony was that according to her
this money was
paid for the sexual intercourse.
[9] The
magistrate rejected the appellantâs version that the R50 was for
sexual intercourse, and stated that she was of the âopinionâ
that
the money was for âher duties not for sex.â It is not clear on
what basis the magistrate formed this opinion as it was neither
the
complainantâs nor the appellantâs version.
[10] Related
to the divergence pertaining to the payment of R50 is a document
produced at the instance of appellant during the course
of the trial.
This document was produced after the complainant had been excused
after leading her evidence. She was recalled and
the appellant
through his legal representative produced the document that was
written by his wife on his instructions and given to
the complainant
to sign as an acknowledgement of moneys she had received. This
document specifies that the complainant was given
an amount of R670 â
âJanuarie se salaris van R350 plus R250 vir Desember plus R50 wat
hy haar ekstra gee plus R20 wat hy haar
geleen het.â Both the
appellant and his wife were cross-examined at length on this document
and the reason why this document does
not specify that the R50 was
for sexual intercourse. His explanation was that the document was
given to the complainant to sign as
proof that she had been paid her
full salary. The failure to specify the reason for the payment of
the R50 seems to have influenced
the court below in rejecting the
version of the appellant with regards to the reason for its payment.
The court below found it strange
that the appellantâs wife did not
specify in the document signed by the complainant that the R50 was
for sex. The learned Judgeâs
reasoning was that the appellant
should have found it prudent to specify that the R50 was for sex
because at that stage he had already
been arrested on rape
allegations. This conclusion by the court below loses sight of the
fact that the purpose for which the document
had been prepared was to
prove that the complainant had been paid her salary and all her
outstanding moneys. On either version, it
is clear that the R20 was
for the loan and that the R50 was not part of the complainantâs
salary. If the version of the appellant
that the R50 was for sexual
intercourse is rejected on the basis that it is not true, it is
inexplicable why the appellant would
decide to give the complainant
R50 extra for no reason; a few days after she had laid a charge of
rape against him. In my view therefore
nothing turns on this
omission. For the same reasons, it is irrelevant that the appellantâs
wife was the scribe of the document.
[11] When
evaluating the evidence of the appellant, the magistrate stated that
it was riddled with contradictions and inconsistencies
and that it
could not be reasonably possibly true. The magistrate found the
complainant a satisfactory witness in all material respects.
In
reaching that conclusion she relied on her performance in court;
supposedly her demeanour and the medical evidence. It is therefore
necessary to deal with these findings by the magistrate, and to the
extent of their relevance, how the court below approached this
evidence and the findings by the magistrate in dismissing the appeal.
[12] As
stated above, the magistrateâs description of the injuries
appearing in the J88 was inaccurate. Her conclusion that the
medical
report supports the version of the complainant was also wrong because
the medical conclusion does not isolate forcible penetration
as the
only cause for the abrasion. It is therefore not surprising that she
came to a wrong conclusion and thereby misdirected herself
in this
regard. The version of the appellant on the other hand is consistent
with the findings in the J88 and gives a probable explanation
for the
clinical findings in that the appellant described the sexual
intercourse as ârofâ and further stated that after he told
the
complainant that he was tired she climbed on top of him until he
informed her that he was tired. His version suggests that they
had
wild intercourse for a lengthy period of time. Sheer logic dictates
that a single abrasion can not be unexpected under these
circumstances.
[13] It
is inconceivable on what basis the magistrate found the evidence of
the complainant honest and reliable in the midst of the
following
improbabilities:
The
layout of the yard shows that the complainantâs room was a mere two
metres from the room in which the appellantâs son was
sleeping, two
metres from the neighbourâs wall and ten metres from the nearest
room in the main house. The appellantâs wife and
his children were
all at home that night. If the complainantâs version regarding the
time of the rape is accepted; then it means
that the appellantâs
son was in a flat two metres from the complainantâs room sleeping.
It is improbable that the appellant went
out of his bedroom carrying
a fire-arm, knocked on her door and raped the complainant in her room
at that time of the night, because
in so doing he would be taking a
huge risk that the complainant would not react nor act in such a
manner as to wake up his son who
was a mere two metres away from
them; or his other family members who were in the main house. It is
further improbable that when
the appellant heard a noise from the
garage; appreciating a possibility that it could be his son; would go
out of his domestic workerâs
room during the early hours of the
morning without fearing that his son would see him or find his
behaviour bizarre. That, according
to her, he then came back and
knocked and shouted her name, with no regard for the son on whose
account he had interrupted the sexual
intercourse is more astounding.
The same applies to her evidence that he came back expecting her to
open her room for him again;
a few minutes after he had just raped
her. What makes far more sense is the appellantâs version that he
went to her room and engaged
in sexual intercourse with her by
consent clearly with no fear that the complainant would do something
to wake up his family. There
is also nothing improbable in his
version that he interrupted the sexual intercourse because he was
tired.
[14] The
other missing piece in the puzzle of her evidence is the reason why
the appellant was carrying a bottle of 2 litre coke when
he came into
her room. There is no cogent reason for the possession of the 2 litre
Coke on her version. However the evidence of the
appellant that he
brought the 2 litre Coke because she asked for it explains this.
According to the complainant, he was carrying
both a fire-arm and the
2 litre coke. It could be inferred from her testimony that the
purpose for carrying the fire-arm was to threaten
or intimidate her.
Even so, her evidence that the appellant was carrying a fire-arm
falls to be rejected because of the contradictions
on whether she was
indeed threatened or not with the fire-arm. In response to a question
by the defence during cross-examination
on why she did not scream,
she stated that she did not scream because she saw the fire-arm and
had been told not to scream. When
asked to explain her testimony in
that regard she gave a meaningless response. She was then
specifically asked whether the appellant
had said he would shoot her
if she screamed and she responded that indeed the appellant had
mentioned that. She was then asked to
state what the appellant said
exactly thereafter and the cross-examination proceeded as follows:
â
Wat
het hy gesê mevrou? â He told me: âMary you should not shout,
you should not make a noise or anything, get on top of the
bed and I
should sleep with him, if not so, here is the firearm.â As a
result of this worship I did as he commanded me to.
Dit
is baie interessant, want u sê dit nie in u verklaring nie en u het
ook nie in u getuienis in hoof gesê nie, waarom nie? â
The reason
why I did not mention it, maybe the last portion, I mentioned it
above my sta tement that I should not shout, I should
just remain
silent.
Mevrou
u antwoord nie my vraag nie. Waarom het u dit nie in u verklaring
gesit nie en waarom het u nie vandag in die hof voordat
ek vir u vrae
gevra het dit vir die aanklaer en die hof gesê nie.? Hoekom steek u
dit weg? â The reason why I did not mention
it is because I have
mentioned it already in my statement.
Watter
âstatement?â â Your worship the statement that has been handed
in as an exhibit, I only mentioned that he had a firearm.
Mevrou
kom ons vergeet dit, dit is nie my punt nie. U sê,â
Then
the court interjected and the following exchange took place:
â
Listen
they say, at no point in time in the statement, in your evidence in
chief and up to so far you never made mention of the fact
that
accused person threatened you with the firearm and promise to kill
you, now why is that? â Your worship I did not explain,
because in
my statement I explained that he had a firearm.â
On
being questioned further on this aspect by the defence the following
exchange took place:
â
Mevrou
baie mense dra net vuurwapens by hulle, niemand raak ook net sommer
bang omdat iemand ân vuurwapen dra nie, ân mens raak
eers bang as
iemand jou dreig. â I was shocked and I was afraid because he was
in possession of this firearm and he was in my bedroom.â
â
Maar
hy het u nie gedreig nie, is dit korrek? â He did not threaten me
he only said: âDo not make anything, here is the firearm.â
U
het dit nie so gesê nie u het net gesê in u verklaring hy het ân
vuurwapen gehad, u probeer nou die indruk skep by hierdie
hof dat hy
u gedreig het met die vuurwapen. â That is what I said, that he had
a firearm in his possession when he came to my bedroom.
En
dit beteken eintlik maar niks nie. â I know that the duty of a
firearm is to kill a person, and I was shocked and afraid when
I saw
this firearm.â
It
can be inferred from her contradictions on whether she was indeed
threatened with the fire-arm that the complainant fabricated
her
evidence in an attempt to bolster her version that she was coerced to
engage in sexual intercourse. The court a quo misdirected
itself by
finding that the complainant âdid not in any way contradict
herselfâ in regard to her version as to the fire-arm. The
appellant
on the other hand was truthful in that he did not deny that he owns a
fire-arm. He in fact testified that he owned several
fire-arms and
that he kept his fire-arms in a safe in his bedroom. He stated that
the safe was very close to his bed in which he
slept with his wife
and that the door of the safe made a loud noise when it is being
opened. He testified that if he had tried to
remove the fire-arm from
the safe that evening, his wife, who was already asleep in their bed
would have heard the noise. His wife
confirmed that she would have
heard him if he tried to open the door of the safe that evening
because it makes a loud noise and she
is a light sleeper. The court a
quo
said
it was ânot convincedâ by the denial of the appellant that he had
a fire-arm as he could have taken the fire-arm out of the
safe
earlier without his wife knowing. The correct approach would have
been to consider whether the appellantâs version that he
had no
fire-arm could reasonably possibly have been true, particularly in
the light of the complainantâs contradictory evidence
which I have
quoted at some length because of its importance.
[15] The
behaviour of the complainant the following day is inconsistent with
her version that she was raped. The complainant woke
up the following
day and continued with her normal duties as if nothing had happened
until she completed what was necessary. Nothing
prevented her from
leaving at the earliest available opportunity that morning to go and
report her rape as she claims she intended
to. There is absolutely no
reason why she would lend an amount of R20 to a man who had just
raped her carrying a fire-arm, a few
hours before. The version of the
appellant on the other hand explains his behaviour the following day.
As stated above his behaviour
shows that he had no fear that he would
be caught. It is also not surprising that he would go to her room,
early in the morning to
ask if she was alright. This behaviour would
indeed be nonsensical if he did so after having raped her a few hours
previously. It
is also not unusual that he would ask her for a loan
of R20 under the circumstances testified to by him, but not remotely
probable
that she would lend him money after he had raped her earlier
that morning.
[16] The
appellant proferred an explanation as a probable reason why the
complainant laid a charge of rape against him. The appellant
stated
that he thought that the complainant incriminated him falsely because
of a conflict between him, his wife and the complainant,
involving
his child, a few days before. When the complainant was asked whether
he had encountered any problems with the appellant,
she stated that
there were no problems. During cross-examination, she was confronted
about an incident that has had occurred a few
days earlier when she
was confronted by the appellant and his wife because their youngest
child was found outside the yard, and she
was threatened with
dismissal. She admitted the incident thereby contradicting her
earlier evidence to the contrary. It is worth
commenting on the
approach adopted by the court below in dealing with this incident.
The court below stated that it was suggested
that this incident was a
possible motive by the complainant to incriminate the appellant
falsely. The court found that such a motive
was too remote and that
this was so because the dispute was resolved amicably. The court
therefore concluded that the complainant
had no motive. It is
doubtful that the court was correct in simply ruling out this
incident as a possible motive. The complainant
admitted that the
incident occurred. She was not only confronted by both the appellant
and his wife but was also threatened with
dismissal. It is trite that
an accused may tender an explanation why he believes he has been
falsely implicated and it may turn out
another reason unknown to him
exists or is more probable. The accused is called upon to speculate,
not testify on a matter of fact.
In such circumstances he cannot be
blamed if it turns out that his explanation is found to be wanting.
1
It would therefore be wrong to criticise the appellant if it turned
out that this was not the reason. What is important is that the
appellant was truthful when he relayed the incident to the court and
the incident cannot be ruled out as a possible reason why the
complainant laid false charges against him.
[17] In
an attempt to bolster her evidence, the complainant testified that
there was a garage outside and that it was as a result
of noise
emanating from the garage that sexual intercourse had been
interrupted. This evidence was a clear fabrication. The appellantâs
evidence of his yard was not disputed and was further corroborated
his wife, who also
denied that there was a
garage at the time. The appellantâs son also corroborated this
evidence in as far as he confirmed that he
slept in a room outside
the main house
(which could
only have been a flat). The court
a
quo
found that the presence
of the garage was immaterial because the real issue was whether or
not there was noise in that direction.
In my view the existence or
not of the garage is material because it deals with the reason
advanced by the complainant on why the
sexual intercourse was
interrupted. She repeatedly said that the appellant had referred to
âthe garage door.â He could not have
done so. There was no
garage. This in turn affects the credibility of the complainant. It
follows that if there was no garage, then
it can be inferred that
there was no noise coming from a garage and that this version was
fabricated by the complainant.
[18] The
other clear fabrication found in the complainantâs evidence relates
to the alleged alcohol consumption by the appellantâs
wife. The
appellant denied that he said this to the complainant. His wife
stated that she is and had always been a teetotaler. This
was not
challenged during her cross-examination. No reason comes to mind on
why the appellant who admitted that he had sexual intercourse
with
the complainant on his request and who further admitted that he
allayed her fears pertaining to his wife by telling her that
his wife
was asleep, would deny that he had instead said that she was drunk. A
denial of this is of no moment.
[19] The
magistrate concluded that the appellantâs evidence was full of
contradictions. Apart from the fact that such contradictions
are
blatantly absent from her judgment, this conclusion is unfounded and
amounted to a clear misdirection. In support of this wrong
conclusion, the magistrate further stated that the appellant stated
that âthe complainant consented to the sexual intercourse,
but
could not explain why she was injured. Then later he said it was
because she was roughâ.
This
probable explanation by the appellant for the injuries of the
complainant was not an afterthought nor a contradiction by the
appellant. On the contrary it was consistent with his earlier version
during his evidence that the sexual intercourse was wild.
The
appellant was a truthful witness who admitted that sexual intercourse
had taken place to which there were no witnesses in spite
of the
possible problems this would probably cause between him and his wife.
[20] The
magistrateâs criticism of the evidence of the appellantâs wife is
also unfounded and was based on wrong assumptions.
The appellantâs
wife did not testify that she would do anything to keep her husband
out of jail. She said that she would do anything
to protect him, but
immediately added that she believed that what he said was the truth.
It was also incorrect for the magistrate
to find that she could not
testify about what had occurred at night because she had gone to
sleep. Her evidence in this regard was
that she would have heard her
husband if he woke up as she was a light sleeper and because they
slept together like spoons. She also
stated that she would have heard
him if he opened the gun safe because it made a lot of noise when it
was being opened. In
S v
Gentle
2
Cloete JA stated:
â
The
representative of the State submitted on appeal that (I quote from
the heads of argument):
â
(T)here
was sufficient corroboration or âindicatorsâ to support the
occurrence of the rapes.â
It
must be emphasised immediately that by corroboration is meant other
evidence which supports the evidence of the complainant, and
which
renders the evidence of the accused less probable,
on the issues in dispute
(cf
R
v W
1949
(3) SA 772
(A) at 778-9). If the evidence of the complainant differs
in significant detail from the evidence of other State witnesses, the
Court
must critically examine the differences with a view to
establishing whether the complainantâs evidence is reliable. But
the fact
that the complainantâs evidence accords with the evidence
of other State witnesses on issues not in dispute does not provide
corroboration.
Thus, in the present matter, for example, evidence
that the appellant had sexual intercourse with the complainant does
not provide
corroboration of her version that she was raped, as the
fact of sexual intercourse is common cause. What is required is
credible
evidence which renders the complainantâs version more
likely that the sexual intercourse took place without consent, and
the appellantâs
version less likely that it did not.â
The
appellantâs wife was truthful and her corroboration of the
appellantâs testimony should have been taken into account in
evaluating
the evidence.
[2
1] The
court below also criticised the appellantâs evidence. He was
criticised for a failure to give an explanation as to why he
left his
slippers in the room. The court belowâs reasoning is premised on a
conclusion that he would not have wanted to leave any
tracks in the
complainantâs room. This finding does not take into account the
converse inference that the appellant may have left
his slippers
there because he did not fear that the complainant would use them
against him because there was consent. Of course if
the appellant had
indeed raped the complainant, he would have ensured, as stated by the
court below, that he left no track in the
complainantâs room.
[22] In
criticising the evidence of the appellant, the court a quo made a
further factual error in stating that the appellant testified
that he
watched pornographic movies with the complainant. His evidence was
that the movies were ârofâ. When he was cross-examined
further,
he stated that they watched M-Net stories but did not discuss sex;
although the thought had occurred in his mind. It is
this factual
error that led the court a quo to conclude that it is very uncommon
that a female domestic worker will watch such movies
with her
âmasterâ male employer, unless there are some sort of emotional
feelings. Apart from the fact that this Court has in
the past
criticised such bald generalisations,
3
this conclusion was based on an incorrect factual summation of his
evidence.
[23] The
test applicable in criminal proceedings is that the State ought to
prove the guilt of an accused beyond a reasonable doubt.
The trial
court must accept the version of an accused unless it is found that
this is not reasonably possibly true. In light of the
improbabilities
and contradictions in the complainantâs version, the magistrate and
the court a quo misdirected themselves in accepting
her version and
rejecting the version of the appellant. There is no basis for
rejecting the version of the appellant.
[24] I
therefore make the following order:
1. The
appeal is upheld.
2. The
order of the court a quo is set aside and substituted with the
following:
âThe
appeal is upheld. The conviction and sentence are set aside.â
____________________
Z
L L TSHIQI
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
:
APPELLANT
: L
Augustyn
Instructed
by Pretoria Justice Centre, Pretoria;
Bloemfontein
Justice Centre, Bloemfontein
RESPONDENT
: R
T Mareume
Instructed
by Director of Public Prosecutions, Pretoria;
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Bloemfontein
1
R v Mthembu
1956 (4) SA 334
(T) at 335H-336B;
S v Kubeka
1982 (1) SA 534
(W) at 536D-537D and cases there cited;
S v
Ramochela
1997 (2) SACR 494
(O) at 496a-e.
2
2005 (1) SACR 420
at 421 para [18].
3
S v Scott Crossley
2008 (1) SACR 223
(SCA).