Appeal against convictions on counts 1-4
[5]
According to the charge sheet, read together with
the two sets of further particulars supplied by the State in terms of s 87 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, the dates on
which and the places where the relevant different acts in respect of the four charges were allegedly committed were as follows: Count
1 – during January to April 1998, in an Elwierda tour bus at the Eastgate Airport, approximately 7 kilometres outside Hoedspruit,
Mphumalanga; count 2 – during January to April 1998, in a room at the Casa Da Sol Hotel in Mphumalanga; count 3 – also
during January to April 1998, in the appellant’s car in the parking lot of the Corpus Christi Church in Elardus Park, Pretoria;
count 4 – during October to November 1998, in the complainant’s bedroom at his family home in Mirage Street, Elardus
Park, Pretoria. As the complainant was born on 29 June 1983, he was 14 years old at the time of the acts allegedly committed in respect
of the first three counts and 15 years old in respect of the act forming the basis of the fourth count. According to the charge sheet
for each of the four counts, the appellant had indecently assaulted the complainant by masturbating him and enticing him to masturbate
the appellant.
[6]
It was common cause that, during 1997, the appellant
– a qualified dentist who had been suspended from practice for three years (commencing in 1996) as a result of his conviction
in 1991 on four counts of ‘indecency’ involving children – was employed by Elwierda, a tour bus company, as one
of its drivers. In approximately July 1997, the complainant’s mother (Mrs B) met the appellant while she was travelling on
an evangelical tour, in an Elwierda bus, to Mozambique. After that, he became close friends with the family, often visiting their
home. According to the complainant and Mrs B, the appellant slept over at their home quite frequently, usually in the youngest son’s
(A’s) room where there were bunkbeds.
[7]
The appellant was generous to the children, and to the complainant in particular, bringing them
sweets and other gifts. The whole family was fond of the appellant, as he was of them. At that stage, the family was experiencing
serious financial problems and the appellant lent not insubstantial sums of money to both Mr and Mrs B for various purposes. When
he resumed practising as a dentist in Randfontein in December 1998, the appellant rendered dental services free of charge to one
of Mrs B’s friends, who was a single mother with three dependants. With the knowledge and approval of the parents, he sometimes
took the complainant or A or both of them on various outings.
[8]
The complainant testified that the indecent acts to which the appellant subjected him started at
the end of 1997, when the complainant was 14 years old and in standard six. As far as count 1 is concerned, the complainant’s
evidence was that, some time during the period January to April 1998, the appellant had to drive a tour bus very late one night to
Hoedspruit to pick up a tour group at the Eastgate Airport. The complainant accompanied him. They arrived at their destination in
the early hours of the morning and, while they were waiting for the tour group to arrive, the appellant came to sit next to the complainant
in the bus and once again started to touch his private parts on top of his trousers. The appellant then put his hand under the complainant’s
underpants and masturbated him. He then pulled open the zip of his own trousers, took out his penis, placed the complainant’s
hand on it and performed a masturbating action, with his hand over the complainant’s. At some stage the complainant took his
hand away but the appellant simply replaced it and the masturbation continued. This stopped when the tour group arrived and the appellant
then drove the tour bus as the group was taken on a short tour through Mpumalanga.
[9]
The events forming the basis of count 2 allegedly happened that same night. Because of some defect
in the tour bus, the appellant and the complainant had to spend the night with the tour group at the Casa da Sol Hotel in Mpumalanga,
while waiting for another bus to be sent. According to the complainant, he and the appellant had to share a room with a double bed,
where appellant once again started fondling the complainant, putting his hand into the complainant’s underpants and masturbating
him. Thereafter, he placed the complainant’s hand on his penis, and with his hand over the complainant’s hand, performed
a masturbating action. This carried on until one of them ejaculated – according to the complainant, this was how it always
ended.
[10]
After this incident, the appellant gave the complainant money of between R50 and R200. The gifts of money
had in fact started before the ‘masturbation and everything’ began. In his examination-in-chief, the complainant made
the unsolicited comment, referring to the mutual masturbation, that ‘it is a nice feeling, with that I am not going to quarrel’.
Nevertheless, he felt heartsore and disturbed by what had happened. He was scared to tell his parents because he did not know how
they would react and felt that they might be disappointed in him. His relationship with his parents at that stage was such that they
did not really talk about sex and like matters, so he kept these things to himself. He found it much easier to talk to his friends
about such matters. He stated that he was scared to say no to the appellant because he (the appellant) might then do something more
serious to him. The complainant also expressed his belief that the main reason why he was not able to tell his parents about what
was happening was the fact that the appellant gave him gifts of money after these incidents. He enjoyed being spoiled by the appellant,
but this spoiling also made him feel that he was the guilty party. Under cross-examination, he conceded that he could have stopped
these incidents at the outset, had he wanted to do so. Although he did not really know why he had not done so, this had all happened
at a time when the family was suffering financially and he believed that the reason why he had kept quiet about it all was the money
with which the appellant had ‘bribed’ him.
[11]
As regards count 3, the complainant testified that during the period between January and April 1998,
the appellant was teaching the complainant to drive at the parking area of the Corpus Christi Church in Elardus Park. The complainant
was sitting in the driver’s seat of the appellant’s vehicle, with the appellant on the passenger’s side, when the
latter started to rub the complainant’s trousers, so that he got an erection. The appellant then once again put his hand inside
the complainant’s underpants and masturbated him. There then followed the usual mutual masturbation, which ended when one of
them ejaculated. They swapped seats and then returned to the complainant’s parental home. According to the complainant, after
the incident in the parking area of the church, the mutual masturbation happened frequently in the appellant’s dental surgery,
and also when they were going somewhere together. It was always initiated by the appellant and, after each incident, the appellant
gave money to the complainant and continued to spoil him.
[12]
In respect of count 4, the complainant was studying at home for his end-of-year standard 7 examinations
in October or November 1998. The appellant arrived at the house when only the complainant and the domestic worker were there. The
appellant and the complainant socialised for a while and then started to play a game of chess in the complainant’s bedroom.
During the game, the appellant came to sit next to the complainant, he then put his hand into the complainant’s pants and masturbated
him. Once again the mutual masturbation ensued until the complainant ejaculated. While this was happening, the domestic worker was
busy with tasks in and outside the house.
[13]
There were several other instances of mutual masturbation thereafter which eventually graduated to full
anal penetration on more than one occasion. By that stage though, the complainant had already turned 16. In the light of the conclusion
that I have reached on the constitutional challenge to s14(1)(b) of the Act, those allegations need not detain us any further.
[14]
The last sexual ‘encounter’ between the two of them occurred, according to the complainant,
in September 2001, when the appellant accompanied the complainant and the latter’s brother A to the Aardklop Festival in Potchefstroom.
They spent the whole day at the festival, returning to the appellant’s flat in Randfontein, where they spent the night. It
would appear that this encounter at the appellant’s flat was the proverbial ‘last straw’ for the complainant and,
according to him, he decided that he did not want that to ever happen again. From then on, he deliberately avoided the appellant,
seeing to it that he was not at home when the appellant visited or that he went to bed early on the evenings when the appellant slept
over at his home. Under cross-examination, it was put to the complainant that, after this ‘final’ incident which had
allegedly occurred in September 2001, the complainant went out for a meal with the appellant at least twice during the course of
the year 2002. The complainant readily conceded that they had in fact had a meal together in that year, but he could not remember
another such occasion. The complainant also acknowledged that he might have spent a night at the appellant’s flat some time
during 2002, when he went to meet the appellant’s parents there. On this occasion, which might (or might not) have happened
in 2002 (the complainant could not remember the year of the visit), he slept in the sitting room of the appellant’s flat, without
anything untoward occurring.
[15]
Although the complainant felt unable to tell his parents about what was happening between the appellant
and himself, he did tell his best friend, J, in April 1998, about the incidents of mutual masturbation that had taken place up to
that time. He asked J not to tell his (the complainant’s) parents because he did not know how they would react. That much was
confirmed by J, who was also called by the State as a witness. The complainant also testified that, after he had told J about what
was happening between himself and the appellant, he also told approximately seven of his girl friends about it during the period
May 1998 to the end of 1999, and about another eight of his girl friends after he had started his studies at the Technikon in 2002.
He recalled that, while he was still at school, he had told J’s twin sister and a girl called N, and later, one of his Technikon
friends. He could not remember the names of the other girls whom he had told about the incidents. He reiterated that he found it
much easier to talk to his friends about these matters than to his parents and that, although several of his friends had encouraged
him to tell his parents, he had not done so because he was scared how they might react.
[16]
The complainant told no one in his family about the incidents between him and the appellant before January
2003. The B family had spent the December 2002/January 2003 holidays near Wilderness in the Cape. They then celebrated the New Year
by spending New Year’s Eve and the first few days of 2003 in Somerset West at the home of Mrs B’s cousin, H, and his
partner of 18 years’ standing. When the family returned home by car, the complainant stayed on with H and his partner for a
few days, before flying back to Pretoria on 6 January 2003. On the evening before his departure, he had told H, with whom he had
developed a good and close relationship, about everything that had happened between himself and the appellant. He testified that
he had not specifically chosen this moment to tell them about what he had experienced - ‘it just happened’ and he had
felt ready to share this with them. Having told them, he felt much better about it. He asked them not to tell his parents but, according
to the complainant, they had ultimately decided to do so in order to prevent the same thing happening with his younger brother. H,
who was also called as a State witness, confirmed the essential features of the appellant’s evidence.
[17]
H had in the meanwhile discussed the matter with his partner and they had decided that they had no choice
but to notify the complainant’s parents, as they were concerned about the complainant’s younger brother. Thus, some three
or four days after the complainant’s return to Pretoria, H telephoned the complainant’s father and told him what the
complainant had imparted. Under cross-examination, H testified that he was somewhat troubled by the father’s reaction. Although
he had expected a major outburst, the complainant’s father, although shocked and ‘a bit upset’, had remained quite
calm and had simply said that he would discuss this with Mrs B. According to H, he was fully aware of the dangers of HIV and, when
the complainant had told him that no condoms had been used by the appellant, he had told the complainant to take proper precautions
‘in the future’. He testified that he had requested the complainant’s parents to report the matter to the police
immediately and to take the complainant to see a doctor.
[18]
Some while after H had told Mr B what the complainant had conveyed to him, he (H) telephoned Mrs B to
find out how she was. Mrs B told him that the appellant was at that moment visiting in their home. As soon as he heard this, H told
her to request the appellant to leave the premises at once. He then telephoned the complainant on the latter’s mobile phone
and told him to remove his younger brother, A, from the house and to go for a drive. After he had done this, he telephoned Mrs B
again. She then had a ‘major outburst’, becoming quite hysterical and screaming uncontrollably. H tried to calm her down
and told her that he would immediately fly up to Pretoria to assist and support the family. This he then did.
[19]
When H contacted the complainant on the latter’s mobile phone, the complainant questioned H and
heard for the first time that his parents knew ‘the whole story’. He then followed H’s instructions and drove with
A to his friend J’s house, leaving the appellant behind at the B home. He and A had only been away for about 15 minutes when
H again telephoned the complainant on his mobile phone and told him to return home at once as his mother needed him. When he got
home, he went into his mother’s bedroom to find her lying on her bed and crying uncontrollably. His mother then hugged A to
her and the complainant realised that A had also been molested by the appellant. The complainant then also started crying because
he thought that it was all his fault. It was after this that he decided to lay charges against the appellant, so as to prevent the
same thing happening to other children.
[20]
At the end of his examination-in-chief, the complainant explained how his life had been influenced by
what had happened between him and the appellant. From time to time thereafter, he started to ‘wonder’ about himself (referring,
no doubt, to his sexual orientation). There were times when he saw a ‘guy’ and said to himself that the ‘guy’
was sexy. The ‘last thing he wanted to be was gay’ and he had to fight this struggle taking place inside him. When he
went to public toilets and encountered other men who were older than he, he felt very uncomfortable and scared because he did not
know which of them did ‘such things’. He did not want to be alone in a public toilet with such a man and hence always
went into the cubicle to urinate, locking the door behind him.
[21]
Mrs B, the complainant’s mother, who was at that stage working as a nurse and was frequently on
night duty, confirmed in her testimony that the appellant had become a close family friend. According to her, sometimes, if there
were other guests in the house, the appellant, the complainant and A all slept in A’s bedroom, A and the appellant each on
a bunk bed and the complainant on the floor. She testified that the whole family was very fond of the appellant. Despite what had
happened, they still loved him; indeed she felt sorry for him. She also confirmed that their financial position was bad at that time
and the appellant often gave the children gifts that they could not afford to give them and that he was generous to the family. She
saw nothing sinister in the fact that he frequently visited them and slept over at their home and also saw nothing untoward in him
spending time alone with her children. She could not understand why her children had not told her about the molestation by the appellant.
According to Mrs B she knew that, during the course of 2002, the appellant was the accused in a criminal trial involving the molestation
of a child in his dental surgery. When she asked him about this, he told her that he was not guilty and that the parents simply wanted
to make money out of him. Her response was to ask him not to do anything of the kind to her own children, whereupon he assured her
that he would not. Little did she know that her children had already been molested by him. When Mr B was informed by H about the
complainant’s revelations, she and Mr B had decided that, should the appellant return to their home, Mr B would speak to him
‘in a Christian manner to sort the matter out.’ However, when A told her, on the morning of Sunday 19 January 2003, that
the appellant was coming to visit them that afternoon, she realised that she could no longer permit him to be in their home. She
called A to her and, telling him that she would never reproach him, asked him whether the appellant had ‘messed with him’.
A replied that the appellant had ‘played with his penis’ and she then realised that ‘everything’ was true.
[22]
According to Mrs B, after the complainant and A had left the house that afternoon, she had asked the
appellant how he could have molested her two sons when the whole family loved him and cared about him. The appellant turned deathly
pale and kept repeating that he was sorry. She informed him that he must go and that she did not want to see him ever again. He kept
on saying that he was sorry and then left the house. She still felt heartsore and did not understand how he could have done such
a thing. She reiterated that she felt sorry for him.
[23]
Mrs B testified that it was a psychologist who had reported the matter to the police. Both children had
been taken to see this psychologist approximately a week after her confrontation with the appellant. They had two sessions with him.
He then said that they must first ‘get through the court case’ before continuing with the sessions. After the boys had
testified, both of them had immediately been taken back to the psychologist.
[24]
After the complainant’s parents had become aware of what had happened, the matter was reported
to the police and the complainant was medically examined by a Dr Winn on 15 February 2003. The complainant had informed Dr Winn that
he had been sodomised by a person known to him three times during the year 1999 to 2000. All the findings flowing from the doctor’s
examination of the complainant showed signs of anal penetration. During his anal examination of the complainant, he had found an
old abrasion and an old scar on the skin surrounding the anus; fissures and cracks along the circumference of the anus; thickening
and folding of the anal orifice; inversion of the anal canal and swelling around the rim of the anus. The skin surrounding the anus
was also red and painful to his touch. All these symptoms were in his view probably due to repeated anal penetration. The redness
and pain, as well as some of the other injuries, could have been caused by chronic constipation, but his findings favoured penetration
of the anus with a sexual organ.
[25]
Under cross-examination, Dr Winn stated that fissures and cracks which he had found along the circumference
of the anus were approximately one to one and half years old. He also stated that the funnelling which he had found was one of the
signs of chronic anal penetration. He expressed the view that his findings indicated more than three or four anal penetrations; all
the signs pointed to ‘habitual’ or frequent penetration, perhaps on a monthly or even on a daily basis. He was however,
unable to say definitively that his findings indicated chronic anal penetration as there could possibly have been another cause for
the symptoms found, such as internal or external haemorrhoids. However, the combination of all his findings pointed in the direction
of repeated anal penetration, certainly more than three incidents thereof.
[26]
The appellant testified in his own defence and denied all the allegations of wrongdoing against him.
He stated that he was diagnosed as having Romano Ward syndrome when he was in standard one at school. This syndrome is a genetic
deviation of the main nerve of the heart, creating the risk of instant death in the event of any emotional arousal (such as anger
or excitement) which makes the heart beat faster. He did reasonably well at school and then went on to obtain his dental degree at
the University of Pretoria. In May 1980, he began practising as a dentist in Balfour in the Eastern Transvaal. However, in 1990,
five charges of indecent assault were laid against him. One was withdrawn, but he pleaded guilty to the other four charges and was
convicted on these charges in 1991. On two of the charges, taken together, he was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment, suspended
for five years on certain conditions, one of which was that he had to undergo psychotherapeutic treatment with a registered psychologist
for a period of 18 months. On the other two charges, also taken together, he was sentenced to 2000 hours of periodical imprisonment.
[27]
In consequence of these convictions, the appellant was suspended from practising as a dentist in 1993.
He appealed against the suspension, but the appeal failed and the suspension took effect in May 1996. The appellant then started
working for the Elwierda tour bus company as a bus driver. It was on one of the bus tours that he met Mrs B in 1997. He thereafter
met the rest of the B family and quickly became a close family friend. According to the appellant, shortly after he had met the B
family, he told the oldest son, F, then in matric, about his previous convictions. He thereafter told Mrs B about this as well. They
were supportive and did not reject him and he remained friends with the whole family. When cross-examined about how it had come about
that he told F about his previous convictions, the appellant replied that he had ‘simply felt that the family should know’.
[28]
According to the appellant, he had never slept over at the B family home in 1997. He had terminated his
employment at Elwierda in January 1998 and had gone straight to his parents’ home in Warden, staying with them until the end
of November 1998. He testified that he did not visit the B family home during 1998, apart from one brief visit in August or September,
when he was in Pretoria for a sitting of the medical council. He had definitely not visited the B family on other occasions in 1998,
as the engine of his motor vehicle packed up at the beginning of January of that year and he did not have transport.
[29]
He started practising as a dentist again, in Randfontein, on 1 December 1998 and in February 1999 moved
into a flat close to his practice. He moved to another flat in Mimosa Street in Randfontein at the beginning of May 1999, which was
where the B boys had slept over upon returning from their outing with him to the Aardklop festival in Potchefstroom.
[30]
The appellant testified further that he had started visiting the B family again from about February 1999.
He slept over at the B home in Pretoria only four times during the course of 1999, as far as he could remember, and twice during
the course of 2000 (in April and in May). When he stayed the night at the B home, he usually slept in A’s bedroom, where there
were bunkbeds, and sometimes A slept in the room with him. According to the appellant, Mr and Mrs B had borrowed relatively large
sums of money from him, the first such loan (in an amount of R2500) being made to Mr B in 1997, allegedly for a mortgage bond repayment
and policies which had to be paid. Mr B had repaid this loan after the appellant started practising again. Mr B had asked the appellant
for a second loan in 1997, but the appellant could not afford it. Both F, as well Mrs B, had also borrowed money from the appellant.
The B’s daughter, H, had twice written to him asking him for a ‘donation’, once for her glass work and once for
a pair of shoes. He had also purchased an outfit for her. A had asked him for money to go on a cricket tour, as well as for ‘presents’
which he (the appellant) could not afford, such as a tennis racket and a mobile telephone. Under cross-examination, the appellant
stated that he had at no stage felt that he was being abused, and that the requests for money and for free dental services had not
influenced his friendship with the family.
[31]
The appellant confirmed that he had received psychological treatment after his 1991 convictions on charges
of child molestation, and that this was a condition of suspension of his sentence because he had tendencies towards paedophilia.
Under cross-examination, the appellant alleged that this psychological treatment had ‘helped’ him. When asked why, if
that were so, he was convicted on a similar charge in 2002, the appellant’s response was that he had pleaded not guilty in
the ‘second case’.
[32]
According to the appellant, the complainant had told him that he had had a sexual relationship with one
of his school friends (a boy) for approximately four years. As far as he could remember, the complainant had made this revelation
to him in the first quarter of 2000. In response to a question posed by counsel for the State, the appellant said that his attitude
to sexual matters was on the conservative side and that he had been somewhat shocked and taken aback when the complainant had told
him of this relationship. His reaction was to tell the complainant that it was wrong and that he must never do such a thing again.
He however could not remember the precise circumstances of this conversation between himself and the complainant, although he knew
that it had taken place at the B home.
[33]
Regarding the confrontation between Mrs B and himself in January 2003, the appellant testified that he
was visiting the B family on a Sunday afternoon after A had telephoned him that morning. After the complainant and A left, telling
him that they were going somewhere by car, Mrs B entered the lounge where the appellant was reading the newspaper and asked him to
leave their home. She alleged that the appellant had molested the complainant and A. He left the house.
[34]
Under cross-examination, he testified that he had felt ‘somewhat shocked’ when Mrs B had
made these accusations against him. He had not, however, then told her about the complainant’s alleged homosexual relationship
or about an incident that had allegedly happened in the first quarter of 2002 – about which he had testified in his examination-in-chief
– during which he (the appellant) had woken up to find A trying to open the zip of his trousers. According to the appellant,
A had accompanied him to visit the T family and, at the T family home, the appellant had taken two painkillers because of a headache
and had gone to lie down in one of the bedrooms. When he woke up, A was tampering with the zip of his trousers. He (the appellant)
took A to task about this, told him that he must never do it again and took him back home.
[35]
The reason given by the appellant for his failure to mention either of these things to Mrs B when she
accused him of having molested her sons, was that he did not want to get into an argument with her, impliedly because of his medical
condition. The appellant conceded that, in view of his previous convictions, he had to be very careful in his relationships with
children and that if his version of the boys’ conduct, particularly A’s behaviour, were true, this could have placed
him in a very difficult and dangerous position. He reiterated, however, that he had rebuked A for his behaviour and that the latter
had never again behaved in such a manner. He insisted that the incidents of sexual activity about which the complainant and A had
testified had never happened and that both boys had been lying to the court. He had been very good to the B family and had no idea
why they would lay such charges against him.
[36]
The appellant admitted that, before this confrontation between himself and Mrs B in 2003, he had again
been charged with a sexual offence, committed in Randfontein, the allegation being that he had indecently assaulted a minor child
on 2 November 2000. He was convicted on this charge and sentenced on 21 November 2002. According to the appellant, he had told Mrs
B about the pending matter in November 2000, long before it had been finalised. He had pleaded not guilty to the charge, but had
nevertheless been convicted and sentenced to a fine of R20 000 or five years’ imprisonment, plus a further five year’s
imprisonment suspended for five years on certain conditions, including community service. The appellant testified that there had
been no change in his relationship with Mrs B or in her attitude to him as a result of this criminal trial and that he had informed
her of the outcome of the trial in November 2002.
[37]
During his examination–in-chief, the appellant admitted that he had been in the complainant’s
company on the various different occasions during which the alleged sexual activity referred to in counts 1 to 4 had actually occurred,
although not all during the time periods referred to by the complainant. So, for example, in respect of the first two counts, the
appellant testified that, at the end of December 1997, after Christmas, he had indeed been accompanied by the complainant on a late
night bus journey to the Eastgate Airport to pick up an overseas tour group. Mr B was allegedly worried about the appellant’s
being able to stay awake should he undertake the late-night drive alone, and had therefore suggested that the complainant accompany
him to keep him awake. Apart from the incident of mutual masturbation in the bus while they were waiting for the tour group to arrive,
about which the complainant had testified, and which the appellant denied, the appellant’s account of the journey and what
had happened the following day largely tallied with the complainant’s version.
[38]
The appellant agreed that, because of a defect with the bus, he and the appellant unexpectedly had to
spend the night at the Casa da Sol Hotel in Mphumalanga while they were waiting for a new bus to be sent out by the tour company.
According to the appellant, however, the hotel room which he and the complainant had to share did not contain a double bed, but only
two single beds and a sofa which could be converted into a bed. He, the complainant and another bus driver employed by Elwierda,
by the name of Bernard Docco, shared the room, he and the complainant each sleeping on a single bed and Bernard on the sofa-bed.
He alleged that he had made enquiries about the whereabouts of Mr Docco, but that he been informed that Mr Docco was now in the United
States of America. The appellant also alleged that the person who had driven the replacement bus to the hotel, arriving in the early
hours of the morning, had also used the bathroom facilities in the hotel bedroom in which he, the complainant and Mr Docco were sleeping.
He could not, however, remember whether this person had also slept in the room. He denied that there had been any mutual masturbation
between himself and the appellant that night.
[39]
As regards the third count, the appellant agreed that he had started to teach the complainant to drive
at the latter’s request, and that the complainant had practised driving with him once or twice in the beginning of December
1997. This had taken place in the parking area of the Corpus Christi Church, as the complainant had testified. However, he and the
complainant had never been alone on any such occasion; on the contrary, A and, as far as he could remember, also the complainant’s
sister (H) had been with them and no mutual masturbation had taken place between him and the complainant in the car. The driving
lessons could not have taken place in the period from January to April 1998 – as the complainant had testified – as he
(the appellant) had resigned from Elwierda in early January 1998 and had immediately gone to his parental home in Warden, where he
had stayed until November 1998. He had helped out at Elwierda on a free-lance basis from mid-September to late October 1998 and had
certainly not visited the complainant’s family in October or November of that year. He testified that he could not therefore,
have visited the complainant at the latter’s home during the complainant’s study ‘leave’ in October or November
1998 and indulged in mutual masturbation with the complainant in the complainant’s bedroom as the latter had testified.
[40]
The appellant testified that he had indeed taken the complainant and A to the Aardklop festival in Potchefstroom
in September or early October 2001. They had spent a day at the festival and, on their return to Randfontein, the boys had spent
the night at his apartment, sleeping in his spare room while he spent the night in his own bedroom. The appellant denied the complainant’s
allegations that, during the period January to March 2001, he (the appellant) had engaged in sessions of mutual masturbation with
the complainant or that he had anally penetrated the complainant on the diverse occasions testified to by the latter. Here again,
in the light of my approach to the constitutional challenge and its impact upon the remaining unlawful acts allegedly perpetrated
by the appellant after the complainant had turned 16, and my assessment of the veracity of the appellant’s version, it is not
necessary to deal in any greater detail with rest of the appellant’s evidence.
Assessment of evidence
[41]
Counsel for the appellant contended that neither the regional magistrate, nor the high court, attached
sufficient weight to the contradictions and improbabilities in, and the unreliable nature of certain aspects of, the evidence of
the complaint and other State witnesses. Moreover, it was submitted, both the regional magistrate and the high court erred by not
finding that there was insufficient corroboration of the complainant’s evidence in respect of the alleged sexual incidents.
According to counsel, the evidence of the appellant should not have been rejected as not being reasonably possibly true. Finally,
counsel repeated – and elaborated upon in considerable detail – the argument which he had advanced before the regional
magistrate and the High Court, namely that the complainant was conspiring with the rest of his family to incriminate the appellant
falsely, in order to conceal from the outside world his homosexual orientation and, possibly, the identity of his homosexual partner.
[42]
I do not find any of these arguments convincing. As Hartzenberg J pointed in his judgment, there were
indeed contradictions in the complainant’s evidence and that of some of the other State witnesses. On the whole, however, the
complainant remained consistent although he was testifying about events some of which occurred more than five years before the commencement
of the trial. It is true that the complainant’s evidence that the appellant had penetrated him anally only three times and
that he had never been involved in a homosexual relationship with any other person, cannot really be reconciled with Dr Winn’s
evidence that all the findings which emerged from his anal examination of the complainant pointed to repeated (‘chronic’)
anal penetration. However, it was also clear from the complainant’s evidence that, in his view, considerable stigma attached
to being inclined to same-sex sexual activity. There are many possible reasons why the complainant might not have wanted to disclose
the fact of a possible homosexual relationship with another person occurring at the same time as the occurrence of the sexual acts
between himself and the appellant, or of such a homosexual relationship occurring after these events. In this regard, the reasoning
of Hartzenberg J in the High Court is compelling-
‘That superficially speaking his [the complainant’s] evidence and that of Dr Winn cannot be reconciled, is clear. The magistrate
was clearly aware of it because he pointed out that the medical examination was done eighteen months after the last incident of anal
penetration by the appellant. There are a number of possibilities. He may have had a homosexual relationship with someone else after
his last encounter with the appellant. He may even have had such a relationship during the same time although one would have expected
his family to have been aware of it. He may have had more such incidents with the appellant, but if I understand the evidence of
Dr Louw correctly, he may have subconsciously dissociated himself from them or Dr Winn may have exaggerated his clinical findings.’
[43]
It is true that the complainant’s evidence was not above criticism. However, the regional magistrate
was clearly aware of the areas of criticism and nevertheless accepted his evidence. This evidence was corroborated in number of important
respects. In particular, the appellant’s conduct when initially confronted by Mrs B, when (according to her evidence) the appellant
went deathly pale and repeatedly said that he was sorry, is reconcilable only with the truth of the complainant’s evidence
and not with the appellant’s evidence. It must also be remembered that most of the occasions on which the sexual incidents
between the complainant and the appellant allegedly happened, are common cause. The appellant himself conceded that he and the complainant
were together on those occasions. It was common cause that the appellant was very friendly with all the B children and, in particular,
with the complainant, and that he took the latter on outings and spoiled him with gifts.
[44]
On the other hand, there are many aspects of the appellant’s evidence which to my mind, are most
unconvincing. So, for example, the appellant’s version of how he had reacted when initially confronted by Mrs B on January
2003, namely that he had simply said that he was not aware of the events in question and that they had not happened is extremely
unlikely. Not only did the appellant, on his version of events, not ask Mrs B any questions about the allegations against him or
express any shock or outrage about these allegations, but he also did not tell her that A had on one occasion ‘fiddled’
with the zip of his trousers and that the complainant had informed him of a four-year long homosexual relationship with a school
friend, involving anal sex. His ostensible reason for not doing any of these things was that he did not want to get into a conflict
with her. So he simply left the house as she had requested him to do. I find this very difficult to believe.
[45]
The ‘conspiracy theory’ advanced by counsel for the appellant does not ring true. In the
words of Hartzenberg J:
‘The argument on behalf of the appellant entails that the complainant falsely told the uncle [H] about the appellant’s conduct, and on top of it asked the uncle not to inform his parents, in the hope that
he would tell them. According to the argument he must have done that to protect someone who was anyway not suspected of anything
by anybody. It is much more likely that he told the uncle the truth. Moreover, the whole B family, except possibly A, was clearly
sympathetic towards the appellant and did not create the impression of trying to have an innocent man convicted.’
[46]
Faced with the competing versions of the complainant and the appellant, the regional magistrate, and
thereafter the High Court, concluded that the appellant’s version, when viewed against the totality of the evidence adduced,
as well as against the inherent probabilities, was false. Each of these courts correctly adopted a holistic approach to the evidence
and I am not persuaded that either court misdirected itself on the evidence before it, nor that its conclusion was wrong.
[47]
It follows from the above that the appellant’s appeal against his convictions on the first four
counts must fail.
Application in terms of s 322(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
[48]
Before this Court, the respondent applied for an amendment, in terms of s 322(1)(b) of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977, of the appellant’s convictions on ten counts of contravening s 14(1)(b) of Act 23 of 1957 to 10 convictions
of indecent assault and also, should this application be successful, for an increase in the sentences imposed on the appellant by
the regional court and confirmed by the high court. The gist of the argument advanced by counsel for the state was that, right from
the start, the power relationship between the appellant and the complainant was totally unequal because of the complainant’s
age in relation to that of the appellant (who was nearly 28 years older than the complainant) and the relationship of friendship
and trust that existed between the appellant and the B family. With reference to each count, counsel attempted to illustrate that,
although the complainant may have appeared to have consented to the sexual act in question, this was not voluntary consent. Counsel
relied in this regard on the evidence of the clinical psychologist who had treated both the complainant and A after Mr and Mrs B
had become aware of what had happened. The psychologist testified that a child who becomes sexually involved with an adult in this
manner is traumatised and, from the outset, is in the position of a victim. As such, the child is paralysed and one of the common
reactions is that the child ‘disassociates’ and places an emotional distance between himself or herself and the adult.
Where the adult follows a pattern of ‘spoiling’ the child by, for example, taking the child on outings and giving the
child presents and money, there is a gradual process of conditioning and manipulation.
[49]
The problem we have in this case is that it is clear from the record that the regional magistrate adopted
a prima facie view, at an early stage of the trial, that the complainant had been a willing participant in all the various sexual interludes between him
and the appellant, to which view the prosecutor appears to have assented. Thus, during the examination-in-chief of the complainant,
the following exchanges took place between the regional magistrate and the complainant:
‘Die lank en die kort van die storie is jy het basies altyd die goed toegelaat en saamgespeel nie waar nie? – ‘Ek het dit
toegelaat maar . . .
‘En jy het ook saamgespeel want jy het ook vir hom gemasturbeer as dit nodig is? – Later ja maar dit was altyd ook net eerste
van sy kant af ek het . . . nooit begin nie.’
‘En as ek jou reg verstaan het jy op geen stadium vir hom gesê wat blyk dat jy dit nie wil doen nie?’ – ‘Ja
ek het dit nooit vir hom gesê nie.’
After the examination-in-chief of the complainant had been completed, the regional magistrate remarked:
‘Op die stadium soos ek die omstandighede nou lees tensy ek anders oortuig kan word, wil dit vir my voorkom of die seun basies saamgespeel
het en toegestem het.’
[50]
On appeal to the Pretoria High Court, Hartzenberg J commented as follows on the attitude adopted by the
regional magistrate in this regard:
‘In fairness to the magistrate the answer to the argument [that the magistrate was wrong not to have found the appellant guilty of
indecent assault on the complainant] is that the incidents occurred over a period of four years and that the complainant was an intelligent
and well-developed lad. The appellant certainly was justified to think that the complainant was a willing participant. That was exactly
the attitude of the magistrate expressed at an early stage of the trial. In the result this question was not really investigated.
There is therefore no foundation upon the evidence, to find that the magistrate was wrong and that the appellant was guilty of indecent
assault.’
[51]
Before us, counsel for the respondent relied on R v Taylor 1927 CPD 16 as support for his argument that, in a case of indecent assault, the onus of proving consent rests upon the accused. This is clearly not correct, as was pointed out by Munnik J in S v D 1963 (3) SA 263 (EC) at 266B-D:
‘Although absence of consent is not part of the definition of the crime of [indecent] assault as is the case in rape, the definition
as quoted in Gardener & Lansdown includes an averment of “unlawfulness”. The State must, therefore, prove that the act complained of was unlawful . .
.
Since the act complained in the present case was not malum in se and is only unlawful because of the complainant’s lack of consent, prove of unlawfulness necessarily involved proof of absence
of consent. It seems to me therefore that the onus of proving absence of consent rested upon the State.’
(See also S v M 2006 (1) SA 135 (SCA) paras 68 and 284-285; and generally JRL Milton South African Criminal Law and Procedure Vol II Common-law Crimes 3 ed (1996) p 476.)
[52]
It is therefore clear that, in this case, the onus rested on the State to prove absence of consent by adducing sufficient evidence to negative the reasonable possibility that the complainant
consented to the sexual acts in question. From the evidence as a whole, I agree with the regional magistrate and the High Court that
the State did not discharge its onus of proof in this regard.
[53]
Although it may perhaps be unfortunate that, because of the prima facie view expressed by the magistrate early in the trial, the question of consent was not really investigated, this does not affect my
conclusion. As was pointed out by Nugent JA in S v M, supra, para 277:
‘The process of examination and cross-examination in a court of law is on occasions a blunt instrument for revealing the truth, and
that is particularly so where, as in this case, the evidence concerns matters that might be emotionally and psychologically complex
and nuanced. But then it is common for the full truth not to emerge in the course of a criminal trial, which has the limited function
of determining whether there is sufficient and adequate evidence to establish beyond reasonable doubt that the accused person committed
an offence. In the absence of such proof in relation to each element of the offence the accused person is entitled to be acquitted
albeit that the full truth might not have emerged. That applies no matter the nature of the offence.’
Constitutional validity of s 14(1)(b) of Act 23 of 1957
[54]
I turn now to deal with the constitutional challenge to s 14(1)(b) of the Act. The relevant provisions
of s 14 (headed ‘Sexual offences with youths’), read as follows –
(1) Any male person who –
(a)
has or attempts to have unlawful carnal intercourse with a girl under the age of 16 years; or
(b)
commits or attempts to commit with such a girl or with a boy under the
age of 19 years an
immoral or indecent act; or
(c)
solicits or entices such a girl or boy to the commission of an immoral or indecent act,
shall be guilty of an offence.
(2) . . .
(3) Any female who –
(a)
has or attempts to have unlawful carnal intercourse with a boy under the age of 16 years; or
(b)
commits or attempts to commit with such a boy or with a girl under the age of 19 years an immoral
or indecent act; or
(c)
solicits or entices such a boy or girl to the commission of an immoral or indecent act;
shall be guilty of an offence.’
‘Unlawful carnal intercourse’ is defined in s 1 of the Act as meaning ‘carnal intercourse otherwise than between husband
and wife’.
The prescribed penalty for an offence referred to in ss 14(1) or 14(3) is imprisonment for a period not exceeding 6 months, with or
without a fine not exceeding R12 000 in addition to such imprisonment (s 22(f) of the Act).
[55]
It may be noted that, in terms of s 68(2) of the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment
Act 32 of 2007, read with the Schedule to such Act, the whole of s 14 of the Sexual Offences Act is repealed. Moreover, in terms
of s 68(1)(a), ‘[t]he common law relating to - (a) the irrebuttable presumption that a female person under the age of 12 years
is incapable of consenting to sexual intercourse’ is also repealed. With the exception of Chapters 5 and 6 thereof, Act 32
of 2007 (the 2007 Act) came into operation on 16 December 2007 (see s 72(1)).
[56]
Part 1 of Chapter 3 of the 2007 Act, headed ‘Consensual sexual acts with certain children’
replaces the provisions of s 14 of the Sexual Offences Act of 1957. Part 1 comprises ss 15 and 16, which sections read as follows:
‘Acts of consensual sexual penetration with certain children (statutory rape)
15 (1) A person (“A”) who commits an act of sexual penetration with a child (“B”) is, despite the consent of
B to the commission of such an act, guilty of the offence of having committed an act of consensual sexual penetration with a child.
(2)(a) The institution of a prosecution for an offence referred to in subsection (1) must be
authorised in writing
by the National Director of Public Prosecutions if both A and B were children at the time of the alleged commission of the offence:
Provided that, in
the event that the National Director of Public Prosecutions authorises the institution
of a prosecution, both A and B must be charged with contravening subsection (1).
(b) The National Director of Public Prosecutions may not delegate his or her power
to decide whether a prosecution in terms of this section should be instituted or not.