Case Law[2024] ZASCA 105South Africa
Minister of Police v Sabisa and Another (725/2023) [2024] ZASCA 105; 2024 (2) SACR 553 (SCA) (28 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
28 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Delict – unlawful arrest and detention – Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the Act) – execution of arrest with a warrant must comply with s 39(2) of the Act – arrested person must be taken to the police station or any other place expressly stated in the warrant of arrest in terms of s 50(1)(a) of the Act – arrested person to be brought before a lower court in compliance with ss 50(1)(c) and 50(1)(d) of the Act – further detention of the arrested person to be authorised by the court on application by the prosecutor.
Judgment
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## Minister of Police v Sabisa and Another (725/2023) [2024] ZASCA 105; 2024 (2) SACR 553 (SCA) (28 June 2024)
Minister of Police v Sabisa and Another (725/2023) [2024] ZASCA 105; 2024 (2) SACR 553 (SCA) (28 June 2024)
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sino date 28 June 2024
FLYNOTES:ADMINISTRATIVE
PERSONAL INJURY – Unlawful arrest and detention –
Assault
– Warrant must be in possession of arrestor at arrest –
Taken to office and not police station –
Interrogated,
assaulted and tortured – Shackled by police in hospital for
nine days – Not brought before lower
court to appear, nor
was authorisation sought for their detention in hospital –
High Court making awards for unlawful
arrest and detention,
assault, torture and contumelia – Appeal by Minister
dismissed –
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
,
ss 39(2)
,
50
(1)(c) and
50
(1)(d).
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 725/2023
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF POLICE
APPELLANT
and
THANDEKILE
SABISA FIRST
RESPONDENT
LAWRENCE
NZIMENI MAMBILA
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Minister
of Police v Sabisa and Another
(725/2023)
2024 ZASCA 105 (28 June 2024)
Coram:
MOCUMIE and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and
KOEN, COPPIN and SMITH
AJJA
Heard:
23 May 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 28
June 2024.
Summary:
Delict – unlawful arrest and detention –
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the Act) – execution of
arrest with
a warrant must comply with s 39(2) of the Act –
arrested person must be taken to the police station or any other
place expressly
stated in the warrant of arrest in terms of
s 50(1)
(a)
of the Act – arrested person to be brought before a lower court
in compliance with ss 50(1)
(c)
and 50(1)
(d)
of the Act – further detention of the arrested person to be
authorised by the court on application by the prosecutor.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court, Mthatha (Nhlangulela DJP, sitting as court of first
instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel where
so employed.
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Mabindla-Boqwana
JA (Mocumie JA and Koen, Coppin and Smith AJJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The respondents, Mr
Thandekile Nelson Sabisa and Mr Lawrence Nzimeni Mambila instituted
claims for damages in the Eastern Cape Division
of the High Court,
Mthatha (the high court), against the appellant, the Minister of
Police (the Minister) for unlawful arrest,
unlawful detention and
assault. Their matters were consolidated and heard by Nhlangulela
DJP, who found in favour of the respondents
and awarded each R400 000
for unlawful arrest and detention and R110 000 for assault,
torture and
contumelia
.
He granted leave to appeal to this Court.
Background
Facts
[2]
On 18 April 2016, the respondents, who were
councillors of the
OR
Tambo District Municipality (the Municipality),
were
arrested by members of the South African Police Service (SAPS) at the
offices of the Municipality at
Myezo
Park in Mthatha
. At the time,
Mr
Sabisa served as the Deputy Executive Mayor while Mr Mambila was a
member of the Mayoral Committee responsible for technical
services.
[3]
The respondents
pleaded that they were arrested without warrants of arrest by the
members of the SAPS; that the police officers
did not produce any
warrants for their arrest; and that there was no justification for
executing the warrants, even if those were
available. They further
pleaded that after the arrests they were detained by members of the
SAPS for nine days, without a reasonable
and probable cause and with
the intention to injure them, and were assaulted and tortured which
caused them pain, shock and
injuria
,
amongst other things. As a result, they claimed to have suffered
damages of R10 million each.
[4]
The Minister filed a plea in which he
admitted the arrests but denied that they were unlawful. He averred
that the respondents were
arrested in terms of valid warrants of
arrest which were shown to them and that the police were justified in
executing the warrants.
The Minister admitted that the respondents
were detained by the police on 18 April 2016 and on 19 April 2016
they were admitted
to hospital where they remained under guard until
26 April 2016. The Minister averred further that the respondents
remained in
hospital on the authority of the Court. He denied that
the respondents were assaulted and tortured by the police.
[5]
The respondents’ evidence was as
follows. On the day of their arrests, they were attending a Mayoral
Committee meeting at
the Municipality’s offices. At
approximately 15h00 a team of more than ten armed police officers
arrived in about a dozen
vehicles. These were apparently members of
the Hawks and other several unidentified police officers. Three of
the police officers,
namely, Detective Warrant Officer Xolile Mdepa,
Colonel Loyiso Mdingi and Captain Batandwa Hanise went into the
boardroom where
the meeting was held. Col Mdingi pointed at the
respondents and advised the meeting that they were required in
connection
with the attempted murder of one Mr Xolile Kompela and the
murder of his bodyguard (the Tsolo case). Mr Kompela was the Speaker
of the Mhlontlo Local Municipality.
[6]
Col Mdingi instructed the respondents to
accompany the police officers to their motor vehicles that were
parked outside. The police
seized the respondents’ licenced
firearms and cell phones. The respondents were thereafter instructed
to board separate motor
vehicles. The police left with them and drove
towards the N2 East London direction. All the police vehicles that
had arrived at
the Municipality’s offices drove in a convoy.
[7]
They stopped by some office in Butterworth.
The distance between Mthatha and Butterworth is approximately 120
kilometres. It is
about a one and a half to two-hour drive. The
respondents were taken inside the office in Butterworth, which is not
a police station.
There, they were interrogated about the Tsolo case,
assaulted and tortured.
[8]
Mr Sabisa was instructed to remove his
clothes until he was left with just his underwear on. There were
policewomen present and
this embarrassed him a great deal. As this
was taking place, he was told to speak the truth. His hands were
cuffed around the back
of the chair, a tube was placed over his face
and pulled at the back of his neck, to the point that he could not
breathe. The police
officers kept asking him where he got the money
he gave to Mr Mambila. He told them that he knew nothing about the
money, but they
continued hitting him with fists and kicking him on
his back. Tears started flowing and he felt embarrassed, having to
sob in front
of women. Capt Hanise kicked him hard with a knee on his
private parts which led to excruciating pain and increased body
temperature.
[9]
Mr Mambila was also instructed to remove
the clothes on his upper body and was handcuffed behind his back. He
was also suffocated
with a tube which covered his eyes and nose and
was beaten all over his body. A foot was placed on his hands, which
resulted in
his chair falling over backward. He felt pain on his
chest.
[10]
At approximately 22h00, the convoy departed
to Mthatha Central Police Station (the Police Station). They arrived
at the Police Station
close to midnight and were booked in and placed
in the cells. On 19 April 2016, at approximately 03h00 in the
morning, Mr Mambila
was visited by an attorney in the cells. He told
his attorney that he had been injured and requested him to arrange
for him to
be seen by a doctor. Mr Sabisa also reported the assault
to his attorneys and requested them to take the necessary steps to
have
those responsible face the law.
[11]
That afternoon, the police arranged for the
respondents to be taken to a doctor, following the requests made by
their attorneys.
The respondents were booked out of the cells and
taken to a doctor. Mr Mambila had difficulty walking to the vehicle.
He had to
make use of a walking stick. The doctor recommended that
the respondents be admitted to hospital. Mr Mambila was given an
injection
and was transported to the hospital in an ambulance. The
respondents were admitted to the same ward. They were shackled to
their
beds and guarded by the police. They had to get permission from
the police if they needed to relieve themselves.
[12]
On 26 April 2016, the respondents noticed
that the police guards had left without any explanation. Their
shackles were removed,
and they were no longer detained in custody.
They however remained in hospital. Mr Mambila was discharged from
hospital on 28 April
2016 while Mr Sabisa was transferred to the
Mthatha General Hospital, as his medical aid cover would be exhausted
on 1 May 2016.
[13]
On 28 April 2016, the respondents attended
the offices of the Hawks in Mthatha, by arrangement, for the purpose
of having summonses
served on them in respect of the Tsolo case. In
terms of the summonses, the respondents had to appear in the Tsolo
Magistrates’
Court (the magistrates court) on 19 May 2016.
[14]
On 19 May 2016, the respondents appeared in
the magistrates’ court, after which the case was remanded on
various occasions,
with them warned to appear on the subsequent
remand dates. The charges were withdrawn against Mr Sabisa during
October 2016, and
against Mr Mambila on 20 February 2017.
[15]
All three policemen who were present at the
time of the arrest, namely, Warrant Officer Mdepa, Col Mdingi and
Capt Hanise, testified
on behalf of the Minister. They admitted the
arrest in the boardroom, the drive to Butterworth and the detention
of Messrs Sabisa
and Mambila in hospital, albeit denying that those
were unlawful. Their evidence, which I deal with in my analysis, was
not cohesive
in many respects. For current purposes, their evidence
was that the warrants of arrest were obtained on the strength of
information
obtained from a confession in the Tsolo case, which
implicated the respondents in a plot to kill Mr Kompela. The
respondents were
informed of their constitutional rights during the
arrest.
[16]
The high court found the arrest and
detention of the respondents unlawful because they were not brought
before a court within 48
hours as envisaged in s 50 of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the Act). Furthermore, they were detained
in hospital in custody
without an order of court authorising their
continued detention beyond the mandatory 48-hour period. The high
court further found
the warrants to be defective ‘to the extent
that they did not authorize the arrestor to take the plaintiffs to
Butterworth’.
As regards the assault, the high court accepted
the respondents’ version.
[17]
In its reasons for granting leave to
appeal, the high court seemed to confine the appeal to whether it had
misapplied ss 44 and
51(1)
(a)
of the Act. To the extent that it is not clear which aspects of the
judgment are to be appealed against, the approach I take favours
the
Minister. The Minister did not appeal the quantum awarded.
On
appeal
[18]
Counsel
for the Minister submitted that the police were armed with warrants
of arrest, the validity of which was not challenged,
and that they
had no discretion but to arrest. He referred to the recent
Constitutional Court decision of
Groves
N.O. v Minister of Police
[1]
which held that s 43(2)
[2]
of
the Act ‘places
a positive duty on an arresting officer to arrest the person
identified in the warrant with the use of the word “shall”.’
The Constitutional Court held that a peace officer executing a
warrant has no discretion but to act in accordance with the terms
of
the warrant. However, bearing in mind the principle of rationality,
there may be situations where the arresting officer will
have to make
value judgment but that would only be:
‘
[W]here
the prevailing exigencies at the time of arrest may require him to
exercise same; a discretion as to how the arrest should
be effected
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.’
[3]
[19]
In my view this case has less to do with
whether the arresting officer had a discretion to give effect to the
warrants, but more
with whether the execution of the arrest, complied
with the law. There are questions about whether the warrants were
ex
facie
defective by failing to indicate
where the arrested persons should be taken. It is however not
necessary to decide that issue. The
matter can be disposed of on the
factual basis, namely, whether the manner and effecting of the
arrests complied with the law.
Was
the arrest of the respondents lawful?
[20]
In
terms of s 39(1) of the Act an arrest may be effected with or without
a warrant, except if the intended arrestee submits to custody.
Relevant for our purposes is s 39(2) which provides that:
‘
The
person effecting an arrest shall,
at the
time of effecting the arrest or immediately after effecting the
arrest,
inform the arrested person of
the cause of the arrest or, in the case of an arrest effected by
virtue of a warrant, upon demand
of the person arrested hand him a
copy of the warrant.’ (Emphasis added.)
[21]
This
section deals with two alternative requirements, ie
the
communication of the reason for the arrest or in the case of an
arrest effected by virtue of a warrant, the handing over of
a copy of
the warrant upon demand. Non-compliance with s 39(2) renders the
arrest unlawful.
[4]
These
alternative conditions must occur at the time of the arrest or
immediately thereafter. The latter signifies an occurrence
‘as
soon as reasonably possible in the circumstances’.
[5]
[22]
In
Minister
van Veiligheid en Sekuriteit v Rautenbach
[6]
(
Rautenbach
)
,
this
Court held that it is imperative
that
the persons arrested be informed, as soon as is practically possible,
of the reason for the drastic infringement of their fundamental
right
to liberty. To achieve this objective, a strict rather than a loose
application of the statute’s requirements must
be adopted.
[23]
In the
Rautenbach
matter
,
the
arresting officer had told the suspect that he was arresting him on a
warrant. The intended arrestee asked where the warrant
was, and the
arresting officer told him he would give it to him as soon as the
suspect had accompanied him to the police station.
The intended
arrestee refused to go until he saw the warrant. The arresting
officer arrested him anyway. The Court held that s 39(2)
assumes
that the arrestor has a copy at hand when arresting so that he or she
can hand it over at the request of the arrestee.
The Court found that
the arrestor had no intentions to comply with s 39(2) at the time of
the arrest.
[24]
Turning back to this case, the respondents
alleged that they were arrested without a warrant and if there was
one, it was not shown
to them at the time or immediately after they
were arrested. In the first instance, to give effect to s 39(2) the
respondents had
to be told that they were being arrested on the
authority of a warrant, otherwise how else would they know to request
a copy? If
they are not told, it is reasonable for them to assume, as
the respondents did, that they were being arrested without a warrant.
[25]
Counsel for the Minister submitted that it
is sufficient that a warrant was obtained, even if not in the
possession of the arrestor
at the time of the arrest. Such a reading
of the provision is untenable and goes against the primary object of
the section. The
existence of a warrant ‘somewhere’ does
not (by itself) make the execution of the arrest lawful. The
arresting officer
must be able to exhibit it to the intended
arrestee, at the time of the arrest or immediately thereafter,
otherwise the object
of s 39(2) is defeated.
[26]
In this case, the evidence of the
Minister’s witnesses was inconsistent in material respects.
Firstly, they contradicted each
other as to who the arresting officer
was, and secondly, on whether the respondents were informed that they
were arrested on the
authority of a warrant, and on whether it was
exhibited to them. Warrant Officer Mdepa testified that he was the
arresting officer.
He stated that he displayed the warrants to the
respondents and informed them of their constitutional rights and that
they were
being arrested in connection with a case of murder.
[27]
Col Mdingi, on the other hand, in his
evidence in chief mentioned a warrant only in relation to Mr Sabisa.
It was only in cross
examination that he spoke about Warrant Officer
Mdepa having warrants for both respondents. Capt Hanise testified
that Col Mdingi
was the arresting officer and that he had informed
the respondents of their constitutional rights and their right to
remain silent.
Most importantly, he stated that Col Mdingi had no
warrant of arrest in his possession when informing the respondents
about their
rights.
[28]
These contradictions were compounded
further by the fact that, despite Warrant Officer Mdepa’s
testimony that he had shown
the warrants to the respondents, he wrote
on the warrants themselves that they were executed on 19 April 2016,
which is contrary
to the alleged date of execution, namely, 18 April
2016.
[29]
Furthermore,
there was no mention in the investigation diary that the warrants had
been obtained by Warrant Officer Mdepa in Tsolo
on 18 April 2016
and/or that they were available and in his possession at the time of
the arrest as required by the Standing Order
(General) 323
Investigation Diary (SAPS 5) (the Standing Order).
[7]
The Standing Order required completion of the investigation diary,
inter alia, to contain a complete chronological record of all
work
done in the case, including when a house or other place is visited,
and the name and address of the person visited or searched.
[30]
Weighing the respondents’ evidence
against that adduced on behalf of the Minister on this issue, the
probabilities favour
the respondents’ version that they were
not
informed
of the existence of warrants by virtue of which their arrests were to
be effected.
The Minister,
accordingly, failed to show that the arrests were lawful.
Were
the respondents lawfully detained after the arrest?
[31]
The purpose of the arrest is to bring the
arrested person before a court to face justice. Section 50 regulates
the process after
arrest. Section 50(1)
(a)
provides that any person arrested ‘shall as soon as possible be
brought to a police station or, in the case of an arrest
by warrant,
to any other place expressly mentioned in the warrant’.
[32]
The warrants in this case do not indicate
where the arrested persons had to be taken. Most importantly, they
did not direct that
the respondents be taken to Butterworth. At best
for the Minister, although there was no indication of which place the
respondents
must be taken to, on the warrants, they ought to have
taken them to a police station. It is not clear why they were not
immediately
taken to the Police Station, but on a long trip to
Butterworth, only to return later to Mthatha where they were then
detained.
[33]
The Minister’s witnesses stated that
the respondents were taken to the offices of the Butterworth Crime
Intelligence for questioning.
Col Mdingi testified that the reason
why the respondents were taken to Butterworth was that, because there
were factions in the
African National Congress, he did not know what
would happen if people found out that their leaders were arrested.
According to
Warrant Officer Mdepa, the respondents were prominent
individuals, and their arrest could create chaos in the community.
This does
not make any sense. The community would have found out
sooner or later about the respondents’ arrests. The important
issue,
in any event, is that police officers are bound to act in
accordance with the law.
[34]
The Minister’s witnesses testified
that the interviews in Butterworth were short. In that case, it makes
no sense, why the
respondents would be kept there for approximately
five hours when they had indicated early on, at the mayor’s
office, that
they wanted legal representation. To aggravate matters,
there was no satisfactory explanation in the evidence of the three
policemen
as to what actually transpired in Butterworth, nor of any
warning statements taken from the respondents. Warrant Officer Mdepa
testified that he only took the warning statements on 19 April 2016
at the hospital, an occurrence which was also not recorded in
the
investigation diary.
[35]
The respondents, on the other hand,
explained that they were arrested at approximately 15h00 and arrived
in Butterworth at approximately
17h30. They were interrogated in
Butterworth until 22h00 when the convoy returned to Mthatha. They
were only booked in the Police
Station at approximately midnight
(23h55). There was no lawful purpose to take the respondents to
Butterworth. The detention in
Butterworth after the arrest was,
consequently, unlawful and not in compliance with the requirements of
s 50(1)
(a)
of the Act.
Was
the further detention lawful?
[36]
Section 50(1)
(c)
of the Act requires an arrested person to be brought before a lower
court as soon as reasonably possible, but not later than 48
hours
after the arrest. Subsection
(d)
(i)
states that if the period of 48 hours expires outside ordinary court
hours, the person may be brought before a lower court not
later than
the end of the first court day.
[37]
In terms s 50(1)
(d)
(ii)
(the most relevant section for our purposes), if the 48-hour period
expires at the time when the arrested person cannot be
brought before
a lower court, because of physical illness or condition, the court to
which he or she would have been brought, but
for the illness, may on
application by the prosecutor:
‘
authorise
that the arrested person be detained at a place specified by the
court and for such period as the court may deem necessary
so that he
or she may recuperate and be brought before the court.’
[38]
The
application envisaged in this section must set out the circumstances
relating to the illness or condition which the arrested
person
suffers from and be accompanied by a certificate of a medical
practitioner. Court orders for further detention at the said
place
may be similarly sought.
[8]
[39]
The respondents were shackled by the police
in hospital for nine days, from 19 April 2016 after being booked out
of the police cell
in Mthatha until 26 April 2016. The period of 48
hours expired at 16h00 on 20 April 2016. Neither of the respondents
was brought
before a lower court to appear, nor was authorisation
sought on 20 April 2016 or thereafter for their detention in
hospital. The
Minister pleaded that the respondents were detained in
hospital on judicial authority. There is, however, no evidence of any
court
order in terms of s 50(1)
(d)
(ii)
to that effect.
[40]
Counsel for the Minister argued that the
words ‘Acc 3 and in absentia – reported to be admitted in
hospital’,
appearing in the record of the proceedings of
20 April 2016, in the magistrates’ court, should be read
as a court order
remanding the respondents in hospital. This
statement is a far cry from being a court order, let alone a court
order complying
with the requirements of s 50(1)
(d)
(ii).
Firstly, there was no application by the prosecutor supported by a
medical certificate. Secondly, there was no court order
authorising
and specifying the place and the period of detention.
[41]
The record of proceedings of 26 April 2016
in the magistrates’ court puts paid to the Minister’s
case. The magistrate
ordered the release of the respondents on the
strength of the submissions by the respondents’ counsel, who
appeared in the
magistrates’ court, that their further
detention contravened s 50(1) of the Act.
[42]
Confronted with these difficulties, counsel
for the Minister, for the first time, and at the hearing of the
appeal, placed reliance
on s 39(3) of the Act which provides:
‘
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.’
[43]
He submitted that by virtue of this
provision the respondents were in lawful custody until they were
released by the court order
on 26 April 2016. This, he contended,
must be considered with the fact that the court had at the previous
hearing remanded the
respondents ‘in absentia’. Based on
this new argument, he moved for an amendment to the plea to include
this new defence.
[44]
An
amendment of the plea will not assist the Minister, on the simple
basis that, counsel’s interpretation of s 39(3) is incorrect.
In
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development and Another v Zealand
,
[9]
this Court said:
‘
Section
39(3) provides for lawful detention during the period between
lawful
arrest and the first court appearance.’ (Emphasis added.)
[45]
Section 39(3) provides for detention from
the time of arrest until the first court appearance. That first
detention must itself
be lawful, which requires that it must have
been preceded by a lawful arrest. In other words, the section
presupposes that s 39(2) would have been
complied with. Reading s 39(3) in any other way would deprive s 39(2)
of any force.
[46]
The subsection
does
not allow for perpetual detention until the court has ‘finally
spoken’, even when the arrest was unlawful. Such
a construal of
the provision would infringe upon the detainee’s fundamental
right to liberty. In addition, it would directly
offend against the
provisions of s 50(1) that require an arrested person to be brought
before a lower court without delay and no
later than 48 hours. The
Minister’s counsel’s interpretation is clearly untenable
on any reading, also because it would
confer unbridled power upon
arresting police officers. In the circumstances, the further
detention of the respondents after the
expiry of the 48-hour
provision, was unlawful.
Were
the respondents assaulted?
[47]
The probabilities regarding whether the
assault took place favour the respondents. They were kept in an
office in Butterworth for
approximately five hours with no clear
justification for such length of detention being given by the
Minister’s witnesses.
As stated, no plausible explanation was
provided as to why the respondents were only booked into the police
cells, at the Police
Station, just before midnight, having been
arrested at about 15h00.
[48]
The respondents’ evidence on the
other hand was clear and cogent. It was supported by the entries in
the occurrence book.
They told their attorneys at the first available
opportunity that they had been assaulted and were injured. The
occurrence book
reflects that at 10h30 and 11h00 on 19 April 2016,
the respondents’ attorneys consulted their clients and
requested that
the police accompany the respondents to hospital as
they were complaining of body pains. Mr Mambila testified that
he had
to use a walking stick to go to the vehicle. The respondents
were taken to a doctor who recommended that they be taken to
hospital.
Mr Mambila had to be transported by an ambulance from the
doctor’s examination room to hospital, due to his serious
condition.
The fact that the doctor was not called to testify or that
the full medical record of Mr Mambila was not presented, is of no
moment
given the common cause facts which amply support the
respondents’ evidence of assault.
[49]
For these reasons, the appeal must fail. It
is accordingly dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel
where so employed.
N P MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
V Notshe SC with A Magadla
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Mthatha
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents: N Mullins SC
with L Kroon
Instructed
by:
Mvuzo
Notyesi Inc, Mthatha
Phalatsi
& Partners, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Groves
N.O. v Minister of Police
[2023] ZACC 36
;
2024 (1) SACR 286
(CC);
2024 (4) BCLR 503
(CC) paras
56 and 60.
[2]
Section
43(2) states that ‘[a] warrant of arrest issued under this
section shall direct that the person described in the
warrant shall
be arrested by a peace officer in respect of the offence set out in
the warrant and that he be brought before a
lower court in
accordance with the provisions of section 50’.
[3]
Groves
N.O.
fn
1 para 60.
[4]
Minister
of Law and Order v
Kader
1991
(1) SA 41
(A) at 46A-B.
[5]
Minister
van Veiligheid en Sekuriteit v Rautenbach
1996 (1) SACR 720(A)
at 729C-D.
[6]
Ibid.
[7]
Issued
by Consolidation Notice 44 of 2012.
[8]
Section
50(1)
(d)
(ii).
[9]
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development and Another v Zealand
[2007]
ZASCA 92
;
2007
(2) SACR 401
(SCA) para 10.
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