Reasonable and probable cause in the law of malicious prosecution: a review of South African and commonwealth decisions
Abstract
The requirement that the plaintiff in an action for malicious prosecution must prove
a lack of reasonable and probable cause to initiate, instigate or continue the
prosecution on the part of the instigator or prosecutor is one of the four elements of
that cause of action. It is a vital link between the lawfulness of the prosecution and
the state of mind of the defendant. Again, whether a prosecution is wrongful or
lawful depends on whether there was a reasonable and probable cause coupled with
the animus iniuriandi of the defendant in instigating, initiating or continuing it. It is
not whether the prosecutor possessed evidence to secure a conviction since that is
for the trial court to decide after the conclusion of evidence; but, the honest belief
by the prosecutor that, having carefully collected and objectively assessed the
available information, the plaintiff was probably guilty of the crime. In coming to
that decision the prosecutor must have grappled with both the subjective and
objective elements in the exercise of that discretion. The Australian High Court
judgment in A v New South Wales 2007 230 CLR 500 (HCA) has brought clarity to
this aspect of the problem. However, as this paper contends, the ten-point
guidelines enunciated by that court in that case and designed to provide the courts
with a seemingly less complicated formula for determining if the prosecutor lacked
reasonable and probable cause do not appear to have provided the panacea to the
problem. Meanwhile, the distinct nature of the requirement of reasonable and
probable cause is made clearer when it is compared with reasonable ground to
arrest in the case of wrongful arrest and the tort of abuse of process. Also
problematic and equally challenging is identifying where a reasonable and probable cause inquiry stops and malice begins. This is brought out in the attempt by the
Supreme Court of Canada to unravel the tension between the proof of the existence
of malice and reasonable and probable cause in the law of malicious prosecution in
Miazga v Kvello Estate 2009 3 SCR 339 (SCC). The extent to which the guidelines
laid down in these recent cases would have resolved the confusion in this field of the
law is yet to be realised.