16
October 1996
THE
STATE versus DAWID DOESEB
MTAMBANENGWE,J.
EVIDENCE
Rape
- evidence- immediate report of no corroboration of rape or
independent evidence of the allegation but admissible to show
consistency of complainants evidence. Accused failure to testify
after plea of guilty in Sec 119 proceedings before magistrate and
statement that 6 year old complainant gave her consent but no sexual
intercourse took place. Factors to be take with other evidence in
determining whether accused is guilty as charged, the same as regards
allegation unsubstantiated by cross-examination of complainant or
reputation of same by accused under oath.
Rape
- penetration - slightest penetration even if the hymen not injured
suffices.
CASE
NO. CC 123/96
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF NAMIBIA
In
the matter between
THE
STATE
versus
DAWID
DOESEB
CORAM:
MTAMBANENGWE, J.
Heard
on: 1996.10.15
Delivered
on: 1996.10.16
JUDGMENT
MTAMBANENGWE,
J.:
The accused pleaded not guilty to the charge that on 3rd December,
1995 he raped the complainant, a female child then aged 6 years. His
plea explanation put in as Exhibit A
puts
into issue:
"...
all the elements of the charge."
Mariane
Niuses, complainant's mother's sister, lived with the complainant
then. She was accused's girlfriend for seven months to that date. She
said she was cleaning inside the house and when she finished went
outside to look for the complainant. She called for the complainant
and later saw her coming from the veld. The complainant immediately
made a report to her that accused had raped her. She confronted the
accused who denied the allegation. She reported the accused to
accused's elder brother, one Gerson, who also questioned the
accused. The accused also denied the accusation to his brother. She
said that the complainant later showed her two places where she
alleged accused had assaulted her and there she saw some marks of a
knee and a toe on the ground which was mainly dusty with little grass
on it. The complainant had said that the accused had spread his shirt
on the ground. She went on to say that the complainant's dress was
clean but her panty was wet in the front area and there was some
white stuff on it.
A
certain white man by the name of Diedericks had also questioned the
accused who again denied the allegation. After the child was examined
by a doctor the following day she noticed a drop of blood on the
complainant's panty. She said on Mr Diedericks's instruction she had
not washed the complainant when she took the latter to hospital the
following day.
The
complainant was examined by Dr Riegter the following day, the 4th of
December and the doctor's evidence was that she had compiled the
medical report produced as Exhibit B. She dealt with so many cases of
a similar nature, and could not remember this independently of her
remarks on the report which she acknowledged to have compiled. In
giving evidence she said that she found a yellow-whitish discharge
from complainant's vagina which she assumed was an infection caused
by the accused. The hymen was torn at .06 degrees and there was
partial penetration. She could not say that there was any attempt to
penetrate complainant more deeply, otherwise there would have been
more injury, she said. The
genital
organs of the complainant were bleeding easily which meant that the
assault must have happened in the last twenty four hours. Her
report records the following findings:
"Rabia
minora - mildly reddened. Vestibule - erythematous Hymen - torn at
06:00 bleeding Discharge - offensive yellow/white Haemorrhage -
Contact bleeding
Examination
- (easy - painful) under anaesthesia
Remarks: Clear
evidence of acute sexual
molestation
with probable attempted penile penetration (torn hymen, erythematous
vestibule and labia minora, vaginal infection). Unlikely that adult
penis entered vaginal canal.
Opinion:
Possible digital penetration of anus with e.g. little finger. Penile
penetration of anus unlikely. No tears.
Episode
likely to have occurred recently e.g. last 3 days."
Under
cross-examination the doctor said that the labia minora, that is the
wall around the vagina, was reddened because of the trauma, that is
bruising of the tissue. She conceded that that fact did not point or
indicate a penis as the only cause or as the only object likely to
have caused the injury and that any other object like a finger would
have caused such an injury. I have already said she explained what
she meant by .06 degrees or hours, she said like a clock at the
position of half past six and that is what is indicated in the
drawing that I have just referred to, and repeated that this could
be caused by partial penetration. She said she had taken vaginal
smears and sent them for analysis. On the results of the analysis
she said (her evidence on this point was later confirmed by Mr
Nambakoe, the senior forensic analyst who analyzed the smears and
who was called to produce the report showing the result.) Her notice
was that no spermatozoa or semen was observed on the vaginal smear
when analysed, the reason being that smears were bloody and both the
doctor and the analyst said the blood would mask the presence of
sperms or semen and Mr Nambakoe put the chances that that would
happen to be nine out of ten cases, that is in 90% of the cases,
this masking would happen. The report in the form of an affidavit in
terms of section 212(4)(a) and (8)(a) of the Criminal Procedure Act
no. 51 of 1977 (the Act) was produced as Exhibit D.
The
doctor and the analyst of course would not rule out the possibility
that no sperms of semen were found in the smears because neither was
there.
The
complainant was a very timid girl who appeared to have been so
traumatized that she was unwilling to talk about her experience. I
and counsel had to reassure her in chambers that she had nothing to
fear. When she testified she said that accused had invited her and
other kids to go with him to collect wood. As they followed him he
told the other kids to go back and said to the complainant let us go
and collect some tree gum. In the veld he took off his shirt and
said "give me." She said accused injured her and indicated
her private parts as the area where she was injured. She said that
he had opened his trousers before he touched her body. Asked where
he had touched her body she pointed at her private parts. She had
also indicated the accused as the man who had injured her by looking
at him when she said the man was present in Court.
Defence
counsel did not cross-examine her. Her reluctance to talk about her
experience was painfully demonstrated by the way she answered or did
not answer the prosecutor's questions.
The
accused chose to remain silent and closed his case soon after the
State called its last witness who was the complainant.
The
section 119 (of the Act) proceedings before a magistrate which were
held on 6th December, 1995 were produced by consent as Exhibit C.
There the accused pleaded guilty to the charge of rape and was
questioned in terms of section 112(1)(b) of the Act. Asked why he
pleaded guilty to the charge he replied:
"The
complainant gave me consent to have sexual intercourse with her but
we did not have sexual intercourse."
In
choosing to remain silent this answer to the magistrate and the plea
of guilty remain begging for an explanation. These are factors to be
taken into account as part of the totality of the evidence in this
case, and in this connection see S
v Snyman,
1968(2) SA 582 (AD) at 588 G - H and the cases there referred to.
In
addressing the Court Mr Murorua tried to persuade the Court not to
convict the accused as charged. He criticised the evidence of the
doctor as not being conclusive that the injuries she found on
complainant's genitals were caused by a penis. He stressed the
fact that the doctor in her report
said
that it was "unlikely that adult penis entered the vaginal
canal." The short answer to this criticism is as stated by
Snyman:
Criminal Law,
2nd edition at p. 446:
"The
act (that is the act of rape) consists in the penetration of the
female's organ by that of the male. The slightest penetration is
sufficient."
The
learned author relies for this proposition on the case S
v Molefe,
1969(2) PH H 213 (Bot) where Young, C.J. then said:
"The
Court-a-quo
had erred in acquitting the accused of rape since any penetration,
even the slightest, and even if the hymen is uninjured suffices
(Archbold, 36 ed. para. 2879 referred.)"
In
this connection Mr Murorua referred to two authorities namely S
v Theron,
1924 SA 2 04 (EDLD) and R
v V,
1960(1) 117 (TPD) at 117 H. The relevant passage in the first case
is at 205. The facts in these two cases clearly distinguish them
from the present case. They appear sufficiently summarised in the
two passages viz
p. 2 05 in the Theron
case:
"The
Court found that, notwithstanding that the complainant had conceived
as a consequence of the assault, as there was no satisfactory
evidence of any degree of penetration whatever, the accused was
guilty only of assault with intent to commit rape and not rape."
and
that at p. 117 H in R
v V:
"It
was found that there were scratch marks between the labia minora
and the labia majora:
the
hymen was not torn at all but there obviously had been interference
with the child's vagina. The doctor has said there was no sign of
penetration and such marks as he found could have been caused by
something like a finger nail.
It
is on this evidence that the Court says the Crown was right in
abandoning the charge of rape. There was no penetration and it is
not clear that there was even an attempt to penetrate."
Next
Mr Murorua argued that an inference that rape had taken place could
not be drawn from the totality of the evidence as the only
reasonable inference. He added that even if it was found that
partial penetration took place one could not say it was penile.
This
argument ignores the evidence of the complainant, the accused's plea
and statement to the magistrate which, by remaining silent, the
accused failed to explain. He also failed to gainsay complainant's
evidence that accused opened his trousers, he injured her on her
private parts. Mr Murorua's comment on complainant's evidence was
that he could not say much about it and that she was justifiably
traumatised and did her best to narrate the horrible experience she
suffered. I agree with him on that comment.
The
complainant immediately reported to her aunt that she had been raped
and that report and the contents thereof are, though not a
corroboration of her story or independent evidence of the alleged
rape, admissible to show the consistency of her evidence. In this
connection see Hoffmann
& Zeffert: The South African Law of Evidence,
4th ed. at pp. 118 - 121. The accused's plea and answer to the
magistrate are sufficient corroboration of complainant's
evidence at least as far as there having been a sexual
association
between accused and her. Despite
her
understandable
timidity, which, according to the Court's observation of her as a
witness, arose from the continuing trauma she still suffers, I have
no reason to doubt the veracity of the rest of her evidence despite
its shortcomings.
Mr
Murorua also criticised the doctor's evidence because, as he said,
it was not conclusive about penetration or attempted penetration and
it was further weakened because there was no corroboration of it of
a discharge of sperms or semen in the vaginal smears that she took
and sent for analysis. Snyman in the passage that I have quoted
above makes the further statement that "it is immaterial
whether semen is emitted . . . . " and of course it is a
well-known fact that a man can have sexual intercourse with a woman
without discharging at all.
It
must be remarked that in cross-examining the doctor Mr Murorua,
admittedly on the accused's instructions, alleged that he had
information that complainant had had previous sexual experience.
This was a gratuitous attack on complainant's character which was
not substantiated either by cross-examining the complainant on it or
by accused taking the witness stand to repeat it under oath. In the
circumstances it must be taken as a base lie in an attempt, it would
seem, for accused to raise a defence that he was not responsible for
complainant's torn hymen.
In
cases like the instant caution must be exercised in approaching the
evidence of the complainant. MacDonald, A.J.P., as he then was, said
the following at p. 90 D - T in R
v J,
1966(1) SA 88 (SRAD):
"The
surrounding circumstances when they do not afford evidence of the
commission of the offences or of the identity of the perpetrator,
frequently afford valuable evidence in regard to the merits of the
evidence of the respective witnesses.
The
third point is that while there is always the need for special
caution in scrutinizing and weighing the evidence of young children,
complainants in sexual cases, accomplices and, generally, the
evidence of a single witness, the exercise of caution should not be
allowed to displace the exercise of common sense."
See
also Snyman'
s case, supra,
at p. 585 G. I find these statements to be very apposite in the
circumstances of this case.
On
the totality of the evidence that I have considered above I find
that the State has proved the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable
doubt. The accused is accordingly found guilty as charged.
MTAMBANENGWE,
JUDGE
ON
BEHALF OF THE STATE: ADV
S F SCHULTZ
ON
BEHALF OF THE ACCUSED: MR
MURORUA
Instructed
by: