Marunga v S (A119/2018) [2018] ZAGPJHC 627 (9 November 2018)

85 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Appeal against conviction — Appellant convicted of attempted rape — Appellant's conviction based on complainant's testimony, which contained inconsistencies and lacked corroboration — Magistrate misdirected in assessing evidence and failed to apply the cautionary rule regarding single witness testimony — Appeal court finds that the State's case did not meet the standard of proof beyond reasonable doubt — Conviction set aside.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned a criminal appeal to the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg, against both conviction and sentence. The appellant, Azwindini Marunga, had been convicted in the Regional Court, Johannesburg, of attempted rape and sentenced to six years’ imprisonment.


The respondent was the State. The appeal was pursued with the leave of the trial court. The conviction and sentence were imposed on 8 February 2016, and the appeal was heard on 25 October 2018, with judgment delivered on 9 November 2018.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the Regional Court correctly accepted the State’s version—primarily dependent on the evidence of the complainant—such that the State had proved guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and whether the trial court properly applied the approach to the evidence of a single witness, including the treatment of inconsistencies and the evaluation of the evidence relating to the immediate aftermath of the alleged incident.


2. Material Facts


The complainant was employed by a company contracted to provide 24-hour cleaning services at a mall. The appellant held a managerial position within that company and was the complainant’s manager. A third employee, Mr Patrick Biyela (“Patrick”), was employed in a supervisory position, and the complainant fell under his supervision.


On 10 July 2014, the complainant, the appellant, and Patrick were all on a night shift running from 23:00 to 08:00 the following day. During the early hours of the morning, Patrick instructed the complainant to fetch a vacuum cleaner from a downstairs office/store room and then to report to Entrance 2 of the mall to perform her cleaning duties. The evidence indicated that the appellant was in that office/store room at some point and that the room was normally locked, with the implication that it was unlocked at that time because someone (on the evidence, the appellant) was present.


The complainant’s version was that at about 04:00 she went down to the office/store room, found the appellant there, and that they were alone. She alleged that the appellant grabbed her, forced her against a wall, pulled down her leggings, touched her genitals, attempted to insert his finger into her vagina, and also fondled her breasts by placing his hand under her clothing. She stated that she resisted, managed to free herself, and exited the room. She further claimed the appellant had locked the door behind her, but that she unlocked it because the key remained in the door. She then left with the vacuum cleaner and went to her assigned post at Entrance 2.


Patrick’s evidence supported that he had indeed instructed the complainant to fetch the vacuum cleaner. He stated that because she was taking a long time, he went to look for her and met her ascending the stairs. He asked why she had taken so long, but she ignored him and walked off; he observed that she looked angry. The complainant, in contrast, did not testify that she met Patrick on the stairs. Her version was that Patrick later telephoned her while she was at Entrance 2 to check where she was, and she did not disclose the attempted rape during that call because she was upset. Patrick disputed that he had called her, reasoning that he would have had no need to call because he had already located her on the stairs.


The appellant’s version was a denial of presence at the office/store room at the relevant time. He testified that he had been in the office/store room about two hours earlier, but at the time of the alleged incident he was conducting his usual patrols of the mall to ensure cleaning duties were properly performed. He suggested the complainant’s motive for fabricating the allegation was related to her casual employment status, asserting that she knew he intended to terminate her casual employment and believed that if he were removed she would retain her position. It was common cause that the appellant was suspended due to the charges and that the complainant kept her position.


In considering the evidence, the High Court treated as material that the complainant was the single witness to the alleged attempted rape itself, while the events surrounding reporting and the immediate aftermath were addressed through other evidence, including Patrick’s testimony. The court also considered as material the deficiencies and inconsistencies in the complainant’s evidence regarding when and to whom she first reported the incident, as well as inconsistencies between the complainant and Patrick on whether they met on the stairs and whether a later phone call occurred. The complainant’s boyfriend, to whom she claimed she made the first report, was not called as a witness; the explanation tendered was that the relationship had ended and his whereabouts were unknown.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether, on the record, the State had proved the appellant’s guilt of attempted rape beyond reasonable doubt, taking account of the fact that the complainant was a single witness to the core alleged criminal conduct and that there were acknowledged inconsistencies relevant to the surrounding narrative and reporting.


Closely connected to that question was whether the Regional Court had properly applied the cautionary approach to single-witness evidence and whether it had properly confronted and reconciled inconsistencies both within the complainant’s account and between her evidence and that of Patrick. The appeal therefore concerned the application of legal standards to factual evaluation, particularly the assessment of credibility, reliability, and the reasonableness of competing versions.


A further issue was whether the trial court committed misdirections in its factual findings—most notably in attributing evidence to Patrick that was not given—and what effect such misdirections had on the safety of the conviction.


Because the appeal attacked both conviction and sentence, the fate of the sentence depended on whether the conviction could stand. The judgment ultimately turned on the conviction appeal; once the conviction was set aside, the sentence necessarily could not remain operative.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The High Court emphasised that the complainant was a single witness to the attempted rape. While single-witness evidence can sustain a conviction, the court noted that the trial court was required to evaluate such evidence with appropriate caution. The High Court found that the magistrate, although referring to the cautionary approach, did not properly engage with the material inconsistencies in the complainant’s evidence concerning the reporting of the incident.


The High Court regarded the reporting narrative and the immediate aftermath as significant, not as mere peripheral detail, but as a material phase in the overall narrative. In this case, the complainant’s account contained contradictions about when she first reported the incident to Patrick and about subsequent reporting to the police. In addition, there were stark inconsistencies between the State witnesses themselves, particularly between the complainant’s version (that she did not meet Patrick on the stairs and that he later called her) and Patrick’s version (that he met her on the stairs and did not call her). The court held that the magistrate failed to give these contradictions sufficient weight and failed to reconcile the “glaring inconsistencies” between the complainant’s and Patrick’s accounts.


The High Court further identified a specific and material misdirection by the magistrate: the magistrate found that Patrick had testified that the complainant was crying when he encountered her on the stairs, but the record contained no such evidence. The High Court treated this as important because a complainant’s immediate presentation after an alleged sexual assault could be relevant to whether the incident occurred, and the magistrate’s incorrect recollection or attribution of evidence risked improperly bolstering the State’s case.


Against this background, the High Court approached the appellant’s denial by applying the standard criminal law test: an accused’s version cannot be rejected merely because it is improbable; it must be rejected only if it is not reasonably possibly true, viewed against the State’s obligation to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt. Given the inconsistencies identified and the misdirections in the trial court’s evaluation, the High Court held that the appellant’s version could not be disregarded as not reasonably possibly true. It followed, in the High Court’s assessment, that the State’s case did not meet the threshold of proof beyond reasonable doubt.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court upheld the appeal and set aside the conviction. The order recorded that the appeal succeeded and that the conviction was set aside. No separate costs order was recorded in the judgment. Although the order expressly addressed the conviction, the setting aside of the conviction entailed that the sentence imposed pursuant to that conviction could not stand.


Cases Cited


R v Mokoena 1932 OPD 79.


S v Sauls 1981 (3) SA 172 (A).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The High Court held that, in light of material inconsistencies in the State’s case—particularly regarding the complainant’s reporting of the incident and the conflict between her evidence and Patrick’s—and in light of a material misdirection by the magistrate concerning whether Patrick testified that the complainant was crying, the State had not proved the appellant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt. The appellant’s version could not be rejected as not reasonably possibly true. The conviction for attempted rape was therefore set aside.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that where a conviction depends on the evidence of a single witness, the evidence must be approached with appropriate caution and must be evaluated with careful attention to internal consistency and consistency with other material evidence, as reflected in the authorities cited.


The judgment applied the criminal standard of proof that the State must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and that an accused person’s version must be accepted if it is reasonably possibly true, even if the court does not prefer it.


The judgment further applied the principle that material misdirections by a trial court—such as attributing evidence to a witness that was not given—may undermine the reliability of the factual findings and the safety of the conviction, particularly where such misdirections bear on important aspects of the narrative like the immediate aftermath of the alleged offence.

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[2018] ZAGPJHC 627
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Marunga v S (A119/2018) [2018] ZAGPJHC 627 (9 November 2018)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
A119/2018
In
the matter between:
AZWINDINI
MARUNGA
Appellant
And
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
FISHER
J, (MAIER-FRAWLEY AJ CONCURRING:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The appellant was convicted of attempted
rape in the Regional Court, Johannesburg on 8 February 2016. On the
same day, he was sentenced
to 6 years imprisonment. This appeal is
against conviction and sentence with the leave of the trial court.
FACTS
[2]
The facts as they emerge from the record
are as follows. The complaint was employed by a company that was
contracted to provide
cleaning services on a 24-hour basis to the […]
Mall. The accused was employed in a managerial position by such
company.
The appellant was the manager of the complainant. On 10 July
2014 the complainant, the appellant, and Mr Patrick Biyela (who has

been referred to throughout the record as “Patrick” -
which appellation I will retain for the sake of convenience)
were all
on night duty. This meant that they worked a shift which commenced at
23:00 and finished at 08:00 the following day.
[3]
The appellant testified that the
complainant had been employed on a casual basis and that her
employment was not permanent. The
appellant was responsible for
employing casual employees and his testimony was that he would do so
in order to fill temporary vacancies
which occurred as a result of
permanent employees taking leave. Patrick was employed in a
supervisory position and the complainant
fell under his supervision.
[4]
On the early hours of the morning in
question, Patrick instructed the complainant to fetch a vacuum
cleaner from a downstairs office/store
room facility and to then
report to Entrance 2 of the […] Mall in order to perform her
cleaning duties there. The evidence
was to the effect that the
appellant was in this office/store room and that thus it was
unlocked. The implication was that the
room was normally kept locked.
[5]
The complainant testified that she duly
descended the stairs and went into the office/store room in order to
fetch the vacuum cleaner.
This occurred, she said, at approximately
04:00. When she arrived at the office/store room she found that the
appellant was there
and the door unlocked.  She testified that
they were alone together in the room and that the appellant took
advantage of this
situation by grabbing her, forcing her against a
wall, pulling down the leggings she was wearing, touching her
genitals and trying
to insert his finger into her vagina. She states
that he also fondled her breasts by putting his hand under her
clothing. Her testimony
was to the effect that she resisted his
advances. She was, she said, able to struggle free and escape. She
indicated that the door
had been locked behind her by the appellant
and that she managed to unlock it because the key was still in the
door. She left the
room with the vacuum cleaner in tow and went to
her appointed station at Entrance 2.
[6]
Patrick agreed that he had sent the
complainant to the storeroom to obtain the vacuum cleaner. He
testified that he eventually
went to find her as she was taking
an inordinate amount of time. He stated that he met her ascending the
stairs. He asked her why
she had taken so long to fetch the vacuum
cleaner but she ignored him and walked off. He noted that she looked
angry.
[7]
The version of the complainant was that she
left the room, with the vacuum cleaner, and went directly to her
appointed post at Entrance
2.  She made no mention of meeting
Patrick on the way. She testified that Patrick later called her cell
phone when she was
at her post to check where she was. She said she
made no report to him of the attempted rape during this call, as she
was upset.
[8]
Patrick however disputed that he had called
her. He reasoned that there would have been no purpose to call her as
he had already
located her on the stairs.
[9]
The version of the appellant was that he
was not in the office at the time alleged although he had been there
approximately 2 hours
earlier. He says that at the time of the
alleged incident, he was doing his usual patrol of the mall to check
that the cleaning
services were being performed properly. It is not
disputed that he had a team of staff to manage on the shift.
[10]
He said that he left at the end of the
shift as usual. He surmised, he said, that the motive for the
complainant making the false
report was that she knew he was going to
terminate her casual employment. She believed, he said, that if he
were fired she would
keep her position. It is not in dispute that he
was suspended as a result of the charges and that she kept her
position.
DISCUSSION
[11]
The complainant was a single witness to the
actual attempted rape described by her. However, she was not a single
witness to what
happened immediately after this incident. The
evidence of the complaint had deficiencies which are, to my mind,
material. She contradicted
herself in relation to when she first
reported the incident to Patrick and in relation to her subsequent
report to the police.
Her boyfriend, to whom she said she made the
first report, was not called. It was simply said that they had broken
off their relationship
and she did not know where he was.
[12]
Whilst
paying lip service to the cautionary rule of evaluating the evidence
of a single witness,
[1]
the Magistrate failed to take proper account of the inconsistencies
in her evidence in relation to the reporting of the incident.
This
aspect is important and the Magistrate failed to give it sufficient
weight. He also failed to reconcile the glaring inconsistencies
in
the State’s case as a whole with reference to the evidence of
Patrick and the complainant.
[13]
The Magistrate also misdirected himself in
finding that Patrick had testified that, when he met her on the
stairs, she was crying.
There was no such evidence led. This is an
important misdirection in that the way a victim of a crime presents
directly after the
event could be a relevant indicator that the crime
occurred. The immediate aftermath of an alleged sexual assault (or
any crime
for that matter) must be accorded significance in that it
is a material phase in the narrative.
CONCLUSION
[14]
The version of the appellant cannot be disregarded as not
being reasonably possibly true. The State’s case is such, that
given
the inconsistencies therein and given the misdirections of the
Magistrate as discussed above, it cannot be said to serve as evidence

of the charge which is beyond reasonable doubt.
ORDER
[15]
I thus make the following order:
1. The appeal succeeds.
2. The conviction is set aside.
______________________________________
FISHER
J
HIGH
COURT JUDGE
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
I
agree,
______________________________________
MAIER-FRAWLEY
AJ
HIGH
COURT ACTING JUDGE
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of Hearing:
25 October 2018.
Judgment
Delivered:
09 November 2018.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellant

:
Adv W Mahlangu.
Instructed
by

:
Tlou Bangiswani Attorneys.
For
the Respondent

:
Adv M Mashego.
Instructed
by

:
The DPP.
[1]
As
espoused in
R
v Mokoena
,
1932
OPD 79
and
S
v Sauls,
1981
(3) SA 172
(A).