Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 377South Africa
Selume v Minister of Police and Another (2019/33807) [2024] ZAGPJHC 377 (11 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 April 2024
Headnotes
as follows:
Judgment
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## Selume v Minister of Police and Another (2019/33807) [2024] ZAGPJHC 377 (11 April 2024)
Selume v Minister of Police and Another (2019/33807) [2024] ZAGPJHC 377 (11 April 2024)
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sino date 11 April 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED.YES
CASE
NO: 2019/33807
In
the matter between:
OMPIE BEN
SELUME
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
First Defendant
NATIONAL
PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS AUTHORITY
Second Defendant
JUDGMENT
LOUW
AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The plaintiff instituted three damages claims against the defendants:
1)
Claim A: wrongful and unlawful arrest and detention;
2)
Claim B: wrongful, false and malicious prosecution; and
3)
Claim C: loss of business profit.
[2]
It is common cause that the plaintiff, after his arrest on 23
February 2018, was detained for a period of 494 days when
he was
discharged in terms of Section 174 of the Criminal Procedure Act.
[3]
The plaintiff cumulatively claims an amount of R15 560 000
from the defendants. In respect of claim A, he claims
R14 820 000
(Fourteen Million Eight Hundred and Twenty Thousand Rand). In respect
of claim B he claims R500 000
(Five Hundred Thousand Rand). In
respect of claim C he claims R240 000 (Two Hundred and Forty
Thousand Rand).
THE
EVIDENCE
[4]
The plaintiff testified in respect of claims A to C and Mr Sibiya was
called on the plaintiff’s behalf to testify
in respect of claim
C.
[5]
For the defendant the following witnesses testified:
[5.1]
Detective Constable Mhlanga (nee Lubisi ), the arresting officer;
[5.2]
Mr Daniel Petrus Oberholzer, the control prosecutor; and
[5.3]
Mrs Gladys Sibongile Nxumalo, the Regional court prosecutor.
[6]
The parties agreed that the contents of the docket is what it
purports to be and will serve as evidence without having
to lead
evidence thereon.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
[6]
In
order to conceptualise and properly evaluate the evidence, the
following legal principles are to be considered.
[7]
Section
40(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act
[1]
(“the Act”) reads as follows:-
“
A
peace officer may, without warrant, arrest any person whom he
reasonably suspects of having committed an offence referred to in
Schedule 1, other than the offence of escaping from custody.”
[8]
The
jurisdictional facts in terms of a Section 40(1)(b) defence are
that:-
(i)
The arrestor must be
a peace officer;
(ii)
The arrestor must
entertain a suspicion;
(iii)
The suspicion must be
that the suspect committed an offence referred to in Schedule 1; and
(iv)
The
suspicion must rest on reasonable grounds.
[2]
[9]
In
Hiemstra’s
Criminal
Procedure
,
[3]
the learned author, with reference to
the
Sekhoto
case
(supra)
summarises
the law pertaining to arrest without a warrant as follows:-
(i)
The jurisdictional
prerequisites for subsection 40(1)(b) must be present;
(ii)
The arrestor must be
aware that he or she has a discretion to arrest;
(iii)
The arrestor must
exercise that discretion with reference to the facts;
(iv)
There is no
jurisdictional requirement that the arresting officer should consider
using a less drastic measure than arrest to bring
the suspect before
court.
[10]
It
is fairly trite that these grounds are interpreted objectively and
must be of such a nature that a reasonable person would have
had a
suspicion.
[4]
It
is also a well-established legal principle that the arrestor’s
grounds must be reasonable from an objective point of view.
When a
peace officer has an initial suspicion, steps have to be
taken to have it confirmed in order to make it a reasonable suspicion
before the peace officer arrests.
Nkambule
v Minister of Law and Order.
[5]
[11]
In
the matter of
Olivier
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another,
[6]
the
court held as follows:
“
When
deciding if an arrestor’s decision to arrest was reasonable,
each case must be decided on its own facts.”
[12]
T
he
court stated
[7]
the following,
namely:-
“
This
entails that the adjudicator of facts should look at the prevailing
circumstances at the time when the arrest was
made and ask
himself the question- was the arrest of the plaintiff in the
circumstances of the case, having regard to flight risk,
permanence
of employment, and residence, co-operation on the part of the
plaintiff, his standing in the community or amongst his
peers, the
strength or the weakness of the case and such other factors which the
court may find relevant, unavoidable, justified
or the only
reasonable means to obtain the objectives of the police
investigation. The interests of justice may also be a factor.
Once
the court has considered these and such other factors, which in the
court’s view may have a bearing on the question,
there should
be no reason why the court should not exercise its discretion in
favour of the liberty of the individual. Arrest should
after all be
the last resort.”
[13]
The
discretion to arrest must be properly exercised, therefore, the test
for the legality of the exercise of discretion to arrest
should be an
objective one. In order to avoid abuse, the exercise of public power
by the executive and other functionaries should
not be arbitrary.
Such decisions must be rationally related for the purpose for which
the power was given, otherwise they are,
in effect, arbitrary and
inconsistent with this requirement. The question of whether a
decision is rationally related to the purpose
for which the power was
given, calls for an objective enquiry.
[8]
[14]
In
order to objectively determine whether an arrestor has acted
arbitrarily the court is obliged to consider whether or not he (1)
applied his mind to the matter or exercised his discretion at all;
and/or (2) disregarded the express provisions of the statute.
The
authority for this has long been held.
[9]
The
onus rests upon the arrestor to prove that the arrest was objectively
lawful.
[10]
[15]
A
number of decided cases support the proposition that if the arrest is
unlawful, it follows that the subsequent detention must
also be
unlawful.
[11]
The
principles applicable to the delictual liability of the Minister of
Police for detention were laid out in the recent Constitutional
Court
decision of
Mahlangu
and Another v Minister of Police
.
[12]
[16]
The
Court cited, with approval, the matter of
Relyant
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Shongwe
[13]
where
the Supreme Court of Appeal held,
inter
alia
,
the following:-
“ …
.to
succeed in an action based on wrongful arrest the plaintiff must show
that the defendant himself, or someone acting as his agent
or
employee deprived him of his liberty”.
[17]
In
Mahlangu
(supra)
,
Tshiqi J
[14]
was
compelled to include in the judgment an excerpt from the decision
of
Botha
v Minister of Safety and Security, January v Minister of Safety and
Security
.
[15]
:-
“
It
is also trite law that in a case where the Minister of Safety and
Security (as defendant) is being sued for unlawful arrest and
detention and does not deny the arrest and detention, the onus to
justify the lawfulness of the detention rests on the defendant
and
the burden of proof shifts to the defendant on the basis of the
provisions of s 12(1) of the Constitution … These provisions,
therefore, place an obligation on police officials, who are bestowed
with duties to arrest and detain persons charged with and/or
suspected of the commission of criminal offences, to establish,
before detaining the person, the justification and lawfulness of
such
arrest and detention.
This,
in my view, includes any further detention for as long as the facts
which justify the detention are within the knowledge of
the police
official. Such police official has a legal duty to inform the public
prosecutor of the existence of information which
would justify the
further detention. Where there are no facts which justify the further
detention of a person, this should be placed
by the investigator
before the prosecutor of the case, and the law casts an obligation on
the police official to do so. In Mvu
v Minister of Safety and
Security and Another Willis J held as follows:-
"It
seems to me that, if a police officer must apply his or her mind to
the circumstances relating to a person's detention,
this includes
applying his or her mind to the question of whether detention is
necessary at all."
It
goes without saying that the police officer's duty to apply his or
her mind to the circumstances relating to a person's detention
includes applying his or her mind to the question whether the
detention is necessary at all. This information, which must have
been
established by the police officer, will enable the public prosecutor
and eventually the magistrate to make an informed decision
whether or
not there is any legal justification for the further detention of the
person
.
[Footnotes
omitted.]”
[18]
In
the case of
Raduvha
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another,
[16]
the Constitutional Court held as follows, as to how the discretion
ought to be exercised:
“
[42].
Section 40(1) of the CPA states that a police officer “may”
and not “must” or “shall”
arrest without a
warrant any person who commits or is reasonably suspected of having
committed any of the offences specified therein.
In its ordinary and
grammatical use, the word “may” suggests that police
officers have a discretion whether to arrest
or not. It is permissive
and not peremptory or mandatory. This requires police officers to
weigh and consider the prevailing circumstances
and decide whether an
arrest is necessary. No doubt this is a fact-specific enquiry.”
“
[44].
In other words the courts should enquire whether in effecting
an arrest, the police officers exercised their discretion
at all. And
if they did, whether they exercised it properly as propounded in
Duncan [29] or as per Sekhoto where the court, cognisant
of the
importance which the Constitution attaches to the right to liberty
and one’s own dignity in our constitutional democracy,
held
that the discretion conferred in section 40(1) must be exercised “in
light of the Bill of Rights”.
[19]
In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyokwana
:
[17]
“
(T)he
duty of a policeman, who has arrested a person for the purpose of
having him or her prosecuted, is to give a fair and honest
statement
of the relevant facts to the prosecutor, leaving it to the latter to
decide whether to prosecute or not.”
[20]
In
relation to the standard of a reasonable suspicion to be applied
the
SCA in
Biyela
v Minister of Police
[18]
held that:
“
The
standard of a reasonable suspicion is very low. The reasonable
suspicion must be more than a hunch; it should not be an
unparticularised
suspicion. It must be based on specific and
articulable facts or information. Whether the suspicion was
reasonable, under the prevailing
circumstances, is determined
objectively.”
THE
EVIDENCE IN RESPECT OF THE ALLEGED UNLAWFUL ARREST
[21]
Detective
Sergeant Mhlanga (née Lubisi)(“Lubisi”) was the
arresting officer who arrested the plaintiff on 23
February 2018. She
testified that on 23 February 2018, she received a complaint from the
Bertha Gxowa Hospital about a sexual assault
on a minor child. She
met with the complainant, who is the minor child`s mother and took
down her statement. The essence of the
statement was that her 10-year
old daughter described a perceived sexual act performed on her by the
plaintiff.
[22]
It
is common cause that the minor child had undergone a medical
examination at the Bertha Gxowa Hospital on 23 February 2018. The
examination was performed by Dr Ncha. Dr Ncha’s conclusion in
the J88 was that the child was sexually assaulted. The doctor
concluded that: “
She was
sexually assaulted. There was no hymen and the vaginal opening could
admit 1 finger. There was inflammation above the posterior
fourchette. There was also fluid above the perineum as well as
between the thighs. Evidence was collected from the labia, perineum
and vagina. Evidence points towards interference with the genital
area, i.e. sexual assault
”.
[23]
Armed
with the statement by the complainant and the J88 completed by
Dr Ncha, Lubisi arrested the plaintiff after he was pointed
out
to her by the complainant. It is common cause that he was a willing
participant to the arrest.
[24]
Under
cross-examination the plaintiff testified that he did not have any
problem with Lubisi effecting the arrest. He conceded that
Lubisi had
a reasonable suspicion with the available evidence at her disposal.
He testified that he was not against what Lubisi
was doing and
conceded that the “
police would
have been in dereliction of their duties if they did not act”.
[25]
The
only disputed issue surrounding the factors after the arrest is
whether the plaintiff requested Lubisi to show him the J88.
Lubisi
denied that this request was made by the plaintiff and that, in any
event, she would not have shown him the J88 as she was
not allowed
to.
[26]
The
plaintiff testified that he became concerned when Lubisi did not give
him the J88 when he asked Lubisi for it. He testified
that Lubisi
told him that she has not read the J88 and that she then became
threatening towards him when he asked her on what basis
is she
charging him if she has not read the report.
[27]
The
evidence by Lubisi contradicts the plaintiff`s version. In any event,
when it was put to the plaintiff that if Lubisi had showed
him the
J88, “
you say she did her job
properly
”.
The plaintiff testified that although he did not commit the offence,
he would have believed the doctor`s report and he
would have been
satisfied when she showed him the J88.
[28]
It
was suggested to Lubisi in cross-examination that she did not
consider the plaintiff’s version that the complaint was as
a
result of an argument that the plaintiff had with the complainant
and, had she considered that, she would not have arrested him.
Lubisi
refuted this allegation. In light of the unequivocal evidence in the
J88 and the complainant’s statement, she “
had
to do her job
”. She expressed
that it was essential that the minor child be protected, and that she
could not be seen to neglect the minor
child and that her safety was
paramount.
[29]
It
is common cause that the plaintiff, the complainant and the minor
child lived together in a 1-roomed outbuilding. The best description
of the living environment was when the plaintiff testified that when
he was in the mood for sexual relations with the complainant,
he
would merely pull her from the bed where she and the minor child was
sleeping to join him on the mattress directly next to the
bed.
[30]
Lubisi
testified that she understands how to consider and interpret the
content of a J88. At that time she was part of the sexual
offences
unit for a period of 6 years and had no difficulty in accepting the
doctor’s conclusion. The conclusion in the J88
was perfectly
clear. She accordingly arrested the plaintiff on the information in
the complainant’s affidavit and the conclusive
finding on the
J88.
[31]
It
was put to Lubisi that when the plaintiff made his statement, she had
already made up her mind. Her answer thereto was instructive
and, in
my mind, carries substantial weight: “
If
the J88 was negative, I would not have arrested the plaintiff
”.
[32]
She
denied that the plaintiff was unlawfully arrested and detained. She
testified that the plaintiff was arrested for a reason and
that she
had applied her mind thereto.
[33]
She
handed the docket over to the control prosecutor in Germiston and the
plaintiff appeared in the Germiston Magistrates Court
on 26 February
2018.
THE
EVIDENCE IN RESPECT OF THE ALLEDGED MALICIOUS PROSECUTION
[34]
Daniel
Oberholzer (“Oberholzer”) was, at the time of the
plaintiff’s first appearance on 26 February 2018, the
control
prosecutor at Germiston.
[35]
He
testified that one of his functions at the time was to screen and
consider new dockets to determine placement on the court roll.
According to the guideline manual of the Prosecuting Authority, he
would have to, at the time, look for admissible evidence that
a crime
was committed. He would then look for admissible evidence to link the
person arrested to the crime.
[36]
On
26 February 2018, he received what purportedly was a rape docket
which contained evidence, i.e. witness statements, correspondence
and
the investigation diary up to that stage, including the accused’s
statement.
[37]
Based
on the statements and the J88, he believed that a crime was committed
and he had sufficient reasons to believe that an accused
was
identified. He accordingly placed the matter on the roll and
instructed the court prosecutor with a written summary to oppose
bail
because of the nature of the offence – being Schedule 6.
[38]
Not
from memory, but having considered the record, he testified that the
matter was postponed several times. Legal aid was appointed
for the
plaintiff and a bail application had been abandoned. A private
attorney was subsequently appointed to represent the plaintiff.
A
formal application for bail was heard and bail was refused on 07 May
2018. The matter was then postponed for a transfer certificate
to the
Regional court. Oberholzer personally issued the transfer certificate
on or about 12 May 2018.
[39]
A
delay in the proceedings was caused in obtaining an assessment report
of the minor child by a registered social worker. Oberholzer
issued
the instruction during February 2018. The complainant did not
co-operate and did not comply with requests to have the minor
child
attend an assessment.
[40]
The
matter proceeded to trial without an assessment report. At the end of
the prosecution’s case, the plaintiff was discharged
as the
minor child’s testimony was found to be of poor quality.
[41]
Oberholzer
testified that there was no maliciousness in the prosecution of the
plaintiff. The evidence indicated that the minor
child was a victim
of a serious crime and that any prosecutor, on the available facts,
would have done the same.
[42]
It
was suggested to Oberholzer in cross-examination that he should have
taken the plaintiff’s version into account. Oberholzer
answered
that he did consider the plaintiff’s version which, at the
time, he had to weigh up against the content of the docket.
He does
not have the “
tools
”
to evaluate evidence as that remains the purpose and function of the
court. He testified that with the available evidence
“
no
prosecutor would have refused
”
to place the matter on the roll.
[43]
Oberholzer
refuted the statement that he did not properly apply his mind. He
repeated his evidence that “
we
”
look for a crime committed and admissible evidence. A
prima
facie
case is considered and the
rest is done in court. He did consider the plaintiff’s
statement, but weighed up against the content
of the docket, it was
not remotely enough to not prosecute.
[44]
He
concluded his testimony by saying that he would have done nothing
differently, and that he cannot establish that anything was
done
incorrectly.
[45]
Sibongile
Gladys Nxumalo (“Nxumalo”), the Regional court prosecutor
in Germiston at the time of the trial, testified
that no prosecutor
would have declined to prosecute the plaintiff considering the
available evidence.
[46]
She
did concede that she experienced some difficulty in securing the
assistance of the complainant to ensure that the minor child
be
evaluated. At some time she decided to in fact remove the minor child
from the custody of the complainant.
[47]
It
is common cause that an assessment of the minor child was not done
when the trial commenced. Nxumalo testified that she was comfortable
to proceed without an assessment as she prepared the minor child for
court. In any event, she testified further that an assessment
is not
always handed up and it would not have made a difference except if
the minor child had mental problems. The absence of DNA
results was
not critical. She would have prosecuted whether the results were
available or not. If the identification of an alleged
rapist is
unknown, she will not proceed without DNA results
[48]
Under
cross-examination she was referred to the complainant’s
statement and confronted by plaintiff’s counsel with aspects
he
deemed to be inconsistent and incomplete. She testified that she
considers all the evidence and that she looks at the case in
totality. She as a prosecutor does not “nitpick” at the
available evidence and on the evidence presented to her “
I
certainly will not draw a negative inference
”.
[49]
She
concluded that there was always a
prima
facie
case to be prosecuted.
EVALUATION
OF THE EVIDENCE
[50]
The
evidence of the plaintiff is that of a single witness; accordingly,
the plaintiff’s evidence must be approached with caution.
[51]
The
plaintiff did not make a favourable impression on the court during
his evidence. His evidence was improbable and unreliable.
On the
one hand he accepted that Lubisi acted prudently and correctly and
that he would have been satisfied had he been shown the
J88.
Conversely, he was unhappy because a full investigation was not
launched to investigate, what he perceived to be, bias against
him by
the complainant. Nothing was said about the conclusive findings in
the J88.
[52]
I
found the evidence of the state’s witnesses to be credible and
reliable. The arresting officer, the control prosecutor and
the
Regional court prosecutor all testified candidly and honestly. I have
no hesitation in accepting their evidence in totality.
[53]
It
is clear that Lubisi`s grounds for arresting the plaintiff were
reasonable from an objective point of view. The decision to prosecute
was reasonable and clearly based on specific and articulable facts
and information.
[54]
Counsel
for the plaintiff seemed to suggest that it was a function of the
defendant`s witnesses in this case – starting with
the arrest
up to the decision to prosecute - to conduct a
sui
generis
preliminary trial in order
to ensure the veracity, or not, of the evidence presented. This is
not the legal test.
[55]
I
accordingly find that the arrest of the plaintiff was lawful and that
the prosecution of the plaintiff was not malicious.
[56]
In
light of my findings the plaintiff’s claim for loss of profit
need not be considered.
[57]
For
all these reasons, the plaintiff’s claims fall to be dismissed.
COSTS
[58]
There is no cogent reason to depart from the general rule that the
successful party is entitled to the costs.
ORDER
[59]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
1.
The plaintiff’s claims are dismissed with costs.
A
LOUW
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Johannesburg
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines. The date and time for hand down is deemed to be
_____________ 2024.
APPEARANCES
:
For the Plaintiff:
Adv Madau
For the
Defendants: Adv Mkhatshwa
Date
of hearings:
15, 16, 17 and 26 May 2023
Date
of judgment:
April 2024
[1]
Act
51 of 1977.
[2]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another
2011 (5) SA 467
(SCA).
[3]
Page
5-8.
[4]
R
v Van Heerden
1958
(3) SA 150
(TPD);
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
1986 (2) SA 805
(AD) at 814D.
[5]
1993
(1) SACR 434
(TPD);
Heimstra
(supra)
at 5-8.
[6]
2009
(3) SA 434 (WLD).
[7]
At
445D to F.
[8]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of SA and Another v Imray Ex Parte
President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
2000 (2) SA 678
(CC) paragraphs 85-86, page 708D-F.
[9]
Shidiack
v Union Government (Minister of the Interior)
1912 (AD) 642 at 651-652.
[10]
Minister
of Law and Order and Others v Hurley and Another
1986 (3) SA 568
(AD) at 589E-Fl
Mabasa
v Felix
1981 (3) SA 865
(AD) and
Minister
of Law and Order v Matshoba
1990 (1) SA 281
(AD) at 284.
[11]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyokwana
2015 (1) SACR 597
(SCA) at 600G.
[12]
Supra
[2021] ZACC 10.
[13]
[2007]
1 All SA 375
(SCA) at para 6; at para [29] of
Mahlangu
(supra)
.
[14]
At
para [40].
[15]
2012
(1) SACR 305 (ECP).
[16]
2016
ZACC 24.
[17]
[2014]
ZASCA 130
;
2015 (1) SACR 597
(SCA) at para 40.
[18]
(1017/2020)
[2022] (1 April
2022) ZASCA 36.
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