Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 441South Africa
Nefale v Minister of Police (82307/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 441 (29 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
29 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nefale v Minister of Police (82307/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 441 (29 April 2024)
Nefale v Minister of Police (82307/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 441 (29 April 2024)
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sino date 29 April 2024
# IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 82307/2018
Date
of hearing: 22 April 2024
Date
delivered: 29 April 2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 29/4/24
SIGNATURE
In
the matter of:
TSHILISANO
NEFALE
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
Respondent
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J:
[1]
This is a
claim for damages arising from the alleged unlawful arrest and
detention of the plaintiff on 30 May 2017. The plaintiff's
case
stands uncontested, and is the following: At approximately 18h00 on
that day the plaintiff was walking in Sunnyside, Pretoria,
having
just delivered a laptop to a friend. The plaintiff is a Rastafarian,
and wears the distinctive apparel typical to that religion.
He was
then an intern with the Department of International Affairs and
Cooperation, and he was still dressed in his work clothing
and his
Rastafarian hat. As he approached an intersection a police vehicle
with two occupants drove past. They greeted the plaintiff
in a
Rastafarian manner, and he returned the greeting
.
The police
officers called the plaintiff to their vehicle (they called him
'Rasta').
As
he approached them one of the police officers demanded marijuana and
said that if the plaintiff did not give them marijuana,
they would
search him
.
[2]
At that point
the police officers alighted from the vehicle. The plaintiff demanded
to know why they were targeting him with such
a request. He was told
that it was because he was a
'Rasta'.
The plaintiff
had words with the police officers, who then grabbed him
.
The plaintiff
resisted them. The police officers then called for backup
,
and a further
four officers arrived on the scene. Together they picked the
plaintiff up by the legs and arms and threw him into
the police
vehicle. The plaintiff was not told why he was being arrested
,
nor were his
rights explained to him.
[3]
The plaintiff
was taken to
the
Sunnyside
Police Station where he was placed in a cell. The police officers
told the plaintiff that he was a 'Venda boy' who was
full of
witchcraft, and that he was trying to present himself as educated
.
His shoe laces
and cell phone were taken from him
.
The cell was
approximately 10 x 5 meters, and he shared it with more than five
other persons.
[4]
Between
approximately 21h00 to 22h00 the investigating officer took the
plaintiff out of the cell. He asked the plaintiff to provide
a
statement, which the plaintiff refused to do, writing only that he
did not know why he was under arrest. He was returned to the
cell.
Sometime after midnight another police officer came to him. He
searched the plaintiff without finding anything incriminating
.
When asked why
the plaintiff was in custody, the police officer merely said that he
didn't know, and that only
'
Lucky"
would know. Lucky turns out to be the arresting officer. He was
present in court and was pointed out by the plaintiff
.
A few minutes
later Lucky came to the cell and demanded that the plaintiff sign a
'notice of rights
'
form. The
plaintiff refused to sign the document when he noticed that the time
reflected thereon was 18h55, and not the correct
time which was after
midnight. When the plaintiff refused to sign the form
,
Lucky told the
plaintiff that he was being d
i
srespectful.
[5]
The plaintiff
did not receive any food at Sunnyside Police Station. The following
day he was taken to court where his case was remanded
to the
following day for confirmation of his residential address. He was
taken to the Kgosi Mampuru Correctional Facility
.
[6]
At Kgosi
Mampuru the plaintiff was put in a cell with a large number of other
prisoners. The new-comers to the cell were all assaulted,
including the
plaintiff
,
and
he was only saved from further assault by an elderly man who took the
plaintiff under his wing
,
protecting him
through the night.
[7]
The
experience
of
being
in
a
cell
was
clearly
horrifying
to
the plaintiff.
The plaintiff says that the toilets had no doors, and neither did the
showers. There were people defecating in full
view of the others in
the cell. The prisoners were not given blankets
,
and they had
to sleep on the floor unless they were able to pay R 30 to rent a
blanket. There were men openly masturbating.
[8]
The plaintiff
is obviously still t
r
aumatized
by his experience. When he recounted this version he was visibly
upset and tearful. He says that he was very afraid that
he would be
raped or otherwise
assaulted
,
and even the
protection extended to him by the elderly man raised his hackles
.
He spent the
night unable to sleep
.
[9]
The
following
morning
the
plaintiff was
taken
to
court
where
he
was granted bail. The
plaintiff
'
s
brother managed to pay the bail, and he also alerted the plaintiff
'
s
supervisor of his arrest. The case dragged on for some 18 months
before being withdrawn by the state
.
[10]
The
plaintiff's case was closed after his evidence was led
.
The defendant
also chose to close its case without leading any evidence
.
The defendant
elected
not
to
address
me
on
the
merits
,
a
(belated)
wise
decision. The arrest was no
longer in dispute, and the defendant had not satisfied the onus on it
to prove that the arrest was lawful.
[11]
That left the
quantum aspect for consideration. The plaintiff was, at the time of
his arrest, approximately
24 years of
age. He had already attained an Honours degree and was studying
towards his Master
'
s
degree in political science. As I have said above, he was engaged in
an internship with Dirco. The plaintiff is clearly an intelligent,
ambitious and sensitive individual. He says that he had always
strived to be an upstanding citizen
.
[12]
The
plaintiff
was
humiliated
in public
by
the police
officers
who descended
on him. One would have expected at least one of the six police
officers who attended at the scene to have called a
halt to what was
obviously unlawful conduct, and it says much for the culture at this
police station that none did
.
The arresting
officer had no reason to target the plaintiff other than his
religion, a fact conceded by defendant's counsel.
[13]
Therefore,
not only did
the police officers infringe on the plaintiff's human rights to
freedom and security and the right not to be arbitrarily
deprived of
his freedom, they also did so in a manner which infringed upon his
right
to
human dignity. Their reason for doing so infringed on the plaintiff
'
s
right to religious freedom. The police officers fabricated an offence
to justify the plaintiff's arrest. The plaintiff was then
subjected
to two nights in custody, with the second night in Kgosi Mampuru
being especially horrifying.
[14]
The trauma
that the plaintiff suffered was palpable in court. The plaintiff was
tearful, and on one occasion I adjourned court to
give the plaintiff
an opportunity to recover. The plaintiff is a sensitive person who
would have felt the trauma of his
incarceration
even deeper
than other more resilient persons might have. One must also consider
the humiliation that the plaintiff would have felt
by the disclosure
to his supervisor of his arrest.
[15]
The plaintiff
claimed a global sum of R 500 000 for unlawful arrest, for
deprivation
of
freedom
,
contumelia,
emotional
stress
and
psychological trauma, and embarrassment for being arrested in public.
In argument
the
plaintiff's
counsel
submitted
that
R
180 000 would
be an
appropriate award. The defendant contended that the sum of R 60
000.00 was appropriate
.
[16]
Both
parties addressed me on authorities
relating
to quantum
in
these types of cases
,
but
neither have submitted heads of argument
,
nor
have I been provided with references to
,
or
copies of these judgments. I am aware of the dictum in
Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyulu
[1]
where
the Court (per Bosielo AJA) said that the purpose of damages for
unlawful arrest is not to enrich a party
,
but
to provide him or her with solatium for his or her injured feelings
.
The
elements to consider when awarding damages are the plaintiff's
personal circumstances
,
the
manner of arrest
,
the
duration of detention
,
the
degree of humiliation to the plaintiff, and any other relevant
factors
.
[2]
It
is helpful to consider awards made in comparable cases
,
without
making a
"
meticulous
examination of awards made in other cases
".
[17]
In
Diljan
(supra)
the
plaintiff was held in custody in unsavoury circumstances for a period
comparable to this case. The Court awarded R 120 000 for
unlawful
arrest and detention
.
However
,
in that case
the plaintiff had in fact committed a Schedule 1 offence and her
arrest was held to be unlawful because the police
officers had not
exercised their discretion to bring the plaintiff before court in a
manner other than by detention. In this case
the plaintiff did not
commit any offence
,
distinguishing
this case from
Diljan.
[18]
In
Khedama
v The Minister of Police
[3]
the
plaintiff was arres
t
ed
and held in custody for 12 days
.
The
plaintiff was held in unsavoury circumstances, and was humiliated and
traumatized by the experience. She was awarded R 100 000
for unlawful
arrest
,
and
R 80 000 per day for unlawful detention
.
The
plaintiff was also awarded damages for defamation and general damages
for suffering and psychological shock
.
In
Diljan
(supra)
,
the
Khedama award was criticized as being excessive
.
[19]
It
appears
to
me
that
an
award
in
the
amount
that
the
plaintiff
contends for is appropriate
.
The amount
argued for by the defendant
is totally
inadequate, especially given the abominable conduct of the police
officers.
[20]
I must,
furthermore, express my dismay at the manner in which the defendant
prosecuted this case. The summons was issued in 2018,
and it is very
evident from the plea that little to no investigation or
consideration went into its preparation. The defendant
simplypleaded
a bare denial of all of the averments in the particulars of claim,
specifically denying the arrest.
[21]
It is now six
years later, and the bare denial in the plea still stands,
notwithstanding that it is crystal clear that the plaintiff
was in
fact arrested by the police, who were acting within the course and
scope of their employment. Before the trial commenced
the plaintiff
advised me that the arrest was not disputed, and that the onus
therefore rested on the defendant to prove the lawfulness
of the
arrest. The defendant's counsel
,
however,
insisted in
chambers that the arrest was still in dispute (in the face of its own
discovery of the arrest documents), only to concede
that the
plaintiff had in fact been arrested a few minutes later.
[22]
In
cross-examination
of
the
plaintiff
the
defendant did
not
deny any
aspect of his
evidence
.
The
high point of cross-examination (which was very cursory) was when the
plaintiff was asked how big the cell was at Sunnyside,
how many
persons had occupied the cell, and whether he had been given food at
Sunnyside and Kgosi Mampuru. Not a single material
part of his
evidence was disputed.
[23]
After the
plaintiff testified and closed
its case, the
defence also closed its case without calling any witnesses, even
though the arresting officer was in court
.
This begs the
question why, if the defence was at all times in
agreement
with
the
plaintiff
about
the
facts,
this
matter
was allowed to
drag on for six years, and be taken to trial without any attempt
whatsoever at settling the matter, or even simply
curtailing the
proceedings by making the appropriate admissions.
[24]
Not only is
the manner in which the matter was conducted by the defendant a waste
of scarce and valuable resources of the State
Attorney's office, but
also of judicial resources.
[25]
Finally
,
an aspect
which is relevant to costs is the conduct of the police officers
.
Not one, but
six officers descended on the plaintiff in public, dragging him into
a police van by his arms and legs
,
in full view
of the public
.
The police
then manufactured an offence
,
detaining the
plaintiff for almost three days. The only reason why the plaintiff
was targeted was because of his distinctive religious
regalia
.
The plaintiff
was pounced upon by those persons who were in fact tasked with
protecting him
.
Their conduct
was a disgrace
.
I will direct
the Registrar to forward this judgment to
the
Commissioner of Police and to
the Minister
of Justice.
[26]
Consequently
,
I find that
,
given the
polices' conduct
,
and the
blatant infringement on the plaintiff's human rights, it would be
appropriate to make a costs order on the High Court scale
,
so that the
plaintiff would not be unduly out of pocket. Had I been asked to do
so
,
I
would have awarded punitive costs.
[27]
I
make
the
following
order:
[27.1]
The defendant shall pay the plaintiff the sum of R 180 000.
[27.2]
The defendant shall pay interest on the aforesaid sum
ex tempore
morae
from 14 November 2018 to date of payment.
[27.3]
Defendant shall pay plaintiff's costs on the High Court party and
party scale.
[27.4]
The Registrar is directed to forward this judgment to the National
Commissioner of Police and to the Minister of Justice.
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
COUNSEL
FOR THE PLAINTIFF:
Adv.
N Babalwa
ATTORNEY
FOR THE PLAINTIFF:
Ernest
Nemusimbori Attorneys
COUNSEL
FOR THE DEFENDANT:
Adv
F Mhamba
ATTORNEY
FOR DEFENDANT:
The
State Attorney
DATE
HEARD:
22
April 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
29
April 2024
[1]
2009
(5) SA 85
(SCA
);
[2009]
ZASCA 55
[2]
Diljan
v 2022 JDR 0128 (KZD
)
Minister
of Police
[2022] ZASCA 103
(24 June 2022)
[3]
2022
JDR 0128 (KZD)
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