Goodal v S (A392/10) [2011] ZAWCHC 96 (26 April 2011)

85 Reportability
Criminal Law

Brief Summary

Criminal Law — Rape — Appeal against conviction and sentence — Appellant convicted of two counts of rape of a minor — Central issue on appeal whether State proved rape beyond reasonable doubt — Complainant, a 15-year-old girl with significant intellectual disabilities, testified through an intermediary — Evidence presented included psychological assessments of complainant's ability to consent and her vulnerabilities — Court found that despite the complainant's ambivalence and complexities in her testimony, the evidence sufficiently established the appellant's guilt — Appeal dismissed, conviction and sentence upheld.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter was an appeal to the Western Cape High Court, Cape Town, against both conviction and sentence imposed in the Parow Regional Court in respect of two counts of rape.


The appellant was Kevin Goodall, and the respondent was the State.


The appellant had been convicted on 1 August 2007 in the Parow Regional Court on two counts of rape. He was later sentenced on 24 October 2008 in the Western Cape High Court under the minimum sentence legislation to 15 years’ imprisonment on each count, with the sentences ordered to run concurrently. Leave to appeal was granted against both conviction and sentence, and the appellant was released on bail pending the appeal.


The dispute concerned whether the State had proved beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant had raped a 15-year-old complainant on two occasions in December 2004. A significant contextual feature was the complainant’s moderate intellectual disability, her evidence as a single witness, and whether the evidence supported rape convictions or, alternatively, a statutory sexual offence involving a child under 16.


Material Facts


The charges arose from alleged incidents on 22 December 2004 and 24 December 2004 at the appellant’s residence at 151 Victoria Road, Parow, where it was alleged that the appellant had sexual intercourse with the complainant, then 15 years old, without her consent.


It was common cause that the complainant was a minor and that she testified at trial at age 17, through an intermediary and via closed-circuit television in terms of section 170A of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. A psychologist, Ms Gillian Douglas, assessed the complainant and reported that she functioned with moderate intellectual disability in overall adaptive functioning, with age-equivalent scores (depending on domain) in the range of approximately 5 to 9 years. Douglas also testified that the complainant’s disability was not necessarily obvious in ordinary communication, but emerged in her reasoning, judgment, and vulnerability to manipulation.


On the complainant’s version, she met the appellant through his older brother and initiated contact with the appellant. She described becoming infatuated with him despite an age disparity, and despite parental disapproval. She testified that on 22 December 2004 she met him, went to his residence, and despite protestations he had sexual intercourse with her, causing pain. She stated she did not alert others present because she feared they would participate. She then accompanied him afterwards and did not immediately report the incident.


On 24 December 2004, she again arranged to meet him, went with him to his residence, travelled with him to Atlantis, returned to the residence, and described drinking water that tasted “bitter,” becoming drowsy, and later being forced onto a bed where the appellant had sexual intercourse with her. She described objecting, including due to fear of pregnancy, and testified that the appellant reassured her. After that, she accompanied him shopping and returned to her workplace.


The complainant’s parents testified that they opposed the relationship due to the appellant being much older. They described the complainant as unusually aggressive and with dilated pupils when collected on 24 December 2004, and confirmed that they physically assaulted her in an effort to obtain information about where she had been. A drug test was arranged the next day, and the result was negative.


The complainant was medically examined on 26 December 2004 by Dr Pierre Mugabo, who recorded a history of sexual assault on 24 December 2004, observed a blue mark on her thigh, and recorded a tear near the vulval area with bleeding; the hymen was absent. He concluded the tear could be associated with vaginal penetration, but conceded under cross-examination that it could occur in consensual sex as well.


In relation to disclosure, the complainant had made two police statements: the first did not disclose rape; the second alleged rape. The judgment also noted that, aside from her testimony, there did not appear to have been disclosure to her parents, the psychologist, friends, or in police statements regarding an incident specifically on 22 December 2004.


The appellant denied any sexual contact with the complainant on either date. He portrayed her as seeking his attention and claimed he merely enjoyed her company in a non-romantic way. The trial magistrate rejected his denial as false.


Legal Issues


The central legal issue was whether, on each count, the State proved beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant had committed rape, particularly where the complainant was a single witness with the intellectual functioning of a child.


This required the appeal court to determine issues of fact (whether intercourse occurred and whether it was non-consensual), as well as the application of legal standards to the evidence (the cautionary approach to single child witnesses and whether the evidence met the criminal standard of proof).


A further question arose as to the appropriate legal consequence if rape was not proved but sexual intercourse with a child under 16 was established, namely whether the appellant should be convicted of contravening section 14(1)(a) of the Sexual Offences Act 23 of 1957 (as it then applied), and what sentence would be competent given the statutory maximum for that offence.


Court’s Reasoning


The appeal court reaffirmed that the State bears the onus to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and that the evidence of a single witness, especially a child (and here a complainant with moderate intellectual disability), must be approached with an appropriate measure of caution. It relied on authority summarising the cautionary approach, including the need for evidence to be clear and satisfactory in all material respects, while recognising that caution should not replace common sense.


In assessing count 1 (the alleged rape on 22 December 2004), the court focused on difficulties and improbabilities in the complainant’s account as relied upon by the magistrate. It noted that the complainant contradicted her evidence in chief during cross-examination by asserting that the first rape occurred on 24 December 2004 before the Atlantis trip, and that her confusion was compounded by an inaccurate version put to her by the defence. More importantly for the appeal court’s assessment of proof, it emphasised that, apart from her testimony, there was no apparent disclosure to parents, the psychologist, friends, or in police statements about the incident of 22 December 2004. The court also regarded her explanation for not calling out to the appellant’s friends during the alleged incident as unconvincing, particularly given her own evidence that those friends had warned her about the relationship. The court further noted the absence of conduct after the first incident that suggested fear, distress, or intimidation, and reasoned that any claim of fear was undermined by her initiating contact again on 24 December 2004. On the totality of the evidence, the court concluded the evidence on count 1 was extremely tenuous, and that the magistrate had insufficiently considered the improbabilities and contradictions. It therefore held that the State had not proved rape (or sexual intercourse) beyond reasonable doubt on count 1.


In respect of count 2 (the alleged rape on 24 December 2004), the court accepted that Dr Mugabo’s findings were objective support for the occurrence of sexual intercourse, in the sense that the tear and bleeding were consistent with penetration, while simultaneously recognising the doctor’s concession that the tear could have been consistent with consensual intercourse as well. The court considered the complainant’s evidence of infatuation with the appellant and her protective conduct towards him, including her reluctance to disclose the relationship even at the cost of being physically assaulted by her parents. It also considered that her account of a drugged drink was not supported by the negative drug test the next day. Against this evidentiary background, the court held that reasonable doubt existed as to whether the intercourse on 24 December 2004 occurred without her actual consent, and therefore rape was not proved beyond reasonable doubt.


However, the court proceeded to consider the legal significance of the complainant’s age. It found that the appellant “knew full well” she was far younger than she claimed; on his own version he thought she looked like a primary school child. The court held that he could have been under no illusion that she was not able to legally consent. Although rape was not proved, the court concluded that the appellant had taken advantage of her infatuation, youthful naivety, and limited intellectual development, and that his conduct amounted to having sexual intercourse with a child under 16, contrary to section 14(1)(a) of the Sexual Offences Act 23 of 1957.


On sentence, the court held that the original sentences (15 years on each count under the minimum sentence regime) could not stand once the rape convictions were set aside. It considered sentence afresh for the section 14 offence, noting that the statutory maximum under section 14 was six years’ imprisonment, alternatively a fine. The court emphasised conventional sentencing triad considerations (personal circumstances, seriousness of offence, and societal interests), and placed weight on the prevalence of sexual abuse of children and the public interest in protection of vulnerable children. It also considered authority indicating that sentencing must be proportionate to the offence of which the accused is convicted, and that courts may not impose sentences exceeding statutory maxima.


In the application of these principles, the court recorded the appellant’s personal circumstances (approximately 40 years old at sentencing, married with two children, employed in tourism, no prior convictions). It also recorded evidence and reports indicating the complainant experienced trauma, required psychiatric care, displayed behavioural changes, and that the family experienced a significant impact. The court treated as aggravating the appellant’s lack of remorse and the age gap, and imposed the maximum custodial sentence with partial suspension as an appropriate balance.


Outcome and Relief


The convictions for rape on both counts were set aside.


On count 1, the appellant was acquitted.


On count 2, the appellant was convicted of contravening section 14(1)(a) of the Sexual Offences Act 23 of 1957.


A sentence of six (6) years’ imprisonment was imposed, of which two (2) years were suspended on condition that the appellant is not convicted of any offence under the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007 during the period of suspension.


The judgment, as provided, did not record a distinct costs order in relation to the appeal.


Cases Cited


The judgment cited the following authorities: S v Dyira 2010 (1) SACR 78 (ECG). S v Artman 1968 (3) SA 339 (A). S v V 2000 (1) SACR 453 (SCA). R v Manda 1951 (3) SA 158 (A). Woji v Santam Insurance Co Limited 1981 (1) SA 1020 (A). S v J 1998 (2) SA 984 (SCA). S v Janse Van Rensburg and Another 2009 (2) SACR 216 (C). S v Makoena 1956 (3) SA 81 (A). S v Webber 1971 (3) SA 754 (A). S v Sauls and Others 1981 (3) SA 172 (A). S v Stevens [2005] 1 All SA 1 (SCA). S v Gentle 2005 (1) SACR 420 (SCA). S v Fhetani 2007 (2) SACR 590 (SCA). S v L 1998 (1) SACR 463 (SCA). Dube v S 2004 JOL 13221 (W). The judgment also referred again to S v M 1998 (1) SACR 463 (SCA) in the context of community concern about sexual crimes against children.


Legislation Cited


The judgment referred to the Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997 (minimum sentence legislation). It cited the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, including section 170A (intermediary and closed-circuit testimony) and section 208 (single competent witness). It applied section 14(1)(a) of the Sexual Offences Act 23 of 1957 (since repealed). It referred to the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 32 of 2007 for purposes of the suspension condition. It also referred to sentencing options under section 276 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 in discussing comparable sentencing approaches.


Rules of Court Cited


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


Held


The court held that the evidence did not establish beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant raped the complainant on either date. In relation to the first count, the court held that the complainant’s evidence was materially weakened by contradictions, lack of prior disclosure, and improbabilities, rendering the State’s case insufficient to prove rape or sexual intercourse beyond reasonable doubt. In relation to the second count, although medical evidence supported that sexual intercourse occurred, the court held that reasonable doubt existed as to whether it occurred without the complainant’s actual consent, and therefore rape was not proved.


The court nonetheless held that, because the complainant was under 16 and the appellant appreciated her youthfulness, the proven conduct in relation to the second incident amounted to unlawful sexual intercourse with a child under 16 in contravention of section 14(1)(a) of the Sexual Offences Act 23 of 1957. It accordingly replaced the rape convictions with an acquittal on count 1 and a statutory conviction on count 2, and imposed a sentence within the six-year statutory maximum for that offence.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that the State must prove criminal guilt beyond reasonable doubt, and that a conviction cannot follow where reasonable doubt remains on material elements such as the occurrence of rape or the absence of consent.


It applied the cautionary approach to single-witness evidence, particularly where the witness is a child or is functionally comparable to a child due to intellectual disability. The court endorsed guidance that the evidence must be clear and satisfactory in material respects, while also emphasising that caution must not displace common sense.


It further applied the sentencing principle that punishment must be proportionate to the offence of which the accused is convicted, and that a court may not impose a sentence exceeding the statutory maximum for the offence proved. Within that framework, it treated the protection of vulnerable children and the social prevalence of sexual abuse as weighty considerations, but insisted those considerations operate within lawful sentencing bounds.


Finally, it applied the principle that where rape is not proved beyond reasonable doubt, but sexual intercourse with a child under the statutory age is established, a conviction may properly follow for the statutory offence proscribing intercourse with a child under 16, with sentence determined according to that offence’s statutory penalties.

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[2011] ZAWCHC 96
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Goodal v S (A392/10) [2011] ZAWCHC 96 (26 April 2011)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE HIGH COURT, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No.:A392/10
In
the matter between:
KEVIN
GOODALL
…..................................................................................
Appellant
and
THE
STATE
….......................................................................................
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED: TUESDAY 26 APRIL 2011
SALDANHA,
J
[1.]
The appellant, Mr. Kevin Goodall, was convicted on the 1
s
'
of August 2007 in the Parow Regional Court on two counts of rape. He
was sentenced on the 24
th
October
2008 in the Western Cape High Court in terms of the Minimum Sentence
legislation Criminal Law Amendment (Act 105 of 1997)
to 15 years of
imprisonment on each count. The sentences were ordered to run
concurrently.
[2.]
Leave to Appeal was granted against both the conviction and sentence
and the appellant was released on bail pending the outcome
of the
appeal.
[3.]
The charges arise out of incidents on the 22"° and 24
th
December
2004 at 151 Victoria Road, Parow. where the appellant was alleged to
have had sexual intercourse with T M, a 15 year old
girl, without her
consent.
[4.]
The
appellant was legally represented at the trial and. having pleaded
not guilty, confirmed that he understood the provisions of
the
Minimum Sentence legislation which was applicable to the charges. He
elected not to disclose the basis of his defence save
to admit the
identity of the complainant The State called five witnesses while the
appellant testified in his own defence and called
two witnesses.
[5.]
The central issue raised on appeal by the appellant was whether the
State had proved beyond reasonable doubt that he had raped
the
complainant on the two occasions.
The
evidence.
[6.]
The complainant was seventeen years old when she testified in the
regional court. She did so through the use of an intermediary
and by
close circuit television in terms of section 170A of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (as amended). A report on the
intellectual
development and mental state of the complainant, which was prepared
by a psychologist.
Ms
Gillian Douglas
(Douglas)
of Cape Mental Health, was used in support of the application Douglas
also testified during the trial and described her
evaluation and
findings on the complainant's mental and intellectual ability, her
ability to consent to sexual intercourse and
her competence as a
witness At the time of the assessment the complainant was sixteen
years old. She was born on 12 May 1989. Douglas
recorded the
complainant's background and history of her intellectual development.
[7.]
The complainant's father, Mr. John Hayes, had informed Douglas about
the complainant having been behind in her developmental
milestones.
Her medical files revealed that she had at the early age of four
years undergone repeated assessments at the Wynberg
Military Hospital
with regard to concerns about her delay in language articulation and
in other areas of difficulty. She received
occupational and speech
therapy. In 1995 she was assessed as having significant development
delays across a range of areas. She
was found to have been
cognitively handicapped on a verbal scale and on a borderline range
in respect of her performance skills
and her global intelligence. She
attended pre-primary school and went on into an adaptive class until
the end of 2001. It appeared
from her school reports that despite
having had good relationships with her teachers she suffered
significant emotional and behavioral
difficulties, was regarded as
disruptive and appeared isolated at school. Her academic progress was
generally slow and difficult
She received psychological counseling in
the year 2000. In February and March of that year she also received
individual play therapy
following two attempts of suicide. She was
found unsuitable for a placement at a special needs high school,
Vista Nova School,
because of her delay in global and intellectual
development. She was referred to the Therapeutic Learning Centre at
the Red Cross
Children's Hospital for the purpose of a comprehensive
diagnosis and therapeutic input. She attended the centre for the
better
part of the year 2000 and her parents also received
counseling. She was provided with behaviour modification and social
skills
programmes. She had also been placed at the Khanyisa Special
School and thereafter attended the Batavia School, also a special
needs school, where she reported continued unhappiness and isolation.
[8.]
Douglas assessed the complainant in accordance with the recognized
DSM (Diagnosis and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
of the
American Psychiatric Association, 4
th
Ed)
and administered two further tests for increased reliability. The
scales used covered three areas, namely, communication, daily
living
skills and socialization. In the domain of communication she scored
in the range of moderate intellectual disability with
an age
equivalent of seven years and nine months. In the domain of daily
living skills she scored in the range of mild intellectual
disability
with an age equivalent of nine years and four months In the domain of
socialization she scored in the range of moderate
intellectual
disability with an age equivalent of five years and eight months In
her overall adaptive functioning she scored in
the range of moderate
intellectual disability By comparison with other people with
intellectual disabilities her scores were regarded
as average in all
the three areas of functioning. Her scholastic aptitude score fell
within the range of mild intellectual disability
and an age
equivalent of nine years and eight months. This assessment was
consistent with her reported difficulties at school
[9.]
The
complainant has received sex education at school and the basic
knowledge of conception, contraception and sexually transmitted

diseases. She was however under the age to legally consent to sexual
intercourse at the time the alleged rapes took place. She
was found
to be a competent witness during trial but because of her
vulnerabilities Douglas recommended that she receive court

preparation as support and that an intermediary be used to minimize
the anxiety associated with testifying in court. In testimony
Douglas
also claimed that because of the complainant's good communication
skills her disability was not obvious and only emerged
in the
subtleties of her reasoning and lack of judgment. The complainant was
too trusting and vulnerable to flattering advances.
She was unable to
judge the safety of precarious situations that she may have been
faced with.
[10.]
At the outset of her testimony the complainant expressed an extreme
ambivalence to testifying against the appellant. She testified
that
she had met the appellant through his older brother Anthony who had
given her his cellular phone number. She made the initial
contact
with him and they eventually agreed to meet. She described her
meeting with him at the Kenilworth Shopping Centre, where
she had
worked in a hairdressing salon on a casual basis. She claimed that
although the appellant appeared to be much older than
her she had
immediately fallen in love with him. She knew that both her parents
were against her having a relationship with him
because of their age
difference. Her mother had left a message for the appellant on his
cell phone not to have anything to do with
her because of his age. A
few days after their first meeting, she on the 22
nd
December
2004, initiated a second meeting with him. He picked her up on the
same day from the Kenilworth Centre and took her to
his residence in
Parow At his residence, which was described as an open plan flatlet,
she met two of the appellant's friends. They
warned her about having
a relationship with the appellant as he was much older than her and
that he could be sent to jail if he
had sexual intercourse with her.
They also warned her of the risk of falling pregnant to which she
responded that it would never
happen. She also described how she had
teased the appellant about being gay after looking at photographs of
him on the wall of
his residence. In response he said that he would
show her that he was not gay and they began kissing one another. She
claimed that
despite her protestations he proceeded to have sexual
intercourse with her during which she experienced extreme pain in her
private
parts.
[11.]
She thereafter accompanied the appellant to a shopping centre in
Parow and he later dropped her off at the Kenilworth Centre.
She
claimed that she was scared of the appellant because of his muscular
build and the way that he had looked at her and therefore
did not
tell anybody about the incident. She also claimed that she did not
call out to his friends, who were on the premises during
the
incident, because she feared that they would simply have participated
in the rape.
[12.]
On the 24
th
December
2004 she once again called the appellant and he arranged to meet her
at the Kenilworth Centre. She had asked her colleagues
at the
hairdressing salon to tell anyone who was looking for her while she
was with the appellant that she had gone home early.
From the
Kenilworth Centre they proceeded to his flatlet where he changed his
clothes and she thereafter accompanied him to Atlantis,
in Atlantis
he appeared to have handed over money at various places and she had
also met his elder brother, Anthony, who lived
in the area. They
thereafter returned to his flat in Parow. While watching the
television she asked him for a glass of water. He
gave her a glass of
water which she described as having tasted bitter while drinking it.
She felt drowsy and did not know what
had happened thereafter. She
claimed though that the appellant had pushed her down onto the bed
where he forcefully had sexual
intercourse with her. He did so by
unzipping his pants and inserting his penis into her while pushing
her panty aside. She claimed
that she had experienced pain during the
incident She also claimed that she had protested against having
sexual intercourse with
him because she was scared that she would
fall pregnant. He said to her that if that happened he would put her
up in an expensive
hospital and would love the baby as much as he
loved her. She testified that although she was angry about what had
happened she
accompanied the appellant thereafter on his shopping for
Christmas presents. He thereafter took her back to the Kenilworth
Centre.
She claimed that she had disclosed to the appellant her age
and his response was to the effect that age did not matter, what was

more important was what was in the heart.
[13]
When she returned to the hairdressing salon she was ecstatic, which
she ascribed to the water that she drank at the appellant's
place Her
parents had earlier called the hairdressing salon to find out where
she was, as they were concerned that she was late
in returning home.
Her mother had picked her up at the salon but she initially resisted
going home with her. She refused to disclose
to her mother where she
had been and claimed that she did so to protect the appellant whom
she at that stage desperately loved.
Upon her arrival at home she
maintained her silence and her father, a member of the police
services, gave her a beating with a
spoon in an endeavour to elicit
where and with whom she had been. Her mother assisted her father by
holding her down. She later
disclosed to a friend of her mother
Desire, who was present at their home at that time that she had been
with the appellant. Desire
in turn told her mother. She thereafter
had a bath which she described as particularly painful because of the
beating. She was
taken to her grandmother's house where more pressure
was put on her to disclose where she had been that day. Her uncle,
also a
policeman, also threatened to beat her up because of her
relationship with the appellant.
[14.]
She claimed that the atmosphere in their house was particularly
unpleasant thereafter. The next day she was taken by her father
to an
emergency medical facility for a drug test. The tests proved
negative.
[15.]
The following day, 26 December 2011 she accompanied her father to
Parow where she pointed out the appellant's residence. She
saw him in
the company of another woman and she claimed that immediately made
her feel very sad. Her father thereafter took her
to Karl Bremmer
Hospital where she was examined by a doctor. The doctor told her that
she was no longer a virgin and she became
very upset about it She
told the doctor that it was the appellant who had had sexual
intercourse with her without her consent.
[16]
She also claimed that she had been taught at the Batavia School about
sex and that she knew exactly what it was all about.
She had made two
statements to the police. The first was prior to the medical
examination wherein she did not disclose that the
appellant had raped
her. In the second statement she claimed that the appellant had raped
her. During the cross-examination she
angrily gestured at the
appellant in court for his repeated denials of having had any
intimate relationship or any love for her.
She emotively described
her anger at the appellant for having deceived her about his love for
her and for having a relationship
with another woman She crudely
taunted the appellant from the witness stand that she was yet to vent
her anger at his pregnant
girlfriend
[17.]
In cross-examination she claimed that the first rape occurred on the
24
th
of
December 2001 and prior to their going to Atlantis. However, it
appears that her confusion in this regard was compounded by an

incorrect version put to her by the appellant's legal representative.
She also blamed herself for the incident with reference to
her
relationship with the appellant and her love for him. She claimed
that she had flashbacks and dreamt of the appellant sitting
on the
roof of their house looking down at her and attempting to scare her
away. She thought at times that such dreams were real.
She also
claimed that she had wanted to phone the appellant on the 24
lrt
December
2004. after having returned to the hairdressing salon, to thank him
for having spent the day with her.
[18.]
Both parents of the complainant testified and claimed that they had
forbade the complainant from having a relationship with
the appellant
as he was much older than her. The complainant's mother confirmed
that she had left a message on the cell phone of
the appellant in
which she warned him not to encourage the relationship with her
daughter because of his age. She claimed that
when she had picked up
the complainant from the hairdresser on the 24
,b
December
2004 she immediately noticed that the pupils of her eyes were dilated
and that she was aggressive Her clothes were also
in a disheveled
state. She confirmed that both she and her husband had given the
complainant a hiding and that the complainant
had threatened to leave
their house and had packed her bags to go and live with the appellant
with whom she claimed that she was
in love. The complainant was also
very tearful, refused to eat anything and was extremely uncooperative
with them. She suspected
that the complainant had been protecting the
appellant. Her suspicions were strengthened by the opinion of the
policeman who had
taken the first statement from the complainant that
she was hiding something from them. They therefore had the appellant
tested
for drugs the following day. The complainant's mother claimed
that her friend, Desire, who had accompanied the complainant and her

husband to the appellant's house, had telephonically reported to her
that the complainant had
"admitted
that the appellant had raped her that they actually had sex."
She
repeated that Desire had said that the complainant had admitted that
"Kevin
had sex or that he raped her."
The
complainant was thereafter taken to Karl Bremmer Hospital for a
medical examination.
[19.J
The complainant's mother claimed that both she and her husband were
not happy with the pace of the investigation and that
her husband had
consequently intervened with the police.
[20]
The complainant's father had 15 years of experience as a police
officer and mainly dealt with crime intelligence. He confirmed
the
evidence with regard to the intellectual disability of the
complainant He regarded her as particularly vulnerable and both
he
and his wife were therefore overly protective of her. He confirmed
the evidence of both the complainant and his wife where it
related to
his involvement but claimed that it was after he had confronted the
complainant in the car on the way back from the
appellant's house
that she said that the appellant had raped her. He testified that the
complainant had claimed that the appellant
had threatened her with a
firearm and to harm the rest of the family if she revealed to the
police what had happened He immediately
contacted the police again
and arrangements were made for the complainant to be medically
examined at the Karl Bremmer Hospital.
He claimed that no statement
was taken from him despite his repeated requests to the investigating
officers and subsequently to
the prosecutor to do so. He also claimed
that he had been dissatisfied and frustrated with the investigating
officer and the delay
and what appeared to be a lack of effort in
tracing and arresting the appellant. He therefore complained to the
superiors of the
investigating officer and as a result thereof
somebody else was assigned to the investigation of the case.
[21.]
He was also upset that the appellant had been released on bail
subsequent to his arrest notwithstanding the seriousness of
the
charges against him.
[22]
Dr Pierre
Mugabo
conducted
the medical examination of the complainant at Karl Bremmer Hospital
on the 26
th
December
2004 and completed the J88 medical examination form. He had recorded
that the complainant had been "sexually assaulted
on the 24
th
December
2004 between 17h00 and 18h00 in Parow by a 27 year old man who had
introduced his penis without her consent." He recorded
a blue
mark on her left thigh. Her genital area appeared normal except for
the bleeding of a tear near the
viculahs.
The
tear was approximately half a centimetre in length. Her hymen was
absent. He concluded that the tear could have been associated
with
vaginal penetration. In cross examination he conceded that the tear
could have occurred as a result of consensual sex.
[23]
The appellant in his testimony denied any intimate or emotional
relationship with the complainant. He claimed that she had
repeatedly
called and sent him sms's (cellular phone messages) and sought out
his attention. He denied reciprocating and claimed
that he had merely
enjoyed her company when she accompanied him to his flat and shopping
and to Atlantis. He found her to be a
"jolly person" and
regarded her as a younger sister. He claimed that when he initially
met her he told her that she looked
more like a primary school child,
to which she responded that she was eighteen years old and had just
completed school He steadfastly
denied ever touching her on either
the 22
nd
or
24
m
December
2004. He claimed that it was because of a "stupid mistake"
of his relationship with the complainant that he had
landed up in
court and in the situation that he found himself in He blamed the
complainant's father, who he claimed had conspired
against him in the
prosecution of the charges.
[24.]
Inspector
Singwane
the
initial investigating officer in his testimony confirmed that the
complainant's father had assaulted the appellant once during
his
arrest, and also confirmed the complaints against him by the
complainant's father with regard to the investigation. The
appellant's
brother, Patrick Goodall, claimed that he had seen the
complainant at the appellant's house in Parow but he did not appear
to be
sure of which day it was. He claimed that it was apparent to
him that the complainant was no older than eighteen years old and
that he had in fact warned the appellant that she had spelt trouble
for him.
Evaluation
[25.]
The magistrate in the court a
quo
made
a detailed assessment of the evidence and in particular the
intellectual capacity of the complainant. She was of the view that

the complainant had portrayed a realistic picture of the events that
had occurred and that her version was not inherently improbable.
She
claimed that the complainant's version was consistent both in
examination-in-chief and in cross-examination. Although the
complainant did not give a methodical or sequential description of
the events, she had introduced extraneous information and
descriptions
of her own opinions that in the view of the magistrate
merely lent credence to her version given that her functioning was no
higher
than that of a nine year old child. The magistrate had found
that the complainant's version made logical sense and that given her

intellectual difficulties and limitations it was improbable that she
would have invented the allegations against the appellant.
The
magistrate was also mindful of the complainant's ambivalence towards
the appellant and her conflicted emotional loyalty to
him on the one
hand and her anger towards him on the other. She considered these
feelings as militating against the risk of the
complainant having
constructed a false version of events against the appellant. She was
also of the view that had the complainant
invented the allegations
against the appellant she would hardly have had the insight to know
how it felt when she was sexually
penetrated. She also found that
there was no undue influence placed on the complainant by either of
her parents. She regarded the
anger of the father of the complainant
and his role in the investigation as understandable and irrelevant to
the complainant's
claims against the appellant. The magistrate
accepted the evidence of Dr Mugabo as consistent with the complainant
having been
sexually penetrated. Although the complainant was a
single witness the magistrate found her evidence to be reliable. The
magistrate
rejected the appellant's version and in particular his
explanation and description of the nature of his relationship with
the complainant.
She also found it improbable that the appellant
would have accepted that the complainant was eighteen years old
despite his own
perception of her being no older than a primary
school child. She also found the appellant's evidence with regard to
the complainant
persistently phoning him as an exaggeration and that
he had inappropriately encouraged her relationship with him. She
rejected
his denial of having sexual intercourse with the
complainant.
The
magistrate described the rape on the 24' December 2004 as a "date
rape scenario" where despite the objections by the
complainant
the appellant had merely overrode her objections and had sex with her
anyway. She found that the complainant had not
only objected to his
sexual intentions, but, because of her disability and her not being
able to fully comprehend the situation
in which she was in, was. also
unable to negotiate safe sex and that she could not have consented to
sexual intercourse.
[26]
The State is required to prove the guilt of the appellant beyond
reasonable doubt
[27.]
The evidence of the complainant as a single witness and a child has
to be approached with the appropriate measure of caution.
This should
be especially so , given the moderate intellectual disability in
which she functioned at the level of a child of nine
years and eight
months.
[28]
The guidelines in dealing with the evidence of a single witness who
is also a child was usefully tabulated in the recent decision
of
Jones J in
S
v Dyira
2010 (1) SACR 78
(ECG) at para [10]:
"(a)
a court will articulate the warning in the judgment, and also the
reasons for the need for caution in general, and with
reference to
the particular circumstances of the case;
(b)
a court will examine the evidence in order to satisfy itself that the
evidence given by the witness is clear and substantially
satisfactory
in alt material respects;
(c)
although corroboration is not a pre-requisite for a conviction, a
court will sometimes, in appropriate circumstances, seek
corroboration which implicates the accused before it will convict
beyond reasonable doubt;
(d)
failing corroboration, a court will look for some feature in the
evidence which gives the implication by a single child witness
enough
of a hallmark of trustworthiness to reduce substantially the risk of
a wrong reliance upon her evidence. (S v Artman
1968 (3) SA 339(A)
at
340h*
[29]
Zulman
JA in
S
v V 2000(1) SACR 453 (SCA) para [z
]said
that
"...
whilst there is no statutory requirement that a child's evidence must
be corroborated, it has long been accepted that
the evidence of young
children should be treated with caution
(R
v Manda 1951(3) SA 158 (A) at 163 C; Woji v Santam Insurance Co
Limited
1981 (1) SA 1020
(A) at 1028B-D):
and
that the evidence in a particular case involving sexual misconduct
may call for a cautionary approach
(S
v J 1998(2) SA 984 (SCA) at 1009B)"
[30]
Moosa J in this division held in
S
v
Janse
Van Rensburg and Another 2009(2) SACR 216 (C) at para [9]:
"Section
208 of the Act (Criminal Procedure Act) stipulates that an accused
may be convicted on the evidence of a single and
competent witness.
This does not displace an important principle in our law that the
evidence of a single witness must be approached
with caution. Before
the Court can place any reliance thereon, the evidence of a single
witness must be clear and satisfactory
in every material respect. In
other words, the evidence must not only be credible, but must also be
reliable. In this respect see
S v Makoena
1956 (3) SA 81
(A); S v
Webber
1971 (3) SA 754
(A) at 758G; S v Sauls and Others
1981 (3) SA
172
(A) at 179G-180G; S v Stevens
[2005] 1 All SA 1
(SCA) at 5d-h;
and S v Gentle
2005 (1) SACR 420
(SCA) at para 17. However, our
courts have repeatedly warned that the exercise of caution should not
be allowed to replace the
exercise of common sense (S vArtman and
Another
1968 (3) SA 339
(A) at 341 Cy
[31.]
in respect of the first count of rape the complainant clearly
contradicted her testimony in chief when she claimed in cross

examination that the appellant had raped her for the first time on
the 24
,h
December
2004 prior to them going together to Atlantis. Her confusion it
appears was compounded by the inaccurate version of her

evidence-in-chief put to her by the appellant's lawyer. However, save
for her testimony in court about the first incident there
did not
appear to have been any disclosure to either her parents, or Ms
Douglas, or her friends or in her statements to the police
about the
incident on the 22
nd
December
2004. Moreover, her explanation for not calling out to the
appellant's friends who were at the premises while she was being

forcibly raped was particularly unconvincing given that she herself
had testified about the warnings of the two friends to her
about the
appellant's age and the risk of her being impregnated by him.
Further, there appeared to be nothing in her conduct after
the first
rape that either alerted any of her friends or parents of the
incident or that she had laboured in any pain, discomfort
or
emotional distress. There was no evidence of fear or intimidation by
the appellant. If she did in fact have any fear for the
appellant it
was clearly undermined by her initiating contact with him again on
the 24
tn
December
2004 in pursuance of their relationship. The evidence in respect of
the first count appeared extremely tenuous in the circumstances
and
it is apparent from the magistrate's judgment that she had given
insufficient consideration to the inherent improbability and

contradictions of the complainant's version.
[32]
The complainant was under the age of sixteen years old and was
clearly not able to have consented to sexual intercourse with
the
appellant. I am of the view that in consideration of the totality of
the evidence in respect of the first count the magistrate
had
incorrectly found that the state had proved the rape or any sexual
intercourse between the appellant and the complainant beyond

reasonable doubt.
[33.]
In respect of the second count of rape the objective evidence of Dr
Mugabo supports the claim that sexual intercourse occurred.
He
observed that the complainant's hymen was absent and that there was a
tear which had still bled near her vicularis and which
was also
consistent with a sexual intercourse episode that could have taken
place with the consent of the complainant. The complainant
herself
testified about her complete infatuation with the appellant. It
appears that on the evidence of her mother the complainant
had lost
weight in order to please the appellant and that on the 24
th
of
December 2004 both she and her husband had found it rather strange
that the complainant had completely changed her style of dress.
It
appears also that the complainant completely trusted the appellant
despite her suspicions that he was involved in a relationship
with
another woman. She accompanied him on visits to his flat and on a
trip to Atlantis, all in complete defiance of her parents.
She
claimed that even after the incident of the 24
th
December
2004 she was completely protective of him and did not want to divulge
her relationship with the appellant She did so even
at the pain of
receiving a hiding at the hands of both her parents. Moreover her her
evidence with regard to the water that was
given to her by the
appellant which tasted bitter was not supported by the drug test
conducted by the emergency medical facility
the following day as
having been laced. In the circumstances I am of the view that
reasonable doubt exists with regard to whether
the sexual encounter
between the appellant and the complainant at his premises on the
24
,fl
December
2004 occurred without her actual consent. The appellant for his part
knew full well that she was much younger than what
she professed. He
himself was of the view that she looked no more than a primary school
child and could have been under no illusion
that she was not able to
legally consent to sexual intercourse with him. His version of the
relationship with the complainant was
correctly rejected by the
magistrate as being false. It is apparent that the appellant had
taken advantage of the complainant's
infatuation with him and through
her youthful naivete and poor intellectual development, seduced her.
In the circumstances the
appellant had committed the offence of
having sexual intercourse with a child under the age of sixteen years
old in contravention
of section 14(1)(a)of the Sexual Offences Act
No. 23 of 1957 (now repealed).
Ad
sentence
[34]
The appellant had been sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 15
years on both counts based on a conviction of rape. In the

circumstances, sentence has to be considered afresh based on his
conviction of the contravention of section 14(1 )(a) of the Sexual

Offences Act. Section 14 provides for a maximum sentence of six years
imprisonment and the alternative of a fine of R12000.00.
[35]
In considering an appropriate sentence the court has to take into
account the personal circumstances of the appellant, the
nature and
seriousness of the offence and the interests of society These factors
have to be considered while balancing the objectives
of sentence such
as retribution, prevention and rehabilitation. The offence must also
be considered within the increased prevalence
of sexual abuse against
young children and the ever increasing public demand that both the
legislature and the courts protect vulnerable
children from such
abuse. In a survey of decisions dealing with sentencing in such
circumstances it is apparent the limitation
imposed on the courts
with the maximum sentencing provision in the Sexual Offences Act was
taken into account. In the matter of
S
v Fhetani
2007 (2) SACR 590
(SCA),
the
appellant, having pleaded guilty on the lesser offence of
contravention of the statute as opposed to the main count of rape,

was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment. On appeal the court
found that the magistrate had over-emphasized the deterrent nature
of
the sentence and had incorrectly imposed the sentence in excess of
the statute and had therefore violated the appellant's right
to a
fair trial.
[36.]
The court held at para 5:
"It
is a well established principle of our law that the sentence imposed
must fit the nature of the offence of which the accused
was found
guilty. Put differently, the severity of the sentence must not be
grossly disproportionate to the offence itself.An exemplary
sentence
such as the one that we are concerned with here, is not a fair and
just punishment because it is disproportionate to the
true deserts of
the offender."
[37.]
The court however, found that this did not mean that deterrence was
no longer an object in sentencing. In that matter it had
found that
it was unlikely that the appellant would commit the same offence
again. The court in assessing tne circumstances of
the offence and
the personal circumstances of the appellant imposed a sentence of
three years imprisonment.
[38.]
In the matter of
S
v L
1998 (1) SACR 463
(SCA)
the
court held that that sexual molestation of children had become a
serious problem and there was no reason, despite weighty mitigating

factors, for a finding that the magistrate's conclusion that both
correctional supervision in terms of section 276
(1)
(h)
and imprisonment in terms of section 276 (1) were inappropriate and
unreasonable as a sentence option in the matter. The appeal
against a
sentence of four years in that matter was dismissed.
[39]
In
Dube
v S
2004 JOL 13221(W)
Makhanya
J in imposing a sentence under section 14 (1) A of the Sexual
Offences Act stated the following;
"Although
pubescent and females are by definition physically prepared for the
act of sexual intercourse, a concern remains
regarding the emotional,
psychological and social effects on these giris. Further, these
sexual crimes are regarded as serious
because in the present times
sexual molestation of children has become quite a serious social
problem, giving rise as such to a
legitimate uproar in the community
(see the matter of S vM
1998 (1) SACR 463
(SCA)).
[40.]
In that matter the appellant was sentence to a period of 12 months
imprisonment.
[41.]
It is apparent from the above cases that the consideration of an
appropriate sentence for the contravention of the statute
requires to
be dealt with on its own set of circumstances.
[42]
The appellant's personal circumstances were placed on record by his
legal representative. He was at the time of sentencing
forty years
old, the father of two children and married to their mother. At the
time of the offence he was not married but had
been living with her.
He had been employed in the tourism industry for a number of years
and he had no previous convictions.
[43.]
Douglas in her report recorded in her assessment of the complainant
that she had expressed ambivalent feelings about her willingness
to
testify. She felt vulnerable with regard to her own safety and
confused with regard to the nature of the relationship between

herself and the complainant. She found the complainant to be
preoccupied with the events and that she had required hospitalization

for a period following the incident and was under the care of a
psychiatrist. Both of the complainant's parents had also testified

about the extent of the trauma that the complainant displayed after
the incident. A Social Welfare Report which had been prepared
for the
purposes of sentencing by a Ms C Malan a social worker in the
department of Social Services, was handed into evidence.
It appeared
from the information available to her that the complainant had become
withdrawn after the incident and had on one occasion
ran away from
home She was also hospitalized during January and February 2005 at
the Crescent Clinic for the treatment of depression
and anxiety.
Malan had also received a report from the Batavia School after the
incident and it appeared that the complainant had
become aggressive
and regularly got into fights with other learners. She had also lost
weight after the incident She claimed that
in her consultations with
the complainant she at times experienced a longing for the appellant.
The complainant had also become
emotional during the consultations
and it appeared that she found it difficult to talk about the
incident. The complainant had
also lost one of her best friends who
had been unhappy about her relationship with the appellant in the
first place. Ms Malan was
also of the view that the incident had a
dramatic impact on the family of the complainant and in particular
because of her vulnerability
and her mental development. The
complainant's parents claimed that since the incidents they have
become over-protective of her
and do not allow her to leave the house
and when she does they remain in constant telephonic contact with
her. Malan was of the
view that the complainant had experienced
serious trauma as a result of the incident. She was of the view that
the appellant had
misused his position of trust with the complainant,
who was a young, emotional and immature child with limited
intellectual functioning.
It appeared that the complainant would
require on going counseling, particularly given her conflicted
feelings for the appellant.
[44]
The appellant, despite his relationship with the complainant,
maintained that he had absolutely no physical contact with her.
He
displayed a complete lack of remorse or appreciation for the nature
of his abuse of his relationship with the complainant His
conduct is
also aggravated by the huge age gap between them and the fact that he
was in an existing relationship with another woman.
[45]
In the circumstances I propose to impose a sentence of six (6) years
imprisonment on the appellant of which two years is suspended
on
condition that he is not convicted of any offence under the new
Sexual Offences and Related Matters Act 32 of 2007.
In
the result I propose to make the following order;
(i)
The
conviction of rape on both counts is set aside
(ii)
The
appellant is acquitted on the first count and convicted of
contravention of Section 14 (1)(a) of the Sexual Offences Act in

respect of the second count
A
sentence of six (6) years imprisonment is imposed of which two years
is suspended on condition that the appellant is not found
guilty of
contravention of any provision of the new (Sexual Offences and
Related Matters ) Amendment Act 32 of 2007.
It
is ordered that;
SALDANHA
J
I
agree
ALLIE,
J
I
agree and it so ordered
BLIGNAUT,
J