Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 596South Africa
Juscar Metale (Pty) Ltd v National Commissioner of Police and Another (2022/060800) [2025] ZAGPJHC 596 (11 June 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Juscar Metale (Pty) Ltd v National Commissioner of Police and Another (2022/060800) [2025] ZAGPJHC 596 (11 June 2025)
Juscar Metale (Pty) Ltd v National Commissioner of Police and Another (2022/060800) [2025] ZAGPJHC 596 (11 June 2025)
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sino date 11 June 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:2022/060800
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YE
Date:
11 June 2025
In
the matter between:
JUSCAR
METALE (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER OF POLICE
First Respondent
THE
STATION COMMANDER OF
ETWATWA
POLICE STATION
Second Respondent
DATE
OIF JUDGMENT
: This judgment
was authored and issued by the Judge whose name is reflected herein
and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties/their
legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file of this matter on CaseLines.
The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 11 June 2025.
JUDGMENT
STYLIANOU,
AJ
1.
The applicant
is Juscar Metale (Pty) Ltd, a scrap metal purveyor carrying on
business in Limpopo.
2.
On the 9
th
of March 2022, a truck transporting 5509 kilograms of scrap copper
belonging to the applicant was stopped by members of the South
African Police who, suspecting that the load of scrap copper was
stolen property, arrested the driver and took the truck to the
Etwatwa local police station.
3.
The applicant
alleges that once at the police station, the truck was unloaded, and
non-uniformed men arrived, supposedly representatives
of Telkom,
Transnet and Eskom.
4.
The applicant
says that the majority of the copper was then packed into eight full
bags and taken away for storage to “SAP13”
by
non-uniformed men, in an unmarked vehicle.
5.
The applicant
sought the return of the copper that was seized and launched a
spoliation application on 4 October 2022 wherein it
cited the
National Commissioner of Police and the Station Commander of Etwatwa
Police Station.
6.
It is common
cause between the parties that the Director of Public Prosecutions
declined to prosecute the applicant and on 31 July
2023, the
applicant was informed that the scrap copper was to be returned to
it.
7.
Mr Juan Claude
Du Toit, on behalf of the applicant, says that when he attended at
the Etwatwa Police Station to retrieve the scrap
copper on 31 July
2023, instead of finding the original 8 full bags of copper that were
seized, he discovered only 6 half-full
bags of “wire” and
that upon close inspection, he noticed that the wire in three of the
bags consisted of other elements,
specifically aluminium and steel
wire, not copper wires.
8.
Mr. Du Toit
says that when he sought to take three of the half-full bags
containing copper away with him, he was told that he had
to take all
6 bags tendered to the applicant, or none at all.
9.
Du Toit
declined to take any of the bags and left.
10.
This prompted
the Applicant to seek alternative relief which it says is, “
in
the form of damages for the monetary and business losses that have
been occasioned by the unlawful conduct of the agents of the
Respondents, and a punitive costs order, in solatium to the
Applicant, and in censure of the conduct of the Respondents in their
halfhearted and flimsy, and demonstrably dilatory opposition to this
present process.
”
11.
No amendment
to the notice of motion was effected, but even if there had been,
motion proceedings are inappropriate for a claim
for damages. This
notwithstanding, the applicant still seeks the main relief for the
return of the metal seized, which it can seek
by way of motion
proceedings. If, the applicant is eventually successful in its
spoliation application but finds that less is eventually
returned to
it than was initially seized, then it could always seek redress by
issuing summons for the damages it allegedly suffered.
12.
The
respondents, represented by the State Attorney, raise a point
in
limine
i.e.
that the Minister of Police should have been cited and joined as the
respondent in accordance with
section 2(1)
of the
State Liability
Act, 20 of 1957
and not the National Commissioner of Police and the
Station Commander for Etwatwa local police station.
13.
At the hearing
of the matter, applicant brought an application from the Bar for a
postponement in order to afford it an opportunity
to bring an
application to join the Minister of Police.
14.
The court has a discretion
whether to grant or refuse a postponement.
15.
I
accept that the point
in
limine
was raised in the answering affidavit by the respondents and that
there was ample time for the applicant to seek the joinder of
the
Minister of Police, however, where fundamental fairness and justice
justify a postponement, a Court may in an appropriate case
allow such
an application for postponement even if the application was not so
timeously made.
[1]
16.
The
respondents argue that the application should be dismissed with costs
for the failure to cite the Minister of Police.
17.
In the present
instance, it is clear that no charges have been brought and that the
seized copper was tendered back to the applicant.
It would therefore
be unjust to nonsuit the applicant because of this oversight.
18.
Counsel for
the respondents opposed the postponement on the basis that the
respondents would suffer prejudice if the matter was
not brought to
finality. To my mind, this does not seem to be prejudice which could
not be remedied with a costs order.
19.
I am mindful
that the respondents raised the point
in
limine
upfront in their answering affidavit and yet the applicant did
nothing to join the Minister of Police until the day of the opposed
motion hearing.
20.
From the
manner in which the applicant dealt with this issue in its replying
affidavit it appears as if the applicant misunderstood
the point
in
limine
believing it to relate to the
Institution of Legal
Proceedings against certain Organs of State Act 40 of 2002
and not the
State
Liability Act.
>
21.
In considering
the application for postponement, I am mindful that there was no
prosecution of the applicant and that the applicant
is entitled to
return of whatever was seized (whatever that may be) and I accept
that the application for postponement is
bona
fide.
22.
For these
reasons I am inclined to accede to the request for a postponement,
however, I believe that the Court should convey its
displeasure of
the manner in which the applicant has conducted this litigation by
ordering the applicant to pay the costs of the
postponement on Scale
C.
23.
I accordingly
make the following order:
1.
The matter is
postponed
sine
die
.
2.
The applicant
is ordered to pay the wasted costs of the respondents occasioned by
the postponement on scale C.
X
STYLIANOU, AJ
Acting
Judge of the Hight Court
Heard:
10 March 2025
Judgment
delivered: 11 June 2025
Appearances:
For
Applicant: Adv D.
Snyman
Instructed
by: BDK
Attorneys
For
Respondents: Adv H Ngomane
Instructed
by: Office of the
State Attorney
[1]
Myburgh
Transport v Botha t/a SA Truck Bodies
1991
(3) SA 310
(NmS)
at
315C-D
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