Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 445South Africa
Nkabinde and Others v Minister of Police and Another (16523/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 445 (9 May 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nkabinde and Others v Minister of Police and Another (16523/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 445 (9 May 2023)
Nkabinde and Others v Minister of Police and Another (16523/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 445 (9 May 2023)
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sino date 9 May 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO:16523/2018
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
NOT REVISED
09.05.23
In the matter between:
NQOBI
NKABINDE
First
Plaintiff
PHIWANKOSI
VELAPHI NKABINDE
Second
Plaintiff
SIPHIWE
CHRIS NKOSI
Third
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
First
Defendant
DIRECTOR
OF NATIONAL PROSECUTING AUTHORITY
Second
Defendant
Neutral Citation:
Nqobi
Nkabinde and Others v Minister of Police and Another
(Case
No. 16523/2018) [2023] ZAGPJHC 445 (9 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
YACOOB
J
:
1.
The
plaintiffs claim damages from the defendants, jointly and severally,
for wrongful arrest and detention, wrongful prosecution,
and loss of
income, in the amount of R2,1 million each.
2.
The
second defendant is apparently the National Director of Public
Prosecutions, incorrectly cited. However the second defendant
did not
object to the mis-citation and participated in proceedings.
3.
The
plaintiffs bore the duty to begin for the malicious prosecution
claim, while the defendants did for the unlawful arrest and
detention
claim. Since the rule is that where the duty is on the defendants for
one element and on the plaintiffs for another,
the plaintiffs must
begin, I ruled that the plaintiffs must begin.
4.
The
third plaintiff was no longer a part of this matter by the time it
was heard. The attorneys no longer represented him, nor did
he appear
at the hearing. Mr Vobi submitted that the third plaintiff wished to
have his claim postponed
sine
die
,
but of course he had no mandate from the third plaintiff. I make no
order regarding the third plaintiff, and if he wishes to attempt
to
prosecute his claim he will no doubt face some procedural hurdles.
The case of the third plaintiff was then separated from that
of the
first and second plaintiffs in terms of Uniform Rule 10(5).
5.
After
the plaintiffs closed their case, the defendants made a successful
application for absolution on the claim for unlawful prosecution.
6.
This
was granted on the basis that there was no evidence of either malice
or negligence on the part of the prosecution placed before
the court.
There was no evidence that the prosecutor interfered or was careless
of the liberty of the plaintiffs.
7.
Although
the docket had been provided to the plaintiffs, they did not place it
before the court, so the court only had their say
so that there was
no evidence against them. This was insufficient for the court to
conclude that the prosecution was malicious.
The plaintiffs had to
bear the consequences of their failure to adduce evidence and
absolution was granted against the first and
second plaintiffs for
malicious prosecution. Costs were reserved.
8.
It
remains to deal with the unlawful arrest and detention claim.
9.
The
defendants called 4 witnesses, 3 members of the South African Police
Services and one prosecutor.
10.
The
first witness was Warrant Officer Mavhusha. He testified that he and
Constable Mngoma were patrolling at Bramley View, they
had started
just before 07h00. At Brighton Road they say a white Quantum parked
off the road, there was a
cul
de sac
,
and it was an industrial area.
11.
Mr
Mavhusha saw four men standing outside near the taxi. He went up to
them, identified himself as a policeman, and asked them what
the
problem was and why they were there. One of them came towards him and
told him the taxi (the white Quantum) was broken down.
He also was
told that their friend was in the taxi with his girlfriend. Mr
Mavhusha said he got the impression the man was trying
to prevent him
from getting closer to the taxi.
12.
He
approached the taxi and a fifth man came out of the taxi, attempting
to flee, but Mr Mavhusha accosted him. He tried to look
through a
window of the taxi at the time the man emerged. He also heard a woman
scream that she was being raped. The man said that
was a lie, that
she was a sex worker who had been paid.
13.
The
woman was naked and there were condoms inside and near the taxi. She
told Mr Mavhusha that “all of them” raped her.
She
appeared to be traumatized. He then arrested all five men, also
reading them their rights.
14.
The
woman could not put her clothes back on because she said they had
been thrown out of the taxi. He had to telephone a woman police
officer to ask her to bring some clothes. She said she had been there
since about 04h30.
15.
Mr
Mavhusha then took the men to Sandringham Police Station. The taxi
started easily and was driven to the Sandringham Police station.
It
was not stuck. He booked the men in and opened the docket at
Sandringham, and then took the men to Norwood Police Station, because
there were no proper cells at Sandringham. The documents filled in
when the plaintiffs were booked in show that they were arrested
for
rape.
16.
Detective
Sergeant Manenje who specializes in rape cases took the woman to the
doctor.
17.
Mr
Mavhusha was taxed in cross examination with some inconsistencies
with his statement, which did not include reference to being
told
that someone was in the taxi with his girlfriend or that one of the
men outside came towards him as he approached them. He
was adamant
that even though he had not put some details in the statement made at
the time, he remembers that they happened.
18.
Mr
Mavhusha handed over the docket to the detective, he does not know
what happened with the investigation.
19.
The
second witness was Detective Sergeant Manenje. She is attached to
Sandringham Social Crime Prevention. She was on standby to
be called
if a case of rape or something dealing with children or gender-based
violence occurred. She was called in because there
was a rape case.
She went to the Sandringham police station around 09h00. The
processing of the arrest and the docket had not been
complete but a
statement had been taken from the complainant and the arresting
officer had made a statement.
20.
Sgt
Manenje looked at the statements and then met the complainant. She
introduced herself and asked the complainant if she was the
complainant in a rape case. She confirmed that she was, and Sgt
Manenje explained the procedure. Sgt Manenje began filling in a
form
with her which was the form which needed to be filled in before going
to the doctor. When they got to the point where the
complainant had
to explain what had happened she started crying and got angry, asking
if she had to be aske dby everyone in the
police station what
happened.
21.
Eventually
Sgt Manenje took the complainant to a clinic for an examination.
Eventually the complainant told her what had happened,
although she
was crying. This was while they were on their way to the clinic.
22.
The
complainant had gone with two siblings to a tavern in Yeoville. While
they were waiting for transport in the street, a Quantum
arrived, and
the three of them got into it. There were three men in the taxi, the
taxi went to Orange Grove and the two siblings
got out and two men
got in.
23.
One
of the men told her to spread her legs and called her a harlot. While
telling the story, she began crying more. She was distressed
but Sgt
Manenje tried to calm her and asked her to continue. She said they
took her into the next seat, because she had been in
the seat behind
the driver, and began stripping her, throwing her clothes out of the
window, and they then began raping her while
the taxi was still
moving. They continued even after the taxi stopped. She said the
police appeared and she screamed that she was
being raped. Sgt
Manenje appeared to be quite distressed while relating this part of
the evidence.
24.
Sgt
Manenje left the complainant at the clinic because she had to do
other things in the case. She asked the Norwood station commander
to
get the suspects’ finger prints and buccal samples for DNA
comparison. She then also interviewed the suspects. She told
them the
offence was gang rape and read them their rights in accordance with
procedure. The two plaintiffs declined to give a statement,
and told
her they would talk to their lawyers.
25.
She
then went back to fetch the complainant from the clinic, and
collected the J88 and sexual offences kit at the same time. The
complainant then said she wanted to wash and was hungry, and asked
her to take her to an address in Alexandra. She did so and told
her
that she would fetch her again. She does not remember at what time
she dropped the complainant off. Sgt Manenje then said she
wasn’t
sure if she dropped the complainant off before or after interviewing
the suspects.
26.
When
Sgt Manenje went back to fetch the complainant she was not there and
could not be found in the area. The telephone number also
did not
reach her. Sgt Manenje had wanted to go with the complainant to try
and recover the clothes that had allegedly been thrown
out of the
window.
27.
Sgt
Manenje stopped working on this case in July 2016. By that time the
complainant had not been found. She was pointed to an entry
in the
docket in May 2017 in which the prosecutor noted that the victim
could not be found and that it would possibly not be prosecuted.
She
confirmed that the complainant was never found and that the case
could not proceed without the complainant. She never visited
the
scene of the crime because she had wanted to go there with the
complainant. The case was in any event withdrawn in October
2016,
although that was after Sgt Manenje had left that unit.
28.
Under
cross examination it emerged that on one of the occasions she looked
for the complainant, Sgt Manenje found her sister, who
said that the
complainant lies and uses men for money. Sgt Manenje said, quite
rightly, that this did not cause her to doubt the
complainant’s
story because a person’s behaviour does not have a bearing on
whether they were raped or not. The sister’s
evidence may only
have been relevant if the matter went to trial.
29.
Sgt
Manenje testified that it was not unusual for a rape victim to
disappear. She was experienced in these matters, she has worked
with
sexual offences for a long time.
30.
The
next witness for the defendants was Lieutenant-Colonel Mogaila. He
was the head of visible policing at Norwood SAPS. He testified
to
describe the condition of the cells at Norwood. However he had only
been stationed at Norwood since January 2022. His evidence
therefore
did not assist with the condition of the cells in May 2016.
31.
The
last witness for the defendants was Ms R E Khoda, a Regional
Prosecutor based at Booysens Regional Court. She was stationed
at
Johannesburg Magistrates Court in 2016. She testified about the
plaintiffs’ court appearances in the matter. The
first
appearance was on 24 May 2016, it recorded that bail was opposed
because it was a schedule 6 offence. It was adjourned for
address
verification to 31 May 2016. On 31 May the docked was not at court
and the address was not verified so it was postponed
again to 13 June
2016, when it was crowded out to 21 June 2016. The matter was
postponed a further three times. On 20 July bail
was finally granted.
32.
According
to Ms Khoda she read the complainant’s statement, and decided
to enrol the matter as a schedule 6 offence because
she could see
from the statement that it was gang rape.
33.
The
first plaintiff testified at the beginning of the trial and again in
rebuttal. He had been out drinking with his friend B who
was a taxi
driver, together with three other friends, one of whom was the second
plaintiff. They were accompanying B in his taxi.
B stopped the
vehicle and told them it was stuck. The four men were sitting and
talking in the back. There was also a woman in
the vehicle.
34.
The
four men got out to urinate and B told them he wanted to speak to the
woman who was his “person”. There were cottages
near the
taxi and they did not want to disturb people in the cottages so the
four of them went further away. He did not know when
the woman
alighted the taxi, according to him they had been driving and picking
up and letting off passengers.
35.
They
had been drinking in the taxi and took alcohol with them when they
got out. They stood around drinking. He then heard someone
say there
is police, hide the liquor. He put his on the ground. The police came
and asked them what they were doing and one of
them said the vehicle
is stuck. The police were told that the driver was in the vehicle and
went to the vehicle. When the policeman
came back it was with B and
they made the four remaining men lie on the ground and that they were
under arrest. The first plaintiff
asked what he had done and was told
he would hear. They were neither told the charge nor read their
rights. He was cuffed and put
in a van.
36.
When
they got to Sandringham Police Station he overheard people saying
“here are the rapists” and he was surprised.
Their
fingerprints were taken and they were taken to Norwood. They put them
in a cage and they were given documents. The cages
had some sponge
mattresses and blankest but no other people. It was dirty. Buccal
samples were taken and they were given notices
of rights, and the
first plaintiff indicated that he would give his statement to his
lawyer. He was very confused about allegations
of rape.
37.
They
were not given any food, and the next day they went in a van to
court. They were given two slices of bread and some juice.
They were
not allowed to make any phone calls. They were taken back to Norwood
because at court they were told to come the next
day. They were taken
to different rooms this time but they were still dirty. The toilet
was not functional, there was water flowing
the whole time. They were
given potatoes and rice to eat.
38.
They
went to court the next day and nobody told them anything and then
they were taken to Johannesburg prison, where they had to
sleep in
overcrowded cells.
39.
The
first plaintiff’s evidence in rebuttal of the defendant’s
case contradicted that of his evidence in chief, in which
he
testified in cross examination that he heard the complainant scream
that she was being raped when the police arrived. It was
suggested
that the evidence given by the plaintiffs in the first part of the
hearing could not be considered. However, it was a
single trial and
the plaintiffs had adduced evidence in one trial. That they were
permitted to adduce evidence in rebuttal did
not mean the other
evidence was not considered.
40.
When
B stopped the vehicle and told them it was stuck, not one of the men
went to check what was wrong with the vehicle. The four
who got out
just continued drinking.
41.
The
second plaintiff similarly gave evidence twice, once at the outset
and once in rebuttal. He confirmed that the friends had been
drinking, and went with Bongumusa in his taxi. There was a woman in
the taxi at some point and B said at some point that the taxi
was
stuck. The four of them got out to urinate and went and sat near the
taxi, and about an hour later the police came. He told
them the
vehicle was stuck. When the police peeped in the taxi a woman
screamed and then the police went and investigated. The
police then
came back and made them lie down and told them they had raped.
42.
The
second plaintiff mirrored that of the first plaintiff, save that he
testified that they were told at the scene that they were
arrested
for rape, and that he heard the complainant scream, which the first
plaintiff denied when he testified in rebuttal.
43.
It
is common cause that the plaintiffs were arrested by peace officers
within the meaning of the term in the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of
1977
, and without a warrant. The first defendant relied on
section
40(1)(b)
of the Act in pleading that the arrest was lawful.
44.
Section
40(1)(b)
requires that an arrest without a warrant, in order to be
lawful, must be effected by a peace officer who entertains a
suspicion
on reasonable grounds that an offence listed in Schedule 1
of the Act has been committed by the person being arrested. The onus
is on the defendants to establish that this is the case.
45.
Rape
is an offence listed in Schedule 1. It was submitted for the
plaintiffs that because the plaintiffs were charged with gang
rape
which fell within Schedule 6, it did not fall under Schedule 1. This
argument is fallacious. Gang rape is clearly a sub category
of rape.
It is a more serious category, and is listed in Schedule 6 for that
reason, to make it harder for suspects to get bail.
It is still also
rape, and for purposes of
section 40(1)(b)
, still a Schedule 1
offence.
46.
The
arrest was effected by peace officers. What remains to be established
is whether the arresting officer entertained a suspicion
on
reasonable grounds that the plaintiffs had committed the rape.
47.
Taking
the evidence of the plaintiffs and the defendants’ witnesses as
a whole, what emerges as common cause is that there
were men drinking
outside a taxi stopped in the early hours of the morning, that a
woman screamed when the police approached the
taxi, and that another
man was in the taxi with the woman.
48.
The
plaintiffs were unable to dispute the defendants’ evidence that
the woman was naked and that she screamed that she was
being raped,
or that she said she was raped by all of them.
49.
At
that point, in my view, there was already reasonable grounds for
suspicion against the plaintiffs, as part of the group.
50.
The
second plaintiff told the police that the taxi had broken down. When
the taxi was able to be driven to the police station with
no problem,
this would have been an additional ground for suspicion. The J88 also
supported a finding that the woman had been raped,
although this
appeared later in the day.
51.
The
plaintiffs deny that anyone tried to prevent the police from going
towards the taxi, and told the police that their friend was
there
with his girlfriend. This is odd, taking into account that their
version was that they were keeping a distance from the taxi
because B
wanted to be alone with his person.
52.
To
the extent that the plaintiffs’ version is inconsistent with
that of the defendants, I reject it. In any event, the
inconsistencies
are ultimately negligible.
53.
It
was argued on behalf of the plaintiffs that the suspicion entertained
by the arresting officer was unreasonable because he did
not do
sufficient investigation before arresting the five men. I disagree.
It was patently reasonable, when faced with a screaming
naked woman,
to suspect the men she accused of raping her.
54.
It
was submitted that the arresting officer ought to have exercised his
discretion at the scene to find more evidence before effecting
an
arrest, particularly when faced with more than one version. Again I
disagree, and consider it reasonable for the police to have
effected
the arrest there and then, and then continue to investigate. It would
have been difficult to find the suspects at a later
date, nor would
further investigation at that point have prevented the arrest.
55.
It
was submitted for the plaintiffs that the arrest was unreasonable
because the plaintiffs did not commit the rape. This court
is not in
a position to decide whether the plaintiffs committed the rape, nor
is it required to. The issue is not whether they
committed it, but
whether it was reasonable to suspect them at the time of the arrest.
It was.
56.
The
reason why the charges were withdrawn are also relevant. They were
withdrawn because the complainant disappeared. This distinguishes
this case from one where there was no evidence on which to arrest in
the first place, and which was then withdrawn because no further
evidence came to light. In this matter the evidence was the
screaming, naked woman, accusing all five men of having raped her.
As
serious as a deprivation of liberty is, this one was justified by the
circumstances in terms of
section 40(1)(b)
of the Act.
57.
It
is clear that once the plaintiffs were arrested their continued
incarceration, although not ideal, was not due to any particular
negligence or wrongdoing on the part of any of the defendants. If the
system had worked better, the incarceration might have been
a little
shorter, but it does not appear that there was any inordinate delay
that was avoidable.
58.
Both
the plaintiffs and the defendants submitted that costs should follow
the result. I agree, including the costs of the unlawful
prosecution
claim.
59.
For
these reasons, the first and second plaintiff’s claims are
dismissed with costs.
S. YACOOB
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
SI
Vobi and A Nongogo
Instructed
by:
Oni
Attorneys
Counsel
for the Defendants:
MH
Mokale and B Nkoana
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney (Johannesburg)
Date of hearing: 16 –
20 and 23 May 2022
Date of judgment: 9 May
2023
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