Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 326South Africa
Serite v Minister of Police and Others (43007/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 326 (8 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Serite v Minister of Police and Others (43007/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 326 (8 April 2024)
Serite v Minister of Police and Others (43007/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 326 (8 April 2024)
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sino date 8 April 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED:
YES
In
the matter between:
Case No: 43007/2020
PRINCE
XOLANI
SERITE
PLAINTIFF
and
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
1
ST
DEFENDANT
DIRECTOR
OF NATIONAL PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
2
ND
DEFENDANT
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL SERVICES 3
RD
DEFENDANT
JUDGEMENT
JOYINI
AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The Plaintiff (Prince Xolani Serite) instituted a claim for damages
against the Minister of Police (the 1st Defendant), the
National
Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP) (the 2nd Defendant), and the
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services (the
3
rd
Defendant). The 3
rd
Defendant had not filed his notice of intention to defend. The matter
therefore proceeded only with the 1
st
and 2
nd
Defendants. The claim is premised on unlawful arrest and
detention
[1]
; further
detention
[2]
; and malicious
prosecution
[3]
owing to a charge
of unlawful possession of a firearm.
[2]
By agreement between the Plaintiff and the 1
st
and 2
nd
Defendants, merits were separated from quantum in terms of Rule 33(4)
of the Uniform Rules of Court. In this regard, the trial
proceeded
only on the issue of merits.
[3]
The m
atter was set down for trial on 4; 5; 6; and
8 March 2024.
Before
turning to the issues for determination, let me take this opportunity
to thank all the parties’ legal representatives
for assisting
the Court with their Heads of Argument.
PLAINTIFF’S
CASE
Pleadings
[4]
Counsel for the Plaintiff submitted that the Defendants had on the
29
th
day of February 2024, served a notice in terms of Rule 28(10)
[4]
of the Uniform Rules of Court, four years after a bear denial plea
[5]
seeking to amend their plea just three calendar days before the
commencement of the trial. The plea in the forementioned intended
amendment sought to introduce a defense in terms of Section 40(1)(b)
of the Criminal Procedure Act
[6]
,
which could have been done four years ago. Nevertheless, the trial
proceeded and amendment was also effected during trial. The
Plaintiff
then served his reply to the amended plea.
Background facts
[5]
On the 28
th
day of October 2017, the Plaintiff was wrongfully, unlawfully
arrested, detained, and further detained for alleged possession of
an
unlicensed firearm. On Monday, the 30
th
day of October 2017, Plaintiff made his first appearance in the
Magistrate Court. The matter was postponed for further investigation
and the Plaintiff was also afforded the opportunity to seek legal
aid. On the 9
th
day of November 2017, the Plaintiff appeared for a formal bail
application, which bail was posted. On the 13
th
day of December 2017, the matter was postponed to March 2018. On 26
th
day of February 2018, Warrant Officer JL Scheepers deposed to an
affidavit, the ballistics report
[7]
indicating that the alleged confiscated firearm is not a firearm, as
defined in terms of the Firearms Control Act
[8]
.
On 7
th
day of March 2018, the case was withdrawn against the plaintiff.
Issues
in dispute
[6]
According to the Plaintiff’s Counsel, the following are issues
in dispute: (i) Whether both the arrests, detentions and
further
detentions were lawful? (ii) Flowing from the above whether the
arresting officer had reasonable suspicion at the time
of arrest?
(iii) Whether the defence in terms of section 40(1)(b) of the
Criminal Procedure Act (CPA) stands or the defendants
should have
pleaded section 40(1)(h) which provides that- A peace officer may
without warrant arrest any person - who is reasonably
suspected of
committing or of having committed an offence under any law governing
the making, supply, possession or conveyance
of intoxicating liquor
or of dependence – producing drugs or the possession or
disposal of arms or ammunition? (iv) Whether
the Plaintiff was in
possession of an unlicensed firearm as defined in the Firearms
Control Act
vis a vis
the ballistic report? (v) Whether the
Plaintiff was in possession of the alleged firearm in accordance with
Section 117 (d) (i),
(ii) and (iii) of the Firearms Control Act? (vi)
Whether the plaintiff was maliciously prosecuted having regards also
to the ballistic
reports?
Onus
of Proof
[7]
It is trite that in the trial court the Plaintiff bears the onus of
proving malicious prosecution, whilst on the other hand
the Defendant
bears the onus of proving the lawfulness
[9]
of the arrest and detention where the arrest was effected without a
warrant. The onus of establishing such facts and circumstances
is on
a preponderance of probabilities.
Plaintiff’s
testimony
[8]
The Plaintiff had only two witnesses, which were the Plaintiff
himself and his younger brother Tshepiso Serite. The evidence
as led
by the Plaintiff was that on the 28
th
October 2017, he was
from a 21
st
birthday party in Extension 5 Mamelodi. With
him was his brother, cousin, Steven and Steven’s friends. He
asked the other
friend who was driving a Quantum mini bus to allow
him to sleep in it as he was too drunk and tired to drive his City
Golf motor
vehicle. He then asked his friend Steven to drive his
motor vehicle. Both the Quantum mini bus and the Plaintiff’s
motor
vehicle followed each other to Steven’s parental home in
Lusaka Mamelodi. In the meantime, he slept in the Quantum mini bus
whilst his brother had earlier slept in his vehicle. He testified
that he and his friends were standing next to his motor vehicle
listening to music. He further testified that his brother went to buy
some more beer for them when a police motor vehicle passed
them and
later returned to where the Plaintiff and his friends had parked. In
the police van were three male police officers (one
of them driving)
and one female officer. The driver male police officer stayed in the
vehicle.
[9]
The police officers alighted the vehicle, greeted the Plaintiff and
his friends and introduced themselves and requested to search
both
the Plaintiff’s motor vehicle and the Plaintiff and his friends
which they had agreed. The vehicle was searched by Constable
Makunyane who found the alleged unlicensed firearm whilst on the
other hand the Plaintiff and his friends where being searched
by
Sergeant Nwaila who informed the Plaintiff and his friends to face
Steven’s parent’s house. Whilst Sergeant Nwaila
was
searching the Plaintiff and his friends, Constable Makunyane asked or
enquired with them on who was the owner of the motor
vehicle. The
Plaintiff replied that he was the owner of the vehicle. Constable
Makunyane asked him to open the glove compartment
and inside was the
alleged firearm.
[10]
The explanation the Plaintiff gave to Constable Makunyane was that he
does not know anything about the alleged firearm and
that his friend
Steven was the one who was driving his motor vehicle. Since they were
parked in front of Steven’s parent’s
house, the Plaintiff
asked Constable Makunyane and Sergeant Nwaila to go with him inside
the premises to look for Steven. Steven’s
sister informed them
that Steven stays at the backyard and they should look for him there.
They went to the backyard and did not
find Steven there and the
Plaintiff was told that he was under arrest as they could not find
Steven. Constable Makunyane and Sergeant
Nwaila concluded with
arresting the Plaintiff because they could not find Steven. The
police officers did not enquire with the
friends who were there about
Steven’s whereabouts.
[11]
The police officers proceeded to handcuff and effected the arrest and
the Plaintiff was charged with possession of unlicensed
firearm and
was placed in the police vehicle whilst the Plaintiff’s vehicle
was driven by another police officer to the police
station. The
Plaintiff was taken to Mamelodi Police Station and detained in the
police cells from Saturday till Monday and went
to court on Monday
the 30
th
day of October 2017. However, during his stay in
the police cell, a different warrant officer brought a form stating
Notice of Rights
and the Plaintiff was told to sign it without
further explanation however the warrant officer went on to say
something in Ndebele
which is a language the Plaintiff does not speak
nor understand. The Plaintiff was told to remove his belt and
shoelaces and some
of his possessions were kept in a safe by the
police officers. None of the police officers who were with him at the
scene where
present with him when the Plaintiff was booked in nor
when the notice of rights was brought to him as it was brought by a
different
warrant officer.
[12]
On Monday the 30
th
day of October 2017, the Plaintiff was
taken to the Magistrates’ Court where the Plaintiff was asked
whether he wanted legal
aid which he agreed to. The Plaintiff also
testified that besides confirming that he needs legal aid, the Court
postponed the matter
for 7 days for further investigation which was
what the court said, reception court. Plaintiff was sent to Kgosi
Mampuru Prison
where he stayed up until the 9
th
day of
November 2017. The Plaintiff indicated during re-examination that he
did not know why he was kept longer than 7 days as he
is not a
prosecutor. Whereafter he appeared at the Magistrates’ Court
for formal bail application.There was a formal bail
application done
whereby the Plaintiff paid R2 000.00. The matter was further
postponed to 13
th
day of December 2017, with Magistrate
Swart indicating that it was final as the matter would not be
remanded again.
[13]
On the 7
th
day of March 2018, the charges against the
Plaintiff were withdrawn. To date the Plaintiff has not been summoned
to appear in court
and/or a subpoena being served on the Plaintiff,
since 2018, for a period of five [5] years.
Tshepiso
Serite’s testimony
[14]
Tshepiso Serite’s testimony was very short. The defendant also
elected not to do a cross- examination. He testified to
the Court
that on the day his brother was arrested they were from a 21
st
birthday party in Extension 5 Mamelodi. He had earlier at the party
slept inside the Plaintiff’s motor vehicle whilst waiting
for
the Plaintiff and his friends from inside the party. They were also
delayed because there were many people and they could not
move their
vehicle out. He then slept in the vehicle. He said that he had to
wake up at one point only to see that the vehicle
was moving and
driven by Steven. He went back to sleep as Steven was one of the
people who was in their company. When they got
to Steven’s
parental home he then went to buy beer. On his coming back he was
surprised to see his brother inside the police
motor vehicle and his
vehicle being driven by a police officer. Tshepiso testified that he
was told his brother was arrested for
possession of alleged
unlicensed firearm and had to make a call to inform their mother.
Adv
Anna Marie Bendaman’s testimony
[15]
She testified that she is an admitted advocate. It was her testimony
that on the 30
th
day of October 2017, she was with a
control prosecutor and conducting a strict screening process. They
checked whether the accused
person was linked to the crime or charged
of possession of firearm, in contravention of Section 3 of the Act.
She testified that
they had six statements, two police officers’
statements, Notice of Rights, A4 Warning statement, bail affidavit,
A6 confirmation
address by Plaintiff. She testified that what she
considered on the statement was that the police were on duty in a
high crime
area. They stood down four men who were listening to music
and requested permission to search them which was granted. Nothing
illegal
was found on the men however inside the car they found a 9 mm
firearm. Upon inquiry the owner of the car said he knew nothing about
it, the most important part of it is he could not give the name of
the friend and the license of the firearm. She proceeded to
testify
that this always happens in Mamelodi where the accused always say
they do not know the owner of the firearm or whatever
is found on
them.
[16]
It was her further testimony that the elements of the crime were
there. The accused was linked to the car and the gun to the
motor
vehicle. She indicated that there was no version given by the
accused. She further indicated that she could not
nolle prosequi
as all the elements of the crime were there. She testified that she
does not know the accused therefore she had no malicious intention.
It was her further testimony that the Plaintiff was arrested on the
28
th
of October, appeared in court on the 30
th
of October and Mr Mahlangu was the prosecutor. She also testified
that the matter was withdrawn on the 7
th
of March 2018 as
it was not ready. She indicated that there is no reception court in
Mamelodi and
that the court did not enquire about the bail which
is
not the truth. She indicated that the matter was withdrawn
because there was a backlog.
Johannes
Mahlangu’s testimony
[17]
He testified that he was a prosecutor at that time and stationed at
Mamelodi Magistrates’ Court and the decision to prosecute
came
from Advocate Bendaman. He confirmed that on the 30
th
the
Plaintiff appeared before him and that the matter was remanded
because the Plaintiff requested for legal aid. He also testified
that
the Plaintiff appeared for bail application and the matter was
remanded to 13
th
December 2017 where the Magistrate
insisted that it was wherein they had to bring the ballistics report.
He testified that the
matter appeared before his female colleague and
was withdrawn on October 2017 because there was no ballistics report.
Constable
Makunyane’s testimony
[18]
It was Constable Makunyane’s testimony that he only got to know
the Plaintiff after his arrest. He testified that on
the 28
th
October 2017 he was doing crime prevention duties in Lusaka when he
spotted a blue city golf parked on the pavement. When he alighted
the
police vehicle he introduced himself and asked to search the motor
vehicle and found a pistol.
[19]
It was Makunyane’s testimony that he enquired whose vehicle it
was in which he had found the pistol when the Plaintiff
indicated
that it belonged to him. He further indicated that the Plaintiff said
the pistol found in his vehicle belonged to his
friend. He did not
know his friend’s whereabouts and if he could have known the
name he could have taken the Plaintiff to
the person concerned. He
further testified that after the Plaintiff was arrested he was taken
to Mamelodi Police Station and had
nothing further to do with the
case.
Sergeant
Nwaila’s testimony
[20]
He testified that he was on crime prevention duties too with
Constable Makunyane. He further testified that they did a stop
and
search when they spotted a blue golf. He says that he was on guard
for his colleague who had asked the Plaintiff and his friends
if they
can search the vehicle. The Plaintiff was asked who the car belonged
to and he confirmed that it was his and the firearm
was found in his
motor vehicle. The Plaintiff informed him that the firearm belonged
to a friend and he does not know his name
or where he stays then they
arrested him. He testified that it was the first time he had dealings
with the Plaintiff and did not
complete the SAP14A as it is done by
the arresting officer, and it was Makunyane.
Unlawful
arrest and detention & further detention
[21]
Counsel for the Plaintiff submitterd that it is undisputed that the
Plaintiff was arrested. The evidence as it is, remains
unchallenged
that the arrest was done at Steven’s parental home (Plaintiff’s
friend). Although the Defendants admitted
arrest, it does not end
there. The Defendants must prove that the arrest was justifiable and
lawful. It is submitted that there
is no justification for the arrest
and the arrest was and remains wrongful and unlawful. There are a
number of issues that surfaced
during cross examination of Constable
Makunyane and Sergeant Nwaila. The police officers seem to be
labouring under the impression
that the arrest can only be done by
one person who will be held accountable. It is noted on his
statement
[10]
that was handed
during trial that when he introduced himself to the Plaintiff he also
introduced his colleague Sergeant Nwaila.
In any event, Segeant
Nwaila conceded that they were working as a team and that they could
not all do the act of arrest, one person
had to do it.
[22]
The second thing noted, when it was put to both Makunyane on whether
they did a mini investigation, amongst other, to enquire
with the
friends who were present at the time of arrest none of the police
officers bothered themselves to ask the people who were
there about
the ownership of the firearm. Neither did they try to look for Steven
whom the Plaintiff referred the two police officers
to. It was
Sergeant Nwaila’s testimony that there was no need to do a mini
investigation, as he was also asking Counsel for
the Plaintiff ‘what
mini investigation is?’. This clearly showed that these police
officers do not know what is involved
during arrest and thus failing
completely on their duties.
[23]
Case law has dealt with what a reasonable police officer should do
when confronted with information before him before he could
make an
arrest. In the case of
Mabona
& Another v Minister of Law and Order & Others
[11]
the court took the view that “
the
reasonable man will therefore analyse and assess the quality of the
information at his disposal critically and will not accept
it lightly
or without checking where it can be checked
.”
The police officers were less interested in interrogating the
Plaintiff further or even his friends whom were there with
him.
[24]
It does not make sense that a person will not know a name of his
friend. It further does not make sense that where a person
is faced
with spending a night behind bars would prefer that than to tell the
police the truth. In this instance, the Plaintiff
was faced with
being taken to the police cell, he told the police the truth
including taking the police into Steven’s parental
home as the
person whom has used his motor vehicle and the firearm belonged to.
[25]
Du Toit et al on the Commentary on the Criminal Procedure Act ad page
– 5-12B
states
that police officers who purports to act in terms of section 40(1)(b)
should
investigate exculpatory explanations offered by a suspect
before they can form a reasonable suspicion of a lawful arrest
.
[26]
MR v Minister of Safety and Security
[12]
, Bosielo JA stated the point thus: "In other words, the court
should enquire whether, in effecting an arrest, the police
officers
exercised their discretion at all. And if they did, whether they
exercised it properly as propounded in Duncan or Sekhoto
where the
court, cognisant of the importance which the Constitution attaches to
the right to liberty and one's dignity in our constitutional
democracy, held that the discretion conferred in S 40(1) must be
exercised' in light of the Bill of Rights"
[13]
.
[27]
The explanation and the subsequent act were reasonable. The Plaintiff
also indicated that he had even told the police what
Steven was
wearing, none of these explanations were considered. Taking into
consideration what the court said in the aforementioned
case, that
the discretion of the police must be exercised in the light of the
Bill of Rights, the police should have known that
the ultimate act of
arrest and detention borders on the liberty of an individual. The
right to liberty is enshrined in the Constitution,
regardless of the
fact that the Plaintiff did expressly plead it on the papers is
neither here nor there.
[28]
The court in
JSS
Industrial Coatings CC
[14]
stated that ‘...not all allegations that are relevant to the
dispute ought to be pleaded. For purposes of determining the
allegations the parties ought to plead, it is important to draw a
distinction between
facta
probanda
and
facta
probantia
….’
[29]
The Plaintiff’s right to liberty was transgressed and this is
as a consequence of an unlawful arrest, detention and further
detention. The further detention was not disputed, for the period
between the 30
th
October to the 9
th
of November
2017. Even though the defendants pleaded that it was as a result of a
court order, which is denied, and the Plaintiff
submits that it was
as a consequence of the Defendants’ conduct.
[30]
Constable Makunyane testified that he had explained the Plaintiff’s
rights in Ndebele which is the language not known
to the Plaintiff as
he speaks SiSwati. Plaintiff indicated that it was not truthful of
Makunyane to have said that he spoke to
the Plaintiff in a language
known to him. Sergeant Nwaila who said he heard the Plaintiff talking
to Constable Makunyane and yet
did not know what language they were
speaking clearly showed how untruthful he was as he did not want to
contradict his colleague
who was clearly not talking to him in
SiSwati.
[31]
It is submitted that, from the testimonies especially that of the
Defendants, the Defendants failed to plead section 40(1)(h)
which is
relevant to this matter. This section provides that- A peace officer
may without warrant arrest any person - who is reasonably
suspected
of committing or of having committed an offence under any law
governing the making, supply, possession or conveyance
of
intoxicating liquor or of dependence – producing drugs or the
possession or disposal of arms or ammunition.
Malicious
prosecution
[32]
Counsel for the Plaintiff submitterd that it is without doubt that
proceedings have been instituted and further without doubt
that the
Plaintiff appeared before court on the 30
th
October 2017,
and matter was remanded to the 9
th
November 2017, in
December 2017 and lastly the 7
th
day of March 2018. There
were further postponements and to date the prosecution failed and
this remains undisputed.
[33]
The Court in the case of
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND OTHERS V MOLEKO
[15]
indicated that in order to succeed to established a claim for
malicious prosecution there are requirements to be met which are:
‘In
order to succeed (on the merits) with a claim for malicious
prosecution, a claimant must allege and prove – that
the
defendants set the law in motion (instigated or instituted the
proceedings); that the defendants acted without reasonable and
probable cause; that the defendants acted with ‘malice’
(or
animo
injuriandi
);
[16]
and that the prosecution has failed.
[34]
It is clear that from the 28
th
October until the 7
th
of March 2018, the Defendants had maliciously set the law in motion.
It was conceded during cross examination by the Mr Mahlangu
and Adv
Bendaman that the police have set the law in motion.
[35]
There was really no reasonable cause nor justification to arrest and
detain nor bring the Plaintiff before court as there was
no evidence
against the Plaintiff as the ballistic report was not yet submitted.
A reasonable police officer should have noticed
that the alleged
firearm was not a real firearm as defined in the Act. The arresting
officers failed to reasonably and objectively
assess the evidence
before them nor make a mini-investigation. An explanation was given
by the Plaintiff and yet they failed to
objectively look at it. The
Plaintiff’s mother had given proof of address and thus known
where the Plaintiff can be found.
[17]
When the ballistics report was finally submitted the matter could
have been re-enrolled for Plaintiff to be charged and prosecuted.
[36]
The disheartening facts were that the prosecutors did not even know
the elements of the crime which the Plaintiff was charged
with. Adv
Bendamin was not objective and failed to treat the Plaintiff’s
case objectively and generalised the alleged explanation
said to be
given by the Plaintiff that in Mamelodi Magistrate Court accused
people always said that they do not know the owner
of a gun or
anything found in their possession which they are being charged with.
In this case, the Plaintiff not knowing the owner
of the firearm in
his possession.
[37]
The above-mentioned show
malice
on the side of the
prosecution, they do not have to show that they know the Plaintiff
for there to be
malice
. Both the prosecutors especially Mr
Mahlangu conceded that the prosecution has failed. It was also
confirmed by Mr Mahlangu and
the Plaintiff that to date there has
been no re-instatement of the charges, nor the Plaintiff found guilty
of the charge of alleged
possession of unlicensed firearm.
[38]
Should this Honourable Court not agree with the Plaintiff’s
submission so far as malicious prosecution, I submit that
the Court
must consider the following cases as quoted in
LIFA
V MINISTER OF POLICE AND OTHERS
[18]
– “
The
recent decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in the matter of
Minister of Police and Another v Erasmus [12] is illustrative
of the
more recent developments in our law pertaining to unlawful arrest and
detention. At paragraph [12] of the judgment the Court
held:- “When
the police wrongfully detain a person, they may also be liable for
the post-hearing detention of that person.
The cases show that such
liability will lie where there is proof on a balance of probability
that, (a) the culpable and unlawful
conduct of the police, and (b)
was the factual and legal cause of the post-hearing detention. In
Woji v Minister of Police
[2014] ZASCA 108
;
2015 (1) SACR 409
(SCA),
the culpable conduct of the investigating officer consisting of
giving false evidence during the bail application caused
the refusal
of bail and resultant deprivation of liberty. Similarly, in Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyokwana
[2014] ZASCA 130
;
2015 (1) SACR 597
(SCA), liability of the police for post-hearing detention was based
on the fact that the police culpably failed to inform the prosecutor
that the witness statements implicating the respondent had been
obtained under duress and were subsequently recanted and that
consequently there was no credible evidence linking the respondent to
the crime.
[39]
With the present case, the police were negligent not to consider what
the Plaintiff told them, including the description of
what Steven was
wearing, nor go back to Steven’s house to check whether Steven
was there nor even leave a message for him
to avail himself at the
Mamelodi Police Station.
Ballistics
report and failure to call a witness
[40]
The Defendants discovered the ballistic report. It is clear that the
purpose of discovery is to assist the court and the parties
in
discovering the truth and by doing so helps towards the just
determination of the case
[19]
.
Thus reference was also made during trial to the ballistic report and
therefore it forms part of the documents before court. This
report
was discovered by the Defendants and therefore should have called the
author to testify regarding the contents thereof.
[41]
The court in the matter of
Tshishonga
[20]
held: “
112.
The failure of a party to call a witness is excusable in certain
circumstances, such as when the opposition fails to make out
a prima
facie case. But an adverse inference must be drawn if a party fails
to testify or place evidence of a witness who is available
and able
to elucidate the facts as this failure leads naturally to the
inference that he fears that such evidence will expose facts
unfavourable to him or even damage his case. That inference is
strengthened if the witnesses have a public duty to testify. 113.
The
respondents are publicly accountable for the actions against the
applicant. Their defence is paid from public funds as will
any
compensation award. They owe the applicant and the public an
explanation. The claim is not against them as individuals but
in
their official capacities. 114. Their failure to testify results in a
dearth of factual material on their side which makes it
impossible to
exercise any discretion in their favour. 115. There was no suggestion
from Mr Hulley that the respondents were not
available or able to
testify. In fact, there was no explanation at all for why they did
not testify. 116. The court must therefore
accept the evidence for
the applicant, qualified by its probative value
.”
[42]
It is further submitted that it will be in the interest of justice
that the ballistic report be admitted as evidence according
to Law of
Evidence Amendment Act.
Probability
[43]
In
Ngakula
vs Minister of Police
[21]
,
the court held that so far as the probabilities are concerned, what
is being weighed in the balance is not the quantities of evidence,
but are probabilities arising from that evidence and all the
circumstances of the case”. The Court further said that “If
the acceptable evidence is such that “I think that it is more
probable than not”, the burden is discharged, but if
the
probabilities are equal, it is not”. It is submitted that the
testimony as provided by the Plaintiff is more probable
than of the
Defendants.
[44]
It is respectfully submitted to the above Honourable Court that
Section 117(d)(i) to (iii) of the Firearms Control Act, find
application in this matter as the Defendants has failed to prove that
indeed the Plaintiff was the (i)
driver of the vehicle
,
(ii) in
charge of the vehicle
; and lastly (iii)
in control of all the goods on the vehicle
.’
It is submitted with respect that evidence led was that the Plaintiff
was not the driver of the vehicle from the party to Steven’s
homestead and further that at the time of the search and subsequent
arrest, the Plaintiff was never in control of all the goods
on the
vehicle.
Conclusion
[45]
The Defendant failed to prove that the arrest, detention, and further
detention were lawful, nor and the arresting officers
had a
reasonable suspicion to arrest the Plaintiff. The prosecution was
malicious and without probable cause. It is therefore,
based on the
above arguments, submitted that a case has been made and the
Plaintiff’s claim for wrongful, unlawful arrest,
detention,
further detention including malicious prosecution be granted in
favour of the Plaintiff with costs.
1
ST
AND 2
ND
DEFENDANTS’ CASE
[46]
The 1
st
and 2
nd
Defendants, through their
Counsel, deny liability towards the Plaintiff on the following basis:
The Plaintiff was lawfully arrested
by a member of the 1
st
Defendant in terms of section 40(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act
(CPA) 51 of 1977. There was reasonable and probable cause
for the
prosecution of the Plaintiff which was instituted by a duly
authorised representative of the 2
nd
Defendant. The
prosecution of the Plaintiff was not instituted maliciously (“
animo
injurandi
”). And pursuant to his first appearance before
court, the Plaintiff was detained in terms of an order of court by
way of
a deliberative judicial decision on the part of the presiding
Magistrate. For reasons stated below, the 1
st
and 2
nd
Defendants respectfully submit that the action falls to be dismissed
with costs, including the costs of two Counsel.
Arrest/detention:
Legal Principles
[47]
Counsel for the Defendants submitted that it is trite law (given that
an arrest without a warrant is
prima
facie
unlawful) that a Defendant has the onus to prove the lawfulness of an
arrest.
[22]
The jurisdictional
facts which must exist before the power to arrest a suspect without a
warrant in terms of section 40(1)(b) of
the Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977 (“the CPA”) may be invoked are that:
[23]
(i) the arrestor must be a peace officer; (ii) the arrestor must
entertain a suspicion; (iii) the suspicion must be that the arrestee
committed an offence referred to in Schedule 1 of the CPA; and (iv)
the suspicion must rest on reasonable grounds.
[48]
Concerning the requirements of section 40(1)(b) of the CPA referred
to in sub-paragraphs (ii) and (iv) above, the following
principles
are settled law: “
Suspicion
in its ordinary meaning is a state of conjecture or surmise where
proof is lacking; ‘I suspect but I cannot prove’.
Suspicion arises at or near the starting point of an investigation of
which the obtaining of prima facie proof is the end
”.
[24]
The word ‘suspicion’ “
(implies)
an absence of certainty or adequate proof. A suspicion might be
reasonable, even if there is insufficient evidence for
a prima facie
case against an arrestee
”.
[25]
In determining the lawfulness of an arrest “
there
is no warrant for holding that the Legislature did not contemplate
further investigation subsequent to the arrest of a suspect.
Indeed,
it must have contemplated that such investigation could lead either
to the arrestee’s release from detention or his
prosecution on
a criminal charge
”.
[26]
The
question as to whether the suspicion of the person effecting the
arrest is reasonable, must be applied objectively. The circumstances
giving rise to the suspicion must be as would ordinarily move a
reasonable man to form the suspicion that the arrestee has committed
a Schedule 1
offence
”.
[27]
[49]
Once the jurisdictional facts for a lawful arrest in terms of section
40(1)(b) of the CPA are established, peace officers are
entitled to
exercise their discretion whether to effect an arrest as they see
fit, provided that they stay within the bounds of
rationality. The
standard is not breached because a peace officer exercises the
discretion in a manner other than that deemed optimal
by the court.
The standard is not perfection or even the optimum, judged from the
vantage of hindsight.
[28]
It
is for the Plaintiff to prove that the discretion to effect an arrest
under section 40(1)(b) was exercised in an improper manner.
[29]
It is submitted (to quote the
dictum
of the Supreme Court of Appeal) that “
it
is clear that in cases of serious crime – and those listed in
Schedule 1 are serious, not only because the legislature
thought so –
a peace officer could seldom be criticised for arresting a
suspect
”.
[30]
Lawfulness
of the Plaintiff’s arrest
[50]
Counsel for the Defendants, applying the afore-going legal
principles, submitted that the Plaintiff was lawfully arrested in
terms of section 40(1)(b) of the CPA on a charge of possession of an
unlicenced firearm. The First Defendant called two witnesses
who
testified as to the circumstances under which the Plaintiff was
arrested, namely Cst Makunyane and Sgt Nwaila. On the evidence
of Cst
Makunyane (who effected the arrest of the Plaintiff) and Sgt Nwaila
(in whose presence the arrest was effected), Counsel
for the
Defendants argued that neither of these witnesses, in his evidence as
to the circumstances under which the Plaintiff was
arrested,
contradicted himself under cross-examination, nor is there any reason
to doubt their honesty. Over and above each of
the witnesses not
having contradicted himself under cross-examination, the witnesses
corroborated each other in all material respects
regarding the
circumstances under which the Plaintiff was arrested. On the
probabilities, there is no reason to doubt the version
of these
witnesses regarding the circumstances under which the Plaintiff was
arrested.
[51]
According to the Counsel for the Defendants, the Plaintiff testified
on his own behalf regarding the circumstances under which
he was
allegedly arrested, and called as a witness his brother, Tshepiso
Serite (“Tshepiso”). The evidence of Tshepiso
was that he
was not present at the time of the Plaintiff being arrested, given
that at that time he had gone to the liquor store
to purchase liquor.
Given that Tshepiso was not present at the time of his arrest, the
Plaintiff is a single witness to whose evidence
the cautionary rule
applies. Accordingly, the Honourable Court will not readily rely on
the evidence of the Plaintiff unless it
is clear and satisfactory in
all material respects.
[31]
It
is submitted that the Plaintiff’s evidence was anything but
clear and satisfactory in all material respects.
[52]
It is settled law that one of the ways in which the credibility of a
witness may be impeached is by way of previous inconsistent
statements made by the witness which differ from what he or she is
saying in court.
[32]
In the
affidavit deposed to by him in support of an application for
condonation of his non-compliance with the provisions of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings against Certain Organs of State Act
40 of 2002 prior to the institution of the action, the Plaintiff
stated as follows:
[33]
“
4.5
Upon the vehicle being searched, members of the 1
st
respondent found an unlicenced firearm underneath the front passenger
seat, which upon inquiry from the members of the 1
st
respondent, I preferred a reasonable explanation that
I
had lent
my vehicle to my friend
who
was present at the time of questioning
,
however the officers elected not to question him about the said
unlicenced firearm
”
[Emphasis added].
[53]
In his evidence before court, the Plaintiff testified that he had not
lent his vehicle to a friend. The Plaintiff’s evidence
in this
regard was, rather, that he had requested a friend to drive his
vehicle from a birthday celebration as he was himself under
the
influence of alcohol. Secondly, more importantly, in his evidence
before court the Plaintiff testified that his friend was
not present
at the time of the Plaintiff having been questioned concerning the
unlicenced firearm which was found in the cubbyhole
of his vehicle.
Rather, the version of the Plaintiff in his evidence before court in
this regard was that he had allegedly accompanied
Cst Makunyane and
Sgt Nwaila to his friend’s house but that his friend was not to
be found. Clearly, the version of the Plaintiff
in his evidence
before court cannot be reconciled with the version quoted in
paragraph 4.5 of his affidavit referred to above.
[54]
In similar vein, it is clear that the version given by the Plaintiff
to his attorney was that his friend was present at the
time of the
Plaintiff having been questioned concerning the firearm. In this
regard, it is averred in the particulars of claim
that “
upon
inquiry from the members of the 1
st
defendant, plaintiff preferred a reasonable explanation that he had
lent his vehicle to a friend
who
was present
”
[Emphasis added].
[34]
The
version of the Plaintiff according to the pre-trial minutes was that
“
plaintiff
informed the arresting officer and/or members of 1
st
defendant that he is the owner of the vehicle, which he had borrowed
to his friend
who
was present at the time when the vehicle was searched
”
[Emphasis added].
[35]
Once
again, the version of the Plaintiff in his evidence before court
cannot be reconciled with the version given by him to his
attorney.
[55]
In the circumstances (in the light of the afore-going inconsistent
statements), it is submitted that the Plaintiff cannot be
believed
regarding the circumstances under which he was arrested. It is
submitted further that the afore-going versions of the
Plaintiff
regarding the circumstances under which he was arrested are
improbable in the extreme. This is confirmed by the evidence
of both
Cst Makunyane and Sgt Nwaila who testified that the Plaintiff told
them that he did not know the name of his (supposed)
friend. Had the
Plaintiff informed them of the name and address of his (supposed)
friend, they would surely have taken steps to
approach and question
this person. In the premises, on an acceptance of the evidence of Cst
Makunyane and Sgt Nwaila, the Plaintiff
was lawfully arrested in
terms of section 40(1)(b) of the CPA on a charge of possession of an
unlicenced firearm (which is an offence
in terms of Schedule 1 and
Schedule 5 of the CPA).
Lawfulness
of Plaintiff’s detention
[56]
Counsel for the Defendants submitted that pursuant to his having been
lawfully arrested, the detention of the Plaintiff at
Mamelodi Police
Station during the period 28 October – 30 October 2017 on which
date he made his first appearance before
court was lawful in terms of
section 50(1)(c) of the CPA (in terms of which an accused is to be
brought before court within 48
hours after his arrest). It is
submitted further that the Defendants are not liable to the Plaintiff
in respect of his detention
pursuant to his first appearance before
court on 30 October 2017. Counsel contended that in the
De
Klerk
matter,
[36]
the Constitutional
Court were divided on the effect of an order of remand granted by a
magistrate on the issue of liability for
further detention.
[57]
In the
Muller
matter,
[37]
the Supreme Court
of Appeal summarised this division as follows: “
[34]
What emerges from the various judgments in De Klerk is that one half
of the court considered that a deliberative judicial decision
in
respect of the further detention of the arrestee constitutes an
intervening act which truncates the liability of the police
for the
wrongful arrest and detention. The remainder considered that it may
do so, but not necessarily. Theron J summarised the
applicable
principles thus:
‘
The
principles emerging from our jurisprudence can then be summarised as
follows. The deprivation of liberty, through arrest and
detention, is
per se prima facie unlawful. Every deprivation of liberty must not
only be effected in a procedurally fair manner
but must also be
substantively justified by acceptable reasons. Since Zealand, a
remand order by a Magistrate does not necessarily
render subsequent
detention lawful. What matters is whether, substantively, there was
just cause for the later deprivation of liberty.
In
determining whether the deprivation of liberty pursuant to a remand
order
is
lawful, regard can be had to the manner in which the remand order was
made’
”
[Emphasis added].
[58]
In the
De
Klerk
matter, pursuant to his having been arrested, the plaintiff made his
first appearance before a ‘reception court’, which
meant
that the order remanding him in custody was a routine or mechanical
act rather than a considered judicial decision. The plaintiff
was
accordingly not afforded an opportunity to apply for bail and was
remanded in custody. Writing for the majority, Theron J acknowledged
that there is no reason why a deliberative judicial decision (in
contra-distinction to merely a failure to apply the mind) could
not
constitute a break in the chain of causation, but that the exercise
of a judicial discretion should not always be considered
sufficient
to break the chain of causation.
[38]
[59]
In the
Muller
matter, the Supreme Court of Appeal distinguished the
De
Klerk
matter (in which the remand order was granted by way of a routine or
mechanical act, rather than a considered judicial decision)
from the
Muller
matter (in which the plaintiff was remanded in custody by way of a
deliberative judicial decision). In the
Muller
matter, at the first appearance the magistrate did give judicial
consideration to the release of the plaintiff and remanded him
in
custody.
[39]
Based on the
afore-going distinction, the Supreme Court of Appeal held in the
Muller
matter that liability for wrongful arrest and detention of the
plaintiff “
was
truncated upon the remand order made at the first appearance
”
by the magistrate.
[40]
[60]
The offence of possession of the firearm on which the Plaintiff was
charged is an offence referred to in Schedule 5 of the
CPA. Section
60(11)(b) of the CPA provides that where an accused is charged with a
Schedule 5 offence, “
the court shall order that the accused
be detained in custody until he or she is dealt with in accordance
with the law, unless the
accused, having been given a reasonable
opportunity to do so, adduces evidence which satisfies the court that
the interests of
justice permit his or her release
”. For
purposes of being granted bail, therefore, the
onus
was on the
Plaintiff to satisfy the court that the interests of justice permit
his release on bail.
[61]
In the light of the offence for which he was charged, being an
offence referred to in Schedule 5 of the CPA, at his first appearance
on 30 October 2017 before the Mamelodi Magistrate’s Court which
is not a ‘reception court’, the presiding Magistrate
remanded the Plaintiff in custody until 9 November 2017 for a formal
bail application. Self-evidently, then, at his first appearance
before court on 30 October 2017 the presiding Magistrate gave
judicial consideration to the release of the Plaintiff on bail, but
remanded him in custody (by way of a deliberative judicial decision)
for a formal bail application to be brought for the granting
or not
of bail in respect of a Schedule 5 offence.
[41]
[62]
Over and above the Plaintiff having been remanded in custody on 30
October 2017 in terms of a deliberative judicial decision
on the part
of the presiding Magistrate, the evidence of the prosecutor, Mr
Mahlangu, was that this was done at the request of
the Plaintiff for
him to obtain Legal Aid representation. The evidence of the
prosecutor, Mr Mahlangu, in this regard is borne
out by the
inscription of the presiding Magistrate on the charge sheet at the
time of the Plaintiff having been remanded in custody.
[42]
In the premises, applying the legal principles applicable to
lawfulness of Plaintiff’s detention, any liability on the part
of the 1
st
or 2
nd
Defendants for the detention of the Plaintiff pursuant to his first
appearance before court on 30 October 2017 “
was
truncated upon the remand order made at the first appearance
”
by the presiding Magistrate.
[43]
Malicious
Prosecution: Legal Principles
[63]
According to the Counsel for the Defendants, the requirements for a
plaintiff to succeed with a claim for malicious prosecution
are
that
[44]
the defendant set the
law in motion (instituted the proceedings); the defendant acted
without reasonable and probable cause; the
defendant acted with
‘malice’ (
animo
injuriandi
);
and the prosecution has failed. The requirement of 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 criminal proceedings is justified. The defendant must
have subjectively had an honest belief in the guilt of the plaintiff
and his belief and conduct must have been objectively reasonable,
as
would have been exercised by a person using ordinary care and
prudence.
[45]
[64]
The concept of reasonable and probable cause (which involves both a
subjective and an objective element) has been formulated
as
follows:
[46]
“
When
it is alleged that a defendant had no reasonable cause for
prosecuting, I understand this to mean that he did not have such
information
as would lead a reasonable man to conclude that the plaintiff had
probably been guilty of the offence charged; if, despite
his having
such information, the defendant is shown not to have believed in the
plaintiff’s guilt, a subjective element comes
into play and
disproves the existence, for the defendant, of reasonable and
probable cause.
It
follows that a defendant will not be liable if he or she held a
genuine belief founded on reasonable grounds in the plaintiff’s
guilt.
”
Although the expression ‘malice’ is used, what this means
in the context of a claim for malicious prosecution
is
animus
injuriandi
.
[47]
Animus
injuriandi
includes not only the intention to injure, but also consciousness of
wrongfulness.
[48]
In order for
a plaintiff to succeed in his or her claim for malicious prosecution,
“
the
defendant must thus not only have been aware of what he or she was
doing in instituting or initiating the prosecution, but must
at least
have foreseen the possibility that he or she was acting wrongfully,
but nevertheless continued to act, reckless as to
the consequences of
his or her conduct (dolus eventualis). Negligence on the part of the
defendant (or, … , even gross negligence)
will not
suffice
”.
[49]
Reasonable
and probable cause /
Animus injuriandi
[65]
Counsel for the Defendants submitted that the Plaintiff falls well
short of discharging the onus which rests on him to prove
that there
was a lack of reasonable and probable cause to prosecute the
Plaintiff and that any prosecutor in the employ of the
2
nd
Defendant acted with ‘malice’ (
animo
injuriandi
)
in instituting the prosecution against the Plaintiff. The decision to
prosecute the Plaintiff was taken by Adv Bendeman, Senior
Public
Prosecutor at the Mamelodi Magistrate’s Court, acting in the
course and scope of her employment with the 2
nd
Defendant. The decision to institute criminal proceedings (‘to
set the law in motion’) against the Plaintiff was taken
by Adv
Bendeman on the strength of the sworn statements of Cst Manunyane and
Sgt Nwaila contained in the police docket. The sworn
statements of
Cst Makunyane and Sgt Nwaila speak for themselves.
[50]
[66]
It is submitted (indubitably so) that on the strength of the sworn
statements of Cst Makunyane and Sgt Nwaila, there indeed
existed
reasonable and probable cause for the institution of the prosecution
against the Plaintiff. Their statements were of such
a nature that if
proved in a criminal trial, the court would convict the Plaintiff.
There was accordingly a duty on the State to
prosecute the Plaintiff
in the circumstances. It is submitted further, over and above there
having been reasonable and probable
cause for the prosecution of the
Plaintiff, that it cannot be said that Adv Bendeman acted with malice
(
animo injuriandi
) in instituting the prosecution against him.
Any such suggestion was emphatically refuted by Adv Bendeman in her
evidence (
inter alia
, by way of her stating that she does not
know the Plaintiff ‘from a bar of soap’). On the
contrary, the evidence of
Adv Bendeman was that in the light of the
sworn statements of Cst Makunyane and Sgt Nwaila she was duty-bound
to institute the
criminal proceedings against the Plaintiff.
Status
of Documents
[67]
According to the Counsel for the Defendants, at the pre-trial
conference held on 9 March 2022,
[51]
the parties agreed on the status of documents to be used at the
trial. The agreement reached between the parties in this regard
was
that “
all
documents be admitted as evidence, without admitting the content
thereof and without further proof thereto, and that only documents
referred to during the trial be regarded as evidence in the
trial
”.
[52]
In the light of the agreement (which is somewhat clumsily worded)
reached between the parties at the pre-trial conference, it is
clear
that only documents referred to in the evidence during the trial
would be had regard to by the Honourable Court in determining
the
issues between the parties.
[68]
The content of the documents referred to in the evidence would in the
nature of things not serve as proof of the truth of what
is stated in
such documents (for example, as proof of the truth of what is stated
in the statements of Cst Makunyane and Sgt Nwaila).
The documents
referred to in the evidence (without admitting the truth of the
content of such documents) are what they purport
to be, without the
need to formally prove the existence of the documents. In the light
of agreement referred to above, the covering
letter to the ballistic
report dated 2018/02/26
[53]
is
what it purports to be, without the need formally to prove the
existence of the letter or that it was addressed to the Commanding
Officer at Mamelodi East Police Station and the truth of the content
of the ballistic report is not admitted in the absence of
evidence
being led to prove the truth thereof.
Object
of pleadings
[69]
Counsel for the Defendants submitted in the Supplementary Heads of
Argument that the object of pleadings is to define the issues.
[54]
It has in this regard been held by the Supreme Court of Appeal and
the Constitutional Court as follows: “
It
is trite that litigants must plead material facts relied upon as a
basis for the relief sought and define the issues in their
pleadings
to enable the parties to the action to know what case they have to
meet
”;
[55]
“
It
is impermissible for a plaintiff to plead a particular case and seek
to establish a different case at the trial. It is equally
not
permissible for the trial court to have recourse to issues falling
outside the pleadings when deciding a case
”;
[56]
“
The
pleadings are of paramount importance in every civil dispute. They
identify the legal and factual issues in dispute that have
to be
decided
”;
[57]
“
It
is a fundamental rule of fair civil proceedings that parties should
be apprised of the case which they are required to meet;
The
purpose of pleadings is to define the issues for the other party and
the court. And it is for the court to adjudicate upon the
disputes
and those disputes alone
”.
[58]
On the pleadings, it is not in dispute that what was found in the
cubbyhole of the Plaintiff’s vehicle was an unlicenced
firearm.
It is specifically pleaded in this regard in the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim that “
(upon)
the vehicle being searched, members of the 1
st
defendant
found
an unlicensed firearm
”
[Emphasis added].
[59]
In the
premises, it does not avail the Plaintiff to rely on the ballistics
report for his contention that what was found in the
cubbyhole of his
vehicle was not an unlicenced firearm.
Conclusion
[70]
In the light of the afore-going, it is respectfully submitted that
the Plaintiff was lawfully arrested in terms of section
40(1)(b) of
the CPA by Cst Makunyane, acting in the course and scope of his
employment with the First Defendant. There was reasonable
and
probable cause for the prosecution of the Plaintiff which was
instituted by Adv Bendeman, acting in the course and scope of
her
employment with the Second Defendant. The prosecution of the
Plaintiff was not instituted
animo injuriandi
. Pursuant to his
first appearance before court, the Plaintiff was remanded in custody
in terms of an order of court by way of a
deliberative judicial
decision on the part of the presiding Magistrate as a result of which
liability on the part of the 1
st
and 2
nd
Defendants for his detention after 30 October 2017 was truncated.
ANALYSIS
OF EVIDENCE AND FINDINGS OF FACT
[71] It is trite law that
an arrest, without a warrant, is
prima
facie
unlawful
and the same goes for detention. It (detention) is also
prima
facie
unlawful. The onus is on the Defendants to
prove
the lawfulness of an arrest
[60]
and of course, the detention.
The
onus rests on the detaining officer to justify the arrest and
detention. Section 12(1) (a) of the Constitution of the Republic
of
South Africa
[61]
(the
Constitution) guarantees the right to be free from unjustified
detention. Everyone has the right to personal security and
freedom
which includes the right to be free from arbitrary and unjustified
deprivation of liberty. Section 7(2) of the Constitution
provides
that the state must respect, protect, promote, and fulfil the rights
in the Bill of Rights.
[72]
The undisputed evidence is that,
Constable Makunyane
was told by the Plaintiff that he (Plaintiff) does not know anything
about the alleged firearm found in his
car and that his friend was
the one who was driving his motor vehicle up to where it was parked.
Under those
circumstances, Constable Makunyane, in my view, had a duty on him to
have investigated this information (Plaintiff’s
statement).
This (even the allegation of not knowing his friend’s
name and address who was driving his car) must have triggered a need
to investigate this information even by simply asking for more
information from the people around especially his friends who were
with the Plaintiff standing together next to his car when he was
arrested.
[73]
Constable Makunyane did not do a simple “on the spot
investigation.”
Constable Makunyane was, for
whatever reason, less interested in interrogating the Plaintiff
further or even his friends whom were
there with him. In
Mabona v
Minister of Justice
1988 [2] SA 654 SEC the following was stated
as regards suspicion: “…
the reasonable man will
therefore analyse and assess the quality of information at his
disposal critically and 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 that
will justify the arrest. This is not to say that the information at
his disposal must be of a sufficiently
high quality and cogency to
engender in him a conviction that the suspect is in fact guilty. The
section requires suspicion not
certainty. However the suspicion must
be based on solid grounds. '
[74]
Constable Makunyane also did not comply with
Section
117(2)(d)
(i) to (vii) of the
Firearms Control Act, 2000
, Act 60 of
2000, which reads as follows: “
(2) Whenever
a person is charged in terms of this Act with an offence of which the
possession of a firearm or ammunition is
an element, and the State
can show that despite the taking of reasonable steps it was not able
with reasonable certainty to link
the possession of the firearm or
ammunition to any other person, the following circumstances will, in
the absence of evidence to
the contrary which raises reasonable
doubt, be sufficient evidence of possession by that person of the
firearm or ammunition where
it is proved that the firearm or
ammunition was found—
(d)
in or on a vehicle and the person was, at the time—
(i) the
driver of the vehicle;
(ii)
the person in charge of the vehicle;
(iii) in
control of all the goods on the vehicle;
(iv) the
consignor of any goods in or among which the firearm or ammunition
was found;
(v)
the only person who had access to the firearm or ammunition;
(vi) the
employer of the driver of the vehicle and present on the vehicle; or
(vii)
over the age of 16 years and present on the vehicle.”
[75]
This raises many questions i.e. when Constable Makunyane found the
firearm in the car, who was
in
control of all the goods on the vehicle; was the Plaintiff the only
person who had access to the firearm or ammunition;
who
was the driver up to where the car was parked; etc.
It
is trite that when an arresting officer has a suspicion,
investigative steps should be pursued to determine the reasonableness
of the suspicion.
[62]
Constable Makunyane did not do the on the spot investigation and as
such, he cannot be said to have entertained a reasonable suspicion
that the Plaintiff was in possession of a firearm as defined in the
Act. What he did was in contravention of section
117(2)(d)
(i) to (vii) of the
Firearms Control Act, 2000
, Act 60 of 2000,
referred to above.
[76] It is well
established that the onus rests on a police officer to justify
arrest. In
Minister
of Law-and-Order v Hurley and another,
[63]
Rabie CJ held: “
An
arrest constitutes an interference with the liberty of the individual
concerned, and it therefore seems to be 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 in law.”
In
casu
,
Constable Makunyane did not discharge
the onus of proving that his action (arresting the Plaintiff) was
justified in law.
[77]
In the circumstances of this case, the Plaintiff’s arrest would
be lawful if the Defendants have established on a balance
of
probabilities that (1) the Plaintiff was arrested by a police
officer; (2)
the arrestor must entertain a suspicion
that
the Plaintiff had committed or attempted to commit an offence; (3)
the commission of the offence, referred to in (2) above,
or the
attempted commission of that offence, occurred in the presence of the
police officer; and
the arrestor’s suspicion must
rest on reasonable grounds.
[78]
It is against the set jurisdictional requirements that the conduct of
Constable Makunyane had to be evaluated to ascertain
if it passes the
muster justifying the arrest of the Plaintiff. There is no discordant
that Constable Makunyane is a police officer
and was acting
vicariously as employee of the 1st Defendant.
[79]
It is my considered view that three of the four jurisdictional
requirements justifying the arrest of the Plaintiff are absent.
But,
for Constable Makunyane being a peace officer, his evidence did not
establish that he entertained a suspicion; that there
was no evidence
that the suspicion was that the Plaintiff committed an offence in
Schedule 1 [CPA]; and finally the suspicion must
rest on reasonable
grounds. As such, the arrest and detention of the Plaintiff by
Constable Makunyane were unlawful.
[80]
On application of the law to the facts, it could not be found that
Constable
Makunyane
had a suspicion of any crime being committed
based on the evidence at his disposal at the time the Plaintiff was
arrested.
[81]
On the conspectus of the evidence as a whole, there existed no
suspicion to effect an arrest of the Plaintiff. The arrest of
the
Plaintiff in the absence of a suspicion automatically renders the
arrest unlawful. That normally would sound the death knell
for the
case for the Defendants as the jurisdictional factors set out in
section 40[1][b] of the CPA are symbiotic in nature.
[82]
The absence
of a suspicion would circumvent an inquiry into the reasonableness
thereof. In sum, three of the jurisdictional requirements
justifying
the arrest of the Plaintiff had not been met.
CONCLUSION
[83]
The Plaintiff adduced sufficient evidence to establish that
Constable
Makunyane
made improper use of the legal proceedings to
deprive him of his liberty. On the basis of the evidence, reasoning
and conclusions
referred to above, I am persuaded that the
Plaintiff’s arrest was accordingly unlawful. Accordingly, the
Plaintiff was also
maliciously arrested. Since the Plaintiff’s
arrest was unlawful and malicious, it follows that his subsequent
detention and
further detention were also unlawful.
[84]
I now consider whether or not the Plaintiff was maliciously
prosecuted. In order to succeed with his claim for malicious
prosecution,
the Plaintiff was required to allege and prove that (1)
Constable
Makunyane
set the law in motion, meaning that he
instigated the criminal proceedings against the Plaintiff; (2)
Constable
Makunyane
acted without reasonable and probable cause;
(3)
Constable
Makunyane
acted with
animo injuriandi
(malice);
and (4) the proceedings instituted against the Plaintiff terminated
in his favour.
[85]
The enquiry as to whether or not the Plaintiff proved that
Constable
Makunyane
had reasonable or probable cause, is whether,
when he instigated or initiated the criminal proceedings against the
Plaintiff, he
had such information as would lead a reasonable person
to conclude that the Plaintiff had probably been guilty of possession
of
a firearm without a licence to hold that firearm. For a Defendant
to be held liable for malicious prosecution, the Plaintiff must
prove
animus injuriandi
by showing that: the
Defendant intended to cause the Plaintiff to be prosecuted or must
have foreseen that his conduct
would cause the Plaintiff to be
prosecuted; and the Defendant knew or foresaw the possibility
that there were no reasonable
grounds for the prosecution, meaning
that he was aware of the wrongfulness of his conduct or foresaw the
possibility that his conduct
may be wrongful; but the Defendant
nevertheless continued with his wrongful conduct, reckless as to the
possible consequences
of his conduct.
[86]
It is common cause that
Constable
Makunyane
instigated or initiated the criminal
proceedings against the Plaintiff by arresting him on a charge of
being in possession of a
firearm without a licence, in contravention
of the
Firearms Control Act, and
that those criminal proceedings
terminated in the Plaintiff’s favour. This court must determine
whether, when
Constable
Makunyane
initiated those criminal proceedings, he had
reasonable or probable cause for doing so, and whether he had
animus
injuriandi
.
[87]
Reference was made during trial to the ballistic report and it was
discovered by the Defendants. However, the Defendants did
not call
the author to testify on the contents of the ballistic report.
Instead Counsel for the Defendant made the following submission
on
the ballistic report: “
The
documents referred to in the evidence (without admitting the truth of
the content of such documents) are what they purport to
be, without
the need to formally prove the existence of the documents. In the
light of agreement referred to above, the covering
letter to the
ballistic report dated 2018/02/26
[64]
is what it purports to be, without the need formally to prove the
existence of the letter or that it was addressed to the Commanding
Officer at Mamelodi East Police Station and the truth of the content
of the ballistic report is not admitted in the absence of
evidence
being led to prove the truth thereof.”
[88]
Be that as it may, evidence was also adduced to the Court about
postponements linked
inter alia
to the awaited ballistic
report. Constable Makunyane must have been aware that, without
ballistic report confirming that the firearm
he found in the
Plaintiff’s car was a firearm as defined in the Act, he had
insufficient information at his disposal to have
acted with
reasonable or probable cause. The fact that he wanted the firearm to
be sent for ballistics examinations suggests that
he was unsure, at
least at that stage, whether or not it was a firearm as defined in
the Act. He knew that the ballistics examination
could either confirm
that it was indeed a firearm, as described in the
Firearms Control
Act, or
that it was not a firearm.
[89]
In cases of unlawful possession of firearms in terms of the
Firearms
Control Act 60 of 2000
, evidence is required that a weapon was indeed
a firearm as intended by the Act. The Court did not get this evidence
from the Defendants
as they decided, for whatever reason(s), not to
call the author of the balistic report to testify on the contents
thereof. In these
circumstances, it is incumbent on the Defendants to
prove that the weapon of which Plaintiff was allegedly in possession
was a
firearm as defined in the Act. In my view, the Defendants have
failed to discharge this onus.
[90]
In the circumstances, I am satisfied that the Plaintiff established
that
Constable
Makunyane
acted without reasonable and probable cause
when he instigated the criminal proceedings against the Plaintiff and
that, for purposes
of malicious prosecution, he acted with malice.
The Plaintiff has accordingly established that he was maliciously
prosecuted at
the hands of
Constable
Makunyane
.
[91]
Considering all the evidence, arguments from all the parties,
applicable law including relevant legal principles, I am persuaded
that the 1st and 2nd Defendants failed to prove that the arrest,
detention, and further detention were lawful. I am also persuaded
that the prosecution was accordingly malicious and without probable
cause. It is considered view that a case has been made by the
Plaintiff. The Plaintiff’s claim for unlawful arrest, unlawful
detention, further unlawful detention and malicious prosecution
is
bound to succeed. As a result, the Plaintiff’s claim on the
issue of merits succeeds.
COSTS
[92]
Counsel for the Plaintiff submitterd that the issue of costs is the
discretion of the court, which discretion must be exercised
judicially. It must be submitted with respect that our courts must
desist from treating state official with kids gloves, when they
defend the indefensible and in such cases, the court must order
punitive costs against such officials.
[93]
In
casu,
the Plaintiff
seeks that cost
should be on the scale as between attorney and own client in
accordance with contingency fee agreement and/or alternative
costs
de
bonis propriis
for the following
reasons: The D
efendants have defended the indefensible. For a
period of four years, the Defendants have maintained a plea of bare
denial. On the
eve of trial, specifically three [3] days before
trial, Defendants introduced an amendment with a plea of section
40(1)(b), that
a police officer, specifically Constable Makunyane
entertained a reasonable suspicion that a schedule 1 offense has been
committed
in his presence,
to wit, possession of unlicensed
firearm.
The Defendants discovered a ballistic report deposed by
JL Scheepers, which the Defendants’ legal teams sought to
distance
themselves from, their very own document which was
discovered by them. For four years, the defendant had perused the
docket and
the ballistic report and noted the contents thereof as
well as the date of commissioning,
to wit, 26
th
day of February 2018.
[94]
Defendant knew that the contents of the ballistic report are not
favourable to their case and/or defense hence they distance
and
importantly, failed to call the author of the ballistic report.
During the hearing, reference was made to the ballistic report.
It is
undeniable that the prosecution has read the ballistic report to the
extent that the charges against the Plaintiff were withdrawn
nine [9]
days after the ballistic report was commissioned. For five [5] years
the charges against the Plaintiff were never reinstated.
In its
amended plea, the Defendants plead that the charges against the
Plaintiff were
provisionally withdrawn,
which
allegation is not supported by any shred of evidence, except to the
contrary.
[95]
Our courts have held legal practitioners liable for costs of another
where there are special grounds justifying this. Such
grounds have
been found to be present in cases where a litigant has been found
guilty
of dishonesty or fraud
or
where
their motives have been vexatious, reckless, malicious and frivolous,
or
where
they have acted unreasonably in the conduct of litigation or where
their conduct has been in some way reprehensible
[65]
.
In
casu,
the
conduct of the Defendants’ legal representatives squarely fits
within the conduct as described herein
supra.
[96]
In
Gois
t/a Shakespear’s Pub v Van Zyl and Others
[66]
,
the
court held as follows: “…
this
court may make a punitive costs order such as costs on an attorney
and own client scale where it believes it (is) appropriate
to do so.
Factors to consider whether or not to grant such punitive costs order
include where the conduct of the party
(a)
is vexatious and amounts to an abuse of legal process, even though
there is no intention to be vexatious;
(b)
evinces
a lack of bona fide; and
(c)
is
reckless, malicious and unreasonable.”
[97]
It is my respectful submission to the above Honourable Court, that
the Court does not take the issue of costs
de bonis propriis
lightly and it has to be shown that the conduct of the practitioner
was such that it was
grossly negligent
,
mala fide,
negligent or
unreasonable.’
[98]
It is submitted with respect that the conduct of the Defendant’s
representatives should be found to be
unreasonable, mala
fide and grossly negligent
to defend the indefensible
with their bare denial plea, even with their amended plea.
[99]
In
Brown
v Papadatis
and
Another NNO
[67]
Davis J held at 545J-546D is apposite here. The learned Judge said:
“
Mr
Khan submits that he was given instructions to so pursue this course
of action, but attorneys must surely apply a professional
standard in
deciding to do this. See the dictum of Innes CJ in Vermaak’s
Executor v Vermaak’s Heirs
1909 TS 679
at 691.
Applicants
have rights, but the courts are not playthings, to be abused at the
convenience of litigants who raise spurious, reckless
arguments which
jeopardize the integrity of the court, so as to postpone proceedings,
when they, as in this case, have clear rights,
which can protect any
interest or rights which they may have
.
In my view, this is a case where the court should say: Of course,
litigants
have rights; of course, courts must fastidiously respect these
rights; of energetically as he or she may be able, to protect
these
rights. But when the boundary is overstepped so grossly in
circumstances where there is no legal basis, no precedent, no
serious
evidential edifice on which to launch such an application (ie even on
these vague affidavits could a recusal application
ever be brought?),
the court should say, you have overstepped the mark and have crossed
a bridge in circumstances where an order
of costs de bonis propriis
must follow.”
[100]
In
University
of South Africa v Socikwa and Others
[68]
,
the court held as follows at paragraph 31 of the judgment
:
“[31]
I
squarely attribute the launching of these absolutely
hopeless
urgent
applications to legal practitioners who represented Unisa and the
Justice Department. Legal practitioners, as officers of the court,
have
the fiduciary responsibility to the court
.
Once
legal practitioners accept either the instructions and/or briefs,
their appointment by their clients connotes that they become
fiduciary in relation to the litigant.
In the words of Innes CJ, fiduciary duty also involves “…a
solicitor to his client…” .
Once
appointment is confirmed and accepted, the forensic skills of legal
practitioners must be ignited to ensure that they protect
the court
from the burden of entertaining and adjudicating absolutely hopeless
cases.
It remains the duty of a legal practitioner to act in the best
interests of his or her client.
Acting
in the best interest of the clients also denotes that a legal
practitioner has an obligation to disclose to the client that
the
case sought to be pursued is either absolutely hopeless or has
prospects of success
.
[101]
Further in the above judgment, para 35, 36 and 37 the court held:
“[35]
In respect of the legal representatives of the
applicants, they assisted in bringing absolutely hopeless cases to
court when they
reasonably ought to have known that the applications
were not urgent and there were no reviews pending before court. Had
they simply
embarked upon drafting the chronology and juxtapose same
with Section 145 of the LRA, Practice Manual and the Rules, the
court’s
resources could have been directed to worthy cases.
[36] Mindful of the fact that the Justice Department is
represented by the State Attorney and not a private attorney, what
should be the fate of an Attorney from the State Attorney in the
circumstances of the costs. Attorneys employed by the State Attorney
are employed in terms of the Public Service Act 103 of 1994 (“the
PSA”), as amended. As civil servants, they are bound
by the
provisions of the Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999, (“the
PFMA”), as amended.
[102]
Section 45(c) of the PFMA provides: “45.
Responsibilities of other officials
-
An
official in a department, trading entity or constitutional
institution— (c)
must take effective and appropriate steps to prevent, within that
official’s area of responsibility, any unauthorised
expenditure,
irregular expenditure and fruitless and wasteful
expenditure and any under collection of revenue due.
[37]
An
attorney duly employed by the State Attorney who agrees to take a
hopeless case to court without properly advising the litigating
department or organ of state, contravenes section 45 (c) of the PFMA.
In the premise, consequence management measures must ensue.”
[103]
In considering, the costs sought against the Defendant’s legal
representatives, the court is implored to consider the
bleeding of
national budget and should stop the rot of “
we do not care
attitude’
on the part of public officials, specifically in
the office of the State Attorneys.
[104]
In the event, that the above Honourable Court, does not find in
favour of the Plaintiff, therefore the Plaintiff pleads that
he was
entitled by law to exercise his constitutional rights and further
that the principles as laid down in
Biowatch
[69]
,
find application in this matter and the court should find as such.
[105]
It is further submitted that the matter was not complicated, and it
did not warrant or necessitate the employment of a senior
and a
junior nor a senior at all. Should the Court grant in favour of the
Defendants, consider the issue of costs favourably in
respect of the
Plaintiff as he was exercising his constitutional rights.
[106]
Counsel for the 1
st
and 2
nd
Defendants pray
that the action be dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
Counsel.
[107]
Matters
of costs are always important and sometimes complex
and difficult to determine
.
I
n
leaving
a Judge
a discretion
,
the law contemplates that he should take into consideration the
circumstances of each case
. One must
carefully weigh the various issues in the case, the
c
onduct
of the parties
,
and any other circumstance
which may have a bearing upon the question of costs, and then make
such order as to costs as would be
fair and just between the parties.
[108]
As the starting point, the
C
ourt must
determine whether any costs are payable to any of the parties. Once
the Court has decided that costs are payable it has
to decide who of
the parties is entitled to costs. This exercise cannot be embarked on
capriciously or by chance, there should
be sound legal principles
upon which the decision is based.
The
idea behind granting a costs order in favour of a successful party is
to indemnify it for its expense in ‘
having
been forced to litigate’
.
Further, a balance must be struck ‘
to
afford the innocent party adequate indemnification within reasonable
bounds’
.
In
order to achieve the necessary balance, the individual circumstances
of each case must be taken into account.
[109]
A Court exercising a wide discretion may choose from all the options
at its disposal and award a cost order that it considers
just in the
circumstances of the case at hand. The Court has to,
inter
alia
, consider the conduct of the parties during the actual
litigation process, all other matters that lead up to and occasioned
the
litigation and whether there were attempts to settle the matter
before and during the litigation. The extent to which a party raised,
pursued or contested a particular issue and whether it was reasonable
for that party to pursue that issue.
[110]
The Court’s
approach
is
to
look first at who the successful party
is
.
I believe
that the
principle
that
costs should follow the result is fair too.
In the end,
the exercise of
the Court’s
discretion on costs,
is
an exercise to
determine what is fair, an enquiry in which substantial success
carries significant weight. Substantial success
is often described as
the general, although not an inflexible rule. It is not easily
departed from, as in general, the purpose
of a costs award is to
indemnify the successful party.
[111]
In circumstances such as the present, I am of the view that a
punitive order for costs is not appropriate. However, I think,
in
this case, an order for costs is appropriate and the costs must
definitely follow the results as there is no reason for deviation.
I
am therefore inclined to grant the costs order on a party and party
scale.
[112]
In the premise, I issue the following Order:
[112.1] The Plaintiff’s
arrest was unlawful.
[112.2]
The Plaintiff’s detention and further unlawful
detention (after his aforesaid unlawful arrest) were unlawful.
[112.3]
The Plaintiff’s prosecution was malicious.
[112.4]
The 1st and 2nd Defendants (the Defendants) are jointly
and severally liable to pay 100% of the Plaintiff’s
damages arising
from unlawful arrest, unlawful detention, further
unlawful detention and malicious prosecution referred to above.
[112.5]
The quantum proceedings are postponed
sine die
for a date to be determined by the Court.
[112.6] The 1st and 2nd
Defendants are jointly and severally liable to pay the costs of
suit to the Plaintiff on a party and
party scale.
T
E JOYINI
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
Counsel for the
Plaintiff:
Adv WN Sidzumo
Instructed
by:
Makhafola & Verster Attorneys Inc.
Counsel for the 1
st
and 2
nd
Defendants: Adv TWG Bester SC and Adv CGVO
Sevenster
Instructed
by:
State Attorney in Pretoria
Date of
Hearing:
4; 5; 6; and 8 March 2024
Date of
Judgment:
8 April 2024
This
Judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the Court online
digital data base of the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and by
e-mail to
the Attorneys of record of the parties. The deemed date and time for
the delivery is 8
th
of April 2024 at 10h00.
[1]
Caseline 001-6.
[2]
Caseline 001-6.
[3]
Caseline
001-10.
[4]
Caseline
011-1.
[5]
Caseline
003-1.
[6]
Act 51 of 1977.
[7]
Caseline
012-14 to 19
[8]
Act
60 of 2000
[9]
See
Cele v Minister of Safety and Security
[2007] 3 All SA 365
D; Mhaga
v Minister of Safety and Security
[2001] 2 All SA 534
(TK); Lombo v
African National Congress
2002 (5) SA 668
(SCA) para 32.
[10]
at
paragraph 3 and Nwaila statement caseline 012-46 at paragraph 4.
[11]
1988 (2) SA 654
(
see
)
AT 658 F-H, as quoted on Du Toit at al (supra), Jones J.
[12]
2016 (2)SACR 540 CC.
[14]
JSS
Industrial Coatings CC v Inyatsi Construction (South Africa) (PTY )
LTD (2013/9610){2013}ZAGPJHC 209(16 August 2013) at paragraph
6 -7.
[15]
(2008) 3 ALL SA 47
(SCA) at paragraph 33 and 34.
[16]
See
Relyant
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Shongwe
[2007]
1 All SA 375
(SCA) para 5, referring to
Lederman
v Moharal Investments (Pty) Ltd
1969 (1) SA 190
(A) at 196G–H;
Thompson
v Minister of Police
1971
(1) SA 371
(E) at 373F-H and J Neethling, JM Potgieter & PJ
Visser
Neethling’s
Law of Personality
2
ed (2005) pp 124-125 (see also pp172-173 and the authorities there
cited). Cf 15
Lawsa
(
sv
‘Malicious
Proceedings’ by DJ McQuoid-Mason) (reissue, 1999 para 441;
François du Bois (General Editor)
Wille’s
Principles of South African Law
9
ed (2007) pp 1192-1193; LTC Harms
Amler’s
Precedents of Pleadings
6
ed (2003) p 238-239.
[17]
Caseline
012-23
[18]
(2020/17691) [2022] ZAGPJHC 795;
[2023] 1 All SA 132
(GJ) (17
October 2022 at paragraph 41.
[19]
Du Toit et al on the Commentary on the
Criminal Procedure Act.
[20]
Tshishonga v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and
Another (JS898/04)
[2006] ZALC 104
;
[2007] 4 BLLR 327
(LC);
2007 (4)
SA 135
(LC); (2007) 28 ILJ 195 (LC) (26 December 2006) at paragraphs
112-116.
[21]
[2021] ZAGPJHC 97 at para 43 and 45.
[22]
See:
Minister
of Law and Order v Hurley
1986 (3) SA 568
(A) at 589E-F;
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another
2011 (1) SACR 315
(SCA) at para [7].
[23]
See:
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
1986 (2) SA 805
(A) at 818G-H;
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another, supra
,
at paras [6] and [21].
[24]
See:
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order, supra
,
at 819I;
Minister
of Law and Order v Kader
1991 (1) SA 41
(A) at 50H.
[25]
See:
Liebenberg
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another
[2009] ZAGPPHC 88 (18 June 2009) at para 19.22.
[26]
See:
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order, supra
,
at 819G-H.
[27]
See:
Liebenberg
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another, supra
,
at para 19.21.
[28]
See:
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another, supra
,
at para [39].
[29]
See:
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another, supra
,
at paras [46] – [49];
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order, supra
,
at 819B-D;
Minister
of Law and Order and Another v Dempsey
1988 (3) SA 19
(A) at 37B-39F.
[30]
See:
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another, supra
,
at para [44].
[31]
See: Zeffert & Paizes,
Law
of Evidence
,
Third Edition, pp 1081-1084.
[32]
See:
Phakula
v Minister of Safety and Security
[2023] ZAGPPHC 277: case no 64450/2011 (6 April 2023) at paras [73]
and [65].
[33]
See: CaseLines 005-1-12 at para 4.5.
[34]
See: Particulars of claim, para 4.5, CaseLines 010-7.
[35]
See: Pre-trial minutes, para 8.7, CaseLines 011-57 to 011-58.
[36]
See:
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
2020 (1) SACR 1 (CC).
[37]
See:
Minister
of Police and Another v Muller
2020 (1) SACR 432 (SCA).
[38]
See:
De
Klerk v Minister of Police, supra
,
at para [74].
[39]
See:
Minister
of Police and Another v Muller, supra
,
at para [38].
[40]
See:
Minister
of Police and Another v Muller, supra
,
at para [39].
[41]
See: Charge sheet, CaseLines 012-71.
[42]
See: Charge sheet, CaseLines 012-71.
[43]
See:
Minister
of Police and Another v Muller, supra
,
at para [39].
[44]
See:
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development & Others v Moleko
[2008] 3 All SA 47
(SCA) at para [8];
Rudolph
and Others v Minister of Safety and Security and Another
[2009] 3 All SA 323
(SCA) at para [16].
[45]
See:
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development & Others v Moleko,
supra
,
at para [20].
[46]
See:
Relyant
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Shongwe
[2007] 1 All SA 375
(SCA) at para [14].
[47]
See:
Moaki
v Reckitt and Colman (Africa) Ltd and Another
1968 (3) SA 98
(A) at 103G-104E;
Relyant
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Shongwe, supra
,
at para [5];
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development & Others v Moleko,
supra
,
at para [61].
[48]
See:
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development & Others v Moleko,
supra
,
at para [63].
[49]
See:
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development & Others v Moleko,
supra
,
at para [64].
[50]
See: Statement of Cst Makunyane, CaseLines 012-49A to 012-49B;
Statement of Sgt Nwaila, CaseLines 012-46 to 012-47.
[51]
See: Pre-trial minutes, CaseLines 011-51 to 011-67.
[52]
See: Pre-trial minutes, paras 13.1-13.2, CaseLines 011-64.
[53]
See: CaseLines 012-14.
[54]
See:
Imprefed
(Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission
1993 (3) SA 94
(SA) at 107C-D;
Minister
of Agriculture and Land Affairs v De Klerk
2014 (1) SA 212
(SCA) at 223G-H.
[55]
See:
Knox
D’Arcy AG and Another v Land and Agricultural Development Bank
of South Africa
[2013] 3 All SA 404
(SCA) at para [35].
[56]
See:
Minister
of Safety and Security v Slabbert
[2010] 2 All SA 474
(SCA) at para 11.
[57]
See:
Mahlangu
and Another v Minister of Police
2020 (2) SACR 136
(SCA) at para [26].
[58]
See:
Molusi
v Voges NO
2016 (3) SA 370
(CC) at paras [27] - [28].
[59]
See: Particulars of claim, para 4.5, CaseLines 010-7.
[60]
See:
Minister
of Law and Order v Hurley
1986 (3) SA 568
(A) at 589E-F;
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another
2011 (1) SACR 315
(SCA) at para [7].
[61]
Act
108 of 1996, the Constitution.
[62]
R
v Heerden 1958 [3] SA 150 71.
[63]
1986 (3) 568 (A) at 589 para-E
-F.
[64]
See: CaseLines 012-14.
[65]
See
Erasmus Superior Court Practice at E12-20 and footnotes cited there.
[66]
(2003) 24 ILJ 2302 (LC)
[67]
2009 (3) SA 542 (C)
[68]
(J
675/23; J 680/23) [2023] ZALCJHB 172;
[2023] 8 BLLR 836
(LC); (2023)
44 ILJ 1785 (LC) (7 June 2023)
## [69](CCT
80/08) [2009] ZACC 14; 2009 (6) SA 232 (CC) ; 2009 (10) BCLR 1014
(CC) (3 June 2009)
[69]
(CCT
80/08) [2009] ZACC 14; 2009 (6) SA 232 (CC) ; 2009 (10) BCLR 1014
(CC) (3 June 2009)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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