Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 262South Africa
S v N.K (SS54/2024) [2025] ZAGPJHC 262 (10 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v N.K (SS54/2024) [2025] ZAGPJHC 262 (10 March 2025)
S v N.K (SS54/2024) [2025] ZAGPJHC 262 (10 March 2025)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: SS 54/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
And
N[…]
K[…]
Accused
JUDGMENT
Mdalana-Mayisela
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The accused is charged with murder of her newborn baby boy K[…]
(“the deceased”), read with
section 51(1)
of the
Criminal
Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
, as amended (“the CLAA”).
The state alleged that upon or about 3 March 2024 and at or near
Fordsburg in the district
of Johannesburg Central, the accused did
unlawfully and intentionally kill the deceased.
[2]
The provisions of
section 51(1)
read with
Part I
(a) (planned or
premeditated murder) and (b)(iii) (victim was a person under the age
of eighteen years) of Schedule 2 of the CLAA
were explained to the
accused before pleading to the charge of murder. She pleaded not
guilty to murder and gave no plea explanation.
EVIDENCE
Exhibits
[3]
The following exhibits were admitted as evidence during the trial:
A - Admissions in terms
of
section 220
of Act 51 of 1977 (“the CPA”);
B1 - Affidavit in terms
of section 212(4&8) of the CPA made by Dr Leonardo Mantanga;
B2 - Medico-legal autopsy
report prepared by Dr LL Mantanga;
C - Affidavit made by
Johan N[...];
D - Affidavit in terms of
section 212(4) of the CPA made by Dr Tayla Sarah Ferguson;
E – 3 Photographs
of the deceased taken by Dr TS Ferguson;
F - Clinical notes made
by Dr TS Ferguson;
G - Photo album and key
prepared by Sergeant Owen Moeketsi;
H - Clinical notes made
by Dr Dayna Ferguson;
I - Qualifications and
experience document prepared by Dr Efrat Barnes;
J - Referral report
prepared by the social worker, Ms S P Papila;
K - Clinical notes made
by Dr Ronwyn Stevens; and
L - Helen Joseph final
Laboratory report for N[…] K[…] (accused).
The
witnesses
[4]
To prove its case against the accused the
state
called her boyfriend J[...] N[...], Dr Tayla Sarah Ferguson, Dr Dayna
Jane Ferguson, Dr Efrat Barnes, Ms SP Papila and Dr
Ronwyn Stevens.
Some of the state witnesses’ evidence was handed up by
agreement between the state and accused, and those
witnesses were not
called to testify. The accused testified in her defence. I have
considered the evidence in totality. However,
I do not intend to
summarize the evidence of the witnesses individually in this judgment
because most of the material facts are
common cause.
The
common cause facts
[5] The following
facts are common cause, and/or not in dispute between the state
witnesses and accused:
[5.1] The identity of the
deceased and that he is the accused’s late baby boy.
[5.2] The accused gave
birth to the deceased on 3 March 2024 at home in Crown Mines.
[5.3] The deceased was
healthy and normal at the time of his birth. He did not have any
congenital abnormalities. He had a height
of 46 centimeters and a
weight of 2305 grams which was an indication that he was a full-term
baby. He was carried to at least 36
weeks gestation.
[5.4] The deceased was
crying and breathing well at birth. The umbilical cord was not
wrapped around his neck.
[5.5] The placenta was
not removed, and the umbilical cord was not clamped or cut at home
after the deceased was born.
[5.6] The accused’s
boyfriend, J[...] N[...] whom she began dating from December 2023,
did not know that the accused was pregnant
until the deceased was
born.
[5.7] The accused was
alone at home when the deceased was born, as well as when J[...] went
to look for an ambulance or car to take
her and the deceased to
hospital.
[5.8] J[...] organized a
car and accompanied the accused and deceased to Rahima Moosa Mother
and Child hospital on 3 March 2024.
[5.9] The deceased was
wrapped in a towel that had blood and covered with a blanket.
[5.10] The deceased was
not crying and struggled to breathe inside the car on the way to
Rahima Moosa hospital.
[5.11] The accused was
holding the deceased from birth at home until she handed him over to
Dr Dayna Ferguson in Rahima Moosa hospital,
and nobody tried to harm
him during that time.
[5.12] The deceased
arrived at Rahima Moosa hospital emergency department at about 19H50
and he was immediately taken to neonatal
resuscitation area, placed
under a warmer and stimulated. A face mask was placed to give him
oxygen. The placenta was removed.
The umbilical cord was
clamped, lifted away from the deceased, placed on a thick maternity
pad and then cut with a scalpel by the
nurses in the presence of Dr
Dayna.
[5.13] Dr Dayna conducted
the initial assessment of the deceased in the presence of her senior,
Dr Umer Thair. The deceased was
observed to be cyanotic. He was
making respiratory effort but not saturating well. He was also
hypothermic. He had signs of respiratory
distress. A laceration above
the left clavicle was observed initially. When the deceased was
placed in position for supportive
breaths and his neck extended,
three deep lacerations to the right anterior-lateral neck were
noticed. The wounds were not actively
bleeding. Dr Thair took over
airway breathing control and resus situation was declared.
[5.14] When doctors Dayna
and Thair’s shift ended at 20H00 in the emergency department,
Dr Sarah Ferguson took over the resuscitation
of the deceased and
proceeded to stabilize him. The deceased’s lips were noted to
be blue, he was gasping and struggling
to breathe. Dr Sarah examined
the body of the deceased and when she extended his neck, she noticed
that he had multiple penetrating
wounds to his neck. The deceased’s
trachea (breathing pipe), vocal cords, oesophagus (swallowing pipe)
and neck muscles were
completely cut through and severed. As a
result, the deceased could not cry or swallow food and struggled to
breathe. Dr Sarah
managed to stabilize the deceased by putting a
breathing pipe in the neck through the actual wound of the windpipe.
He was placed
on a ventilator to help him breathe. The medication for
pain was administered and he was kept in the ICU.
[5.15] Dr Sarah completed
a J88 and attached diagrams. She also took black and white, and
colour photographs of the deceased’s
multiple injuries. She
also took two videos showing the deceased not crying, having multiple
penetrating wounds in the neck, blood
stains and abnormal breathing
with her phone. By agreement between the parties the videos were
played during her testimony in court.
[5.16] She described the
injuries as extensive and not superficial cuts. The first wound was a
4-centimeter by 4-centimeter laceration
with the trachea exposed and
the sternocleidomastoid muscle severed in the right anterior neck
triangle. This injury also had surgical
emphysema with an audible air
leak or sucking chest wound. That means there was air escaping from
the chest into the tissue underneath
the neck. The second wound was a
2-centimeter by 0,5- centimeter laceration to the anterior neck
triangle. The third wound was
a 2-centimeter by 3-centimeter
laceration on the right neck triangle. The fourth wound was a 3
centimeter by 2-centimeter laceration
to the left anterior neck
triangle that was about 3-centimeters above the clavicle. All the
wounds were deep lacerations or incisions.
They had sharp edges
caused by a sharp object, for example a knife or scalpel blade. She
concluded that there were multiple deep
lacerations to the neck of
the deceased in keeping with nonaccidental injuries.
[5.17] The deceased was
transferred to Charlotte Maxeke Academic hospital which has pediatric
surgical expertise for further management.
He was kept in the
pediatric ICU. Dr Efrat Barnes oversaw the treatment administered to
the deceased by a team of medical doctors.
The head of the pediatric
surgical team, Dr Mapunda performed a surgery and repaired the
oesophagus of the deceased. The ear, nose
and throat specialist
repaired his trachea. The deceased’s condition remained
critical until his demise on 26 April 2024.
He could not maintain
blood pressure and pulse. He could not breathe on his own. The signs
of life were not present unless he was
supported by machines. He was
given inotropes drugs to support his heart and blood pressure. An MRI
scan was done, and it was found
that he sustained a brain injury. Dr
Barnes opined that the deceased sustained an initial brain injury
because of not having received
oxygen to the brain for a long period
due to the loss of significant amount of blood and severed trachea. A
tracheostomy (windpipe)
was inserted into the penetrating wound of
the neck perforating the trachea and oesophagus to help maintain his
breathing and oxygenating.
[5.19] Dr Leonardo
Mantanga conducted a postmortem examination on the body of the
deceased on 3 May 2024 and found the cause of
death to be “
unnatural
causes: penetrating wound of the neck”
.
[5.20] Dr Ronwyn
Stevens examined the accused on 4 March 2024. She noted that the
uterus was well contracted. She had normal
blood after delivery. Her
heart sound was normal. She was calm and cooperative. She was
clinically stable.
Issues in dispute
[6] The following
issues are in dispute:
[6.1] The identity of the
person who inflicted multiple penetrating wounds in the neck of the
deceased.
[6.2] Whether there was a
new intervening act that broke the chain of causation.
EVALUATION
OF EVIDENCE
[7]
It is trite law that
the
state bears the onus to prove the guilt of the accused beyond
reasonable doubt.
[1]
The accused
is entitled to her acquittal should her version be reasonably
possibly true.
[8]
First, I deal with the issue of the identity of the perpetrator. It
is common cause that the state did not present direct
evidence to
prove the identity of the perpetrator. It relies on circumstantial
evidence. The court in
Mashia
v S
[2]
in
dealing with circumstantial evidence stated as follows:
“
(47)
Circumstantial evidence is sometimes described as that network of
facts and circumstances that swirls around the accused. The
court is
called upon under such circumstances to determine whether or not
those facts and circumstances justifies the court to
infer what could
have actually happened even though there is no direct evidence
available. Simply put pieces of evidence, facts,
documentary
evidence, surrounding circumstances, exhibits, the conduct of an
accused person, his reaction to questioning - be it
by the
prosecution or the police; all these and other relevant and material
aspects can conflate and confluence into a body of
ascertainable
facts and evidence that can go a long way towards proving the guilt
of an accused person, despite the absence of
direct evidence by
witnesses to that effect.
(48) Such an exercise
may sometimes come up with nothing implicating an accused person. On
the other hand, the circumstances may
turn out to be such that a
convincing story indeed ultimately shines through. The law does not
demand that one should act upon
certainties alone. In our lives, in
our courts, in our thoughts, we do not always deal with certainties:
we also act upon just
and reasonable convictions founded upon just
and reasonable or set grounds. The law asks for no more and the law
demands no less.
see: Ranzani Ndumalo v The State (Case No 450/2008
[2009] ZASCA 113.
”
[9]
In
S
v Reddy and Others
[3]
it was held as follows:
“
In
assessing the circumstantial evidence one needs to be careful not to
approach such evidence on a piece-meal basis and to subject
each
individual piece of evidence to a consideration whether it excludes
the reasonable possibility that the explanation given
by the accused
is true. The evidence needs to be considered in its totality. It is
only then that one can apply the oft-quoted
dictum in R v Blom
1939
AD 188
at 202-3, where reference is made to two cardinal rules of
logic which cannot be ignored. These are, firstly, that the inference
sought to be drawn must be consistent with all the proved facts, and
secondly, the proved facts should be such ‘that they
exclude
every reasonable inference from them save the one that is sought to
be drawn’
.”
[10] The state
proved the following facts relevant to the issue of identity:
[10.1] The deceased was
the accused’s newborn baby.
[10.2] The accused was
alone in the shack when the deceased was born.
[10.3] The accused held
the deceased from birth until he was handed over to Dr Dayna at
Rahima Moosa hospital, and nobody else held
him during that time.
[10.4] The accused never
lost sight of the deceased from birth until he was handed over to Dr
Dayna.
[10.5] The deceased’s
multiple penetrating wounds were nonaccidental and were inflicted
intentionally.
[10.6] When the deceased
was born his vocal cords, oesophagus and trachea were normal. He was
crying and breathing normally. The
umbilical cord was still attached
but it was not wrapped around his neck.
[10.7] J[...] left the
deceased crying in the shack when he went to organize a car to take
the deceased and accused to hospital.
[10.8] When J[...]
returned the deceased was not crying and he was wrapped in a towel
that had blood. He gave the accused a blanket
to cover the deceased.
[10.9] When the deceased
was transported to Rahima Moosa hospital he was not crying and was
struggling to breathe.
[10.10] When he arrived
at Rahima Moosa hospital he was taken to neonatal resuscitation area
where the doctors noticed multiple
deep lacerations or penetrating
wounds within few minutes after his admission.
[10.11] Drs Sarah, Dayna
and Barnes opined that the deceased was unable to cry because his
vocal cords were severed, and he was
struggling to breathe because
his trachea was also severed.
[10.12] The accused
informed doctors Sarah, Dayna and the social worker Papila that she
did not want this pregnancy.
[10.13] The accused did
not show any emotions in hospital when the doctors were trying to
save the deceased’s life. She did
not enquire about the
deceased’s health.
[10.14] I observed the
accused in court. She did not show any emotions during the state case
and even when the two videos showing
the deceased’s injuries
were played.
[11] The accused
applied for her discharge in terms of
section 174
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
at the end of the state case. I dismissed
the application because I believed that the common cause facts
together with the above
proven facts are sufficient to convict and
require an explanation from the accused. The accused testified in her
defence.
Her defence is a bare denial.
[12] It was argued
on behalf of the accused that the breathing problem could have been
caused by the placenta and umbilical
cord that were still attached.
However, this was not put to doctors Sarah, Dayna and Barnes for
their comment. It was also not
the accused’s testimony. The
proven fact is that the umbilical cord was not wrapped around the
deceased’s neck when
he was born. The breathing problem
persisted even after the placenta was removed and the umbilical cord
was cut. This argument
is without substance because the deceased was
crying and breathing well when he was born. The accused and J[...]
observed the breathing
problem when the deceased was inside the car
on the way to Rahima Moosa hospital. The only reasonable inference
consistent with
these facts is that the breathing problem was caused
by the injury to the trachea.
[13] Furthermore,
it was argued that the injuries could have been inflicted by nurses
when they were cutting a cord with a
scalpel, or the doctors when
they were putting a windpipe. This was not put to doctors Sarah and
Dayna for their comment. It was
also not the accused’s
testimony. The accused in her testimony denied inflicting the
multiple wounds and stated that she
did not know how they were
inflicted and by whom. This argument is also without substance
because the pediatrician initially inserted
a breathing pipe orally
and it was unsuccessful. Dr Sarah put a windpipe through a defect,
that is in one of the multiple penetrating
wounds. She did not cut
the deceased’s neck. Dr Dayna was present when the nurses cut
the umbilical cord. She explained that
it was clamped, lifted away
from the deceased and placed on a thick maternity pad and then it was
cut.
[14] he accused
lied to Dr Dayna about the deceased being removed from the shack
after birth by his father and grandmother
and returned with a
breathing problem. Although she denied this in court, I have no
reason to reject the testimony of Dr Dayna.
This information was
noted in her clinical notes that she made during the interview with
the accused. She was a good witness. She
did not exaggerate her
evidence.
[15] The accused
also informed Dr Stevens during the interview that the deceased could
have been injured on the rough floor
inside the shack. That is not
probable because Drs Sarah and Dayna described the injuries as deep
lacerations or penetrating wounds
with sharp edges inflicted using a
sharp object. They were not superficial wounds. The trachea,
oesophagus and vocal cords were
cut into half.
[16] I observed all
the witnesses and the accused during their testimonies. I found all
the state witnesses to be credible
witnesses. They corroborated each
other in material respects. The few contradictions in their
testimonies are not material. J[...]
was also corroborated by the
accused in material respects.
[17] The accused
manufactured her evidence during the trial. The version inconsistent
with her evidence was put to the state
witnesses that as a caring
mother she took the deceased to hospital because she observed at home
that he had a breathing problem.
She testified that she observed for
the first time inside the car on the way to Rahima Moosa hospital
that the deceased had a breathing
problem. J[...] testified that he
left the shack and went to organize a car to take the deceased and
accused to hospital because
he was shocked after becoming aware that
the accused gave birth at home, and he had never seen something like
that before. This
version was not disputed by the accused when J[...]
testified. There was no discussion between J[...] and the accused
about organizing
a car. But during her testimony the accused claimed
that she was the one that advised J[...] to organize an ambulance or
a car
to take them to hospital.
[18] The accused
testified that she did not know that she was pregnant. She stated
that the liquid substance would come out
of her breasts only when she
was pregnant. J[...] stated in his statement which was admitted as
evidence in court that he started
dating the accused from December
2023. In January 2024 while they were in bed, he touched the
accused’s breast, and a liquid
substance came out. He asked the
accused what it was, and she answered that she always had a liquid
substance coming out of her
breasts and it was normal. It was at
night, and he could not see if it was water or milk. Dr Stevens
testified that considering
that the deceased was born at 36 weeks and
weighed 2305 grams, it is highly unlikely that the accused did not
know that she was
pregnant. For these reasons, I reject the accused’s
version that she did not know that she was pregnant.
[19] In my view the
only reasonable inference consistent with the above proven facts is
that when J[...] left the shack to
organize a car to take the
deceased and accused to Rahima Moosa hospital, the accused inflicted
the four penetrating wounds in
the neck of the deceased
intentionally.
[20] It was argued
that the postmortem report mentioned only 3 wounds and not four
wounds. Drs Sarah and Dayna observed the
fresh four penetrating
wounds during the examination of the deceased’s body on 3 March
2024. They described the nature of
all four wounds, the positions
where they were inflicted and their sizes. They were treating
doctors. Their evidence was not disputed.
I accept their evidence in
this regard. Furthermore, there is no discrepancy between the
postmortem and their evidence on the existence
of the fatal
penetrating wound to the neck that caused death.
[20] I now deal
with the issue of the new intervening act. It was not the accused’s
testimony that there was a new intervening
act that broke a cause of
causation of death. However, it was argued on her behalf that an
obstruction in the tracheostomy medical
device inserted into the open
wound to maintain airway ventilation which culminated in terminal
hypoxic brain injury due to oxygen
deprivation was an intervening act
which broke a causation.
[21]
In
MEC for Health Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
[4]
,
it was held as follows:
“
It
is trite that causation involves two distinct enquiries: factual and
legal causation. Generally, the enquiry as to factual causation
is
whether, but for the defendant’s wrongful act, the plaintiff
would not have sustained the loss in question; whether a
postulated
cause can be identified is a causa sine qua non of the loss. The
second enquiry, legal causation, is whether the wrongful
act is
linked sufficiently closely or directly to the loss for legal
liability to ensue; or whether the loss is too remote.”
[22] The
penetrating wounds were repaired surgically and some healed. However,
Dr Barnes who oversaw the treatment of the
deceased until he died,
testified that the deceased’s condition was critical and he was
kept alive by the machines until
his death. He could not breathe on
his own. He died as a result of being stabbed repeatedly in his neck.
She agreed with Dr Mantanga
that the cause of death was the
penetrating wound of the neck. The accused admitted the cause of
death in the
section 220
admissions.
[23] I find that
the hypoxic brain injury did not break a chain of causation. The
penetrating wound of the neck inflicted
by the accused is linked
sufficiently closely to the death of the deceased. It is not too
remote. The penetrating wound of the
neck was a direct cause of
death. I reject the argument by defence that the hypoxic brain injury
broke the chain of causation.
ORDER
[..]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
1.
The accused is found guilty of murder read with
section 51(1)
and
Part I
of Schedule 2 of the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 105 of 1997
,
as amended.
MMP
Mdalana-Mayisela
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division,
Johannesburg
Date of
delivery:
10 March 2024
Appearances:
On behalf of the
State:
Adv C Ryan
Instructed
by:
National Prosecuting Authority
On behalf of the
Accused:
Ms L Qoqo
Instructed
by:
Legal Aid SA
[1]
R
v Difford
1937 AD 377
; R v Ndhlovu 1945 AD 369.
[2]
(41/1449/2005)
[2013] ZAGPJHC 43 (7 March 2013).
[3]
1996
(2) SACR 1
(A) at 8 paragraph C-D.
[4]
1221/2015
[2016] ZASCA 176
(26 November 2016).
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