Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 879South Africa
Macamo v Minister of Police (25027/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 879 (17 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Macamo v Minister of Police (25027/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 879 (17 September 2024)
Macamo v Minister of Police (25027/2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 879 (17 September 2024)
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sino date 17 September 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
17
September 2024
Case
No.
25027/2020
In
the matter between:
VIGO
MANUEL MACAMO
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Defendant
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
Just before midnight on 18 October 2019, the plaintiff, Mr.
Macamo, was driving on Mdlalose Street in Protea North, Soweto. Ahead
of him was a marked public order police vehicle, which it turned out
was driven by a Sergeant Risonga Maluleke. Sergeant Maluleke
was
returning with a detachment of around seven other officers from a
local operation in which they had all been involved. Mr.
Macamo
overtook Sergeant Maluleke’s vehicle, which then pursued him to
a Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department (JMPD)
roadblock.
2
Sergeant Maluleke stopped Mr. Macamo, and detained him.
Sergeant Maluleke was assisted in doing so by a Sergeant Davidson
Mutavhatisindi,
who was one of the officers travelling with him.
While he was in the process of detaining Mr. Macamo, Sergeant
Maluleke was approached
by another police officer, a Sergeant
Nzimande, who asked him to release Mr. Macamo.
3
Sergeant Maluleke declined to release Mr. Macamo, and instead
took him to the Protea Glen police station, and had him charged with
driving under the influence of alcohol, reckless and negligent
driving, and driving an unroadworthy vehicle. Mr. Macamo was released
on police bail shortly before 09h00 the next morning. The charges
against him were later withdrawn.
4
On his release from detention, Mr. Macamo went to see a
doctor. The doctor, whose evidence was admitted as Exhibit “A”
before me and accepted as true by agreement between the parties,
observed that Mr. Macamo had a bruise on the left side of his
nose, a
bruise on his left shin, and marks and bruises on both wrists. The
doctor also observed that Mr. Macamo was tender to the
touch on his
left lower ribcage and on the left side of the front of his lower
abdomen.
5
Mr. Macamo now sues the defendant, the Minister, for what he
says was his unlawful arrest and assault, carried out by Sergeant
Maluleke
and Sergeant Mutavhatisindi, together with other members of
the team of police officers travelling with them.
6
The facts I have so far set out are common cause. The parties’
stories are otherwise mutually incompatible. Mr. Macamo says
that he
overtook Sergeant Maluleke’s vehicle shortly before he reached
the JMPD roadblock. He stopped at the roadblock. His
car licence and
his driver’s licence were checked. He was breathalysed, and
then allowed to continue. Around 30 metres after
the roadblock, Mr.
Macamo says that he was stopped again by Sergeant Maluleke’s
team, hauled out of his vehicle, handcuffed,
kicked, slapped and
punched. He says that some of the officers taunted him because he is
from Mozambique. He was told that he “was
not in Maputo now”,
the implication presumably being that he could not expect the kind of
treatment he may have been
used to there.
7
Mr. Macamo denied that he had been drinking. He also denied
that he was driving at an excessive speed or in any way erratically.
He pointed out that if there had been anything wrong with his
driving, his licences or his vehicle, he would never have been able
to get past the JMPD roadblock. Mr. Macamo asserted that there was no
basis for his arrest, and no reason for Sergeant Maluleke,
Sergeant
Mutavhatisindi or the other officers to assault him.
8
Mr. Macamo’s evidence was somewhat terse, but there was
nothing inherently improbable or unreliable about it. He was,
overall,
an impressive witness. It seemed to me that his taciturn
demeanour in the witness box was designed to hold in genuine feelings
of anger and humiliation at what, on his version, was plainly a
harrowing episode. Mr. Macamo clearly found it difficult to recount
the events of which he gave evidence.
9
Sergeant Maluleke and Sergeant Mutavhatisindi both deny
assaulting Mr. Macamo. They also say that they were perfectly
entitled to
arrest and detain him. In resolving this dispute, I turn
first to the question of the assault.
The
assault
10
Mr. Macamo’s account of the assault was corroborated by
the evidence of Sergeant Nzimande. Sergeant Nzimande testified that
he was driving past the scene of Mr. Macamo’s arrest on the
night in question. Sergeant Nzimande recognised Mr. Macamo, because
Mr. Macamo, who is a mechanic, had recently done some work on his
car. Both men lived and worked in the Soweto area. Mr. Macamo
worked
at a car workshop in Protea Glen. Sergeant Nzimande was posted to the
South African Police Service’s Soweto dog unit.
He had lived in
Soweto for about a year before Mr. Macamo’s arrest. He had seen
Mr. Macamo around town, but did not know
him well.
11
Sergeant Nzimande said that he stopped at the scene to see if
he could help. He said that he saw Mr. Macamo sitting on the ground
with his hands cuffed behind his back. He saw Sergeant Maluleke slap
Mr. Macamo. He saw another police officer kick Mr. Macamo
in the back
of the head. Sergeant Nzimande asked Sergeant Maluleke why he was
beating Mr. Macamo. Sergeant Maluleke responded merely
that Mr.
Macamo was a criminal. Sergeant Nzimande asked Sergeant Maluleke to
let Mr. Macamo go, but Sergeant Maluleke refused.
Seeing that there
was very little more he could do, Sergeant Nzimande got back into his
car and drove away.
12
None of these features of Sergeant Nzimande’s evidence
was challenged in cross-examination. Ms. Tshifhango, who appeared for
the Minister and who cross-examined Sergeant Nzimande, was not really
able to explain why so much of Sergeant Nzimande’s
evidence was
left uncontradicted if it was not true. Ms. Tshifhango did say that
she was not expecting Sergeant Nzimande to give
the evidence he did
and that she had no instructions on it. Be that as it may, Ms.
Tshifhango did not object to Sergeant Nzimande’s
evidence being
led. Nor did she seek a postponement or a short adjournment to
consult on it. In their evidence, both Sergeant Maluleke
and Sergeant
Mutavhatisindi denied that Mr. Macamo was assaulted but neither of
them dealt specifically with Sergeant Nzimande’s
account of
what he saw. They both accepted that Sergeant Nzimande was present at
the time of Mr. Macamo’s arrest.
13
Sergeant
Nzimande’s evidence was clear and satisfactory in every
respect. He of course knew Mr. Macamo, but not that well.
It was not
suggested that he had any bias adverse to Sergeant Maluleke or
Sergeant Mutavhatisindi. Sergeant Maluleke and Sergeant
Mutavhatisindi both said that Sergeant Nzimande did not happen on the
scene of the arrest by chance, but was called there by Mr.
Macamo.
Again, however, that version was not put to Sergeant Nzimande. It is,
in any event, fanciful. I find it impossible to accept
on the
evidence that Mr. Macamo’s relationship with Sergeant Nzimande
was such that he could call Sergeant Nzimande out at
midnight to
prevent his arrest. Sergeant Nzimande’s unchallenged evidence
was in any event that he was on his way back from
a duty shift at the
dog unit when he passed the scene of Mr. Macamo’s arrest. It
was not disputed that Sergeant Nzimande
arrived at the scene in a
marked police car wearing his police uniform.
14
Accordingly, I accept Sergeant Nzimande’s evidence that
Mr. Macamo was placed on the ground with his hands cuffed behind his
back, while being kicked and slapped by Sergeant Maluleke and one
other police officer. The injuries later recorded in Exhibit
“A”
are consistent with such an assault. Although the doctor did not
notice any injuries to the back of Mr. Macamo’s
head, the
weight of evidence is plainly that Mr. Macamo was assaulted in the
manner Sergeant Nzimande alleged.
The
arrest
15
The facts surrounding the decision to arrest Mr. Macamo are
more complex. Sergeant Maluleke and Sergeant Mutavhatisindi both
testified
that Mr. Macamo overtook them at some speed before running
a red light. They pursued Mr. Macamo and stopped him just before the
JMPD roadblock. They say that they found three bottles of beer in Mr.
Macamo’s car, two of which were empty. They said that
Mr.
Macamo was plainly drunk and unco-operative, and that he was detained
for his own safety. They alleged that Mr. Macamo refused
to provide
his driver’s licence and that he was driving without a valid
car licence.
16
I do not think that I can accept either Sergeant Maluleke’s
or Sergeant Mutavhatisindi’s evidence. In the first place,
neither officer mentioned the detail of the bottles of beer in Mr.
Macamo’s car in their contemporaneous statements. Nor
did Ms.
Tshifhango put that detail to Mr. Macamo in cross-examination. In my
assessment, Sergeant Maluleke’s and Sergeant
Mutavhatisindi’s
version that Mr. Macamo had bottles of beer in his car was a
falsehood, made up after the fact.
17
Secondly, Sergeant Maluleke and Sergeant Mutavhatisindi were,
overall, wholly unimpressive witnesses. Their demeanour in the stand
was dogmatic and belligerent. Neither man’s evidence is
consistent with what was said on their behalf in the Minister’s
plea. In the first place, paragraph 8 of the Minister’s plea
states that Mr. Macamo was stopped “by” the JMPD
at the
roadblock where he refused to submit to a breathalyser test. Sergeant
Mutavhatisindi’s contemporaneous statement also
alleges that it
was in fact the JMPD who stopped Mr. Macamo and not the team of
public order police officers.
18
Sergeant
Mutavhatisindi accepted that neither the Minister’s plea nor
his contemporaneous statement was consistent with his
version given
in evidence. Sergeant Maluleke tried to make out that he was assisted
by the JMPD in some way, but his evidence on
that point was wholly
incredible. Ms. Tshifhango called no-one from the JMPD to corroborate
it. Neither officer suggested that
any attempt was made to
breathalyse Mr. Macamo at the scene of his arrest – whether by
them or by the JMPD officers at the
roadblock. Neither officer sought
to explain why the Minister’s plea differed so markedly from
their evidence.
19
In addition, the defence in the Minister’s plea was that
Mr. Macamo had been arrested under
section 40
(1) (b) of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, which authorises arrests on the reasonable
suspicion that the arrestee has committed an offence specified in
Schedule 1 of the
Act. However, neither Sergeant Maluleke nor
Sergeant Mutavhatisindi suggested that this was the basis for Mr.
Macamo’s arrest.
They said that he was arrested for his own
safety because he was driving an unroadworthy vehicle recklessly
while under the influence
of alcohol. None of these offences appears
in schedule 1 of the
Criminal Procedure Act.
20
Moreover
, I do not think I can accept Sergeant Nzimande’s
evidence without concluding that Sergeant Maluleke and Sergeant
Mutavhatisindi
were clearly lying when they denied assaulting Mr.
Macamo, and that they made up the story about Sergeant Nzimande being
summoned
to the scene by Mr. Macamo. The fact that they lied about
Mr. Macamo’s assault clearly taints their justification of his
arrest.
21
For
all these reasons, I reject Sergeant Maluleke’s and Sergeant
Mutavhatisindi’s evidence. On a balance of probabilities,
I
find that Mr. Macamo was unlawfully detained despite having done
nothing to provoke it. I cannot say exactly what led to the
arrest.
It may have been because Mr. Macamo had the temerity to overtake a
police vehicle, or perhaps it was simply because Mr.
Macamo is from
Mozambique. I accept Mr. Macamo’s version on the facts in
dispute, but I need not do so in order to find that
his arrest was
unlawful. Because Mr. Macamo’s arrest is common cause,
and the Minister bears the onus to justify it,
judgment for Mr.
Macamo must follow directly upon my rejection of Sergeant Maluleke’s
and Sergeant Mutavhatisindi’s
evidence.
The
damage
22
For the reasons I have given, Mr. Macamo must be compensated
for his unlawful arrest, for his assault and for the hours of
detention
that followed. Mr. Macamo originally claimed judgment in
the sum of R800 000, but Mr. Dlali, who appeared for Mr. Macamo,
accepted
in argument that this figure is more than the proven facts
justify. Mr. Macamo was detained for around 9 hours. Mr. Macamo led
no evidence to suggest that the conditions of his detention were
undignified or inhumane, save that his prison cell was very dirty.
The assault on Mr. Macamo was clearly humiliating. He was taunted
about his national origin, and he was cuffed helpless on the
ground
while he was kicked and punched. His injuries did not, however,
result in anything more than temporary incapacity. Mr. Macamo
said
that he did not go to work for three weeks after his assault, but no
need for ongoing medical treatment was proven.
23
On the unlawful arrest and detention claim, I take as my
starting point the decision of the Constitutional Court in
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
2021 (4) SA 585
(CC), in which the
plaintiff was awarded R300 000 in general damages in respect of 7
nights’ detention. This works out at
just over R40 000 per day.
Adjusted for inflation, that yields an amount of R50 000 for one
night’s detention in today’s
money. Although Mr. Macamo
was detained late in the evening, he is in my view entitled to no
less than this amount. I will add
R10 000 for the dirty conditions in
which he was detained.
24
In relation to the assault, I must balance the humiliation Mr.
Macamo experienced during the assault against the fact that no
serious
injury was inflicted. Still, to cuff a man and make him sit
on the ground while he is kicked and punched is a serious assault. I
am also satisfied on the evidence that the assault was at least
partly xenophobic in character. To kick and punch someone under
restraint while taunting them about their national origin is
despicable. It also adds a dimension of humiliation that cannot but
force the value of my award upwards.
25
In
Minister of Police v Heleni
[2023] ZAECGHC 43 (11
May 2023), the sum of R200 000 was awarded to the plaintiff, who had
sustained minor injuries and post-traumatic
stress as a result of a
humiliating and gratuitous assault carried out during a wrongful
arrest. While I accept that no two cases
are alike, the facts in
Heleni
provide an acceptable, if rough, analogue on which to
base my award in this case. An inflation-adjusted award of R210 000
seems
to me to be just and fair compensation for the assault on Mr.
Macamo in this case.
The
amendment
26
During argument, Ms. Tshifhango moved for an amendment to the
Minister’s plea. The plea on which the trial proceeded alleged
that Mr. Macamo was arrested on suspicion of committing a Schedule 1
offence. When the parties closed their cases there was, everyone
agreed, no evidence that the Schedule 1 offence had been committed,
much less that Mr. Macamo was arrested on suspicion of one.
For that
reason, Ms. Tshifhango applied from the bar for leave to amend the
plea to justify the arrest on the basis that Mr. Macamo
had committed
a crime in the presence of a peace officer, which would have been
justification enough for his arrest under
section 40
(1) (a) of the
Criminal Procedure Act. The
theory was that Mr. Macamo’s arrest
was justified because the crimes for which Sergeant Maluleke and
Sergeant Mutavhatisindi
say Mr. Macamo was arrested – drunk
driving, reckless and negligent driving and driving an unroadworthy
vehicle – were
committed in their presence.
27
Because I have rejected Sergeant Maluleke’s and Sergeant
Mutavhatisindi’s evidence on the facts in dispute in its
entirety,
my disposition of the application for leave to amend makes
no difference to the outcome of the case. Even on the Minister’s
amended case, Mr. Macamo must succeed.
28
Had the amendment made a difference, I would have had to
confront the difficult issue of prejudice to Mr. Macamo. Had Mr.
Macamo
been alerted to the fact that the Minister intended to rely on
section 40
(1) (a) of the Act, there is no doubt in my mind that Mr.
Dlali’s approach to cross-examination would have been very
different.
Facing only a case under
section 40
(1) (b) of the Act,
and the total absence of any facts on which a reasonable suspicion
that Mr. Macamo had committed a Schedule
1 offence could be formed,
Mr. Dlali very wisely cross-examined with a light touch. Given this,
it seems to me that permitting
the amendment, had it made a
difference, would probably have caused incurable prejudice to Mr.
Macamo.
29
In any event, for the reasons I have given, there is no need
to deal with the application for leave to amend.
The
order
30
Accordingly, –
30.1
The plaintiff’s claims for general
damages in respect of his unlawful arrest, his unlawful assault and
his unlawful detention
succeed.
30.2
The defendant is directed to pay to the
plaintiff the sum of R270 000, plus interest at the prescribed rate,
which will run from
11 September 2020 to the date of payment.
30.3
The defendant is directed to pay the
plaintiff’s costs, including the costs of counsel on the “B”
scale.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 17 September 2024.
HEARD
ON:
3,
4 and 6 September 2024
DECIDED
ON:
17
September 2024
For
the Plaintiff:
S
Dlali
Instructed
by Smith Rand Attorneys Inc
For
the Defendant
TI
Tshifhango
Instructed
by the State Attorney
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