REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2020-000987
DATE: 26 NOVEMBER 2025
In the matter between:
LEROY QUINTON THERON First Plaintiff
GAVIN FISHER Second Plaintiff
VUSIMUSI MAKONI Third Plaintiff
and
THE MINISTER OF POLICE First Defendant
THE NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS Second Defendant
Neutral Citation: Theron and Others v Minister of Police and Another ( 2020-
091784) [2025] ZAGPJHC ---- (26 November 2025)
Coram: Adams J
Heard: 6, 7, 8, 9 May 2025 and 12 June 2025
Closing Arguments: 31 July 2025 – Heard ‘virtually’ as a videoconference on
Microsoft Teams.
(1) NOT REPORTABLE
(2) NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
---
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Delivered: 26 November 2025 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by email,
by being uploaded to CaseLines and by release to SAFLII. The date
and time for hand -down is deemed to be 14:30 on 26 November
2025.
Summary: Criminal law and procedure – Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 –
section 40(1)(b) – unlawful arrest and detention – whether the plaintiff’s arrest
and detention were lawful in terms of s 40(1)(b) of the Cri minal Procedure Act ,
read with schedule 1 thereto, which includes any offence , the punishment
wherefor may be a period of imprisonment exceeding six months , without the
option of a fine – the plaintiffs were, at the time of their arrest, suspected of having
committed the crimes of robbery, assault GBH and attempted murder – therefore,
arrest and detention justified – no malicious prosecution either –
Factual disputes – mutually destructive versions – correct approach – to come to
a conclusion on the disputed issues a court is required inter alia to make a finding
on the probability or improbability of each party's version – it is only where a
consideration of the probabilities fails to indicate where the truth probably lies,
that recourse is had to an estimate of relative credibility apart from t he
probabilities –
Plaintiffs’ claims dismissed.
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ORDER
(1) The first, second and third plaintiffs’ claims are dismissed with costs.
(2) The first, second and third plaintiffs, jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, shall pay the first and the second defendants’ costs,
including Counsel’s charges on scale ‘B’ of the tariff applicable in terms of
the Uniform Rules of Court.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1]. On Sunday morning, 10 June 2018, at about 09:00, Sergeant Thandeka
Buthelezi (Sgt Buthelezi) was on duty in the Client Service Centre (‘CSC’) at the
Parkview Police Station , when two members of the public, a Mr Rubin Adams
and his son, Mr Ronald Adams (‘the complainants’) , came to lay charges of
assault, with intent to do grievous bodily harm, and armed robbery against the
plaintiffs. The complainants alleged that they were assaulted the previous night
(Saturday, 9 June 2018) at about 21:00 by the plaintiffs and robbed of cash and
a cell phone. At the time that the complainants arrived at the Police Station, a
Sergeant Ndivhuho Muregu (Sgt Muregu) was also on duty in the CSC with Sgt
Buthelezi. Sgt Muregu, who at the time held the rank of Constable, as did Sgt
Buthelezi, was in fact the CSC Commander, and he listened in whilst the
complainants were reporting to Sgt Buthelezi the events of the previous night.
[2]. When they arrived at the police station, Mr Rubin Adams had blood on his
head and on his face and he indicated to the police officers that he had been
assaulted with a ‘plank’ and kicked repeatedly by the plaintiffs, who were known
to him at the time. He also confirmed that they (the complainants), like the
plaintiffs, were living on the streets in the Parkview area and all of them were
making a living informally as so -called ‘car guards’ at the shops and shopping
4
centres in the vicinity. The plaintiffs were also known to Sgt Muregu as persons
‘living on the streets’ and, as luck would have it, whilst the complainants were
being interviewed by the police officers , two of the plaintiffs came walking past
the police station. They were apprehended by Sgt Muregu and taken into the
CSC, where they were pointed out by the complainants as the persons who had
assaulted and robbed them the previous night. The plaintiffs were thereafter
arrested by the police and detained until their release during June 2019, after
they were acquitted and discharged in terms of section 174 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (‘the CPA’). They were released after facing charges
of armed robbery and attempted murder and after standing trial in the
Johannesburg Regional Court. By then they had been prosecuted and the trial
proceeded to the close of the State’s case, at which point (on 12 June 2019) they
were discharged in terms of s 174 of the CPA and acquitted.
[3]. In this consolidated action, the first plaintiff, the second plaintiff and the
third plaintiff claim delictual damages for unlawful arrest and detention from the
first defendant ( the National Minister of Police (‘Minister’) ). From the second
defendant ( the National Director of Public Prosecutions (‘NDPP’)) all of the
plaintiffs claim damages on the basis of malicious prosecution. In pursuing their
claims in this matter, the plaintiffs set great store to the fact that the Johannesburg
Regional Court had discharged them in terms of s 174 of the CPA, which
confirms, so the plaintiff s aver, that the State had no case against them and
should never have arrested , detained or prosecuted them. For the reason s
mentioned infra, this argument is misdirected and ill-advised.
[4]. The first defendant denies liability for the claims of the plaintiffs. His case
is that the arrest and the detention were lawful in that the plaintiffs were suspected
is that the arrest and the detention were lawful in that the plaintiffs were suspected
– reasonably so – of having committed the crime s of armed robbery, with
aggravating circumstances, and attempted murder . The second defendant also
denies liability for damages as a result of alleged malicious prosecution for the
simple reason that the Prosecuting Authority had every right to prosecute the
plaintiffs and that they had failed to prove that the prosecution was malicious.
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[5]. The issue to be considered in this action is therefore whether, all things
considered, the arrest of the plaintiffs and their subsequent detention were lawful.
Put another way, the issues to be decided in this matter is whether the arresting
officers had reasonable grounds to arrest the plaintiff s and whether they had
reasonable grounds thereafter to detain him. A further issue relates to whether
the prosecution of the plaintiffs was malicious.
[6]. Prior to adjudicating the foregoing issue s, the court is required to try and
assess the facts in the matter. In that regard, there are two mutually destructive
versions – one on behalf of the plaintiff s and the other on behalf of the
defendants, in relation to the circumstances surrounding and leading up to the
arrest and detention of the plaintiff s. In other words, there is a factual dispute
between the parties relating to a material issue in the matter, which dispute is
required to be considered and decided upon by the court.
[7]. Before dealing with the facts in the matter, it may be apposite to traverse
and consider firstly the applicable legislative framework and the relevant legal
principles.
[8]. An arrest or detention is prima facie wrongful. Once the arrest and
detention are admitted, as is the case in casu, the onus shifts onto the State to
prove the lawfulness thereof and i t is for the defendants to allege and prove the
lawfulness of the arrest and detention. So, for example, it was held by the
Supreme Court of Appeal as follows i n Zealand v Minister of Justice &
Constitutional Development & Another1:
'This is not something new in our law. 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.'
causing that interference to establish a ground of justification.'
1 Zealand v Minister of Justice & Constitutional Development & Another 2008 (4) SA 458 (SCA) at para 25;
6
[9]. Section 40(1)(b) of the CPA confers the power on a police officer, without
warrant, to arrest a person reasonably suspected of having committed a
schedule 1 offence. Schedule 1 includes the following crimes: -
‘Murder.
Robbery.
Assault –
(a) when a dangerous wound is inflicted;
(b) involving the infliction of grievous bodily harm; or
(c) where a person is threatened –
(i) with grievous bodily harm; or
(ii) with a firearm or dangerous weapon, as defined in section 1 of the Dangerous
Weapons Act, 2013 (Act 15 of 2013).
Theft, whether under the common law or a statutory provision.
Any offence, except the offence of escaping from lawful custody in circumstances other
than the circumstances referred to immediately hereunder, the punishment wherefor
may be a period of imprisonment exceeding six months without the option of a fine.
Any conspiracy, incitement or attempt to commit any offence referred to in this Schedule.’
(Emphasis added).
[10]. In this matter, the case on behalf of the defendants is to the effect that the
plaintiffs were reasonably suspected of having committed one or more of the
following crimes: robbery, attempted murder and assault, all of which are
section 1 offences. The offences of which the plaintiffs were suspected of having
committed therefore clearly falls within the ambit and the contemplation of
s 40(1)(b) of the CPA. Provided the arresting officers’ suspicion that the plaintiffs
had committed any one or more of these crimes , was reasonable , they would
have been entitled and empowered to arrest the plainti ffs without a warrant.
Section 50(1)(a) requires that such arrested person be brought, as soon as
possible, to a police station, and be there detained. And section 50(1)(b) provides
that he or she, as soon as reasonably possible, be informed of his or her right to
institute bail proceedings.
[11]. It is not required for a successful invocation by a peace officer of s 40(1)(b)
[11]. It is not required for a successful invocation by a peace officer of s 40(1)(b)
of the CPA, that the offence was actually committed. The question is whether the
7
arresting police officer had reasonable grounds for suspecting that such a crime
had been committed. This requires only that the arresting officer should have
formed a suspicion that must rest on reasonable grounds. It is not necessary to
establish as a fact that the crime had been committed 2. ‘Suspicion’ implies an
absence of certainty or adequate proof. Thus, a suspicion might be reasonable
even if there is insufficient evidence for a prima facie case against the arrestee3.
[12]. In cases such as Duncan v Minister of Law and Order 4, Minister of Law
and Order v Kader5, Powell NO and Others v Van der Merwe NO and Others 6,
the Supreme Court of Appeal has endorsed and adopted the following
formulation of the meaning of 'suspicion' by Lord Devlin:
'Suspicion in its ordinary meaning is a state of conjecture or surmise where proof is
lacking; "I suspect, but I cannot prove". Suspicion arises at or near the starting point of
an investigation of which the obtaining of prima facie proof is the end.'
[13]. The question, whether the suspicion by the police officer effecting the
arrest is reasonable, as envisaged by s 40(1)(b), must be approached objectively.
Accordingly, the circumstances giving rise to the suspicion must be such as would
ordinarily move a reasonable person to form the suspicion that the arrestee had
committed a first-schedule offence. The information before the arresting officers
must be such as to demonstrate an actual suspicion, founded upon reasonable
grounds, that a schedule 1 offence had been committed by the person or persons
to be arrested.
[14]. That then brings me back to the facts in the matter, as elicited from the
evidence led during the trial. In that regard, only the second plaintiff gave
evidence in support of the case on behalf of all three plaintiffs. Strangely, the first
and the third plaintiffs did not give evidence and it was explained in very general
2 R v Jones 1952 (1) SA 327 (E) at 332;
2 R v Jones 1952 (1) SA 327 (E) at 332;
3 Duncan v Minister of Law and Order 1986 (2) SA 805 (A) ([1996] ZASCA 24) at 819I – 820B;
4 Duncan v Minister of Law and Order 1986 (2) SA 805 (A) ([1996] ZASCA 24) at 819I;
5 Minister of Law and Order v Kader 1991 (1) SA 41 (A) ([1990] ZASCA 111) at 50H – I;
6 Powell NO and Others v Van der Merwe NO and Others 2005 (1) SACR 317 (SCA) (2005 (5) SA 62; 2005
(7) BCLR 675; [2005] 1 All SA 149) para 36;
8
terms by their Counsel that both of them were not available at the time when the
trial proceeded before me during May and June 2025. If I understood
Mr Mudimeli, Counsel for the plaintiffs, correctly, the first plaintiff was
incarcerated for an unrelated crime at the relevant time and the third plaintiff could
not be located by his legal representatives. I am not sure that the explanation
proffered on beh alf of the plaintiffs for the absence of the first and the third
plaintiffs are satisfactory. Moreover, I am not convinced that an adverse
inference, insofar as it may be necessary, cannot and should not be drawn from
their failure to give evidence in support of their causes.
[15]. On behalf of the defendants the following witnesses testified: The arresting
officers, namely Sergeant Buthelezi and Seargeant Muregu; the investigating
officer, Warrant Officer Tshifhiwa Muluvhu, and a prosecutor, Ms Colleen Ryan.
[16]. The second plaintiff’s evidence, in a nutshell, was to the effect that on a
Sunday morning, 10 June 2018, at about 08:00, whilst in the company of the first
and the third plaintiffs and whilst they were walking along a particular street in
Parkview, they were accosted out of the blue by police officers and arrested. The
police officers were travelling in a police van and, when they confronted them, so
the second plaintiff testified, the police officers advised them that a case of
attempted murder and robbe ry had been opened against them by the
complainants. They were put into the police van and transported back to the
Parkview Police Station, where they saw the complainants, who, so the second
plaintiff testified, showed no signs of having been assaulted or having been
seriously injured.
[17]. The second plaintiff denies that he and his friends assaulted or robbed the
complainants. On being asked why the complainant s, in particular Mr Rubin
Adams, would lie about being assaulted and robbed by him and the other two
Adams, would lie about being assaulted and robbed by him and the other two
plaintiffs, the second plaintiff suggested that the complainants fabricated the
storey against them out of jealousy. The complainants, so the second plaintiff
surmised, did not like the i dea that he (the second plaintiff) was making more
money than them (the complainants) from the car-guarding business.
9
[18]. The second plaintiff confirmed that at the police station they were
‘processed’ and detained in the police cells until their first court appearance on
the Tuesday, 12 June 2018. Thereafter, they attended court on a few occasions
whilst their matter proceeded to trial until their acquittal on 12 June 2019,
whereafter they were released from prison. All the time – for the whole year, they
remained in custody, awaiting trial, at the Johannesburg Prison. Importantly,
during his cross-examination, the second plaintiff confirmed that shortly after they
were arrested initially, all three of them ‘abandoned’ their bail applications mainly
because the investigating officer was finding it impossible to confirm th eir
residential addresses. Importantly, the second plaintiff did not strenuously
dispute, nay did not dispute at all the contention on behalf of the defendants that
neither he nor the other two plaintiffs had fixed residential addresses as they were
living in a public park in the Parkview area. It is therefore understandable that
they were not released on bail.
[19]. In sum, the version of the defendants, based on the evidence of the
arresting officers, is as set out in the above introduction and the first two
paragraphs of this judgment. The complainants arrived at the police station and
laid charges of robbery and assault, with the intention to do grievous bodily harm,
alternatively attempted murder, against the plaintiff. One of the complainants was
seriously injured as a result of the assault on their person s by the plaintiffs. At
some point, whilst the complainants were being interviewed by the police, two of
the plaintiffs came walking past the Police Station, whereupon they were arrested
and charged with robbery and attempted murder
[20]. Sergeant Muregu, who was the second witness for the defendants,
corroborated in all the material respects the testimony of Sgt Buthelezi . He
confirmed that, on their arrival at the police station, he could clearly see that
confirmed that, on their arrival at the police station, he could clearly see that
Mr Rubin Adams was bloodied and had been seriously injured. He also confirmed
that Mr Rubin Adams reported to them that, during the assault the previous night,
he was hit with a plank and that the plaintiffs kicked him. He was the one who,
whilst standing on the ‘veranda’ of the police station, noticed the first and the
second plaintiffs walking past the police station and he accordingly brought them
10
into the police station. Later on, whilst they were still busy processing the first and
the second plaintiffs, the third plaintiff also arrived at the police station and he
was also arrested.
[21]. The Investigating Officer, Warrant Officer Muluvhu, testified with regard to
the docket, which was given to him on Monday, 11 June 2018. He testified that
he took their warning statements from the plaintiffs and readied them for court
the next day, being Tuesday, 12 June 2018. He also confirmed that he had
difficulty in confirming the plaintiffs’ fixed places of residence in view of the fact
that they were living ‘on the streets’. This, he explained, was the reason why the
plaintiffs were not released on b ail in addition to the fact that they had in fact
abandoned their bail applications.
[22]. Lastly, the prosecutor, Ms Ryan gave evidence, explaining why the
plaintiffs were prosecuted. She also confirmed that the plaintiffs abandoned their
bail applicants and that is why they remained in custody for the duration of their
matter going on trial. In any event, so Ms Ryan explained, the plaintiffs were
facing schedule 5 charges, which meant that they probably would not have been
granted bail even if they proceeded with their bail applications. The fact that the
first complainant suffered serious injuries, so she testified, was confirmed by the
Form J88 medical report by a medical practitioner
[19] As I have already indicated, the dispute between the plaintiff s and the
defendants is a factual one. I have before me two mutually destructive versions
relating to the events surrounding the arrest and the detention of the plaintiffs. If
I accept the version of the police, the plaintiffs ’ claims must fail. I revert to the
reasons for such conclusion later on in the judgment. However, having said that,
it should be born in mind that the version of the police is to the effect that they
arrested the plaintiffs on the strength of the claim by Mr Rubin Adams that he was
arrested the plaintiffs on the strength of the claim by Mr Rubin Adams that he was
robbed and seriously injured by the plaintiffs. The plaintiff s do not seem to
seriously take issue with the foregoing, although they do deny having assaulted
and robbed the complainants. The point is that the undisputed and unchallenged
version before me is that the complainants accused the plaintiffs of having
11
assaulted and robbed them, which resulted in serious injury to Mr Rubin Adams.
That means that, howsoever one views the matter, the police were fully entitled
to arrest the plaintiffs in terms of s 40(1)(b) of the CPA – on the basis of what they
were told by the complainants, the police had a reasonable suspicion that the
plaintiffs had committed a schedule 1 offence. Is that not the end of the matter, I
ask rhetorically.
[20] All the same, t he question to be considered by the court is therefore
whether, having regard to all of the evidence before me, the version of the
defendants is more probable than that of the plaintiff s. The defendants bear the
onus of proving the lawfulness of the arrest and the detention of the plaintiffs ,
which includes proving the facts in support of a con clusion that the arrest and
detention were lawful. If the probabilities are equally balanced, then the plaintiffs
get the benefit of the doubt.
[21] In Stellenbosch Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell and
Others7, the Supreme Court of Appeal explained how a court should resolve
factual disputes and ascertain, as far as possible, where the truth lies between
conflicting factual assertions, The SCA held as follows:
‘To come to a conclusion on the disputed issues a court must make findings on:
(a) the credibility of the various factual witnesses;
(b) their reliability; and
(c) the probability or improbability of each party's version on each of the disputed issues .
In light of the assessment of (a), (b) and (c), the court will then, as a final step, determine whether
the party burdened with the onus of proof has succeeded in discharging it. The hard case, which
will doubtless be a rare one, occurs when a court's credibi lity findings compel it in one direction
and its evaluation of the general probabilities in another. The more convincing the former, the less
convincing will be the latter. But when all factors equipoised, probabilities prevail’. (Emphasis
added)
added)
[22] Also in National Employers' General Insurance Co Ltd v Jagers8 the court
remarked as follows:
7 Stellenbosch Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell and Others 2003 (1) SA 11 (SCA) at para 5.
8 National Employers' General Insurance Co Ltd v Jager 1984 (4) SA 437 (ECD) at 440D-441A.
12
‘It seems to me, with respect, that in any civil case, as in any criminal case, the onus can ordinarily
only be discharged by adducing credible evidence to support the case of the party on whom the
onus rests. In a civil case the onus is obviously not as h eavy as it is in a criminal case, but
nevertheless where the onus rests on the plaintiff as in the present case, and where there are two
mutually destructive stories, he can only succeed if he satisfies the court on a preponderance of
probabilities that hi s version is true and accurate and therefore acceptable, and that the other
version advanced by the defendant is therefore false or mistaken and falls to be rejected. In
deciding whether that evidence is true or not the court will weigh up and test the pla intiff's
allegations against the general probabilities. The estimate of the credibility of a witness will
therefore be inextricably bound up with a consideration of the probabilities of the case and, if the
balance of probabilities favours the plaintiff, t hen the court will accept his version as being
probably true. If however the probabilities are evenly balanced in the sense that they do not favour
the plaintiff's case any more than they do the defendant's, the plaintiff can only succeed if the
court nevertheless believes him and is satisfied that his evidence is true and that the defendant's
version is false.
This view seems to me to be in general accordance with the views expressed by Coetzee J in
Koster Ko-operatiewe Landboumaatskappy Bpk v Suid-Afrikaanse Spoorweë en Hawens (supra)
and African Eagle Assurance Co Ltd v Cainer (supra). I would merely stress however that when
in such circumstances one talks about a plaintiff having discharged the onus which rested upon
him on a balance of probabilities one really means that the court is satisfied on a balance of
probabilities that he was telling the truth and th at his version was therefore acceptable. It does
not seem to me to be desirable for a court first to consider the question of credibility of the
witnesses as the trial judge did in the present case, and then, having concluded that enquiry, to
consider the probabilities of the case, as though the two aspects constitute separate fields of
enquiry. In fact, as l have pointed out, it is only where a consideration of the probabilities fails to
indicate where the truth probably lies, that recourse is had to an es timate of relative credibility
apart from the probabilities’. (Emphasis added)
[23] Lastly, in Govan v Skidmore9, the following principle was enunciated:
‘In finding facts or making inferences in a civil case, it seems to me that one may, as Wigmore
conveys in his work on evidence … by balancing probabilities select a conclusion which seems
to be the more natural or plausible conclusion from amongst several conceivable ones, even
though that conclusion may not be the only reasonable one.’
[24] I need to apply these authorities to the matter before because I am faced
with two mutually destructive versions on the incident in question. The version of
9 Govan v Skidmore 1952 (1) SA 732 (N).
13
the plaintiff s is irreconcilable with that of the defendants. Accepting the one
means of necessity a rejection of the other.
[25] The starting point of the discussion and the analysis is the probabilities.
As was held in Stellenbosch Farmers’ Winery (supra), I am required to assess
the probability or improbability of each party's version on each of the disputed
issues. In that regard, I am of the view that the version of the plaintiff s is an
inherently improbable one. One needs only to relate the story to conclude that it
is improbable. The important part of the version is that the SAPS Officers, for no
apparent reason, have fabricated the whole narrative that the complainants laid
charges against the plaintiffs, which resulted in them being arrested and detained.
This is the very definition of inherent improbability. What the plaintiff s say is that
the SAPS Officers, who had no axe to grind with them, decided to implicate them
in crimes in which they were not involved. Moreover, they then, between
themselves and the complainants, decided to fabricate the whole concocted story
against them. That just cannot possibly be. We know from our everyday
experience that things happen for a reason.
[26] In my view and having regard to the above considerations and the
probabilities in their totality, the version of the defendants is more probable than
that of the plaintiffs. Therefore, to borrow from the dicta in the National Employers'
General Insurance Co Ltd (supra), I am satisfied that the defendants’ evidence is
true and that the plaintiffs’ version is false.
[27] Mr Mudimeli urged me to reject the defendants’ version on the basis that
there were contradictions between the evidence given by the various witnesses.
Much was made of the fact there were discrepancies between evidence given
and statements previously made by the witnesses , as well as contradiction
between the evidence of the witnesses.
[28] The difficulty with this contention is that the evidence on behalf of the
[28] The difficulty with this contention is that the evidence on behalf of the
plaintiffs was equally problematic. Moreover, as I indicated above, I can and
should draw an adverse inference from the failure on the part of the first and the
14
third plaintiffs to give evidence . The point is simply that the criticism levelled
against the evidence on behalf of the defendants is equally applicable to the
evidence on behalf of the plaintiffs.
[29] Moreover, the contradictions complained of are, in my view, not of a
material nature and are not of the kind that it can be said with any conviction that
they show that the defendants’ witnesses were dishonest. As was held by the
Appellate Division in S v Mkohle10, citing with approval the dicta in S v Oosthuizen
1982 (3) SA 571 (T) 11, ‘contradictions per se do not lead to the rejection of a
witness' evidence; they may simply be indicative of an error. Not every error made
by a witness affects his credibility; in each case the trier of fact has to make an
evaluation, taking into account such matters as the na ture of the contradictions,
their number and importance, and their bearing on other parts of the witness'
evidence’.
[30] In any event, the contradictions alluded to by Mr Mudimeli are relied upon
by him presumably to impugn the credibility of the defendants’ witnesses.
However, in view of my above findings relating to the probabilities in the matter,
a finding relating to credibility is unnecessary. As was held in Jagers (supra), it is
only where a consideration of the probabilities fails to indicate where the truth
probably lies, that recourse is had to an estimate of relative credibility apart from
the probabilities. I have already found that the probabilities undoubtedly favour
the defendants.
[31] The only question remaining is whether these facts, as found by me based
on the evidence of the defendants’ witnesses, ground a conclusion that the arrest
and detention were lawful.
[32] There can be no doubt that the arresting officers manifestly harboured a
suspicion that the plaintiffs had committed the said crimes. They, in my view, had
10 S v Mkohle 1990 (1) SACR 95 (A).
11 S v Oosthuizen 1982 (3) SA 571 (T) at 576B-C and 576G-H.
15
sufficient evidence to support their suspicion, which was reasonable if regard is
had to the statements by Mr Adams and his son.
[33] The question, whether the suspicion by the arresting officer affecting the
arrest is reasonable, must, as I have said, be approached objectively. Therefore,
the circumstances giving rise to the suspicion must be such as would ordinarily
move a reasonable person to form the suspicion that the arrestee had committed
a first-schedule offence. In my view, the defendants had established that there
were reasonable grounds to suspect that the plaintiff had committed the schedule
1 offence. The arrests and subsequent detention were therefore lawful.
[34] On the basis of the facts in this matter, there is no evidence to support a
conclusion, either direct ly or inferentially, that the police , when arresting the
plaintiffs, acted unreasonably and without reasonably suspecting that they had
committed the crimes complained of. The arresting officers were, in my judgment,
not subjectively motivated by any irrelevant personal considerations of sympathy
or vengeance. They just had no reason to be so motivated. Their suspicion that
the plaintiffs had committed the said crimes was based on reasonable grounds,
notably information received from the complainants and what they themselves
observed regarding the injuries sustained by the complainants.
[35] The same considerations and conclusions apply in relation to the claims
based on malicious prosecution. In sum, it cannot possibly be said with any
conviction that the prosecution of the plaintiffs, in the circumstances of the matter,
was malicious.
[36] In conclusion, it bears emphasising, that, as was held by this court in Senti
v Minister of Police and Another12, the mere fact that in the end the plaintiffs were
discharged in terms of s 174 of the CPA does not detract from the
reasonableness of the suspicion that the crime had in fact been committed by the
reasonableness of the suspicion that the crime had in fact been committed by the
plaintiffs. If anything, there are a myriad of reasons why the criminal case took a
12 Senti v Minister of Police and Another 2023 JDR 3425 (GJ).
16
turn for the worse as it did. Objectively viewed, it is difficult to see on what basis
the arresting officers can be said not to have subjectively had a reasonable
suspicion that the crime had been committed. Furthermore, the plaintiffs were not
unlawfully detained. They abandoned their bail applications in the face of them
being unbale to provide the police with fixed addresses.
[37] For all of these reasons, the plaintiffs’ claim fall to be dismissed.
Costs
[38] The general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should be
given his costs, and this rule should not be departed from except where there are
good grounds for doing so. I can think of no reason why I should deviate from this
general rule.
[39] The plaintiffs should therefore be ordered to pay the defendant s’ costs of
the action.
Order
[40] Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1) The first, second and third plaintiffs’ claims are dismissed with costs.
(2) The first, second and third plaintiffs, jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, shall pay the first and the second defendants’ costs,
including Counsel’s charges on scale ‘B’ of the tariff applicable in terms of
the Uniform Rules of Court.
_______________________ __
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
17
HEARD ON: 6, 7, 8, 9 May 2025 and 12 June 2025
CLOSING ARGUMENTS ON: 31 July 2025 – heard ‘virtually’ as a
videoconference on Microsoft Teams
JUDGMENT DATE: 26 November 2025 – judgment handed
down electronically
FOR THE FIRST, SECOND
AND THIRD PLAINTIFFS: M O Mudimeli
INSTRUCTED BY: Tlaweng Lechaba Incorporated,
Northcliff, Randburg
FOR THE FIRST AND
SECOND DEFENDANTS: S P Mabiletsa
INSTRUCTED BY: The State Attorney, Johannesburg