- The arrest at Clearwater Mall was lawful because police had reasonable grounds to suspect fraud.
- Detention after 26 November 2015 was unjustified and violated constitutional rights.
- The State was ordered to pay R150 000 for unlawful deprivation of liberty.
The Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg has drawn a clear line between a lawful arrest and an unlawful detention. It ruled that while Cheslin Ashley van Vuuren was properly arrested by police officers at the Vodacom 4U store in Clearwater Mall in 2015, his continued detention for four days without being taken to court was unconstitutional.
Acting Judge PH Malungana ordered the Minister of Police to pay Van Vuuren R150 000 in damages for unlawful detention, describing the deprivation of liberty as a serious breach of rights that could not be excused.
Van Vuuren had sued the State for R640 000 after being arrested for fraud at the Vodacom store where he worked as a sales representative. He claimed his dignity, reputation, and livelihood were destroyed by an arrest that eventually led to his dismissal and a criminal charge that was later withdrawn. While the court rejected the claim that the arrest itself was unlawful, it agreed that the police failed in their constitutional duty to process him lawfully once he was in custody.
The fraud complaint gave police lawful grounds to arrest
The events unfolded on 25 November 2015, after Van Vuuren’s managers at the Vodacom store raised concerns about an allegedly fraudulent cellphone contract processed in the name of a customer who was not present in Gauteng at the time. Police were called to the mall, where Constable Jeffrey Maswanganyi interviewed senior staff and reviewed documents linked to the transaction.
The court accepted the police version that the documentation raised clear red flags: the proxy letter authorising the contract was unsigned, personal particulars were incomplete, signatures did not match, and the customer’s name was inconsistently spelled. Acting Judge Malungana found that these factors were enough to justify a reasonable suspicion of fraud.
He held that the officer did not act arbitrarily or mechanically in making the arrest and had properly applied his mind, concluding that the jurisdictional requirements of section 40 of the Criminal Procedure Act had been satisfied. The court referred to established case law, which makes it clear that police officers are not required to prove guilt at the point of arrest, only that their suspicion is rational and grounded in fact.
Quoting the Supreme Court of Appeal in Sekhoto v Minister of Safety and Security, the judge reaffirmed that “an arrest will accordingly be irrational and consequently unlawful if the arrestor exercised his discretion to arrest for a purpose not contemplated by law.” In Van Vuuren’s case, however, the purpose was to investigate a suspected crime.
Detention beyond the first night had no legal basis
Where the State faltered was not in putting Van Vuuren in handcuffs, but in leaving him in a cell. Van Vuuren was taken first to Honeydew Police Station and later transferred to Roodepoort because Honeydew has no holding cells.
Despite being charged on 26 November 2015, he was not taken to court until 30 November. The State conceded in its own written arguments that he had not appeared before a magistrate within the required time, but offered no lawful explanation for keeping him in custody.
The court stressed that the moment an arrest is complete, a different set of constitutional duties comes into play. Citing the Supreme Court of Appeal in Minister of Justice v Zealand, Judge Malungana reminded the police that “when a person is arrested and detained, public power is being exercised by the executive administration of the state, which may not exercise any power or perform any function beyond what is conferred by law.”
He was blunt in his conclusion: “Absent lawful justification, I conclude that the detention of the plaintiff beyond the 26th of November 2015 was unlawful.”
The Criminal Procedure Act allows detention for up to 48 hours before a first court appearance, but even that period cannot be used mechanically. Police must justify every hour a person remains in custody. In Van Vuuren’s case, that justification was missing.
R150 000 awarded for lost freedom
In assessing compensation, the court rejected both tokenism and exaggeration, instead focusing on the concrete impact of the detention. Judge Malungana relied on existing Supreme Court of Appeal guidance that damages must take account of the circumstances of the arrest, the length of detention, the humiliation suffered, and the loss of personal liberty.
Van Vuuren testified that he was kept in filthy conditions, denied access to a toilet, and left wearing soiled clothes after he was refused permission to relieve himself. His girlfriend brought fresh clothing, which the police refused to give him. His charge was later withdrawn, but by then his reputation and job at Vodacom had already been damaged.
Taking these factors into account, the court ordered the Minister of Police to pay R150 000 plus interest, and to cover Van Vuuren’s legal costs.
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