Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 45South Africa
Fritz v Minister of Police and Another (2023/025526) [2025] ZAGPPHC 45 (20 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 January 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Fritz v Minister of Police and Another (2023/025526) [2025] ZAGPPHC 45 (20 January 2025)
Fritz v Minister of Police and Another (2023/025526) [2025] ZAGPPHC 45 (20 January 2025)
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sino date 20 January 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2023/025526
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
3.
REVISED:
YES
/ NO
DATE:
20 January 2025
SIGNATURE
OF JUDGE:
In the matter between:
STEPHANUS PRETORIUS
FRITZ
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
First
Respondent
NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER OF POLICE
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MEADEN AJ
On
05 NOVEMBER 2024 upon hearing counsel for the Applicant, First and
Second Respondents and upon considering the papers, I handed
down the
following Order:
[1]
“
That the application is dismissed.
[2]
That the Applicant pays the Respondents cost on the attorney
and client scale and counsel on Scale B.”
The
above Order was handed down, taking consideration of the
undermentioned:
[1]
By way of
motion process, the applicant sought the undermentioned relief
[1]
:
(i)
An order removing the “
hit”
or “
flagging”
effected by the respondents on the applicant’s
passport/identity document;
(ii)
a declaratory order confirming that the first and second
respondents’
conduct of “
flagging
” and/or placing a “
hit
”
on the applicant’s passport (Number: A[...]) and/or identity
number 7[...] was unlawful and unconstitutional;
(iii)
a further declaratory order confirming that the conduct of the
first
and second respondents in stopping and searching the applicant
whenever he crosses the South African Border (be that travelling
in
or out of RSA) constitutes a direct violation of the applicant’s
constitutional rights to human dignity, privacy and freedom
of
movement; and
(iv)
an order awarding the applicant general damages in the amount of
R 1
Million and which damages arise as a result of the first and second
respondents’ alleged violation of the applicant’s
constitutional rights, unlawful detention, humiliation and
embarrassment allegedly suffered by the applicant at the hands of the
respondents;
(v)
a special order as to costs of this application
and on the
attorney and own client scale.
[2]
What becomes immediately apparent in perusing the founding and
replying affidavits
deposed to by the Mr. FS Pretorius - the
applicant in this opposed application; is that the applicant for his
part has failed to
take this court into his confidence in setting out
the full factual circumstances of this matter; including his alleged
unlawful
detention, humiliation, public embarrassment and
victimization suffered and at the hands of the first and second
respondents.
[3]
Ad
paragraphs 17 – 19 of the applicant’s founding
affidavit
[2]
he records that:
“
17. I have been
travelling without any hassles by the boarders for my entire life and
only started experiencing embarrassment, harassment
and unlawful
detention on port of entry and exit of South Africa on the 14
th
of January 2022.
18. I was on this day
(14 January 2022) unlawfully detained at the airport police satellite
station, searched without a warrant
and subjected to inhumane
treatment, accompanied from port of entry by full police uniform to
satellite police station, then to
the flight wherein my bags were
stripped, then back to the boarding pass gate with the uniform police
official in full view of
all passengers inclusive of those not flying
with me that are awaiting other flights.
19. It was really
embarrassing, humiliating, and degrading I must say. It has become an
ordeal I had to endure for more than a year
now.”
[4]
The
aforesaid is then supplemented with that recorded in paragraphs 20 -
21 of the applicant’s Replying Affidavit
[3]
and which paragraphs are recorded below:
“
AD PARAGRAPH 10
THEREOF
20. The contents
contained in this paragraph is denied, my right of freedom of
movement is impaired each and every time that I leave
and enter the
Republic because I am not allowed to immediately leave the ports of
entry. I must first be subjected to undignified
stop and search for
no apparent or valid reason.
21. Immediately I hand
over my passport to Immigration Officer by the counter. The counter
is stopped and queue blocked as my passport
hit due to flagging.
Police officials in full uniform are to take and escort me to the
airport satellite office. Search my bags
I would be carried.
Thereafter escort me the flight to offload my luggages’ already
packed in the flight. All this happens
in full view of all members or
airport personnel. In fully view of the public and/or everyone
walking to various destinations in
the airport. It is really
embarrassing I have no words to describe it.”
[5]
In pursuing this High Court application and over and above that
recorded aforesaid;
the applicant omits providing additional
necessary and material insight and information regarding the
following:
5.1
The dates and times of the applicant’s airline travel;
5.2
where the applicant is travelling to and from;
5.3
the airports of departure and arrival;
5.4
the airlines being flown on;
5.5
the airline counters attended on by the applicant;
5.6
the applicant’s flights and flight numbers;
5.7
particulars of how the applicant was allegedly unlawfully detained
and the circumstances in which this occured;
5.8
the periods of detention;
5.9
where the applicant is allegedly engaged and detained and by whom
on
arrival at airports;
5.10
particulars of what transpires in the course of the alleged
detention;
5.11
particulars of the conduct including alleged inhumane treatment meted
out to the applicant
and by whom;
5.12
the number and identification of police officials attending on,
engaging and escorting
the applicant;
5.13
particulars relating to the circumstances of the actual searching of
the applicant and
his luggage and by whom;
5.14
particulars of the actual embarrassing, humiliating and degrading
circumstances suffered
by the applicant.
What is recorded above is
not to be construed as being exhaustive of necessary and material
information and insights omitted from
the applicant’s above
affidavits. In the absence of the aforesaid necessary insights, this
application as compiled by and
on behalf of the applicant is bald,
vague, embarrassing and actually excipiable.
[6]
The applicant’s application as framed leaves the court with
more questions
than answers. As is apparent from the aforesaid, the
applicant’s Founding and Replying Affidavits lack necessary and
material
averments, particularity and documentary evidence including
annexures to establish, sustain and prove the applicant’s
contentions
and claims and in the absence of which, render the
applicant’s application fatally defective.
[7]
This court is not able in these circumstances to determine and
establish the
full scope and extent of the applicant’s
application as filed as of record.
[8]
Further and in resorting in pursuing such court process, the
applicant was clearly
able to anticipate that the allegations
contained in his above founding affidavit coupled with the relief
sought in the notice
of motion would be scrutinized and challenged by
and on behalf of the respondents. This indeed occurred and with the
respondents
opposing this application and filing their answering
affidavit. The respondents’ disputing of facts and allegations
contained
in the applicant’s application were reasonably
foreseeable.
[9]
The
respondents in their answering affidavit
[4]
have confirmed that the applicant is “
a
person of interest
”
and in circumstances where the South African Police Services
Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation Unit has been
in receipt
of information relating to the applicant and activities that he may
be involved in, including questionable cross border
activities
entailing his being in contact with a known futigive of justice –
Prophet Bushiri (who the SAPS are seeking to
apprehend and extradite
back to RSA) and which then renders the applicant a suspect in
ongoing police investigations. With this,
the respondents then
further in their answering affidavit deny the various allegations
raised by the applicant, thus resulting
in material dispute of facts
arising.
[10]
In this
context, motion proceedings cannot be resorted to and where material
disputes of fact are foreseeable and have actually
arisen.
Application proceedings are not designed to resolve factual disputes,
but rather have as their object; the determination
of legal issues
based on common cause facts.
[5]
[11]
This is then aggravated and with the applicant in the course and
scope of pursuing such application
process, then also resorting and
per paragraph 4 of the notice of motion and in introducing an
unliquidated financial claim for
damages (R 1 Million) and which the
applicant can reasonable anticipate will be opposed by the
respondents and involve the ventilation
and resolution of factual
issues associated with such unliquidated claim for damages.
[12]
As a
general rule, a party claiming damages, must produce the best
evidence available to substantiate the claim for damages, so
as to
enable an accurate assessment to be made thereof.
[6]
It is not competent for the court to award an arbitrary approximation
of damages to a plaintiff who has failed to produce available
evidence upon which a proper assessment of the loss could have been
made.
[7]
The court cannot embark
upon conjecture in assessing damages where there is no factual basis
in evidence for an assessment.
[8]
[13]
In
Greyling
v George Randell High School
[9]
the court concurred with the decision in
Leymac
Distributors Ltd v Hoosen
which
held that the quantum of damages claimed necessarily, has to be
assessed by a court on the basis of what the court itself
considers
to be reasonable, fair and just. The court went further to say “
the
court cannot assess the quantum of damages in a vacuum. It has to
hear evidence
…”
[10]
[14]
Per Rule 17(2)(a) of the Uniform High Court Rules, a combined summons
drawn in accordance with Form
10 is to be used where the claim is not
for a debt or liquidated demand. The applicant’s claim
contained in paragraph 4 of
his notice of motion constitutes an
unliquidated claim for damages requiring to be proved and established
and which in the ordinary
course of being pursued would form the
subject of a combined summons (as opposed to motion process) and as
envisaged in terms of
Rule 17(2) of the Uniform High Court Rules.
[15]
Further,
and per Rule 18(10) of the Uniform High Court Rules, a plaintiff in
suing for damages requires to set such claim out in
such a manner as
would enable the defendant to reasonably access the content thereof
and be able to plead thereto. In
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Manuel
[11]
it was held that:
“
92. …an
unliquidated claim for damages must be pursued by the institution of
an action … that has always been the
position and it is
reflected in Uniform Rules of Court. Uniform Rule 17(2) compels a
person claiming unliquidated damages to use
a long form summons and
file particulars of claim, and Uniform Rule 18 (10) obliges a
plaintiff suing for damages to set them out
in such a manner as would
enable the defendant reasonably to access the content thereof and
plead thereto….
93. This is not mere
technicality. Claims for unliquidated damages by their very nature
involve a determination by the court of
an amount that is just and
reasonable in the light of a number of imponderable and
incommensurable factors. That exercise cannot
be undertaken in
proceedings by way of application.”
[16]
The formulation and incorporation of such an illiquid claim for
damages in this application in the
prevailing circumstances is
clearly irregular and with that wholly incomplete. There is no
indication of how the applicant’s
claim for damages is founded
and quantified and the raising of such an illiquid claim for
financial damages amounts to an abuse
of process.
[17]
In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[12]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal clarified the Plascon-Evans principle as
follows:
“
Motion
proceedings, unless concerned with interim relief, are all about the
resolution of legal issues based on common cause facts.
Unless the
circumstances are special they cannot be used to resolve factual
issues because they are not designed to determine probabilities.”
[18]
Rule 6(5)(g) of the Uniform High Court Rules provides that where an
application cannot be properly
decided on affidavit, the court may
dismiss the application or make such order as it deems fit with a
view to ensuring a just and
expeditious decision.
[19]
The applicant in referencing there allegedly being breaches of his
rights, including fundamental constitutional
rights in this opposed
application; then enjoys the onus of formulating and making out a
substantial case to this end. With this,
the applicant is required to
correctly and substantially frame his cause of action and which in
the face of foreseeable opposition
including disputes of fact
arising; will entail leading of oral witness testimony and in the
establishment of the applicant’s
case.
[20]
In the face of the applicant’s founding and replying affidavits
being substantively incomplete
and devoid of necessary and material
facts required in the proper formulation of the allegations and
claims and this then being
aggravated with the further introduction
by the applicant of the above illiquid financial claim for damages in
the amount of R
1 Million and which in so doing; the applicant could
and should have realized will culminate in a serious dispute of fact
arising
that is not capable of resolution on the court papers at
hand; this court has proceeded to dismiss the application and with an
appropriate punitive order as to costs against the applicant.
ORDER
Accordingly,
this application has been dismissed and on the basis below.
[1]
“
That the application is dismissed.
[2]
That the Applicant pays the Respondents cost on the attorney
and client scale and counsel on Scale B.”
MEADEN
JR
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is
deemed to be 17h00
on this 20
th
day of January 2025.
Appearances
For Applicant:
TN Baloyi (Baloyi
Ntsako Attorneys Inc.)
For Respondents:
Office
of the State Attorney – Ref Mr. E Scharf
Date
of Hearing:
05
November 2024
Date
of Judgment:
20
January 2025
[1]
NOM
001-2 AND III.
[2]
NOM
001-10.
[3]
Applicant’s
Replying Affidavit 005-10 and 005-5.
[4]
Respondents’
Answering Affidavit 004-6 and 004-07.
[5]
Plascon-Evans
Paints (TVL) Ltd v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
[1984] 2 All SA 366
(A).
[6]
Erasmus
v Davis
1969
2 SA (AA) 227-G (per Muller AJA).
[7]
Monument
Art Co v Kenston Pharmacy
(Pty)
Ltd
1976 2 SA 111
( C) 118D-F.
[8]
Monument
Art Co 118D-F.
[9]
(PR11/22) [2023] ZALCPE 2;
[2023] 5 BLLR 412
(LC); (2023) 44 ILJ
1254 (LC) (27 February 2023).
[10]
1974(4) SA 534(D.
[11]
2021
3 SA 425
SA at para 92.
[12]
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA), at para 26.
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