THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case Number: A 239 / 2023
In the matter between:
UVE NGQENGQA Appellant
And
THE STATE Respondent
Coram: Wille J et Katz AJ
Heard: (Determined on the papers as agreed with the parties)
Delivered: 4 March 2024
JUDGMENT
2
THE COURT:
Introduction:
[1] This is an appeal from the lower court only against a conviction of the rape
and kidnapping of a minor. The appellant w as convicted of one count of rape and
one count of kidnapping. The complainant was ten years old at the time when these
offences were allegedly perpetrated against her.1
[2] The appellant was sentenced to eighteen years imprisonment for the rape
offence and three years imprisonment for the offence of kidnapping. The offence of
rape was defined in terms the targeted legislation dealing with matters of this
nature.2
[3] The a ppellant was legally represented in the court of first instance. He
pleaded not guilty to the offences as preferred against him by the respondent and
elected not to advance any plea explanation. The appellant was initially charged
with three counts of rape but was acquitted on two counts of rape.3
[4] Leave to appeal was granted against his convictions following the petition
procedure. The charge of rape against the appellant, as preferred by the
respondent, was also read with the relevant provisions of the minimum sentencing
regime.4
[5] The appeal against the convictions was initially based on the following
grounds, namely: (a) that the respondent failed to allege sufficient particularity
regarding the offences preferred against the appellant , (b) that the complainant did
not sufficiently identify the appell ant and, (c) that the evidence implicating the
appellant was that of a single witness and was insufficient as it was not sufficient and
satisfactory in every material respect.5
1 The complainant was thirteen years old when she testified.
2 A contravention of section 3 of the Sexual Offences and Related Matters Amendment Act, 32 of 2007.
3 These additional rape charges all related to the same complainant.
4 Section 51 (1) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 105 0f 1997.
5 The appellant effectively advanced that the evaluation of the evidence by the trial court was wrong.
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[6] The r espondent wisely conceded that the trial court erred in convicting the
appellant of kidnapping. The alleged kidnapping of the complainant was inextricably
linked to the alleged rape of the complainant. Put another way, the perpetrator of the
rape upon the complainant had the intention to rape that complainant and clearly not
to kidnap her. In our view, this amounted to a misdirection by the trial court, and the
appellant should not have been found guilty of kidnapping. The only real remaining
issue left was that of the correct identification of the appellant.6
Evidence
[7] The complainant testified that she was raped by the appellant when she was
ten years old. She testified that this incident happened when she was on her way to
look for her friends. She said this happened in the afternoon when it was getting
dark.7
[8] She testified that somebody snatched her from the street, covered her face
and mouth with a cloth, and dragged her into an informal settlement structure. Inside
this structure were various appliances and a broken microwave oven. This structure
housed two beds and only had one room.8
[9] The person who dragged her into this structure proceeded to undress her,
rubbed some lotion on her vagina and raped her. This person had a knife in his
possession. She then left the structure after having been threatened that the
perpetrator would murder her (and her family should she mention this incident
again.9
[10] After a few days, the complainant confided in her aunt regarding this incident.
She identified her rapist as she had seen him on prior occasions. The complainant
described the appellant as an ‘odd’ person in their community. She also knew his
name because she had heard people in her village calling the appellant by this
name.10
[11] The complainant’s aunt told the complainant that she had to tell her mother
about this incident. The complainant obliged and told her mother. Her mother
insisted that this matter be reported to the police. The complainant then decided to
6 The appellant later conceded that the issue of identification was correctly decided in the court of first instance.
7 Her evidence was that this happened near a depot, and it was in January 2019.
8 This is what is commonly known in an informal settlement as a ‘shack”.
9 From this evidence it is apparent that the perpetrator of this crime knew her and her family.
10 She knew the appellant by the name of Uwe. According to her he looked like a “thug” and he had “big” hair.
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be untruthful with her mother about what had occurred , as she was fearful and did
not wish to report this incident to the police.11
[12] The complainant’s foster mother testified that the complainant resides with her
and is responsible for the complainant. The complainant has been in her care since
infancy. The ‘first report’ of the alleged rape was not made to her. However, she
confirmed that the complainant made the first report to her sister, whom the
complainant regarded as her aunt.12
[13] This led to a discussion with the complainant , who confirmed that the
appellant had snatched her from the street and had taken her into his structure. The
complainant said the appellant undressed her but that the appellant did not do
anything to her during this time while she was in his shack with him. The
complainant’s mother decided (at that stage) not to pursue the report made to her by
the complainant.13
[14] Notably, the complainant’s progress at school shortly after th e incident
deteriorated significantly. Sometime after the incident, she was at the local police
station. She was attending a program at the police station and was told a story
about a young girl who had also been raped. She then decided to confide in the
police about the fact that she, too, had been raped.14
[15] She made a statement and was taken to a local clinic for a medical
examination. She told the medical practitioner that she had been traumatized by the
actions of the appellant and was experiencing nightmares.15
[16] The person to whom this report was made at the local police station testified
that the complainant confided in him that she had been raped. The complainant
confirmed that she was snatched off the street and taken into a shack, and raped.
She was raped in the same year she had attended the program at the police
station.16
[17] The registered forensic nurse who examined the complainant testified that
she completed the medico-legal report handed in as an exhibit. She confirmed that
11 Her aunt’s name is Mantombi. The person she referred to as her mother was Sophia Morris who is her “foster” mother.
12 Mantombi who is described by the complainant as her aunt, is the sister of her foster mother.
13 This complainant was busy with her examinations, and she did not want to upset the complainant during this time.
14 The complainant attended a program called “Love Life” at the police station situated in Hout Bay.
15 The medical report -J88- was entered into the record as an exhibit and will be referenced later in this judgment.
16 This was in 2019. The chronology makes sense, considering the complainant’s lack of progress at school.
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the complainant told her that the person who raped her rubbed some lotion on her
before he raped her. Further, th e perpetrator snatched her off the street and
covered her mouth. The complainant also identified the appellant by his name.17
[18] The clinical findings by the forensic nurse were of significance. She opined
that penetration had occurred vaginally by means of a blunt object. This portion of
the medical evidence was not challenged at all. The forensic nurse was also told by
the complainant that the appellant was in the possession of a knife and that she was
threatened and told to remain silent about the incident. This evidence was
consistent with the complainant’s previous statements in this connection and
especially that the appellant was armed with a knife. Detailed notes were taken down
by the forensic nurse at the time of the medical examination of the complainant.18
Consideration:
[19] The respondent’s case is that the tapestry of the available evidence prove d
that the appellant raped the complainant beyond reasonable doubt . Further, no
evidence of any nature was presented to gainsay any evidence presented by the
witnesses for the prosecution. It is undoubtedly so that an accused person enjoys
the right to remain silent and not testify during any criminal proceedings against him
or her. However, in these circumstances, circumstantial evidence indirectly supplies
proof. Distinguishing direct and circumstantial evidence is crucial when an appellant
does not testify or call witnesses supporting his or her case.19
[20] Put another way, i f there is evidence at a trial calling for an answer and an
accused person chooses to remain silent in the face of such evidence, a court may
well be entitled to conclude that the evidence may be sufficient in the absence of an
explanation, to prove the guilt of the person so accused This must as a matter of
logic be so, bearing in mind always that a failure to testify (in circumstances such as
these) does not relieve the prosecution of its duty to prove guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt.20
[21] This does not mean, as has sometimes been suggested, that an adjudicator
of the facts is entitled to (or is expected to) speculate as to the possible existence of
facts which, together with the proven facts, would justify a conclusion that an
17 Uwe or Hoover.
18 She noted the appellant fell asleep after the incident, and the complainant managed to escape from the appellant’s shack.
19 S v Mthetwa 1972 SA 766 (A) 769.
20 S v Boesak 2001 (1) SACR 1(CC).
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accused person may be innocent. Instead, this means that an accused person runs
the risk that, absent any rebuttal on his or her part , the prosecution’s case may be
sufficient to prove the elements of the offence , which may, in turn, lead to his or her
conviction.21
[22] Turning now to the facts of this case. The appellant did not testify and did not
call any witnesses. This , the appellant was perfectly entitled to do. However, this
election bore consequences. I say this because in view of the evidence tendered by
the prosecution, it could not have been expected of the prosecution to wallow in any
kind of conjecture to search for and try and find answers to every possible inference
that may be drawn in view of this strategy adopted by the appellant. In addition, the
court is also not expected to search for speculative explanations for conduct, which
on the face of it, is very incriminating.22
[23] It must be so that any exculpatory suggestions or explanations that may have
been put to the respondents’ witnesses by the appellant’s legal representative did
not amount to evidence and carried no probative weight . Finally, on this score, the
respondent is not required to plug every loophole, counter every speculative
argument, and parry every shield that imaginative counsel c ould conceive without a
scrap of evidence in substantiation thereof.23
[24] The appellant's core complaint is that the evidence tendered by the
complainant was unsatisfactory and that she was a young and impressionable single
witness. We disagree. The complainant was not a single witness. We say this
because, in its material terms, her evidence was corroborated by the other three
witnesses who testified on behalf of the prosecution.24
[25] The probative value and weight of all the evidence presented must also be
tested and considered in the correct context , as the evidence incriminating the
appellant and the evidence possibly exculpating the appellant should not be
considered in separate compartments.25
[26] In this case, there is no evidence exculpating the appellant. By contrast, there
is only evidence against him. The identification of the appellant is not an issue in this
21 Osman and Another v Attorney-General, Transvaal 1988 (4) SA 1224 at para [22].
22 S v Sauls and Others 1981 (3) SA 172 (A) at 182 G - H.
23 S v Ntsele 1988 (2) SACR 178 (SCA).
24 The other witnesses who testified on behalf of the respondent all corroborated portions of the complainant’s testimony.
25 S v Van Der Meyden 1999 (1) SACR 447.
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appeal. This much was conceded. The only possible complaint remains about the
evidence of a single witness and the so -called cautionary rule in sexual assault
cases. The lower court's judicial officer was acutely aware that the complainant was
a single witness, and no misdirection or irregularity occurred while assessing this
evidence. Further, the test to be applied for the proper evaluation of the evidence in
sexual assault cases has now been definitively determined. The so-called cautionary
rule in sexual assault cases no longer finds direct application.26
[27] It is trite that an appeal court’s powers to interfere with findings of fact made by
a court of first instance are limited. The factual findings are presumed to be correct if
there is no material misdirection by the trial court. Thus, the findings made by the
trial court regarding the fact that the complainant was a single witness and how this
evidence was to be evaluated can only be set aside if it was wrong. It was not
wrong.27
[28] Finally, we need to deal with the conviction on the charge of kidnapping and
the technical issue raised by the appellant that the charges preferred against him
were defective for want of crucial information. The respondent has the advantage of
formulating the charges against an accused person and if by reason of any
uncertainty the accused may be charged with any number of charges.28
[29] In this case, the charge of kidnapping (other than the lack of intention to
commit the offence of kidnapping) may also have amounted to an impermissible
splitting of charges. A further complaint is raised as to the lack of specificity and
particularity regarding the rape charge. Time was not of the essence concerning this
charge. Further, the particulars in the charge of rape (as formulated) were
reasonably sufficient to have informed the appellant of the nature of the charge.29
Order
[30] In all the circumstances, the following order is granted, namely:
1. That the appeal against the appellant ’s conviction (and therefore
sentence) on the charge of kidnapping (count 1) is upheld and is, with this,
set aside.
26 S v M 1999 (2) SACR 548 (A).
27 Masango v S (A175 / 2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 64 (5 February 2024).
28 Section 83 of the Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977. (The uncertainty may be on the facts which can be proved).
29 Sections 83, 84 and 92 of the Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977.
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2. That the appeal against the appellant ’s conviction on the charge of rape
(count 2) is dismissed
3. That the conviction and sentence imposed upon the appellant in
connection with the charge of rape (count 2) is, with this order, confirmed.
WILLE, J
I agree:
KATZ, AJ