Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 586South Africa
Radebe v Minister of Police and Another (16581/2012) [2023] ZAGPPHC 586 (18 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
18 July 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Radebe v Minister of Police and Another (16581/2012) [2023] ZAGPPHC 586 (18 July 2023)
Radebe v Minister of Police and Another (16581/2012) [2023] ZAGPPHC 586 (18 July 2023)
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sino date 18 July 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
Number:
16581/2012
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
18 July 2023
SIGNATURE: JANSE VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN J
In
the matter between:
BRIAN RADEBE
Plaintiff
and
THE MINISTER OF POLICE
First
Defendant
THE NATIONAL DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second
Defendant
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J:
[1]
The plaintiff claims for damages he suffered as a result of his
unlawful arrest and
detention by a member of the first defendant
(referred to herein after as “the defendant”). The
plaintiff also claimed
damages against the second defendant for
malicious prosecution but did not persist with the claim.
[2]
The only issue in dispute between the parties is whether reservist
captain Janse van
Rensburg who effected the arrest of the plaintiff
acted within the jurisdictional requirements contained in
section
40(1)(b)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
.
Evidence
[3]
The defendant bore the onus to establish on a balance of
probabilities that captain
Janse van Rensburg acted within the ambit
of
section 40(1)(b).
[4]
Captain Janse van Rensburg (the captain) testified in respect of the
arrest. In order
to establish whether the captain had a reasonable
suspicion that the plaintiff committed a crime. It is first of all,
incisive
to have regard to the contents of the witness statement he
deposed to on the day of the arrest.
[5]
I will only refer to the relevant portions of the statement:
“
2.
On Sunday the 5
th
of April 2009 at about 13:37 I received a phone call from a Mr Madiro
Godfrey Fungurandi. He told me that on his way from church
he got
pulled over by police officers near Wemmerpan and was kept in the
back of a police van. He was apparently later taken out
and he paid
R50 to a police officer at the roadblock.
5.
Part of the
description of the one suspect is that he was wearing braces on his
teeth.
7.
While we were standing
at the back of the CSC office waiting to get a chance to speak on the
radio the complainant told me that
it is the three police officers
coming out of the door.
8.
The police officers
became known to me as:
…
. Cst. M.L.
Tshabalala;
…
.Cst. A.E.
Mabasa;
…
.Cst S.B.
Radebe
[the
plaintiff in
casu
].
9.
I asked the
complainant if he was sure that these were the policeman. He
confirmed.
10.
Cst S.B. Radede had
braces in his mouth as described by the complainant.
11.
The complainant
identified Cst. M. L. Tshabalala as the police officer he gave the
money to.
13.
Cst. Tshabalala (sic)
and Cst. Radebe told me that they were using BS 39. A marked VW City
Golf Chico.. Cst Mabasa stated that he
was driving a Ford Ranger …..
[a
police van].
14.
I arrested the three
members and disarmed them. I informed them of their rights and the
reason I was arresting them for. The reason
for their arrest being
that of suspected corruption.”
[6]
In his evidence in chief the captain elaborated on his statement. I
only refer to
the further facts that are relevant to determine the
issues in dispute. The captain testified that the complainant,
subsequent
to identifying the three police officers, informed him
that one police officer was in the police van and two in the Golf.
[7]
It seems that after the complainant pointed out the three officers,
constable Mabasa,
whom the captain presumed was a student, said: “
I
am sorry! I am sorry!”
. The plaintiff spoke to constable
Mabasa in a language the captain did not understand, but he presumed
that the plaintiff told
constable Mabasa to keep quiet.
[8]
The captain then asked the three police officers whether they wanted
to explain what
happened, to which they replied: “
No, we
will wait for a lawyer.”
Whilst waiting for their lawyer
the captain arrested them.
[9]
The captain further testified that he was told by Fungurani that
Fungurani was taken
to a police van and told to sit in the back.
There were several people seated at the back. The persons at the back
were called
one by one and never returned to the police van.
Fungurani was the last person to be called and he was taken to
constable Tshabalala
who said to him: “
Let’s talk”
.
Fungurani presumed that meant that constable Tshabalala wanted money
/ a bribe and he told him that he did not have any money
on him.
[10]
He enquired from his wife and a friend that was with him in the car,
whether they had money and
the friend said she had R 100,00 in her
possession. Fungurani had R 50, 00 in his possession. The Golf
vehicle stopped next to
him and he placed the R 50, 00 on the
passenger seat next to constable Tshabalala.
[11]
During cross-examination the captain admitted that the spontaneous
exclamation by constable Mabasa
and the fact that neither of the
police officers were willing to give a version of events, were
essential facts. When confronted
with the fact that he neglected to
include these essential facts in the statement he deposed to
immediately after the arrest, the
captain could not offer a
reasonable explanation for his failure to do so.
[12]
The captain was referred to a judgment in the Magistrate’s
Court dated 8 December 2015
in a matter pertaining to constable
Tshabalala in which the Magistrate stated that the captain testified
that he did not give the
three police officers an opportunity to give
him a version of events. The captain admitted that the judgment was
correct in this
regard, thereby conceding that he did not grant the
three police officers an opportunity to give their version. This
admission
contradicts the captain’s evidence in chief in this
regard.
[13]
The defendant closed its case after the testimony of the captain and
the plaintiff closed his
case without presenting any evidence.
Legal principles and
discussion
[14]
Mr Bester SC, counsel on behalf of the plaintiff, referred to a
recent Supreme Court of Appeal
matter, which in essence confirms the
test applicable to
section 40(1)(b)
as set out in
Mabona and
Another v Minister of Law and Others
1988 (2) SA 654
SECLD at p.
658 E – H, to wit:
“
It authorises
an arrest on the strength of a suspicion and without the need to
swear out a warrant, ie something which otherwise
would be an
invasion of private rights and personal liberty. The reasonable man
will therefore analyse and access the quality of
the information at
his disposal critically, and he will not accept it lightly without
checking 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. This is not
to say that the information at
his disposal must be of sufficiently high quality and cogency
engender in him a conviction that
the suspect is in fact guilty. The
section requires suspicion not certainty. However, the suspicion must
be based upon solid grounds.
Otherwise, it will be flighty or
arbitrary, and not a reasonable suspicion.”
[15]
The problem with the captain’s evidence, which Mr Malowa SC,
counsel for the defendant,
to his credit readily conceded, is the
absolute lack of any facts that would form the basis for a suspicion
that the plaintiff
committed bribery. At best and due to the fact
that the plaintiff did wear braces at the time, one can presume that
the plaintiff
was one of the police officers at the roadblock.
[16]
There is, however, absolutely no evidence as to how, when and where
the plaintiff committed bribery.
On Fungurani’s version the
plaintiff was not even present when constable Tshabalala interacted
with him. The R 50, 00 was
also, according to Fungurani placed on the
passenger seat next to constable Tshabalala.
[17]
A further factor that disposes of any notion that the captain could
have formed a reasonable
suspicion, is his failure to give the
plaintiff an opportunity to give his version of events.
[18]
In the result, I find that there was no information to the captain’s
disposal on which
he could form a suspicion that the plaintiff
committed bribery.
Conclusion
[19]
After the first defendant closed its case, Mr Bester applied for a
separation of merits and quantum
and an order in terms of
rule 33(4)
for the separation was granted.
[20]
Insofar as the costs are concerned, I was informed by the parties
that costs were reserved on
17 January 2022 and requested to include
such costs in the cost order.
ORDER
The following order is
issued:
1.
The first
defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s proven or agreed
damages.
2.
The first
respondent is ordered to pay the costs, which costs include the
reserved costs of 17 January 2022.
N. JANSE VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
DATE
HEARD:
24
May 2023
DATE
DELIVERED:
18
July 2023
APPEARANCES
For
the Plaintiff:
Advocate
TWG Bester SC
Instructed
by:
Loubser
van Wyk Inc
For
the Defendant’s:
Advocate
M Malowa SC
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney, Pretoria
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