Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 426South Africa
Ntjinga v Minister of Police and Another (11580/2016) [2024] ZAGPPHC 426 (16 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 April 2024
Judgment
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## Ntjinga v Minister of Police and Another (11580/2016) [2024] ZAGPPHC 426 (16 April 2024)
Ntjinga v Minister of Police and Another (11580/2016) [2024] ZAGPPHC 426 (16 April 2024)
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sino date 16 April 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
11580/2016
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
16 April 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
SIMON
NTSIKELELE
NTJINGA
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
First Defendant
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second Defendant
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading it
to the electronic file of this matter on Caselines. The date
and for
hand-down is deemed to be 16 April 2024.
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN, J
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff’s claim is for damages
that he suffered as a result of his wrongful arrest and prosecution
by the first and
second defendants.
[2]
At the commencement of the trial, an order
in terms of rule 33(4) of the Uniform rules of court for the
separation of the merits
and quantum of the plaintiff’s claim
was granted and the trial only proceeded in respect of merits.
Pleadings
[3]
It is common cause between the parties that
the plaintiff was arrested on 31 July 2004 by inspector Colyn on a
charge of,
inter alia
,
robbery with aggravating circumstances. It is, furthermore, common
cause that the plaintiff was thereafter prosecuted by various
prosecutors in the employ of the second defendant, The National
Director of Public Prosecutions (“NDPP”) on the charge
until 15 October 2015 when the prosecution was stopped.
[4]
The plaintiff alleges that the defendants,
in acting as aforesaid, wrongfully and maliciously and/or with
animus
injuriandi,
set and kept the law in
motion against him. According to the defendant, he was falsely
charged.
[5]
In respect of the first defendant, the
Minster of Police (“the Minster”), the plaintiff alleges
that inspector Colyn:
5.1
arrested him without a warrant of arrest;
5.2
detained him as a suspected robber;
5.3
charged him with,
inter alia,
robbery;
5.4
brought him to court on the charge, and
5.5
partook in the bail proceedings against him.
[6]
The allegations against the prosecutors in
the employ of the NDPP are:
6.1
that he was placed before court and his case was enrolled without
sufficient evidence;
6.2
that the matter was postponed numerous times from 31 July 2004 to 15
October 2015 without sufficient
evidence against him in the case
docket;
6.3
that the prosecutors partook in the bail proceedings against him; and
6.4
that the prosecutors failed to stop proceedings and/or failed to
grant him bail during all the court
appearances from his arrest until
14 October 2015.
[7]
According to the plaintiff, the officials
in the employ of the Minister and the NDPP acted, at all relevant
times, without reasonable
and probable cause.
[8]
The Minster and the NDPP deny all the
aforesaid allegations.
Background
[9]
The events leading to the arrest and
prosecution of the plaintiff are common cause between the parties.
[10]
On 28 May 2004, a cash-in-transit vehicle
belonging to Fidelity Guard Services (FGS) picked up cash at ABSA
Bank in Pretoria and
was robbed whilst on its way to deliver the cash
at various auto banks in Atteridgeville, Pretoria.
[11]
The plaintiff, a security guard in the
employ of Fidelity, was a crewman in the vehicle and he was
accompanied by a Mr Labuschagne
(“Labuschagne”), the
driver and a Mr Hutchinson (“Hutchinson”), the marksman.
According to the plaintiff,
the cash-in-transit vehicle overturned
during the robbery. The plaintiff testified that he lost
consciousness and only awoke in
the ambulance that transported him to
Eugene Marais hospital. The plaintiff, furthermore, testified that he
sustained a cut on
his right front skull, which required two stitches
and a scratch on the bottom of his right upper arm.
Inspector Colyn
[12]
Inspector Colyn (“Colyn”)
testified that he was the investigating officer in the
cash-in-transit heist case and that
he received a warning statement
made by one Aarons Sello Malatje (“Malatje”) on 1 July
2004. The salient portion of
the statement reads as follows:
“
A
friend of mine named Straw Ngobeni, used to work at FGS. He knew a
guy still working at FGS named Ntsiki…..They also told
me that
they got an inside man Ntsiki at FSG who gave them information.
The same evening George,
Straw and Enoch came to my house at 20h00 and told me that we needed
to go and meet the fingerman. We met
Ntsiki at his house and he
showed us a list of all the cash drops that he had to make. He told
us we must hit the car so that it
capsizes or else they would suspect
him at work.
We arranged to meet on
Friday at about 8:00 in Kwaggas rank. ..Ntsiki told me that he would
come to me at the outside of the base
of ABSA to give me the Fleet No
of the FG vehicle he would be travelling in. Ntsiki was the marksman
in the same vehicle. Ntsiki
came outside with another FG guard named
Skhosi who also worked with him. Ntsiki gave me the fleet no, but I
cannot remember it
now. Ntsiki told me that if he got delayed inside
Skhosi would come outside and inform me. So I continued to wait.
After a while
the FG vehicle came out. I phoned the guys and informed
them that the vehicle was coming.
I followed the FG vehicle
until Kwaggas rank. I told them that it didn’t go to Kwaggas
rank but to Hartebees. I followed it
until Atteridgeville. .. At that
time we knew that Hloni had already hit the FG vehicle….As we
were going towards the FG
vehicle we noticed the V6 bakkie pass us on
the opposite direction. At that stage we did not know whether they
took the money or
not so we went straight to the FG vehicle. We
stopped at the FG vehicle and got off and noticed that the roof of
the vehicle opened
and the guards lying on the floor. Jewel went into
the vehicle and checked inside. At that stage Ntsiki got up and told
us that
we must go because they already got the money.
Stalliano shot Ntsiki in
the shoulder but he was not aware that he shot him. Straw screamed to
Stalliano “Straw don’t
shoot” but by then Ntsiki
fell to the ground.
On Sunday I took my taxi
to Ntisiki’s house with Enoch and we gave him his R 70 000,
00. It was only there that we realised
that Stelliano shot him when
we saw his injuries. We phoned Stalliano and informed him that he
nearly killed Ntsiki. Stalliano
then spoke to Ntsiki and apologised.”
[13]
Armed with the warning statement of
Malatje, Colyn contacted Mr Pretorius (“Pretorius”), the
internal investigator of
FGS and enquired whether they had a security
guard by the name of Ntsiki in their employ. Mr Pretorius informed
him that they have
a security guard named Ntjinga in their employ and
that Ntjinga is sometimes referred to by his nickname Ntsiki. Colyn
asked who
the crew in the FGS vehicle on the day of the robbery were
and was informed by Pretorius that it was Ntjinga, Labuschagne and
Hutchinson.
[14]
Having confirmed that the plaintiff’s
nickname is Ntsiki and that he was the only black male in the FGS
vehicle on the day
of the robbery, Colyn took the decision to arrest
Ntsiki. Colyn attended at the premises of FGS on 31 July 2004, and
arrested the
plaintiff after the plaintiff confirmed that he is also
referred to as Ntsiki.
[15]
The plaintiff appeared in court on 2 August
2004 and brought a bail application. Colyn did not oppose the bail
application and the
plaintiff was granted bail on 17 August 2004.
[16]
The cross-examination of Colyn mainly
focussed on the steps Colyn should have taken prior to the arrest of
the plaintiff, to wit,
he should have:
16.1
conducted an identity parade;
16.2
conducted a pointing-out of the residence
of the plaintiff;
16.3
ascertained whether the plaintiff was shot in the shoulder during the
robbery by,
inter alia,
examining his body;
16.4
determined whether the plaintiff left the ABSA building when the cash
was collected.
[17]
It was put to Colyn that the warning
statement of Malatje was a confession and inadmissible against the
plaintiff in terms of the
provisions of section 219 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“CPA”). Colyn duly conceded as
much.
[18]
Colyn testified, during cross-examination,
that he was informed by Pretorius that the plaintiff was shot during
the robbery and
that he received a written report/medical certificate
from FGS in this regard. He further testified that Pretorius informed
him
that only the three crewmen had knowledge of the route that the
vehicle would travel on the day in question. It was pointed out
to
Colyn that he did not testify about these important facts during his
evidence in chief. It was put to Colyn that the plaintiff
denies that
he was shot during the robbery.
[19]
The medical certificate was, furthermore,
not discovered, which, according to the plaintiff, places a question
mark on Colyn’s
evidence in this regard. Colyn testified that
the medical certificate should be in the case docket, that he was
replaced as the
investigating officer during the trial and that he
does not know what happened to the certificate.
Ms Carla Germishuis
[20]
Ms Germishuis (“Germishuis”)
the public prosecutor who prosecuted the plaintiff from 15 March 2005
until prosecution
against him was stopped on 15 October 2015,
testified that the only evidence against the plaintiff was the
warning statement of
Malatje, a statement by Phillemon Maako (accused
3) which implicated “Ntsiki” and the verbal statement by
Labuschagne
and Hutchinson that only the three guards in the
cash-in-transit vehicle know the route that would be travelled on a
specific day.
Germishuis testified that, since her involvement in the
matter in 2005, no new evidence against the plaintiff come to the
fore
or was requested.
[21]
Germishuis admitted that neither Malatje’s
warning statement nor the statement by Maako was admissible against
the plaintiff.
Maako, in any event, passed away before 20 February
2006.
[22]
Prior to 15 October 2015, Mr Human
(“Human”), an attorney, came on record for the plaintiff.
When the matter was in
court on 15 October 2015, Human wanted to know
from Germishuis why the trial against the plaintiff is proceeding
when there is
no evidence implicating the plaintiff in the
commissioning of the offense. Germishuis considered the position,
agreed with Human
and a decision was taken to stop the prosecution
against the plaintiff.
[23]
Lastly, Germishuis conceded during
cross-examination that the charges against the plaintiff should have
been withdrawn at an earlier
stage.
Legal principles and
discussion
Malicious arrest and
detention
[24]
Malicious
arrest was distinguished from unlawful arrest by Margo J in
Newman
v Prinsloo and Another
[1]
as
follows:
“
The
importance of the distinction is that, in the case of wrongful
arrest, neither malice nor absence of justification need be alleged
or proved by the plaintiff, whereas in the case of malicious arrest
it is an essential ingredient of the plaintiff’s cause
of
action, which must be alleged and proved by him, that a defendant
procured or instigated the arrest by invoking the machinery
of the
law maliciously.”
[25]
The first question is therefore whether the
arrest was justifiable.
[26]
Ms
Hartman, with reference to
Mabona
and Another v Minster of Law & Order and Others,
[2]
contended
that the arrest was not lawful. She, more specifically referred to
the following extract that dealt with an arrest in
terms of section
40(1)(a) of the CPA at 658 E – H:
“
The
reasonable man will therefore analyse and assess the quality of the
information at his disposal critically, and he will not
accept it
lightly or without checking it where it can be checked. It is only
after an examination of this kind that he will allow
himself to
entertain a suspicion which will justify an arrest. This is not to
say that the information at his disposal must be
of sufficiently high
quality and cogency to engender in him a conviction that the suspect
is in fact guilty. The section requires
suspicion but not certainty.
However, the suspicion must be based upon solid grounds. Otherwise,
it will be flighty or arbitrary,
and not a reasonable suspicion.”
[27]
Ms Hartman contended that Colyn’s
reliance on Malatje’s warning statement and that of Mooka,
which were both inadmissible,
did not satisfy the test set out in
Mabona
.
According to Ms Hartman, Colyn should have investigated and verified
the aspects pointed out in cross-examination before he could
form a
reasonable suspicion that would justify the arrest of the plaintiff.
[28]
Mr
Van Zyl SC, counsel for the defendants, did not agree. Mr van Zyl
referred to the more recent Supreme Court of Appeal judgment
in
Biyela
v Minister of Police
,
[3]
to wit:
“
[33]
The question whether a peace officer reasonably suspects a person of
having committed an offence within
the ambit of s 40(1)(b) is
objectively justiciable. It must, at the outset, be emphasised that
the suspicion need not be based
on information that would
subsequently be admissible in a court of law.
[34]
The standard of a reasonable suspicion is very low. The reasonable
suspicion must be more than a hunch;
it should not be an
unparticularised suspicion. It must be based on specific and
articulated facts or information. Whether the
suspicion was
reasonable, under the prevailing circumstances, is determined
objectively.
[35]
What is required is that the arresting officer must form a reasonable
suspicion that a Schedule 1 offence
has been committed based on
credible and trustworthy information. Whether that information would
later, in a court of law, be found
to be inadmissible is neither here
nor there for the determination of whether the arresting officer at
the time of arrest harboured
a reasonable suspicion that the arrested
person committed a Schedule 1 offence.” (footnotes omitted)
[29]
I respectfully agree with the test
formulated by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Biyela
and proceed to apply the test to the
facts in
casu
.
Colyn had “
specific and
articulated facts or information”
indicating
that the plaintiff was involved in the cash-in-transit heist prior to
the plaintiff’s arrest. Having regard to
the similarities
between the version in Malatje’s warning statement and the
circumstances in which the heist occurred, the
information in the
statement appeared to be credible and trustworthy. The information
was, furthermore, confirmed by Pretorius
insofar as the plaintiff was
known by the nickname “
Ntsiki”
.
[30]
Ms Hartman’s contention that Colyn
had to verify each and every allegation in Malatje’s warning
statement, prior to
arresting the plaintiff, does not accord with the
test set out
supra
and
I am satisfied that the arrest of the plaintiff was justifiable and
therefore lawful.
[31]
Insofar
as malice is concerned, malice and/or
animus
injuriandi
was
defined in
Moaki
v Reckitt & Colman (Africa) Limited and Another
[4]
as
follows:
“
Where
relief is claimed by this
actio
the plaintiff must allege and prove that the defendant intended to
injure (either
dolus directus
or
indirectus
).”
[32]
In this regard, the plaintiff pleaded that
Colyn arrested him on a false charge. During cross-examination, it
was not put to Colyn
that he intended to injure the plaintiff by the
arrest. The facts, in any event, point in the opposite direction.
Colyn had enough
evidence in his possession to justify the arrest of
the plaintiff, which militates against a finding that he intended to
injure
the plaintiff.
[33]
In the result, the plaintiff has failed to
establish, on a balance of probabilities, that the plaintiff’s
arrest by Colyn
and his subsequent detention was malicious.
Malicious
prosecution
[34]
The
requirements for a successful claim based on malicious prosecution
were set out in
Minister
for Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Moleko
[5]
(“
Moleko”)
as follows:
“
[8]
In order to succeed (on the merits) with a
claim for malicious prosecution, a claimant must allege
and prove –
(a) that
the defendants set the law in motion (instigated or instituted the
proceedings);
(b) that
the defendants acted without reasonable and probable cause;
(c) that
the defendants acted with 'malice' (or
animo injuriandi
); and
(d) that
the prosecution has failed.” (footnotes omitted)
[35]
In finding that the plaintiff’s
arrest by Colyn was not malicious, it follows that the Minister
cannot be held liable for
the prosecution of the plaintiff.
[36]
Insofar as the NDPP is concerned, it is
common cause that the NDPP set the law in motion by instituting the
prosecution against
the plaintiff and that the prosecution has
failed.
[37]
The
interplay between the remaining two requisites, was explained by the
Supreme Court Appeal in
Ledwaba
v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Correctional
Service and Others
,
[6]
as follows:
”
[22]
Although our law requires that the defendant must have acted with
malice or
animus injuriandi
,
that question will only become relevant when it is established that
the defendant instigated the prosecution without reasonable
and
probable cause. The latter issue is anterior to the question of
whether the defendant acted with
animus
injuriandi
. To succeed on this leg of
the enquiry, a plaintiff must not only prove intent to injure but
also consciousness of wrongfulness.
As held by this Court in
Moleko
,
animus injuriandi
‘means
that the defendant directed his or her will to prosecuting the
plaintiff in the awareness that reasonable grounds for
the
prosecution were absent’. It follows from this that the
determination of whether a defendant had reasonable and probable
cause to prosecute the plaintiff, must precede the determination into
whether it acted with
animus
injuriandi
.” (footnotes omitted)
[38]
The court defined reasonable and probable
cause as follows:
“
[23]
It is to the issue of reasonable and probable cause that I now turn.
In
Beckenstrater
this Court held that:
‘
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.’
There
would, thus, be reasonable and probable cause for the prosecution
where a defendant is of the honest belief that the facts,
available
at the time of taking the decision to prosecute the plaintiff,
constituted an
offence which
would lead a
reasonable person to conclude that the person against whom charges
are brought, was probably guilty of such offence.
This question must
not be confused with whether there is sufficient evidence upon which
the accused may be convicted. That question
would ultimately be for
the court, in the criminal trial, to decide at the conclusion of the
evidence.”
[24]
Whether there was reasonable and probable cause for the prosecution
depends on the facts or material
which was at the disposal of the
prosecutor, at the time the prosecution was instigated, and the
careful assessment of that information.”
[39]
The facts that were at the disposal of the
prosecutor on 2 August 2004 when the decision was taken to charge the
plaintiff on a
charge of robbery are common cause. A mere reading of
Malatje’s warning statement coupled with the information
obtained from
Pretorius, Labuschagne and Hutchinson would reasonably
have led to a conclusion that the plaintiff was probably guilty of
the offence
of robbery. The test at that stage was not whether there
was sufficient evidence upon which the plaintiff may be convicted.
[40]
That is, however, not the end of the
enquiry. As conceded by Germishuis, a careful assessment of the
evidence available at the time
the decision to prosecute the
plaintiff was taken, would have resulted in a conclusion that the
only evidence against the plaintiff
was inadmissible. In the result,
there was at that stage no evidence against the plaintiff that could
lead a reasonable person
to conclude that he was probably guilty of
the offence of robbery.
[41]
It might well be that through further
investigation, evidence could have been obtained against the
plaintiff. This did not happen
and led to the decision to stop the
prosecution against the plaintiff.
[42]
Consequently, I find that there was no
reasonable and probable cause to prosecute the plaintiff on a charge
of robbery.
[43]
The next question is whether the
prosecutors acted with
animus injuriandi
when the decision was taken to
prosecute the plaintiff. In this regard I am of the view that a
distinction should be drawn between
the prosecutor who decided to
charge the plaintiff with the crime of robbery and the prosecutor who
decided to proceed with the
trial against the plaintiff.
[44]
At the stage that a person is charged,
further investigation is still possible and enquiries may well lead
to a decision not to
prosecute the accused.
[45]
Once the decision is taken to prosecute an
accused, the trial commences, and the law is set in motion for
purposes of malicious
prosecution.
[46]
From the evidence, it appears that
Germishuis took the decision to prosecute and proceeded with the
trial against the plaintiff.
[47]
The question then arises whether Germishuis
acted with
animus injuriandi.
In
Moleko, animus injuriandi
was
defined as follows:
“
[63]
Animus injuriandi
includes not only the intention to injure, but also consciousness of
wrongfulness:
'In this regard
animus
injuriandi
(intention) means that the defendant directed his
will to prosecuting the plaintiff (and thus infringing his
personality),
in the awareness that reasonable grounds for the
prosecution were (possibly) absent, in other words, that his conduct
was (possibly)
wrongful (consciousness of wrongfulness). It follows
from this that the defendant will go free where reasonable grounds
for the
prosecution were lacking, but the defendant honestly believed
that the plaintiff was guilty. In such a case the second element of
dolus,
namely of consciousness of wrongfulness, and therefore
animus injuriandi
, will be lacking. His mistake therefore
excludes the existence of
animus injuriandi
.'
[64] 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, I would say, even gross negligence) will not
suffice.
[65] In this case, I am
of the view that Mr Moleko did prove
animus injuriandi
on the
part of the DPP. Ms Neveling clearly intended to prosecute Mr Moleko
and was fully aware of the fact that, by so doing,
he would in all
probability be 'injured' and his dignity ('comprehending also his
good name and privacy') in all probability
negatively affected.
Despite this knowledge, she took the decision to prosecute without
making any of the enquiries which cried
out to be made, thus acting
in a manner that showed her recklessness as to the possible
consequences of her conduct.” (Footnotes
omitted)
[48]
The evidence of Germishuis, and more
pertinently, her admission that the evidence against the plaintiff
was, at the time the decision
was taken to prosecute him,
inadmissible and that the prosecution against the plaintiff should
been stopped earlier, is telling.
[49]
Germishuis
testified that she considered the evidence contained in the case
docket prior to commencing with, and during the trial
against the
plaintiff. In the circumstances, her admission
supra
leads
to the ineluctable conclusion that her conduct in this regard was
reckless.
[7]
[50]
In the result, the plaintiff has proved on
a balance of probabilities that Germishuis acted with
animus
injuriandi.
[51]
Consequently, the plaintiff’s claim
for malicious prosecution against the NDPP must succeed.
Costs
[52]
There exists no reason why costs should not
follow the cause.
Order
[53]
The following order is issued:
1. The
claim of malicious arrest against the first defendant is dismissed
with costs.
2. The
second defendant is order to pay the proven or agreed damages
suffered by the plaintiff as a result of
the malicious prosecution of
the plaintiff with costs.
N. JANSE VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
DATES HEARD:
06, 07 & 08 February
2024
DATE RESERVED:
04 April 2024
DATE DELIVERED
16 April 2024
APPEARANCES
For
the Plaintiff:
Advocate
N Hartman
Instructed
by:
Taute
Bouwer & Cilliers Inc
For
the Defendant’s:
Advocate
D Van Zyl SC
Assisted
by:
Advocate
C Seven Ster
Instructed by:
State
attorney, Pretoria
[1]
1973
(1) SA 125
(W) at 127H-128A.
[2]
1988
(2) SA 654 (SE).
[3]
2023
(1) SACR 235 (SCA).
[4]
1968
(3) SA 98
(A)
at
104B – C.
[5]
2009
(2) SACR 585 (SCA).
[6]
[2024]
ZASCA 17.
[7]
Also
see:
Minister
of Safety and Security N. O. and Another v Schubach
[2014] ZASCA 216
; R
udoph
& Others v Minster of Safety and Security & Another
2009
(5) SA 94
(SCA).
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