Ruselo v S (Appeal) (Ex Tempore) (CA&R 141/2025) [2026] ZAECMKHC 4 (21 January 2026)

80 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Rape — Appeal against conviction and sentence — Appellant convicted of raping 11-year-old complainant — Complainant testifying to multiple instances of sexual assault by the appellant — Appellant arguing insufficient evidence for identification — Court finding compelling evidence of familiarity between complainant and appellant, sufficient to establish identity — Appeal against conviction and life sentence dismissed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns a criminal appeal in the High Court of South Africa (Eastern Cape Division, Makhanda) against both conviction and sentence. The appellant, Siyathemba Ruselo, appealed against his conviction for rape and the consequent sentence of life imprisonment. The respondent was the State.


The matter originated in a trial before the court a quo (a magistrates’ court), where the appellant was convicted of rape in terms of section 3 of the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007, read with the relevant provisions of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (minimum sentence legislation). Following conviction, the court a quo imposed the prescribed sentence of life imprisonment.


The general subject-matter of the dispute on appeal was twofold. First, the appeal challenged whether the State had proved identity of the perpetrator beyond reasonable doubt, particularly given the asserted limitations of lighting and observation during the night-time incident. Second, the appeal challenged whether the sentence of life imprisonment ought to have been replaced with a lesser sentence on the basis that substantial and compelling circumstances were present.


2. Material Facts


In June 2016, a traditional ceremony took place at the complainant’s mother’s house. The complainant was 11 years old at the time. After the ceremony, some men, including the appellant, remained overnight because they had been under the influence of alcohol.


During the night, the complainant slept in her bedroom in a bed shared with her cousins and her sister, A[...]. She testified that she was wearing a traditional skirt and panties. While asleep, she became aware that someone was “tampering” with her and realised that it was the appellant, who had moved her panties aside and inserted his fingers into her vagina. The appellant returned to the lounge where he had been sleeping but later returned and repeated the conduct. According to the complainant, this occurred on three occasions during the night.


The complainant did not speak during the incidents because she was scared. On the final occasion, A[...] woke up, shouted at the intruder, and the appellant pretended he was looking for something. A[...] continued shouting, and the appellant left the bedroom and exited the house through a window. The complainant then told A[...] what had happened, and reported it to her mother, Ms N[...] J[...], the next morning.


Later that day, the family confronted the appellant, reported the matter to the police, and arranged a medical examination. The charges were subsequently withdrawn after the appellant’s family apologised on his behalf. The families were related through marriage.


Several years later, in December 2023, the complainant attended another traditional ceremony where the appellant was present and allegedly behaved strangely, including making an inappropriate remark to her. This triggered a strong emotional reaction in the complainant, and the police investigation was reopened, ultimately resulting in the trial leading to the conviction and sentence under appeal.


At trial, the primary issue was the identity of the perpetrator. The State led evidence from the complainant and other witnesses. The appellant elected not to testify.


The High Court treated as significant that, on the evidence accepted, the incident was not in complete darkness, the complainant and A[...] asserted there was sufficient illumination to see, and both witnesses described themselves as being highly familiar with the appellant, having seen him frequently (indeed, they testified they saw him effectively every day). The mother’s evidence was relied upon to corroborate that the appellant was one of the men who stayed overnight, and that the front door had been locked while a window was open in the morning, consistent with the appellant’s alleged exit via a window.


The judgment also treated as material that, although two other men stayed overnight, they were not strangers to the household and there was no evidence suggesting that either of them was the perpetrator or that their presence created reasonable doubt about the complainant’s and A[...]’s identification of the appellant.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were, first, whether the State had proved beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant was the person who committed the acts constituting rape, given the need for caution in identification evidence and the appellant’s contention that the conditions for observation were inadequate.


This dispute concerned primarily the application of legal principles governing identification evidence to the facts, including an evaluative assessment of the reliability of witnesses’ identification in the circumstances (lighting, opportunity for observation, and prior familiarity).


The second central question was whether the trial court correctly imposed the prescribed sentence of life imprisonment, or whether the appeal court should find that substantial and compelling circumstances justified a departure from the minimum sentence regime. This involved an application of sentencing principles to the facts, including an evaluative judgment regarding proportionality and the weight to be attached to mitigating and aggravating factors.


A further legal issue arose as to the limited circumstances in which an appeal court may interfere with sentence, namely whether any misdirection or irregularity or other recognised basis for appellate interference was present on the record.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On conviction, the High Court approached the matter with reference to the principle that identification evidence requires caution, given the fallibility of human observation, as articulated in the authority relied upon by the appellant. The appellant’s argument focused on the alleged insufficiency of lighting and the contention that, because other men were in the house, one of them could have been responsible.


The Court rejected the premise that the incident occurred in pitch darkness, emphasising that there was at least some illumination in the bedroom. It also noted that the witnesses’ description was not fairly characterised as merely a distant streetlamp providing negligible light; the description was more consistent with a high-mast security light, and in any event the evidence from all three relevant witnesses was that there was some light and that it was sufficient for the complainant and A[...] to see and identify the appellant.


In assessing reliability, the Court considered the static nature of the incident and the repeated nature of the conduct, reasoning that the complainant had the opportunity to assess who was interfering with her not once but three times during the night. This, in the Court’s evaluation, diminished the scope for mistake as to identity.


A decisive aspect of the Court’s reasoning was the complainant’s and A[...]’s degree of familiarity with the appellant. The complainant’s evidence was that she had known the appellant essentially all her life, that she saw him every day, and that he lived only a few houses away and was well-known to the family, including as an attendee at ceremonies and functions. Similarly, A[...] described the appellant as a family friend whom she saw frequently and knew well. The Court treated this as materially distinguishing the case from one involving identification of a stranger under difficult conditions.


The Court also relied on the trial record’s indication that, despite intense cross-examination, both the complainant and A[...] were adamant and unwavering in their identification of the appellant, and it accepted the trial court’s assessment that there was no apparent reason for false implication, given the evidence that their relationship with the appellant had not been characterised by ill will.


The Court considered corroborative aspects. Although the mother did not witness the incident itself, her evidence corroborated that the appellant was among the men who stayed overnight. Her evidence that she locked the front door and later observed an open window was treated as consistent with the complainant’s and A[...]’s evidence that the appellant exited through a window. The Court also noted the undisputed evidence that the appellant’s family later apologised on his behalf, which had been a factor in the withdrawal of the earlier charges.


Regarding the argument that one of the other men could have been responsible, the Court observed that both were known persons (including the complainant’s stepfather and a relative connected to the younger sister), and that there was no evidence indicating either was the perpetrator or creating reasonable doubt about the appellant’s identification. In the Court’s conclusion, the evidence, considered as a whole, overwhelmingly indicated that the appellant, and no one else, was the perpetrator.


On sentence, the Court addressed the minimum sentence framework through the lens of the principles stated in the authorities relied upon by the appellant. It accepted that a prescribed sentence should not be departed from for flimsy reasons and that the enquiry remains one of whether the prescribed sentence would be disproportionate when considering the crime, the offender, and the interests of society, with traditional sentencing considerations remaining relevant.


The appellant’s mitigation arguments were that the trial court should have placed more weight on his clean record, age, and intoxication, and that the case did not fall within the “worst categories” because there was no evidence of physical injuries or gratuitous violence. The Court treated the “categorisation” of rape cases as hazardous, and emphasised the seriousness of rape, particularly rape of a child. It also considered the record to indicate that the incident caused the complainant acute emotional distress, apparently triggered again years later when she encountered the appellant at another ceremony, demonstrating that the experience remained profoundly distressing.


The Court placed weight on aggravating features identified on the record, including that the complainant was a minor, the conduct occurred in her bedroom while she was asleep, the appellant was known to the family and had abused that trust, the rape occurred on three occasions during the night, and there was evidence of physical pain. While acknowledging that the appellant’s age, first-offender status, and intoxication could not be ignored, the Court stressed there was no evidence establishing the degree of intoxication or how it could operate as meaningful mitigation in the circumstances. Balancing these considerations, the Court held it was extraordinarily difficult to find that substantial and compelling circumstances existed that would justify a departure from life imprisonment.


Finally, relying on the principles governing appellate interference with sentence, the Court held that none of the recognised bases for interference were present. It found no basis to disturb the trial court’s sentencing discretion on the record.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court dismissed the appeal against both conviction and sentence. The conviction for rape and the sentence of life imprisonment therefore remained in place.


The judgment does not record any separate or special order as to costs in relation to the appeal.


Cases Cited


S v Mthethwa 1972 (3) SA 766 (A).


S v Malgas 2001 (1) SACR 469 (SCA).


S v Zinn 1969 (2) SA 537 (A).


S v Petkar 1988 (3) SA 571 (A).


Legislation Cited


Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007, section 3.


Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Court held that, assessed holistically, the evidence established beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant was correctly identified as the perpetrator, notwithstanding arguments about limited lighting and the presence of other men in the house. The Court emphasised the presence of some illumination, the repeated opportunities for observation, and the complainant’s and A[...]’s strong prior familiarity with the appellant, together with corroborative features accepted on the record.


The Court further held that the appellant failed to demonstrate substantial and compelling circumstances warranting a deviation from the prescribed sentence of life imprisonment for the rape of a child, particularly where the rape occurred on three occasions in the course of the night and involved abuse of trust. It also held that no basis existed for appellate interference with the sentence imposed by the court a quo.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that identification evidence must be approached with caution, recognising the potential fallibility of observation. However, it also applied the associated principle that reliability of identification is assessed contextually, including consideration of the lighting, the opportunity for observation, the repeated nature of the encounter, and critically the witness’s prior familiarity with the accused, which may materially strengthen reliability when compared to identification of a stranger.


In relation to sentence, the judgment applied the minimum sentence framework requiring that a court may depart from a prescribed sentence only where substantial and compelling circumstances are present. The proportionality enquiry remained relevant, requiring consideration of the offence, the offender, and the interests of society, while recognising the gravity of rape, and especially rape of a child, in evaluating whether the prescribed sentence would be unjustly disproportionate on the facts.


The judgment further applied the principle that an appeal court may interfere with sentence only on limited grounds, and where those grounds are absent, the sentencing decision of the trial court should not be disturbed.

SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this document
in compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy


IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN CAPE DIVISION, MAKHANDA)
CASE NO. CA&R 141/2025

In the matter between:

SIYATHEMBA RUSELO Appellant

and

THE STATE Respondent
___________________________________________________________________
EX TEMPORE JUDGMENT
___________________________________________________________________
LAING J

[1] This is an appeal against the appellant’s conviction on a charge of rape in
terms of section 3 of the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters)
Amendment Act 32 of 2007, read with the relevant provisions of the Criminal Law
Amendment Act 105 of 1997. The appellant also appeals against his sentence of life
imprisonment.

[2] The complainant was 11 years old at the time of the incident. She testified that
a traditional ceremony had taken place in June 2016 at her mother's house.
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Afterwards, some of the men, including the appellant, stayed overnight because they
had been under the influen ce of alcohol. The complainant shared a bed that night in
her bedroom with her cousins and her sister, A[...]. She had been wearing a
traditional skirt and a pair of panties. At some point, while sleeping, the complainant
became aware of someone ‘tampering ’ with her, as she put it. She realised that it
was the appellant, who had moved her panties aside and inserted his fingers into her
vagina. The appellant left her alone and went back to the lounge, where he had been
sleeping. He returned later however, an d repeated his actions. This happened on
three occasions.

[3] The complainant did not say anything to him because she had been scared.
A[...] awoke on the final occasion and shouted at him. The appellant pretended that
he was looking for something. A[...] continued to shout at him and he left the
bedroom, exiting the house via a window. The complainant told A[...] what happened
and informed her mother, Ms N[...] J[...], the next morning. The family confronted the
appellant later that day. They reported the matt er to the police and arranged a
medical examination. Charges were subsequently withdrawn after the appellant’s
family apologized on his behalf. The respective families were related through
marriage.

[4] Several years later, in December 2023, the complainant a ttended another
traditional ceremony. The appellant was also present and had been acting strangely.
He made an inappropriate remark to the complainant, triggering a strong emotional
reaction in her. The police investigation was reopened, culminating in the trial before
the court a quo.

[5] The primary issue for determination at trial was the identity of the perpetrator.
The state led several witnesses, including the complainant. The appellant elected not
to testify. In a careful and well -reasoned judgment, the magistrate found that the

to testify. In a careful and well -reasoned judgment, the magistrate found that the
state had demonstrated successfully that it had been the appellant who had raped
the complainant.

[6] On appeal, counsel for the appellant referred to S v Mthethwa 1972 (3) SA
766 (A), in terms of which the erstwhile Ap pellate Division, per Holmes JA,

emphasised the need for caution regarding the identification of a perpetrator. This
was important, considering the fallibility of human observation. Counsel contended
that, in the present matter, the lighting in the bedroom had been insufficient to have
allowed the identification of the appellant beyond reasonable doubt. The bathroom
light would not have assisted and the only other source of light was a streetlamp,
some 60 to 70 metres away. Both the complainant and her sist er conceded that
visibility had been limited. Furthermore, neither could refer to any specific feature
that identified the appellant; the complainant mentioned his face and build, but only
in general terms, while A[...] mentioned his clothes and his voice, but without
elaboration. Counsel also pointed out that there had been at least two other men
staying overnight in the house; either one could have accosted the complainant.

[7] As a starting point, it is necessary to point out that the incident never took
place in pitch darkness. It was not a situation where there had been no light at all.
Furthermore, the description given by the witnesses was not to the effect that there
had been a single streetlamp at some distance away. The description matched what
was more likely to have been a high -mast security light. Whatever the situation, all
three of the witnesses were certain that it had created at least some illumination in
the bedroom. Both the complainant and A[...] were adamant that it had been
sufficient to have seen the appellant.

[8] If the static nature of the incident is considered, with an opportunity for the
complainant to have assessed exactly who was ‘tampering’ with her, on not one but
three occasions, then any doubt about the identity of the perpetrator must begin to
recede. Importantly, any remaining doubt must disappear, however, when the
complainant’s degree of familiarity with the appellant is considered. The following
exchange took place during re-examination:

exchange took place during re-examination:
‘PROSECUTOR: How long have you known the accused, taking into consideration you
were 11 years old. In 2016, how long had you known him?
HK: I can say or put it like this, Your Worship, I grew [up] in front of him.
PROSECUTOR: Okay. And did you see him on a daily basis or a weekly basis — or not
very often?

HK: I can say, Your Worship, I saw him every day. He is a drunkard in the
area.’

[9] The complainant had known the appellant all her life. The record indicates
that he had lived just a few houses away, that he had been well -known to the family,
and that he had attended traditional ceremonies and other functions at the
complainant’s home. This was not a case involving a stranger.

[10] Similarly, A[...] knew the appellant. She corroborated the complainant’s
testimony, saying that the appellant had been a family friend and that she had seen
him often because he had stayed close to her house, which he would sometimes
visit. During cross-examination, A[...] stated as follows:
‘MS ETSEBETH: . . . Now you told us that you saw the accused often at that time. Is
that right?
MS K[...]: Yes.
MS ETSEBETH: If you can estimate, how often? Once a week, twice a week, more
than that?
MS K[...]: I can say every day during the week, Your Worship.
MS ETSEBETH: Every single week?
MS K[...]: Yes.’

[11] Later, the appellant’s attorney put to A[...] that the appellant would deny that
he had slept overnight at the house. It was suggested that A[...] was unable to say
who had spent the night there because she had gone to bed early. But she
responded:
‘MS K[...]: Ja, what I am sure of, Your Worship, seeing that Siyathemba is a
family friend, every time when there is a ceremony or traditional
ceremony or whatever is happening there, Your Worship, he would be
there also; he would be present. He would always be there, every time
when there is a ceremony there at home, Your Worship. And he would
sleep over there, Your Worship.’

[12] What is striking about the record is that, despite intense and sustained cross -
examination, both the complainant and A[...] demonstrated absolute certainty; they
were adamant that the appellant had been the perpetrator. This is understandable,
considering their degree of familiarity with him. There was, moreover, no reason for
either of them to h ave falsely implicated the appellant; both testified that their
relationship with him had not been characterised by any ill will.

[13] Although their mother, Ms B[...], never witnessed the scene, she corroborated
the fact that the appellant had been one of the t hree men who had stayed overnight.
It is difficult to accept counsel’s argument that it was possible that either of the other
two men had accosted the complainant. One was the complainant’s stepfather, the
other was her younger sister’s uncle. Both were known to the witnesses. Neither was
a stranger. No evidence was presented to have suggested that either was the
perpetrator — or, conversely, to have cast reasonable doubt on the witnesses’
identification of the appellant. From the evidence of Ms J[...], moreover, the appellant
had already left the house by the time that the complainant reported the matter to her
mother. She said that she had locked the front door before going to bed but had
seen an open window in the morning. Her testimony corroborated the evid ence of
the complainant and A[...] that the appellant had exited the house in such manner. A
further consideration is Ms J[...]’s undisputed testimony that the appellant’s family
had later apologized on his behalf. His sister was married to Ms J[...]’s brother. This
had prompted the withdrawal of the charges shortly after the incident.

[14] Taken as a whole, the evidence of the witnesses indicated overwhelmingly
that the appellant — and no-one else — had been the perpetrator.

[15] Regarding sentence, counsel referred to the seminal decision in S v Malgas

[15] Regarding sentence, counsel referred to the seminal decision in S v Malgas
2001 (1) SACR 469 (SCA). In that regard, counsel accepted that a prescribed
sentence could not be departed from lightly and for flimsy reasons that could not
withstand scrutiny. Nevertheless, traditional factors continue d to play a role. To that
effect, the prescribed sentence must be proportionate to the crime, the offender, and
the interests of society. The principles in S v Zinn 1969 (2) SA 537 (A) remain ever
relevant.

[16] In the present matter, counsel argued that the c ourt a quo ought to have
placed more emphasis on the appellant’s clean record, his age, and his state of
intoxication. Furthermore, counsel contended that the offence did not fall within the
worst categories; the complainant did not sustain physical injuri es, no gratuitous
violence was involved.

[17] Regarding the last point, the categorization of cases, especially in relation to
rape, is an exercise fraught with hazard. Whereas the court a quo would have
benefitted from a victim impact assessment, the record indicates that the incident
gave rise to ac ute emotional distress on the part of the complainant. This seems to
have been triggered late, several years after the incident, when the complainant
encountered the appellant at another traditional ceremony. The experience remains
a raw scar that runs dee ply through the complainant. At the risk of repeating what
has been said in so many judgments dealing with similar facts, the horrors
associated with the crime of rape cannot be understated. In the present matter, the
offence involved the rape of a minor — the rape of a child. There was undisputed
evidence that it occurred on three occasions during the night. In the circumstances, it
cannot simply be said that this was a case that did not fall within the worst
categories. It must be seen for what it is.

[18] Turning to the remaining factors, it is true that the appellant’s age and his
status as a first offender cannot be ignored. The same can be said of his state of
intoxication. Against this must be weighed the age of the complainant, the fact that
the offence took place in her bedroom while she had been asleep, that the appellant
was known to the complainant and her family and that he had abused their trust, that
there was no evidence of the degree to which he had been intoxicated and how this
could have been a mitigating factor, and that the complainant had experienced

could have been a mitigating factor, and that the complainant had experienced
physical pain. When placed in the balance, after adding the nature of the offence, it
is extraordinarily difficult to say that there were substantial and compelling
circumstances to have justified a departure from the prescribed sentence.

[19] Counsel referred to S v Petkar 1988 (3) SA 571 (A), where the erstwhile
Appellate Division, per Smalberger JA, set out the conditions under which a court of

appeal may interfere with sentence. None of those exi st in the present matter. The
findings of the court a quo must remain undisturbed.


[20] Consequently, I would order that:
The appeal against conviction and sentence is hereby dismissed.


_________________________
JGA LAING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT

I agree.


_________________________
R KRÜGER
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT

APPEARANCES
For the appellant: Adv Geldenhuys
Instructed by: Legal Aid, South Africa
MAKHANDA

For the respondent: Adv Van Rooyen
Instructed by: Director of Public Prosecutions
MAKHANDA

Date heard: 21 January 2026.
Date delivered: 21 January 2026.