Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 550South Africa
Minister of Police and Another v Mkhize (A23/057795) [2025] ZAGPJHC 550 (27 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 May 2023
Headnotes
the respondent's arrest, detention, and prosecution were unlawful.
Judgment
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## Minister of Police and Another v Mkhize (A23/057795) [2025] ZAGPJHC 550 (27 May 2025)
Minister of Police and Another v Mkhize (A23/057795) [2025] ZAGPJHC 550 (27 May 2025)
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sino date 27 May 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL
CASE NO
:
A23/057795
COURT
A QUO
CASE NO
:
2018/19387
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
Date:
27 May
2025
In the matter between:
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
1
st
Appellant
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR
2
nd
Appellant
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
And
MKHIZE
MBONGISENI CYPRIAN
Respondent
Coram:
Dlamini J (Twala J
et
Mfenyana J concurring)
Heard
:
23 April 2024
Delivered:
27 May 2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties' representatives
via
email,
uploaded to
CaseLines
, and released to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 27 May 2024
JUDGMENT
Dlamini J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This appeal came before us as a result of
leave being granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) to this
court. The appellants,
cited as defendants in the court below, are
appealing the entire order and judgment of Victor J, delivered on 22
August 2022, sitting
as the court of first instance in the Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg (“the court
a
quo
”). The court
a
quo
refused leave to appeal.
[2]
The respondent was
arrested on 18 October 2017, on a charge of raping a minor, that took
place in June 2017. The arrest was carried
out by members of the
South African Police Service (SAPS) without a warrant. Following his
remand, he was granted bail on 2 November
2017. After several
appearances, the charges were, on 6 April 2018, withdrawn against the
respondent, after his attorneys of record
submitted representation to
the senior public prosecutor, arguing that on the day of the alleged
rape, the respondent could not
have committed the offence he was
charged with, as he was in Kwa-Zulu Natal.
[3]
After the charges
were withdrawn, the respondent instituted this action against the
appellants for unlawful arrest, detention, and
malicious prosecution.
[4]
The
appellants defended the action and contended in their defence that
the arrest, detention, and prosecution of the respondent
were
justified under the provisions of section 40 (1) of the Criminal
Procedure Act
[1]
(the
CPA).
[5]
The court
a
quo
ruled
against the appellants and held that the respondent's arrest,
detention, and prosecution were unlawful.
[6]
Aggrieved by this
decision, the appellants filed an application for leave to appeal
before the court
a
quo
. The
Deputy Judge President heard and dismissed the application for leave
to appeal.
[7]
The application is
opposed by the respondent, arguing that the judgment of the court
a
quo
should
stand and not be interfered with.
BACKGROUND FACTS
[8]
It is apposite to set
out a brief narrative of the relevant facts and circumstances
presented at the trial, which have a bearing
on the issues to be
determined in this appeal.
[9]
In the trial, the
respondent testified on his own behalf and did not call any
witnesses. Captain Nduku, Investigating Officer Bopedi,
Ms Van der
Walt, and Mr Mabogoane were called to testify on behalf of the first
and second appellants.
THE
APPELLANT’S CASE
The
Arresting Officer
[10]
Mr. Nduku, a captain
in the SAPS testified that on 18 October 2018, whilst on duty, he was
alerted about a rape incident that had
been reported at Moroka Police
Station. He proceeded and met with the complainant and her mother.
They all went to the respondent’s
residence. They found the
respondent and the complainant positively identified the respondent
as the person who allegedly raped
her.
[11]
Captain Nduku was
adamant that he had applied his mind and studied the docket. Since
the complainant had pointed out the respondent
as the perpetrator, he
was therefore entitled, and there was no other means of securing the
respondent’s attendance in court
other than to arrest the
respondent. There was also some debate about whether the respondent
had requested his cellphone from the
Captain. He denies that the
respondent asked for his cellphone.
The
Investigating Officer
[12]
Mr. Bopedi, a member
of SAPS, confirmed that he was appointed as the investigating officer
in the matter, and was responsible for
charging the respondent at the
Moroka Police Station, where the respondent was already in custody.
He maintained under cross-examination
that he neither refused the
respondent access to his cellphone to enable the respondent to locate
his whereabouts on the day of
the alleged rape, nor did he generally
refuse the respondent his cellphone. According to him, the respondent
chose not to make
any statement.
The
Prosecutors
[13]
Mrs Van der Walt
confirmed that she was the designated prosecutor in the respondent’s
trial. According to her, when she received
the docket, it contained
the statement of the complainant, the complainant’s mother, a
J88, which confirmed that the complainant
had been penetrated before.
She was certain that the docket did not include the respondent's
statement, as the respondent had elected
not to make a statement.
[14]
Probed by the court
a
quo
regarding whether she should have proceeded with the respondent’s
prosecution in light of the respondent’s submission
that his
car tracking unit indicated that his car was in KZN on the day
of the alleged incident, she insisted that she would
have proceeded
with the prosecution on the basis that the docket contained
sufficient information to enable her to proceed with
the prosecution.
[15]
Mr Mabogoane
testified that he was the prosecutor who withdrew the case against
the respondent. He confirmed that the charges were
withdrawn against
the respondent upon receiving the tracker report of the respondent’s
motor vehicle which placed the respondent
in KZN on the day of the
alleged rape of the complainant.
RESPONDENT’S
CASE
[16]
Mr Mkhize, a member
of the SAPS, testified that on 18 October 2017 he was approached by
Captain Nduku, who was in the company of
the complainant and her
mother. The respondent confirms that the complainant pointed him out
and alleged that the respondent had
raped her around June 2017.
[17]
The respondent’s
main defence was an alibi. He asserts that on the day of the alleged
rape he was in KZN. He maintains that
the tracker in his motor
vehicle and cellphone records would corroborate his version that on
the day of the incident, his car was
parked in KZN.
[18]
During
cross-examination, there was some debate about whether the respondent
had asked the arresting officer to hand him his cellphone.
The
respondent contends that he asked both the arresting officer and the
investigating officer to hand over his cellphone, but
the two
officers refused. The officers deny that the respondent requested his
cellphone. According to them, the respondent refused
to make a
statement and insisted that he would make his statement in court.
[19]
The respondent
confirmed that following his arrest, he was granted bail on 2
November 2017. After making several court appearances,
his legal
representatives made submissions to the senior public prosecutor
insisting that on the day of the alleged rape his car
tracker and
cellphone records indicated that he was in KZN and could not have
committed the offence. As a result of these representations,
the
charges were withdrawn against him on 6 April 2018.
[20]
As I indicated
earlier, at the conclusion of the trial, the court
a
quo
found
in favour of the respondent. Additionally, the court
a
quo
awarded
the respondent damages in the amount of R300,000.00 for unlawful
arrest and R150,000.00 for malicious prosecution.
[21]
The nub of the appeal
concerns the findings of the court
a
quo
against the appellants, and the award of damages in favour of the
respondent, as well as the cost order granted by the cour
t
a quo
.
The grounds for leave to appeal are outlined in the notice of leave
to appeal and are deemed to be incorporated into this judgment.
[22]
The respondent
opposes the appeal.
[23]
This then brings the
appeal before us.
ISSUES
FOR DETERMINATION
[24]
It
is trite that in defending a claim for unlawful arrest the four
jurisdictional facts set out in Section 40 (1) (b) of the CPA
must be
pleaded, that the arrestor was a peace officer, that he or she
entertained a suspicion, that the suspicion entailed that
the person
to be arrested had committed a Schedule 1 offence and lastly the
suspicion rested on reasonable grounds.
[2]
[25]
In broad terms, the
issues arising for determination in this appeal, which also arose in
the court
a
quo
,
concern whether the arrest and detention of the respondent by the
appellants were unlawful. Tied to this is the question of whether
the
subsequent prosecution of the respondent was unlawful. Additionally,
if a finding is made in favour of the respondent, the
determination
of the appropriate damages to be awarded to the respondent.
Unlawful
Arrest
[26]
Once, the arresting
officer had reasonable suspicion that the respondent had committed
the offence for which they were arrested,
the arresting officer has a
discretion whether to arrest the suspect or not. At issue in this
regard is a narrow question, whether
the arresting officer had any
other means of ensuring that the respondent attends court other than
arresting the respondent.
[27]
Before us, the
appellants argue that the court
a
quo
erred
in finding that the arrest of the respondent was unlawful. They
contend that the court
a
quo
erred
in concluding that had the arresting officer applied his mind to the
offence, studied the docket, he would have found it
unnecessary to
arrest the respondent. The appellants insist that the court
a
quo
also
erred in criticizing Captain Nduku for failing to obtain a warrant
before arresting the respondent.
[28]
Having analysed the
events and the relevant timeliness of the evidence presented, the
court
a quo
concluded that the respondent’s arrest was unlawful. The court
a quo
held
that; -
“
But
if there are other circumstances which are suggestive of it being
unnecessary to arrest, then a summons would suffice. In this
case,
the plaintiff had a fixed and known address. He had fixed and known
employment. And those circumstances, following the dictum
of
Schreiner JA in Tsose, the arrest of the plaintiff was unnecessary.
It is of importance that when the plaintiff was brought
to trial, it
is the function of the judicial officer to guard against the accused
being detained on improper grounds and to ensure
that the detention
is not unduly extended”.
[29]
It
is trite that a court of appeal will be hesitant to interfere with
the trial court’s factual findings and evaluation of
the
evidence, and will only interfere when the trial court materially
misdirects itself insofar as its factual and credibility
findings are
concerned.
S
v Francis
.
[3]
[30]
It
is now a well-established principle of our law that a person’s
freedom and security are sacrosanct and protected by our
Constitution. In
Mahlangu
and
Another
v Minister of Police
,
[4]
the
Constitutional Court captured this principle as follows at [43]; -
“
it
is trite now that public policy is informed by the Constitution. Our
Constitution values freedom, understandably so when regard
is had to
how, before the dawn of democracy, the freedom of the majority of our
people was close to non-existence. The primacy
of “human
dignity, the achievement of equality and the advancement of human
rights and freedoms” is recognised in the
founding values
contained in section 1 of the Constitution. Section (7) (1) of the
Constitution provides that the Bill of Rights
“enshrines the
rights of all people in our country and affirms democratic values of
human dignity, equality and freedom.“These
constitutional
provisions and the protection of section 12 of the right of freedom
and security of the person are at the heart
of public considera
tion”.
[31]
In
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
,
[5]
the
court held that; -
[62]
“
The principles emerging from our jurisprudence can then be
summarised as follows. The deprivation of liberty, through arrest and
detention, is per se prima facie unlawful. Every deprivation of
liberty must only be effected in a procedurally fair manner but
must
also be substantively justified by acceptable reasons”.
[32]
In
line with the principles set out in
Mahlangu
[6]
above,
in my view, once it was established that the respondent was a police
officer with a known and fixed address, issuing a warrant
of arrest
would have been a reasonable, practical, and less drastic method of
securing the respondent’s attendance in court.
The arrest of
the respondent under these circumstances was unwarranted and
excessive. There were no reasons presented to justify
the
respondent’s arrest instead of issuing a warrant.
[33]
Also, considering that the alleged rape
occurred in June 2017 and the respondent’s arrest took place in
October 2017, there
was evidently sufficient time for the arresting
officer to obtain a warrant instead of arresting the respondent.
This issue
was dealt with comprehensively and, in my view, correctly
by the trial court. The court
a quo
’s
findings cannot be faulted. Therefore, the court
a
quo
was correct in finding that the
respondent’s arrest was unlawful.
Malicious
Prosecution
[34]
The question that
arose in the court
a
quo
and
which still arises in this appeal is whether, in deciding to
prosecute the respondent, the second appellant had reasonable
and
probable cause to believe that the respondent was guilty of the
offence with which he had been charged, meaning that the prosecution
of the respondent was not malicious. If it is found that the
prosecution was malicious, then the determination of the amount of
damages to be awarded to the respondent follows.
[35]
The case made by the
appellant is that the court
a
quo
erred
in finding that the second appellant maliciously prosecuted the
respondent on the basis that the state prosecutor had intimated
that
even if there was a tracker report in the docket confirming that the
respondent’s car was in KZN on the day of the alleged
rape, she
would have proceeded with the prosecution. The appellant argued that
because the respondent’s car was in KZN, therefore
the
respondent could not have committed the offence.
[36]
The principles of
what constitutes a malicious prosecution are now well established.
The claimant must allege and prove that the
defendants set the law in
motion and instituted the proceedings. Additionally, the claimant
must prove that the defendants acted
without reasonable and probable
cause. Lastly, the determination hinges on whether the defendants
acted with malice.
[37]
In deciding this
issue, the court
a
quo
found
in favour of the respondent and held that the prosecution of the
respondent was unlawful. The court
a
quo
stated; -
“
I
have already referred to the startling evidence of Mrs Van der Walt
who said she would have prosecuted anyway, even if there was
proof of
the tracker report. She could have also called the plaintiff’s
phone records. She did not do so. The cell phone
towers that record
the movement of the relevant cell phone user would have accurately
reflected the plaintiff’s whereabouts
on the day in question.
Instead, she pursued the prosecution on a hunch that the plaintiff
had lent his car to someone to drive
to KZN without a little evidence
to corroborate that thesis.
[38]
The court
a
quo
continued and held that; -
“
In
this case, therefore, I find that the defendants were aware of what
they were doing in instituting the prosecution. That they,
at least,
must have foreseen the possibility that they were acting with
disregard to the plaintiff’s rights. And that it
was negligent
of the second defendant to continue with the prosecution”.
[39]
In my view, the court
a quo
misdirected itself by finding that the respondent’s prosecution
was unlawful. This is because the decision to prosecute the
respondent was based on lawful and probable grounds. By focusing on
the comments of the prosecutor, the court disregarded the fact
that
the prosecution had in its possession the docket, which contained the
complainant’s statement, alleging that the respondent
raped
her. Additionally, the complainant’s mother made a statement.
Significantly, the docket included a J88, which confirmed
that the
complainant had been penetrated with a blunt object. On these facts,
the state was entitled to proceed with the prosecution.
[42]
Also, the prosecutors’ comment that even if there had been a
tracker report or cell phone records in the docket
indicating that
the respondent’s car was parked in KZN, she would not have
withdrawn the charges against the respondent is
of no moment. What is
significant, in my view, is the prosecutor’s submission that,
based on the information contained in
the docket, the respondent had
a case to answer, especially since the complainant had identified the
respondent as the perpetrator.
Additionally, at the time the
prosecutor made the comments, the docket did not contain the
respondent’s car tracker report
and cell phone records. This
information was only forwarded to the senior public prosecutor when
the respondent made a representation
for the charges to be withdrawn.
[40]
It follows therefore,
that on this issue, the order of the court
a
quo
must
be set aside, and the appellant is entitled to relief in this regard.
Damages Awarded
[41]
The final issue for determination is what
constitutes just and equitable compensation to be awarded to the
respondent.
[42]
After analysing the parties’
submissions and considering various case law on this matter, the
court
a quo
awarded the respondent R 300,000.00 for unlawful arrest and
detention. The appellant was ordered to pay the respondent R
150,000.00 as compensation for malicious prosecution.
[43]
In
the assessment of damages for unlawful arrest and detention, it is
important to bear in mind that the primary purpose is not
to enrich
the aggrieved party but to offer him or her some much-needed solace
for his or her injured feelings. It is therefore
crucial that serious
attempts be made to ensure that the damages awarded are commensurate
with the injury inflicted.
Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyulu
.
[7]
[44]
As
I have alluded to earlier, the Court of Appeal is constrained from
interfering with the amount of damages awarded by the trial
court
when that amount is a matter of estimation and discretion. This is
because the trial court is endowed with a wide discretion,
which
discretion must be exercised judiciously.
Dikoto
v Mokhatla
.
[8]
[45]
Considering all the circumstances of the
case, I find no reason to interfere with the amount of damages
awarded. This amount reflects
fair and just compensation for the
respondent’s damages.
[46]
I have already determined that the
prosecution of the respondent was not malicious and that the
appellants were entitled to prosecute
the respondent on the available
information. Therefore, it follows, as it should, that the amount of
damages for unlawful prosecution
awarded to the respondent must be
set aside.
[47]
In the result, the appeal against the
decision of the court
a quo
in relation to malicious prosecution should succeed.
COSTS
[48]
I now turn to the issue of costs. The trite
principle of our law is that costs follow the results and are awarded
to the successful
party., The court
a
quo
held that the first and second
appellants shall be liable for the respondent’s costs. The
parties have achieved varying degrees
of success in the matter, with
the respondent achieving a higher degree of success. The effect of
this is that the respondent is
substantially successful in opposing
this appeal. In the circumstances there can be no reason to deviate
from the established principle
that costs follow the result. The
limited success achieved by the appellant in respect of the
prosecution does not warrant such
a deviation.
[49]
In all the circumstances alluded to above,
the appeal is partly upheld.
ORDER
In the result, the
following order is made: -
(1)
The appeal is upheld only in respect of
malicious prosecution.
(2)
The order of the court
a
quo
is set aside and substituted by the
following order;
(3)
The arrest and detention of the plaintiff
by employees of the first defendant is unlawful.
(4)
The first defendant is liable to pay to the
plaintiff an amount of R300 000 for damages suffered consequent
upon his unlawful
arrest and detention.
(5)
The plaintiff shall pay the second
defendant’s costs.
(6)
The first appellant is ordered pay the
costs of the appeal.
J DLAMINI
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE
APPELANTS:
Adv. N. M Mtsweni
EMAIL:
milly@adv-mtsweni.co.za
INSTRUCTED
BY:
State Attorney, Johannesburg.
Mr.
Teffo Malape
EMAIL:
tmalape@justice.gov.za
FOR THE
RESPONDENT: Adv.
Sithe Ngomane
EMAIL:
sithe@capebar.co.za
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Mtumtum Inc.
EMAIL:
mtumtuyolisa@gmail.com
/
info@mtumtumattorneys.co.za
[1]
Act
51
of 1977
[2]
Section
40 (1) (b) of the Criminal Procedure Act, sets out the essential
jurisdictional facts which are required to be present
to justify an
arrest without a warrant. These are:
(a)
The arresting officer must be a peace
officer
(b)
The arresting officer must entertain a
suspicion
(c)
The suspicion must be that the suspect
committed an offence referred to in Schedule 1.
(d)
And, the suspicion must be based on
reasonable grounds.
[3]
1991
(1) SACR 189 (A)
[4]
2021
(2) SACR 595 (CC)
[5]
2020
(1) SACR 1(CC)
[6]
Ibid
[7]
[2009]
ZASCA 55; 2009 (5) SA 85 (SCA)
[8]
2006
(6) SA 235
(CC) ; 2007 (1) BLCR 1 (CC)
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