S v Nyambuza (A88/2010) [2010] ZAFSHC 93 (19 August 2010)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Sentencing — Rape of a minor — Appellant convicted of raping a five-year-old girl and sentenced to six years' imprisonment — Appeal by the State against the leniency of the sentence — Court finds significant aggravating factors, including the age of the victim and the breach of trust — Original sentence deemed inappropriate in light of the seriousness of the crime — Sentence increased to eleven years' imprisonment.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an appeal by the State against sentence imposed for the offence of rape. The proceedings arose after the accused (the respondent in the appeal) had been convicted in the regional court and then dealt with under the statutory scheme governing serious offences and prescribed minimum sentences.


The parties were the State (as appellant) and Sello Andries Nyambuza (as respondent/accused). The appeal was heard by the Free State High Court, Bloemfontein, constituted by Hancke (acting Judge President), Kruger J, and Molemela J.


Procedurally, the accused was convicted of rape in the regional court and, in terms of section 52(1)(b) of Act 105 of 1997, the matter was referred to the High Court for sentence. On 6 February 2006 the court a quo imposed a sentence of six years’ imprisonment. Leave to appeal against sentence was granted to the Director of Public Prosecutions, and the State pursued the appeal on the basis that the sentence was inappropriately lenient.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the proper sentencing outcome for the rape of a very young child, within the framework of the minimum sentence legislation, and in light of aggravating and mitigating circumstances accepted to be present.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause on appeal that the offence was rape, and that the accused was convicted accordingly. It was also common cause that the matter attracted the minimum sentence regime, and that the accused’s case was one in which “substantial and compelling circumstances” were present so as to justify a sentence less than life imprisonment. The dispute on appeal accordingly did not concern the fact of conviction or the applicability of the minimum sentence framework, but rather the appropriate term of imprisonment.


The court relied on the following sentencing facts. The complainant was five years old at the time of the rape. The court noted that, on her appearance, she in fact seemed smaller than a typical five-year-old. The accused and the complainant were known to each other, because the complainant played with a friend on the accused’s premises. On the court’s assessment, this meant there was a relationship of trust which the accused abused.


In mitigation, the accused was an entire first offender, born on 14 December 1985, making him approximately 18 years and 10 months old at the time of the offence. It was contended that he had remorse, but the record reflected that this remorse only emerged during the trial when conviction was effectively inevitable. He indicated a wish to apologise to the complainant’s parents. He was apparently still at school at the time of the incident. Medical evidence indicated that the complainant did not sustain physical injuries.


In aggravation, the court accepted that, even in the absence of physical injury, the complainant was emotionally traumatised. The complainant’s mother testified to post-offence behavioural changes, namely that the child suffered nightmares, wet the bed, no longer wished to play in the street with other children, and was afraid of men. The court treated these consequences as relevant indicators of psychological impact, particularly in light of the complainant’s very young age.


3. Legal Issues


The central question for determination was whether the sentence of six years’ imprisonment was so inappropriate that appellate interference was justified, and if so, what sentence should be substituted.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal principles to largely common-cause sentencing facts, together with an evaluative judgment about the relative weight to be attached to mitigating and aggravating considerations, the community interest, and the purposes of punishment in a serious sexual offence against a child.


Although the parties were agreed that substantial and compelling circumstances existed (so that a sentence less than life imprisonment was competent), the court still had to determine the proper sentencing level within that discretionary space, including whether the court a quo committed a misdirection in the way it characterised or weighed particular mitigating factors.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The High Court emphasised the gravity of rape of very young children and the courts’ duty to protect children from predatory sexual violence, particularly where the complainant is extremely young. In this context, the court treated the complainant’s age and vulnerability as a powerful aggravating feature, and also relied on the fact that the accused and complainant were acquainted in circumstances that the court regarded as involving a trust relationship. The abuse of that trust was treated as materially aggravating.


The court addressed the absence of physical injury by referring to authority recognising that physical findings are not a reliable measure of harm in rape cases, especially involving children. It endorsed the approach that psychological harm can be extensive even where not overtly manifested, and that it is unrealistic to assume no psychological harm where young girls are raped. On the facts, the court found additional support for psychological harm in the mother’s evidence about nightmares, bedwetting, withdrawal from play, and fear of men.


A specific misdirection was identified in the court a quo’s reference to the possibility that the matter involved a high school boy whose “urges” overwhelmed him. The appellate court held that the jurisprudence is clear that a man’s virility or sexual urges, regardless of age, cannot mitigate rape where the offender chooses to satisfy those urges through violating another’s rights and autonomy. The court further observed that, despite the accused’s youth, he had previously been involved in a sexual relationship and thus could not be treated as wholly naïve or ignorant in sexual matters.


The court considered comparisons with other cases raised in argument, but stated that each case must be determined on its own facts and circumstances. It noted, in particular, that reliance on Direkteur van Openbare Vervolgings v McNelly (Appèlnommer 590/2000, 21 Junie 2001) did not assist because the minimum sentence legislation had not applied in that matter given the offender’s age and the circumstances described. It also mentioned S v PN 2010 (2) SACR 187 (O), where life imprisonment was imposed for the rape of a three-year-old by a nineteen-year-old, but treated that decision as not determinative of the present outcome, given the fact-specific nature of sentencing.


Having weighed the mitigating factors (first offender status, youth, limited and late-emerging remorse, schooling, and absence of physical injury) against the aggravating factors (the complainant’s extreme youth, trust abuse, trauma and likely psychological harm, and the need for deterrence and protection), the court concluded that this was a serious case in which the offender’s personal circumstances had to yield to the community interest and the need to send a clear message that such conduct will not be tolerated. On that basis, it held that the sentence imposed by the court a quo was strikingly inappropriate in the circumstances and warranted substitution.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal was upheld. The sentence of six years’ imprisonment imposed on 6 February 2006 was set aside and replaced with a sentence of eleven years’ imprisonment, antedated to 6 February 2006.


The judgment as provided did not record a separate or additional costs order.


Cases Cited


S v Tyatyame 1991 (2) SACR 1 (A). Vilakazi v S [2008] ZASCA 87; [2008] 4 All SA 396 (SCA). S v Mahomotsa 2002 (2) SACR 435 (SCA). Direkteur van Openbare Vervolgings v McNelly (Appèlnommer 590/2000, judgment delivered 21 June 2001). S v PN 2010 (2) SACR 187 (O).


Legislation Cited


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997, section 52(1)(b).


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were cited in the judgment as provided.


Held


The High Court held that, despite the accepted presence of substantial and compelling circumstances justifying a sentence less than life imprisonment, the sentence of six years’ imprisonment for the rape of a five-year-old child was inappropriately lenient. The court held that the court a quo materially erred in its approach, including by treating the accused’s sexual urges as potentially mitigatory, and by insufficiently weighing the seriousness of the offence, the abuse of trust, and the likely psychological harm to the complainant.


It further held that the interests of the community and the need to deter and denounce sexual violence against very young children required a substantially heavier sentence, and it substituted a sentence of eleven years’ imprisonment, antedated to the original sentencing date.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that, in rape cases involving children, the absence of physical injury does not negate the seriousness of the offence, nor does it justify an inference that the complainant suffered no lasting harm; psychological and emotional harm may be profound even if not overtly demonstrated, and it is generally unrealistic to assume no psychological harm where young girls are raped.


It applied the principle that a perpetrator’s sexual urges or virility cannot operate as a mitigating factor in rape sentencing, irrespective of the offender’s age, because rape entails a deliberate violation of the complainant’s rights and bodily integrity.


Within the statutory sentencing framework, the judgment proceeded on the accepted premise that substantial and compelling circumstances may justify deviation from prescribed life imprisonment, but emphasised that the presence of such circumstances does not entail leniency divorced from the gravity of child rape; rather, the sentencing court must still impose a punishment that appropriately reflects the seriousness of the offence, the protection of vulnerable victims, and the community interest.


Finally, the judgment reaffirmed that sentencing remains case-specific and fact-sensitive: comparisons to other sentencing decisions may be informative, but they do not displace the need to evaluate the particular combination of mitigating and aggravating features present in the case under consideration.

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[2010] ZAFSHC 93
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S v Nyambuza (A88/2010) [2010] ZAFSHC 93 (19 August 2010)

VRYSTAATSE HOË
HOF, BLOEMFONTEIN
REPUBLIEK VAN
SUID-AFRIKA
Appèlnommer :
A88/2010
In
die appèl van:-
DIE
STAAT
.................................................................
Appellant
en
SELLO
ANDRIES NYAMBUZA
.................................
Respondent
CORAM:
HANCKE, WND RP
et
KRUGER, R
et
MOLEMELA, R
AANGEHOOR OP:
16 AUGUSTUS 2010
_____________________________________________________
UITSPRAAK DEUR:
HANCKE, WND RP
_____________________________________________________
GELEWER OP:
19 AUGUSTUS 2010
_____________________________________________________
[1]
Die respondent (hierna genoem “die beskuldigde”) is in ‘n
Streekhof skuldig bevind aan verkragting en ingevolge
artikel
52(1)(b) van Wet 105 van 1997 na die Hoë Hof oorgeplaas vir
vonnis. Op 6 Februarie 2006 is hy deur die hof
a
quo
gevonnis tot ses jaar
gevangenisstraf waarna die hof
a quo
verlof verleen het aan die Direkteur van Openbare
Vervolgings om teen die vonnis te appelleer.
[2]
Ter aanvang kan net gemeld word dat die partye dit
ad
idem
is dat daar wel wesenlike en
dwingende omstandighede ingevolge die gemelde Wet teenwoordig is wat
die oplegging van ‘n ligter
vonnis regverdig as die van
lewenslange gevangenisstraf. Daar is gewigtige versagtende én
verswarende omstandighede in hierdie
saak teenwoordig. Wat die
versagtende omstandighede betref, is hy ‘n algehele eerste
oortreder wat gebore is op 14 Desember
1985, d.w.s hy was 18 jaar en
10 maande oud tydens die pleging van die misdryf. Namens hom is
aangevoer dat hy berou het, maar
blyk dit dat eers tydens die
verhoor, toe ‘n skuldigbevinding onafwendbaar was, die berou na
vore gekom het. Hy het ook te
kenne gegee dat hy die ouers van die
klaagster om verskoning wil vra. Hy blyk ook nog op skool te wees toe
hierdie voorval plaasgevind
het en blyk dit volgens die mediese
getuienis dat die klaagster nie fisiese beserings opgedoen het nie.
[3]
Wat erg verswarend is, is die feit dat die klaagster slegs vyf jaar
oud was tydens die voorval en ook volgens haar voorkoms,
volgens die
hof
a quo
,
inderwaarheid kleiner lyk as ‘n vyfjarige dogter. Daar rus ‘n
dure plig op die howe om jong kinders teen gewetenlose
geweldenaars
te beskerm, veral waar die klaagsters baie jonk is. Vergelyk
S
v TYATYAME
1991 (2) SASV 1 (A)
te 7 f. Volgens die rekord was die beskuldigde en die klaagster aan
mekaar bekend, omdat die klaagster gaan
speel het by ‘n maatjie
op die beskuldigde se erf. Daar was duidelik ‘n
vertrouensverhouding tussen die klaagster en
die beskuldigde wat
gruwelik deur die beskuldigde misbruik is.
[4]
Ten spyte van die afwesigheid van fisiese beserings, is dit duidelik
dat die klaagster erg getraumatiseerd was na die voorval.
Gesonde
verstand dui aan dat ‘n voorval soos hierdie ‘n
emosionele impak moet hê op ‘n jong meisie soos
die
klaagster. In
VILAKAZI v S
[2008] ZASCA 87
;
[2008] 4 All SA 396
(HHA)
verklaar Nugent A.R. op 413 par. [56] die volgende:

In
this case there is very little upon which to measure the emotional
impact of the offence upon the complainant..... It is sufficient
to
say that it is evident from the literature that emotional distress
and damage that accompanies rape might be extensive even
if it is not
manifested overtly and even more is that so in the case of young
girls.”
[5] ‘n Soortgelyke
houding blyk in
S v MAHOMOTSA
2002 (2) SASV 435 (HHA) waar Mpati A.R. op 441 teenoor par. [11] die
volgende verklaar:

While
it may theoretically be possible that a victim of rape committed in
the circumstances and manner I have described may not
suffer any
psychological damage other than that experienced while the attack is
taking place and in its immediate aftermath, it
is in the highest
degree unlikely. Where as here, the complainants were young girls, it
is quite unrealistic to suppose that there
will be no psychological
harm.”
[6]
Aanduidings van die emosionele impak van die voorval op die
klaagster, blyk uit die feit dat haar moeder getuig dat sy na die

voorval nagmerries kry, haar bed natmaak, nie meer in die straat saam
met die ander kinders wil speel nie en bang is vir manspersone.
[7]
Die hof
a quo
het na my mening fouteer om daarna te verwys dat
hierdie moontlik
“‘
n
geval is van ‘n hoërskoolseun wie se drange hom oorweldig
het en hy dit toe op misplaaste wyse tot uitvoering gebring
het”.
Die
regspraak is duidelik dat ‘n man se viriliteit, ongeag sy
ouderdom, nooit ‘n versagtende faktor kan wees wanneer
hy
verkies om dit te bevredig deur ‘n vrou se regte te misken deur
teen haar wil met haar gemeenskap te hê nie. Vergelyk
S v
MAHOMOTSA
,
supra
, te 442 d - f. Ondanks die
beskuldigde se jeug was hy al voorheen in ‘n seksuele
verhouding betrokke en is hy dus nie heeltemal
onkundig of naïef
nie.
[8]
In soverre gesteun word op die saak van
DIREKTEUR VAN OPENBARE
VERVOLGINGS v McNELLY
(Appèlnommer 590/2000 gelewer op
21 Junie 2001) neem dit nie die saak enigsins verder nie. Die
klaagster in daardie saak
was sewe jaar oud, terwyl die beskuldigde
17 jaar oud was en was die Wet op Minimum Vonnisse in daardie saak
dus nie van toepassing
gewees nie. Insgelyks is die saak van
S
v PN
2010 (2) SASV 187 (OK) waar ‘n 19-jarige
beskuldigde wat ‘n 3-jarige dogtertjie verkrag het en
lewenslange gevangenisstraf
opgelê is, ook nie op die punt af
nie. Dit is belangrik dat elke saak volgens sy eie feite en
omstandighede beoordeel word.
[9]
In die lig van al die feite en omstandighede van hierdie saak meen ek
dat hierdie een van daardie ernstige gevalle is waar die
persoonlike
omstandighede van die oortreder moet swig voor die gemeenskapsbelang
en dat dit belangrik is dat ‘n duidelike
boodskap na die
gemeenskap uitgestuur word dat hierdie optrede nie geduld sal word
nie. Dit volg dus dat die hof
a quo
se vonnis in die
omstandighede treffend onvanpas is.
Bygevolg
slaag die appèl. Die opgelegde vonnis van ses jaar
gevangenisstraf word tersyde gestel en vervang met ‘n vonnis

van elf jaar gevangenisstraf, teruggedateer 6 Februarie 2006.
______________________
S.P.B. HANCKE, WND RP
Ek stem saam.
____________
KRUGER, R
Ek stem saam.
_________________
M.B. MOLEMELA, R
Namens die appellant:
Adv. S. Giorgi
In opdrag van:
Direkteur van Openbare
Vervolgings
BLOEMFONTEIN
Namens die respondent:
Mnr. J.D. Reyneke
In opdrag van:
Regsentrum
BLOEMFONTEIN
/sp