Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1294South Africa
Mtetwa v Minister Of Police (19234/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1294 (10 November 2023)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1294
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mtetwa v Minister Of Police (19234/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1294 (10 November 2023)
Mtetwa v Minister Of Police (19234/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1294 (10 November 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_1294.html
sino date 10 November 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:
19234/2015
In the matter between:
SIMPHIWE
MTETWA
Plaintiff
And
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Defendant
JUDGMENT
NTULI, AJ
Background
[1] Mr Simphiwe
Mtetwa (the plaintiff) was arrested in the morning of 24 January 2015
and was charged with possession
of drugs, colloquially known as
“nyaope”. He was subsequently detained at Moroka
Police Station cells. He
states that the cell in which he was
detained:
[a] Was overcrowded which
made sleeping difficult;
[b] It had a toilet in
the open which did not flush, and therefore emitted an unbearable
stench; and
[c] He was given dirty
and dusty blankets which made breathing difficult and as such
aggravated his sinuses.
[2] On 19 January
2015, prior to his arrest, he visited Chiawela Hospital where he was
diagnosed with severe pains and was
put on medication for the pains
and was also given a mouth wash for bleeding gums. On the
Saturday of his arrest, he only
took the morning dose of the
medication and was denied access to his medication by the arresting
officers and thereafter by the
officers who detained him. It
was only on Monday morning, 26 January 2015, that he took the
medication. Consequential
to the conduct of the police officers
whereby they refused him access to the medication, he had to endure
unbearable physical pains
from the Saturday of his arrest to Monday
morning when he took the medication. He equates the refusal to
access his medication
by the police officers to physical assault as
such refusal caused him the same physical pains consequential to
physical assault.
[3] The plaintiff
is now suing the Minister of Police (the defendant) and the Minister
is defending the suit. The defendant
is contending that the
arrest was lawful as it satisfied all the jurisdictional facts set
out in section 40(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977
(“CPA”). As the arrest and detention were not
disputed, the defendant had a duty to show that
the arrest was lawful
and within the prescripts of section 40(1)(b) of the CPA.
[4] The arresting
police officers, namely Captain Pillay (“Pillay”) and
Sergeant Nkuna (“Nkuna”) narrated
the chain of events
leading to the arrest and the subsequent detention of the plaintiff.
Save for a minor difference, their
evidence is very similar in
many respects, and they allege that:
[a] They were, and still
are, members of the flying squad;
[b] On the day of the
arrest, they were drafted to assist the unit of the Moroka Police
Station in an operation of stopping
and searching people in the
Moroka jurisdiction;
[c] This operation was
occasioned by the high crime rate in the area, especially drug
peddling;
[d] Pillay and Nkuna were
driving on Mgeni Road in a clearly marked police car;
[e] The area where the
operation was being conducted is a very busy area with lots of people
walking and sitting around;
[f] Whilst driving, they
spotted the plaintiff walking opposite to their direction;
[g] They observed the
plaintiff, who after seeing the police car, started making hand
gestures, putting his right hand in his pocket,
and taking it out as
if he wanted to throw something away. Whilst doing that, he was
looking around as if he wanted to run
away;
[h] They allege that that
behaviour of the plaintiff appeared strange to them, and they
suspected that the plaintiff had committed
an offence referred to in
Schedule 1 of the CPA;
[i] Pillay, who was
driving, stopped the car, alighted from the car, and ordered the
plaintiff to stop. Pillay identified
himself as a police
officer and requested to search the plaintiff and the plaintiff
obliged;
[j] Pillay conducted the
search and found a “brownish” plastic in which there was
also a “brownish” powder-like
substance which he presumed
to be drugs
—
nyaope;
[k] After explaining to
the plaintiff his constitutional rights, he then arrested him for
possession of drugs;
[l] He then took him to
Moroka Police Station;
[m] At the Moroka
Police Station, Pillay stated that he deposited the drugs in a
forensic bag which he then sealed and recorded
it in SAP 13;
[n] The plaintiff was
then handed over to the police officials responsible for detention;
[o] They, Pillay and
Nkuna, went back to the operation and never had any interaction with
the plaintiff;
[5] The plaintiff
narrated his own version of how the events of his arrest unravelled,
and he states that:
[a] He woke up quite
early on that day and started working (fixing) on a car
—
a VW Combi. He claims to be known in his neighbourhood as a
car mechanic, having learned the skills from his uncle;
[b] In the process, he
realised that he needed a No. 17 spanner and consequently went to a
nearby “Dunlop Spares” to
buy the spanner;
[c] On his way, he was
stopped by a man he only knows by sight as he is a person that
frequents the shopping area. The man
asked him for a R2.00 coin
which he did not have at the time but hoped to have one as change
after paying for the spanner. He
then asked the man to
accompany him to the spares shop;
[d] Shortly thereafter,
he saw a police car stopping just behind them. Pillay alighted
from the car and asked to search them
to which he agreed as he had
nothing to hide;
[e] Pillay then searched
him but could not find anything on him;
[f] And to his surprise,
Pillay picked up something from the ground about a metre away from
where he was standing. Pillay
then said that the item belonged
to him because it was picked up right behind him;
[g] He denied ownership
and knowledge of that item which Pillay said were drugs and belonged
to him;
[h] He was then
handcuffed and pushed into the police car. Despite protesting
his innocence, the police did not listen to
his cries and claims of
innocence. He alleges that he informed the police that he had a
medical condition for which he was
taking medication and requested
them to take him home to get that medication. The police agreed
to take him to his home but
such did not happen. He states that
the police asked him whether he had money on him to which he answered
in the affirmative
referring to the R140.00 he was going to buy the
spanner with. He further told the police that he had more money
at home;
[i] He relates that the
police did not take him to his house to get his medication as they
promised. Instead, they drove around
the area with him and
eventually took him to Moroka Police Station where he was eventually
detained. He asked for access
to a phone to call his family to
inform them of the arrest and to ask them to bring his medication at
Moroka Police Station where
he was being detained. The police
initially did not entertain his request but after some time he was
allowed to call his
family. After being fingerprinted, he was
put in a cell which was not humanly habitable because it was
overcrowded, filthy
and had one toilet in the open which did not
flush. He was given dirty and dusty blankets which made it
difficult for him
to breath and that aggravated his sinus medical
condition. He pleaded that he be given access to his medication
which plea
was ignored. The pains were so severe that he
couldn’t sleep nor eat.
[6] On Monday, 26
January 2015, he was given his medication and a jacket which his
family brought at the Moroka Police Station
on Sunday 25 January
2015. This he was told by one of the police officers. It
was only then that he took his medication
which he last took on
Saturday morning before his arrest. He, together with other
arrestees, were taken to the Protea Magistrate
Court. There,
they were put in a cell and their names would be called to appear
before a Magistrate. When his turn
came, the policeman who
called up his name looked at the paper that he (the plaintiff) was
given at Moroka Police Station and thereafter
the police officer told
him that he could go home because there was no case against him.
That police officer directed him
to another police officer who
was seated at the desk and that police officer stamped a “welcome to
Soweto” mark
on his forehead and told him that he could go
home.
The law
[7] The arresting
officers sought to rely on section 40(1)(b) of the CPA to justify the
warrantless arrest and detention of
the plaintiff. Section
40(1)(b) sets out the following jurisdictional facts that must be
present for such an arrest to be
lawful:
[a] The arrestor must be
a peace officer;
[b] The arrestor must
entertain a suspicion;
[c] The suspicion must be
that the suspect (the arrestee) committed an offence referred to in
Schedule 1 of the CPA; and
[d] The suspicion must
rest on reasonable grounds.
[8]
The
Constitutional Court in
Mahlangu
and Another v Minister of Police
[1]
teaches that:
“
The police, like
any other state functionary in the country for that matter, are
constrained by the principle of legality imposed
by the Constitution
and may not exercise any power nor perform any function beyond that
conferred upon them by law. That is a basic
component of the rule of
law and one of the founding values of our Constitution”.
[9] The unlawful
deprivation of liberty, with the accompanying infringement of the
right to human dignity, has always been
regarded as a particularly
grave wrong and a serious inroad into the freedom and rights of a
person. In
Thandani v Minister of Law and Order
, the
court said that:
“…
[S]ight
must not be lost of the fact that the liberty of the individual is
one of the fundamental rights of a [person] in a free
society which
should be jealously guarded at all times and there is a duty on our
Courts to preserve this right against infringement.
Unlawful arrest
and detention constitute a serious inroad into the freedom and the
rights of an individual”.
[2]
[10]
This Court
has previously pronounced that “the right not to be deprived of
freedom arbitrarily or without just cause affords
both substantive
and procedural protection against such deprivations”.
[3]
In
S v
Coetzee
,
[4]
the Constitutional Court pronounced on these two aspects as follows:
“
They raise two
different aspects of freedom: the first is concerned particularly
with the reasons for which the state may deprive
someone of freedom
[the substantive component]; and the second is concerned with the
manner whereby a person is deprived of freedom
[the procedural
component]. … [O]ur Constitution recognises that both aspects
are important in a democracy: the state may
not deprive its citizens
of liberty for reasons that are not acceptable, nor, when it deprives
citizens of freedom for acceptable
reasons, may it do so in a manner
which is procedurally unfair.”
[11]
This
approach was affirmed in
Zealand
[5]
in which – as in the instant matter - the focus was on
detention. There the court held that:
“
It has long been
firmly established in our common law that every interference with
physical liberty is prima facie unlawful. Thus,
once the claimant
establishes that an interference has occurred, the burden falls upon
the person causing that interference to
establish a ground of
justification.
In Minister van Wet en Orde v Matshoba
, the
Supreme Court of Appeal again affirmed that principle, and then went
on to consider exactly what must be averred by an applicant
complaining of unlawful detention. In the absence of any significant
South African authority, Grosskopf JA found the law concerning
the
rei vindicatio a useful analogy. The simple averment of the
plaintiff’s ownership and the fact that his or her property
is
held by the defendant was sufficient in such cases. This led that
court to conclude that, since the common law right to personal
freedom was far more fundamental than ownership, it must be
sufficient for a plaintiff who is in detention simply to plead that
he or she is being held by the defendant. The onus of justifying the
detention then rests on the defendant. There can be no doubt
that
this reasoning applies with equal, if not greater, force under the
Constitution.’’
[12]
Once all
the jurisdictional facts prescribed in section 40(1)(b) are present,
the discretion whether or not to arrest arises and
that discretion is
objectively justiciable. In
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
[6]
the court held that:
“
If the
jurisdictional requirements are satisfied, the peace officer may
invoke the power conferred by the subsection, i.e. he may
arrest the
suspect. In other words, he then has a discretion as to whether or
not to exercise that power”.
[13]
In
Mvu
v Minister of Safety & Security
,
[7]
the court found that the fourth requirement, i.e. that the suspicion
must rest on reasonable grounds is objectively justiciable.
Willis
J, relying on
Hofmeyr
v Minister of Justice and Another
,
[8]
drew a distinction between a claim for unlawful arrest and unlawful
detention and found –
“
It seems to me
that, if a police officer must apply his or her mind to the
circumstances relating to a person’s detention,
this includes
applying his or her mind to the question of whether detention is
necessary at all”.
[14] In
Hofmeyer,
King J as he was then, held that even where an arrest is
lawful, a police officer must apply his mind to the arrestee’s
detention
and the circumstances relating thereto and that the failure
by a police officer to properly do so is unlawful.
[15] In this case,
no objective facts were given by the arresting officers, namely
Pillay and Nkuna, to show that they did
indeed apply their minds to
the circumstances relating to both the arrest and detention of the
plaintiff. Counsel for the
defendant contended that the arrest
of the plaintiff after Pillay allegedly found the drugs on him,
amounts to the exercise of
the discretion contemplated by law after
being satisfied of the presence of the jurisdictional facts.
[16] I disagree.
[17] It is clear from the
authorities cited above that the exercise of the discretion must be
preceded by the application of minds
to objective facts relevant to
the circumstances of the person to be arrested, in this instance, the
plaintiff. The typical
objective facts that could have been
canvased by Pillay from the plaintiff prior to arresting him would be
to enquire about: (1)
the plaintiff’s residential address,
which would have assisted in determining whether or not the plaintiff
is a flight risk;
(2) the residential address would have assisted in
further investigating whether or not the plaintiff had some more
drugs at his
residence; and (3) it would have assisted to confirm or
disprove the plaintiff’s claim that he was fixing a motor
vehicle
hence the need to go to the spares shop to buy the spanner
that he allegedly needed. Better still, Pillay’s
evidence,
corroborated by Nkuna, is that the plaintiff willingly
obliged when Pillay asked to search him. Why would they then
not enquire
further about him so that they could objectively exercise
the discretion the law imposes upon them to do? Surely by
asking
questions about the plaintiff, the answers elicited would have
helped them to comply with what is contemplated in the matter of
Olivier
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another
[9]
,
which case counsel for defendant cited in his heads of argument.
Therein the court instructively teaches thus:
“
I say this by
reason thereof that I am of the view that in circumstances such as
these [deciding if an arrestor’s decision
to arrest was
reasonable] each case must be decided on its own facts. This entails
that the adjudicator of fact should look at
the prevailing
circumstances at the time when the arrest was made and ask himself
the question - was the arrest of the plaintiff
in the circumstances
of the case, having regard to flight risk, permanence of employment
and residence, cooperation on the part
of the plaintiff, his standing
in the community or amongst his peers, the strength or weakness of
the case, and such other factors
which the court may find relevant,
unavoidable, justified or the only reasonable means to obtain the
objectives of the police investigation?
The interests of justice may
also be a factor. Once the court has considered these and such other
factors which in the court’s
view may have a bearing on the
question, there should be no reason why the court should not exercise
its discretion in favour of
the liberty of the individual. Arrest
should after all be the last resort”.
[18] The plaintiff’s
evidence suggests that he was not far from his house when he was
arrested. Pillay could have enquired
what the plaintiff’s
occupation is. The plaintiff told the Court that at the time of
his arrest, he was on his way
to the shop to buy a spanner which he
needed to fix a car he had been working on since about 06:30 that
morning. By going
to the plaintiff’s house, Pillay could
have confirmed whether or not the plaintiff/suspect was indeed
working on the car
as he claimed thus corroborating or disproving the
plaintiff’s claim that he was going to buy a spanner at the
spare shop.
Had Pillay asked that objective question in
relation to the plaintiff’s residential address, this could
have helped
him exercise his discretion whether or not to arrest and
detain the plaintiff.
[19] This information
could have been verified by the arresting officers to objectively
exercise the discretion contemplated in
the authorities cited above.
The arrest is the end result of the envisaged discretion the
law imposes on the arresting officers
to exercise.
Analysis of the
evidence
[20] As stated above,
Pillay and Nkuna’s evidence for the defendant is very much
similar in many aspects, save for one aspect
in Nkuna’s
evidence, and that is with regard to the position where the plaintiff
was when they (Pillay and Nkuna), allegedly
observed the plaintiff
behaving strangely, which behaviour constituted the basis upon which
they reasonably suspected the plaintiff
to have committed an offence.
They both allege that the plaintiff was walking opposite to
their direction when they spotted
him. Nkuna’s evidence,
however, went further to say that the plaintiff was on the other side
(the opposite lane) of
the Mgeni Road, walking opposite to their
direction. This appears to corroborate the plaintiff’s
version that
he only noticed the police when they stopped behind them
– them being him and the man who had asked him for a R2 coin.
I
come to this conclusion using the circumstances of the area
of the arrest, as articulated by the arresting officers, and that is,
that it is a very busy area and crime is rife, hence the
reinforcement of the Moroka Police Station with the flying squad to
which
Pillay and Nkuna belong.
[21] In such a busy
scenario, as articulated by Pillay and Nkuna, the probabilities are
that there were lots of cars travelling
up and down Mgeni Road as
well. In such busy traffic, it is unthinkable that the police
would have easily stopped next to
the plaintiff as he was on the
opposite lane walking in the opposite direction of the police car.
The police car would have
seriously disturbed the busy traffic
flow if they would have simply stopped next to the plaintiff the way
they put it. The
logical probability is that they (Pillay and
Nkuna), must have executed a U-turn to be on the same lane with the
plaintiff to be
able to safely stop and also order the plaintiff to
stop. This lends credence to the plaintiff’s version that
he only
saw the police when they stopped behind him and never saw
them coming from in front of him as they claim.
[22] This I accept to be
probable and therefore must conclude that the “hand gestures”,
if any, the police claimed
were performed by the plaintiff which
consequently led them to form the “requisite suspicion”
that the plaintiff had
committed a Schedule 1 offence, might have
related to something else and not suggestive of a person who is
guilty of having committed
an offence of any nature. I
consequently reject the officers’ version as improbable and
therefore find that their suspicion
was unreasonable, which then
renders the stop, search, and arrest of the plaintiff unlawful.
On the detention
[23] Pillay and
Nkuna told the court that at the Moroka Police Station they handed
the plaintiff over to the police officers
responsible for the
processing of suspects to be detained and they could not tell what
happened to him thereafter. The detaining
officers were never
called to testify on what transpired after the plaintiff was detained
to challenge his claims of being refused
access to his medication
which police conduct the plaintiff equates to being assaulted.
[24] The plaintiff told
the court that the cell in which he was detained was overcrowded and
that made sleeping very difficult.
The blankets were filthy and
dusty which aggravated his medical condition of sinusitis; the
communal toilet was in the open,
and could not flush and therefore
emitted a very unhealthy and unbearable stench; and he was denied
access to his medication the
Chiawela Hospital (Clinic) prescribed
for him for the severe pains and the bleeding gums. The
plaintiff asserts further that
the police told him that people in
cells were not allowed to take tablets. The medication was
brought by his grandmother
on Sunday 25 January 2015. The
pains, he says, were so severe that he couldn’t eat, and
sleeping was very difficult.
He pleads that the refusal by the
police to access his medication amounts to an assault, and as such,
caused him unbearable
pains. It is on this basis that he claims
an amount of R550 000.00.
[25] As stated earlier,
there is no evidence adduced on behalf of the defendant to rebut the
plaintiff’s claims, consequently
I must accept the plaintiff’s
version to be true. Counsel, for the defendant, argued that
because the plaintiff’s
version was not corroborated, it cannot
and should not be believed.
[26] I disagree.
[27] There is no contrary
evidence attacking its integrity. It is the only best evidence
available to assist the court to discharge
its duty to adjudicate on
the dispute placed before it. The defendant had at its disposal
the police officers who detained
the plaintiff. No explanation
was offered why they were not called to challenge the plaintiff’s
claims.
[28] In the premises, I
conclude that the plaintiff suffered pains equivalent to pains that
would be consequential to physical assault,
so the plaintiff was
assaulted as he pleaded in his particulars of claim.
[29] On whether or not
the alleged “powderish, brownish” substance the arresting
officers allegedly found on the plaintiff,
and which Pillay presumed
to be drugs, were indeed drugs, no one knows, as no shred of evidence
was led on this aspect. Pillay
told the court that at the
Moroka Police Station, he recorded that substance in SAP 13, sealed
it to be sent to the forensic laboratory
for analysis. However,
no evidence was led to confirm that that substance was indeed drugs
as contemplated by the Drug and
Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992.
[30] In argument, Counsel
for the defendant, sought to refer me to a section 212 affidavit
which formed part of the bundle of documents
made available to the
court. He invited me to have sight of that affidavit and thereafter
admit it into evidence to complete the
transaction Pillay commenced
when he allegedly sealed the substance to be sent to a laboratory for
analysis.
[31] I declined that
invitation as I disagree with him that the mere production of a
document automatically qualifies it as evidence
to be considered in
the adjudication of the matter before me. Firstly, I pointed
out to him the limitations and dangers associated
with that
proposition because the author of that document was never called to
personally testify on the integrity of the contents
thereof. As
such, that testimony could not be subjected to scrutiny by the
counsel for the plaintiff. Secondly, the
pre-trial minutes by
both parties clearly state that the documents in the bundle are what
they purport to be and their contents
are not admitted. This
means then that it cannot be true that the plaintiff was found in
possession of drugs and therefore
his arrest was unlawful.
[32] In the
circumstances, I find that the arresting officers, Pillay and Nkuna
failed to exercise the discretion required
by section 40(1) of the
CPA and therefore the subsequent arrest and detention of the
plaintiff was unlawful.
The quantum of damages
[33] Having found that
the arrest and subsequent detention of the plaintiff was unlawful,
now arises the issue of the amount payable
to the plaintiff by the
defendant as a
solatium
for the pain and suffering the
plaintiff endured consequent to the unlawful arrest and detention.
[34] The plaintiff has
pleaded that I award an amount of R550 000.00 to compensate for
the unlawful arrest and for the two
days he spent detained in a cell
in the inhumane conditions articulated above.
[35] Our jurisprudence is
rich with authorities on the issue of the amount to be awarded for
damages occasioned by unlawful arrest
and detention. However,
in the final analysis, they all point to the discretion of the trial
court for determination.
[36] I
have in the main, sought guidance from the Constitutional Court
decision of
Mahlangu
[10]
and the other authorities cited therein. Delivering the
unanimous decision of the court, Tshiqi J, directs that:
“
It
is trite that damages are awarded to deter and prevent future
infringement of fundamental rights by organs of state. They are
a
gesture of goodwill to the aggrieved and they do not rectify the
wrong that took place”.
Quoting
from the Supreme Court of Appeal judgment in
Seymour
[11]
she points out that:
“
Money
can never be more than a crude solatium for the deprivation of what
in truth can never be restored and there is no empirical
measure for
the loss”.
She
then deferred to
Tyulu
[12]
where the court re-affirmed the following:
“
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 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 injuria with any kind of mathematical
accuracy. 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 facts of the particular case and to determine the
quantum of damages
on such facts.”
[37] In determining the
amount payable as damages to the plaintiff, I have taken into account
that:
[a]
The arrest was capriciously effected in
that it was consequent to a lack of exercise of the discretion
required of the arresting
officers by section 40(1) of the CPA;
[b]
The plaintiff was detained in the cell that
was overcrowded, with a toilet in the open which toilet could not
flush and consequently
emitted an unbearable stench;
[c]
The police officers’ conduct in
refusing the plaintiff access to his medication amounts to a
dereliction of their duty and
as a consequence of that, the plaintiff
endured unbearable pains for two days.
THEREFORE, I HEREBY
MAKE THE FOLLOWING ORDER:
1.
That the defendant pays an amount of
R150 000.00 to the plaintiff together with interest at the
prevailing legal rate from
the date of judgment to date of payment
thereof.
2.
The
defendant pays the costs of suit at the High Court scale of party and
party together with interest thereon from a date 14 after
allocatur
to date of payment thereof.
NTULI AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff: Mr Malema
Instructed
By: Madelaine Gowrie Attorneys
Counsel
for the Defendant: Mr Mlambo
Instructed
By: State Attorney
Date
of hearing: 14 & 21 August 2023
Date
of Judgment: 10 November 2023
[1]
Mahlangu
and Another v Minister of Police
(“
Mahlangu
”)
[2021] ZACC 10
;
2021 (2) SACR 595
(CC);
2021 (7) BCLR 698
(CC) at
para 26.
[2]
1991
(1) SA 702
(E) at 707 A-C.
[3]
Zealand
v Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development and Another
(“
Zealand
”)
[2008] ZACC 3
;
2008 (4) SA 458
(CC);
2008 (6) BCLR 601
(CC) at para
33.
[4]
[1997] ZACC 2
;
1997 (3) SA 527
(CC);
1997 (4) BCLR 437
(CC) at para
159.
[5]
Zealand
above n 3 at para 25.
[6]
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
[1986] ZASCA 24
; [1986] 2 A11 SA 241 at para 24.
[7]
Mvu v
Minister of Safety & Security & Another
2009 (6) SA 82
(GSJ) at para 10.
[8]
Hofmeyr
v Minister of Justice & Another
1992 (3) SA 108 (C).
[9]
Olivier
v Minister of Police
2009 (3) SA 434
(W) at 445 C-F.
[10]
Mahlangu
above n 1 at para
[11]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Seymour
[2006]
ZASCA 71
;
2006 (6) SA 320
(SCA) at para 20.
[12]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyulu
[2009] ZASCA 55
;
2009 (5) SA 85
(SCA) at para 26.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mthetwa v S (A20/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 330 (11 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 330High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Mtshali v Minister of Police (2021/26368) [2024] ZAGPJHC 881 (8 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 881High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Mtshali v Minister of Police (43727/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 621 (30 August 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 621High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Mtshali v Road Accident Fund (A2024/114920) [2025] ZAGPJHC 977 (30 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 977High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Mntungwa v Maripane and Others (2021/27860) [2025] ZAGPJHC 170 (18 February 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 170High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar