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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2023] ZAWCHC 102
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## Sandlana v Minister of Police and Another (5546/2016)
[2023] ZAWCHC 102;
2023 (2) SACR 84 (WCC) (11 May 2023)
Sandlana v Minister of Police and Another (5546/2016)
[2023] ZAWCHC 102;
2023 (2) SACR 84 (WCC) (11 May 2023)
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sino date 11 May 2023
FLYNOTES:
PERSONAL INJURY – Unlawful arrest and detention –
Intimidation – Requirements – Detective
not
appreciating that Act required that threat to complainant’s
safety had to have been serious and imminent –
Reasonable
suspicion lacking – Harsh conditions in awaiting trial
section of prison prior to getting bail – R300,000
damages
awarded –
Intimidation Act 72 of 1982
,
s 1(1)
(b).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: 5546/2016
REPORTABLE
In the matter between:
NCEBA
SANDLANA
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
First
Defendant
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second
Defendant
Bench:
P.A.L Gamble, J
Heard:
28, 29 & 30 November 2022; 25 January 2023
Delivered:
11 May 2023
Judgment
GAMBLE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
On Tuesday 19 August 2014, Mr. Nceba
Sandlana (“the plaintiff”), a 48-year-old family man from
Gugulethu, was arrested
on the steps of the High Court, Cape Town by
Sgt. Lwandile Msindo, a detective with the South African Police
Service (“SAPS”)
stationed at the Cape Town Central
Police Station (“Cape Town Central”). At the time the
plaintiff was attending the
criminal trial of his brother, who was
arraigned on a murder charge in the High Court.
2.
The plaintiff was thereafter detained by
Msindo at Cape Town Central before he appeared before the magistrate,
Cape Town, purportedly
on a charge under the Intimidation Act, 72 of
1982 (“the Act”) the following day, Wednesday 20 August
2014. The plaintiff’s
case was then remanded for a week while
his personal circumstances were investigated by the State with a view
to bail being set.
In the interim the plaintiff was detained at
Pollsmoor Prison until 26 August 2014, when he appeared again and was
granted bail
in the sum of R500 which was paid there and then. The
case was postponed to 23 October 2014 and the plaintiff was released.
3.
The matter was struck off the roll by the
presiding magistrate on 23 October 2014 because the docket was not at
court. No further
prosecution ensued and in 2016 the plaintiff issued
summons out of this court for wrongful arrest and detention as also
malicious
prosecution, all arising out of his arrest as aforesaid.
The Minister of Police is cited as the first defendant and the
Director
of Public Prosecutions (“DPP”) as the second
defendant.
4.
Upon commencement of the trial on 28
November 2023 the Court was asked to determine liability and quantum
in respect of both claims.
However, when the matter was argued on 25
January 2023, counsel for the plaintiff, Mr. Papier, informed the
Court that the plaintiff
had abandoned the claim against the DPP for
malicious prosecution and that it had been agreed in the interim that
each party would
bear its own costs in that regard. Thus it is only
the wrongfulness of the plaintiff’s arrest and the damages
flowing therefrom,
if any, that fall for determination. For the sake
of convenience, the first defendant will hereinafter be referred to
as “the
defendant”.
THE DEFENCE TO THE
CLAIM FOR WRONGFUL ARREST
5.
It
is common cause that that defendant has attracted the onus of
establishing the lawfulness of the plaintiff’s arrest
[1]
.
To that end the defendant relies on the provisions of s40(1)(b) of
the Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977 (“the CPA”)
which
is to the following effect.
“
40.
Arrest by peace officer without warrant –
(1)
A peace officer may without a warrant
arrest any person –
(a)…
(b) whom he reasonably
suspects of having committed an offence referred to in Schedule 1,
other than the offence of escaping from
lawful custody.”
It is clear therefore
that a lawful arrest without a warrant requires a reasonably
suspected contravention of a Schedule 1 offence.
6.
Schedule 1 to the CPA contains a long list
of serious offences and includes a so-called “catch-all”
provision incorporating
–
“
Any
offence, except the offence of escaping from lawful custody in
circumstances other than the circumstances referred to immediately
hereunder, the punishment wherefor may be a period of imprisonment
exceeding six months without the option of a fine.”
7.
In
support of the grounds justifying the arrest, the defendant makes the
following allegations in para 2 of his plea.
[2]
“
First
Defendant only admits that on or about Tuesday, 19 August 2014, at
High Court in Cape Town, Plaintiff was arrested and
detained on
an allegation of contravening section 1(1)(b) read with
section 2
and
3
of the
Intimidation Act 72 of 1982
, referred to as
Intimidation, by Constable Msindo. First Defendant denies that the
arrest of Plaintiff was unlawful and plead that
the arrest of
Plaintiff was lawful in terms of
section 40(1)(b)
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, in that:
2.1
arresting officer was a peace officer;
2.2 arresting officer
entertained a suspicion since Plaintiff was pointed out to him by
complainant;
2.3
offence was a Schedule 1 offence; and
2.4 there were reasonable
grounds in that a criminal case was already registered against
Plaintiff under Cape Town CAS 2083/04/2014.”
The defendant thus
attracted the onus of establishing the suspected commission of a
Schedule 1 offence by the plaintiff. I turn,
first, to examine the
relevant evidence.
EVIDENCE ADDUCED BY
SAPS
8.
Msindo explained that in 2014 he was
stationed at Cape Town Central as a detective handling general
criminal complaints such as
aggravated assault and intimidation. At
that time he held the rank of constable, while he has since been
promoted to sergeant.
He explained that on 2 May 2014 he was
allocated a docket under reference number Cape Town CAS 2083/04/2014
for further investigation.
That is the docket relevant to this
matter.
9.
On going through the docket Msindo said he
noted that the complainant was a certain Ms. Zimkita Ndayi, the
sister of the deceased
in a murder case in which the plaintiff’s
brother, Siyabulela Sandlana, was the accused. I shall refer to this
as “the
murder case”. The docket recorded that Ms. Ndayi
was assisting the investigating officer (W/O John van Staden) in the
murder
case. That assistance, it seems, encompassed the marshalling
and transport of witnesses to court and the like. Ms. Ndayi was not
a
State witness in the murder case.
10.
Like Ms. Ndayi, the plaintiff resided in
the Cape Town suburb of Gugulethu. He was also regularly in
attendance at the High Court
trial of the murder case, offering
support to his brother. In the result, Ms. Ndayi and the plaintiff
were acquainted by sight
but they were not well disposed to each
other: Ms. Ndayi had complained to van Staden that she felt
threatened by the plaintiff
and that she feared for her safety. The
plaintiff’s evidence also suggests that he and Ms. Ndayi were
active in local politics
in Gugulethu, were aligned to different
political parties and had a history of disagreement in that regard.
11.
Ms. Ndayi told the police that a friend had
informed her of a video circulating on the WhatsApp social media
platform which showed
her sitting at court during the trial of the
murder case. The plaintiff was evidently the author of this video,
which was the second
such image to be circulated on social media, an
earlier iteration having done the rounds in 2013. Ms. Ndayi told the
police that
she found the circulation of these video’s
threatening.
12.
Ms. Ndayi told the police that while
attending the High Court trial in 2014 she was informed by van Staden
that the plaintiff was
again making a video recording of her. When
van Staden asked the plaintiff what he was up to, said Ms. Ndayi, he
was apparently
told by the plaintiff that he was a journalist,
implying that he thus served a public interest in covering the murder
case.
13.
Upon enquiry as to her welfare, Ms. Ndayi
told van Staden that she was “ok”, but he nevertheless
decided to accompany
her after the court adjourned. Her car was
parked in the street in the High Court precinct and while she and van
Staden walked
to her car, Ms. Ndayi said the plaintiff continued to
walk behind her and film her on his cellphone camera. Given that they
were
acquainted with each other on the basis set forth above, and in
light of the fact that he sometimes drove past her house in the
company of male friends, Ms. Ndayi said she was scared of the
plaintiff and experienced his conduct overall as threatening and
intimidatory.
14.
Ms. Ndayi laid a charge against the
plaintiff at Cape Town Central on 30 April 2014, which was registered
under the aforesaid CAS
number. The front cover of the docket records
the charges as “
1. Intimidation;
2. Incitement”.
These entries
were not made by Msindo who only received the docket for
investigation on 14 May 2014. Common sense tells one that
the entries
probably originated from an official in the charge office who opened
the docket for investigation. Just what that unnamed
official
considered the crime of “incitement” to have been in the
circumstances, is beyond comprehension.
15.
Be that as it may, Msindo said that when he
received the docket it contained only the statement of Ms. Ndayi and
so he asked her
to come in for an interview. She gave him further
details which confirmed her fear of the plaintiff. Msindo said that
he asked
Ms. Ndayi to furnish him with the contact details of any
persons to whom the video had been circulated on WhatsApp. She
undertook
to do so but never reverted with any further information.
When he pressed her to procure such evidence, Msindo said that Ms.
Ndayi
told him that her friends were reluctant to get involved as
they were scared of the plaintiff.
16.
It seems that Msindo was not
particularly hasty to complete his investigation but, perhaps in
fairness to him, he did tell the court
that his workload was
excessive – he said he never investigated less than 100 dockets
at any given time. In the event, Msindo
procured a statement from van
Staden on 10 July 2014, in which the warrant officer confirmed Ms.
Ndayi’s statement regarding
events at the High Court. Msindo
said that he was then satisfied that Ms. Ndayi had felt intimidated
and that the plaintiff had
behaved as described by both her and van
Staden.
17.
Msindo said that in the course of his
investigation he had attempted to confront the plaintiff on various
occasions with the allegations
made by Ms. Ndayi but was unable to
gain access to his residence which he claimed was surrounded by a
high wall. He said he did
not know what the plaintiff looked like and
that he had no number at which he could contact him telephonically.
Msindo also testified
that he had handed Ms. Ndayi a “pointing
out note” in May 2014. This would have permitted her to call
upon the police
to arrest the plaintiff in the event that she
encountered him.
18.
In the result, Msindo said he decided to
arrest the plaintiff at the High Court while he was attending the
murder trial. He said
that he believed that Ms. Ndayi was scared of
the plaintiff and that he thus had reasonable grounds to believe that
he had committed
the offence of “intimidation”. Msindo
said he wished to bring the plaintiff before the court so that the
prosecutor
could decide what to do with him. Because he believed that
the crime of “intimidation” resorted under Schedule 1 to
the CPA in that it carries a sentence in which 6 months’ direct
imprisonment (or more) may be imposed upon conviction, Msindo
said he
considered that the arrest of the plaintiff without a warrant was
justified under that schedule.
19.
Having confronted the plaintiff at the High
Court, and having satisfied himself as to his identity, Msindo said
he then effected
the arrest described above. After informing the
plaintiff of his rights, Msindo cuffed him and took him off to Cape
Town Central
where he was charged. During his post-arrest interview,
said Msindo, the plaintiff confirmed that he had made a video
recording
of the plaintiff and alleged (in a rather garbled version)
that he had done so because he knew that Ms. Ndayi was on parole at
the time following her conviction on a charge of fraud and he
considered that her attendance at the High Court constituted a breach
of her parole conditions. He told Msindo that he wished to provide
Ms. Ndayi’s parole officer with proof of these alleged
transgressions.
20.
Msindo said he was skeptical of this
explanation as he had already heard from van Staden about the
plaintiff’s earlier claim
that he had made the video recording
in the discharge of his functions as a journalist. In any event, the
plaintiff was detained
overnight in the cells at Cape Town Central on
Tuesday 19 August 2014 before being taken across to the magistrates’
court
for his first appearance the following day.
21.
At the time of his first appearance the
plaintiff’s details regarding previous convictions and/or
pending cases were incomplete
and according to Msindo the control
prosecutor in the office of the Senior Public Prosecutor, Ms. Warda
Steyn, required some follow
up before bail could be considered, this
notwithstanding Msindo’s recommendation at that stage that bail
not be opposed.
22.
Accordingly, when the matter came before
the magistrate in court 16, which is evidently the feeder court for
criminal cases to be
tried in the regional court, the matter was
postponed for a week for verification of the plaintiff’s
personal details. On
26 August 2014 the plaintiff appeared in court
16 again and bail was fixed in the sum of R500, which, as I have
said, was paid.
The plaintiff was warned to appear again on 23
October 2014 and was released from custody.
23.
At his next appearance on 23 October 2014,
the police docket was not at court – due to Msindo’s
slackness – and
the matter was thus struck from the roll.
Msindo said that the matter was never re-enrolled as he was unable to
procure the further
statements which Ms. Steyn required from the
witnesses to whom the video’s had been circulated. That was the
end of the abortive
criminal prosecution of the plaintiff.
24.
The defendant also adduced the evidence of
van Staden which corroborated the plaintiff in all material respects
and which need not
be addressed further. Further, the defendant
called Ms. Steyn, seemingly to rebut the allegations of a malicious
prosecution. No
doubt as a consequence of the veracity and
materiality of her evidence, the plaintiff subsequently abandoned the
claim against
the DPP.
25.
Ms. Steyn’s evidence did nevertheless
deal with a relevant aspect of the claim against the defendant. This
related to the
formulation of the charge sheet in the intended
prosecution against him. Ms. Steyn explained that as part of her
duties she screened
all new dockets before they were handed to the
court prosecutor at an accused’s first appearance. The purpose
was so that
she could satisfy herself, inter alia, as to the status
of a matter, whether a prima facie case existed, what charge(s)
should
be preferred, what further investigation needed to be done and
to which court the matter should be referred.
26.
In that regard, Ms. Steyn testified that
she held the view that the statements in the docket made out a prima
facie case for a contravention
of s1(1)(b) of the Act. She regarded
that contravention as a Schedule I offence under the CPA because of
the penalty provisions
in s1 of the Act which provided for the
imposition of a fine not exceeding R40 000 or imprisonment not
exceeding 10 years,
or to both such a fine and such imprisonment.
27.
Ms. Steyn explained further that when a
docket was sent to court the annexure to the charge sheet (“the
J15”), in which
the details of the offence with which an
accused was charged were set forth, was customarily filled in by the
court prosecutor.
There was a collection of pro forma annexures in a
series of pigeon-holes in the court room which the court prosecutor
procured
and filled in. In this matter the annexure to the J15 was
not so filled in and remains blank. However, it is clear that the
court
prosecutor selected the pro forma annexure relating to a
contravention of s1(1)(a) of the Act.
EVIDENCE OF THE
PLAINTIFF
28.
Upon consideration of the plaintiff’s
evidence it appears that there is not much in dispute between the
parties regarding
what the plaintiff said and did during the murder
trial in relation to Ms. Ndayi. He admitted having taken a video of
her using
his cellphone, suggesting that he wanted to report her
conduct to her probation officer to demonstrate that she was in
breach of
the aforesaid parole conditions. He denied ever having told
van Staden that he was a journalist.
29.
The plaintiff’s explanation in regard
to the filming of Ms. Ndayi was palpably false. He was no goody
two-shoes purporting
to discharge a civic duty but clearly intent on
harassing the sister of the victim whom his brother had allegedly
murdered. His
conduct is thus to be considered in the emotionally
charged atmosphere of a murder trial and against the background of
his political
differences with Ms. Ndayi. However, the dubious
“journalist” explanation is not relevant for the
determination of
this matter: it might have been if the criminal
charge against him was pursued to finality. The question to be
addressed here is
whether the defendant has discharged the onus of
establishing that the arrest of the plaintiff was lawful.
A SCHEDULED OFFENCE?
30.
The respondent argues that a contravention
of s1 of the Act is an offence classified under Schedule 1 to the CPA
in light of the
penalty provisions therein. As I have already said,
this is consistent with the approach adopted by Ms. Steyn already
referred
to. The plaintiff argues that because the Act is
specifically mentioned in Schedule 2 Part III of the Act, it does not
resort under
Schedule 1 and that an arrest without a warrant is not
sanctioned.
31.
I do not agree. Part III of Schedule 2
specifically refers, in parentheses under the heading, to its
application in respect of ss
59, 72, 185 and 189 of the CPA. The
first two sections relate to the circumstances in respect whereof
bail for a listed offence
may be considered while s185 deals with
witness protection and s189 with recalcitrant witnesses. There is
nothing in the said Part
III which links it to the powers of arrest.
32.
I am consequently of the view that an
arrest for a contravention of s1 of the Act may be effected without a
warrant provided there
has been compliance with the criteria
contemplated in s40(1)(b) of the CPA. I turn now to consideration of
the applicable provisions
of the Act.
THE
INTIMIDATION ACT,
1982
33.
At
common law a threat made to a person might, in appropriate
circumstances, constitute common assault
[3]
.
Central to a conviction in such circumstances is the fact that, in
the absence of any physical impact by the perpetrator on the
victim,
the perpetrator was required to have to inspired in the victim the
reasonable belief that force was imminently to be applied
to her.
[4]
34.
The
Intimidation Act was
promulgated in 1982, replacing the relevant
provisions of the Riotous Assemblies Act, 17 of 1956. It is a piece
of apartheid order
legislation introduced at a time of increasingly
repressive internal security legislation designed to criminalise
conduct, largely,
in the field of the resistance politics.
[5]
Its application was often to be found in the attempts by members of a
particular political philosophy to induce others to take
up the same
view (or not to take up a differing view)
[6]
while in the field of labour relations, for example, it was used
against striking workers who purported to dissuade non-striking
workers from going to work on pain of violence being dealt out
towards them
[7]
.
35.
In
Holbrook
[8]
a Full Bench in the Eastern Cape remarked that the wording of the
section was “tortuously framed” and went on to add
in an
obiter
dictum
that
the section was an unnecessary burden on the statute book whose
objectives might rather be achieved through the enforcement
of common
law sanctions. The Court’s suggestion to the Law Commission
that it consider the constitutionality of the Act seems
to have
fallen on deaf ears. Underlying the decision in
Holbrook
was the concern whether, when viewed reasonably, the offending
conduct could truly have been taken as a threat to the personal
safety of the complainant.
36.
In any event, the Act has two distinct
provisions – s1 thereof prohibits “
certain
forms of intimidation”
while s1A
targets the intimidation of the “
general
public, [a] particular section of the population or the inhabitants
of a particular area.”
The latter
section was an amendment effected to the Act shortly after its
promulgation and was intended to focus on more generalized
threats to
the disturbance of public order. This matter, however, involves only
the application of s1.
37.
At the time of the plaintiff’s arrest
s1 comprised two distinct contraventions.
“
S1.Prohibition
of and penalties for certain forms of intimidation.
(1)
Any person who –
(a)
without lawful reason and with intent to
compel or induce any person or persons of a particular nature, class
or kind of persons
in general to do or to abstain from doing any act
or to assume or to abandon a particular standpoint –
(i)
assaults, injures or causes damage to any
person; or
(ii)
in any manner threatens to kill, assault,
injure or cause damage to any person or persons of a particular
nature, class or kind,
or
(b)
acts or conducts himself in such a manner
or utters or publishes such words that it has or they have the
effect, or that it might
reasonably be expected that the natural and
probable consequences thereof would be, that a person perceiving the
act, conduct,
occurrence or publication –
(i)
fears for his own safety or the safety of
his property or the security of his livelihood, or for the safety of
any other person
or the safety of the property of any other person or
the security of the livelihood of any other persons; and
(ii)…
[9]
shall be guilty of an
offence and liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding R40 000 or
to imprisonment for a period not exceeding
ten years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.”
38.
S1(2) of the Act contained a provision
relating to the onus in criminal proceedings:
“
1(2)
In any prosecution for an offence under subsection (1), the onus of
proving the existence of a lawful reason as contemplated
in that
subsection shall be upon the accused, unless a statement clearly
indicating the existence of such a lawful reason has been
made by or
on behalf of the accused before the close of the case for the
prosecution.”
39.
In
October 2019, the Constitutional Court considered the
constitutionality of s1(1)(b) and 1(2) of the Act in
Moyo
[10]
and concluded that neither subsection passed constitutional muster.
S1(2), which effectively made provision for a reverse onus
of proof,
is of no relevance in this matter and will not be considered further.
40.
In regard to the finding of
unconstitutionality of s1(1)(b), the Constitutional Court directed
that its finding of invalidity should
operate retrospectively in
regard to pending criminal trials and appeals. That order does not
affect the determination of this
matter which must be decided on the
assumption that s1(1)(b) was constitutional and fully operative in
2014. This Court must therefore
look at s1(1)(b) and consider it as
it might reasonably have been interpreted by police officers,
prosecutors and courts at that
time.
41.
I should add that in finding s1(1)(b)
unconstitutional, the Constitutional Court considered that the
sub-section was overly broad
when applied in the context of, inter
alia, the free speech provisions of the Constitution.
“
[44]
Our courts have rightfully referred to the framing of s1(1)(b) as
‘tortuous’. But that alone is not enough to render
the
section unconstitutional. On a plain reading, the section
criminalises any person who acts in a manner that has the effect
of
causing another to fear for their own safety, or the safety of their
property or livelihood. This, in my view, casts the net
of liability
too wide, as it depends simply on the experience of fear by another.
For example, the act of handing out flyers advocating
expropriation
of land without compensation in a known libertarian suburb could, all
things considered, lead to a charge of intimidation.
This is because
such an activity would, in all likelihood, be fear-causing. It is
unlikely that such an infringement on freedom
of expression and the
adjacent political rights could ever be justified under a s36
analysis…
[65]… If the
section merely criminalizes conduct that creates objectively
reasonable fear of imminent violent injury to person,
property or
security of livelihood, it becomes easier to argue that it does not
infringe on the constitutional guarantees of freedom
of expression or
peaceful protest. Incitement of imminent violence is not protected as
free expression and it would be difficult
to argue that conduct
creating objectively reasonable fear of imminent violence to person,
property or security of livelihood would
qualify as peaceful protest.
If, however, intimidation does not carry this broad meaning under the
section, and it is held that
any intentional conduct that creates
objectively reasonable fear of harm to person, property or security
of livelihood is covered,
then it is overbroad because it would
criminalize protected free speech that does not incite imminent
violence and probably also
peaceful forms of protest.”
42.
There
is a dearth of reported judgments dealing with the applicability of
s1(1)(b) prior to
Moyo
.
A comprehensive study of the sub-section was conducted by a Full
Court in the Northern Cape in
Motshari
[11]
,
an analysis with which I fully associate myself. At para 10 of this
judgment, the learned judges refer to a critique of the Act
in the
Industrial Law Journal
[12]
in which the authors pointed out the contextual setting of the Act in
the milieu of repressive security legislation passed at the
time and
the attempt to broaden the ambit of legislation intended to crack
down on conduct properly classified as intimidatory.
43.
The
facts in
Motshari
were based on domestic strife of some duration between what were
described as “live-in lovers”. The Full Court
[13]
distinguished that situation from the customary application of the
Act –
“
B.1…The
case did not involve any riotous behavior pertaining to an assembly
of people or a security situation or some industrial
action.”
The
Full Court went on to hold that it considered that the Act was not
applicable in those circumstances and that the common law
or even the
Domestic Violence Act, 116 of 1998
, should have been resorted to.
44.
Upon consideration it seems to me that in
2014 the ambit of the Act would have similarly been strictly
interpreted. I therefore
consider that s1(1)(a) then contemplated
either an actual act of violence (such as an assault) or an imminent
threat of such violence,
intended to induce the victim to do a
particular act or to refrain from doing something.
45.
S1(1)(b) on the other hand contemplated an
act or conduct of sorts which induced in the victim an imminent sense
of fear for her
personal safety (or property) or the safety (or
property) of another. It is the latter interpretation that occasioned
the striking
down of the section by the Constitutional Court as being
overly broad.
HAS THE DEFENDFANT
ESTABLISHED THE ALLEGED ACT OF INTIMIDATION ON THE PART OF THE
PLAINTIFF?
46.
As I have already said, the defendant
justifies the arrest of the plaintiff under s 40(1)(b) of the CPA on
the basis of an alleged
contravention of s(1)(b) of the Act, as it
then was on the statute book. It is thus required to prove on a
balance of probabilities
that the plaintiff conducted himself in such
a manner that Ms. Ndayi feared for her personal safety or for that of
another. Importantly,
that fear had to be of an imminent nature. In
the context of the facts at hand, the focus must be on the fact that
the taking of
Ms. Ndayi’s photograph by the plaintiff on his
cellphone and the subsequent distribution thereof on a social media
platform
had the consequence that she felt imminently threatened by
him and that she bore an imminent fear for her safety.
47.
As pointed out above, the entry on the
cover of the police docket made by Msindo does not disclose what
particular act of “intimidation”
was relied on by the
investigating officer. Similarly, in the interview with the plaintiff
which Msindo conducted shortly after
his arrest, the offence with
which he was charged is simply described as “Intimidation”.
Indeed, that is the description
given throughout the docket where any
description of the plaintiff’s alleged criminal conduct is
recorded.
48.
It is not difficult to conclude that Msindo
had no inkling whatsoever of the fact that the plaintiff was required
to have breached
a particular statutory provision before he could be
charged in respect of any conduct vis-à-vis Ms. Ndayi. Indeed,
he conceded
under cross-examination that he did not know of the
existence of the Act. This presents problems for the defendant: there
is no
common law offence known as “intimidation” and the
evidence before this Court establishes conclusively that Msindo
arrested the plaintiff without knowledge of the criminal
contravention he was alleged to have committed.
49.
When Msindo took the docket to court on the
plaintiff’s first appearance, it was perused by Ms. Steyn who
testified that she
formed the view that a prima facie case had been
made out for a prosecution of the plaintiff under s1(1)(b) of the
Act. She said
that the murder case comprised a number of serious
crimes and given Ms. Ndayi’s involvement in assisting the
investigating
team during the trial, Ms. Steyn testified that she
thought that the statement in the docket justified the inference that
her safety
“was at risk”.
50.
Ms. Steyn explained that the docket was
sent to court 16 with the intention that the charge to be preferred
against the plaintiff
was a contravention of s1(1)(b) of the Act. The
duty prosecutor in that court, a certain Mr. Hugh, was responsible
for attaching
the appropriate pro forma annexure to the J15 and for
filling in the relevant details therein. In the result, the annexure
actually
attached to the J15 was a pro forma document relating to a
contravention of s1(1)(a) which to this day is bereft of any detail –
nothing was filled in by either the duty prosecutor at the first
appearance or subsequent thereto – and so this Court, upon
a
reading of the J15, has no idea of where, when, how or why the
contravention of s1(1)(a) is alleged to have been committed by
the
plaintiff.
51.
To be sure, the opinion of Ms. Steyn that
there was a prima facie case to prosecute the plaintiff under
s1(1)(b) does not mean that
there was a case made out under s1(1)(a).
It could be that the prosecutor in court simply plucked the wrong
annexure out of the
pigeon-hole in his haste to place the matter
before the magistrate, or perhaps he was of the view that the
allegations in the docket
indeed warranted a prosecution under
s1(1)(a). The Court is left in the dark regarding this anomaly.
52.
But the fact that the prosecution
authorities believed that a charge under the Act should be preferred
against the plaintiff does
not assist the defendant in this matter.
It must show that Msindo reasonably held the belief that the section
of the Act upon which
the justification for the arrest in the plea is
predicated had been contravened. The defendant was unable to do so
because the
cross-examination established that Msindo had never read
the Act before the arrest of the plaintiff. This notwithstanding,
Msindo
testified that he had learned of the existence of the offence
during training at the police college and confidently proclaimed the
successful arrest and prosecution of several offenders on charges of
‘intimidation” during his time as a detective.
53.
In my view, the fact that Msindo did not
know what statutory provision the plaintiff might have contravened
was, on the facts of
this case, fatal to the reasonable suspicion
which he is alleged to have harboured before he was entitled to
consider arresting
the plaintiff. After all, as demonstrated above,
the Act criminalises various forms of intimidatory conduct, and it
would have
been necessary for the arresting officer to fully
appreciate what conduct on the part of the plaintiff was proscribed
before he
was permitted to arrest him.
54.
Had Msindo correctly understood the
provisions of s1(1)(b) he would have appreciated at the time that the
Act required that the
threat to Ms. Ndayi’s safety had to have
been serious and imminent to warrant the prosecution of the
plaintiff. Yet,
there are facts that militate against such a
conclusion having been reasonably arrived at. Firstly, the evidence
of van Staden
demonstrated that Ms. Ndayi did not feel sufficiently
threatened when being filmed at Court during April 2014. After all,
she told
van Staden that he need not be concerned as she was “ok”.
Secondly, she was not scared to walk off to her car after
this
happened, notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff continued to
film her as she walked down the steps of the court. Thirdly,
she did
not complain to van Staden that she feared for her safety as he
escourted her to her car.
55.
When Msindo received the docket on 2 May
2014, the most recent act of intimidation was alleged to have taken
place almost three
weeks earlier, on 14 April 2014. Prior to that,
the docket reflected an incident in November 2013 when earlier video
footage of
Ms. Ndayi was allegedly circulated on social media. But
Msindo waited until 22 May 2014 before he interviewed Ms. Ndayi and
issued
her with the “pointing-out note”. In addition, the
delay in the arrest of the plaintiff some 3 months later is not
explained. Importantly, there were no further acts of intimidation
alleged in the interim and there was consequently no “imminent
threat” towards Ms. Ndayi at the time of the plaintiff’s
arrest.
56.
Msindo said that he arrested the plaintiff
because he was concerned about the safety of Ms. Ndayi “at the
time”, this
notwithstanding the aforesaid absence of any
further threatening behaviour by the plaintiff towards her in the
interim. Furthermore,
at that stage the police investigation was
incomplete since Msindo had not followed up on the instructions of
his superiors (who
reviewed the docket from time to time) to procure
additional evidence from, inter alia, the persons to whom the video
footage of
Ms. Ndayi had allegedly been sent by the plaintiff. This
evidence was critical because the say-so of Ms. Ndayi needed to be
corroborated.
Further, there had been no interview conducted with the
plaintiff.
57.
Yet, with the investigation far from
complete, Msindo said he decided to arrest the plaintiff anyway and
bring him before court
in order that the prosecutor could decide what
to do. It was manifestly not necessary nor prudent to effect an
arrest of the plaintiff
in such circumstances. A reasonable
investigating officer would rather first have sought directions from
the prosecutor as to what
was further required to bring the
investigation to completion before taking the drastic step of
arresting the suspect and depriving
him of his liberty and dignity.
58.
When the docket was reviewed by Ms. Steyn
on 20 August 2014, she immediately noted the gaping holes in the
investigation which need
to be filled before she was prepared to
permit the prosecution to go ahead and told Msindo what needed to be
done in that regard.
And, when the charges were eventually withdrawn
against the plaintiff, it was precisely because these statements were
still outstanding
in the docket that the State refused to prosecute.
59.
Msindo did not have personal knowledge of
the commission of the alleged offence – he had to rely on the
docket contents when
deciding whether to arrest or not. And, when he
arrested the plaintiff, those contents were incomplete. The arrest of
the plaintiff
was therefore effected by a police officer who did not
properly comprehend the legal basis for the offence which the
plaintiff
had allegedly committed and whose knowledge of the factual
basis for the arrest was sorely lacking.
60.
While
it appears that Msindo may have failed to properly exercise his
discretion when arresting the plaintiff
[14]
,
this was not expressly pleaded by the plaintiff nor traversed in
evidence or argument. It would therefore not be proper to make
a
definitive finding in that regard.
61.
In the circumstances, I conclude that the
defendant has not established that Msindo reasonably held the
suspicion that the plaintiff
had contravened s1(1)(b) of the Act and
has failed to establish that the arrest was accordingly justified
under s40(1)(b) of the
CPA. It follows that the plaintiff has
established that his arrest was unlawful.
DAMAGES
62.
In
assessing the plaintiff’s damages, the Court has regard to what
the SCA said in
Rahim
[15]
“
[27]
The deprivation of liberty is indeed a serious matter. In cases of
non-patrimonial loss where damages are claimed, the extent
of damages
cannot be assessed with mathematical precision. In such cases the
exercise of a reasonable discretion by the court and
broad general
considerations play a decisive role in the process of quantification.
This does not, of course, absolve a plaintiff
from introducing
evidence which will enable a court to make an appropriate and fair
award. In cases involving deprivation of liberty
the amount of
satisfaction is calculated by the court
ex
aequo et bono
. Inter alia the following
factors are relevant:
(i)
the circumstances under which the
deprivation of liberty took place;
(ii)
the conduct of the defendant; and
(iii)
the nature and duration of the
deprivation.”
63.
In
granting such damages, the Court enjoys a wide discretion in which
fairness predominates, subject only to equanimity. In
Pitt
[16]
Holmes J eloquently reminded trial courts that –
“
I
have only to add that the Court must take care to see that its award
is fair to both sides - it must give just compensation to
the
plaintiff, but it must not pour out largesse from the horn of plenty
at the defendant’s expense.”
64.
In
Seria
[17]
,
Meer J summed up the approach as follows –
“
Courts,
I believe are tasked with the duty of upholding the rights to
liberty, safety and dignity of the individual and in so doing
have a
responsibility to record an appropriate and proper value thereto,
especially in the light of the extent to which these rights
were
devalued, indeed negated, in the brutal past of this country.”
65.
The plaintiff testified in detail about his
experience after his arrest. He said he was kept in a filthy cell at
Cape Town Central
where he was in the company of a dozen drunks and a
handful of hardened criminals. But his experience in the cells pales
into insignificance
when compared to his detention in the awaiting
trial section of Pollsmoor Prison. His graphic evidence in that
regard constitutes
a shocking indictment of the appalling state of
South African prison conditions.
66.
The
plaintiff testified that he was transported from the magistrates’
court to Pollsmoor in a large truck along with a number
of other
arrestees. En route he was confronted by a hardened gangster
belonging to one of the notorious “Numbers Gangs”
who
operate with unbridled impunity in our prisons
[18]
.
That confrontation led to the plaintiff being deprived of his track
shoes and belt even before he arrived at Pollsmoor.
67.
Upon arrival at Pollsmoor, said the
plaintiff, he and a large group of other men were kept in a crowded
holding cell overnight,
awaiting medical evaluation the following
morning. He was able to share a blanket with others and had to sleep
on a cold cement
floor in mid-winter. The following morning the
plaintiff was taken to the hospital section for a check-up where he
was fortunate
to receive medication for treatment of his chronic
asthmatic condition. Thereafter he was taken to a euphemistically
termed “sleeping
cell” where he would spend the next 7
days.
68.
The plaintiff said that upon entering this
cell he was confronted by yet another numbers gangster, who enquired
as to his gang affiliation.
Evidently the members of the 26 Gang were
sent by this self-appointed orderly to one part of the cell while
members of the 28 Gang
were sent to another part of the cell. When
the plaintiff disavowed any gang affiliation he was directed to a
different part of
the cell where, he said, he once again shared a
blanket and slept on the floor with other suspects who did not have
gang affiliations
either. The cell was grossly overcrowded with 76
persons kept in a cell with only 20 beds. During the time he was
incarcerated
at Pollsmoor the plaintiff said he received 2 meals a
day – one at 07h00 and another at 14h00. He was not permitted
to exercise
outside and was only briefly let out to make a phone call
to friends. For a week therefore the plaintiff was crammed into a
grossly
over-crowded cell with no opportunity for exercise or proper
sleep.
69.
The plaintiff is no shrinking violet. He is
a self-confident man who is actively involved in local politics in
Gugulethu where he
is well-known as a volunteer and liaison officer
in community organizations and he struck the Court as someone who was
both astute
and street-smart. He readily acknowledged that he had
been arrested before on criminal charges and had spent trial as an
awaiting-trial
prisoner, all on charges which had ultimately been
withdrawn. This was thus not the plaintiff’s first experience
of incarceration.
70.
Yet when he testified about the events in
the prison truck and later at Pollsmoor he was overcome with enormous
shame and grief.
He was so upset by relating his experience that the
Court was required to adjourn for about 20 minutes to enable the
plaintiff
to compose himself. In argument, counsel for the defendant,
Mr. van Wyk, readily accepted the gravity of the situation and
correctly
did not suggest that the plaintiff had disingenuously
hammed it up in the witness box. It is clear that so many years after
the
event, the emotional scars of the plaintiff’s experience of
this unlawful arrest still run deep.
71.
In
argument, Mr. Papier referred the Court to the judgment of the
Constitutional Court in
De
Klerk
[19]
in which an award of damages in the amount of R300 000 was
confirmed in circumstances where the arrestee was held in custody
for
a week. In so doing, the majority of the apex court upheld the
minority judgment of Rogers AJA in
De
Klerk SCA
.
72.
I must add in passing that, following the
dictum
in
De Klerk CC
,
it was common cause that any damages that the Court might award,
should include the entire period of the plaintiff’s detention
and that the first appearance before the magistrate (at which bail
was not considered and whereafter he was detained by order of
the
court) did not constitute a
novus actus
interveniens
which interrupted the
causal chain following upon the initial unlawful arrest.
73.
Mr. van Wyk did not quibble with quantum of
damages suggested by Mr. Papier and rightfully so. The facts in this
case are similar
to those set forth in
De
Klerk SCA
, if not more serious, and I
can only but echo the words of Rogers AJA.
“
[50]
…On the appellant’s evidence, what happened was a
shocking violation by the prosecutor, the magistrate and indeed
the
investigating officer of their duties to ensure that the question of
bail was properly considered at the appellant’s
first
appearance. Detention in prison for a week is no small matter. Had
the question of bail been considered by any of the officials
concerned, it would immediately have been apparent that there was no
justification not to grant the appellant bail in a modest
amount.
This was not a case where remand in custody pending further
investigation could ever have been warranted.
[51] I thus consider that
the appellant’s damages should be assessed with reference to
the full period of his detention. The
period of detention was seven
nights, extending into an eighth day. The appellant found the
experience very distressing. At the
holding cells in Randburg his
cellphone was confiscated and he never saw it again. After he was
remanded in custody, he was handcuffed
and taken to prison in a bus.
He found jail a very intimidating experience. He testified that he
cried almost the whole time. His
period of incarceration included
Christmas and Boxing Day. This was the period during which his son
was meant to have been with
him. He paid R450 as protection money to
a fellow prisoner who could make prison life more bearable.”
74.
In the result, I am satisfied that a
damages award in the amount of R300 000 would be fair and
reasonable to both parties.
ORDER OF COURT
Accordingly, it is
ordered that:
A.
The first respondent is liable to pay
damages to the plaintiff in the amount of R300 000;
B.
Interest will run on the aforesaid amount
at the prescribed rate from date of this judgment until date of
payment;
C.
The first respondent shall pay the
plaintiff’s costs of suit.
GAMBLE, J
APPEARANCES
For
the plaintiff:
Mr.
G.R. Papier
Instructed
by
Venfolo
Attorneys
Cape
Town
For
the defendants:
Mr.
P van Wyk
Instructed
by
The
State Attorney
Cape
Town.
[1]
Minister
of Law and Order and another v Dempsey
1988 (3) SA 19
(A) at 38 B-C;
Minister
of safety and Security v Sekhoto
2011 (5) SA 367
(SCA) at [53];
Minister
of Safety and Security and another v Swart
2012 (2) SA 226
(SCA) at [19].
[2]
The
pleading is reproduced as in its original grammatical and
syntactical form.
[3]
See,
for example,
R
v Jolly and others
1923 AD 176
at 179;
R
v Sibanyone
1940 (1) PH H67 (T);
S
v Miya
1966 (4) SA 274
(N) at 277
[4]
South
African Criminal Law and Procedure
Vol II (3
rd
Ed. by JRL Milton) at 427
[5]
It is not insignificant that the Act was passed at the same time as
the notorious and now defunct Internal Security Act, 74 of
1982.
[6]
S v
Mohapi en andere
1984 (1) SA 270
(O) at 274E – 275A
[7]
South
African Criminal Law and Procedure
Vol III, Part 2 (2
nd
Ed.
by JRL Milton) at M1
[8]
S v
Holbrook
[1998] 3 All SA 597
(E) at 603a-d
[9]
This subsection was deleted when the aforesaid amendment introducing
s1A was promulgated later in 1992.
[10]
Moyo
and another v Minister of Police and others
2020 (1) SACR 373 (CC)
[11]
S v
Motshari
[2001] 2 All SA 207 (NC)
[12]
Clive
Plasket and Richard Spoor
“The New Offence of Intimidation” (1991) 12 ILJ 747
[13]
At 209f
[14]
See, for example,
Sekhoto
at [28]
et
seq
and
the cases cited therein;
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
2018 (2) SA 28
(SCA) (“De Klerk SCA”) at [11]
[15]
Rahim
and others v Minister of Home Affairs
2015 (4) SA 433
(SCA)
[16]
Pitt v
Economic Insurance Co Ltd
1957 (3) SA 284
(D) at 287E-F
[17]
Seria v
Minister of Safety and Security and others
2005 (5) SA 130
(C) at 151B
[18]
See, in this regard,
Johnny
Steinberg
The Number: One Man’s Search for Identity in the Cape
Underworld and Prison Gangs (Jonathan Ball, 2010)
[19]
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
2021 (4) SA 585
(CC)(“De Klerk CC”)
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