Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 569South Africa
Masente v Minister of Police (22/2747) [2025] ZAGPJHC 569 (6 June 2025)
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Masente v Minister of Police (22/2747) [2025] ZAGPJHC 569 (6 June 2025)
Masente v Minister of Police (22/2747) [2025] ZAGPJHC 569 (6 June 2025)
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sino date 6 June 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 22/2747
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
6 June 2024
In
the matter between:
SIBUSISO
MASENTE
PLAINTIFF
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
DEFENDANT
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties and/or parties’
representatives by email and by
upload to CaseLines. The date and
time for hand down is deemed to be 10h00 on 6 June 2025
JUDGMENT
S.VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN, AJ
Introduction
[1]
The trial in this matter was originally set
down for 4 days. After an attempt to postpone same the trial
eventually took off on
10 October 2024 and ran till 18 October 2024
whereafter it had to be postponed to be heard at the end of term from
9 December 2024
onwards. The reason for the postponement to 9
December 2024 was the fact that the court infrastructure could not
cope with the
immediate continuation of the matter. On 10 December
2024, all evidence was completed and judgment reserved whilst the
parties
undertook to file heads of argument by 09h00 on 11 December
2024 but the defendants counsel could only file their heads of
argument
late on 11 December 2024 seeking condonation for filing same
late, on the basis that they underestimated the task. I can see no
prejudice to the plaintiff in condoning same and such order will
follow.
[2]
The plaintiff will for the sake of
convenience be referred to as “Masente” and the defendant
as the “Minister”
or “SAPS” as may be
convenient. Masente testified on his own behalf and only called one
witness W/Officer Hlongwane.
The Minister called 3 witnesses Cst
Rampaeri, Cst Thabethe and Warrant Officer Lapane an expert in
explosives. I will deal with
their evidence below.
The Defendant’s Pleadings and
attempts to postpone the matter
[3]
Masente sued the Minister for wrongful
arrest and detention without lawful reason and without a warrant
having allegedly sold and
distributed liquor in contravention of the
Disaster Management Regulations on 1 January 2021 and allegedly
having been found in
possession of explosives. SAPS is alleged to
have arrested him as aforesaid acting in the course and scope of
their duties. He
was allegedly detained for approximately 52 hours.
The prosecution declined to prosecute him under the Disaster
Management Regulations
(on the basis that there was no proof that he
was selling liquor) and he was ultimately charged with the
contravention of certain
sections of the Prevention and Combating of
Corruption Act 12 of 2004. After several appearances in the Benoni
Magistrate’s
Court the matter was withdrawn. With regard to the
latter he claimed that he suffered damages in the amount of R180 000
including
loss of dignity, shock and discomfort. This claim was
settled by the Minister’s representatives for an amount of
R130 000
despite the plea in denial and a Court order was made
in accordance with the settlement on 10 October 2024.
[4]
In addition Masente claim damages in the
amount of R450,000. He allegedly for security purposes kept monies
and expensive stock
of liquor (in respect of his father’s
business conducted at 1849 Sataba Street in Daveyton and two other
premises) at his
residence. At the time of his arrest members SAPS
allegedly removed R450 000 from his house during a raid of which
only R45 000
was booked into the SAPS 13 exhibit register and
later returned to him. He laid charges of theft and corruption at the
Daveyton
police station against the SAPS officers who were involved
in his arrest and the appropriation of the money. It would appear
that
these charges came to nought. An amount of liquor was also found
at his residential address which SAPS allegedly destroyed but it
later transpired that same was not returned to him. He lodged no
claim in respect of the liquor.
[5]
When the matter came before me on 8 October
2024 the Minister’s legal representative had already filed a
notice of motion
supported by an affidavit deposed to by Mr MA Lekala
for an application for a postponement
sine
die
. I should point out that the
heading incorrectly refers to Masente as the applicant whilst the
Minister was actually the applicant
and Masente the respondent. In
the body of the affidavit there is a general reference to annexures
which were never annexed.
[6]
Mr Lekala describes himself as a Legal
Admin Officer with his principal office at Benoni SAPS. Although he
is housed at the SAPS
Regional office (Johannesburg) he is
responsible for all local police stations within Johannesburg
including the Daveyton police
station. He deals with volumes of
dockets on a manual basis. He also explains that SAPS is inundated
with a “plethora of
summons” issued on a daily basis.
[7]
The police officers In these matters are
housed at different police stations and are often assigned to various
crime prevention
projects which require them to be on the ground
outside police stations. As a result it becomes a mammoth task to
have them available
for consultations and/or court attendances due to
high pressure work demands which is target driven.
[8]
He states that it is almost practically
impossible to get hold of relevant police officers swiftly in
litigious matters for consultations
and that when a request for a
consultation is made on short notice as was the case in the present
matter this task is even more
difficult.
[9]
Prior to him dealing with the aforesaid
request the State Attorney was dealing with the matter and after 3
quotations were obtained
from counsel in order to determine who
should be briefed, the procurement process was only finalised on 30
September 2024. After
SAPS’ counsel was appointed and perused
the brief the State Attorney received a memorandum on 3 October 2024
requesting an
urgent consultation with the arresting officers
Rampaeri and Thabethe. The consultation was necessary to assess and
to get a sense
of the Minister’s defence to the claim and to
amend his plea so as to have a version before the court. According to
this
affidavit the plea was at that stage a bare denial with no
version.
[10]
Adv Mashabela acting for the Minister at
this stage tried to reach the Daveyton police station on 3 October
2024 and despite trying
two different numbers only thereafter
succeeded in contacting W/Officer Hlongwane on his mobile number and
enquired if he knew
the arresting officers. He also sent him
screenshots of the arresting officers’ statements. Warrant
Officer Hlongwane undertook
to revert to counsel on 4 October 2024.
In the event he only reverted on Saturday 5 October 2024 with a voice
note that the Cst.
Thabethe he had in mind was not the correct
person.
[11]
As a consequence counsel called Mr Lekala
on the same day to discuss the state of the matter and the best
possible approach under
the circumstances. At this juncture counsel
requested instructions to prepare a substantive application for
postponement to which
Mr Lekala agreed.
[12]
He also tried to contact the said police
officers on their mobile phone and at the Daveyton police station
with no success and states
that he needed more time to locate them.
[13]
All the aforesaid took place against the
backdrop of the State Attorney having been served with a notice of
set-down on 23 August
2024 for the trial to commence on 8 October
2024. This witness also explained that the State Attorney does not
brief counsel from
the outset and that the state attorneys’
office is expected to handle all files allocated and manage
litigation until the
hearing stage. This left the impression that the
State Attorney alone is to blame for the application for
postponement.
[14]
On 8 October 2024, the above was relied
upon as a basis for a postponement of the matter by Adv Morare who at
this stage appeared
for the Minister. I was informed that she had to
step in when for medical reasons Adv Mashabela had to fall out of the
matter on
Sunday 6 October 2024.
[15]
At the heart of the application is the
difficulty that the state attorney’s office never consulted any
of the witnesses before
filing the Minister’s plea, which
amounted to a bare denial. The failure to consult witnesses was not
only limited to the
period immediately prior to trial but included
the period before filing the plea. In the circumstances it became
necessary to explore
why no consultations took place for purposes of
filing a plea. In addition Mr Mthombeni appearing for Masente also
required an
opportunity to prepare an answering affidavit whereafter
the legal representative of the Minister would require an opportunity
to reply thereto. Mr Nthombeni only received the application for he
postponement during the afternoon on 7 October 2025 and when
he was
informed that there is a reference to annexures thereto he
immediately caused his office to call for such annexures given
the
fact that no annexures were actually annexed.
[16]
He received no response to the aforesaid
request. This was later clarified in Mr Lekala’s replying
affidavit. When the matter
was called before me on 8 October 2025 he
had no opportunity as yet to file an answering affidavit to the
application. He was given
such opportunity whereafter the applicant
had to reply thereto. Such affidavits were exchanged and by 10
October 2025 the application
papers were ripe.
[17]
In my view the real and underlying cause of
the State Attorneys’ failure to consult the relevant SAPS
witnesses before or
after the filing of the plea seems to have been
in part the lack of an ability to communicate effectively per email
coupled with
a failure of SAPS to track down such witnesses. I made
it clear that no proper case for a postponement was made out on paper
and
that I was inclined to refuse same. This led to two officials
from the state attorneys office being called to give oral evidence
so
as to explain the aforesaid difficulties and also the interaction
with Mr Lekala in more detail.
[18]
These officials explained that the State
Attorney’s office is hampered in its task by the fact that it
has no stable email
system and this often caused delays in
communicating with SAPS so as to request that witnesses be tracked
down timeously before
a plea becoming due and that as a consequence
and to avoid the Minister being placed under bar the practice
developed to file a
”holding plea” with the intention to
amend the plea as soon as the SAPS witnesses are tracked down and
consulted. In
the present case this could not be done timeously.
[19]
Mr Lekala was also called by Adv Morare to
explain and elaborate why he could not find the said witnesses. He
testified on 9 October
2024 (before filing the replying affidavit
referred to above). His evidence demonstrated that he keeps no proper
filing system
and also fails to diarise dockets in a systematic way
so as to pursue enquiries into the whereabouts of witnesses. It is
clear
that his office is run in a chaotic fashion. When I expressed
my disapproval as to the way his office is being run and that any
postponement may have to be at the risk of him paying the wasted
costs personally he indicated that he might be able to find the
relevant witnesses who then suddenly became traceable and by 10
December 2025 Adv Mashabela appeared with Adv Morare for the Minister
and informed me that they have been able to consult with Cst.
Rampieri and Cst Thabethe. I was also provided with an amended plea
on 10 October 2025 and informed that to the extent that Masente
claimed damages for unlawful arrest same was settled for R130 000
and the only remaining issue was whether an amount of R450 000
was stolen by the police.
[20]
Given that the Minister’s legal
representatives tendered the plaintiff’s wasted costs in
respect of the delay in their
heads of argument I will exercise my
discretion as to costs in such a way as to only order that the
Minister is liable for Masente’s
wasted costs on Scale “B”
to the extent that time was spent on the application for a
postponement and the amendment
of the plea which include the whole of
8
and
9 October 2024 and the morning of 10 October 2024. Mr Lekala and the
officials from the State Attorney should know that they
are being let
off lightly.
[21]
From a perusal of the pre-trial minute it
is clear that same was conducted on the basis that all witnesses for
the Minister are
available and it was even contended that the arrest
was lawful. Given that the police witnesses was not even consulted by
that
time it is clear that on the part of the Minister, the
particular official from the State Attorney conducted the pre-trial
on a
false and deceptive basis. To state in a pre-trial minute that
witnesses are available when you have not been able to obtain them
to
formulate your plea or to amend your plea and then to contend on the
basis of the docket alone that the arrest was lawful is
in my view
unacceptable.
The Trial
[22]
Ultimately the trial only started on 10
October 2024 at 15h00. After a short opening address by Mr Mthombeni,
Masente took the witness
box and testified that he his 31 years old
and resides at 3086 Ndlaka Street Chris Hani Daveyton. He is
qualified as a teacher
but only worked for one month as one
whereafter he started working in his father’s business. He
initially testified that
he conducts a liquor business at 1849 Chris
Hani Extension 4 Daveyton and is a co-owner of the business with his
father Mr M Masente
but it later transpired that the liquor license
of the said premises and 2 other outlets that he manages on behalf of
his father
were in the name of his father and that he conducts and
manages three taverns on behalf of his father. Given that Masente’s
original claim was for loss of money of which he was the owner Mr
Mthombeni caused an amendment to the Masente’s pleadings
to be
made in terms whereof Masente amended his particulars of claim and
maintained a claim against the Minister for a similar
amount but now
based on his position as a
bona fide
possessor of the monies allegedly stolen by SAPS. The Minister’s
legal representatives did not object to this amendment and
the matter
proceeded on this basis. The amended pleadings were filed on 14
October 2024 whilst Masente was still testifying in
chief.
[23]
In essence his evidence was that from the
time that he was allowed to trade after lockdown from beginning
December 2020 to the end
of December 2020 he did not do any banking.
He stored the cash proceeds of the trading period at home in a
cupboard. He had no
safe at home. The cash was stored in a green
Heineken cooler bag and in a red cooler bag. The green cooler bag
contained R200 and
R100 notes amounting to R400 0000 and the red
cooler bag contained coins, R20 and R50 notes amounting on his
initial evidence to
R49000 and later in evidence in chief said to
contain R52 000.
[24]
On 1 January 2022 he was at his residential
address and after removing stock from the trading sites early the
morning covering his
light delivery van with a sail he arrived home
and was unloading same to store liquor from the taverns in a store
room at home
because he feared that same would be stolen from the
business premises given the fact that a state of lockdown prevailed.
[25]
Whilst he was unloading 3 police vans
arrived. His wife called him whilst she was washing dishes and said 2
of the policemen wanted
to speak to him.
[26]
He spoke to one of them in the house who
told hm he was suspected of selling liquor from home. This police man
was an Indian man
(who later became known as Cst Rampieri). With him
was another black constable (who later became known as Cst Thabethe).
Masente
was not told who he allegedly sold liquor to and was informed
that they wanted to search the premises. Masente told them he was
packing stock in the storeroom.
[27]
According to Masente all the policemen’s
badges were turned upside down and he could not read their names.
They also did not
introduce themselves. They searched his vehicle and
lifted the sail on the back of the van and displayed no interest in
the remaining
amount of beer on the van. They searched the inside of
the van and found some whiskey.
[28]
They searched the store room where he was
packing the stock and the house. They found no liquor in the house.
Cst Rampieri eventually
searched the main bedroom and found the
cooler bags with the money in the cupboard. Cst Thabethe was present
at this point as well
as Masente’s wife.
[29]
There was no warrant for purposes of
conducting the above search. Masente was asked where the money came
from and he explained that
it came from the liquor business. He was
then arrested for selling liquor during the Covid-19 period and also
for money laundering.
The money was counted in the house in his
presence and he was told that he was not allowed to keep such an
amount of money at his
house.
[30]
After his arrest he was placed in a double
cab police van (one of the three that arrived at his house). He did
not refer to it in
chief but all the liquor on the premises was
confiscated. Thereafter the three police vans left from his house. It
is common cause
that Cst Rampieri and Cst Thabethe ultimately took
him to the Daveyton police station.
[31]
He was seated in the back of the police van
with four other policemen. Cst Rampieri was driving with one other
officer sitting in
front and whilst he was seated behind Cst Rampieri
and his hands were cuffed when he was arrested. Two other police
officers were
sitting with him in the back of the double cab.
[32]
After approximately 10-15 minutes the
vehicle he was in came to a standstill in an open area known as
Alliance and all the police
officers alighted and he was left alone
in the police van. The officers walked towards the back of the van he
was in. He did not
see the other police vehicles there.
[33]
After about 45 minutes the officers
returned and they proceeded to Daveyton police station. Upon his
arrival there he was charged
with unlawfully trading in liquor during
Covid -19, Money -laundering, Bribery and possession of explosives.
[34]
He was eventually read his rights after
approximately 5 hours. His mobile phone and the money that was in the
red cooler bag was
booked in as exhibits into the SAP 13 register. He
enquired as to what happened to the money in the green cooler bag and
was merely
told by Cst Rampieri that all monies were booked in at the
charge office.
[35]
After he came out on bail he made further
enquiries and reported the fact that the money in the green cooler
bag was never booked
in as an exhibit. This report was made to a
Detective Mashebele. This detective could not find the statement of
the arresting officer.
Masente never received the R400 000 back.
The detective also never told Masente what steps he took to find
same.
[36]
He later established that W/Officer
Hlongwane saw a green cooler bag in a refuse bin outside the police
station.
[37]
He testified that neither he or his father
are Vat Vendors. He could not produce any proof of a proper
book-keeping system. He normally
did the banking. If statements were
required he obtained same with his father. He produced a few
documents demonstrating business
activity in earlier years but
nothing pertinent to the period under discussion. The documents he
had were referred to in his amended
particulars of claim as SM
3.3-3.4 showing deposits made in favour of SA Breweries at Absa Bank
ranging between R60 000- R90 000
with a short period of
time in between.
[38]
He was cross-examined in-depth on the above
and could not improve on his evidence in chief. It is clear that no
proper books were
kept other than a hand record which he stated was
missing after he was released. He was asked to produce a stock sheet
of the stock
in the business at the time of the loss and was unable
to do so. He stated however that he knows the prices of the various
items
in stock. Given that he lodged no claim in this regard this is
of no consequence other than demonstrating that there was no proper
bookkeeping. He did not produce any documentary proof of purchases of
liquor from his liquor suppliers who included SA Breweries,
Liquor
Legends and Makro. He made arrangements with his suppliers after the
loss of the money and paid the amounts he owed, off.
No attempt was
made to subpoena the records of any of these companies to prove that
such quantities of liquor was purchased prior
to the event in
question that could be sold to produce the amount of R400 000
and a further R50 0000.
[39]
Under cross-examination he conceded that
the confiscated liquor was returned except for the whiskey. The
amount that was in the
red cooler bag was repaid to him by EFT. To
the extent that there were references to an amount of R49 000 to
R50 000
in the cooler bag he accepted the correctness of the
amount repaid by SAPS by EFT being R49 880.00.
[40]
He laid a charge against the police
officers involved. He was cross-examined about the fact that the
statement he made in this regard
was after he was released on bail
and on 4 January 2022 when the events of his arrest were still fresh
in his mind. In this statement
he made no reference to the fact that
W/Officer Hlongwane allegedly saw the empty green cooler bag outside
the police station in
a refuse bin. He could not explain why he did
not refer to this in his statement. It was also put to him that
W/Officer Hlongwane
would in any event state that he found an empty
red cooler bag in the refuse bin and not an empty green cooler bag
should he be
called as a witness. Masente’s answer hereto was
that he had no comment hereon.
[41]
It was put to him that the fact the police
took him to Alliance was on his own insistence. It was put to him
that on the way to
Daveyton police station Masente spoke to an
unknown officer on his mobile phone and arranged to meet him there
with the police
men who arrested him. Masente denied this and said
that his mobile phone was taken from him upon his arrest.
[42]
He was also referred to the fact that in
paragraph 5 of his statement laying charges against the police (which
statement he allegedly
wrote himself) he said that he was called into
the bedroom by his wife Constance and asked by a police officer to
take out the
money in the wardrobe and did so and counted out R50 000
which he gave to the police officer. This version contradicted his
evidence in chief. He answered this by saying he knew the amount was
R50 000. He denied counting out the money and giving
it to the
police officer. He was also referred to paragraph 6 of this
statement. This paragraph asserts that a police officer instructed
that the house be searched thoroughly and then a police officer found
the cooler bag with R450 000. These two paragraphs are
non-sensical when compared with his evidence in chief.
[43]
In re-examination he contended that he did
not write the statement of complaint on which he was cross-examined
himself. It was taken
down at Daveyton by a police officer. I asked a
question to clarify how many police officers were in the three police
vans that
arrived at his house. Masente stated that there were about
12 officers. He also in response to my attempt to clarify his
evidence
regarding the issue as to whether only one officer wrote
down his statement stated that when he arrived at Daveyton to lay
charges
he found different officers there. He also stated that he did
not check the statement before he signed same and was still in shock.
[44]
I allowed further cross-examination on this
point and it was put to him that each time an issue is raised with
him his statement
changes. He was pertinently asked why he did not
tell the court that 2 or 3 officers took down his statement. His
response was
that he asked them to take his statement. When he was
pressed to answer the question he said that he did not know how to
answer
it.
[45]
There after W/Officer Hlongwane was called
to testify. In brief he was on duty from 18h00 to 06h00 the night of
1 January 2021 and
was charge office commander. An elderly man and
younger woman arrived and complained about police corruption to the
effect that
the police arrested Masente and took two cooler bags with
money. He had no personal interest in matter except in as much as
corruption
was alleged. He noticed a red cooler bag in a dustbin. He
later made a supporting affidavit to the complaint laid by Masente
which
referred to the fact that he found the red cooler bag. He also
took charge of the SAP 13 register on the night of the first. He
caused the red cooler bag to be checked into the register and caused
statements to be taken from Masente’s family. He does
not
recall any conversation with Masente that evening. In any event he
was not on duty in cells. He does not know Masente personally.
But
for the fact that some relatives of Masente came to complain about
police corruption and that he found a red cooler bag in
a dustbin his
evidence did not take the matter any further.
[46]
Thereafter the matter stood down for Mr
Mthombeni to obtain instructions as to Mrs Masente’s
availability. He was informed
that she cannot go out and was deployed
as a stocktaker at Pick ‘n Pay. After the matter stood down
further he closed the
plaintiff’s case. Subsequent thereto he
applied for the reopening thereof which was granted. After the matter
stood down
further Mr Mthombeni advised me that Masente’s
father is on his way to the Eastern Cape and is not prepared to
assist as
a witness. I warned Mr Mthombeni that the failure to call
witnesses that are available might lead to adverse inferences but he
then finally closed the plaintiff’s case.
[47]
Mr Mashabela thereafter applied for
absolution from the instance and addressed me at length in this
regard. At the heart of his
argument was the fact that there was
insufficient evidence before me to place the Minister on his defence.
Mr Mthombeni opposed
this application vigorously. I reserved judgment
in this regard overnight and on the morning of 17 October 2024
dismissed this
application with costs on scale “B”.
[48]
Thereafter Mr Mashabela opened his case
with a short address and called Cst Rampieri as his first witness. He
testified that he
was on duty at Chloorkop Taxi Violence Patrol when
he received information from an informant that a person was selling
liquor illegally
during lockdown at an address in Daveyton and shared
this information with his partner Cst Thabethe and 4 other police
officers.
They proceeded to the address in Daveyton without any
search warrant and arrived at Masente’s premises being the
address
given to him by the informant.
[49]
On his arrival he saw a Nissan bakkie being
loaded. He thought that if he first tried to obtain a search warrant
the evidence might
be removed. He stepped onto the premises and
walked along a passage to the back where he knocked on the kitchen
door. He requested
that a gentleman who turned out to be Masente step
out and asked him whether he was selling liquor. To his surprise
Masente said
“yes” whereafter Cst Thabethe joined them
and when Cst Rampieri asked him where the alcohol was Masente said it
is
in the storage room and in the house. At this stage, the other
police officers were also in the yard. Cst Rampieri asked him to
take
him to the storage room and Masente took him and Cst Thabethe to the
storage room at the back of the house.
[50]
The door of the storage room was closed but
not locked and Masente opened same for them whereafter Cst Rampieri
observed a large
amount of different brands of alcohol. He does not
drink himself and cannot identify the brands. He called for
assistance from
the other officers to have the liquor moved to the
police vans.
[51]
As the liquor was being removed he noticed
a packet on the floor and peeped into it. He recognised its content
as 4 blasting cartridges.
He is not an explosives expert but based
his observation on his 8 years of experience during which he had
exposure thereto. He
followed standard procedure and contacted the
Germiston Standby Explosives Unit and spoke to Sergeant Lapane. Based
on the instructions
he received from this officer he removed the
packet and locked same in his police vehicle. His other colleagues
were still removing
liquor from the storeroom. He told Masente to
keep record of the liquor that was removed so as to avoid later
allegations that
some of it was stolen by the police.
[52]
While still removing liquor he noticed that
the bakkie had stickers on the door and observed what looked like
liquor inside. He
thereafter approached Masente and asked him who the
bakkie belonged to. Masente said that he is the owner. He waited till
they
were finished with the liquor removal from the storage room and
while the other officers were walking around he asked Masente
regarding
the bakkie. He could see no liquor inside the bakkie but it
had a sail over the back and when he lifted it up he saw a lot of
liquor.
He asked Masente who the liquor belonged to and Masente said
it was his. The liquor on the bakkie was also confiscated.
[53]
Thereafter he and the other officers went
to the house. He was asked who else was on the premises when he
arrived on the premises
and he testified that Masente’s wife
was in the kitchen when he arrived there.
[54]
Masente had identified himself as Sibusiso
when he initially arrived at the kitchen door. When they now went to
the kitchen he asked
Masente’s wife where the rest of the
liquor is and she pointed him to the fridge where he found a sealed
bottle of liquor
which was confiscated. He asked Masente about any
other liquor and was directed to the adjoining sitting room/lounge
where more
liquor was found stacked at least a half meter high
against the wall This was also confiscated. Cst Thabethe was with Cst
Rampieri
at this point.
[55]
Cst Rampieri testified that the quantity of
alcohol was too much for one vehicle and they tried to split it
equally between the
three vehicles. He then asked Masente whether
there was any more alcohol but Masente said that was all. Thereafter
Cst Rampieri
wanted Masente to step outside where he was going to
explain what was now going to happen to him. Cst Rampieri felt safer
outside.
They barely started moving outside when Masente stopped.
While he was trying to explain to Masente that he was going to arrest
him Masente interjected and asked Cst Rampieri to follow him back
into the kitchen without telling him why. Cst Rampieri followed
him
into the kitchen and then Masente placed a weighty black plastic bag
in his hand and stated that he wanted to be released.
He did not see
where Masente got the black plastic bag from. Cst Thabethe was just
outside the kitchen at this stage.
[56]
He opened the bag in his right hand and
found that that it contained notes. He then said to Masente that he
is arresting him for
bribery and corruption. Masente said he should
take the bag and release him when he placed the bag in his hand. Cst
Rampieri also
informed him that he is under arrest for possessing
explosives and selling liquor during the revised lockdown period. He
then handcuffed
Masente with his cuffed hands in front of his body.
As they moved to the police vehicle with the black bag in his hand,
Masente’s
wife suddenly appeared and wanted to know where I was
taking Sibusiso. He told her that Masente was under arrest and they
were
going to the Daveyton police station. They got into his police
vehicle. They were just three in the vehicle. He passed the message
that they are going to the Daveyton Police station to the other
police vehicles.
[57]
In the event they did not go straight to
the Daveyton police station. Whilst in transit Masente phoned another
police officer who
allegedly wanted to meet them near a bridge
underneath the N12. Presumably, this was the spot that Masente
described as Alliance.
Cst Rampieri wanted to see who this person
was. When Masente spoke to this person Cst Rampieri could not follow
the conversation
because they spoke in another language. When they
got to the spot Cst Rampieri and Cst Thabethe remained in the police
vehicle
with Masente whilst some of the crew of the other two
vehicles got out and came to speak to Cst Thabethe. After they
stopped Masente
still pleaded to be released. They waited at this
spot for approximately 20 – 30 minutes whereafter Cst Rampieri
concluded
they are wasting their time and they then proceeded to the
Daveyton police station. The unknown police officer they were waiting
for never arrived.
[58]
At the police station Cst Rampieri took
Masente and together with Cst Thabethe they went inside. He found the
W/officer in command
of the Client Service Centre, an elderly
gentleman whose name he does not remember and told him what Masente
was arrested for.
They made arrangements for the exhibits to be
checked in and he and Cst Thabethe sat down with Masente and he then
counted the
money in the black plastic bag. The money was placed into
an exhibit money bag. The black plastic bag he threw into a dustbin.
He did not think much of the plastic bag. The money bag was checked
into the SAP 13 exhibit register.
[59]
Cst Rampieri opened a docket. At some point
the explosive expert Sergeant Lapane arrived. Cst Rampieri fetched
the packet with the
explosive material from his police vehicle and
handed it to Sergeant Lopane. Thereafter he continued with the docket
with Cst Thabethe
with him. Masente was placed in the holding cells
and he did not see him again that day.
[60]
Cst Rampieri was also asked if he was aware
of the charges laid by Masente. He testified that he became aware
thereof through detective
Ramauro who informed him about it and was
the investigating officer. He never went to court with regard to this
case. Mr Mashabela
had no further questions at this stage and I
sought to clarify certain aspects of Cst Rampieri’s evidence.
[61]
I enquired about Masente’s mobile
phone to which he responded it was booked in for downloading in the
SAP 13 register –
he regarded it as an exhibit. He testified in
answer to one of my questions that he did not dial the number of the
police man Masente
dialled. He also did not confiscate the mobile
phone earlier. I also asked him why he did not request Masente to
dial the number
and then spoke to this police officer himself. His
answer hereto was that he did not see himself doing that. He also
confirmed
that nobody came to the police station to look for them. He
regarded it as the task of the investigating officer to track down
this unknown officer. He did not see the need to confiscate the
bakkie. He confiscated the liquor and believed Masente’s when
he said there was no more liquor.
[62]
The matter was later postponed to 9
December 2024. Mr Mashabela wanted to lead further evidence in chief
as a consequence of one
of my questions. He enquired whether the cell
phone was ever down loaded and Cst Rampieri testified that he
enquired from the investigating
officer at some stage who responded
that the information was still being downloaded.
[63]
Thereafter Mr Mthombeni commenced an
extensive and thorough cross-examination covering various themes. He
asked Cst Rampieri whether
he would sum it up as a good job done by
him and his colleagues which Cst Rampieri confirmed. This while he
ended up driving from
the scene of the arrest to a suspicious
secluded place at the request of Masente. Cst Rampieri did not regard
it as suspicious
to go and stop at a secluded space. The procedures
followed by Cst Rampieri with regard to the explosives were also
interrogated
on several occasions. Cst Rampieri stuck to his
statement that he followed the instructions he received from Sergeant
Lapane and
that he himself was not an explosive expert. Cst Rampieri
was also asked whether he is familiar with the LCRC- The Local
Criminal
Record Centre in Springs. He did not think of phoning the
LCRC to obtain a photograph of the scene with the explosives. Cst
Rampieri
stated that he failed to do this given that the instructions
from Sergeant Lapane required no photographs. He was also
cross-examined
on the SAPS Vehicle Location report which indicated
that he was a mere 22 minutes on the premises of Masente.
[64]
Cst Masente regarded this as a long period.
It was put to him that in this period he confiscated a lot of liquor,
phoned Sergeant
Lapane to get instructions regarding the explosives
and read Masente his rights after the arrest. The implication was
that he tramples
on peoples rights and the Constitution. This was
denied by Cst Rampieri. He was also asked what he should do first
when he arrives
at a crime scene. When asked whether he showed
Masente’s his appointment card he said no. According to Cst
Rampieri he nevertheless
introduced himself properly. He denied that
their names tags were illegible.
[65]
He was also cross-examined about his
informer and why this person was not called. Cst Rampieri testified
that the informer was a
registered informer identified by a number
and could not be called as a witness. The informer told Cst Rampieri
that he purchased
alcohol from Masente earlier the same day. He was
also asked whether the checked the lockdown regulations. According to
Cst Rampieri
he did check Regulation 44(1) of the Revised Lockdown
Regulations and his removal of the liquor correlated with same. He
admitted
that he himself did not find anybody selling or consuming
alcohol on the day in question. The informer did not give him
Masente’s
name but the address.
[66]
The aim that day was to verify that Masente
was selling liquor which he admitted. He did not arrest Masente
immediately because
Masente still had to point out the liquor. It was
his personal decision to first search the storage room although
Masente admitted
that there was liquor in the house. Cst Rampieri was
cross examined about the size of the house and what he could see in
the house
when standing inside. It was suggested that it was a RDP
house. He said that he could not remember the size of the house. His
evidence
in chief was that it was a small house. He was asked if he
could see the bedrooms when he was in the house. His answer was that
he could only see walls when in the house. When he stood where the
pile of liquor was against the sitting room wall he could not
see the
rest of the house. He was also asked whether he did not consider
searching other properties when he found the explosives
and to this
his response was that he found liquor and explosives and for him this
was enough.
[67]
It was pointed out to him that his aim was
to search the house and yet he never searched the bedrooms according
to his evidence.
He was pertinently asked if he and Cst Thabethe was
denying that they searched the bedrooms. He maintained that he did
not search
further and also denied finding any cooler bags. He was
also asked why he did not search inside the bakkie. His response was
that
he did not think he would find anything inside. He was also
asked why he never searched inside the car for explosives. His
response
hereto was that he was not interested in the vehicle. The
explosives in the storage room was in the left corner and not hidden.
[68]
It was put to him that he was in charge (an
assertion that is borne out by his conduct on the premises the day).
He denied this
and said that W/officer Napo was in charge. When it
was pointed out that there is no statement by W/officer in the docket
and I
asked him why there was no statement he said we should ask
W/officer Napo the question.
[69]
He demonstrated to the court how he
handcuffed Masente with his hands in front of him and how Masente
could still use his mobile
phone while handcuffed. It became clear
that the ability to pull the mobile phone from Masente’s
trousers would depend on
whether the trousers had pockets in front as
opposed to the side. He could not remember what trousers Masente wore
on the day in
question. When pressed on whether the mobile phone was
part of the criminal case he initially said it was not and then later
testified
he thought it was part of the criminal activity because
someone wanted to interfere in the case.
[70]
He was cross-examined as to whether he told
anybody about the reason for the phone being booked in as an exhibit.
He insisted that
he told a member at the crime office. This arose
because there was no mention thereof in his statement. He ultimately
admitted
that he did not tell the investigation officer that the
purpose was to listen to the conversation Masente had with the
unknown
police officer.
[71]
He was also cross-examined as to whether
they all went into the house of Masente at Masente’s behest. He
stated they all just
followed and that Masente said there was alcohol
in the house. He was also cross-examined as to how many visits there
was into
the house and he identified two occasions I.e. when they
went into the house following Masente and when he went into the house
and Masente placed the black plastic bag into his hand. He was asked
about the size of the kitchen and the fridge. It was not a
bar fridge
and was a fridge with two sections. He was also asked why he threw
the black plastic bag in the dustbin. To this he
responded that he
was satisfied that the money was entered into the SAP 13 register. On
the topic of the explosives he did not
know what the expert did with
it. He was unaware of the cooler bag W/officer Hlongwane found in the
dustbin.
[72]
It was then put to him that he and his
colleagues took the one red cooler bag containing the R50, R2o and
coins and the other green
cooler bag containing R400 000. His
response was that he knew only about an amount of approximately
R49 000 and denied
that any other monies were taken. He denied
any knowledge of a red cooler bag from the bedroom. It was put to him
that there were
2 other officers with Masente in the back of the
police van. He said that this statement was wrong.
[73]
Thereafter he was re-examined on
inter
alia
the advice he received from the
explosive expert. He testified that the explosive expert wanted to
know whether anything was plugged
in. When he advised the expert that
everything was unplugged he was informed not to step on it or put it
in a hot place. The purpose
of the call was to notify the expert
about the explosives found and not to get him to the scene. He could
keep it in the police
vehicle with the window open. The expert
arranged to meet him at the Daveyton police station. No specific time
was agreed. He was
also re-examined on the mobile phone and the fact
that there is noting in his statement on this. He was also referred
to the SAP
13 register which reflects an entry to the effect that the
mobile phone is booked in for downloading. See Section 2 on page 70
at the bottom extreme left column as displayed on Caselines. He could
not take the matter any further.
[74]
Thereafter Cst Thabethe testified on behalf
of the Minister. It is not necessary to analyse his evidence in great
detail. He broadly
supports the evidence of Cst Rampieri but
contradicts him in critical aspects. The most critical aspect is
whether the bedrooms
were searched by the police. He places Cst
Rampieri squarely in the search of the bedrooms and states that he
observed the search
by Cst Rampieri of the two bedrooms, one bigger
and one smaller. No liquor was found there. He also denies that the
drawers of
the cupboard were searched and that any money was found in
any cooler bags as claimed by Masente. He also observed that
Masente’s
wife was in and out of the bedrooms while the search
thereof was taking place. He also observed Masente when the latter
went to
fetch the black plastic bag with money that ended up in Cst
Rampieri’s hands. According to him Masente fetched it from one
of the bedrooms.
[75]
He also testified that Masente consented to
the search of the premises. He makes no reference to the confiscation
of liquor from
the vehicle or from the sitting room/lounge but
mentions that liquor was found in the house. He specifically mentions
the liquor
in the fridge in the kitchen. He also testified that only
after the house was also searched were the other police officers
called
to come and assist with the loading of the liquor and this
context he mentions the liquor from the vehicle. He did not look into
the black plastic bag himself but testified that Cst Rampieri looked
into the bag and said that Masente was trying to bribe us.
He adds
that he called W/officer Napo who told “us” to arrest
Masente and to take him to the police station. He testified
that the
latter reopened the black plastic bag and that the notes and coins
were shown to him (Cst Thabethe). When the stop took
place on the way
to the police station he asked Masente who the policeman was and how
far away he was. Masente did not answer the
question as to who this
policeman was and said the man was on his way.
[76]
According to Cst Thabethe they arrived at
the Daveyton police station about 11h30 – 12h00. He read
Masente his rights at the
police station. He wrote his own statement
A2 in the docket. He does not know what happened with the black
plastic packet at the
police station. Under cross-examination he
stated that he showed his appointment card to Masente on their
arrival. He also stated
that he could see Cst Rampieri when the
bedrooms were searched. He stated that the latter searched the
wardrobe and around the
bed. When asked what the point was of
searching the wardrobe and drawers he simply said “nothing”.
He was asked whether
Cst Rampieri was searching not only for liquor
but other things as well. He agreed with this statement. He denied
that 2 cooler
bags (red and green) were retrieved from a wardrobe. He
made it clear that he himself could not search because he was the
rifleman.
[77]
He stated that he had the rifle at all
times. He never saw the cooler bags referred to. When he read Masente
his constitutional
rights at the police statin he placed the rifle on
a table. He explained that only after the unknown policeman wanted to
speak
to them did he considered the mobile phone an exhibit. He was
asked why they did not wait for the unknown policeman and answered
the question with his own question to the effect whether the unknown
policeman’s conduct was not interference. He did not
count the
money. When he wrote his statement he did not state the amount of
money in the black plastic bag. He did not know why
the other
officers made no statement.
[78]
He could not say where in the storage room
the explosives were found. He testified that Cst Rampieri gave the
black plastic bag
with money to W/officer Napo. He could not remember
the exact location where this happened. In re-examination he
testified that
he received no training how to deal with a suspect’s
mobile phone. He had dealt with mobile phones personally twice
before.
When asked whether he is allowed to open a suspect’s
mobile phone he stated that would not want to invade a suspect’s
privacy. He did not follow up the charges laid against them. He never
saw a red or green cooler bag.
[79]
Thereafter Sergeant Lapane’s evidence
was presented by Ms Morare. He confirmed that he is an explosive
expert and received
a call from a person whose name he could not
remember to the effect that explosives were recovered. On his version
the caller told
him that he was at Daveyton police station. He went
there and met this person. The explosives were pointed out to him and
booked
out to his Germiston office. He typed up an expert statement
for the docket. He confirmed that the statement in the docket was his
and then detailed the kind of explosives. According to him only
registered blasters are supposed to have same in their possession.
He
does not know whether it was destroyed or is in the safe at the
Germiston office. He was cross -examined by Mr Mthombeni who
inter
alia
pointed out that Cst Rampieri
contacted him. It was pointed out to him that in his statement in the
docket he did not establish
a chain of evidence. He denied that he
ever gave Cst Rampieri advice as to how to deal with the explosives
and stuck to his version
that the caller phoned him from Daveyton
police station. He asked the caller why he did not wait for him at
the scene of the crime.
He agreed that everything should have been
photographed to preserve the evidence. I understood this to mean at
the place where
same was found. In re-examination he was referred to
the entries he made at Daveyton when he booked the explosives in and
out.
[80]
Thereafter arrangements were made for the
filing of heads of argument as already set out above and the matter
was postponed
sine die
and judgment reserved.
Evaluation of the evidence
[81]
Masente presented with a poor demeanour and
his evidence came across as disjointed. He tried to present himself
as co-owner of the
business and only later disclosed that it is his
father’s business that lost money and that he merely managed
the taverns
on behalf of his father.
[82]
His is real difficulty is the fact that he
did not call any witness such as his wife to substantiate his version
of the events or
even his father to substantiate the level of
turnover or profit at the time. On the latter the excuse was that his
father did not
want to testify given his historic interaction with
the courts of the country. His wife who is a vital eye witness did
not want
to testify due to her employer refusing to give her off. I
warned Mr Mthombeni that the failure to call witnesses such as
Masente’s
wife might lead to adverse inferences and that the
use of a subpoena could easily solve her problem with her employer.
This notwithstanding
neither Masente senior nor Masente’s wife
was called. She is a vital eye witness on his version. The fact that
his father
left for the Eastern Cape when he could have made a
substantial contribution as to the income generating capacity of the
business
did not assist his case either.
[83]
The fact that there was no bookkeeping
system or a stock sheet available places a massive question mark over
the ability of the
taverns to have generated the income of R400 000.
The failure to call one of his suppliers to establish the supply of
goods
during the period under discussion also counts against him. He
claimed that the normal representative of SA Breweries passed away
but this does not mean that somebody else from SA Breweries could not
have been subpoenaed duces tecum with the necessary records
of such
supply. The same notion applies to his other suppliers of liquor.
[84]
W/officer Hlongwane was a witness who
answered questions directly and displayed a good demeanour.
Unfortunately, his evidence does
not take the case much further.
[85]
Cst. Rampieri was also an unsatisfactory witness. He presented with
an over confident demeanour and conducted himself
as if he was in
charge. He conceded that W/officer Napo was actually in charge of the
scene of the crime but hardly ever deferred
to the latter on his
version. His evidence that the bedrooms were not searched is not
borne out by Cst. Thabethe his buddy who
places him squarely in the
search of the bedrooms. He is contradicted by the explosives expert
as to the issue whether he sought
advice. It is clear that he never
followed proper protocol with regard to the recovered explosives.
[86]
Cst. Thabethe was probably the closest to an honest witness among the
two police witnesses on the scene who were called.
He nevertheless
denied the presence of the R400 000 in the green cooler bag and
the R49 000 – R50 000 in the
red cooler bag. I am
despite all the evidence from these two witnesses left with my
suspicions as to what really transpired on
the day in question. This
is not a basis on which I can find for Masente given the weaknesses
in his case.
[87]
I have no reason to doubt Sergeant Lapane ‘s evidence except
for the fact that no proper chain of evidence was
disclosed in the
statement in the docket or even in court. This does not mean that he
lied as to the established protocol regarding
the recovery of
explosives.
[88]
I considered the heads of argument filed by Mr Mthombeni on behalf of
Masente. Despite his contentions about informal
businesses his
arguments do not persuade me. In the circumstances Masente’s
claim must fail given that he had the onus of
proving his case.
[89]
I have considered the heads of argument filed by the Minister’s
legal representatives. I do not find same persuasive
given the
observations made with regard to the police witnesses save for
Sergeant Lapane.
[90]
In the circumstances I make the following orders:
1. The Plaintiffs case is
dismissed with costs of one counsel on scale “B”;
2. The Defendant is ordered to
pay the Plaintiff’s wasted costs for 2.5 days pertaining to the
failed application for
a postponement;
3. The Defendant’s late
filing of its heads of argument is condoned.
4. The Defendants application
for absolution at the end of Plaintiff’s case was dismissed
with costs of one counsel
on scale “B”.
S. VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN, AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date Judgement Reserved: 10
December 2024
Date Judgement Delivered : 6 June
2025
For
the Plaintiff: Mr Mthombeni
PT MTHOBENI
ATTORNEYS
MOBILE NUMBER:082 364 1265
EMAIL:
mthombeniattorneys@telkomsa.net
Tel/Fax No: (011)
421 5619
Mobile No: 082 364
1265
House Number 93
Wooton Avenue
Benoni West
For
the Defendant: Adv Mashabela
Club Advocates Chambers
Hazelwood
Pretoria
with Adv A Morare
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney
Johannesburg,
REF: 0343/22/P67
Mr S MAGCAKINI
Email:
SMagcakini@justice.gov.za
Tel No: (011) 330 7784
Fax: (011) 330 1782
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