Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 234South Africa
Mabasa v Minister of Police and Another (60522/2017) [2024] ZAGPPHC 234 (11 March 2024)
Headnotes
he testified that he joined the South African Police Service in 1993. He works for the K9 (dog unit). On 24 November 2015, he was with his crew member, Constable Modisha doing patrol duties in the Nelmapius area driving an unmarked police vehicle. At about 09h00am, they were flagged down by the Complainant who reported that he had just been robbed of his red BlackBerry cellular phone by 3 men armed with a knife. The Complainant further reported that the three men who robbed him were wearing a red shirt, a blue shirt and a grey shirt respectively. They advised the Complainant to go and report the case at the police station.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mabasa v Minister of Police and Another (60522/2017) [2024] ZAGPPHC 234 (11 March 2024)
Mabasa v Minister of Police and Another (60522/2017) [2024] ZAGPPHC 234 (11 March 2024)
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sino date 11 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No.: 60522/2017
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE
11 March 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
PRAYER
MOKONOPI MABASA
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
First
Defendant
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTION
Second Defendant
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, being uploaded to Caselines
and by release to SAFLII. The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 11 March
2024.
JUDGMENT
BHENGU
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an action for damages against the first defendant for
unlawful arrest and detention.
The claim against the second defendant
is for malicious prosecution. Both defendants defended the claim. By
agreement between the
parties, the issue of liability and quantum is
separated in terms of Rule 33(4). The matter is therefore proceeding
on the aspect
of liability only.
[2]
The Plaintiff, (Mr Mabasa) was arrested by Warrant Officer Du
Plessis, a peace officer,
on 24 November 2015 without a warrant on a
charge of robbery while using a knife. He remained in custody
until he was discharged
in terms of section 174 of the
Criminal
Procedure Act No. 51 of 1977
as amended (CPA) on 24 May 2017. Mr
Mabasa spent a total of 18 months in custody before his
release.
[3]
The defendants in their plea admitted the date, time and place of the
arrest but denied
that the arrest and subsequent detention was
unlawful. In their defence on the claim for unlawful arrest and
detention, the defendants
averred that Warrant Officer Du Plessis
reasonably suspected the Plaintiff to have committed an offence of
robbery in compliance
with
section 40(1)(b)
and
section 40(1)(e)
of
the CPA
.
In
respect of the claim for malicious prosecution, the defendants
averred that the prosecutor, after considering all the evidence
in
the police docket, reasonably believed that there was a prima facie
case for the plaintiff to answer.
Plaintiff’s
evidence
[4]
In summary, Mr Mabasa testified that in the morning of 24 November
2015, he was standing
under a tree smoking a cigarette that he had
just bought from a nearby spaza shop. Whilst he was smoking, a young
man (later identified
as “the Complainant” in the
criminal case) called him from across the street. Mr Mabasa and the
Complainant were staying
on the same street and knew each other
well. The Complainant informed Mr Mabasa that he had just been
robbed of his cellular
phone by two males at knife point. The
Complainant pointed out the two alleged robbers who were walking down
the road and asked
Mr Mabasa for help. Mr Mabasa advised the
Complainant to go back and seek for help while he followed the two
alleged robbers to
see where they end up.
[5]
Mr Mabasa then followed the two males whose identity was unknown to
him at a distance of
approximately 10 metres . Whilst following them,
he noticed them trying to sell the phone to a lady who was selling
chicken feet
on the street. The lady advised the two males that she
did not have money as it was still in the morning. After the two
males had
a conversation with the street vendor, Mr Mabasa then
approached them and told them that he knew someone who was looking
for the
phone.
[6]
Mr Mabasa alleged that while he was talking to the two males, a
police vehicle approached
them. Two policemen, Warrant Officer Du
Plessis and his crew member, Sergeant Modisha, told them to lie down.
They were all handcuffed
and searched. The police explained to them
that the clothes worn by Mr Mabasa and the two males fitted the
description given by
the Complainant, of the people who robbed him of
a cellular phone at knife point. At the time Mr Mabasa was wearing a
red shirt
and the other two males were wearing a blue and grey shirt
respectively. They were all arrested and taken to Silverton police
station
where they were charged. Mr Mabasa maintained that the police
found nothing on him.
[7]
Under cross examination, Mr Mabasa denied that he was involved in any
way in the robbery
and averred that he was trying to assist the
Complainant to get his phone back from the robbers. He also confirmed
that during
the search, a Blackberry cellular phone was found on one
male suspect and a knife was found on the other male suspect. Mr
Mabasa
admitted that he refused to give his name to the police and
also refused to sign the notice of rights (SAPS14A). According to Mr
Mabasa, his refusal was because the notice of rights was written
armed robbery, and he did not rob anyone. He also conceded that
he
abandoned his application for bail on 18 January 2016 as there was no
one who could pay bail for him.
Defendants’
Case – Evidence of arresting officer
[8]
The defendant called Warrant Officer Du Plessis, the arresting
officer. In summary he testified
that he joined the South African
Police Service in 1993. He works for the K9 (dog unit). On 24
November 2015, he was with his crew
member, Constable Modisha doing
patrol duties in the Nelmapius area driving an unmarked police
vehicle. At about 09h00am, they
were flagged down by the Complainant
who reported that he had just been robbed of his red BlackBerry
cellular phone by 3 men armed
with a knife. The Complainant further
reported that the three men who robbed him were wearing a red shirt,
a blue shirt and a grey
shirt respectively. They advised the
Complainant to go and report the case at the police station.
[9]
Warrant Officer Du Plessis and Constable Madisha proceeded to
look for the suspects.
In not more than 10 minutes they noticed three
males fitting the description given by the Complainant. Mr Mabasa was
wearing a
red shirt, and the other two males were wearing a blue and
grey shirt respectively. They ordered the three (3) men to lie down
and secured them with cuffs as standard procedure.
[10]
They informed the suspects of the reason for their arrest and that
their clothing fitted the description
given by the Complainant of the
males who robbed him of his cellular phone. He searched the tall
suspect wearing a red shirt (Mr
Mabasa) and found a red Blackberry
(8520 model) cellular phone that he was carrying on his right hand.
Upon searching a man with
a blue shirt, Sergeant Modisha found a
knife with a black and red handle. The items were seized as evidence.
They informed the
suspects of their rights, and they were arrested.
[11]
According to Mr Du Plessis, Mr Mabasa refused to give his name at the
time of the arrest. He also refused
to sign the notice of rights. He
testified that he only got to know the identity of the Mr Mabasa when
he was greeted by a guard
at the police cells as “Prayer”.
The guard advised them to check the cell register for the past day or
two for Mr Mabasa’s
full details. They indeed checked the
police cells register and found Mr Mabasa’s full names.
[12]
Under cross examination, Mr Du Plessis was confronted with a version
contained in the Complainant’s
written statement that he was
robbed by two men. Warrant Officer Du Plessis was adamant that the
Complainant told him that he was
robbed by three men. He disputed the
Plaintiff’s version that the red BlackBerry cellular phone was
not found on him. He
insisted that he found the phone in the
Plaintiff’s possession on his right hand.
Evidence
of Seargeant Modisha
[13]
The defendants called their second witness, Sergeant Modisha who was
a crew member working with Warrant Officer
Du Plessis at the time of
the arrest. In most respects, Mr Modisha corroborated the testimony
of the arresting officer. Of importance,
he confirmed that the
BlackBerry Phone was found in the Plaintiff’s possession by
Warrant Officer Du Plessis and that he,
Sergeant Modisha, found a
knife with black and red handles from the pocket of the suspect
wearing a blue shirt.
[14]
Under cross examination he conceded that he is the one who took a
statement from the Complainant at the police
station on 24 November
2015. He also conceded that although the Complainant told them
initially that he was robbed by three men,
in his written statement,
he stated that he was robbed by two males, one wearing a blue shirt
and another wearing a grey shirt.
Evidence
of Ms Mpho Monyane – Prosecutor
[15] Ms
Monyane testified that her experience as prosecutor spans for over 13
years. Ms Monyane stated that before
she could proceed with
prosecution of the accused, she had to first satisfy herself that she
had grounds to proceed with the prosecution.
In the case of Mr
Mabasa, when she received the police docket, a decision to prosecute
was already taken and her job was to proceed
with the prosecution.
She however, testified even though a decision was already taken, she
still had a duty to assess the evidence.
She had a discretion to
abandon the prosecution if she was of the view that there was no
prima facie case against the accused.
[16]
When she perused the docket it contained a statement of the
Complainant, statements of the arresting officers,
an unsigned notice
of rights, a copy of SAPS 13 register showing a red BlackBerry
cellular phone and a knife which was used in
the commission of the
offence as exhibits. She noted from the statement of the complainant
that Mr Mabasa had refused to help the
Complainant when he approached
him and that later on, he was found in possession of the robbed phone
and in the company of the
two robbers. Ms Monyane noted that Mr
Mabasa knew that the robbers were carrying a knife, “
Was he
not scared of the knife”
.
[17]
She stated that after considering all the factors mentioned above,
she concluded that Mr Mabasa was involved
in the robbery and that he
had a case to answer. It was at that point that she decided to charge
Mr Mabasa with common purpose
because she believed that he was acting
in collusion with the robbers.
Claim 1 - Unlawful arrest
and detention
[18]
Section 40(1)(b)
and (e) of the CPA provides that:
“
(1) A peace
officer may without a warrant arrest any person:-
(b) whom he reasonably
suspects of having committed an offence referred
to in schedule 1,
other than the offence of escaping from lawfully custody;
and
(e) who is found in
possession of anything which the peace officer reasonably suspects to
be stolen property or property dishonestly
obtained, and whom the
peace officer reasonably suspects of having committed an offence with
respect to such thing”
[19]
In Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto
[1]
,
the Court held that, in order for the defendants to successfully rely
on the defence in terms of
Section 40(1)(b)
, the following
jurisdictional facts must be present:- (i) the arrestor must be a
peace officer; (ii) the arrestor must entertain
a suspicion; (iii)
the suspicion must be that the suspect committed an offence referred
to in Schedule 1; and (iv) the suspicion
must rest on reasonable
grounds.
Analysis
[20] It
is not in dispute that Mr Mabasa was arrested and detained by Warrant
Officer Du Plessis who is a peace
officer on suspicion of having
committed an offence of robbery with a weapon which offence falls
under schedule 1. In my view,
the first three jurisdictional facts in
terms of Sekhoto are present. Regarding the fourth jurisdictional
fact, the issue is whether
Warrant Officer Du Plessis’
suspicion rested on reasonable grounds. It is trite that the
onus to justify the lawfulness
of the arrest and detention rests on
the defendant in terms of the provisions of section 12(1) of the
Constitution.
[21]
Counsel for
the defendants argued that the evidence of Warrant Officer Du Plessis
proved that he was entertaining a reasonable suspicion
at the time of
the arrest. He referred the Court to a decision in Mabona and Another
v Minister of Law and Order and Others
[2]
where Jones J held that:-
“
The reasonable
man will therefore analyse and assess the quality of the information
at his disposal critically, and he will not
accept it lightly or
without checking it where it can be checked. It is only after an
examination of this kind that he will allow
himself to entertain a
suspicion which will justify an arrest. This is not to say that the
information at his disposal must be
of sufficiently high quality and
cogency to engender in him a conviction that the suspect is in fact
guilty. The section requires
suspicion but not certainty. However,
the suspicion must be based upon solid grounds. Otherwise, it will be
flighty or arbitrary,
and not a reasonable suspicion.”
[22]
The Plaintiff in its particulars of claim alleged that the arresting
officer “
failed to investigate the allegations levelled
against the Plaintiff before arresting him”.
Plaintiff’s
counsel’s argument on the unlawfulness of the arrest was mainly
based on the statement of the Complainant
made to the police, that he
was robbed by two males. He contended that there was no reason to
arrest Mr Mabasa as he was not part
of the robbery.
[23]
In his
evidence, Mr Du Plessis was adamant that the Complainant told him
that he was robbed by three males fitting the description
of the 3
arrested males. Even if we are to accept that the Complainant
may have said he was robbed by two males, Warrant
Officer Du Plessis
would not have been in a position to determine which of the two
suspects robbed the Complainant in the absence
of the Complainant and
when Mr Mabasa was the one in possession of the robbed phone.
Although Mr Mabasa denied that he was found
in possession of the
phone, he however, was able to correctly describe the colour and make
of the phone. This would not have been
possible to do from a distance
of 10 metres as alleged during his evidence. I find that Mr Du
Plessis was a reliable witness. His
evidence, as far as it related to
where the cellular phone was found was corroborated by his crew
member, Mr Modisha. The fact
that the Plaintiff was found in
possession of the stolen cellular phone on his right hand entitled
Warrant Officer Du Plessis to
arrest him in terms of section
40(1)(e)
[3]
for possession of a
suspected stolen property.
[24]
According to the information on the SAPS cell register, Mr Mabasa was
detained at 09h55 in the morning of
24 November 2015 and brought
before Court on the morning of the 26 November 2015 which was within
the prescribed 48 hours in terms
of section 50(1)(c) of the Act.
Accordingly, I find that the first Defendant discharged its onus to
prove, on a balance of probabilities,
that the arrest of the
Plaintiff and his subsequent detention until 26 November 2015 was
lawful.
Claim 2 - Malicious
Prosecution
[25]
In Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Moleko
[4]
the court held that to succeed with a claim for malicious prosecution
the Plaintiff must prove that:-
1.
“
the defendants set the law in motion (instigated or
instituted the proceedings);
2.
the defendants acted without reasonable and probable cause;
3.
the defendants acted with ‘malice’ (or animo
injuriandi); and
4.
that the prosecution has failed”.
[26] It
is the case of the Plaintiff that the prosecutor laid false charges
of armed robbery against Mr Mabasa
and continued with the prosecution
of the Plaintiff until he was discharged on 24 May 2017. It is
further alleged that the prosecutor
charged the Plaintiff without a
probable cause and acted with
animus injuriandi
.
[27]
The
Plaintiff’s counsel in his heads of argument referred the court
to a decision in State v Lubaxa
[5]
where the Court found that:-
‘
Clearly a
person ought not to be prosecuted in the absence of a minimum of
evidence upon which he might be convicted, merely in
the expectation
that at some stage he might incriminate himself. That is recognised
by the common law principle that there should
be “reasonable
and probable” cause to believe that the accused is guilty of an
offence before a prosecution is initiated
. . . and the
constitutional protection afforded to dignity and personal freedom (s
10 and s 12) seems to reinforce it. It ought
to follow that if a
prosecution is not to be commenced without that minimum of evidence,
so too should it cease when the evidence
finally falls below that
threshold.’
[28]
The second defendant in paragraph 4.2 of its plea averred the
following:
“…
the
prosecutor reasonably acted (indicted the Plaintiff) having had
regard to the evidence contained in the docket”.
[29]
It is
common cause in this matter that the second defendant instituted the
prosecution of the Plaintiff, and that the Plaintiff
was discharged
on 24 May 2017 in terms of Section 174. At issue is whether the
prosecutor had reasonable and probable cause to
prosecute the
Plaintiff. In Moleko
[6]
Van
Heerden JA held that:-
“
Reasonable and
probable cause, in the context of a claim for malicious prosecution,
means an honest belief founded on reasonable
grounds that the
institution of proceedings is justified. The concept therefore,
involves both a subjective and an objective element”.
[30] To
determine this question, the Court has to consider all the
information that was at the prosecutor’s
disposal at the time
when the decision to prosecute was made. Ms Monyane testified that
the police docket contained a statement
of the complainant,
statements of the two policemen, SAP13 register indicating the two
exhibits, a Blackberry Phone and a knife
which was used in the
commission of the crime and an unsigned notice of rights.
[31]
Regarding the involvement of Mr Mabasa, the statement of the
Complainant provided that:-
“…
Few
steps away there was an African male I knew his face because we stay
at the same street but I don’t know his name…I
called
him to help me with those guys cause I don’t know them and he
told me that he does not know them and he does not want
to get
involved…he told me to call other people to help me and I did
as he said. When I got people to help me, he was nowhere
to be found.
We started asking people and they said they saw him with those guys
who robbed me…”
[7]
[32]
Whilst it is clear from the Complainant’s statement that the
Plaintiff did not participate in the actual
robbery, Ms Monyane
testified that in addition to the Complainant’s statement, she
also considered all the evidence at her
disposal and concluded that
the Plaintiff was working in concert with the two robbers. In
arriving at the decision to charge Mr
Mabasa with common purpose, Ms
Monyane stated that she considered the evidence of the two arresting
officers who found Mr Mabasa
in the company of the two robbers
carrying the robbed cellular phone in his right hand. She could not
reconcile how could the Plaintiff
refuse to help, sent the
Complainant away to look for help elsewhere but, in turn, he was able
to approach the robbers knowing
them to be armed with a knife. She
believed that Mr Mabasa could have decided not to be involved in the
robbery because he knew
that the Complainant knows him and decided to
join his friends later. Ms Monyane stated that she also took into
consideration that
the Plaintiff failed to co-operate with the police
by refusing to give his name, refusing to sign the notice of rights
and refusing
to tell the police his side of the story.
[33]
The accused person’s right not to be compelled to give
self-incriminating evidence is protected in
section 35(3)(j) of our
constitution. In this regard Mr Mabasa did not have to provide a
warning statement to the police. However,
what this meant was that
the prosecutor only had one side of the story and did not have the
benefit of the Plaintiff’s version
.
Doctrine of Common
Purpose
[34] Ms
Monyane was asked under cross examination why she did not charge the
Plaintiff with possession of a stolen
Blackberry cellular phone, she
responded as follows:-
“
Because in a
case of robbery with a knife, it is the responsibility of the
Magistrate to inform the accused of competent verdicts
in terms of
the Criminal Law Amendment Act, which may be theft, receiving or
being in possession in terms of section 37. The accused
was also
charged with common purpose with the other 2 suspects.
The
Charge sheet does not contain alternative charges in that alternative
charges must be read out by the Magistrate at the commencement
of the
trial.”
[35]
In Thebus
and Another v S
[8]
The
Constitutional Court stated the following regarding the doctrine of
common purpose:-
“
The principal
object of the doctrine of common purpose is to criminalise collective
criminal conduct and thus to satisfy the social
"need to control
crime committed in the course of joint enterprises”. The
phenomenon of serious crimes committed by
collective individuals,
acting in concert, remains a significant societal scourge. In
consequence crimes such as murder, robbery,
malicious damage to
property and arson, it is often difficult to prove that the act of
each person or of a particular person in
the group contributed
causally to the criminal result. Such a causal prerequisite for
liability would render nugatory and ineffectual
the object of the
criminal norm of common purpose and make prosecution of collaborative
criminal enterprises intractable and ineffectual”.
[36] In
order to determine whether the prosecutor was correct in finding that
there was a prima facie case for
the Plaintiff to answer based on the
doctrine of common purpose, the Court took note of the evidence of
the Plaintiff which was
inconsistent in many respects. It was the
evidence of the Plaintiff that he was following the robbers at
approximately 10 metres
to see where they end up. However, he was
able to tell the court that the robbed phone was a Blackberry phone
which was red or
pinkish in colour. He was able to recite the
conversation between the robbers and the street vendor which occurred
before he approached
the two males. He stated that:-
“
Dumisani, was
the one who tried to sell the phone to the lady. The lady told him
that
she
did not have any money as it was still in the
morning, and she had not yet sold anything. Dumisani then said to the
lady that they
will come back later”.
[37]
Despite the Plaintiff denying that he was found in possession of the
phone he was able to describe the colour
and make of the phone with
no difficulty. The fact that he had told the Complainant to go back
and look for help and that he was
found in the company of the robbers
walking in the opposite direction does not support his evidence that
he was assisting the Complainant.
Even though he claimed not to know
the other two suspects, he was able to approach them alone while
knowing that they are armed
with a knife. Under cross examination, he
was referring to the 2 suspects by name as Terrence and Dumisani.
[38]
Having regard to the above factors, I am satisfied that there was
prima facie evidence available to the prosecutor
to charge the
Plaintiff using the doctrine of common purpose. It is trite that a
defendant will not be held liable if she had a
genuine belief that is
founded on reasonable grounds in the plaintiff’s guilt. The
standard of proof in a criminal trial
is beyond a reasonable doubt.
It is important to note that the higher standard is not required for
a decision to prosecute. The
fact that the prosecutor failed to prove
the Plaintiff’s guilt at trial and that the Plaintiff was
discharged does not necessary
mean that the prosecution was malicious
unless it can be shown objectively that the prosecutor did not have
minimum evidence that
reasonably led her to believe that there is a
prima facie case for the Plaintiff to answer. The Plaintiff failed to
make out a
case for malicious prosecution.
Detention from 26
November 2015 to 24 May 2017
[39] It
is noted that the Plaintiff was kept in custody for 18 months before
his discharge. It is the evidence
of the prosecutor which was
confirmed by the Plaintiff that he abandoned his bail application on
18 January 2016. This led to him
remaining in custody until he was
discharged.
[40]
Regarding the accused’s right to be released on bail, she
testified that an offence of robbery while
armed with a knife falls
under schedule 1. For purposes of bail proceedings, she needed to
check whether the suspect had any previous
convictions or pending
cases. She checked Mr Mabasa’s profile on SAPS 69 (Criminal
Records) and noted that Mr Mabasa had
previous convictions of theft
and housebreaking. He also had a pending case of possession of drugs.
She mentioned that due to his
previous convictions and pending case,
his offence was changed from schedule 1 to schedule 5. She explained
that for schedule 5
offence, an accused must do a formal bail
application.
[41]
The chronology of events according to the prosecutor is that:-
The Plaintiff appeared
before the Regional Court, Pretoria on 26 November 2015. The matter
was postponed to 03 December 2015 for
the hearing. On 03 December
2015 Mr Mabasa requested Legal Aid. The matter was postponed to 09
December 2015. On this date the
magistrate was not available. The
matter was then postponed to 11 December 2015. Because as of 11
December 2015 the office of the
Legal Aid was already closed, the
matter could not proceed. Mr Mabasa was remanded in custody until 18
January 2016 for a formal
bail hearing.
On 18 January
2016, the Plaintiff abandoned his bail application. He then
remained in custody whilst his case was tried until
he was discharged
after the close of the state’s case in terms of section 174 on
24 May 2017.
[42]
The second defendant in paragraph 13 of its plea denied that the
Plaintiff was held in custody for 18 months
as a result of the
conduct of the prosecutor. They averred that the Plaintiff remained
in custody because his legal representative
chose to abandon his bail
application.
[43]
The Plaintiff during his testimony confirmed that he abandoned his
bail application on 18 January 2016. According
to the Plaintiff, he
abandoned his bail hearing because there was no one to pay bail money
for him. It is important to note that
the Plaintiff was charged with
a schedule 5 offense due to the previous convictions and pending
cased. Section 60 of the CPA prescribed
that Mr Mabasa had do a
formal bail hearing and satisfy the requirements thereto in order to
be released on bail. In the absence
of an application for bail, the
Court would not have been in a position to release the Plaintiff on
bail as it would have been
in contravention of the Act. Further, the
Plaintiff was represented at the time of the bail hearing and his
legal representative
would have been in a position to advise him of
his constitutional right to apply to be released on bail. The
Plaintiff failed to
put forward the grounds upon which the second
defendant may be held liable for unlawful detention after the
Plaintiff had abandoned
his bail hearing.
7.
In the result, I make the following order:
1. The
Plaintiff’s claim against the first and second defendant is
dismissed with costs on a party and party
scale.
JL
BHENGU
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION (PRETORIA)
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv TT
Tshivhase briefed by Tshuketana Attorneys
For
the Defendant:
Adv BF Gededger briefed by State Attorney,
Pretoria
Date
of Judgment: 11 March 2024
[1]
Minister of Safety and Security v Sekhoto
(2011 (1) SACR 315
(SCA) ;
[2011] 2 All SA 157
(SCA);
2011 (5) SA 367
(SCA))
[2010] ZASCA 141
;
131/10.
[2]
Mabona and Another v Minister of Law and Order and Others
1988 (2)
SA 654
(SE) at 658F-H
[3]
S40(1)
A peace officer may without warrant arrest any person-
(e) who is found in
possession of anything which the peace officer reasonably suspects
to be stolen property or property dishonestly
obtained, and whom the
peace officer reasonably suspects of having committed an offence
with respect to such thing
[4]
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v
Moleko (131/07)
[2008] ZASCA 43
; [2008] 3 All SA 47 (SCA) para 8
[5]
State v Lubaxa
2001 (2) SACR 703
(SCA) para 19
[6]
Moleko referred to above para 20
[7]
Statement of Complainant, CaseLines page 011-57
[8]
Thebus and Another v S (CCT36/02)
[2003] ZACC 12
;
2003 (6) SA 505
(CC);
2003 (10) BCLR 1100
(CC) para 34
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