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[2005] ZASCA 78
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S v Kimberley and Another (519/2004) [2005] ZASCA 78; 2005 (2) SACR 663 (SCA) (19 September 2005)
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Last Updated: 3 December 2005
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Reportable
CASE NO. 519/2004
In the matter between
SITHEMBISO XOLANI KIMBERLEY
AND
ANOTHER Appellants
and
THE STATE Respondent
____________________________________________________________
CORAM: ZULMAN, MTHIYANE, BRAND and MLAMBO JJA
et MAYA AJA
HEARD: 26 AUGUST 2005
DELIVERED: 19 SEPTEMBER 2005
____________________________________________________________
On a proper
interpretation of s 51 (1)(a) read with Part 1 of Schedule 2 paras (a)(i) and
(ii) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act No 105 of 1997, a High Court lacks
jurisdiction to impose a sentence of life imprisonment in respect of a single
act of
rape.
______________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
____________________________________________________________
ZULMAN JA
[1] The appellants were convicted in the Alexandria Regional Court, of
rape. The Regional Magistrate referred the matter to the High Court
of the
Eastern Cape Provincial Division for the imposition of sentence in terms of s 52
of the Criminal Law Amendment Act no 105
of 1997 (the Act). The High Court
(Erasmus J) sentenced the appellants to life imprisonment but granted leave to
appeal to this court.
The essential question which arises for determination in
this appeal is whether the High Court was correct in finding that s 51 (1)(a)
read with Part 1 of Schedule 2 para (a) (ii) of the Act was
applicable.
[2] Both the appellants pleaded not guilty to the charge of rape
on which they were arraigned. The complainant was the key witness
for the
prosecution. She testified that the two appellants entered her home and
proceeded to attack her. Appellant number 1 then
held her down while appellant
number 2 raped her. The appellants denied the whole of the version of the
complainant. The regional
magistrate nevertheless accepted the
complainant’s evidence and rejected that of the two appellants. She
thereupon convicted
both the accused of rape, without however indicating the
basis for the conviction. Thereafter, the matter was postponed in order
to
obtain a probation officer’s report in respect of appellant number 2. A
number of postponements followed. The record indicates
that on 17 July 2003 the
case was postponed to the High Court for trial. There is however no record of
the referral proceedings.
[3] When the matter came before the High Court on
21 August 2003 it appeared to that Court that certain information was required
for
the Court to properly deal with the matter in terms of the Act. The
proceedings were postponed. The Court directed that the following
inquiry be
sent to the magistrate:
‘1. The record does not contain the proceedings and the judgment of the magistrate in regard to the referral of the accused for sentence in terms of s 52 of Act 105 of 1997. The magistrate is requested to furnish same.
2. The magistrate is requested to furnish reasons for the referral, indicating therein the section of the relevant schedule on which the Court relied. It would seem that the Court convicted accused no 1 on the basis that he aided accused no 2 in raping the complainant. Can it be said that on such basis accused no 1 committed rape, as contemplated in the schedule? The magistrate is referred to the judgment of this court in S v JONAS SAFFIER a copy of which is attached (CC 4/03); which judgment might have a bearing on the question.
3. The magistrate is further requested to comment whether it was competent, alternatively appropriate, in the circumstances of the case for a Court to invoke provisions of the Act in view of the apparent failure on the part of the State to alert the defence to the fact that it intended to rely on the provisions of the Act in the event of a conviction. See S v Ndlovu 2003(1) (SACR) 331 (SCA).’
[4] The magistrate replied
simply that she had found that appellant number 1 was ‘an
accomplice’. She stated further that
she had erred in referring the matter
to the High Court, as she had interpreted s 52 incorrectly. She was now of the
view that she
had lacked the jurisdiction to refer the matter to the High Court.
She requested that the referral therefore be set aside and that
the matter be
referred back to her in terms of s 52 (3) (e) (v) of the
Act.
[5] Notwithstanding the magistrate’s request and the attitude of
counsel for both the appellants and the State in support of
the magistrate,
Erasmus J ruled that the matter should not be referred back but that the trial
of the accused should proceed before
him in terms of the provisions of s 52(3)
of the Act (the first judgment). The court a quo accepted that the
schedule in paragraph (a)(i) contemplates the position where the accused has
been convicted of rape committed in
circumstances involving multiple rapes.
Although Erasmus J considered that there was some uncertainty as to what the
‘lawmaker
intended’ and that the language was not clear, he
nevertheless considered that he did not need to ‘search for that meaning,
for whichever way one looks at the provision it contemplates more than one act
of rape; and the present complainant was only raped
once’ (first judgment
paragraph 17).
[6] The learned judge then turned to consider parapraph
(a)(ii) of the schedule. At the outset he commented that ‘The provision
contemplates a single rape committed by more than one person’. He then
stated that:
‘A layman reading para (a)(ii) could understand it to
relate to the so-called gang rape situation, where one or more persons
hold down
the victim with the ‘common purpose’ that another of their number
has sexual intercourse with her. A court
could conclude that Parliament here
uses the words in such loose sense. This could explain some of the perplexities
in para (a)(i)
set out above in para [17], which would lend support to the loose
or non-legal interpretation of the schedule as a whole. As no more
acceptable
interpretation suggests itself, I must conclude that such was the intention of
the legislator and therefore give effect
to that intention, even though it will
give rise to anomaly. It would mean that the concepts ‘common
purpose’ and ‘co-perpetrator’
have one meaning (a legal one)
for purposes of conviction and another (non-legal) for purposes of sentence. Be
that as it may, on
the above interpretation, the factual findings of the
magistrate mean that the two accused committed the rape ‘in the execution
of a common purpose’ which brings them both within the ambit of the
schedule.’
(first judgment paragraph 21).
In my view and for the
reasons which will appear presently the court a quo erred in this
interpretation of para (a)(ii).
[7] The court thereupon proceeded to consider
the question of sentence and as previously stated imposed a sentence of life
imprisonment
on both the appellants, (the second judgment). In so doing Erasmus
J considered that he was by law obliged to impose a sentence of
life
imprisonment unless he was satisfied that substantial and compelling
circumstances existed which justified the imposition of
a lesser sentence. He
found that no such circumstances existed.
[8] Section 51(1) of the Act is
prefaced by the words: ‘minimum sentences for certain serious
offences’. In section 51(1)(a)
the Act provides that the High Court shall
have jurisdiction:
‘(1) Notwithstanding any other law but subject to subsections (3) and (6) [the subsections are not here relevant], a High Court shall –
(a) if it has convicted a person of an offence referred to in Part 1 of schedule 2; ...
sentence the person to imprisonment for life.’
Rape is one such offence. Part 1 of Schedule 2 of the Act provides, inter alia, that a High Court shall have jurisdiction to impose life imprisonment on an offender who is convicted of:
‘Rape - (a) when committed -
(i) in circumstances where the victim was raped more than once whether by the accused or by any co-perpetrator or accomplice;
(ii) by more than one person where such persons acted in the execution
or furtherance of a common purpose or conspiracy.’
(my
emphasis).
In the present case, as previously stated, the evidence disclosed
that Appellant number 1 held the complainant down whilst Appellant
number 2
actually raped her.
[9] The Act is concerned in s 51(1) to deal with what it
terms the imposition of ‘minimum sentences for certain serious
offences’.
In the case of what may be described as ‘ordinary’
rapes not falling within the ambit of Part 1 of Schedule 2, these
attract a
minimum sentence of ten years imprisonment for a first offender (Part 3 of
Schedule 2). (Both appellants are first offenders).
Accordingly the rapes
referred to in Part 1 of Schedule 2 which attract a minimum sentence of life
imprisonment are obviously of
a more serious nature. The ‘mischief’
which the legislature sought to deal with, in my view, was the situation where
a
woman is subjected to multiple rapes either by one person or by any
‘co-perpetrator or accomplice’. Paragraph (a) (i)
of Schedule 2
covers the situation where ‘the victim was raped more than once’.
Paragraph (a) (ii) also deals with the
situation where the victim is raped by
more that one person in the ‘execution or furtherance of a common purpose
or conspiracy’.
Both paragraphs require that the victim be raped more than
once.
[10] It is not necessary to go into the degrees of participation in
the rapes for the purposes of interpreting paragraphs (a)(i) and
(ii). Nor is
the fact that an accomplice, may in an appropriate case, receive the same
sentence as the actual perpetrator/s of a
rape, of assistance in interpreting
the paragraphs in question.
[11] Erasmus J considered that para (a)(ii) and
not para (a)(i) applied to the case before him. In my view, in doing so he in
effect
erroneously equated the position of an ‘accomplice’ proper
with that of a person or persons acting in the execution or
furtherance of a
common purpose or conspiracy. He erred in doing so. Where the legislature wishes
to deal with an ‘accomplice’,
a well known term in law, which it is
clearly cognizant of, it does so in express terms in para (a)(i). It makes no
mention of an
‘accomplice’ in para (a)(ii) but refers to other
equally well known concepts in law such as ‘common purpose’
and
‘conspiracy’. I do not accept the validity of the reasoning of the
court a quo that the concepts ‘common purpose’ and
‘co-perpetrator’ have one meaning for the purposes of conviction (a
legal one) and another for the purposes of sentence (a non-legal one). The
concepts have only one consistent and clear meaning.
[12] As previously
pointed out Appellant number 1 was found to be simply an
‘accomplice’ and not a co-perpetrator nor
was it found that he
acted in the execution of a common purpose or conspiracy. An
‘accomplice’ (medepligtige) is one
who takes part in the commission
of the crime other than as a perpetrator (dader) and other than as an accessory
after the fact (begunstige)
(Burchell - South African Criminal Law and
Procedure - Vol 1 p 322). The matter is put succinctly by Joubert JA in
S v Williams 1980(1)SA 60(A) at 63 A-B in these terms:
‘’n Medepligtige se aanspreeklikheid is aksessories van aard sodat daar geen sprake van ‘n medepligtige kan wees sonder ‘n dader of mededaders wat die misdaad pleeg nie. ‘n Dader voldoen aan al die vereistes van die betrokke misdaadomskrywing. Waar mededaders saam die misdaad pleeg, voldoen elke mededader aan al die vereistes van die betrokke misdaadomskrywing. Daarenteen is ‘n medepligtige nie ‘n dader of mededader nie aangesien die dader se actus reus by hom ontbreek. ‘n Medepligtige vereenselwig hom bewustelik met die pleging van die misdaad deur die dader of mededaders deurdat hy bewustelik behulpsaam is by die pleging van die misdaad of deurdat hy bewustelik die dader of mededaders die geleentheid, die middele of die inligting verskaf wat die pleging van die misdaad bevorder.’
(see also LAWSA First Re-Issue Vol 6 paras
129/132,pp 1138/146, Snyman- Strafreg (Vierde Uitgawe) 254/257 and De Wet
en Swanepoel – Strafreg (Vierde Uitgawe) Chapter 7 pp
175/208)
So for example a woman who assists a man to rape another woman or
who makes it possible for him to do so, cannot be held to have committed
the act
of rape (S v Jonathan en Andere 1987 (1) SA 633 (A) at 643
H-I).
Simply put it is of fundamental importance to vest a High Court with
jurisdiction, to impose a sentence of life imprisonment that
there be more than
one act of rape.
[13] In any event, in so far as the wording of paras (a)(i)
and (a)(ii) may not be clear it is trite that a court will interpret the
paragraphs so as to render an interpretation least harsh to the affected person
( see for
example, Principal Immigration Officer v Bhula 1931 AD
323 at 336/7). Similarly a statutory provision which is not clear which changes
the common law will also be restrictively interpreted
(See for example
Casserley v Stubbs 1916 TPD 310 at 312 ) More particularly statutes
which prescribe minimum sentences, such as the statute here under consideration,
thus eliminating
the usual discretion of a court to impose a sentence which
befits the peculiar circumstances of each individual case, will usually
be
construed in such a way that the penal discretion remains in tact as far as
possible ( Du Plessis - The Interpretation of Statutes para 23.3
p75).
[14] Both counsel for the Appellant and for the Respondent agreed,
perhaps for different reasons, that Erasmus J had erred in finding
that the
provisions of Part 1 (a)(ii) of Schedule 2 were applicable to the appellants,
the court having lacked the necessary jurisdictional
capacity to impose the
sentence of life imprisonment. They were also both agreed that the matter
should be referred back to the
magistrate for the imposition of an appropriate
sentence.
[15] Accordingly :
15.1 The appeal is allowed.
15.2 The
sentences imposed by the High Court are set aside.
15.3 The matter is
referred back to the Alexandria Regional Court, for the purposes of imposing
sentence on the
appellants.
---------------------------------------
R
H ZULMAN
JUDGE OF APPEAL
MTHIYANE
JA )
BRAND JA ) CONCUR
MLAMBO JA )
MAYA
AJA )