Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 309South Africa
Minister of Police and Another v Hoogendoorn (A392/17) [2022] ZAGPPHC 309; 2022 (2) SACR 36 (GP) (16 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 November 2016
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of Police and Another v Hoogendoorn (A392/17) [2022] ZAGPPHC 309; 2022 (2) SACR 36 (GP) (16 May 2022)
Minister of Police and Another v Hoogendoorn (A392/17) [2022] ZAGPPHC 309; 2022 (2) SACR 36 (GP) (16 May 2022)
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sino date 16 May 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISON, PRETORIA)
Case
No: A392/17
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
FIRST APPELLANT
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR
FOR
PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
SECOND APPELLANT
AND
INA
HOOGENDOORN
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
NQUMSE
AJ (R G TOLMAY J et N V KHUMALO J concurring)
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against the whole of the judgment and order (as per
Van Niekerk AJ) delivered on 17 November 2016.
[2]
The leave to appeal having been refused by the court a quo was
granted
by the Supreme Court of Appeal to the full bench of this
court.
[3]
At the heart of this appeal is the alleged wrongful arrest and
detention,
as well as the malicious prosecution of Mrs. Ina
Hoogendoorn (plaintiff). For sake of convenience, I shall refer to
the parties
as they were cited in the court a quo. The plaintiff
instituted a claim for damages against the first defendant arising
out of
wrongful arrest and detention and further claimed damages
against the second defendant for malicious prosecution. Both claims
were
granted by the court a quo. Aggrieved thereby, the defendants
launched this appeal.
[4]
This matter
brings into focus the long-standing and generally accepted
relationship between the police (arresting officer) and the
prosecutorial officers of the National Director of Public
Prosecutions (prosecutors), with specific reference to the duties of
the police to effect an arrest in accordance with the provisions of
Section 40(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedures Act (the Act).
[1]
[5]
The issue before us is whether the court a quo was correct in its
findings
that the arrest and detention was unlawful, and whether the
plaintiff had proved her claim for malicious prosecution. Put
differently,
the question is whether the arresting officer acted
within the ambit of Section 40(1) (b) when he affected the
warrantless arrest
on the plaintiff.
Factual
Matrix
[6]
The material facts of this matter are largely common cause. Prior to
the
arrest of the plaintiff on 4 November 2010, a certain Mr. De
Villiers (De Villiers) approached a senior prosecutor, Mr. Lamprecht
(Lamprecht), at the Pretoria Magistrates Court in Soweto. The gist of
his complaint related to a business venture in the oil industry,
which he had with Mr. Hoogendoorn, the husband of the plaintiff (the
husband). He alleged that the husband had defrauded him after
he had
made payment into a bank account, which turned out to be that of the
plaintiff. The amounts that were deposited with the
plaintiffs bank
account, including amounts allegedly from other complainants, were
estimated to be in the amount of R800 000 (eight
hundred thousand
rands).
[7]
Whilst De Villiers was still in the office of Lamprecht, Lt Colonel
Maleka
(Maleka) who had fortuitously been around the court precinct
for errands unrelated to this matter, was summoned to the office of
Lamprecht wherein he was introduced to De Villiers and was given the
information which De Villiers had handed over to Lamprecht,
and was
instructed to open a docket to investigate a charge of fraud against
the husband. The information he had been given by
Lamprecht contained
four statements, one of them from De Villiers, all of which
implicated the husband.
[8]
The investigations following the information from De Villiers
revealed
that the husband instructed certain parties (with whom he
conducted business) to deposit monies into the bank accounts
belonging
to the plaintiff and their son Du Plooy. Subsequently,
Maleka returned to Lamprecht to report the outcome of his
investigations.
Mrs. Van Schalkwyk, (Van Schalkwyk) an experienced
prosecutor became involved in the matter, and she gave an instruction
which
appears in the investigation diary as follows: "I've read
all the relevant documents and I am of the opinion that Hoogendoorn
and wife and stepson can be arrested for fraud. Please effect same."
(sic)
[9]
On the same date of 3 November 2010, when the instruction was made in
the diary, Maleka responded in the same diary and wrote the following
"your
instructions are noted and shall comply with"
(sic)
[10]
It bears mentioning that Maleka in his testimony was initially
reluctant to concede that the endorsement by the prosecutor
amounted
to an instruction, however, he later conceded that it was an
instruction.
[11]
The evidence of Maleka and Van Schalkwyk is very crucial in the
arrest of the plaintiff.
Whilst I do not intend to reproduce their
entire evidence, I find it necessary to refer to their evidence in
great detail to the
extent it is relevant to this appeal. According
to Maleka, after he had consulted with De Villiers, he attempted to
get hold of
the husband without success. This caused him to solicit
the assistance of De Villiers in tracing him. De Villiers got hold of
the
husband and lured him to a garage in Florida under the guise of
an appointment for a meeting between the two. Maleka, on the other
hand arranged for three police members to accompany him to the
purported meeting. Upon their arrival at the garage, they found
both
De Villiers and the husband.
[12]
He introduced himself to the plaintiffs husband and informed him that
he was investigating
a fraud case against him. At the same time, he
asked if he knew Mrs. Hoogendoorn, in whose bank account the monies
of De Villiers
and other complainants were paid into. The husband
informed him that the plaintiff was his wife and Du Plooy his son. He
thereafter
arrested the husband on a charge of fraud. He contends
that the husband, without any difficulty, took him to his house where
they
found the plaintiff. Maleka further stated that he introduced
himself to the plaintiff and informed her that he was investigating
a
case of fraud. He further showed her statements in which her bank
account was listed as having received payments that were made
by De
Villiers. He asked the plaintiff whether she bears any knowledge of
the money deposited into her bank account. The plaintiff
refused to
proffer any answers as a result of which he arrested her.
[13]
From the plaintiff’s house, they went to Du Plooy's residence
where he was also arrested
for the deposit of money into his bank
account. When Maleka was asked under cross-examination as to why he
had arrested both the
plaintiff and Du Plooy, he stated that their
arrest is due to the monies that were paid into their banking
accounts, otherwise,
he is aware that they had not committed any
crime. He was further asked as to when did he form an opinion to
arrest them. He said
that the only opinion he had formed and the
person on whom he was to effect an arrest is in respect of the
husband and not the
other two. His sole purpose for approaching the
plaintiff and Du Plooy was to obtain information on their knowledge
about the money
deposited into their bank accounts. However, he later
changed under cross examination and said when he went to meet the
husband
at the garage in Florida, he had no intention to arrest him
but to solicit information on whether he was aware of the
transactions
that were reflected in the bank statements. It was the
failure of the husband to give an explanation that caused him to
effect
an arrest on him.
[14]
Similarly, all he needed from the plaintiff and the son was for them
to provide him with
the information he sought and it was their
failure to supply that information which led to their arrest.
Following the arrest of
the trio, he was contacted by their legal
representative who indicated his desire to be present when he took
down their warning
statements.
[15]
The following day he took down their statements in the presence of
their legal representative.
Even then, they maintained their stance
not to furnish any information regarding the matter. On Wednesday 8
November 2010, during
the following week, he took them to court for
their first appearance.
[16]
According to Maleka, the accused was asked by the magistrate if they
have any knowledge
about what had happened. Their legal
representative informed the court that Du Plooy was prepared to pay
back the R50 000 that
he had received from the husband, and which was
deposited into his bank account. As a result, thereof the magistrate
allowed Du
Plooy to pay back the money. It was paid back on the same
day of their appearance and that resulted in the state withdrawing
the
charges against Du Plooy. However, the plaintiff was not so
fortunate to be released as Du Plooy but was only released on bail
ofRl0 000, on 10 November 2010 following a formal bail application.
On 19 November 2010, the charges against the plaintiff were
withdrawn. Whilst her husband was convicted following a plea of
guilty and was given a wholly suspended sentence.
[17]
As alluded to above, Maleka was asked on numerous times during cross
examination and
by the court for his reasons for arresting the
plaintiff. From the record I have gleaned no less than three
responses that he gave
for his reasons for the arrest.
[18]
For sake of completeness and due to the significance of the responses
offered that were
offered, I refer to the relevant part of the
cross-examination and the questions put by the court to Maleka as it
appears on page
285 of the record on pages 4-30 as follows:
Mr. Venter:
For what did you arrest Mrs. Hoogendoorn?
Maleka:
I arrested her because there was a deposit of an amount into her
account
and when J requested her to furnish me with an explanation as
to does she have any knowledge to where does that comes from and then
she indicated to me that he is not going to tell that (sic)
Mr. Venter:
So on what?
Maleka:
if she had indicated to me that she is aware about the money and the
money comes from whomever, then I should not have arrested her.
Mr. Venter:
So on what charge did you arrest her?
Maleka:
For fraud
[19]
The court interjected in seeking more clarification and asked the
following questions:
Court:
So you actually arrested her because she failed to give you
information that you wanted. That was the catalyst of the arrest.
Maleka:
My, I arrested her because the alleged fraudulent deposit was done
in
her account.
Court:
Does that, in your mind, constitute fraud on her side?
Maleka:
Not from her side.
Court:
Now the question that begs to be answered, why did
you arrest her?
Maleka:
The reason why I have arrested her, because I have come to a
conclusion
that maybe they are working together, with Mr.
Hoogendoorn. For me, if an amount is deposited into my account, I
will be aware
or maybe if one day I am aware that an amount of R1 00
000(one hundred thousand rand) for example is deposited into my
account
I will have to ask and say where does this money come from.
Court:
Colonel Maleka you just about two minutes said the
mere fact that
money is paid into her account does not constitute fraud.
Maleka:
yes
Court:
Now then, I ask you again then, why did you arrest
her?
Maleka:
I said My Lord, that if the amount is paid into the somebody's
account
it is not fraud. But if that money was comingfrom, in the
view of this, coming from an alleged fraudulent means, and it is paid
into her account and that for me is if she have got a knowledge that
this certain money was deposited into her account and it comes
to my,
it did come to my conclusion that it can happen, that maybe she knows
that this money was deposited into her account, she
knows where does
the money comes from (sic)
Court:
And Sir, because she did not tell you where, give
you the information
that you wanted; you arrested her because she did not give you the
information you wanted?
Maleka:
That is correct My Lord.
Court:
So that is the reason you arrested her because she
did not give you
the information you wanted?
Maleka:
That is correct my Lord.
Court:
But in all the statements people who deposed, who
deposed to the
statements said Mr. Hoogendoorn committed fraud. Nobody said she
committed fraud. There was no complaint against
her
Maleka:
Yes.
Court:
You say the fact that the money is paid into her account is not
fraud by itself, and then I do not understand why you arrested her.
Maleka:
My Lord, as I have indicated
now that I based my
reasons for arresting her is that I thought that she knew or was
working with Mr.
Hoogendoorn.
[20]
The court further asked:
Court:
I understand your evidence to be, forget about Mr.
Hoogendoorn
senior, forget about him at the time when you arrested Mrs. Ina
Hoogendoorn.
Maleka:
Yes.
Court:
You arrested her because the money that the complainant
complained
about was paid into an account, which is in her name.
Maleka:
Yes.
Court:
That is why you arrested her?
Maleka:
Yes.
Court:
And/or no other reason?
Maleka:
No other reason, yes.
[21]
When he was asked whether anyone from his investigations that
commenced in August, until
the arrest of the plaintiff, mention the
plaintiffs name bar the bank statement that indicated her account
details. He said there
was no other person who mentioned the
plaintiff.
[22]
I have to mention that Maleka's testimony under cross-examination was
characterized by
several inconsistencies and contradictions. He
flip-flopped in many of the responses he gave. By way of example, it
was put to
him that all the individuals testified that when he
approached them, he told them that he was investigating a case of
fraud, and
thereafter arrested them, none of them said he first asked
for an explanation or information before effecting the arrest. In his
response, he said,
"yes I will take it that way My Lord'.
His
response is different and at variance with his earlier testimony that
he never had the intention to arrest the trio when he
went to each of
them except to seek information. When directed to his statement in
which there is no mention of him seeking information
or explanation
from the arrestees he conceded that it is not mentioned in his
statement though it should have been mentioned as
such.
[23]
It is also worthy to note that Maleka confirmed that after he had
acquired the bank statements
he went back to the prosecutor to find
out if there was a
prima facie case.
This was contradicted by
the prosecutor, Van Schalkwyk, who said in her evidence when Maleka
came to her, he had already formed
in his mind the opinion that there
was a
prima facie
case against the three suspects.
[24]
In further cross-examination Maleka was at pains to concede the
author of the investigation
diary that says,
"I
have
read all the relevant documents and I am of the opinion that
Hoogendoorn, the wife plus the stepson can be arrested for fraud".
He even suggested that the inscription could have been made by
one of his senior officials. However, in re-examination by his
counsel,
he conceded without any difficulty and confirmed that the
entry was made by a prosecutor although he does not know who the
prosecutor
is. Whilst he conceded earlier to the court that the entry
above amounts to an instruction. In re-examination, he said it does
not amount to instruction but an opinion.
[25]
Another illustration of the many contradictions that came out in
Maleka's evidence is that
on 8 November 2010 when he took the
suspects to court, according to him, he took along the docket which
he gave to the prosecutor.
When he was asked in cross-examination
what he had discussed with the prosecutor at that stage, he told the
prosecutor the following
"I
have come to submit a case of
fraud in which there are three people who had been arrested, who had
committed fraud".
[26]
Maleka's submission to the prosecutor is wholly different from his
version, that the deposit
of money into the plaintiffs bank account
does not amount to fraud. This is also not in sync with his response
to the court's questioning
in which he said that the only reason for
which he arrested the plaintiff is for her failure to furnish the
information he needed.
[27]
In dealing with his 'decision' not to subpoena but to arrest the
plaintiff, Maleka said
even though the plaintiff did not pose a
flight risk, and was aware of her residential address, he had nothing
to give her to ensure
her appearance in court.
[28]
Van Schalkwyk, a seasoned prosecutor of many years in the
prosecution, dating back to 1991
albeit with intermittent breaks, and
who was finally back into the fold of the National Prosecuting
Authority in 2010 as a prosecutor
in Protea in Soweto under the
supervision of Lambrecht said she was placed in the section that
handled complicated fraud matters
together with a Mr. Fanie Van
Vuuren.
[29]
During September 2010, De Villiers approached their office to seek
help to open a fraud
case since he could not be assisted by the
police at Florida. She went through the documents that were in the
possession of De
Villiers and discovered dealings between De Villiers
and Hoogendoorn, which were in the petroleum industry. Thereafter she
sought
advice from Lamprecht who also went through the documents and
was satisfied that there was a prima facie case of fraud. Lamprecht
referred the docket to Maleka who was steeped in organized crime to
register it and to further investigate the case.
[30]
Subsequently,
she gave Maleka instructions that were indicated
in the
investigating
diary section of the docket to obtain bank statements of the accounts
into which the monies were deposited. After
Maleka had gathered the
information which was ostensibly from banks in terms of section 205
of the Criminal Procedure Act he brought
back the docket to her.
According to Van Schalkwyk, Maleka was already of the opinion that
the docket was ready. I find it necessary
to refer to her evidence in
which she stated, "Ek
dink
dit was die 3de November, het hy na my toe gekom, met die dossier.
Waar hy vir my te kenne gegee het hy het na my kantoor toe
gekom. My
kollega was ook daar, 'n Mnr Van Vuuren, Fourie. Hy het vir ons die
dossier gebring, na ons kantore toe en vir my gese
dat hy is van
opinie dat die dossier is gereed vir ter rolle plasing. Hy wou by my
'n opinie he of, as ek deur die docket, deur
die dossier gaan, of
ek
van opinie is dat die saak gereed is, vir verhoor, waarop
ek
dit
deur
gegaan
het.
Ek
het
dit
nog
met
my
kollega,
Mnr
Van
Vuuren,
ook
bespreek. Ons het dit deur gegaan. Ek het die besluit gemaak. Ek het
die opinie vir
horn
gegee date
is
van oordeel dat die saak kan ter rolle geplaas word"
[2]
[31]
Later in her evidence, Van Schalkwyk stated most importantly as
follows:
"Kolonel Maleka was
by my kantoor, op daardie einste datum, 3 November 2010. Hy is van
oordeel dat die saak ter rolle geplaas
kan word. Da hy 'n arres kan
uitvoer. Hy wou net by my
'n opinie
weet, is ek tevrede, en wat is my opinie? Is daar nog iets
uitstaande, voordat hy hierdie arres uitvoer, of nie? Ek het
vir horn
gese, Nee. Ek het geen problem gehad, op daardie stadium, met die
inhoud van die dossier, dat hierdie dossier verhoor
gereed
is nie. Wat
ek ook net hier wil verduidelik is, die Staat was van plan om die
beskuldigdes
aan te kla
van bedrog en ook diefstal, as
'n Skedule
5 misdryf''
[3]
[32]
The statement of Van Schalkwyk above must be read in the context of
what Maleka said, that
when he went to the prosecutor it was to
obtain her opinion and for guidance. He further said when he met with
the plaintiff and
Du Plooy, even the husband for that matter, he was
still in need of information. Even after he had arrested the husband
he had
not yet formed an opinion to arrest the plaintiff and Du
Plooy.
[33]
A simple understanding of Maleka's evidence is that it is patently
clear that he had not
concluded his investigations until he was in
possession of the information he sought from the suspects. More
particularly, the
plaintiff, and Du Plooy. With that being the case,
I find it difficult to understand the evidence of Van Schalkwyk that
Maleka
had informed her that the investigation was complete and was
ready to effect the arrests. Similarly, how does one who claims that
the investigations are complete and that the matter has to be
enrolled, but on the other hand seek guidance on how he should
proceed
with the matter. Van Schalkwyk further testified as follows.
"Toe die dossier vir my voorgele is, het hy gevra wat is my
opinie?
Is dit reg? Ek het gese ja, dit is reg. ek is van oordeel dat
vervolging kan ingestel word. Die dossier was vir my gereed vir hof.
In die sin dat op daardie stadium het ek al die volledige inligting
gehad, op die dossier, wat my oortuig het, hier is 'n
prima facie
saak uitgemaak op die, vir die Staat. Met die document wat voor
my was, op daardie stadium, met die eerste oog, opslag, was ek van
oordeel, daar is
'nprimafacie
saak". When Van Schalkwyk
was asked by the court as to what was connecting the plaintiff as
well as Du Plooy to the case, she
said they were connected only
through their bank statements which showed the monies paid into their
bank accounts.
[34]
According to Van Schalkwyk's overall testimony, at no stage did
Maleka inform her that
he was ready to arrest the suspects for fraud,
nor theft. Instead, it was Van Schalkwyk who had formed an opinion
that fraud or
theft had been committed or that there was a
prima
facie
case where either of the crimes had been committed. The
ambivalence and uncertainty of Maleka are demonstrated in approaching
Van
Schalkwyk for her opinion and for guidance as to what to do. I
therefore have difficulty in accepting the version of Van Schalkwyk
to the effect that Maleka had already formed an opinion when he
approached her for an opinion. Neither do I find it in her version
that Maleka told her that the investigation was complete and the
matter was ready to be enrolled. My view is fortified by Maleka's
testimony that he had not yet formed an opinion and a suspicion when
he approached the suspects, but only when they failed to furnish
him
with information.
[35]
What I also find curious m the interaction between Maleka and Van
Schalkwyk is that nowhere
in their discussions did it surface that
Maleka had to obtain further information from the suspects. If Maleka
was confident that
the investigation was complete and ready to affect
an arrest and to have the matter enrolled as alleged by Van
Schalkwyk, why was
it necessary for him to obtain further information
from the suspects. This is most surprising if regard is had to Van
Schalkwyk's
plan to charge them with fraud and theft, something which
it is expected she would have discussed with Maleka.
[36]
Similarly, it would have been expected that Maleka would have
informed or brought to the
attention of Van Schalkwyk that he is yet
to obtain the information that he needs from the suspects. The
difficulty in understanding
the evidence of Maleka and Van Schalkwyk
is further complicated by Maleka's opinion that the plaintiff and Du
Plooy had committed
an offence whilst at the same time conceding that
the mere deposit of money into their bank accounts did not constitute
fraud.
[37]
As alluded above, Van Schalkwyk conceded that her endorsement in the
investigation diary
to effect the arrest of the three suspects, is an
instruction and she did nothing wrong therein. She, however,
maintained that
Maleka could have, in conjunction with his commander,
exercised his discretion not to arrest. It is worth noting that Van
Schalkwyk
admitted that there are no meaningful investigations that
were carried out by Maleka since September to November when the
plaintiff
was arrested together with her family. The only information
they relied on to effect the arrest was the information supplied by
De Villiers and the bank statement obtained through a section 205
subpoena.
[38]
She also conceded that they never considered other available measures
to bring the plaintiff
to court except for the drastic measure of
effecting an arrest.
[39]
I now tum to deal with the question of whether Maleka acted in
accordance with Section
40(1)(b) of the Act when arresting the
plaintiff.
[40]
According to the first defendant's plea, it is admitted that the
plaintiff was arrested
by a member of the South African Police
Service, namely, Maleka without a warrant. In justifying the arrest,
it relies on S40(1)(b)
and further alleges that the arresting officer
formed a reasonable suspicion that the plaintiff committed or
attempted to commit
an offence listed in schedule 1 of the Criminal
Procedure Act. In amplification of its justification the defendant
alleges that
the fruits of a fraudulent transaction(s) within which
Mr. Hoogendoorn was involved were deposited into the bank account of
the
plaintiff.
[41]
In
Minister
of Law and Order v Hurley
[4]
,
Rabie
CJ explained that 'the person who arrested or caused the arrest of
another should bear the onus of proving that his actions
were
justified in law'. In order to justify an arrest, the jurisdictional
facts, as stated in
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
[5]
are the
following:
i)
the arrester is a peace officer;
ii)
who entertained a suspicion that the plaintiff committed a
schedule 1 offence;
iii)
the arrester (peace officer) had reasonable grounds that
justify the suspicion
(See
also
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto
[6]
at para
6).
It
is only after the jurisdictional facts are present that a decision
arises to arrest or not. In Duncan supra, the correct legal
approach
when dealing with the discretion to arrest pursuant to the
establishment of the jurisdictional facts was stated as follows:
"If
the
jurisdictional requirements are satisfied, the peace officer may
invoke the power conferred
by the
subsection, i.e. he may arrest the suspect. In other words, he then
has a discretion as to whether or not to exercise that
power...
No doubt
the discretion must be properly exercised"
[7]
[42]
Bosielo
AJ (as he
then was) reaffirming
the legal
position
as
enunciated
in
Duncan,
he, in
MR v
Minister of Safety and Security
[8]
commented
thus:
"This salutary
approach was confirmed in
Sekhoto
as follows:
"Once the
jurisdictional facts for an arrest ...
in terms of
any paragraph of section 40(1) …are present, a discretion
arises. The question whether there are a y
constraints
on the exercise of discretionary
powers is
essentially a matter of construction of the empowering statute in a
manner that is consistent with the Constitution. ln
other words, once
the required
jurisdictional
facts are present the discretion whether to arrest or not arises. The
officer, it should be emphasised, is not obliged
to effect an
arrest."
[9]
[43]
At this stage, I find it apposite to mention that the court a quo
made adverse credibility
findings against both Maleka and Van
Schalkwyk, whilst on the other hand was satisfied with the evidence
of the plaintiff and her
credibility as a witness. The learned
judge's remarks on the plaintiff as reflected in the judgment are
that the plaintiff was
an impressive witness who was unassuming,
non-confrontational, withdrawn and did not contradict herself. The
learned Judge concluded
by saying, he had made similar observations
of the other witnesses of the plaintiff and had no reason to reject
any of their evidence.
On the other hand, he criticized the
defendant's witnesses characterising the evidence of Maleka as being
fraught with inconsistencies
and was tailored as the trial continued.
Most unfortunately, he found Maleka's evidence with numerous factual
fabrications. Significantly,
he was scathing on the credibility of
Van Schalkwyk, in relation to the second claim for malicious
prosecution. I am unable to
falter the findings of the learned judge
having had regard to the evidence of the witnesses of the defendants
. It is also trite
that the trial court's findings of fact and
credibility are presumed to be correct unless they are vitiated by an
irregularity
or unless an examination of the record of evidence
reveals that those findings are patently wrong (See
R v Dhlumayo
and Another
1948 (2) SA 677
(A) at 705). See also Makata
v
Vodacom
[2016] ZACC 12
at 37-41.
I, therefore, have
no reason to differ with the findings of the learned judge in this
regard.
[44]
The point of departure in this matter is whether the defendant has
discharged the onus
under s 40(1)(b) and has met the jurisdictional
requirements therein. It is common cause that Maleka is a police
officer. The question
is whether he entertained a suspicion. If so,
was it a suspicion that the plaintiff had committed an offence or
attempted to commit
an offence referred to in Schedule 1 of the Act,
and whether his suspicion rested on reasonable grounds.
[45]
What is borne out in the objective facts of this matter is that at
the time Maleka went
back to the prosecutor for guidance and for an
opinion he had not yet formed a suspicion. One possibility for his
difficulty in
forming a suspicion or an opinion is the insufficiency
of the evidence that was in his possession. He was only armed with
four
statements from De Villiers which do not implicate the plaintiff
except to implicate her bank account details coupled with the bank
statements in which it is confirmed that a deposit was made into her
bank account. Maleka could not at the time have formed a suspicion
that rests on reasonable grounds. It appears that the person who
entertained the suspicion notwithstanding the insufficiency of
the
evidence is the prosecutor. This is borne out in the instruction that
she penned down in the investigation diary that she is
satisfied that
an arrest can be effected on the plaintiff and the other suspects.
[46]
The prosecutor's instruction propelled Maleka to find the husband,
surprisingly only a
day after such an instruction whereas he could
not make contact with any of the suspects for almost three months
since the complaint.
His failure to collect any other evidence for
the said period bar the documents handed over can be seen as
lackluster in pursuing
the matter by Maleka. This can bea further
confirmation that his inability to form an opinion or suspicion until
3 November 2010
was purely due to a lack of other evidence upon which
he could have based such suspicion.
[47]
Section 40(1)(b) is very clear that the suspicion has to be
entertained by a peace officer.
A peace officer in the context of s
40 and as defined in the Criminal Procedure Act, includes any
magistrate, justice, police official,
correctional official as
defined in Section 1 of the Correctional Services Act, 1959 (Act 8 of
1959) or persons that the Minister
may by notice in the Gazette
declare to be a peace officer for the purpose of exercising, with
reference to any provision of the
Act or any offence or any class of
offences likewise specified the powers defined in the notice.
[48]
In all the legal instruments I have consulted, inter alia, the
National Prosecuting Authority
Act (Act 32 of 1998) and the
Prosecution Policy, none of them qualifies a prosecutor as a peace
officer. I have no doubt in my
mind that a prosecutor is not a peace
officer and her/his opinion or suspicion does not play a role in s 40
of the Act. Consequently,
a police officer who purports to act under
s 40 cannot rely on a suspicion of a prosecutor as justifying an
arrest without a warrant.
Maleka contends that he formed a suspicion
at the point of arrest at the plaintiffs residence when he did not
get the information
he wanted from the suspects. As already alluded,
I have serious difficulty in accepting that version if regard is had
to his evidence
that his sole purpose was to obtain information. Even
if the view I hold is incorrect, the next hurdle for Maleka is the
offence
that was committed by the plaintiff for which he had a
suspicion.
[49]
Maleka in evidence explained that the reason for the arrest was not
on the grounds of a
commission of an offence referred to in Schedule
1, but for failure by the plaintiff to provide information.
Undoubtedly, his reason
for the arrest falls short of the requirement
that the suspicion must be that the suspect has committed an offence
referred to
in Schedule 1 of the Act. Put differently, suspicion
cannot survive if the conduct of the suspect does not amount to a
crime mentioned
in schedule 1 of the Act.
[50]
In
Ramphal
v Minister of Safety and Security
[10]
,
Plasket J(as he then was) vexed with a similar situation as in this
matter where Ramphal was a suspect in a case of crimen injuria
and was
arrested by the investigating officer after he had sought an advice
from his superiors on what to do and who in tum referred
him to the
district prosecutor. The prosecutor in tum issued an instruction for
the arrest of the suspect. Two days later the investigating
officer
went to Ramphal' s shop and arrested him. During the arrest, he told
him that he was being arrested so that he could come
and give his
explanation by himself. On the understanding by the investigating
officer that the prosecutor was giving him instructions,
he reported
to his superiors that he had been instructed to effect an arrest.
Pursuant that arrest Ramphal instituted a damages
claim which was
dismissed by the magistrate, who had found that although the arrest
was not authorised by any statutory provision
it was not
unreasonable.
[51]
Plasket J disagreed with the finding of the magistrate and held as
follows, "The magistrate
erred in so doing. As I stated at the
outset of this judgment our constitutional order is based
on the rule
of law. That
means, at
least, that every exercise of
public
power
must, in
order to be valid, be authorised
by law. No
provision of s 40 (1)
of the
Criminal
Procedure
Act, 51 of 1977, or any other statute, authorises the arrest of a
person on the instruction of a public prosecutor. The
arrest of
Ramphal was invalid, and hence unlawful, on this account and whether
Ndaleni acted reasonably
in the
circumstances is entirely irrelevant
[11]
.
[52]
The matter of Ramphal is on all fours similar to the matter before
us. It is clear from
the objective facts of this matter that Maleka
understood Van Schalkwyk's opinion to be an instruction to arrest the
suspects.
Hence, the following day he effected the arrests as per
that instruction. I tend to agree with respect with Plasket J, that
whether
it can be said Maleka acted reasonably under the
circumstances, that is entirely irrelevant since there is no law,
neither is it
sanctioned by s 40 of the Criminal Procedure Act for an
arrest of an individual to be effected on the instructions of a
public
prosecutor. I ineluctably find that the arrest was unlawful
and invalid.
[53]
Furthermore, as was the case in Ramphal, the arrest of the plaintiff
by Maleka was not
for purposes of bringing her to court but was
actuated by her failure or refusal to give him the information he
sought. As was
found by Plasket J in Ramphal, that the purpose for
Ramphal's arrest was to force him to abandon his right to silence, a
fundamental
right enshrined in section 35 of the Constitution.
Similarly, in this case, Maleka's arrest of the plaintiff on account
that she
refused to proffer an answer about the money in her account,
is in effect a violation of the plaintiffs constitutional right to
silence. Therefore, the arrest has to be unlawful on this ground too.
[54]
In light of
the facts above, I am of the view that the first defendant has failed
to establish the presence of the four jurisdictional
facts as
required by s40 (1)(b) in order to justify the arrest. It is further
my view that the lack of jurisdictional facts obviates
the need to
deal in great detail with the question of whether Maleka exercised
his discretion properly to arrest, save to state
the well established
principle that an arrest is a drastic interference with an
individual's rights .to freedom of movement and
dignity. An arrest
therefore must be justified in terms of the Bill of Rights
[12]
.
[55]
In
MR
v Minister of Safety and Security
above,
Bosielo JA stated the point thus: "In
other
words,
the
court
should
enquire
whether,
in
effecting
an
arrest,
the
police
officers
exercised
their
discretion
at all. And
if they
did,
whether
they
exercised
it
properly
as
propounded
in
Duncan
or
as
Sekhoto
where
the court,
cognisant
of
the
importance
which
the
Constitution attaches to the right to liberty and one's dignity
in our
constitutional democracy, held that the discretion
conferred
ins
40(1) must
be
exercised'
in
light of
the
Bill
of
Rights"
[13]
.
In this matter, the evidence which has been established and confirmed
by Maleka is that he did not consider any other means to
bring the
plaintiff to court save an arrest. Evidently,
he did
not
exercise
any
discretion
before
effecting
the
arrest,
which
clearly
demonstrates his lack of appreciation that he has a discretion to be
exercised in a proper
manner
other
than
the arrest.
It,
therefore,
follows
that
his failure
to exercise the discretion conferred
on him by
law, the detention which
is the
consequence of that arrest is equally unlawful.
[56]
This brings me to the cause of action of malicious prosecution based
on
actio iniuriarum.
In order to succeed in a claim of
malicious prosecution a plaintiff must establish that the defendant-
(a)
set the law in motion (instituted or instigated
the proceedings)
(b)
acted without reasonable and probable cause;
and
(c)
acted with malice (or animo injuriandi);
and
(d)
that the
prosecution failed
[14]
.
[57]
It is so
that in this matter the
prosecution
failed.
After
nine
days of the
release of the plaintiff on bail, the charges against her were
withdrawn. The learned judge in the court aquo found
that in the
absence of any evidence which could not even remotely support the
charge against the plaintiff, the conduct of the
prosecution, more
particularly of Van Schalkwyk was malicious. In further support of
his findings, he relied on S
v
Lubhaxa
[15]
where
it was held: "Clearly a person
ought not
to be prosecuted
in
the
absence
of
a
minimum
of
evidence
upon
which
he
might
be
convicted,
merely in
the
expectation
that
at some
stage
he
might
incriminate
himself.
That
is
recognised
by
the common
law
principle
that there
should
be
'reasonable
and
probable'
cause
to
believe
that
the accused
is guilty of an offence before a prosecution
is
initiated-and the constitutional protection afforded
to dignity
and
personal
freedom
(section
10 and
section
12) seems
to
reinforce
it. It
ought to follow that if a prosecution
is not to
be commenced
without
that minimum of evidence, so too should
it cease
when the evidence finally falls below that threshold".
[58]
The
defendants admitted in their pleadings that the first defendant set
the law in motion. Whilst the plaintiff has not been acquitted
on the
charges they accept that the prosecution was discontinued consequent
to the withdrawal of the charges. They further submitted
that the
first and fourth requirements were established by the plaintiff but
dispute that the second and third requirements were
established. Mr.
de Jager for the appellants, relying on
Prinsloo
and Another v Newman
[16]
argued that the plaintiff ought to have established the absence of
reasonable and probable cause which both involve the subjective
and
objective elements. This the plaintiff failed to do. He further
submitted that the plaintiff has failed to establish
animo
iniuriandi,
and
to show that the prosecutor acted with malice.
[59]
On the other hand, Mr. Mulligan for the respondent, submitted at
length the role played
by the prosecutor in deciding whether or not
to charge a suspect. This the prosecutor does by way of assessing
whether there is
sufficient evidence to provide a reasonable prospect
of a successful prosecution. He further referred to the Prosecution
Policy
which requires a prosecutor to take care whether to prosecute
or not given the profound consequences the decision has for victims,
witnesses, accused persons and their families.
[60]
Mr. Mulligan further submitted that the prosecutor admitted that she
did not have a genuine
belief founded on reasonable grounds in the
plaintiffs guilt. She should have foreseen, so the argument went, the
possibility that
she was acting wrongfully, but nevertheless
continued to act, which was reckless as to the consequences of her
conduct. It was
further argued by Mr. Mulligan that the prosecutor
failed to pay the necessary attention to the information contained in
the docket
and should therefore have foreseen that she was acting
wrongfully in the absence of sufficient evidence to warrant the
prosecution
of the plaintiff. It was further argued that if the
matter is approached based on malicious prosecution alternatively
based on
the negligent breach of a duty of care owed by the
prosecutor to the plaintiff the court
a quo
was correct
in its finding in favour of the plaintiff.
[61]
In
light
of
the
concession
on
the
two
requirements
namely,
the
second
defendant
set
the
law
in
motion
and
the
requirement
that
the
prosecution
failed,
I shall
therefore
confine
myself
only
to
the
remaining
requirements,
that
is,
a
reasonable
and
probable
cause
and
that the
second
defendant
was
actuated
by
an improper motive (malice). The test for reasonable and probable
cause was set out in
Beckenstrater
v Rottcher and Theunissen
[17]
"
When
it is alleged that a defendant had no reasonable
cause
for
prosecuting,
I
understand
it
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
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,
or reasonable and
probably
cause. In Moleko the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) explained the
requirement
as follows
"Reasonable and
probable
cause, in the context of a claim
for
malicious
prosecution,
means
an
honest
belief
founded
on
reasonable
grounds
that
the
institution
of
proceedings
is
justified.
The
concept
therefore
involves
both
a
subjective
and
an
objective
element,
not only must the defendant have subjectively had an honest belief in
the guilt of the plaintiff, but his belief and conduct
must have been
objectively reasonable, as would have been exercised by a person
using
ordinary care and prudence".
[62]
In this matter, the evidence that was at the disposal of the
prosecutor are the bank statements
of the plaintiff in which it is
confirmed that an amount of money was deposited into her bank
account. Whilst the plaintiff may
not have established or proved that
the defendant did not subjectively believe in the guilt of the
plaintiff, it has succeeded
to show that objectively, based on the
evidence that was in the possession of the prosecutor the institution
of criminal proceedings
against the plaintiff could not have been
justified by any imagination. All that was at the disposal of Van
Schalkwyk are bank
statements and nothing more.
[63]
With regard to the requirement that the defendant acted with malice
in Moleko, the court
found that
animus injuriandi
entails in
an action for malicious prosecution that the plaintiff must allege
and prove that the defendant acted in awareness that
reasonable
grounds for prosecution were absent. The net effect of the statement
by the court is that the defendant must act absent
the good faith
required by the National Prosecuting Act which provides in Section 42
as follows: ''No person shall be liable in
respect of anything done
in good faith".
[64]
Commenting
on this aspect in
Kruger
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[18]
,
Zondo
DCJ (as he then was) said the following: "Although
the Supreme
Court
of
Appeal
did
not
in
Moleko
refer
to
section
42
of
the
National
Prosecuting
Authority
Act when
it held
that the plaintiff must allege and prove that the defendant did not
honestly believe that the accused
or
plaintiff was guilty, it in effect
held
what
section 42 of the Act lays down".
[65]
Regard being had to the totality of the evidence, and the authorities
referred to above
I am not convinced that the plaintiff has succeeded
to establish that the defendant (second appellant) acted in bad faith
and thereby
acted in malice when it instituted prosecution against
her. I, therefore, come to the conclusion that in the absence of the
element
of malice it follows that not all the requirements for
malicious prosecution have been proved by the plaintiff.
Conclusion
[66]
Consequently, the finding of the court
a quo
on this aspect
cannot be sustained and therefore the appeal on this claim has to
succeed. In view of my conclusions in respect of
both claims, that
is, for unlawful arrest and detention and the claim for malicious
prosecution, the appeal in respect of unlawful
arrest and detention
ought to be dismissed and the appeal on malicious prosecution ought
to succeed.
[67]
On the issue of costs, I shall first deal with the costs
occasioned by the postponement of the matter on 24 November 2017. At
first,
parties were in disagreement as to who is to blame for the
postponement and who should bear the costs thereof. Mr. Mulligan
submitted
that it was at the instance of the record that was not in
order and the non-availability of the hard copies as well as the
failure
by the attorneys of the defendant to upload the records
successfully onto caselines. On the other hand, Mr de Jager submitted
that
costs should be costs in the cause, alternatively, neither party
should bear the costs due to the fault of the registrar of this
court. He further undertook to provide us with the relevant
information that may assist us in understanding the problem that had
arisen on the said date.
[68]
Following the conclusion of the hearing of the appeal, we were
favored with correspondence from the Office of the State Attorney
in
Pretoria under ref. 10211/2012/25, the contents of which are that the
parties have agreed that no one is to be blamed for the
mishap that
led to the unfortunate postponement of the matter. The parties
further agreed that subject to the court's decision,
no order as to
costs be made and that the agreement be made an order of Court. In
light of the agreement, the court is of the view
that a proper order
should be that of no order as to costs.
[69]
Finally, regarding the costs of this appeal it is my view that
since the costs are interwoven notwithstanding the success of the
claim for malicious prosecution the appellant are ordered to pay the
costs of the appeal.
Order
The
following order will issue:
1.
The appeal in respect of unlawful arrest and detention is dismissed;
2.
The appeal in respect of malicious prosecution is upheld and
the
order of the court a quo is set aside to this extent and
3.
The appellant are ordered to pay the cost of the appeal jointly
and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
4.
No order as to costs occasioned by the postponement on 24 November
2017
V
M Nqumse
Acting
Judge of the High Court
DATE
OF HEARING OF THE APPEAL: 26 JANUARY 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
16 May 2022
ATTORNEY
FOR APPELLANT:
THE STATE ATTORNEY
PRETORIA
ADVOCATE
FOR APPELLANT:
Adv P de JAGER SC
Adv
M BOTMA
ATTORNEY
FOR RESPONDENT:
LOUBSER VAN DER WALT
INC.
ADVACATE
FOR RESPONDENT:
Adv S MULLIGAN SC
Adv
P VENTER
[1]
Act 51 of 1977
[2]
Transcribed record: page 352, line 20[caseline 4-696-697]
[3]
Transcribed record: Page 356 line 10(caselines 4-701)
[4]
Minister
of Law and Order v Harley and Another
1986
3 SA 568
(A) at 589 E-F
[5]
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
1986
(2) SA 805
(A) at 818 G-K
[6]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto
2011
(5) SA 367
[7]
Duncan (at 818H-J)
[8]
2016 (2) SACR 540
(CC) at 554 para d-f
[9]
MR
v
Minister of Safety and Security and Another
2016
(2)SACR 540 (CC) at para 46
[10]
2009 (1) SACR 211
E
[11]
ibid at para 9
[12]
Sekhoto above fn 9 para [40]
[13]
ibid fn 39 para [44]
[14]
Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v
Moleko
[2008] ZASCA 43
;
2009 (2) SACR 585
(SCA) and Woji v Minister
of Police
[2014] ZASCA 108
;
2015 (1) SACR 409
(SCA) para 33.
[15]
2001(2) SACR 703 (SCA) at para 19
[16]
1975 (1) SA 481 (A)
[17]
1955 (1) SA 129
(A) at 136 A-B [also reported at
[1955] ALL SA 1467
[a-Ed]
[18]
2019 (6) bclr 703 (CC) at para [58]
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