Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 888South Africa
Moropana v City of Johannesburg and Others (2335/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 888 (16 November 2022)
Headnotes
‘that even where an arrest is lawful, a police officer must apply his mind to the arrestee’s detention and the circumstances relating thereto and that the failure by a police officer properly to do so, is unlawful… It seems to me that, if a police officer must apply his or her mind to the circumstances relating to a person’s detention, this includes applying his or her mind to the question of whether detention is necessary at all.’
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Moropana v City of Johannesburg and Others (2335/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 888 (16 November 2022)
Moropana v City of Johannesburg and Others (2335/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 888 (16 November 2022)
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sino date 16 November 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 2335/2018
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
NOT
REVISED.
16/11/22
In
the matter between:
FRANS
MOROPANA
PLAINTIFF
And
CITY
OF
JOHANNESBURG
FIRST DEFENDANT
KGOTSANE
TSIETSI DENNIS
SECOND DEFENDANT
MINISTER
OF POLICE
THIRD DEFENDANT
The judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties and or parties’
representatives by e-mail and by
being uploaded to Caselines. The
date and time for the hand down is deemed on 16 November 2022 at
12H00.
J U D G M E N T
FRANCIS-SUBBIAH,
AJ
Introduction
[1] The
Plaintiff, Mr Moropana seeks compensation for delictual damages
arising from wrongful and
unlawful detention and an incorrect and
misleading record kept by the third defendant, the Minister of
Police. The incorrect and
misleading record kept by the Minister of
Police relates to Mr Moropana being charged and is awaiting trial for
reckless and negligent
driving and failing to produce his licence. He
claims that this record is being maintained by the third defendant
against his name
and therefore it is an impediment on him seeking
employment as a Bus Driver and as a result has diminished his earning
capacity
and has caused damages to him.
Procedural requirements in terms of
Institution of Legal Proceedings against Certain Organs of State
[2] At
the commencement of the trial the third defendant raised that its
special pleas had not been
adjudicated upon and the court extended an
indulgence in this regard and heard both special pleas. The third
defendant complains
that the notice of the intention to institute
legal proceedings for recovery of a debt against the third defendant
is out of time.
However, it became evident that the notice was sent
to the defendant by registered mail on 10 August 2017 and not 23
January 2018
as raised in the defendant’s second special plea.
The Plaintiff made representations to the National Prosecuting
Authority
during August 2016 regarding the criminal case. He was
invited to attend at their offices on 3 March 2017 at Protea
Magistrates
Court in Soweto. At this meeting he was given a letter
informing him that he is not charged in relation to the matter. The
proceedings
were instituted within six months in compliance with the
procedural requirements. Accordingly, this special plea was
dismissed.
Special plea of Non joinder of
first and second defendants
[3] Mr
Moropana maintains that he was unlawfully detained by employees of
the third defendant, being
members of the South African Police
Services (SAPS) and withdrew his claim against the first and second
defendants as joint wrongdoers.
Subsequent thereto the third
defendant objected to the non-joinder of the first and second
defendants on the basis that the arrest
and detention of the
Plaintiff was affected by the first and second defendants and not the
third defendant. The third defendant
maintains that it is duty bound
by legislation in terms of
section 64H
of the
South African Police
Service Act 68 of 1995
to provide detention services and did not
exercise any discretion in the arrest and subsequent detention of Mr
Moropana, the Plaintiff.
[4]
Section 65
H provides:
‘
A person
arrested with or without warrant by a member of a municipal police
service shall as soon as possible be brought to a police
station
under the control of the Service …’
and similarly, section 50 of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977(CPA) also provides for detention at
a Police Station subsequent
to arrest.
[5] The
Plaintiff’s legal team had replicated to the third defendant’s
special plea of
non- joinder of the first and second defendants. The
Plaintiff pursues a claim for unlawful detention which was at the
instance
of the third defendant after the Metro Police Kgotsana
(second defendant) had left the police station. The Plaintiff’s
claim
for loss of income is a result of an entry of a record created
and maintained by the South African Police Service through its
Criminal
Record Systems.
[6]
According to the Plaintiff’s counsel the first and second
defendants’ have no legal
interest in the subject matter of the
litigation and therefore they are no longer being joined. Plaintiff
relies on the Constitutional
Court judgment of
De Klerk v
Minister of Police
2020 (1) SACR (CC) where potential and
concurrent wrongdoers were not joined to the proceeding, and where
the court was not barred
from determining the liability, if any, of
the party or parties before it. I therefore ruled that the matter may
proceed to trial
on the basis that non-joinder is at the peril of the
Plaintiff who has to prove its case on a balance of probabilities
with no
onus upon the third defendant to prove lawfulness of arrest
and detention in the current circumstances. On that basis the
Plaintiff
proceeded to trial against the third defendant only.
Background of the Claim
[7] Mr
Moropana testified that on 3 June 2015 at 06h00 a taxi bumped into
the back of the Putco Bus
that he was driving. The Metro Police
arrived on the scene and after preliminary investigations arrested
him for reckless and negligent
driving and driving without a licence.
The Metro Police took him to the police station where he was warned
of his constitutional
rights, formally charged and detained
overnight.
[8] Mr
Moropana was not in agreement with the Metro Police Officer, Dennis
Kgotsane (second defendant)
over the charges that he was being
charged with. Around midday his supervisor from Putco Bus Services
arrived at the Police Station
with his driver’s licence. It was
given to Kgotsane in the presence of SAPS members. Despite this
Kgotsane wrote numerous
statements and together with two Metro Police
Officers escorted him to the police cells where they detained him.
[9] At
20h00 another police officer from SAPS took his warning statement and
his fingerprints. The
next day on 4 June 2015 he was taken by the
SAPS to the Magistrate Court. Subsequently he was released around
15h00 without appearing
before the Magistrate. He was informed that
the charges were dropped. He went back to work after a day off.
However, three weeks
later he fought with a colleague who called him
a ‘bandit’ because he had been arrested. As a result of
the fighting
his colleague and him were suspended. A disciplinary
enquiry was conducted, and both were subsequently dismissed from
their employment
at Putco Bus Services in July 2015 because the
company maintains a zero-tolerance fight policy. Mr Moropane concedes
that his dismissal
was due to his own conduct and not that of SAPS.
He agrees that had he not fought with his colleague he would still be
employed.
[10]
In
Mvu v Minister of safety &
Security and Another
2009 (6) SA 82
at para 10, the court referring to
Hofmeryr
v Minister of Justice and Another
1992 (3) SA 108
(C) held:
‘
that even
where an arrest is lawful, a police officer must apply his mind to
the arrestee’s detention and the circumstances
relating thereto
and that the failure by a police officer properly to do so, is
unlawful… It seems to me that, if a police
officer must apply
his or her mind to the circumstances relating to a person’s
detention, this includes applying his or her
mind to the question of
whether detention is necessary at all.’
[11]
Whether the detention was necessary at all, places an onus on the
first and second defendant
who exercised a discretion in this regard
and against whom the Plaintiff withdrew charges. Advocate Dlamini for
the Plaintiff submitted
that the conduct of the police was harsh in
continuing the further detention of the Plaintiff. The police could
have opted for
less intrusive measures to secure the Plaintiff’s
appearance at court because the Plaintiff had provided the police
with
his physical address and his identity. Moreover, his employer
was known, and his supervisor was there with him when he was
detained.
If the police had applied their mind, he could have been
released on bail or warning.
[12] To
what extent should a duty rest on the third defendant to exercise a
discretion regarding the
continued detention of the Plaintiff? Mr
Moropane argues that the third defendant is equally liable for his
detention in that SAPS
members took his warning statement at 20h00
and it was SAPS official who escorted him to the Court. He had asked
the SAPS official
why he was arrested and was told that he was
arrested for reckless and negligent driving. He protested that he
cannot be reckless
and negligent because he was bumped from the back.
Although he did not have his licence while driving a public bus, it
was brought
to the police station later. In response the police
officer told him that he can tell his version to the Court on the
next day.
The third defendant argued that the process of preparing
the Plaintiff for court appearance by completing a warning statement
should
not be construed as recharging and detaining the Plaintiff all
over again.
[13] Mr
Moropane testified that his family contacted his lawyer around 20h00
to apply for bail. However,
no evidence is led before this court on a
bail application or any appearance by an attorney or anyone else.
Whether it was brought
to SAPS attention is unknown. It is further
unknown what steps were taken, if any, and at all. There is no
evidence that a consideration
of bail was sought and refused.
[14] In
National Commissioner of Police & Another v Coetzee
2013 (1) SACR 358
(SCA) at [16] the court cautioned that:
‘
Courts must
guard against and resist the temptation to impose duties on police
officials under the guise of an alleged protection
of rights
guaranteed in the Bill of Rights, which existing law in this case the
CPA, does not impose.
[15]
Colonel Mbotho for the defendant testified that a cell register is
used to record details relating
to the detainee and that the
investigating officer has a discretion to release suspects after
making recommendations to a senior
officer for approval.
[16] It
is clear that in accordance with s35(1)(f) of the Constitution, it
provides that everyone
who is arrested for allegedly committing an
offence has the right to be released from detention if the interest
of justice permit,
subject to reasonable conditions including those
set out in terms of s59 of the CPA. The relevant part of s 59(1)(a)
reads as follows:
“
An
accused who is in custody in respect of any offence, other than an
offence referred to in Part II or Part III of Schedule 2 may,
before
his or her first appearance in a lower court, be released on bail in
respect of such offence by any police official of or
above the rank
of non-commissioned officer,
in
consultation with the police official charged with the investigation
,
if the accused deposits at the police station the sum of money
determined by such police official.” (my underlying)
[17]
However, there is no evidence before this court that the
investigating officer was appointed
at that stage and consulted. It
is understood that the decision to release the Plaintiff after arrest
and detention must be made
in consultation with the investigating
officer prior to the Plaintiff being taken to court.
[18]
This legislation, s59 is instructive and is prescribed by the
legislature and cannot be developed
by the courts in protecting the
liberty of individuals. The police in this regard retains a proper
exercise of its lawful powers
under legislation. This precedent is
entrenched by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Minister of Safety
and Security v Sekhoto and Another
2011(1) SACR 315 (SCA)
where it was held that ‘and because legislation overrides the
common law, one cannot change the meaning
of a statute by developing
the common law.’
[19] The
evidence is undisputed that the officials of the Metro Police
exercised the discretion to
arrest. Whether it was harsh, or they
should have opted for less infringing means to secure the Plaintiff’s
appearance at
court because the Plaintiff had provided his physical
address, his identity and details is left unanswered. Metro officers
had
interacted with the Plaintiff’s supervisor before he was
detained. This court cannot assume the grounds the arresting officer
considered when effecting the arrest of the Plaintiff.
[20]
Whether the Metro police had applied their mind, to release the
Plaintiff on bail or warning
cannot be imputed to the SAPS officials
who were custodians in terms of S65H of the Police Act and s50 of the
CPA and did not exercise
the initial discretion to arrest and detain
the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff’s arrest and detention by the
Metro police was not
tested and was not declared unlawful due to the
Plaintiff withdrawing his claim against them.
[21]
However when the Plaintiff protested about his continued detention
the police officer told him
that he can tell his version to the Court
on the next day.
SAPS cannot exercise a
discretion to continue the detention without exercising their mind
for the continuous detention of the Plaintiff.
The Plaintiff’s continued detention for a charge of
reckless and negligent driving was simply not considered. He was
released
at Court on the next day around 15h00, without any charges
being put to him and he did not appear before a Magistrate.
[22]
On a balance of probabilities, the Plaintiff has shown that his
protest not to be detained because
he was not negligent or reckless
was dismissed without any consideration. I find that the police
officer failed to take reasonable
steps in considering the release
from detention of the Plaintiff after it was brought to his attention
at 20h00. There is a duty
on the SAPS in accordance with s35(1)(f) of
the Constitution, to consider the release of a person from detention
who is arrested
for allegedly committing an offence if the interest
of justice permit, subject to reasonable conditions. It follows
therefore that
the Plaintiff’s continued detention from 20h00
until his release at 15h00 was unlawful.
[23] For
the quantification of damages suffered as a result of the continued
detention for 19 hours.
The Supreme Court of Appeal held in
Diljan
v Minister of Police
Case no 746/2021
[2022] ZASCA 103
(24
June 2022) that a balance should be struck between the award and the
injury inflicted. It was cautioned that a defendant should
not be
treated as a ‘cash-cow’ with infinite resources and the
purpose is not to enrich the aggrieved party. I am therefore
satisfied that a fair and reasonable amount is R50 000.00 under
these circumstances.
[24] I
now turn to consider the claim pertaining to the incorrect and
misleading record kept by the
Minister of Police, the third
defendant. In this regard Mr Moropana testified that in January 2016
he looked for employment and
was shortlisted for the position of a
driver by the Matodi Bus Company (Matodi). He was interviewed and
conducted the required
driving test after which he and three others
were informed that they will be contacted within two days. He did not
hear from Matodi
and therefore went to them to enquire about the
employment. He was informed that he was not considered for employment
because he
has a criminal record.
[25] Mr
Moropana went to several police stations to verify the information.
He was given a print-out
from the Criminal Administration System
(CAS) that indicated that he has a pending case awaiting trial for
reckless and negligent
driving and driving without a licence.
Eventually he obtained a Police Clearance Certificate from the
Pretoria Local Criminal Record
Centre (LCRC), CRIM system, that
indicates that he has no criminal record. However, he maintains that
the LCRC is keeping incorrect
information about him which was made
available to prospective employers, such as Matodi Bus Company which
caused him not to be
employed. On the basis that he had a record
indicating, that he is awaiting trial for reckless and negligent
driving when the charges
were already dropped.
[26] The
evidence led by the Minister of Police indicate there is a difference
between the CAS system
and the CRIM system. This evidence was given
by Colonel Mbotho and Brigadier Baloyi. The CAS system is an internal
database used
by SAPS to store and keep information from a docket.
The data is captured at the police stations and is not a public
document.
The information in this system cannot be removed or deleted
but any new result obtained can be added to the record on the system.
For instance, information from the prosecutor that charges have been
withdrawn against the Plaintiff can be added onto the system.
[27]
Colonel Mbotho referred to exhibit “C” and explained that
this printout was generated
from the CAS system and what is reflected
there is not a criminal record. He also considered additional print
outs from the CAS
system issued at the Alexandra Police Station and
at the Makweng Police Station and confirmed that these printouts are
not issued
to prospective employers. These print outs are for
internal processing and information and not for public issue.
According to him
only a prosecutor can get this information. And if
it was in public hands this information was stolen or through the
incorrect
actions in the police force.
[28]
Instead a Police Clearance Certificate referred as Exhibit “E”
is issued to prospective
employees. The Police Clearance Certificate
is a public document and is generated from the CRIM system. He
further explained that
the downside of obtaining a Police Clearance
Certificate can take about 2 to 3 months. For this reason, there is
an arrangement
with prospective employers to verify information about
prospective employees much quicker. In this regard Brigadier Baloyi,
testified
that companies like Afiswitch in partnership with SAPS
provide such service.
[29]
Brigadier Baloyi is stationed at the Local Criminal Record Centre
(LCRC) in Pretoria. She explained
that one of the differences between
the CAS and CRIM systems was that the former was based at the police
station while the latter
was kept at the LCRC in Pretoria. She
explained that Exhibit “D” was a report produced by
Afiswitch which is a private
company that can do a search on the
police system and produce a report. It however cannot amend anything
on the system.
What is a Criminal Record?
[30] The
third defendant denies that there is a record reflecting that the
Plaintiff has previous
convictions and denies creation and or
maintenance of any criminal record of the Plaintiff. The defendant
denies that the Plaintiff
has suffered any loss of earnings as a
result of the said record. It is common cause that the Plaintiff was
never charged and does
not have a criminal record which is evident
from the Police Clearance Certificate marked Exhibit “E”.
It was issued
at the Mankweng Police Station on 1 May 2017.
[31] The
information on both the CAS and CRIM systems are maintained by SAPS.
If charges are withdrawn,
and the Plaintiff is involved in the matter
as a witness, such an update or information captured to keep the
record accurate is
for internal use and information and will follow
internal protocols. The CAS system feds into the CRIM system, which
produces Clearance
Certificates which is a Public Document. Whereas a
printout from the CAS system is not a public document, it forms part
of police
records and should not have found its way into the hands of
prospective employees and members of the Public.
[32] It
is understood that what is captured on the CAS system cannot be
deleted. So, the information
remains on the system however it can be
updated. Once the Plaintiff came into the unauthorized possession of
the report from the
CAS system, and after obtaining the letter dated
3 January 2017 (which was provisionally accepted) from the National
Prosecuting
Authority he should have requested SAPS to update their
internal CAS system. The Court upon canvassing this issue between the
parties
received confirmation from Brigadier A Wepener, the Acting
Head of Criminal Record and Crime Scene Management that the internal
system has been updated. However, no duty can be imposed on SAPS to
update its internal records, especially when its Public Document
in
the form of a clearance certificate is correct and reflects the
status of the Plaintiff not having any previous criminal record.
[33]
Brigadier Baloyi testified about the history of requests and types of
enquires generated by the
CRIM system. In relation to the Plaintiff
she found requests made in 2003, 2006, 2008, 2017 and 2021. However,
there is no request
on the system in 2016 when the Plaintiff contends
that Matodi checked the system. There is no letter from the company
confirming
that it checked the CAS or CRIM system and any evidence
confirming its reason for not employing the Plaintiff.
[34] In
Luvhengo v Minister of Police
(14445/2019) [2021]
ZAGPPHC 762 (12 November 2021) the court held that only correct and
true facts are to be recorded on the LCRC
which deals expressly with
an accused person’s previous convictions. The current matter is
consistent with the view held
in
Luvhengo,
on the basis that
the LCRC records generate a certificate of clearance that the
Plaintiff has no previous convictions. The LCRC
records are correct.
[35]
According to the Plaintiff the potential employer Matodi informed him
that he has a criminal
record. Matodi was wrong. The Plaintiff does
not have a criminal record. Even if a witness from Matodi told this
court that the
CAS records that was not updated was the reason for
the Plaintiff not being employed by them, the Minister of Police
cannot be
blamed because printouts from the CAS system are for
internal information and is not a public document. There is no
connection
with SAPS records to the loss of earnings of the
Plaintiff. Harm must be sufficiently linked to the probabilities. On
a balance
of probabilities, the Plaintiff has failed to make out a
case that the LCRC maintains a record that has caused him harm giving
rise to a claim for delictual damages.
[36] The
Plaintiff failed to prove that the third defendant keeps an incorrect
criminal record relating
to them.
[37] The
Court Orders as follows:
1.
The Plaintiff’s claim on continued unlawful detention succeeds.
2.
An award in the sum of R50 000.00 is granted with costs.
3.
The Plaintiff’s claim relating to the keeping of an incorrect
criminal record is dismissed
with costs.
Francis-Subbiah, AJ
Acting Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division: Johannesburg
Appearances:
Plaintiff:
Adv Dlamini
Instructed by Seloane-Vincent
Attorneys
Defendant:
Adv N M Mtsweni
Instructed by the State Attorney
Date Heard:
9-12 and 20 October 2022
Date Judgment:
16 November 2022
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