Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 822South Africa
Shabangu v Minister of Police and Others (20/18028) [2024] ZAGPJHC 822 (27 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 August 2024
Judgment
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## Shabangu v Minister of Police and Others (20/18028) [2024] ZAGPJHC 822 (27 August 2024)
Shabangu v Minister of Police and Others (20/18028) [2024] ZAGPJHC 822 (27 August 2024)
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sino date 27 August 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case No. 20/18028
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED:
YES
27
August 2024
In
the matter between
SIBUSISO
CLEMENT SHABANGU
Plaintiff
And
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE:
1st
Defendant
NATIONAL
COMMISIONER OF POLICE:
2nd
Defendant
PROVINCIAL
COMMISSIONER OF SAPS:
3rd
Defendant
NATIONAL
PROSECUTING AUTHORITY:
4th
Defendant
JUDGMENT
ON SPECIAL PLEAS
MNYATHELI AJ
Introduction
[1] These are
action proceedings in which Plaintiff claims against the Defendants
compensation for damages allegedly occasioned
on the Plaintiff
pursuant to his unlawful arrest and detention by members of the
First, Second and Third Defendants, acting within
the course and
scope of their employment, (“the Defendants”). The arrest
was allegedly followed by malicious prosecution
by or at the behest
of Fourth Defendant, National Prosecuting Authority (“the
NPA”).
[2]
The claim is resisted by, and on behalf of all the Defendants on
several grounds including various Special Pleas, based
on the
contention,
inter
alia,
that the claim has all but prescribed, in terms of the Prescription
Act (“the Prescription Act”),
[1]
as well as under the provisions of the Institution of Legal
Proceedings Against Certain Organs of State Act, hereinafter referred
to as (“the ILPACOSA”)
[2]
for want of compliance with the strictures contained in the latter
Act. Other Special Pleas related to non-compliance with the
provisions of the State Liability Act. There is also a General Plea
or Plea-over.
[3] It was agreed
before the start of the matter, that the issue of special pleas is,
for reason not difficult to discern,
to be dealt with and disposed of
first. The parties also agreed that the claim as against the Second
and Third Defendants would
also be jettisoned, such that the claim
remains against the First and the Fourth Defendants only; the claims,
however, remaining
as they were.
[4] At the start of
the proceedings, the parties advised the court that by agreement
between them that accordingly, Plaintiff
is no longer proceeding
against the Second and Third Defendants; the Plaintiff’s
counsel also advising the court that the
claim as against Second and
Third Defendants is practically withdrawn. In consequence the special
pleas as against the above two
Defendants were also
ipso facto
abandoned. Nothing more need then be said
qua
Second and Third
Defendants.
The Facts
[4]
It is common cause that Plaintiff was arrested by members of the
Defendants on 03 April 2016. He was charged and arraigned
with
charges ranging from armed robbery and murder and detained in terms
of the Criminal Procedure Act.
[3]
.
He unsuccessfully applied to be released on bail and remained in
custody, being remanded several times until his case was heard
over a
period of not less than three (3) years and seven (7) months, all
that period being in custody. He was eventually found
not guilty and
discharged on 15 November 2019.
[5] On 27 January
2020 Plaintiff served on the Defendant, the statutory notice (“the
Notice”) in terms of Section
3 of ILPACOSA, demanding
compensation and advising of an intention to issue summons against
the Defendant. It is common cause that
the Notice was acknowledged by
or on behalf of the Defendants on 13 February 2020.
[6] On 23 July 2020
Plaintiff issued summons against the Defendants including the Fourth
Defendant for a composite amount
of R50 000 000 [Fifty Million rand].
There is no issue raised regarding the service of the summons at
issue.
[7] Initially four
(4) Special Pleas were raised on behalf of the Defendants against the
claim of the Plaintiff, as follows:
7.1 That the claim
had prescribed in terms of the section 11 of the Prescription Act;
7.2 That Plaintiff
failed to comply with the provisions of Section 3 of the ILPACOSA and
was late of the statutory Notice
required in terms thereof, in that
it was not served within six (6) months of the precipitation of the
cause of action;
7.3 Failure to
comply with Section 5 of the ILPACOSA; and
7.4
Failure to adhere to the provisions of Section 2 of the State
Liability Act;
[4]
Issues for decision
[8] I reiterate
that upon hearing of the matter, counsel for the Defendants and the
Fourth Defendant informed the court that
they were abandoning the
last two Special Pleas referred to in 6.3 and 6.4 above. The result
was that only the Special Plea of
Prescription in terms of section 11
of the Prescription Act and the Special Plea under the provisions of
the Section 3 of ILPACOSA
remained for adjudication.
[9]
Both parties elected not to lead any evidence in support of their
cases on the special pleas of Prescription under both
the
Prescription Act and compliance requirements under the ILPACOSA. It
is trite that our courts have been at pains to point out
that it is
wrong of a court to seek to decide issues which the parties have not
raised in their papers. It was pertinently pointed
out in
Mtokonya
v Minister of Police,
[5]
that
a court should not tell a litigant what it should complain about,
unless it is a matter of a point of law that has not been
raised by
the parties but is apparent in the papers. This matter will,
therefore, be mainly decided on the parties’ heads
of argument
and their arguments and contentions in presenting their respective
cases.
[10] The issues
that remain for adjudication, in consequence, are:
When would
prescription be said to have started running in the trajectory of the
Plaintiff’s case in respect of his claims;
Whether the claim of
the Plaintiff based on unlawful arrest and detention and the claim of
malicious prosecution have been extinguished
by prescription in terms
of section 11 of the Prescription Act; and
Whether there was due
and proper compliance with the prescripts laid out in section 3 of
ILPACOSA as regards the statutory notice
(“the Notice”)
The law
[11]
Generally the Prescription Act governs issues of prescription of
claims arising from causes such as delicts and contracts
and even
unjust enrichment. In this case the issue at hand is damages in
delict. It is now settled that claims of the nature concerned
in this
case are claims based on
actio
injuriarum
.
See
Holden v Assmang Limited
[6]
;
See also Kruger v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[7]
[12]
In relevant parts the Prescription Act provides that the period of
prescription shall be three years save where an Act
of parliament
provides otherwise.
[8]
[13] Section 12 of
the Act is to the following effect:
(1) Subject to
the provisions of subsection (2) (3) and (4), prescription shall
commence as soon as the debt is due.
(2) If the
debtor willfully prevents the creditor from coming to know of the
existence of a debt, prescription shall not commence
to run until the
creditor becomes aware of the existence of the debt.
(3) A debt shall
not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge of the
identity of the debtor and of the facts from
which the debt arises:
Provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have such knowledge if he
could have acquired it by the exercise
of reasonable care
[14]
For a debt to be due and for prescription to start running section
12(3) above requires that the creditor must have knowledge
of the
identity of the debtor and of the facts from which the debt arises.
The section does not require that before a debt can
be said to be due
or before prescription can start running, that the creditor must know
that the conduct of the debtor giving rise
to the debt is wrongful
and actionable, as that is a legal conclusion and not fact. Per Zondo
J in
Mtokonya
v Minister of Police
[9]
;
See also Minister of Safety and Security v Slabbert
[10]
[15] Given the
nature of the Pleas of the Defendant it is apparent that to
adjudicate the matter the issue of dates is of
prime importance.
Of more importance is the determination of the date on which the
cause of action in the matter arose. In
other words, the strike date
as to when the claim against the Defendants became due is the
gravamen of this case.
[16]
For its sake, the cause of action is the totality of all the facts
and circumstances that give rise to a claim that would
entitle the
Plaintiff to prosecute a claim against the Defendants. According to
Section 12 (3) a debt becomes due when the Plaintiff
is able to
identify the debtor and the facts upon which the claim arises. So for
claims based on an allegation of unlawful arrest
the debt becomes due
on the date that the offending conduct was committed,
See
Makhwelo v Minister of Safety and Security
[11]
[17] For a claim
based on malicious prosecution to succeed on the merits, Plaintiff
must allege and prove:
17.1 that the
Defendant set the law in motion in the sense of initiating or
instigating the Proceedings that the
Plaintiff alleges
were malicious;
17.2 that the
Defendant acted without reasonable and probable cause;
17.3 that Defendant
acted with malice or animo injuriandi; and
17.4
that the prosecution was decided in favour of the Plaintiff or that
the matter was withdrawn against him.
See
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v
Moleko
[12]
[18]
The distinguishing factor with regard to claims based on malicious
prosecution is that unlike other claims generally
such as one based
on unlawful arrest, the claim for malicious prosecution can only
arise if the proceedings at issue are terminated
in favour of the
Plaintiff. This much was said with authority in
Els
v Minister of Law and Order
[13]
.
The reason for this is that a claim for malicious prosecution cannot
anticipate the outcome of the proceedings yet to be finalized.
Finality of the proceedings, in favour of the claimant is what is an
essential requirement.
[19]
In
Holden
v Assmang
[14]
Dlodlo
JA asserted that ‘a claim for malicious prosecution can only
arise after the successful conclusion of the criminal
case in a
plaintiff’s favour. In a criminal matter such a favourable
conclusion in plaintiff’s favour would occur on
acquittal or
the withdrawal of the charges by the Director of Public Prosecutions.
The institution of a civil claim based on a
malicious prosecution
before such prosecution has been finalized in the plaintiff’s
favour, may amount to prejudging the
results of the pending
proceedings’
[20] A claim based
on unlawful arrest is much different from one based on malicious
arrest and/or prosecution. In the case
of an unlawful arrest the
cause of action arises when all the facts upon which a claim may
ensue are present, and the claimant
is able to identify its debtor,
unless they are prevented from doing so by the debtor himself. This
is only possible upon arrest.
As regards a claim based on malicious
prosecution, it is imperative that the cause of action only gets
completed upon the termination
of the proceedings in favour of the
claimant
[21]
In addressing the first issue for decision herein at: as to when
prescription would have started to run in the trajectory
of the
Plaintiff’s case regarding his claims
Ms
Liphoto
for the Defendants submitted that it is common cause that Plaintiff
was arrested on 03 April 2016, and that this is in accordance
with
his very summons. This, she says, was repeated in the Plaintiff’s
Replication
[15]
and must be
taken as an admission on his part as he says it is common cause.
Plaintiff was arrested by members of the First Defendant,
Police
officials; he was also informed of the reason for the arrest, in that
he was charged with robbery and murder.
[22]
The submission in short is that the Plaintiff knew or had knowledge
of the identity of his debtor on that date of the
3
rd
of April 2016. Also on being informed that he was being arrested on
charges of robbery and murder he would then have known of the
facts
giving rise to, and the reason for his arrest, and therefore the debt
and the debtor. Ms Liphoto relies for her submissions,
inter
alia
,
on the judgment of
Kutoane
v Minister of Police and others
[16]
[23] The thrust of
Ms Liphoto’s
submissions on behalf of the Defendants was
that the claim of the Plaintiff was based on an assertion that he was
unlawfully arrested
and detained on 3 April 2016, and was in custody
for the period of more than three years until his acquittal on the 15
November
2019.
[24] It is common
cause that he then, on the 27 January 2020, issued the Notice in
terms of Section 3 of the ILPACOSA to the
First Defendant.
[25]
Ms Maisela
on behalf of the Plaintiff also pursued her arguments along the Heads
of Argument she had presented, arguing, in the main, that
the claim
of the Plaintiff had not been extinguished by prescription. She stuck
to the common cause facts of this matter: that
the arrest of the
Plaintiff was on the 03 April 2016; He was languishing in the
Johannesburg prison where he was detained, bar
postponements,
appearance for bail applications and the trial itself and remands
in-between till his acquittal on 15 November 2019.
He spent in total
a period of Three (3) years and Seven (7) months in custody.
[26]
Ms
Maisela
further argues through,
inter
alia
,
her heads of argument, that Plaintiff was denied bail hence he was
kept in custody for this length of time; that over the period
of
custody he was not aware of his rights to sue; further
that
even if Plaintiff might have known about his rights to sue for his
unlawful arrest and malicious prosecution, he had to allow
the
prosecution process to take its course.
She
submitted that it would have been
prematurely
(sic)
to
bring any action against the Defendants whilst the prosecution was
still underway. Ms Maisela argues that even if Plaintiff knew
of his
rights to sue, he was kept in custody at the Johannesburg Central
Prison and had no means to bring this action against the
Defendants.
[17]
[27]
In objecting to the contention of prescription argued for by
Ms
Liphoto, Ms Maisela
referred also to the decision in
Mtokonya
v Minister of Police
[18]
averring that there was a split decision by the Judges of the
Constitutional Court in that case. Since this decision is against
the
arguments of Ms Maisela by majority, she obviously aligns herself
with the minority view. Unfortunately, the principles of
stare
decisis
do not avail her arguments. She presented arguments of the majority
and those of the minority. For this I commend her but from
both a
substantive law point of view and the law of procedure the arguments
of the minority do not find favour with the current
legal position.
[28] I engaged the
parties on the Latin maxim,
lex non cogit ad impossibilia,
(the law does not expect a person to do the impossible), since there
have been some differences in the authorities and some case
law on
this issue. The arguments by counsel for the Plaintiff also appear to
be leaning towards the implications under this maxim.
On a strict
interpretation of the maxim and the notion that the law does not
expect a person to do the impossible, it would seem
that this would
implicate the principles and some judicial pronouncements on the
issue of ignorance of the law and impossibility
of performance. This
speaks more to the minority judgment arguments posited by
Ms
Marisela
in the Mtokonya judgment. Referring to Paragraph [140]
in that judgment counsel quoted the following passage:
‘
In
the case where section 12(2) applies, prescription does not commence
even if the debt becomes due. What prevents the running
of
prescription is the creditor’s lack of knowledge of the
existence of the debt brought about by the debtor. ……
At paragraph [148
]
Therefore, in my view section 12(3) should not be read as authorising
prescription to commence running where the claimant, through
no fault
of his or hers, has successfully established that he or she was not
aware of the existence of the debt. The effect
of holding
otherwise would be denying the uneducated and poor people in custody
the protection arising from constitutional rights…’
[29] The above
arguments obviously do not thump the sentiments expressed in the
majority judgment in
Mtokonya,
namely that ‘the question
before them as to whether the High Court was correct in its decision
that section 12(3) of the
Prescription Act does not require a
creditor to have knowledge that the conduct of the debtor giving rise
to the debt was wrongful
and actionable before prescription could
start running’ was to be answered in the affirmative or not.
[30] Dismissing the
minority arguments the court went on to say, “we decline the
invitation by Counsel for Applicant
to hold that the meaning of the
provision in Section 12(3) that a debt shall not be deemed to be due
until the creditor has “knowledge
of the facts from which the
debt arises” includes that the creditor must have knowledge of
legal conclusions, i.e. the conduct
of the debtor was wrongful and
actionable”.
[31] The Court went
on to brand counsel’s overtures as an invitation to render our
law of prescription
so ineffective that it may as well be
abolished, because prescription would then not run against people who
have no legal training
at all, including professionals in non-legal
disciplines.
[32] It was the
judges’ overall impressions in the
Mtokonya
case that
prescription would hardly run against trained lawyers even, if the
issue arises in areas of law in which they do not specialise,
and the
percentage of people against whom prescription would not run would be
exceedingly high.
[33] In short a
decision in favour of allowing uninformed, illiterate or uninitiated
people in the law governing prescription
would open the proverbial
floodgates of litigation against the state and the public purse would
soon be bankrupted.
[34]
There was an issue raised by the court
mero
motu
,
regarding whether it can be said that the case of the Plaintiff would
fall under what was referred to as ‘superior force’
in a
recent decision of this court. Counsel was not bound by any of the
sentiment expressed in that case and the matter was not
covered by
their respective cases, nor was the court entitle to traverse matters
that fell outside the parties; cases. No further
discussion will
therefore, be held on tis issues in this judgment.
See
the recent judgment in Katha v Pillay and Others
[19]
Conclusion and Ruling
[34] Now, in this
matter counsel for Applicant made it clear to the court, that they
their challenge of prescription in their
special pleas did not extent
to the claim based on malicious prosecution and their arguments did
not implicate the law governing
such situations. This was a fair, and
dare I say, wise approach. I need, therefore, not burden myself with
argument on that particular
score at this stage, and will cross that
proverbial bridge, if and when, I come to it.
[35] The summary of
the above reasoning and legal treatise is that as regards a claim
based on unlawful arrest and detention
prescription will ordinarily
commence to run immediately after the arrest has been effected. That
is the trigger event of the running
of prescription.
[36] As regards
unlawful detention, each day that the claimant is in detention gives
rise to a separate claim with regard
to prescription. It runs
[afresh] in respect of each such day. See Also Unreported Judgment:
Case No. 2007/67791
[37] So, when
Applicant was apprehended by members of the First Defendant on the 03
April 2016, that is the date when he is
deemed to have identified his
debtor, the First Defendant Minister of Police and the facts and
circumstances from which the arrest
or apprehension arose.
[38] As nothing was
done by him or anyone on his behalf till his acquittal on 15 November
2019, the period of prescription
ran its course and was extinguished
on 03 April 2019. It does not avail Plaintiff that he was in custody
or did not know his rights
all of the period of three (s) years and
seven (7) months.
[39] It will be
found that Plaintiff’s claim against the First Defendant for
unlawful arrest and detention had prescribed.
[40] Regarding
prescription in terms of Section 40 of ILPACOSA concerning the above
claim, it is common cause that no notice
was issued in terms of
Section 3 of ILPACOSA, as Plaintiff believed that he did not need one
since being in custody.
[41] It will be
found that the claim would have prescribed for the reasons stated
above with regards to.
[42] The hearing
did not traverse the issue of costs in this interlocutory aspect.
Since the matter is not over yet, I would
have been prepared to rule
that the costs be in the action.
[43] However since
these aspects of prescription under the Prescription Act and under
the ILPACOSA have been dealt with, in
my view exhaustively between
the parties, and in the exercise of my judicial discretion I rule
that costs should follow the results
that the losing party shall bear
the costs hereof.
Order
[44] The following
ORDER is made:
44.1 Plaintiff’s
claims based on unlawful arrest have prescribed in terms of the
Prescription Act;
44.2 Plaintiff’s
action under the provisions of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings
Against Certain Organs of State Act, No. 40 of 2002
has also
prescribed.
44.3 Plaintiff
shall bear the costs of the proceedings on the above interlocutory
aspects.
44.4 Further
process on the matter is postponed
sine die
MNYATHELI AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date of hearing :22
August 2024
Date Judgment delivered:
27 August 2024
Appearances:
For the Plaintiff: Adv
Maisela
Instructed by: Molope
Madondo Attorneys
For the Defendant: Adv L
Liphoto
Instructed by : State
Attorney
[1]
No.
68 of 1969
[2]
No.
40 of 2002
[3]
No.
51 of 1977
[4]
No.
20 of 1957
[5]
2018
(5) Sa 22 (CC)
[6]
2020 ZASCA 145
[7]
2019 ZACC 13; 2019 BCLR 703 (CC)
[8]
See
Section 11
[9]
supra
[10]
[2010]
2 All SA 474 (SCA)
[11]
2017
(1) SDA 274 (GJ)
[12]
[2008]
3 All SA 47 (SCA)
[13]
1993
(1) SA 12 (CC)
[14]
[2020]
ZSCA 145
[15]
The
Replication pretty much repeats the particulars of Claim with an
emphasis that the date of the 3
rd
April 2016 is common cause and not in dispute
[16]
2024 (
[17]
Plaintiff's
Heads of Argument (HoA) Page 4 paragraph 11
[19]
2024 (1) SA 159
(GJ)
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