Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 357South Africa
Mapisa-Nqakula v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (B9/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 357 (16 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mapisa-Nqakula v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (B9/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 357 (16 April 2024)
Mapisa-Nqakula v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (B9/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 357 (16 April 2024)
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sino date 16 April 2024
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL – Arrest –
Interdict
and judicial peek
–
Alleging
urgency stems from threat to arrest applicant without due and
lawful process – Arrest without detention is
not urgent –
No facts set out why future arrest will be unlawful –
Setting out on speculation that there is a
weak case against
applicant – Not competent to interdict arrest –
Discretion not to take judicial peek exercised
– Found
inappropriate – Application struck from roll.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO
: B9/2024
DATE
:
02-04-2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/ NO.
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
2024-04-16
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between
NOSIVIWE
MAPISA-NQAKULA
Applicant
and
THE NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
First Respondent
THE MINISTER OF
POLICE
Second Respondent
BHEKI
MANYATHI
Third Respondent
CHIEF INVESTIGATOR DYLAN
PERUMAL
Fourth Respondent
SERGEANT SUNEEL
BELLOCHUN
Fifth Respondent
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL,
J
:
[1]
The applicant, Ms Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula has brought an urgent
application seeking the following
order:
“
Interdicting
and restraining the respondents or their agents from arresting the
Speaker, notwithstanding any warrant of arrest under
the Criminal
Procedure Act, 51 of 1977 (to which I shall refer as the CPA)
pending the final outcome of this application on
terms to be directed
by this Court; alternatively the final outcome of the application
served on the respondents at or about 06:30
on Friday, 22 March
2024.”
This
is referred to as the main application.
[2]
Furthermore, that the Court is to exercise a discretion to take a
judicial peek into the state’s
brief, including the docket to
decide this application.
[3]
This relief is sought against five respondents, not in this notice of
motion, neither in the founding
affidavit are the respondents cited
in accordance with the Uniform Rules of Court. The Court is
referred to the main application
for the correct citation.”
I will remark that this deviation, due to urgency is not accepted
practise. The respondents
are cited as the National Director of
Public Prosecutions, to whom I shall refer as the NDPP. The
second respondent is the
Minister of Police [the Minister] and the
third respondent is cited as Bheki Manyathi. The answering
affidavit is made by
Adv Manyathi setting out that he is the Deputy
Director of Public Prosecutions and the lead prosecutor in this
matter that the
applicant is to be charged with. The fourth
respondent is cited as Chief Investigator Dylan Perumal; and that
seems to be correct
in terms of his answering affidavit where it is
stated that he is the chief investigator in the criminal matter
pertaining to the
applicant. The fifth respondent is Sgt Suneel
Bellochun. Counsel for the respondents placed on record that
counsel was appearing
on behalf of all the respondents.
Background
:
[4]
The applicant, on Friday, 22 March 2024 at 06:30 in the morning, one
court day before this application,
before me was launched and served,
served another urgent application, on the same respondents.
This is the application referred
to as: “the main
application.” In the founding affidavit, the urgent
application before me, it is set out that
this urgent application is
interim relief to anticipate the main application; “the
pre-emptive strike” to the
main application. The relief
in this application is the same relief sought in prayer 2 of the main
application. It
is further set out, in the founding affidavit,
that the basis for the interdict sought herein is essentially the
same relief sought,
set out in the main application.
[5]
The first issue the Court has to decide is urgency. The grounds
for the accelerated or anticipated
urgency application is set out as
that the unlawful arrest is imminent and it intended to take the
applicant and her attorney by
surprise. The imminent arrest
will harm the applicant’s dignity, as a normal citizen, and
under the Constitution of
the Republic of South Africa: “Merely
by virtue of her office and status as Speaker of Parliament.”
It
is further averred that there has been constant and unrelenting
attempts by the state to arrest, despite the necessary threshold
to
arrest her, let alone charge a statutory and constitutional
authority. In this case one of the three most important
functionaries
appointed in terms of the Constitution of the Republic
of South Africa.
[6]
It is further set out that the state’s case is underpinned by
an underwhelming weak investigation
and riddled with irregularities
which could never justify the infringement and imperilment of the
applicant’s constitutional
rights; let alone the
applicant’s position as the Speaker of the Parliament.
[7]
Furthermore the applicant is not a flight risk. The media
reports leaked by the NPA is the
NPA trying the applicant by means of
the media.
[8]
The respondents deny that the matter is urgent and submit that any
urgency is self-created.
There is an urgent application set
down for 09 April 2024. One cannot anticipate that urgent
application and set it down
earlier.
[9]
The applicant knew since 08 March 2024, when Mr Perumal contacted the
applicant and asked who
her attorney is, that her arrest was
imminent. For a period of two weeks, since 08 March 2024, no
arrest has been carried
out. The urgent applications were
brought while NDPP Manyathi was still engaging with the applicant to
hand over the applicant
at the police station for processing in
preparation for the enrolment of the matter. It is common cause
that even before
this application before me was brought, it was
indicated to the applicant that the respondents would not oppose
bail. An
arrest, on its own, cannot create urgency; especially
when there is no apprehension of detention.
[10]
The applicant, herself, concedes it was brought to her attention that
resort to section 40 of the CPA would
be the last resort. This
fact is now, however, used as to create urgency despite it being a
last resort.
[11]
Furthermore, whether there is a weak case is speculative and the
Court should not consider this as a ground
for urgency. The
media leaks by the NDPP are denied and also do not constitute grounds
for urgency.
[12]
There has been non-compliance with the practice directives as to
service and the date it was enrolled.
One cannot anticipate
another urgent application.
Ruling
on urgency
:
[13] It
is trite that an urgent application is not for the mere asking.
Rule 6(12)(b) sets out:
“
In
an urgent application an applicant must set forth explicitly the
circumstances which averred rendered the matter urgent and the
reasons why the applicant claims that the applicant would not be
afforded redress at a hearing in due course.”
The
locus classicus
of
Luna
Meubelvervaardigers
(Edms) Beperk v
Makin and another
t/a Makin’s Furniture Manufacturers
1977
(4) SA 135
(W) bears repeating:
“
The
degree of relaxation should not be greater than the exigency of the
case demands. It must be commensurate therewith.
Mere lip
service to the requirements of Rule 6(12)(b) will not do and an
applicant must make out a case in the founding affidavit
to justify
the particular extent of the departure from the norm, which is
involved in the time and day for which the matter must
be set down.”
[14]
The Gauteng Practice, Pretoria Practice Manual, contained in Volume 3
of
Erasmus
sets out how urgent applications must be brought
before Court. On page H2-137(6) it reads as follows:
“
The
rules ensure an ordinary flow of applications through the court and
their expeditious adjudication. Rule 6(12) allows
an applicant
who requires relief urgently to have his case decided without the
delays necessitated by the ordinary procedure.
However, the
normal times will be abridged and a deviation from rule 6 will be
permitted only when the matter is urgent. The degree
of abridgement
and deviation must be commensurate with the case and must be
justified in the founding affidavit.”
Page H2-139 under [4](2)
the following is said:
“
The
abridgement of times and the deviation from a rule must be
justified. If the matter is not heard immediately the applicant
will not be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
These matters must be pertinently dealt with in the
affidavits filed
in support of the application.”
[15]
The Court has to decide whether the matter is so urgent that the
times are justified and the urgency is not
self created,
because:
“
Where
the application lacks the requisite element or degree of urgency, the
court can for that reason decline to exercise its power
under Rule
6(12)(a). The matter is then not properly on the court’s roll
and it declines to hear it. The appropriate
order is generally
to strike the application from the roll.”
[1]
[16]
The Constitutional Court in
AParty and Another v Minister for Home
Affairs and Others; Moloko and Others v Minister for Home
Affairs and Another
2009 (3) SA 649
(CC) at paragraph [65] found
that launching applications on such short notice and at the very
latest date should be avoided as
it places undue pressure on the
parties and the Court.
In
Economic Freedom
Fighters and Others v Chairperson of the Powers & Privileges
Committee and Others
(23230/23)
2024 ZAWCHC 31
(8 February 2024)
it was found that one day notice to the respondents with the Court:
“
To
digest the contents thereof so that the matter could be heard and
judgment handed down in the space of a day or two thereafter,
was
also wholly unreasonable.”
[17]
With this background the Court has to decide this urgency. In
this matter the application was filed
on a Saturday. The
respondent was to oppose the matter by e mail or extraordinary
by means of WhatsApp on the
Sunday by 16:00 on the same day; Saturday
23 March 2024 and to deliver any opposing affidavit by no later than
16:00 on Sunday
24 March 2024, with the matter set down for Monday 25
March 2024. The Court was expected to hear this matter on
Monday at
10:00. The respondents’ answering affidavit was
filed on Monday and the matter stood down till 15:00 for the
applicant
to decide whether it wanted to reply; for the Court to have
time to read the answering affidavit in between the other 20 urgent
applications this Court had on its roll. I managed to read the
answering affidavit and entertained the matter at 15:00.
The
applicant had decided not to file a reply.
[18] It
is patently clear that none of the practice directives of this Court
was adhered to. The timeframes
in terms of Rule 6(12) were
unreasonable, not only to the respondents, but to the Court. It
was thus argued that despite
these shortcomings the urgency is so
patent, as it stems from a threat to arrest the applicant, without a
due and lawful process,
and the whole premise of the applicant’s
case is:
1.
The applicant’s standing in society.
2.
There is an unlawful prosecution.
3.
The arrest will be unlawful.
4.
The applicant’s constitutional right to
dignity and freedom of movement will be infringed.
[19]
Arrest is a means to process a suspect and have an appearance before
Court. The respondents set this
out in their answering
affidavit; but it is trite. The applicant, by means of her
attorney, sets out in the main application,
that the NDPP does not
even intend to oppose bail. This was already in the main
application set out making it clear that
detention was not in issue.
In the answering affidavit, to this application, the NDPP confirms
that it will not oppose bail.
Arrest without detention simply
is not urgent.
[20] It
is most certainly not within the power of this Court to instruct the
Minister and his officials to summons
the applicant versus to arrest
her. There is in anyway no such prayer sought in the
application before me. I cannot
find this, firstly, because
there are no grounds set out as to why this should be done, except
that the applicant’s standing
in society and her dignity.
The NDPP has stated, under oath, that her attorney can take her to
Lyttleton Police Station and
her attorney can take her to the court.
This is already a courtesy and an exception to what ordinary citizens
are afforded.
[21]
There is not a single fact set out as to why the future arrest will
be unlawful. Seemingly because
there is a weak case made out.
Yet, the applicant does not know what case has been set out and this
is pure speculation.
I can make no finding on such speculation
that there will be an unlawful arrest or that there is a weak case.
These facts
cannot underpin urgency.
[22]
The respondents argued that it would not be competent for this Court
to interdict an arrest. I am in
full agreement with this
submission. Not on the facts presented, but more importantly, a
Court has to take cognisance of
the fact that if the Court grants
such an order the floodgates will be opened. Every suspect will
be in a position to approach
a Court, on an urgent basis, setting out
on speculation that there is a weak case against it and interdict an
arrest.
Any suspect would merely
have to set out in a founding affidavit that the arrest in future
will be unlawful. The whole criminal
justice system will fail
and will be controlled by suspects.
[23]
This applicant has been ensured that section 40 will only be utilised
if she does not present herself to
the police station. The
applicant has failed to do for two weeks. The fact that section
40 will only be utilised if
she does not present her to the police
station, is in complete compliance with the standing orders, which
sets out that arrest
should be a last resort.
[24] I
was referred to the matter of
President of the Republic of South
Africa v Zuma and Others
2023 (1) SACR 610
(GJ) at paragraphs 8
to 10, that it would not be overreach for this Court to interdict
arrest, but a Bench exercising judicial
oversight. The matter
is not comparable and does not sway me that I am entitled to judicial
oversight of this nature.
Firstly, nowhere in that matter does
the Court find a Court has judicial oversight to interdict an
arrest. Secondly, in that
matter the summons was before Court
and the plethora of grounds regarding its validity on the face
thereof was raised. In
this matter no arrest has been made and
no unlawfulness on its own has been explained to Court, excepting for
pure speculation
being raised.
[25]
Furthermore, the Court in that matter found that
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC) was not applicable
in that matter due to it being a private prosecution. The
OUTA
case held that where an interdict was sought against a statutory
authority from performing a function within its domain a higher
treshold existed then when seeking such relief against a private
litigant; as in this instance.
[26]
Much reliance was placed on the fact that the applicant has a right
to legal representation of her choice.
Clearly the NDPP and the
police investigator is aware of this right and has afforded her ample
time to report to the Lyttleton
Police Station with a legal
representative. Mr Perumal already, on 09 March 2024, had asked
who her legal representative
is. On 17 March 2024 the legal
representative, for the first time, made contact with Perumal.
The delay in processing
the applicant was done out of courtesy.
It was made clear that it ws not a negotiation and was not
open-ended. Mr May
set out that due to a long trial in Durban
he is only available on 03 April 2024. I was referred to
section 35 of the Constitution
and section 73 of the CPA.
Firstly, all of those sections referred to an accused, or an arrested
or a detained person, which
on no construction this applicant before
the Court is.
But
I accept that pre-arrest there is informational duties in terms of
section 73(2)(A). With these duties arising at the
time of
arrest of the accused, the accused is entitled to legal
representation. This right does not include that the legal
representative dictate when a police official, acting in terms of his
authority, has to fulfil its duties. The averment that
the
respondents do not want an attorney present for her to incriminate
herself is pure speculation and flies in the face of Perumal
and the
NDPP attempting to secure an attorney to be present at her arrest.
Already at the gatehouse the applicant is afforded
legal
representation. She has been afforded the right to legal
representation in the pre-trial and pre-arrest stage.
The Court
cannot interdict to prevent statutory authorities to comply with its
statutory duties. It is not as if the state
representatives
have been not lenient and has already let two weeks go by.
[27]
The prayer that I take a judicial peek is for the Court to determine
whether an arrest would be unlawful.
In reply, on behalf of the
applicant, persuant to a question by this Court, it was submitted
that I only need to take a peek into
the docket if I am uncertain.
I
am not uncertain. I exercise my discretion not to take a
judicial peek and find this inappropriate. This Court is
not a
means to declare an arrest, which has not taken place, unlawful or
that it would be unlawful, or express a view thereon or
make a value
judgment. I am therefore also not granting this order.
[28]
Although I do not address all the issues raised, it does not mean I
did not not consider it. No remedy
is prayed pertaining to the
search and seizure. The respondents deny the media leaks
eminate from their offices or agents;
but in any event no remedy is
sought pertaining to any leaks.
[29]
In the applicant’s affidavit there are a variety of emotive
garnishing, which the Court cannot take
cognisance of and make
factual decisions on. However, even if the Court finds that the
matter is not urgent, the Court must
still make sure that there is
substantial redress in due course.
[30]
Not in the founding affidavit, of this application, or the main
application, is any facts set out.
This requisite, in terms of
Rule 6(12)(b) and the practice directive is not at all addressed in
the founding affidavits.
[31]
But, even if I consider that despite the applicant setting out any of
these facts, before me, even if I should
consider it, then also
persuant to a question by this Court, whether this Court would not be
deciding already the matter as it
seeks the same relief pertaining to
arrest in the main application, counsel for the applicant strongly
argued that that Court would
make a final ruling, as this is just an
interim interdict.
In
that case the applicant will have substantial redress in the hearing
to follow.
[32]
As for the costs, the costs must follow the result. Both
parties asked for costs, including the cost
of two counsel.
Accordingly
the application is struck from the roll. The applicant is to
pay the costs, including the costs of two counsel.
POTTERILL, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
DATE
:
2024-04-16
[1]
Commissioner
for South African Revenue Service v Hawker Air Services (Pty) Ltd
Commissioner for South African Revenue Services
v Hawker Aviation
Services Partnership and others
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006
(4) SA 292
(SCA)
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