On 20 September 1998, a group of young men raped eight women in the Umthambeka section of the township of
Tembisa in
Gauteng. Members of the group were brought to trial in the
High Court of South Africa on 13 August 1999 and were convicted of various charges, including seven counts of
common law rape. Seven of the eight rape counts were imposed on the basis of the doctrine of
common purpose: although some of the defendants had not penetrated the raped women, but had instead stood as look-outs, the High Court found that defendants had entered into a common purpose to commit the rape and that the rapes were executed pursuant to a prior agreement in furtherance of that purpose. Two of the defendants, Mr Abulane Alpheus Tshabalala and Mr Annanius Ntuli, sought leave to appeal their convictions and sentences in the
Constitutional Court. The Constitutional Court found jurisdiction in the case because of an existing uncertainty in
South African criminal law about the proper application of the common purpose doctrine to the crime of common law rape. Although the doctrine of common purpose passed constitutional muster in
S v Thebus, it was generally applied to convictions of
crimes of consequence such as
murder,
assault, and
robbery. Courts had been hesitant to apply the doctrine to co-accused in rape cases, especially in cases of
gang rape. == Arguments ==