Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 996South Africa
King of the Road Transport and Others v Minister of Police and Others (22254/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 996 (7 December 2022)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 996
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## King of the Road Transport and Others v Minister of Police and Others (22254/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 996 (7 December 2022)
King of the Road Transport and Others v Minister of Police and Others (22254/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 996 (7 December 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_996.html
sino date 7 December 2022
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
number: 22254/2022
Date
of hearing: 21 November 2022
Date
delivered: 07 December 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
07/12/2022
In
the matter between:
KING
OF THE ROAD TRANSPORT
1
st
Applicant
TIFOW
ABDIWAHID OMAR
2
nd
Applicant
ALI
HAJJI ADAN
3
rd
Applicant
And
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
1
st
Respondent
COMMANDING
OFFICER: SAPS TRUCK
2
nd
Respondent
HIJACKING
UNIT, GAUTENG
SERGEANT
MATLALA: SAPS TRUCK
3
rd
Respondent
HIJACKING
UNIT, GAUTENG
JUDGMENT
KEMACK
AJ:
1.
The applicants seek a
mandament
van spolie
. The first applicant is a
company involved in the transport industry. The second applicant
describes himself as the sole proprietor
of the first applicant. The
third applicant (Ali Hajji Adan) is a driver employed by the first
applicant.
2.
The third respondent is Sergeant Matlala of
the South African Police Service Truck Hijacking Unit in Gauteng, who
is the investigating
officer in respect of the incident which led to
the seizure by the police of the items which form the subject of the
mandament van spolie
.
The first and second respondents are cited in their capacity as the
administrative and the executive authority responsible for
the third
respondent.
3.
The applicants seek to reclaim possession
of four seized items. They are an Argosy Freightliner truck with
vehicle register number
[....]; keys of a Volvo FH truck with vehicle
registration number [....]; a Huawei P20 Lite mobile phone belonging
to the third
applicant; and a driver’s licence belonging to the
third applicant.
4.
In his capacity as a member of the South
African Police, the third respondent seized the Argosy truck on 16
March 2022 at Crown
Mines, where a driver named Assad, employed by
the first applicant, had left the truck after a delivery to a certain
Aden (not
to be confused with the third applicant, whose name is name
is Adan). Assad had used the Argosy truck to collect goods from
Aden’s
premises and delivered them to a purchaser in accordance
with Aden’s instructions, and received payment of R10 000
for
the hiring of the Argosy truck.
5.
On 16 March 2022, police officers including
the third respondent, seized the truck where Assad had left it at
Crown Mines, on suspicion
that it had been used to take transfer of
and thereafter deliver stolen goods procured in a truck hijacking in
which a valuable
consignment of Aquafresh toothpaste was stolen.
6.
The first and second applicants deny
knowledge of the truck hijacking and the prior theft of the
toothpaste which the first applicant’s
Argosy truck
transported, and blame Aden for hiring the first applicant’s
truck to transport stolen goods.
7.
Nevertheless, on 16 March 2022 the second
applicant requested Aden to attend at Crown Mines to investigate the
reason for the police
presence in the vicinity of the Argosy truck.
Aden complied, and was arrested by the police who seized his mobile
phone on which
they found video footage of the offloading of the
allegedly stolen toothpaste from the first applicant’s Argosy
truck. Counsel
for both parties agreed that Aden’s telephone
allegedly containing footage of the transfer of the stolen goods from
the Argosy
truck, is not the Huawei mobile telephone which is
reclaimed in this application
8.
The third applicant, Adan, states that
after transporting goods to Cape Town, he left the Volvo truck at the
same Crown Mines depot
on 15 March 2022, and returned on the morning
of 16 March 2022 to collect the Volvo for another trip. When he
arrived at the Crown
Mines depot he found police officers standing
around the Argosy truck. The third respondent searched the third
applicant and found
the Volvo keys, and the third applicant’s
Huawei mobile phone and driver’s licence, all of which he
seized from the
third applicant.
9.
There is no dispute that at the time of the
seizure, the third applicant possessed the Volvo keys on behalf of
the first applicant,
and the Huawei mobile phone and his driver’s
licence on his own behalf.
10.
The third respondent has not returned any
of the seized items to the first and third applicants, and relies on
alleged consent by
the third applicant as a basis for justifying the
seizure under section 22 of the Criminal Procedure Act.
11.
It is necessary to consider section 22 of
the Criminal Procedure Act in context with reference to sections 20,
21 and 31:
“
20.
State may seize certain
articles
. The State may, in
accordance with the provisions of this Chapter, seize anything (in
this Chapter referred to as an article)
(a) which is concerned in or is on
reasonable grounds believed to be concerned in the commission or
suspected commission of an offence
whether within the Republic or
elsewhere;
(b) which may afford evidence of
the commission or suspected commission of an offence whether within
the Republic or elsewhere;
or
(c) which is intended to be used or
is on reasonable grounds believed to be intended to be used in the
commission of an offence.
21. Article to be
seized under search warrant.
(1) Subject to the provisions of
sections 22, 24 and 25, an article referred to in section 20 shall be
seized only by virtue of
a search warrant issued (a) by a magistrate
or justice, if it appears to such magistrate or justice from
information on oath that
there are reasonable grounds for believing
that any such article is in the possession or under the control of or
upon any person
or upon or at any premises within his area of
jurisdiction; or (b) by a judge or judicial officer presiding at
criminal proceedings,
if it appears to such judge or judicial officer
that any such article in the possession or under the control of any
person or upon
or at any premises is required in evidence of such
proceedings.
…
(4) A police official executing a
warrant under this section or section 25 shall, after such execution,
upon demand of any person
whose rights in respect of any search or
article seized under the warrant have been affected, hand to him a
copy of the warrant.
22.
Circumstances
in which article may be seized without search warrant
. A police
official may without a search warrant search any person or container
or premises for the purpose of seizing any article
referred to in
section 20
(a) if the person concerned
consents to the search for and the seizure of the article in
question, or if the person who may consent
to the search of the
container or premises consents to such search and the seizure of the
article in question; or
(b) if he on reasonable grounds
believes
(i) that a search warrant will be
issued to him under paragraph (a) of section 21 (1) if he applies for
such warrant; and
(ii) that the delay in obtaining
such warrant would defeat the object of the search.
31.
Disposal of
article where no criminal proceedings are instituted or where it is
not required for criminal proceedings
.
(1)
(a) If no criminal proceedings are instituted in connection with any
article referred to in section 30 (c) or if it appears
that such
article is not required at the trial for purposes of evidence or for
purposes of an order of court, the article shall
be returned to the
person from whom it was seized, if such person may lawfully possess
such article, or, if such person may not
lawfully possess such
article, to the person who may lawfully possess it
.”
12.
Section 20 of the Criminal Procedure Act
permits seizure either under a section 21 warrant; or in the absence
of a warrant under
section 22(1) if the person searched consents to
the search for and the seizure of the article in question, or in
respect of a
container or premises if the person who may consent to
their search consents to such search and the seizure of the article
in question.
The third applicant denies consenting to the seizure of
any of the four seized items.
13.
Bearing in mind that the Huawei mobile
phone seized from the third applicant is not the mobile phone
containing the alleged record
of the transfer of the stolen goods
from the Argosy truck, none of the Volvo keys, driver’s licence
and mobile phone qualify
as items eligible for seizure under section
20 of the Criminal Procedure Act, because there is no suggestion that
the third applicant
was involved in the hijacking and transfer of
stolen goods to or from the Argosy truck; nor is there any suggestion
that the Volvo
truck and the third applicant’s driver’s
licence and mobile phone had any connection whatsoever with the
hijacking.
14.
On that basis alone, the respondents had no
lawful justification for seizing the Volvo keys, driver’s
licence and telephone,
and they must be returned to the applicants’
attorney without delay.
15.
Significantly, Sergeant Matlala himself
states in paragraph 30 of his answering affidavit that “
The
keys of the Volvo were confiscated upon learning that it belonged to
the second applicant. This was done as a last result to
get the
second applicant, who is a foreigner and refugee to avail himself for
the interview with the police regarding the commission
of a very
serious crime
”. There can be no
clearer indication that the confiscation of the Volvo keys does not
fall under the relevant sections of
the Criminal Procedure Act, and
was unlawful.
16.
Regarding the seized Argosy truck, the
third respondent relies on inadmissible hearsay evidence by referring
to information given
to him that the goods contained in the hijacked
truck were offloaded into the Argosy truck at Aden’s premises
at [....] A
[....] Street, with the second applicant reportedly in
the vicinity. The third respondent states that he is in possession of
a
video showing all this, but for reasons not explained by the
respondents, the video was not produced before the court.
17.
The court considers reliance on hearsay
evidence and an unproduced video to be insufficient for the
respondents to satisfy the requirement
in section 20 of the Criminal
Procedure Act, that the Argosy truck was on reasonable grounds
believed to be concerned in the commission
or suspected commission of
an offence.
18.
There is more to the matter, however, since
Aden’s mobile phone containing the allegedly incriminating
footage was seized
from him after the second applicant had requested
him to go to the Crown Mines depot to find out what was happening to
the Argosy
truck, and Aden then took the third respondent to a
business named Drinkwater Cash and Carry where the stolen toothpaste
was found
in the possession of a person who stated that he had bought
the toothpaste from Aden.
19.
In the founding affidavit, the second
applicant acknowledges being hired by Aden to collect and transport
goods, and that he requested
Aden to attend at the Crown Mines depot
to investigate why the police were concerned with the Argosy truck.
This is sufficient
to create reasonable grounds for the third
respondent to believe that the Argosy truck was concerned in the
commission of the offence
of taking receipt of and transporting the
stolen goods from the hijacking.
20.
In the absence of a search warrant issued
under section 21 of the Criminal Procedure Act, section 22 of the Act
only entitled the
third respondent to seize the Argosy truck either
with the consent of the persons entitled to give such consent, or if
the third
respondent on reasonable grounds believed that a search
warrant would be issued on application and that the delay in
obtaining
such warrant would defeat the object of the search.
21.
The third respondent does not make out any
case for either believing that a search warrant would be issued as
envisaged by section
22(b)(i) of the Criminal Procedure Act, or that
a delay in obtaining such warrant would defeat the object of the
search.
22.
Rather, the respondents rely on the
combined conduct of Aden and the third applicant (Adan) as a basis
for satisfying the consent
requirement in section 22(a) of the
Criminal Procedure Act. There are, however, three reasons why this is
not a valid defence.
23.
First, neither Aden who was not employed by
the first applicant, nor the third applicant who was employed as the
driver of a different
truck, qualify as being entitled on behalf of
the first applicant to consent to the seizure of the Argosy truck.
24.
Second, the respondents’ allegations
in support of consent by conduct, also do not satisfy the
requirements set out in
Magobodi v
Minister of Safety and Security and Others
2009 (1) SACR 355
(Tk) to the effect that a person whose premises or
property are to be searched must be informed of the purpose of the
search. The
respondents do not allege that this occurred. The same
judgement states that in the absence of an entitlement under section
21(1)
or 22(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act, “
the
police official should, prior to requesting consent for the search,
establish whether the person to whom the request will be
directed has
the capacity to consent and has physical control over the vehicle to
be searched. If so, then such person should be
informed of his or her
right not to have the vehicle searched and also of his or her right
to refuse to give consent for the search
to take place
”.
25.
The affidavits in this matter disclose no
evidence that the third respondent complied with these requirements.
26.
During the hearing on 21 November 2022,
counsel for the respondents handed up an
ex
parte
order dated 8 September 2022, by
Malindi J in this division under section 38(2) of the Prevent of
Organised Crime Act, 121 of 1998.
Paragraph 1.2 of this order is a
preservation order in respect of a 2014 Freightliner Argosy truck,
the registration number, vehicle
identification number and engine
number of which are set out in Malindi J’s order.
27.
The court understood counsel for the
respondents to be requesting that this preservation order be treated
as a defence to the application
for restoration of possession of the
Argosy truck which is the subject of this
mandament
van spolie
application. No explanation
was given for the respondents’ delaying production of this
order until the spoliation application
was in the process of being
heard, but the court accepted the handing up of the order and ruled
that it be filed in the CaseLines
record of this matter. This has
been duly done by the respondents.
28.
Malindi J’s order does not serve as a
defence in this application, because it deals with a different Argosy
truck. The registration
number, vehicle identification number and
engine number of the truck identified in paragraph 1.2 of the
preservation order are
different from the corresponding numbers for
the Argosy truck in this application. The preservation order
accordingly has no effect
on the outcome of this application.
29.
Under these circumstances, the applicants
have made out a case for restoration of possession of all four items,
and have been substantially
successful in this application.
30.
Prayers 2 (a), (b), (c) and (d) and 3 of
the notice of motion are granted. The respondents are ordered to
restore possession of
the four items forthwith to the applicants’
attorney.
KEMACK
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANTS: Adv Mafoko
ATTORNEY
FOR APPLICANTS: Leseka Attorneys
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENTS: Adv Mashabane
ATTORNEY
FOR RESPONDENTS: The State Attorney
DATE
HEARD: 21 November 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 07 December 2022
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
King Civil Contractors (PTY) Ltd v Enviroserv Waste Management (PTY) Ltd (45747/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 467 (13 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 467High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
King Prince Insurance Company Limited v Matuba Transport and Logistics CC (A050244/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 866 (31 July 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 866High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Kingfisher Fuels CC t/a BP Braamfontein v BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another (2023/048927) [2025] ZAGPJHC 366 (7 April 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 366High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Kingdom of Lesotho v Frazer Solar GMBH and Others (2020/33700) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1486 (31 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1486High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Transport and Allied Workers Union v South African Securitisation Programme (RF) Ltd and Others (2020/ A5066) [2022] ZAGPJHC 66 (7 February 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 66High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar