THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case number : 317/03
Reportable
In the matter between :
HEINRICH GENTLE APPELLANT
and
THE STATE RESPONDENT
CORAM : FARLAM, CLOETE, PONNAN JJA
HEARD : 14 MARCH 2005
DELIVERED : 29 MARCH 2005
Summary: Section 316 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977: SCA granting
leave to appeal where High Court believing that leave unnecessary but
indicating that it would have been refused. Evidence: effect of document
handed in by consent; what is meant by corroboration.
_________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
CLOETE JA/
2
CLOETE JA:
[1] At the outset of this appeal the court granted the appellant’s
application for condonation for the late delivery of his application for leave
to appeal to this court. The application was, correctly, not opposed by the
representative of the State. At the c onclusion of the hearing and after a
short adjournment the court granted the appellant’s application for leave
to appeal, upheld the appea l against conviction and set the appellant’s
conviction and sentence aside. The appellant was released from custody
later the same afternoon. It was indi cated that reasons for the court’s
order would be furnished in due course. These are the reasons.
[2] On 26 July 2000 the appellant and his co-accused were charged in
the Regional Court, Oudtshoorn, with having raped the complainant on 31
January 1999 at Matjiesrivier. Both pleaded not gu ilty but both were
convicted. The magistrate found t hat each had raped the complainant
twice. This finding meant that the of fence was one specified in Part 1 of
Schedule 2 of the Criminal Law Amendm ent Act, 105 of 1979 (‘the Act’).
The regional magistrate was accordingly obliged in terms of s 52(1) of the
Act to stop the proceedings and commit the appellant and his co-accused
for sentence by a high court as contemplated in s 51(1) of the Act.
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[3] The procedure which the high court was obliged to follow is set out
in s 52(3), which provides inter alia:
‘(a) Where an accused is committed under subsection (1)(b) for sentence by a High
Court, the record of the proc eedings in the regional court shall upon proof thereof in
the High Court be received by the High Court and form part of the record of that Court.
(b) The High Court shall, a fter considering the record of the proceedings in the
regional court, sentence the accu sed as contemplated in sect ion 51(1) or (2), as the
case may be, and the judgment of the regi onal court shall stand for this purpose and
be sufficient for the High Court to pass such sentence: Provided that if the judge is of
the opinion that the proceedings are not in accordance with justice or that doubt exists
whether the proceedings are in accordance with justice, he or she shall, without
sentencing the accused, obtain from the regional magistrate who presided at the trial a
statement setting forth his or her reasons for convicting the accused.’
The sentence prescribed in s 51(1) is imprisonment for life; but s 51(3)(a)
provides that if the court is sati sfied that substantial and compelling
circumstances exist which justify the imposition of a lesser sentence, it
may impose a lesser sentence.
[4] The matter came before Griesel J on 12 November 2001 in the
circuit court at Oudsthoorn. T he learned judge recorded that he was
satisfied that the proceedings were in accordance with justice; found that
substantial and compelling circumstances were present; and sentenced
4
the appellant to fifteen years’ im prisonment and his co-accused to ten
years’ imprisonment. Both applied to the learned judge for leave to appeal
against the convictions and senten ces imposed. Their application was
heard together with four other applications in similar matters. On 19 April
2002 the learned judge handed down a joint judgment in which he
concluded that each of the applican ts had an automatic right of appeal
against conviction, but that leav e to appeal against sentence was
required. The learned judge continued:
‘Sou die Volbank van my bogemelde benadering verskil, òf wat die feite òf wat die reg
aanbetref, word geboekstaaf dat ek in elk van die vyf aansoeke wat die onderwerp van
die huidige uitspraak vorm sodanige verlof sou geweier het. In daardie geval kan die
gebrek aan verlof ondervang word deur die uitoefening deur die Hof van Appél van sy
wye hersieningsbevoegdhede voortspruitend uit die bepalings van art 309(3), gelees
met art 304(2) van die Strafproseswet.’
In the case of the appel lant and his co-accused, leave to appeal against
sentence was refused.
[5] In coming to the conclusion that the appellant and the other
applicants for leave to appeal had an automatic right to appeal against
conviction, the learned judge reasoned as follows:
‘Hierdie hof het geen onafhanklike skuldigbevinding ten opsigte van enigeen van hulle
uitgebring nie en het selfs nie eens nodig gehad om hul skuldigbevindings te bekragtig
5
nie. Wat wel gebeur het, is dat hierdie ho f die verrigtinge in die laer hof onder
hersiening geneem het en tot die gevolgtrek king gekom het dat reg tydens sodanige
verrigtinge behoorlik geskied het.’
That reasoning is inconsistent with the later decision of this court in S v B
2003 1 SACR 52 (SCA). In para [9] of the judgment Streicher JA
concluded, with reference to s 52(3) of the Act, that:
‘Die skuldigbevinding in die streekhof is dus, in effek, ‘n voorlopige skuldigbevinding
wat finaal word indien dit aanvaar word of bekragtig word deur die Hoë Hof. Met ander
woorde die Strafwysigingswet het ‘n spesiale prosedure geskep ingevolge waarvan
die verhoor van ‘n beskuldigde in die streekhof begin en in die Hoë Hof afgehandel kan
word.’
[6] The appellant and his co-accused appealed to the Cape High Court .
The decision of this court in S v B was available to that court. In a
judgment delivered on 20 February 2003 Knoll J (Selekowitz and Blignaut
JJ concurring) found that although the Act had been amended with effect
from 23 March 2001 by the Judicial Matters Amendment Act, 62 of 2000,
the conclusion reached in S v B was unaffected; and accordingly correctly
held that the appellant r equired leave to appeal agai nst his conviction in
terms of s 316 of the Criminal Proc edure Act, 51 of 1977. Because such
leave had not been granted by Griese l J, and because leave to appeal
against sentence had been refused by him, the full court struck the appeal
6
off the roll. The full court was unable to exercise its review jurisdiction
inasmuch as the decision of a superior court is not reviewable.
[7] The obviously bewildered appellant then applied for condonation
and for leave to appeal to this court. The applications were dated 29 April
2003 and were received by the registrar on 17 July 2003. On 22 August
2003 this court made the following order:
‘1. The application for condonation and leave to appeal is referred to this court for
oral argument.
2. The parties must be prepared, if called upon to do so, to address the court at
the hearing on the merits of the conviction and sentence.
3. The applicant is to file five additional copies of the application for condonation
and leave to appeal and to fi le with the registra r of this court t he record of the
proceedings and to comply with all the rules relating to the prosecution of an appeal.
4. The applicant should arr ange to be legally represented, if necessary, by
applying to the Legal Aid Board for assistance.’
[8] As I have said, the application for condonation was granted at the
outset of the hearing. The question wh ich then arose for decision was
whether this court could hear the ap peal. The answer to that question
depended upon whether it could be found that Gr iesel J refused to grant
leave to appeal ─ in which case this court could grant the application for
7
leave. Griesel J refused leave in reg ard to the sentence he imposed. In
the passage I have quoted in par agraph [4] above, Griesel J said
expressly that he would have refused leave to appeal against conviction;
and that is no doubt what he would have done, had the matter been sent
back for his consideration by this co urt. If the matter were to have been
sent back, this court could nev ertheless have heard t he appeal pending
the decision of Griesel J for the reasons given in paras [18] to [28] of the
judgment of this court handed down on 20 December 2004 in
Pharmaceutical Society of South Afri ca v The Minster of Health; New
Clicks South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Dr Manto Tshabalala-Msimang NO , SCA
cases 542/04 and 543/04; and this court could itself have granted the
necessary leave were it to have been refused. But to follow this approach
would have been pointless, would have caused further unnecessary delay
and would have resulted in form triumphing over substance ─ all for the
purpose of obtaining an entirely predict able result. In the circumstances
this court was of the view, and the representative of the State on appeal
conceded, that Griesel J’s approach should be interpreted as a refusal of
leave to appeal on conviction. This court therefore considered that it was
in a position to grant such leave in terms of the provisions of s 316(13)(c)
of the Criminal Procedure Act, in view of the application before it and the
8
previous order made by this court on 22 April 2003 quoted in para [7]
above. The application was accordingly granted.
[9] I turn to examine the merits of the appellant’s conviction. It was
established that at about five p.m. on the day in question the complainant
left her home where she had been drinking wine all day with her husband,
the appellant and another person. She had her baby with her. According
to the appellant, he accompanied h er as she had agreed to have sexual
intercourse with him, and on their way the co-accused joined them.
According to the complainant on th e other hand, the appellant and his
co-accused accosted her some dist ance from her home. It is common
cause that the complainant and the appellant went to a place amongst the
bushes next to a dirt track and th at the co-accused followed them.
Whether the complainant was a w illing partner or wa s dragged there by
the appellant, was in dispute. The complainant made no allegation that
the co-accused forced her into the bu shes nor did she suggest that he
was acting in concert with the appell ant when he, on her version, did so.
The complainant said that the appell ant then hit her on the eye, leaving
what she described as a ‘rooi kolletj ie’. The appellant denied any such
incident. It is further common cause that the appellant and thereafter his
co-accused had sexual intercourse with the complainant in the bushes. It
9
is not necessary to consider whether the co-accused had sexual
intercourse with the complainant tw ice (although that question will arise
for decision should the co-accused obtain condonation and prosecute an
appeal). Whether the appellant again had sexual intercourse with the
complainant after his co-accused had done so, was in dispute. At some
stage Mr Moos Barnard walked past the scene and at another stage the
complainant’s son Mario together with Daniël Malgas and another young
person, who did not give evidence , arrived on t he scene. The
complainant’s sister-in-law was summoned by Mario and he took her and
her sister to the scene. Ultimately the police were called.
[10] In convicting the appellant, the magistrate committed a number of
fundamental misdirections. It suffices to refer to two at this stage. First, the
magistrate used the conten ts of the plea explanat ion of the appellant’s
co-accused to discredit the appellant’s version. The appellant testified that
the complainant had undone the butto n of her shorts herself. The
co-accused had said in his plea ex planation that the appellant had done
this before dragging her into the bu shes and having sexual intercourse
with her. The magistrate could not rely on the evidence of the co-accused
as it was patently unsatisfactory on this very point. Initially, the
co-accused said in his evidence in chief that the complainant had gone
10
into the bushes with the appellant willingly. This elicited the following retort
from the co-accused’s attorney: ‘Jy het my gesê sy is daar ingesleep’, to
which the co-accused responded: ‘Hy het gegaan met haar daarin’. In
response to the question: ‘Wie trek wie se broek af?’, the co-accused said
‘Ek weet nie of sy [ sc. hy] hom afgetrek het of sy nie meneer’. The
co-accused’s attorney then said ‘Die verklaring wat jy vir my gegee het
wat gesê het: “Klaagster se kort broek losgeknoop haar die bosse
ingesleep en met haar omgang gehad”, is dit nie reg nie?’ and after some
further cross-examination (and I use this word advisedly) by his own
attorney, the co-accused finally agreed that his plea explanation was the
correct version. I shall return to the credibility of the co-accused later. For
present purposes it suffices to say that what is said in a plea explanation
by one accused is obviously not evidence against another accused.
[11] Second, the magistrate used what he termed ‘die mediese
getuienis, die dokter se getuienis wat ingehandig is’ as being an indication
that the complainant’s evidence was reliable. The medical evidence in fact
shows the exact opposite. That evid ence was contained in a form J88
entitled ‘Report by District Surge on, Medical Officer or Medical
Practitioner on the Completion of a Medico-legal Examination’. According
to the form a medical practiti oner named Barnard examined the
11
complainant at 9:30 p.m. (i.e. four hours or so after the alleged rape). The
medical practitioner recorded:
‘Was glo dronk kan nie voorval onthou nie. Antwoord nie juis op vrae nie. Nog ver deur
die wind. Sê eers 1 persoon toe weer twee.’
The form was handed in by the appellant’s attorney with the consent of the
prosecutor. The medical practitioner was not called to give evidence. The
only conclusion which can be drawn from the procedure which was
followed at the trial and the magistrat e’s reliance on the contents of the
form is that in consenting that the form be handed in, the prosecutor
accepted the correctness of what was stated in it. The representative of
the State on appeal was obliged to concede that this must be so, although
he submitted that in the absence of oral evidence by the doctor, the
possibility exists that the doctor’s examination of the complainant may
have been perfunctory and the entries on the form unreliable; and that
accordingly where the State witnesse s contradicted the entries on the
form, their evidence should be preferred. That approach is not open to the
State. Had the prosecutor wished to c hallenge the weight to be given to
the contents of the form, he should have called the doctor or timeously
have advanced a submission to this effect, in wh ich case the magistrate
should himself have called the doctor in terms of the provisions of s 186 of
12
the Criminal Procedure Act. In any event, the argum ent advanced on
behalf of the State on appeal does not explain the approach of the
magistrate. The one thing that the r eport did not do, is show that the
complainant’s evidence was reliable. The magistrate’s statement to the
contrary, is inexplicable and a plain misdirection.
[12] The State’s representativ e on appeal submitted that the
misdirections to which I have referred were not material. They obviously
were. They formed part of the reasoning of the magistrate and contributed
to his conclusion that the appellant was guilty. The consequence of the
first misdirection was that inadmissible material was taken into account to
discredit the appellant’s version; and the consequence of the second
misdirection was that evidence was ta ken into account to show that the
complainant’s version was reliabl e, when such evidence showed the
exact opposite. This court is acco rdingly at large to disregard the
magistrate’s findings of fact, even if based on credibility, and to come to its
own conclusion on the record as to whether the guilt of the appellant was
proved beyond a reasonable doubt; and the onus accordingly becomes
all-important: R v Dhlumayo and Another 1948 (2) SA 677 (A) paras 10,
12 and 13.
13
[13] The complainant was an appalli ngly bad witness. She contradicted
herself in numerous respects. In chief she said that the appellant had had
sexual intercourse with her twice whilst his co-accused held her child, and
that when the appellant had fini shed, the co-accused had sexual
intercourse with her twice whilst the appellant held her child. In
cross-examination she said that after the appellant had had sexual
intercourse with her, he walked aw ay and did not ret urn; and that the
co-accused then put the baby down whilst he had sexual intercourse with
her. It was pointed out to her by the a ppellant’s attorney that in repeating
her version in cross-examination she had not claimed that the appellant
had had sexual intercours e with her more than once. She then said that
the appellant had come back afte r his co-accused had had sexual
intercourse with her and it was then that the appellant had had sexual
intercourse with her for the second time. When she was confronted with
her evidence that the appellant had walked away and not come back after
he had had sexual intercourse with her, she was unable to explain the
contradiction despite the fact that she was repeatedly asked to do so.
[14] The evidence of the complainant was also unsatisfactory as to when
Barnard had walked past the scene and her son Mario had arrived on the
scene. In her evidence in chief she said that Barnard walked past after
14
both the appellant and his co-accused had had sexual intercourse with
her. In cross-examination on behalf of the appellant, she said that Barnard
had walked past whilst the appellant wa s still having sexual intercourse
with her, for the second time. That is a clear contradiction. She was asked
when her son had arrived. She said it was when the co-accused was
having sexual intercourse with her, and that was after Barnard had
passed the scene. On this version, her evidence in chief that both had
finished raping her when Barnard passed, cannot be true because Mario
arrived after Barnard a nd saw the co-accused ra ping her. Nor can her
previous evidence in cross-examination that the appellant was raping her
for the second time w hen Barnard passed, be true ─ because if Mario
saw the co-accused raping her when he arrived, the appellant had not yet
raped her for the second time and Barnard could not have seen him doing
so.
[15] During cross-examination the complainant said:
‘Ja, maar ek, my kop, ek kan nie meer so lekker onthou nie.’
The reason why the complainant had difficulty in remembering what had
happened, is not hard to find. She was drunk. That much is quite apparent
from the medical report according to which she was still intoxicated some
four hours after the incident, c ould not remember it and gave a
15
contradictory account of what had happened. Her evidence as to how
much she had had to drink, was also unsatisfactory. She said that she and
her companions, including the appellan t, had been drinking since 9 a.m.
on the day in question. She initially said that she had had only three and a
half glasses of wine. It was pointed out that this was not very much,
bearing in mind that the incident had taken place at about 5 pm. After
much hesitation, she admitted having had two further glasses of wine. (I
should perhaps say in parenthesis that no attempt was made to argue
before this court that the complainant was too drunk to consent to sexual
intercourse.)
[16] In all the circumstances, it is difficult to understand how the
magistrate was in a position to say that ‘die hof is tevrede dat die klaagster
‘n goeie indruk op die hof gemaak het’. It may well be that the magistrate
was only referring to the demeanour of the complainant and not to the
content of her evidence. If so, it is cause for comment that the magistrate
did not deal with the latter aspect at all. The magistrate said:
‘Daarna het die verdediging mnr. Delport haar [the complainant] onder
kruisondervraging geneem. Deur die krui sondervraging het hierdie prokureur daarin
geslaag om ook ‘n geheelbeeld, ‘n prentjie voor die hof te plaas van wat presies daar
plaasgevind het. Hy het haar stap-vir-stap deur die proses gevat en daaruit kon die hof
16
dan aflei wat gebeur het. Sy kon meer in detail vert el as gevolg van die
kruisondervraging van mnr. Delport.’
As I have demonstrated, however, t he complainant did not give more
detail in cross-examination, nor did she clarify what she had said in her
evidence in chief. She gave contradic tory versions. These contradictions
in the complainant’s evidence were simply ignored by the magistrate.
[17] The complainant’s evidence has very little probative value. The
magistrate did not consider that a cautionary approach was necessary,
but purported to follow such an approach. In S v Jackson 1998 (1) SACR
470 (SCA) at 474f-475e Olivier JA surveyed the history of the cautionary
rule and the position in other jurisdictions, and concluded at 476e-f:
‘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.’
The learned judge then quoted with approval from the decision of the
English Court of Appeal in R v Makanjuola, R v Easton [1995] 1 All ER 730
(CA), including the following passage at 477c-d:
‘In some cases, it may be appropriate for the judge to warn the jury to exercise caution
before acting upon the unsupported evidence of a witness. This will not be so simply
because the witness is a complainant of a sexual offence nor will it necessarily be so
because a witness is alleged to be an accomplice. There will need to be an evidential
basis for suggesting that the evidence of the witness may be unreliable. An evidential
17
basis does not include mere suggestions by cross-examining counsel.’
The evidence in this case certainl y did call for a c autionary approach.
Quite apart from her contradictory evidence to which I have already
referred, the complainant had been seen by Barnard, her son and some of
his friends in an extremely compromisin g situation. The lower half of her
body was naked when her sister-in-law arrived on the scene. Her husband
and her family would undoubtedly have called for an explanation. Rape
was an obvious answer. These facts alone provide an evidentiary basis
for the suggestion that the version of the complainant that she was raped
may be unreliable and such evidence accordingly had to be approached
with caution.
[18] The representative of the Stat e submitted on appeal that (I quote
from the heads of argument): ‘[T]here was sufficient corroboration or
“indicators” to support the occurr ence of the rapes.’ It must be
emphasized immediately that by cor roboration is meant other evidence
which supports the evidence of the complainant, and which renders the
evidence of the accused less probable, on the issues in dispute (cf R v W
1949 (3) SA 772 (A) at 778-9). If the evidence of the complainant differs in
significant detail from the evidence of other State witnesses, the court
must critically examine the differences with a view to establishing whether
18
the complainant’s evidence is reliable. But the fact that the complainant’s
evidence accords with the evidence of other State witnesses on issues
not in dispute does not provide corroboration. Thus in the present matter,
for example, evidence that the appellant had sexual intercourse with the
complainant does not provide corroborat ion of her version that she was
raped, as the fact of sexual interc ourse is common cause. What is
required is credible evidence which renders the complainant’s version
more likely that the sexual intercourse took place without her consent, and
the appellant’s version less likely that it did not.
[19] I shall deal with each of the fa cts that we were asked to take into
account as providing corroboration. Fi rst, it was pointed out that the
complainant had complained to her sister-in-law that she had been raped
when the latter arrived on the scene. That is not corroboration. This court
held in the as yet unreported decision in Hammond v S (SCA case 500/03
in which judgment was delivered on 3 September 2004) that the fact and
contents of a complaint in a sexual misconduct case can be used only to
show that the evidence of a compla inant who testifies that the act
complained of took place without her co nsent, is consistent. It is relevant
solely to her credibility. The comp laint cannot be used as creating a
probability in favour of the State case i.e. it cannot be argued that because
19
the complainant complained shortly a fter the incident, it is probable that
the incident took place without her consent.
[20] Second, reference was made to what was termed the ‘naked and
injured state’ of the complainant. The magistrate found corroboration for
the complainant’s version inter alia in the fact that the complainant’s
sister-in-law saw blood coming out of the complainant’s private parts, and
that the complainant was not wearing her panties, when she arrived at the
scene. The fact that the lower half of the complainant’s body was
unclothed, is neutral, as the Stat e’s representative correctly conceded.
The fact that the complainant was bleedi ng is of no significance as it is
clear from the medical evidence that she was menstruating.
[21] Third, reference was made to th e alleged injury sustained by the
complainant to her eye. The complainant’s sister-in-law and Daniël
Malgas testified that they had seen such an injury. The problem facing the
State is that the doctor found that the complainant was not injured. It is
clear from the form J88 that the do ctor was not referring to her private
parts. If such injury was obvious to the complainant’s sister-in-law and
Malgas, the probabilities are that it would also have been noticed by a
trained doctor whose function it was to record such an injury. It is not as
20
though the alleged injury was concealed under her clothing. The
contradiction in the evidence cast s doubt upon the v eracity of the
evidence given by those who said that they did see it ─ particularly
because the complainant’s own son Mario made no mention of it. In the
circumstances it would be unsafe to find corroboration for the evidence of
the complainant that the appellant hit her leaving a visible mark on her
face.
[22] Fourth, reference was made to the fa ct that the complainant’s pair of
panties was torn. The appellant said that they were not torn. They were
handed in as an exhibit and they were torn. There is therefore
corroboration for the complainant’s evidence on this point.
[23] Fifth, reference was made to the evidence of the c o-accused that
the appellant had dragged the complainant into the bushes. I have already
dealt with this evidence. It is contradictory and completely unreliable.
[24] Sixth, reference was made to the evidence of the complainant’s son
Mario regarding drag marks (‘sleepmerke’) on the ground. This evidence
is of no value, even assuming that it was admissible. (The question which
arises in this latter regard is whether the magistrate’s warning to Mario
and to his youthful companion Daniël Malgas to tell the truth was
21
competent or whether he should have administered the oa th. I find it
unnecessary to decide the point.) Mario said nothing about drag marks in
his evidence in chief. In cross-examination he began talking about ‘toe die
oom Mamma aangesleep het’ and ‘toe hy Mamma ingesleep het’. It
appears from the context in which this evidence was given that Mario was
talking about the co-accused and not the appellant as the ‘oom’. The
following exchange then took place between Mario and the magistrate (it
is notable that up until that time, Mario had consistently referred only to
one person who had dragged his mother into the bushes):
‘Het hulle vir haar ingesleep? -- Ja meneer.
Het jy dit gesien? -- Ja meneer.’
The proceedings continued with the co-accused’s legal representative
asking the questions:
‘Was jy daar toe jou ma gesleep is? -- Nee meneer.
Het jy sleepmerke gesien of hoekom praat jy van sleep? -- Ja meneer ek het die sleepmerke
daar gesien meneer.’
The magistrate then asked:
‘Het jy sleepmerke gesien, jy het nie gesien jou ma word gesleep nie?’
to which Mario replied:
‘Ek het nie gesien hulle word gesleep nie meneer, ek het die sleepmerke daar gesien.’
As the representative of the State readily conceded, what appears to have
22
happened is that in order to explain why he said his mother was dragged
into the bushes when he was not there, Mario claimed to have seen drag
marks. The evidence is obviousl y unreliable and no weight can be
attached to it.
[25] Seventh, reference was made to the evidence of the co-accused
that the appellant had had sexual int ercourse with the complainant after
he (the co-accused) had had sexual intercourse with her. The co-accused
was demonstrated to be an out and out liar. He claimed to have been
impotent for some time before the incident but ended up conceding that
this was not correct and that he had indeed had sexual intercourse with
the complainant. His evidence was also unsatisfactory as to whether the
complainant was dragged into the bus hes by the appellant, as I have
already indicated. Whether his evidence can be regarded as corroborative
of the complainant’s evidence depends upon w hether any credence can
be attached to it; and I am quite unable to do so.
[26] Finally, the State’s representat ive relied on the evidence of the
complainant’s son Mario and his companion Daniël Malgas to show that
the complainant had called for help. T he problem facing the State in this
regard is that there is a contradiction between the two witnesses on this
23
very point. Malgas said that when he arrived on the scene, the co-accused
was having sexual intercourse with the complainant and she called for
help. Mario confirms that the co-acc used was having se xual intercourse
with the complainant when they arrived but, in his evidence in chief, when
asked: ‘Ja, en wat sê mamma toe vir julle?’ he answered: ‘Niks nie
meneer’. It is far more probable that the complainant’s own son would
have remembered the complainant calling f or help, if this occurred, than
one of his companions. In the circumst ances the evidence of Malgas on
this point cannot be accepted.
[27] The only aspect ─albeit an important aspect ─ on which the
complainant’s evidence is corroborated, is that her panties were torn. On
the other hand, she is contradicted by the medical report and by Barnard
on equally important aspects of her ev idence. It cannot be accepted, in
view of the medical report, that she had any injury to her face, and
consequently her evidence that the appellant hit her also cannot be
accepted. It also cannot be accepted, because of the evidence of Barnard,
that she was screaming whilst she was being raped. She said that
Barnard walked past the scene and I have already referred to her
contradictory evidence in this regard. Barnard was called by the State. His
evidence is confusing. One thing, ho wever, is clear from that evidence,
24
namely, that he did not hear the complainant scream and that he would
have heard this, had she done so. Indeed, if the complainant saw Barnard,
as she said she did, it is inconceivable that she would not have called out
for him to help her. Yet she does not say that she did; and it is clear from
Barnard’s evidence that she did not. The magistrate found that Barnard
appeared to be an unwilling witness. But that is no warrant for ignoring his
evidence. As Nugent J said in S v Van der Meyden 1999 (2) SA 79 (W)
82D-E, in a passage su bsequently approved by this court in S v Van
Aswegen 2001 (2) SACR 97 (SCA) at 101e:
‘What must be borne in mind, however, is that the conclusion which is reached
(whether it to be convict or to acquit) must account for all the evidence. Some of the
evidence may be found to be false; some of it might be found to be unreliable; and
some of it might be found to be only possibly false or unreliable; but none of it may
simply be ignored.’
[28] The appellant was not a satisfacto ry witness. He persistently denied
telling the police the version which was recorded in his statement and
contradicted himself as to whether he had read the statement before he
signed it. His attitude is inexplicable inasmuch as there is nothing
incriminating in the statement. His ev idence in this regard leaves a poor
impression of his credibility. He was also constrained to concede that his
25
version as to the amount of wine he had had to drink, was unlikely bearing
in mind the time he had spent at the complainant’s home. Furthermore,
his version that the complainant’s pa ir of panties was not torn, must be
rejected and this must count against him.
[29] The State’s representative submitted in argument that the
appellant’s version is so improbable that it cannot be true. The submission
was that if the appellant and the co mplainant had mutually agreed that
they would have sexual intercourse at a convenient place some distance
from her matrimonial home, it is improbable that the appellant would have
allowed the co-accused to watch; and that it is inexplicable how, without a
word having been said, the co-accused would have ended up also having
sexual intercourse with the comp lainant. One would indeed not expect
rational people to behave in this way. But the complainant was drunk. So
were the appellant and his co-accused. Their conduct as testified to by the
appellant cannot accordingly be evaluated according to rational norms. It
is quite possible in the circumstanc es that the complainant and the
appellant could not have cared less whether the co-accused was around
or not; and that after the appellant had satisfied himself, he walked away
leaving the complainant to fend off the advances of his co-accused if that
was his intention, or to succumb to them if she had no objection. There is
26
simply no evidence which suggests that the appellant and his co-accused
had agreed that they would rape the complainant or why they would wish
to do so together. It is quite possible that after the appellant had finished
having sexual intercourse with th e complainant with her consent, the
co-accused, having seen that she was not resisting, decided to try his luck
as well.
[30] Considering the evidence on the re cord as a whole I am not satisfied
that the guilt of the appellant was proved beyond a reasonable doubt. The
appellant was an unsatisfactory witne ss, and was proved to have lied as
to whether the complainant’s panties were torn. On the other hand, the
complainant’s evidence was patently unsatisfactory, and except for the
aspect I have just mentioned, uncorroborated; and she was furthermore
contradicted on two important aspects of her evidence, namely, whether
she had screamed for help and whether the appellant has hit her on the
face leaving a visible mark. A caut ionary approach is called for in the
circumstances of this particular case for the reasons I have given. The
natural sympathy which one has for a woman who says that she has been
raped, cannot be allowed to play any role in deciding whether the onus of
proof in a criminal case has been satisfied. In the present case, it has not.
27
[31] In the circumstances this court concluded that the following order
should be made, and it was made:
1. The application for leave to appeal is granted.
2. The appeal succeeds and the conviction and sentence of the
appellant are set aside.
______________
T D CLOETE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Concur: Farlam JA
Ponnan JA