begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 810
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Msudulu v Minister of Police (2014/6624)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 810 (20 August 2024)
Msudulu v Minister of Police (2014/6624)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 810 (20 August 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_810.html
sino date 20 August 2024
###### IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2014/6624
1.
Reportable: No
2.
Of interest to other judges: No
3.
Revised:
20
August 2024
In the matter between:
SIYABULELA
MSUDULU
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
Defendant
JUDGMENT
WRIGHT J
1.
The plaintiff, Mr
Msudulu instituted action in February 2014 against the defendant
Minister of Police. In Claim A, it was alleged
on his behalf that he
had been wrongfully arrested by the police without warrant at
Daveyton on Friday, 20 September 2013. Damages
claimed were R250 000
as “
general
damages
“ and
R100 000 for “
contumelia
.
“ No allegation is in made in Claim A as to detention or its
length.
2.
In Claim B, it was
alleged that Mr Msudulu had been detained at the same time “
in
a marked police vehicle whilst being transported to the Daveyton
police station
.”
No allegation is made as to the length of detention. The same claims
for damages are raised in Claim B as in Claim A.
3.
The particulars of
claim end with what appears to be a single claim for R350 000,
interest and costs.
4.
The barebones
particulars of claim do not allege any prior medical condition
suffered by Mr Msudulu nor is any detail pleaded as
to the
circumstances of his arrest nor those relating to the conditions in
which he was held.
5.
Ms HR Mandizha appeared
for Mr Msudulu and Ms NE Cingo appeared for the Minister. I got the
impression that both legal practitioners
commendably did what they
could, having apparently received instructions late in the day.
6.
A special plea relating
to inadequate notice of the claim to the police was abandoned. The
trial proceeded only on the agreed remaining
issues of merits and
quantum.
7.
Mr Msudulu testified.
8.
He was born on 12
January 1983. He was 30 years old on Friday, 20 September 2013. He
was employed as a panelbeater earning R250
per day. He has a Grade 9
education. He left school as he suffers from epilepsy. He was married
and had a one year old child. He
now lives in a squatter camp on a
grant of R350 per month.
9.
On
the day in question, at about 3pm, he was riding his bicycle in
Daveyton, having just obtained green traditional medication in
the
form of leaves for his epilepsy. It smelled like “
gameti
“ which is a
“
plant-cigarette
.”
10.
The
police blocked his path, told him to raise his hands, searched him
without asking his permission and arrested him. They handcuffed
him
on the street in front of people, some of whom he knew.
11.
He
told the police that the substance was his medication but they would
not listen.
12.
He was taken to
the police station. The journey took about ten minutes.
13.
He
was not allowed to phone his wife to ask her to collect the food that
he had been carrying for their child but his wife arrived
later
anyway, having been informed by those who had witnessed the arrest.
14.
His wife later
left him, saying that he was a criminal because of the arrest. Sadly,
their child died soon after.
15.
He
was released about 71 hours after his arrest, at 2pm on Monday, 23
September 2013. He was never taken to court.
16.
He
was kept in a small cell, about 4 metres by 4 metres with about
thirty others. The walls had blood on them. A blanket on the
floor
was urinated on by the inmates as the toilet was not working.
17.
Mr
Msudulu had an epileptic attack in the cell on the Saturday. He was
not attended to by the police. He was not able to wash. There
was no
water in the cell. He was given no food either Friday or Saturday,
other than two slices of bread and cold tea.
18.
When Ms Mandizha
sought to lead Mr Msudulu on a document, an SAPS 14A form and headed
“
Notice of
rights in terms of the Constitution
“
Ms Cingo objected. It had not been discovered by the plaintiff. Ms
Mandizha argued that it need not have been discovered
as the
plaintiff had received no notice to discover. Ms Cingo argued that
under Rule 37(1) the plaintiff, having received notice
of a trial
date, was obliged to discover. Ms Cingo is correct. Mr Msudulu’s
attorney had applied for and received a trial
date and then set the
matter down for trial.
19.
Be
that as it may, I allowed the document to be handed in as Exh A by Mr
Msudulu after he had identified his signature on it. Ms
Cingo had
conceded that it would have been seen on caselines by the State
Attorney during 2023. There was clearly no prejudice
to the defendant
by the admission into evidence of the document. Ms Cingo did not
allege any.
20.
Exh
A supported Mr Msudulu’s evidence that he had been arrested and
when he had been arrested.
21.
Ms
Mandizha sought to lead Mr Msudulu further on what happened on the
Saturday, Sunday and Monday after the arrest. Ms Cingo then
objected
on the basis that there was no allegation in the particulars of claim
that the detention had been for any length of time.
22.
A
pretrial minute, signed on 15 May 2023 by both attorneys records that
it is the plaintiff’s case that he was detained from
Friday, 20
September 2013 to Monday, 23 September 2013.
23.
The minute
expressly records a denial by the defendant of the arrest and his
detention from 20 September 2013 to 23 September 2013.
This denial
reflects the plea.
24.
Ms
Mandizha did not seek an amendment to the particulars of claim. In
these circumstances I upheld the objection by Ms Cingo. I
ruled that
the plaintiff could not testify as to what occurred on the Saturday
to the Monday after arrest on the Friday. It is
trite that the
pleadings define the issues, absent admissions of which there are
none relevant in the present case.
25.
Mr
Msudulu testified that he had been given no reason for his release.
Nor did Mr Msudulu receive an apology. His rights were not
explained
to him. People thought that he was a criminal. He could not return to
work as he was thinking about how he had been treated.
He felt sick
for a week from a blocked chest. He went to the local clinic but did
not get treated. His employer said that it appeared
that he was a
criminal. He never got back his medication that the police had taken.
26.
In
cross-examination, Mr Msudulu conceded that he had never been
diagnosed as epileptic.
27.
After
Mr Msudulu had testified his case was closed without further
evidence. The defendant’s case was then closed, no evidence
having been led.
28.
In
my view, there is no doubt that Mr Msudulu was arrested and held at
Daveyton police cells for three days. The conditions in the
cell were
cramped and unhealthy.
29.
The
onus is on the Minister to justify the arrest and detention. No
attempt was made to do so. It follows on the evidence that the
arrest
and detention were unlawful.
30.
On
the question of damages, Ms Mandizha handed up written heads of
argument. In addition, she relied on the decision of the SCA
in
Motladile v Minister of Police ( 414/2022 ) [
2023] ZASCA 94
handed
down on 12 June 2023. In that case, the plaintiff had been arrested
and held for five days and four nights. He had been
held in a filthy
cell with five other inmates. He had been assaulted and his food was
stolen. He had to miss a family wedding.
He was an elder in the
community and had been traumatised by the arrest and detention.
R200 000 was held to be appropriate
by the SCA as general
damages.
31.
In
Mahlangu and another v Minister of Police (CCT 88/20) [2021] ZACC the
Constitutional Court handed down judgment on 14 May 2021.
The
appellants had been arrested, held for about eight months, two months
of which were in solitary confinement. They were tortured
and
confessions extracted. The court awarded the plaintiffs R500 000
and R550 000 respectively as general damages. This
works out at
roughly R2 300 per day. The court did not specify different awards
for arrest, detention, assault or solitary confinement.
32.
The attention of
the SCA in Motladile was apparently not drawn to the decision in
Mahlangu. I am bound in the circumstances to follow
Mahlangu.
33.
Mr
Msudulu, on his pleaded case, has proved unlawful arrest and
detention for about nine hours on Friday 20 September 2013 in filthy
conditions. The circumstances of Mr Msudulu’s detention were
not nearly as harsh as those in Mahlangu. Allowing for the
depreciating value of money over time and taking into account the
lighter circumstances of Mr Msudulu’s detention compared
to
those in Mahlangu, R2 000 is all I can award on the case as pleaded.
34.
The action
commenced in February 2014. Neither side pushed the finalization of
the case very hard. Under
section 2A2(a)
of the
Prescribed Rate of
Interest Act, 55 of 1975
interest runs on a judgment for an
unliquidated debt from the date of demand or summons, whichever is
the earlier.
35.
It is common cause that
summons was served on 28 February 2014. As at 28 February 2014 the
prescribed rate was 15.5 % per annum.
36.
Once the prescribed
rate is triggered in a given case it does not change even with
gazetted fluctuations in the rate. See Davehill
(Pty) Ltd v The
Community Development Board 1988(1) All SA 388 A especially at
paragraphs 25 to 31.
37.
Ms Mandizha sought
interest from date of service of summons. I shall accede to this
request, subject to the proviso that interest
should not exceed
capital. It would be unfair to saddle the defendant with interest
beyond duplum when the plaintiff or his legal
team was not doing much
to advance the litigation.
38.
The proviso itself
needs a proviso. The defendant must pay the capital and interest
straight away. If not, then interest should
run from the day after
judgment until the judgment debt is paid even if duplum has been
reached and passed.
ORDER
1.
The defendant is to pay
the plaintiff R2 000.
2.
Subject to paragraph 3
below, the defendant is to pay the plaintiff interest on the said sum
at the prescribed rate of 15.5 % per
annum from 28 February 2014 to
date of payment.
3.
Interest is not to
exceed capital, provided that interest shall run, on capital and
accumulated interest, at the prescribed rate
of 15.5% per annum as
from the day after judgment if payment of capital and interest is not
made by then.
4.
The defendant is to pay
the plaintiff’s costs on the lowest Magistrate’s court
scale.
GC
Wright
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD:
19
August 2024
DELIVERED:
20
August 2024
APPEARANCES
:
Plaintiff
Att
HR Mandizha
Instructed
by
Bessinger
Attorneys Inc
081 028
7342
bessingerattorneys@gmail.com
Defendant
Att
NE Cingo
Instructed
by
State
Attorney
MR
G Madikgelta
GMadikgetla@justice.gov.za
sino noindex
make_database footer start