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Hands off Spouseās Phone, Court Rules
By: Baston Mfune
A High Court Judge has ruled that it is illegal for spouses to pryĀ Ā into each otherās cell phones without permission.
Hands Off Spousesā Phones
Mzuzu High Court judge Dindiswayo Madisi said evidence obtainedĀ through prying into a cell phone should not stand in court as it wouldĀ have been illegally obtained.
Judge Madisi made the landmark ruling as he sentenced FortunateĀ Mkandawire (36) of Zolozolo, Mzuzu for stabbing her husband to deathĀ while their eight-year-old daughter watched, because he refused to show herĀ aĀ āsuspiciousā text message that he had received on his cell phone.
Fortunate fatally stabbed Petros Mwenelupembe (55) in February lastĀ year, in a dispute over the text message which her husband hadĀ received on his cell phone.
Judge Madisi convicted Fortunate of culpable homicide and sentencedĀ her to 10 years in jail. He suspended two years for five years on condition that she does notĀ commit a similar crime within the time period.
The judge said snooping into someoneās phone contravenes Section 57(d)Ā of the Constitution, which guarantees every person the right not toĀ have the privacy of their communications infringed upon.
Judge Madisi: No Law allows eavesdropping
āThere is no law which provides that a husband or wife has a right toĀ infringe on the privacy of the otherās communications. WhateverĀ message which the deceased received was not intended for Fortunate,Ā otherwise Mwenelupembe would have conveyed the message to her. SheĀ (Fortunate) could simply not respect her husbandās right to privacy,āĀ said Judge Madisi
It was, however, not mentioned in court the reason why FortunateĀ demanded to read the message.
āFortunateās insistence that Mwenelupembe should divulge aĀ communication made to him on his phone was in itself an infringementĀ upon his right to privacy of communication,ā said the judge.
Judge Madisi said Mwenelupembe was lawfully entitled to refuse toĀ divulgeĀ the message he had received on his phone to his wife.
āIn a way, by insisting that Mwenelupembe discloses the message,Ā Fortunate was the cause or torched the altercation which ended up withĀ disastrous consequences. It is the courtās view that society shouldĀ learn to respect privacy of communications. Many a time, the cell phoneĀ has been a cause of matrimonial quarrels and domestic disputes becauseĀ couplesĀ do not respect each otherās right to communications made orĀ received,ā said the judge.
Judge Madisi said the courts continues to be inundated with casesĀ involving spouses invading the private communications of the other.
āThis practice should be deprecated as it amounts to investigating orĀ eavesdroppingĀ on one another. Usually, spouses who do this will beĀ aiming to find evidence of wrongful conduct by the other.
Eavesdropping on anotherās cell phone is evidence of lack of trust inĀ that other person. The courts are flooded with cases where couplesĀ or spouses seek to prove wrongful conduct by the other using evidenceĀ in the form of messages retrieved from another spouseās phone,ā heĀ said.
The court heard that on February 26, 2015 shortly afterĀ 7pm, theĀ couple was in their bedroom when Mwenelupembe received a message on hisĀ mobileĀ phone.
Fortunate demanded to read the message, but her husband refused. HeĀ also declined to divulge the contents of the message.
Kitchen Knife: Used as a murder weapon
She got angry resulting in a dispute. The court heard that a fightĀ ensued and Mwenelupembe indiscriminately assaulted his wife.
Fortunate rushed to the kitchen and returned armed with three kitchenĀ knives, which she used to stab her husband.
The court heard that Mwenelupembe died on the same day afterĀ succumbing to the sustained injuries.
A neighbour, who heard Mwenelupembe screaming, reported the matter toĀ theĀ police leading to Fortunateās arrest.
Post mortem results showed that the cause of death was due toĀ post-hemorrhagic shock, lacerations, bruises, abrasions, stab andĀ cutsĀ consistent with a use of a sharp instrument by force.
Ā Hands off Spouseās Phone, Court Rules was originally published on The Malawi Star