Case Law[2022] ZASCA 57South Africa
Minister of Police and Another v Erasmus (366/2021) [2022] ZASCA 57 (22 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
22 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Delict – actio iniuriarum – unlawful arrest and detention – liability of police for post-court appearance detention – not caused by unlawful conduct of police – elements of malicious deprivation of liberty not proved in respect of prosecution.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZASCA 57
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Minister of Police and Another v Erasmus (366/2021) [2022] ZASCA 57 (22 April 2022)
Minister of Police and Another v Erasmus (366/2021) [2022] ZASCA 57 (22 April 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
Links to summary
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2022_57.html
sino date 22 April 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 366/2021
In the matter
between:
MINISTER OF
POLICE
FIRST APPELLANT
THE NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF
PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
SECOND APPELLANT
and
EDWARD
ALBERTO ERASMUS RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Minister
of Police and Another v Erasmus
(366/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 57
(22 April 2022)
Coram:
DAMBUZA,
VAN DER MERWE and MOCUMIE JJA and TSOKA and WEINER AJJA
Heard
:
17 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 have been at 09h45 on 22 April 2022.
Summary:
Delict
–
actio
iniuriarum
–
unlawful arrest and detention – liability of police for post-court
appearance detention – not caused by unlawful conduct of
police –
elements of malicious deprivation of liberty not proved in respect of
prosecution.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern
Cape Division of the High Court, Grahamstown (Malusi and Roberson JJ,
sitting as court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of
two counsel.
2
The order of the court a quo
is
set aside and replaced with the following order:
‘
(a)
The appeal is upheld with costs.
(b)
The cross-appeal is upheld with costs.
(c)
The order of the Port Elizabeth Regional Court is set aside and
replaced with the following order:
“
(i)
The first appellant is liable to the respondent in respect of the
unlawful arrest on 4 May 2016 and initial
detention until 5 May
2016, in the sum of R25 000;
(ii)
The respondent’s claim in respect of the subsequent detention from
5 May 2016 until 19 May 2016 is
dismissed”.’
JUDGMENT
Tsoka
AJA (Dambuza, Van der Merwe and Mocumie JJA and Weiner AJA
concurring)
[1]
This
appeal concerns the arrest and detention of the respondent, Mr Edward
Alberto Erasmus (Mr Erasmus) from 4 to 5 May 2016 (the
first period)
by
members of the South African Police Service (the police) and his
further detention, after his appearance in court, from 5 May to
19
May 2016 (the second period).
[2]
Subsequent to his release from detention on 19 May 2016, Mr Erasmus
instituted an action for damages in
the Port Elizabeth Regional Court
(the regional court) against both the first appellant, the Minister
of Police (the Minister) and
the second appellant, the National
Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP). The regional court found that
the arrest and the detention
for the first period was not unlawful,
but that the detention for the second period was unlawful. The
regional court awarded Mr Erasmus
damages in the amount of R250 000
plus costs.
[3]
Dissatisfied, the Minister and the NDPP (the appellants) appealed
against the order of the regional court
to the Eastern Cape Division
of the High Court, Grahamstown (the high court). Mr Erasmus
cross-appealed against the judgment and
order in respect of the
arrest and the first period of detention. On 19 January 2021, the
appellants’ appeal was dismissed and
the cross-appeal upheld. The
high court awarded Mr Erasmus damages in the amount of R50 000
for unlawful arrest for the first
period of detention and R250 000
in respect of the second period. The appellants applied for leave to
appeal against the high
court judgment and order, but it was refused.
As a result, the appellants petitioned this Court for special leave
to appeal. On 26
March 2021, this Court granted the appellants
special leave to appeal the high court judgment and order.
[4]
The facts giving rise to the appeal are as follows. On 4 May 2016,
the police received a report that there
had been a housebreaking and
theft of a safe with its contents, including a firearm, at House 5
Habelgaarn, Gelvanpark, Port Elizabeth (the property) and that a
suspect was apprehended by members of the public. The police drove
to
the scene where they found Mr Erasmus and the items allegedly stolen
from the property.
[5]
After interviewing the persons at the scene, the police were
satisfied that there were reasonable grounds
for believing that Mr
Erasmus was the person who had broken into the property and stolen
the safe and its contents. The police placed
him under arrest. He was
then taken to Gelvandale Police station where he was detained. On 4
May 2016 at 23h30, Warrant Officer Raynier
Ritzma de Koning (W/O de
Koning) interviewed Mr Erasmus and perused the police docket that
contained two statements implicating Mr
Erasmus. W/O de Koning being
satisfied that there were reasonable grounds to detain Mr Erasmus,
proceeded to charge Mr Erasmus with
housebreaking and theft, which
charges are schedule 1 offences in terms of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the CPA).
W/O de Koning conducted
the following investigations: he obtained two further statements;
verified Mr Erasmus’ place
of residence; obtained his profiles; and
verified that he had previous convictions of reckless and negligent
driving, possession
of dagga and contravening the
Domestic Violence
Act 116 of 1998
. These are offences for which a sentence of
imprisonment of six months without the option of a fine may be
imposed, within the ambit
of schedule 1 of the CPA. Thereafter, W/O
de Koning charged Mr Erasmus and detained him until his first
appearance in court on 5
May 2016. As he was of the view that Mr
Erasmus was not a flight risk, he did not intend on opposing an order
releasing Mr Erasmus
on bail and recorded that in the bail
information sheet in the police docket.
[6]
On 5 May 2016, Mr Erasmus appeared in the magistrates’ court for
the first time. His constitutional
rights to legal representation
were explained to him and he elected to be represented by a Legal Aid
lawyer. As a result of the previous
convictions, pointed out above,
he was facing schedule 5 offences. In terms of
s 60(11)
(b)
of the CPA, the magistrate’s court was obliged to detain him until
he was dealt with in accordance with the law, subject to the
proviso
that he be granted a reasonable opportunity to satisfy the court that
the interest of justice warranted that he be released
on bail. The
onus rested on him to satisfy the court that the interest of justice
warranted that he be admitted to bail. The magistrate’s
court,
accordingly, postponed the matter to 12 May 2016 for the purposes of
enabling Mr Erasmus to apply for bail in terms of
s 60(11)
(b)
of
the CPA.
[7]
On 12 May 2016, Mr Erasmus’ legal representative requested the
magistrate’s court to consider the
amount of R100 as sufficient for
bail purposes, while the prosecution submitted that the appropriate
amount, in the circumstances
of this matter, should be R1 000. The
court, being satisfied that the charges levelled against Mr Erasmus
were schedule 5 offences
and indeed serious, fixed the amount of bail
in the sum of R500. As he was unable to raise the bail amount, the
matter was again
remanded to 19 May 2016, ostensibly, for the
purposes of trial. He was kept in custody until the said date. On 19
May 2016, again,
the police docket was not at court. The matter was
then struck off the roll and Mr Erasmus was accordingly released from
custody.
[8]
As I have said, the matter is before us on appeal from the high court
(Malusi J, Roberson J concurring).
The high court issued the
following order:
‘
81.1
The appeal is dismissed with costs;
81.2
The cross-appeal is upheld with costs;
81.3
The order of the court a quo is set aside and substituted with the
following:
(a)
The Minister of Police is liable to Mr Erasmus in respect of the
unlawful arrest on
4 May 2016 and initial detention until 5 May 2016,
in the sum of R50 000,00;
and
(b)
The Minister of Police and the NDPP are jointly and severally liable
to the Mr Erasmus, the
one
paying the other to
be absolved, in respect of the unlawful detention of Mr Erasmus from
5 May 2016 until 19 May 2016, in the sum
of R250 000,00;
(c)
Interest on the aforesaid sum of R50 000.00 and R250 000.00
at the prescribed
legal rate of 10,25% per annum, from date of
judgment to date of payment;
81.4
The Minister of Police and the NDPP are liable for the costs of
suit.’
[9]
In the main, the high court concluded that the arrest of Mr Erasmus
and his consequent detention for the
first period was unlawful
because the regional court ought to have rejected the evidence of the
police officer who effected the arrest,
Cst Schoeman, because his
evidence was unsatisfactory on when he had advised Mr Erasmus of his
rights and whether Mr Erasmus had
given him an exculpatory statement
at the scene of arrest. It held that the detention for the second
period was unlawful on the basis
that W/O de Koning failed to prepare
and submit a ‘bail affidavit’ which would, inevitably, have
enabled the court to exercise
its discretion by admitting Mr Erasmus
to bail. The high court reasoned that ‘. . . on the facts it is
clear that “but for”
the unlawful arrest by
Cst Schoeman,
the magistrate would not have remanded Erasmus in custody for a
week’.
Regarding the second period of detention, the high
court accepted that ‘. . . there was proper judicial intervention
by a magistrate
in setting bail. However, on the facts this did not
break the chain of unlawful conduct by both the police and the NDPP’.
[10] On
a reading of the record, it is difficult to fathom the reasons for
the high court’s findings that the arrest
and detention for the
first period were unlawful. These findings were not, however,
appealed against. The appellants challenge only
the quantum of
damages in respect of the arrest and initial detention, to which I
shall revert. I now turn to the detention for the
second period from
5 May to 19 May 2016.
[11] It
is necessary, at the outset, to set out the basic principles of our
law that are applicable to the determination
of the liability of the
Minister and the NDPP for the deprivation of the liberty of Mr
Erasmus for this period. These are the following.
Both wrongful and
malicious deprivation of liberty are
iniuria
actionable under
the
actio iniuriarum
. Wrongful deprivation of liberty
(detention) takes place where the defendant himself, or his agent or
employee, detains the plaintiff.
Malicious detention takes place
under or in terms of a valid judicial process, where the defendant
makes improper use of the legal
machinery of the state. The
requirements to succeed in an action for malicious detention are
therefore like those for malicious prosecution
namely: that the
defendant instigated the detention; that the instigation was without
reasonable and probable cause; and that the
defendant acted with
animus iniuriandi
. See Neethling et al
Law of Delict
5
ed (2006) at 304-306. It follows that the NDPP could only be liable
for the second period of detention if these stringent requirements
were proved in respect of the relevant prosecutors.
[12]
When the police wrongfully detain a person, they may also be liable
for the post-hearing detention of that person.
The cases show that
such liability will lie where there is proof on a balance of
probability that, (a) the culpable and unlawful
conduct of the
police, and (b) was the factual and legal cause of the post-hearing
detention. In
Woji
v Minister of Police
[2014]
ZASCA 108
;
2015 (1) SACR 409
(SCA), the culpable conduct of the
investigating officer consisting of giving false evidence during the
bail application caused the
refusal of bail and resultant deprivation
of liberty. Similarly, in
Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyokwana
[2014]
ZASCA 130
;
2015
(1) SACR 597
(SCA), liability of the police for post-hearing
detention was based on the fact that the police culpably failed to
inform the prosecutor
that the witness statements implicating the
respondent had been obtained under duress and were subsequently
recanted and that consequently
there was no credible evidence linking
the respondent to the crime. In
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
[
2019]
ZACC 32
; 2020 (1) SACR (CC) paras 58 and 76,
the
decisive consideration in both the judgments that held in favour of
the appellant was that the investigating officer knew that
the
appellant would appear in a ‘reception court’ where the matter
would be remanded without the consideration of bail. Finally,
in
Mahlangu
and Another v Minister of Police
[2021]
ZACC 10
;
2021
(2) SACR 595
(CC)
,
the investigating officer deliberately supressed the fact that a
confession which constituted the only evidence against the
appellants,
had been extracted by torture and thus caused their
continued detention.
[13]
Section 60(11)
(b)
of the CPA is of relevance as Mr Erasmus was
charged with offences that are referred to in schedule 5 of the CPA.
In the present matter,
it is common cause that theft and the breaking
and entering the property with intent to commit an offence, fall
within schedule 1
of the CPA. It is also common cause that, as Mr
Erasmus had previous convictions of offences that may attract a
sentence of six months
imprisonment without the option of a fine, he
was charged with schedule 5 offences. In terms of
s 60(11)
(b)
of the CPA, the magistrate’s court was obliged to detain Mr Erasmus
until he was
dealt with in terms of the law. It
was then up to Mr Erasmus to satisfy that court that it was in the
interest of justice
for him to be admitted to bail. That court
was only expected to afford him a reasonable opportunity to satisfy
it, on a balance of
probabilities, that the interests of justice
permitted his release on bail.
[14] In
the present matter, no unlawful conduct of the police influenced the
decisions that led to the second period of
detention. The position
was quite the contrary. There was no legal obligation on W/O de
Koning to submit a ‘bail affidavit’.
The police indicated in
writing in the police docket that bail should not be opposed. The
detention of Mr Erasmus from 5 May 2016
was caused by the effect of
s
60(11)
(b)
of the CPA and the independent decision of the
prosecutor to oppose bail. His detention from 12 May 2016 was caused
by the inability
of Mr Erasmus to pay the bail amount of R500 that
the magistrate had set in the exercise of his or her judicial
discretion.
[15] As
I have said, the liability of the NDPP depended on proof that the
prosecutors, who appeared on 5 May 2016 (Ms
Naidoo) and 12 May 2016
(Ms Le Bron), had caused the second period of detention or part
thereof and had acted without reasonable
and probable cause and
animo
iniuriandi
, that is, with the intent to injure Mr Erasmus. Both
prosecutors testified in the regional court. Ms Naidoo said that she
had acquainted
herself with the contents of the police docket and
that she had opposed bail despite the recommendation of the police
because Mr
Erasmus was charged with serious offences (housebreaking
and theft of a safe with its contents) which were also schedule 5
offences.
Ms Le Bron testified that on 12 May 2016, the police docket
was not at court and that therefore she did not oppose bail. Mr
Erasmus
had legal representation and the magistrate granted the
application for bail in the amount of R500. There was no basis for
rejection
of any of this evidence.
[16] It
is not necessary to consider whether Ms Naidoo caused any part of the
second period of detention. That is so because
she had reasonable and
probable cause to oppose bail and clearly did not act with
animus
iniuriandi
. Ms Le Bron’s conduct did not cause the detention
from 12 May 2016 and nothing more needs to be said in respect
thereof. It follows
that the high court erred in holding the Minister
and the NDPP liable for the second period of detention.
[17] It
remains only to consider the award of R50 000 in respect of the
arrest and detention of the first period.
Mr Erasmus was detained for
approximately 20 hours in unpleasant conditions. Nevertheless, there
is a striking disparity in the amount
of damages that I would award
(R25 000) and that of the high court. This justifies this
Court’s interference with the exercise
of the discretion of the
high court in this regard. The appeal against the quantum of damages
in respect of the arrest and detention
for the first period must also
succeed and the award must be replaced with one in the amount of
R25 000.
[18] The
order of the court a quo must be varied in accordance with these
findings. There should be no order as to costs
in the regional court.
Although the appellants employed three counsel on appeal, they only
asked to be awarded costs of two counsel,
which was justified.
[19] For
these reasons the following order is issued:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel
.
2
The order of the court a quo
is
set aside and replaced with the following order:
‘
(a)
The appeal is upheld with costs.
(b)
The cross-appeal is upheld with costs.
(c)
The order of the Port Elizabeth Regional Court is set aside and
replaced with the following order:
“
(i)
The first appellant is liable to the respondent in respect of the
unlawful arrest on 4 May 2016 and initial
detention until 5 May 2016,
in the sum of R25 000;
(ii)
The respondent’s claim in respect of the subsequent detention from
5 May 2016 until 19 May 2016 is
dismissed”.’
M TSOKA
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For appellants:
F
Petersen (with
him V Madokwe and M Ndamase)
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Port Elizabeth
State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
For respondent:
M
du Toit
Instructed
by:
Peter
McKenzie Attorneys, Port Elizabeth
Webbers Attorneys,
Bloemfontein.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Minister of Police v Gqamane (226/2022) [2023] ZASCA 61; 2023 (2) SACR 427 (SCA) (3 May 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 61Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Minister of Police v Nontsele (547/2022) [2024] ZASCA 137; [2025] 1 All SA 44 (SCA) (11 October 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 137Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Minister of Police v Sabisa and Another (725/2023) [2024] ZASCA 105; 2024 (2) SACR 553 (SCA) (28 June 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 105Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Minister of Police v Mzingeli and Others (115/2021) [2022] ZASCA 42 (5 April 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 42Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Syce and Another v Minister of Police (1119/2022) [2024] ZASCA 30; [2024] 2 All SA 662 (SCA); 2024 (2) SACR 1 (SCA) (27 March 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 30Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar