Case Law[2022] ZASCA 36South Africa
Biyela v Minister of Police (1017/2020) [2022] ZASCA 36; 2023 (1) SACR 235 (SCA) (1 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Delict – unlawful arrest and detention – inadmissible hearsay evidence can form the basis of a reasonable suspicion by a peace officer.
Judgment
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## Biyela v Minister of Police (1017/2020) [2022] ZASCA 36; 2023 (1) SACR 235 (SCA) (1 April 2022)
Biyela v Minister of Police (1017/2020) [2022] ZASCA 36; 2023 (1) SACR 235 (SCA) (1 April 2022)
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THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not reportable
Case no: 1017/2020
In
the matter between:
SANDILE
BIYELA
APPELLANT
and
MINISTER OF
POLICE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Biyela
v Minister of Police
(1017/2020)
[2022] ZASCA
36 (01 April 2022)
Coram:
PETSE AP, DLODLO
JA, MUSI, MATOJANE and MOLEFE AJJA
Heard:
15 February 2022
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
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 09h45 on
01 April 2022.
Summary:
Delict – unlawful
arrest and detention – inadmissible hearsay evidence can form the
basis of a reasonable suspicion by a peace
officer.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal
Division of the High Court Pietermaritzburg (Koen J
et
Bezuidenhout J concurring, with
Mngadi J dissenting sitting as court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the court a quo is set aside and replaced by the
following:
‘
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Musi
AJA (Petse AP and Dlodlo JA and Matonjane and Molefe AJJA
concurring):
[1]
This appeal, which is with the special leave of this Court, concerns
the arrest and
detention of the appellant, Mr Sandile Biyela. The
controversy to be determined is whether his arrest and detention by
members of
the South African Police Service (SAPS) were unlawful.
[2]
The appellant successfully instituted action against the respondent,
the Minister of
Police, in the Durban Magistrate’s Court for
unlawful arrest and detention. Judgment was granted in his favour in
the sum of R160,000
with interest plus costs.
[3]
The respondent was aggrieved by the outcome and appealed to the
KwaZulu-Natal Division
of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg. After the
two judges to whom the appeal was initially allocated could not
agree, a third judge
joined the bench to hear the appeal afresh and
resolve the deadlock. The majority (Koen
et
Bezuidenhout JJ)
upheld the appeal, however, Mngadi J dissented and concluded that he
would have dismissed the appeal.
[4]
Before traversing the facts of this matter, I pause to deal with a
preliminary issue
that was raised by the appellant. In his amended
particulars of claim, the appellant alleged that on Friday, 18 May
2012 at Durban
Central, he was arrested without a warrant by members
of the SAPS for the offence of intimidation. He was, thereafter,
detained at
the Durban Central Police Station and appeared in court
on Monday, 21 May 2012. The case against him was postponed and he was
released.
[5]
The respondent’s plea was a bare denial which had the effect that
it was accepted
that the appellant had the onus to prove his arrest
and detention. That being the case, the appellant assumed the duty to
begin.
During his cross-examination, counsel for the respondent put
to him that he was indeed arrested by members of SAPS. Since that
statement
conflicted with the plea, counsel for the appellant
objected.
[6]
The court adjourned for the parties to discuss the issue. They
resolved the issue and
the respondent applied to amend his plea. In
the amendment the respondent admitted that the appellant was arrested
without a warrant
on 18 May 2012, in the area of Warwick Avenue, by
members of the SAPS and that he was detained until Monday, 21 May
2012. The respondent
amplified its plea by setting out factual
allegations that purportedly led to the arrest and detention of the
appellant. The magistrate
allowed the amendment.
[7]
Although the appellant testified first, the matter was nevertheless
conducted with the
common understanding that the onus of proving that
the arrest and detention were lawful rested on the respondent. The
court
a quo
described the bare denial as a ‘tactical denial
to avoid the defendant (respondent) attracting the onus to begin’.
Before us,
counsel for the appellant argued that the appellant was
prejudiced by this ‘tactical plea’ because it rendered his trial
unfair.
He submitted that the trial was unfair because the appellant
had to testify first and that the trial was conducted on the
understanding
that the onus was on the appellant to prove both his
arrest and detention.
[8]
It is unacceptable for a party to plead a bare denial in the face of
straightforward
and undeniable allegations against such party. It
goes without saying that a trial by ambush is unfair; courts should
be very slow
to allow a party to mount a case at trial other than the
one that the party has pleaded. In
Minister
of Safety and Security v
Slabbert
[1]
it was stated that:
‘
The purpose
of pleadings is to define the issues for the other party and the
court. A party has a duty to allege in the pleadings
the material
facts upon which it relies. It is impermissible for a plaintiff to
plead a particular case and seek to establish a different
case at
trial.’
[2]
(Footnote
omitted.)
[9]
In this matter, the respondent pleaded a bare denial and persisted
with such denial
in circumstances where it obviously knew that the
information at its disposal is incongruent with such plea. This must
be so because
the statements of the respondent’s witnesses that
were disclosed to the appellant clearly show that the appellant was
arrested
by members of the SAPS.
[10]
The matter was set down, on approximately six occasions, for a
pre-trial hearing before a magistrate.
The respondent failed to
attend all the pre-trial conferences. The respondent’s failure to
attend the pre-trial conferences compounds
its egregious abuse of
court process. The issue relating to the bare denial could have been
raised and addressed at the pre-trial
stage. The respondent’s
conduct was totally unacceptable and must be deprecated.
[11]
However, having regard to the total circumstances of this case, the
stage at which the issue was discovered
and addressed and the manner
in which the trial was subsequently conducted, I am not convinced
that the prejudice was of such a nature
that it should vitiate the
entire proceedings. I now turn to the facts.
[12]
Warrant Officer Sithole (Sithole) and Constable Ngcobo (Ngcobo)
testified that on 18 May 2012 they were
on duty in the Durban Central
Business District (CBD). Earlier in the day, taxi drivers had marched
to the offices of the eThekwini
Metro Police in order to hand over a
memorandum protesting the impoundment of their vehicles.
[13]
At approximately 14h20 they received a report from Constable Saunders
(Saunders), who was monitoring
CCTV cameras, about the occupants of a
white minibus taxi who were engaged in unlawful activities at the
Warwick Avenue Triangle.
They were given the location and
registration number of the taxi. They drove to Warwick Avenue where
they saw the taxi and activated
their police vehicle’s siren in
order to stop the taxi. It stopped and the occupants were asked to
alight from the taxi. Sticks,
stones and a rubber hammer were found
in the taxi or in the possession of some of the passengers. All 12
males who were in the taxi
were arrested and taken to the Durban
Central Police Station.
[14]
Sithole testified that Saunders had informed them, via their radio,
that the occupants of the white taxi
‘just smashed a DTM bus’ and
jumped into the taxi and drove in a northerly direction on Warwick
Avenue. They rushed to the scene
where they stopped the taxi. He and
Ngcobo jumped out of the car in which they were travelling, went to
the taxi and instructed the
driver to alight. He identified himself,
explained the reason for stopping the taxi and requested permission
to search the driver.
He was granted permission. Nothing illegal was
found in the driver’s possession.
[15]
He then requested the driver to accompany him to the left side of the
taxi and opened the sliding door.
The occupants were requested to
alight from the vehicle and once they were outside, he searched the
taxi and found concrete stones
and sticks that were abandoned. They
arrested all the males for intimidation and public violence and
requested their colleagues to
come to the scene with a police van.
They came and 12 people were transported to the police station while
they followed the police
van in their own vehicle. Sithole denied
that the police van executed zig-zag manoeuvres on the road on the
way to the police station,
which was one of the allegations levelled
against them.
[16]
Likewise, Ngcobo testified that Saunders had informed them that a
group of 12 males alighted from a taxi,
pelted a bus with stones and
forced the passengers to alight from the bus after which they climbed
back into the taxi and drove off.
When he saw the taxi for the first
time there were males hanging out of the windows of the taxi with
sticks in their hands. He testified
that before they stopped the
taxi, they called Saunders in order to verify that it was indeed the
taxi that they were supposed to
stop. He confirmed.
[17]
After stopping the taxi, Sithole searched the occupants of the taxi
while Ngcobo was observing. Although
he could not recall exactly what
was found, he said that Sithole found a rubber hammer, sticks and
stones in the taxi. All the males
were informed that they were going
to be arrested for public violence and malicious injury to property.
After their arrest they were
transported to the police station in a
police van.
[18]
Constable Rajen Saunders testified that he is stationed at the Durban
Central Police Station, but was
stationed at the Metro CCTV room at
the time. His duties entailed monitoring CCTV for crime or related
incidents. He would then report
any crime or incidents to radio
control who would then be put into direct contact with the vehicle on
the ground and communicate
with the police officers in the vehicle.
His job also entails downloading any camera footage of an incident.
He confirmed that he
was on duty on 18 May 2012. However, he could
not recall any incident that occurred on that day. During cross-
examination, he confirmed
that he could not recall the incident
referred to by Sithole and Ngcobo. At some stage, he categorically
stated that no report was
ever given as testified to by both Sithole
and Ngcobo.
[19]
Detective Constable Zikhalala, who was the investigating officer in
respect of the criminal case testified
that he took a warning
statement from the appellant. The appellant informed him that ‘he
will make a statement at court’.
[20]
For his part, the appellant testified that he is a tractor operator.
On 18 May 2012, he went to work
and thereafter went to town to buy
groceries. He stays in Kwa-Mashu and commutes by taxi. Between 15:00
and 16:00, he went to the
taxi rank and boarded a taxi together with
approximately 12 other males. While seated, he saw that the area at
the taxi rank was
full of police officers. Whilst the taxi was still
stationary, the police approached it. They opened the taxi door,
grabbed him and
pulled him out of the taxi. He fell and the police
hit, kicked and swore at him.
[21]
They pulled him up and hurled him into a police van. There were other
persons in the van. Whilst driving
to the police station the police
allegedly executed zig-zag manoeuvres which had the effect that they
were being hurled from one
side of the van to the other and bumping
into each other. Once they arrived at the police station, they were
told to sit on the floor.
When he enquired why he was arrested, the
police swore at him and placed him in the police cells until the
Monday when he was released.
This was his first brush with the law.
He was very traumatised by the incident and consulted a doctor after
the incident.
[22]
In the court of first instance, the magistrate made terse and
unsubstantiated credibility findings. She
found that because Sithole
and Ngcobo based their arrest on the information received from
Saunders, no reliance could be placed on
their testimonies,
especially when ‘considering their contradictions as well’. She
did not elaborate on these contradictions.
Rather, she found that ‘on
the evaluation of the evidence and the legal position the entire
arrest depended solely on the evidence
of radio command, which the
court found inadmissible … hence I find that the defendant failed
to discharge the onus.’
[23]
The majority, in the court a quo, found that the magistrate erred in
concluding that the information
that qualified to be considered
whether a reasonable suspicion to arrest existed, had to be evidence
which would be admissible in
a court of law. They properly
characterised the issue and said the following:
‘
The issue
is not whether there is evidence admissible in a court available to
the arresting officer, but whether there was information
available
which would cause him to reasonably suspect the suspect of having
committed the relevant offence. The reasonableness requirement
therefore extends inter alia to the reliability or accuracy of the
information upon which an arrest is founded, including the quality
and ambit thereof.’
[24]
Having properly characterised the nature of the enquiry, the majority
had regard to the credibility of
the witnesses. They concluded that
they ‘had no hesitation in accepting the evidence of Sithole as
corroborated in every material
respect by Ngcobo as more probable.’
They found that there is no reason why the police officers would
fabricate their testimonies
relating to the taxi being in motion and
them stopping it by activating the siren of their vehicle, if that
did not occur.
[25]
They found that the appellant’s version that the police van in
which they were being transported drove
in a reckless zig-zag manner
to the police station can safely be rejected, because it is
improbable that the police would do so in
a built-up area, in full
view of the public and their colleagues who were following them.
[26]
The majority concluded that the court of first instance misdirected
itself by not having regard to the
information available to the
arresting officers to establish a reasonable suspicion at the time of
the arrest. If it had done so,
the majority concluded, it would have
found that the arrest of the appellant was lawful.
[27]
The minority found that the arresting officer must prove the basis of
his or her suspicion. He or she
must prove what he or she observed
which caused him or her to reasonably suspect, and, if not based on
his or her observation, he
or she must prove the information he or
she had which caused him or her to formulate the suspicion. The
learned judge characterised
the enquiry as follows:
‘
In this
case the issue is not that the report as contained in an inadmissible
evidence (sic). In this case the police failed to produce
the report
when the matter was tried before the trial court. They did not fail
to produce it because it was inadmissible, it did
not exist.’
[28]
The learned judge reasoned that in his view the issue was not whether
the information relayed to the
arresting officers afforded sufficient
grounds to form a reasonable suspicion. Rather, the issue was whether
the arresting officers
could prove that they had formed a suspicion
and that the suspicion was reasonable without producing the
information on which they
allegedly formed the suspicion. He
concluded that the case was decided on the basis of the respondent’s
failure to discharge the
onus to justify the arrest because there was
a failure to produce the report on which the arrest was based.
[29]
Counsel for the appellant contended that the testimonies of Sithole
and Ngcobo were inadmissible hearsay
and that the court of first
instance was correct in finding that for that reason the respondent
did not discharge the onus of proving
that the arrest was lawful.
Counsel on behalf of the respondent, on the other hand, argued that
the court a quo was correct in its
characterisation of the nature of
the enquiry as well as the credibility of the witnesses.
[30]
Section 40(1)
(b)
of
the Criminal Procedure Act
[3]
provides:
‘
A peace
officer may without warrant arrest any person –
(a)
who commits or attempt to commit any offence in
his presence;
(b)
whom he reasonably suspects of having committed
any offence referred to in schedule 1, other than the offence of
escaping from lawful
custody; …’
[31]
In order to prove that the arrest was lawful, the respondent has to
prove that:
(i)
the arresting officer was a peace
officer;
(ii)
the arresting officer entertained a
suspicion;
(iii)
that the suspect to be arrested
committed an offence referred to in schedule 1; and
(iv)
the
suspicion rested on reasonable grounds.
[4]
[32]
It is common cause, in this matter, that the arrest was effected by a
peace officer. It is further common
cause that the appellant was
allegedly suspected of having committed a Schedule 1 offence.
The only
controversies in this matter are whether the arresting officers could
have formed a reasonable suspicion based on hearsay
evidence and the
credibility of the arresting officers.
[33]
The question whether a peace officer reasonably suspects a person of
having committed an offence within
the ambit of s 40(1)
(b)
is
objectively justiciable.
[5]
It
must, at the outset, be emphasised that the suspicion need not be
based on information that would subsequently be admissible in
a court
of law.
[34]
The standard of a reasonable suspicion is very low. The reasonable
suspicion must be more than a hunch;
it should not be an
unparticularised suspicion. It must be based on specific and
articulable facts or information. Whether the suspicion
was
reasonable, under the prevailing circumstances, is determined
objectively.
[35]
What is required is that the arresting officer must form a reasonable
suspicion that a Schedule 1 offence
has been committed based on
credible and trustworthy information. Whether that information would
later, in a court of law, be found
to be inadmissible is neither here
nor there for the determination of whether the arresting officer at
the time of arrest harboured
a reasonable suspicion that the arrested
person committed a Schedule 1 offence.
[36]
The arresting officer is not obliged to arrest based on a reasonable
suspicion because he or she has
a discretion. The discretion to
arrest must be exercised properly.
[6]
Our legal system sets great store by the liberty of an individual
and, therefore, the discretion must be exercised after taking all
the
prevailing circumstances into consideration.
[37]
The mere fact that Saunders could not recall that he made the report
is not dispositive of the matter.
The absence of his recollection
does not signify the absence of a report made by him. If the
testimonies of the recipients of the
report are credible, and it is
clear that they genuinely acted on the information received from
Saunders, there would be nothing
wrong in concluding that the
suspicion was reasonable under the circumstances because they
received it from a credible source. That
source was one of their own
colleagues specifically tasked with monitoring CCTV cameras in order
to report to them, in real-time,
the scene of the crime, the kind of
crime committed and a description of the person or persons who
committed the crime.
[38]
I, therefore, agree with the majority’s characterisation of the
issues and its conclusion that a reasonable
suspicion can, depending
on the circumstances, be formed based on hearsay evidence, regardless
of whether that evidence is later
found to be admissible or not.
Furthermore, I agree with the conclusion that the court of first
instance erred in its conclusion
that the police officers could not
form a reasonable suspicion because such suspicion was based on
inadmissible hearsay evidence.
[39]
However, the majority did not upset or criticise the magistrate’s
credibility findings. They did not
point out any factual misdirection
committed by the magistrate. Neither did they state that the
magistrate’s credibility findings
were wrong or insupportable. They
did not comment, at all, on any of the magistrate’s credibility
findings and they did not state
on which ground they were at large to
interfere with the magistrate’s credibility findings. This was a
misdirection because the
majority did not have regard to the
entrenched principles pertaining to a court of appeal’s powers to
interfere with the credibility
findings of a trial court.
[7]
[40]
The court a quo downplayed the materiality of the contradictions and
omissions in the testimonies of
Sithole and Ngcobo. That they
contradicted each other as to the exact content of the report that
was made by Saunders is beyond question.
They both testified that
when they followed the taxi, they saw men brandishing or holding
sticks but during cross-examination they
could not explain whether
they saw one or more of the occupants of the taxi brandishing or
wielding sticks.
[41]
During cross-examination, Sithole testified that he searched the
occupants of the taxi and found some
carrying sticks and some
carrying stones. When he was pressed to indicate how many were
carrying sticks and how many were carrying
stones, he said that he
could not recall. He then conceded that he could not recall whether
it was one stick or more than one stick.
He also did not make mention
of any of the occupants of the taxi carrying a rubber hammer. It was
also pointed out to him by counsel
for the appellant, that in his
statement made immediately after the arrest he stated that all the
occupants in the taxi were involved
in damaging the bus and that they
also damaged police vehicles with the registration numbers and
letters BRH567B and BRB112B. He
conceded, without satisfactory
explanation, that he did not mention this aspect in his
evidence-in-chief. It was also put to him
that he previously
testified in other trials relating to the same incident and that in
those trials he did not mention that police
vehicles were damaged or
a rubber hammer was found in the possession of one of the taxi’s
occupants.
[42]
Ngcobo did not mention that Sithole first spoke to and searched the
taxi driver before he (ie Sithole)
went to the left side of the
vehicle. Ngcobo testified that before they stopped the taxi, they
verified with Saunders whether it
was indeed the correct vehicle.
Yet, this was not mentioned in his statement. Ngcobo conceded during
cross-examination that this
was a very important aspect which he
omitted from his statement. It was then put to him that he
embellished his testimony in order
to give it an aura of
truthfulness. It was also pointed out to him that Sithole did not
mention anything about the verification of
the identity of the taxi
before it was stopped.
[43]
In this matter the respondent’s case faced insurmountable
obstacles. First, Saunders could not recall
that he made the report
to his colleagues, and at some stage he said that he made no such
report. The recorded CCTV footage, if it
ever existed at all, is also
irretrievably lost. Secondly, Sithole and Ngcobo contradicted each
other on material issues. In my view,
the majority downplayed the
contradictions in the testimonies of the last-mentioned witnesses.
Additionally, these material contradictions
undermined the
credibility of their evidence.
[44]
The majority did not criticise the gravamen of the appellant’s
testimony. Instead, they, for the most
part, referred to and
over-emphasised peripheral issues. The court of first instance
concluded that the appellant’s evidence was
‘straightforward and
clear with little or no contradictions’. This finding cannot be
faulted. There was therefore no tenable
basis to justify interference
with those findings. Indeed, none is discernible from the majority
judgment of the court a quo.
[45]
In my judgment the court a quo should have concluded that the
respondent did not prove that the appellant
was arrested lawfully.
Therefore, this appeal ought to succeed. And there is no reason why
costs should not follow the result.
[46]
The quantum determined by the court of first instance was not
challenged. Thus, no more need be said
about it in this judgment.
[47]
I accordingly make the following order:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the court a quo is set aside and replaced by the
following:
‘
The
appeal is dismissed with costs.’
C MUSI
ACTING JUDGE OF
APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
appellant:
S Khan SC
Instructed
by:
Seelan Pillay & Associates, Durban
Webbers,
Bloemfontein.
For
first respondent:
N D Myeni
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Durban
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
[1]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Slabbert
[2009]
ZASCA 163; (2010) 2 All SA 474 (SCA).
[2]
Ibid para 11.
[3]
Criminal
Procedure
Act
51 of 1977
.
[4]
Duncan v
Minister of Law and Order
1986
(2) SA 805
(A) at 818G – H.
[5]
Minister
of Law and Order and Others v Hurley and Another
1986
(3) SA 568
(A) at 579H.
[6]
Groenewald
v Minister van Justisie
1973
(3) SA 877
(A) at 883G.
[7]
Rex v
Dhlumayo and Another
1947
(2) SA 677
(A) at 705.
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