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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Modack v Minister of Police and Others (21348/2019)
[2023] ZAWCHC 108 (4 May 2023)
Modack v Minister of Police and Others (21348/2019)
[2023] ZAWCHC 108 (4 May 2023)
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sino date 4 May 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
number: 21348/2019
In
the matter between:
NAFIZ
MODACK
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
First
respondent
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SERVICE
Second
respondent
THE
PROVINCIAL COMMISSIONER OF
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SERVICE (WESTERN CAPE)
Third
respondent
MAJOR
GEN ANDRE LINCOLN
Fourth
respondent
MAJOR
GEN JEREMY VEARRY
Fifth
respondent
LT
COL CHARL KINNEAR
Sixth
respondent
CAPT
SHARON JAPTHA
Seventh
respondent
SGT
DE VRIES
Eighth
respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 4 MAY 2023
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
The
applicant seeks final interdictory relief against the respondents, to
restrain the respondents
from:
1.1
arresting
the applicant without a warrant of arrest issued by an authorised
judicial
officer,
alternatively,
unless
in
specific
circumstances set out in
section
40(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (“the CPA
“
);
1.2
assaulting
the applicant or causing him any physical harm or injury of any
nature;
1.3
confronting,
intimidating or harassing the applicant and his family members
related to him by birth or by marriage; and
1.4
entering
the applicant's home or that of his family members related
to
him by birth or by marriage, unless (i) authorised by a warrant duly
issued by an authorised judicial officer;
or
(ii) there exists a due cause for such
entry.
2.
The
factual basis for the relief sought by the applicant is premised,
very broadly, on the
following
averments detailed in the founding papers:
2.1
Several
members of the South African Police Service ("SAPS"),
including high-ranking officers, attached to different units
of SAPS,
have been harassing the applicant whilst he has
lawfully
been acting as
a
consultant
to
certain security businesses, and whilst
he has been in lawful possession of firearms.
2.2
The
applicant has been liaising and co-operating with other members of
SAPS, including high-ranking officers in
Cape
Town, Johannesburg and the Northern Cape. In his
interaction with those members of SAPS it has become clear that some
of the respondents
are biased, and that others are corrupt.
3.
In
seeking final interdictory relief, the duty is on the applicant to
show (i) that he has a clear right; (ii) an injury actually
committed
or reasonably apprehended; and (iii) the absence of
an
alternative remedy.
[1]
4.
The
ordinary rules relating to the discharge of the duty on affidavit
apply. Consequently, the version set up by the respondents
must be
accepted unless their allegations do not raise a real, genuine or
bona
fide
dispute
of fact,
or
are
so
far-fetched or
clearly untenable
that it
will
be justified to
reject them merely
on the papers.
[2]
The test in
determining whether a respondent's version may be rejected merely on
the papers, is "a
stringent
one not easily
satisfied”.
[3]
5.
This
application has taken years to wend its way towards a hearing.
Before dealing with the merits of the application,
the question that needs to be discussed is whether the grant of the
relief sought
will, at this stage, serve any purpose.
The
mootness of the relief sought
6.
The
doctrine of mootness, as it is now known, did not find application in
the South African law before the advent of the Interim
Constitution
of 1993.
[4]
However,
as early as 1963 our Courts have declined to decide cases where the
issues had no more than academic significance and as
such would not
have a binding effect on the parties.
[5]
Since
1994 there has been a number of cases in which the Constitutional
Court has applied the doctrine.
7.
In
JT
Publishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Safety and Security
,
[6]
for example, the
Court stated that Courts are governed by a judicial policy which
vests in them a discretion, and that it is a well-established
and
uniformly observed policy which directs them not to exercise it in
favour of deciding points that are merely abstract, academic
or
hypothetical.
[7]
8.
In
JT
Publishing
the
legislation complained of by the applicants had been replaced by new
legislation by the time the Court delivered judgment. The
Court
declined to make a decision on the merits of the case on the basis
that:
[8]
“
[T]here
can hardly be a clearer instance of issues that are wholly academic,
of
issues
exciting no interest but a historic one
,
than those on which our ruling is wanted have now become. The repeal
of the Publications Act has disposed altogether of the questions
pertaining to that. And any aspect of the one about the Indecent or
Obscene Photographic Matter Act which our previous decision
on it did
not answer fully has been foreclosed by its repeal in turn. I
therefore conclude that we should decline at this stage
to grant a
declaratory order on either topic
.”
[Emphasis added.]
9.
In
South
African
Transport
and
Allied
Workers Union v
ADT Security (Pty) Ltd
,
[9]
the
Labour
Appeal
Court
stated
the
following:
"[4] The principles relating
to mootness have been well established in National Coalition for Gay
and Lesbian Equality and
Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[1999] ZACC 17
;
2000 (1) BCLR 39
(CC) in which the Constitutional
Court said:
"A case is moot and therefore
not justiciable, if it no longer presents an existing or live
controversy which should exist
if the Court is to avoid giving
advisory opinions on abstract propositions of law."...
[5]
In Independent Electoral Commission v Langeberg Municipality
[2001]
ZACC 23
;
2001 (9) BCLR 883
(CC), the Constitutional Court held that,
where there was no live
controversy between the parties, and, in the absence of any
suggestion that any order might have an impact
on the parties, the
disputes between the parties were moot especially since future cases
inevitably presented different factual
matrixes and hence no purpose
would be served in resolving the dispute.
See
also Radio Pretoria v Chairman of the
Independent Communication Authority of South Africa and Another …
[2004] ZACC 24
;
2005 (3) BCLR 231
(CC)."
[Emphasis
added.]
10.
In
Sebola
and another v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and another,
[10]
the Constitutional
Court stated
that
"
mootness
is not an absolute bar to deciding an issue. That is axiomatic: the
question is whether the interests of justice require
that it to be
decided.
One
consideration whether the Court's order will have any practical
effect on either the parties or others
."
[Emphasis
added.]
11.
It
is by now a
matter of
public record that the applicant in the present
matter was arrested in
April 2021 (this
application had been instituted in 2019) and charged with various
serious offences, including the murder of the
sixth respondent in
this matter.
12.
In
the circumstances, I agree with the submission made on the
respondents’ behalf that there is no longer a live dispute
between (i) the applicant and the
sixth
respondent; and (ii) the
applicant and
the
remaining
respondents. The
applicant has been
arrested and is being detained, awaiting his criminal trial.
13.
The
issues raised by the applicant and the relief sought in the notice of
motion are now, at best, purely academic. The relief sought
will have
no practical effect on any of the parties.
14.
I
am of the view that the application falls to be dismissed on this
issue.
15.
In
case I am wrong, however, the merits of the applicant’s case
are nevertheless scrutinised.
Has
there been an infringement of a clear right, and an injury?
16.
The
respondents set out in their answering affidavits that, far from
being singled out as alleged, the applicant was, and is, just
one
of several parties involved in, or suspected to be
involved in, the extortion and intimidation of businesses,
particularly restaurants,
pubs and nightclubs. This state of
affairs has given rise to a spate of violence, including murders.
The applicant
was also one of thousands of suspects nationwide
involved in fraud on a grand scale relating to the unlawful issuing
of firearms
licences.
17.
SAPS’s
interactions with the applicant, upon which the applicant relies for
the relief sought, were in connection with the
endemic extortion and
fraud relating to firearms licences. The respondents contend that
SAPS did not infringe any of the applicant's
rights. On the
respondents’ version, no injury was committed, and none is
reasonably apprehended. Those interactions
will be dealt with
below.
18.
I
pause to mention that the applicant has failed to divulge in the
founding affidavit that, in an unsuccessful application previously
launched by him in the High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division,
Pretoria) during November 2018 under case number 82048/2018,
for the
return
of
his
firearms seized during December 2017 and
February 2018, a substantial part of the
allegations in his founding affidavit in the present matter
(including allegations of bias
and victimisation) was raised by him
and was addressed extensively in SAPS's answering affidavit. The
Court dismissed the applicant’s
application and, on 6 December
2019, dismissed his application for leave to appeal.
The
arrest of the applicant, and the seizure of firearms on 15 December
2017
19.
In
any event, one of the events relied on by the applicant for the
relief sought against the respondents is his arrest and the seizure
of some of his firearms during December 2017.
20.
The
respondents explain that, during
an
investigation into the extortion and intimidation
of
businesses in
the
hospitality
industry, the sixth respondent received a statement taken by the
seventh respondent from an owner of a business in
Cape
Town about
complaints of
extortion
levelled against the
applicant. A
police docket was registered at
the
Table Bay Harbour police station. The
relevant statement forms part
of
the
police
docket.
21.
The
sixth respondent also obtained evidence from SAPS sources linking
certain security guards, who
were
apparently harassing
businesses in
Long Street, to businesses allegedly operated by
the applicant. The relevant evidence forms part of the evidence in
the police docket
in the criminal proceedings pending against the
applicant and his co-accused in the Cape Town Regional Court.
They are being
prosecuted on various charges, including extortion and
the rendering of security services without being registered as a
security
service provider, in contravention of the provisions of
section 20(1) of the Private Security Industry Regulation Act 56 of
2001.
22.
In
early December 2017, prior to the commencement of the prosecution of
the applicant referred
to in the previous
paragraph, the sixth respondent approached the
Cape
Town Magistrate’s Court and
obtained
a
warrant for
the
arrest of
the
applicant and his co-accused on charges of
extortion and intimidation. The warrant of
arrest
authorised the SAPS
members to
enter
the
applicant's premises.
23.
On
15 December 2017 the sixth respondent led a team of SAPS members who
arrived at the applicant's premises to arrest the applicant
pursuant
to the warrant of arrest. The size of the team was based on
experiences that SAPS had had when they dealt with the applicant
in
the past. The applicant was accompanied by armed men who introduced
themselves as his body guards.
24.
Upon
entering the premises, the sixth respondent showed the applicant the
warrant of arrest and explained it to him. The applicant
was
thereafter arrested on the charges mentioned in the warrant. The
seventh respondent noticed that the applicant had a handgun
in his
possession.
25.
After
the arrest, the sixth respondent asked the applicant if there were
any other firearms and ammunition kept at the premises
in addition to
the firearm in his possession. The applicant confirmed that
there were more firearms and ammunition on the
premises, and took
SAPS to his study where he showed them a safe, which he opened. He
informed SAPS that there was also cash in
the safe. After he had
opened the safe, the applicant kept the key. SAPS member Sergeant
Davids took the cash from the safe, placed
it in a bag and gave it to
the applicant for safekeeping. Sergeant Davids then removed the
firearms and ammunition from the safe,
sealed them in forensic bags
in the presence of the applicant, and formally seized them. The
applicant put the bag containing the
cash into the safe, locked it,
and kept the key.
26.
The
applicant also took the seventh respondent to his bathroom where
there was another safe, but which did not contain any firearms
or
ammunition.
The sixth and seventh
respondents asked the applicant whether there were any other firearms
at the premises. He informed them
that his other firearms were
kept at a
"gunshop"
in
Johannesburg. He was unable to disclose the name and location of the
shop in Johannesburg.
27.
In
terms of
the
provisions of
the
Firearms Control Act
60
of
2000 ("the
FCA"), only an
authorised licence
holder has the right to
possess the
firearms to
which the
licence relates. The
exception to
this
general rule
is
that
the
licence
holder may give
permission to another person who is
fit and
proper to
possess or
store
the lawful firearms in the circumstances permitted under the
provisions of the FCA.
28.
The
respondents explain that SAPS seized the firearms and ammunition
found at the premises for safety reasons, as they could not
arrest
the applicant and leave his firearms and ammunition
without
anyone to
take responsibility
as
required by the
provisions of the FCA.
Those firearms and ammunition could, moreover, have been used to
cause bodily harm to others. The applicant
was not permitted to keep
the key to the safe with him after his arrest, and left it at the
house. If, therefore, the firearms
had been left in
the
safe, anybody could have used the key to open the safe.
29.
In
these circumstances, the applicant’s arrest and the seizure of
the firearms were lawful.
30.
After
the operation at the applicant’s house, SAPS immediately went
to the premises of other suspects in respect of whom SAPS
had
warrants of arrest, and those persons arrested. They are the
applicant’s co-accused in the pending prosecution in the
Cape
Town Regional Court referred earlier.
The
seizure of firearms in February 2018
31.
The
second incident upon which the applicant relies is the seizure of
firearms during February 2018.
32.
The
respondents explain that, before SAPS visited the applicant's
premises on 15 December 2017, SAPS established that the applicant
held licences for nine firearms.
After
SAPS could not find all of the firearms registered in the applicant’s
name, and he failed to furnish SAPS with satisfactory
answers as to
the whereabouts of five other firearms that were not at the premises
on 15 December 2017, the sixth respondent was
concerned about the
safekeeping of those firearms. He
advised
the applicant that
the issue of the missing
firearms would be relevant for purposes of the applicant’s bail
application, and requested him to
co-operate with SAPS in relation
thereto.
33.
In
the
meantime, SAPS’s
Hawks
branch had commenced with an investigation against the applicant, as
he was suspected of being involved in organised crime
which involved
firearms. The firearms to which this application relates may be
relevant to that investigation and the prosecution
of the applicant
on the charges he faces in that matter. The Hawks too, therefore,
requested the applicant to produce the missing
firearms.
34.
Subsequently,
during the hearing of
the applicant’s
bail
application, the
issue of the missing firearms was raised with the
applicant's attorneys. As a result, the applicant instructed his
attorneys that
the firearms were at his premises, and that SAPS could
go there and seize those firearms that could not be found during the
operation
conducted on 15 December 2017.
35.
The
applicant's attorney arranged with the applicant's cousin to be at
the premises to assist SAPS with the seizure of the firearms.
During February 2018 members of SAPS visited the premises to seize
the rest of the firearms as agreed with the applicant, through
his
legal representatives. On arrival, SAPS were met by the
applicant's cousin, Mr lkeram Modack ("lkeram") outside
the
premises. lkeram let the SAPS members into the house and then to a
safe in the linen room, which he opened. SAPS seized the
five
firearms found in the safe and took them to the Table Bay Harbour
police station for safekeeping.
36.
The
operation in February 2018 was accordingly lawful, as it was
conducted with the applicant’s consent.
The
events of 31 October 2019
37.
This
is the third incident upon the applicant relies in support of the
relief sought.
38.
In
the process of the investigation relating to the firearms licences
obtained by the applicant, SAPS discovered that his spouse
had also
unlawfully obtained a licence for her firearm in collaboration with a
member of
SAPS in Olifantsfontein, and a
firearms dealer in Kempton Park.
39.
The
sixth respondent duly applied for, and obtained, a warrant for the
arrest of the applicant's spouse from the Germiston Magistrate's
Court. There were also warrants of arrest issued against persons
close, or related, to the
applicant and his
wife.
40.
On
31 October 2019, members of the Anti-Gang Unit visited the
Plattekloof residence of the applicant and his
spouse
to
execute the warrant for the arrest of
the applicant's spouse. The members of SAPS entered the residence for
that purpose but the
applicant and his spouse were not there.
41.
SAPS
were informed by employees of the applicant, a Mr Visser and a Ms
Lottering, that the applicant and his wife had not been at
their
premises for two days prior to that SAPS visit.
SAPS
therefore did not search the
applicant's
premises during the visit of 31 October 2019. The respondents
aver that the allegations of unlawful conduct on
the part of SAPS on
that day made by the applicant and the deponents to confirmatory
affidavits on
behalf
of
the
applicant are thus not correct.
42.
On
the same day, 31 October 2019, SAPS visited the residences of family
members of
the applicant and his spouse to
arrest her collaborators and co-suspects.
The
applicant's spouse
was arrested in
terms of the warrant at her
place of business at 1[…] T[…] Street in Monte Vista,
after members of SAPS initially
looked for her at 1[…] T[…]
Street where the applicant's mother-in-law resides. She appeared in
court, was released
on bail, and the matter was
postponed.
The criminal proceedings against her and her co-accused will continue
in due course.
Conclusion
in respect of these interactions with the applicant and his spouse
43.
The
answering affidavits set out, in detail, the facts relating to the
applicant’s alleged involvement in various unlawful
activities,
and the fact that he deliberately withheld relevant information from
this Court, knowing that some of the information
has already been
tested – and rejected - in the Gauteng application to which
reference has been made.
44.
The
applicant’s founding papers are replete with hearsay
allegations (including reports of “rumours”) and with
allegations of foul play (including bribery and assault) against the
respondents, in a wide and unsubstantiated fashion.
The
allegations raise numerous material disputes of fact. I agree with
the submission made by the respondents’ counsel that
it appears
that the applicant seeks, by way of this application, to stifle the
SAPS investigation into his and his spouse's allegedly
unlawful
activities.
45.
The
relief sought also involves the interests of a wide-ranging network
of family and friends, none of whom has been joined to this
application. The applicant’s
locus
standi
in relation to the relief sought
on behalf of those third parties has not been established.
46.
The
respondents have answered the applicant’s allegations in
detail, insofar as they were able to do so given the vague nature
of
vast portions of the applicant’s narrative. In the
circumstances, and with regard to the
Plascon
Evans
rule, I am not persuaded that the
respondents’ version is
far-fetched
or
untenable so as to justify rejection on
the papers.
47.
In
relation to the interdictory relief sought in the notice of motion,
the following is clear from a holistic consideration of the
papers:
47.1
“…
arresting
the applicant without a warrant of arrest issued by an authorised
judicial
officer,
alternatively,
unless
in
specific
circumstances set out in
section
40(1) of the [CPA]”
: there is no
evidence that the applicant is under threat of being arrested
unlawfully. When he was arrested on 15 December 2017,
it was in terms
of a warrant of arrest which has not subsequently been impugned by
the
applicant.
47.2
“…
assaulting
the applicant or causing him any physical harm or injury of any
nature
”
: there is no evidence
that the applicant is under threat
of
being assaulted or
being
caused
physical harm
or
injury by any of the
respondents. There was no assault on him in the course of his
arrest in December 2017.
47.3
“…
confronting,
intimidating or harassing the applicant and his family members
related to him by birth or by marriage
”
:
there is no evidence that the applicant or his
family are under threat of being confronted
unlawfully, or of being harassed or intimidated. When his spouse was
arrested on 31
October 2019, it was in terms of a warrant of arrest
which has· not subsequently been impugned by her.
47.4
“…
entering the applicant's home or that of his
family members related
to him by
birth or by marriage, unless (i) authorised by a warrant duly issued
by an authorised judicial officer;
or
(ii) there exists a due cause for such
entry
”
:
there is no evidence that the homes of the applicant or his family
have been, or will be, entered without a warrant, duly issued.
When
the applicant's home was entered on 15 December 2017 and on 31
October 2019, it was in terms of warrants to arrest the
applicant and
his spouse respectively. SAPS merely visited the
applicant's
in-laws in
the search for the
applicant's spouse who could not be found at her
ordinary place of residence on 31 October
2019.
An
alternative remedy?
48.
The
applicant did have alternative remedies at his disposal, but those
horses have bolted by now. The applicant must have
been aware
that the nature of his allegations would cause serious disputes of
fact, which cannot be resolved in an application.
As such, he
should have proceeded by way of action instead of application.
49.
Neither
the applicant nor his spouse, moreover, have sought to impugn the
warrants of arrest issued in respect of each of them.
Conclusion
50.
In
all of these circumstances, I am of the view that the
applicant has failed to make out a case for the relief sought, not
only because
the application is moot, but also because the
requirements for the grant of final interdictory relief have not been
satisfied.
51.
Given
this finding, it is not necessary to determine the respondents’
application for the striking
out of portions of the founding
affidavit for being hearsay evidence or being vague and embarrassing.
Costs
52.
There
is no reason to deviate from the general rule that costs follow the
event.
Order
53.
In
the premises, it is ordered as follows:
The
application is dismissed, with costs, including the costs of two
counsel.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
Appearances
:
For
the applicant
:
L.
Guma, Guma Attorneys
For
the respondents
:
P.
Botha SC (with him M. Titus),
Instructed
by
the
State Attorney
[1]
Setlo
q
elo
v Setlo
q
elo
1914
AD 221
at 227.
[2]
Plascon
-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints
(
P
ty)
Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634 E-635 C.
[3]
National
Scrap Metal (Cape Town) v Murray & Roberts
2012 (5) SA 300
(SCA) at
para [22].
[4]
Loots
C "Standing, Ripeness and Mootness" in Woolman S
et
al
(eds)
Constitutional
Law of South Africa
(Juta,
2012) at p20.
[5]
Loots
op
cit
at
p20, citing
Masuku
v State President
1994
(4) SA 374
(T) 380I which refers to
Ex
parte Nell
1963
{1) SA 754 (A) 760B-C.
[6]
1996
(12) BCLR 1599 (CC).
[7]
At
para [15].
[8]
At
para [17].
[9]
[
2011]
9
BLLR 869
(LAC)
at
paras
[
4]-[5].
[10]
2012
(
5
)
SA
142
(CC)
at para [32].
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