Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 435South Africa
Motloung and Another v Minister of Police and Another (2016/6107) [2024] ZAGPJHC 435 (3 May 2024)
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Motloung and Another v Minister of Police and Another (2016/6107) [2024] ZAGPJHC 435 (3 May 2024)
Motloung and Another v Minister of Police and Another (2016/6107) [2024] ZAGPJHC 435 (3 May 2024)
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sino date 3 May 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBERS:
2016/61
1. Reportable: No
2. Of interest to other judges: No
3.Revised: No
3 May 2024
In
the matter between:
DANIEL
LETHENA MOTLOUNG
First Applicant
STRIKE
EDWARD THOKOANE N.O.
Second Applicant
obo
SOLOMON PITSI THOKOANE
and
THE
MINISTER OF
POLICE
First Respondent
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
(LEAVE
TO APPEAL)
HALGRYN
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against the whole of my
judgment and order dated the 16
th
of August 2023.
Ex
tempore judgment
[2]
I gave a brief
ex tempore
judgment after argument in which I
dismissed the application with costs.
[3]
This judgment has as its purpose to amplify the
ex tempore
judgment.
Nature
of the action
[4]
The application for leave to appeal lies against my judgment and
order which I made in an action for damages based for
the alleged
wrongful arrests and detentions of the Plaintiffs and their alleged
malicious, alternatively negligent prosecutions
for unlawful
possession of firearms.
Notice
of application for leave to appeal and heads of argument
[5]
In preparation for the argument herein, I had regard to the notice of
application for leave to appeal and the heads of
argument submitted
by both parties.
[6]
The grounds of appeal are many, too many to mention, and not all of
it was addressed during argument.
[7]
I will deal with some of the main submissions herein briefly.
[8]
I have also carefully considered the oral arguments by both parties,
and I am not convinced that another court would find
that I erred in
any/all of the respects relied upon.
[9]
I also do not consider that the applicants have any reasonable
prospects of success on appeal.
[10]
I proceed to deal with the main issues raised during argument.
Main
issues raised during argument
[11]
It was submitted that I erred by not finding that the arrests were
triggered by the information received from an informer.
[12]
The arrests were not in my view triggered by the information from an
informer.
[13]
The second applicant’s arrest was triggered because he was
implicated by Moeketsi, who was arrested because of
the information
from an informer in respect of some armed robberies.
[14]
Acting upon this information the arresting officer clearly had a
reasonable suspicion to justify the arrest without a
warrant of the
second applicant.
[15] The
first applicant was arrested because of the pointing out and
identification by Maseko and this clearly shows that
his arresting
officer had a reasonable to suspicion to arrest him without a
warrant.
[16]
Both arresting officers were peace officers.
[17]
Mr Coetzee’s enrolment of the matter cannot be faulted in my
view.
[18]
In the docket he had sworn statements of the arresting officers and
Maseko who identified both.
[19]
I do not find that the fact that Captain Fouche did not inform Mr
Coetzee that both accused contended that they attended
the premises
where Moeketsi resided to borrow money, as tainting the process with
unlawfulness.
[20]
It is undeniably so that almost in all cases, accused have some
defence, and it is not for the enrolment prosecutor,
or the other
prosecutors which became involved to make credibility findings; that
is the domain of the court.
[21]
I do not think another court would find that I erred in the way I
dealt with Maseko’s recanting of her earlier
statements.
[22]
Counsel for the applicants contended that it amounted to speculation,
but this is not so.
[23]
Mr Coetzee quite spontaneously informed me that this called for
reconsideration, but if it was up to him, he would have
continued
with the prosecution.
[24]
I agree with him but acknowledge that a conviction may have been hard
to obtain.
[25]
But this does not mean that the further prosecution was malicious or
unlawful.
[26]
Maseko could have been called as witness, perhaps declared hostile
and she would have had to explain her recanting of
her earlier
version.
[27]
There was thus every possibility that she may have informed the court
that she was coerced or threatened.
[28]
Either way, every possibility existed for the truth to come out.
[29]
Counsel for the applicants urged upon me to find that this is not
what happened.
[30]
To my thinking, this is irrelevant.
[31]
What is relevant, is which options existed for the prosecution at the
time, to adjudicate whether the further prosecution
was malicious or
unlawful after Maseko recanted her earlier statements.
[32]
It was contended that I should make a negative inference because
Maseko was not called as witness.
[33]
I do not comprehend why she should have been called to testify.
[34]
Counsel for the applicants contended that the applicants stand their
ground that their arrests without a warrant for
the illegal
possession of firearms were not legally competent.
[35]
I have dealt with this comprehensively in my judgment and I do not
need to restate it.
[36]
It was also contended that the second applicant stands his ground
that their arrests without a warrant based on a confession
by a
co-accused, was not legally competent.
[37]
I have also dealt with this comprehensively in my judgment.
Conclusion
[38]
I am not convinced that another court would find that I erred in
respect of any of the issues raised in the notice of
leave to appeal.
[39]
It follows that the application must fail.
[40]
The order that I make herein is as follows:
“
The Application for
leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.”
L.
HALGRYN
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard
:
03 May 2024
Judgment
:
03 May 2024
Appearances
:
For
Applicants
:
KP Graham
Instructed by the Wits Law Clinic
For
Respondents
:
E Mahlangu
Instructed by the State Attorney
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