Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 635South Africa
Gumbi v Minister of Police and Another (29514/15) [2022] ZAGPPHC 635 (16 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 August 2022
Judgment
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## Gumbi v Minister of Police and Another (29514/15) [2022] ZAGPPHC 635 (16 August 2022)
Gumbi v Minister of Police and Another (29514/15) [2022] ZAGPPHC 635 (16 August 2022)
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sino date 16 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 29514/15
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
16
August 2022
In
the matter between:
GASSON
JOHN GUMBI
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
First Defendant
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
Second
Defendant
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties'
legal representatives by email and publication by uploading
it to the
electronic file in this matter on Case-lines. The date and time of
hand down is deemed to be 10:00 on 16 August 2022.
TEFFO,
J:
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff instituted an action
against the Minister of Police, the first defendant, and the National
Director of Public Prosecutions,
the second defendant, for damages
based on malicious prosecution.
The
action is defended.
[2]
The trial began
on
14
August
2019
and proceeded
until 16 August 2019 when it became
part-heard. It was postponed
sine
die.
It
was then set down for 26 and
27
March 2020
and
9
December
2020 when
it could not be heard.
It was eventually heard on 23 March
2021, and 8 to 9 July 2021 when the evidence was finalized. The
record was transcribed and oral
arguments were heard on 11 April
2022.
[3]
The total claim comprised general
damages for malicious prosecution and special damages.
The claim for special damages was
abandoned at the commencement
of
the trial.
[4]
The
defendants
had
raised
two
special
pleas
against
the
plaintiff's particulars of claim.
The first special plea revolved around
the issue of prescription. The defendants claimed that the cause of
action relied upon by
the plaintiff pertaining to his arrest and
detention arose on 29 July 2011 and the summons was issued and served
on 4 May 2015
after a period of three years.
As a result, the cause of action that
related to the arrest and detention of the plaintiff was abandoned.
[5]
The second special plea related to the
failure by the plaintiff to serve the defendants with a notice in
terms of section 3 of Act
40 of 2002 within six months from the date
on which the
cause
of action arose. This special plea fell away after the plaintiff was
granted condonation by this Court for the late filing
of the
statutory notice.
Facts
that are common cause between the parties
[6]
On or about 29 July 2011 and in
Carolina, the plaintiff was arrested by members of the first
defendant in the course and scope of
their employment with the first
defendant.
He
was charged with the rape and murder of Ms Patricia Shongwe ("the
deceased").
Subsequent
thereto he was detained. He was eventually
released on bail on 10 August 2011.
[7]
Afterwards, on 29 December 2011, he was
rearrested and his bail was withdrawn.
On 16 April 2014 he was discharged
in terms of section 174 of Act 51 of
1977
("the Criminal Procedure
Acf').
Facts
that are in dispute
[8]
Whether or not the defendants had
reasonable cause for charging and detaining the plaintiff and whether
or not the defendants had
any reasonable belief in the truth of the
information at their disposal on which the plaintiff was arrested,
detained and charged.
Furthermore,
whether or not the defendants acted with
"malice"
or
animus
iniuriandi.
The
evidence
[9]
The plaintiff was the only witness to
testify in support of his case.
The
defendants called a police officer and a Public Prosecutor as
witnesses in defence of their case.
[10]
The plaintiff, Mr Gabson John Gumbi
testified that the deceased's body was found on 14 December 2010. She
was his girlfriend. He
last saw her on 11 December 2010.
They met on 10 December 2010 and spent
the night together at his friend, Mandia Gadebe's house where they
had sexual intercourse.
In
the morning of 11 December 2010, he left the deceased at Mandla's
house and went to work.
He
never saw her again.
[11]
He became aware of the deceased's death
after her burial when the police came to him and spoke about it.
He told them that he last saw her on 11
December
2010
at
Mandla's
house
where
he
left
her
when
he
went
to work.
The police left.
A few months later, they returned and
arrested him. He was detained for one night. The following morning
blood was drawn from him.
He was later released. Two months later the
police returned and rearrested him.
He
was detained for some days and subsequently released on bail.
[12]
When
he
applied
for
bail,
he
informed
his
attorney
that
the
deceased was his girlfriend and they
spent the night together at Mandla's place on 10 December 2010. The
information was reduced
to writing and he heard his attorney giving
the information to the court.
[13]
He was later arrested again and his bail
was cancelled.
He
applied for the second bail.
However,
the application was not successful.
He
remained in custody until on 16 April 2014 when he was acquitted.
[14]
Under
cross-examination
he
testified
that
his
relationship
with
the
deceased lasted for more than a year prior to her demise.
After denying that he only disclosed one
previous conviction when he applied for bail, he conceded that he had
other previous convictions
which happened long time ago. He did not
disclose them but conceded that they included a case of rape that he
committed in 2008.
He
admitted that in 2008 the police collected blood samples from him.
[15]
It was put to him that he was
re-arrested because he did not disclose his previous convictions
and a pending
case when he applied for bail, and he
was granted bail on the wrong information that he gave the court.
He conceded that it would therefore not
have been wrong for the police to re arrest him and apply for
the cancellation of his
bail.
[16]
When told that the defendants will lead
evidence that he was arrested because his DNA which was stored in the
Forensic Science Laboratory
("the laboratory") that related
to the rape that he committed in 2008 matched the DNA that was found
from the deceased,
he reiterated that he had sexual intercourse with
the deceased on 10 December 2010 and that explained the presence of
his DNA on
the deceased. His further evidence was that he left the
deceased with his sister and Mandia at Mandla's house.
His sister
passed away when he was in custody.
He could not tell why his sister's
statement was not taken by the police.
His sister and her boyfriend rented a
place at Mandla's house at the time when he was with the deceased
there.
[17]
He last saw Mandia the same year he was
released from custody.
[18]
The investigating officer asked him to provide him with Mandla's
residential address and not
his contact number. He denied that he
refused to give him Mandla's contact number. He was detained at the
time and his cellphone
which had Mandla's contact number was at home.
Subsequent to his release on bail, he went to Mandia and enquired
whether the investigating
officer came to him when he was in custody.
The investigating officer never went to Mandia even though he
provided him with Mandla's
residential address.
[19]
He further denied that he raped and murdered the deceased. He
testified that Sgt Mashaba took
the side of the deceased. He gave him
Mandla's residential address, however he did not visit the address.
He just wanted to arrest
him.
[20]
Mr Managa for the defendants applied for
absolution from the instance at the close of the plaintiff's case.
The application was dismissed.
[21]
Mr Selebi Sibusiso Jack Mashaba
testified that he is a Sergeant in the South African Police Service
(SAPS) and has been a police
officer for 19 years.
He was the investigating officer in the
criminal case against the plaintiff.
He
collated evidence during his investigation. He received information
from the station about the body of a female person that was
found
next to the railway
station.
He drove to the scene where he found the body of a young female
person which had injuries.
The
deceased was lying on the ground with her hands covering her head
showing that she was trying to protect herself. Forensic pathologists
and other officials from the Local Criminal
Record
Centre
(LCRC)
were
called.
They
arrived,
pictures
were taken and the body was transported
to the mortuary. The scene was thoroughly inspected for any clues.
No clue was found there.
They all left the scene.
The incident happened during the weekend
although he could not recall the exact date.
[22]
Arrangements were made for a
post mortem
to be conducted. At
the same time investigations continued.
[23]
The witness was taken through the investigation diary which indicated
what happened on 14 December
2009. This was the day when the body was
found.
[24]
He managed to trace the family members of the deceased and the person
who last saw her.
[25]
On 18 December 2009 blood was drawn from the plaintiff. The
plaintiff's blood sample and that
obtained from the deceased were
sent to the laboratory for analysis. They also had another suspect
called Mr Sibusiso Ngcobo. Mr
Ngcobo's blood was also taken and then
sent to the laboratory for analysis. He also interviewed the
deceased's friend, Ms Nomvula
Ennocentia Madonsela ("Ms
Madonsela") who mentioned in a statement filed in a police
docket that on Saturday 12 December
2009 at approximately 22:00 she
was with the deceased. They were from another friend and the deceased
requested her to accompany
her home.
[26]
They went to her home and then proceeded to Mandla's place to look
for the deceased's sister,
Ntombifuthi. On their way, on the main
road towards Gwebu's shop, they were accosted by a certain black male
person who had covered
his head with a hat and a jacket. He pulled
out a grass slasher and hit the tarred road. Sparks went out. He then
said whoever
he would grab between them, he would kill her. She and
the deceased ran to different directions. She looked back and saw the
man
chasing after the deceased. She ultimately reached home and does
not know what happened to the deceased. The next day she went to
check on the deceased and she was told that she did not come back
home. She does not know the suspect and would not be able to
identify
him. The incident happened at night and it was dark.
[27]
The two sets of the blood taken from the
two suspects were analysed and nothing was found from Mr Sibusiso
Ngcobo.
When
comparing the blood results of the plaintiff, they matched the blood
that was taken from the deceased.
[28]
When he was arresting the plaintiff and
after he had explained his constitutional rights to him, the
plaintiff disclosed certain
information. He then made arrangements
that he be taken to a magistrate on 1 August 2011 to make a
confession. He realised when
he read the confession that the
plaintiff told the magistrate that the deceased was his girlfriend.
That was the first time he became aware
of the plaintiff's defence about his alleged relationship with the
deceased and the fact
that on 10 December 2009, they were together at
Mandia Radebe's house.
[29]
He
asked
Ms
Madonsela
about
Mandia
who
she
mentioned
in
her
statement and she said she does not know where he resided. The
deceased requested her to accompany her to Mandla's place and
they
did not reach the place.
He
could not say if Ms Madonsela was talking about the same Mandia the
plaintiff mentioned in his evidence as there are many people
in the
area with the same name.
[30]
Ms
Madonsela's
statement
could
not
assist
his
investigation.
She mentioned that the person who
accosted her and the deceased had covered his face.
It was at night and the place was dark.
He interviewed her three times and she
said she would not be able to identify the culprit.
[31]
After becoming aware of the plaintiff's
defence, he went to the sisters of the deceased
and they
told him that they
only
knew
Nonkululeko
as the boyfriend of the deceased.
He tried to investigate the information
about Mandia in order to verify the plaintiff's version.
He also visited the plaintiff and asked
him about the whereabouts
of
his
alibi
witness,
Mandia.
He
told him that Mandia was staying in Ermelo.
He asked the plaintiff to provide him
with Mandla's cellphone number to enable him to meet him.
The plaintiff said he did not have it
and that he should come back to him the following day.
[32]
He
returned
to
the
plaintiffs
home
the
next
day
and
did
not
find
him.
Eventually
he found him after some days and the plaintiff refused to provide him
with Mandla's cellphone number. He therefore could
not obtain a
statement from Mandia. He only managed to obtain statements from the
deceased's sisters and they all said the plaintiffs
statement about
him having a love relationship with the deceased is not the truth.
[33]
Under
cross-examination it
was
put
to him that when the plaintiff
was
arrested in July 2011, he told the police about his
alibi
and that he had a secret love
relationship with the deceased.
Further
that they were together at Mandia, his friend's place. He disagreed
and maintained that according to the information that
he had, the
deceased
did
not know the plaintiff.
[34]
He denied that there were two panties at
the crime scene, one pink and one white in colour and only one of
them was taken to the
laboratory. Further that there was a mixed-up
of the exhibits and when the DNA report became available, it was
rectified without
conveying the information to the plaintiff.
[35]
He denied that there was no evidence
against the plaintiff and despite this,
the
defendants
continued
to
keep
him
in
custody
for
three
years.
He
denied any malice on the part of the defendants and maintained that
throughout their investigation, the defendants were satisfied
that
there was a case against the plaintiff.
[36]
All
the
evidence
which
he
collated
during
his
investigation
was forwarded to the Public Prosecutor.
He could not investigate the plaintiffs
alibi
without
his co-operation.
[37]
Mrs Antoinette Klapper testified that
she was a prosecutor for 38 years. She is retired.
From 2009 she was a Regional Court
Prosecutor and in the main, she handled rape and murder cases.
She only got involved in the criminal
matter against the plaintiff when it was transferred to the Regional
Court.
She
corroborated the evidence of Sgt Mashaba that prior to the arrest of
the plaintiff there was no suspect. The case was only enrolled
after
the DNA evidence was received from the laboratory.
Fluid like semen was found in the vagina
of the deceased and sent to the laboratory.
[38]
The plaintiff was arrested and he applied for bail. Based on the
defence that he disclosed at
the bail hearing, statements were
obtained from the deceased's family members which all said the
deceased did not reside in Carolina.
[39]
The evidence that was in the docket when the matter came to the
Regional Court, which she evaluated when she prepared
for trial, was
that the plaintiff was linked to the offences through the DNA report.
She also had the affidavit of the plaintiff
which was before the
district court when he applied for bail wherein he disclosed a
defence of sexual intercourse with the deceased
with consent. There
was also a
post mortem
report which was compiled after a
post
mortem
was conducted on the body of a 15 years old girl who died
of multiple injuries.
[40]
Furthermore, there was a photo-album
with photos that depicted the place where the deceased's body was
found in the veld.
The
body was naked from the
waist
down.
A
panty
of
the deceased
was
found
next to her
body and the T-shirt she was wearing was
pulled up and her breasts were exposed. The position
in
which
she
was
found
and
the
semen
that
was
found
in
her vagina indicated that she was raped
before she was murdered.
[41]
She
considered
the defence
that was
raised by the plaintiff
in
his
bail hearing.
In
her view this aspect was addressed by the family members of the
deceased in the statements they made to the police where they
mentioned that the deceased resided in Witbank
where she attended school and she only
visited her sister in Carolina for December holidays.
Further to this the sister of the
deceased said in her statement that on the night of 10 December 2009
to 11 December 2009 in the
morning, the deceased was with her at her
home in Silobela (Carolina).
They
spent the night together in one room.
Later in the day they accompanied each
other to Carolina town where they separated.
The sister sustained injuries when they
were in Carolina town and had to go to the hospital.
[42]
The sister further
stated that the plaintiff
was not known to
them. He could not have
been
in
a
relationship
with
the
deceased
as
she
would
have known about it.
There was also a statement of a friend
of the deceased who said she was with her on the night of 12 December
2009 when they were
accosted by an unknown male person.
[43]
Further to this, she consulted
with a sister of the deceased prior to
proceeding with the trial.
The
sister confirmed what she said in her statement. It would have been
unlikely for the plaintiff and the deceased to have been
involved in
a love relationship.
She
was satisfied that if the deceased's sister's statement was accepted
in court, it would show that the plaintiff's version was
not
reasonably possibly true.
[44]
The plaintiff's version that he and the
deceased spent the night of 10 December 2009 at Mandla's house was
rebutted by the Investigating
Officer's statement that he asked the
plaintiff to point out Mandia to him and the plaintiff did not
co-operate.
When
she evaluated this evidence holistically, she was satisfied that the
State had sufficient evidence to prosecute the plaintiff
and there
was a reasonable
and
probable cause to do so. She then decided to continue with the
prosecution of the plaintiff and the trial proceeded.
[45]
If the deceased
had sexual intercourse
with someone else and not the plaintiff
one would have expected that person's DNA and not that of the
plaintiff.
[46]
There
was
no
need
whatsoever
for
the
State
to
request
the
Investigating Officer to obtain the plaintiff's employer's statement.
The offence was committed at night and
not at the employer's premises.
[47]
The mistake
on the case
numbers
that
appeared
on
the
DNA
results became immaterial when the
plaintiff raised a defence of sexual intercourse with the deceased by
consent.
[48]
The
plaintiff
was
acquitted
in
terms
of
section
174
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act based on a
credibility finding the magistrate made regarding the evidence of the
deceased's sister, something
which the State did not expect.
[49]
She corroborated Sgt Mashaba's evidence
that after the plaintiff's bail was withdrawn, he never applied for
bail again and he remained
in custody until the case was finalised.
Applicable
legal principles
[50]
In
order
to
succeed
in
a
claim
based
on
malicious
prosecution
a plaintiff must establish that:
(a)
the defendant -
(i)
set the law in motion (instituted or
instigated the proceedings);
(ii)
acted without reasonable and probable
cause; and
(iii)
acted with malice (or
animo
injuriand1)
and
(b)
that the
prosecution
failed.
[1]
[51]
Whilst
there may be a measure of overlap between the first three
requirements, they remain separate elements of the cause of action
and the plaintiff bore the
onus
to
establish each distinctly.
[2]
[52]
Reasonable
and probable
cause
in
the
context of this claim means
"an
honest belief founded on reasonable grounds that the institution of
the proceedings is justified'.
[3]
The
concept, as is stated in
Relyant
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Shongwe,
[4]
involves
a subjective and an objective component:
"The
requirement for malicious arrest and prosecution that the arrest and
prosecution be instituted 'in the absence of reasonable
and probable
cause' was explained in Beckenstrater v Rottcher and Theunissen
[1955
(1) SA 129
(A) at 136A-BJ 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 doing
so
they are actuated by indirect and
improper motives."
[53]
Chuks Okpaluba in an article called
"Reasonable
&
Probable
Cause in the Law of Malicious Prosecution",
[5]
said
the following:
"The
requirement that the plaintiff in an action for malicious prosecution
must prove
a
lack
of reasonable and probable cause to initiate, instigate or continue
the prosecution on the part of the instigator or prosecutor
is one of
the four elements of that cause of action.
It is
a
vital link between the lawfulness of
the prosecution and the state of mind of the defendant. Again whether
a
prosecution
is wrongful or lawful depends on whether there was
a
reasonable or probable cause coupled
with
the
animus
injuriandi
of
the
defendant
in
instigating, initiating or
continuing it.
It
is not whether the prosecutor possessed evidence to secure
a
conviction since that is for the
trial court to decide after the conclusion of the evidence; but, the
honest belief by the prosecutor
that, having carefully collected and
objectively assessed the available information, the plaintiff was
probably guilty of the crime.
In coming to that decision the
prosecutor must have grappled with both the subjective and objective
elements in the exercise of
that discretion."
[54]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Minister
of Police and Another v Ou Plessis
[6]
said
the following:
"[29]
In Democratic
Alliance
v President
of
the RSA and
Others [2012)
1 All SA 243
(SCA)
this Court, after
a
discussion
concerning prosecutorial
independence
in
democratic
societies
quoted
with approval, the following part of
a
paper
presented at an international seminar by Mr James Hamilton, a then
substitute member of the Venice Commission and Director
of Public
Prosecution in Ireland:
'Despite
the variety of arrangements in prosecutor's offices, the public
prosecutor plays a vital role in ensuring due process and
the rule of
law as well as respect for the rights of all the parties involved in
the criminal justice system.
The
prosecutor's duties are owed primarily to the public as a whole but
also to those individuals caught up in the system, whether
as
suspects or accused
persons,
witnesses
or
victims
of
crime.
Public confidence in the
prosecutor ultimately depends on the confidence that the rule of law
is obeyed.'
We
should all be concerned about the maintenance and promotion of the
Rule of Law. Given increasing litigation involving the NDPP,
these
principles cannot be repeated often enough. We ignore them at our
peril.
[30]
A prosecutor
exercises
a
discretion
on the basis
of the information
before
him
or her. In State
v
Lubaxa
2001
(2)
SACR
703 (SCA) para 19 this Court said
the following:
'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 (s10 and s12) 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 fails below
that threshold."'
Discussion
[55]
The
plaintiff's
claim
against
the
defendants
was
formulated
in
his
particulars of claim as follows:
"On
or about the 29th July 2011 at Carolina, the defendants wrongfully
and maliciously set the law in motion by:
5.1
Charging the plaintiff with alleged
charges of rape and murder, even after the Plaintiff furnished them
with an alibi;
5.2
By insisting that the Plaintiff be
detained without bail without any evidence to warrant the criminal
charges against the Plaintiff's
detention until 10 August 2011 when
the Plaintiff was granted bail of R1 500,00 (one thousand five
hundred rand);
5.3
By re-arresting the Plaintiff on
29
December
2011 and withdrawing his bail even after same was granted by the
Carolina Magistrate's Court on 10 August 2011;
5.4
By again insisting that the
Plaintiff be detained without bail, without evidence to warrant
criminal charges or the Plaintiff's
detention until 16 April 2014
when he was discharged in terms of
section 174
of the Criminal
Procedure Act, 51 of 1977.
# 6.
6.
6.1
When so charging and detaining
the Plaintiff, the Defendants had no reasonable cause for doing so
nor did they have any reasonable
belief in the truth of the
information at their disposal on which the Plaintiff
was
arrested, detained and charged on
29
July 2011 and
29
December 2011.
6.2
The defendants' conduct was
actuated by malice and/or animus iniuriandi."
[56]
The ineluctable evidence
is that the plaintiff was linked to the
murder and rape
of
the
deceased
through
DNA
evidence.
The
body
of
a
female young person who was raped and
murdered, was found next to a railway station with multiple injuries.
No suspect could be found at the time.
Fluid like semen was found in the vagina of the deceased when the
post mortem
examination
was conducted and sent to the
laboratory.
[57]
The plaintiff was previously suspected
of rape which was committed in 2008. His DNA
sample was collected
and stored
in the laboratory.
The DNA sample that was collected from
the deceased matched the sample of the plaintiff that the laboratory
had at the time.
In
a letter from the laboratory dated 17 August 2010 to the SAPS
Carolina the following is stated:
"DNA
INFORMATION REPORT: REQUEST FOR A CONFIRMATION BLOOD SAMPLE
CAROLINA
CAS 36/01/07 (4890/08) CAROLINA GAS 58112/09 (294/10)
1.
We have received information that
the suspect in CAROLINA GAS 36/01108
(4890/08)
(05D3AA0728MX,
JG
GUMB/)
was
possibly
involved
in CAROLINA CAS 58/12109 (294/10). The case needs to be further
investigated to explain the presence of the suspect at
this crime
scene.
2.
In order to verify this
information for further evidence,
a
blood sample (i.e. confirmation blood
sample), should be obtained from the suspect (05D3AA0728MX, JG GUMB/)
and submitted to the
Biology section in Pretoria for the confirmation
of the DNA hit.
AND/OR
Reference
sample of possible suspect (NGCOBO SJ, 06D1AF1194XX)
CAROLINA
GAS 58/12109 (294/10) was
provided and this suspect was excluded as the possible donor of the
DNA result obtained on the exhibits
...
"
[58]
A fresh blood sample was subsequently
extracted from the plaintiff and sent to
the laboratory.
The DNA
results
of
this
sample
confirmed
what
was
stated in the letter referred to above that the plaintiff was
involved in the murder and rape of the deceased.
[59]
The deceased's
body
was
discovered
on
14
December
2009.
In
his
evidence the plaintiff incorrectly mentioned the dates of 10 and 11
December 2010 as the dates he was with her. According to
the
plaintiff despite explaining the presence of his DNA on the deceased
to the police, they arrested him.
[60]
Sgt Mashaba denied this and maintained
that he only got to know of the plaintiff's defence on the day of his
first appearance in
court from what purported to be a confession the
plaintiff made before a magistrate on 1 August 2011. The information
was further
confirmed in an affidavit made by the
plaintiff
when
he
applied
for
bail.
He
then
investigated
the
plaintiff's defence by interviewing the
members of the deceased's family, the deceased's boyfriend and the
deceased's friend who
was the last person to be with her prior to her
death.
From
the information he gathered the plaintiff and the deceased did not
know each other.
[61]
The
plaintiff
accuses
Sgt
Mashaba
of
not
verifying
his
defence
as
he
did not
go
to
Mandia
even
after
he had
provided
him
with
his
residential address. He denied that he
refused to provide Sgt Mashaba with Mandla's cell phone number.
Without repeating Sgt Mashaba's
evidence, it is clear that the plaintiff was not co-operative in
ensuring that Sgt Mashaba meets
with Mandia, his alibi witness.
Sgt Mashaba did not know Mandia.
At some stage he was told by the
plaintiff that he was somewhere in Ermelo. If the explanation for the
presence of the plaintiff's
DNA on the deceased was the truth as he
alleges, there would not have been any difficulty for the plaintiff
to provide Sgt Mashaba
with Mandia 's cell phone number and
residential address, if any, to enable him to do his work. After
testifying that he left the
deceased at Mandla's house on the morning
of 11 December 2009, under cross examination he mentioned the
presence of his sister
at the place and that he left the deceased
with his sister. It was strange that he could not explain why the
police did not obtain
his sister's statement that could have
confirmed his defence. When asked about the whereabouts of his
sister, he was quick to say
she passed on when he was in custody.
[62]
The statement of Ms Madonsela who was
with the deceased on the night of 12 December 2009 was made on 18
December 2009. Sgt Mashaba
testified
that
the
statement
could
not
assist
his
investigation
because
Ms
Madonsela indicated that the incident happened at night in the dark.
She would not identify the perpetrator.
[63]
Sgt Mashaba further testified that from
the statements obtained from the deceased's sisters, they all
indicated that the plaintiff's
defence relating to his secret love
relationship with the deceased was not the truth.
[64]
Sgt Mashaba's evidence was corroborated
by Mrs Klapper who added that she
consulted
with
the
deceased's
sister,
Ms
Ntombifuthi
Martha Shongwe prior to the trial.
Ms Shongwe confirmed the contents of the
statement she made to the police that on the night of 10 December
2009, the deceased was
at home in Silobela the whole day and they
spent the night together in one room. The following day on 11
December 2009 the deceased
accompanied her to Carolina town when they
separated.
[65]
The
defendants'
evidence
is
that
the
date
of
the
deceased's
death and rape is unknown. Her family
members last saw her on 11 December 2009 while Ms Madonsela was with
her on 12 December 2009.
[66]
Mrs Klopper's evidence explaining what
information was in the docket when the
matter
was
enrolled
in
the
district
court,
when
it
came
to
the
Regional Court and what she considered when she continued with the
prosecution of the plaintiff and eventually bringing the
matter to
trial, is on record. She was adamant in her evidence that if the
deceased had sexual intercourse with someone else and
not the
plaintiff, one would have expected that to find that person's DNA and
not that of the plaintiff.
Did
the defendants set the law in motion?
[67]
It
is
clear
from
Sgt
Mashaba's
evidence
that
all
he
did
was
to
investigate the matter, collect the evidence and forward it to the
OPP.
He was
not responsible for the prosecution of the plaintiff. At all times he
acted on the instructions and under the direction of
the Office of
the OPP.
[68]
The plaintiff conceded under cross
examination that it was not wrong for the police to re-arrest him
after he was granted bail and
thereafter
for his bail
to be
withdrawn
after
it
was
discovered
that
he
failed
to
disclose
his previous convictions when he applied
for bail.
There
was no evidence that he subsequently made another application for
bail after his bail was withdrawn as he testified.
[69]
An issue was raised during the
cross-examination of Sgt Mashaba and Mrs Klepper and also in the
plaintiff's heads of argument that
the plaintiff was prosecuted on
the basis of a defective DNA report which Sgt Mashaba discovered on
14 September 2011 and rectified.
Further that there was no reasonable
and probable cause to prosecute or continue to prosecute him on the
basis of that DNA report
which both the police and the prosecutor
were aware of and that the prosecution thereof was malicious.
[70]
I
must
state
from
the
onset
that
this
issue
was
not
pleaded.
It
only came for the first time when the
defendants' witnesses were cross-examined. Even then
I
will
briefly
deal
with
it.
The
evidence
of
Sgt
Mashaba
and
Mrs
Klepper regarding this issue is on record. Both witnesses were
extensively cross-examined on the issue.
Sgt Mashaba's reply to a question as to
what was rectified on the DNA result (A16) as per the entry that he
made in his investigation
dairy
on
14
September
2011
was
that
he
cannot
remember.
Later
on he testified that the lady who was typing the report put an old
number in the report instead of the new one. He noticed
that the
exhibit number was incorrect and then wrote a letter to the
laboratory correcting it. He was adamant that the report was
not
wrong. According to him the sample was correct. He explained that the
original statement had to be rectified because of the
wrong exhibit
numbers. When he phoned the laboratory and alerted them of the
problem, they said they had already analysed the samples
and inserted
the correct exhibit numbers.
[71]
The two
witnesses
for
the
defendant disputed
that
the plaintiff
was
prosecuted on a defective DNA report.
Mrs Klapper testified that she cannot
comment on what had to be rectified on the DNA report.
The plaintiff admitted the DNA results
by conceding that the DNA that was found from the deceased's vagina
was his because he had
sexual intercourse with her with consent. What
he disputed was the chain of evidence.
At the time when the prosecution
of the plaintiff was instituted, there
was a
section 212(4)
statement (A16) which is
prima
facie
evidence by mere production
thereof that the plaintiff was linked to the offences through his DNA
profile.
She
was clear in her evidence that she does not know what was rectified
and cannot confirm whether that which was rectified changed
the
results. What she could confirm was that the enrolment was based on
the
prima facie
evidence
contained in the
section 212(4)
statement as it was available on the
date of enrolment. She denied that the case against the plaintiff was
built after the prosecution
was instituted and that when she took
over the docket in the Regional Court, there were shortcomings
which she tried to rectify.
[72]
She testified that the DNA results
rested on serial numbers of exhibits and if there was a mistake in
the serial numbers of the
exhibits used to obtain the DNA
results,
the
State
would
not
have
prosecuted
using
that
sections 212(4)
statement. What was
rectified could not have been the contents of the actual analysis
otherwise they would not have used that report
to institute the
prosecution of the plaintiff from the beginning.
[73]
It is clear from the evidence of Sgt
Mashaba that the mistake on the exhibit numbers
that had to be rectified
was a genuine and
bona
tide
mistake made in the laboratory.
There is already evidence on record that
there was no suspect in the criminal case against the plaintiff. He
was linked to the
offences
committed in 2009 through his DNA profile that was stored in the
laboratory in 2008 and he admitted that the DNA that was
found on the
deceased was his.
[74]
No
evidence
was
presented
by
the
plaintiff
that
Sgt
Mashaba
did
anything more than one would expect from a police officer in the
circumstances.
The
prosecution occurred at the instance of the OPP. In my view the
plaintiff failed to prove that the first defendant instigated
or
instituted the prosecution against him. The claim against the first
defendant can therefore not succeed.
Was
there any lack of reasonable and probable cause?
[75]
In his heads of argument Mr Jacobs for
the plaintiff submitted that the court should
disregard
the
affidavits
referred
to
by
Sgt
Mashaba
in
his evidence as the
authors thereof were not called to
testify.
He
claims that in the
pre-trials
as
well
as
his
opening
address, the plaintiff
clearly
stated
that
the status of the documents is what they purport to be, without
admitting the content thereof. Further that it was agreed that
only
documents referred to in evidence shall be taken into account by the
court.
[76]
These affidavits are statements which were made to Sgt Mashaba during
his investigation. They form part and parcel of
the docket that was
presented to the OPP for purposes of applying its mind and exercising
its discretion to prosecute the plaintiff.
They were referred to in
evidence and the parties agreed that they should be taken into
account by the court. I cannot therefore
disregard them. They should
be assessed together with the totality of the evidence before me.
[77]
The answer to the question whether there was reasonable and probable
cause does not lie in the question whether the prosecutor
possessed
evidence to secure a conviction but the honest belief by the
prosecutor that having carefully collected and objectively
assessed
the available information, the plaintiff was guilty.
[78]
I am satisfied from the evidence of Mrs Klepper that she carefully
considered the evidence that was before her in the
docket. She
mentioned in her evidence that amongst the documents that were in her
possession, there was a post-mortem report. According
to the evidence
on the post-mortem report, the deceased was 15 years old when she
died. In the light of this evidence, I am of
the view that the
evidence of the plaintiff that prior to the incident he was in a
secret love relationship with the deceased,
is not probable.
[79]
Further
evidence
was
that
Mrs
Kloppers
applied
her
mind
to
the defence raised by plaintiff
regarding the presence of his DNA on the deceased and was satisfied
from the evidence of the deceased's
sisters that his version could
not be reasonably possibly true. I agree with her in this regard.
[80]
The deceased was very young.
The evidence of Ms Madonsela that an
unknown male person who accosted her and the deceased threatened to
kill anyone of them he
would catch resulting in them running in
different
directions
and her observation of the deceased being chased by him, support the
information in the docket pertaining to the offences.
I therefore have difficulty in accepting
the version of the plaintiff explaining the presence of his DNA on
the deceased.
It
is, in my view, improbable. It is
rejected as false.
[81]
Another
aspect
was
raised
which
revolved
around
the
issue
of
the panties allegedly found at the
scene, a white and a pink panty that was referred to in the
investigation diary. This aspect
is, in my view, neither here nor
there.
The
DNA evidence that was relied upon in this matter was found in the
vagina of the deceased.
[82]
Having
said
that
I
conclude
that
there
was
reasonable
and
probable cause to prosecute the
plaintiff.
Did
the OPP act with malice?
[83]
Having regard to the conclusion that I
have arrived at
supra
that
there was reasonable
and
probable
cause
to
prosecute
the
plaintiff, I
find
that the plaintiff has failed to establish that the instigation or
continuation of his prosecution by the second defendant
was actuated
by malice.
[84]
There is no dispute that the prosecution
of the plaintiff failed.
[85]
It therefore follows
that the
plaintiff
has failed to discharge
the onus he bore to establish each of
the requirements in a claim based on malicious prosecution.
[86]
Consequently, the plaintiff's claim against the defendants is
dismissed with costs.
M
J TEFFO
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances
For
the plaintiff G
Jacobs
Instructed
by
Loubser
Van der Walt Inc
For
the Defendants
P Managa
Instructed
by State
Attorney Pretoria
Heard
on 11
April 2022
Handed
down on
16
August 2022
[1]
See Minister of Justice & Constitutional Development &
Others v Moleko
2009 (2) SACR 585
(SCA); and Woji v Minister of
Police
2015 (1) SACR 409
(SCA) para [32].
[2]
Relyant Trading (Pty) Ltd v Shongwe & Another
[2007] 1 All SA
375
(SCA) para [14]; and Minister of Safety and Security &
Another v Lincoln
2020 (2) SACR 262
(SCA) para [21].
[3]
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development v Mofeko, supra,
at para [20]; Minister of Safety and Security v Lincoln,
supra.
[4]
Supra
[5]
A Review of South Africa & Common Wealth Decision [April 2013
Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal 2013 (16) PER/PEL]
[6]
2014 (1) SACR 217
(SCA).
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