Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1422South Africa
Minister Of Police v Els (A3015 /2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1422 (8 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 December 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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## Minister Of Police v Els (A3015 /2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1422 (8 December 2023)
Minister Of Police v Els (A3015 /2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1422 (8 December 2023)
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sino date 8 December 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: A3015 – 2020
VEREENIGING
REGIONAL
COURT
CASE NUMBER
RC
135/2013
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
In
the application by
MINISTER
OF POLICE
APPELLANT
And
ELS,
JOHANNA ESTRIASA
RESPONDENT
In
re
ELS,
JOHANNA ESTRIASA
PLAINTIFF
And
MINISTER
OF POLICE
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
Appeal from
Magistrates’ Court – Unlawful arrest and detention –
Onus on State to prove arrest by police officers
justified –
onus discharged – appeal upheld
Failure to provide
medical care to arrestee while in custody – Arrestee failing to
prove that police officers failed to provide
or arrange access to
medical care during period of detention – counter-appeal
dismissed
Civil onus –
preponderance of probabilities
Order
[1]
In this matter I make the following order:
1.
The appeal is upheld;
2.
The following order is substituted
for the order in the court a quo:
a)
The plaintiff’s claim is
dismissed;
b)
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the
costs of the action.
3.
The counter-appeal is dismissed;
4.
The appellant is ordered to pay the
costs of the appeal and of the counter-appeal.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
This
is an appeal
[1]
against a
judgement handed down by the learned Magistrate Morwane in the
Vereeniging
Regional Court
on
21 January 2020. The trial commenced before the learned Magistrate
Moletsane and when she unfortunately passed away, it proceeded
before
Mr Morwane by agreement between the parties.
[4]
I refer to the parties as they were referred to in
the court below, in other words to the appellant as the defendant and
to the
respondent (and counter-appellant) as the plaintiff.
[5]
In the amended particulars of claim filed on her
behalf, the plaintiff alleged that she was arrested without a warrant
by members
of the South African Police Service on 22 July 2019 at
approximately 01h40. The plaintiff was arrested on suspicion of
driving
a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol and detained
until 14h00 on the same day, when she was released on bail from the
Sebokeng Hospital. The defendant admitted the arrest and relied on
justification for the deprivation of the plaintiff’s freedom.
[6]
The plaintiff alleged that she was severely
injured in an assault and in a motor vehicle accident that preceded
her arrest and that
the failure of the police officers to arrange for
medical treatment for her exacerbated her injuries. A number of
injuries were
listed in paragraph 10 of the amended particulars of
claim. These included a laceration of the left knee; an injury to the
left
clavicle, and an injury to the right upper leg.
[7]
The plaintiff alleged that the arresting officer
had no reasonable grounds to arrest her and that the arrest was
carried out “
possibly”
for an “
ulterior motive.”
The plaintiff in her first claim, sought damages of R100,000 for an
alleged infringement of her dignity,
contumelia
,
and deprivation of her freedom arising out of the arrest.
[8]
In a second claim, the plaintiff alleged that she
had been assaulted by hijackers who had stabbed her on her right leg
and left
knee. Paragraph 9 of the particulars of claim made reference
to more than one hijacker, and paragraph 11 to one hijacker. As a
result of the assault the plaintiff allegedly lost control of the
motor vehicle and collided with a tree on the sidewalk. The members
of the police found the plaintiff at the scene of the accident with
severe injuries but instead of affording her immediate medical
treatment the plaintiff was taken to hospital for an alcohol test
where she was allegedly denied medical treatment. The plaintiff
was
then detained at a police station before being returned to the
hospital where she was released on bail at 14h00.
[9]
The plaintiff alleged that she was denied
painkillers or any medication and was also denied medical attention
which would have eased
her pain and suffering. In paragraph 14 of the
amended particulars of claim, the plaintiff alleged that she was
afforded treatment
16 hours after being incarcerated. The evidence
showed that the plaintiff was arrested at approximately 01h40 and if
she received
medical attention for the first time 16 hours later, she
did not receive any medical treatment during the period that she was
in
custody, until 14h00. If the plaintiff only received medical
treatment 16 hours after incarceration, she first received medical
attention at approximately 18h00, a few hours after her release on
bail.
[10]
The plaintiff relied on section 35(2)(e) of the
Constitution of 1996. The relevant subsection reads as follows:
“
(2)
Everyone who is detained, including every sentenced prisoner, has the
right-
…
(e) to
conditions of detention that are consistent with human dignity,
including at least exercise and the provision,
at state expense, of
adequate accommodation, nutrition, reading material and medical
treatment;”
[11]
The plaintiff claimed general damages of R200,000
and compensation for future medical expenses in the amount of
R168,000.
[12]
After the conclusion of the trial, the learned
magistrate gave judgement in favour of the plaintiff in the amount of
R25,000 “
for unlawful arrest and
detention”
and R100,000 for
“
damages,”
with interest and costs. The defendant appeals against the whole of
the judgement and the plaintiff counter-appeals. The plaintiff
argues
that the learned Magistrate ought to have awarded R160,000 as general
damages and R135,000 as estimated future medical expenses.
The
evidence
[13]
Two police officers, Constables Motlejeba and
Raselamane (neé Malindi), testified as to the events at the
scene of the accident
.
They related how
they responded to a report of a collision in Reynold Street,
Falconridge sometime after midnight on 22 July 2019.
It was common
cause that Reynold Street is a public road.
[14]
Upon their arrival on the scene, they observed the
plaintiff sitting behind the steering wheel of a motor vehicle that
had collided
with a tree. The engine of the vehicle was running and
Const Raselamane reached through the car window and turned off the
ignition.
The plaintiff informed the two constables that she had had
an argument with her husband after a “
few
drinks”
and had decided to leave
her home. The constables became aware that the plaintiff reeked of
alcohol. The plaintiff advised that
she could not move and that she
was trapped behind the wheel
.
[15]
The constables called for an ambulance and when
the ambulance arrived a paramedic, Mr Ngubeni, assisted the plaintiff
to alight
from the vehicle. It was not clear whether the plaintiff
was able to walk unaided or whether Mr Ngubeni assisted her. Mr
Ngubeni
testified that upon his arrival at the scene of the accident
he found the plaintiff in the driver's seat of the motor vehicle. The
plaintiff informed him that she was not injured and did not wish to
go to the hospital. Mr Ngubeni told the plaintiff not to move
and
went to the ambulance to fetch his equipment. When he returned to the
car, the plaintiff had moved to the passenger side of
the motor
vehicle and was sitting on the floor. Mr Ngubeni admonished her for
moving and she responded that she was not injured
and that she did
not want treatment.
[16]
The plaintiff exited the vehicle at Mr Ngubeni’s
request but refused him permission to immobilise her neck or back. At
the
ambulance, the plaintiff refused Mr Ngubeni permission to take
vital health information from her or to administer any treatment
to
her. Mr Ngubeni eventually left the scene after failing to convince
the plaintiff to accept treatment. His services were needed
elsewhere.
[17]
Mr Ngubeni’s evidence was that he did not
see the plaintiff’s husband at the scene. The police officers
contradicted
this evidence, testifying that when Mr Els arrived the
plaintiff was in the back of the ambulance. Const Motlejeba stated
that
the husband was screaming at his wife to get out of the
ambulance because, in the words of the witness, “
these
people are going to leave with you and they are going to arrest you.”
The police witnesses saw Mr Els there, gesticulating to his wife who
then alighted from the ambulance.
[18]
Mr Ngubeni acknowledged that his recollection of
events was not very clear (he could for instance not remember the
name of his colleague
who was on the scene, and nor could he remember
the make, model and colour of the car) and that he was in any event
concentrating
on the patient rather than on other observations. It
must also be noted that –
18.1
Mr Els was not someone who was known to Mr
Ngubeni and he would not have had reason to recognise him upon his
arrival.
18.2
In evaluating the evidence, it is relevant that
these events occurred at about 02h00, in the dark of night, at the
scene of a motor
vehicle accident, and that the people involved were
not familiar with one another. An accident scene is by its very
nature dynamic,
where many things happen in a short space of time and
different people have to concentrate on different aspects of the
scene.
[19]
Mr Ngubeni
confirmed that the car smelt of
alcohol, that the plaintiff had no visible injuries, that he assisted
the plaintiff out of the vehicle,
and that she refused medical
assistance despite a recommendation by the police officers that she
be taken to the hospital. The
plaintiff told
Mr Ngubeni
she
was “
fine”
and had not been injured. She initially agreed to go to the ambulance
with him but baulked when
Mr Ngubeni
wanted
to immobilise her back on a spine board. The plaintiff refused,
jumped out of the car, and walked towards the ambulance.
Mr
Ngubeni
assisted her.
[20]
The plaintiff got into the ambulance and sat on a
chair.
Mr Ngubeni
explained medical
procedures to her. The plaintiff explained that she had had an
altercation (“
fight”)
with her husband.
Mr Ngubeni
was
unsuccessful in trying to persuade the plaintiff to go to the
hospital. She alighted from the ambulance and refused the medical
treatment that was available to her.
[21]
A Colonel van Rooyen arrived at the accident scene and advised that
the plaintiff’s husband,
Mr Els, was a former police officer
who was known to him. The plaintiff’s husband was notified of
the accident but it is
not clear who called him to the scene. Mr Els
testified that the police colonel telephoned him at home when he was
ready to go
sleep. Evidence was led to the effect that
Mr
Els advised the plaintiff that she should refuse treatment as the
paramedics would take a blood sample, and that the plaintiff
took the
advice and jumped out of the ambulance. The ambulance left a short
while later to attend to other pressing duties.
[22]
The police officers informed the plaintiff that as
she had refused treatment and had assured them that she was not
injured they
would arrest her for reckless or negligent driving and
for driving under the influence of alcohol.
[23]
Accordingly, the plaintiff was arrested and the
defendant pleaded that the arrest was effected in terms of sections
40(1)(a) and/or
40(1)(b) of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
read with sections 63, and 65(1) and 65(2) of the Road Traffic Act 93
of 1996. These provisions are dealt with under a separate
heading
below.
[24]
The police took the plaintiff to Koponong Hospital
where a blood sample was taken and booked into the SAP13 store under
serial number
AM077051. Mr Els tried to force his way into the
consulting room when the sample was being taken and had to be
restrained by police
officers. By then Mr Els had already advised the
plaintiff not to permit the police officers to take a blood sample.
[25]
The uncontested evidence of Mr Madiga, a forensic
analyst in the employ of the Forensic Chemistry Laboratory of the
National Department
of Health in Johannesburg, was that the blood
alcohol content in the blood sample of the plaintiff was 0.15 grams
per 100 millilitres.
This evidence was not available at the time of
the arrest but supports the testimony that the plaintiff smelt of
alcohol at the
scene of the accident and that the police officers
suspected her of driving in an inebriated state. The plaintiff
objected to the
production of this evidence at the trial as the
evidence was never put to the plaintiff’s witnesses. The
Magistrate allowed
the evidence and I am of the view that he was
correct in doing so but the weight of the evidence must be evaluated
in the light
of the fact that it was not put to the plaintiff’s
witnesses. To my mind it carries sufficient weight for the limited
purpose
of confirming that the observations of the police officers
and the paramedic were not without substance.
[26]
The plaintiff testified that she was bleeding
profusely at the hospital. That evidence was not supported by the
paramedic’s
evidence who testified that he found no visible
evidence of wounds when he examined the plaintiff on the scene. It
cannot be seriously
disputed that the plaintiff was in the presence
of medically trained perso
nnel
at the scene of the accident and at the hospital and that it would
likely have com
e to their notice if
the plaintiff was bleeding profusely as alleged by her and Mr Els.
[27]
The plaintiff was taken from the hospital to the
police station and booked into the cells. Shortly after arrival at
the police station,
the police officers advised that she was not well
and a private medical emergency service, ER24, was summoned. Ms
Swanepoel of
ER24 arrived at the police station at approximately
04h00.
[28]
The plaintiff was taken to the Sebokeng hospital.
She arrived at the hospital between 04h00 and 05h00 and from where
she was released
on bail at 14h00. Given that the accident occurred
during the two hours after midnight and the plaintiff was transported
first
to the hospital for a blood sample to be taken, she could only
have been at the police station for a very short period before
returning
to the hospital. In his judgment, the Magistrate estimated
the time spent in the police cells at thirty minutes, which is likely
an accurate estimate.
[29]
During the interaction with the police officers on
the scene of the accident, the plaintiff did not report that she had
been attacked
by a hijacker or hijackers. Her version of events was
that she had had an argument with her husband after a few drinks and
left
the home as a result of this altercation. During her testimony,
the plaintiff complained of an intermittent loss of consciousness
during the time after the accident. She testified that she did not
tell the police of the alleged hijacking because she lost
consciousness.
The plaintiff denied that she refused to cooperate
with the paramedics on the scene of the accident. The plaintiff
testified that
the police officers refused to open a case of
hijacking but later conceded that no case was ever opened by her,
subsequently. When
pressed as to why she did not report the hijacking
she said that “
Nee ek kon nie want
ek was bewusteloos en ek het in die hospital wakker geword.”
The plaintiff’s attorney, in
paraphrasing her evidence and his instructions, said that she was
conscious until the moment
she was forced to stand outside her car.
[30]
It was put to the defendant’s witnesses
during cross examination that they had consistently refused the
plaintiff medical
assistance. The denied this. The defendant’s
witnesses testified that when Mr Els arrived, the plaintiff was in
the back
of the ambulance and that she refused medical assistance on
his advice.
[31]
The plaintiff testified that she consumed “
twee
of drie sopies [whisky]… dit kon meer gewees het” [two
or three drinks … it could have been more”]
at
her home. When it was put to her that her breath smelt of liquor she
replied: “
Wel daardie aand het ons
wel ‘n drankie of twee gedrink maar was dit nie so verskriklik
nie.”
[“Well that evening
we had a drink or two, but it was not so terrible”] She
testified that she and her husband hosted
a house party at their home
for family and friends. After the party, the other occupants of the
house were sleeping when she heard
a noise outside the house and went
out to investigate. She was accosted by an unknown male who
threatened her with a knife and
forced her into her car and to drive
away. During a scuffle with the attacker, he tried to open her
trousers and stabbed at her
with the knife, causing her to lose
control of the motor vehicle and crash into a tree.
[32]
The plaintiff testified that the police officers
forcibly removed her from the motor vehicle and that she was made to
stand on her
injured leg, and this was painful. There was an
ambulance on the scene but the paramedics who were present
refused her any
medical help.
[33]
The plaintiff made multiple concessions during
cross examination. She conceded that she never informed the police of
the alleged
hijacking, that her blood alcohol level was above the
legal limit, that her eyes were red and breath smelt of liquor, that
she
had consumed alcohol earlier that evening, and that no case of
hijacking was ever opened.
[34]
The plaintiff's husband, Mr Els, testified that
upon his arrival at the scene of the accident he encountered the
plaintiff in the
back of a police vehicle. He therefore disputed the
evidence that he saw her in the back of the ambulance. He could see
that the
plaintiff was in pain and there was blood on her legs. Mr
Els asked for medical assistance for the plaintiff but was ignored
by
the paramedics and the police. Mr Els described the plaintiff’s
injuries as severe, so much so that she never returned
to work
because of the pain. When it was put to him that his wife was under
the influence of alcohol he replied that “
we
had a braai, we had a few drinks that night.”
[35]
At the hospital, Mr Els again sought medical
assistance for the plaintiff and was forcibly removed from the
consulting room by police
officers. Mr Els was permitted to sit on
the grass outside the hospital after he promised to behave himself.
The police witnesses
disputed Mr Els’s evidence that the
plaintiff was carried or dragged out of the hospital when she was
taken from the hospital
to the police station. They testified that
the plaintiff walked to the police vehicle.
[36]
Mr Ellis also testified that the police officers
refused to complete an official accident report to enable him to
launch an insurance
claim.
[37]
The plaintiff called Ms Swanepoel to give expert
and factual evidence. She was the paramedic employed by ER24 to
transport the plaintiff
back to the hospital from the police station.
Ms Swanepoel testified that upon her arrival at the police station at
approximately
04h00 the plaintiff told her that she was experiencing
pain in her arm, leg, and her whole body. Ms Swanepoel observed
bruises
on the plaintiff’s left shoulder and arm, and blood on
her leg. The injury to the leg was only evident when she exposed the
plaintiff’s knee area.
[38]
The plaintiff was able to stand but complained of
pain in her left leg. Ms Swanepoel was unable to testify as to the
plaintiff’s
sobriety as she was not allowed to make
observations in this regard in her notes. Ms Swanepoel testified that
she applied a bandage
and verified Ms Els’s vital health
parameters; what she referred to as “
the
vitals.”
Ms Swanepoel
testified that the plaintiff appeared nervous but was fully aware of
her surroundings, and also reported that
the plaintiff told her that
she might have been stabbed by her husband.
[39]
Ms Swanepoel also testified that the injuries
sustained by the plaintiff were consistent with injuries sustained by
a patient in
a motor vehicle accident when the dashboard underneath
the steering wheel moves backwards on impact.
[40]
The plaintiff called a second expert, Dr Heynes.
He testified to
quantum
on the basis of facts placed before him by the plaintiff together
with his perusal of the hospital records and an examination conducted
two years after the collision. His expert evidence was based on the
premises that
40.1
the plaintiff had been forcibly removed from the
motor vehicle after the accident;
40.2
the plaintiff’s knee had been fractured;
40.3
the plaintiff was forced to stand and walk on a
freshly fractured knee; and
40.4
the plaintiff was refused timeous medical
attention.
[41]
Dr Heynes’ assumptions of fact are
contradicted by the evidence of Mr Ngubeni and no averments of a knee
fracture were made
in the particulars of claim.
The
jurisdictional requirements
[42]
The
jurisdictional requirements for an arrest on reasonable suspicion in
the context of
section 40(1)(b)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act were
set out in
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and another
[2]
:
42.1
The arresting officer must be a peace officer, such as a police
officer;
42.2
The arresting officer must entertain a reasonable suspicion that the
arrestee committed an offence referred to in Schedule 1 of the
Criminal Procedure Act.
[43
]
Harms DP
quoted
[3]
with approval from the
judgment of Innes ACJ in
Shidiack
v Union Government (Minister of the Interior)
:
[4]
“
Now
it is settled law that where a matter is left to the discretion or
the determination of a public officer, and where his discretion
has
been bona fide exercised or his judgment bona
fide expressed, the Court will not interfere with the result.
Not being a judicial functionary no appeal or review in the ordinary
sense would lie; and if he has duly and honestly applied himself
to
the question which has been left to his discretion, it is impossible
for a Court of Law either to make him change his mind or
to
substitute its conclusion for his own. This doctrine was recognised
in Moll v Civil Commissioner, Paarl (14 S.C.,
at p. 468);
it was acted upon in Judes v Registrar of Mining Rights (1907,
T.S., p. 1046); and it was expressly affirmed
by this Court
in Nathalia v Immigration Officer (
1912 AD 23
).
There are circumstances in which interference would be possible and
right. If for instance such an officer had acted mala
fide or
from ulterior and improper motives, if he had not applied his mind to
the matter or exercised his discretion at all,
or if he had
disregarded the express provisions of a statute - in such cases the
Court might grant relief. But it would be unable
to interfere with a
due and honest exercise of discretion, even if it considered the
decision inequitable or wrong.”
[44]
Similarly,
in
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
[5]
HJO van Heerden JA said:
“
If
the jurisdictional requirements are satisfied, the peace officer may
invoke the power conferred by the subsection, ie, he may
arrest the
suspect. In other words, he then has a discretion as to whether or
not to exercise that power (cf Holgate-Mohammed v
Duke
[1984] 1
All ER 1054
(HL) at 1057). No doubt the discretion must be properly
exercised. But the grounds on which the exercise of such a discretion
can
be questioned are narrowly circumscribed.”
[45]
In the
Constitutional era the exercise of a discretion must also be
rational. Chaskelson P said in
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of SA: In Re Ex Parte Application of
President of the RSA
:
[6]
“
It
is a requirement of the rule of law that the exercise of public power
by the Executive and other functionaries should not be
arbitrary.
Decisions must be rationally related to the purpose for which the
power was given, otherwise they are in effect arbitrary
and
inconsistent with this requirement. It follows that in order to pass
constitutional scrutiny the exercise of public power by
the Executive
and other functionaries must, at least, comply with this requirement.
If it does not, it falls short of the standards
demanded by our
Constitution for such action.
The
question whether a decision is rationally related to the purpose for
which the power was given calls for an objective enquiry.
Otherwise a
decision that, viewed objectively, is in fact irrational, might pass
muster simply because the person who took it mistakenly
and in good
faith believed it to be rational. Such a conclusion would place form
above substance, and undermine an important constitutional
principle.”
[46]
The police officers acted in terms of sections
40(1)(a) and/or 40(1)(b) of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
read with section 63, and 65(1) and 65(2) of the Road Traffic Act 93
of 1996.
Section 40(1)(a)
and (b) of the
Criminal Procedure Act
stipulates
that a peace officer such as a police officer may without
a warrant arrest a person who
46.1
commits or attempts to commit any offence in his
or her presence, or
46.2
whom he or she reasonably suspects of having committed an offence
referred
to in Schedule 1 of the
Criminal Procedure Act, other
than
the offence of escaping from lawful custody
[47]
Section 63 of the Road Traffic Act outlaws negligent and reckless
driving on a public road. Section
65(1) and (2) provide as follows:
“
65
Driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drug
having narcotic effect, or with excessive amount of alcohol
in blood
or breath
(1)
No person shall on a public road-
(a) drive
a vehicle; or
(b) occupy
the driver's seat of a motor vehicle the engine of which is running,
while
under the influence of intoxicating liquor or a drug having a
narcotic effect.
(2)
No person shall on a public road-
(a) drive
a vehicle; or
(b) occupy
the driver's seat of a motor vehicle the engine of which is running,
while
the concentration of alcohol in any specimen of blood taken from any
part of his or her body is not less than 0,05 gram per
100
millilitres, or in the case of a professional driver referred to in
section 32, not less than 0,02 gram per 100 millilitres.”
[48]
These
statutory provisions protect the safety of the public and are visited
with a criminal sanction. Drunken driving is a scourge
in society and
many innocent lives have been lost or torn asunder by car accidents
caused by drivers under the influence of alcohol.
The offences
created by the legislation are therefore not ‘mere technical
statutory offences’ and must be taken seriously.
A person
who is convicted of an offence in terms of section 65(1) and (2) of
the
of
the Road Traffic Act
may
be sentenced to imprisonment for a period not exceeding six years,
[7]
and a person convicted of an offence in terms of section 63(1) may be
sentenced to imprisonment for a period not exceeding three
years when
the offence was committed negligently, and for a period not exceeding
six years when the offence was committed recklessly.
[8]
Imprisonment may be imposed without the option of a fine. These
offences therefore fall within the parameters of Schedule 1 of
the
Criminal Procedure Act.
[9
]
[49]
On consideration of the totality of the evidence, I am satisfied that
the defendant met the jurisdictional
requirements and
discharged the onus of proving that the arrest was justified. The
plaintiff’s claim based on unlawful arrest
must fail. I must
add that there is nothing in the evidence to suggest that the police
officers acted with an “
ulterior motive”
in
effecting the arrest.
[50]
The plaintiff’s second claim was based on
allegations that whilst in the custody and under the care of the
police officers
the plaintiff was mistreated and not given adequate
medical attention and treatment. It was common cause that the
plaintiff sustained
injuries as a result of her motor vehicle
accident. An ambulance with at least two paramedics arrived at the
scene of the accident
shortly after the police officers arrived and
the medical aspects of the plaintiff’s treatment then became
the responsibility
also of the paramedics.
[51]
The plaintiff’s evidence was that she
drifted in and out of consciousness and did not have a very clear and
uninterrupted
recollection of events. This evidence was somewhat at
odds with other evidence of the plaintiff that she was conscious the
whole
time. It was also common cause that she had consumed alcohol
before the accident occurred whilst still at her home. The extent to
which stress caused by the accident and prior consumption of alcohol
contributed to her observation of events was not fully canvassed.
[52]
The defendant’s witnesses testified that the
plaintiff refused medical attention from the paramedic when it was
available
to her on the scene of the accident, and that the
plaintiff’s husband advised her against providing a sample of
her blood
or accepting medical treatment. The plaintiff’s
refusal to attend at the hospital for medical treatment was followed
by her
arrest and transport to the hospital where healthcare
professionals drew a blood sample. The plaintiff was seen by these
health
care professionals and was not booked into the hospital as a
patient. After the blood samples were taken, the plaintiff was taken
to the police station – she was still under arrest. There is no
evidence to suggest why the police officers and the health
care
officials at the hospital would have, as the plaintiff argued,
ignored serious injuries and that they did so for no reason
whatsoever or with some ulterior motive.
[53]
When it became apparent at the police station that
medical care was or might be required, the necessary steps were taken
to transport
the plaintiff to a hospital where she was again under
the care of health care professionals. The plaintiff was without the
assistance
of health care professionals at the police station for
approximately thirty minutes before Ms Swanepoel arrived.
[54]
The averment is made in the pleadings that the
police officers acted with some or other ulterior motive, and invited
the inference
that the health care professionals at the hospital were
somehow in cahoots with the police officers by refusing the plaintiff
medical
treatment because of an ulterior motive. The problem
with this alarming proposition is that there is no evidence of any
such
ulterior motive and no such motive can be inferred from the
facts. The averments of an ulterior motive must be rejected, and with
it the evidence that the plaintiff was in custody for ten to eleven
hours without receiving medical attention by paramedics and
health
care professionals who saw her at the scene of the accident and at
the hospital, under circumstances where she bleeding
profusely and
was seriously injured.
[55]
I conclude that the plaintiff did not discharge the onus to prove
that the police officers failed to
provide her with medical care, and
the plaintiff’s second claim stands to be dismissed with costs.
[56]
In view of the dismissal of the plaintiff’s
claim the quantum of the claim need not be considered by this Court,
and the counterclaim
also must be dismissed with costs.
[57]
As regards costs, there is no reason to deviate
from the usual principle that costs should follow the result
______________
MOORCROFT
AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
I agree and it is so
ordered
______________
CRUTCHFIELD J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judges whose names
are reflected and is handed down electronically by
circulation to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date of the
judgment is deemed to be
8 DECEMBER 2023
APPEARANCE
FOR THE APPELLANT:
Mr
EB MAFOKO
INSTRUCTED
BY:
STATE
ATTORNEY
APPEARANCE
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
A
GROVÉ
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MILLS
& GROENEWALD ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
31
OCTOBER 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
8
DECEMBER 2023
[1]
See
section 83
of the
Magistrates’ Courts
Act 32 of 1944
and
section 16
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
[2]
Minister of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another
2011 (5) SA 367
(SCA) para 6.
[3]
Ibid
para 34.
[4]
Shidiack
v Union Government (Minister of the Interior)
1912
AD 642
at 651–652.
[5]
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
[1986] 2 All SA 241,
1986 (2) SA 805
(A) 818H.
[6]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of SA: In Re Ex Parte Application of
President of the RSA
[2000] ZACC 1
;
2000 (2) SA 674
paras 85 to 86, quoted in the
Sekhoto
case,
[7]
Section 89(1) and (2) of the
Road
Traffic Act.
[8]
Section 89(1) and (5) of the
Road
Traffic Act.
[9]
The Schedule includes any offence, except the
offence of escaping from lawful custody in certain specified
circumstances, that may merit imprisonment for a period of more than
six months without the option of a fine.
sino noindex
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