Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 268South Africa
Wilson v Minister of Police and Others (2021/56553) [2025] ZAGPJHC 268 (11 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 March 2025
Headnotes
an honest belief founded on reasonable grounds that the institution of the criminal proceedings against the Plaintiff was justified.
Judgment
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## Wilson v Minister of Police and Others (2021/56553) [2025] ZAGPJHC 268 (11 March 2025)
Wilson v Minister of Police and Others (2021/56553) [2025] ZAGPJHC 268 (11 March 2025)
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sino date 11 March 2025
REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2021-56553
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
13
March 2025
In the matter
between:
MARINA
VENETTE WILSON PLAINTIFF
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
FIRST
DEFENDANT
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
SECOND DEFENDANT
ORDER
Judgment is
granted in favour of the plaintiff against the first defendant, the
Minister of Police, for:
(1)
Payment of the amount of R400 000.00;
(2)
Interest on the amount of R400 000.00
from date of judgment to date in full at the rate prescribed in the
Prescribed Rate of
Interest Act, from time to time;
(3)
Costs of suit, to be taxed on Scale B.
JUDGMENT
D MARAIS AJ
The
plaintiff’s case as pleaded
[1]
In this action, the plaintiff, Ms Marina
Venette Wilson, instituted action against the defendants, the
Minister of Police, as first
defendant, and the National Director of
Public Prosecutions, as second defendant, for payment of damages in
the amount of R500 000.00
for unlawful arrest and detention.
[2]
The plaintiff’s claim against the
Minister of Police is based on the allegation that on 19 November
2020 she was unlawfully
arrested without a warrant of arrest by
members of the South African Police Service, acting within the course
and scope of their
employment with the Minister of Police.
[3]
It was also alleged that when the plaintiff
was arrested the relevant member of the SAPS did not apply his mind
or failed to exercise
his discretion when arresting the plaintiff.
[4]
The plaintiff alleged that the arrest was
unlawful because the plaintiff did not commit the offence of
“violation of a protection
order”.
[5]
The plaintiff then, somewhat paradoxically,
also alleged in the alternative that if the plaintiff’s arrest
was justified,
then her detention was unlawful in that the arresting
officer “knew that there were no reasonable grounds to arrest
and detain
the plaintiff”.
[6]
In the further alternative, it was pleaded
that if the plaintiff’s initial arrest was lawful, then the
senior police official
on duty or the investigating officer
unlawfully failed to release the plaintiff on warning in terms of the
Criminal Procedure Act,
197 (“CPA”).
[7]
The case against the National Director of
Public Prosecutions (NDPP) was based on an allegation that the public
prosecutor failed
to study the information placed before him or her
at the plaintiff’s first appearance in the Magistrates’
Court on
19 November 2020, failed to study the police docket, failed
to inform the court that there were no reason to further detain the
plaintiff and failed to consent to bail.
[8]
A further allegation against the member(s)
of the SAPS, as an alternative to the allegation against the NDPP in
paragraph [7] above,
was that the SAPS failed to provide necessary
information to the public prosecutor during the hearing of the matter
in the Magistrates’
Court, resulting in the refusal of bail and
the continued detention of the plaintiff after the first appearance
in court.
[9]
It was finally pleaded that the case
against the plaintiff was remanded until 26 November 2020, when she
was released on bail, and
that during July 2021 she was acquitted on
a charge of contravening a protection order. Regarding the latter
allegation, it was
common cause that the plaintiff was discharged
after the State case in terms of section 174 of the CPA.
Claim
against NDPP abandoned
[10]
At the commencement of the trial of this
matter, the plaintiff abandoned the claim against the National
Director of Public Prosecutions.
As will be evident hereunder, the
abandonment of the claim against the NDPP was correctly done, as on
the facts of this matter,
the claim against the NDPP was completely
unjustified.
Discussion
of the plaintiff’s cause of action
[11]
The plaintiff’s claim against the
Minister of Police is one of damages for the unlawful deprivation of
her freedom, resulting
from her unlawful arrest and detention.
[12]
It is important to note that as far as the
plaintiff’s detention after her first appearance in court is
concerned, the plaintiff
principally sought to hold the NDPP liable,
but in the alternative alleged that the SAPS failed to place
information before the
prosecutor relevant to the granting of bail,
with the result that bail was refused.
[13]
The latter allegation does not appear to be
intended to support an independent delictual cause of action against
the Minister of
Police, separate from the claim based on the alleged
initial unlawful arrest and detention (which is notionally possible).
[14]
In the premises, the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim should be interpreted on the basis that the
plaintiff is relying on
the commission of a single delict, being the
initial unlawful arrest, and is claiming damages on that single basis
for the entire
duration of the plaintiff’s detention (including
the period after her first appearance in court until she was released
on
bail on 26 November 2020).
[15]
The plaintiff also did not seek to split
her claim for damages between the damages up to the first appearance
in court, and the
damages suffered after her first appearance. She
claimed one globular amount.
The
defences raised by the defendants
[16]
The defendants raised special pleas that
the plaintiff failed to comply with certain statutory notice
requirements. Based on allegations
of non-compliance with the
statutory notice provisions, a conditional plea of prescription was
also raised. These special pleas
were also abandoned at the
commencement of the trial and need not be considered.
[17]
The defendants’ defences against the
plaintiff’s claims can be summarised as follows:
a.
That on 19 November 2019, at approximately
08h35, plaintiff was lawfully arrested by a member of the South
African Police Services
stationed at Sophiatown Police Station, in
execution of a warrant issued under the provisions of section
11(1)(a) of the Protection
from Harassment Act 17 of 2011 (“PHA”)
upon receipt of a complaint, from one Rashieda Mohammed, that
plaintiff had
violated the final protection order granted by the
Johannesburg Magistrate's Court, in her favour, under the provisions
of Act
17 of 2011 on 30 January 2020.
b.
It was alleged that the arresting officer
had reasonable grounds to suspect that the complainant and her family
were suffering or
may suffer imminent harm as a result of the breach
of the Protection Order by the Plaintiff.
c.
Subsequent to her lawful arrest, Plaintiff
was lawfully detained, in terms of section 50 of Act 51 of 1977, in
the cells at Sophiatown
Police Station, under cell register reference
SAP14186/11/2019 and was charged under Sophiatown Police Station CAS
203/11/2020
for violating the final Protection Order granted by the
Johannesburg Magistrate's court.
d.
Plaintiff was lawfully detained until 08h55
on 20 November 2019 when she was taken to court.
e.
At plaintiff's first appearance at court on
20 November 2019 the prosecution enrolled the matter on the basis
that they held an
honest belief founded on reasonable grounds that
the institution of the criminal proceedings against the Plaintiff was
justified.
f.
It was admitted that:
i.
The plaintiff was afforded a section 174
(Act 51 of 1977) discharge on 23 July 2021 and
ii.
That the relevant members of the South
African Police Services and court prosecutor/s, were acting within
the course and scope of
their respective employment with First and
Second Defendants.
g.
The other allegations made by the plaintiff
were denied, including allegation that the plaintiff suffered damages
as a result of
the arrest and detention.
Onus of
proof and duty to begin
[18]
It was correctly accepted that the onus to
prove the lawfulness of the plaintiff’s initial arrest and
detention was
on the Minister of Police. Consequently, the
first defendant assumed the duty to begin leading evidence in the
matter.
[19]
As such, the Minister of Police clearly
also did not view the defendant’s allegation that the SAPS
failed to provide information
to the prosecutor as a separate
standalone claim in respect of which the onus may have been on the
plaintiff.
Status of
the police docket and record of proceedings in the Magistrates’
Court
[20]
At the commencement of the trial, the
parties agreed to admit into evidence a copy of the relevant police
docket, charge sheet and
court record.
Witnesses
[21]
The investigating officer in this matter,
Constable Sandile Mkhize, regrettably, died before the hearing of
this trial and the first
defendant called as its only witness Mr
Riebeeck Anthonie Burger, a public prosecutor, who testified that he
was the public prosecutor
on 19 November 2020 when the plaintiff
first appeared in court, and on 26 November 2020, when the plaintiff
was released on bail.
He was an excellent witness and provided
valuable information to the court regarding the police docket, the
events in court and
the question regarding the granting of bail to
the plaintiff. However, his evidence is obviously of limited value,
as he was not
involved in the decision to arrest the plaintiff. His
evidence also did not traverse all the relevant issues in this
matter.
[22]
There are certain affidavits by the
investigating officer in the police docket, including a statement
regarding the alleged arrest
of the plaintiff. These statements,
having been admitted in evidence by agreement, obviously also have
limited evidential value
due to the absence of Constable Mkhize and
the lack of cross-examination in respect thereof.
[23]
The plaintiff energetically and emotively
testified in support of her own case. She used an interesting and
colourful vernacular
of Afrikaans, which the interpreter sometimes,
quite reasonably, had difficulty in interpreting, despite doing an
exceedingly good
job in general and for which he must be highly
commended. The energetic, fast paced manner in which the plaintiff
testified, evidently
also permeated the process by which she gave
instructions to her counsel, with the result that there was some
confusion regarding
the sequence of events during her evidence. This
was cleared up in a satisfactory manner during her evidence. In
general, the plaintiff
was a satisfactory witness, who gave a
detailed account of the events and made concessions where such
concessions were justified.
Her factual evidence was also not really
disputed during cross-examination. To the extent that her evidence
must be treated with
circumspection, in view of the fact that the
investigating officer died and was not available to testify, I am
satisfied that her
evidence was generally acceptable.
[24]
The result of this is that the facts of
this matter were largely common cause. The parties diverge on the
conclusions to be drawn
from the available facts.
The
protection order against the plaintiff and suspended warrant of
arrest
[25]
It is common cause that the complainant in
the matter obtained a final protection order in terms of PHA against
the plaintiff on
30 January 2020. This order was also served on the
plaintiff on 30 January 2020, and she was fully aware of the order.
[26]
The order interdicted the plaintiff from:
a.
Engaging in or attempting to engage in
harassment of the complainant;
b.
Insulting the complainant; and
c.
Physically abusing the complainant.
[27]
The court also ordered the plaintiff not to
accost the complainant and not to have any contact with the
complainant directly or
indirectly, including social media contact.
[28]
In terms of PHA a warrant for the arrest of
plaintiff was issued, but suspended subject to compliance by the
plaintiff with the
terms of the order.
The
legislative framework of PHA
[29]
PHA has been enacted to make provision for
the issuing of protection orders to prevent harassment.
[30]
“
Harassment” is defined in the
Act as meaning directly or indirectly engaging in conduct that the
respondent knows or ought
to know causes harm or inspires the
reasonable belief that harm may be caused to the complainant or a
related person by unreasonably:
a.
following, watching, pursuing or accosting
of the complainant or a related person, or loitering outside of or
near the building
or place where the complainant or a related person
resides, works, carries on business, studies or happens to be;
b.
engaging in verbal, electronic or any other
communication aimed at the complainant or a related person, by any
means, whether or
not conversation ensues; or
c.
sending, delivering or causing the delivery
of letters, telegrams, packages, facsimiles, electronic mail or other
objects to the
complainant or a related person or leaving them where
they will be found by, given to, or brought to the attention of, the
complainant
or a related person.
[31]
The definition also includes sexual
harassment, which is further defined in the Act.
[32]
Sections 2, 3 and 9 of the Act make
provision for the granting of an interim and final protection order
against a respondent who
engaged in harassment of an applicant, or a
related person. Section 10 provides the court with wide powers to
make an order aimed
at preventing harassment.
[33]
In the present matter, the provisions of
section 11 are of importance. Section 11(1) provides that when a
court makes a protection
order it must make an order authorising the
issuing of a warrant of arrest of the respondent and suspend the
execution of the warrant
subject to compliance with the order by the
respondent.
[34]
Section 11(4)(a) provides that a
complainant may hand the warrant of arrest, together with an
affidavit in the prescribed form stating
that the respondent has
contravened any specified prohibition, condition, obligation or order
contained in a protection order,
to any member of the South
African Police Service.
[35]
Section 11(4)(b) provides that if it
appears to the member of the South African Police Service concerned
that, subject to subsection
(5), there are reasonable grounds to
suspect that the complainant or related person is suffering harm or
may suffer imminent harm
as a result of the alleged breach of
the protection order by the respondent, the member
must
immediately
arrest the respondent for
allegedly committing the offence referred to in section 18 (1)
(a)
.
[36]
Section 11(4)(c) provides that if the
member of the South African Police Service concerned is of the
opinion that there are insufficient
grounds for arresting the
respondent in terms of paragraph (b), he or she must immediately hand
to the respondent a written notice
in the prescribed form, which-
a.
specifies the name, the residential and
work address and the occupation or status of the respondent;
b.
calls upon the respondent to appear before
a court on the date and at the time specified in the notice, on a
charge of committing
the offence referred to in section 18 (1) (a);
and
c.
contains a certificate signed by the member
of the South African Police Service concerned to the effect that he
or she handed the
original notice to the respondent and that he or
she explained its import to the respondent.
[37]
Section 11(5) states that, in considering
whether or not the complainant or related person is suffering harm or
may suffer imminent
harm, as provided for in subsection (4) (b),
the member of the South African Police Service must take into account
the:
a.
risk to the safety or well-being of the
complainant or related person;
b.
seriousness of the conduct comprising an
alleged breach of the protection order;
c. length
of time
since
the alleged breach occurred;
and
d. nature
and extent of the harm previously suffered by the complainant or
related person.
[38]
Section 18(1) determined that,
notwithstanding the provisions of any other law, any person who-
a.
contravenes any prohibition, condition,
obligation or order imposed in terms of section 10 (1) or (2); or
b.
in an affidavit referred to in section 11
(4) (a), makes a false statement in a material respect,
is guilty of an
offence and liable on conviction to a fine or imprisonment for a
period not exceeding five years.
[39]
In
terms of regulation 24 of the Protection from Harassment Regulations,
2013, it was prescribed that an affidavit
referred to in section
11(4)
(a)
of
the Act in which it is stated that the respondent has
contravened any prohibition, condition, obligation or order
contained
in a protection order must be in a form which corresponds
substantially with
Form
22
.
[40]
Form 22 provides for detail of the parties and the
formal detail of the protection order to be contained in the
affidavit. It also
requires the complainant to indicate
whether
a copy of the protection order indicating what orders were
made by the court and the original warrant of arrest
are attached, or
to state why a copy of the protection order and/or the
original warrant of arrest cannot be attached.
[41]
The form also requires the following
information:
a.
The date(s) of breach of protection order;
b.
Place(s) where breach of protection order
took place:
c.
Full details on how any specified
prohibition, condition, obligation or order contained in the
protection order was breached;
d.
Reasons, if any, for believing that
imminent harm may be suffered as a result of the breach of the
protection order by the respondent.
[42]
The obvious purpose of PHA is to protect
members of the public from harassment. The ordinary meaning of
“harassment”
is repeated harmful conduct against a
victim. A single event cannot be regarded as harassment. The extended
definition of “harassment”
in PHA is not a model of
clarity, but on a proper interpretation relates to repeated conduct.
[43]
A protection order in terms of PHA is in
essence a statutory interdict. PHA created a new statutory offence,
and created a new mechanism
whereby an alleged contemnor can be
arrested by any member of the SAPS upon an affidavit being presented
by a complainant that
the protection order was breached. This is a
far-reaching departure from the common law, in terms of which a
contemnor can only
be imprisoned for contempt of court on application
to the court. In such a common law contempt application the alleged
contemnor
can escape a sanction by merely creating reasonable doubt
as to whether he or she wilfully disregarded the court order.
Importantly,
an order will only be granted if the principles of
audi
alteram partem
had been complied with.
[44]
A complainant can also lay a charge of
contempt of court against an alleged contemnor. A variety of other
complaints in relation
to common law offences can also be laid. The
SAPS must then act in accordance with the CPA in securing the
attendance of the alleged
perpetrator. Notably, contempt of court is
not a CPA Schedule 1 offence for which a person can be arrested
without warrant of arrest.
Usually, contempt of court would not
justify an arrest, and the alleged contemnor should be brought before
the court by way of
a summons. The situation will be different if the
contemnor is simultaneously also accused of other serious crimes.
[45]
In an ideal world, only actual victims who
are themselves unblemished make use of the law to protect themselves.
However, experience
teaches that often people abuse the law for their
own unlawful purposes, and that the abuse of process is used as a
form of harassment.
[46]
Whilst PHA was designed to protect innocent
victims, the reality is that the Act finds application in a robust
environment where
the participants may be less than scrupulous, and
the complainant may also be a perpetrator of harassment, other crimes
and also
perjury. The facts of this matter illustrate this; after an
eventual trial the Magistrate found the complainant and her husband’s
evidence so improbable and contradictory that the court in essence
rejected it out of hand and discharged the plaintiff in terms
of CPA
section 174. For this to happen, the quality of the complainant’s
evidence must have been exceedingly poor.
[47]
Against this background, it could never
have been the purpose of PHA to infringe upon the alleged contemnor’s
constitutional
rights of freedom, dignity and a fair trial. The Act
must accordingly be interpreted as far as possible to be consistent
with these
fundamental rights.
[48]
To the extent that PHA created a special
mechanism whereby an alleged contemnor can be arrested, at the same
time it created strict
requirements that must be present before a
person can be arrested. Notably, a person cannot be arrested for
simply contravening
the protection order. PHA requires that the
member of the SAPS must have
reasonable
grounds to suspect that the complainant or related person is
suffering harm or may suffer imminent harm as a result of
the alleged
breach of the protection order. The Act then, in peremptory
terms, requires the police official to take certain
mandatory factors
into consideration.
[49]
For an alleged contemnor to be arrested in
terms of PHA, there must obviously be compliance with these
requirements. If the requirements
of PHA for an arrest are not
present, then the Act makes provision for a notice to appear in
court. Alternatively, the SAPS must
make use of the CPA to secure the
alleged offender’s presence in court.
The
incidents allegedly constituting a breach of the protection order by
the plaintiff
[50]
On 8 November 2020, 9 November 2020 and 12
November 2020 there were incidents of an unpleasant nature involving
the complainant
and the plaintiff, as well as their respective
families. The plaintiff gave evidence regarding these incidents
during the trial,
but it is not necessary for purposes of this matter
to make a finding regarding the exact events that took place.
[51]
What is of importance in the present matter
is that the complainant approached the SAPS on 13 November 2020 and
made a complaint
that the plaintiff had contravened the protection
order and deposed to an affidavit to that effect. This affidavit was
not on the
prescribed Form 22. The following was,
inter
alia
, stated by the complainant:
a.
That on 8 November 2020 the plaintiff’s
daughter, acting under instructions from the plaintiff, smashed the
window of a car
belonging to the complainant’s family and as a
result her husband opened a case of malicious damage to property
against the
plaintiff and her daughter;
b.
After the aforesaid incident, at about
12h30 during the evening of Sunday, 8 November 2020, the plaintiff
passed the complainant’s
house and swore at the plaintiff,
calling her an “aids bitch”, that she would see to it
that members of the Fast Guns
gang would rape the complainant. It was
also alleged that the plaintiff instigated her daughter to “throw
the complainant’s
daughter with bricks”. By this the
complainant presumably meant to say that bricks were hurled at her
daughter.
c.
On 9 November 2020 the plaintiff and her
daughter were allegedly arrested in relation to the damage to the car
windscreen but were
released on unknown conditions.
d.
At about 16h00 on 9 November 2020, the
plaintiff passed the complainant and stated that the complainant
“will get what is
coming to her” as she “knows
people”. The plaintiff stated that the complainant will not
live to see the new
year and that her son, Jermaine Booysens, will
“take care” of the complainant’s husband, as he
(Jermaine) is
a member of the Fastguns.
e.
On 12 November 2020 at about 14h30 the
plaintiff again passed the complainant’s house and started
swearing at the complainant,
calling her a “witch” and a
“black-hearted bitch”, whose witchcraft will not work on
her. She repeated
that the complainant was an “aids-bitch”
and a prostitute who was selling her body to the Varodo gangsters.
She also
said that she will make sure that her husband would lose his
firearm, and that her husband will die before the end of the year.
f.
At this time, the plaintiff’s son,
Jermaine Booysens, stood with her and also swore at them, threatening
the complainant’s
husband, saying that he must “watch his
back”.
[52]
The fact that the affidavit was not made on the prescribed form was
clearly not fatal, as the regulation required the
affidavit to be
substantially in accordance with the form. Consequently, the question
is whether the affidavit complied materially
with the requirements.
Notably, the affidavit did not particularly deal in full detail with
the manner in which any aspect of the
protection order was
contravened. It was left to the reader to analyse the allegations and
assess whether the order was contravened.
[53]
Importantly, the affidavit did not deal with the question whether the
complainant had any belief that imminent harm may
be suffered as a result of the breach of the protection order by the
respondent.
Did
the investigating office arrest in the plaintiff in terms of PHA and
was there compliance with PHA?
[54]
As indicated above PHA section 11(4)(b) provides that if it appears
to the member of the South African Police Service
concerned that
there are reasonable grounds to suspect that the complainant or
related person is suffering harm or may suffer imminent
harm as a
result of the alleged breach of the protection order by the
respondent, the member must immediately arrest the respondent
for
allegedly committing the offence referred to in section 18(1)(a).
[55]
It is evident from the affidavit made by
the complainant that extremely serious threats were allegedly made
towards her by the plaintiff,
which was not confined to swearing and
insults, but included the threat that the plaintiff would orchestrate
the rape and killing
of the complainant.
[56]
Despite the apparent seriousness of the
allegations, the investigating officer did not arrest the plaintiff
immediately after the
complaint was made. The complainant’s
affidavit was not accompanied by the warrant of arrest, as required.
The investigating
officer had to first obtain the warrant from the
complainant, which he did on 14 November 2020. Even then he did not
arrest the
plaintiff. Instead, he only interviewed the plaintiff on
17 November 2020 in connection with this charge and after informing
her
of her rights (evidenced also by a written acknowledgement by the
plaintiff to that effect), obtained a written warning statement
from
her, and allowed the plaintiff to go free without being arrested.
[57]
These events were intertwined with the case
against the plaintiff’s daughter for allegedly breaking the car
windscreen, and
the allegation that the plaintiff instructed her to
do so. On the plaintiff’s evidence, both she and her daughter
were arrested
on this charge, but both were released on warning to
appear in court on the 19
th
of November 20020.
[58]
It does not appear from the evidence that
the investigating officer took the complainant’s allegations
too seriously. The
police docket indicate that the complainant’s
complaint was about “swearing”, and this was repeated in
an affidavit
which he made at the request of the public prosecutor in
respect of the question of bail, as will be more fully dealt with
hereunder.
[59]
The immediate temptation is to criticise
the investigating officer for taking the complainant’s serious
complaints so lightly,
but consideration must be given to the fact
that the plaintiff deposed to a warning statement on 17 November
2020, in which she
also made certain allegations of abuse committed
by the complainant against her, including an allegation that the
complainant had
stated to her that her husband will shoot and kill
her son, Jermaine, just like her other son had “gevrek”.
The Afrikaans
word “vrek” is similar in meaning with the
word “sterf” (die), but the proper use of the word is
confined
to the death of animals. Properly interpreted, the
complainant, therefore, allegedly stated to the plaintiff that her
son Jermaine
would be shot and killed, just like her other son was
dispatched like an animal. A statement like this is made with
absolute contempt
for human life. In her statement the plaintiff also
denied the complainant’s allegations and stated that all she
wanted was
peace.
[60]
The situation that confronted the
investigating officer under the circumstances was that two members of
the community were allegedly
hurling crude and uncivilised abuse at
each other. In the process they were making serious threats against
each other. The investigating
officer clearly did not interpret the
serious threats the parties made against each other literally. Under
the circumstances, he
seemingly acted wisely in regarding this tit
for tat with circumspection. In this regard, it is of note that the
public prosecutor,
after the plaintiff’s first appearance in
court, requested the investigating officer to assist the plaintiff in
opening her
own case against the complainant.
[61]
The plaintiff’s undisputed evidence
is that on 18 November 2020 the investigating officer left her a
message, requesting her
to report to the police station on 19
November 2020.
[62]
It must be noted that an offence in terms
of section 18(1) of PHA is an offence in terms of Schedule 1 of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 1977
, being “any offence . . . the
punishment wherefor may be a period of imprisonment exceeding six
months without the option
of a fine”.
[63]
In terms of
section 40(1)(b)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, a
peace office may arrest a person whom he
reasonably suspects of having committed an offence referred to in
Schedule 1, without
a warrant of arrest.
[64]
However, the Minister of Police did not
raise the defence that the plaintiff was arrested in terms of
section
40(1)(b)
, nor was this possible defence ventilated during the trial
before me. There is intricate detail and thought processes involved
in the question whether an arrest without a warrant was justified.
Consequently, in the circumstances of this matter, this is not
a
defence that may be entertained. There is also no indication on the
evidence, tested or not, that the plaintiff was arrested
in terms of
section 40(1)(b)
, or could have been arrested in terms of that
section without a warrant of arrest.
[65]
The defence raised by the Minister of
Police was confined to the allegation that the SAPS had executed the
warrant of arrest issued
in terms of
section 11(1)
of PHA,
specifically because there was allegedly a threat of imminent harm.
[66]
Constable Mkhize’s affidavit does not
reveal that he was in any way motivated by considerations of imminent
harm in arresting
the plaintiff. He expressly stated that the
plaintiff handed herself over for contravening the protection order,
and that he then
arrested her. There is no indication that he
considered himself to have a discretion in the matter, as provided in
PHA, nor does
his affidavit indicate that he applied him mind to any
of the mandatory considerations provided for by the Act. In a
subsequent
affidavit that he made in respect of the question of bail,
he stated that the complaint was about “swearing” and
made
no allegation that the plaintiff should be denied bail because
of the threat of imminent harm to the complainant.
[67]
PHA obliges a police officer to immediately
(“must immediately”) arrest the alleged perpetrator upon
information of
a breach of the order and imminent harm being received
in the prescribed manner. The investigator officer clearly did not
deem
it necessary to immediately arrest the plaintiff, and clearly
did not act in terms of PHA in arresting the plaintiff.
[68]
In this regard, the investigating officer’s
affidavits do not support the defence pleaded by the Minister of
Police and the
probabilities are overwhelming that he never arrested
the plaintiff on the basis of any threat of imminent harm as pleaded.
[69]
More fundamentally, the investigating
officer’s affidavit also does not even reveal that the
plaintiff was arrested on the
basis of the warrant of arrest issued
in terms of PHA, as pleaded by the Minister of Police.
[70]
The plaintiff’s evidence seems to
suggest that the investigating officer dealt with the matter on a
rather informal manner.
Having requested her to come to the Police
Station, he then told her that he was going to take her to court. She
then got into
a motor vehicle with him and was taken to the “Westgate
Court”, as the Johannesburg Magistrates’ Court is
referred
to colloquially. There she was taken to the holding cells,
and detained.
[71]
The plaintiff testified that she was
arrested without a warrant of arrest. On her evidence, there is no
indication that the investigating
officer revealed the existence of
the warrant to her, nor that he informed her that he was executing a
warrant of arrest. In this
regard, apart from putting it to the
plaintiff that there was a warrant for her arrest in terms of PHA,
the plaintiff’s version
was not materially challenged. The
investigating officer’s simple version, that the plaintiff was
arrested for contravening
the protection order, without any reference
to the warrant of arrest or any specific motivation for the arrest,
is also not incompatible
with the plaintiff’s version that she
was arrested without a warrant.
[72]
In the final analysis, there is no evidence
is support of the defence raised by the Minister of Police that the
plaintiff was arrested
in the execution of the warrant, because of
the fear or imminent harm. Consequently, the Minister failed to
discharge onus resting
on it to demonstrate the lawfulness of the
arrest.
Release on
warning
[73]
The plaintiff also alleges that upon her
arrest she should have been released on warning by the SAPS in terms
of the CPA.
[74]
However, despite the plaintiff’s
reliance on the CPA in this regard, this issue is in reality
intertwined with the defence
pleaded by the Minister, based on the
provisions of PHA.
[75]
Where the investigating officer clearly did
not deem it necessary to arrest the plaintiff immediately for the
safety of the complainant,
he was required by section 11(4)(c) of PHA
to refrain from arresting the plaintiff and should have given the
plaintiff a written
notice to appear in court on a charge of
contravening section 18(1) of PHA.
[76]
From the finding that the investigating
officer did not arrest the plaintiff in terms of PHA, it
automatically follows that she
should have given a written warning to
appear in terms of PHA. Although this was not exactly the point made
by the plaintiff, the
facts from which this conclusion follows have
been fully ventilated and there would be no prejudice to the Minister
if the matter
is approached on this basis.
[77]
Consequently, I agree that the plaintiff
should have been given a written warning to appear. I hold, however,
that the plaintiff
should not have been arrested at all.
Conclusion
regarding the lawfulness of the arrest and initial detention
[78]
Consequently, I hold that the plaintiff’s
arrest at about 8h00 on 19 November 2020 was unlawful, as well as her
detention
until at least her first appearance before the Magistrates’
Court later that morning.
The
continued detention of the plaintiff after her first appearance in
court
[79]
Regarding the plaintiff’s continued
detention after the postponement of the case until 26 November 2020,
the plaintiff alleged
that the SAPS acted unlawfully by not placing
evidence before the court that would have lead to her release on bail
at her first
appearance in court on 19 November 2020.
[80]
Very little, if any attention was given to
this aspect during the trial and it does not contribute much to the
adjudication of this
matter. It is also an issue which can become
very speculative and hypothetic in the circumstances of this matter.
[81]
The bottom line is that the plaintiff
should not have been arrested and held in custody. The issue of bail
should never have arisen
in this matter.
The
issue of causation in relation to the plaintiff’s continued
detention
[82]
In
De Klerk v Minister of Police
2021 (4) SA 585
(CC)
the majority of the court
held that the question of the Minister of Police’s liability
for an accused’s detention after
the first appearance depends
on the question of causation. The mere fact that the initial arrest
and detention was unlawful does
not automatically result in the
continued detention being unlawful. Conversely, the mere fact that
the initial arrest and detention
was lawful does not automatically
result in the continued detention being lawful.
[83]
The court held that the Minister of
Police’s liability for continued detention after the first
appearance, where the initial
arrest was unlawful, depends on the
application of the traditional
condictio
sine qua non
– test (also
expressed as the “but-for test”), coupled with
considerations of legal policy to prevent limitless
liability. In
this regard, the foreseeability of the harm or damage also plays a
role. The question is also whether the failure
by the court to grant
bail was a
novus actus interveniens
,
which disrupted the causal chain.
[84]
Thus, in
De
Klerk
the Constitutional Court held
that at all times when the SAPS unlawfully arrested the applicant it
was foreseen that the magistrate
would upon the first appearance
simply postpone the matter for a period and that the accused would
remain in custody for that period.
Consequently, the court held that
the “but-for” test was satisfied, in that, but for the
unlawful arrest, the matter
would not have been postponed at the
first appearance. Policy considerations dictated that liability
should not be limited for
this factual consequence.
[85]
In the present matter, there is no
suggestion on the evidence that the magistrate in the reception court
of the Johannesburg Magistrates’
Court was oblivious or
indifferent to his or her statutory and constitutional obligations
regarding the granting of bail. However,
this matter demonstrates a
systemic issue with very practical realities and consequences. The
reality is that after arrest an accused
person is brought before a
reception court, which is on all accounts a very busy court. The
evidence is that such court can have
up to 50 cases on the roll on
any given day. If it is optimistically assumed that the court
actually sits for five to six hours
per day, this means that there is
six to seven minutes available per case. The evidence is that an
indigent accused who elects
to make use of a Legal Aid attorney is
systemically forced into a hurried consultation with the attorney. If
the matter is uncomplicated
and bail is for good reasons not opposed
by the State, this may effectively result in accused being released
on bail forthwith
without much time being spent. However, various
factors may complicate the issue of bail, which may require,
sometimes unjustifiably,
the accused to bring a formal bail
application, with the onus being on the accused to show why it is in
the interest of justice
that he or she be released on bail. In a busy
reception court having 50 matters on the roll, the court clearly has
no capacity
to hear formal bail applications on the first appearance.
Nor would an accused person, especially an indigent person, be in a
position
to bring a formal bail application on the first appearance.
The systemic reality is that it is a forgone conclusion that if the
accused needs to bring a formal bail application, the matter will be
postponed for that purpose. In the process there is a high
risk that
lip service will be paid to the accused person’s statutory and
constitutional rights.
[86]
The plaintiff’s evidence, which I
have no reason to doubt, was that her first appearance in court was a
rushed event, during
which there was no real opportunity for her to
be advised by, or consult with, the Legal Aid attorney. While she had
no understanding
of the process, her matter was postponed without
bail being fixed.
[87]
In
Lee
v Minister of Correctional Services
2013
(2) SA 144 (CC)
paras
40-41 the principles relating to factual causation were described as
follows:
“
Although
different theories have developed on causation, the one frequently
employed by courts in determining factual causation
is the
condictio
sine qua non
theory or but-for test. This test is not
without problems, especially when determining whether a specific
omission caused
a certain consequence. According to this test the
enquiry to determine causal link, put in its simplest formulation, is
whether
'one fact follows from another'. The test –
"may
involve the metal elimination of the wrongful conduct and the
substitution of a hypothetical course of lawful conduct
and the
posing of the question as to whether upon such an hypothesis
plaintiff's loss would have ensued or not. If it would in
any event
have ensued, then the wrongful conduct was not a cause of the
plaintiff's loss; [otherwise] it would not so have ensued.
If the
wrongful act is shown in this way not to be a
causa sine qua
non
of the loss suffered, then no legal liability can
arise."
In the case of
"positive" conduct or commission on the part of the
defendant, the conduct is mentally removed to determine
whether the
relevant consequence would still have resulted. However, in the case
of an omission the but-for test requires that
a hypothetical positive
act be inserted in the particular set of facts, the so-called mental
removal of the defendant's omission.
This means that reasonable
conduct of the defendant would be inserted into the set of facts.
However, as will be shown in detail
later, the rule regarding the
application of the test in positive acts and omission cases is not
inflexible. There are cases in
which the strict application of the
rule would result in an injustice, hence a requirement for
flexibility. The other reason is
because it is not always easy to
draw the line between a positive act and an omission. Indeed there is
no magic formula by which
one can generally establish a causal nexus.
The existence of the nexus will be dependent on the facts of a
particular case.”
[88]
It is said that the “but-for”
test requires the judge to think away the relevant unlawful conduct
that is potentially
the cause of the harm and then ask whether the
harm would have ensued in any event. If it would have ensued in any
event, the relevant
conduct is not factually the cause of the harm.
On the facts of
De Klerk
this
process is relatively simple; if the accused person was unlawfully
arrested because there were no grounds for forming a reasonable
suspicion that the person had committed an offence for which the
person could be arrested without a warrant, thinking away the
unlawful arrest will quite simply result in the conclusion that the
continued detention after the first appearance would not have
eventuated. The accused would never have appeared in court and the
matter would never have been postponed. The causal link is evidently
there.
[89]
However, as stated by the Constitutional
Court, there are situations where, in order to effectively apply the
condictio sine qua non
– test, the exercise entails not merely discounting the
perceived cause but also postulating a hypothetical lawful course
of
events instead of the perceived cause.
[90]
Regarding this possible hypothesis as part
of the causation test, it must be emphasised that the Minister did
not rely on section
40(1)(b) of the CPA that the arrest without a
warrant was lawful, or that the plaintiff could have been lawfully
arrested in terms
of section 40(1)(b). Consequently, the hypothetical
possibility that the plaintiff could have been lawfully arrested in
terms of
section 40(1)(b) and lawfully brought to court on that basis
cannot be introduced through the back door in the context of factual
causation.
[91]
In the present matter, it will be
appropriate for the investigating officer’s unlawful conduct to
be substituted with lawful
conduct on his part in the application of
the “but-for” test. As I held above, if the investigating
officer acted lawfully
in terms of PHA, in the absence of evidence
that he considered the complainant to be in imminent danger, he
should have given the
plaintiff a notice to appear in court, instead
of arresting her. If this had happened, the plaintiff would not have
been in custody
at her first appearance in court, and there would
have been no need for her to apply for bail. The matter against her
would have
been remanded and she would have been warned to appear at
the next hearing. The harm inherent in her continued detention would
not have occurred.
[92]
Consequently, there is a direct causal link
between the unlawful conduct of the SAPS and the plaintiff’s
continued detention
after her first appearance in court.
[93]
It is now trite law that an unlawful arrest
does not necessarily render the enrolment of the matter unlawful. If
there is a
prima facie
case against an accused which justifies a prosecution, the unlawful
arrest does not render the proceedings in court unlawful. This
was
confirmed in
De Klerk.
In
the present matter, there was a
prima
facie
case against the plaintiff that
she contravened section 18(1) of PHA. Consequently, the public
prosecutor correctly decided to
prosecute the plaintiff and correctly
enrolled the matter.
[94]
Did this valid action on the part of the
prosecutor constitute a
novus actus
interveniens
which legally disrupted
the causal chain? In my view the valid decision on the part of the
prosecutor to enrol the case is irrelevant
to the question of
causation
in casu
and
did not constitute a
novus actus
interveniens.
The simple fact is that
if the investigating officer acted lawfully and gave the plaintiff a
written notice to appear in court,
the prosecutor would have decided
to prosecute and would have enrolled the matter in any event, and the
plaintiff would have been
warned to appear on the next date. The
issue of bail would never have arisen. The valid decision is a
neutral factor as far as
causation is concerned.
[95]
In this regard, I am of the view that the
same reasoning applies to the question whether the Minister’s
liability should be
limited on the basis of policy considerations. I
perceive no valid considerations to limit the Minister’s
liability.
[96]
The Minister of Police lead extensive
evidence by the prosecutor regarding the procedure to be followed in
terms of section 60 of
the CPA regarding bail applications. The
prosecutor displayed a high degree of knowledge and competence in his
evidence, which
clearly accorded with the provisions of the CPA. His
evidence is summarised in what follows.
[97]
Schedule 5 of the
Criminal Procedure Act includes
an offence, being
an offence referred to in Schedule 1:
a. where
the accused has previously been convicted of an offence referred to
in Schedule 1; or
b. which
was allegedly committed whilst he or she was released on bail in
respect of an offence referred to in Schedule 1.
[98]
The plaintiff was previously convicted of
malicious damage to property. Consequently, the Schedule 1 offence
the plaintiff allegedly
committed was, objectively, also a Schedule 5
offence.
[99]
Even prior to the amendment of the
Criminal
Procedure Act in
2022, the plaintiff was obliged to inform the court
of any prior convictions she may have, and any pending case in
respect of which
she was on bail.
[100]
The record of proceedings reflect that the
plaintiff failed to inform the court of her previous convictions,
which included not
only a previous conviction on a charge of
malicious damage to property, but also common assault.
[101]
The importance of this is that in terms of
section 60(11)(b)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, an
accused may only
be released on bail in respect of a Schedule 5 offence if the accused
convinces the court by evidence that his
or her release on bail is in
the interests of justice. In this instance the onus is on the accused
to demonstrate why it was in
the interest of justice that he or she
be released on bail. This also means that the accused must make
application for bail and
must place the necessary evidence before the
court.
[102]
Currently
section 60(11)(c)
, read with
section 59(1)
, provides that a person charged with the contravention
of
section 18(1)
of PHA shall be kept in custody, unless the accused,
having been given a reasonable opportunity to do so, adduces evidence
showing
that it is in the interests of justice that he or she be
released on bail. However, this subsection only became operative in
2022
and is not relevant herein.
[103]
The undisputed evidence by the prosecutor
was that he opposed bail on 19 November 2020, as he deemed it a risk
for the plaintiff
to be released on bail, having regard to the
serious allegations against the plaintiff. The plaintiff also had
another case against
her pending for which she had to appear in court
on the same day (the case involving the damage to the complainant’s
husband’s
car window). Consequently, he asked the investigating
officer to provide an affidavit, setting out an overview of the
different
cases against the plaintiff.
[104]
On 26 November 2020 there was an affidavit
by the investigating officer in the police docket, but such affidavit
was inadequate
and did not provide the detail requested by the
prosecutor. Importantly, at that stage, the plaintiff’s
previous convictions
were not known, and the plaintiff, represented
by a Legal Aid attorney, expressly informed the court the plaintiff
had no previous
convictions. In this regard, I hold that the
plaintiff misled the court.
[105]
The prosecutor testified that if the
plaintiff revealed her previous convictions, as she was obliged to
do, in particular the malicious
damages to property conviction, which
rendered the alleged offence a Schedule 5 offence, the plaintiff
would have been required
to bring a formal bail application, as the
onus would have been on the plaintiff to show why she should be
released on bail in
the interest of justice.
[106]
As the previous convictions were not
revealed at that stage, and the investigating officer’s
affidavit was inconclusive, the
prosecutor then decided not to oppose
the granting of bail. Bail was granted by the court, but subject to
the condition that the
plaintiff should reside at an alternative
address, to avoid conflict between the feuding parties.
[107]
It was contended that the plaintiff was not
entitled to be released on bail on 26 November 2020, because
objectively the offence
she was accused of was a Schedule 5 offence
and the plaintiff failed to adduce the required evidence to show that
it was in the
interests of justice that she be released on bail.
[108]
It is contended that the fact that the
plaintiff remained in custody after her first appearance was because
she was obliged to bring
a bail application and adduce evidence,
which she did not do on 19 November 2020, and the matter was
postponed for a formal bail
application on 26 November 2020.
[109]
Whilst the evidence by the prosecutor is
correct with regards to the usual procedure to be followed in bail
applications, the Minister
of Police’s argument is fatally
flawed and amounts to a
petitio
principii
. Put more plainly, the
argument puts the cart before the horse. The Minster’s argument
completely loses sight of the fact
that if the investigating officer
acted lawfully by not arresting the plaintiff, and by giving her a
written notice to appear instead,
it would never have been necessary
for the plaintiff to apply for bail at all. Where the plaintiff was
brought before court in
an unlawful manner, in unlawful custody, and
where she should never have been in custody, it would be a complete
failure in logic
and justice to argue that she was obliged to bring a
bail application and persuade the court that she should be released
from such
unlawful custody. Consequently, the fact that the plaintiff
failed to disclose her previous convictions and failed to bring a
formal
bail application is irrelevant in the present matter. In any
event, it is clear that the plaintiff would in any event not have
been able to bring a formal bail application during her first
appearance, due to the systemic issues referred to above.
[110]
In the premises, I hold that the Minister
of Police is liable for the entire period of the plaintiff’s
detention, from 19
November 2020 to 26 November 2020.
Damages
and compensation
[111]
The plaintiff gave extensive evidence
regarding the suffering she experienced while she was in detention,
not only in the court
holding cells, but more particularly at “Sun
City” which is an ironic reference, not to the well-known
entertainment
resort and casino where patrons stay in luxury and
international golf tournaments are hosted, but indeed the
Johannesburg Prison.
[112]
On the plaintiff’s evidence, which
was not disputed by the Minister, unsentenced detainees are held in
overcrowded circumstances.
There are no facilities which can be
remotely regarded as decent. There is a lack of protection from other
criminals, and some
criminals are allowed to control life in the
cells. Inhumane routines are implemented. In short, circumstances are
horrendous.
Consequently, the plaintiff described her suffering while
in detention, in her ornate vernacular, as “’n bietjie
baie”
(literally translated as “a little much”),
which is a euphemistic way of stating that she suffered tremendously.
This
statement, properly understood, accords with the detail of her
evidence and must be accepted.
[113]
Despite the unlawfulness of the arrest, the
investigating officer treated the plaintiff with some respect and
transported the plaintiff
to the court in a motor vehicle. He also
took her to court immediately and did not detain her for long at the
police station. However,
this is a small consolation for the
plaintiff who was held in custody for seven to eight days in
horrendous conditions.
[114]
Consequently, I find that there was a
serious breach of the plaintiff’s fundamental rights, which
caused her great suffering,
for which she must be appropriately
compensated.
[115]
In
De
Klerk
, the period of the unlawful
detention was the same as in the present matter, and the plaintiff
was awarded the sum of R300 000.00
damages by the Constitutional
Court. This was in 2019. This equates to about R380 000.00
currently.
[116]
I respectfully regard the award made in
De
Klerk
as a good guideline in the
present matter. However, I have a discretion to determine the amount
of damages in accordance with the
facts of the matter and the extent
of the suffering experienced by the plaintiff.
[117]
As indicated above, the plaintiff
experienced considerable suffering, which was entirely foreseeable.
Consequently, I am of the
view that the amount that should be awarded
to the plaintiff should be higher than the amount that was awarded in
De Klerk,
but
that a conservative approach should still be followed. Accordingly, I
am of the view that an award of R400 000.00 would
be appropriate
in the circumstances.
Costs
[118]
The costs should follow the result.
[119]
Although the claim against the NDPP was
abandoned, in the circumstances of this matter it is unlikely that
any additional costs
were incurred in respect of such claim.
Order
In the
circumstances, judgment is granted in favour of the plaintiff against
the first defendant, the Minister of Police, for:
(1)
Payment of the amount of R400 000.00;
(2)
Interest on the amount of R400 000.00
from date of judgment to date in full at the rate prescribed in the
Prescribed Rate of
Interest Act, from time to time;
(3)
Costs of suit, to be taxed on Scale B.
DAWID MARAIS
ACTING JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the plaintiff
Adv
FF Muller instructed by Jean Keyser Attorneys Inc
For
the defendant
Adv
B Mathathe instructed by the State Attorney
Date
of trial
8
October 2024 (written argument delivered subsequently
Date
of judgment
13
March 2025
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