Abstract

Although the requirements of absence of a reasonable and probable cause and malice are two distinct elements in an action for malicious prosecution, they sometimes appear inseparable. An absence of reasonable and probable cause might, in instances, be a clear indication of malice on the part of the prosecution. However, while the absence of reasonable and probable cause is often deduced from the conduct of the prosecutor, judged from the objective standpoint of a reasonable prosecutor possessed of the same information, malice is inferred from the state of mind of the prosecutor as to whether he or she genuinely intended to bring the accused person to justice, or had operated from the angle of vengeance, improper purpose, targeted malice or for any unlawful purpose. Such inference can easily be drawn where the investigating officer and the prosecutor knowingly relied on fabricated information – Minister of Safety and Security v Tyokwana 2015 (1) SACR 597 (SCA). The burden of proof of both elements, though extensively canvassed by the Australian High Court in A v New South Wales (2007) 230 CLR 500 (HCA), has been taken a step further by the New South Wales Court of Appeal in State of NSW v Quirk [2012] NSWCA 216. The Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa has maintained in Woji v Minister of Police 2014 (1) SACR 409 (SCA) that negligence or gross negligence, short of dolus eventualis, would not suffice in a claim for malicious prosecution. The defendant must have been aware of the wrongfulness of his or her conduct in initiating or continuing the prosecution, but nevertheless continued to act, reckless as to the consequences of his or her conduct.

Highlights

  • Along with the requirement that the defendant must have instigated, initiated or continued the prosecution which must have terminated in favour of the plaintiff, the proof of absence of reasonable and probable cause and malice complements the four ingredients that make up the jurisdictional facts for a successful action for malicious prosecution

  • When Sir Andrew Leggatt spoke for the Privy Council in Harracksingh v Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago that: “charging a person with an offence which the arresting officer knows he has not committed, necessarily involves a lack of honest belief on the part of the officer, and his motive can only have been improper”, the Justice was addressing these two interconnected requirements of malicious prosecution

  • The absence of reasonable and probable cause may be deduced from the conduct of the prosecutor, judged from the objective standpoint of a reasonable prosecutor in that same position, and possessed of the same information

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Summary

SUMMARY

The requirements of absence of a reasonable and probable cause and malice are two distinct elements in an action for malicious prosecution, they sometimes appear inseparable. While the absence of reasonable and probable cause is often deduced from the conduct of the prosecutor, judged from the objective standpoint of a reasonable prosecutor possessed of the same information, malice is inferred from the state of mind of the prosecutor as to whether he or she genuinely intended to bring the accused person to justice, or had operated from the angle of vengeance, improper purpose, targeted malice or for any unlawful purpose Such inference can be drawn where the investigating officer and the prosecutor knowingly relied on fabricated information – Minister of Safety and Security v Tyokwana 2015 (1). The defendant must have been aware of the wrongfulness of his or her conduct in initiating or continuing the prosecution, but continued to act, reckless as to the consequences of his or her conduct

INTRODUCTION
General of Trinidad and Tobago and Crawford Adjusters v Sagicor General
REASONABLE AND PROBABLE CAUSE
The lawfulness of the arrest and reasonable and probable cause
Information available at the time of arrest and the prosecution
Where the arresting and prosecuting officers operated on false information
Recent South African case law
Onus of proof on reasonable and probable cause
Privy Council judgment in Williamson
Calabro v State of Western Australia
Biladeau v Ontario
Improper purpose
Can negligence substitute for malice?
CONCLUSION

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