Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 206South Africa
S v Mdlane (SS085/2022; 10/2/11/1 (2022/106)) [2023] ZAGPJHC 206 (8 March 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S v Mdlane (SS085/2022; 10/2/11/1 (2022/106)) [2023] ZAGPJHC 206 (8 March 2023)
S v Mdlane (SS085/2022; 10/2/11/1 (2022/106)) [2023] ZAGPJHC 206 (8 March 2023)
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sino date 8 March 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: SS085/2022
DPP
Ref: 10/2/11/1 (2022/106)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE:
08 MARCH 2023
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
and
MDLANE:
GIDEON SABATA
ACCUSED
JUDGEMENT
ALLY
AJ
[1]
The Accused, Mr Gideon Sabata Mdlane, has been arraigned before this
Court on the following charges:
1.1.
Count 1
: Murder of
G[....] M[....]1,
an adult female
person, read with the provisions of Section 51(1) of Act No 105 of
1997 and Part 1 of Schedule 2 of Act 105 of 1997
as amended by
Section 15 of Act 12 of 2021;
1.2.
Count 2
: Murder of
L[....] Y[....]1 M[....]2,
a minor
female child born on 30 January 2016, read with the provisions of
Section 51(1) of Act No 105 of 1997 and Part 1 of Schedule
2 of Act
105 of 1997 as amended by Section 15 of Act 12 of 2021;
1.3.
Count 3
: Murder of
K[....] Y[....]2 M[....]3,
a minor
female child born on 18 November 2020, read with the provisions of
Section 51(1) of Act No 105 of 1997 and Part 1 of Schedule
2 of Act
105 of 1997 as amended by Section 15 of Act 12 of 2021;
1.4.
Count
4: Attempted murder of
N[....] M[....]4,
a minor
female child born on 8 February 2019, read with the provisions of
Section 51(1) of Act No 105 of 1997 and Part 1 of Schedule
2 of Act
105 of 1997 as amended by Section 15 of Act 12 of 2021.
[2]
The State is represented by Adv. R. Barnard and the Defence by Ms
Bovu from Legal Aid South Africa.
[3]
The Accused pleaded guilty on all four counts in terms of
Section
112(2)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, as amended, and
indicated that his guilty plea must be read with
Section 51(2)
of Act
105 of 1997. A statement in this regard was handed in as Exhibit “A”
[4]
The State accepted the facts placed before the Court as admissions in
terms of
Section 220
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, as
amended, and indicated that they will argue that the Accused must be
found guilty as charged, in other words, on all counts
but read with
Section 51(1)
of Act 105 of 1997.
[5]
The State and the Defence then presented argument for and against the
guilty plea as tendered.
[6]
The facts as outlined by the Accused in respect of the abovementioned
plea of guilty are as follows:
6.1.
On 12 May 2022 he was at [....] P[....] DZ[....]in Soweto, a
sub-district of Johannesburg Central;
6.2.
On the said date he admits that he unlawfully and intentionally
killed the following deceased:
6.2.1.
G[….] M[….]1,
an adult female person;
6.2.2.
L[....] Y[....]1 M[....]2,
a minor female child;
6.2.3.
K[....] Y[....]2 M[....]3,
a minor female child.
6.3.
He further admits that on the same date as above, that is, 12 May
2022, he unlawfully and intentionally attempted
to kill
N[....]
M[....]4,
a minor female child.
6.4.
The Accused resided with the three deceased and the complainant in
Count 4, the attempted murder charge.
6.5.
The deceased in Count 1,
G[....] M[....]1
was married to the
Accused by customary law and two children were born of this
relationship,
K[....] Y[....]2 M[....]3
and
N[....]
M[....]4
.
6.6.
The third child,
L[....] Y[....]1 M[....]2
was the Accused’s
step-child whom he raised with his wife.
6.7.
On 12 May 2022 the deceased, the Accused’s wife, came home late
from work and when the Accused confronted
her, she stated that she
knocked off late.
6.8.
The Accused went out to a friend and on his return, he was in the
sitting-room and his wife was in the bedroom
and the door was
slightly opened. The Accused overheard his wife talking to someone on
the phone saying she was tired of staying
with an old man and that he
must go back to her parents and take the cows he paid for lobola.
6.9.
When he approached her about the telephone conversation, she told him
that she was talking to her boyfriend.
He tried to grab the phone in
order to talk to the person but his wife threw it on the floor. He
had an argument with the deceased
about the telephone conversation.
6.10.
The Accused went out of the bedroom and was on his way to the garage
with the intention of cooling off when he noticed
a knife in the
kitchen. He then changed his mind, took the knife and went back to
the bedroom with the intention to stab his wife
and inflict the pain
which she also emotionally caused him. When he entered the bedroom
with the knife, his wife pushed him when
she saw the knife and the
Accused fell against the wardrobe with the knife. He stood up and
took the knife from the floor and wanted
to stab his wife.
6.11.
The Accused and his wife tussled, as he states it, over the knife
until he managed to be in possession of the knife.
He stabbed his
wife, firstly on the shoulders so that she would not attack him and
thereafter he stabbed her several times on the
body with the
intention to kill her. At the time when he was stabbing his wife, she
was not defending herself. After he stabbed
her, she sat on the bed
and passed on and fell on the floor.
6.12.
When the Accused noticed she was dead, he thought it was better to
also take his own life to be with her by committing
suicide. However,
he also thought that he would not be able to leave his children
behind as orphans and he had to kill them also.
6.13.
The Accused admits that by killing his wife, he did not act in
self-defence as the deceased was not a threat at the
time.
6.15.
The Accused admits the cause of death as outlined in the post-mortem
report, Exhibit “B”, of Dr M.A. Ramela,
and that the
cause of death was determined to be that of multiple stabbing.
6.16.
The Accused then states that he proceeded to stab each of the
children more than once on the body with the knife with
the intention
to kill them. He cannot recall which child was stabbed first and
last. He recalls that he was stabbing them one by
one more than once
on the body. The Accused states that he did not notice which parts of
the body he was stabbing.
6.17.
At the time of the stabbing, the children were crying and were unable
to defend themselves. When he noticed that the
children were no
longer crying and were dead, he took all of them and put them on the
bed. He further states that he was not aware
that
N[....]
M[....]4
, the complainant in Count 4, was still alive as she
looked like she was dead like the others.
6.18.
The Accused admits the post-mortem report, Exhibit “C” as
being the report of Dr K.S. Carson and admits
that the cause of death
of
L[....] Y[....]1 M[....]2,
was determined to be
‘penetrating stab wound of the chest’.
6.19.
The Accused admits the post-mortem report, Exhibit “D” as
being the report of Dr F. Nciweni and admits that
the cause of death
of
Khanyisa Lamile Mdlane,
was determined to be ‘abdominal
penetrating incised wound’.
6.20.
The Accused further admits that
N[....] M[....]4
survived and
was admitted to Chris Hani Hospital where she was examined by Dr N.C.
Mashaba whose report is marked Exhibit “E”.
The Accused
admits the contents of the said Exhibit “E”.
6.21.
The Accused admits that he did not act in self-defence and
furthermore admits he inflicted the injuries sustained by
the
deceased in Counts 1 to 3 and that the injuries caused their deaths.
6.22.
The Accused admits that he had no right to assault and attempt to
kill
N[....] M[....]4,
the complainant in Count 4.
6.23.
The Accused admits the correctness of the crime scene photographs
marked as Exhibit “F” but has no knowledge
of how the two
knives depicted in photo 9 of Exhibit “F” ended up in his
bedroom.
6.24.
The Accused furthermore stated that his attempt at committing suicide
firstly, by hanging himself from a plank in the
ceiling and secondly
by drinking Jeyes fluid mixed with car battery water, was
unsuccessful.
6.25.
Finally, the Accused was aware that his actions were wrongful,
unlawful, and punishable by law.
[7]
The question that arises, which is common cause to the State and the
Defence, is whether the above stated
facts amount to murder and
attempted murder as read with Section 51(1) of Act 105 of 1997.
[8]
Section 51(1) of Act 105 of 1997 provides as follows:
“
Notwithstanding
any other law, but subject to subsections (3) and (6), a regional
court or a High Court shall sentence a person
it has convicted of an
offence referred to Part 1 of Schedule 2 to imprisonment for life.”
[9]
Part 1 of Schedule 2 of Act 105 of 1997 provides as follows:
“
Murder,
when –
(a)
It was planned or premeditated;”
[10]
The rest of the provisions of Part 1 of Schedule 2 are not relevant
for purposes of this judgement.
[11]
Now it should be noted that the words ‘planned’ and
‘premeditated’ are not defined in Act 105
of 1997.
[12]
The Court was referred to the case of Kekana v S
[1]
by the State to serve as a guide in dealing with the present case.
The Appellant in the Kekana matter was faced with a direction
by the
Court of Appeal in terms of
Section 322
(6) of the
Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977
, as amended, which relates to a Court of Appeal
increasing a sentence.
[13]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in Kekana found it misplaced of an
Accused to plead guilty to murder but that the guilty
plea must be
read with
Section 51(2)
of Act 105 of 1997. The reasoning of the
Court is that murder is murder and aggravating and extenuating
circumstances are relevant
to sentence. An Accused must, if so
advised, plead guilty based on facts and a Court must then find such
an accused guilty based
on the facts placed before the Court.
[14]
The Accused in the present case before this Court, has pleaded guilty
and placed certain facts before the Court. Ms Bovu
on behalf of the
Accused, submits that based on the facts placed before the Court, the
murder was neither ‘pre-planned’
nor ‘premeditated’.
[15]
The State on the other hand argues that the same facts as placed
before this Court by the accused, amount to ‘pre-planned’
and/or ‘premeditated murder’ and the accused should be
found guilty as such. It should be noted that the said Act does
not
define the concepts ‘pre-planned’ and ‘premeditated’.
[16]
The second reason for the State referring this Court to the Kekana
matter was the reference therein to another Kekana
[2]
matter
[3]
:
“…
In
this regard, one must bear in mind what this Court said in S v Kekana
[2014] SCA 158 at para 13, that premeditation does not
necessarily
entail that the accused should have thought or planned his or her
action for a long period of time in advance before
carrying out his
or her plan. This is because ‘even a few minutes are enough to
carry out a premeditated action’.”
[17]
I align myself with the explanation given to the word ‘premeditated’
by the Supreme Court of Appeal
[4]
.
The question that remains is whether the actions of the Accused in
the present matter amounted to ‘premeditation’
as
explained in the Kekana case.
[18]
I am of the view that in respect of all counts, the Accused’s
actions in this case evidenced ‘premeditation’.
In this
regard, he was on his way to the garage when he changed his mind and
decided that he wanted to inflict pain on his wife.
He did this with
the express intention, in his own words
[5]
,
of killing his wife. He disavows any defence in the said killing. It
is clear from the post-mortem report, Exhibit “B”
that
multiple stab wounds were inflicted on the body of his wife,
G[....]
M[....]1.
There
is no evidence whatsoever, to gainsay the intention in this
particular case, namely, that of
dolus
directus
.
The accused must therefore be found guilty of murder and the
intention being
dolus
directus
.
[19]
Insofar as the minor children are concerned, the Accused again in his
own words, decides that the children should not
be left orphans and
they must be killed. This Court can think of no other intention in
the circumstances of the killing of
L[....] Y[....]1 M[....]2
and
K[....] Y[....]2 M[....]3
than that of
dolus directus
.
The Accused wanted them dead and stabbed them with the intention that
they must die. Accordingly, the Accused must be found guilty
of the
murder of
L[....] Y[....]1 M[....]2
and
K[....] Y[....]2
M[....]3
with the intention being
dolus directus
.
[20]
Finally, in respect of
N[....] M[....]4,
as with the killing
of her siblings, the Accused had the direct intention of killing her
also. It is by the grace of God that this
child is alive today.
Accordingly, the Accused must be found guilty of the attempted murder
of
Noxolo
with the intention being
dolus directus
.
[21]
It is the judgement of this Court, accordingly, that the Accused Mr
Gideon Sabata Mdlane is found guilty of murder, with
direct intent,
of the following persons:
21.1.
G[....] M[....]1
21.2.
L[....] Y[....]1 M[....]2
21.3.
K[....] Y[....]2 M[....]3
[22]
It is further the judgement of this Court that the Accused, Gideon
Sabata Mdlane is guilty of the attempted murder with
direct intent of
N[....] M[....]4.
G
ALLY
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
For
the State:
Adv. R. Barnard
DPP
Johannesburg
For
the Accused:
Ms S. Bovu
Legal
Aid South Africa
[1]
2018
SCA 148
[2]
Kekana
v S 2014 SCA 158
[3]
Kekana
v S 2018 supra @ para 37
[4]
Kekana
v S 2014 supra
[5]
Section
112 statement para 7.4
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