Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 818South Africa
Nooe v Minister of Police and Another (2021/7425) [2022] ZAGPJHC 818 (30 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 September 2022
Headnotes
at para [17] that:
Judgment
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## Nooe v Minister of Police and Another (2021/7425) [2022] ZAGPJHC 818 (30 September 2022)
Nooe v Minister of Police and Another (2021/7425) [2022] ZAGPJHC 818 (30 September 2022)
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sino date 30 September 2022
FLYNOTES:
NOTICE TO ORGANS OF STATE
Civil
procedure – Organs of state – Notice and prescribed
period for service – Claim on unlawful arrest
and detention
and malicious prosecution – When debt became due –
When charges were withdrawn – Legal Proceedings
against
Certain Organs of State Act 40 of 2002, s 3.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO. 2021/7425
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED:
YES
27
SEPTEMBER 2022
In the matter between:
TEBOGO
EDWIN NOOE
PLAINTIFF
And
MINISTER
OF POLICE
FIRST DEFENDANT
THE
DPP
SECOND DEFENDANT
REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
Thupaatlase
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff issued summons against both the first defendant
(Minister of Police) and second defendant (The Director of Public
Prosecutions) for damages arising from alleged unlawful arrest,
detention, and malicious prosecution.
[2]
The summons was met with a special plea alleging that the plaintiff
has failed to send a notice within the prescribed period,
in that the
plaintiff failed to comply with the provisions of Section 3 of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings against Certain
Organs of State Act,
No. 40 of 2002
[1]
(the Act). The
contention was that such notice was served out of time. In terms of
the Act such notice must be served within a
prescribed period of six
months from the date on which the debt became due as prescribed by
Section 3(2) of the Act.
[3]
The Act also provides for a procedure to be followed where there is
allegations of non-compliance with the stipulated time periods.
Such
procedure for condonation is laid down in Section 3 (4) (2)
[2]
of the Act. It is clear from case-law that there is unanimity about
the approach to be followed when dealing with such applications.
See
for example cases of
Madinda
v and Minister of Safety
[3]
,
Minister of Security v De Witt and De Wet
[4]
v Minister van Veiligheid en Sekuriteit
[5]
.
[4]
However, the issue of condonation did not arise in this matter. This
is so because no such application was before the court.
This aspect
is mentioned merely because it was suggested by counsel for the
defendants during argument that the plaintiff should
have applied for
condonation.
[5]
The Plaintiff submitted that it was unnecessary to take such a
procedural step because the notice was served within the prescribed
period.
[6]
At the commencement of the proceedings it was agreed between parties
that a special plea should be adjudicated before the trial
on the
merits could commence. The court was therefore required to rule on
the special plea.
[7]
After arguments were presented on both sides, the court gave an
ex
temporae
judgment and ruled in favour of the plaintiff and
dismissed the special plea. The defendant subsequently requested
reasons for
such a decision and what follows are such reasons.
Common
cause facts
[8]
In order to put the matter in a proper context and to show the
reasons why the special plea was dismissed it is perhaps apposite
that the sequence of events be narrated in much more details. The
following facts are common cause between the plaintiff and the
defendants that:
8.1.
The plaintiff was arrested on the 16/03/19. This was after the
plaintiff was pointed out by the complainant in a criminal complaint.
The arrest was executed without a warrant of arrest.
8.2.
The plaintiff appeared in court on the 18/03/2019 and was remanded in
custody for a bail hearing. He was subsequently released
on bail on
01/04/2019.
8.3.
The criminal charges against the plaintiff were withdrawn on the
26/08/2020.
8.4.
The plaintiff through his legal representative served a Section 3
Notice on the Provincial Police Commissioner on the 26/10/2020
and on
the Minister of Police on 11/11/2020. A similar notice was served on
the second defendant on 27/10/2020.
8.5.
The summons was subsequently served on the first defendant on
18/02/2021 and on the second defendant on 19/02/2021. The defendants
filed a plea in response to the summons. The plea incorporated a
special plea.
[9]
As already alluded the essence of the special plea was that there was
non-compliance with the provisions of Section 3 of the
Act. The
defendants contended that the notices were served out of time.
According to the defendants the debt became due on the
day the
plaintiff was arrested and that the computation of the six-month
period started to run from that date.
[10]
On the other,the plaintiff contends that the notices were served
within the time period prescribed by the Act. The mainstay
of his
argument was that the debt became due after the charges were
withdrawn.
[11]
At the commencement of the proceedings counsel for the defendants
abandoned special plea as it relates to the second defendant.
She
conceded that notice was served within the prescribed period. This
was relating to the claim of malicious prosecution.
The
Law
[12]
It will be prudent to canvass the legal position in order to
understand why I dismissed the special plea raised by the first
defendant. This is also important as there are two decisions in this
division that have dealt with the same legal point raised
by the
defendant, and each court came to a different conclusion. This will
also help to explain why I decided to follow one decision
and not the
other.
[13]
In respect of the phrase ‘debt arising’ guidance is
sought from the various decisions dealing with the same phrase
in the
context of Prescription Act
[6]
.
The court shall borrow liberally from those decisions in its
discussion of the issues raised. The phrase is not defined in the
Prescription Act nor in the Act.
[14]
In the case of
Mtokonya
v Minister of Police
[7]
the court stated that:
‘’
Section 12 (3) does
not require the creditor to have knowledge of any right to sue the
debtor nor does it require him or her to
have knowledge of legal
conclusions that may be drawn from ‘’ the facts from
which the debt arises’’. Case
law is to the effect that
the facts from which the debt arises are facts which a creditor would
need to prove in order to establish
the liability of the debtor’’
.
[15]
In the case of
Minister
of Finance v Gore NO
[8]
the court commented as follows:
“
This
Court has in a series of decisions emphasised that time begins to run
against the creditor when it has minimum facts that are
necessary to
institute action. The running of prescription is not postponed until
a creditor becomes aware of the full extent of
its legal rights’’.
[16]
Another case that dealt with the question as to when debt is due and
when prescription starts to run against the debtor is
Yellow
Star Properties 1020 (Pty) Ltd v MEC: Department of Development
Planning and Local Government, Gauteng
[9]
the court commented as follows:
“
It
may be that the applicant had not appreciated the legal consequences
which flowed from the facts but its failure to do so does
not delay
the date of prescription.’’
[17]
In the case of
Eskom
v Bojanala Platinum District Municipality
[10]
the court stated that:
“
If
such a construction were to be placed on the provisions of section
12(3) grave absurdity would arise. These provisions regulating
prescription of claims would be nugatory and ineffectual.
Prescription would be rendered elastic and contingent upon the
claimant
subjective sense of legal certainty. On this contention
every claimant would be entitled to have certainty before debt it
seeks
to enforce becomes or is deemed to be due. A claimant cannot
blissfully await authoritative, final, and binding judicial
pronouncements
before its debt becomes due, or before it is deemed to
have knowledge of the facts from which the debt arises’’.
[18]
It is trite law that legal certainty is not a requirement. The
plaintiff only needs minimal facts. As stated in the case of
Johannes
G Coetzee and Another v Le Roux and Another
[11]
the SCA per Molefe AJA
stated as follows after considering a number of authorities including
some quoted in this judgment and concluded
as follows:
“
These
numerous authorities cited indicate that the exercise to determine
and distinguish a question of fact from a question of law
when
determining whether prescription has started to run, is not an easy
task that should be dealt with mechanically. It cannot
simply be
predetermined on the basis of previous cases. Zondo J appreciated
this difficulty when he stated as follows in Mtokonya:
‘’
The distinction between a question of law and fact is not always easy
to make. How difficult it is will vary from
case to case’’
.
[19]
As already stated the first defendant based her argument in an
unreported judgment of this division. I was urged to follow
the
decision. The case in point is
Mataboge and Another v Minister
of Police and Another
(16/17654) delivered on 25/08/2017).
The court held at para [17] that:
‘’
In Makhwelo v Minister
of Safety and Security Spilg J analysed previous cases on the
question when the date of a debts is due. The
learned judge concluded
that where all the facts giving rise to the debt were known and were
not dependent on the state of mind
of the offending authority, the
debt is due on the date the offending conduct was committed. Unlawful
arrest falls within this
category’’.
[20]
At para [18] of the judgment the following is further stated:
‘’
Spilg J
held further that in a case of a claim for bodily injury the debt
only becomes due when the identity of the wrongdoer can
be reasonably
ascertained. The claim for general damages in this case arose on the
same day as the arrest and the Plaintiffs knew
who the offending
authority is, that is the First Defendant’s servants. The claim
also arose on 18 April 2013
[12]
’’.
[21]
It is at this juncture that I respectfully differ from the
Mataboge
judgment
.
It is my humblest view that a proper reading of the
Makhwelo
v Minister of Safety and Security
[13]
does not support the conclusion reached in
Mataboge
.
I shall
attempt to show the reason why I hold such a view.
[22]
As in this case, the courts in
Makhwelo
and
Mataboge
were required to decide whether Section 3 notice was defective for
having been served outside the prescribed period of six months.
The
court in the former concluded that the debt became due upon
withdrawal of charges against the plaintiff whereas in the latter
the
debt was found to have been due at the time of his arrest. It is my
view that the conclusion that the debt was due at the time
of arrest
is untenable and if it prevails will present serious difficulties in
practice. This may even implicate section 34 of
the Constitution
[14]
.
[23]
The court in
Makhwelo
undertook a review of decisions
dealing with this subject and in the course of its analysis it stated
as follows:
“
As
to the first requirement of knowledge of the material facts: It is
difficult to appreciate that at the time of the arrest or
even during
detention the suspect would have sight of the docket in order to form
a view that the arresting officer did not have
reasonable suspicion
that an offence had been committed. The officer may have received a
fabricated complaint from alleged eyewitnesses
who were intent on
falsely incriminating the suspect for their own ends. Accordingly,
the complainant would not know at the time
of arrest whether the
arresting officer was reasonably relying on the accounts of a
complainant who turned out to be fabricating
events (in which case
the claim would lie against the complainant and not the police), or
whether the arresting officer in fact
did not have reasonable
suspicion that the suspect had committed the offence. Since the
docket is not available to an accused until
the investigation is
completed and is presented with the indictment; it is most likely
that the identity of the complainant or
the evidence that was
available when the arrest was made would be known to a would-be
plaintiff. Without that knowledge a plaintiff
cannot assume that the
arresting officer was acting unlawfully when effecting the arrest
rather than that the complainant had falsified
a charge against
him’’
[15]
.
[24]
The court continued to further demonstrate the difficulties faced by
such a plaintiff, in claims of unlawful arrest and detention
by
stating the following:
‘’
Unique
considerations are involved in cases of wrongful arrest and detention
because other delicts involve either physical injury,
damage to or
loss of property or involve objectively ascertainable failure to
comply with formalities that render the action unlawful,
and which
are not dependent on the outcome of criminal proceedings (e.g.,
Slomowitz). In the case of arrest and detention there
is deprivation
of liberty and loss of dignity which will be justified if there is
conviction. It is difficult to appreciate how
a debt can be
immediately claimable and therefore justiciable-which is the second
requirement for a debt being due (see Deloitte
Haskins) – prior
to the outcome of the criminal trial, or prior to charges being
dropped or otherwise withdrawn
[16]
’’.
Analysis
[25]
The question that the court needed to answer was when did the ‘a
debt become due’ in terms of Section 3(2) of the
Act where the
claim is one for unlawful arrest and detention. In order to resolve
the issue, it is imperative to correctly classify
the claim. The
claim is for wrongful deprivation of liberty and arrest and therefore
actio
iniuriarum.
The
actio iniuriarum is primarily aimed at providing an individual with
satisfaction for an iniuria, in other words the wrongful
and
intentional infringement of a personality right
[17]
[26]
It is under the Aquilian action as opposed to
actio
iniuriarum
that
Mataboge
appeared to have relied in order to conclude that the debt became due
at the time of arrest. However, as already determined the
factual
matrix points to the action being
actio
iniuriarum
.
The debt became due when the charges were withdrawn. The court in
Mataboge
referred to ‘
in
a case of a claim for bodily injury the debt only becomes due when
the identity of the wrongdoer can be reasonably ascertained’
[18]
.
In the
particulars of claim there is no reference to bodily injury or
injuries suffered by the plaintiff
.
[27]
In a claim for damages for malicious prosecution the ‘debt’
becomes due when all the elements required to prove
a malicious
prosecution are established. This point was conceded by counsel for
the defendant in respect of the second defendant.
It is my view that
by parity of reasoning the same should follow with regard to claim
based on unlawful arrest and detention. I
agree with Spilg J in
Makhwelo
that ‘
Unique considerations are
involved in cases of wrongful arrest and detention
’.
[28]
The objective knowledge of unlawfulness as a result of lack of
reasonable suspicion on the part of the arresting officer, who
arrest
without a warrant of arrest only manifests after acquittal, or
withdrawal of charges. This so because during the trial the
arresting
officer can still justify his action and show that he acted
reasonably. See also
Human
v Minister of Safety and Security
[19]
.
[29].
The Act was enacted in order to alert an organ of State to a
contemplated action against it. It cannot be expected that whenever
police effect an arrest, then immediately a notice needs to given
that a delictual claim is contemplated. The deluge of such notices
will render the process unmanageable and impossible to administer.
This could not have been the intention when the Act was enacted.
The
possibility of motion court rolls getting overwhelmed by condonation
applications cannot be discounted. That will render the
administration justice ineffectual. The courts are already
experiencing huge backlogs. The rationale for the enactment of the
Act will be nugatory and inconsequential to deal with its stated
objective.
[30]
I am fortified in my view by what the court stated in
Mohlomi
v Minister of Defence
[20]
that notices similar to the one required by Section 3(1) have been
part of our ‘statutory terrain’ for a long time
and
reason for:
“
demanding
prior notification of any intention to sue such an organ of
government is that with its extensive activities and large
staff,
which tends to shift, it needs the opportunity to investigate claims
laid against it, to consider them responsibly and to
decide before
getting embroiled in litigation at public expense, whether it ought
to accept or endeavour to settle them’’.
[31]
I therefore conclude that at the time of an arrest and detention, the
plaintiff did not have all the facts giving rise to the
debt. The
arrest and detention is a continuous act. I refer to the case
of
Unilever Bestfoods Robertson (Pty) Ltd v Soomar
[21]
the court stated as follows:
“
Lemue’s
case indicates what one at least of the policy considerations is:
a court hearing a malicious prosecution case should not be called
on
to prejudge the findings of the criminal court. Equally in my view,
it is clear that an accused should not be allowed to launch
what
amounts to pre-emptive strike against a prosecution pending against
him by suing the complainant for damages”.
[32]
The
Unilever
decision which was quoted with approval by
Spilg J further states as follows:”
Because
he knew all the facts necessary to establish this claim (on the
assumption that I have made that he has a claim) more three
years
before the proceedings commenced,
the only basis he can
resist a plea of prescription is by pointing to an essential element
of his cause of action which only came
into existence less than three
years before the institution of the proceedings
” –
my underlining
.
The court stated in the same
paragraph that
: “While a prosecution is actually pending its
result cannot be allowed to be pre-judged in the civil action. A
different
reason for the rule was given by Solomon J in Bacon v
Nettleton (supra). He said (at 142-3):
“
The
proceedings from arrest to acquittal must be regarded as continuous,
and no personal injury has been done to the accused until
the
prosecution determined by his discharge”
[22]
.
[33]
It is clear from the facts that the investigations conducted by the
police formed the basis on which the decisions were taken
to arrest
the plaintiff without a warrant and to ultimately to prosecute him,
until the matter was withdrawn. The facts to sustain
the claims that
his arrest and detention were unlawful and therefore actionable only
became known to him when the charges were
withdrawn. Until that time
the plaintiff could not be launch any action against the first
defendant.
[34]
I find further support from the case of
Thompson
v Minister of Police
[23]
where it was held that:
“
In an action
based on malicious prosecution it has been held that no action will
lie until the criminal proceedings have terminated
in favour of the
plaintiff. This is so because one of the essential requisites of the
action is proof of a want of reasonable and
probable cause on the
part of the defendant, while a prosecution is actually pending its
result cannot be all owed to be prejudged
by civil action (Lemue v
Zwartbooi supra at p.407). The action therefore only arises after
criminal proceedings against the plaintiff
have terminated in his
favour or where Attorney-General has declined to prosecute. To my
mind the same principles must apply to
an action based on malicious
arrest and detention where a prosecution ensues on such arrest as
happened in in the present case.
The proceeding from arrest
to acquittal must be regarded as continuous, and no action for
personal injury done to the accused person
will arise until the
prosecution has been determined by his discharged”. –
my
underlining
[35]
It is my considered view that if the contention of the defendant was
to be upheld, then it will be contrary to the law as it
stands and
will militate against the practical application and implementation of
the notice as contemplated in the Act.
[36]
Although generally a cause of action in delict arises when the
wrongful act is committed or wrongful omission occurs, it is
clear
that that there are deviations from the general rule. The plaintiff
in this case was not dilatory. Furthermore, in the case
of wrongful
arrest and detention without a warrant the plaintiff must prove that
the arresting officer had no reasonable suspicion
that he had or was
going to commit a schedule offence. The plaintiff must also be able
to quantify the damages suffered
[24]
.
[38]
The position would have been different if the claim was based only on
unlawful or wrongful arrest. In that case the delict
is committed by
the illegal arrest of the plaintiff without the due process of the
law, i.e., the injury lies in the arrest without
legal justification,
and the cause of action arises as soon as that unlawful arrest has
been made, and, in order to comply with
the requirements of section 3
of the Act, the envisaged notice must be served within six months of
the debt becoming due. A clear
distinction must be made between an
unlawful arrest where no prosecution does not ensue and where a
prosecutorial decision is taken
to prosecute, and charges are
eventually withdrawn.
[39]
In the latter scenario, the proceedings from arrest to acquittal and
or any other outcome like a subsequent withdrawal by the
prosecution
must be regarded as continuous, and as such no action for personal
injury done to the accused person will arise until
such time that the
plaintiff gains ‘knowledge’ which is an essential element
of his cause of action.
[40]
In the light of the conclusion that I have reached, it is unnecessary
to consider the alternative argument, whether the ‘once
and for
all rule’ finds application in this case, safe to state that
the rule is part of our common law. See
MEC
for Health Gauteng v DZ obo WZ.
[25]
It
is my view that the rule was properly applied in this case.
I
accordingly make the following order:
a.
That the notice of intention to institute legal proceedings against
the first
defendant in terms of Section 3(1) of the Institution of
Legal Proceedings against Certain Organs of State Act 40 of 2002 was
given
within the prescribed period of six months.
b.
The first defendant to pay the costs.
Thupaatlase
AJ
Appearances
For
the plaintiff: L Matsiela
Instructed
by: Dudula Incorporated
For
the defendant: L Liphoto
Instructed
by State Attorney- Johannesburg
Date
of hearing: 29 & 30 August 2022
Date
of Judgment (Ex temporae): 30 August 2022
Date
of written reasons: 27 September 2022
[1]
3. (1) No legal proceedings for the recovery of a debt may be
instituted against an organ of state unless- (a) the creditor has
given the organ of state in question notice in writing of his or (b)
the organ of state in question has consented in writing
to the
institution of that her or its intention to institute the legal
proceedings in question; or legal proceedings-
(i)
without such notice; or
(ii)
upon receipt of a notice which does not comply with all the
requirements set out in subsection (2).
[2]
(2) A notice must- (a) within six months from the date on which the
debt became due, be served on the organ of state in accordance
with
section 4(1); and
(b)briefly
set out
(i)
the facts giving rise to the debt; and
(ii)
such particulars of such debt as are within the knowledge of the
creditor.
[3]
2008 (4) SA 312 (SCA)
[4]
2009 (1) SA 457 (SCA)
[5]
2008 (5) SA 418
(C)
[6]
No. 68 of 1969
[7]
[2017] ZACC 33
; 2018 SA (5) 22 (CC) at para. [36]
[8]
[2006] ZASCA 98
;
2007 (1) SA 111
(SCA) at para
[17]
[9]
[2009] ZASCA 25
;
2009 (3) SA 577
(SCA) at para
[37]
[10]
2003 JDR 0498 (T) at 11-12
[11]
969/2020) ZASCA 47 (8 April 20220) at para [23]
[12]
Mataboge
at para [18]
[13]
2017 (1) SA 274 (GJ)
[14]
Access to courts
34 Everyone has a right
to have any dispute that can be resolved by the application of law
decided in a fair public hearing before
a court or, where
appropriate, another independent and impartial tribunal or forum
[15]
Makhwelo
at para [55]
[16]
Makhwelo
at para [58]
[17]
CJ Visser 'The doctrine of subjective rights, t he actio in iuriarum
and the Constitution: A convergent doctrinal
basis
for the law of personality' 2021
Stell LR
271 at p280
[18]
See footnote 12 above
[19]
2013 JDR 2302 (GNP)
[20]
[1996] ZACC 20
;
1997 (1) SA 124
(CC) at para
[9]
[21]
2007 (2) SA 347
(SCA) at para [27]
[22]
Unileve
r
at
para [25]
[23]
1971 (1) SA 371
(E) at 372
[24]
Makhwelo
at para [54]
[25]
[2017] ZACC; 2018
(1) SA 335 (CC) at para
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