Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 408South Africa
Nkogatse v Minister of Police and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 408; 73663/2016 (2 June 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nkogatse v Minister of Police and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 408; 73663/2016 (2 June 2023)
Nkogatse v Minister of Police and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 408; 73663/2016 (2 June 2023)
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sino date 2 June 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 73663/2016
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
Date:
02 June 2023
In
the matter between:
HOSEA
MADIME NKOGATSE
PLAINTIFF
And
MINISTER
OF POLICE
FIRST
DEFENDANT
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
SECOND
DEFENDANT
This
judgment is issued by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is
submitted electronically to the parties/their legal representatives
by email. The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of
this matter on CaseLines by the Judge or her Secretary. The
date of
this judgment is deemed to be 02 June 2023.
JUDGMENT
# COLLIS J
COLLIS J
INTRODUCTION
1.
The plaintiff’s action against the first and second defendants
is premised against the first
defendant on their alleged conduct of
unlawful arrest and detention and against the second defendant on
their alleged conduct of
malicious prosecution. The plaintiff has
abandoned his claim of unlawful arrest and detention against the
first defendant and is
only proceedings against the second defendant.
ISSUES
TO BE DETERMINED
2.
The issue that this court was called upon to determine, as against
the second defendant is whether the
prosecution of the plaintiff was
lawful.
3.
The plaintiff’s claim is premised on two of arrests that
resulted in prosecutions. The first prosecution
resulted in the
plaintiff being found guilty and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.
4.
This conviction and sentence was set aside on special review and
remitted back to the
court a quo
for a retrial before a
different presiding officer. The reason for the conviction and
sentence to be set aside on review was as
a result of the plaintiff
not having been represented by an attorney who had right of
appearance in that court.
5.
The plaintiff was then re-arrested and charged again. He then
appeared before a different presiding
officer. During the second
prosecution he was found not guilty and discharged terms of section
174 of the Criminal Procedure Act.
This transpired on 29 October
2015.
6.
In respect of the claim for malicious prosecution this court was
called upon to determine the circumstances
of the second prosecution
which was instituted and terminated in favour of the plaintiff, i.e
whether such prosecution was unreasonable
and without probable cause
and further whether same was malicious. The remaining two
requirements are common cause between the
parties.
BACKGROUND
7.
The plaintiff is a former policeman who was with his friends on the
10 June 2007. On the day of the incident,
he was driving his Citroen
motor vehicle and Lufuno Rabumbulu (accused number 2) was driving VW
Golf. They were busy enjoying themselves
by indulging in drinking
liquor.
8.
Along their journey the plaintiff’s motor vehicle collided with
the VW Golf which Lufuno was driving
and the occupants of the VW Golf
climbed into the plaintiff’s Citroen. According to the
plaintiff’s testimony they
were about twelve (12) occupants in
his vehicle as a result.
9.
At Castenhof Clinic, along Allandale Road, Lufuno suggested that all
the men got out of the plaintiff’s
car to avoid damaging it.
Allandale Road is a dual carriage road. Loti remained in the
plaintiff’s vehicle. The plaintiff
then drove with the girls
and Loti towards a filling station in the direction of Ivory Park.
Lufuno and the other men were then
to catch a lift to Ivory
Park.
10.
The plaintiff drove further and stopped at a nearby filling station.
He dropped the ladies and drove
back to pick up Lufuno and the
others. That was the time when Lufuno and the others got a lift from
a red Ford Focus driven by
Simphiwe Kiyane with Phumzile Ntseke (the
deceased) as a passenger. The plaintiff then drove back to the
filling station, picked
up the ladies and he followed towards Ivory
Park.
11.
At the robot at Rabie Ridge, Lufuno took out his firearm and pointed
at the driver of the Ford
Focus, Simphiwe Kiyane and instructed him
to get out of the car. Simphiwe got out of the vehicle and ran away
to the opposite direction
leaving his car and Phumzile behind.
Phumzile also tried to escape but he was grabbed and pushed back into
the car. They drove
away with Phumzile to the direction of Ivory
Park.
12.
At or near Ivory Park Community Hall, Lufuno shot Phumzile twice. He
died on the spot. Xolani
and Nkosana took the deceased out of the car
as the group proceeded to King’s Palace at Tembisa. They
abandoned the Ford
Focus near King’s Palace in Tembisa. The
robbery of the Ford Focus and the killing of Phumzile happened out of
sight of the
plaintiff and the passengers in his vehicle.
13.
According to Simphiwe Kiyane, the next car that approached since he
was robbed of his Ford Focus was that
of the plaintiff. Simphiwe
Kiyane ran in front of the plaintiff’s car, stopping it. The
plaintiff stopped. It was at a robot.
Simphiwe Kiyane threw himself
into the car through a window. He told the plaintiff that he had been
robbed of his car. The plaintiff
then took Simphiwe to Rabie Ridge
police station to open a case. At the police station, the plaintiff
handed Simphiwe Kiyane to
the police and left.
14.
Lufuno called the plaintiff to come and pick the group up at King’s
Palace. The plaintiff indeed came
and took them home in groups. The
Ford Focus was surrounded by the police.
15.
The plaintiff was arrested on the 19 June 2007 at Ivory Park Police
Station by Captain Seretlo on charges
of robbery with aggravating
circumstances, kidnapping and murder under Ivory Park Cas
299/06/2007. This then in short, the circumstances
leading up to the
plaintiff’s arrest.
ONUS
16.
In respect of the malicious prosecution, the plaintiff bears the
onus
to prove that the prosecution was malicious.
THE
LAW
17.
As for the plaintiffs’ claim of malicious prosecution the
plaintiffs must allege and prove that
the prosecution:
(a) set
the law in motion – they instigated or instituted the
proceedings;
(b) acted
without reasonable and probable cause;
(c) acted
with malice (or
animo iniuriandi
); and
(d)
the
prosecution has failed.
[1]
18.
In
Magwabeni v Liomba
[2]
, the SCA
defined malicious prosecution as follows:
“
Malicious
prosecution consists of the wrongful and intentional assault on the
dignity of a person encompassing his good name and
privacy….”
19.
It is common cause that the defendant set the law in motion and that
the prosecution failed. The questions
before the court are whether
the second defendant acted without reasonable and probable cause and
whether the prosecution was malicious.
20.
In the decision Beckenstrater v Rottcher and Theunissen
(1955) 1 SA
129
(A) at 136A-B; Schreiner JA 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……this
[means] that he did not have such
information as would lead a
reasonable man to conclude that the plaintiff had probably been
guilty of the offence 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.”
HAS
THE SECOND DEFENDANT ACTED WITHOUT REASONABLE OR PROBABLE CAUSE.
21.
In
assessing as to whether the second defendant acted without
reasonable
or probable cause the decision of Moleko,
[3]
is instructive.
“
5.3.1
Animus injuriandi includes not only the intention to injure, but
also consciousness of wrongfulness:
In this regard animus
injuriandi (intention) means that the defendant directed his will to
prosecuting the plaintiff (and thus infringing
his personality), in
the awareness that reasonable grounds for the prosecution were
(possibly) absent, in other words, that his
conduct was (possibly)
wrongful (consciousness of wrongfulness). It follows from this that
the defendant will go free where reasonable
grounds for the
prosecutions were lacking, but the defendant honestly believed that
the plaintiff was guilty. In such a case the
second element of
dolus,
namely of consciousness of wrongfulness, and therefore animus
injuriandi,
will be lacking. His mistake therefore excludes
the existence of
animus injuriandi
.
5.3.2 The defendant must
thus not only have been aware of what he or she was doing in
instituting or initiating the prosecution,
but must at least have
foreseen the possibility that he or she was acting wrongfully, but
nevertheless continued to act, reckless
as to the consequences of his
or her conduct (
dolus
eventualis
). Negligence on
the part of the defendant (or, I would say, even gross negligence)
will not suffice.”
22.
The decision Beckenstrater v Rottcher and Theunissen quoted
supra
described the requirement for malicious arrest and prosecution to
be instituted in the 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 offence 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 held 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.”
23.
In order to assess as to whether the second defendant acted without
reasonable or probable cause, the
evidence of Mr Maphiri is
instructed.
EVIDENCE
24.
In this regard, Mr Maphiri testified that he was a Regional Court
prosecutor at the time of the
prosecution of the plaintiff and that
he knew his responsibilities in terms of the Prosecutions Directives.
25.
The prosecutor testified that in respect of the initial prosecution
he got involved with the prosecution
after the decision had already
been taken to prosecute the plaintiff. When he got involved, he read
the case docket before him
and was satisfied with the decision to
prosecute the plaintiff as a
prima facie
case was made out
against the plaintiff. The state had three witnesses, namely Thabo
Mokgale, Petunia and Simphiwe with Thabo Mokgale
being a section 204
witness. The prosecutor also testified that he was also the
prosecutor when the first conviction and sentence
was set aside on
review and a decision was thereafter taken to prosecute the plaintiff
de novo
.
26.
At all material times he testified that he harboured no animosity
towards the plaintiff as he
was with him during the first
prosecution. In relation to the second prosecution upon the matter
being remitted back to the trial
court to start the trial
de novo
he was satisfied that the evidence contained in the docket was
sufficient to establish a prima facie case against the plaintiff and
it is for this reason that he even was able to add an additional
charge of defeating the end of justice which was not initially
proffered against the plaintiff. In addition, he also had the
knowledge that the first prosecution resulted in a guilty conviction
and sentence albeit that the conviction and sentence was set aside on
review.
27.
He testified that the decision to prosecute was therefore supported
by objective facts and there were
reasonable prospects of another
successful prosecution. The decision to prosecute according to him
was therefore rational.
28.
Furthermore that even thought there was a court order from the High
Court ordering the case to be tried
de novo
and a directive
from the Provincial Director of Prosecution to prosecute the
plaintiff, he first satisfied himself that there was
a
prima facie
case against the plaintiff. He indeed was satisfied that a prima
facie case was made out against the plaintiff.
29.
On this basis he testified that a reasonable and probable cause
existed which warranted the second prosecution
and it is on this
basis that the second prosecution ensued.
30.
In respect of the second prosecution counsel on behalf of the second
defendant had argued, that the
plaintiff had failed to prove that his
prosecution was without reasonable and probable cause and furthermore
he failed to prove
that the defendant acted with
malice
.
31.
He further argued that the prosecution upon assessing the witnesses’
statements took a decision
to prosecute the plaintiff and that it
would have been a dereliction of duty if he had not done so.
32.
On point the counter-argument advanced on behalf of the plaintiff,
was that this Court should
first determine as to whether there was
one or two prosecutions. In this regard the plaintiff contends that
the prosecution commenced
on the 21 June 2007 when the plaintiff
appeared before the court for the first time and terminated on the 29
October 2015 when
he was discharged in terms of
Section 174
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
. The decision by the High Court to
review and set aside the conviction and sentence did not result in a
second decision to charge
the plaintiff but that the second defendant
proceeded with the initial decision to charge the plaintiff and made
an election to
add a further charge.
33.
In contrast the second defendant contends that the prosecution
commenced on the 21 June
2007 when the plaintiff appeared before the
court for the first time and terminated on the 12 May 2011 when the
plaintiff was convicted
and that a new prosecution commenced on the
19 May 2015 when the plaintiff appeared before the court for the
first time in the
de novo
trial until 29 October 2015 when he
was discharged.
34.
The argument advanced on behalf of the plaintiff that two
prosecutions ensued, to my mind is devoid of any
merit. This I say so
for the following reasons:
34.1 It
is common cause between the parties that the first trial resulted in
a conviction and sentence which was
ultimately set aside on review.
34.2 It
is further common cause that the setting aside of the conviction and
sentence culminated in the plaintiff
facing not only the initial
charges once again but also an additional charge of defeating the
ends of justice and that this trial
proceeded de novo before a
different presiding officer. If the initial prosecution was still
persisted with, it would have the
unintended consequences that no
additional charges could be added to those initially faced by the
plaintiff, or worse still that
a court directs what charges should be
proffered against an accused which will be against what falls within
the exclusive purview
of our Chapter 9 institution.
34.3
The inescapable conclusion must therefore be that the second trial
ensued with a second prosecution before
a different presiding officer
and it is for this reason that I find that two prosecutions ensued
and not one as contended for by
counsel for the plaintiff.
35.
The evidence presented by the prosecutor on point however was not
supported by any witness statements
contained in the case docket.
During the testimony of Mr. Maphiri he was unable to refer this Court
to any specific witness(es)
statement that pointed to the culpability
on the part of the plaintiff during the commissioning of these
offences. The prosecutor
in question was required to interrogate the
contents of the case docket to establish the plaintiff’s
culpability in the commissioning
of these offences and absent such
evidence it cannot be said that evidence existed that established a
reasonable and probable cause.
36.
For these reasons I therefore find that the plaintiff has discharged
his onus in proving this requirement
for malicious prosecution.
WHETHER
THE PROSECUTION ACTED WITH MALICE?
37.
The further issue which calls for determination by this Court is that
the plaintiff must show that his
prosecution was actuated by
malice
or action injuriandi
.
38.
In Patel v
NDPP and others,
[4]
it was held
that the prosecutor exercises his discretion on the basis of the
information before him or her.
39.
As per the Moleko decision, the defendant in a claim for malicious
prosecution must have, at the
time of instituting the prosecution
proceedings, foreseen the possibility that the institution of the
said prosecution proceedings
would in any event injure the plaintiff
and/or amount to malicious prosecution and then reconciled with
himself with the possibility.
40.
On behalf of the second defendant the argument advanced was that the
plaintiff has failed to meet the
test for malicious prosecution as
set out in the Maleko-decision quoted above.
41.
In the
matter of Relyant Trading (Pty) Limited v Shongwe
[5]
,
the court held that:
“
An arrest is
malicious where that defendant makes improper use of the legal
process to deprive the plaintiff of his liberty.”
42.
In this regard the argument advanced on behalf of the plaintiff is
that immediately upon his release
on 18 May 2015, following the
setting aside of his conviction and sentence, Warrant Officer Phaka,
on the strength of an invalid
warrant of arrest, arrested and
detained the plaintiff on the same charges.
43.
As a result thereof, the plaintiff appeared before the court on 19
May 2015. In addition to being charged
with the same charges as
before a further charge of defeating the ends of justice was also
added.
44.
In assessing this requirement, the question that this court will need
to answer is whether it can be
said that the prosecutor, in deciding
to prosecute the plaintiff in the circumstances of this case had the
required intention to
injure the plaintiff (animus injuriandi).
45.
In
Moleko
quoted
supra
the
court held as follows:
[6]
“
[63] Animus
injuriandi includes not only the intention to injure, but also
consciousness of wrongfulness:
‘
In this regard
animus injuriandi (intention) means that the defendant directed his
will to prosecuting the plaintiff
(and thus infringing
his personality), in the awareness that reasonable grounds for the
prosecution were (possibly) absent, in other
words, that his conduct
was (possibly) wrongful (consciousness of wrongfulness). It follows
from this that the defendant will go
free where reasonable grounds
for the prosecution were lacking, but the defendant honestly believed
that the plaintiff was guilty.
In such a case the second element of
dolus, namely of consciousness
of
wrongfulness,
and therefore animus iniuriandi, will be lacking. His mistake
therefore excludes the existence of animus iniuriandi.
[64] The defendant
must thus not only have been aware
of what he or she
was doing in instituting or initiating the
prosecution
but must at least have foreseen the possibility that he or she was
acting wrongfully, but nevertheless continued to
act, reckless as to
the consequences of his or her conduct (dolus eventualis). Negligence
on the part of the defendant (or, I would
say,
even
gross negligence) will not suffice
”.
46.
On behalf of the plaintiff it was argued that when the prosecutor
made the decision to prosecute, he
lacked evidence that would have
justified his decision to prosecute the plaintiff beyond reasonable
doubt. He made such a decision
conscious of the fact that he lacked
such evidence. He did so in direct contravention of the Code of
Conduct for Prosecutors.
47.
In casu
Mr Maphiri was not only the prosecutor who conducted
the initial prosecution but he was also the prosecutor when the trial
proceeded
de novo
. As such he was aware of the paucity of
evidence contained in the case docket and still proceeded to embark
on the second prosecution.
It is for this reason that counsel had
argued that the prosecutor had the required
animus
iniuriandi/malice
when the prosecution ensued.
48.
In addition counsel had also argued that the prosecutor knew that his
conduct would result in the incarceration
of the plaintiff for
extended periods and he also knew that the prosecution of the
plaintiff without evidence would infringe upon
the plaintiff’s
his right to dignity.
49.
The prosecutor by his decision taken, therefore directed his will
towards the injury of incarceration of the
plaintiff in circumstances
where the plaintiff did not meet the standard of reasonable
apprehension of guilt.
50.
As the plaintiff was not even present, so counsel had argued, when
the offences of kidnapping, robbery
with aggravating circumstances
and murder were committed, the second defendant, had insufficient
evidence to prove the elements
of the individual offences including
the offence of defeating the ends of justice and as such the
prosecutor acted with malice
under the circumstances.
51.
On behalf of the second defendant the argument advanced was that the
prosecutor, having been involved
in the initial prosecution had
insight into the case docket and was able to ascertain the strength
of the prosecutions’ case
and on the basis of the contents of
the case docket, had embarked on the second prosecution.
52.
The evidence presented by the plaintiff that he was not present when
the offences were committed and
that he even transported the
complainant to the police station remains uncontroverted. In
addition, the case docket further contains
no witness(es) statements
pointing to the participation of the plaintiff in the commissioning
of these offences which is indicative
of a prosecution which was
embarked upon with malice and an intention to injure. As such this
Court is satisfied that the plaintiff
has discharged his onus that
the prosecution acted with malice.
QUANTUM
53.
It is trite
that the trial court has a discretion to award what it considers
to be fair
and adequate compensation.
[7]
The court has to consider the facts
of the
particular case in the assessment of compensation.
[8]
In assessing an
appropriate
award to be made, the correct approach is to have regard to all the
facts of the particular case and to determine
[9]
the
quantum of damages on such facts ….”
[10]
54.
Any award made by a court must be fair to both parties. To the facts
applicable in this case, the plaintiff
testified that the prosecution
was painful and humiliating and that the prosecution resulted in his
incarceration. It was common
cause between the parties that the
plaintiff is a former police officer and as such it must have been a
very humiliating and degrading
experience for him, more so in
circumstances where it already has been found that his prosecution
was motivated by malice. In
casu
it is common cause that the
second trial lasted for just over a five-month period.
55.
In determining an appropriate award to be made by the court, this
court was referred to a number a caselaw
by either, parties to assess
previous awards made by our courts. As per the particulars of claim,
the plaintiff seeks an award
of an amount of R 5 million in respect
of his claim for malicious prosecution.
56.
This amount so claimed by the plaintiff was premised on the incorrect
stance adopted by counsel for
the plaintiff that there was one
prosecution in respect of which the plaintiff was incarcerated for an
extended period of time
instead of two prosecutions.
57.
As already found by this court, there was in fact two prosecutions
and it is the second prosecution
which this court has found to be
without reasonable or probable cause and motivated by malice since
there was no evidence at all
that the plaintiff had committed these
offences.
58.
Any award thus made by the court would be based on the period since
the second prosecution was embarked
upon until the plaintiff was
discharged in terms of
section 174
of Act 51 of 1977.
COSTS
59.
In as far as an appropriate costs order to be awarded in the event of
the plaintiff being successful,
the plaintiff had argued for costs on
an attorney scale to be warded to him as the prosecution was actuated
by malice.
60.
In the circumstances of this case, I do not believe that a punitive
costs order is warranted.
ORDER
61.
Consequently, the following order is made:
61.1
The second defendant should be ordered to pay the plaintiff an amount
of R 500 000.00 (FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND
RAND) for General damages.
61.2
The second defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs on
a party and party scale.
# C.J. COLLIS
C.J. COLLIS
# JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
# APPEARANCES:
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Adv
S Mbhalati
Attorney
for the Plaintiff:
Mokoena
Attorneys
Counsel
for the Defendants:
Adv
T T Tshivhase
Attorney
for the Defendants:
State
Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
10/10/22
Date
of Judgment:
06/02/23
[1]
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v
Maleko
[2008] 3
ALL SA 47
(SCA);
2009 (2) SACR 585
(SCA).
[2]
(198/2013)
[2015] ZASCA 117
(11 September 2015)
[3]
2131/07)
[2008] ZASCA 43
(31 March 2008) at paragraphs 63 and 64 on
page
31.
[4]
2018 (2) SACR 420
(KZD) (13 June 2018).
[5]
2006 JDR 0720 SCA at para 4 on page 4.
[6]
Ibid at para 63 and 64
[7]
Road Accident Fund v Marunga 2003(5) SA 164 SCA at 169f
[8]
Minister of Safety and security v Seymour
2006 (6) SA 320
SCA at
325B.
[9]
Minister of Safety and Security v Tyulu
2009 (5) SA 85
(SCA)
paragraph 26 at
930-F.
[10]
De Jong v Du Pisanie NO
2005 (5) SA 457
(HHA)
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