Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 261South Africa
Buthelezi v Minister of Police and Another (4886/2018) [2025] ZAGPJHC 261 (10 March 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Buthelezi v Minister of Police and Another (4886/2018) [2025] ZAGPJHC 261 (10 March 2025)
Buthelezi v Minister of Police and Another (4886/2018) [2025] ZAGPJHC 261 (10 March 2025)
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sino date 10 March 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO.: 4886/2018
(
1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
10
March 2025
In the matter between:
DAVID
BUTHELEZI
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
First Defendant
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
1.
In this matter, the plaintiff, Mr David
Buthelezi, has instituted action against the Minister of Police
and the National Director
of Public Prosecutions for damages,
arising from the alleged unlawful arrest, unlawful detention and
malicious prosecution
of the plaintiff.
2.
Both of the defendants have defended
the relief sought, denied the allegations of unlawful arrest,
unlawful detention and malicious
prosecution, and a trial accordingly
ensued.
#
# THE PLAINTIFF'S
ALLEGATIONS
THE PLAINTIFF'S
ALLEGATIONS
3.
The plaintiff alleges that he was arrested,
without a warrant of arrest, on 15 September 2016, where after he
was charged with
the crime of armed robbery, and detained by the
South African Police Services. It is common cause that the
plaintiff was indeed
arrested without a warrant of arrest on 15
September 2016.
4.
The plaintiff states that he ultimately
remained in custody for a period of 11 months, until he was
found not guilty of the
offence he was charged with.
5.
The plaintiff alleged that at the time of
his arrest by members of the SAPS, the arresting police officer
had no reasonable
grounds to suspect or believe that the
plaintiff had committed the offence he was arrested for and later
charged with, and
that therefore the arrest and consequent detention
was wrongful, unlawful and without probable cause.
6.
The plaintiff alleged that in the
alternative, the arrest by the SAPS was not necessary, for a
number of reasons, including,
inter
alia
, that the plaintiff is a South
African citizen, was not a flight risk, and was not a danger to
the complainant or any witnesses.
7.
As regards the claim against the National
Director of Public Prosecutions (“the NDPP”), the
plaintiff alleged that
the decision of the prosecuting authority to
prosecute the plaintiff was made without reasonable and/or
probable cause.
8.
The plaintiff alleged that the conduct
of the prosecutor was malicious, alternatively negligent, as there
were no reasonable
grounds warranting the prosecution of the
plaintiff, alternatively, there were no grounds or prospects of a
successful prosecution
of the plaintiff.
#
# THE DEFENDANTS’
ALLEGATIONS
THE DEFENDANTS’
ALLEGATIONS
9.
The defendants essentially pleaded
that the arrest, detention and prosecution of the plaintiff was
lawful, that there
was a
prima
facie
case of criminal conduct as
against the plaintiff, and that there was no malice or
negligence on the part of any of the defendants.
THE RELEVANT
BACKGROUND FACTS
10.
I briefly set out the relevant facts under
this heading and will deal with the particular facts and allegations
relating to the
issues to be determined, in more detail, under the
separate headings of the issues to be determined.
11.
On 14 September 2016, Mr Tiisetso Matima,
the Complainant, was robbed of his cellphone, at gunpoint, by two
men.
12.
Mr Matima attended at the Moroka Police
Station to report the crime and was advised by the member of the
SAPS, with whom he interacted,
to block his cellphone.
13.
The following day, 15 September 2016, Mr
Matima and a friend were driving around in the vicinity of where the
crime occurred, in
an attempt to ascertain whether any person had any
information relating to the robbery. He was approached by a man,
whose identity
is unknown to him, enquiring whether he was the person
who had been robbed the previous day. The unknown man mentioned that
a person
with the name of “Dezza” was involved, and
advised Mr Matima that “Dezza” was always at a well-known
dice
gambling spot.
14.
Mr Matima drove to the gambling spot, where
he allegedly recognized one of the men who had robbed him, and he
then proceeded to
the Police Station, to inform the SAPS that he had
located one of the men who had robbed him the previous day.
15.
Mr Matima accompanied members of the SAPS
to the gambling spot in Mphuti Street, where he pointed out the
plaintiff as one of the
men who robbed him.
16.
The plaintiff was arrested by Constable
Mokoena, who thereafter transported the plaintiff to the Police
Station, where he was later
charged with armed robbery.
17.
The plaintiff appeared in Court on 19
September 2016, after the Control Prosecutor had elected to prosecute
the plaintiff for the
crime of armed robbery.
#
# THE ISSUES TO BE
CONSIDERED.
THE ISSUES TO BE
CONSIDERED.
18.
The Plaintiff's counsel submitted that the
issues to be considered were the following:
18.1.
whether the plaintiff's arrest
and detention by members of the SAPS on allegations of armed
robbery was lawful;
18.2.
whether the subsequent prosecution of
the plaintiff by the NDPP was malicious and/or constituted wrongful
legal proceedings,
and
18.3.
in the event that the court finds in favour
of the plaintiff in respect of the preceding two issues, to
decide on the quantum
of damages payable to the plaintiff.
19.
The Defendants' counsel submitted that
the issues to be considered by the court were the following:
19.1.
whether the arrest of the plaintiff was
lawful;
19.2.
whether the subsequent detention of
the plaintiff was lawful;
19.3.
whether the plaintiff discharged his onus
to prove malicious prosecution, and,
19.4.
the amount of damages, if any.
20.
It is common cause that the plaintiff was
arrested, detained and criminally prosecuted. Having regard to
the issues raised
for determination by the parties, and the contents
of the pleadings, it appears that it is necessary to determine
whether:
20.1.
the arrest of the plaintiff was unlawful;
20.2.
the subsequent detention of the
plaintiff by the SAPS was unlawful;
20.3.
the prosecution of the plaintiff by the
SAPS was malicious;
20.4.
the prosecution of the plaintiff by the
NDPP was malicious;
20.5.
whether the continued detention of the
plaintiff was maliciously perpetuated by the NDPP; and
20.6.
what quantum of damages, if any, should be
awarded to the plaintiff.
#
# THE FIRST ISSUE:
UNLAWFUL ARREST
THE FIRST ISSUE:
UNLAWFUL ARREST
21.
As already set out above, it is common
cause that the plaintiff was arrested on 15 September 2016
without a warrant of
arrest having been issued.
22.
Plaintiff’s counsel correctly
submitted that any arrest without a warrant of arrest is regarded as
prima facie
unlawful,
and that accordingly, the SAPS must prove the lawfulness of the
arrest and subsequent detention of the plaintiff.
23.
In such regard, the first defendant
pleaded that the plaintiff was lawfully arrested in terms of
section
40
(1) (b) of the
Criminal Procedure Act, No. 51 of 1977
, as
amended, (“the CPA”).
24.
The relevant portions of
section 40
(1)(b)
reads as follows:
“
40.
Arrest by peace officer without warrant
.
(1)
a peace officer may without warrant
arrest any person –
…
(b) whom he reasonably
suspects of having committed an offence referred to in Schedule
1, other than the offence of escaping
from lawful custody;
…”
25.
It was submitted on behalf of the
plaintiff that the plaintiff had been arrested on a charge of
armed robbery, and that
such specified crime does not fall
under Schedule 1, but rather under Schedule 6, and accordingly
that
Section 40
(1) (b) is not applicable.
26.
Such submission is without any merit, as it
is clear from Schedule 1 that the crime of robbery is a crime which
would entitle
a peace officer, provided that the other
requirements of
Section 40
(1) (b) of the CPA are present, to
arrest a person without a warrant. It is therefore
unsustainable to suggest that a person
suspected of armed
robbery cannot be arrested without a warrant of arrest.
27.
A further aspect that negates such
submission is that based on the evidence of the Control Prosecutor,
Mr Khoza, the classification
of the alleged crime as a schedule 6
offence was only made on 19 September 2016, after Mr Khoza had
perused the Police Docket.
Accordingly, at the time of the arrest of
the plaintiff, the offence was not regarded as a schedule 6 offence.
28.
The plaintiff contended that the
jurisdictional requirements for reliance by the SAPS on
Section 40
(1) (b) were not present, on the basis that the peace officer,
Constable Mokoena did not have a suspicion, based on reasonable
grounds, that the plaintiff had committed the offence for which
he was arrested.
29.
The evidence of Constable Mokoena, was
that he was on patrol, in the area described as White City, when he
was advised by an
officer from the Police Station that a complainant,
Mr. Matima, was at the Police Station, and had advised
the police
officers there that he had been robbed at gunpoint
the previous day, and that he had seen one of the persons who
robbed him,
at gunpoint, of his cell phone, and knew his
whereabouts.
30.
Constable Mokoena returned to the Police
Station, where he met with Mr. Matima, who advised him of the
robbery that had occurred
the previous day.
31.
Mr. Matima travelled with Constable
Mokoena, together with other police officers, to Mphuti Street in
White City, where Mr. Matima
pointed out the plaintiff as one of the
persons who robbed him of his cell phone.
32.
Constable Mokoena accordingly arrested
the plaintiff, based on the information he had obtained from Mr.
Matima, and took the
plaintiff to the Police Station for further
processing.
33.
Plaintiff's
counsel referred me to the matter of
Duncan v
Minister of Law and Order for the Republic of South Africa
[1]
(“the Duncan matter”) and submitted that the arrest of
the plaintiff by Constable Mokoena did not meet the
jurisdictional requirements
for arrest without a warrant of
arrest as set out in such matter.
34.
It was stated in the
Duncan
matter,
by the then Appellate Division, in considering Section 40 (1)
(b) of the CPA, that the section empowers a peace officer
to arrest,
without a warrant, any person whom he reasonably suspects of
having committed an offence referred to therein, other
than the
offence of escaping from custody.
35.
It was stated as follows, in such regard:
“
It
was common cause that the question whether a peace officer,
‘reasonably suspects’ a person of having committed
an offence within the ambit of s40 (1)(b) of the Act is
objectively justiciable. And it seems clear that the test is not
whether a policeman believes that he has reason to suspect, but
whether, on an objective approach, he has reasonable grounds
for his
suspicion, …
”
[2]
36.
It
is also stated in the
Duncan
matter
[3]
as follows, in respect
of the jurisdictional requirements:
“
The
so-called jurisdictional facts which must exist before the power
conferred by s 40 (1) (b) of the present Act may be invoked,
are as
follows:
(1)
the arrestor must be a peace
officer.
(2)
he must entertain a suspicion.
(3)
it must be a suspicion that the
arrestee committed an offence referred to in Schedule 1 to the
Act, (other than one particular offence).
(4)
that suspicion must rest on reasonable
grounds.
”
37.
It was stated in the
Duncan
matter that if the jurisdictional requirements are indeed
satisfied, the peace officer may invoke the power conferred by the
section, and he may arrest the suspect.
38.
As set out above, the exercise of
determining whether or not the peace officer's suspicion was
reasonable or not, is an
objective fact, based on the
reasonable person test, as determined from the evidence as to the
information available to the
peace officer.
##
## 39.I
was also referred by plaintiff’s counsel to the matters ofSibuta
and Another v Minister of Police and Another[4]andMinister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another[5]both of which matters confirmed the principle as set out in theDuncanmatter, as regards arrest without a warrant, by a peace officer.
39.
I
was also referred by plaintiff’s counsel to the matters of
Sibuta
and Another v Minister of Police and Another
[4]
and
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another
[5]
both of which matters confirmed the principle as set out in the
Duncan
matter, as regards arrest without a warrant, by a peace officer.
40.
In
the matter of
Ntoni
Jacob Hlape v The Minister of Police
(“the
Hlape
matter”)
[6]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal confirmed the principles relating to an
arrest without a warrant by a peace officer, as set out in
the
Duncan
matter.
41.
Constable Mokoena was summoned to the
Police Station, in order to attend to a complainant, who had attended
at the Police Station
to inform the SAPS that he had been robbed, at
gunpoint, the previous day, and that he had identified one of the
persons who had
robbed him of his cell phone, and that he knew
of the whereabouts of such person.
42.
The evidence was that Constable Mokoena was
directed to where the plaintiff was, and that the plaintiff was
pointed out to Constable
Mokoena by Mr Matima as being one of
the persons who robbed the complainant of his cell phone.
43.
There is a factual dispute as to what
occurred at the time of the arrest, and whether the plaintiff was
advised of the offence for
which he was being robbed.
44.
Mr Matima testified that Constable Mokoena
enquired from him, prior to the arrest of the plaintiff, whether he
was certain that
the plaintiff was one of the persons that had robbed
him, as the SAPS did not want to arrest the wrong person.
45.
It is accordingly objectively ascertainable
that Constable Mokoena’s suspicion that the plaintiff had
committed the crime
of which he was accused, was reasonable in the
circumstances.
46.
Applying the reasonable person test, it is
clear that a reasonable police officer, in the position of Constable
Mokoena, would have
had a reasonable suspicion that the plaintiff had
committed the crime of which he was accused.
47.
Having regard to such evidence, I am
satisfied that all of the requirements of section 40 (1) (b)
were met, and that the arrest
of the plaintiff was not unlawful as
contended for by the plaintiff.
48.
It
was also submitted by the plaintiff's counsel that a peace officer
always retained a discretion whether or not to arrest
a person
accused of a crime, as arrest was not the only method by which
the attendance of an accused could be secured
at a trial in due
course. Such submission is certainly correct, as confirmed by the
Constitutional Court in the matter of
Groves
NO v Minister of Police.
[7]
49.
There was no suggestion or evidence given
during the trial, that Constable Mokoena exercised his discretion to
arrest the plaintiff
injudiciously, or for any ulterior
motive. This is an aspect that was only raised during argument.
50.
In
the
Hlape
matter, it was held that a party seeking to contend that the
arresting officer did not exercise a discretion has the burden to
prove, on a balance of probability, that such discretion was not
exercised.
[8]
51.
I am satisfied that the plaintiff has
failed to prove that Constable Mokwena did not exercise a
discretion and failed to prove
that Constable Mokoena exercised his
discretion to arrest the plaintiff improperly or injudiciously.
#
# THE SECOND ISSUE: THE
DETENTION OF THE PLAINTIFF BY THE SAPS
THE SECOND ISSUE: THE
DETENTION OF THE PLAINTIFF BY THE SAPS
52.
The plaintiff's contention that the
detention of the plaintiff by the SAPS was unlawful is based on
the fact that at the time,
after the arrest had been effected, and
the plaintiff was being detained at the police station, no
arrest statement had been
taken.
53.
The plaintiff contends that the arrest
statement was only prepared approximately two hours after his
arrest.
54.
The contention that the detention of the
plaintiff for two hours, in order to effect the arrest statement
was unlawful, is
without merit, as it is certainly not
unreasonable, although not desirable, for a period of two hours to
elapse between the
arrest of an accused, and the finalisation of an
arrest statement.
55.
There was no suggestion that the plaintiff
should have been released on “police bail”, or that such
release was contemplated,
discussed, raised or refused.
##
## 56.As
I have found that the arrest of the plaintiff was not unlawful the
issue of harm arising from the continued detention of the
plaintiff,
as considered in the matter ofDe
Klerk v Minister of Police[9]does
not arise.
56.
As
I have found that the arrest of the plaintiff was not unlawful the
issue of harm arising from the continued detention of the
plaintiff,
as considered in the matter of
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
[9]
does
not arise.
57.
In the circumstances, I am of the view that
the detention of the accused at the police station was reasonable,
having regard to
the nature of the crime and the plaintiff’s
decision not to make any form of statement, and was not unlawful.
58.
There is some overlap between this issue
and the fifth issue, but as I have found that the arrest of the
plaintiff was not unlawful,
the fifth issue need not be considered.
#
# THE THIRD ISSUE:
MALICIOUS PROSECUTION OF THE PLAINTIFF BY THE SAPS
THE THIRD ISSUE:
MALICIOUS PROSECUTION OF THE PLAINTIFF BY THE SAPS
59.
In paragraph 9 of the plaintiff's
amended particulars of claim, it was alleged that the members of
the SAPS maliciously prosecuted the
plaintiff.
60.
There were no submissions made on behalf of
the plaintiff in closing argument, in such regard, and the aspect was
not raised at
all in the heads of argument prepared on behalf of
the plaintiff.
61.
It was contended that the prosecution
of the plaintiff by the NDPP was, however, malicious.
62.
The SAPS, after the arrest and detention of
the plaintiff, took the plaintiff to the Magistrate's Court, after
which the plaintiff
was detained, pending a criminal trial.
63.
It was the evidence of Constable Mokoena
that the purpose of the arrest was, inter alia, to take the plaintiff
to Court, to enable
the Court to “
make
a decision
”.
64.
In the circumstances, I am satisfied that
the SAPS did not elect to prosecute the plaintiff, and certainly did
not elect to maliciously
prosecute the plaintiff, and that the SAPS
carried out their obligations in terms of the CPA, pursuant to
the complaint of
armed robbery raised against the plaintiff.
#
# THE FOURTH ISSUE:
MALICIOUS PROSECUTION BY THE NDPP
THE FOURTH ISSUE:
MALICIOUS PROSECUTION BY THE NDPP
65.
The plaintiff contends that the decision
taken by the NDPP to prosecute the plaintiff was malicious and was an
arbitrary decision.
66.
In
the matter of
Minister
for Justice & Constitutional Development v Moleko
[10]
the Supreme Court of Appeal set out the requirements for succeeding
with a claim for malicious prosecution at paragraph [8] as
follows:
“
In
order to succeed (on the merits) with a claim for malicious
prosecution, a claimant must allege and prove –
(a) that the
defendants set the law in motion (instigated or instituted the
proceedings);
(b) that the
defendants acted without reasonable and probable cause;
(c) that the
defendants acted with ‘malice’ (or animo injuriandi); and
(d)
that the prosecution has failed.
”
##
## 67.The
requirements have been restated and confirmed in a number of
subsequent matters.[11]
67.
The
requirements have been restated and confirmed in a number of
subsequent matters.
[11]
68.
It is only necessary to determine whether the plaintiff has proven
the second and third requirements, as the first and
fourth
requirements have clearly been established and are common cause.
69.
As regards
the second requirement, the plaintiff must prove that the NDPP set
the prosecution in motion without reasonable and probable
cause.
The concept of “r
easonable
and probable cause”, in the context of an action for malicious
prosecution, means “
an
honest belief founded on reasonable grounds that the institution of
proceedings is justified
”.
[12]
70.
In
the
Moleko
matter
it was held
[13]
that in
determining whether there was “reasonable and probable cause”,
a court must consider both a subjective and
an objective element, and
must determine whether the decision-maker subjectively had an honest
belief in the guilt of the accused,
but must also consider whether
the decision-maker’s belief was objectively reasonable.
##
## 71.In
the matter ofNational
Director of Public Prosecutions v Sijoyi Robert Mdhlovu[14]the Supreme Court of Appeal held thatthe
test for reasonable and probable cause is an objective one, and that
it is not based on the subjective beliefs or motives of
the
prosecutor. The Court held that “reasonable and probable cause”
exists if a reasonable person would have concluded
that the accused
was probably guilty on the facts available to the prosecutor at the
time of making the decision to prosecute.
71.
In
the matter of
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Sijoyi Robert Mdhlovu
[14]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that
the
test for reasonable and probable cause is an objective one, and that
it is not based on the subjective beliefs or motives of
the
prosecutor. The Court held that “reasonable and probable cause”
exists if a reasonable person would have concluded
that the accused
was probably guilty on the facts available to the prosecutor at the
time of making the decision to prosecute.
72.
I
was referred by plaintiff’s counsel to the test set out for the
absence of “reasonable and probable cause” in
the matter
of
Beckenstrater
v Rottcher and Theunissen
[15]
as being the following:
"
Where it is
alleged that a defendant had no reasonable cause of prosecuting, I
understand this to mean that he did not have such
information as
would lead a reasonable man to conclude that the plaintiff had
probably been guilty of the offence charged; if despite
his having
such information, the defendant is shown not to have believed in the
plaintiffs guilt, a subjective element comes into
play and disproves
the existence, for the defendant, of reasonable and probable cause."
73.
It was submitted on behalf of the plaintiff
that Mr Khoza’s decision to prosecute the plaintiff was
unreasonable, in that
what was placed before Mr Khoza amounted to
“
scanty evidence
”.
It was submitted that the conduct of Mr Khoza in deciding to
prosecute the plaintiff in the face of such lack of real evidence
amounted to negligence.
74.
Having regard to the evidence of Mr Khoza,
being that he was convinced that a crime had been committed by the
plaintiff, and the
contents of the police docket placed before Mr
Khoza, I am satisfied that Mr Khoza (and the NDPP) had a reasonable
and probable
cause for the prosecution of the plaintiff.
75.
The plaintiff has accordingly failed to
establish that there was no reasonable and probable cause for the
prosecution of the plaintiff.
76.
Insofar as I have found that the plaintiff
has not proven the second requirement for a claim of malicious
prosecution, I am theoretically
not required to determine whether the
plaintiff has proven the third requirement, being whether the NDPP
acted with malice in deciding
to prosecute the plaintiff.
77.
It was submitted on behalf of the plaintiff
that the NDPP did not have a prima facie case against the plaintiff,
that it acted unreasonably,
and that it prosecuted the plaintiff in
the hope that the plaintiff would incriminate himself. There was no
evidence supporting
any of these allegations, and there is no
evidence that the NDPP acted with malice.
THE FIFTH ISSUE:
MALICIOUS DETENTION
78.
This issue is entirely dependent on it
being found that the plaintiff was unlawfully arrested.
79.
As already set out above, I have found that
the arrest was not unlawful, and accordingly the fifth issue falls
away.
SIXTH ISSUE: QUANTUM
OF DAMAGES
80.
As I have found that the plaintiff’s
arrest was not unlawful, and that the subsequent prosecution of the
plaintiff by the
NDPP was not malicious, there is no need to or
entitlement to give consideration to the issue of quantum.
CONCLUSION
81.
Having regard to what is set out in this
Judgment, it follows that the plaintiff’s action must be
dismissed.
COSTS
82.
There is no reason to depart from the
established principle that costs should follow the result, and I
accordingly find that the
plaintiff should pay the costs of the
action.
ORDER
83.
I accordingly make the following Order:
83.1
The Plaintiff’s claim is dismissed.
83.2
The Plaintiff is to pay the taxed costs of
the Action on the party and party scale.
G NEL
[Acting Judge of the
High Court,
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg]
Date of hearing: 23
September 2023
Date of Judgment:
10 March 2025
APPEARANCES
For
Plaintiff: Mr N Gumede
Instructed
by: Ndou Attorneys Inc.
For
Defendants: Adv FF Opperman
Instructed
by: The State Attorney
##
[1]
(2)
All SA 241 (A) (24 March
1986); 1986 (2) SA 805
(A) at 818G-H].
[2]
at
paragraph 8, with reference to the matter of
Watson
v Commissioner of Customs and Excise
1960 (3) SA 212 (N).
[3]
at
paragraph 23
[4]
(3709/2016;3710/2016) [2020] ZAECGHC 6 (15 January 2020)
[5]
2011 (1) SACR 351 (SCA)
[6]
(426/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 68
(3 May 2024)
[7]
[2023]
ZACC 36
;
2024 (1) SACR 286
(CC);
2024 (4) BCLR 503
(CC) at
paragraphs 52 and 60
[8]
at
paragraph [14]
[9]
(CCT 95/18)
[2019] ZACC 32
;
2019 (12) BCLR 1425
(CC);
2020 (1) SACR
1
(CC);
2021 (4) SA 585
(CC) (22 August 2019)
[10]
(131/07)
[2008] ZASCA 43
(31 March 2008)
[11]
See:
Magwabeni
v Liomba
(198/2013)
[2015] ZASCA 117
(11 September 2015) at paragraph [9] and
Rudolph
and Others v Minister of Safety and Security and Another
(
380/2008)
[2009] ZASCA 39
;
2009 (5) SA 94
(SCA) ;
2009 (2) SACR 271
(SCA) ;
[2009] 3 All SA 323
(SCA) (31 March 2009) at paragraph [16].
[12]
Minister
for Justice & Constitutional Development v Moleko
at
paragraph [20]
[13]
at
paragraph [20]
[14]
(194/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 85
;
2024 (2) SACR 331
(SCA) (3 June 2024) at
paragraph [20]
[15]
1955
(1) SA 129
(A) at 136 A - B.
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