Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 77South Africa
Egerer v Minister of Police and Others (1679/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 77 (1 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 February 2024
Headnotes
in a case where the Minister of Safety and Security is being sued for unlawful arrest and detention and does not deny the arrest and the detention, the onus to justify the detention as being lawful rests on the defendant and the burden shifts to the defendant based on the provisions of Section 12(1) of the Constitution.[3]
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Egerer v Minister of Police and Others (1679/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 77 (1 February 2024)
Egerer v Minister of Police and Others (1679/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 77 (1 February 2024)
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sino date 1 February 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
number: 1679/2018
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED No
Date:
01/02/2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
JEAN-PIERRE
EGERER
PLAINTIFF
And
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
1ST DEFENDANT
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN COUNCIL
2ND DEFENDANT
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF THE SAPS
3RD DEFENDANT
THE PROVINCIAL
COMMISSIONER OF POLICE
4TH DEFENDANT
THE
STATE ATTORNEY
5TH DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
KHWINANA
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The plaintiff instituted action against the defendant for damages
suffered when the
plaintiff was arrested on 14 April 2017 and
detained until 15 April 2017.
[2]
The First Defendant is THE MINISTER OF POLICE.
2.1 The Second Defendant
is EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN COUNCIL.
2.2 The third Defendant
THE NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF THE SAPS,
2.3 The fourth Defendant
THE PROVINCIAL COMMISSIONER OF POLICE.
2.4 The Fifth Defendant
is THE STATE ATTORNEY.
[3]
The plaintiff issued a summons for unlawful arrest and detention in
the sum of R150 000.00
and R 150 000.00 for defamation. The
defendant did not enter an intention to defend. The plaintiff alleges
that he did comply
in terms of section 3 (2) of Act 40 of 2002. This
matter is proceeding on a default basis. I am ceased to determine if
the arrest
and detention were lawful, defamation, and the fair and
reasonable amount of compensation.
BACKGROUND
[4]
The plaintiff was arrested without a warrant of arrest on the 14
th
of April 2017 at a traffic light at Range View Road, Benoni. He
says that he was arrested by traffic officers for allegedly
exceeding
the speed limit under cas number 246/04/17.
[5]
He says that the traffic officers did not comply with the guidelines
as requested
by the technical committee for speed prosecution which
constitutes an inaccurate measurement of the speed the Plaintiff was
traveling
at. He says he was detained at Brakpan Police Department
without a just cause.
[6]
He says that on the 15
th
of April 2017, he was released on
warning to appear in court on the 18
th
of April 2017. He
says he appeared several times in court and the matter was ultimately
withdrawn against him. He says the police
officers that effected the
arrest and detention were acting under the scope and cause of
employment.
[7]
He says the Metro Police failed to take the necessary steps to ensure
his release,
had no justification to arrest and detain him, and
passed unsavoury and derogatory remarks in the presence of the
plaintiff’s
family members, members of the first and second
defendant, and members of the public. He says he was detained in a
deplorable and
unhygienic conditions with three other inmates. He was
denied his medication. He says the cell was gloomy and he could not
keep
track of time. He says the cell was very dirty and he was
advised to shower and wash with soap upon release. He says he had to
sleep next to a stinking toilet and had no toilet paper.
[8]
He says he did not have privacy with the other inmates when using the
toilet. he requested
medication but was detained. The plaintiff says
he suffered damages of R 150 000.00 being for seven nights and
eight days
and contumelia. He says he suffered general damages in the
sum of R 150 000.00 as a result of the enjoyment of the
amenities
of life in that he suffered loss of self-respect,
humiliation, degradation, loss of dignity, and unusual and cruel
punishment post-traumatic
stress disorder.
[9]
The plaintiff claims R 150 000.00 for derogatory remarks passed
by members of
the first and second defendant in the presence of
members of the public which injured his
fama
(name)
COUNSEL’S
SUBMISSION
[10]
He submitted that the arrest and subsequent detention of the
plaintiff were unlawful because
the officers who arrested the
plaintiff did so without a warrant of arrest, and without any
reasonable suspicion, he did not exercise
his discretion correctly in
that there was no need to arrest the plaintiff to secure his
attendance at court and could have been
brought before court in any
of the many other formats afforded to himself in terms of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (hereafter
referred to as “the
act”), as well as in terms of Standing order G341.
THE LAW APPLICABLE
[11]
Section
40
(1) (b) of the
Criminal Procedure Act
[1
],
sets out the essential jurisdictional facts that have to be present
to justify an arrest without a warrant. These are;-
(a) The
arresting officer must be a peace officer;
(b) The
arresting officer must entertain a suspicion;
(c) The
suspicion must be that the suspect committed an offence
to
in Schedule 1; and
(d) The
suspicion must be based on reasonable grounds.
[12]
Botha v Minster of Safety; January v Minister of Safety and
Security
[2]
has held that in a
case where the Minister of Safety and Security is being sued for
unlawful arrest and detention and does not
deny the arrest and the
detention, the onus to justify the detention as being lawful rests on
the defendant and the burden shifts
to the defendant based on the
provisions of Section 12(1) of the Constitution.
[3]
[13]
These provisions, therefore, place an obligation on the police
official who is bestowed with
duties to arrest and detain persons
charged with and/or suspected of the commission of criminal offences,
to establish before detaining
the person, the justification and
lawfulness of such arrest and detention.
[14]
It is trite that the onus rests on the police to justify the arrest.
Rabie CJ explained in Minister
of Law and Order v Hurley and
Another
[4]
: ‘that an
arrest constitutes an interference with the liberty of the individual
concerned, and it, therefore, seems fair
and just to require that the
person who arrested or caused the arrest of another person should
bear the onus of proving that his
action was justified.
[15]
In
Biyela
v Minister of Police
[5]
,
the
court affirmed that the test whether a suspicion is reasonable, is
objectively justiciable. At [34] Musi AJA said “
The
standard of a reasonable suspicion is very low. The reasonable
suspicion must be more than a hunch; it should not be an
unparticularised
suspicion. Whether that information would later, in
a court of law, be found to be inadmissible is neither here nor there
for the
determination of whether the arresting officer at the time of
arrest harboured a reasonable suspicion that the arrested person
committed a Schedule 1 offence”.
[16]
It is now a well-established principle of our law that a person's
freedom and security are sacrosanct
and are protected by our
Constitution. In Mahlangu and Another v Minister of
Police,
[6]
Tshiqi J
captured this principle as follows at “It is now trite that
public policy is informed by the Constitution.
Our Constitution
values freedom, understandably so when regard is had to how, before
the dawn of democracy, freedom for the majority
of our people was
close to non-existence. The primacy of “human dignity, the
achievement of equality and the advancement
of human rights and
freedoms” is recognized in the founding values contained in
section 1 of the Constitution… These
constitutional provisions
and the protection in section 12 of the right of freedom and security
of the person are at the heart
of public policy consideration”.
[17]
In
Rahim and 14
Others v Minister of Home
Affairs
(4) SA 433 (SCA) at paragraph 27 it was stated:
‘
the deprivation of
liability is indeed a serious matter. In cases of
non-patrimonial loss where damages are claimed the extent
of damages
cannot be assessed with mathematical precision. In such cases
the exercise of a reasonable discretion by the court
and broad
general considerations ploy a decisive role in the process of
quantification. This does not, of course
absolve a
plaintiff of adducing evidence which will enable a court to make an
appropriate and fair award. In cases involving
deprivation of
liability the amount of satisfaction is calculated by the court
ex
aequo et bono
.
Inter alia
the following
factors are relevant:
‘
17.1
circumstances under which the deprivation of liability took place;
17.2
the conduct of the defendants; and
17.3
the nature and duration of deprivation …’
[18]
The general approach regarding the amount of damages for unlawful
arrest and detention was appropriately
captured by Bosielo AJ
in
Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyulu
[7]
,
at [26], the Judge remarked thus “
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 comensurate
with the injury inflicted.
Therefore,
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.
[19]
In Mathunjwa v Minister of Police (A3134/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 12 (11
January 2023 this principle
was reiterated that “
Money
can never be more than a crude solatium for the deprivation of what
in truth can never be restored and there is no empirical
measure for
the loss….It needs to be kept in mind when making such awards
that there are many legitimate calls upon the
public purse to ensure
that other rights that are no less important also receive
protection”
[8]
..
[20]
In
Olga v Minister of Safety and Security
2008
JDRJ582E paragraph 6 (ECD case number 608/207) Jones J remarked:
‘
In modern South
Africa a just award for damages for wrongful arrest and detention
should express the importance of the constitutional
right to
individual freedom, and it should properly take into account the
facts of the case, the personal circumstances of the
victim and the
nature, extent and degree affront to his dignity and his sense of
worth, These considerations should be tempered
with restraint
and proper regard to the value of money to avoid the motion of an
extravagant distribution of wealth from what Holmes
J called the
‘“horn of plenty” at the expense of the defendant’.
[21]
At common law, the elements of the delict of defamation are: (a) the
wrongful and (b) intentional
(c) publication of (d) defamatory
statement (e) concerning the plaintiff. It is not an element of the
delict in common law that
the statement be false. Once a plaintiff
establishes that a defendant has published a defamatory statement
concerning the plaintiff,
it is presumed that the publication was
both unlawful and intentional. A defendant wishing to avoid liability
for defamation must
then raise a defence which rebuts unlawfulness or
intention
[22]
In Minister of Police v Mbilini
[9]
,
the Court stated:
“
Every person
has an inborn right to the tranquil enjoyment of his peace of mind,
secure against aggression upon his person, against
the impairment of
that character for moral and social worth to which he may rightly lay
claim and of that respect and esteem of
his fellow-men of which he is
deserving, and against degrading and humiliating treatment; and there
is a corresponding obligation
incumbent on all others to refrain from
assailing that to which he has such right.”
[23]
In Ryan
v Petrus
[10]
,
the Court confirmed that the nature of the word uttered, as well as
the context in which it is used, will affect the damage suffered.
[24]
Hix Networking Technologies v System Publishers (Pty) Ltd and
Another
[11]
,
Plewman AJ defined defamatory statements as follows: “…a
defamatory statement is one which injures the person to
whom it
refers by lowering him in the estimation of the ordinary intelligent
or right-thinking members of society…”.
[25]
It is now a well-established principle of our law that a person's
freedom and security are sacrosanct
and are protected by our
Constitution. In Mahlangu and Another v Minister of
Police
2021
(2) SACR 595
(CC)
Tshiqi J captured this principle as follows at [43], It is now
trite that public policy is informed by the Constitution.
Our
Constitution values freedom, understandably so when regard is had to
how, before the dawn of democracy, freedom for the majority
of our
people was close to non-existence. The primacy of “human
dignity, the achievement of equality and the advancement
of human
rights and freedoms” is recognized in the founding values
contained in section 1 of the Constitution… These
constitutional provisions and the protection in section 12 of the
right of freedom and security of the person are at the heart
of
public policy consideration
[12]
.
ANALYSIS
[26]
It is well-established in this context that the plaintiff only needs
to demonstrate to this Honourable
Court that he was arrested without
a warrant. Following this, the burden shifts to the defendants, who
must then prove or convincingly
demonstrate to this Honourable Court
that the arrest was justified under
section 40
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
[27]
The affidavit presented confirms that the plaintiff was arrested
without a warrant. It is also
evident that in the docket uploaded on
caselines, it is clear that the plaintiff's arrest occurred without a
warrant of arrest.
It is encumbered upon
the defendant to demonstrate the lawfulness of the arrest and
detention in this instance. However, despite
being duly served, the
defendants has not defended this matter leaving the court with a
unilateral account of the events.
[28]
The plaintiff alleges that the traffic officers did not adhere to the
technical committee's guidelines
for speed prosecution. This is a
crucial claim, as non-compliance could indicate an inaccurate
measurement of the plaintiff's speed.
I would consider the specifics
of these guidelines and whether the evidence supports the plaintiff’s
claim of non-compliance.
The accuracy of the speed measurement is
central to the legitimacy of the initial stop and subsequent actions
by the officers.
[29]
The plaintiff asserts that he was detained at the Brakpan Police
Department without justifiable
reason. This claim raises questions
about the lawfulness of his detention. Under the law, detention must
be justified and proportionate
to the offence. The lack of just cause
for detention is a violation of the plaintiff's rights.
[30]
The plaintiff's statement that he was released on a warning and
subsequently appeared in court
multiple times, with the matter
eventually being withdrawn, could indicate a lack of sufficient
evidence or grounds for the charge.
I therefore consider the
implications of the case's withdrawal on the legitimacy of the arrest
and detention.
[31]
The plaintiff’s assertion that the police officers were acting
within the scope and course
of their employment when they arrested
and detained has mor been rebutted. It is imperative to note that any
liability or wrongful
conduct will be attributed to their employer
regard being had to the fact that there is no counter evidence that
the defendants
were acting within their scope of employment.
[32]
The plaintiff's assertion that the Metro Police did not take
necessary steps for his release
and had no justification for his
arrest and detention. The law requires arrests and detentions to be
based on just cause and to
comply with procedural safeguards. A key
point of analysis would be whether the Metro Police's actions were
lawful and justified
under the applicable legal framework, without
the first and second defendant’s plea to this matter, this
court has only one
version. The version of the plaintiff remains
uncontroverted.
[33]
The plaintiff's description of being detained in deplorable and
unhygienic conditions, along
with the denial of medication, presents
concerns regarding the treatment of detainees. The conditions
described by the plaintiff,
constitute violations of basic human
rights and dignity. The standards for detention conditions and
treatment of inmates are key
in the promotion and protection of human
rights. A detained person has the following rights in terms of the
Constitution at Section
35 (2) (e) they are
"everyone who is
detained including every sentenced prisoner has the right to
conditions of detention that are consistent
with human
dignity, including at least exercise and provision of adequate
accommodation, nutrition, reading material and medical treatment
at the state expense."
[34]
The lack of privacy in the cell and the denial of medication are
serious allegations, particularly
if the plaintiff's medical
condition requires specific treatment.
[35]
The plaintiff's claim for damages includes compensation for the
alleged mistreatment and the
psychological impact of the experience,
including post-traumatic stress disorder. The assessment of these
damages would involve
evaluating the extent of the plaintiff's
suffering and the causal link between the defendant's actions and the
alleged harm. However,
it is imperative to mention that there is no
expert evidence to confirm the plaintiff’s claim herein.
[36]
The claim for general damages due to loss of self-respect,
humiliation, degradation, and loss
of dignity would require an
evaluation of both the tangible and intangible impacts on the
plaintiff’s life. The nature and
extent of the alleged unusual
and cruel punishment have to be scrutinized. However, this court is
limited to that which has been
alluded to by the plaintiff and there
is no expert appointed who would assist this court in determining
nature and the extent of
the trauma.
[37]
Van
der Schyff J
[13]
held “Little
information was provided regarding the plaintiff’s personal
circumstances, save that it was the first
time that he was arrested
and detained. He testified that he was humiliated by the ordeal and
that his reputation suffered. In
addition, he was deprived of his
liberty, and detained in dismal circumstances.
[38]
This court is limited to the facts as alluded to by the plaintiff and
therefore I have taken
into account the manner of the arrest as
described followed by the detention wherein the plaintiff suffered
great indignity. The
plaintiff was driving a motor vehicle when he
was stopped and detained by the Metro police. He was detained without
being issued
with a traffic fine. He was subjected to a cell that was
dirty and unhealthy. His life was put at risk as the officers refused
his medication to be handed over to him.
[39]
The matter was arraigned for the plaintiff to appear in court, he was
subjected to postponements
in court and that the matter was
ultimately withdrawn without a trial.
TSHIDADA
J
[14]
held that “
I
t
is undisputable that plaintiff's constitutional rights were infringed
by the conduct of the defendant's employees. I am duty bound
to
consider and apply fairness demanded of me when considering all
circumstances relevant to quantify the harm caused by the
violation of one's constitutional rights.
The
period of time for which a person is detained after an arrest
cannot only be the factor to be
considered when determining the extent
of the
damage suffered. All prevailing circumstances should
be considered cumulatively”.
[40]
The claim of unsavoury/unwarranted remarks made by the plaintiff in
the presence of the plaintiff’s
family and the public touches
on the issue of defamation and the injury to the plaintiff’s
reputation and dignity. However,
the mere mentioning of
unsavoury/unwarranted remarks is not sufficient for a claim of
defamation.
[41]
Similarly in this case the plaintiff says that he was humiliated in
the presence of his family
members, members of the public and the
police. He says unsavoury/unwarranted remarks were made towards him
but fails to provide
details thereof. There is no evidence of the
trauma as alluded to in his damages’ affidavit nor what was
said to the plaintiff
that he has termed unsavoury. There is also no
evidence by his family member, a bystander nor an independent witness
to confirm
what happened on the day in question.
Order
[42]
In the result, I am satisfied that the total sum of R 300,000.00 is a
fair and reasonable amount
in the circumstances for unlawful arrest
and detention. I have considered the draft order filed and have
amended it accordingly.
KHWINANA ENB
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
COUNSEL FOR
PLAINTIFF:
ADV. A.C. GOBETZ
DATE OF HEARING:
02 NOVEMBER 2023.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01 FEBRUARY 2024
[1]
Act 51/1977
[2]
2012 (1) SACR 305 (ECP)
[3]
Constitution of RSA
[4]
1986(3) SA 568 (A) T 589 E – F
[5]
[
2022]
ZASCA 36
(01
April 2022)
[6]
2021
(2) SACR 595
(CC)
[7]
2009
(5) SA 85
SC
[8]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Seymour, (295/05) [
2006]
ZASCA 71
;
[2006] SCA 67 (RSA); [2007]
1
All SA 558
(SCA)
(30 May 2006
[9]
1983 (3) SA 705
(A)
[10]
CA 165/2008) [2009] ZAECGHC 16;
2010 (1) SA 169
(ECG);
2010 (1) SACR
274
(ECG) (27 March 2009)
[11]
1997
(1) SA 391 (A).
[12]
Mathunjwa v Minister of Police (A3134/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 12 (11
January 2023)
[13]
Kutiya v Minister of Police (19474/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 543 (18 July
2022)
[14]
Sylvia v Minister of Police (307/2021) [2023] ZALMPTHC 5 (24 March
2023)
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