Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 150South Africa
S.T.T and Others v Minister Of Police (26369/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 150 (20 February 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil proceedings - Trial - Irregularity in - Action on unlawful arrest by members of the South African Police Service- Defendant accepting onus to begin - At end of defendant's case plaintiff calling no evidence - Plaintiffs, though not closing case nor leading evidence, asking for judgment in their favour.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## S.T.T and Others v Minister Of Police (26369/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 150 (20 February 2023)
S.T.T and Others v Minister Of Police (26369/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 150 (20 February 2023)
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sino date 20 February 2023
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 26369/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE: 20 February 2023
In the matter between:
S[....]
T[....]1
T[....]1 1
ST
PLAINTIFF
S[....]
T[....]1 T[....]1(OBO HER MINOR CHILD)
THESELE
T[....]2 2
ND
PLAINTIFF
TSHEGO
MOLEFE 3
RD
PLAINTIFF
XOLANI
MAKROTI 4
TH
PLAINTIFF
THEBE
T[....]3 5
TH
PLAINTIFF
AND
MINISTER
OF POLICE
DEFENDANT
Coram: MUDAU J
Heard: 17 February 2023
Delivered:
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e-mail and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 20
February 2023.
Summary:
Civil proceedings - Trial - Irregularity in - Action on unlawful
arrest by members of the South African Police Service- Defendant
accepting onus to begin - At end of defendant's case plaintiff
calling no evidence - Plaintiffs, though not closing case nor leading
evidence, asking for judgment in their favour.
Held-
to allow the applicants’ application for judgment at that stage
without applicant having closed their case is not only
prejudicial to
the respondent, but would amount to an irregularity.
Order:
application dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
MUDAU, J:
[1]
This is an opposed application for judgment at the close of the case
for the
defendant. For convenience, the parties are referred to in
this application as cited in the action. The plaintiffs (applicants)
instituted action against the defendant in this court for damages
suffered as a result of their arrest and subsequent detention
by
members of the South African Police Service (“SAPS”). It
is alleged that members of the SAPS acted within the course
and scope
of their employment with the defendant. From the pleadings, the
arrest and detention are not placed in dispute.
The defendant (respondent)
, bore the duty to begin and the
onus of proof to show by reason of this admission, on a balance of
probabilities, that the arrest
of the plaintiffs was lawful in terms
of sub
section 40(1)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
.
[2] The onus being clearly on the defendant, this court heard the defendant’s evidence,
in particular the evidence of the witnesses
that the defendant called.
[3]
At the close of the defendant's case, plaintiff's counsel
Mr Naidoo (an attorney with a right of appearance in this
court) without closing his case with reference to
the purported common law position, asked for judgment in plaintiffs’
favour on the ground that the onus which rested on the
defendant has
not been discharged. In the heads of argument prepared for this
application he not only deals with the evidence led
on behalf of the
defendants, but sets out a summary of the facts. I deliberately
refrain from commenting thereon for reason that
their
final determination must depend on the facts ultimately established
at the end of the trial.
[4]
The legal
representative for the plaintiffs, relied for his proposition on,
inter alia, an unreported judgment,
Pather
v Minister of Police
[1]
by Nkosi AJ and the authorities referred therein. In
Pather
,
the court stated at paragraphs 31.1 to 31.3 as follows:
“
31.1 That
plaintiff is entitled to apply for judgment at the close of the
Defendant’s case without leading evidence
and without closing
its case. It was submitted on her behalf that the test to be applied
is similar to that of absolution from
the instance where a Plaintiff
has not discharged its onus. It was further submitted that if a
Defendant upon whom the onus of
proof rests has failed to lead such
evidence in discharge of that onus to the effect that a reasonable
man could have not come
to the conclusion that it might be accepted,
the court would be entitled to give judgment for the Plaintiff.
31.2 This
proposition of an application for judgment, where the Defendant bore
the onus and before the Plaintiff closing
its case or leading
evidence, was introduced in the old case of Siko v Zonsa 1908 (T)
1013 where the court held that it would be
a useless (exercise) waste
of time to proceed with the matter further.
31.3 The Siko
case was confirmed as an applicable principle in the case of
Hodgkinson v Fourie 1930 (TPD) 740 at page
743 where it was held as
follows:
‘
At
the close of the case of the one side upon whom the onus lies, the
question which the judicial officer has to put to himself
is: ‘is
there evidence on which a reasonable man might find for that side.’”
[5]
The
Pather
judgment and the passages referred to above were subsequently
followed in
Guntu
v Minister of Police
[2]
,
another unreported judgment by the Eastern Cape Division, Mthatha (
per Noncembu J), which Mr Naidoo also relies upon. I am inclined
to
disagree with the approach taken in those judgments for the reasons
that follow.
[6]
The quoted paragraphs do not help the plaintiffs for the simple
reason that
in paragraph 29 of the
Pather
judgment, it is
recorded that “
Plaintiff closed its case without
testifying
”. That alone is a distinguishing feature to this
matter. However, to the extent that it is suggested
Pather
set
out the correct legal position from the quoted paragraphs and the
authorities relied upon, it is appropriate to deal with that
proposition.
[7]
Siko v
Zonsa,
[3]
relied upon in the
Pather
and
Guntu
matters, was an action where the issue was one of fact regarding the
sale of a certain wood and iron hut. The defendant, on whom
the
onus lay, testified to a version, which if true was a good defence,
and called corroborative evidence. The magistrate,
without hearing
the evidence for the plaintiff, gave judgment for the latter on the
ground that he did not believe the evidence
for the defendant. It was
held, on appeal by Solomon J with Mason J concurring, that while that
evidence stood uncontradicted,
judgment could not be given in the
plaintiff's favour. The procedure adopted by the magistrate was
described by the learned Judge
as “extremely unsatisfactory”
and that the decision fell to be set aside and the case remitted to
the magistrate to
hear the evidence for the plaintiff. Put simply,
contrary to what is referred to in
Pather
and
Guntu
,
this procedure was specifically denounced in
Siko
.
[8]
In
Hodgkinson
v Fourie
[4]
,
relied upon in
Pather
,
the plaintiff sued in a magistrates’ court on a promissory
note. The defendant pleaded the non-fulfillment of a suspensive
condition, and led evidence in support of the plea. At the conclusion
of this evidence, and without plaintiff leading evidence
or closing
his case as this court is urged to do regarding this matter, the
magistrate gave a judgment for plaintiff, stating in
his reasons that
the defendant’s evidence was not impossible or on the face of
it improbable, but that it did not convince
him and that the
defendant had thus not discharged the onus which rested on him. On a
subsequent appeal, it was a held that the
judgment of the magistrate
should be set aside and the case referred back to the magistrate for
the magistrate to hear the plaintiff’s
evidence in rebuttal,
or, should the plaintiff elect not to call evidence and to close his
case, to decide the case on the recorded
evidence.
[9]
The authorities quoted in the above matters quite clearly do not
support the
conclusions arrived at in both the
Pather
and
Guntu
matters. I respectfully disagree with them. The
Hodgkinson matter, which is a judgment of this Division (TPD as
it then was)
by De Waal JP, and with which Krause J concurred was in
any event binding or at the very least persuasive and not properly
dealt
with in the
Pather
matter.
[10]
As early as
1933, in the matter of
Schuster
v Geuter
[5]
Van Heerden J held, and I agree that: if the onus is on the
defendant, the court cannot after he has led his evidence, give
judgment
for the plaintiff unless and until the plaintiff closes his
case. The
Schuster
case was followed in
Scheepers
v Video & Telecom Services
[6]
( Eksteen J and Mullins AJ concurring)
wherein
the procedure followed was exactly the same as the applicants contend
in this matter in that the defendant accepted the
onus to begin. At
the end of
the
defendant's
case, the plaintiff called no evidence nor closed its case, but asked
for judgment, which application the Magistrate
entertained and
granted judgment in plaintiff's favour. It was held on appeal, that
the magistrate had committed an irregularity
in entertaining and
allowing the respondent's application for judgment at that stage
without the respondent having closed its case.
[11]
It was further held, that
"In a case where the
onus rests upon the plaintiff a defendant is entitled to ask for
absolution from the instance at the close
of plaintiff's case on the
ground that he has failed to make out a
prima
facie
case. Such a decree, if granted, will not be in the nature of a final
judgment between the partie. Where, however, the onus is
on
the defendant, there is no room for a decree of absolution from the
instance, and any judgment given must be a final judgment
as between
the parties.”
[7]
I
agree. Prejudice is likely to be the result, if it is later
established, prima facie, that the defendant discharged its burden
of
proof.
[8]
[12]
Rule 39 of the Uniform Rules of court lays down pertinently the
procedure for the conduct of the trial.
Rule 39 (13) reads:
“
Where the onus of
adducing evidence on one or more of the issues is on the plaintiff
and that of adducing evidence on any other
issue is on the defendant,
the plaintiff shall first call his evidence on any issues in respect
of which the onus is upon him,
and may then close his case. The
defendant, if absolution from the instance is not granted, shall, if
he does not close his case,
thereupon call his evidence on all issues
in respect of which such onus is upon him.”
[13]
It follows, accordingly, that this application was poorly conceived.
I consequently hold that to enter
judgment in circumstances where the
plaintiffs have not led any evidence or closed their case would be a
serious irregularity.
As to the question of costs, Counsel for the
defendant argued that the conduct by the legal representative of the
plaintiffs justified
an order for cost
de bonis propriis
on a
punitive scale. I do not think that such an order for costs is
warranted for the mere fact that the legal representative for
the
plaintiffs as he contended, relied on existing judgments. I agree.
For the reasons stated above, the plaintiffs’ application
falls
to be dismissed with costs following the result.
Order
[14]
The application is dismissed with costs.
T
P MUDAU
Judge
of the High Court
Date of Hearing:
18 February 2023
Date of Judgment: 20
February 2023
APPEARANCES
For the Applicants:
Mr
L Naidoo
Instructed
by:
Logan
Naidoo Attorney
For the Respondent:
Adv.
K Mashile
Instructed by:
State
Attorney
[1]
14512/13
[2016] ZAGPPHC 215 (31 March 2016).
[2]
962/2021
[2022] ZAECMHC 33 (8 September 2022).
[3]
1908
(T) 1013.
[4]
1930
(TPD) 740.
[5]
1933
SWA 114.
[6]
1981
(2) SA 490 (E).
[7]
Above
at pg. 491.
[8]
Belonje
v Greyling Schelling en Kie Bpk
1956
(2) SA 632
(T).
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