Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 29South Africa
Mudau v Minister of Police (21903/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 29 (27 January 2022)
Headnotes
“the constitutionality of an arrest will almost invariably be heavily dependent on its factual circumstances”. With reference to the various preceeding judgments to which the parties in that matter referred to it was held that “the lawfulness of an arrest is highly fact-specific” (at paragraphs 17 -19).
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mudau v Minister of Police (21903/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 29 (27 January 2022)
Mudau v Minister of Police (21903/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 29 (27 January 2022)
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sino date 27 January 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1) REPORTABLE: NO.
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3) REVISED.
DATE:
27 JANUARY 2022
CASE
NO: 21903/2018
In
the matter between:
TSHIFIWA
SAMUEL MUDAU
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Respondent
J
U D G M E N T
This matter has been heard in
open court and disposed of in the terms of the Directives of the
Judge President of this Division. The
judgment and order are
accordingly published and distributed electronically.
DAVIS, J
[1]
Introduction
In this action the plaintiff
claimed damages pursuant to an alleged unlawful arrest and detention
by members of the South African
Police Service. The arrest was
on the basis of suspicion of intimidation and conspiracy to commit
murder. It was done
without a warrant and the period of
detention was for four days. After separation of issues, the
matter proceeded in respect
of the issue of merits only.
[2]
Plaintiff’s
pleaded cause of action
The plaintiff has formulated his case simply as follows:
“
On the 9
th
of September 2016 and at Pretoria, the plaintiff was arrested without
a warrant by unknown members of the South African Police Service.
Thereafter the plaintiff was detained at Olievenhoutbosch Police
Station for four days at the instance of the aforesaid policemen
and
various other policemen whose names are unknown to the plaintiff
”.
[3]
The pleaded defence
3.1
Two special pleas of
non-compliance with the provisions of section 3 of the Institution of
Legal Proceedings against certain Organs
of State Act 40 of 2002 have
since been abandoned and were not proceeded with.
3.2
The plea on the merits
went as follows:
“
3
On
the 9
th
September 2016, Constable Mhlongo arrested the plaintiff without a
warrant.
3.3
Constable
Mhlongo was justified in arresting the plaintiff by virtue of the
provisions of section 40 (1)(b) by virtue of the following:
3.3.1
That on the 9
th
September 2016 at Olivenhoutbosch Police Station, Constable Mhlongo
was the arresting officer as defined in Act 51 of 1977.
3.3.2
That on the same
day, Constable Mhlongo arrested the plaintiff who he reasonable
suspected to have committed an offence contemplated
in Schedule 1 of
Act 51 of 1977, to wit conspiracy to commit murder.
3.3.3
The arrest and
detention were therefore lawful”.
[4]
The applicable law
4.1
It is trite that the
liberty of a person is a constitutionally entrenched right.
Section 12 of the Constitution expressly provides
that “
everyone
has the right of freedom and security of the person, which includes
the right … not to be deprived of freedom arbitrarily
or without
just cause
”.
4.2
It follows that a
deprivation of freedom without a warrant or a statutorily prescribed
reason would be “without just cause” and
therefore unlawful.
4.3
Section 40(1)(b) of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 19477 (the CPA), being the statutory
justification relied on by the defendant,
provides as follows: “
A
peace officer may without a warrant arrest any person … (b) whom he
reasonably suspects of having committed an offence referred
to in
Schedule 1 …”.
Conspiracy
to murder is such an offence.
4.4
In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Van Niekerk
2008 (1) SACR 56
(CC), the court held that “
the
constitutionality of an arrest will almost invariably be heavily
dependent on its factual circumstances
”.
With reference to the various preceeding judgments to which the
parties in that matter referred to it was held that “
the
lawfulness of an arrest is highly fact-specific
”
(at paragraphs 17 -19).
4.5
In the more recent case
of
De Klerk v
Minister of Police
2021 (4) SA 585
(CC), a plaintiff who seeks compensation for unlawful
arrest and detention must satisfy the following requirements (summed
up at
paragraph 14 of the majority judgment):
“
(a) the plaintiff
must establish that [his/her] liberty has been interfered with;
(b) the plaintiff must
establish that this interference occurred intentionally. In
claims for unlawful
arrest, the plaintiff need only show that the
defendant acted intentionally in depriving their liberty and not that
the defendant
knew that it was wrong to do so;
(c) The deprivation of
liberty must be wrongful, with the onus falling on the defendant to
show why it is
not and
(d) the
plaintiff must establish that the conduct of the defendant must have
caused, both legally and factually,
the harm for which compensation
is sought
”
.
4.6
It has been confirmed
that “
the issue as
to whether the plaintiff’s detention was consistent with the
principle of legality and his right to freedom and security
”
is a constitutional matter. See
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
(above) at paragraph 11 and
Zealand
v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development
[2008] ZACC 3
;
2008 (4) SA 458
(CC) at paragraph 22.
4.7
The present case
primarily turned on the issue of wrongfulness and whether the
justification provided for in the above quoted section
of the CPA has
been present, as all the other facts relating to the actual arrest,
the subsequent detention and whether the arresting
and detaining
officers had been acting within their course and scope of their
duties as police officers, were all common cause.
[5]
The case for the
defendant:
5.1
Two policemen testified
on behalf of the defendant. They were the two members of the
South African Police Service who had effected
the arrest of the
plaintiff. They were both stationed at Olivenhoutbosch police
station.
5.2
Sergeant Mohlongo
testified that he had been a member of the South African Police
service since the commencement of his training in
2009. He confirmed
that he had been in uniform and on duty since 06h00 on the day in
question, being 9 September 2016. A complainant
had called the
police call number (10111) pursuant to which sergeant Mohlongo and
his partner had been dispatched to the Spur restaurant
at the Grey
Owl Mall. When the two policemen arrived at the restaurant,
they were approached by the complainant, a Mr Shah
Alam, who
requested police assistance. The complainant told Sergeant
Mohlongo that he had been driven by his driver, Mr Adam
Maake, in his
vehicle since 05h30 that day. Based on a report from the driver
that the plaintiff had “issues” with the
driver’s boss, they
had picked up the plaintiff in Musina. The “issue” was
reportedly that “someone” had paid the
plaintiff to kill the
complainant. The complainant explained that the plaintiff was
picked up under false pretenses and did
not at the time know what the
intended target of the contract killing looked like, but merely knew
his name. The plaintiff
had allegedly also told the driver that
he wanted to meet the target of the contract killing, being the
complainant, face to face
“
to
tell him someone had paid him (the Plaintiff) to kill him (the
complainant)
” (in
the words of sergeant Mohlongo). When the complainant and his
driver arrived at the Grey Owl Mall, they were met in
the Spur by a
private investigator who had been employed by the cmplainant after he
had been receiving threatening messages that
he and his family would
be killed unless he paid the sender of the message a sum of money,
the amount of which was not mentioned
in court. Apart from the
employment of the private investigator, the complainant had also laid
a charge of intimidation at
the Musina Police Station. One of
the threatening cellphone massages was shown to Sergeant Mohlongo.
Sergeant Mohlongo then
asked the driver whether he knew anything
about the complaint related by the complainant. The driver confirmed
every detail thereof.
After having received this report, the
two policemen proceeded to the Spur restaurant on foot where the
complainant pointed out the
plaintiff. It was at this
stage that the complainant stated that he feared for his life as a
result of the arranged contract
killing. When the two policemen
approached the plaintiff, sergeant Mohlongo confronted him with the
allegation that he was
contracted to kill the complainant. The
plaintiff denied this, claiming to know nothing about anything of the
sort. Sergeant
Mohlongo then asked how did it come about that
the plaintiff had travelled to Pretoria with the complainant and his
driver to which
the plaintiff responded that he had been invited to
do so by the complainants’ driver. Sergeant Mohlongo then
asked the complainant
whether he knew the plaintiff and the answer
was in the negative. Sergeant Mohlongo asked the complainant
about the private
investigator’s role, apart from the fact that he
had apparently detained the plaintiff until the arrival of the police
officers.
The answer was that the private investigator had
apparently been hired by the complainant to assist in the
intimidation case since
no-one in Musina knew of or could find a
suspect therein. Sergeant Mohlongo testified that he and his
partner at that time
held “a strong belief” that the plaintiff
was involved in a conspiracy to murder the complainant and feared,
now that the plaintiff
had found out the identity of the target as a
result of the occurrences mentioned above, that the complainant’s
life might be in
danger. The sergeant’s view was that if he
did not effect an arrest and allow someone who had been accused of
being a contract
killer and who gave an implausible explanation of
being in the intended victim’s presence, to remain at large while
the complainant
returned to Musina “anything could happen on the
way”. Based on this he formed the opinion that a schedule 1
offence, being
a conspiracy to murder, might still be under way.
The plaintiff was then informed of his rights and the police’s
suspicions
and was then promptly searched and arrested.
5.3
Cross-examination
elicited that there were in fact two private investigators present in
the Spur restaurant, that no fire-arm or weapon
was found on the
plaintiff’s person, but only a wallet and cellphone, which had been
booked into Olivenhoutbosch police station
prior to the plaintiff’s
transfer to the Weidabrug police station. At different times
during his cross-examination, sergeant
Mohlongo repeated that he
believed the plaintiff to have been involved in a conspiracy to
murder the complainant and, if left unapprehanded,
he could complete
his mission now that he had identified the complainant.
Sergeant Mohlongo was also referred to a statement
made by himself
contained in the docket. He confirmed the statement and the
correctness thereof. It read virtually the
same as his evidence
in chief but with added detail regarding vehicle identities,
registration numbers and cellphone numbers of relevant
persons.
It also included the case reference of the intimidation complaint
laid in Musina, which particulars the private investigator
had
supplied.
5.4
After the arrest, the
matter was handed over to an investigating officer, one sergeant
Manyua. Before any further investigation
could take place,
however, at the plaintiff’s first scheduled appearance the
following Monday, the state prosecutor determined
as follows (as per
his or her notes in the docket): “
The
accused was arrested is supposed to be a witness, he did not have the
intention to kill the person. How could he inform
the person if
he want to kill him?
”.
It is not known what informed this note or the determination, but
pursuant to it the case against the plaintiff was withdrawn.
It
is not clear whether the plaintiff indeed appeared in court.
When this was put to sergeant Mohlongo he replied that the
plaintiff
had not denied any intention to him nor had he disclosed any intended
warning, he had simply pleaded agnostic to the whole
business and
gave an implausible reasons for him having travelled to Pretoria.
When pushed, sergeant Mohlongo speculated that
the alleged intention
to warn the complainant might have been a ploy to get close to him.
this was however never disclosed
to the sergeant and he had to weigh
up the complainant’s fear and his version,
with some corroboration
from his driver, against a bald or doubtful
denial by the plaintiff. In re-examination, the complainant was
described as a
short skinny man while the plaintiff was a tall,
well-built man. I interpose to state that his imposing physique
also accorded
with the court’s observation of him.
5.5
Sergeant Mavhunga also
testified. He had two years seniority on sergeant Mohlongo.
He confirmed that, while the two of
them had been on patrol, they
received the “10111 complaint” from radio control which caused
them to proceed to the Grey Owl
Mall. His version accords with
that of Sergeant Mohlongo as to what transpired there. He,
however, had interviewed the
driver while Sergeant Mohlongo had
interviewed the complainant. After the two policemen had
compared notes, they approached
and confronted the complainant.
The plaintiff denied any knowledge of a plot to kill the complainant
and did not allege that
he had come to warn the complainant as may
have been suggested. Sergeant Mavhungu determined that, in the
absence hereof, the
only reason why a person accused of having been
hired to kill someone would travel from Musina to Pretoria, seeking
to identify or
meet up with the intended target, would be to put the
plan into operation. In describing the physical differences
between the
plaintiff and the complainant, he described the former as
“a giant” compared to the skinny complainant.
5.6
Sergeant Mavhungu was
confronted with the plaintiff’s version as contained in a
subsequent letter of demand by his attorneys.
The relevant part
read: “
Our client
instructed us that on 7 September 2016 he was telephonically called
by one Adam telling him that his employer wants to
see him.
Adam’s employers Shalom (Shah Alam) was looking for our client’s
friend Joumal Abedin. On the 9
th
September 2016 one Adam called again telling our client that his boss
says they can use his motor vehicle to go and look for our
client’s
friend. The same day Adam came with a young asian male driving
a vehicle. Our client joined them and they
drove to Musina Town
and they were later accompanied by three Bangladeshi nationals, two
of them known to our client. They
drove with a Golf-R until
they reached Polokwane and Shalom insisted that they should proceed
to Pretoria as he wanted to fetch his
other vehicle there. They
indeed drove to Pretoria and entered a certain restaurant wherein
Shalom wanted to drink cappuccino.
Whilst still there our
client was approached by one of two white males who were seated
there, who grabbed him and told him not to
move. Our client was
surprised and asked them what is the problem and he was told that he
will soon know. Shalom sat
there not saying anything until one
of the white males persons called the police. The member of the
South African Police Services
indeed came and our client was taken to
Olievenhoutbosch police station. The police came to the scene
with a marked police
vehicle and were dressed in police uniform ….
At the police station our client was informed that he had conspired
with another
person to kill Sahlom and he got surprised as he had
done nothing wrong …
”.
Sergeant Mavhungu stated that such a version was never given to them
by the plaintiff. He repeated, in response to
various questions
put to him in cross-examination that, had the plaintiff given a
version, be that of an intention to warn the complainant
or not, he
might have viewed the matter differently but, given the reports made
by the complainant and his driver, he was so sufficiently
convinced
that the plaintiff was part of an ongoing conspiracy to kill the
complainant, that he had to be arrested.
[6]
The plaintiff’s
evidence:
6.1
The plaintiff testified
that he knew the complainant’s driver as someone who used to visit
his grandmother, who is a traditional
healer. According to him,
the driver had called on 9 September 2016 and arranged to pick up the
plaintiff to take him to the
driver’s boss who wanted to know the
whereabouts of one Joubal, who used to be an employee of the driver’s
boss. The plaintiff
was duly picked up by the driver by car.
In the car was an unknown young “Asian man”. They went into
Musina town
and picked up two other “Indian men”. The
plaintiff was asked to sit in the front passenger seat. They
drove to Polokwane
where the plaintiff asked the driver to arrange to
speak to his boss. The driver said they had to be go Pretoria
first which
they did, dropping the other gentlemen on the way.
They never talked much on the way until they got to the Grey Owl Mall
where
the driver stopped and said, lets go in and talk. There
the plaintiff was accosted by two white gentlemen who wanted to know
where Joumal was. The plaintiff told them that all he knew was
that Joumal had also occasionally visited his grandmother’s
place.
He was also asked about the whereabouts of a Mr Sakie, who he did not
know. Thereafter the police was phoned and
sergeant Mohlongo
and sergeant Mavhunga arrived.
6.2
About what happened
between the plaintiff and the policemen before he got arrested, the
detail was somewhat unclear. The plaintiff
said that the police
told him that they had received a call that he was trying to “kill
this Bangladeshi guy”. He then
gave them “his side of the
story” (without elaborating what that was). The police then
said that it did not make sense
and they asked him to step outside.
The plaintiff testified that he then knew “this story is not going
to go well”.
He then said: “its fine, take me to the police
station”.
6.3
Upon further probing by
his counsel as to whether the police had put it to the plaintiff that
he had approached the driver in order
to tell his boss to pay Joubal
money, the plaintiff responded that he had answered that the driver
had approached him to tell “them”
where Joubal was.
6.4
The plaintiff denied
that he had been told why he was being arrested, that he had been
advised of his rights and said that he was
actually only arrested at
the “reception” at the police station, at the instance of the two
white men who had been at Spur.
6.5
The plaintiff was
referred to a Notice of Rights document signed by him and it was not
clear from his evidence whether this had been
handed to him at the
Spur or at the police station. It is a formal document in a
standard form whereby a suspect is informed
of his Constitutional
rights.
6.6
The plaintiff was also
referred to a completed statement of “Interview with a Suspect”,
completed by a constable Mtimbani on the
next day 10 September 2016.
The plaintiff remembered this document and that he had indicated
therein that he will make a statement
in court. He however
testified that the police officer who conducted this interview told
him that his case does not make sense
and once he was “out”, he
should get someone to help him.
6.7
As part of his evidence
in chief, the plaintiff testified that he was aware of a workplace
“misunderstanding” between Joumal and
the driver’s boss.
He also knew that Joumal had approached “people from Uganda” who
had tried to blackmail Joumal “through
the boss”. He had
been in telephonic communication with Joumal. The plaintiff had
not been paid anything by Joumal
and he had not discussed anything of
the sort with the driver. Joumal had however “approached”
the plaintiff to talk to
“them” on his behalf.
6.8
In cross-examination,
when asked why none of these various versions or reasons for
accompanying the driver to Pretoria were related
to the interviewing
policeman at the station, the plaintiff responded: “
Sometimes
things slip your mind
”.
[7]
Evaluation
7.1
It is clear that there
is much more to this matter than that which had been related in
court, particularly in relation to the involvement
of the plaintiff
with the complainants’ ex-employee Joumal (or Joubal). At one
stage, the plaintiff said he had heard from
the driver that the
complainant was even Joumal’s brother in law.
7.2
What is also clear, is
that the plaintiff’s version is riddled with inconsistencies and
obfuscation. For example: at one stage
the plaintiff said he
was asked to accompany the driver to explain to the driver’s boss
the whereabouts of Joumal and at another
stage the plaintiff said he
was asked by Joumal to speak to “them” (the driver and his boss)
on Joumal’s behalf. The
plaintiff never furnished an
explanation as to what this would have been about. From the
plaintiff’s evidence, it is also
not clear who would be
blackmailing whom. When questioned about any knowledge of a
planned murder, the plaintiff’s version
was even more astounding.
He said that he had heard about a message to the effect that “
if
you don’t pay us money, we’re going to tell Joumal’s boss that
he hired them to kill Shalom
”.
When one tries to make sense of this version of the message, it is
not clear whether this was a reference to the message
on the
complainant’s phone, which he had shown to the arresting officers
and which clearly said something else, or not.
7.3
Irrespective of the
haze of obscurity which has been drawn across the true facts,
particularly by the plaintiff, one must assess,
on the evidence
disclosed to the arresting officers, whether their conduct,
objectively viewed, fell within the ambit of section
40(1)(b) of the
CPA. The evidence confronting the two officers in question was
this:
-
A complainant had
stated a fear for his life from a suspected contract killer.
-
The purported contract
killer was lured by car to Pretoria.
-
The complainant’s
employee, the driver of the car, confirmed the identity of the
suspected contract killer and that he had been
told about the
contract killing by this suspect.
-
The suspected contract
killer was a huge man and his intended victim a small “skinny”
person.
-
After the occurrences
at the Grey Owl Mall, the suspected contract killer had no doubt
about the identity of the intended victim,
of which, according to all
accounts, he previously only knew by name.
-
The threats on the life
of the complainant (and his family) were confirmed by a cellphone
message shown to the police.
-
The suspected contract
killer could give no plausible explanation to the police for him
having travelled from Musina to Pretoria,
when confronted with the
above allegations.
7.4
In respect of
whether a plausible explanation had been given to the police or
not, I am prepared to accept the evidence of the
two policemen.
They gave clear and unequivocal corroborating evidence while the
plaintiff’s version(s) were both insufficient
in cogency and so
unclear that they could not be afforded credibility over those of the
arresting officers. In fact, his refusal
to even give an
explanatory statement to the later interviewing officer, lends
further credence to the allegation that he had similarly
refused to
give such an explanation prior to his arrest. There is no
evidence on why or based on what disclosures or discussions
the
prosecutor made the later decision to withdraw the case without
further investigation.
7.5
It is not certain
whether the plaintiff had been involved in the intimidation of the
complainant although he clearly knew something
about it.
However, even based on the plaintiff’s own convoluted explanation
of knowledge of the case pending in Musina, the
arresting officer had
insufficient grounds to arrest the plaintiff on a charge of
intimidation. This makes little difference
however, as I find
based on the evidence set out by the officers and in particular that
summarised in paragraph 7.3 above, that their
suspicion that the
crime of conspiracy to murder, being an offence as contemplated in
schedule 1 of the CPA, had been committed (and
might very well still
have been ongoing) at the time of the arrest, was reasonable.
7.6
I conclude therefore,
that the plea of justification has sufficiently been proven. It
follows that the arrest and subsequent
detention had not been
unlawful. Once the merits of the matter had been disposed of in
this fashion, it is the end of the matter.
[8]
Costs
I find no reason to deviate from the customary rule that
costs should follow the event.
[9]
Order
The plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with costs.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 22 October 2021
Judgment
delivered: 27 January 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv N Swart
Attorney
for the Applicant:
Erwee Attorney, c/o Dyason Inc,
Pretoria
For
the Respondent:
Adv A Gxogxa
Attorneys for the
Respondent: State
Attorneys, Pretoria
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