Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 870South Africa
Ndlovu and Another v Minister of Police and Others (30278/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 870 (9 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law and procedure – Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 – sections 40(1)(b) and (e) – unlawful arrest and detention – whether the plaintiffs’ arrest and detention was lawful in terms of ss 40(1)(b) and (e) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 – arrest and detention justified – plaintiffs’ claims dismissed
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ndlovu and Another v Minister of Police and Others (30278/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 870 (9 November 2022)
Ndlovu and Another v Minister of Police and Others (30278/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 870 (9 November 2022)
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sino date 9 November 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
30278/2018
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
Date:
9
th
November 2022
In the matter between:
NDLOVU
,
TRUST
First Plaintiff
BHEBHE
,
THANDAZANI
Second Plaintiff
And
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
First Defendant
THE NATIONAL DIRECTOR
OF
PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
Second Defendant
NDZUKE
,
VINCENT
Third Defendant
NTJANA
,
ANDRIES
Fourth Defendant
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
1, 2, 3 and 8 November 2022
Delivered:
9 November 2022 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 11:30 on 09
November 2022.
Summary:
Criminal law and procedure –
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
–
sections 40(1)(b)
and (e) –
unlawful arrest and detention – whether the plaintiffs’
arrest and detention was lawful in terms of
ss 40(1)(b)
and (e) of
the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
– arrest and detention
justified – plaintiffs’ claims dismissed
ORDER
(1)
The first plaintiff’s claim is dismissed
with costs.
(2)
The second plaintiff’s claim is dismissed
with costs.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
At about 05:00, in the wee hours of the morning, on Friday, 21 April
2017,
an unidentified person called in, to the South African Police
‘Dispatch Centre’, a housebreaking in progress in
Yeoville.
A shop was being broken into, so the ‘informer’
advised the Dispatch Centre, which immediately dispatched Constable
Ngaka and his partner, stationed at the Yeoville Police Station, to
the scene of the crime. Shortly after their arrival at the
scene,
they encountered the informer, who indicated to them that he wished
to remain anonymous, but he nevertheless agreed to accompany
them on
their pursuit of the suspects, who, the informer indicated, were
making their get-away in a Southerly direction. Very shortly
thereafter, the first plaintiff (‘Ndlovu’) and the second
plaintiff (‘Bhebhe’) were tracked down by Constable
Ngaka
and his partner, and, as luck would have it, they were found in
possession of one of the items – a steel cabinet –
which
had been stolen from the business premises, which had been burgled
minutes before then. Their explanation for being in possession
of the
stolen goods was to the effect that they had bought it from so called
‘street boys’.
[2].
Despite this explanation, Ndlovu and Bhebhe were arrested by
Constable Ngaka
and his partner on a charge of being in possession of
suspected stolen property – the steel cupboard, which they were
busy
pushing on a trolley. Their explanation was seemingly not
acceptable to Constable Ngaka and his colleague. And, in any event,
the
informer had identified them as the persons who had broken into
the said premises. Constable Ngaka and his partner therefore arrested
Ndlovu and Bhebhe, who were subsequently detained, first in the
Yeoville Police Cells and thereafter at the Johannesburg Prison,
until 13 September 2017, when after a trial in the Johannesburg
Regional Court, they were discharged and acquitted in terms
of
s 174
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, Act
51 of 1977 (‘the CPA’).
[3].
In this action, the plaintiffs claim delictual damages for unlawful
arrest
and detention, as well as for malicious prosecution, from the
first defendant, the National Minister of Police (‘the
Minister’),
and the second defendant, the National Director of
Public Prosecutions (‘the NDPP’), as well as from the
Johannesburg
Public Prosecutors – Mr Ndzuke (the third
defendant) and Mr Ntjana (the fourth defendant) – who were
responsible for
the prosecution of the plaintiffs in the Johannesburg
Regional Court. Needless to say, the plaintiffs attach considerable
weight
to the fact that the Johannesburg Regional Court had
discharged them in terms of
s 174
of the CPA, which confirms, so the
plaintiffs aver, that the State had no case against them and should
never have arrested and
prosecuted them.
[4].
The defendants deny liability for the claims of the plaintiffs. Their
case
is that the arrests and the detention were lawful in that the
plaintiffs were suspected – reasonably so – of having
committed the crimes of possession of suspected stolen property and
housebreaking in respect of business premises.
[5].
The issues to be considered in this action are therefore whether, all
things
considered, the arrest of the plaintiffs and their subsequent
detention were lawful, and whether their prosecution by the National
Prosecuting Authority was malicious. Put another way, the issues to
be decided in this matter is whether the arresting officers
had
reasonable grounds to arrest the plaintiffs and whether they had
reasonable grounds thereafter to detain him. Additionally,
I am
required to decide whether the prosecution of the plaintiffs was, in
the circumstances of this matter, malicious.
[6].
These issues can and should be decided, in my view, against the
backdrop of
those facts, which are common cause and which are set out
in the paragraphs which follow. In my view, there is no need to
decide
any factual disputes either way, in order to arrive at a
resolution of the legal disputes between the parties. I reiterate
that
the disputes can be resolved and adjudicated upon simply by
having regard to those facts which are common cause between the
parties
and which are not seriously challenged by the plaintiffs.
[7].
Before dealing with the facts in the matter, it may be apposite to
traverse
and consider firstly the applicable legislative framework
and the applicable legal principles.
[8].
An
arrest or detention is
prima
facie
wrongful.
Once the arrest and detention are admitted, as is the case
in
casu
,
the onus shifts onto the State to prove the lawfulness thereof and it
is for the defendants to allege and prove the lawfulness
of the
arrest and detention. So, for example, it was held by the Supreme
Court of Appeal as follows in
Zealand
v Minister of Justice & Constitutional Development &
Another
[1]
:
'This
is not something new in our law. It has long been firmly established
in our common law that every interference with physical
liberty is
prima facie
unlawful. Thus, once the claimant establishes that
an interference has occurred, the burden falls upon the person
causing that
interference to establish a ground of justification.'
[9].
Section 40(1)(b)
of the CPA confers the power on a police officer,
without warrant, to arrest a person reasonably suspected of having
committed
a schedule 1 offence, which includes the offence of
‘Breaking or entering any premises, whether under the common
law
or a statutory provision, with intent to commit an offence’,
as well as the offence of ‘Receiving stolen property knowing
it
to have been stolen’. And, in terms of subsection (1)(e), a
police officer is empowered to arrest, without a warrant of
arrest,
any person ‘who is found in possession of anything which [he]
reasonably suspects to be stolen property or property
dishonestly
obtained, and whom the peace officer reasonably suspects of having
committed an offence with respect to such thing’.
Section
50(1)(a)
requires that such arrested person be brought, as soon as
possible, to a police station, and be there detained; and
section
50(1)(b)
provides that he or she, as soon as reasonably possible, be
informed of his or her right to institute bail proceedings.
[10].
It
is not required for a successful invocation by a peace officer of
Section 40(1)(b)
of the CPA, that the offence was actually committed,
the question is whether the arresting police officer had reasonable
grounds
for suspecting that such a crime had been committed. This
requires only that the arresting officer should have formed a
suspicion
that must rest on reasonable grounds. It is not necessary
to establish as a fact that the crime had been committed
[2]
.
‘Suspicion’ implies an absence of certainty or adequate
proof. Thus, a suspicion might be reasonable even if there
is
insufficient evidence for a
prima
facie
case
against the arrestee
[3]
.
[11].
In
cases such as
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
[4]
,
Minister
of Law and Order v Kader
[5]
,
Powell
NO and Others v Van der Merwe NO and Others
[6]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal has endorsed and adopted Lord Devlin's
formulation of the meaning of 'suspicion':
'Suspicion
in its ordinary meaning is a state of conjecture or surmise where
proof is lacking; "I suspect, but I cannot prove".
Suspicion arises at or near the starting point of an investigation of
which the obtaining of
prima facie
proof is the end.'
[12].
The question, whether the suspicion by the police officer effecting
the arrest is reasonable,
as envisaged by s 40(1)(b), must be
approached objectively. Accordingly, the circumstances giving rise to
the suspicion must be
such as would ordinarily move a reasonable
person to form the suspicion that the arrestee had committed a
first-schedule offence.
The information before the arresting officers
must be such as to demonstrate an actual suspicion, founded upon
reasonable grounds,
that a schedule 1 offence had been committed by
the person or persons to be arrested.
[13].
That then brings me back to the facts in the matter, as elicited from
the evidence led during
the trial. In that regard, the two plaintiffs
gave evidence in support of their cases, as did one Mr Masimula,
who was a Johannesburg
Regional Court Control Prosecutor at the
relevant time. He gave evidence to the effect that – by the
time of their third
appearance in Court – he had instructed the
prosecutors to withdraw the charges against the plaintiffs. He did
so, so he
testified, because he did not believe that the State had a
winnable case against the plaintiffs. For the defendants, the
arresting
officer (Warrant Officer Ngaka), the investigating officer
(Sergeant Dlamini) and the third and fourth defendants, gave
evidence.
[14].
As indicated above, the case on behalf of the defendants is that the
arresting officer, Constable
Ngaka (who had been promoted to Warrant
Officer by the time he gave evidence), and his partner reasonably
suspected that the two
plaintiffs had committed the crime of being in
possession of suspected stolen property and the crime of
housebreaking. Their reasonable
suspicion was informed mainly by the
fact that, within minutes of the actual housebreaking being reported
as being ‘in progress’,
the two plaintiffs were found in
possession of one of the stolen items. That, in my view, is the end
of the plaintiffs’ case.
[15].
Moreover,
the plaintiffs were fingered as the ones who committed the
housebreaking by an ‘informer’, who, by all accounts
had
personally witnessed the plaintiffs breaking into the shop. It is of
no moment, in my view, that the ‘informer’
preferred to
remain anonymous and did not give a statement to the police. At worst
for the state, his pointing out of the plaintiffs,
can be regarded as
hearsay evidence, which could and should have been admitted in terms
of the provision of s 3(1)(c) of the Law
of Evidence Amendment
Act
[7]
. The point is simply that
the police officers cannot be faulted for their actions in arresting
the plaintiffs. Everything pointed
to them having committed the
aforegoing offences – with or without the explanation that they
had supposedly bought the stolen
item from the supposed burglars
within minutes of it having been stolen.
[16].
There can be no doubt that the arresting officers manifestly
harboured a suspicion that the
plaintiffs had committed at least the
offence of being in possession of suspected stolen property. They
would also have been justified
in suspecting that the plaintiffs had
committed the offence of housebreaking. They may not have had
sufficient evidence to support
their suspicion, but that is of no
moment – the simple fact of the matter is that their suspicion
was reasonable for the
reasons mentioned above, notably the proximity
in time and space between the commission of the crime and the
plaintiffs being caught
in the act of carting off the stolen item. It
is inconceivable that, in these circumstances, the arresting officers
should have
simply accepted the explanation of the plaintiffs that
they had bought the stolen cupboard from ‘street boys’.
[17].
The question, whether the suspicion by the arresting officer
effecting the arrest is reasonable,
must, as I have said, be
approached objectively. Therefore, the circumstances giving rise to
the suspicion must be such as would
ordinarily move a reasonable
person to form the suspicion that the arrestee had committed a
first-schedule offence. In my view,
the defendants had established
that there were reasonable grounds to suspect that the plaintiffs had
committed the schedule 1 offences.
The arrests and subsequent
detention were therefore lawful.
[18].
On behalf of the plaintiffs, it was contended that the arresting
officers acted unreasonably
in that they failed to follow up on and
investigate the explanation given by the plaintiffs to the police –
either at the
place where they were arrested or at the Yeoville
Police Station when they were being processed. This explanation, it
will be recalled,
was to the effect that they (the plaintiffs) had
bought the steel cupboard from so called ‘street boys’
for one hundred
rand. The least the arresting officers should have
done, so the contention on behalf of the plaintiffs went, was to go
to the place
where the item was supposedly bought to try and verify
the story. These officers had a duty, so it was submitted, to
consider and
investigate any exculpatory explanation given by the
plaintiffs, which they failed to do.
[19].
The response to this proposition by the arresting officer, WO Ngaka,
was to the effect that,
at the Police Station, the plaintiffs simply
said that they had bought the steel cabinet on the streets, without
given any further
details, such as the place where the sale happened
or particulars relating to the alleged sellers. All the same, my
impression
of the evidence of the arresting officer was basically
that he did not accept the explanation. That, in my judgment, was
reasonable.
In the context of the matter and the surrounding
circumstances, it can safely be said that the explanation given by
the plaintiffs
was highly improbable, far-fetched and bordered on the
ridiculous. His uncontested evidence was that no more than five
minutes
passed from the time that they received the report of the
break-in in progress at the shop to when they arrested the
plaintiffs.
In that context of time, WO Ngaka had every reason to
reject out of hand the explanation by the plaintiffs that they had
bought
the stolen cabinet from phantom ‘street boys’.
[20].
Mr Sibisi, Counsel for the plaintiffs, also submitted that the police
officers’ suspicion
was not reasonable because: (1) There were
other items stolen from the shop, such as a TV and a fridge, which
were not found in
the possession of the plaintiffs; and (2) They were
also not found in possession of housebreaking implements, which they
would
have needed to break into the shop.
[21].
I cannot agree with these submissions. As rightly pointed out by the
arresting officer during
his evidence, at the time they arrested the
plaintiffs they did not know what had been stolen from the shop. As
for the housebreaking
implements, it is so that there are reasonable
explanations for the plaintiffs not being in possession of same, such
as the fact
that they could have and probably did discard them after
use.
[22].
The same applies to the continued prosecution of the plaintiffs on
the charges of housebreaking,
alternatively, unlawful possession of
suspected stolen property. With the evidence which they had in their
possession, the prosecutors
were fully justified in persisting with
the charges against the plaintiffs. Moreover, the evidence of the
investigating officer,
Sgt Dlamini, was that, when he interviewed
them as suspects on or about 24 April 2017 (on the Monday following
their arrest), the
plaintiffs were not prepared to give him their
side of the story. They opted to give their version in court. This
then left the
prosecutors only with the version of the arresting
officer, which incorporated the report and the pointing out of the
informer,
which, in my view, translated into the conclusion that
there was a reasonable suspicion that the plaintiffs had committed
the crimes
of breaking and entering, alternatively, unlawful
possession of suspected stolen property, which, in turn, justified
the arrest
and detention of the plaintiffs as well as their
prosecution on the aforementioned charges.
[23].
As regards the unlawful detention, the plaintiffs confirmed that they
never applied for bail
or even attempted to apply for bail, how then,
I ask rhetorically, can it be said that they were detained
unlawfully.
[24].
On the basis of the facts in this matter, there is no evidence
to support a conclusion,
either directly or inferentially, that
Constable Ngaka and his partner, when arresting the plaintiffs, acted
unreasonably and without
reasonably suspecting that they had
committed the offences of housebreaking and being in possession of
suspected stolen property.
The arresting officers were, in my
judgment, not subjectively motivated by any irrelevant personal
considerations of sympathy or
vengeance. They just had no reason to
be so motivated. Their suspicion that the plaintiffs had committed
the said crimes was based
on reasonable grounds, notably information
received from the informer, and importantly the fact that the
plaintiffs were caught
with the stolen goods literally within minutes
of the shop reportedly being broken into.
[25].
The mere fact that in the end the plaintiffs were discharged in terms
of s 174 of the CPA
does not detract from the reasonableness of
the suspicion that crimes had in fact been committed by the
plaintiffs. If anything,
there are a myriad of reasons why the
criminal case took a turn for the worse as it did. Objectively
viewed, it is difficult to
see on what basis the arresting officers
can be said not have had a reasonable suspicion that the crimes had
been committed. Furthermore,
the plaintiffs were not unlawfully
detained. They had every opportunity to apply for bail, but opted not
to do so.
[26].
For all of these reasons, the plaintiffs’ claims fall to be
dismissed.
Costs
[27].
The general rule in matters of costs is that the
successful party should be given his costs, and this rule should not
be departed
from except where there are good grounds for doing so. I
can think of no reason why I should deviate from this general rule.
[28].
The plaintiffs should therefore be ordered to pay
the defendants’ costs of the action.
Order
[29].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The first plaintiff’s claim is dismissed
with costs.
(2)
The second plaintiff’s claim is dismissed
with costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
1
st
,
2
nd
,
3
rd
and
8
th
November
2022
JUDGMENT
DATE:
9
th
November 2022 – judgment handed down
electronically
FOR THE FIRST AND SECOND
PLAINTIFFS:
Advocate S F Sibisi
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Dike Attorneys, Johannesburg
FOR THE FIRST TO FOURTH
DEFENDANTS:
Advocate James Magodi
INSTRUCTED
BY:
The State Attorney, Johannesburg
[1]
Zealand
v Minister of Justice & Constitutional Development & Another
2008 (4)
SA 458 (SCA) at para 25;
[2]
R
v Jones
1952
(1) SA 327
(E) at 332;
[3]
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
1986
(2) SA 805
(A) ([1996] ZASCA 24) at 819I – 820B;
[4]
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
1986
(2) SA 805
(A) ([1996] ZASCA 24) at 819I;
[5]
Minister
of Law and Order v Kader
1991
(1) SA 41
(A) ([1990] ZASCA 111) at 50H – I;
[6]
Powell
NO and Others v Van der Merwe NO and Others
2005
(1) SACR 317
(SCA)
(2005 (5) SA 62
;
2005 (7) BCLR 675
;
[2005] 1 All
SA 149)
para 36;
[7]
The
Law of Evidence Amendment Act, Act 45 of 1988;
sino noindex
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