Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 620South Africa
Bhekinkosi and Others v Minister of Police and Others (88521/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 620 (18 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
18 June 2024
Headnotes
once the jurisdictional requirements of section 40(1)(b) of the CPA are satisfied, the peace officer may, in the exercise of his discretion, invoke the power to arrest a suspect permitted by section 40(1)(b). However, the discretion must be properly exercised in good faith, rationally and not arbitrarily. If not, reliance on section 40(1) will not be available to the peace officer.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 620
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Bhekinkosi and Others v Minister of Police and Others (88521/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 620 (18 June 2024)
Bhekinkosi and Others v Minister of Police and Others (88521/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 620 (18 June 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_620.html
sino date 18 June 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 88521/2018
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
18
June 2024
In
the matter between:
MDLETSHE SIPHO
BHEKINKOSI
First Plaintiff
BIGBOY
NCUBE
Second Plaintiff
TSOTETSI GODFERY
THEMBA Third
Plaintiff
And
THE MINISTER OF
POLICE
First Defendant
NATIONAL DIRECTOR:
PUBLIC PROSECUTION Second
Defendant
MINISTER OF JUSTICE &
CONSTITUTIONAL
Third
Defendant
DEVELOPMENT
JUDGMENT
FLATELA J
# Introduction
Introduction
1.
The Plaintiffs instituted an action against the Defendants for
damages arising from their unlawful arrest and detention (Claim A)
and malicious prosecution (Claim B).
2.
The plaintiffs were
arrested by the members
of the South African Police Service (“The SAPS”) without
a warrant. The First and Second Plaintiffs
were arrested on 23
November 2016, and the Third Plaintiff was arrested on 1 December
2016 on charges of armed robbery, kidnapping,
possession of an
unlicensed firearm and ammunition and the possession of explosives in
contravention of section 6(1) of the Explosive
Act 26 of 1956. The
Plaintiffs were detained in custody and only released on the 9
th
of July 2018.
3.
At the commencement of the hearing, the parties requested the
Court to grant an order declaring that the merits and quantum be
separated
in terms of Rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court. The
request for such an order was granted and the matter proceeded with
respect
to the merits only.
4.
The Defendants admitted that the Plaintiffs
were arrested
but averred that the Plaintiffs arrest was
legally justified in terms of the provisions of section 40(1)(b) of
the Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977 (“The CPA”), as
amended.
# Issues
Issues
5.
This Court was called to consider whether the
Plaintiffs arrest was unlawful and whether there was malicious
prosecution. In an
instance where the Court finds in favor of the
Plaintiffs, it follows that the detention is also unlawful.
The
common cause facts
6.
The following are the common cause facts:
6.1.
The First and Second Plaintiffs were
arrested and detained on 23 November 2016, while the Third Plaintiff
was arrested and detained
on 1 December 2016.
6.2.
The
officers who arrested the Plaintiffs were the members of the South
African Police Service and they were acting within the scope
of their
employment with the First Defendant.
6.3.
The First Plaintiff was a peace officer at
the time of his arrest; he was a reservist in South African Police
Service under the
command of the late Colonel Eric Nkosi, based at
the Dobsonville Police station.
6.4.
The arrest of the plaintiffs was effected
without warrants of arrest.
Onus
of Proof
7.
It is common cause that the defendants justified the arrest, and as
such, they assumed such a duty to begin with.
The Legal Principles
8.
It is trite that the arrest or detention of the Plaintiffs is
prima
facie
unlawful, and the Defendants had to justify the arrest.
When the arrest and detention is admitted, the State has an onus to
prove
their lawfulness.
9.
Section 40(1)(b) of the CPA, permits a peace officer to arrest
someone without a warrant where there is reasonable suspicion
that a
Schedule 1 offense has been committed.
10.
It is trite that where a peace officer is acting under section
40(1)(b) entertains a suspicion that it is reasonable that
the
suspect has committed a Schedule 1 offence, the arrest is lawful.
There
are four jurisdictional facts to be proved in justification of
section 40(1)(b) defence, namely;
10.1. The arrestor
must be a peace officer.
10.2. The arrestor
must entertain a suspicion.
10.3. The suspicion
must be that the suspect (the arrestee) committed or is committing an
offense referred to in Schedule
1; and
10.4.
The
suspicion must rest on reasonable grounds.
[1]
11.
In
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
[2]
,
Van Heerden JA held that once the jurisdictional requirements of
section 40(1)(b) of the CPA are satisfied, the peace officer
may, in
the exercise of his discretion, invoke the power to arrest a suspect
permitted by section 40(1)(b). However, the discretion
must be
properly exercised in good faith, rationally and not arbitrarily. If
not, reliance on section 40(1) will not be available
to the peace
officer.
12.
Having dealt with the principles governing the unlawful arrest, I now
deal with the evidence tendered.
The
Defendant’s evidence
13.
The Defendants called upon five witnesses to testify on their behalf:
Sergeant Hlongwane, Captain Pienaar- the arresting
officer; Colonel
Velloen – the Investigating Officer; Captain Pieterse and
Warrant Officer Venter. The first witness that
was called on behalf
of the Defendants was Sergeant Hlongwane.
Sergeant
Hlongwane
14.
Sergeant Hlongwane testified as follows:
14.1. He is
employed as a Sergeant at Roodepoort Police Station with sixteen
years of experience. On 23 November 2016, he
was on patrol duty with
his crew member Sergeant Mamburu in Matholeville area, Roodepoort, he
was a driver of the Police Marked
Van.
14.2. They were
stopped by the community members who reported to them that there was
a silver double cab bakkie whose occupants
were robbing people at
Lindelani Squatter Camp,
14.3.
While patrolling, they spotted the van with a similar
description to that as described by the community members and they
attempted
to stop it but the driver did not stop.
Sergeant
Hlongwane noticed that there were five people inside the bakkie and
one of the occupants lifted his hands, showing the handcuffs.
14.4.
He followed the bakkie until the
driver,
who later turned out to be the First Plaintiff, stopped at the corner
of Mathew Goniwe and Randfontein Road. The First Plaintiff
came out
to them and produced an appointment card of a police officer and
showed it to them.
14.5.
Sergeant Hlongwane testified that the First
plaintiff informed them that he was investigating a murder case where
one of the suspects
was on the run. He showed them an article from
the Daily Sun Newspaper regarding the murder case. While Sergeant
Hlongwane and
the First Plaintiff were still talking, a group of
people attacked the plaintiffs by throwing stones at them and at
their bakkie.
They demanded the release of two man that were in First
Plaintiff’s bakkie. Due to the commotion, Sergeant Hlongwane
and
the First Plaintiff reached an agreement that they should all go
to the Roodepoort Police Station to resolve the issue between the
First Plaintiff and the two suspects. The two suspects were
transferred to Sergeant Hlongwane’s car because the angry
mob
accused the Plaintiffs of robbing them and that the Plaintiffs were
personifying police officers.
14.6.
The Plaintiffs and Sergeant Hlongwane
followed each other to the Roodepoort Police Station. At the police
station, they found Captain
Pienaar and Captain Pieterse, who
inquired about the matter, Sergeant Hlongwane gave a report
accordingly. Captain Pienaar and
Captain Pieterse advised Sergeant
Hlongwane and Sergeant Mamburu to make a statement, which they made
under oath; thereafter, they
were released to continue with their
patrolling duties.
14.7.
Sergeant Hlongwane testified that only the
First and Second Plaintiffs and two suspects went to the Police
Station, the Third Plaintiff
did not follow them to the police
station. He was left behind to fetch his car, but he never followed
them to the police station
as agreed.
14.8.
Under
cross-examination, Sergeant Hlongwane was asked if there were
injuries during the mob attack, he testified that there were
injuries
sustained by the one who went to fetch his car, the Third Plaintiff.
He stated further that the Third Plaintiff
never came to the
Police Station. It was put to him that the Third Plaintiff later went
to the police station with the First and
Second Plaintiffs, and due
to his injuries, Captain Pienaar and
Colonel
Velloen
organized an ambulance to take him to the hospital to be treated.
Sergeant Hlongwane denied
that the Third Plaintiff came with the First and Second Plaintiff to
the Police Station, testifying that
he never saw him at the station.
He testified that he left the Police station shortly after writing
the statement to continue with
his duties.
15.
The second witness that was called was an
arresting officer, Captain Pienaar who testified as follows;
15.1.
That
he is a retired Captain with 41 years of experience in the South
African Police Service. He testified that on the day of the
arrest,
he was on standby duty at the Roodepoort Police Station. He testified
that Captain Calitz requested him to deal with the
matter. He then
interviewed Sergeant Hlongwane regarding the background information
of the matter. He testified that Sergeant Hlongwane
informed him that
while they were patrolling, they were stopped by a group of community
members who reported to him and his crew
member that there was an
armed robbery which had been carried on by people driving a double
cab bakkie in Matholeville informal
settlement wherein a firearm was
used, and that the two complainants were forced into a double cab
bakkie, he further testified
that the community threw stones at the
bakkie.
15.2.
Captain
Pienaar then interviewed the two complainants, Mr. Nponyana and Mr.
Sithole, who confirmed that they were robbed at gunpoint,
and they
pointed out two males, the First and Second Plaintiff as the people
who robbed them.
15.3.
Captain
Pienaar testified that he then interviewed the First Plaintiff and
attempted to get information from him, but the First
Plaintiff was
not co-operative. He testified that he heard from the bystanders at
the police station that the First Plaintiff was
a Reservist from the
Dobsonville police station. He requested the First plaintiff to
produce a pocketbook SAPS 206, he further
requested him to confirm
whether he was legally booked on duty on the day in question and also
requested that he produce the log
book required to drive the state
vehicle.
The First Plaintiff
failed to produce those documents. He also asked him to produce a
document that authorized him to be in possession
of a police officer
issued firearm, but he failed to produce such authorization. The
First Plaintiff then handed over the
issued 9mm Pistol to him, and on
inspection, Captain Pienaar realized that some rounds were missing,
and the empty cartridges were
later found in the Toyota bakkie
together with some explosives when the bakkie was searched.
15.4.
Captain
Pienaar testified that he interviewed the Second Plaintiff regarding
the allegations and the second plaintiff failed to
provide an
explanation. Captain Pienaar testified that he then entertained a
reasonable suspicion that the First and Second Plaintiffs
had
committed a Schedule 1 offence, and he then informed them about their
constitutional rights and proceeded to arrest them.
15.5.
Captain
Pienaar denied the allegation that he organized for the collection of
the Third Plaintiff’s car from Matholeville,
and he also denied
the allegation that he arranged for an ambulance to take the Third
Plaintiff the hospital.
15.6.
Under
cross-examination, Captain Pienaar was asked why he arrested the
First and the Second Plaintiffs. Captain Pienaar stated that
he
arrested them on the strength of a report given to him by Sergeant
Hlongwane and a document at his disposal. He was asked if
he knew how
the two suspects/complainants ended up at the police station. Captain
Pienaar stated that Sergeant Hlongwane brought
the two complainants
into the station, but he did not know how they ended up with Sergeant
Hlongwane.
15.7.
During
cross-examination, Captain Pienaar conceded that he arrested the
First and Second Plaintiff on the strength of the pointing
out made
by the complainants.. Furthermore, he stated that he arrested the
First Plaintiff because he failed to produce a log book
authorizing
the use of the state vehicle, adding that the First Plaintiff failed
to show him his pocketbook and failed to show
that he had
authorization documents for the possession of a firearm, and he was
not accompanied by a permanent member.
15.8.
Captain
Pienaar conceded during cross-examination that he did not doubt that
the First Plaintiff was a police officer, he saw him
completing the
docket in the police station but then the suspects he arrested became
complainants against the Forst Plaintiff.
The First Plaintiff could
not explain nor provide the necessary documents that would support
his averments nor explain the authority
to use police resources at
the time and he was not cooperative.
15.9.
Captain
Pienaar testified that at the time of arrest, it seemed that the
First Plaintiff was not on duty and that the standing orders
governing Category B Reservists were not followed, the First
Plaintiff failed to produce the logbook, the OB and the occurrence
book. When asked what happened to the suspects who became
complainants against the Plaintiffs, he offered no explanation.
Counsel
for the Plaintiff told him that his client will come and
testify that one of the complainants was released while the First
Plaintiff
was speaking to him. He denied the allegation but confirmed
that
Colonel
Velloen took over the
investigation upon the First Plaintiff’s arrest.
Colonel
Velloen
16.
The third witness that the defendants called was Colonel Velloen.
16.1.
He testified that he was assigned as the
investigating officer in the matter. He had 33 years of service in
the South African Police
Service. He was stationed at the SAPS
provincial office and was assigned the case because it involved a
police officer. He testified
that his investigation revealed that the
Toyota RunX motor vehicle that the Third plaintiff was driving on 23
November 2016, was
borrowed from Mr. Dube, who made a statement under
oath. Based on this information, which implicated the Third Plaintiff
as being
part of the Plaintiffs involvement in the robbery, he
instructed Warrant Officer Venter to arrest the Third Plaintiff on 1
December
2016.
Colonel Velloen
asserts that
he had a reasonable suspicion to arrest the Third Plaintiff and that
section 40(1)(b) of the CPA authorized him to
make an arrest without
a warrant.
16.2.
Colonel
Velloen testified that on 9 July 2018, the matter was removed from
the trial roll because the two complainants could not
be traced. He
testified that he made every effort to trace the witnesses but to no
avail. He visited their addresses, went to the
mortuaries, and
attempted to trace them using the Rica data of cell phone companies
to no avail. He stated further that the matter
would be re-enrolled
if the witnesses became available.
16.3.
Under cross-examination, it was put to him
that he opposed the bail application and one of the grounds for
opposing bail was that
the Second Plaintiff was suspected to have
been sentenced by the High Court, Kwa-Zulu Natal Division to 35
years’ imprisonment
for murder and that the matter was
postponed for further investigations. It later transpired that the
Second Plaintiff was not
an accused in the Kwa-Zulu Natal matter. It
was put to him that it was his ineptitude that caused the Second
Plaintiff to remain
in detention as the person who was convicted for
35 years who could not have been released from prison.
Captain Pieterse
17. The fourth
witness to be called was Captain Pieterse was called as a fourth
witness and he
testified that he is a Captain in
the SAPS with an experience of 30 years and is based at the
Roodepoort police station. He testified
that on December 1, 2016, he
was on duty and standing outside smoking when an unknown Black male
waved at him and approached him.
The unknown man requested that he
must make a plan so that he would not be arrested, it later
transpired that the unknown man was
the Third Plaintiff.
18.
Under cross examination, it was stated to him that
the Third Plaintiff was a police informant, and Captain Pieterse was
asked why
the Third Plaintiff was not charged with an attempt to
bribe a police officer. He did not respond. He was told that the
allegation
was a fabrication as the Third Plaintiff had never been
charged for the alleged crime.
19.
This was the whole of the evidence presented on
behalf of the First Defendant regarding the arrest and detention. I
now deal with
Plaintiff’s evidence.
The
Plaintiff's evidence
Tsotetsi
Godfrey Themba
20.
The Third Plaintiff was the first to testify and testified as follows
that:
20.1. He was a
trader and an informant working with the First Plaintiff. On the day
of his arrest, he went to buy stock for
his shop in Sunshine,
Roodepoort, when
he spotted four men who were
standing outside of a silver bakkie; one of them was Thapelo, a
murder suspect whom the First Plaintiff
was investigating. The First
Plaintiff had asked the Third Plaintiff to help him find Thapelo, who
was well known to him. Upon
spotting Thapelo, The Third Plaintiff
called the First Plaintiff to inform him that he had just seen
Thapelo. The First Plaintiff
told him to watch him as he was making
his way to him. He testified that after a few minutes, the occupants
of the silver bakkie
got into the vehicle and headed to Matholeville,
the Second and Third Plaintiffs followed them. Upon arriving at
Matholeville,
Thapelo and his friends entered an area with a lot of
shacks.
20.2.
The
Third Plaintiff testified that he parked his vehicle far from where
Thapelo parked his car and called the First Plaintiff. The
First
Plaintiff advised that he was on his way and that they must watch
Thapelo’s movements. Thapelo and the occupants came
out of
their vehicle and spoke a bit. The First Plaintiff then informed that
he would not be able to navigate his way into the
informal
settlement. The Third plaintiff went on foot to fetch the First
Plaintiff. He asked the Second Plaintiff to watch Thapelo
and the
occupants’ movement. The First Plaintiff was walking in front,
and he wanted to make sure that he did not lose Thapelo.
Thapelo and
others entered into one of the shacks, which was L-shaped, and the
door remained opened. The First Plaintiff entered
the shack where
Thapelo entered. The Third Plaintiff stopped in the passage, and he
then heard the First Plaintiff and the man
arguing inside the shack.
The First Plaintiff came out of the shack with two males who were
handcuffed together, he also came out
carrying a plastic bag. The
First Plaintiff took them to his car and when he asked the First
Plaintiff why these two males were
arrested, the First Plaintiff said
that they were naughty. They entered the First Plaintiff’s car
with the two male suspects.
20.3.
The
Third Plaintiff testified that they entered a tar road, they saw the
police van with two police officers. The Third Plaintiff
alighted
from the vehicle to fetch his car, the RunX. Before he could reach
his vehicle, he saw a group of men approaching them
and shouting that
they must release the suspects. They threw stones at him, and he
subsequently incurred injuries. He then returned
to the bakkie driven
by the First Plaintiff where the suspects were. The Third Plaintiff
testified that a female police officer
who was in the police marked
van called one of the handcuffed men by his name. The police took the
suspects out of the first plaintiffs’
vehicle to the
police-marked vehicle.
20.4.
During
the commotion, a marked metro police golf vehicle passed by, made a
U-Turn to investigate the commotion. Officer Jacobus
assisted the
First, Second and Third Plaintiffs by removing them from the crowd
and moving them to the other side of the river.
The First Plaintiff
asked the female cop to follow them to the other side of the river.
The Third Plaintiff testified that he went
to the police station with
the First and Second plaintiff. The police van with the suspects
arrived later at the Police Station
with only one suspect. Upon their
arrival, Sergeant Hlongwane went to Captain Pienaar, and they spoke.
The Plaintiffs were told
to sit outside.
20.5.
The
Third Plaintiff testified that he wanted to fetch his vehicle, but
the First Plaintiff told Pienaar about the vehicle, and Captain
Pienaar called one of the officers to fetch the car. Captain Pienaar
asked him about his injuries. He then called an ambulance
to take him
to Leratong Hospital to be treated. The Third Plaintiff testified
that the ambulance came to the police station and
took him to the
hospital for treatment. He was admitted and released on the same day.
He then went back home and did not return
to the police station. He
testified that he did not go back to the police station and had no
interest in going back to the police
station because he had not been
arrested. He testified that while he could not explain to the family
of the Second Plaintiff where
the second Plaintiff was, he could not
risk going to the police station when the First and Second Plaintiffs
were arrested.
20.6.
On
1 December 2018, while accompanying his friend, members of the South
African Police stopped their vehicle. He was arrested and
taken to
the Roodepoort Police Station. When he asked why he was arrested,
Colonel
Velloen told him that he would know
at court. Notice of rights were given to him, but the charge was not
written on the notice of
rights. He was locked up and placed in a
cell. He went to court for his first appearance on 5 December 2016
for a bail application.
He attended two bails hearings; however, bail
was refused. He appeared many times in court, but the police came up
with new issues
in court, which caused a delay in the finalization of
the matter. On 9 July 2018, on the date of trial, they were released
but
he could not hear what was said in court, but they were told that
the charges were withdrawn.
20.7.
The
Third Plaintiff testified that at the time of his arrest, he owned
three spaza shops. He sold all three shops as his wife could
not
maintain them while he was detained. The Third Plaintiff maintained
that he was not involved in the robbery. He did not speak
to the
complainantshad no firearm.
20.8.
Under
cross-examination, it was put to him that Captain Pienaar denied that
he arranged to fetch his vehicle and that he had had
called an
ambulance to take him to the hospital. The Third Plaintiff stated
that Captain Pienaar had called the ambulance. He says
his details
appeared in the hospital computer, but his file was lost, and
therefore, there are no records of the file, but the
file number is
there.
20.9.
Under
cross-examination, he confirmed that he borrowed the car from one Mr
Dube, the owner; he borrowed it from him in order to
buy stock. When
asked why he referred to the car as his throughout the proceedings,
the Third Plaintiff testified that he referred
to the car as his
because the car was in his possession at the time of the incident. He
was asked who fetched the car from Matholeville
and dropped it off at
the Police Station. He stated that Captain Pienaar fetched the car
where he left it and came with it to the
police station. It was put
to him that Captain Pienaar denied that he had fetched the car. The
Third plaintiff stated that Pienaar
was not telling the truth. It was
put to him that he did not go to the police station, and he disagreed
when asked if he had seen
the docket regarding the murder case in
which Thapelo was the suspect, the Third Plaintiff stated that he was
an informant and
had never seen a docket.
20.10.
He
confirmed that when he was discharged from hospital, he did not
return to the police station despite the fact that the car he
borrowed was still at the station, for fear that he would be
arrested, and his friend was arrested. He stated that that he was
not
going back to be arrested when he believed he was innocent. The Third
Plaintiff denied that he tried to bribe Warrant Officer
Venter.
First
Plaintiff - Sipho Mdletshe
21.
The First Plaintiff, Sipho Bhekinkosi Mdletshe, testified next. He
averred that he is self-employedand at times he is
called to the
Police Station to assist with cases. On 23 November 2016, The First
Plaintiff went to work and attended a parade
at Dobsonville Police
Station, where he was stationed as a police reservist. He
received
a call from the Third Plaintiff, who was his informant, advising him
that he spotted Thapelo, a suspect he was looking
for in connection
to a murder case he was working on. He then told the Third Plaintiff
to follow the suspect. He consulted with
his supervisor, the late
Colonel Nkosi, who was the branch commander and the head of
detectives, regarding the phone call. Colonel
Nkosi told him to rush
to where the suspect was spotted. He gave him authority him to drive
a state car, a grey Toyota Double cab,
handcuffs and a firearm. He
drove to the place where Thapelo was alleged to have been seen. The
Third Plaintiff was waiting for
him on the road while the Second
Plaintiff was watching the suspects.
22.
They proceeded to the yard where Thapelo had
entered with his group of friends and the yard was filled with many
shacks. When the
suspect and his friends saw them coming, they ran
and went into one of the shacks. He followed the suspect to a shack
where he
thought they had entered, but he found the two complainants
with explosives in their possession
.
He asked them what they were doing
with the explosives, and they told him that they were using them for
illegal mining. The First
Plaintiff further testified that there were
two gas cylinders that were used to melt the gold. He arrested and
handcuffed the two
man and took them to the bakkie in order to
formally charge them at Roodepoort Police Station.
23.
On his way to Roodepoort Police Station to formally charge the
suspects, he saw a marked police van which was driven by
Sergeant
Hlongwane and
Sergeant
Mamburu.
Sergeant
Hlongwane greeted him and asked him what was happening, and upon
being told about the suspects,
Sergeant
Hlongwane told him that he was not permitted to arrest people in
their area. The First Plaintiff told
Sergeant
Hlongwane that he could arrest the suspects anywhere. One of the
suspects called the police officer by name, and the First Plaintiff
asked them if they knew them. While they were still talking, a group
of illegal miners known as Zama-Zama’s approached them
with the
intention to take the suspects away from him; they threw stones at
him and at the state vehicle. He asked
Sergeant
Hlongwane and
Sergeant
Mampuru to take the
suspects to the Roodepoort Police Station. The First Plaintiff then
discharged a firearm to disperse the mob.
A Captain from Metro Police
under K9 came and helped them with the commotion and advised them to
get out of
Matholeville
.
24.
The First Plaintiff testified that Mampuru was shouting at them and
said they would make sure that he was arrested. He
drove to
Roodepoort Police Station. He was driving in front and
Sergeant
Hlongwane and the two suspects were following them. He was with the
Second Plaintiff and the Third Plaintiff was bleeding. He entered
through the back gate and waited for
Sergeant
Hlongwane and the suspects. While waiting, Captain Pienaar called him
by his name and position, and when he enquired how he knew
him,
Captain Pienaar said he knew everyone in that area.
Sergeant
Hlongwane and his crew member arrived with the suspects and parked
next to the vehicle driven by the First Plaintiff.
Sergeant
Hlongwane and his crew member came to him with one of the suspects
while Captain Pienaar continued to speak with him, and he asked
him
how he arrested the suspects. The First Plaintiff realized that the
suspects had disappeared while Pienaar was talking to him.
25.
The First Plaintiff testified that he looked for a duty officer and
told the officer to bring the suspects to him to formally
charge
them, the police came with both suspects. Captain Pienaar called
Captain Pieterse aside and spoke to him, and the First
Plaintiff did
not know what they were talking about. Captain Pienaar came back to
him and told him that they would hold the two
suspects for him.
26.
The First Plaintiff testified that he went to the charge office to
prepare the docket. Warrant Officer Venter gave him
all the
stationery to prepare the docket and to open a case. He was busy with
the preparation of the docket before he could give
it to the data
typist for registration. Captain Pienaar asked to see the docket he
was preparing and at that stage, the First Plaintiff
testified that
many cars driven by white people came to the police station, among
those white people was Colonel Velloen from the
Provincial Office.
Colonel Velloen said that he was there as an observer as he was
informed that the police were attacked at
Matholeville
.
Captain Pienaar then told him the suspects he came with were
now complainants, and he was then placed under arrest with
the second
plaintiff. He was then charged with the second plaintiff and Colonel
Velloen was an investigating officer in their matter.
The First
Plaintiff testified that he objected to Colonel Velloen being an
investigating officer as he was present during the arrest,
but his
objection was ignored, and he was told that he knew too much.
27.
The Plaintiffs appeared in court on 25 November 2016, and the case
was remanded for seven days to allow the State to conduct
further
investigations. The First Plaintiff testified that during the bail
proceedings he testified that he informed the court
that he had
another docket opened for robbery in Roodepoort and another one for
the possession of explosives, cases which had pending
trial dates. He
further advised that he was a witness in those two matters, but the
court refused him bail.
The
Plaintiffs spent a month in detention, while the police opposed their
bail application and alleged that there was a murder case
in Kwa-Zulu
Natal which was linked to the Second Plaintiff. It was alleged that
the Second Plaintiff was sentenced to 35 years’
imprisonment.
It would later transpire that the Second Plaintiff was not involved
in the aforementioned matter. That resulted in
them spending several
months in jail until they petitioned the High Court for their release
on bail.
28.
Under cross-examination, the First Plaintiff was asked how he lost
sight of Thapelo, whom he testified that he saw entering
the shack,
but ended up arresting the two suspects. He was referred to
Mpenyana's statement that one of the suspects, that Mdletshe,
the
Second plaintiff, robbed them of money, gold, and a gold scale. He
denied robbing them and stated that there were too many
shacks and
that the Third Respondent called him when they were already inside
the shack and so, he would not know the shack they
were in.
29.
Under cross-examination, it was put to him that the reason for his
arrest was that he failed to produce the necessary
authorisation
documents for the vehicle and gun. Mdletshe stated that Captain
Pienaar was not telling the truth because when he
arrived at the
police station, there was no need to ask all those questions because
he had no reason to suspect that he had committed
any crime. The
suspects went to the holding cells to wait for him to open the
docket, and the first time he saw him was when he
opened the docket.
He stated that Colonel Velloen took the logbook and pocketbook and
denied that he failed to produce the logbook.
He further stated
that there was no way that one could drive a state vehicle without a
logbook as the logbook is always in
the car.
30.
When asked why he produced a newspaper extract about the murder case
he was investigating instead of a docket, he stated
that the docket
was with the investigating officer. He was on the tracing agents’
team and the paper extract had all the
information about the case.
31.
Under cross-examination, he was asked to explain his statement of
arrest. He stated that he arrested both suspects, he
intended to
acquire an additional state witness, but the suspects instead ran
away.
32.
Lastly, he was asked a few questions about the reservists and whether
they are fully functional police officers with the
same power of
arrest. He confirmed that the reservists are fully functional police
officers.
33.
The First Plaintiff was asked if the informer was registered and
whether he received payment from the police. The first
plaintiff
stated that he was not registered, and that informers were not paid.
Testimony
of Big Boy Ncube
34.
The Second Plaintiff was the last witness to testify. He testified
that he was self-employed, and he bought and sold clothing
and
blankets. On 23 November 2016, he was accompanying the Third
Plaintiff to Roodepoort when he noticed the Third Plaintiff reducing
the car’s speed as they approached a bakkie with four
occupants. The Third plaintiff informed him that one of the occupants
was wanted by the police. The Third Plaintiff then made a call. The
car with the suspect drove past them, and they followed it
until they
reached
Matholeville
.
35.
The suspect and his friends parked their car and went by foot to
Matholeville
. The Third Plaintiff also
parked his car far away from where the suspect and his friends were
parked. The Third Plaintiff told
him to wait for him as he was
collecting the First Plaintiff. When the First and Third plaintiffs
arrived, the suspect and his
friends ran away and entered a shack.
The First and Third plaintiffs came out of the shack with the two
suspects who were hand
cuffed. The First Plaintiff came out also
carrying a black plastic bag.
36.
They went to the car and as they entered the tar road, they noticed a
police van. The Third Plaintiff alighted from the
vehicle to fetch
his car, the police van stopped too. The police were speaking with
the First Plaintiff when the group of Zama-Zama
attacked them with
stones and hit the Third Plaintiff, prompting the Third Plaintiff to
return to the First Plaintiffs bakkie.
Another K9 police officer
driving a golf assisted in dispersing the crowd. The two suspects
were transferred to the police van.
The plaintiffs went together to
the police station, while at the police station, the police van
arrived with only one suspect.
37.
The Second Plaintiff avers that Captain Pienaar called an ambulance
to take the Third Plaintiff to the hospital. Captain
Pienaar went
upstairs with Mdletshe and told him that he was arresting him for
armed robbery. The Plaintiffs appeared in court
after two days.
Captain Pienaar charged them with armed robbery, kidnapping and
possession of explosives. They were detained for
one year and seven
months.
38.
Regarding Claim B, he testified that the State opposed his bail
application on the basis that he was arrested in 2013
in
Pietermaritzburg for murder and armed robbery and was sentenced to 35
years. He testified that as a result, he stayed for 1
year and 7
months in prison, but Colonel Velloen needed a few days, maybe two
weeks, to verify the information.
39.
Regarding his passport, the Second Plaintiff testified that he was in
the country legally at the time of his arrest but
due to his arrest
he stayed in the country for more than three months, which caused his
visa to expire. Under cross-examination,
it was suggested that he was
tasked with watching Thapelo. He agreed but stated that it was the
First and Second Plaintiffs who
went inside the shack and came out
with the two suspects.
40.
Regarding his passport, he was told that the other reason for the
postponement of proceedings, the bail was that his visa
had expired;
he testified that his passport was valid until the end of November
2016.
##
## Discussion
Discussion
##
41.
The Pleadings were not a model of clarity. Both Plaintiff’s and
Defendant’s pleaded evidence in their amended
pleadings,
respectively.
42.
Captain Pienaar, the arresting officer,
testified that he arrested the First and Second Plaintiffs on
the strength of
Sergeant
Hlongwane's report
to him and on the information contained in a statement of the two
complainants who stated that they were robbed
at gunpoint by the
First and Second Plaintiffs. The complainants also pointed out the
First and Second Plaintiff as the people
who robbed him. Therefore,
he reasonably suspected that the Plaintiffs committed a Schedule 1
offence.
43.
The question that this Court must answer is whether, based on the
information that was available to Captain Pienaar at
the time of
arrest, he could have formed a reasonable suspicion that the
Plaintiffs committed a Schedule 1 offence. To answer this
question,
the Court must look at the information that was available to him at
the time of arrest, not after the arrest.
44.
When
Sergeant
Hlongwane spoke the First
Plaintiff in Matholeville, he had no suspicion at that stage that the
Plaintiff had committed an offence.
He was still merely seeking
information from the First Plaintiff pertaining to the reports they
received from the community members
when the mob of illegal miners
known as the Zama -Zama attacked the Plaintiff’s car with
stones. During the commotion, the
First Plaintiff discharged a
warning shot to disperse the mob who wanted to violently take the
suspects from the Plaintiff’s
vehicle in the presence of the
Police Officers. There is nothing in
Sergeant
Hlongwane’s statement suggesting that he and his crew member
suspected that the Plaintiffs must have committed an offence.
The
contention by the arresting officer that he arrested the First and
Second Plaintiffs on the strength of
Sergeant
Hlongwane’s report is not supported by Hlongwane’s
evidence and statement.
45.
It is common cause that the mob of Zama-Zama attacked the Plaintiffs
and their vehicle and the Police Vehicle while Sergeant
Hlongwane was
conversing with the First Plaintiff.
Sergeant
Hlongwane testified that it was agreed between them that due to the
violent attacks from the group of the illegal miners who wanted
the
two suspects to be released by force, that the two suspects that the
First Plaintiff arrested should be transferred to a Police
marked
vehicle driven by
Sergeant
Hlongwane and
that they must all go to the police station to resolve the issue.
46.
The evidence was that the two suspects were held in the holding cells
so that the First Plaintiff could formally charge
them.
47.
While Captain Pienaar testified that he did not doubt that the First
Plaintiff was a police officer, he failed to conduct
further
investigations to verify the First Plaintiffs credentials and whether
the First Plaintiff was on duty and was authorised
to use the service
pistol, handcuffs and police vehicle which is information that could
have been easily secured by contacting
the First Plaintiff’s
supervisor. Captain Pienaar also failed to assess the information
given to him by the suspects, who
were self -confessed illegal miners
who were brought to the Police Station to be charged by the First
Plaintiff for possession
of illegal explosives and gold.
48.
The other information available to the arresting officer was the
complainants ‘statements. The two suspects made
contradictory
statements regarding the incident. Captain Pienaar relied on these
statements, and these statements were admitted
as evidence. I propose
to deal with these statements below.
49.
The first statement, deposed under oath by Moses Nponyana, stated
that:
49.1. He is a
Zimbabwean citizen living in Tshepisong who conducts illegal mining
by burning/purifying gold. On the day of
the incident, he was in the
Matholeville squatter camp conducting illegal mining activities; he
used gas cylinder to purify gold
for customers. While he was busy
purifying the gold for a customer, two black men entered his shack,
and they brought his friend
Meshack with. They introduced themselves
as police officers, and one of them took out handcuffs and handcuffed
them together. The
other one searched him and robbed him of the R4000
that was inside his underpants. They also took 25 grams of gold that
had been
purified, and they also took his scale used for measuring
gold. The two men made a call to the third man who came with the grey
bakkie. On arrival, the third man showed them his appointment card
and a firearm and told them that he was a police officer. He
took
them to his vehicle and drove away with them.
49.2. While in the
van, Meshack managed to un-cuff himself. The police van stopped the
bakkie he was in, and while the driver
of the bakkie was talking to
them, the other man who stole from them ran towards the street where
he parked his RunX. The community
chased the man and threw stones at
him, and he ran back to the vehicle. The community stoned the First
Plaintiff’s car as
the First Plaintiff drove off.
The
police only took Meshack with them. He followed on foot so that the
police could take off the handcuffs off him. When they arrived
at a
set of robots, the police took off the handcuff off his hands. He
stated that the value of gold stolen was R11 000.00.
50.
Meshack Sithole stated under oath that on the day of the incident, he
was visiting his friend, Moses Sithole, in the Matholeville
squatter
camp. Moses arrived with a customer who needed gold to be purified.
Meshack stated that he entered the shack with the
customer to have
the gold purified and went and stood outside the shack. While he was
busy outside, two black men appeared and
asked him where his car was;
one of them pushed him into the shack where Moses and his customer
were busy burning the gold. They
introduced themselves as police
officers, and he asked them to show him their appointment card or
their guns, but they failed to
do so. They took out the handcuffs and
handcuffed them. The Third Plaintiff arrived at the shack and
introduced himself as a policeman
and produced a police card and his
firearm. Then they took him and Moses and put them inside the van,
leaving the customer behind;
the policeman issued a warning to them
that they were under arrest for the possession of explosives and
possession of illegal gold.
51.
While traveling with the Plaintiffs, they came across a police van,
and he lifted the handcuffed hand for the police to
see him; the
marked vehicle made a U-Turn and followed the bakkie, and the driver
of the bakkie stopped it and told the police
in uniform that he is
also a policeman. They were then transferred to the marked police
van. The uniform member took him with them,
and they followed the
bakkie, which drove off when the mob attacked it. They arrived at the
police station with the marked van,
and that was all the information
he provided.
52.
In
Mabona
and Another v Minister of Law and Order and Another
[3]
,
the court defined reasonable suspicion contemplated in section
40(1)(b) as follows:
“
Would a reasonable
man in the second defendant’s position and possessed of the
same information have considered that there
were good and sufficient
grounds for suspecting that the plaintiffs were guilty of conspiracy
to commit robbery or possession of
stolen property knowing it to be
stolen? It seems to me that in evaluating this information a
reasonable man would bear in mind
that the section authorises drastic
police action. It authorises an arrest on the strength of a suspicion
and without the need
to swear out a warrant, i.e. something which
otherwise would be an invasion of private rights and personal
liberty. The reasonable
man will therefore analyse and assess the
quality of the information at his disposal critically, and he will
not accept 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."
53.
The statements
by the two suspects, turned complainants, contained contradictory
information pertaining to how they were allegedly
robbed.
53.1.
Moses admitted
that he is an illegal miner from Zimbabwe and was arrested by the
First Plaintiff while purifying some gold;
53.2.
The
complainant’s statements do not state that guns were used to
threaten them. Instead, they state that the First Plaintiff,
upon
their request showed them his police appointment card and he then
showed them a gun.
53.3.
Meshack stated
that his friend Moses was with the client when the two black men
approached them. They were arrested but the client
Moses brought was
not arrested, they left the client in the shack.
53.4.
When the First
Plaintiff arrested them, he informed them that they were under arrest
for illegal possession of explosives and possession
of illegal gold.
53.5.
Moses stated
that the Third Plaintiff was attacked by a group of illegal miners
when he tried to get to his motor vehicle, and he
ran back to the car
driven by the First plaintiff.
54.
It seems to me that a reasonable man
in the position of Captain Pienaar would have given himself time to
critically analyze the
information received from the two suspects
turned complainants while bearing in mind that the complainants were
brought to the
police station as suspects to be charged and that he
would not just accept the information without even attempting to
investigate
it
55.
There was not
enough information to justify the Plaintiff’s arrest on the
defendant’s own showing, for example, no one
disputed that the
First Plaintiff was a Police Reservist and that he had gone to the
police station to charge the two suspects.
The First Plaintiff showed
his appointment card to Sergeant Hlongwane and his crew member.
Captain Pienaar testified that he had
no doubt that the First
Plaintiff was a Police Reservist. He attempted to get certain
information from the First plaintiff, but
he did not get it. It is
clear that when he arrested the plaintiffs, he did not have enough
information to arrest them. He did
not give himself enough time to
gather the information he was looking for, which in my opinion could
have been easily established.
56.
Captain
Pienaar testified that he saw the First Plaintiff when he was opening
the docket, in the process of charging the complainants
but he did
not even wait for the First Plaintiff to complete the process, he
simply accepted the allegations made by the suspects
turned
complainants without investigating them.
Similarly,
Colonel
Velloen,
and
Warrant Officer Venter also
relied on the complainant’s statements to effect the arrest of
the Third Respondent. Therefore,
I
am not satisfied that Captain Pienaar, could have formed a reasonable
suspicion to justify the arrest of the Plaintiffs with the
information at their disposal at the time of their arrest.
57.
Accordingly,
the arrest is not justified in terms of section 40(1)(b) and is
unlawful, it follows that the detention is also unlawful.
Consequently, the
Defendant is liable for Plaintiffs’ proven damages for the
period spent in detention.
Claim B
58.
The Plaintiffs
also claims damages for malicious prosecution. The Plaintiff contends
that when formulating the charges, the First
and Second Defendants
had no reasonable and probable cause. The Plaintiffs contends further
that the Prosecution was negligent
in charging the Plaintiffs with
schedule 6 offenses that were not supported by facts, thereby placing
the Plaintiffs in a situation
where they had to prove that
exceptional circumstances existed at the time of their bail
proceedings.
59.
It is trite that for the Plaintiffs to
succeed in a claim for malicious prosecution, the claimants must
allege and prove that (i)
the Defendants set the law in motion, they
instigated and instituted the proceedings, (ii) they acted without
reasonable and probable
cause; (iii) they acted with malice; and (iv)
the prosecution failed.
60.
It is common cause that the Defendants
have set the law in motion and instituted proceedings against the
plaintiffs. The question
that this Court must answer is whether the
defendants acted without reasonable cause and whether the prosecution
was malicious,
61.
Schreiner
JA
in
Beckenstrater v Rottcher and Theunissen
[4]
formulated
the
test
for absence
of
reasonable
and probable cause as follows:
“
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 offense 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 holds a genuine belief founded on reasonable
grounds in the plaintiff’s guilt. Where reasonable
and probable
cause for an arrest or prosecution exists, the
conduct of the defendant instigating it is
not wrongful. The requirement of reasonable and probable cause is a
sensible one: ‘For
it is of importance to the community that
persons who have reasonable and probable cause for a prosecution
should not be deterred
from setting the criminal law in motion
against those whom they believe to have committed offences, even if
in so doing they are
actuated
by indirect and improper motives.”
62.
Simply put, the prosecution must have a
prima facie
case against the Plaintiffs, which means that if they were to lead
the evidence, they would secure a conviction. In order to assess
whether the prosecution has probable cause, the State called Mr
Shadrack Mahine Temeki whose evidence can be summarised as follows:
62.1.
He is a Regional Court Prosecutor
with 19 years’ experience as an advanced Regional Court
interpreter. After stating
what his
responsibilities were, he
testified that he
received and considered the
Roodepoort CAS617/11/2016 on 25 November 2016. It contained police
statements and complainants’
statements where the complainants
alleged that they were robbed at gunpoint by the Plaintiffs. The
complainants pointed out the
First and Second Plaintiff.
62.2.
Mr. Temeki testified
that having
read the case docket, he was satisfied that a
prima facie
case
was made against the Plaintiffs. He decided to prosecute them,
and he enrolled the matter. All of the Plaintiffs were charged with
Schedule 6 offenses, and they needed to prove that exceptional
circumstances existed to satisfy the court for their bail application
to be successful.
62.3.
Mr Temeki testified that the charges
against the Plaintiffs were not withdrawn, but the matter was removed
from the roll because
the witnesses could not be traced. Once
the witnesses become available, the matter will be re-enrolled.
63.
Under cross-examination, Mr Temeki was
asked what his responsibilities were with upon receiving the docket;
he stated that he read
the statements and all other information in
the docket and then decided to proceed with the prosecution
proceedings. He was further
asked whether he received the
unregistered docket of the First Plaintiff, which the Defendants
discovered. Mr Temeki stated that
he was not certain if he received
it, but if he did, he would have considered it.
64.
On the correctness of the charges
formulated against the Plaintiffs, Mr Temeki stated that they were
properly formulated and that
all the elements of the charges were
present.
He testified that the decision to prosecute was
supported by objective facts and that there were reasonable prospects
of securing
a conviction.
65.
The charges against the plaintiffs were
formulated as follows:
65.1.
Robbery with aggravating circumstances
The plaintiffs assaulted
the complainants and forcefully took an amount of R4000 in cash from
them. They informed the suspects that
they were police officials, and
the Second and Third Plaintiffs were in possession of the firearm,
which was used to instill fear
in them.
65.2.
Possession of the firearm
The
First Plaintiff unlawfully possessed a firearm.
65.3.
Possession of ammunition
The First Plaintiff
unlawfully possessed ammunition.
65.4.
False representation
Only the Second and Third
Plaintiffs pretended to be policemen.
65.5.
Kidnapping
The three plaintiffs
stole their freedom of movement by cuffing them together, taking them
against their will into a vehicle, and
driving away.
The three plaintiffs,
with each other's help and for a common purpose, unlawfully kept,
stored, or possessed explosives or components
thereof in a motor
vehicle in contravention of section 6(1)(a) read with section 6(2) of
the Explosives Act 26 of 1956.
66.
A charge of robbery with aggravated
circumstances is a Schedule 6 offense. The information provided
regarding this offense was false;
nowhere in Nponyan’s
statement does he states that the First Plaintiff’s gun was
used to threaten them or that they
were robbed at gun point.
67.
Regarding the charges of possession of a
gun and ammunition, there was simply insufficient information to
formulate this charge
against the First Plaintiff. Captain
Pienaar testified that at the time of arrest, the First Plaintiff
surrendered his service
pistol and ammunition. He also testified that
he had no doubt that the First Plaintiff was a police officer. There
was simply no
basis to charge him with these charges without
investigation.
68.
Mr Temeki relied on Moses' statement
which he read into the record, where Moses states in paragraph 5 that
one of the Plaintiffs
had a plastic bag with him.
69.
The evidence presented by Mr. Temeki on the formulation of
schedule 6 offenses was not supported by the complainants’
statements
contained in the case docket. He failed to point out the
witness statements where it was stated that the Plaintiffs had robbed
them at gunpoint.
70.
On the charges of Kidnapping and being
found in possession of explosives, Meshack Sithole, in his statement,
stated that “
they took Moses
and me, left the customer and put us inside the grey bakkie which
came with a policeman, they warned us that we
were under arrest for
possession of explosives and possession of illegal gold
”.
71.
I am satisfied that the Plaintiffs has discharged their onus
in proving that there was no probable and reasonable cause to
prosecute.
72.
In
Patel
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
In
Patel v NDPP
[5]
Ledwaba
DJP, dealing with the requirement of malice in cases of malicious
prosecution, expressed himself as follows:
[6]
“
To
determine whether there was malice or not, it will be worth recalling
what the Supreme Court of Appeal said when it dealt with
the duty of
the prosecutor in
Minister of Police and
Another v Du Plessis
:
‘
A
prosecutor has a duty not to act arbitrarily. A prosecutor must act
with objectivity and must protect the public interest. In
S
v Jija and Others
1991 (2) SA 52
(E) at 67I-68B
,
the following appears:
‘
I
must also mention that the court had an uneasy feeling that state
counsel had misconceived his function. It appeared to the court
from
the nature of his address and attitude that he regarded his role as
that of an advocate representing a client. A prosecutor,
however,
stands in special relation to the court. His paramount duty is not to
procure a conviction but to assist the court in
ascertaining the
truth’
In
Democratic Alliance
v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
, this
court, after a discussion concerning prosecutorial independence in
democratic societies, quoted, with approval, the following
part of a
paper presented at an international seminar by Mr James Hamilton, the
then substitute member of Venice Commission and
Director of Public
Prosecution in Ireland:
‘
Despite
the variety of arrangements in prosecutor’s office, the public
prosecutor plays a vital role in ensuring due process
and the rule of
law as well as respect for the rights of all parties involved in the
criminal justice system. The prosecutor’s
duties are owed
primarily to the public as a whole but also to those individuals
caught up in the system, whether as suspects of
accused persons,
witnesses or victims of crime. Public confidence in the prosecutor
ultimately depends on confidence that the rule
of law is obeyed.’
We should all be
concerned about the maintenance and promotion of the rule of law.
Given increasing litigating involving the NDPP,
these principles
cannot be repeated often enough. We ignore them at our peril.
A prosecutor exercises
discretion on the basis of the information before him or her. In
S
v Lubaxa
, this court said the following:
‘
Clearly
a person ought not to be prosecuted in the absence of a minimum of
evidence upon which he might be convicted, merely in
the expectation
that at some stage he might incriminate himself. That is recognised
by the common law principle that there should
be reasonable and
probable cause to believe that the accused is guilty of an offence
before a prosecution is initiated, and the
constitutional protection
afforded to dignity and personal freedom (s 10 and s 12)
seems to reinforce it. It ought to
follow that if a prosecution is
not to be commenced without that minimum of evidence, so too should
it cease when the evidence
finally falls below that threshold.’
[24] Courts are
not overly eager to limit or interfere with the legitimate exercise
of the prosecutorial authority. However,
a prosecuting authority's
discretion to prosecute is not immune from the scrutiny of a court,
which can intervene where such discretion
is improperly exercised.
See generally
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
.
The following was held in
Du Plessis
.
‘
Indeed
a court should be obliged to and therefore ought to intervene if
there is no reasonable and probable cause to believe that
the accused
is guilty of an offence before a prosecution is initiated.’
The second defendant
should have been satisfied that there was reasonable and probable
cause, not just a prima facie case against
the plaintiff. The
prosecutor should interrogate the docket in its entirety and apply
his/her mind properly before making a decision.
Again, if I accept
the version of Ms. Nxele, it implies that Adv Noko was not a credible
witness, and she fabricated the evidence.
The defence failed to call
the officer who commissioned Ms Nxele’s statement, so that
he could testify if the complainant
understood the contents of her
statement and confirm the truthfulness thereof.” [footnotes
omitted]
73.
I am satisfied that the Plaintiffs have proven on a balance of
probabilities that the Defendants acted with malice when prosecuting
them.
74.
Accordingly, the following order is
made.
1.
The Defendants are liable for the proven
damages suffered by the Plaintiffs with respect to the unlawful
arrest and detention of
the Plaintiffs as well as malicious
prosecution.
2.
The Defendants shall pay the Plaintiff’s
costs, including the costs of two counsel.
# FLATELA L
FLATELA L
# JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
# GAUTENG DIVISION
GAUTENG DIVISION
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is
deemed to be 10h00 on 18 June 2024
.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for the
Plaintiff:
Adv JSC Nkosi with Adv LJL Mokoape
Attorney for the
Plaintiff
MWIM & Associates Inc
Counsel for the
Defendants: Adv Sape
Attorney for the
Defendants: State Attorneys
Date of
Hearing:
: May 22,23,24,25 2023 and 2 June 2023
Date of
Judgment:
:18 June 2024
[
1]
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
1986 (2) SA 805
(A) at 818 G-H.
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
1988 (2) SA 654
at
658F to H
[4]
(1955)
1 SA 129
(A)
at
136A-B;
[5]
2018
(2) SACR 420 (KZD).
[6]
Patel
v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others at para 21 to
25.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Bhekuzulu and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others (19891/2022; 38670/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1982; [2024] 1 All SA 662 (GP) (11 December 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1982High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Ndziba N.O and Others v ABSA Bank Limited (Leave to Appeal) (13189/2014) [2025] ZAGPPHC 123 (14 February 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 123High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Nndwammbi and Others v Pollock N.O and Others (56445/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1308 (17 December 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1308High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Sibeko v S and Another (Appeal) (A839/2016) [2025] ZAGPPHC 407 (23 April 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 407High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Thubakgale and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others (39602/2015) [2023] ZAGPPHC 750; 2024 (2) SA 525 (GP) (29 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 750High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar