NDOU J: The
applicants seek an order for spoliation in that;
"1st respondent and/or his agents or assignees be
and are hereby ordered to immediately cause to be released and restore [sic] to the applicants the possession
and control of eight (8) boxes of fliers, with each box containing five
thousand (5 000) copies of two (2) boxes of 3rd applicant's National
Council Resolutions of the 17th of December 2011, with each box
containing five thousand (5 000) copies."
The salient facts of this matter are
the following. The 1st
applicant is Provincial Chairperson of the 2nd applicant. The 2nd applicant is an organ of
the 3rd applicant. The 3rd
applicant is a political party. On 14
January 2012, the 2nd applicant decided to conduct what they term "a
peaceful car procession in and around Bulawayo Province in solidarity with 2nd
applicant's national Chairperson one Solomon Madzore and seven (7) others" who
are in prison custody at Chikurubi
Prison on allegations of murdering a police officer. The car procession was scheduled to start at
1000 hours. It was planned to be
preceded by a prayer at 3rd applicant's provincial officers at
number 42 Fort Street, between 2nd and 3rd Avenues. After the prayer session, the members were to
be ferried by motor vehicles in a procession of cars with stickers and
distributing fliers advocating for the speedy trial of the said Madzore and
seven others. The car procession was to
start at the 3rd applicant's provincial officers and move in and
around Bulawayo Province and end around 1200 hours at the 3rd
applicant's provincial offices by another prayer session. The 3rd applicant had made
transport arrangements to ensure that all district and branch members of the 2nd
applicant are ferried from their respective districts and branches and converge
at 3rd applicant's provincial offices for the prayer and subsequent
car procession. Members from various
district and branches were brought to the provincial offices. However, Mpopoma District members were
stopped at a police roadblock before they entered the Central Business Centre
next to McKeuten Primary School.
This eventually led to the arrest of
the 1st applicant and some of the 2nd applicant's members
and confiscation of the materials subject matter of this application. It is common cause that the applicants did
not notify the Zimbabwe Republic Police of the said procession and prayer
sessions in terms of section 25 (1)(a) of the Public Order and Security Act
[Chapter 11:17] ("the Act"). Further,
the fliers they intended to distribute had the following message -
"FREE SOLO MADZORE AND SEVEN OTHER
MDC YOUTH NOW!!!
Justice Delayed is Justice Denied
Rebecca Mafikeni, Yvonne Musarurwa, Tungamirai Madzokere,
Stanford Maengahama must be freed!!!
Encouraged, Determined and Committed
to the struggle for real change .
Let's finish it !!!"
The other document contains
resolutions of the MDC National Council held at Harvest House on 17 December
2011. These resolutions do not take this
matter any further so I will not state them.
The issue is whether the applicants have made out a case for
spoliation. It is trite that spoliation
is any illicit deprivation of another of the right to possession which
he has whether in regard to movable or immovable property or even in regard to
legal right - Nino Bonino v de Lange 1906 TS 120 at 122; Davis
v Davis 1990 (2) ZLR 136 (H) at
141; Geza v Khumalo & Anor 2002 (2) ZLR 144 (H) and van t' Hoff v van t' Hoff
& Ors (1) 1988 (1) ZLR 294 (H) at 296B-C. In casu,
the articles were seized by the police when the latter searched them during the
arrest for convening a procession or public gathering without notifying the
Regulating Authority (the police) as required by section 25(1) of the Act. This failure is an offence under section 25
(5) of the Act. In their founding
affidavit the applicants clearly state what amounts to a contravention of
section 25 (5). In this case the
respondent was not taking the law into his hands. What the 1st respondent did was
not illicit as they were empowered by sections 49, 51 and 52 of the Criminal
Procedure and Evidence Act [Chapter 9:07] to search and seize articles which
are a reasonable grounds believed to be or concerned in the commission of a
crime. In casu, the applicants in their wisdom embarked on a procession or
public gathering without complying with the provisions of section 25(1) of the
Act. They, by so doing, committed an
offence under section 25(5) of the Act.
These documents were going to be distributed in the abovementioned
procession. The purpose of the mandament van spolie is to preserve law
and order and discourage persons from taking the law into their own hands. In this case, the 1st respondent
is empowered to act in the manner he did by the above-mentioned statutory
provisions. His conduct is not illicit
so there is not spoliation.
Accordingly, the application is
dismissed with costs.
Messrs Hwalima, Moyo & Associates, applicant's legal practitioners
Civil Division, Attorney General's Officer,
respondents' legal practitioners