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[2005] ZAGPHC 24
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Kruger v Minister of Correctional Services and Others (7117/02) [2005] ZAGPHC 24; 2006 (5) SA 21 (T) (2 March 2005)
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a
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(TRANSVAAL PROVINCIAL DIVISION)
DATE: 2/3/05 REPORTABLE
Case no.
7117/2002
.,
'-, ;'.-
.....
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In the matter between:
CASPER
JACOBS KRUGER
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
THE
COMMISSIONER OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES THE HEAD OF THE MAXIMUM
PRISON, PRETORIA THE HEAD OF THE C-MAX SECTION, PRETORIA
1st
Defendant 2nd
Defendant 3rd
Defendant 4th
Defendant
JUDGMENT
LEGODI
J
INTRODUCTION
1. The plaintiff claims payment for
the sum of R500 000-00 from the defendants either jointly or
severally for general damages as a result of non-compliance
and consequent infringement of his constitutional rights by the
defendants based
on their omission to afford the plaintiff to state
his side of the case when taking the decision to allegedly deprive
him of his rights and privileges which he enjoyed as a
prisoner before the transfer.
2
The plaintiff's damages is alleged
to have been caused by the decision taken by the defendants in
terms whereof the plaintiff
was transferred to the C-Max Section of
the prison, which allegedly resulted in the plaintiff being
deprived of his privileges.
The plaintiff's damages are further
alleged to have been caused by the alleged conduct of the
defendants subjecting the plaintiff
to conditions of detention that
were inconsistent with human dignity, mental torture and trauma as
well as being treated and
or punished in a cruel, inhuman and or
degrading manner.
The essence of the plaintiff's cause
of action is that his right to administrative action which is
supposed to be lawful, reasonable
and procedurally fair has been
infringed.
The plaintiff is basing his cause of
action on the decision of the High Court of Appeal setting aside
the decision of the defendants
in terms of which the plaintiff was
transferred to C-Max prison from Pretoria Central Maximum Prison.
The decision was set aside
by the Supreme Court of Appeal for
non-compliance with the audi alterem partem rule.
BACKGROUND
During August 1992 the plaintiff was
sentenced three times to death on charges of murder and sixty five
(65) years on charges
of armed robbery with aggravating
circumstance.
3
The sixty five (65) years sentence
was on appeal reduced to twenty two years. As the time the decision
to transfer the plaintiff
was set aside by the Supreme Court of
Appeal the three death sentences were not yet converted due to the
abolition of the death
sentence.
For most part of his detention
before his transfer the plaintiff was detained and served his
sentence at Pretoria Central Maximum
Prison.
During or about February 1996 the
plaintiff escaped from custody at Garden City Clinic, Johannesburg.
Subsequent to this escape
the plaintiff was then transferred to
Pretoria Central Maximum Prison.
On the 26th May 1997 at
Local Prison in Pretoria the plaintiff again escaped from prison
and again recaptured. Subsequent to this escape
the plaintiff was
placed in solitary confinement from the 26th May 1997 up
to the 26th June 1997.
After the 26th June 1997
the plaintiff was degraded to category D in terms of which most of
the privileges which he enjoyed before the 26th May 1997
as a category A prisoner were curtailed.
On the 13th
November 1997 the plaintiff was
again awarded category A grading. According to category A the
plaintiff enjoyed amongst others
the following privileges:
4
12.1 48 visits per year with contact
visits where facilities were available, a number of visitors allowed
depending on the availability
of facilities, 40 minutes of duration
of each visit. Children under the age of 16 years not counted as
visitors and permission
to be visited by children under the age of
16 years allowed when necessary facility available.
12.2 Unrestricted number of letters
received and written.
12.3 Purchase of confectionary or
sweets during contact visits from the prison tuck shop.
12.4 Telephones made instead of
visits allowed during weekends and public holidays and during
working hours. Twelve additional making
of calls allowed per year.
Each call to take about ten minutes at a public phone boot and using
telephone card.
12.5 R100-00 cash allowed for the
purchase of specific items in prison.
12.6 Private music instrument allowed
and to be played during normal hours. Private radio and TV set also
allowed.
On
the 3rd September 1997 at or near Pretoria Magistrate
court the plaintiff is alleged to have attempted to escape from
custody when the
plaintiff was on trial on a charge of escaping
from custody on the 26th May 1997.
5
On the 27th November 1997
the plaintiff was transferred to the C Max section of the
Pretoria Maximum Prison as the plaintiff was regarded
to be an
escape risk.
14.1 On his transfer to C-Max the
plaintiff forfeited most of the privileges which he had enjoyed as a
category A prisoner.
14.2 The plaintiff was first placed
in phase 1 of the C-Max prison and Rules for inmates in phase 1 was
handed over and acknowledged
by the plaintiff on the 27th
November 1997 in terms of which amongst others the plaintiff was
only entitled to:
14.2.1 Receive 3 non-contact visits
per month for 20 minutes.
14.2.2 Receive 10 minutes visit
within the first six weeks being orientation period after admission
to C-Max.
14.2.3 Phone spouse or partner and
next of kin. Need to phone to be registered with the section head in
advance and only 10 minutes
allowed within the first six weeks
orientation period after admission to C-Max.
14.2.4 Communicate with other inmates
while exercising in the exercise pen or area.
14.2.5 Register any complaint or
request twice daily to a member in charge of Section and hand mail
and any application to him and
feedback to be furnished within 2
days after receipt of such a complaint or request.
6
14.2.6 One hour exercise a day if
weather and security permit.
14.2.7 Subscribe to newspapers and a
magazine and to study through correspondence course.
14.2.8 Receive additional privileges
if he or she adheres to the rules so supplied.
The plaintiff challenged this
transfer in this Division. His challenge was dismissed. The
plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court
of Appeal. The appeal was
upheld and the transfer was reviewed and set aside on the 16th
March 2001.
Subsequent to the decision of the
appeal court the plaintiff was removed from C-Max prison to Leeukop
prison and the plaintiff
is presently still in Leeukop prison.
It was after the decision of Supreme
Court of Appeal that the plaintiff instituted the present
proceedings against the defendants.
ISSUES RAISED
In my view and also partly as agreed
and indicated by both counsels the following issues were raised at
the beginning of the trial,
during the trial and in the counsels'
written heads of argument which heads I requested at the conclusion
of the trial:
7
18.1 whether or not the defendants
were entitled to transfer the plaintiff to C-Max prison.
18.2 whether or not such entitlement
was vitiated by the noncompliance with the audi alterem
partem principle.
18.3 whether or not the plaintiff
whilst at C-Max was subjected to conditions of detention that were
in consistent with human
dignity.
18.4 Whether or not the defendants
subjected the plaintiff whilst at C Max to mental torture
and trauma.
18.5 Whether or not whilst at C-Max
the plaintiff was treated, and or punished in a cruel and or
degrading manner.
18.6 Whether or not the plaintiff
suffered damages due to his detention at C-Max and if so whether or
not such damages could be
attributable to the defendants' conduct.
LEGISLATION AND LEGAL
PRINCIPLES Section
22 of the Correctional Services Act 8 of 1959 (The Act)
reads as follows:
"22. Security,
measures, privileges and indulgences
1.
The commissioner shall determine-
(a) the
security measures applicable
at prisons, and may determine
different security measures at
prisons, and may determine different security measures in respect of
different prisons;
8
(b) the groups into which
prisoners are to be classified.
2.
The commissioner may-
(a) grant such privileges and
indulgences as he may determine to any prisoners,
(b) withdraw or amend any
privilege or indulgence granted in terms of para (a) to any prisoner
if it is in the interest of the administration
of prisons. '
Section 94 of the Act authorises the
Minister to make regulations not inconsistent with the Act, which
regulates the management
and administration of prisons in
generalised or specific manner.
Section 93(2) of the Act provides
that the commissioner may delegate any of the powers vested in him
by this Act to any correctional
official or other person employed
in the department.
Section 10 of the Constitution Act
108 of 1996 (Constitution Act) provides that everyone has inherent
dignity and the right to
have their dignity respected and
protected.
In terms of Section 12(1)(d) and (e)
of the Constitution Act everyone has the right to freedom and
security of the person which
includes the right not to be tortured
in any way and not to be treated or punished in a cruel, inhuman or
degrading way.
9
In terms of Section 33(1) of the
Constitution Act everyone has the right to administrative action
that is lawful, reasonable and
procedurally fair.
Traditionally, courts in many
jurisdictions have adopted broad hands off attitude towards matters
of prison administration. This
stems from healthy sense of
realisation that prison administrators are responsible for securing
their institutions against escape
or unauthorised entry, for the
preservation of internal order and discipline, and for
rehabilitating, as far as is humanly possible
the inmates placed in
their custody. The proper discharge of these duties is often beset
with obstacles. It requires expertise,
comprehensive planning and a
commitment of resources, all of which are peculiarly within the
province of the legislative and
executive branches of government.
Courts recognise that they are ill-equipped to deal with such
problems. But a policy of judicial
restraint cannot encompass any
failure to take cognisance of a valid claim that a prison
regulation or practice that offends
a fundamental constitutional
protection. Fortunately the view no longer obtains that in
consequence of his crime, a prisoner
forfeits not only his liberty,
but all his personal rights, except those which the law in its
humanity grants him. For while
prison officials must be accorded
latitude and understanding in the administration of prison affairs,
and prisoners are necessarily
subject to appropriate rules and
regulations, it remains the continuing responsibility of courts to
enforce constitutional rights
of all persons, prisoners included
(see Conjwayo v Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary
Affairs and others 1992 2 SA 56 (25) at
10
60G-61A). The legislation as
set out clearly authorises the Commissioner to act and make such
regulations as may be necessary in the administration
of prisons.
It seems that fundamentally a
convicted and sentenced prisoner retains all the basic rights of
liberty of an ordinary citizen
except those taken away from him by
law, expressly or by implication or those necessarily inconsistent
with the circumstances
in which he or she as a prisoner is placed
(see Goldberg and others V Minister of Prisons and others
1979 1 SA 14 (A) at 39 C-D).
Whatever fundamental rights are
flouted or legislative protection ignored, to any prisoner's
prejudice our courts' writs or orders
will run, breaking through
stone walls and iron bars, to right the wrong and restore the rule
of law. In Chaskalson Kentridge
et al Constitutional Law of
South Africa the Learned authors indicated
that a key requirement of the principle of legality is that even
those rights of prisoners which
are restricted as necessary
consequence or incarceration may only be limited if this is done by
legislation, either expressly
or by necessary implication. The law
regulating prison in South Africa must therefore be scrutinised to
see whether they provide
the necessary authority for the
restriction of prisoners' rights. The restrictions must in
addition, be formulated sufficiently
narrowly to ensure that
prisoners are not exposed to overbroad discretionary powers which
deny them protection of the law.
In Whittaker v Roos and Bateman,
Morant v Roos and Bateman 1912 AD 92 at 122-3 the
following were said:
11
"True,
the plaintiffs' freedom had been greatly impaired by the legal
process of
imprisonment, but they were
entitled to demand respect for what remained. The fact that their
liberty had been legally curtailed
could afford no exercise for a
further illegal encroachment upon it. .. They were entitled to all
their personal rights and personal
dignity not temporarily taken
away by law, or necessarily inconsistent with the circumstances in
which they had been placed".
Punishment or treatment incompatible
with the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a
maturing society which
involves the infliction of unnecessary
suffering, is repulsive. What might not have been regarded as
inhuman decades ago may
be revolting to the new sensitivities which
emerge as civilisation advances (see Conjwayo supra at 63E).
At a time in our history when crime
is rampant and prisons overflowing, the public might feel
particularly unsympathetic towards
prisoners and even against those
who are yet to be tried on criminal charges, thereby undervaluing
the judicial process. We cannot
dispense with the essential values
that make us a civilised society. We are bound to the values
entrenched in our constitution.
It is accepted that prison is a
black place and that prisoners are not entitled to imprisonment
with all the comforts that they
enjoyed before their incarceration
(See Minister
of Correctional Services v
Kwakwa and Another
2002 4 SA 455 at
470 B-C).
DISCUSSIONS
AND SUBMISSIONS
12
I now turn to deal with the issues I
believe have been raised by this case and submissions made by
Counsels on behalf of the parties.
WHETHER OR NOT THE DEFENDANTS WERE
ENTITLED TO TRANSFER THE PLAINTIFF TO C-MAX
It was the defendants' case at the
trial that the plaintiff was so transferred as the plaintiff was
regarded to be an escape risk
taking into account the fact that he
escaped from prison during February 1996 and on 26 May 1997. It was
also alleged on behalf
of the defendants that on or about the 3rd
September 1997 the plaintiff attempted to escape from custody after
he had been at court in Pretoria.
32.1 The defendants in regard to this
issue heavily relied on the evidence of Mr Venter. Mr Venter is the
person who took the decision
to transfer the plaintiff to C-Max
prison. He was at the time an official of the defendants tasked
amongst others to identify those
prisoners that had to be
transferred to C-Max.
32.2 This issue, put differently is
whether or not the actions of the defendants in transferring the
plaintiff to C-Max without
giving him a hearing can be said to have
been unlawful.
32.3 Mr Joubert on behalf of the
plaintiff argued that the defendants' unlawful actions or omissions,
are founded in the infringement
of the plaintiff's constitutional
rights and more specifically the right
13
to administrative action as envisaged
in Section 33 of the constitution.
32.4 It was common cause in this case
that the defendants when transferring the plaintiff to C-Max did not
give the plaintiff a
hearing. The plaintiff in relying on this
omission by the defendants referred to the Supreme Court of Appeal
decision which reviewed
and set aside the decision taken by the
defendants to transfer the plaintiff to C-Max without giving him a
hearing.
32.5 The plaintiff's particulars of
claim and submissions made by counsel on behalf of the plaintiff
suggest that the decision by
the Supreme Court of appeal setting
aside the plaintiff's transfer to C-Max for non-compliance with the
audi alterem partem rule should be seen as a basis for
finding unlawfulness in the defendants' actions and or omissions.
This submission should immediately
raise an issue whether or not
failure to act fairly or to follow a particular procedure should in
itself affect the lawfulness
of a decision so taken.
32.6 The defendants whilst accepting
that they failed to comply with the audi alterem partem rule,
they however pleaded justification i.e. they contend that the
decision to transfer the plaintiff was not only lawful, but
reasonable taking into account the fact that the plaintiff was
regarded as an escape risk in the light of his escapes from custody
during February 1996 and May 1997 coupled with allegation that on or
about the 13th September
14
1997 at Pretoria magistrate court the
plaintiff attempted to escape from lawful custody.
32.7 C-Max was created to be maximum
security prison for long serving sentence prisoners and for
dangerous prisoners who might pose
a security threat within prison.
Those prisoners who were regarded as an escape risk will qualify to
be kept at C-Max.
32.8 Section 33 of the Constitution
relates to an administrative action which action has to comply with
the following:
32.8.1 32.8.2 32.8.3
It has to be lawful,
It has to be reasonable and
It has to be procedurally fair.
32.9 The plaintiff admitted or
conceded that as a result of his two escapes from prison, the
defendants were entitled to regard
him as an escape risk. He however
stated also as argued by his counsel that the defendants were not
entitled to transfer him without
complying with procedurally fair
requirement as envisaged by Section 33(1) of the Constitution Act.
The plaintiff seemed to have
accepted that the administrative action
to transfer him to C-Max might have been lawful and reasonable, but
that it was procedurally
not fair for failure to give him a hearing
before the decision was taken.
32.10 Mr Venter in his evidence
indicated that even if he had
given the plaintiff a hearing before
the actual transfer, his decision to effect the transfer would not
have changed in
15
the light of the overwhelming
evidence against the plaintiff that he was an escape risk and that
he was posing a threat to himself,
to the prison population where he
was held and to the community at large. In my view the sentiments so
expressed by Mr Venter cannot
be faulted as also in a way conceded by the plaintiff that he could
be regarded as an escape risk.
The plaintiff did not deny the fact
that he escaped twice from custody. His reasons for the escape were
two fold:
32.10.1 That he wanted to prove his
innocence by collecting more evidence outside and this he wanted to
do after his
conviction.
32.10.2
That he was scared he might be hanged
after there was an indication that death penalty might be
reintroduced.
32.11 The duty to act fairly is
concerned only with the manner in which the decisions are taken. It
does not relate to whether the
decision itself is fair or not (see
Nortjie en 'n Ander v Minister van Korrektieve Dienste en Ander
2001 3 SA 472 (SCA) at 479 I-J). This is the Supreme Court of appeal
in which the plaintiff was one of the two appellants. The decision
to transfer
the plaintiff to C-Max was set aside in this case.
Clearly the Supreme Court of appeals did not decide on whether or
not the decision
so taken by the defendants to transfer the
plaintiff was lawful, and reasonable. The court of appeal dealt with
the procedural
aspect, i.e. the manner in which the decision to
16
transfer the plaintiff was taken,
being transfer to C-Max without giving the plaintiff a hearing.
32.12 As regard the lawfulness or
unlawfulness of the decision to transfer the plaintiff to C-Max Mr
Joubert on behalf of the plaintiff
seemed to have relied heavily on
the decision of the appeal court. As indicated above the Appeal
Court did not decide on the lawfulness
of the decision so taken by
the defendants. On the facts of this case I cannot find that the
decision taken by the defendants to
C-Max was unlawful or
unreasonable and the fact that the decision taken was procedurally
unfair, in my view did not affect the
lawfulness, and reasonableness
of the decision itself.
32.12 Mr Joubert also attacked the
lawfulness of the defendants to the transfer the plaintiff on the
basis that after the plaintiff
had escaped on the 26th
May 1997, the plaintiff was punished, firstly kept in a solitary
conferment for a month secondly degraded to category D which had
far
much less privileges than a prisoner in category A and lastly that
on the 13th November 1997 the plaintiff was re-upgraded
to category A. Mr Joubert submitted that this upgrading was
concession by the defendants
that the plaintiff constituted no risk
nor could he be regarded as an escape risk. It was common cause
during trial that the plaintiff
was upgraded to category A on the
13th November 1997. This upgrading was according to Mr
Venter irrelevant for the purpose of deciding whether or not the
plaintiff had
escape potential. The fact that the plaintiff became
an A category prisoner again did not mean that his high category
status which
only related to
17
the privileges and did not mean that
the plaintiff can no longer be considered as a security risk.
32.13 Mr Venter only became aware
that the plaintiff was a category A prisoner after he had taken a
decision to have him transferred
to C Max. C-Max was said to be
more suitable, for it had better facilities such as metal detectors
and X-ray machines, which
were not available in other prisons. The
decision so taken in re upgrading the plaintiff was taken
without considering the
security risk posed by the plaintiff. It was
a policy decision giving the plaintiff more privileges without
considering the length
of sentence, escape potential or risk, and
the crime.
32.14 In my view therefore the fact
that the plaintiff was re-upgraded to category A when the decision
to transfer the plaintiff
to C-Max was taken did not in itself
preclude the defendants from taking the decision to transfer the
plaintiff to C-Max on the
ground of security risk.
32.16 Lastly on this issue Mr Joubert
seemed to have relied on the fact that after the Appeal Court
decision, the defendants did
nothing. The plaintiff was taken out of
the C Max to Leeukop Prison and since March 2001 the plaintiff has
been at C-Max. The plaintiff
sees this as concession by the
defendants that they were not justified in transferring the
plaintiff to C-Max. I am not convinced
that the fact that the
defendants took no steps to follow the procedure and to have the
plaintiff be re-admitted at C-Max could
be the basis to find that
the defendants' actions in initially transferring the plaintiff to
C-Max were unlawful.
18
32.17 In my view therefore the
defendants were entitled to transfer the plaintiff to C-Max and such
transfer could not be rendered
unlawful and unreasonable by virtue
of non-compliance with the audi alterem partem rule. Whilst
the actions of the defendants were not procedurally fair, the
grounds upon which the decision was taken were in my
view lawful and
reasonable.
32.18 The second issue raised by this
case is closely related to the first issue, the second issue being
whether or not the defendants'
entitlement to transfer the plaintiff
to C-Max was vitiated by failure to give the plaintiff a hearing.
This issue has already
been discussed with the first issue. I will
therefore proceed to deal with the third issue raised by this case.
WHETHER OR NOT THE PLAINTIFF WHILST
AT C-MAX WAS SUBJECTED TO CONDITIONS OF DETENTION THAT WAS
INCONSISTENT WITH HUMAN DIGNITY?
This issue will be dealt together
with the fourth and fifth issues raised earlier in this judgment
under paragraphs 13.4 and 13.5.
33.1 The Constitution requires every
person to have inherent dignity and the right to have his or her
dignity respected and protected
(see Section 10).
33.2 It is also important to mention
that the plaintiff like any other prisoner would be entitled to have
his human dignity be respected.
It remains the continuing
responsibility of our courts
19
to enforce constitutional rights of
all persons, prisoners included (see Conjwayo supra). A
convicted and sentenced prisoner retains all the basic rights of
liberty of an ordinary citizen except those taken away from him
by
law or those necessarily inconsistent with the circumstances in
which he or she as a prisoner is placed. The plaintiff's freedom
might have been greatly impaired by legal process of imprisonment,
but he was entitled to demand respect for what remained. The
fact
that his liberty had been legally curtailed could not afford any
excuse for a further illegal encroachment upon it. He was
entitled
to all his personal rights and personal dignity, not temporarily
taken away by law.
33.3 The plaintiff in trying to show
that his fundamental rights to human dignity have been infringed
relied on the following:
33.3.1 The alleged noise and effect
of the radio.
33.3.1
The alleged refusal to engage him in any conversation
at any time with other inmates.
33.3.2
Locking up of the plaintiff in solitary confinement for 23
hours.
33.3.3
The alleged infringement of his rights of privacy and
dignity.
As regard the alleged noise and
effect of the radio, the plaintiff indicated that the radio noise
which was played for many hours
20
was such that one could not hear a
person talking next to each other. He complained on various
occasions about the noise and effect
thereof also as indicated in
his letter of complaint dated the 29th January 1995.
According to the plaintiff the noise tortured him mentally and that
there were other cases which were launched in
this Division by other
detainees or prisoners in C-Max in terms whereof they complained
about the unreasonable noise caused by
the radio played.
34.1 To these allegations by the
plaintiff Mr Venter on behalf of the defendants disputed the fact
that the noise made by the radio
was unreasonable or was such that
it could amount to mental torture. He indicated on a number of
occasions when he was in prison
he could hear no intolerant noise by
the radio. It was suggested that because he was not there all the
time, it could well have
been that the other prison officials played
the radio low because they knew that he was there or would have been
there. To this
Mr Venter indicated that his visits to C-Max were
unannounced and therefore they could not have known when to expect
him.
34.2 The plaintiff also placed
reliance on the other case where complaints were launched in this
division regarding the noise of
the radio and to this I was referred
to:
Pretorius and others v Minister of
Correctional Services and
others 2004 2
SA 658 (T).
21
De Wet Kritzinger and others V
Minister of
Correctional Services and
others a reported case
number 15747/04 by Swart J on the 12th
November 2004.
34.2.1
All the applicants in the two cases were inmates of C-Max
prison. They all complained about the
noise level caused by the radio.
34.2.2 A distinction could however be
found in these cases. In the matter of Pretoruis and others for
example the applicants were
un-sentenced prisoners although this
will make no much difference except to say that the treatment and
privileges will differ with
those of sentenced prisoners. In this
case the level of radio noise was found to be in the region of 64 to
66 dB (A) with announcements
peaking at 75/77 dBA and these noise
levels were stated to be typical for large offices, stores and in
respect of announcements
for school intercom systems. Bertelsman J
on page 661 paragraph 21 found that it was clear that this
noise levels were not inconsiderable. In the present case however no
noise level was given and no concession was made by the defendants
that the noise might have been unreasonable as was the case in
Pretorius case supra. In fact the evidence on behalf
of the defendants in the instant case was that one could clearly
communicate with the one person
next to other and the noise was not
regarded as being unreasonable.
34.2.3 In the case of De Wet
Kritzinger and Others referred to earlier in this judgment there
was again a dispute regarding the
22
noise level of the radio. The matter
was not finalised and no order was given on the merits of the case.
The court however made
an order to have the disputed issues over the
noise level be investigated. Swart J
ordered that a qualified noise engineer be appointed to
investigate and report on the radio noise level.
34.2.4 Whilst these two cases could
have been intended to show similar facts which had to be considered
by this court, I am not
satisfied that the radio noise level has
been proved on the balance of probability in the present case to
have been unreasonable
so as to have caused the alleged condition of
the plaintiff and subsequent damages if any.
Regarding the alleged refusal to
engage in any conversation at any time with other inmates, the
plaintiff alleged that once in
cell, he had no means or way of
communicating with his inmates. The evidence tendered on behalf of
the defendants was that whilst
the structures of the single cells
are such that it would not be possible for one inmate in one single
cell to communicate with
any inmate, it was however possible to
communicate with an inmate in a next door cell. On the available
evidence tendered one
cannot make a finding of fact regarding the
plaintiff's allegations that he was refused any communication with
any other inmates.
It also emerged during evidence by both parties
that during the one hour exercise time it was possible for the
plaintiff to engage
in a conversation with prisoners next to him.
At a stage the plaintiff worked at a prison library, and he
delivered books and
or newspapers to other
23
prisoners and during this time the
plaintiff could engage himself in some conversation with other
people and prisoners. I am therefore
not satisfied that the
plaintiff was refused to communicate with other people or inmates
and or that the restrictions placed on
such conversation can be said
to have been so unreasonable that it rendered the conduct or actions
of the defendants unreasonable
and unlawful.
The plaintiff also indicated that
the conduct of the defendants in placing the plaintiff in a
solitary conferment for 23 hours
a day infringed unreasonably and
drastically on his constitutional rights not to be treated or
punished in cruel, inhuman or
degrading manner. I need to pose and
emphasis that whilst the Commissioner of Correctional Services is
entitled to determine
the security measures applicable at different
prisons and may grant such privileges and indulgences as he may
determine to any
prisoners, the plaintiff as a prisoner was
entitled to all his personal rights and personal dignity not
temporarily taken away
by law or necessarily inconsistent with the
circumstances in which he had been placed.
The keeping of the plaintiff in
solitary conferment for 23 hours per day in my view did not accord
with the principle of decency
and may have infringed the
plaintiff's fundamental rights to be treated like any other citizen
except those rights taken by law
expressly or by implication or
those necessarily inconsistent with the circumstances in which the
plaintiff as a prisoner was
held. Whether or not the plaintiff
suffered any damages as a result of
24
the defendants' actions in this
regard is another issue still to be decided later in this judgment.
The plaintiff also testified that
his rights of privacy and dignity have been infringed. To this the
plaintiff indicated that
he was exposed to a situation where his
right to privacy was infringed. He indicated that he was being
watched at all times by
security guards who walked above his cell
along a cat walk. That he was watched whilst taking a shower or in
the toilet.
The plaintiff was regarded as an
escape risk. He twice escaped from custody. There were allegations
of the third escape. The issue
therefore is whether or not the
prison officials were entitled to keep watch from the catwalk above
the cells either whilst taking
a shower or at any time. The
plaintiff was not in a position to say the officials deliberately
picked up at him any given moment
whilst in the toilet or taking a
shower nor could he say every time when he took a shower or in the
toilet the officials would
then walk above his cells. There was a
mechanism in terms of which any complaint could be registered.
Nothing emerged during
evidence that such a complaint on the
infringement or rights to privacy was lodged. I am therefore not
satisfied that the plaintiff
has succeeded in showing infringement
of his rights of privacy and dignity nor that the actions of the
defendants in this regard
were unlawful or unreasonable.
WHETHER OR NOT THE PLAINTIFF SUFFURED
DAMAGES DUE TO HIS DETENTION AT C-MAX AND IF SO WHETHER OR NOT SUCH
DAMAGES COULD BE ATTRIBUTABLE
TO THE DEFENDANTS' CONDUCT
25
The last issue to be decided in this
case also as raised and agreed upon by the parties, was whether or
not the actions of the
defendants could be said to have been the
cause of the plaintiff alleged mental trauma, emotional stress,
torture and consequent
damages suffered by the plaintiff, if any,
or to put it differently whether or not there was any casual link
between the defendants'
alleged unlawful actions and alleged mental
trauma emotional stress, torture and consequent damages if any.
The essence of counsel's submissions
on behalf of the defendants in this regard was in short that there
was no casual link taking
into account the following:
41.1 That the plaintiff when admitted
at C-Max prison was already having mental trauma, emotional stress
or torture as expressed
in the letter dated the 23rd
March 1997 from the plaintiff to his girlfriend.
,
41.2 That plaintiff embarked on
hunger strike that had an effect on his well being.
41.3 That the refusal to participate
in rehabilitation programmes available at C-Max prison aggravated
any mental, psychological
and or physical condition the plaintiff
had before admitted to CMax.
The plaintiff heavily relied on the
evidence of Dr Van Onselen clinical psychologist called on behalf
of the plaintiff who saw
and
26
interviewed the plaintiff at Leeukop
prison. This was after the decision to transfer or keep the
plaintiff at C-Max was set aside
by the Supreme Court of appeal
during March 2001. He also thereafter visited C-Max and inspected
the conditions at C-Max. His description
of C-Max prison was that it
was a horrible place and a nightmare, which could never have been a
place for human beings.
The
remarks by Dr Van Onselen cannot be without criticism.
Firstly as it is said prison is a
dark place. It is not meant to
bring comfort to those who have been
removed from the society because of their criminal activities. It is
meant to protect the society
and safely keep those who pose a danger
to the society with the hope that one day they will come out of that
prison life having
learned from their bitter mistakes and criminal
activities. Secondly Dr Van Onselen did not go out to make a
complete comparison
of the conditions in other prisons through out
the country. One must remember that C-Max was established with a
purpose of placing
dangerous prisoners in it for security reasons.
For example a single cell where the plaintiff was held at C-Max is
said to be bigger
or larger than the present single cell where the
plaintiff is presently being held at Leeukop prison. C-Max although
with stricter
rules, is said to be having better facilities in terms
of rehabilitation and security measures, some of which will be dealt
later
in this judgment.
Dr Van Onselen in coming to his
conclusion that the plaintiff was mentally and psychologically
tortured and traumatised by his
placement in C-Max relied heavily
on his interview with the
27
plaintiff without having regard to
his past. The plaintiff's past was described by Dr Bergh as the key
to any reliable opinion on
the plaintiff's alleged condition caused
by his placement in C Max. The plaintiff was convicted of
serious charges and
was sentenced to death three times. He did not
accept his guilt, he twice escaped from jail, allegedly because of
the fear of possibility
of the return of death sentence and because
he wanted to prove his innocence. All of these should be vital in
determining the condition
of the plaintiff at the time he was
admitted at C-Max. Dr Van Onselen conceded that this information
would have been important
but he did not pursue the search for it
because that was not his instructions or brief.
Now coming back to the issues relied
upon by the defendants as the basis to suggest that there is no
casual link between the plaintiff's
alleged damages and the actions
of the defendant, the defendants relied firstly on the plaintiff's
letter dated the 23rd March 1997. On the first page of
the letter the time is indicated as ±21h16 and on the last but one
page the time is indicated
as 6h45 and dated 24th March
1997. This letter appears to have been written immediately after Ms
Brookes had visited the plaintiff in prison. Ms Brookes
was a
girlfriend to the plaintiff and the letter was addressed to her.
The letter consists of thirteen pages.
EXTRACTS FROM THE LETTER
"You know a man who is locked
up in prison and through that very incarceration, has suffered
terribly, has been damaged, physically
and
28
mentally ... (you said you know
this). Then you went further and said that I am intelligent,
thoughtful, very sensitive, capable
of
loving deeply, cares about
my friends and is loyal and faithful to those I love ...
sexual and sexy as well as
other things ... (see
paginated page 77 second
paragraph) .
... I
ended my relationship with Trudy,- the relationship with my family
were on a downhill course anyway ... I didn't have my daughter
...
well, no one really to consider and really care about ...
what kind of
a person would I have
turned into if I never met you?
I don't think I would've cared or gave a fuck about anyone ...
You came
into my life honey and the things you mentioned (the good qualities)
surfaced, where, have I not met you, I would've been a
'cold'
someone, one who would've put the good qualities in my 'black bag',
never to take out again and become the person I was
'portrayed', the
dangerous, walking time bomb person ... " a quality"
that's needed inside a place like, this among people,
like some of
them around me
... Maybe I would've became
a gang leader inside, never wanting to be free ...
a bitter, full of
hate person ... (see
paginated pages 77 last
paragraph and 78 first
paragraph thereof).
My 'other side' ... yes, at times
I do not' wish to' control my reactions, (It certainly was this way
on the outside) but, I can
control it at times
... Ne?
My reaction is to lash out, though in here, it is mostly verbally -
there were a couple of
times it were physically.
Baby, I've often told you that to
drink and use that as an excuse to vent my anger is an excuse -
even under the influence I can be quite normal,- but I do agree
with you, alcohol greatly enhance a tendency
29
to lash out -
in a lot of
men, (well women too I
thing!). This tendency to
lash out makes me actively
dangerous? Yes, it does honey, -
couple this tendency with
my experiences' (especially in the army) the training I've had, the
boxing career, the 'heart' to taken
on people three times my size, -
my 'love' to be a major
role player in a fistfight ...
yes, ...
you are right, (see
paginated page 79
second paragraph of
the letter).
What papers described the person
in court ... I
am capable
of violence
honey, of killing
someone, (you know)
but the way I was
described in court by P.V.D.M ...
the judge--- someone who
cold heartedly gave orders to kill those people (yes, I
could give orders like that
too) but baby ... the entire point is that I
were that
person, giving orders when I
wasn't even
present when the murders were committed by PVDM they believed him,
because of
my past history, they
believed I was present
when I was
not. The things I did
criminally wrong-giving a false statement, giving a car to someone
to sell, - I
wasn't even charged for. (I
so wish
you had spoken earlier (when, or before you arrived) about wanting
to read the transcript honey ---
I would
be too happy to have you read them --- hmm ---I
should've thought about it
too. Ne? To sum this up --- I
am inside for 3
murders -
which the court found I
didn't commit, -
robbery, possession of
firearm, and ammo, and
escape, -(which I'm very guilty of) the court found I
gave the order, and for that my
life is taken away, -and, the cherry on the cake, -
I wasn't
even present when these crimes were committed! (except for
escaping). I found
guilty and sentenced for something I am capable
of, but
didn't commit, - do
you see? (see
paginated pages 79
and 80).
30
Liefie --,
ek is seker rig is wakker,
you've quite the earlier bird. I didn't sleep very well may be it's
because I slept yesterday afternoon.
Earlier when I wake, I wrote
another request and soon as they open I'll send it down to this
people-. I can just hope there wont'
be a problem, -
I'm nervous about this, -
maybe it's because of
today-. I don't really know
(see
paginated page 82
last paragraph and page 83
first paragraph).
The plaintiff's cause of action is
based on the events starting from the 27th
November 1997 when the plaintiff was placed at C Max. The
extracts referred to are from a letter dated the 23rd
and 24th
March 1997 when the plaintiff was still at Maximum prison. Hardly
two months after the letter of the 23rd March
1997 the plaintiff escaped from custody on the 26th
May 1997. The letter by the plaintiff although the bulk of it
expresses the plaintiff's love and affection for Ms Brookes, the
extracts referred to above displays a very worried and unstable
person. He appears to be a broken man who refuses to accept the
finding of the court on the three murder charges. He expresses his
emotions and desire to lash out at some times. He accepts
and
acknowledges the fact that prison or incarceration in itself turns
a man into terrible suffering, mental and physical torture.
Indeed
as explained by Dr Van Der Bergh incarceration of a person will in
one way or the other psychologically and mentally affect
a person
and in my view the plaintiff could not have been an exception to
this.
But what appears to have aggravated
the condition of the plaintiff was his fear of prison. It did not
appear like the plaintiff
31
before placed into C Max ever
settled in prison and accepted prison life. This is displayed by his
two escapes from prison,
his denial of his guilt despite
pronouncement by the court, his love for Ms Brookes coupled with his
inability to be with Ms Brookes
due to his incarceration, his fear
of being hanged and his protestation by going on a hunger strike
which had started long before
the placement into C-Max. It was
submitted on behalf of the defendants that his hunger strike, must
have had an effect on his physical,
mental and psychological being.
This was also confirmed by the two experts Drs Van Onselen and Van
Der Bergh that hunger strike
would have had an effect on the well
being of the plaintiff.
It was argued on behalf of the
plaintiff also as testified by Dr Van Onselen on behalf of the
plaintiff that the conditions at
C-Max caused the plaintiff to have
sleepless nights. However it appears from the letter and extracts
referred to in this judgment
that the plaintiff confesses to have
had no sleep at least on a particular night being the 23rd
and 24th March 1997. He attributes this to having slept
during the day. This might be so, however when reading the entire
letter of the
23rd March 1997, it becomes apparent that
plaintiff was a shattered person as on the 23rd March
1997.
I am therefore not satisfied that
the plaintiff's condition at C-Max was as a result of the conduct
of the defendants
Lastly even if I was to find that the
action of the defendants in transferring the plaintiff to C-Max was
unlawful and that the
conditions
32
at C Max and the manner in which
the plaintiff was treated constituted violation of his
constitutional rights and that as a
result thereof the plaintiff
should be entitled to damages, such consideration for damages should
be considered in the light of
peculiar factors to this case. Dr Van
Der Bergh alluded to the fact that prison life will always have an
effect on an individual.
For this reason prisons are expected to
have facilities suitable to deal with individual cases. This will
include the involvement
of social workers, psychologists, doctors
and or psychiatrists. It was indicated that C Max in comparison
with other prisons
was better equipped with these facilities and or
expertise. Each prisoner whose needs are required in a particular
field would
be referred to and treated. To these facilities the
plaintiff refused to be involved. He refused to be seen by any of
these people
in their respective fields. His attitude was that all
these people were not trustworthy and that, they would gossip about
him or
divulge information concerning him. If the plaintiff had
agreed to submit himself for treatment, his damages if any would
have
been mitigated. Or to put it differently his alleged conditions
caused by placement into C Max would have been attended to.
The
risk taken by the plaintiff in refusing treatment can only have
caused the condition to continue and therefore in my view the
defendants cannot be blamed for this.
CONCLUSION
I therefore conclude by dismissing
the plaintiff's action with costs.
M
F LEGODI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
ADV. H P JOUBERT Counsel for the
Plaintiff
,
'
High Court Chambers, PRETORIA
ADV. E I MOOSA
Counsel for the defendants
High Court Chambers, PRETORIA
33