Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 62South Africa
Mbele v Minister of Police (D2639/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 62 (31 August 2023)
Headnotes
with costs
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Mbele v Minister of Police (D2639/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 62 (31 August 2023)
Mbele v Minister of Police (D2639/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 62 (31 August 2023)
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sino date 31 August 2023
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE NO: D2639/2021
In
the matter between:
# SABELO ANDILE
MBELE
PLAINTIFF
SABELO ANDILE
MBELE
PLAINTIFF
#
and
# MINISTER OF
POLICE
DEFENDANT
MINISTER OF
POLICE
DEFENDANT
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email, and released to SAFLII.
The date for hand
down is deemed to be 31 August 2023 at 11:45am
# ORDER
ORDER
1. The special plea
raised by the defendant is upheld, with costs
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Chetty J:
[1]
The plaintiff instituted proceedings
against the defendant arising from his alleged wrongful and unlawful
arrest on 20 December
2020.
He
further alleges that the defendant’s officers assaulted him and
stole an amount of R4 000 from him in the process.
The
plaintiff
gave
notice
in
terms
of
the
Institution
of
Legal
Proceedings
against certain Organs of State Act 40 of 2002 (the Act) of his
intention to sue the defendant.
Upon
institution of the action the defendant filed a special plea,
contending that the plaintiff had failed to comply with sections
3
and 5 of the Act. Insofar as non- compliance with s 3 is concerned,
this section requires notice be given to an ‘organ
of state’.
This is defined in s 1 of the Act as, inter
alia, ‘any national or provincial department’. It is not
in dispute that
the plaintiff gave notice to the National
Commissioner of the South African Police Service by letter dated 19
January 2021. It
is also common cause that the letter was received by
the National Commissioner on 18 February 2021.
Ex
facie
, it is not in dispute that notice
was given to the National Commissioner within six months of the ‘debt
becoming due’,
in other words, within a period of six months
from the incident giving rise to the claim.
[2]
It is however in regard to the provisions
of s 5 of the Act that this judgment is concerned. While s 3 does not
provide any details
as to who must be served in the event of an
action being instituted against the Minister of Police, sections 4
and 5 are instructive
in this respect. Section 4 provides for the
serving of the notice referred to in s 3, and reads as follows:
‘
Service
of notice.—
(1)
A
notice must be served on an organ of state by delivering it by hand
or by sending it by certified mail or, subject to
subsection
(2)
,
by sending it by electronic mail or by transmitting it by facsimile,
in the case where the organ of state is—
(a)
a
national
or
provincial
department
mentioned
in
the
first
column
of
Schedule 1, 2 or 3 to the Public Service Act, 1994 (Proclamation No.
103 of 1994), to the officer who is the incumbent of the
post bearing
the designation mentioned in the second column of the said Schedule
1, 2 or 3 opposite the name of the relevant national
or provincial
department:
Provided that in the case of
the Department of Police, the notice must be sent to the National
Commissioner
and
the Provincial Commissioner of
the province in which the cause of action
arose, as defined in section 1 of the
South African Police Service Act, 1995;’
(my emphasis)
[3]
It is not in dispute that the plaintiff
only partially complied with the requirement in s 4(1)(
a
)
in that the notice was dispatched timeously, but only addressed to
the National Commissioner. It is not disputed that as at the
time
when the matter was argued there had been no service of the notice on
the Provincial Commissioner. Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
submitted
that
it
is
not
prejudicial
to
the
defendant
that
no notice was served on the Provincial
Commissioner, as the acknowledgment from the National Commissioner
confirms that the notice
was indeed forwarded to the offices of the
Provincial Commissioner.
[4]
The question which arises is whether
service only on one of the parties referred to in s 4(1)(
a
)
of the Act could be said to constitute compliance with the statutory
requirement contained in the section.
Counsel for the defendant submitted that
issues of prejudice do not arise at this stage of the enquiry.
All that the court is concerned with at
this point, it was submitted, is a factual enquiry to establish
whether there has been compliance
with the provisions of the Act. If
no service in accordance with the Act can be proved, the special plea
must be upheld.
It
was contended that it was then up to the plaintiff to decide whether
it wished to bring an application for condonation in order
to serve
the notice on the Provincial Commissioner.
It is only at this stage that the court
enters the arena to consider the explanation for the delay on the
part of the plaintiff.
At
this stage, issues of prejudice or otherwise to the parties may enter
the equation.
The
court considering the special plea raised by the defendant is obliged
to consider whether the plaintiff has complied with the
prescripts of
s 4(1)(
a
)
of the Act.
[5]
In
Gcam-Gcam v
Minister of Safety and Security
(187/11)
[2017] ZAECMHC 31 (12 September 2017), Mbenenge ADJP was confronted
with a similar situation to the matter before me and
rejected the
contention that an enquiry into whether there has been compliance
with s 4(1)(
a
)
of the Act must delve into whether prejudice was occasioned by the
non-compliance.
The
court said the following in paragraphs 18 to 20, which are in my
view, dispositive of the enquiry before me:
[18]
Regrettably,
I find myself being in disagreement with the approach adopted in
Bahle
in
so far as the National Commissioner was left out in a consideration
of what constitutes substantial compliance with section 4
(1)(a) of
the Act.
The
wording of the section is plain, simple and uses direct language.
Nothing
from a reading of the section points to any form of ambiguity or
difficulty of interpretation.
It
makes it imperative (and not merely directory) for a claimant to
serve the notice on the head of a department.
In
the case of the SAPS such head is the National Commissioner.
The
reason for the requirement that notice to institute proceedings
against a department be served on the department’s head
at that
early stage is not far to seek.
In
terms of
section
36
of the
Public
Finance Management Act 1 of 1999
(the PFMA) the head of a department must be the accounting officer
for the department. The responsibilities of accounting officers
are
set out in
section
38
of the PFMA.
Section
38
(1)(d)
renders accounting officers responsible for the management of the
liabilities of the department. It is also significant that
the
National Commissioner exercises control over and manages the SAPS in
accordance with section 207 (2) of the Constitution of
the Republic
of South Africa, 1996 and is obliged to perform any legal act or to
act in any legal capacity on behalf of the SAPS.
As
far as I could have discerned argument predicated on the pivotal role
of the head of department does not seem to have been advanced
in
Bahle,
both
before the court
a
quo
and
the full court.
[19]
In terms of section 4(1)(a) the notice must
be addressed to and received by the National Commissioner.
I
am
mindful
of
the
pronouncement
in
Maharaj
and
Others
v Rampersad
wherein
the then AD held that in deciding whether there has been compliance
with an inju[n]ction the object sought to be achieved
by the
inju[n]ction and the question of whether this object has been
achieved are of importance. However, substantial compliance
which
eschews the head of a department, whose responsibility includes the
management of the department’s liabilities, does
not pass
muster. The head must be involved in the relevant process and in
deciding whether the claim should be resisted or settled.
Were the
section to be interpreted otherwise, the managerial role of the
accounting officer would be subverted. A door to all manner
of
possibilities leading to unnecessary uncertainties would also be
opened.
[20]
Moreover, in my view, the question whether
or not the appropriate functionary has been served ought merely to
hinge on the facts
of each case, the enquiry being purely factual and
requiring no exercise of a discretion; considerations of fairness and
prejudice
should not come into
play
during
this
enquiry.
Only
when
condonation
is
sought
in
terms
of
section
3 (4)(b) should a discretion, hinging on,
inter alia,
whether
the organ of State was not unreasonably prejudiced by the failure to
serve the notice on the proper functionary, be exercised.
(footnotes
omitted)
[6]
While the Court in
Gcam-Gcam
was dealing with the unamended version
of s 4 of the Act (prior to the introduction of the provisio
regarding the Department of
Police), this Court agrees with the
finding in
Gcam-Gcam
regarding
the peremptory nature of the provisions of s 4.
As counsel for the defendant submitted, and
correctly in my view, the plaintiff had been alerted by way of the
special plea, as
to the deficiency in the service of the necessary
notice in terms of s 4(1)(
a
)
of the Act.
It
took no steps to remedy the situation.
Instead, it has elected to proceed to trial
on the basis that there has been ‘substantial compliance’,
further contending
that no prejudice has been occasioned by
non-service on the Provincial Commissioner.
The wording of the Act makes it clear that
a notice alerting the State functionaries to a pending claim must be
served on both the
National
and
Provincial Commissioners of Police.
It matters not that the National
Commissioner may have forwarded the notice to his or her counterpart
at the provincial level.
[7]
Despite the peremptory wording of the
section, a non-compliant litigant is not non-suited as they are
permitted to apply for condonation
for non-compliance. It is at that
stage of the matter that an enquiry may focus of the reasons why the
notice was not served on
the Provincial Commissioner.
See
Ethekwini
Municipality v Crimson Clover Trading 17 (Pty) Ltd t/a Island Hotel
(280/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 96
(1 July
2021) where the court at paragraph 10 stated that:
‘
the
factors set out in s 3(4), must be considered in light of the
well-settled principles on
condonation.
In
Mulaudzi
v Old Mutual Life Assurance Company South Africa Ltd
this
Court restated the factors which need to be taken into account when
considering an application for condonation as follows:
“
A
full, detailed and accurate account of the causes of the delay and
their effects must be furnished so as to enable the Court to
understand clearly the reasons and to assess the responsibility.
Factors which usually weigh with this court in considering an
application for condonation include the degree of non-compliance, the
explanation therefor, the importance of the case, a respondent’s
interest in the finality of the judgment of the court below, the
convenience of this court and the avoidance of unnecessary delay
in
the administration of justice.”’
(
footnotes
omitted)
[8]
Despite counsel for
the defendant urging me to dismiss the plaintiff’s action, I am
satisfied that the proper outcome where
there has been non-compliance
with s 4(1)(
a
)
of the Act, is that the plaintiff is barred from proceeding with the
action until condonation is obtained in terms of s 3(4) of
the Act.
[9]
I am satisfied
that the plaintiff had adequate opportunity to consider its approach
once the special plea had been raised.
It chose not
to proceed in terms of s 3(4), as it ought to have.
For that
reason, costs should follow the result.
[10]
The following
order is made:
The special plea raised
by the defendant is upheld, with costs.
M R CHETTY
Appearance:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Mr
Gqencu
Instructed
by:
Gqencu
Attorneys
C/o:
Cebisa
Attorneys
Address:
3rd
Floor Mansion House, Suite 360 12 Joe Slovo (Field) Street
Durban
Cell:
078
0500 233
Email:
gqencu.attorneys@gmail.com
Ref:
08/SAM/UG
Counsel
for the Defendant:
Mr
Tryon
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney (KZN)
Address:
6th
Floor, Metlife Building
391
Anton Lembede Street, Durban
Tell:
031
365 2511
Email:
SimNdlovu@justice.gov.za
Ref:
123/00813/21/M/P27/zm
Judgment
reserved:
14
June 2023
Judgment
Delivery:
31
August 2023
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