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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2022] ZAGPJHC 955
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## Thokozani v Minister of Police (30337/2015)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 955 (30 November 2022)
Thokozani v Minister of Police (30337/2015)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 955 (30 November 2022)
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sino date 30 November 2022
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF UTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF UTH
AFRICA
# (GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No: 30337/2015
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
REVISED:
No
In
the matter between:
SIBIYA
KHAKHWE THOKOZANI
PLAINTIFF
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties' legal representatives by email, and
uploaded on caselines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 30 November 2022.
JUDGEMENT
Mahalelo J
[1]
This is an action for damages arising from an unlawful arrest and
detention which took place on 5 June 2015. The plaintiff was
released
from custody without appearing in court on Monday 8 June 2015. He
instituted an action for damages on 26 August 2015 seeking
payment of
R400 000- 00 against the defendant.
The action is
defended by the defendant who
delivered a plea
dated 30 November 2015 containing a bald denial of the events as
pleaded which plea was amended on 13 November
2018.
[2]
The matter came before me on the civil trial roll on 1 November 2022.
Mr Vilakazi represented the plaintiff and Mr Mpulo the
defendant.
[3]
The plaintiff was the only witness
who
testified about the events and their impact on him.
During
cross examination of the plaintiff Mr Mpulo informed me that the
defendant is conceding the merits of the claim and that
the only
issue to be determined was the quantum.
[4]
The defendant contended that an award of damages as prayed for by the
plaintiff is excessive and exaggerated. He suggested an
amount of
approximately R45 000-00.
[5]
The events unfolded in the morning of 5 June 2015 when the plaintiff
was at home preparing for work. He worked as a taxi driver.
He heard
a knock at the door. When he asked who it was a voice came out saying
“we are the police open the door”. He
opened and the
police entered. They asked him his full names. He told them that he
is Kwakhe Thokozani Sibiya. They asked for his
identity document to
confirm his names. He gave it to them and thereafter enquired from
them what he had done. They conveyed to
him that he had stolen a
motor vehicle in Sebenza in 1997. When he denied any knowledge he was
told to come with and that he will
explain at the police station.
[6]
He was taken to Sebenza police station where he was placed in a room.
In less than an hour he was taken to Edenvale police station
where he
was detained. His rights were read to him and he signed a form. He
was detained over the weekend. On Monday in the morning
he was called
out of the cells and let out of detention. It was explained to him
that he was to be taken home. The police officer
transported him up
to the nearby Mall and he dropped him. This police officer apologised
to him saying that he had arrested him
on unfounded allegations. He
promised to compensate him with money which he never did.
[7]
The issue for determination is what is a just and equitable
compensation to be awarded to the plaintiff.
[8]
The plaintiff is an adult man who is currently unemployed. He was
employed as a taxi driver at the time of the incident. He
did not
give evidence regarding his earnings. He testified that the
conditions at Edenvale police station cells were terrible and
uncomfortable to an extend that if he was a child he would have
cried. He mentioned that he was not afforded an opportunity to
contact his family members or his lawyer. He was detained from Friday
until Monday morning. He did not go back to work because
the taxi he
was driving was already allocated a new driver. He could not find
employment and he eventually went back home in KZN
where he currently
stays with his mother.
[9]
In
assessing the issue of quantum of damages the plaintiff suffered, I
bear in mind what was held in
Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyulu
[1]
:
“
In the
assessment of damages for unlawful arrest and detention, it is
important to bear in mind that the primary purpose is not
to enrich
the aggrieved party but to offer him or her some much-needed solatium
for his or her injured feelings. It is therefore
crucial that serious
attempts be made to ensure that the damages awarded are
commensurate with the injury inflicted. However, our courts
should be astute to ensure that the awards they make for such
infractions
reflect the importance of the right to personal liberty
and the seriousness with which any arbitrary deprivation of personal
liberty
is viewed in our law. I readily concede that it is impossible
to determine an award of damages for this kind of injuria with any
kind of mathematical accuracy. Although it is always helpful to have
regard to awards made in previous cases to serve as a guide,
such an
approach if slavishly followed can prove to be treacherous. The
correct approach is to have regard to all the facts of
the particular
case and to determine the quantum of damages on such facts (Minister
of Safety and Security v Seymour
2006 (6) SA 320
(SCA) 325 para 17;
Rudolph & others v Minister of Safety and Security & others
(380/2008)
[2009] ZASCA 39
(31 March 2009) (paras 26-29).”
[10]
In evaluating what damages to award to the plaintiff, Visser en
Potgieter – Law of Damages, Third Edition, at 15.3.9
at page
505 to 548, states the following factors that generally play a role
in the assessment of damages in similar cases, an assessment
to
determine what is fundamentally fair and equitable, as follows:
“…
The
circumstances under which the depravation of liberty took place; the
presence or absence of improper motive or ‘malice’
on the
part of the defendant; the harsh conduct of the defendants; the
duration and nature of the depravation of liberty; the status,
standing, age and health and disability of the plaintiff; the extent
of the publicity given to the depravation of liberty; the
presence or
absence of an apology or satisfactory explanation of the events by
the defendant; award in previous comparable cases;
the fact that in
addition to physical freedom, other personality interest such as
honour and good name as well as constitutionality
protected
fundamental rights have been infringed constitutionally protected
fundamental rights have been infringed; the high value
of the right
to physical liberty; the effect of inflation; the fact that the
plaintiff contributed to his or her misfortune;the
effect an award may have on the public purse; and according
to some, the view that actio injuriarum also have a punitive
function.”
[11]
In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Seymour
[2]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal reduced the general award of damages awarded
to the plaintiff from R500 000 to R90 000.00. The plaintiff
was a
63-year-old man and had been unlawfully arrested and imprisoned for a
period of five days. In
Olivier
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another
[3]
,
the plaintiff was a senior police officer who was arrested by the
police in full view of his colleagues and then detained at the
same
police station where he worked. He had claimed R150 000.00 for such
arrest where he spent about six hours in custody. He was
awarded R50
000.00. In
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
[4]
the
plaintiff was awarded R300 000.00 compensation for wrongful
arrest and detention. De Klerk was arrested on 20 December
2012,
around 8h00. He was detained and was not granted bail and was
released from prison on 28 December 2012. He had been detained
for
nine days. The plaintiff in this matter was detained for 3 days.
[12] I have had regard to
all other judgments I was referred to by the parties and am mindful
that they only serve as a guide without
losing sight of the facts of
this matter. The ultimate purpose of this award is to compensate the
plaintiff for his injured feelings
and not to enrich him.
[13] I am of the view
that a just and equitable compensation under the circumstances of
this matter is an amount of R100 000.00
(Hundred
Thousand Rand
only).
[14]
The quantum that is being awarded by this court
falls within the jurisdiction of the Magistrate’s Court. The
plaintiff had
made a choice to pursue the matter in the High Court.
It follows that costs of the action should be on the Magistrate’s
Court’s
scale.
[15] In the result I make
the following order:
1.
The
defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff an amount of R100 000.00
(
One Hundred Thousand Rand only
) with interest at the
prescribed rate from date of judgment to date of payment.
2. The defendant is to
pay the costs of the action on the Magistrate’s Court Scale.
M
B Mahalelo
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH
AFRICA, GAUTENG
DIVISION,
JOHANNNESBURG.
Representation:
For
the applicant
: Adv Vilakazi
Instructed
by
: Mangxola Attorneys
For
the respondents
: Adv Mpulo
Instructed
by
: State Attorney Johannesburg
Heard
on
: 1 November 2022
Delivered
: 21 November 2022
[1]
2009 (2) SACR 282
(SCA) para 26.
[2]
2006
(6) SA 320 (SCA)
[3]
2009
(3) SA 434 (W),
[4]
2020
(1) SACR 1
CC
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