Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 530South Africa
Du Toit v Minister of Police and Another (23923/2015) [2024] ZAGPPHC 530 (7 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Du Toit v Minister of Police and Another (23923/2015) [2024] ZAGPPHC 530 (7 June 2024)
Du Toit v Minister of Police and Another (23923/2015) [2024] ZAGPPHC 530 (7 June 2024)
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sino date 7 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 23923/2015
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
DATE:
7/6/2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
MARTINUS
DU
TOIT
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF
POLICE
First Defendant
THE
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL OF
Second Defendant
THE
GAUTENG DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY
SAFETY
SECURITY AND LIAISON
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER
J
:
1]
This claim for unlawful arrest and detention arises out of events
that took place on 3 December 2014 on the N14. The parties agreed
that the issue of liability should be separated from that of
quantum
and this order was granted at the commencement of the trial.
2]
The defendants also raised special pleas which were not proceeded
with at the hearing.
3]
It is common cause that on 3 December 2014 the plaintiff was
on his
way home from writing an exam in Kyalami, to Amersfoort, Mpumalanga.
It was the first time he had driven this road. He was
travelling in
the right hand lane from west to east in his silver Land Rover
Freelander on the N17. On his left was a truck which
he was
attempting to overtake before his lane merged with the left-hand lane
at the start of a painted island which was on his
right.
4]
According to the plaintiff that portion of the N17 was very
busy but
the opposite traffic not as heavy as in his direction, with cars both
in front of and behind the truck. His evidence was
that he could not
slow down to fall in behind the truck because of the heavy traffic
and because the vehicles behind the truck
would not have let him into
that lane.
5]
The truck
sped up as he was trying to pass it, he was forced to drive over the
painted island
[1]
but he did not
drive into the lane of the oncoming traffic. He also testified that
he used his indicators.
[2]
6]
Just before the bridge further up the highway, he saw a traffic
officer whose headlights were on and who indicated that he should
pull over, which he then did.
7]
When he stopped he was asked for his driver’s license
which he
gave and he was told that he’d overtaken the truck incorrectly.
The plaintiff admitted that he’d driven over
the island and
explained that he had no choice - it was peak hour traffic and he
could not apply his brakes as the other vehicles
would have collided
with him.
8]
He was then told that he was being arrested and he was put into
the
traffic police vehicle and driven to the Springs Police Station. His
vehicle was driven by another officer to the station.
9]
His evidence was that the arresting officer never identified
himself,
never told him why he was being arrested, never read him his rights,
never told him that his offence was so serious he
must be arrested
and he was not asked to give an explanation for his conduct.
10]
He also testified that he had Tramacet with him which is a strong
painkiller
because he had 2 burst discs in his back.
11]
At the Springs Police Station, he was given a document to sign -
which was never
explained to him. He signed it because he thought
this was standard procedure. He was then told to hand over his
belongings and
was put into a cell and detained by SAPS. At
approximately midnight he was released and appeared in court the
following day ie
4 December 2014. On 4 December 2014 he signed an
admission of guilt form. According to this document he admitted guilt
of “
a Sec 58(1) Act 93/1993. Disobey a barrier line marking
on public road whilst driving.”
His admission of
guilt fine was R500-00.
12]
Importantly, the plaintiff actually (in his evidence) denies driving
over a
barrier line.
13]
His evidence is that he has never had any previous traffic violations
and that
there was no reason for the arrest.
14]
Cross-examination by the first defendant (SAPS) revealed that the
arrest was
effected by the second defendant and that the second
defendant took the plaintiff to Springs Police Station with the
intention
of detaining him there.
15]
Cross-examination
by the second defendant was important not for its impact, but for the
fact that much of the evidence of its sole
witness
[3]
was never put to the plaintiff. It was put to plaintiff that Mr
Nkambule would testify:
a)
that the plaintiff drove into the lane of the oncoming traffic
when
he overtook the truck;
b)
that he informed the plaintiff why he was arresting him;
c)
that he was read his rights;
d)
that he told the plaintiff that he was arresting him for reckless
and
negligent driving and therefore was not being issued with a ticket.
16]
All of this was denied by the plaintiff.
17]
None of the remainder of the cross-examination moved the plaintiff’s
evidence.
The fact is that the plaintiff signed both his reading of
rights form and the admission of guilt form without reading them - he
admitted as much, but said he thought this was the way it worked as
he had never been arrested before and did not know what the
procedure
was.
18]
In my view, the plaintiff made a favourable impression on me –
cross-examination
did not move his evidence at all and there were no
discrepancies in his evidence. He also conceded the important fact
that he had
overtaken the truck by crossing over completely into the
painted island. This is an important concession as it, in my view,
demonstrates
his willingness to concede relevant evidence.
19]
At the
close of plaintiff’s case, the first defendant moved for
absolution. The test for absolution is the following: “
whether
there is evidence upon which a Court, applying its mind reasonably to
such evidence court or might (not should, or ought
to) find for the
plaintiff.”
The
plaintiff has to make out a prima facie case in the sense that there
is evidence relating to all the elements of the claim.
[4]
20]
I refused absolution as I was of the view that
prima facie
first defendant had a case to answer in relation of the detention of
the plaintiff. It was common cause that the first defendant
detained
the plaintiff until midnight on 3 December 2014 and that:
a)
whilst it is so that the arrest was effected by members of the second
defendant, the evidence is that the plaintiff
was detained by members
of SAPS at the Springs Police Station;
b)
furthermore, the fact is that the plaintiff was released from
detention at midnight on 3 December 2014. No
cross-examination was
put to him that this was at the behest of the second defendant or
that SAPS had no discretion but to detain
the plaintiff at the behest
of the second defendant;
c) Mr
Mhambi argued that the reason why the first defendant detained the
plaintiff is because the second defendant
does not have its own
detention centre facilities – but this was never put to the
plaintiff in cross-examination and thus
it was never introduced into
evidence.
21]
Therefore, in my view, at least prima facie, the first defendant had
a case
to meet. Therefore absolution was dismissed.
22]
The first defendant closed its case without leading any evidence.
23]
The second defendant’s sole witness was Mr Nkambule. He is
employed in
the Department of Community Safety as a Principal
Provincial Inspector. On 3 December 2014 he was a Provincial
Inspector.
24]
On 3 December 2014 he was deployed to patrol the N17 between
Wemmerspan until
the Mpumalanga border. At ± 16h00 he saw a
silver Land Rover in the fast lane overtaking vehicles at a high
speed at the
place where the two lanes converged. He observed the
Land Rover drive over the painted island, over a barrier line and
into the
oncoming traffic lane to pass the other vehicles.
25]
He was
driving behind the truck and his evidence was that the truck could
not have accelerated as there were vehicles in front of
it
[5]
.
As plaintiff overtook the truck, the road was “steep” and
so oncoming vehicles could not see him and had to swerve
suddenly to
avoid him
[6]
.
26]
He then
pulled the plaintiff over. The plaintiff rolled down his window and
told Mr Nkambule that he was epileptic. He got out of
his car and
opened his boot. There was an orange bag and he searched inside and
took out a toiletry bag and breathed deeply into
it and then said “
I
am fine now
.”
[7]
27]
Mr Nkambule then testified that he explained to the plaintiff why he
had stopped
him, told him that he was driving recklessly and
negligently and he had put other people’s lives in danger. He
then asked
the plaintiff for his driver’s license which
plaintiff gave him, and he then told plaintiff he was arresting him
and read
plaintiff his rights.
28]
According
to him plaintiff asked permission to place a call, which Mr Nkambule
allowed. Plaintiff then handed him the phone. The
person identified
himself as an attorney. Mr Nkambule explained what had transpired and
the attorney said that the violation was
not an arrestable offence
which Mr Nkambule disputed. The attorney then told him he would meet
them at the Spring Police Station.
[8]
29]
Mr Nkambule
then called a colleague to drive the plaintiff’s vehicle to the
Springs Police Station and he transported the
plaintiff there where
he opened a docket and charged him with reckless, negligent and
inconsiderate driving. He explained the charges
to him and explained
that plaintiff could have caused a head-on collision. He testified
that plaintiff explained that it was the
first time he’s driven
that road and that he wasn’t feeling well because he’s
epileptic. When Mr Nkambule asked
to see the tablets, the plaintiff
told him they were not there.
[9]
30]
Mr Nkambule was adamant that he could not issue a ticket because the
offence
of reckless and negligent driving is a serious one.
31]
He testified that once he opens the docket at the Police Station, the
SAPS Investigating
Officer takes over and lets him know when to come
to court. He was never called to appear in court and he only found
out later
that the plaintiff had signed an admission of guilt fine.
According to him, his role is done once the docket is opened.
32]
In cross-examination by the first defendant, Mr Nkambule conceded
that the plaintiff
was detained at Springs Police Station because the
second defendant does not have its own detention facilities. He also
admitted
that it was his decision to detain plaintiff after he had
arrested him, but he was unsure whether SAPS had a discretion to
release
plaintiff once he had arrested him.
33]
It appears
from the cross-examination by the Plaintiff that although Mr Nkambule
is a “peace officer”
[10]
he is not vested with the ability to perform an arrest. Mr Nkambule
conceded that his powers were limited in terms of Government
Gazette
R209 of 19 February 2002 (R209), but testified that in terms of his
“466 book”, the procedure prescribed is
that on a charge
of reckless and negligent driving, he must arrest the perpetrator. It
is his testimony that the “466 book”
does not confer any
discretion on him as to whether he can procure plaintiff’s
attendance at court by any other method. He
admitted that this “466
book” had not been discovered and this prescribed procedure was
not placed before this court
other than via Mr Nkambule’s
testimony.
34]
He conceded
that the arrest was without a warrant but could not name the section
in the Criminal Procedure Act, 1997 (the CPA) he
could rely on to
effect an arrest (ie in this case s40(1)(a)
[11]
).
35]
Mr Nkambule also conceded that, as plaintiff had provided his
identity document
he could have verified his identity, that he
co-operated during the arrest, that he was not aggressive and he
could have verified
his address. He also identified the plaintiff’s
motor vehicle. He was adamant that the arrest was effected because it
is
“expected procedure”.
36]
Mr Nkambule then conceded that he is not a police officer, but that
he is a
traffic officer.
37]
Mr Nkambule conceded that an arrest was a drastic infringement of
plaintiff’s
Constitutional rights, but was steadfast in his
position that only a court had the discretion to release plaintiff
and that he
has no discretion not to effect an arrest. His evidence
was further that SAPS also had no discretion whether or not to detain
the
plaintiff - they had to detain him: this statement he walked back
in his re-examination.
38]
The second defendant then closed its case.
39]
The plaintiff’s case is based on 2 legs:
a)
the first argument is that Mr Nkambule is not empowered to arrest the
plaintiff
and that, under the provisions of R209, his powers are
extremely limited;
b)
the second is that even were he to be so empowered, he was vested
with a discretion
whether or not to arrest the plaintiff once certain
jurisdictional facts are present.
40]
According to R209:
“…
every
person who, by virtue of his/her office, falls within any category
defined in column 1 of the Schedule to this notice, shall,
within the
area specified in column 2 of that Scehdule, be a peace officer for
the purpose of exercising with reference to the
offences specified in
column 3 of that Schedule, the powers defined in column 4 there;”
41]
Part 4 of R209 states the following:
PART 4
(a)
Provincial Inspectors appointed by the Provincial Administrations
of the Transvaal and the Orange Free State and Provincial
Traffic
Officers appointed by the Provincial Administrators of the Cape of
Good Hope and Natal.
The area of
jurisdiction of the Provincial Administration which made the
appointment and area of the jurisdiction of the provincial
administration in which the Provincial Inspector or Provincial
Traffic Officer, as the case may be, are deemed thus to be
appointed
Any offence
(i)
The issue of written notices in terms of section 56 of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 1977.
(ii)
The execution of warrants of arrest in terms of
section 44
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 1977
.
42]
Thus, according to the plaintiff’s argument, Mr Nkambule’s
powers were limited
and he had no power to arrest the plainiff. But
the argument of the second defendant was that the metro police
perform their functions
in terms of the National Road Traffic Act No
93 of 1996 (NRTA), that they are “traffic wardens”
[12]
as defined in a1(xlvii) of the NRTA and that, in the course and scope
of the performance of their duties, they also apply the provisions
of
the CPA. It was also submitted that in as much as the JMPD are
qualified peace officers by the South African Police Services
Act 68
of 1995, they are entitled to effect an arrest in terms of s40(1)(a)
of the CPA. But it must be borne in mind that Mr Nkambule
was very
clear that he is not a police officer and that his authority to
effect an arrest lay in the provisions of his “466
book”.
43]
Whilst the provisions of the NRTA clearly define Mr Nkambule as a
“peace officer”,
his duties have been prescribed by R209
– neither of those entitled him to effect an arrest under that
act. As the “466
book” was never put into evidence, I
have no other evidence that Mr Nkambule was entitled to effect an
arrest.
44]
In any event, in my view, the weight of the evidence placed before me
does not support Mr
Nkambule’s version of events: important
details of his evidence were never put to the plaintiff, and the
plaintiff’s
evidence remained unshaken by cross-examination. I
have already found the plaintiff to be a credible witness and, on the
balance
of probabilities, his version is preferred over that of the
second defendant. This being so, his evidence was that he admitted
driving onto the painted island but not into oncoming traffic, that
Mr Nkambule had failed to identity himself, failed to inform
him
properly of the reason for his arrest and failed to read him his
rights.
45]
In
S
v Thebus and Another
[13]
the court stated that s35(1) of the Constitution required the police
to warn people when they were arrested that they had the right
to
remain silent and of the consequences of not remaining silent. Thus a
failure to give the warning would infringe s35(1)(b).
However, one
must be careful of conflating the unlawfulness of an arrest with the
right to a fair trial. In my view, the failure
to read someone their
rights relates to the issue of the right to a fair trial and not
necessarily to the issue of whether or not
the arrest itself was
unlawful.
46]
There is nothing before me to suggest that Mr Nkambule was enpowered
to arrest the plaintiff.
In fact, the evidence suggests the contrary.
The fact is too that on his version he opened a docket which details
the charges against
the plaintiff – the docket was not put into
evidence. What was put into evidence was the admission of guilt fine
which details
a substiantially less serious charge than that stated
by Mr Nkambule.
47]
Furthermore, even were I to accept that Mr Nkambule could invoke the
provisions of s40(1)(a)
of the CPA, the fact is that he was vested
with a discretion whether to effect an arrest – a fact of which
he was not even
aware. In
Syce
and Another v Minister of Police
[14]
the court stated:
“
[22]
A peace officer who makes a warrantless arrest has a discretion
whether or not to make the arrest. The discretion
arises once the
jurisdictional requirements stipulated in s 40(1) of the CPA are
satisfied. In Groves NO v Minister of Police (Groves),
the
Constitutional Court confirmed this principle in relation to a
warrantless arrest, as follows:
‘
The officer
making a warrantless arrest has to comply with the jurisdictional
prerequisites set out in section 40(1) of the CPA.
In other words,
one or more of the grounds listed in paragraphs (a) to (q) of that
subsection must be satisfied. If those prerequisites
are satisfied,
discretion whether or not to arrest arises. The officer has to
collate facts and exercise his discretion on those
facts. The officer
must be able to justify the exercising of his discretion on those
facts. The facts may include an investigation
of the exculpatory
explanation provided by the accused person.’
[23]
Although the Constitutional Court in Groves was dealing with an
arrest made pursuant to a warrant,
it provided important guidance in
relation to the circumstances which trigger the discretion. It stated
that:
‘
Applying the
principle of rationality, there may be circumstances where the
arresting officer will have to make a value judgment.
Police officers
exercise public powers in the execution of their duties and
“[r]ationality in this sense is a minimum threshold
requirement
applicable to the exercise of all public power by members of the
executive and other functionaries”. An arresting
officer only
has the power to make a value judgement where the prevailing
exigencies at the time of arrest may require him to exercise
same; a
discretion as to how the arrest should be affected and mostly if it
must be done there and then. To illustrate, a suspect
may at the time
of the arrest be too ill to be arrested or may be the only caregiver
of minor children and the removal of the suspect
would leave the
children vulnerable. In those circumstances, the arresting officer
may revert to the investigating or applying
officer before finalising
the arrest.’”
48]
It is clear that the principles set out in
Groves
and
Syce
were not followed. The fact of the matter is that Mr Nkambule had no
reason to arrest the plaintiff: he had provided his identity
documents and his address which was easily verifiable, he co-operated
at all times, his motor vehicle registration was easily verifiable
and along with that his personal information. In my view, on the
evidence placed before me, the arrest by the second defendant
was
unlawful.
49]
As to the detention, the first defendant argued that the detention
occurred at the instance
and behest of the second defendant and that
the first defendant had no discretion to refuse to detain the
plaintiff. But this ignores
the fact that an arrest and a detention
are two separate occurrences, each of which requires that each party
exercise a separate
and discrete discretion from the other:
“
[39]
Once the plaintiff was placed in the custody of the second defendant,
the SAPS members
were obliged to consider afresh, prior to detaining
the plaintiff further, whether the continued detention by the second
defendant
of the plaintiff was justified and lawful, in fact,
“whether detention [was] necessary at all”.
[40]
The failure of the SAPS members to do so was unlawful.”
[15]
50]
Futhermore, the first defendant elected to close its case without
calling any witnesses
and thus no evidence was provided by it to
refute the plaintiff’s assertion that the detention was
unlawful. Added to this
is the evidence of the second defendant that,
once a police docket is opened, it is then up to SAPS to take the
matter further.
I thus find that the detention of the plaintiff by
the first defendant was unlawful.
51]
Given this, the plaintiff’s claim on the merits as against both
first and second defendants
must succeed.
COSTS
52]
I have considered the question of costs an the appropriate scale upon
which the costs should
be granted. This is not the usual
“run-of-the-mill” matter. Issues were raised relating to
Mr Nkambule’s autority
to effect an arrest as well as whether
or not the first defendant had a duty to exercise a discretion
discrete from that of the
second defendant. I am of the view that
costs on Scale B are justified.
ORDER
53]
The order is the following:
1.
The first and second defendants are ordered to pay the plaintiff’s
proven
or agreed damages.
2.
The quantum is postponed sine die.
3.
The first and second defendants are ordered to pay the plaintiff’s
costs,
to be taxed in accordance with Scale B.
NEUKIRCHER J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
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 email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 7 June 2024.
Appearances
For the plaintiff:
Mr W Dreyer
Instructed
by:
GMI
Attorneys
For
the first defendant:
Mr MH
Mhambi
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney - Pretoria
For
the second defendant:
Mr M
Maelane
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney - Pretoria
Matter
heard on:
13
and 14 May 2024
Judgment
date:
7
June 2024
[1]
Which he said was approximately 4 vehicles wide and 100m long - this
evidence was not placed in dispute by either defendants.
[2]
Which was also not disputed
[3]
Principal Provincial Inspector Nkambule
[4]
Claude Neon Lights (SA) Ltd v Daniel
1976 (4) SA 403
(A) at 409 G-H
[5]
None of this was put to the plaintiff in cross-examination
[6]
Also not put to the plaintiff in cross-examination
[7]
This was not put to the plaintiff
[8]
This was not put to the plaintiff
[9]
This was not put to the plaintiff
[10]
By virtue of the fact that he’s a “traffic officer”
in terms of National Road
Traffic
Act 29 of 1989
[11]
“
40. Arrest
by peace officer without warrant.
(1) A
peace officer may without warrant arrest any person—
(a)
who commits or attempts to commit any offence in his presence”
[12]
“‘
traffic
warden’ means a person who has been declared by the Minister
of Justice to be a peace officer in terms of
section 334
of the
Criminal Procedure Act (Act
51 of 1977), and has been appointed as a
traffic warden by the chief executive officer, the MEC or another
competent authority
to appoint a traffic warden, as the case may
be.”
[13]
[2003] ZACC 12
;
2003
(6) SA 505
(CC) at par
[91]
[14]
(1119/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 30
(27 March 2024)
[15]
Nqibisa
v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another
(2018/14594) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1053 (11 August 2023)
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