Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 979South Africa
Minister of Police and Another v Manaswe (9982/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 979 (17 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 September 2024
Headnotes
liable for the assault on the respondent
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of Police and Another v Manaswe (9982/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 979 (17 September 2024)
Minister of Police and Another v Manaswe (9982/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 979 (17 September 2024)
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sino date 17 September 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
9982/2018
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE:
17/9/2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF POLICE
First
Appellant
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE
Second
Appellant
DEPARTMENT
OF COMMUNITY SAFETY, SECURITY
AND
LIAISON MPUMALANGA PROVINCE
and
TRIP
KGAGUDI
MANASWE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MPSHE
AJ
(BASSON, J AND LENYAI, J CONCURING)
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an appeal emanating from the judgement
and orders of the
Honourable Justice LUKHAIMANE AJ delivered on the 1 April 2022. This
appeal is with leave of the court a quo.
2.
The first appellant takes issue with the finding
of the court a quo
that the arrest and detention of the respondent was lawful. The
second appellant takes issue with the finding
that the respondent was
assaulted by the members of the appellant.
3.
BACKGROUND
3.1 The respondent (Mr Trip
Kgagudi Manaswe) was arrested without a warrant by Officer L-P Ntuli
(“Ntuli”) acting
within the course and scope of her
duties with second appellant. The arrest took place at approximately
midnight on 24 December
2016 following a roadblock incident next too
Vezukuhle 4-way stop. The plaintiff was released the next day without
appearing in
court. No charges were ever brought against him flowing
from this incident that culminated in his arrest.
3.2 The respondent (the
plaintiff in the court a quo) instituted a claim for damages in the
amount of R6 000 000.
(six million rand) allegedly suffered
by him consequent upon his unlawful arrest and assault by the
employees of the first and
second appellants.
4.
The court aquo made the following order
4.1 The defendants are jointly
and severally liable for the plaintiff’s proven or agreed
damages for the assault on
and the unlawful detention of the
plaintiff.
4.2 That the defendants are
jointly severally liable for the plaintiff’s cost of suit.
4.3 That the issue of the
quantum of damages is hereby postponed sine die.
5.
The event that gave rise to the respondent’s arrest and
subsequent detention
5.1 It is common caused that on
24 December 2016, the respondent was stopped at the roadblock at the
Vezubuhle intersection
in Mpumalanga. The respondent, after having
been stopped by traffic officer Ntuli, presented his driver’s
license which was
duly checked for any previous transgression. There
was one outstanding traffic fine in the amount of R1 800.00
which the respondent
immediately paid. Traffic officer Ntuli then
requested the respondent to take a breathalyser test. She requested
the respondent’s
car keys in order to move his vehicle off the
road. The respondent refused to hand over the keys but offered to
move his car himself.
Respondent got into his car and sped off.
5.2 Ntuli immediately sought
help from other officers who were also present at the roadblock.
Traffic officers R Mokoena,
P A Masemola and other members of SAPS
gave chase in their respective vehicles. The respondent was accosted
at a distance of about
2km from the roadblock operation. He,
respondent was brought back to the roadblock and handed over to
officer Petunia Ntuli who
then subjected respondent to a
breathalyser. The breathalyser showed the alcohol content to be 0.72
mg/1000ml of breath.
5.3 Officer Ntuli then arrested
respondent and took him to the Kwa Mhlanga Police Station to be
charged. He was thereafter
taken to the Kwa-Mhlanga Hospital for a
blood alcohol test. The doctor was only able to administer the test
after protestation
by the respondent. The respondent was thereafter
incarcerated at the Kwa Mhlanga Police Station but was released the
following
day at 11H00 upon payment of R1500.00 bail.
6.
The arresting traffic officer Ntuli conceded
that she is by law
required to draw blood within two hours. She also conceded that this
did not happen within the prescribed time.
The arrest and detention
were admitted. After the blood sample were taken by the medical
doctor, the respondent was handed over
to the South African Police
officer who, in turn detained the respondent and only released him
the next day. The blood tests were
taken after the required period of
two hours, officer Ntuli should have realised that she had no basis
on which she could detain
the respondent any further. Respondent was
never prosecuted for the alleged crime of driving under the influence
of alcohol.
7.
In respect of the arrest and detention of
respondent, the court a quo
concluded as follows:
[55] “
As indicated earlier,
the jurisdictional requirement for an arrest without a warrant in
terms of section 40(1) of the CPA were present
in the beginning,
however, the continued arrest and detention of plaintiff after
leaving the hospital knowing that here shall be
no just cause as the
blood sample to sustain a charge of drunken driving were not taken
within the prescribed time, makes such
further incarceration
unlawful
.”
[56]
“
It is the finding of this court that continued arrest of
the plaintiff after leaving the Kwa-Mhlanga Hospital at 03H15 on 25
December
2016 and his detention at Kwa-Mhlanga Police Station were
unlawful and violation of his constitutional rights. The Defendants
are
therefore liable for Plaintiff’s general damages for
assault and unlawful arrest and detention.”
8.
I cannot find any error or misdirection in
this finding of the court.
9.
The court a quo also had to consider the involvement
of first
appellant in the arrest of the respondent. It is clear from the
evidence that the arrest was effected by traffic officer
Ntuli and
not by members of the first respondent.
10.
The evidence of the respondent is also clear on this point.
He
testified as follows:
“
It
was just before 23:00 or around 23:00 when I approached the
roadblock and at the roadblock I was stopped, at the
time
I was the driver of a Mercedes-Benz, and I was alone in the vehicle.
I was requested to stop at the roadblock, and I stopped.
After
stopping I was approached by one female traffic officer who was later
known to me as Lindiwe Ntuli, she introduced herself
and requested
that I gave her my driver’s license, which I did.”
11.
It is common cause that Lindiwe Ntuli is a traffic officer and not
a
member of the SAPS. I conclude that the order of the court aquo that
first appellant is liable for the arrest and detention of
the
respondent is not supported by evidence. The court a quo at paragraph
40 of the judgment states:
“
the plaintiff’s claim
that he was arrested by members of the first defendant, given the
evidence and circumstances cannot
reasonably possibly be true.”
The arrest from 3H00 on 25.12.2016 to 11H00 26.12.2016 is unlawful.
12.
THE ASSAULT ALLEGATION
12.1 Traffic officer
Ntuli testified that she had no sight of the assault as she was not
present. In terms of
this, the court a quo had to decide whether the
assault was perpetrated by members of the first appellant.
12.2 The evidence in
chief of the respondent was, however, clear that the assault on him
was by members of the
first appellant. He testified as follows:
“
Then after I was slapped,
then those police officers jumped from their own vehicle and then
they came to me. I was forcefully removed
from my car; I fell on the
tarmac road and that is when they started kicking me while I was on
the ground. So, the kicking lasted
for, it was plus minus two minutes
the immediately after that they threw me into their double cab.”
13.
He continued as follow:
“
When raising my hands
and by then, also my window was down and whilst focusing on that I
was slapped, and the slap came from behind.
Then when I turned to
look where this slap, who was slapping me, it was an unknown male in
traffic officer’s uniform that
looked like an overall, but it
was a uniform and behind him it was a Golf 7 GTI which is marked so,
it was a traffic officer’s
vehicle.”
14.
Under cross examination the respondent also did not testify that
he
was slapped by the traffic officer.
15.
The clinical records confirm that the respondent had sustained
injuries.
Lastly, the appellant failed to call members of the SAPS to
testify on the assault to rebut the evidence regarding the assault.
I
am thus persuaded that the court a quo did not err in finding that
respondent was assaulted by members of the first Appellant.
16.
The appeal stands to be dismissed. However, in order to align the
order with findings of the court a quo the following order is made:
Order
1.
The appeal is dismissed
2.
First appellant is held liable for the assault
on the respondent
3.
The second appellant is held liable for the
arrest and detention of
the respondent
4.
The first and second appellants are ordered
to pay the costs jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved. Such costs to
include the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
M J MPSHE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
I agree
A BASSON
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
I agree
M LENYAI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DEVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances:
For appellant:
Adv M Jozana
instructed by The State Attorney, Pretoria
For respondent :
Adv Maphutha &
Adv S Seshoka instructed by Kgagudi Manaswe Attorneys
Date of hearing:
25 July 2024
Date of judgment :
17 September 2024
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