Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 248South Africa
Oosthuizen v Minister of Police [2023] ZAGPPHC 248; 23993/2016 (11 April 2023)
Headnotes
Summary of the grounds of appeal
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Oosthuizen v Minister of Police [2023] ZAGPPHC 248; 23993/2016 (11 April 2023)
Oosthuizen v Minister of Police [2023] ZAGPPHC 248; 23993/2016 (11 April 2023)
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sino date 11 April 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No:
23993/2016
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
SIGNATURE:
DATE:
11 APRIL 2023
In
the matter between:
OOSTHUIZEN
ANDRE
APPLICANT (PLAINTIFF)
And
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
RESPONDENT
(DEFENDANT)
JUDGMENT (LEAVE TO
APPEAL)
NDLOKOVANE
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1.]
The applicant/plaintiff in the main application applies for leave to
appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal, against the whole
judgment and
order I handed down on 06 October 2022.
[1]
The application for leave to appeal is opposed by the
respondent/defendant.
[2.]
For the sake of convenience, I will refer to the parties as they are
cited in the main judgment. After delivery of the judgment
on 06
October 2022, the plaintiff filed a detailed notice of application
for leave to appeal dated 26 October 2022,which contained
the grounds
of appeal.
[3.]
In paragraph 20 thereof, the plaintiff submits that the application
is based on the contention that the appeal has reasonable
prospects
of success as envisaged in section 17 of the Superior Courts Act 10
of 2023(‘the Act’).
[4.]
The defendant on the other hand contends that the application for
leave to appeal has no prospects of success and submits as
follows in
paragraphs 28 and 29 of their main heads of arguments:
“
28.
The Applicant does not meet any of
the statutorily imposed threshold for the granting of leave to
appeal. There is absolutely no
basis offered in this application to
satisfy this court that there are prospects of success.
29.
Based on the above, we submit that there is no reasonable prospect of
success and submit that the application must be dismissed
with
costs.”
[5.]
The essence of my order that the plaintiff seeks to appeal against is
situated in the main judgement at paragraph 50(a)and
can be summed up
as follows:
“
1.
The plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with costs”.
The
test in an application for leave to appeal
[6.]
Applications for
leave to appeal are governed by sections 16 and 17 of the Act.
Section 17(1) of the Act provides:
“
(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned
are of the opinion that
–
(a)
(i)
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments on the matter
under consideration.
(b)
the decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of
section 16((2)(a); and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues in the case,
the appeal would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties.
”
[7.]
With the enactment of section 17 of the Act, the test has now
obtained statutory force and is to be applied using the word
“
would”
in
deciding whether to grant leave. In other words, the test is would
another court come to a different decision. In the unreported
decision of the
Mont
Chevaux Trust v
Goosen
& 18 others,
[2]
the Land Claims Court held,
albeit
obiter
,
that the wording of the subsection raised the bar for the test that
now must be applied to any application for leave to appeal.
In
S
v Notshokovu,
[3]
it was held that an appellant faces a higher and stringent threshold
in terms of the Act comparted to the repealed Supreme Court
Act 59 of
1969.
[8.]
It is noteworthy that the phrase “
reasonable
prospects of success
”
in section 17(1) of the Act presupposes a measure of certainty that
the court of appeal would reach a different outcome.
What the test-
reasonable prospects of success postulates is a dispassionate
decision based on the facts and the law that a court
of appeal could
reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that of the trial
court.
[4]
In order to succeed,
the appellant must convince the court on proper grounds that he has
prospects of success on appeal and that
those prospects are not
remote but have a realistic chance of succeeding.
[5]
Summary
of the grounds of appeal
[9.]
I deal with the grounds of appeal under the main theme as postulated
by the plaintiff. However, I do not endeavour to deal
with each, and
every argument raised therein but only those arguments which are
central to the respective themes.
Whether
the defendant discharged onus placed on it as a result of its
admission of arrest?
[10.]
The plaintiff contends in his heads of arguments that
objectively
seen:
“
4.3
All the evidence confirms that only one 54-crate load of copper left
Wade Walker/Exxaro Grootgeluk mine on the day in question.
4.4
The only evidence of the existence of an additional 92-crate load of
copper is the say so of Capt. Baloyi.
4.5
The glaring omissions in the Defendant's case are as follows:
4.5.1
The Defendant failed to call Etienne Koekemoer to testify at trial or
to give an explanation why he is not available to testify
at trial in
order to confirm the correctness of the averments in his Affidavit,
deposed to, to Capt. Baloyi.”
[11.]
To support its contention, the plaintiff referred me to various
authorities and case law, I will recite some of the authorities
relevant to the question before me as follow:
“
Principles
of Evidence, Second Edition, PJ Schwikkard et al (2002) at page 513:
"A
party's failure to call available witnesses may in exceptional
circumstances lead to an adverse inference being drawn from
such
failure against the party concerned. The extent to which such an
inference can be drawn will depend on the circumstances of
the case.
The Court should, inter alia, consider the following: Was the party
concerned perhaps under erroneous but bona fide impression
that he
had proved his case and that there was therefore no need to have
called the witness? Is there a possibility that the party
concerned
believed that the potential witness was biased, hostile or
unreliable?"
[12.]
I was also referred to the case of
Shishonga
v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Another
2007
(4) SA 135
(LC) at paragraph 112
,
which provides that:
"[112]
The failure of a party to call a witness is excusable in certain
circumstances, such as when the opposition fails to
make out a prima
facie case. But an adverse inference must be drawn if a party fails
to testify or produce evidence of a witness
who is available and able
to elucidate the facts, as this failure leads naturally to the
inference that he fears that such evidence
will expose facts
unfavourable to him, or even damage his case. That inference is
strengthened if the witnesses have a public duty
to testify."
[13.]
The plaintiff further avers that
Capt
.
Baloyi could not and did not produce the averred register in which it
was allegedly recorded that on the said day, two loads of
copper
respectively 54-crates and 92-crates were delivered to Ellisras Scrap
Metal because of that the plaintiff submitted
that it is clear
that, objectively seen, all the documentation and the evidence
adduced on behalf of the Plaintiff confirms that
only one 54 crate
load of copper left Ellisras Scrap Metal on the day in question
[14.]
The plaintiff submits that I
erred
in not finding that the conclusions reached by the arresting officer,
Capt. Baloyi, were based on speculation, assumption,
and conjecture
and therefore, unreasonable under the circumstances. As a result of
this error that I made, the plaintiff
submitted that another
Court will find that the arresting officer, Capt. Baloyi, had not
reasonable come to the conclusion that
the crime of defeating the
ends of justice had been committed in his presence having regard to
the facts of this case and having
applied the case law thereto
as referred to in paragraph 6 of the plaintiff’s heads of
arguments:
[15.]
Relying on the authorities in
LAWSA
Second Edition Volume 6 paragraph 205 and 206 on page 202 to 203 and
Criminal Law CR Snyman Third Edition Butterworths paragraph
3 page
319 to 320,the plaintiff submitted that another Court would, on
application of the law to the facts, come to the conclusion
that the
Defendant failed to prove its defence on a balance of probabilities,
namely that the admitted arrest and detention is
lawful, having
regard to the provisions of Section 40(1)(a) of the Criminal
Procedure Act, Act 51 of 1977 (as amended).
Summary
of opposition to the application for leave to appeal
[16.]
In the main the defendant contends that the grounds for leave to
appeal advanced by the first respondent do not meet the stringent
test set out in section 17(1) of the Act.
[6]
[17.]
The defendant contends that
the
matter before the court
a quo
was not whether the State in particular the defendant has proved
beyond reasonable doubt that Plaintiff in the court
a
quo
committed an offence of
defeating the ends of justice. In support of its contention the
defendant refers me to case authorities
as well as shall be seen
hereunder.
The
defendant contends that the proceedings in the court
a
quo
were not of a criminal nature
but a civil case that required the defendant to prove on a
balance of probabilities that the
arrest of the Plaintiff was lawful
in terms of section 40(1)(a) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
("CPA"). In
so doing, the defendant had to prove the three
jurisdictional factors for arrest in terms of section 40(1)(a) of the
CPA. The jurisdictional
factors for section 40(1)(a) are: the
arrestor must be a peace officer; an offence must have been
committed or there must
have been an attempt to commit an offence;
and the offence or attempted offence must be committed in his or her
presence.
[18.]
Therefore there is no requirement to prove that the officer acted
reasonably in arresting the Plaintiff, all that needed to
be proven
was whether Captain Baloyi had reasonable suspicion that the
Plaintiff committed the offence of defeating the ends of
justice as a
Schedule 1 offence. Reasonable suspicion would be appropriate in case
of a plea of section 40(1)(b) of the CPA requiring
an officer to
arrest any person whom he reasonably suspects of having committed an
offence referred to in Schedule 1, other than
the offence of escaping
from lawful custody. An arrest in terms of section 40(1)(b) is only
permissible where the peace officer
entertains reasonable suspicion
that the person he is arresting has committed an offence listed in
Schedule 1. The jurisdictional
factors for section 40(1)(b) being the
arrestor must entertain a suspicion; suspicion must be that the
suspect committed a Schedule
1 offence and that the suspicion must
rest on reasonable grounds.
[19.]
Further it is evident that plaintiff’s case is that the
defendant failed to prove some of the above jurisdictional factors.
Having regard to the defendant's plea and case presented in the court
a quo
, the above requirements are irrelevant and any
reasonable suspicion of defendant's employees having failed the test
of reasonableness
for suspicion must be rejected and submits that the
Defendant’s case in terms of section 40(1)(a) has been
discharged.
[20.]
In support of its contention, I was referred to the case of
Scheepers
v Minister of Safety and Security
2015 (1) SACR 284
(ECG),
in
this case the court laid the principle regarding section 40(1)(a) by
holding that the assessment of determination of the legality
of an
arrest in terms of section 40(1)(a) requires a determination whether
facts observed by the arresting officer "as a matter
of law
prima facie
establish the commission of an offence in
question". His honest and reasonable conclusion from the facts
observed by him is
not of any significance to the determination of
the lawfulness of his conduct, but may, within the context of section
40(1)(a)
be relevant for determination of the
quantum
of
damages.
[21]
The above by ADJP Van Zyl rejected the AD decision in Tsotse's arrest
made in terms of the predecessor of section 40(1)(a)
would be lawful
if the arrester, as a result of his observations, entertained the
honest and reasonable belief that a crime was
committed, so the
plaintiff’s submission goes.
[22.]
Relating to the facts of the present case and evidence presented in
the court
a quo
, the defendant avers, the facts observed in
line with Scheepers's principle supporting justification of arrest in
terms of section
40(1)(a) are:
“
22.1
The Plaintiff was asked during a meeting at Lephalale about his last
load delivered which he responded to be 54 crates and
he made a
statement in that regard and During the meeting it was revealed that
Mr Ettiene Koekemoer was the one tasked to cut the
off-cuts;
22.2
Mr Koekemoer was called into the meeting, in the presence of the
Plaintiff, asked a question about the last load on the date
in
question, which he responded that it was 92 crates, which were loaded
and the Plaintiff confirmed the loads, the Plaintiff did
not dispute
the allegations, Mr Koekemoer was requested to make a statement which
was deposed and relied on with other information
by arresting officer
to arrest;
22.3
Further investigations by the arresting officer at Ellisras Scrap
Metal revealed two different invoices for the two loads with
two huge
different amounts reflecting the two loads;
22.4
Documents submitted by the Plaintiff in particular the two weighing
tickets supported the invoices relied on by the arresting
officer
that they are in sequence and different;
22.5
The Plaintiff when confronted during arrest was apologetic and said
he was working for his family and furthermore did not make
any
exculpatory statement presenting his version or defence and exercised
his right to remain silent.
22.6
The above justified the arrest and refute any contention that the
officer failed to investigate before arrests as facts observed
and
investigation justified arrest. The Plaintiff was arrested and
brought to justice/court within the prescribed time limits.”
[23.]
Based on the above, no case has been
made for leave to appeal and the application must be dismissed with
costs, so the defendant
submits.
Conclusion
[24.]
Having considered the arguments presented by the plaintiff and
the defendant with regard to whether the defendant discharged
its
onus and the authorities they referred me to , I am of the view that
there is no reasonable prospect that another court
would come
to a different decision. It is so especially considering the findings
I made in the main judgement from paragraphs 43-50.As
it is trite
that for a peace officer ,in the present case Baloyi to be placed in
a position to rely upon s40(1)(a),it is not necessary
that the crime
in fact be committed or that the arrestee(the plaintiff in the
present case) be later charged and convicted of the
suspected
offence.
[7]
ORDER:
[
25]
In the result the following order is made:
(a)
The application for leave to appeal to
the Supreme Court of Appeal is refused with costs.
N NDLOKOVANE AJ
ACTING 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 and by
circulation to the
parties and their legal representatives by email and by uploading it
to the electronic file of this matter on
Caselines. The date for
handing down is deemed to be 11 April 2023
APPEARANCES
:
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF:
ADV.
T DE KLERK
FOR
THE DEFENDANT:
ADV.
W MOTHIBE
DATE
OF HEARING:
25
NOVEMBER 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
11
April 2023
[1]
Preamble to the Notice of Application for Leave to Appeal at para 1,
First Respondent’s Heads of Argument (Application
for Leave to
Appeal) at para 2, Founding Affidavit to the Applicant’s
Urgent Application at para 10.
[2]
2014
JDR 2325 (LCC) para 6.
[3]
[2016]
ZASCA 112
para
7.
[4]
S
v Smith
2012
(1) SACR 567
, 570 para 7.
[5]
Supra.
[6]
Applicant’s Heads of Argument (Opposition to Application for
Leave to Appeal) at para 10.
[7]
2011(1)
SACR 63 (WCC).
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