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[2014] ZAFSHC 88
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Ntsasa v S (A10/2014) [2014] ZAFSHC 88 (12 June 2014)
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Appeal
No.: A10/2014
In
the matter between:
TSHEDISO
NICHOLAS NTSASA
….....................................................................................
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
…........................................................................................................................
Respondent
CORAM:
VAN DER MERWE, J
et
MBHELE, AJ
HEARD
ON:
19 MAY 2014
JUDGMENT
BY:
MBHELE, AJ
DELIVERED
ON:
12 JUNE 2014
[1]
The appellant and two other people were charged with housebreaking
with intent to rob and robbery and four counts of rape.
The
appellant was convicted of housebreaking with intent to rob and
robbery for which he was sentenced to 7 (seven) years imprisonment.
He was also convicted of rape on the basis that he raped the
complainant more than once and sentenced to 25 (twenty-five) years
imprisonment. The sentences were ordered to run concurrently.
Leave to appeal against the conviction and sentence was
granted by
the trial court.
[2]
The facts that led to the appellant’s conviction as related by
the state witnesses was that on 23 April 2011 the complainant’s
house was broken into by two male persons, who each raped her more
than once and stole her property.
[3]
She was pushed to her bed, covered with blankets and raped four times
by her assailants. While one of her attackers was
busy having
sexual intercourse with her, the other one called him by the name
Tshediso. The incident happened at night. Only
light that came
from a mast light, situated about 175 metres from the complainant’s
house, illuminated the room.
[4]
The complainant identified the appellant as one of her assailants.
She pointed out the appellant when she saw him in police
company.
It is not in dispute that the complainant was raped by two males and
that her belongings were stolen.
[5]
The question to answer is whether the trial court correctly convicted
the appellant.
[6]
The state called Me P[…] M[…], who testified that the
appellant arrived at her house selling items that according
to her
resembled those of the complainant. P[…] knows the
appellant by name and calls him Tshediso. The complainant
identified the items left at P[…]’s house as hers.
[7]
The appellant denied any involvement in the rape and robbery of the
complainant. His version is that at the time of the
incident he
was sleeping at his parental home.
[8]
The correct approach when analysing evidence is that evidence must be
considered in its totality. The Supreme Court of
Appeal stated
as follows in the case of
S v
Chabalala
2003 (1) SACR 134
(SCA):
“
The
correct approach is to weigh up all the elements which point towards
the guilt of the accused against all those which are indicative
of
his innocence, taking proper account of inherent strengths and
weaknesses, probabilities and improbabilities on both sides and,
having done so, to decide whether the balance weighs so heavily in
favour of the State as to exclude any reasonable doubt about
the
accused's guilt. The result may prove that one scrap of evidence or
one defect in the case for either party (such as the failure
to call
a material witness concerning an identity parade) was decisive but
that can only be an
ex post facto
determination and a trial court (and counsel) should avoid the
temptation to latch on to one (apparently) obvious aspect without
assessing it in the context of the full picture presented in
evidence.
[9]
In
S v Mbuli
2003 (1) SACR 97
(SCA) Nugent JA said:
“
It
is trite that the State bears the onus of establishing the guilt of
the appellant beyond reasonable doubt, and the converse is
that he is
entitled to be acquitted if there is a reasonable possibility that he
might be innocent (
R v Difford
1937 AD 370
at 373, 383). In
S v Van der
Meyden
1999 (2) SA 79
(W), which was
adopted and affirmed by this Court in
S
v Van Aswegen
2001 (2) SACR 97
(SCA), I
had occasion to reiterate that in whichever form the test is applied
it must be satisfied upon a consideration of all
the evidence. Just
as a court does not look at the evidence implicating the accused in
isolation to determine whether there is
proof beyond reasonable
doubt, so too does it not look at the exculpatory evidence in
isolation to determine whether it is reasonably
possible that it
might be true.
’…
Doubts
about one aspect of the evidence led in a trial may arise when that
aspect is viewed in isolation. Those doubts may be set
at rest when
it is evaluated again together with all the other available evidence.
That is not to say that a broad and indulgent
approach is appropriate
when evaluating evidence. Far from it. There is no substitute for a
detailed and critical examination of
each and every component in a
body of evidence. But, once that has been done, it is necessary to
step back a pace and consider
the mosaic as a whole. If that is not
done, one may fail to see the wood for the trees.'”
[10]
When analysing the facts in totality, the following comes to light:
The
complainant was attacked by two male persons, one of them is called
Tshediso. Her description of this person was that
he had a dark
complexion, short hair and a moustache and that he wore a striped
t-shirt, a leather jacket, jeans and tekkies on
the date of the
incident. It was not disputed that the appellant fits this
description. Two weeks after the incident,
the appellant was
found in possession of items belonging to the complainant which he
sold to P[…] M[…].
[11]
Although the circumstances were certainly not ideal for observation
the complainant gave a remarkably detailed description
of her
assailant and she immediately recognised him when she saw him again.
This indicates that her identification of the appellant
is reliable.
In addition, the appellant was in possession of items stolen from the
complainant, which he did not explain
but falsely denied.
[12]
When one puts all pieces of evidence together, a reasonable
possibility of excluding the appellant as one of the assailants
who
broke into the complainant’s house does not exist.
[13]
The complainant, as a single witness, was both credible and
reliable. In the result I am not convinced that the trial
court
erred in convicting the appellant.
AD
SENTENCE
[14]
It is trite that a court of appeal may not interfere with sentence
unless it finds that the trial court did not exercise its
discretion
judicially.
[15]
The appellant’s legal representative argued that the trial
court overemphasised the interests of the community and the
seriousness of the offence at the expense of personal circumstances
of the appellant. I disagree. When sentencing the
appellant the trial court considered all relevant factors and found
that there are compelling and substantial circumstances that
warrant
deviation from the prescribed minimum sentence.
[16]
I am of the view that the trial court did not misdirect itself.
Given all the circumstances I am of the view that the
sentence
imposed is appropriate. It cannot be said to be a sentence that
could not reasonably have been imposed in the circumstances.
[17]
I therefore make the following order:
The
appeal is dismissed and convictions and sentences are confirmed.
_______________
N.M.
MBHELE, AJ
I
concur.
_______________________
C.H.G. VAN DER
MERWE, J
On
behalf of appellant: Adv L. Smit
Instructed
by:
Legal
Aid SA
BLOEMFONTEIN
On
behalf of respondent: Adv S. Mthethwa
Instructed
by:
Director
of Public Prosecutions
BLOEMFONTEIN