Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 434South Africa
Khanyi v Minister of Police (16/13227) [2023] ZAGPJHC 434 (8 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 May 2023
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that:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Khanyi v Minister of Police (16/13227) [2023] ZAGPJHC 434 (8 May 2023)
Khanyi v Minister of Police (16/13227) [2023] ZAGPJHC 434 (8 May 2023)
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sino date 8 May 2023
REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case Number:
16/13227
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
In
the matter between
LUNGA
MILTON KHANYI
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
Defendant
NUETRAL
CITATION:
Lunga Milton Khanyi vs The Minister of Police
(Case Number:13227/2016) [2023] ZAGPJHC 434 8 May 2023
.
Delivery:
The judgment was
delivered electronically through the email to the legal
representatives and shall be uploaded on the caselines.
The judgment
shall be deemed to be delivered on
08
May 2023
.
JUDGMENT
MOLAHLEHI
J
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff
,
Mr Khanyi
,
instituted action
proceedings against the Minister of Police for his unlawful arrest
and detention by members of the South African
Police Services (SAPS)
on 1
3
September 2014. He claimed
the sum of R600,000, which is made up of the following heads:
(a)
General damages –
unlawful arrest and detention = R450,000.00.
(b)
General damages –
malicious arrest and detention= R150,000.00.
[2]
The defendant filed
its notice to oppose the claim and a plea denying the allegation of
unlawful arrest and detention of the plaintiff.
[3]
The plaintiff's case,
as stated above, is that he was arrested by members of the SAPS on 13
September 2014 around 10h30 in Soweto.
At the time of his arrest, the
plaintiff was on his way to catch public transport to travel to
Sandton City, where he would have
met with his friends to travel the
following morning to Cape Town. They were travelling to Cape Town to
participate in a culinary competition
as a group. At the time
the police confronted him the plaintiff had a bag containing his
clothes and other personal items. The
police requested to search his
ba
g
for which he did not object
but requested that they do it expeditiously as he was in a rush to
Sandton City.
[4]
It would appear that
the police
were
offended by
the
plaintiff’s
response
which
they regarded as reflecting a negative attitude on his part
and
thus informed hi
m
that the search would be conducted
at
the police station. Before putting him at the back of the van, they
informed him that he appeared like someone who smokes dagga.
[5]
The police drove to
the Jabulani police, where they detained the plaintiff in the police
cell. According to the plaintiff, there
were eleven other people in
the cell, which number increased later to twenty.
[6]
There were two
witnesses who testified in support of the plaintiff's claim. The
first witness was the plaintiff himself. He testified
as follows
;
after being
taken to the police station, he was placed in a dirty cell and
provided with blankets and a sponge infested with lice.
There were no
beds in the cell. The toilet was not working properly. He avoided
using it on the first day of the detention. He
had no option on the
second day but to use it. There was no basin in the toilet to wash
their hands. The plaintiff was taken to
the magistrate court on the
fourth day of his detention but never appeared in court. He was
released without being told as to what
wrong he had done. The other
complaint that the plaintiff has is that consequent to the arrest,
his relationship with his friends,
who were supposed to travel with
them to Cape Town, broke down because they blamed him for their
failure to attend the competition.
The other consequence of his
arrest was that members of the community treated him with distrust
and suspicion, as they regarded
him as a criminal.
[7]
The plaintiff
conceded during cross-examination that the police gave him the
document,
notice of his
rights after the arrest. He also conceded having signed the document
but
contended
that he could not read the document properly because he was confused
and thus did not understand the contents thereof.
[8]
The second witness who
testified in support of the plaintiff's case was his cousin, Mr
Johannes Sithole. He testified that he visited
the plaintiff's
mother, his aunt, to attend some family ceremony which to
ok
place on that particular
day. He was informed on arrival by the plaintiff's mother that the
plaintiff had been arrested.
She
gave him R20.00 for taxi
fares to visit the plaintiff at the prison.
[9]
On arrival at the police
station, he inquired as to why the plaintiff was arrested and was
informed that it was in connection with
dagga. He testified further
that he and the plaintiff did smoke dagga
some
time back
.
[10]
The defendant's case,
as indicated earlier, is that the plaintiff's arrest was not unlawful
even though the arrest was effected
without a warrant of arrest. The
defendant did not, however, present any evidence to support this
contention.
The
legal principles
[11]
It
is common cause that the plaintiff was arrested without a warrant of
arrest. Therefore, the onus to show that the arrest was
lawful rested
on the police in terms of section 40 of the Criminal Procedure Act
(CPA)
[1]
. Section
40
of
the CPA provides as follows:
"(1) A
peace officer may, without warrant arrest any person-
(b)
whom he reasonably suspects of having committed an offence
referred to in Schedule 1, other
than the offence of escaping
from lawful custody
.
"
[12]
The jurisdictional
facts which the Minister would have to satisfy to succeed in
rel
ying
on
the
provisions of
section
40(1) of the CPA is to establish that, at the time the arrest was
effected: (i) the arrestor was a police officer; (ii)
the arrestor
entertained a suspicion; (iii) the suspicion was that the suspect was
committing or had committed an offence under
a law governing the
supply, possession of conveyance of dependence-producing drugs; and
(iv) the suspicion rested on reasonable
grounds.
[13]
The
requirements of reasonable suspicion in terms of section 40(1) (b) of
the CPA were dealt with in
Mabona
and Another v Minister of Law and Order and Others
1988
(2) SA 654
(
SE)
at 658E-H
,
[2]
as
follows:
"The test
of whether a suspicion is reasonably entertained within the meaning
of s 40(1)
(b)
is
objective (
S
v Nel and Another
1980
(4) SA 28
(E)
at
33H). Would a reasonable man in the second defendant's position and
possessed of the same information have considered that there
were
good and sufficient grounds for suspecting that the plaintiffs were
guilty of conspiracy to commit robbery or possession of
the stolen
property, knowing it to have been stolen? It seems to me that in
evaluating his information, a reasonable man would
bear in mind that
the section authorises drastic police action. It authorises an arrest
on the strength of suspicion and without
the need to swear out a
warrant, i.e. something which otherwise would be an invasion of
private rights and personal liberty. The
reasonable man will
therefore analyse and assess the quality of the information at his
disposal critically, and he will not accept
it lightly or without
checking it where it can be checked. It is only after an examination
of this kind that he will allow himself
to entertain a suspicion
which will justify an arrest. This is not to say that the information
at his disposal must be of sufficiently
high quality and cogency to
engender in him a conviction that the suspect is in fact, guilty. The
section requires suspicion but
not a certainty. However, the
suspicion must be based on solid grounds. Otherwise, it will be
flighty or arbitrary and not a reasonable
suspicion."
[14]
As indicated earlier,
the police provided no evidence to contradict the a
llegations
made by the plaintiff. It
follows, therefore, that in the absence of evidence explaining why
the arrest was effected without a warrant,
and
having regard to the plaintiff’s version,
the arrest has to be
regarded as unlawful.
[15]
The plaintiff's pleaded
case is that he suffered damages
as
a
consequence
of the unlawful arrest and detention. He
,
has a result of the illegal
conduct of the police
,
suffered damages because he
was deprived of his freedom and liberty.
[16]
It
is trite that the deprivation of liberty is a serious matter which
would entitle the affected person to claim damages. In Rahim
and 14
Others v Minister of Home Affairs,
[3]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
"The
deprivation of liability is indeed a serious matter. In cases of
non-patrimonial loss where damages are claimed, the extent
of damages
cannot be assessed with mathematical precision. In such cases, the
exercise of reasonable discretion by the court and
broad general
considerations play a decisive role in the process of quantification.
This does not, of course, absolve a plaintiff
of adducing evidence
which will enable a court to make an appropriate and fair award. In
cases involving deprivation of liability,
the amount of satisfaction
is calculated by the court ex
aequo
et bono
.
Inter
alia
the following
factors
are relevant: '
27.1
circumstances under which the deprivation of liability took place;
27.2
the conduct of the defendants; and
27.3
the nature and duration of deprivation …"
[17]
The next issue for
determination once it has been
established
that the arrest was
unlawful is that of determining what compensation should be awarded
to the plaintiff for the injury suffered.
In other words, the court
has to determine a just and fair compensation to be awarded to the
plaintiff for the wrongful arrest.
[18]
In
Olga v Minister of Safety and Security
,
[4]
the
court remarked:
"In modern
South Africa, a just award for damages for wrongful arrest and
detention should express the importance
of the constitutional right
to individual freedom, and it should properly take into account the
facts of the case, the personal
circumstances of the victim
and the nature, extent and degree affront to his dignity and
his sense of worth, These considerations
should be tempered with
restraint and proper regard to the value of money to
avoid the motion of an extravagant distribution
of wealth from what
Holmes J called the '"horn of plenty" at the expense of the
defendant
.”
[19]
As
indicated earlier, the plaintiff claims R600,000.00 for
damages arising from the unlawful arrest by the police.
The
approach to adopt with regard to the assessment of damages was stated
as follows in Minister of Safety v Tyulun:
[5]
"In the
assessment of damages for unlawful arrest and detention, it is
important to bear in mind that the primary purpose is
not to enrich
the aggrieved party but to offer him or her some much-needed solatium
for his or her injured feelings. It is, therefore,
crucial that
serious attempts be made to ensure that the damages awarded are
commensurate with the injury inflicted. However, our
courts should be
astute to ensure that the awards they make for such infractions
reflect the importance of the right to personal
liberty and the
seriousness with which any arbitrary deprivation of personal liberty
is viewed in our law. I readily concede that
it is impossible to
determine an award of damages for this kind of injury with any kind
of mathematical accuracy.”
[20]
The
authorities are in agreement that
although
it is always helpful to have regard to awards made in previous cases
,
to
serve as a guide, such an approach, if slavishly followed, can prove
to be treacherous. The correct approach is to have regard
to all the
facts of the particular case and to determine the quantum of damages
on such facts
.
[6]
[21]
In the present matter, as
stated earlier, the plaintiff was detained fr
om
13 September to 15
September 2014. The seriousness of the unlawful conduct by members of
the SAPS in detaining the plaintiff is
aggravated by the fact that he
was arrested in a public place where members of the public observed
the incident. He was thereafter
placed in a dirty cell and served
with
stale food.
[22]
In
contending that he was entitled to the relief sought in the
particulars of claim, the plaintiff relied on other comparable cases,
which would serve as guidelines in assessing the reasonableness of
the damages claimed.
[7]
The
defendant argued that if the plaintiff was entitled to compensation,
it will only be in the sum of R80,00.00.
[23]
Considering the facts
and the circumstances of this case, I am of the view that a fair and
just compensation for the plaintiff is
R250,000.00.
Costs
[24]
The defendant's Counsel
argued that because of the amount claimed, the plaintiff's case fell
within the jurisdiction of the magistrate
court and, therefore the
costs to be awarded to the plaintiff, if successful, should be on the
magistrate court scale. The submission
made was that the magistrate's
court scale as at 27 March 2014 was at R400 000.00.
[25]
In my view, even if
the claim fell within the jurisdiction of the magistrate court scale,
this is a matter where the circumstances
involving the unlawful
conduct of the police are of such a nature that the plaintiff was
justified in approaching the High Court.
The matter involves a breach
of the fundamental rights of the plaintiff and the police failing to
account as to why the arrest
was effected and secondly as to why they
detained the plaintiff for the period they did when it was not
necessary to bring him
before the court. They failed to also provide
any justification as why they could not have summoned him to report
at the police
station.
Order
[26]
In the circumstances, the
following order is made:
1
The arrest and detention of the plaintiff without a warrant of arrest
was unlawful.
2
The defendant is ordered to
pay the plaintiff damages in the sum of R250 000.00.
3
The defendant shall pay the
prescribed interest calculated from the date of the issue of the
summons.
E
MOLAHLEHI
Judge
of the High Court, Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg
Appearances:
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv.
Z Buthelezi
Instructed
by:
Madeleine
Gowrie Attorneys
Counsel
for the defendant:
Adv.
DF Makhubele
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney
Hearing
date: 16 January 2023
Delivery
date:
8
May 2023
[1]
51
of 1977
[2]
1988
(2) SA 654
(
SE)
at 658E-H
[3]
2015
[4]
SA 433 at paragraph 27
.
[4]
2008
JDRJ582E paragraph 6 (ECD case number 608/207)
.
[5]
2009
[5] SA 85 (SCA)
.
[6]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Seymour2006 (6) SA 320 (SCA) 325 para 17
and
Rudolph
& others v Minister of Safety and Security & others
(380/2008)
[2009] ZASCA 39
(31 March 2009) (paras 26-29).
[7]
In
Van
der Laarse v Minister of Police and Another (31378/2012) [2013]
for
instance the court
awarded
R 280 000.00 to the
p
laintiff
for
three
nights
in jail
and
in
Keitumetsi
Letlalo v Minister of Police, (28575/12) [2014] ZAGPJHC 72 (28 March
2014) the
p
laintiff,
a hairdresser, photographed with his cell phone,
when
the
police
officers assaulted two persons. The police demanded the phone, when
he refused he was arrested and detained for
twenty
four
hours.
He was kept in appalling circumstances. He was awarded R110 000-00
.
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