Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 158South Africa
Singwane v Minister of Police (28378/2014) [2025] ZAGPPHC 158 (12 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
12 February 2025
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: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPPHC 158
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Singwane v Minister of Police (28378/2014) [2025] ZAGPPHC 158 (12 February 2025)
Singwane v Minister of Police (28378/2014) [2025] ZAGPPHC 158 (12 February 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2025_158.html
sino date 12 February 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: 28378/2014
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
2025-02-12
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MBONGENI
GODFREY
SINGWANE
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
Defendant
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for
handing down is deemed to be 12 February
2025.
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff, Mbongeni Godfrey Singwane, issued summons against the
defendant, the Minister of
Police [the Minister] claiming that
members of the South African Police Services [SAPS] committed acts of
delict whilst acting
within the course and scope of their
employment. The delicts were committed during and after his
arrest on 23 July 2013.
It is averred that the plaintiff was
assaulted and humiliated during the arrest in that he was stripped
naked and called a dog.
Furthermore, he was denied immediate
medical care and he was chained to his bed while in hospital.
The Minister denied that
he was assaulted or humiliated and pleaded
that any injuries could have been sustained when the plaintiff fled
into the veldt to
avoid his arrest.
[2]
At the commencement of the trial it was conceded that the arrest was
lawful. Furthermore,
it was common cause that the plaintiff was
arrested for robbery, taken to the police station, placed in a cell
and later taken
to the hospital. The charges against the
plaintiff was later withdrawn.
[3]
The issue to the be decided is whether the injuries sustained by the
plaintiff was inflicted by
the members of the SAPS while humiliating
him. The issue of quantum was separated in terms of Rule 33(4).
The
plaintiff’s version
[4]
He was informed by his wife that people arrived at his house,
identifying them as social workers.
According to his wife they
told her that they wanted to kill him and they were looking for
dagga. They had firearms on them
and also had grass cutters.
He was not at home because he had taken a walk. They came a
second time and this time a
neighbour, called Sibongile, was at their
home together with his wife. It was reported to him again they
were looking for
dagga that he was selling and that they were going
to kill him.
[5]
Scared, his wife called his parental home and they stayed at his
mom’s house for two nights.
He did not report the two
incidents to the police because his mother, as the elder, would tell
him what is the way forward.
The plan was to later report it to
the chief in the area. He was controlled by the family and
although urgent he had to wait
before he could report it to the
police. Upon their return his wife through the window saw that
the same people are back.
He “got a fright”.
He saw unmarked motor vehicles and at least 13 armed people, with
some also having grass cutters
and tyre strips. He exited the
house and a person, nine metres/paces away, from him fired a shot
directly at him. He
then fled into the veldt. As he was
running he could hear more fire-arms being discharged in his
direction.
[6]
He was hiding in the veldt, only 8 steps into the veldt, and he
could hear what they were
saying. He saw how they borrowed a
match from a neighbour and they set the veldt alight. He
explained in cross-examination
that the fire was around where he was
hiding and the smoke was interfering with his breathing. His
clothes were blackened
and he was scorched by the fire on his right
arm below the elbow. He admitted this was not in the
particulars of claim and
was not noted in the hospital records.
They also continued to shoot. They told him to come out
of his hiding
spot. He did not come out of his hiding spot,
they found him at his hiding spot because the police dogs had arrived
at the
scene.
[7]
Eight people arrested him and four of them were assaulting him with
tyre strips and grass cutters.
He could identify 4 of these
people; Mlambo, Mathebula, Pokathi and Philisa. They
asked about the dagga. This
assault took three hours.
They also kicked him. He was hurt on his spinal cord, his legs
and also on his head.
He had no operation but in the hospital
they gave attention to his spinal cord and he used support to walk.
He was called
a dog. Only upon being prompted by his counsel
did he volunteer that he was stripped naked by “Mlambo”
and the
community standing around saw him in this state.
[8]
He was after three hours taken to a van. The van drove off and
at an open veldt the van
stopped and he was instructed to run away,
but due to his injuries he could not. They then took him to the
Tonga Police Station
at around 1 am.
[9]
He denied that he knew of the case of robbery of a Nokia cell phone
he was wanted for and knew
of no reason why people would be looking
for him. He insisted that he was unaware of his relative
Lindiwe that had laid a
complaint against him. He admitted that
in 2012 he was charged also for robbery of a cell phone and he was
for that arrested
at his home.
[10]
In cross-examination he informed the court that on the first occasion
his wife was also shocked with a live
wire that they had cut and
placed against her ear. She did not file a complaint because
she is from Swaziland and did not
have the proper documentation to be
in South Africa. Sibongile witnessed this incident. He
also mentioned then that
a bag of mealie meal and a bag of rice was
destroyed as they looked for the dagga inside the bags. His
speaker and some of
his furniture was damaged. There is no
claim for these damages on the pleadings.
[11]
He denied that the police came to his house several times and that
every time he ran into the veldt.
He also denied that he hid
himself in the water stream in the veldt and covered his body with
mud so much so that when he came
out of the stream his whole body was
covered with mud.
[12]
In the van he was still naked, but his mother brought him clothes.
But these new clothes were also
soiled by blood because in the van,
on the drive to the police station they were still assaulting him.
When he was placed
in the van they were standing on him. When
confronted with a hospital report noting that his clothes were soiled
he said
that in the back of the van there was some soil. He had
no operation on his leg, only his spinal cord and his head was given
attention to.
[13]
He denied that he went to his mother’s house to hide from the
police. He denied that he was a
problem in the community and
that he and his friends were committing robberies in the community.
[14]
Thulile Mathebula testified that she is the girlfriend of the
plaintiff since 2011. She testified that
the “Police
arrive at home saying they are social workers, they want Godfrey they
want to kill him.” She denied
that these people came on
many occasions to look for her boyfriend. In cross-examination
she explained that the first time
the police came her husband was
working in the garden ploughing not far from the home. Her
reason for not calling her husband
or going to fetch him was that
there are snakes there and it did not strike her to do that.
She told the people he is at
work. She denied that she was
hiding her husband and said it slipped her mind to tell them where
her husband is. Then
she testified that it did not slip her
mind she was scared because these social workers were armed.
Sibongile, a tenant,
was present when they arrived. She denied
that the police came several times and every time he ran away.
She was unaware
that her husband was terrorising the community.
[15]
After the people left she called her mother-in-law as elderly
protocol dictates and the mother-in-law said
they must sleep at her
place. Her husband agreed and he said the next morning he will
go to the social workers’ office
because perhaps they wanted to
build him a house because his father was in the military. She
said it took an hour’s
walking from their house to their
mother-in-law’s house. When confronted with why go the
social workers’ place
if scared of them she retorted that they
in fact thought perhaps the men with the weapons were soldiers.
As they hurriedly
left the house, leaving goods behind, they returned
home. Upon their return when looking out of the window she saw
the very
same cars of the day before and she told the plaintiff that
the same people, at least 20 people, have arrived and they wanted to
kill him. The plaintiff then left the house and when he
approached them trying to speak to them a shot went off. The
plaintiff ran away and 11 armed people followed him. The shot
that was fired was aimed directly at the plaintiff and from
9 paces
away and the bullet landed at the neighbour’s house. He
ran from their house to the neighbour’s house
and then to the
veldt, while the shooting continued. They were calling him a
dog and also with his mom’s private parts.
[16]
They looked for him, but as the grass was very tall, could not find
him. They then called the K9 dogs.
However, the dogs
could not sniff him out. Only when prompted did she say the
veldt was set alight at the same time as the
K9 dog unit arrived.
She said her husband came out of the veldt out of his own,
contradicting the plaintiff that testified
that the dog sniffed him
out and they then arrested him. Later she heard crying and the
plaintiff came out of the veldt.
He was naked and one was
holding him on each side and one in front pulling him by his penis.
Three people were following
behind.
[17]
She saw him being slapped with a grass cutter and a knopkierie.
She lost sight of him and did not see
him being taken to the van.
He was naked and she called his mother to bring the clothes.
The mother took 10 minutes
to bring the clothes. When she
realised her contradiction she said one could do it in 10 minutes but
one had to be strong.
It was an hour walking from her
mother-in-law’s place to her place.
[18]
She heard that they said they were going into the house and she
followed. One had a knife and she saw
the wardrobe was
damaged. They said that they were looking for dagga and they
spoke harshly. One of them pulled an
electric wire from the TV
and put it next to her hear. She knows one of them as Pelusi,
but an unknown man hurt her ear.
The electrical current did not
last long and one of the 8-9 people in the house said that is wrong
what they are doing and took
it off her ear.
[19]
She said her boyfriend sold water as his job. He was a motor
mechanic and he used to plough and plant
and sell the vegetables.
Only when prompted by his counsel did she say he sometimes built.
[20]
She knew Desmond Matshebula from sight and hearing people referring
to that person as Desmond, but had never
spoken to him. She
knew of no previous charges or this averred charge against her
boyfriend. She did not know of a
previous incident in 2012 with
the Linda as complainant. She said perhaps that was before she
met him.
[21]
She informed the Court that at the court hearing the magistrate bowed
her head and said assaults had stopped
in 1994 and her boyfriend is
released and must report the matter. She admitted that the
charge sheet reflects that the Magistrate
wrote that the matter is
withdrawn because there was no docket before Court.
[22]
On the day of the arrest the plaintiff fled after the first shot was
fired. But, after the amount of
shots fired it was obvious to
her they wanted to kill him. She could not answer why if they
wanted to kill him the bullets
missed him, but thought it was because
he lowered his head while running.
[23]
She could not see her husband in the veldt. The stream is 2-3
minutes away from the veldt where he
hid. She could only see
after they set the place alight. There was smoke and fire, even the
next day the veldt was still
burning. When confronted with how
she could see, she then said it was only burning on the side of the
veldt. The fire
was only started after the dogs arrived.
It was not a controlled fire.
[24]
When he came out of the bushes she could not see injuries from where
she was standing, but he was limping.
She could later see a
wound on his leg, she could not say how big, but one had to take care
of it otherwise it would go septic.
The fence injury was just
an abrasion around the knee. When he scaled the fence the fence
caught his leg, he tripped and
landed with his knee on a rock or
stone. That caused the abrasion. He also had a long mark
which stretched on the inside
of his right thigh. His lower
back and waist was also painful and he had to go for physiotherapy
once a week.
[25]
They did go to the police station to report her shocking of the ear
and the destruction of property.
She did not agree with her
husband that they did not go to the police to report it, because she
did not have proper papers.
Sibongile
Florence Mkhonto testified
[26]
She was a tenant in the house of the plaintiff. She confirmed
that the plaintiff was earning a living
by supplying water tanks and
ploughing. He also did panel beating and when prompted recalled
he also did building.
[27]
On the first occasion the people arrived at the home and they asked
where the plaintiff was and they answered
that he was at work.
The people were, despite saying they would kill him, talking nicely
to them. She testified the
mother’s place is two hours
walking away but if one hurried then one hour. On the second
occasion they came with vans
and she and the girlfriend of the
plaintiff warned the plaintiff that it was the same people of the
first occasion. He left
the house and approached them, but
never spoke. They told him to stop, but he did not, he fled.
The shooting happened
before he fled. She admitted there was a
small amount of water, a stream, four paces from the grass side.
The stream
is dirty. The first shot was fired from two paces
from the plaintiff. They had never identified themselves as
police
officers and the shooting continued while he was running into
the veldt. They could not find him and borrowed a match and
set
the veldt alight. When he came out of the veldt he was naked.
She saw him being assaulted with a grass cutter.
He was limping
and they were pulling him by his genitals. She saw him at
hospital walking on crutches and a bandage around
his head.
[28]
Lindiwe Mnisi testified that the plaintiff is her son. His
source of income was derived from being
“sort of a farmer”.
He was planting and selling water to the community. He would
also sometimes assist
a local panel beater. On being prompted
she added that he sometimes helped with building. She testified
that her son
was kind and helpful and he attends church.
[29]
She received a call informing her that social workers attended her
son’s house and that they wanted
to kill him. She
instructed her son and his girlfriend to come to her house. It
takes about two hours to get from their
house to her house.
They stayed over for two nights and then they left to go and
investigate what was going on.
[30]
She then received a call saying the social workers are back with
guns. As she was preparing to leave
her house she received
another call informing her that her son had been stripped naked.
She ran while crying to her son’s
house. It took her an
hour and some minutes to get there.
[31]
When she arrived there she saw community members and her son lying
face down on his stomach. People
with grass cutters and tyre
strips pushed her away from her son. She had clothes with her
for her son. The people took
the clothes, but she did not know
what happened to the clothes as they would not allow her to approach
her son.
[32]
He was badly injured, so much so that he could not lift his head.
His body was full of blood and his
heads was swollen. She saw
no mud. She asked her son what he had done and he said he had
done nothing wrong.
She then apparently fainted and did not see
him again until his release.
[33]
Only when prompted she said the veldt was burning, she saw flames.
She knows social workers do not
have guns and that they deal with
social problems.
The
defendant’s version
[34]
The Minister called Gugulethu Desmond Mlambo a sergeant in the SAPS
with 21 years experience. He was
the investigating officer in
the matter where Linda Zakele Siwane was the complainant. The
charge was one of robbery of two
cell phones and R80.00 cash.
The suspect was identified by the complainant as the plaintiff.
[35]
He on at least three times went to look for the plaintiff at his home
but could not find him because he would
run away to a veldt. He
managed to escape because his house was angled at such a way that he
could see when their cars were
approaching. There was also a
stream and this stream would broaden with rain to the size of the
witness box, 3-4 metres,
but would be narrower if no rain. He
confirmed that the photographer depicted the scene where the
plaintiff would run to
and where he was arrested.
[36]
On the first occasion he went to the plaintiff’s house he
called the complainant to show him where
the plaintiff stayed as he
did not know the complainant or the suspect. He and three other
police officials accompanied by
the complainant went to his house.
They were not uniformed. They were armed as they wanted to
execute an arrest.
A police officer who had passed on went into
the house and reported that the suspect was not at home. Four
other times other
police officers went to his house and reported he
was not there.
[37]
The next time they went was on a tracing operation. They were
more than 10 members of the SAPS.
The complainant was also
present. They were using unmarked vehicles and were in plain
clothes. They parked the cars
on the top of the slope with the
house being on the bottom of the slope. They had planned that
some vehicles would park close
to the house and others would cross
the stream. In order to cross the stream they would have to use
an alternative route
and their purpose was to cut off the plaintiff
as he always ran to the stream. He was one of the members close
to the stream.
Community members had also come out and they
helped them by shouting to which direction he was running. The
plaintiff went
into the stream which was full of mud and he
disappeared in the mud. They could not see him for more than 30
minutes and
they decided not to get in the mud so they called
Constable Sibiya from the dog unit for search and rescue.
[38]
When the dog arrived he rose out of the mud. He had camouflaged
himself with mud and grass. He
was extremely dirty and he was
smelling very bad.
[39]
He did not know of visits with social workers because the police do
not work with social workers. He
did not hear shots and he saw
no fire. He could not see injuries on the plaintiff’s
body because he was totally covered
in mud and stinking. One
could not even “handle” him. He did not see him
being naked because of the mud
and from his arrest he went straight
to the van so nobody could have stripped him.
[40]
Inside the van were Lieutenant Mangane and Colonel Boluse, both who
are now on pension. He saw no assault
and the van did not stop
until it reached the police station.
[41]
The community members were helping them because they were saying they
are tired of Mbongeni because he is
abusing them by robbing them.
He had previously robbed a female person of her cell phone, necklace
and cash.
[42]
As far as he could recall there was another suspect for this matter,
Leslie Mdiba and they could not find
him. The court told them
to find that suspect and he then applied for a J50.
[43]
He explained that if there were abrasions on his hands and his body
and on his leg, he did not know if the
social workers hurt him or if
he was hurt when he was running away or in the mud.
[44]
He confirmed he was a diligent police officer, was promoted and knows
much about policing. He would
only shoot at a suspect if his
life or somebody else’s life was in danger.
[45]
He denied that they carried grass cutters, he did not know what kind
of grass cutters was referred to.
He could not remember a day
that an armed policeman would also carry a grass cutter and a tyre
strip. He reiterated that
the plaintiff was so full of mud that
he did not know if he was clothed or not, but he did not see anybody
undress him. His
eyes could not scan under the mud of the
plaintiff. They did not put him in the van due to the mud, he
was instructed to
get in the van and he did. He denied that
they stopped on the way to the police station with him and told him
to run away.
He said he was always running away after they had
caught him why would they tell him to run away.
[46]
He denied that people in Tonga were kidnapping people as in his 21
years he had never seen such a docket
or heard that. But, if
the plaintiff was scared why did he not come to the police and report
it. He did not run away
because he did not know who they were,
he ran away because he did not want to be arrested.
[47]
Desmond Mathebula testified that he has 20 years’ service in
the SAPS with his current rank that of
Sergeant. On the day of
the arrest of the plaintiff he was still getting out of his vehicle
when he saw a man running away.
The plaintiff jumped into the
stream. He was 14 paces from him when he emerged from the
stream after the dog found him.
The dog had sniffed his clothes
and then found him.
[48]
When he came out of the stream he was black from the mud. If
anybody touched the plaintiff that person
would have been very
dirty. He recalled that the plaintiff was naked.
[49]
It was the first time he visited the premises but he stayed in the
vicinity and his uncle is the neighbour
to the plaintiff.
[50]
He denied that in that area people were being kidnapped and that is
why the plaintiff fled. He thought
he fled because he knew he
was going to be arrested. He denied that he heard or saw any
shots being fired or that he saw
the plaintiff being assaulted.
He did not see grass cutters, tyre strips or knopkieries.
Decision
on the merits
[51]
From the evidence it is common cause that members of the SAPS
lawfully arrested the plaintiff on 23 July
2013. It was not
denied that it was done by means of a tracing operation; it was
corroborated with the common cause
fact that there were many vehicles
and many members of the SAPS effecting many traces. From this
common cause fact the only
probable inference is that the previous
attempts to arrest the plaintiff were unsuccessful. This Court
can accept the evidence
of Sergeant Mlambo that there were previous
attempts as this at least one attempt was corroborated by the
plaintiff and their lodger.
It is also common cause that he was
never found at the house when the police was looking for him.
[52]
I reject the version that the members of the police, while armed,
told the plaintiff’s wife and their
lodger that they were
social workers. It would serve no purpose, neither would
telling them that they were going to kill
him. This Court noted
with interest that the girlfriend of the plaintiff started her
testimony with “police arrive
at home saying they are social
workers”; she clearly knew it was police officers.
It is common cause that he
was previously arrested at this house so
they knew the procedure. There was an official docket with a
complaint of robbery,
which of course the plaintiff denied.
Later in his evidence he contradicted his prior evidence and admitted
that there was
a complaint of robbery of a cellphone against him.
The initial evidence was false with his concession that there was a
previous
charge and this new charge. It is common cause that
his girlfriend did not tell the police where he was when they
approached
her the first time. He said he went for a walk, she
said he was farming. It is common cause that they fled to their
mother’s house. Even when taking into account cultural
practices the only reasonable inference on the plaintiff’s
own
version is that they were evading the police, knowing it was in fact
the police and not armed social workers. I accept
the evidence
of the defendant that they had attempted to arrest him at least four
times and, as already stated, this is corroborated
by this tracing
operation.
[53]
This fleeing from the police is further corroborated by the way the
tracing operation of this suspect took
place. It is common
cause that some vehicles parked close to the house on the hill and
others used another route to park
close to the stream. If the
plaintiff had not habitually run to the veldt and stream to avoid
arrest, the members would not
have implemented this manner of tactic.
[54]
The plaintiff did not make a good impression on the Court. His
evidence was at times untruthful and
probabilities on how the events
took place defies logic or probability. If a police officer was
aiming directly at him from
9 paces away the police officer must have
been a very bad shot for him not to be hit. The other many
shots fired directly
at the plaintiff also never struck the
plaintiff. The averred bowing of his head as he is running
rendering the bullets to
miss him is simply improbable; the
rest of his body, and even his head, could have been hit. There
is no real evidence
before me of any casings found on the scene.
He was warned of the approach by the police by his wife and tenant
and he fled
towards the veldt as was his practice. He did not
flee because he was being shot at.
[55]
His version that he only entered 8 steps into the veldt and that they
could easily have found him is improbable.
The police’s
purpose was to find and arrest him. If he was so easily to be
found, they would have found him.
Why was it then necessary to
call in the help of the dog unit, that is common cause, to find him
in the veldt.
[56]
It was palpable to this Court that the version of the veldt being
burned was untruthful. The mother
and the wife and tenant had
to be prompted by their counsel to recall this event. This is
completely against human nature;
if a human being is hiding in
a veldt that is set alight one would spontaneously recall that due
the gravity thereof, even taking
into account that the incident took
place ± 10 years earlier. The plaintiff’s version
that they sent the dog
into the burning fire to search for him was
later on in his evidence contradicted by him then testifying that the
fire was only
on the side of the veldt. He started off by testifying
he had burning wounds but later reduced it to a small wound, but
persisted
his clothes was blackened by the fire. He also said
the old lady that gave the police the match could testify. She
was never called. I can with confidence reject his version that he
hid in a burning veldt. The hospital record does not record
a
burning wound or scorched clothes.
[57]
I can also accept that he was covered in so much mud that he appeared
pitch black and was so dirty from it
that he could not be “handled”
as testified to by the officers for the defendant. The stream
is not clean;
it was never denied that there are reeds and mud
in the stream. The doctor on the hospital record specifically
recorded that
his clothes were soiled. The explanation for this
in cross-examination that the back of the van soiled his clothes was
a
clear afterthought. He testified that his clothes were soaked
by blood, yet the doctor did not note this.
[58]
In the particulars of claim the plaintiff is cited as a bricklayer
and his claim for loss of income is based
thereon. All the
witnesses for the plaintiff testified that he planted and sold water
and sometimes assisted a panel beater.
It was again palpable to
the Court that when it struck the plaintiff that his profession was
not that on the pleadings he was prompted
with “did he build”
to all the witnesses who then as an afterthought testified that he
sometimes did this. Again
this reflects on the truthfulness and
reliability of the witnesses.
[59]
The next question to be answered is was the plaintiff naked before
the community and humiliated as a result
of the actions of the
members of the SAPS. The plaintiff and his witnesses testified
that he was naked after his arrest.
His mother testified that
she brought him clothes but was denied access to give him the
clothes. The plaintiff’s version
is that he received
these clothes because his clothes was soiled with blood. He
testified that his clothes were taken off
by Sergeant Mlambo.
Yet, in cross-examination this was never tested; Sergeant
Mlambo was never confronted with that
he was the one that stripped
the plaintiff of his clothes. He was only asked whether he saw
the plaintiff naked and it was
put to him that the officers who
apprehended the plaintiff had stripped him naked. As this was
not tested the court has to
accept that Sergeant Mlambo did not strip
the plaintiff of his clothes. Sergeant Mlambo said he could not
see if the plaintiff
was naked because his whole body was covered in
thick mud. He did not see anybody undress the plaintiff.
Sergeant Mathebula
testified that the plaintiff was black and dirty
from the mud, but he recalled that the plaintiff was naked.
[60]
On this evidence I accept that the plaintiff was naked when arrested,
but the question is how did this happen.
I cannot accept that
it was Sergeant Mlambo as this was never tested. Both the
members testified that nobody would touch
the plaintiff because one
would get very dirty and stinky. The uncontested evidence of
Sergeant Mathebula was that the dog
sniffed the clothes and then went
searching for the plaintiff. The Court must thus accept that
the plaintiff undressed himself
before getting into the stream.
Knowing the muddiness and stinkiness of the water this is not
improbable.
[61]
The plaintiff testified that due to the police assaulting him for
three hours with tyre strips and a grass
cutter he was severely
injured. He testified that he was also kicked. He was
hurt on his legs, head and spinal cord.
He described it as an
orthopaedic injury on the right side of his leg and back. At
hospital they only gave attention to his
spinal cord and leg.
The right hand side of his face and back of his head was swollen.
He needed assistance to walk
and was in a wheelchair.
[62]
His girlfriend testified that he was also beaten with a knopkierie.
He did fall while scaling the fence
of the neighbour while fleeing
and he hurt his knee on a rock or stone. After he came out of
the veldt he was limping.
His lower back and waist was painful
and he had to go for physiotherapy once a week. She later saw a
wound on his leg that
had to be treated otherwise it would go
septic. On his right thigh he had a long “mark”.
[63]
As part of the record the hospital records were filed. The
plaintiff did not call the author of the
hospital records. None
of the information contained therein was explained to the Court by an
expert, nor was I referred to
it by counsel for the plaintiff.
The only reliance placed thereon by the plaintiff was that the doctor
had noted that he
was informed that it was assault by the police.
This has no evidential value as he obtained this information from the
plaintiff
and it was not his expert opinion. I accept
that the plaintiff had injuries, but two questions needed to be
answered;
what was the nature and extent of the injuries and
did the members of the SAPS cause the injuries.
[64]
No medical evidence was placed before this Court as to what could
have caused the injuries, i.e. assault,
or falling over the fence and
landing on a rock or stone, or running away, or while hiding or being
emerged in water with rocks.
I only know that he was limping
and had to go to physio. There were no operations.
.
[65]
From this I can deduce that the injury to his spine and/or leg may
have been serious, but I simply don’t
know. A doctor
would need to explain this and if assault caused this. Upon a
cursory perusal of the hospital records,
notes on p7-58 would need to
be explained “Ⓐ? real or exaggerated.”
But, can I accept that this injury
is from an assault or something
else? The plaintiff and his witnesses testify it was from an
assault with a grass cutter
and tyre strips. One witness went
further and included a knopkierie which the others did not.
This terrible assault,
over three hours, took place in full sight of
many community members. Not one of the community members were
called.
This renders credence to the testimony of the officers
that the community was complaining about the plaintiff robbing them
and
even assisted them in showing where he ran to. The police
must have been very brazen to assault a person for three hours in
front of many community members. The witnesses for the
defendant denied that the plaintiff was assaulted.
[66]
When there are two mutually destructive versions, the plaintiff must
on a preponderance of probabilities
satisfy the Court that his
version is true and accurate. I had already found that the
credibility of the plaintiff’s
version with the veldt being
lit, the “social workers” attending to his house, him not
hiding or fleeing from the police
where he was hiding and his
profession were not credible and probable. This is not a
matter, where the probabilities are
evenly balanced, and therefore I
cannot find that the plaintiff’s evidence is true and the
defendant’s version is false.
[1]
[67]
If the plaintiff had called the author of the hospital records a
court could find on the nature and extent
of the injuries and whether
the cause could be assault. On just the unreliable evidence of
the plaintiff and his witnesses
this Court cannot find this.
The plaintiff has not on a preponderance of probabilities proved the
causal connection between
the injuries and the conduct of the
members. This Court does not know what caused it; i.e. a
grass cutter or booted
feet or tyre strips; or from running,
falling, hiding? If the plaintiff called the doctor that
treated him this could
be proved. This evidence is necessary
especially as I have found the plaintiff and his witnesses’
evidence on most
aspects untruthful or improbable.
In
view thereof I grant absolution from the instance with costs.
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE NO:
28378/2014
HEARD ON:
10-13 September
2024, 2 December 2024
FOR THE PLAINTIFF:
ADV. A. SIBANDA
INSTRUCTED BY:
Ganta Attorneys
FOR THE DEFENDANT:
ADV. M. BALOYI
INSTRUCTED BY:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12 February 2025
[1]
Stellenbosch
Farmers’ Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell et Cie and
Others
2003
(1) SA 11
(SCA) par [5]
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Skhosana v Minister of Police (2024/A200, 30147/2013) [2025] ZAGPPHC 240 (10 March 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 240High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mabasa v Minister of Police (14551/2019) [2025] ZAGPPHC 718 (15 July 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 718High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
T.M v Minister of Police (33413/2015) [2025] ZAGPPHC 46 (21 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 46High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Sampson v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 450; 81791/2018 (19 June 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 450High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Masombuka v Minister of Police (47958/2017) [2025] ZAGPPHC 931 (29 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 931High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar