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IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION, KIMBERLEY
Case No: CA & R: 55/2024
Reportable: YES/NO
Circulate to Judges: YES/NO
Circulate to M agistrates: YES/NO
Circulate to R egional Magistrates : YES/NO
In the appeal of:
YURELL JOEL Appellant
and
THE STATE Respondent
Heard on: 25 /11/2024
Delivered on: 28/02 /2025
Summary : Appeal against conviction: two counts of rape. Whether the sexual
intercourse was consensual . Whether there was a material misdirection or gross
irregularity committed by the trial court?
ORDER
In the result the following order is made:
1. The appeal against the conviction on the two counts of rape is dismissed.
JUDGMENT ON APPEAL
MAMOSEBO ADJP et STANTON J
[1] The appellant and the complainant were involved in a 12 -year love
relationship from which two children were born, aged 12 and 5 years . The
relationship became tumultuous and eventually ended in March 2017 . This is
buttressed by the existence of a protection order granted against the
appellant by the Magistrate in Kimberley on 24 March 2016 under Case No
194/2016 in which he was ordered not to assault, threaten, and/or insult the
complainant , Ms E[...] R[...] C[...] .
[2] The appellant was charged in the regional court, Kimberley, on the following
six charges involving Ms C[...] : Count 1: kidnapping; Count 2: assault with
intent to do grievous bodily harm; Count 3: rape; Count 4: rape; Count 5:
assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm and Count 6: contravening the
conditions of the Domestic Violence Protection Order as contemplated in s
17 of the Domestic Violence Act , 116 of 1998 . He pleaded not guilty to all the
six counts . The appellant was convicted on 2 November 2018 on all counts
and sentenced as follows: Count 1: Three (3) years imprisonment; Count 2:
Three (3) years imprisonment; Count 3: Twenty (20) years imprisonment;
Count 4: Ten (10) years imprisonment; Count 5: Three (3) years
imprisonment; and Count 6: Five (5) years imprisonment. The Court ordered
that counts 2 and 5 run concurrently and count 3 with 4 run concurrently .
The accused was declared unfit to possess a firea rm.
[3] The appellant approached the trial court for leave to appeal against his
convictions on counts 1 to 5 and the sentences imposed on all counts. The
court granted him leave to appeal his convictions on counts 3 and 4 involving
rape but refused him on others, including leave on sentence in respect of the
six counts. He filed a petition to this court against the trial court’s refusal to
grant him leave to appeal his sentences which Mamosebo J and Stanton J
denied him on 8 September 2021.
[4] This appeal is consequently confined to the conviction on counts 3 and 4
pertaining to the rape. It is common cause that sexual intercourse took
place; however, the appellant’s defence is that it was consensual. The
regional magistrate permitted the complainant to testify through the
assistance of an intermediary and the presence of a fe male police officer
because she was observed to be shaking and sweat ing. The proximity to the
appellant discomforted her .
[5] The issues that stand for determination in this appeal as paraphrased from
the Notice of Appeal dated 10 January 2019 are the following:
(a) Whether there was any misdirection by the trial Court in its findings
of fact that the accused could not beyond a reasonable doubt
explain how he got consent to sexual intercourse, how the physical
fight took place , etc. at para 13(l) of the judgment.
(b) Whether the finding that the rape in count 3 was preceded by an
assault with a padlock , and therefore falls under Part 1 of Schedule 2
of Act 105 of 1997 , was correct.
(c) Whether the trial Court applied the cautionary rule when considering
the evidence of Ms C[...] as a single witness.
(d) Was it a misdirection by the trial Court in finding that the complainant
was clear and satisfactory in all material respects in respect of the
two counts of rape.
(e) Whether the trial Court had erred in rejecting the appellant’s version
as not being reasonably possibly true in respect of the rape counts.
(f) Whether the trial Court had erred in not taking into account the
evidence of Haley -Ann Davids (the appellant’s current girlfriend ) and
the complainant’s concession that she visited the appellant’s house
after the incident as she was unhappy that he ha d moved on and
was dating someone else.
[6] As far as ground (issue) 5(a) of appeal is concerned.
On the face of it the regional magistrate applied the wrong test by implying
that there is an onus on the appellant to explain beyond a reasonable doubt
that he was not guilty or that he was innocent. That duty rests upon the State
and never shifts. Having said so, the reasoning of the Court became
muddled, as reflected below where the Court subsequently states, correctly,
at para 13(n) and 13(o):
‘13(n) Accused version on the totality of the evidence is full of extensions,
unexplained, unclear account of fights and conduct wrongful onto the
complainant vis -à-vis the charges against him. When viewed with the
evidence of the State and when viewed in total his version comes
out as not credible and not reasonably possibly true and is rejected
as such in all the charges [in] counts 1 to 6.
13(o) I therefore find that the State managed to prove all charges against
the accused beyond a reasonable doubt. However, on count 3, the
17 March rape, the assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm
with a padlock happened on the complainant, then followed by the
sexual intercourse. It is therefore a rape falling under Part 1
Schedule 2 of the Minimum Sentences Act 105 of 1997.’
[7] In the circumstances it is prudent to accept that the magistrate had
misdirected herself in para 13( l) of the judgment. The proper approach is
that, as a court of appeal, we are at large to assess the evidence afresh, as
we hereby do hereafter. See Rex v Dhlumayo 1948 (2) SA 677 (A) at 705
and S v Hadebe 1997 (2) SACR 641 at 645j – 646b.
[8] As far as ground 5(c) relating to the cautionary rule of a single witness is
concerned, the criticism lacks substance. This will emanate from how the
incident unfolded as set out below.
[9] On Friday, 17 March 2017, while visibility was clear, Ms C[...] and Mr Regan
Wilkinson were together in 14th Street, Kimberley. Their eviden ce is that the
appellant accosted them and called Ms C[...] a whore and a bitch. He
slapped her. Ms C[...] says he also kicked her, and s he fell to the ground. Mr
Wilkinson says he did not see or recall the kicking part. This may be
attributed to the fact that he may have already left the scene without lifting a
finger to protect Ms C[...] . Be that as it may, it is of no moment because the
appellant admits to having kicked her at that stage. She did not embroider.
He dragged her away by clutching her T -Shirt. Several streets away, at 4th
Street, a police vehicle passed by. The appellant threatened that should she
try to stop the police he would harm her. She obliged out of fear. He forced
her into a backroom.
[10] Strangely, he told her to keep a panga which was already on the floor whilst
he interrogated her about being in a love relationship with Wilkinson, which
she denied. Wilkinson also refuted the accusation. When the appellant left
the room temporarily, she concealed the panga because she feared that he
would not hesitate to use it. For her denial he slapped her three or four
times. He then undressed her and pulled tufts of her hair out. The affected
areas are clearly depicted in the photos. For her persi stent denial the
appellant hacked her severely o ver her forehead with a padlock and forced
himself sexually upon her. He threatened to injure her further should she
scream or attract attention. So, she submitted. He then ordered her to lie in
the doorway and humiliated her by urinating over her to be cold. He ordered
her back to bed.
[11] On Saturday, 18 March 2017, he brought painkiller tablets and a rubbing
ointment from the main house and gave her. He had left the backroom door
open, but she was too scared to escape. She had bled from her nose, mouth
and forehead due to the assault. He ordered her to make up the bed and
wash her bloodied top and pants , which she did. He again left the house,
unlocked. She managed to fall asleep. He woke her up, ordered her to pray
so that her head should not swing away, by which she understood : ‘so that
he does not chop her head off ’. He again left the backroom.
[12] Ms C[...] summoned the courage and scaled a fairly high perimeter wall
(depicted in photos but not measured) into a neighbour’s yard and fell
through the branches of a fig tree. She reported her ordeal to the elder ly
couple and pleaded with them to summon the police. Ms Mercy Puley, the
neighbour, obliged by dialling the police emergency number (10111) and
handed the phone to Ms C[...] . Ms Puley testified that at that stage she
summoned the appellant’s uncle, Mr Theodore Manus, t o her place. She
enquired from him whether he knew Ms C[...] . He said he could not
recognise her because her face was too swollen . Mr Manus then unwittingly
committed a cardinal sin by confronting the appellant with what he had
observed at Ms Puley’s place and reported to him that the police are being
summoned.
[13] In no time, t he appellant appeared and wrenched the phone from Ms C[...]
and thus thwarted the call. Not only that, but he forced her back to his place.
He attempted to compel Ms C[...] to tell Mr Manus that Wilkinson was the
one who had assaulted her, but she refused. He gave Ms C[...] painkiller
tablets to wash down with Castle beer. On a whim he produced a knife and
stabbed her on her cheek and her lips. He ordered her to sleep which she
did while he sneaked away temporarily.
[14] The app ellant returned when it was already dark. He took her from the main
house to the backroom. She was wearing only her top and panty. He said to
her ‘ ons gaan nou weer saam kom slaap dat ek sien het jy ‘n man .’ He
penetrated her and thereafter continued to interrogate her on her relationship
with Regan. These responses , in my view, are relevant to the issue of
consent1.
‘Prosecutor : Did you allow him to have sex with you?
Complainant : ‘Ek het niks gesê nie. Dit het net gebeur want ek was te
bang .
Prosecutor: What were you afraid to do?
Complainant : Ek wil nie geskree het nie of weer verder gepraat het nie.
Prosecutor: And if you could scream why would you be screaming?
1 Record page 65 from line 22
Complainant: Net vir help . Vir iemand om my uit te kom haal .
Prosecutor: Now are you referring to the sex now or just being in that
room?
Complainant: Om uit die kamer ook te kom .
Prosecutor : What do you mean and also? Are you referring again to just
the sex or being in that room or both?
Complainant : Al twee en om weg te kom van hom af.
Prosecutor : You may proceed.
Complainant: Toe het hy my gevra het jy ‘n verhouding met Reagan. Toe
haal hy die hamer uit… En toe sê ek nee. Toe kap hy my op
my skouers, my kop en my knieë, my bene en my enkels. Hy
het my elke tyd een vraag oor en oor gevra. Toe kap hy my
net elke tyd op dieselfde plekke.
Prosecutor: Did you ever call out for help?
Complainant: Nee
Prosecutor : Why not?
Complainant : Want hy het gesê as ek weer kan skree hy gaan my
seermaak. En niemand gaan help bring nie.
The complainant lost consciousness which concluded the Saturday episode.
[15] On Sunday morning , 19 March 2017, Ms C[...] walked with difficulty . The
appellant carried her from the backroom to the main house. There he ran a
cold bath and ordered her to bathe . When she was through, he lifted her out
of the bath to his room inside the main house where he gave her his pair of
pants and a shirt as well as pain tablets and returned to the backroom where
he ordered her to sleep. She was awakened by a knock on the door. It was
police officer s, Csts Katlego Boitse and Phiri . Cst Boitse testified that they
were summoned telephonically by Ms Jennifer Erasmus , the complainant’s
aunt. Ms Erasmus testified that she made the report to the police because
Ms C[...] had been missing since Friday. She accompanied the p olice to the
accused’s place but remained inside the vehicle . The appellant tried to dupe
Cst Boitse that he would take Ms C[...] to the doctor the following day. Ms
C[...] used the opportunity to run , with difficulty, to the police van where she
found her aunt and daughter . Ms Erasmus explained that she could not even
recognise her niece due to her facial injuries. Ms C[...] ’ own daughter could
only identify her mother by the marks on her left hand.
[16] According to the evidence of Cst Boitse, the complainant informed them that
the appellant had locked her in his room the entire weekend, assaulted her
and had sexual intercourse with her without her permission. She evidently
was too afraid to speak in the appellant’s presence. The appellant was
arrested . The complainant was taken to her home for a change of
clothes and handed over to the trauma unit of the SAPS and later taken to
Kimberley Hospital for a full medical examination.
[17] Dr Labala Gusti Mafusi examined the complainant on 19 March 2017 and
recorded the following injuries on the J88 form: multiple bruises over both
legs, both upper arms and elbows; bruised and swollen bilateral eyelids;
about three 1cm laceration s on the left cheek; 0.5 cm laceration over the left
side upper lip and the inner part of the upper lip ; 0.5 cm laceration over lower
lip. The docto r found that the injuries were consistent with physical assault.
The bruises were consistent with blunt force trauma while the lacerations
were caused by a sharp object. The doctor ruled out the contention by the
appellant that the injuries on her body could have been caused by the fig
tree when scaling the wall. He ex plained that the lesions would have been
localised rather than having multiple cuts and bruises like the complainant
had. A normal gynaecological examination was conducted . The doctor
opined that his conclusion does not rule out any sexual penetration. This is
immaterial because it is common cause that sexual intercourse had taken
place.
The defence case
[18] The appellant’s evidence was that he found Ms C[...] in the company of
Wilkinson kissing and holding each other in the street. He asked her why she
would be there instead of being home. Wilkinson left. He asked her if she
and Wilkinson were in a love relationship . Instead, she slapped him twice on
his cheek and refused to discuss her business in public . She suggested that
they speak at his ho me. He sug gested that they should rather speak the
following day, but she persisted that they speak on the same day. When they
reached his home, he told her he did not want to be with her but would rather
be with his friends. She told him she was willing to wait for him, but that he
should get her something to drink and play music for her. Which he did.
[19] After about an hour she called him and complained of being lonely and
missing him. He returned home. He found that she had consumed one
dumpie of Cast le Lite beer. She invited him to a couch where they started
kissing. She loosened his pants and removed his t -shirt. She performed oral
sex on him followed by sexual penetration, with her on top. She unfolded the
sleeper couch and made the bed. She also asked for pain tablets which he
gave her. She asked him not to leave since it was late, and they both fell
asleep lying next to each other.
[20] The following morning, on Saturday, 18 March 2017, she woke him up and
started kissing him. She climbed on top of him, and they had sex again. She
washed the clothes she was wearing and asked him for his clothes to wear.
He left . On his return he found her asleep. He enquired about his phone , but
she hurled an empty beer bottle at him, striking him on his head. She broke
another bottle and chased him with the shard . He fled to his friends. He
waited for about an hour for things to cool down and returned home where
he found her sitting on the stoep . He observed that she had damaged his
cellphone and laptop. He left to buy them another six -pack of beer.
[21] As they sat in the room consuming beer, she demanded to know what his
plans are with h er because she want ed them to raise their children together .
He intimated that he did not feel the same way about her. She hit him with a
clenched fist on his nose causing it to bleed. She also slapped him. He
pushed her against a mirror which caused a scratch on her cheek. He fled to
his room. When he exited after a while she slapped him again and he
slapped her back. He disarmed her of the shard she removed from her
trousers’ pocket and threw it away. She then opened another beer and
invited him to join her. He neither assaulted the complainant with a knife nor
a hammer. He followed the complainant to the neighbour’s house to fetch his
wallet which was in her possession. He only took the wallet and left. She
followed him home voluntarily from the neighbours ’ place . He gave her R500
and left. When he returned later that night, he found her sleeping in his
bedroom. He slept next to her.
[22] On Sunday morning , 19 March 2017, there was no incident. The police came
and demanded to know Ms C[...] ’ whereabouts. He confirmed her presence.
She left with them to the police van. He remained behind to lock up and
while walking to his mother’s house the same police apprehended him . He
sat next to the complainant , but after she told them that he had assaulted her
they stopped the bakkie and placed him at the back . He concedes to having
slapped the complainant , punched her with a clenched fist an d elbow
because she wanted to stab h im with a shard . He also pulled out a tuft of her
hair on Saturday afternoon during the fight. He denies keeping the
complainant against her will.
[23] A challenge was raised that the trial c ourt erred in not taking into account the
evidence of Haley -Ann Davids , the appellant’s current girlfriend , and the
complainant’s concession that she had visited the appellant’s house after the
incident as she was unhappy that he ha d moved on and was now dating
someone else. The evidence of this witness clearly did not take the
appellant’s case any further as it does not bear any relevance to the rape
accusations. The witness was absent during the ordeal. These are ex post
facto occurrences . The attack on the rejection of this part of the evidence by
the magistrate lacks merit and stands to fail. Her motivation for assisting to
secure his release on bail is ascribed to the fact that she wanted him to
maintain his children. That cannot be faulted and did not detract from nor
erase his misdeed .
[24] It was aptly pronounced by the SCA in Director of Public Prosecutions
Eastern Cape v Coko :2
2 Director of Public Prosecutions Eastern Cape v Coko 2024 (2) SACR 113 (SCA) paras 29 - 32
‘[13] It bears mentioning that this case falls within the category of sexual
violence committed in the context of an intimate relationship.
Consequently, this can be particularly difficult to navigate, given the
intimate nature of such relationship, familiarity coupled with the fact
that the parties would in most cases have previously been involved
in some form of sexual contact prior to an allegation of rape by one
of the parties against the other. This point was studiously
emphasised by counsel for the se cond amicus curiae, Initiative for
Strategic Litigation in Africa. However, it must be stressed that this in
no way means that consent by one party to a specific form of sexual
act should be taken to be a licence to every other sexual act. It is,
inter alia, those types of situations that the Sexual Offences Act was
designed to address. ’
The learned Judges went further to state:
‘[34] Insofar as the proper approach to evaluation of evidence in a
criminal matter is concerned, bearing in mind that the onus is on the
prosecution to prove its case against the accused beyond
reasonable doubt, the current state of the law is settled. What
Nugent J said in S v Van der Meyden [1999 (1) SACR 447 (W) on
this score is instructive. The learned judge said:
“The onus of proof in a criminal case is discharged by the State if the
evidence establishes the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable
doubt. The corollary is that he is entitled to be acquitted if it is
reasonably possible that he might be innocent (see, for example, R v
Difford 1937 AD 370 at 373 and 383). These are not separate and
independent tests, but the expression of the same test when viewed
from opposite perspectives. In order to convict, the evidence must
establish the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt, which
will be so only if there is at the same time no reasonable possibility
that an innocent explanation which has been put forward might be
true. The two are inseparable, each being the logical corollary of the
other.
In whichever form the test is expressed, it must be satisfied upon a
consideration of all the evidence. A court does not look at the
evidence implicating the accused in isolation in order to determine
whether there is proof beyond reasonable doubt, and so too does it
not look at the exculpatory evidence in isolation in order to determine
whether it is reasonably possible that it might be true.'
[35] Van der Meyden was cited with approval in S v Chabalala , [2003 (1)
SACR 134 (SCA) in which Heher JA said:
'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.' ’
[25] On the criticism that the trial court did not apply the cautionary rule when
considering the evidence of a single witness. In as far as the offences of
rape are concerned, the complainant is a single witness. It is settled that a
cautionary approach must be adopted when considering the evidence. Sec
208 of the Criminal Proc edure Act 51 of 1977 stipulates that an accused may
be convicted of any offence on the single evidence of any competent
witness. In this regard, the trial court referred to s 208 at para 13(a) of its
judgment and buttressed it with well -known precede nts which need not
encumber this judgment. She explained satisfactorily why she did not raise
the “hue and cry” and why she only escaped when she thought it was
opportune and safe. A court must be astute not to hark back to the
cautionary rule in sexual cases which was outlawed in S v Jackson3 in these
emphatic terms :
‘In my view, the cautionary rule in sexual assault cases is based on an
irrational and out -dated perception. It unjustly stereotypes complainants in
sexual assault cases (overwhelmingly women) as particularly unreliable. In
our system of law, the burden is on the State to prove the guilt of an accused
beyond reasonable doubt – no more and no less. The evidence in a
particular case may call for a cautionary approach, but that is a far cry from
the application of a general cautionary rule.’
[26] 'Consent' is defined in s 1(2) of the Sexual Offences Act as 'voluntary or
uncoerced agreement'. Section 1(3), in turn, lists instances where a
complainant would be taken not to have voluntarily or without coercion
agreed to an act of sexual penetration. The section further stipulates under
(3) Circumstances in subsection (2) in respect of which a person ('B') (the
complainant) does not voluntarily or without coercion agree to an act of
sexual penetration, as contemplated in sections 3 and 4, or an act of sexual
violation as contemplated in sections 5 (1), 6 and 7 or any other act as
contemplated in sections 8 (1), 8 (2), 8 (3), 9, 10, 12, 17 (1), 17 (2), 17 (3)
(a), 19, 20 (1), 21 (1), 21 (2), 21 (3) and 22 include, but are not limited to, the
following:
(a) Where B (the complainant) submits or is subjected to such a sexual
act as a result of -
(i) the use of force or intimidation by A (the accused person)
against B, C (a third person) or D (another person) or against
the property of B, C or D; or
(ii) a threat of harm by A against B, C or D or against the property
of B, C or D;
3 S v Jackson 1998 (1) SACR 470 (SCA) at 476E - F
(b) where there is an abuse of power or authority by A to the extent that
B is inhibited from indicating his or her unwillingness or resistance to
the sexual act, or unwillingness to participate in such a sexual act .
[27] The SCA in Coko4 pronounced:
‘[56] As this court made plain in S v SM , [2013 (2) SACR 111 (SCA) para
40] mere submission, or acquiescence, or lack of resistance does
not convey a willingness to engage in a penetrative sexual act. Thus,
none of these would constitute consent. The court had this to say:
'The law requires further that consent be active, and therefore mere
submission is not sufficient. In R v Swiggelaar , Murray AJA
commented as follows:
"The authorities are clear upon the point that though the consent of a
woman may be gathered from her conduct, apart from her words, it
is fallacious to take the absence of resistance as per se proof of
consent. Submission by itself is no grant of consent, and if a man so
intimidates a woman as to induce her to abandon resistance and
submit to intercourse to which she is unwilling, he commits the crime
of rape. All the circumstances must be taken into account to
determine whether passivity is proof of implied consent or whether it
is merely the abandonment of outward resistance which the woman,
while persisting in her objection to intercourse, is afraid to display or
realises is useless.'''
[28] In addition to consent, the SCA in Coko5 further dealt with the required
element of mens rea in a rape charge and said:
‘[62] As to the element of mens rea , it is beyond question that intention is
a prerequisite for a conviction as it is an integral part of the definition
of the statutory crime of rape. A must know that B had not consented
4 Ibid para 56
5 Ibid para 62
to a penetrative sexual act. Therefore, the accused may 'escape
[criminal] liability on the ground of absence of knowledge of
unlawfulness of his conduct if he [or she] believed the complainant
…was in fact consenting'. Even dolus eventualis suffices, which
means that it is sufficient to prove that A foresaw the possibility that
B's free and conscious consent might be lacking, 'but nevertheless
continues to act [recklessly] appreciating that [he/she may be acting
without her/his consent], therefore ''gambling'' as it were [with the
security, bodily integrity and dignity] of the person against whom the
act is directed'.
[29] The appellant’s contention that the trial court was wrong in its finding that the
assault of the complainant with a padlock preceded the sexual intercourse
and therefore falls under Part 1 of Schedule 2 of the Act is flawed. The basis
for invoking Part 1 of Schedule 2 cannot be faulted. It provides :
‘Rape as contemplated in section 3 of the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences
and Related Matters) Amendment Act, 2007 -
(a) when committed -
(iii) by the accused who -
(bb) has been convicted by the trial court of two or more
offences of rape or the offences of rape and compelled
rape, irrespective of -
(aaa) whether the rape of which the accused has so
been convicted constitutes a common law or
statutory offence;
(bbb) the date of the commission of any such offence of
which the accused has so been convicted;
(ccc) whether the accused has been sentenced in
respect of any such offence of which the accused
has so been convicted;
(ddd) whether any such offence of which the accused
has so been convicted was committed in respect
of the same victim or any other victim; or
(eee) whether any such offence of which the accused
has so been convicted was committed as part of
the same chain of events, on a single occasion or
on different occasions .’
In convicting the appellant, the trial court was correct in following Part I of
Schedule 2 because it finds application. The challenge to its application is
flawed .
[30] The criticism by the defence on the oral sex issue is bemusing, and in fact,
self-defeating. Ms C[...] neither disclose d in her police statement that oral
sex had taken place nor did she testify to that effect in her evidence -in-chief.
This occurrence was only elicited from her under cross -examination, which
she readily acknowledged. She says it escaped her mind. This may or may
not be so. What is undeniable is that Ms C[...] cannot be accused of
fabricating evidence to portray the appellant in a worse light than he already
was in. The defence solicited the unfavourable evidence. They must live with
it. Ms C[...] did the appellant’s bidding. It was part of the unwelcome sex. It
bears reminding that the SCA in S v Mafaladiso en Andere6, inter alia, stated
that the person giving the statement is seldom, if ever, asked by the police
officer to explain their statement in detail. The situation sketched above, far
from discrediting her, in fact, enhances her credibility.
[31] To sum up:
(a) The uncontroverted evidence is that the love relationship between
the complainant and the appellant became so tumultuous and
abusive that it led to her obtain ing a protection order against him on
24 March 2016 and formally terminated the relationship and
cohabitation during March 2017;
6 S v Mafaladiso en Andere 2003 (1) SACR 583 (SCA)
(b) When appellant abducted the complainant on 17 March 2017, he not
only effectively contravened the terms of the protection order for
which he was convicted , but had assaulted her as well. He also
falsely accused her of having a romantic relationship with Wilkinson.
Even if such relationship existed it is not for the appellant to
prescribe to her who to associate with and in what manner;
(c) As demonstrated above, the complainant’s evidence was materially
corroborated by Mr Wilkinson, Ms Puley, Mr Manus, Cst Boitse, Ms
Erasmus and Dr Mafusi. The appellant literally held her hostage or
prisoner for three days during which he had tortured and raped her
repeatedly. He proved himself to be sexist and a sexual predator. If
she was not rescued by the police the outcome may have been too
ghastly to contemplate.
(d) The magistrate, who was steeped in the trial, was justified in having
found her to be a reliable and credible witness. In addition, none of
the state witnesses named above were discredited in cross -
examination . To reject their evidence would imply that they
conspired with each other to implicate the appellant falsely. They
were clearly independent and credible witnesses.
(e) It is common cause that the appellant supplied Ms C[...] with a
rubbing ointment and painkiller tablets. He, and nobody else , had
inflicted the pain that had to be dulled by the medication. In addition
he tried to convince the rescuing police officers that he preferred to
take Ms C[...] for medical treatment. This was an admission that she
required medical attention. Once more, the appellant was solely
culpable for her poor physical condition. Her prolonged mental
torture and anguish, which may not be physically perceptible , must
not be left out of the reas oning or underestimated.
[32] The principle pertaining to the injuries sustained analogous to the case
before us has been enunciated by the SCA in S v Van Aardt7 that an
accused cannot convincingly disavow having inflicted the injuries in
circumstances where the overwhelming evidence demonstrates that when
the accused had accosted the victim the victim was uninjured; that the victim
was under the control of the accused throughout; that no one would
conceivably have assaulted the victim in the intervening period; that the
accused was the last person to be seen with the victim who was severely
injured; that the irresistible conclusion must be that the accused caused all
the injuries. In this case, the State went further in that Ms C[...] supplied the
direct eye -witness testimony after she was rescued by the police.
[33] On the contrary, the appellant built a castle in the air and expected whoever
to live in it.
(a) No, he was the victim of the assaults, and the complainant was the
aggressor and the culprit;
(b) No, he did not abduct her, because she initiated the move to his
home. She did so on her own volition.
(c) No, the sexual intercourse was consensual. In fact, complainant
initiated it and was the dominant partner;
(d) No, the extent to which he raised his hand to her was in protecting
himself or self -defence. He did so unarmed and in a non -violent
manner. Wilkinson may have inflicted the injuries, he suggested.
(e) No, he did not hunt the complainant down to return her to his home
against her will. He merely went to retrieve his wallet and even gave
her R500.00 from it. The appellant is a path etic liar.
7 S v Van Aardt 2009 (1) SACR 648 (SCA) at 33
[34] Having regard to the common cause factors, the undisputed evidence, the
weight of the evidence and the probabilities in the case, any suggestion that,
in the circumstances the sexual intercourse could have been consensual
should not be taken seriously. The appellant never intended to seek Ms
C[...] ’ consent to be intimate with her. He was determined to punish her for
being in the company of Mr Wilkinson and did so sadistically. To suggest
that there was consent is, by the same token, to suggest that she consented
to be assaulted.
[35] In the result, the evidence of the appellant was not only not reasonably
possibly true but unquestionably false. It follows that the State had proved its
case beyond a reasonable doubt.
[36] In the result the following order is made:
1. The appeal against the conviction on the two counts of rape is
dismissed.
MC MAMOSEBO
ACTING DEPUTY JUDGE PRESIDENT
NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION
I concur
A STANTON
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION
For the appellant Adv. CF Van Heerden
Instructed by: Strauss de Waal Attorneys
For the respon dent: Adv. SK Weyers -Gericke
Instructed by: Office of the Director Public Prosecutions