Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 529South Africa
Kutoane v Minister of Police and Others (17387/19) [2024] ZAGPJHC 529 (31 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
31 May 2024
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Kutoane v Minister of Police and Others (17387/19) [2024] ZAGPJHC 529 (31 May 2024)
Kutoane v Minister of Police and Others (17387/19) [2024] ZAGPJHC 529 (31 May 2024)
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sino date 31 May 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE NO: 17387/19
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
3.
REVISED:
31 May 2024
In
the matter between: -
SETH
WALTER KUTOANE
APPLICANT
And
MINISTER
OF POLICE
1
st
RESPONDENT
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
2
nd
RESPONDENT
UNIVERSITY
OF WITWATERSRAND
3
rd
RESPONDENT
G4S
SOLUTION SA (PTY) LTD
4
th
RESPONDENT
CONST.
LEBOHANG MPOFU
5
th
RESPONDENT
MR.
SKHOSANA
6
th
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Lucas J van Tonder AJ
Heard:
12 November 2023
Delivered:
31 May 2024
Summary:
Institution
of Legal Proceedings Against Certain Organs of State Act 40 of 2002
–
section 3(2)
notice requirements –
section 3(4)
condonation
requirements.
When
debt regarded as due – facts giving rise to the debt –
debtor not preventing creditor from acquiring knowledge
–
purpose of Act and interpretation of condonation requirements in
context.
Criminal
proceedings against applicants – piecemeal litigation –
reasonable explanation – good cause.
Introduction
:
[1]
This
judgement deals with a belated application for condonation by an
alleged “
creditor
”
,
[1]
based on
section 3(4)
of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings Against
Certain Organs of State, Act 40 of 2002
, as amended (“
the
Act
”
).
The organs of state are the debtors for purposes of the Act.
[2]
Section 3
of the Act repeats the phrase “
the
facts giving rise to the debt
”
in
sections 3(2)(i)
and
3
(3)(
a
)
as follows:
“
3.
Notice of intended legal proceedings to be given to organ of state –
(1) No legal
proceedings for the recovery of a debt may be instituted against an
organ of state unless –
(a) the creditor has
given the organ of state in question notice in writing of his or her
or its intention to institute the legal
proceedings in question; or
(b) the organ of state
in question has consented in writing to the institution of that legal
proceedings—
(i) without such
notice; or
(ii) upon receipt of a
notice which does not comply with all the requirements set out
in subsection (2).
(2) A
notice must—
(a)
within six months from the date on which the debt became due, be
served on the organ of state
in
accordance with
section 4
(1); and
(b) briefly set out—
(i)
the facts
giving rise to the debt
; and
(ii) such particulars
of such debt as are within the knowledge of the creditor.
(3) For
purposes of subsection (2) (a)—
(a) a debt may not be
regarded as being due until the creditor has knowledge of the
identity of the organ of state and of
the facts giving rise to the
debt
, but a creditor must be regarded as having acquired such
knowledge as soon as he or she or it could have acquired it by
exercising
reasonable care, unless the organ of state wilfully
prevented him or her or it from acquiring such knowledge; and
(b) a debt referred to
in
section 2
(2) (a), must be regarded as having
become due on the fixed date.
(4) (a)
If
an organ of state relies on a creditor’s failure to serve a
notice in terms of subsection (2) (a), the creditor
may
apply to a court having jurisdiction for condonation of such failure
.
(b)
The
court may grant an application referred to in paragraph (a) if
it is satisfied that—
(i) the debt has
not been extinguished by prescription;
(ii) good cause
exists for the failure by the creditor; and
(iii) the organ of
state was not unreasonably prejudiced by the failure.
(c) If
an application is granted in terms of paragraph (b), the
court may grant leave to institute the legal
proceedings in question,
on such conditions regarding notice to the organ of state as the
court may deem appropriate.
”
(emphasis
added).
[3]
The applicant (“
Kutuane
”
)
alleges he is creditor because he is a person who has been criminally
prosecuted and unlawfully detained, but eventually acquitted
after
his arrest and detention. The alleged innocent arrest was on 16 May
2016.
[4]
Kutuane seeks condonation for his alleged failure
to give notice within six months to an organ of state (as required in
section 3(1)(
a
)
of the Act). He does so mid-stream a pending action already
instituted against the organs of state. The current relief is sought
while the action is pending, by way of Notice of Motion in terms of
Uniform
Rule 6
, dated 29 April 2021, almost three years after the
impugned notice.
[5]
The impugned notice given on or about 10 September
2018 relied on the following factual allegations:
“…
[Kutuane
was arrested on 16 May 2016 and detained for 747 days] for alleged
armed robbery and stood trial from date of arrest until
date of
acquittal, being 2 July 2018.
”
“
[Kutuane claims
payment for] unlawful arrest, detention and further detention,
malicious prosecution, past loss of income and future
loss of income,
future loss of employability, damage to dignity and contumelia.”
[6]
In broad terms the dispute, like many similar
court applications for condonation in terms of the Act, involves the
manner in which
a court has to be satisfied by a creditor such as
Kutuane in order to grant condonation for not giving notice within
six months.
[7]
There are three expressly stipulated
jurisdictional requirements in
section 3(4)
of the Act that must be
satisfied before a Court may grant condonation for an alleged
creditor’s failure to comply with the
statutory precondition of
prior notice to the organ of state, as alleged debtor.
[8]
This judgment, and the principles considered
herein, are written with an emphasis on applicants who contend that
they suffered damages
due to innocently (or for some other reason
unlawfully) being arrested, prosecuted and held in detention.
[9]
It is trite that, for condonation to succeed, the
court must be satisfied independently in respect of each of the three
requirements,
without the strength of one requirement compensating
for the failure of another to have met the standard required.
[10]
Despite this clarity, diverging judgments exist in
relation to granting condonation to such applicants, most likely by
virtue of
several findings that the court has a wide discretion under
the Act on the question of condonation. This judgment consider the
specific facts to this matter with reference to whether general
principles apply to for a court to apply, aimed at legal certainty.
[11]
The nature of the suggested wide discretion in the
context of these particular types of applications involving arrest
and detention
will be dealt with in more detail below, in order to
test the proposition.
[12]
Suffice it to say at the outset that the
interrelationship between the requirement of “
reasonable
explanation
”
as the touchstone of
the second “
good cause
”
requirement and “
unreasonably
prejudiced
”
as element of one of
the third requirement for condonation, deserve analysis. The
“
reasonableness
”
of delayed notice may well be tested with
reference to the extent of prejudice caused by the alleged
“
reasonableness
”
of the delay. Notice is aimed, amongst other
objectives, to allow the organ of state to terminate or mitigate the
debt/damage causing
act. The mere fact that condonation is only
necessary after six months, does not
per
se
make it reasonable if the notice is
only two days after the end of the six months. It could often be
argued that immediate or prompt
notice is more reasonable, and
delaying even a few days after the six months period aggravates the
unreasonableness. The impression
should not be created with potential
creditors that conduct during the six-month period is irrelevant to
the question of reasonable
explanation. The facts of this matter
illustrates the need to explain why no notice had been given even for
the duration of the
six-month period. It would make little sense if
legislation is aimed at curtailing litigation against organs of
state, only to
be constantly subjected to opposing applications for
condonation.
[13]
In what follows (i) the parties, (ii) the
undisputed facts, (iii) the legal principles, and (iv) the reasoning
in support of the
ultimate orders made below will be dealt with in
some more detail.
[14]
The
details listed below are aimed at providing a platform for whatever
procedures might follow in this matter after this judgement,
[2]
albeit that upon evaluation, the essential question in this matter is
whether Kutuane has satisfied the court to show “
good
cause
”
for
his failure to give timeous notice, and if not, it might render an
analysis of all other considerations unnecessary.
[3]
The
Applicant
:
[15]
Kutuane is an adult male businessman and alleges
he is an operator of a metered taxi business. He is cited as
plaintiff in the main
action to which this application relates.
The Respondents:
[16]
The 1
st
Respondent (1
st
Defendant in the main action) is cited as the
Minister of Police, the Honourable General Bheki Cele, in his
official capacity as
the executive head of the South African Police
Service.
[17]
The 2
nd
Respondent (2
nd
Defendant in the main action) is cited as the
National Director of Public Prosecutions, Adv. Shamila Batohi, in her
official capacity
as the National Director of Public Prosecutions.
[18]
The 3
rd
Respondent (3
rd
Defendant in the main action) is cited as the
University of Witwatersrand, a Higher Education Institution,
established in terms
of the
Higher Education Act 101 of 1997
.
[19]
The 4
th
Respondent (4
th
Defendant in the main action) is cited as G4S
Secure Solutions (Pty) Ltd, a private security company registered in
terms of the
Companies Act 61 of 1973, as amended.
[20]
The 5
th
Respondent (5
th
Defendant in the main action) is cited as Lebohani
Mpofu, in his personal and official capacity as a member of the South
African
Police Service, an adult male person and currently employed
as a Police Officer within the South African Police Service and
stationed
at Hillbrow Police Station, Johannesburg.
[21]
The 6
th
Respondent (6
th
Defendant in the main action) is cited as Mr.
Skhosana, an adult male person, employed by the 4
th
Respondent as security manager, posted and
managing security and access control at the 3
rd
Respondent’s campuses.
Factual
background
:
[22]
The factual analysis below is based on Kutuane’s
version in the papers filed. The iteration thereof is not intended to
be
a finding on the correctness thereof. For purposes of this
judgment, the facts are merely assumed to be correct, until finally
determined in the pending action.
[23]
On 16 May 2016, at about 10h00, at Wits Medical
School, St Andrews entrance, Kutuane was allegedly arrested without
reason, detained
and further detained.
[24]
At the time of the alleged wrongful, unlawful
arrest, detention and further detention, the Respondents alleged that
Kutuane had
committed an offence of armed robbery with aggravating
circumstances, or as an accomplice thereto. Kutuane was taken to
Hillbrow
Police Station, where he was further detained at its holding
cells.
[25]
Subsequent
to the alleged unlawful, wrongful arrest, detention and further
detention, Kutuane was charged with the alleged robbery
with
aggravating circumstances and as being an accomplice, under Case
Number 432/05/2016, OB 816/05/2016, SAP 14224/05/2016 and
Notice in
terms of Section 35 of Act 108 of 1996
[4]
with serial number R1236734.
[26]
Kutuane first appeared at court on 18 May 2016,
when the case was postponed for an identity parade.
[27]
Kutuane alleges that on his first court
appearance, the 5
th
Respondent provided members of the 2
nd
Respondent with false and incorrect information to
the effect that the 5
th
Respondent had attended to the address provided by
Kutuane. However, Kutuane contends that such information was false
and incorrect
to the extent that the 5
th
Respondent never attended to the premises, because
Kutuane’s wife had been waiting for the 5
th
Respondent, but he never arrived. This false
information resulted in Kutuane being detained beyond the initial 48
hours.
[28]
The 5
th
Respondent then requested that Kutuane be further
detained for a further period of seven days in order for the 5
th
Respondent to continue with further investigation.
The court granted the 5
th
Respondent postponement for further investigation.
[29]
After a period of seven days, Kutuane appeared
before court for a bail application.
[30]
Initially, the 5
th
Respondent did not oppose bail. However, prior to
the hearing the 5
th
Respondent deposed to an affidavit opposing bail
on the basis that Kutuane was involved in vehicle theft, albeit that
Kutuane had
never been charged for such a crime.
[31]
On the day of the bail hearing, the 5
th
Respondent requested a further postponement in
order to further investigate the charge of theft of a motor vehicle
and to attend
to the panel beater who had allegedly lent Kutuane a
courtesy car, whilst he was allegedly busy repairing Kutuane’s
car.
[32]
Kutuane had given the 5
th
Respondent the physical address of the panel
beater and the registration of Kutuane’s vehicle, and on his
return from the
panel beater, the 5
th
Respondent informed Kutuane that he had taken a
picture of Kutuane’s car. However, such information was
allegedly never tendered
and/or placed before the court during
Kutuane’s bail application. Kutuane alleges that such
information would have resulted
in bail being granted.
[33]
Kutuane alleges that bail was denied on the
strength of false information provided by the 5
th
Respondent to members of the 2
nd
Respondent.
[34]
Kutuane alleges he was remanded in custody due to
members of the 2
nd
and
5
th
Respondents’
persistent opposition to bail without any justifiable reasons, and
Kutuane alleges he was denied his constitutional
right to freedom in
terms of section 21 of Act 108 of 1996 [
sic
].
[35]
On 6 June 2016, Kutuane appeared for another bail
application. During the hearing the 5
th
Respondent informed the court that he was opposing
bail on the basis that the vehicle driven by Kutuane was stolen, for
which, as
aforesaid, still no charge had been made against Kutuane.
[36]
On 10 June 2016, on the strength of the 5
th
Respondent’s false, incorrect, and
misleading evidence and/or alternatively, based on evidence presented
before the court,
Kutuane was again denied bail.
[37]
On 15 September 2016, Kutuane again applied for
bail, during which he was represented by a certain Mr. Mashinini. On
which day,
the Honourable L van der Schyff refused bail and remanded
Kutuane in custody until 28 September 2016.
[38]
On 28 September 2016, the matter was further
postponed and Kutuane was again remanded in custody.
[39]
Before the commencement of trial, Kutuane engaged
the services of another attorney, a Mr. Leischer, to represent him
during the
upcoming criminal trial.
[40]
On 5 May 2017, the matter proceeded to trial, but
was postponed to September 2017.
[41]
On 7 September 2017, the matter proceeded to
trial, but was postponed to 8 September 2017.
[42]
On 21 December 2017, Kutuane again approached the
court with another bail application on the basis that he had not been
charged
with vehicle theft.
[43]
Subsequent to the refusal of bail on new facts,
Kutuane was again remanded in custody until February 2018, when trial
resumed.
[44]
The criminal trial was postponed on several
occasions until Kutuane was acquitted on 2 July 2018.
Kutuane’s
service of notice in terms of the Act
:
[45]
The analysis below is again based on Kutuane’s
version on the papers filed. The iteration thereof is not intended to
be a
finding on the correctness thereof. For purposes of this
judgment, the facts are merely assumed to be correct, until finally
determined
in the action.
[46]
On 28 August 2018, a notice in terms of section 3
of the Act was served on the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents’ offices and/or alternatively on
the office of the National Commissioner of the South African Police
Service on
10 September 2018, being the Executive Head of the 1
st
Respondent.
[47]
On 26 September 2018, Kutuane’s
then-attorney received a letter from the Legal Service of the
University of Witwatersrand,
acknowledging receipt of the letter
dated 28 August 2018.
[48]
On 22 October 2018, the 1
st
Respondent acknowledged receipt of Kutuane notice
dated 28 August 2018.
[49]
Kutuane alleges that, subsequent to the 1
st
Respondent having received the notice and
confirming that it will be addressed to the relevant commander and/or
department, the
1
st
Respondent did not raise any issues and did not
record that Kutuane’s notice was not compliant with the
provisions of the
Act.
The
anomalous procedural history of the matter
:
[50]
Kutuane ended up issuing summons in the main
action only on 16 May 2019, exactly three years after his arrest, and
several months
after being acquitted. He had deemed knowledge of his
failure to give timeous notice, but proceeded without prior
application for
condonation.
[51]
On 3 June 2019, the 1
st
,
2
nd
,
and 5
th
Respondents
(as organs of state) filed a plea which raised a special plea of
non-compliance with the provisions of the Act.
[52]
As aforementioned, Kutuane brought the application
only on 29 April 2021, almost two years after the special plea by the
organs
of state, and almost three years after the belated notice in
terms of section 3 of the Act. The effect of the delayed conduct of
Kutuane to undermines the objectives of the Act. The reasoning
appears to be that once prescription has arguably been interrupted
at
the eleventh hour, the organs of state should no longer have the
benefit intended by the Act, namely, not to have to unearth
evidence
and witnesses several years down the line. It is hard to reconcile
the express and implied objectives of the Act with
allowing a
creditor to wait until the end of the three-year prescription period
to take action in respect of condonation. Once
the six-month period
has lapsed, the intended creditor should not be allowed, absent
explanation, to prejudice the organ of state
by not applying asking
for or applying for condonation immediately, instead of waiting until
close to the three-year prescription
period to issue summons, and ad
only midstream such action apply for condonation. It is a further
consideration relevant to “
reasonable
explanation
”
and “
unreasonably
prejudice
”
to the organ of state.
[53]
Although the replying affidavit was delivered
promptly on 11 June 2021, this application for condonation was only
finally set down
for argument during the second week of November
2023. If successful, it is anyone’s guess by when a trial date
would be allocated
and, after some usual postponements, when the
matter will finally be in court.
[54]
As alluded to above, with reference to the
objective of the Act, a patent anomaly arises from the difference
between the peremptory
six-month period in section 3 of the Act, the
ultimate date of summons, the condonation application, and the final
hearing in the
distant future.
[55]
Unless there is proof of prevention by the organ
of state of obtaining knowledge of “
the
facts giving rise to the debt
”
,
the irony is patent. One would question the benefit of the notice
provision in section 3 if summons can be delayed for yet another
30
months and the ancillary proceedings can be dragged out for years.
How does that benefit or protect the organs of state against
multiple
claims by the millions of citizens potentially being creditors in
terms of the Act? If the objective of a prescription
period in the
Act is aimed at prompt finality of legal disputes against organs of
state, the notice provisions appear to merely
notify the organ of
state of the possibility of litigation which might in fact only
follow two and a half years later. The difference
in time between
notice in terms of the Act and ultimate conclusion of litigation
waters down the intended benefit of the Act, and
perhaps it
emphasises the need for strict compliance with the three grounds to
be satisfied for condonation. It does not, however,
address the
anomaly that despite the need for prompt notice, a creditor can delay
the process in a manner evident from the facts
of this matter.
Perhaps this urgently calls for legislative intervention to provide
additional procedural guidance on litigation
against an organ of
state after timeous notice had been given.
[56]
Due to
the allocation of the matter to an acting appointment of senior
counsel, the challenges of delayed- or interrupted advocacy
obligations, and the December/January
dies
non
,
delayed the formulation and handing down of this judgment, the
substance of which had been formulated by end of February, but
required editorial polish. An apology is extended to the parties for
the contributory delay.
[5]
[57]
Leaving aside the initial delay in relation to the
notice in terms of section 3, the procedural chronology of this
matter, much
like others on the roll during the same week, also
accentuated the anomaly between the mandatory strict time frames for
prompt
exchange of affidavits (exempted only through obligatory
application for condonation in terms of Rule 27(3) if not complied
with),
juxtaposed by the availability and allocation of a hearing
date, normally several months down the line.
[58]
Although
delay in
handing down judgment in this matter is a mere fraction of the actual
delay (taking into account the court recess), the
remarks by Harms
JA
in footnote 4 above should equally apply to the role/obligations of
the judicial process and whatever factors permit parties
to occupy
space on the judicial parking lot, free of charge, while systemic
rust and dust immobilise the legal chariot, thus blocking,
delaying
or denying (as per the above aphorism) the right of access to the
court, adverse to the objectives of section 34 of the
Constitution:
“
34. Everyone has the right to
have any dispute that can be resolved by the application of law
decided in a fair public hearing before
a court or, where
appropriate, another independent and impartial tribunal or forum.
”
Arguably absent
or
lacking from section 34 are the words “
through
a prompt and cost-efficient process
”
.
[59]
In the
sphere of damages claims against an organ of state,
[6]
section 3 of the Act is aimed at fast-tracking enforcement/resolution
of such debts, in addition to the three-year extinctive prescription
period applicable to such debts. If notice must be given within six
months of knowledge of the
“
facts
giving rise to the debt
”
,
it appears anomalous to argue that an attempt at an application for
condonation could be delayed for some two years, absent good
cause
for the latter delay. Presently no mandatory rule applies to the
ambit of latter.
[60]
The
anomaly provokes the expression “
hurry
up and wait
”
.
In the Constitutional Court, Brand AJ (as he then was in that forum)
said in
Twee
Jonge Gezellen (Pty) Ltd v Land & Agricultural Dev Bank of SA t/a
The Land Bank
:
[7]
“
We
all know that the pace at which the wheels of civil justice are
turning is unacceptably slow.
”
[61]
The
Constitutional Court has explained the purpose of provisions similar
to the Act in
Mohlomi
v Minister of Defence
:
[8]
“
Inordinate
delays in litigating damage the interests of justice. They protract
the disputes over the rights and obligations sought
to be enforced,
prolonging the uncertainty of all concerned about their affairs. Nor
in the end is it always possible to adjudicate
satisfactorily on
cases that have gone stale. By then witnesses may no longer be
available to testify. The memories of ones whose
testimony can still
be obtained may have faded and become unreliable. Documentary
evidence may have disappeared. Such rules prevent
procrastination and
those harmful consequences of it.
”
[62]
In a country where citizens complain that almost
every sphere of government appears to fall apart, the judicial
mainstay
of the
trias
politica
would be well served to be
reminded of the oft quoted extra-judicial statement by Lord Goff of
Chieveley in “Commercial Contracts
and the Commercial Court”
(1984) LMCLQ 382
at 391:
“
[The
judiciary is] there to help [litigants], not to hinder them; we are
there to give effect to their transactions, not to frustrate
them; we
are there to oil the wheels of commerce, not to put a spanner in the
works, or even grit in the oil
.”
[63]
Albeit
that parties are often not innocent when it comes to procedural
delay, the absence of similar mandatory time frames for the
period
after the close of pleadings until the hearing date perhaps deserves
some attention.
[9]
[64]
With
borrowed inspiration from the New Zeeland research,
[10]
it is fair to ask why advanced “
civilization
”
,
or at least with the benefit of vastly improved technology, the
customers of the justice system could still justifiably pronounce
the
cynicism of Charles Dickens in Bleak House (1853) some 170 year
later:
‘
This
is the Court… which so exhausts finances, patience, courage,
hope, so overthrows the brain and breaks the heart, that
there is not
an honourable man among its practitioners who would not give –
who does not often give – the warning,
“Suffer any wrong
that can be done you rather than come here!
”’
[65]
Roscoe Pound (1906) in “
The
Causes of Popular Dissatisfaction with the Administration of Justice
”
wrote:
“
Uncertainty,
delay and expense, and above all the injustice of deciding cases upon
points of practice, which are the mere etiquette
of justice, direct
results of the organization of our courts and the backwardness of our
procedure, have created a deep-seated
desire to keep out of court,
right or wrong, on the part of every sensible business man in the
community.
”
[66]
Academic writing on the two main objectives of any
civilized justice system refers to the first objective as the desire
of each
individual to correct a wrong through dispute resolution as
fast as possible, to avoid having to obtain it through force or
violence.
This must be juxtaposed to the prevailing cynicism in
respect of the second theoretical objective of any civilized justice
system,
namely:
“
Together,
these functions [of the judiciary] of private dispute resolution,
rule creation, ordering of the capitalist economy, and
providing a
check on government, are a public good that goes beyond the interests
of the individual who calls upon the system.
”
[11]
[67]
Although
arguably peripheral in most matters, the concerns about the pace of
dispute resolution appear to be more pertinent in the
context of the
Act, sufficiently so to justify the remarks above. It is in the
interest of justice, commerce, and civilisation
at large for disputes
to be determined promptly and cost effectively – more so where
organs of state is at constant risk
to face multiple claims.
Meritless applications, or reckless reliance
on
the prospect of condonation consume the space of other litigation,
burdening the courts at the expense of the constitutional
touchstone
of the right to access to the courts – justice delayed is
justice denied. If the court roll becomes
congested
with condonation applications by criminally accused who regarded
themselves innocent from the moment of arrest, the judiciary
would
act favourably by providing certainty on the prospects of success, as
opposed to advocating a sentiment
that
the discretion is so wide that it invites a “
I
will try my luck
”
attitude.
It is not a vague or theoretical issue. In
Nedbank
Ltd v Thobejane & Similar Matters
[12]
the full bench held:
“
The
consequence is that the court roll in the Gauteng Division, Pretoria,
is congested, resulting in matters which legitimately
belong to the
High Court being edged out and their adjudication delayed. Further,
it increases the workload for judges, causing
a delay in handing down
judgments and the waiting period for dates of hearings. This results
in the adage ' justice delayed is
justice denied” becoming a
sad reality in this division
.”
[68]
Although
Nedbank
’
s
case was in respect of the jurisdictional principle reversed on
appeal, the Constitutional Court held the following in
South
African Human Rights Commission v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
and Others
:
[13]
“
As
the High Court judgment in [Nedbank supra] shows, the problem has
become worse. Therefore, although our final decision does not
accept
that of the High Court, we cannot make light of the real problem that
court has highlighted. In the main, that is the problem
of clogging
up High Court rolls with matters falling within the jurisdiction of
the magistrates' court. Also, as I said when considering
whether
leave to appeal should be granted, the Gauteng Division and the
Eastern Cape Division, another division where the central
issue in
this matter has been considered, are not outliers. So, we have a huge
problem on our hands, a problem which — as
the High Court says
in this matter — manifests in inordinate delays in the hearing
and finalisation of matters in the High
Court. That, of course, is a
blot on the administration of justice
.”
[69]
An active effort to provide legal certainty to
prospective innocently accused, arrested and
detained
individuals would of course assist to alleviate or
avoid the blot on the administration of justice.
[70]
In what follows below, an attempt will be made to
assist with some additional guidelines to provide certainty to
similar creditors.
When
a debt is regarded as due in terms of the Act
:
[71]
A compliant notice of “
the
debt
”
hinges on the principle
stated in the latter part of section 3(3)(
a
) of the Act
that
“
a creditor must be regarded as
having acquired such knowledge as soon as he or she or it could have
acquired it by exercising reasonable
care, unless the organ of state
wilfully prevented him or her or it from acquiring such knowledge
”
.
[72]
It is
evident from the essence of section 3, that the question of timeous
compliance hinges on the moment in time when a “
debt
may… be regarded as being due
”
,
and in turn on proof of the moment of actual or deemed
[14]
knowledge of “
the
facts giving rise to the debt
”
,
and of the identity of the relevant organ of state as debtor
.
By
when would a creditor with reasonable care have had “
such
knowledge
”
?
The extent of knowledge recorded in the notice is that which has to
be tested against “
reasonable
care
”
.
How can an innocently arrested person escape the simple presumption
that knowledge of innocence is virtually immediate upon being
arrested? Is it not so that, generally speaking, all that remains is
an explanation as to why such knowledge could not have been
acted on?
[73]
If that what is postulated above is correct, then
it narrows down the risk embedded in contending for wide discretion
that can be
tested over and again. It should serve as a narrow
guideline for what has to be alleged and established in order to
satisfy a court
in respect of the knowledge and prevention features.
Contentions
by Kutuane
:
[74]
Kutuane alleges that it is common cause that the
impugned notice was served on the offices of the National
Commissioner of the South
African Police Service on 10 September
2018, being a period of 68 days after acquittal. This, however, was
more than two years
after his initial stated indignance at being
arrested and detained innocently, which, even if providing different
debts or causes
of action, are based on the same simple set of facts.
The extent of the debt might increase over time, but the initial
“
debt”
is
immediate.
[75]
Kutuane alleges that immediately after his
acquittal, he approached his current attorney to assist him with the
institution of the
main proceedings against the Respondents.
[76]
Kutuane alleges he could not have instructed his
attorneys to proceed to institute any legal proceedings against the
1
st
and
2
nd
Respondents
for the logical reason that he was still being prosecuted, and in
order to avoid piecemeal litigation against the two
state entities.
Could any of this ever be a reasonable explanation in order to
establish good cause?
[77]
Kutuane argues he did not have to give notice
within six months after his arrest, namely by latest 15 November
2016, in respect
of the wrongful and unlawful arrest, and in the
alternative that he could not have been expected, whilst exercising
his constitutional
right to defend any criminal charge brought by the
1
st
and
2
nd
Respondents,
also to give notice of his intention to institute legal proceedings
against the same organs of the state. Is it a matter
of either or?
Clearly not. The Act requires action in the form of a “
notice
”
once the basic facts are known. It does not
contemplate the luxury of wait and see if some other, different or
better position in
relation to the basic facts evolve. One such fact
is belief of innocence by applicants such as Kutuane, which stands
unrelated
to the outcome of any consequential or ancillary legal
conclusion thereof.
[78]
Kutuane argues that, if indeed notice ought to
have been given as early as 15 November 2016, then his notice would
be late for a
period of some 23 months.
[79]
Kutuane argues that in such event the court should
condone the late filing of the notices in respect of the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents.
[80]
Kutuane accepted that he had to comply with
section 3(4)(
a
)
of the Act, which provides by way of summary of paragraph [2] above,
that if an organ of state relies on a creditor’s failure
to
serve a notice in terms of subsection (2)(
a
),
he had to apply to a court having jurisdiction for condonation of
such alleged failure, in his words, to satisfy the court that:
-
(i) the debt has
not been extinguished by prescription;
(ii) good cause
exist for the failure by the creditor; and
(iii)
the organ of state was not unreasonably prejudice by the failure.
[15]
[81]
The essential facts that Kutuane relies upon are
that he was arrested on 16 May 2016 and that he was subsequently
detained and further
detained for a period of 747 days, at the behest
of the 5
th
Respondent
who lied to the court in stating that the vehicle which was found in
Kutuane possession was a stolen vehicle and had
been started with hot
wiring, being an aversion (in his words), which is in any way
contrary to the SAPS13 report, a copy of which
he had annexed to his
founding affidavit.
[82]
Due to circumstances beyond his control, Kutuane
alleges he could not launch this application for condonation between
24 March 2020
until date of signature of the affidavit, hence Kutuane
requested the Court’s indulgence in that respect.
[83]
Kutuane submits that the claim against the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents did not prescribe on 15 May 2019,
being three years after his arrest, but rather only three years after
2 July 2018,
when he was acquitted.
[84]
Kutuane
also relies on the provisions of the Constitution of the Republic of
South Africa,
[16]
contending
that he has a right to a fair trial and to challenge any arrest,
detention and further detention, and further that his
matter be heard
in an open court.
[85]
Kutuane argues that he has a constitutional right
to defend in the criminal actions instituted against him by an organ
of state,
in this case the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents.
[86]
After
sifting through volumes of paper in this matter, the core contention,
or “
pith
”
[17]
of it,
is the allegation by Kutuane that he suffered damages after he was
(according to him) innocently arrested on 15 May 2016
and detained
for 747 days. But he did nothing about it until long after his
release, when he gave notice to the organs of state.
[87]
Such
notice had to inform the organs of state, as alleged debtor, of “
(i)
the
facts giving rise to [a] debt
;
and (ii) such particulars of such debt as are within the knowledge of
the creditor
”
[18]
in terms of section 3(2)(
b
)
of the Act. Such “
debt
”
relates
to that “
for
which an organ of state is liable
for
payment of damages
”
(emphasis
added)
.
[88]
The wording of
3(2)(
b
)(ii)
indicates that i
t is not necessary for a
creditor to have knowledge of all facts in support of the
debt/damages, only such particulars of which
the creditor has
knowledge – some basic initial knowledge is enough, more about
this aspect below. However, the first day
of not being able to work,
or earn money upon being arrested innocently, is sufficient knowledge
of the facts to comply with
3(2)(
b
)(ii)
.
It is significant though that, contrary to the first leg in section
3(2)(
b
)(i),
the second leg in section 3(2)(
b
)(ii)
(“
such particulars of such debt as
are within the knowledge of the creditor
”
)
is not part of the definition of when a debt becomes “
due
”
.
This distinction is highly relevant to avoid confusion about
the requirement for “
due
”. It requires knowledge
of the “
facts”
,
not knowledge of
“
damages
”.
[89]
As alluded to above, facts similar to this matter
provokes the floodgates to be opened for every criminally accused
person that
ultimately gets acquitted, by waiting until after
acquittal before proclaiming that damages resulted from the alleged
innocent
prosecution, arrest and detention. Proclaimed innocence
being the kernel fact in each such case, it stands to reason that
such
a person has full knowledge of the damage-causing event (“
facts
giving rise to the debt
”
) shortly
after arrest or detention longer than 48 hours (see
section 50
to
60
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
). On ordinary probability
the “
facts giving rise to the
debt
”
would be within the
knowledge of the innocent criminally accused at an early stage. Those
are the same facts that are required to
be put forward in the
prerequisite notice.
[90]
The general, and fact-specific significance of the
repeated use in section 3 of the Act of the phrase “
facts
giving rise to the debt
”
(alluded
to herein at the outset), for purposes of bringing and deciding an
application for condonation, will be dealt with in more
detail below.
Suffice it to say, in the context of damages claimed by innocent
persons being criminally prosecuted, the repeated
phrase assists to
simplify the task of an applicant (i) to present facts in support of
the due date of the “
debt
”
,
and (ii) to present facts in support of the “
reasonable
explanation
”
element of “
good
cause
”
, all of which the court
has to be satisfied of, absent which an application should not be
pursued or must fail.
[91]
Apart from condonation, Kutuane seeks punitive
costs orders against those opposing the condonation application,
without any substantiation,
other than to provoke opposition.
Judicial
approach to condonation in terms of the Act – general
evaluation of the facts
:
[92]
The special plea by the organs of state contends
that Kutuane, as plaintiff in the action, had failed to give the
requisite notice
within six months.
[93]
Once
the essential undisputed facts have been identified, little needs to
be said about the irrelevant ancillary matters.
[19]
[94]
Kutuane alleged in par 5.5 of his founding
affidavit that he could not have instructed his attorneys to proceed
to institute any
legal proceedings against the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents for the logical reason that he was
still being prosecuted, and in order to avoid piecemeal litigation
against the two
state entities. The latter aspect ignores that the
giving of a notice does not constitute litigation, nor does it
preclude a subsequent
notice or the option to simply not proceed in
terms of the notice.
[95]
In their answering affidavits, the opposing
Respondents deny the allegations and pointed out that these
contentions by Kutuane are
entirely unsubstantiated by any fact or
legal basis.
[96]
Kutuane’s reference to “
piecemeal
litigation
”
is unrelated to or at
the very least does not fully engage with the prevention principle
despite the provisions of section 3 of
the Act. It appears to be
merely relying on alleged convenience or inconvenience.
[97]
The former basis, namely that Kutuane could not
have instructed his attorneys, has not been substantiated by any
level of detail,
but in any event it is contradicted by the
undisputed fact that Kutuane had the benefit of legal representation
long before his
acquittal. It begs the question whether the right to
instruct an attorney prior to giving notice of the requisite
knowledge would
ever be a reasonable explanation, absent facts that
establish failed attempts to give a notice without the help of an
attorney.
If absurdly such reasoning were to be given traction, it
could equally serve a plaintiff to escape the effect of prescription
or
compliance with almost any obligation, by simply resorting to the
prior need for legal advice.
[98]
The
plethora of decisions on what is required for a reasonable
explanation in the context of the Act need not be repeated here.
Suffice it to say that it was made clear, in a more general context,
as far back as
Silber
v Ozen Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
[20]
that
“
[i]t
is enough for present purposes to say that the defendant must at
least furnish an explanation of his default sufficiently full
to
enable the Court to understand how it really came about, and to
assess his conduct and motives.
”
The
criticism by the Court of the manner in which the reasonable
explanation was furnished in
Silber
’
s
case is an instructive guideline for a court on how to assess whether
a particular applicant has explained enough. It is important
though,
to consider “
reasonable
explanation
”
within
the specific context of the Act.
[99]
More
recently, and more directly relevant to the Act, in
Premier
v Lakay
supra
the
Supreme Court of Appeal repeated in similar terms: “
The
second question on which a court must be satisfied is that 'good
cause' exists for the failure by the creditor to give the notice.
The
minimum requirement is that the applicant for condonation
must
furnish an explanation of the default sufficiently full to enable the
court to understand how it really came about
,
and to assess his/her conduct and motives
”
[21]
(emphasis added).
[100]
A more
definitive example in the context of the Act appears in par [22] of
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another (Open Democratic Advice Centre as
Amicus Curiae)
:
[22]
“
[22]
An
applicant for condonation must give a full explanation for the delay.
In addition, the explanation must cover the entire period
of delay.
And, what is more, the explanation given must be reasonable. The
explanation given by the applicant falls far short of
these
requirements. Her explanation for the inordinate delay is superficial
and unconvincing. It amounts to this. During the entire
period of
approximately eleven months she was considering whether or not to
appeal the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal.
During this
period she sought advice from a number of individuals whom she has
not disclosed. In addition she alleges that she
does not have
unlimited funds although she admits that this is not a compelling
reason for the delay. She has not furnished any
explanation as to why
it took approximately eleven months for her to decide whether or not
to appeal. Nor has she furnished any
explanation how she overcame her
funding difficulty.
”
(emphasis added).
[101]
The extensive quote from
Van
Wyk
supra
is
aimed at pointing to the kind of omissions that would justify a court
to dismiss an application on the basis that a “
reasonable
explanation
”
in the context of
the “
good cause
”
requirement has not been satisfied.
[102]
The proposed narrower ambit of “
reasonable
explanation
”
for purposes of the
Act has been ventilated in above.
[103]
Still pursuing the objective to provide legal
certainty in the context of similar applications, it remains
significant that the
phrase “
the
facts giving rise to [a] debt
”
is
repeated in two different contexts of section 3 of the Act: (i) it
instructs the required contents of the notice to be given,
and (ii)
it defines when a debt of an organ of state becomes due. In short,
the requisite notice must “
set
out
”
the exact facts required for
a debt to become due, being in turn the moment when prescription is
deemed to commence, or “
regarded
”
as being due. The notice, once given, represents
the creditor’s own version of what he is required to know in
order to interrupt
prescription.
[104]
In cases like the present, the wording in the
belated notice ultimately given by the creditor, for which
condonation is applied,
should serve as major guide to determine if
“
good cause
”
exists for not having relied on such knowledge
earlier or timeously. After all, it is the creditor’s
self-proclaimed innocence
that constitutes the starting point of the
requisite knowledge. Once arrested, all the requisite facts are
known. An applicant
would have to explain (i) when each aspect of the
knowledge first came to it, (ii) that the knowledge in the notice was
not available
prior to the expiry of the six-month period, and (iii)
why it was ultimately only acted upon when the notice was given. The
facts
from which the debt arises would have had to be concealed or
excluded from the applicant’s knowledge for some reason that
is
explained in detail. On a proper interpretation of the Act, it is
arguable that such explanations would be limited to “
the
organ of state wilfully prevent[ing] [the creditor] from acquiring
such knowledge
”
.
If
not, what purpose does such wording serve? In the context of
innocently arrested individuals, logic would dictate that, absent
exceptional circumstances, the only remaining alternative reason
would have to relate to actual-, physical prevention of giving
the
notice itself, despite knowledge of the facts from which the debt
arises. To widen the nature of the discretion is likely to
undo or
disregard the consequences of the deeming provision section 3(3)(
a
),
if not the entire objective of the Act. A wider discretion would
result in more litigation, instead of the intended less.
[105]
It serves to test the approach analysed above to
judgments in similar cases. In par [13] of
Sello
supra
, it makes
no reference to what actually prevented the giving of a notice until
the plaintiff had been released from incarceration
or until he
consulted with an attorney. Incarceration and lack of consultation
with an attorney has little or nothing to do with
knowledge of the
requisite facts. The mere conclusion of such circumstances in the
judgment deprives it of guidance or precedent
for the benefit of
similar applications. In line with the wording of the Act, knowledge
of the facts, not the law (as opposed to
ignorance of the Act, to
which different principles might apply), must have prevented the
creditor/applicant in order for a debt
not to become due, and in
order to achieve the result that a notice could justifiably be given
later once the prevention no longer
existed. The “
debt
”
in question (in the Act), for purposes of
considering prescription, is a “
debt
by an organ of state
”
.
Sello
supra
appears to
have omitted consideration of section 3(3)(
a
)
of the Act which, contrary to the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 (“the
Prescription Act&rdquo
;), provides an express definition for when a
debt by an organ of state becomes “
due
”
in the context of the Act. That definition, in
turn, logically determines when such a debt of an organ of state is
due for purposes
of the
Prescription Act. Section
12(1) of the
Prescription Act reads: “
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subsections (2), (3) and (4),
prescription shall commence to run
as
soon as the debt is due
.
”
(emphasis added).
[106]
Significantly, section 3(3)(
a
)
of the impugned Act in this matter stipulates the due date, with an
express definition of “
due
”
.
Unlike any other debt under the
Prescription Act, the
Act defines
when a debt against an organ of state becomes due. One simply reads
section 3 of the Act to know when a debt against
an organ of state
becomes due. Section 3 narrows down the provisions of “
due
”
and adds the obligation to comply with “
reasonable
care
”
. Where the Act requires
“
reasonable care
”
to obtain the requisite knowledge, it would be
anomalous for a court to water down the express wording of the Act
with a discretion
that goes wider than “
reasonable
care
”
and the obligation to act
on such knowledge within six months.
[107]
For the reasons detailed below, the use of
knowledge of the “
cause of action
”
is not within the meaning of the Act, properly
interpreted; instead the Act dictates the use of the express wording,
namely “
the facts giving rise
to [a] debt
”
against
an organ of state. It refers to the innocent applicant’s
perception of the facts that causes damage, as opposed to
some legal
opinion- or confirmation of it in due course.
[108]
A debt against an organ of state is due when “
the
creditor has knowledge of the identity of the organ of state and of
the facts giving rise to the
debt
, but a creditor must be
regarded as having acquired such knowledge as soon as he or she or it
could have acquired it by exercising
reasonable care, unless the
organ of state wilfully prevented him or her or it from acquiring
such knowledge [of the facts giving
rise to the debt]
”
.
To determine whether such a debt is
due, one should consider the wording in the ultimate impugned notice
in terms of the Act in
respect of which condonation is sought. The
relevant facts giving rise to the debt would appear on the creditor’s
own version
from the notice itself. It is a simple issue to then
determine, with regard to such recorded and notified knowledge, when
the debt
became due. Decided cases dealing with general principles on
when and how a debt becomes due do not assist insofar as they do not
have regard to the express provisions of the Act that stipulate when
a debt against an organ of state becomes due.
[109]
In
another decision that distinguished the
Sello
judgment
on the facts,
N.A.M.
v MEC for Health, Gauteng Province
,
[23]
Moultrie AJ held there was “
no
allegation that the applicant was not aware of the identity of the
respondent and of the facts giving rise to her claim, or that
the
respondent wilfully prevented her from acquiring such knowledge
.”
[24]
Again, the simple test is to compare the allegations in the section 3
notice, with reference to the creditor’s own words,
to
determine when such knowledge was actual, or must be deemed to exist.
The
N.A.M
.
judgment refers to “
lack
of knowledge
”
of
the notice requirement as a consideration for “
good
cause
”
.
Reliance on “
ignorance
of the law
”
needs
to be dealt with great circumspection, as it is bound to convert
strict compliance with the statutory gateway to litigation
through
prior notice, into a floodgate for collateral litigation upon failure
to comply.
[110]
As
stated above, in the context of the Act providing express definition
on when a debt is due, consideration of “
good
cause
”
with
reference to “
when
the cause of action arises
”
is
inappropriate.
Segodi
v MEC for the Mpumalanga Department of Health
[25]
also refers to “
why
he did not serve the notice within six months from the date of the
cause of action arising.
”
[26]
The legislator deliberately referred to facts, not some legal phrase
such as “
cause
of action
”
.
[111]
In
Landela
v
Minister
of
Safety and Security
[27]
the
court equally did not rely on
the
facts giving rise to the debt
,
but instead analysed the particulars of claim that eventually
followed, instead of what was recorded in the notice itself, and
what
could have been recorded. A person that is innocently arrested and
deprived of the ability to earn income immediately knows
the
requisite facts from which a debt arises. The facts required for a
notice should lead the enquiry, not the particulars of claim.
The
nature and extent of the alleged debt is not an essential element of
the notice – only “
such
particulars of such debt as are within the knowledge of the creditor
”
are
required. It precludes the right to sit and wait until full or more
particulars of the debt is known.
[112]
In summary, to simplify these kind of applications
for condonation, a creditor and its legal representatives would be
well advised
to realise that what has/had to be stated in the notice
in terms of the Act, may well seriously impede a subsequent argument
based
on lack of knowledge for purposes of condonation, unless a
clear case for prevention can be established. If an organ of state
has
acted, or failed to act, it is often axiomatic that some form of
“
debt
”
is
instantaneous. Those simple facts justify the giving of a notice and
allow the organ of state to act/stop the harm or to mitigate
it. Such
essential facts in a notice will not improve over time, but the risk
of not obtaining condonation will increase.
[113]
Once
the basic facts are known,
[28]
the need for reliance on prevention in support of a condonation
application is expressly prompted by the Act, arguably to the
exclusion of any other ground in support of good cause as an
essential element to satisfy the court to grant condonation.
Ultimately
a “
reasonable
explanation
”
comes
down to what has prevented (i) acquiring the knowledge or (ii) the
ability to act on the knowledge, despite proof of having
exercised
reasonable care in obtaining and acting on the simple facts. An
applicant must explain that despite “
reasonable
care
”
,
which has to be detailed, it could not have obtained or have acted on
the obtained knowledge.
Facts
giving rise to the debt revisited
:
[114]
It is undisputed that Kutuane was arrested on 16
May 2016 and detained until 2 July 2018, some 747 days, afterwards
being acquitted.
[115]
It is not in dispute that notice had to be given
by Kutuane in terms of section 3 of the Act: the question being (i)
whether the
court has been satisfied that the notice was out of time,
and if so (ii) whether the court “
may
”
condone “
such
failure
”
to comply.
[116]
It serves to revisit wording of impugned notice,
which relied on the following factual allegations:
“…
[Kutuane
was arrested on 16 May 2016 and detained for 747 days] for alleged
armed robbery and stood trial from date of arrest until
date of
acquittal, being 2 July 2018.
”
“
[Kutuane claims
payment for] unlawful arrest, detention and further detention,
malicious prosecution, past loss of income and future
loss of income,
future loss of employability, damage to dignity and contumelia.
”
[117]
It follows expressly, without the need for any
interpretational debate, that a debt is due on the date of knowledge
the facts set
out in the notice, being the date when the six-month
period commences.
[118]
Kutuane has failed to establish that “
such
particulars of such debt as are within the knowledge of the creditor
”
only came to his knowledge after his acquittal, or
that just cause existed for not acting on such knowledge when, “
[he]
could have acquired it by exercising reasonable care
”
.
[119]
Even if it could be argued that Kutuane did not
have to establish and satisfy the court of actual or deemed
knowledge, the obligation
to satisfy the court of “
just
cause
”
involves allegations to
show when and how he obtained each element of the requisite knowledge
required by the Act (or what found
its way into the notice) and that
once the facts came to his knowledge he did not or could not have
acted on such knowledge. In
this sense, knowledge of “
the
facts giving rise to the debt
”
are
the very
probantia
under
consideration for the “
reasonable
explanation
”
leg of “
just
cause
”
. To put it differently,
actual or deemed knowledge of “
the
facts giving rise to the debt
”
invokes
the duty on an applicant to satisfy the court that it could not have
been obtained earlier than the six-month period, or
once obtained it
could not have been acted on within six months, and if so, why and
how only later.
[120]
In the present matter “
the
facts giving rise to the debt
”
,
detailed in the notice, had been experienced by Kutuane himself from
the moment of his arrest, when he (on his version by necessity)
was
all along innocent and uninvolved in the alleged armed robbery.
[121]
It follows that Kutuane had to give notice long
before he was finally acquitted. There is no need to determine the
exact date for
the commencement and end of the six-month period, save
for the fact that by the date of acquittal the period had come and
gone.
[122]
The relevant organs of state would be well served
by informing as standard procedure each arrested or criminally
accused person.
The time and expense in litigation such as the
present could pay for multiple notices to point to section 3 of the
Act at various
Police Stations, Magistrate Courts and Correctional
Service premises. Added legislation in this regard would assist to
achieve
the objectives of the Act. In turn it would alleviate the
burden of the courts in having to wrestle through applications such
as
the present at the expense of other litigants who profess to be
equally innocent in relation to its disputes.
[123]
The next question is whether Kutuane has satisfied
the court in respect of any of the remainder of the three grounds for
condonation.
It is trite that if any of the three grounds have not
been established, the court has no discretion, power or jurisdiction
to grant
condonation.
Prescription
of the debt
:
[124]
Kutuane argues that the debt has not been
extinguished by prescription, which on his version would only have
been on 1 July 2021,
three years after his acquittal. The facts
recorded in the notice, from which the debt arises, were within his
actual or deemed
knowledge upon his arrest and in any event at the
latest after the first refusal of bail.
[125]
If benefit is given for the 48 hours after the
arrest until being charged, and by when Kutuane had not been
released, it will be
assumed for purposes of this judgment only, that
prescription was interrupted with service of summons on 16 May 2019,
shortly before
the end of the statutory three-year period.
Has
good cause been shown
:
[126]
Kutuane’s primary argument is that the cause
of action (as he puts it) only arose on 2 July 2018, subsequent to
his acquittal
and further alternatively as Kutuane had acquired
knowledge and details of the debtors and/or further alternatively an
organ of
state from the date of his acquittal.
[127]
Kutuane relies on the contention that his cause of
action only arose upon his acquittal. On this basis Kutuane contends
that the
notice was given within six months of the cause of action
arising.
[128]
Kutuane argues that the court should not rely on
an earlier date due to the fact that he had been denied the bail and
was incarcerated
for the entire period of his prosecution.
[129]
In
Minister
of Police and Another v Yekiso
,
[29]
Davis
J held:
“
[24]
By contrast, in Skom v Minister of Police and others: In Re: Singatha
v Minister of Police and another [2014] ZAECBHC 6 the
court held that
the fact of incarceration did not on its own prevent a plaintiff from
giving instructions to an attorney to institute
proceedings on his
behalf. It also emphasised that, on the facts, the plaintiff was
legally represented during his criminal trial
and had not
pleaded
that the detention had made it 'difficult to awkward' to instruct an
attorney to institute proceedings. To suggest otherwise
would merely
to have engaged in speculation
.”
[130]
It is doubtful that the mere fact of incarceration
or access to an attorney would in itself create support good cause,
unless it
results in absolute prevention. An applicant would have to
explain why, because of his innocence, no other means existed to give
notice of the facts that deprives him of freedom or income, resulting
in loss. Based on the reasoning in the previous section,
Kutuane in
any event simply failed to explain step by step when he obtained the
last element of his requisite knowledge of the
debt and why he did
not give notice earlier.
[131]
It is not merely the period after expiry of the
six months that weighs in on the question of good cause or prejudice,
but also the
reasons for not giving notice prior to the expiry of the
six-month period.
Prejudice
to an organ of state
:
[132]
Kutuane argues that the Respondent will not suffer
any prejudice due to alleged non-compliance with the provisions of
the Act, if
any. The organ of state was “
prejudiced
”
every day after Kutuane had knowledge of his
alleged innocent arrest, without giving notice of it. If Kutuane gave
notice as contemplated
in the Act, the relevant organs of state could
have acted there and then to limit the extent of the debt, as opposed
to allegedly
having created the debt. It is hard to see how this
would not be the situation in all similar cases. The sooner the organ
of state
is notified after the occurrence of the facts, the less the
prejudice. As stated above, significantly it is not merely the period
after expiry of the six-month period that weighs in on the question
of good cause or prejudice, but also the reasons for not giving
notice prior to the expiry of the six-month period.
[133]
Kutuane, instead of providing substance to the
absence of prejudice to the organs of state, argues that he will
suffer severe prejudice
if condonation is refused, as he will not
have the opportunity to challenge the lawfulness of the arrest,
detention, further detention
and malicious prosecution and that the
Respondents will get away with their unconstitutional conduct.
[134]
Kutuane argues that the Respondents’ conduct
will be condoned in the event that this application is refused, which
could not
be in the interest of justice, and that the members of the
public will accept that the organs of state will get away with any
conduct
of injustice.
[135]
Kutuane argues that the wrongful, unlawful arrest,
detention, further detention and malicious prosecution transgressed
his constitutional
rights, which the courts have jealously guarded
against and as such should be done in this matter.
[136]
The absence of prejudice requirement is not based
on balance of prejudice or balance of convenience. Kutuane’s
application
is misdirected in this regard.
Incarceration
and delay
:
[137]
Kutuane argues that the period of his
incarceration should not be considered for purposes of the Act. This
is anomalous. In simple
terms, Kutuane relies on the perpetration of
the very harm about which he did nothing to notify the organ of state
about. Again,
this would seem to be applicable to all similar
applications.
[138]
Kutuane submitted that the said period of delay is
not inordinate, having regard to the fact that he was incarcerated
for the entire
period of his criminal trial and that he had to
exercise his constitutional rights to defend alleged criminal action
instituted
by the 1
st
to
6
th
Respondents.
It anomalous for a person to claim about its loss of income while
quietly suffering it without complaining through
the very statutory
provision created for such a complaint. Although the opposite
reasoning appears from other decided cased, it
is arguable that the
longer an innocently accused person is willing to suffer the
prejudice, the less serious its complaint might
be in its own
perception.
[139]
Kutuane’s submission that at all material
times he harboured a serious and
bona
fide
intention to pursue claim for
damages against the Respondents for the injustice suffered as a
result of the unlawful conduct, and/or
alternatively to ensure that
the Respondents are held liable for their actions, and to put a
message across that the Respondents
are not above the law is a mere
sentiment, irrelevant to that of which the court has to be satisfied.
His dilatory conduct conveys
the opposite.
Reasonable
explanation for the delay and prospects of success
:
[140]
Kutuane
accepted that, in terms of the test applied in the matter of
Chetty
v Law Society, Transvaal
[30]
and
NUM
v Council for Mineral Technology
,
[31]
he had to keep in mind that without a reasonable and acceptable
explanation for the delay, the prospects of success are irrelevant
and in the absence of prospects of success an application for
condonation should be refused.
Conclusion
:
[141]
Ultimately, the above principles, applied to the
undisputed facts in this matter, render a clear result.
[142]
Kutuane accepted the duty to satisfy the court of
the three requirements stated in section 3(4)(
b
)
of the Act if his reliance on his acquittal fails.
[143]
A failure to establish any one of the three
deprives the court of jurisdiction, and it must result in dismissal
of the application.
[144]
Kutuane alleges that he was innocently and
unlawfully arrested and detained, and that bail had not been granted
to him. It continued
repeatedly in an unlawful manner. It resulted in
him being detained for 747 days.
[145]
Kutuane relies on the contention that he only had
the requisite knowledge of the facts from which the debt arises on
the date of
his acquittal.
[146]
Kutuane relies on the date of his acquittal in
support the second statutory requirement, “
just
cause
”
.
[147]
Kutuane failed to establish the requirement of
“
good cause…for the failure
by the creditor…to serve a notice in terms of subsection
(2)(a)
”
by “
serving
on the organ of state in accordance with Section 4(1)
”
and “
within six
months from the date on which the debt became due
”
.
[148]
In terms of Section 3(3)(
a
)
“
a debt may not be regarded as
being due until the creditor has knowledge of the identity of the
organ of state and of the facts
giving rise to the debt, but the
creditor must be regarded as having acquired such knowledge as soon
as he or she or it could have
acquired it by exercising reasonable
care…
”
.
[149]
On the Kutuane’s own version “
the
facts giving rise to the debt
”
were
within his knowledge from the moment he got arrested, alternatively
when he realised that information relating to his alibi
was
deliberately being concealed.
[150]
He failed to prove any additional knowledge to
that which was required for him to give notice in terms of the Act
shortly after
his arrest.
[151]
The mere fact that Kutuane was in detention did
not in itself prevent him from acting on his knowledge of “
the
facts giving rise to the debt
”
.
[152]
It
serves no purpose to consider and analyse irrelevant legal and
factual considerations
[32]
where patent non-compliance with one of the requirements that the
court must be satisfied of has not been established, and patently
could never be established.
[153]
Kutuane would have had to explain that during the
747 days he had not been able to seek or obtain legal advice, even if
the doctrine
of ignorance of law had been relied upon and might have
served to benefit him. Access to a lawyer was not even alleged to be
a
prerequisite for compliance with the notice requirements. But if
that was a requirement, Kutuane had access to and the benefit of
legal representation. He is at liberty to blame his legal
representation for not advising him earlier, or for advising him to
wait until after his acquittal, if those are the facts.
[154]
Kutuane furnished no explanations why the advice
he was ultimately able to obtain had not been sought or obtained and
followed from
the outset.
[155]
It stands to reason that had Kutuane taken even
the most basic steps to inform the Minister of Police or the National
Director of
Public Prosecution (through prison staff), that they will
be held accountable for him having been arrested and detained
innocently,
and that those defendants would have been in a position
to investigate and act so as to obtain the benefit of the spirit and
intent
of the Act, even if Kutuane did so as late as six months after
his arrest, or after each refusal of bail.
[156]
The refusal of bail arguably does not introduce a
new set of facts, as opposed to perpetuating the initiating facts,
which on its
own sufficiently constituted “
facts
giving rise to the debt
”
, as
opposed to waiting to see how the extent thereof grows and comes to
an end. The court, however, expresses no final view on
the question
as to whether the debt has been extinguished based on prescription.
[157]
The facts of this matter is a classic example of
depriving the relevant organs of state of the opportunity to act upon
the alleged
facts giving rise to the debt, in order to mitigate or
terminate the consequences of state liability, which ultimately draws
on
the liability on of taxpayers.
[158]
The Act is clearly not intended merely to deal
with the timeous notice in respect of the ultimate result of
liability on the part
of a state organ, but to inhibit a burden on
state resources, encumbered damage-causing events, of which the
officials in power
would want to be informed, as soon as possible to
mitigate liability and to avoid expenditure in the form of
litigation, investigation,
and disbursements, where witnesses and
evidence may no longer be readily available. Absent prompt
compliance, the state organ is
deprived of the opportunity to stop or
mitigate or to curtail the costs related to obtaining information and
witnesses after the
fact at greater expense as time goes by. It could
well be argued that a failure to give notice is tantamount to a
failure to mitigate.
The obligation to mitigate the debt by giving
prompt notice is then arguably an element of what constitutes
reasonable conduct,
in particular the pace at which a notice if given
after knowledge of the requisite facts is obtained. The inverse
result is “
unreasonably
prejudicing
”
the organ of state.
[159]
It is axiomatic that the failure on part of
Kutuane to have notified the organs of state for some 747 (and
several weeks thereafter)
of the intended legal proceedings,
unreasonably prejudiced the said organs of state, if not already a
few days after arrest. It
is more than likely that a prompt notice
with the known facts, at the latest after the first failed bail
application, supported
by a reference to the alleged alibi, would
have caused the organs of state to intervene and to curtail the
debt-causing events,
in line with the obvious purpose of the Act.
[160]
It follows from this ground alone that the court
has no jurisdiction to grant leave to institute the legal proceedings
in question,
Kutuane having failed to satisfy the court in respect of
two of the three requirements in subsection 3(4)(
b
)
of the Act.
Costs
:
[161]
Kutuane sought costs on the “
attorney
and own client
”
scale, not even
merely in the event of them opposing it. The approach was factually
unfounded and legally unjustified. It prompts
a respondent to oppose
the matter on that basis alone.
[162]
I
n
Johannesburg
City Council v Television & Electrical Distribution (Pty)
Ltd
,
[33]
the court held that “
.
. . in appropriate circumstances the conduct of a litigant may be
adjudged "vexatious" within the extended meaning that
has
been placed on this term in a number of decisions, that is, when such
conduct has resulted in "unnecessary trouble and
expense which
the other side ought not to bear
”
.
See also
In
re: Alluvial Creek Ltd
1929
CPC 532
at 535,
Phase
Electrical Co Ltd v Zinman's Electrical Sales (Pty) Ltd
1973
(3) SA 914
(W) at 918H – 919B, and
Hyperchemicals
International (Pty) Ltd v Maybaker Agrichem (Pty) Ltd
1992
(1) SA 89
(W) at 101G – 102D.
[163]
In
Gois
t/a Shakespear’s Pub v Van Zyl and Others
,
[34]
the court held as follows:
“…
this
court may make a punitive costs order such as costs on an attorney
and own client scale where it believes it (is) appropriate
to do so.
Factors to consider whether or not to grant such punitive costs order
include where the conduct of the party is vexatious
and amounts to an
abuse of legal process, even though there is no intention to be
vexatious; evinces a lack of bona fide; and is
reckless, malicious
and unreasonable.
”
[164]
In
Brown
v Papadatis and Another NNO
,
[35]
what Davis J held at 545J-546D is apposite here. The learned Judge
said:
“
Mr
Khan submits that he was given instructions to so pursue this course
of action, but attorneys must surely apply a professional
standard in
deciding to do this. See the dictum of Innes CJ in Vermaak’s
Executor v Vermaak’s Heirs
1909 TS 679
at 691. Applicants have
rights, but the courts are not playthings, to be abused at the
convenience of litigants who raise spurious,
reckless arguments which
jeopardize the integrity of the court, so as to postpone proceedings,
when they, as in this case, have
clear rights, which can protect any
interest or rights which they may have.
In
my view, this is a case where the court should say: Of course,
litigants have rights; of course, courts must fastidiously respect
these rights; of energetically as he or she may be able, to protect
these rights. But when the boundary is overstepped so
grossly
in circumstances where there is no legal basis, no precedent, no
serious evidential edifice on which to launch such an
application (ie
even on these vague affidavits could a recusal application ever be
brought?), the court should say, you have overstepped
the mark and
have crossed a bridge in circumstances where an order of costs de
bonis propriis must follow.
”
[165]
It should be discouraged to provoke an opposing
party into litigation merely because of a threat of a punitive costs
order. Kutuane’s
approach is vexatious in that regard because
there was “
no legal basis, no
precedent, no serious evidential edifice
”
on
which to seek such costs order.
Order
:
[166]
The following order is made:
a.
The application is dismissed with costs;
b.
The applicant shall pay the costs of the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents on the attorney and client scale;
c.
The costs shall be taxed by the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents within 90 days, from date of this
order;
d.
The costs shall be paid by the applicant within 10
days after taxation.
LUCAS J VAN TONDER AJ
Heard:
12 November 2023
Delivered:
31 May 2024
Appearances :
For Respondents:
Adv. Novuyo Sidzumo
Instructed
by:
Makhafola & Verster Inc
For Respondents:
Adv. O Mokaka
Instructed
by:
Office of the State Attorney, Johannesburg
[1]
In
terms of section 1(1)(i) of the Act, a “
creditor
”
means
“
a
person who intends to institute legal proceedings against an organ
of state for the recovery of a debt or who has instituted
such
proceedings…
”
.
A “
debt
”
is
narrowly defined in the Act; it is essentially limited to damages
claims against an organ of state. This is dealt with in more
detail
below.
[2]
See
Premier
of the Western Cape Provincial Government NO v Lakay
2012
2 SA 1
(SCA), par 14: “
At
this stage I would merely add that if condonation is refused by a
court, an appellate court is in my view at liberty to decide
the
same question according to its own view as to whether the statutory
requirements have been fulfilled, and to substitute its
decision for
the decision of the court of first instance simply because it
considers its decision preferable.
”
It is
not clear whether the SCA in
Premier
intended
to go as far as holding that each such applicant for condonation
under the Act would, as a matter of course, be entitled
to leave to
appeal due to the nature of the discretion involved. If that were to
be the intention, it would invite an argument
that it is now open
for any failed applicant to, based on
Premier
,
contend that because another court would be “
at
liberty to decide the same question according to its own view
”
,
a court
a
quo
would
have little choice but to grant leave to appeal. Such approach would
encourage instead of limit litigation against an organ
of state.
Each of the three obstacles to condonation, however, has specific
elements to be established, some of which are patently
not questions
that leave room for discretion, as opposed to whether the requisite
facts have been established. So, for example,
prescription would be
fact-dependent, and not a matter of wide discretion. More is said
about this below, in particular with
reference to the second and
third requirements.
[3]
It
is arguable that the element of “
good
cause
”
equally
involves matters of hard facts in relation to the reasons for the
delay, as opposed to a mere wide discretion. It cannot
be said that
a discretion remains despite the absence of facts on “
how
[the default] really happened
”
(see
infra
)
and when it happened. What if no
reasonable
explanation
is presented by an applicant (i) in the sense of “
whether
the applicant has produced acceptable reasons for nullifying, in
whole, or at least substantially, any culpability on
his or her part
which attaches to the delay in serving the notice timeously
”
,
(ii) or in the sense that “
the
defendant must at least furnish an explanation of his default
sufficiently full to enable the Court to understand how it really
came about, and to assess his conduct and motives
”
?
(Both quotes are from
Madinda
v Minister of Safety and Security
2008
4 SA 317
(SCA) par [11] and [12]). Is a discretion that is eligible
for reconsideration involved, if factually the thresholds quoted
above
had not been met? If these thresholds had factually not been
met, there would be nothing to “
mitigate
”
,
in the words of
Madinda
supra
.
More consideration will be given to this below in the context of
“
innocent
”
applicants
acquitted in criminal prosecution. Suffice it to say that the courts
have narrowed down the requirements for “
reasonable
explanation
”
in
principle, and by way of application to specific facts (thus setting
precedent), and significantly the wording of the Act also
alludes to
the deemed consequences of not “
exercising
reasonable care
”
in
obtaining knowledge of the facts, save where prevented by the
conduct of the organ of state. Obtaining the required facts and
acting on it must both be with reasonable effort. Emphasis must
certainly be placed on the fact that in applications such as
the
present, the alleged innocence is immediately/promptly within the
actual or deemed knowledge of the accused/arrested applicant.
The
same applies to knowledge of deprived income/other prejudice after
each day of detention. If the South African Police made
the arrest,
and the individual is being prosecuted, knowledge of the organ of
state is promptly obtainable by
“
exercising
reasonable care
”
(see
section 3(3)(
a
)).
It is in this context that “
the
facts giving rise to the debt”
has
been emphasized in par [2] above. It almost follows logically that
absent proof of prevention by the organ of state, the threshold
defined in
Madinda
,
is hard to overcome in respect of knowledge of the facts. What
remains is an explanation why it was not followed through with
a
notice immediately after, or at worst even before the end of six
months after arrest.
[4]
The
reference to Act 108 of 1996 is the now replaced reference to “The
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa”.
A formal
“Notice” is not required in terms of Section 35 of the
Constitution
.
[5]
In
Pharmaceutical
Society of South Africa and Others v Tshabalala-Msimang and Another
NNO; New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Minister
of Health and
Another
2005
(3) SA 238
(SCA)
(2005 (6) BCLR 576
;
[2005] 1 All SA 326)
par 39,
Harms JA stated the following:
“
The
judicial cloak is not an impregnable shield providing immunity
against criticism or reproach. Delays are frustrating and
disillusioning and create the impression that Judges are imperious.
Secondly, it is judicial delay rather than complaints about
it that
is a threat to judicial independence because delays destroy the
public confidence in the judiciary. There rests an ethical
duty on
judges to give judgment or any ruling in a case promptly and without
undue delay and litigants are entitled to judgment
as soon as
reasonably possible. Otherwise the most quoted legal aphorism,
namely that "justice delayed is justice denied",
will
become a mere platitude.
”
[6]
Vhembe
District Municipality v Stewarts and Lloyds Trading (Booysens) (Pty)
Limited and Another
[2014]
3 All SA 675
(SCA) par [16]: “
I
accordingly hold, as the High Court did, that as the first
respondent's claim is
not
a damages claim the [Act] does not apply to it
.
”
(emphasis added).
[7]
2011 (3) SA 1
(CC)
(2011
(5) BCLR 505
;
[2011] ZACC 2).
[8]
1997 (1) SA 124
(CC)
(1996 (12) BCLR 1559
;
[1996] ZACC 20)
par 11.
[9]
Compare
research in New Zeeland by
Toy-Cronin,
B., Irvine, B., Stewart, K., & Henaghan, M. (2017). The Wheels
of Justice: Understanding the Pace of Civil High
Court Cases
(Project Report).
The
benefit of judicial intervention through
Rule
37A has been emphasised by the
full
bench of the Mpumalanga High Court in
Hlatshwayo
and Another v Road Accident Fund
(324/2019)
ZAMPMBHC 2 (24 January 2023). However, a moratorium has been placed
in this division since 29 November 2023 on the
right to apply under
Rule 37A(1)(b) for application of this rule (subject to certain
exceptions)
.
[10]
Ibid.
[11]
Toy-Cronin
et al supra,
p2.
[12]
2019 (1) SA 594
(GP);
[2018] 4 All SA 694
(GP) par 2.
[13]
2023 (3) SA 36
(CC) par 42.
[14]
The
term “
deemed
”
is
used here in the broad sense, within the meaning of “
must
be regarded as having acquired such knowledge
”
in
the manner stipulated in section 3.
[15]
Section
3(4)(
b
)
of the Act.
[16]
Act
108 of 1996 [
sic
].
Specifically section 12(1)(
a
)
and (
b
)
read with sections 35 and 34 of the Constitution, 1996.
[17]
There
is benefit in often referring to the
sentiments
expressed in
Schietekat
v S
[1999]
1 SA 131
(C) by Slomowitz AJ:
“
I
marvel at the flood of learning in which one must sink or swim in
order to adjudicate what were once taken to be relatively
straightforward matters…
It
is sufficiently taxing, I find, to have to come to grips with the
facts of a case and the principles of our common law to be
applied
to them. The time has perhaps arrived seriously to question the
value of jurisprudential inebriation caused by having
to imbibe vast
quantities of what are more often than not merely particular
instances of general principle. Consequently I begin
with an apology
for being impelled by circumstance to add to the mountain of
authority. I will, I hope, be brief and seek to
get to the pith of
the problem by burdening my remarks with as little reference to the
books as possible.
”
[18]
The
Act refers elsewhere unnecessarily to “
he
or she or it
”
,
as opposed to simply “
the
creditor
”
.
[19]
Cf
Sello v Minister of Police NO and Another
(89077/16)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 233 (13 April 2022) par 26 where Sardiwalla J
expanded on various principles that did not appear to
be relevant to
the basis upon which the judgment ultimately concluded, namely that
the notice in terms of section 3 of the Act
had been given in time,
from which it follows that no condonation was required: “
The
applicant, as I ``````````have found, submitted the letter within
the prescribed six-month period as set out in section 3(2)(a)
of the
Act and therefore an application condonation in terms of section
3(4)(b) was in fact unnecessary.
”
[20]
1954
(2) SA 345
(A) at 353.
[21]
Par
17.
[22]
2008 (2) SA 472 (CC).
[23]
[2023]
JOL 61930 (GJ).
[24]
Ibid
par
5.
[25]
2024
JDR 0032 (MN).
[26]
Ibid
par
29.
[27]
2024 JDR 0031
(MN).
[28]
See
Nedcor
Bank Bpk v Regering van die Republiek van Suid Afrika
[2000] ZASCA 154
;
2001
(1) SA 987
(SCA), par [13]:
“
Reeds
ten tyde van die opstel van die brief van 22 April 1994 was die
eiser op hoogte van die basiese feite [basic facts] waarop
hy ‘n
eis teen die verweerder kon inklee (Van Staden v Fourie, supra, te
216B-F) - weliswaar ‘n eis wat op die oog
af karig was, maar
nietemin ‘n geldige eis. Menige eiser wat uiteindelik
suksesvol was, het sy saak in die verlede bloots
aangepak mits dit
origens op eie pote kon staan.
”
[29]
2019 (2) SA 281 (WCC).
[30]
1965
(2) SA 756
(A) at 765.
[31]
[1999]
3 BLLR 209
(LAC), par 10.
[32]
Cf
Sello
v Minister of Police NO and Another
(89077/16)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 233 (13 April 2022). The court expanded on various
principles that were not in dispute, evident from
the concluding
part of the judgment, that the notice in terms of section 3 of the
Act had been given in time, from which it follows
that no
condonation was required.
[33]
1997 (1) SA 157
(A) at
177 C – F.
[34]
(2003)
24 LJ 2302 (LC).
[35]
2009
(3) SA 542
(C).
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