Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 46South Africa
T.M v Minister of Police (33413/2015) [2025] ZAGPPHC 46 (21 January 2025)
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## T.M v Minister of Police (33413/2015) [2025] ZAGPPHC 46 (21 January 2025)
T.M v Minister of Police (33413/2015) [2025] ZAGPPHC 46 (21 January 2025)
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sino date 21 January 2025
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
HIGH COURT DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 33413/2015
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 21/01/2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
M[...]
T[...]
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
Defendant
JUDGEMENT
MNGQIBISA-THUSI
J
[1]
The plaintiff, Mr T[...] M[...], has instituted an action for damages
due to his alleged
emotional shock and psychological trauma suffered
after he allegedly witnessed the alleged assault and humiliation of
his father,
Mr V[...] M[...] M[...] (“Mr M[...]”), by
members of the South African Police Service (SAPS), on 25 October
2012.
At the time of the occurrence of the incident in
question, the plaintiff was about six years old.
[2]
From the pleadings it appears that at the time the
plaintiff’s claim was instituted, he was still a minor and Mr
M[...] brought
claims against the defendant (as first defendant) and
the National Director of Public Prosecutions (“the NDPP”),
also
on behalf of the plaintiff.
[3]
Consequently, two court orders were granted on 30 July 2018 and 4
February 2020, respectively,
in which Mr M[...]’s claims
against the defendant and the NDPP were settled. It is apposite
at this stage to set out
the provisions of the two court orders.
[4]
The court order, by agreement, of 30 July 2018 reads in part as
follows:
“
1.
The First Defendant is
liable for all the Plaintiff’s damage pursuant to the arrest on
25 October 2012 and the detention up
until date of first court
appearance on 29 October 2012.
2.
Any and all
liability of the First and Second defendant pursuant to detention and
incarceration from 29 October 2012 until 26 November
2012 as well as
any and all liability in respect of assault and malicious prosecution
is postponed
sine die
.”
[5]
The second order granted on 4 February 2020 reads in part as follows:
“
1.
Without admitting any
liability the First Defendant shall pay the Plaintiff an amount of
R350’000.00 (Three Hundred and Fifty
Thousand Rand) in full and
final settlement of Plaintiff’s claim in respect of the cause
of action as pleaded by the Plaintiff.
…
3.
The claim of the
Plaintiff against the Second Defendant is abandoned with no order as
to costs.”
[6]
In its plea, the defendant asserts that the arrest of Mr M[...] was
lawful but denies the
claims of assault and the purported humiliation
experienced by the plaintiff in witnessing the alleged assault on his
father, as
the plaintiff was not present during the police's presence
at his grandparents' homestead with his father.
[7]
During the hearing of these proceedings, the parties agreed that the
sole issue to
be determined is reflected in paragraph 6 of the
minutes (dated 8 December 2020) from their pre-trial meeting on 23
April 2020,,
which states as follows:
“
The
presiding officer will be called upon to decide whether an incident
occurred, in the presence of the minor, during which, on
25 October
2012 at the plaintiff and minor’s familial place of residence
the plaintiff was severely assaulted and/or humiliated
and/or a
unlawfully arrested, in the presence of the minor, by at least two
uniformed members of the South African Police Services,
whose full
and further particulars are unknown to the plaintiff. The
parties further record that any further aspect pertaining
to this
matter should be postponed
sine die
.
[8]
The plaintiff, in his amended particulars of claim, asserted
that he
had emotional shock and psychological trauma due to the unlawful
arrest and assault of his father.
[9]
The plaintiff’s evidence is as follows. On 25 October
2012, while playing football with friends in an
open field near his
residence, he saw his father arriving at their home in Mavhela,
accompanied by police officers, some in civilian
attire and others in
uniform. At that moment, his father was restrained with
handcuffs while the police officers were dragging
him towards the pit
toilet in the yard, shouting at him. He abandoned his play and
proceeded to the yard, positioning himself
at a footpath, around five
paces from the pit toilet. He witnessed the police assaulting
his father but could not recall
the number of times his father was
kicked. At the pit toilet, he observed the officers excavating
a hole at the back of the
pit toilet with a tool he described as a
'gwala,' a type of steel implement employed for digging in the
earth. The plaintiff
testified that following the excavation of
the pit which was partially filled with excrement and other refuse,
his father was ordered
to enter it. When his father was ordered
to enter the pit-toilet hole, one of his arms was uncuffed. The
father entered
the pit hole feet first. He testified that
during this procedure, the police officers persisted in shouting at
his father.
Upon entering the hole, he saw his father using a
shovel to excavate excrement and other waste outside the hole.
He said
that upon witnessing his father's actions, he was crying,
shocked and terrified. The plaintiff further testified that
while
his father was excavating, there were members of the community
both inside and outside the yard observing the event. He
testified
that while the witnesses to the occurrence remained silent,
other learners at school discussed the events that transpired at his
residence on the day in question and remarked that his father would
ultimately face sentencing by a court. The plaintiff
stated
that upon recollection of the occurrence, he experienced feelings of
distress and fear, and that he becomes anxious or disturbed
whenever
he encounters a police officer. The plaintiff further testified
that when the police and his father arrived at his
residence, his
paternal grandmother was present, although she left briefly and
returned later.
[10]
Under cross examination, the plaintiff conceded that his father was
not arrested
at home but somewhere else. He denied telling a
certain clinical psychologist that he had consulted that when the
police
came with his father, they had hit him with a sjambok, as
reflected in the psychologist’s report. He, however,
added
that when the police were pulling and kicking his father, his
father had fallen to the ground and the police refused to assist him
to get up. He further testified that after he left his paternal
grandparents’ home two years after the incident, to go and
live
with his maternal grandparents, he was no longer scared of police
officers who he believed could come back to his paternal
grandparents’ homestead.
[11]
The next witness called to testify on behalf of the plaintiff was
Sergeant
Divhuwani Sonnyboy Makgwathana who is stationed at the Local
Criminal Research Centre in Makhado. Sgt Makgwathana testified
that on the day in question he was requested by a colleague to join
them at a pointing-out scene for the purposes of taking photos
of the
process of recovering a firearm. On arrival at the scene, he
found a number of police officers, both in uniform and
in civilian
clothes and a suspect. He confirmed that he was not part of the
investigating team. He testified that there
were also many
people who had gathered there. Sgt Makgwathana testified that
he saw when the suspect was ordered by one of
the police officers to
climb into the opened pit-toilet hole. According to Sgt
Makgwathana the suspect went into the pit-toilet
hole with hi whole
body and was ordered to take out faeces inside the hole in search of
a firearm. He took photos of the
whole process. He testified
that although the photos were later downloaded, they were, however,
never used as no firearm was found
or recovered inside the hole of
the pit-toilet. When he left the scene, some police officers had
remained. Sgt Makgwathana
was not cross examined.
[12]
The last witness called on behalf of the plaintiff was Mrs S[...]
P[...] M[...],
the plaintiff's paternal grandmother. Mrs M[...]
testified that upon the arrival of the police with her son, she left
the
residence and proceeded to her sister's home. Mrs M[...]
refuted, as indicated in her police statement, that she had granted
the police permission to excavate a hole at the pit toilet.
[13]
After the plaintiff closed his case, counsel for the defendant
applied for
absolution from the instance. Counsel submitted
that the plaintiff failed to make out a
prima facie
case with
regard to the issues as set out in paragraph 6 of the parties’
pre-trial minute referred to in paragraph 7 above.
Counsel
argued that the plaintiff failed to make out a
prima facie
case that, as a result of the incident relating to his father, he has
suffered emotional shock and psychological trauma or that
he was
present when the police came with his father to his paternal
grandparents’ residence. Counsel urged the
court to
take a deem view of the fact that despite being present in court
during these proceedings, Mr M[...] failed to testify
about the
humiliation he suffered as a result of the alleged treatment by the
police officers who accompanied him on the relevant
day to his
residence.
[14]
On behalf of the plaintiff, counsel submitted that in view of the
settlement
agreement encapsulated in the court order dated 30 July
2018, the defendant conceded that there was an unlawful arrest and
detention
of Mr M[...]. It was further submitted that it was
not the humiliation as experienced by Mr M[...] which was in issue,
but
the humiliation and mental trauma experienced by the plaintiff at
observing how his father was treated by the police officers on
the
relevant day.
[15]
After argument on the issue of whether absolution from the instance
should
be granted or not and having considered the plaintiff’s
evidence and the submissions made, absolution from the instance was
refused.
[16]
The test for absolution from the instance was formulated in
Claude
Neon Lights (SA) Ltd v Daniel
1976 (4) SA 403
(AD)
at 409 G-H as
follows:
“…
when
absolution from the instance is sought at the close of plaintiff’s
case, the test to be applied is not whether the evidence
led by
plaintiff establishes what would finally be required to be
established, but whether there is evidence upon which a Court,
applying its mind reasonably to such evidence, could or might (not
should, nor ought to) find for the plaintiff. (
Gascoyne
v Paul and Hunter
1917 TPD 170
at 173;
Ruto Flour Mills (Pty) Ltd v Adelson
(2)
1958 (4) SA 307
(T)).”
[17]
In elucidating of the test for absolution from the instance as set
out in the
Claude Neon
matter (above), the court in
Gordon
Lloyd Page Associates v Rivera and Ano
[2000] 4 All SA 211
(AD)
held at 243B that:
“
This implies that
a plaintiff has to make out a prima facie case - in the sense that
there is evidence relating to all the elements
of the claim –
to survive the absolution because without such evidence no court
could find for the plaintiff (
Marine & Trade Co Ltd v Van der
Schyff
1972 (1) SA 26
(A) at 37G-38A; Schmidt
Bewysreg
4th
ed at 91-2). As far as inferences from the evidence are
concerned, the inference relied upon by the plaintiff must be
a
reasonable one, not the only reasonable one (Schmidt at 93).
The test has from time to time been formulated in different
terms,
especially it has been said that the court must consider whether
there is evidence upon which a reasonable man might find
for the
plaintiff” (
Gascoyne
(
loc cit
)) – a test
which has its origin in jury trials when the “reasonable man”
was a reasonable member of the jury
(
Ruto Flour Mills
).
Such a formulation tends to cloud the issue. The court ought
not to be concerned with what someone else might think;
it should
rather be concerned with its own judgment and not that of another
“reasonable” person or court. Having
said this,
absolution at the end of the plaintiff’s case, in the ordinary
course of events, will nevertheless be sparingly
granted but when the
occasion arises, a court should order it in the interests of
justice.”
[18]
Considering the evidence presented concerning the events surrounding
Mr. M[...]'s
arrival at his residence on
25
October 2012
and the treatment he received from the police
officers in charge, I concluded that there exists sufficient evidence
for a reasonable
court to rule in favour of the plaintiff regarding
his claim. The evidence presented by the plaintiff regarding the
events of the
pertinent day was largely supported by Sgt Makgwathana.
I reaffirm my previous decision denying absolution from the instance.
[19]
The defendant closed its case without calling any witnesses.
[20]
As agreed between the parties, the matter has to be assessed in the
context
of the issues as set out in paragraph 6 of the minutes of the
pre-trial conference which are, mainly:
20.1
whether an incident occurred in the presence of
the plaintiff;
20.2
whether Mr M[...] was severely assaulted; and/or
20.3
humiliated; and/or
20.4
unlawfully arrested, in the presence of the plaintiff.
[21]
The plaintiff's testimony as an eyewitness to the events that
transpired at
the home of her paternal grandparents on 25 October
2012, when police officers arrived at Mr. M[...]'s residence,
accompanied by
his father who was handcuffed, is in brief as follows.
[22]
Upon the police officers' arrival at his property, they forcibly
escorted his shackled father
through the yard towards a pit toilet.
An officer kicked Mr M[...], resulting in his collapse to the
ground. The police
excavated a hole behind the pit toilet and
instructed Mr M[...] to enter the hole and extract excrement and
other waste with a
shovel. During these occurrences, numerous
community members, both within and outside the yard, were there to
view the proceedings,
alongside the plaintiff and Sgt Makgwathana.
There is no evidence to refute the aforementioned evidence. I
am of the
view that the plaintiff and Sgt Makgwathana's testimony was
credible, plausible, and delivered in a coherent and honest manner.
The plaintiff was willing to concede that his father's unlawful
arrest did not take place in his presence. The plaintiff
remained consistent, even during cross-examination. The
defendant did not provide any evidence to refute the plaintiff's
account, which was largely supported by Sgt Makgwathana's testimony,
regarding the events that occurred at the plaintiff's paternal
grandparents' home on 25 October 2012, when the police arrived with
his father.
[23]
I am convinced that the plaintiff has, on a balance of probability,
established
that his father was severely assaulted in his presence,
having been kicked by a police officer and subsequently` falling to
the
ground. The physical attack was further exacerbated by his
father being compelled to enter a pit filled with excrement.
Moreover, I am convinced that the plaintiff has established that the
assault on his father, witnessed by both him and community
members,
resulted in the humiliation of his father, both in his son's
perception and in the perception of the community members
present
during the incident.
[24]
In the result, an order is granted in terms of the proposed draft
order marked
"
X
."
NP
MNGQIBISA-THUSI
Judge
of the High Court
Date
of hearing: 04 September 2024
Date
of judgment: 21 January 2025
Appearances
For
plaintiff:
Adv C
Van Jaarsveld (instructed by Gildenhuys Malatji Inc. Attorneys)
For
defendant:
Adv P
Nel (instructed by the State Attorney, Pretoria)
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