Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 621South Africa
Mtshali v Minister of Police (43727/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 621 (30 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 August 2022
Headnotes
Summary of the facts
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mtshali v Minister of Police (43727/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 621 (30 August 2022)
Mtshali v Minister of Police (43727/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 621 (30 August 2022)
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sino date 30 August 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No: 43727/2012
REPORTABLE: NO.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO.
REVISED.
30 August 2022
In the matter of:
AMOS
VELAPHI MTSHALI
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Todd AJ.
Introduction
1.
The Plaintiff instituted proceedings
against the Defendant claiming damages for unlawful arrest and
detention. The matter proceeded
to trial on an unopposed basis after
this court ordered, on 22 July 2021, that the Defendant’s
defence was struck out and
that the action should proceed by way of
default.
2.
When the trial was convened Mr Mashimbe
appeared on behalf of the Defendant. He stated that he had not been
aware of the order that
the matter should proceed by default and
informed the court that he had been instructed to seek a postponement
of the matter so
that the Defendant could have an opportunity to
prepare its defence.
3.
This is a matter that has its origins in an
the arrest and detention of the Plaintiff during July 2011. I invited
Mr Mashimbe to
indicate on what basis he could seek a postponement in
circumstances in which an order had already been made that the matter
should
proceed to trial by way of default. He indicated that he had
not been aware that that was the case, and quite properly accepted
that in those circumstances the court was entitled to proceed with
the trial. In my view there were no good grounds on which to
postpone
the matter, and as a result ruled that the matter should proceed.
4.
Ms Sogoni, who appeared for the Plaintiff,
indicated that she would have no objection to Mr Mashimbe attendance
and indeed participating
in the proceedings with a view to making any
submissions that he may wish to make on behalf of the Defendant in
particular regarding
the quantum of the claim. Mr Mashimbe indicated,
however, that he would remain in attendance to observe proceedings
only, and that
he would take no active role, whether in making
submissions or otherwise, since he held no instructions in regard to
the matter
other than to seek a postponement.
5.
In those circumstances the matter
proceeded. Mr Mtshali gave evidence in person and on his own behalf.
Summary of the facts
6.
As indicated, the matter has its origins in
July 2011 when, on a Friday at approximately 11h00 Mr Mtshali was
stopped at a roadblock
being managed by both the Johannesburg
Metropolitan Police and the South African Police Services (SAPS). Mr
Mtshali was asked to
produce registration papers for his vehicle,
which he did.
7.
The vehicle was one which Mr Mtshali had
purchased in 2005, with the assistance of motor vehicle finance
through Wesbank. In 2007
the vehicle had been stolen, but it was
subsequently recovered and returned to him by representatives of the
SAPS. He thereafter
continued in possession of the vehicle and
continued to pay the necessary instalments to Wesbank. He had not
fully paid for the
vehicle at the time when, some four years later,
in July 2011, he encountered the roadblock.
8.
Whether or not the prior theft of the
vehicle was the reason why Mr Mtshali faced special attention on July
2011 is uncertain. He
speculated that this was so. In any event, it
appears that the issue initially identified by representatives of the
Johannesburg
Metropolitan Police at the roadblock, which they
thereafter handed over to members of the SAPS, was that the engine
number on Mr
Mtshali’s motor vehicle differed from the engine
number indicated in the registration papers that he held for it.
9.
Mr Mtshali explained to the officers
concerned that his vehicle had previously been stolen, in 2007, and
had been returned to him
after it had been recovered by members of
the SAPS. He insisted that he was the lawful owner and properly in
possession of the
vehicle as indicated by the registration papers and
by the fact that he was continuing to pay instalments to Wesbank
through whom
the purchase of the vehicle had been financed.
10.
Despite this, representatives of the SAPS
present at the roadblock informed him that he was being arrested, and
he was taken to
the Jeppe police station for processing. Mr Mtshali
continued with his protestations of innocence and he asked whether he
could
make a phone call to his mother to inform her of his situation.
He was refused access to a telephone to contact his mother or any
other person, and the SAPS officials responsible for his arrest and
detention gave no consideration to releasing him on bail or
bringing
him before court until Monday morning.
11.
As a result, Mr Mtshali spent from
approximately midday on Friday in detention in police holding cells
at the Jeppe Street police
station.
12.
He described the conditions under which he
was detained as extremely dirty and unsanitary. Eight detainees
shared a cell with a
single toilet, with no privacy. As a result, the
cell was crowded, polluted and unsanitary. It was also the place
where the detainees
were fed. It was extremely cold, being mid
winter, but the detainees were provided with only four foam
mattresses and a thin blanket
each on which to sleep. This meant that
the eight detainees had to take turns lying down.
13.
Mr Mtshali was not fed at all on the Friday
of his arrest, but on the Saturday and Sunday received a meal of
bread and tea at 10h00
in the morning and bread and soup at
approximately 18h00 in the evening.
14.
On Monday morning Mr Mtshali was taken to
court, where he was to appear before a court for the first time. To
his surprise and extreme
irritation he was not in fact brought before
the court at all, but was simply informed, in the holding cells, that
he was now free
to go. This made it clear to him that there were in
fact no grounds on which to charge him, nor any reason why he should
have been
arrested and detained in the first place.
15.
In a sequel to the indignity of his arrest
and detention, Mr Mtshali was subsequently unsuccessful in securing
the release of his
motor vehicle from the custody of the police.
After various attempts to secure its release had been refused Mr
Mtshali was threatened
with further arrest. He then simply gave up
and abandoned his vehicle, which he never since recovered.
16.
Mr Mtshali made arrangements to settle the
outstanding amount due to Wesbank from a provident fund payment made
to him.
Evaluation
17.
I am satisfied on the evidence that Mr
Mtshali’s arrest and detention were unlawful, for the reasons
submitted by Ms Sogoni,
and I do not deal further with that aspect of
the matter in this judgment.
18.
The primary focus of Ms Sogoni’s
further submissions concerned the quantum of damages that should be
awarded to Mr Mtshali
in these circumstances.
19.
Ms Sogoni submitted, referring to
Minister
of Police v Tyulu
2009 (5) SA 85
(SCA),
that in assessing the quantum 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 much a needed
solatium
for his injured feelings.
20.
As to the amount that should be awarded, Ms
Segoni submitted that there were no hard and fast rules of general
application, and
submitted that the matter was ultimately one that
resided within the discretion of the court. She submitted, however,
that the
court should be guided by awards previously made in
comparable cases.
21.
In this regard, the Plaintiff referred in
its heads of argument to awards made in
Olivier
v Minister of Safety and Security
2009
(3) SA 434
(W),
Mvu v Minister of Safety
and Security and another
2009 (2) SACR
291
(GSJ), and
Koekemoer v Minister of
Police
[2017] ZAGPPHC 110. I was also
referred to the award of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
2018 (7K6)
QOD 420 (SCA), which was subsequently increased by the Constitutional
Court (primarily because that court found that
Mr de Klerk was
entitled to damages for the entire seven days of his unlawful
detention and not only for the initial period before
he was brought
before court for the first time, as had been held by the SCA). The
Constitutional Court decision is reported as
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
2021 SACR 1
(CC).
22.
Ms Sogoni urged me to take into account the
trauma suffered by Mr Mtshali, including as indicated by the fact
that he had chosen
not to pursue the return of his vehicle, a matter
which, she submitted, indicated that he had been severely traumatized
by the
experience.
23.
Mr Mtshali was unlawfully detained for a
period of approximately three days. I accept that the experience was
extremely uncomfortable,
that it was an unwarranted interference with
his liberty, that he was effectively treated unjustifiably like a
common criminal,
and that he felt betrayed by the police who were
expected to protect the rights of citizens and not to violate them.
24.
Ms Sogoni submitted that it would be
appropriate in these circumstances to award compensation in the
amount of R300 000.
25.
I have carefully considered the facts and
circumstances of Mr Mtshali’s arrest and the evidence
indicating that it was unjustifiable,
that it could easily and should
have been avoided, and that the experience was deeply unfair and
uncomfortable for Mr Mtshali.
I have also taken into account the
awards in comparable cases, accepting of course that no two cases are
exactly the same but rather
that I should nevertheless regard them as
providing some level of guidance in regard to the appropriate amount
of damages.
26.
In my view, the appropriate amount of
damages for Mr Mtshali’s unlawful arrest and detention over a
period of three days is
R180,000. This takes into account both the
length of the unlawful detention, being a period of approximately
three days, and also
the cumulative effect of the deprivation of his
liberty.
27.
Ms Sogoni submitted that this was a case in
which the Defendant should be ordered to pay the Plaintiff’s
costs. I agree. Although
the matter ultimately proceeded on an
unopposed basis it was defended up until an order was made striking
out the Defendant’s
defense and it was necessary for the
Plaintiff to be called to give evidence and for submissions to be
made on both the merits
and quantum. In those circumstances it seems
to me that the costs should be granted on a normal opposed scale.
Order
In the circumstances I
make the following order:
1.
The Defendant is ordered to pay the
Plaintiff damages in the sum of R180,000 together with interest
calculated at the prescribed
legal rate from date of this order to
date of payment.
2.
The Defendant is ordered to pay the
Plaintiff’s costs.
C Todd
Acting Judge of the
High Court of South Africa.
REFERENCES
For the
Plaintiff:
Adv. P R Songoni
Instructed
by:
Dudula Attorneys
For the
Defendant:
Adv. Mashimbye
Instructed
by:
The Office of the State Attorney
Judgment
reserved:
22 August 2022
Judgment
delivered:
30 August 2022
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