Case Law[2024] ZASCA 68South Africa
Hlape v Minister of Police (426/2023) [2024] ZASCA 68; 2024 (2) SACR 148 (SCA) (3 May 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – unlawful arrest and detention – whether the arrest and detention of appellant was unlawful – whether respondent was liable to compensate appellant for his arrest and detention for a period of three days.
Judgment
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## Hlape v Minister of Police (426/2023) [2024] ZASCA 68; 2024 (2) SACR 148 (SCA) (3 May 2024)
Hlape v Minister of Police (426/2023) [2024] ZASCA 68; 2024 (2) SACR 148 (SCA) (3 May 2024)
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sino date 3 May 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 426/2023
In the matter between:
NTONI JACOB
HLAPE
APPELLANT
and
THE MINISTER OF
POLICE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
Ntoni
Jacob Hlape v The Minister of Police
(426/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 68
(3 May 2024)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, MOTHLE, WEINER, MOLEFE and
KGOELE JJA
Heard:
23 February 2024
Delivered:
3
May 2024
Summary:
Civil procedure – unlawful arrest
and detention – whether the arrest and
detention of appellant was unlawful – whether respondent was
liable to compensate
appellant for his arrest and detention for a
period of three days.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (Adams J and Turner AJ sitting as court
of appeal):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Mothle
JA (Nicholls, Weiner, Molefe and Kgoele JJA concurring)
[1]
On 31 August 2018, Mr. Ntoni Jacob Hlape
(the appellant) issued summons out of the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg
(the high court), wherein he sued the
Minister of Police (the respondent) for damages in the amount of
R200 000. The damages
arose from appellant’s alleged
unlawful arrest and unlawful detention by members of the South
African Police. The respondent
defended the action.
[2]
The same summons was re-issued on 23 March
2021 in the Magistrates’ Court for the District of Emfuleni,
held at Vereeniging
(the magistrates’ court). The trial
commenced on 17 March 2022 in the magistrates’ court, which, on
6 May 2022, dismissed
the appellant’s action with costs.
Dissatisfied with the outcome, the appellant lodged an appeal with
the high court.
On 1 February 2023, the appeal court of the
Gauteng Division, per Adams J and Turner AJ (the appeal court), also
dismissed the
appellant’s appeal. Still aggrieved with the
outcome, the appellant petitioned this Court for special leave to
appeal, which
petition was granted on 12 April 2023. It is thus with
the special leave of this Court that this appeal is before us.
[3]
The background facts in this appeal are
largely common cause, either because the version of the respondent
was, in part, either
corroborated by the appellant or not disputed.
The respondent’s evidence was presented by three members of the
police. These
were Sergeant Sibusiso Sibande (Sergeant Sibande) and
Constable Sipho Mlungisi Buthelezi (Constable Buthelezi), who
testified as
the arresting officers, while Sergeant Lebogang
MacWilliam Phoofolo (Sergeant Phoofolo) testified in regard to the
appellant’s
detention. At the time of the appellant’s
arrest and detention, all three police officers held the rank of
constable. During
the trial, police officers Sibande and Phoofolo had
been promoted to the rank of Sergeant. In this judgment they will be
referred
to by their rank of ‘Sergeant’. The appellant
testified as the only witness in support of his claim.
[4]
The arresting officers testified that on
the evening of 4 May 2018, at approximately 19h00, while on
patrol in a marked
police van, they were stopped by a community
member who informed them that there were males smoking dagga inside a
shack at house
6242 in Pelindaba. They went to the house and found
the three men smoking. One of them was the appellant. They introduced
themselves
as members of the police and asked for permission to enter
and search the shack. They were granted permission to do so. Sergeant
Sibande searched the appellant and found a transparent plastic bag
containing dagga in the appellant’s front right pocket
of his
trousers. He asked the appellant what he was doing with dagga. The
appellant did not respond. Sergeant Sibande explained
the appellant’s
rights to him, and thereafter informed the appellant that he was
arresting him for being in possession of
dagga.
[5]
Sergeant Sibande took the appellant to the
police station where he weighed the dagga in appellant’s
presence, gave him the
notice of rights to sign and handed appellant
to the cell commander. During trial and under cross-examination,
Sergeant Sibande
testified that he informed the appellant that he may
apply for bail at court. The appellant disputed the evidence that he
was informed
of his right to apply for bail. I will return to this
aspect later in this judgment. Constable Buthelezi basically
corroborated
Sergeant Sibande’s account on the events of the
arrest.
[6]
After the appellant was taken to a cell at
the police station, Sergeant Phoofolo, who at that time was attached
to the crime (investigation)
office, took over the docket. He
testified that his duties at that time involved conducting a
preliminary investigation for the
purpose of compiling the profile of
the arrestee. In that regard, he had to ascertain whether the person
in custody had previous
convictions or outstanding cases, or warrants
in respect of other offences. All these processes are conducted in
order to prepare
the arrestee for his initial appearance in court.
Sergeant Phoofolo went to the cells to interview the appellant
concerning the
necessary particulars required for profiling. During
the interview, the appellant declined to provide his name to the
officer,
but disclosed his date of birth. Consequently, no profile
could be compiled. Officer Phoofolo testified that he decided to take
a warning statement from the appellant, after he informed him of his
rights, including the right to be released from custody. The
pro
forma documents in terms of which he took the warning statement were
admitted as evidence in court. The appellant was held
in custody for
three days. On Monday 7 May 2018, he was released at court,
consequent to the prosecutor withdrawing the charge
of unlawful
possession of dagga.
[7]
The appeal turns on the appellant’s
contentions, first, that the arrest was unlawful, because, as he
alleged, Sergeant Sibande
did not exercise the discretion required of
him before effecting an arrest. Second, that his detention was
unlawful, as he had
a right to be released on bail, but was not
informed of this right. Third, the quantum of the damages claimed,
for the alleged
unlawful arrest and detention. I turn to deal, first
with the appellant’s arrest and thereafter his detention for
three days,
and if the arrest and/or detention is upheld, the quantum
of damages.
[8]
In regard to his arrest, the appellant
pleaded in paragraph 5 of his particulars of claim as follows:
‘
The
Plaintiff pleads that the arresting officer did not apply his/her
mind when he/she executed the arrest of the Plaintiff as he/she
failed to exercise his/her discretion whether or not to arrest the
Plaintiff.
The arresting officer
failed to consider other methods to secure the Plaintiff’s
attendance in court.’
[9]
Section
38(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the CPA) provides
that arrest is one of the four methods of securing the
attendance of
an accused in court for purposes of trial.
[1]
Because
of its intrusive nature on the privacy and liberty of the arrestee,
an arrest has to be effected on the authority of a warrant,
or, under
certain circumstances, without a warrant.
[2]
Consequently,
the onus rests on the arrestor to justify an arrest. In
Minister
of Law and Order and Others v Hurley and Another
,
[3]
this
Court stated thus
:
‘
An
arrest constitutes an interference with the liberty of the individual
concerned, and it therefore seems to be fair and just to
require that
the person who arrested or caused the arrest of another person should
bear the onus of proving that his action was
justified in law.’
[10]
Section 40 of the CPA provides that a
police officer may arrest any person without a warrant, if the person
is reasonably suspected
of committing or of having committed an
offence as listed in items
(a)
to
(q)
of
s 40(1). Of relevance to this appeal, is s 40(1)
(h)
,
which provides:
‘
(1) A
peace officer may without warrant arrest any person —
. . .
(h)
who is reasonably suspected of committing or of
having committed an offence under
any law
governing the making, supply, possession, or conveyance of
intoxicating liquor or of dependence-producing drugs or the
possession or disposal of arms or ammunition. . .’
In this instance, the
relevant law was the Drugs and Drug Trafficking Act 140 of 1992 (the
Drugs Act), in particular s 4, dealing
with the illegality of the use
and possession of dagga.
[11]
This
Court, in
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
(
Duncan
),
[4]
set
out four jurisdictional requirements which flow from s 40(1) of the
CPA, which authorises arrests without a warrant. They are:,
that the
person arresting must be a peace officer, who entertained a
suspicion, that the suspicion was that the arrestee had committed
a
schedule 1 offence and that the suspicion rested on reasonable
grounds. Applying these jurisdictional facts to this appeal, Sergeant
Sibande was a police officer, who entertained a suspicion after a
community member informed him of some male persons smoking dagga
in a
shack. Possession of dagga was, at that time, an offence in terms of
s 4 of the Drugs Act. The suspicion rested on reasonable
grounds that
whoever was smoking dagga in that shack, used and logically
therefore, had that dagga in his possession. The appellant
confirmed
in his evidence that he had dagga in his possession. It is thus not
disputed that, when the appellant was arrested, the
four
jurisdictional prerequisites of s 40(1) of the CPA were present.
[12]
The
question that arises is whether Sergeant Sibande, in executing the
arrest, exercised a discretion. In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto
(
Sekhoto
),
[5]
this
Court established three important principles in the exercise of a
discretion when effecting an arrest. The first is that once
the
required jurisdictional facts that flow from s 40(1) of the CPA, as
stated in
Duncan
are present, a discretion arise as to whether or not to arrest.
[6]
Second,
and related to the first, is where a party alleges the failure to
exercise a discretion to arrest, that party bears the
onus to prove
that allegation.
[7]
Third,
that the general requirement is that any such discretion must be
exercised in good faith, rationally and not arbitrarily.
[8]
The court in Sekhoto further stated thus
[9]
:
‘
This
would mean that peace officers are entitled to exercise their
discretion as they see fit, provided that they stay within the
bounds
of rationality. The standard is not breached because an officer
exercises the discretion in a manner other than that deemed
optimal
by the court. A number of choices may be open to him, all of which
may fall within the range of rationality. The standard
is not
perfection, or even the optimum, judged from the vantage of hindsight
and so long as the discretion is exercised within
this range, the
standard is not breached.’
(Footnotes
omitted)
[13]
These
principles were confirmed by the Constitutional Court
in
Groves
NO v
Minister of Police
,
[10]
thus:
‘
The
officer making a warrantless arrest has to comply with the
jurisdictional prerequisites set out in section 40(1) of the CPA.
In
other words, one or more of the grounds listed in paragraphs (a) to
(q) of that subsection must be satisfied. If those prerequisites
are
satisfied, discretion whether or not to arrest arises. The officer
has to collate facts and exercise his discretion on those
facts. The
officer must be able to justify the exercising of his discretion on
those facts. The facts may include an investigation
of the
exculpatory explanation provided by the accused person.
.
. .
Applying
the principle of rationality, there may be circumstances where the
arresting officer will have to make a value judgment.
Police officers
exercise public powers in the execution of their duties and
“[r]ationality in this sense is a minimum threshold
requirement
applicable to the exercise of all public power by members of the
executive and other functionaries”. An arresting
officer only
has the power to make a value judgement where the prevailing
exigencies at the time of arrest may require him to exercise
same; a
discretion as to how the arrest should be affected and mostly if it
must be done there and then. To illustrate, a suspect
may at the time
of the arrest be too ill to be arrested or may be the only caregiver
of minor children and the removal of the suspect
would leave the
children vulnerable. In those circumstances, the arresting officer
may revert to the investigating or applying
officer before finalising
the arrest.’
[14]
In this case, the burden to prove, on a
balance of probability, that Sergeant Sibande did not exercise a
discretion, is on the appellant.
In this regard, the appellant did
not tender any evidence to prove that Sergeant Sibande failed to
exercise a discretion to arrest.
Sergeant Sibande’s
evidence-in-chief concerning the arrest, went as follows:
‘
MR
SIBANDE: When I opened the said plastic, that is when I discovered
there is dagga inside. I then asked this one that I was searching:
“what is he doing with this dagga.”
MR POOE: What was his
response?
MR SIBANDE:
He did not
respond
. I then explained his rights, telling him that I am
arresting him, because he is in possession of dagga, and it is
unlawful to
be in possession of dagga.’ (Emphasis added.)
[15]
The evidence in the preceding paragraph was
not disputed. The appellant confirmed in his testimony that he was in
possession of
dagga. Due to the appellant failing to respond to the
officer’s question, there were no facts placed before Sergeant
Sibande
in order for him to exercise a discretion or a value judgment
to consider other means, other than an arrest, of securing the
appellant’s
presence in court. The appellant did not present
evidence that, by arresting him, Sergeant Sibande acted in bad faith,
arbitrarily
or irrationally, as his intention would then have
presumably been not to secure the appellant’s attendance at
court. On the
contrary, Sergeant Sibande testified during
cross-examination that he informed the appellant of the reason he was
arresting him
and further stated as follows:
‘
MR
GELDENHUYS: Sir, what was the purpose of your arrest?
MR SIBANDE: He was in
possession of the said drug.
He had to be arrested to explain in
the court of law why was he in possession.’
(Emphasis
added.)
Therefore, the decision
to arrest the appellant was aimed at securing the appellant’s
attendance at court, which in fact happened.
In that regard, the high
court found, correctly in my view, as follows:
‘
.
. . the appellant did not identify any facts that were known to the
arresting officer which ought to have persuaded him not to
arrest and
detain the appellant, let alone facts which show that the decision to
arrest was made in bad faith, irrational or arbitrarily.’
There is therefore no
evidence supporting the allegation that there was no exercise of a
discretion to arrest, or that the arrest
was made in bad faith,
irrationally or arbitrarily. The appellant’s claim that the
arrest was unlawful must, on the evidence,
fail. This brings me to
the question of appellant’s detention.
[16]
The appellant’s second claim was that
his detention after the arrest was unlawful. He in essence contended
first, that when
he was arrested, the arresting officer did not
inform him of his right to be released on bail. Further, that the
police failed
to pro-actively release him on bail. It was thus a
denial of his constitutional right to liberty. Second, that the
conditions under
which he was held in custody at the police station
were in essence appalling and intolerable. He alleged that he was
held in custody
over the three-day period, in a dirty cell which
contained a smelly toilet as it did not flush; there were no towels
and warm water
to wash, and the inmates were only served two
unhealthy meals per day. The conditions of his detention, so he
contended, thus harmed
his rights to health and dignity. I will deal
first with the issue of bail, and thereafter if necessary, with the
damages arising
from the condition of his detention.
[17]
Section 39(3) of the CPA links the arrest
to the detention. It provides thus:
‘
The
effect of an arrest shall be that the person arrested shall be in
lawful custody and that he shall be detained in custody until
he is
lawfully discharged or released from custody.
’
The phrase ‘released
from custody’ includes being released on bail by the police or
at court. In regard to bail by the
police, s 59(1)
(a)
of the
CPA provides:
‘
An
accused who is in custody in respect of any offence, other than an
offence –
(i) referred to in Part
II or Part III of Schedule 2;
. . .
may, before his or her
first appearance in a lower court, be released on bail in respect of
such offence by any police official
of or above the rank of
non-commissioned officer, in consultation with the police official
charged with the investigation, if the
accused deposits at the police
station the sum of money determined by such police official.’
[18]
The appellant contends that both the
arresting officer and the preliminary investigating officer never
informed him of his right
to be released on bail. This version, which
was put to both officers under cross examination, was refuted.
Sergeant Sibande testified
that at the time he arrested the
appellant, he held the rank of constable, therefore he was not
qualified to grant any arrestee
bail. He further testified that he
informed the appellant at the police station, of his right to be
released on bail. In support
of this evidence, he referred to the
notice of rights which he handed to the appellant who read and signed
it. Item 3(e) of the
notice of rights reads:
‘
(3)
As a person arrested for the alleged commission of an offence, you
have the following rights: . . . (e) you have the right to
be
released from detention if the interest of justice permit, subject to
reasonable conditions.’
[19]
The appellant confirmed the evidence of
Sergeant Sibande that he was given the notice of rights document and
that he read and signed
it. He never informed the police officer that
he did not understand the notice of rights, nor did he ask the
officer to explain
the content to him. When he testified in court, he
stated that his highest school qualification was grade 11. It could,
in all
probability, be inferred that he could read and write. The
magistrate, with reference to item 3(e) of the notice of rights,
correctly
concluded thus:
‘
If
the Plaintiff had read the document properly he could have noticed
these aspects and could then have exercised his right to request
being released on bail.’
[20]
It was put to Sergeant Phoofolo, during
cross-examination, that, since as a constable then, he did not
qualify to grant the appellant
bail, why he did not recommend to his
senior officers to grant the appellant bail. Sergeant Phoofolo
answered that if the appellant
had provided him with at least his
identity number, he would have compiled his profile. Sergeant
Phoofolo, conceding that on that
charge, the appellant did qualify to
be released on bail. He further stated that after the appellant was
informed of his right
to be released on bail, he did not request that
he be granted bail. Apart from providing the officer with the date of
birth, the
appellant simply did not co-operate when his particulars,
such as name, identity number and address were sought. It can thus be
inferred from Sergeant Phoofolo’s evidence, though not stated
explicitly, that the appellant’s refusal to co-operate
with the
officer in providing information sought for his profiling, was the
reason the officer did not recommend to his superiors,
that the
appellant be released on bail.
[21]
Further during cross-examination, the
appellant’s legal representative suggested to the officer that
had the appellant being
informed of his right to be released on bail,
he would have applied for bail. That suggestion was somewhat
contradicted when the
appellant testified that when he was held in
custody, he was worried about his parents, they had no idea where he
was. In that
regard, his evidence-in-chief went as follows:
‘
MR
GELDENHUYS: When you arrived home and you saw your parents for the
first time, how did that make you feel?
MR HLAPE: I did not know
what to say to them. Eventually
I even lied to them
, but then
they heard the truth from the street and they discovered the truth
from the street. I had to confess what actually happened.
MR GELDENHUYS: How did
you feel that your parents discovered from the street? That you did
not tell them? Why did you not want to
tell them, let me ask you
that? Why did you not want to tell your parents?
MR HLAPE: I did not want
to stress my parents as they are elderly and are on pension. Also
what happened, I thought that I was in
a secret place when I was
arrested.
COURT: Meaning what? I
thought I was in a secret place when I was arrested. What do you
mean, sir?
MR HLAPE: I thought I am
not guilty for what I was doing at that time, as I was in a secret
place, Your Worship.’ (Own emphasis.)
[22]
The appellant admitted under oath that he
lied to his parents, in order to conceal the fact that he had been
arrested for being
in possession of dagga. The evidence of Sergeant
Phoofolo that the appellant did not provide his name, identity number
and address
was neither challenged nor disputed. The appellant in his
evidence also failed to explain, or offer a comment on his refusal to
respond to the police officer. It was thus evident that the appellant
did not request to be released on bail, as he did not want
to admit
to his parents that he had been arrested.
[23]
The magistrates’ court found in its
judgment, with reference to the respondent’s witnesses, thus:
‘
There
is no reason for the court to not believe the evidence of the
witnesses. They did not come across as being untruthful at all.
They
have nothing to gain by arresting the Plaintiff and keeping him in
custody until his first court appearance.’
Apart
from making a bare denial on the question of bail, the appellant made
no intimation, including through his counsel during
the
cross-examination, that the police officers were lying. It is a trite
principle of this Court, from as far back as
Rex
v Dhlumayo and Another
,
[11]
and followed by a long line of the decisions of this Court, that, out
of deference to the trial court, an appeal court should be
slow to
interfere with or upset the findings of the trial court on the facts,
as well as on the credibility of witnesses. The rationale
is obvious:
the magistrate or judge ‘has advantages – which the
appeal court cannot have – in seeing and hearing
the witnesses
and in being steeped in the atmosphere of the trial.’
[12]
However, there is an exception to this principle. The appeal court
may interfere if it appears from the transcript of the trial
record
that the magistrate or judge committed a misdirection. In this
particular case, there is no misdirection, because the magistrate’s
finding of credibility on the evidence of the police officers, is
buttressed by the transcript of the record of the trial proceedings.
[24]
I am persuaded that, while the conditions
of the detention were appalling, on the evidence which the
respondents did not seriously
dispute, the detention of the appellant
was lawful. The lawfulness was as a result of the appellant’s
consistent failure
to respond to the police officer, to provide basic
facts, to enable them to exercise a discretion or value judgment not
to arrest
him or to have him released from detention on bail. I
therefore conclude that the claim that the detention was unlawful,
must also
fail and the appellant’s appeal should be dismissed.
[25]
Under the circumstances, there is no need
to deal with the question of quantum of damages. As regards costs,
these should follow
the result.
[26]
The following order shall issue:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
_____________________
S P MOTHLE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellant:
L Swart
Instructed by:
JJ Geldenhuys Inc., Krugersdorp
Symington
De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the respondent:
M Gwala SC
Instructed by:
State Attorney, Johannesburg
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section 38(1) provides:
‘
Subject
to section 4(2) of the Child Justice Act, 2008 (Act 75 of 2008), the
methods of securing the attendance of an accused
who is eighteen
years or older in court for the purposes of his or her trial shall
be arrest, summons, written notice and indictment
in accordance with
the relevant provisions of this Act.’
[2]
Section
39 of the CPA.
[3]
Minister
of Law and Order and Others v Hurley and Another
[1986] ZASCA 53
;
[1986] 2 All SA 428
(A);
1986 (3) SA 568
(A) at
589E-F.
[4]
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
[1986] ZASCA 24
;
[1986] 2 All SA 241
(A);
1986 (2) SA 805
(A) at
818G-H.
[5]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto
[2010] ZASCA 141; 2011 (5) SA 367 (SCA);
2011
(1) SACR 315 (SCA); [2011] 2 All SA 157 (SCA).
[6]
Sekhoto
Ibid
para 28.
[7]
Sekhoto
Ibid para 49.
[8]
Sekhoto
Ibid
para 38
[9]
Sekhoto
Ibid
para 39.
[10]
Groves
NO v Minister of Police
[2023] ZACC 36
;
2024 (1) SACR 286
(CC);
2024 (4) BCLR 503
(CC) paras
52 and 60.
[11]
Rex
v Dhlumayo and Another
1948
(2) SA 677
(A).
[12]
Ibid at 705.
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