Case Law[2024] ZASCA 137South Africa
Minister of Police v Nontsele (547/2022) [2024] ZASCA 137; [2025] 1 All SA 44 (SCA) (11 October 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
11 October 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Appeals – whether the court may consider a cross-appeal in the absence of an application for leave to cross-appeal.
Judgment
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## Minister of Police v Nontsele (547/2022) [2024] ZASCA 137; [2025] 1 All SA 44 (SCA) (11 October 2024)
Minister of Police v Nontsele (547/2022) [2024] ZASCA 137; [2025] 1 All SA 44 (SCA) (11 October 2024)
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sino date 11 October 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
PERSONAL INJURY – Unlawful arrest and detention –
Malicious
prosecution
–
Cross-appeal
against findings – Absence of application for leave to
cross-appeal – Withholding of negative DNA
test result would
not on its own justify release of rape accused on bail – No
evidence led to prove absence of reasonable
and probable cause and
intention to injure – Substantially more information that
implicated respondent – Appeal
upheld – Claim
dismissed.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case no: 547/2022
In
the matter between:
MINISTER OF
POLICE
APPELLANT
and
MABHASO NONTSELE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Minister
of Police v Nontsele
(547/2022)
[2024]
ZASCA 137
(11 October 2024)
Coram:
DAMBUZA, MAKGOKA and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and
TOLMAY and SMITH AJJA
Heard:
24 May 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down of the judgment is deemed to
be 11h00 on 11 Octobert2024.
Summary:
Appeals – whether the court may consider a
cross-appeal in the absence of an application for leave to
cross-appeal.
Delict – damages
for malicious detention – onus on the plaintiff to prove that
deprivation of liberty was without probable
cause and was
amino
iniuriandi
– no evidence led to prove absence of reasonable
and probable cause and intention to injure.
Unlawful detention –
police withholding report of negative DNA results in bail application
proceedings – withholding
of negative DNA test result would
not, on its own, justify release of rape accused on bail in this
case.
ORDER
On
special leave to appeal from:
Eastern
Cape Division of the High Court, Mthatha (Majiki J, sitting as court
of first instance):
1
The cross-appeal is struck from the roll with costs.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs.
3
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Tolmay AJA (Smith AJA
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The respondent, Mr Mabhaso Nontsele (Mr Nontsele) instituted action
against the appellant, the
Minister of Police, (the Minister) and the
National Director of Public Prosecutions (the NDPP) for wrongful
arrest, detention and
malicious prosecution in the Eastern Cape
Division of the High Court, Mthatha (the high court). Mr Nontsele was
arrested on 8 December
2013 and detained until 19 May 2015, a period
of 527 days. He was arrested by Sergeant Portia Badikazi Njotini
(Sgt Njotini),
who at the time was a constable in the South
African Police Service and the investigating officer. He was arrested
with a certain
Mr Kanono Jackson Mdike (Mr Mdike) and Mr Kwanda
Kaba (Mr Kaba) for the rape of Ms K[...] S[...] (the complainant) at
a traditional
ceremony that took place on 6 December 2013. At
the trial, held on 15 July 2015 he was acquitted in terms of s 174
of
the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the CPA). The State
conceded that there was no
prima facie
evidence against him,
after the evidence of the State witnesses was led.
[2]
Mr Nontsele then sued the Minister and the NDPP for damages due to
his alleged unlawful arrest,
detention and malicious prosecution. He
was partially successful in the high court. The court found that he
had failed to prove
both claims of unlawful arrest or malicious
prosecution. The high court however found his detention to have been
unlawful from
the date of refusal of bail to date of his release. It
awarded damages in the amount of R1.6 million.
[1]
[3]
The Minister applied for leave to appeal which was refused by the
high court but granted by this
Court on petition to it. Mr Nontsele
did not seek leave to cross-appeal, either from the high court or
this Court. He, however,
filed a Notice of Cross-Appeal on 27 August
2022. The purported cross-appeal is against the high court’s
findings that neither
unlawful arrest nor malicious prosecution had
been proven by the respondent.
[4]
It is convenient to first dispose of the issue whether a cross-appeal
can be entertained in the
absence of leave to appeal having been
granted. Second, whether the high court was correct in finding that
Mr Nontsele was wrongfully
detained from the date of the refusal of
bail to the date of his release, i e from 6 February 2014 to 19 May
2015.
The purported
cross-appeal
[5]
Section 16(1) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the
Superior
Courts Act) reads
as follows:
‘
16
Appeals generally
(1)
Subject to
section 15(1)
, the Constitution and any other law-
(a)
an
appeal against any decision of a Division as a court of first
instance lies, upon leave having been granted –
(i) if
the court consisted of a single judge, either to the Supreme Court of
Appeal or to a full court of that
Division, depending on the
direction issued in terms of section 17(6); or
(ii) if
the court consisted of more than one judge, to the Supreme Court of
Appeal;
(b)
an
appeal against any decision of a Division on appeal to it, lies to
the Supreme Court of Appeal upon special leave having been
granted by
the Supreme Court of Appeal; and
(c)
an
appeal against any decision of a court of a status similar to the
High Court, lies to the Supreme Court of Appeal upon leave
having
been granted by that court or the Supreme Court of Appeal, and the
provisions of section 17 apply with the changes required
by the
context.’
Section 17(2)
(a)
of
the
Superior Courts Act reads
as follows:
‘
(2)
(a)
Leave
to appeal may be granted by the judge or judges against whose
decision an appeal is to be made or, if not readily available,
by any
other judge or judges of the same court or Division.’
[6]
It is clear from these provisions that an application for leave to
appeal is anticipated prior
to an appeal. Mr Nontsele relied on
s
19
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act and
argued that this Court
may condone the failure to first seek leave to appeal. This section
provides that this Court or a Division
exercising appeal jurisdiction
may, in addition to any other power, inter alia, amend or set aside
the decision which is the subject
of the appeal and ‘render any
decision which the circumstances may require’. Condonation was
sought on behalf of Mr
Nontsele for the failure to seek leave to
appeal. The reason given was that it was done to avoid incurring
further costs.
[7]
Counsel for Mr Nontsele in support of the argument that this Court
could entertain the cross-appeal,
relied on
Octagon
Chartered Accountants v The Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg, and
Others
(
Octagon
)
.
[2]
In that matter the plaintiff brought actions against five defendants
in the magistrates’ court for the recovery of accounting
and
auditing fees, each amount fell within the monetary jurisdiction of
the magistrates’ court. The defendants however each
instituted
a counterclaim for an amount of more than the monetary jurisdiction
of the magistrates’ court. The magistrate,
on application by
the defendants, moved the claims and counterclaims to the high court.
The plaintiff challenged the removal of
the proceedings to the high
court in review proceedings. The high court found that the magistrate
was not empowered to remove the
actions,
inter
alia
,
because the claims did not exceed the jurisdiction of the
magistrates’ court. The high court there ordered a stay of the
action and removed the counterclaim to the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg.
[8]
The plaintiff appealed to the full court, only against the decision
of the high court to allow
the removal of the counterclaims to the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg. The full court
found that, even though
the plaintiff had only appealed a part of the
order, the failure to cross-appeal the whole order left the parties
in an untenable
situation.
[3]
It
found that it was empowered to vary the order of the high court and
moved both claims and counterclaims to the high court. The
full court
relied on
s 19(
d
)
of the
Superior Courts Act to
justify its order.
[9]
Octagon
was clearly distinguishable from the matter before us.
Although the high court, in the present matter, may theoretically
have been
wrong in finding that no case was made out for wrongful
arrest or malicious prosecution, the order did not leave Mr Nontsele
in
an untenable situation. The remedy of an application for leave to
appeal was available.
[10]
In
Newlands
Surgical Clinic (Pty) Ltd v Peninsula Eye Clinic (Pty) Ltd
,
[4]
it was expressed as follows:
‘
Since
the decision in
Moch
, the
statutory basis for this court’s jurisdiction has been
superseded by the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. It is now to be
found in
s 16(1)
(a)
of
that Act, which provides that an appeal against a decision of the
high court as a court of first instance lies “
upon
leave having been granted
.
. . either to the Supreme Court of Appeal or to a full court of that
Division. . .”. Leave to appeal therefore constitutes what
has become known, particularly in administrative law parlance, as a
jurisdictional fact. Without the required leave, this court
simply
has no jurisdiction to entertain the dispute.
Section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act then
proceeds to govern the ways in which the
required leave can be obtained. In essence,
s 17(2)
provides that it
may be granted by the court of first instance and, if refused, it may
be granted on application to this court.’
[5]
[11] An
application for leave to appeal is required. Although not a
determining factor, seeking leave to cross-appeal,
could not have led
to a significant increase in costs, considering that it would have
been heard simultaneously with the Minister’s
application for
leave to appeal. Without such an application, this Court does not
have the jurisdiction to entertain the cross-appeal.
[12]
Reliance was placed on
Ex
Parte Gaone Jack Siamisang Montshiwa
,
[6]
which was an application by Mr Montshiwa to be admitted as a legal
practitioner, the application was refused by two judges sitting
as
the court of first instance. Mr Monsthiwa applied for leave to
appeal and this was heard by a single judge and dismissed.
The
dismissal of the application for leave to appeal led to a petition to
this Court. The application for leave to appeal was referred
for oral
argument in terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
of
the
Superior Courts Act. The
majority found that the applicant need
not be sent back to the high court to bring a fresh application for
leave to appeal and
heard the application for leave to appeal and
dismissed it. That matter is distinguishable from the matter before
us. In this instance
there is no application for leave to appeal
before us.
[13]
The approach to the Court’s power and the applicable
limitations of such power was explained as:
‘
.
. . [T]he court’s reservoir of power to regulate its process
and procedure in the interest of proper administration [of
justice]
may not be used . . . to appropriate to itself jurisdiction that is
not conferred to it by statute or where a statute
grants exclusive
jurisdiction to another court’.
[7]
The result simply is that
the condonation sought cannot be granted and the cross-appeal cannot
be considered in the absence of an
application for leave to appeal.
The detention
[14]
The only remaining issue to be determined is whether Mr Nontsele’s
detention was unlawful and, if it
was, from which date. Since the
amount of damages awarded was not disputed, nothing needs to be said
about the quantum.
[15] Mr
Nontsele was arrested on 8 December 2013 and remained in custody in
the police cells from that date until
19 May 2015. He was re-arrested
by Sgt Njotini the following day and brought to court where he
appeared and was warned to appear
on 15 July 2015. He was released on
the same day and the trial ultimately took place on 15 July 2015 when
he was discharged in
terms of
s 174
of the CPA.
[16] Mr
Nontsele appeared in court for the first time on 3 February 2014,
following his arrest on 8 December 2013,
when a bail application was
brought by his legal representative. Sgt Njotini, as the
investigating officer was not present at court.
The magistrate
inquired about her absence. The matter was rolled over to the next
day to ensure her presence at court. On 4 February
2014 the
prosecutor, Ms Siphokazi Maarman (Ms Maarman) informed the magistrate
that the ‘investigating officer’ was
present and swore in
a police officer, Mr Badboy Xolani, who testified but turned out to
have absolutely no knowledge of the case
before court. The court then
insisted that a subpoena for the Commander of the Family and Domestic
Violence Unit needs to be prepared.
Only at this stage did it
transpire that Sgt Njotini was not available as she was attending a
course. The matter was again adjourned
to 6 February 2014. The record
contains no transcript as to what occurred on 6 February 2014. The
transcript of the proceedings
in the magistrates’ court resumes
when the trial in the criminal proceedings was concluded on 15 July
2015.
[17]
During the trial of the present matter before the high court, (the
civil trial) it was confirmed that the
bail proceedings were
concluded on 6 February 2014. Seeing that the evidence led during the
civil trial was available we were able
to proceed with the appeal and
the parties did not take issue with this defect in the record before
us. The evidence led during
the civil trial dealt with the bail
proceedings and therefore the missing part of the record of the bail
proceedings was not fatal
to a proper determination of the appeal.
[8]
[18] To
determine whether the detention was lawful, the evidence available
during the bail proceedings needs consideration.
There was a
statement allegedly made by Mr Nontsele to Sgt Njotini on 9 December
2013. This statement stated that he and the complainant
had met
earlier during the day, on 6 December 2013, and agreed to have sexual
intercourse and proceeded to have consensual sexual
intercourse the
next morning. This statement, importantly, also indicates that Mr
Nontsele said that he did not understand the
charges against him. The
statement furthermore reads that he did not want to make a statement
and wanted an attorney to represent
him. At the civil trial, Mr
Nontsele denied having made the statement and said that he had signed
it because he was scared, and
Sgt Njotini had told him to do so. The
statement is exculpatory and even if Mr Nontsele’s version is
rejected, this statement
cannot on its own justify detention.
[19] In
her statement made on 8 December 2013, Sgt Njotini stated that
although the case was weak, she had evidence
of an eyewitness Ms S
M[...] (Ms M[...]). However, the high-water mark of the evidence
against Mr Nontsele was that Ms M[...]
saw him on the veranda of
the house where the rape occurred, without a shirt. During the civil
trial, it transpired that the house
consisted of several rooms and
the veranda led into the kitchen. The evidence indicated that there
were many people at the ceremony,
and they were dancing and drinking
traditional beer.
[20]
The complainant, at the criminal trial, testified that she was drunk
and went to sleep in the bedroom and
was woken up by Ms S[...] M[...]
(Ms M[...]) who told her that she had been raped. She then noticed
that her panty was torn and
wet. Ms M[...] said she saw Mr Mdike on
top of the complainant. In a statement by the complainant’s
grandmother, made on
27 December 2013, she said she saw Mr Mdike
raping the complainant and tried to stop him. It is noteworthy that
Ms M[...]
said nothing about the presence of the grandmother. The
grandmother’s statement also did not place Mr Nontsele on the
scene.
[21]
Captain Patrick Tembekile Silwana, a colleague of Sgt Njotini, stated
in his statement made on 6 February
2014 that there were three
reasons why Sgt Njotini opposed bail and those were that the
community was angry; the eyewitnesses threatened
the accused; and the
victim was mentally challenged. The anger of the community was
repeatedly confirmed by Sgt Njotini also during
her testimony at the
civil trial as a justification for Mr Nontsele’s detention.
[22]
Ms Maarman, the prosecutor, merely stated during the bail proceedings
that, seeing that rape is a Schedule
6 offence, in terms of the
CPA,
[9]
it was not in the
interests of justice to release Mr Nontsele. She did not point out
the weaknesses in the State’s case to
the magistrate. During
her evidence at the civil trial Ms Maarman repeatedly confirmed her
view that a Schedule 6 crime justified
an opposition to bail. When
her evidence is evaluated, it would seem that she regarded the
strength of the evidence against an
accused as of no consequence at
all, when eligibility for bail is considered.
[23]
The statement prepared on Mr Nontsele’s behalf, for purposes of
the bail proceedings, stated that he
would plead not guilty and that
he had no previous convictions or pending cases against him. He
provided an address and said that
he has been living there for the
last thirty years. He also provided an alternative address in another
area where his grandmother
resided.
[24]
Sgt Njotini, in her evidence during the civil trial, persisted with
her view that it was appropriate to oppose
bail. She again emphasised
the fact that rape is a Schedule 6 offence, and the onus was
accordingly on Mr Nontsele to show exceptional
circumstances why he
should be released on bail. She stated that Ms M[...] saw Mr
Nontsele without a shirt and that the J88
medico legal report (J88)
indicated rape, although no injuries were observed. She further
stated that if she was present at the
bail hearing and was aware that
Mr Nontsele had an alternative address that would have taken him out
of the area where the victim
lived, she would not have opposed bail.
The failure of both Sgt Njotini and Ms Maarman to consider all the
available evidence and
the failure to reveal it to the magistrate led
to the refusal of bail. Neither of them seemed to have considered the
possibility
of setting conditions for bail.
[25]
Sgt Njotini stated that the DNA evidence was obtained and sent for
analysis, and she was made aware that
it was available electronically
on 14 March 2014. She testified that she telephonically followed up
and was told that no semen
was detected. She officially received a
hard copy of the results on 7 August 2014 and took those to court.
She did not go into
detail as to what she did exactly to bring the
information she obtained telephonically to Ms Maarman’s
attention. One thing
is abundantly clear: she did nothing to ensure
that Mr Nontsele and his legal representative were made aware of the
information
obtained on the phone about the results, prior to
officially obtaining them on 7 August 2014. Mr Nontsele’s
uncontested evidence
is that he was taken monthly to court, sometimes
even twice a month. In all that time, no one deemed it necessary to
reveal to
the court that the DNA did not link him to the rape.
[26] Ms
Maarman’s testimony during the civil trial shows that her main
reason for opposing bail was that
rape is a Schedule 6 offence. She
did not have the docket in her possession, initially, when the bail
application was heard. The
senior prosecutor, Mr Buso testified that
he brought the docket to Ms Maarman. It is not clear from the record
whether she perused
it at all during the bail proceedings Mr Buso
surprisingly did not deem it appropriate to draw her attention to the
fact that he
had brought the police docket. After receiving the
docket, Ms Maarman did not alert the court to the weaknesses in the
State’s
case. When asked about why she failed to do so, she
testified that she did not have a duty to do so. Ms Maarman testified
that
she was of the view that the State had a
prima facie
case, because of Mr Nontsele’s statement and the witness
statements previously referred to. She also emphasised the importance
of the anger of the community and seemed to believe that this
justified the decision to oppose bail.
Unlawful Detention
[27] In
order to succeed in an action based on unlawful detention, a
plaintiff must show that a defendant, or
someone acting as his or her
agent or employee, deprived him or her unlawfully of his or her
liberty. Mr Nontsele was charged with
a Schedule 6 offence.
Section
60(11)
(a)
of the CPA provides as follows:
‘
Notwithstanding
any provision of this Act, where an accused is charged with an
offence –
(a)
referred
to in Schedule 6, the court shall order that the accused be detained
in custody until he or she is dealt with in accordance
with the law,
unless the accused, having been given a reasonable opportunity to do
so, adduces evidence which satisfies the court
that exceptional
circumstances exist which in the interests of justice permit his or
her release’.
[28]
The result is that the onus is on an accused to adduce evidence that
exceptional circumstances exist which
permit his release in the
interests of justice.
[10]
In
this case, however, the magistrate should have been advised that the
evidence against Mr Nontsele was circumstantial; that
the
statement made by him was exculpatory and suffered from procedural
defects; and that he could provide both a permanent and
an
alternative address. Sgt Njotini testified that she would have
confirmed the alternative address, if she was aware of it, and
would
not have opposed bail. After the police docket had been given to Ms
Maarman, she failed to bring this evidence to the attention
of the
magistrate. In
Carmichele
v Minister of Safety and Security
,
[11]
the following was said in relation to the duty of prosecutors:
‘
.
. . We can do no better in this regard than refer to the following
passage which appears in the
United
Nations Guidelines on the Role of Prosecutors
:
“
In
the performance of their duties, prosecutors shall:
(a)
. . .
(b)
Protect
the public interest, act with objectivity, take proper account of the
position of the suspect and the victim and pay attention
to all
relevant circumstances, irrespective of whether they are to the
advantage or disadvantage of the suspect; . . ..”’
[12]
[29]
This public law duty was confirmed in
Woji
v Minister of Police
(
Woji
),
[13]
where it was reiterated that a police officer also has a duty to
place ‘all relevant and readily available facts before the
magistrate’.
[14]
Although an unlawful arrest will as a matter of course lead to the
detention being unlawful, the fact that the high court found
that the
arrest was lawful will not automatically lead to the conclusion that
the detention was lawful. The particular facts of
the case will
determine whether the detention was lawful. The importance and
sanctity of personal freedom in our constitutional
dispensation
cannot be over emphasised. In
Mahlangu
and Another v Minister of Police
,
[15]
the Constitutional Court stressed the importance of a person’s
right to freedom as part of the foundational rights in our
constitutional dispensation.
[16]
The Constitutional Court expressed itself as follows:
‘
The
unlawful deprivation of liberty, with its accompanying infringement
of the right to human dignity, has always been regarded
as a
particularly grave wrong and a serious inroad into the freedom and
rights of a person. In
Thandani,
[it
was held that] “the liberty of the individual. . . in a free
society should be jealously guarded . . . Unlawful arrest
and
detention constitutes a serious inroad into the freedom and the
rights of an individual”.’
[17]
(Footnote omitted.)
Quoting what was held in
Coetzee
, the Constitutional Court continued:
‘
[There
are] two different aspects of freedom: the first is concerned
particularly with the reasons for which the state may deprive
someone
of freedom [the substantive component]; and the second is concerned
with the manner whereby a person is deprived of freedom
[the
procedural component] . . . [O]ur Constitution recognises that both
aspects are important in a democracy: the state may not
deprive its
citizens of liberty for reasons that are not acceptable, nor, when it
deprives citizens of freedom for acceptable reasons,
may it do so in
a manner which is procedurally unfair.’
[18]
(Footnote
omitted.)
[30] In
this matter, the magistrate was not made aware of crucial weaknesses
in the State’s case during
the bail proceedings. Mr Buso was
the prosecutor at the criminal trial. During that trial, he conceded
that there was no
prima facie
case against Mr Nontsele
and expressed his surprise that the matter was even enrolled. To make
it worse, the court was not
made aware of the fact that the DNA
evidence also did not link Mr Nontsele to the crime. There was a duty
on the police officer
to make the prosecutor aware of that fact, but
neither the prosecutors nor the police officer deemed it necessary to
bring this
to the attention of the court. There is nothing in the
record that clarifies whether either Sgt Njotini or the prosecutor,
at any
point, considered the evidence or acted thereon.
[31]
An analysis of the evidence led by the Minister’s witnesses,
during the civil trial, reveals that the
attitude of the police and
the prosecutors was simply that, as this was a Schedule 6 offence,
the police officers had no duty to
draw the court’s attention
to the glaring weaknesses in the State’s case. This is not the
position established by this
Court and the Constitutional Court, as
explained in the referenced authorities. Another argument raised on
behalf of the Minister
was that it was Mr
Nontsele’s
duty to bring a further bail application when the DNA results became
available. Unless Mr Nontsele and his legal
representative were made
aware of this fact, they could hardly be expected to have had the
necessary facts available to consider
such an option. The simple
answer is that they were never made aware of the DNA evidence. In any
event, such an approach loses
sight of the public duty on the police
and prosecutors to protect the legitimate interests and rights of the
public, which finds
its foundation in the rule of law.
[32] I
have considered whether the detention might only have become unlawful
from the date that the forensic evidence
became available. However,
after analysing all the evidence, I am of the view that the whole
period of detention was unlawful.
The case against Mr Nontsele was
insufficient to warrant detention. The only evidence available was
firsty, none of the statements
made by witnesses implicated Mr
Nontsele directly. Secondly, this statement was exculpatory and
suffered procedural defects. Thirdly,
that a young man was seen,
without a shirt, on the veranda of a house where the complainant was
allegedly raped. This rape occurred
at a traditional ceremony where,
on all accounts, many people were gathered, and traditional beer was
consumed. So much so that
even the victim herself had no knowledge
that she had been raped due to her state of intoxication.
[33]
Considering all the facts, any potential prejudice to the victim or
the community could and should have been
addressed by setting
appropriate bail conditions. The rule of law requires of the police
and prosecuting authority to act with
honesty and integrity and to
place all relevant evidence before a court of law to enable it to
make an informed decision. As heinous
a crime as rape is, the
principle remains that one is innocent until proven guilty. The
deprivation of one’s freedom must
be carried out with due
regard of the importance our Constitution places on personal freedom.
The fact that Mr Nontsele remained
in custody for 527 days, based on
the available evidence, points to a cavalier attitude by the
Minister’s officers towards
the importance of personal freedom.
The harm done to any unlawfully detained person’s mental and
physical well-being is detrimental
and the high court cannot be
faulted for finding that the detention was unlawful and awarding
damages. Considering all the above,
I would have struck the
cross-appeal from the roll with costs and would have dismissed the
appeal with costs.
R G TOLMAY
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Dambuza JA (with
Makgoka and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA):
[34] I
have read the judgment prepared by my sister Tolmay AJA (the first
judgment) in this appeal. Regrettably,
I am unable to agree with the
conclusion she reaches and some of the reasoning leading to the
result. I agree that this Court has
no jurisdiction to consider an
appeal against the dismissal of the claims for unlawful arrest and
malicious prosecution which Mr
Nontsele’s counsel urged us to
consider. I also agree with the discussion of the principles relating
to wrongful and unlawful
detention. My view, however, is that those
principles are not applicable in this instance. Even if they applied
they would not
support Mr Nontsele’s claim for damages.
[35] In
paragraph 12 of the particulars of claim, Mr Nontsele’s claim
arising from the extended detention
was formulated as follows:
‘
On
the 3
rd
of
February 2014, and at the Lady Frere Magistrate’s Court, the
members of the South African Police Services, whose names
are
presently unknown to the Plaintiff, together with the Prosecutor, Ms
S MAARMAN, who dealt with the case on that day,
opposed
the granting of bail to the Plaintiff, and did so maliciously and in
concert, well knowing that that no
prima
facie
case
existed against the Plaintiff at that time or at all.
’
(Emphasis
supplied.)
[36] In
essence, Mr Nontsele’s case was not that the extended detention
was unlawful for breach of a legal
duty owed to him. He asserted,
specifically, that the opposition to the granting of bail (which
resulted in the extended detention,
subsequent to 4 February 2014)
was malicious. In other words, it was driven by improper motive
and/or was without reasonable and
probable cause, and resulted from a
conspiracy between the police and Ms Maarman.
[37]
Malicious deprivation of liberty occurs when lawful restraint is
inflicted upon a person’s liberty
by means of an act of law,
unjustifiably, with an intention to injure, and with improper
motive.
[19]
Neethling and
Potgieter
[20]
describe it as
follows:
‘
Unlike
wrongful deprivation of liberty, where the result complained of must
have been caused without justification by the defendant
himself or
some person acting as his agent or servant, the conduct in the case
of malicious deprivation of liberty takes place
under
the
guise
of a valid judicial process
.
The defendant makes improper use of the legal machinery of the state,
either through a policeman acting on his own discretion
or through a
valid warrant, in depriving the plaintiff of his liberty. The actual
deprivation of liberty is consequently not carried
out by the
defendant himself or by his servant or agent, but by the machinery of
the state through a valid judicial process.
As
a result, the plaintiff will have to prove the following in order to
succeed in an action based on malicious deprivation of liberty:
that
the defendant
instigated
the
deprivation of liberty; that the instigation was
without
reasonable and probable cause
;
and that the defendant acted
animo
iniuriandi
.
These requirements are similar to those of
malicious
prosecution
.’
[21]
(Emphasis in the original text.)
[38]
Consequently, the test of breach of a legal duty, or wrongful
conduct, on the part of the police (and the
Minister) plays no part
in the inquiry into allegations of malicious and collusion driven
detention. Mr Nontsele had to prove that
Sgt Njotini and Ms Maarman
colluded when opposing his application for bail, that they opposed
bail without a reasonable and probable
cause, and they did so
animo
iniuriandi
.
[39] Mr
Nontsele never tendered evidence to prove the collusion allegation.
There was no evidence that any of
the police officers involved in
this case held discussions with Ms Maarman, aimed at achieving
refusal of bail or to secure Mr
Nontsele’s further detention
after 3 or 4 February 2014. Neither did Mr Nontsele show absence of
reasonable and improbable
cause – that the police never had an
honest belief, founded on reasonable grounds, that his further
detention was warranted
after 4 February 2013 or at any other
time. He also never tendered evidence, and no inquiry was made by the
high court into
whether Mr Nontsele had proved any
animus
iniuriandi
on the part of the police
[40]
The basis for the claim for damages for the extended detention in
this case is a crucial distinguishing factor
from
Woji
,
Zealand
v
Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development and Another
(
Zealand
),
[22]
and many other cases in which the claims for damages were based on
wrongful and/or unlawful detention. In this case, the opposition
to
bail (and the withholding of information as submitted at the appeal
hearing)
[23]
was alleged to
have been done maliciously, and in concert with the prosecution. The
correct test was not applied and there is no
evidence in the record
on which it can be satisfied. On this basis, only the claim for
extended detention should have failed.
[41]
Furthermore, even if Mr Nontsele’s case could be decided on the
basis of breach of a legal duty, it
seems to me that no proper case
was made out against the Minister. Mr Nontsele pleaded that it was
the conduct of both Ms Maarman
and Sgt Njotini that led to his
continued detention beyond 3 February 2014. It is not clear from
both the particulars of claim
and the evidence, whose conduct was
material, in relation to the decision of the magistrate. The high
court found that Ms Maarman
had failed to advise the magistrate about
the weaknesses of the case together with the fact that it was built
on ‘circumstantial
hearsay evidence’. The wrongful
conduct by the police, more specifically Sgt Njotini, was found to be
the failure to inform
the court of the results of the DNA test.
[42] In
Woji
, this Court found that the Mr Woji’s detention was
unjustifiable as a result of a police officer’s erroneous
identification
of Mr Woji, in a video footage, as one of the robbers
that invaded had a bank. On the same principle, Mr Zealand’s
detention
was found by the Constitutional Court to have been unlawful
for the purpose of his delictual damages claim, which arose from the
failure by the court registrar to communicate to prison officials
that Mr Zealand had successfully appealed his conviction for
murder.
The failure resulted in the unlawful extension of Mr Zealand’s
detention.
[43] I
do not think that the conclusions reached by the courts in these
cases establish a principle that all instances
of failure to
communicate information to a court will necessarily support a claim
for delictual damages. In principle, in such
claims, damages will
follow only if the harm was causally linked to the wrongful and
negligent act or omission. In
Woji
and
Zealand
,
causation was readily established. In this case, the result of DNA
testing neither absolved nor implicated Mr Nontsele. It was
neutral.
A positive DNA result is not a pre-requisite for a rape conviction. A
conviction of rape may well ensue in the absence
of a positive DNA
result, where the facts and circumstances of a particular case
support such a conviction. Consequently, a negative
or neutral DNA
result will not necessarily persuade a judicial officer to release a
rape accused on warning or bail. This is particularly
so in a case
such as the one before us, where the police are in possession of
information (other than the neutral DNA result) implicating
the
accused.
[44]
The information that was in Sgt Njotini’s possession on 3
February 2014 included Mr Nontsele’s
statement, the J88, and
statements made by various people including the complainant.
According to the J88, the complainant had
sustained injuries which
were consistent with sexual assault. By all accounts, the fact that
the complainant had been sexually
assaulted was not in dispute. In
addition, the complainant had told Sgt Njotini that her mother had
received a call made by Mr Nontsele
from her (the complainant’s)
phone which was stolen on the night of the incident. According to Sgt
Njotini however, Mr Nontsele
had denied having been in possession of
the complainant’s phone when he confronted him about the
allegation.
[45]
Furthermore, in her statement to the police, the witness, Ms M[...],
had made the following allegations,
that:
‘
I
went inside the room on my arrival I saw Kono doing sex with [the
complainant] then I asked Konono what he was doing and Konono
stand
up and he was dressed naked and he put his penis inside the trouser.
. . . Before I enter the room I met Mabhaso Nontsele
on the way out
of room he was naked on top but I did not ask Mabhaso why he was like
that.’
It also relevant that
according to Sgt Njotini, on the day of the arrest Mr Nontsele
told her (Sgt Njotini) that the complainant
had consented to having
sexual intercourse with him.
[46]
The extent and weight of the information that was in Sgt Njotini’s
possession must be determined as
at the time of the application for
bail, and when he instructed his colleague for bail application. A
shown above that time, there
was substantially more information that
implicated Mr Nontsele, that the magistrate would have had to
consider, in addition to
the neutral DNA results. Courts have, in
appropriate circumstances, considered the results of DNA analysis to
be superseded by
other evidence.
[47]
In
Thwala
v S
[24]
the Constitutional Court considered, for the third time, an
application by Mr Thwala for leave to appeal against a judgment of
the Supreme Court of Appeal, in terms of which his conviction for
several offences, including rape was confirmed. He also sought
to
lead evidence of reports from DNA tests, contending that the high
court had convicted him without considering the DNA evidence
that was
being processed, even though it was notified that such evidence would
be available in 15 weeks. The Court refused leave
and, amongst other
things referred to its decision on the previous occasion that Mr
Thwala had brought an application for leave
to appeal, citing the
failure to consider the DNA results. It held that on that occasion it
had ‘evaluated the impact of
the DNA evidence and concluded
that, in the circumstances of gang rape the fact that ‘the
spermatozoa matched a co-accused
and not Mr Thwala [was] not
significant’.
[25]
The
Constitutional Court considered the other evidence on record and held
that Supreme Court of Appeal had correctly dismissed
the application
for leave to appeal on the basis of lack of prospects of appeal.
[48] In
the case before us, even if Mr Nontsele had brought a claim for
damages on the basis of unlawful extended
detention, it would fail on
the same reasoning as in
Thwala.
For each of the reasons set
out above, the appeal must be upheld.
[49]
The following order is granted:
1
The cross-appeal is struck from the roll with costs.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs.
3
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with costs.’
N DAMBUZA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
P M
Dukada
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney, Mthatha
The
State Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
S H
Cole SC
Instructed
by:
Magqabi
Seth Zitha Attorneys, East London
Mlozana
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Nontsele
v Minister of Police and Another
[2021]
ZAECMHC 29 paras 56 and 76.
[2]
Octagon
Chartered Accountants v The Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg, and
Others
2018
(4) SA 498
(GJ).
[3]
Ibid
para 19 reads as follows:
‘
The
dismissal of the appeal leaves the parties in a wholly impractical
and untenable position. The actions (claims and counterclaims)
in
the magistrates’ court have been stayed. The counterclaims
have been removed to this court, where they are counterclaims
in a
vacuum, without claims to which they are counterclaims. That
position is as a result of the defendants having elected not
to
cross-appeal.’
[4]
Newlands
Surgical Clinic (Pty) Ltd v Peninsula Eye Clinic (Pty) Ltd
[2015]
ZASCA 25
;
2015 (4) SA 34
(SCA);
[2015] 2 All SA 322
(SCA) (
Newlands
Surgical Clinic
).
See also
DRD
Gold Limited and Another v Nkala and Others
[2023]
ZASCA 9
;
2023 (3) SA 461
(SCA) para 18.
[5]
Newlands
Surgical Clinic
para
13.
[6]
Ex
Parte Gaone Jack Siamisang Montshiwa
[2023]
ZASCA 19
; 2023 JDR 0647 (SCA).
[7]
Ibid para 27.
[8]
Schoombee
and Another v S
[2016]
ZACC 50
;
2017 (5) BCLR 572
(CC);
2017 SACR 1
(CC);
S
v Chabedi
2005
(1) SACR 415 (SCA).
[9]
Schedule
6 of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
[10]
S
v Botha and Another
2002
(2) SA 680
(SCA) para 20;
S
v Dlamini
;
S
v Dladla and Others
;
S
v Joubert
;
S
v Schietekat
[1999]
ZACC 8
;
1999 (4) SA 623
(CC);
1999 (7) BCLR 771
paras 78-79;
Knoop
N O and Another v Gupta (Execution)
[2020]
ZASCA 149
;
[2021] 1 All SA 17
(SCA);
2021 (3) SA 135
(SCA) paras
45-46
.
## [11]Carmichele
v Minister of Safety and Security(Centre
for Applied Legal Studies Intervening)[2001]
ZACC 22; 2001 (4) SA 938 (CC); 2001 (10) BCLR 995 (CC).
[11]
Carmichele
v Minister of Safety and Security
(Centre
for Applied Legal Studies Intervening)
[2001]
ZACC 22; 2001 (4) SA 938 (CC); 2001 (10) BCLR 995 (CC).
[12]
Ibid
para 73.
[13]
Woji
v Minister of Police
2015
(1) SACR 409
(SCA) (
Woji
),
as confirmed in
Mahlangu
and Another v Minister of Police
[2021]
ZACC 10
;
2021 (7) BCLR 698
(CC);
2021 (2) SACR 595
(CC) para 38.
[14]
Woji
para
28.
[15]
Mahlangu
and Others v Minister of Polic
e
[2021] ZACC 10; 2021 (7) BCLR 698 (CC);2021 (2) SACR 595 (CC).
[16]
Ibid
paras
25-26.
[17]
Ibid para 27.
[18]
Ibid
para 28.
[19]
Moaki v Reckitt and
Colman (Africa) Ltd and Another
1968
(3) SA 98 (A).
[20]
J
Neethling
and J Potgieter
Law
of Delict
8
th
ed (2020) at 398-399.
[21]
‘
Malice’
in the context of the
actio
iniuriarum
,
being
animus
iniuriandi
.
See
Relyant
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Shongwe and Another
[2006]
ZASCA 162
;
[2007] 1 All SA 375
(SCA) para 5. In
Oletsise
N.O. v Minister of Police
[2023]
ZACC 35
;
2024 (2) BCLR 238
(CC) para 60, the Constitutional Court,
when drawing a distinction between unlawful arrest and malicious
prosecution, said the
following:
‘
.
. . [M]alicious prosecution is constituted by: (a) setting the law
in motion against a claimant; (b) lack of reasonable and
probable
cause on the part of the defendant; (c) malice or
animus
iniuriandi
;
and (d) termination of criminal proceedings in the claimant’s
favour. As far as the onus is concerned, here, unlike a
claim based
on unlawful arrest and detention, it rests on the claimant in
respect of all the elements of the delict, including
that of malice
or
animus
iniuriandi
.’
[22]
Zealand
v Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development and Another
[2008]
ZACC 3; 2008 (6) BCLR 601 (CC); 2008 (2) SACR 1 (CC); 2008 (4) SA
458 (CC).
[23]
Or as
the high court found.
[24]
Thwala v S
[2018] ZACCC 34; 2019
(1) BCLR 156 (CC).
[25]
Para 17.
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