Case Law[2022] ZASCA 103South Africa
Diljan v Minister of Police (746/2021) [2022] ZASCA 103 (24 June 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
24 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law and procedure – arrest without warrant – s 40(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 – failure to exercise discretion whether to arrest upon existence of jurisdictional facts for arrest without warrant – resultant arrest and detention unlawful – determination of appropriate quantum of damages.
Judgment
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## Diljan v Minister of Police (746/2021) [2022] ZASCA 103 (24 June 2022)
Diljan v Minister of Police (746/2021) [2022] ZASCA 103 (24 June 2022)
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sino date 24 June 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 746
/2021
In
the matter between:
AVRIL
EDITH
DILJAN
APPELLANT
and
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Diljan
v
Minister
of Police
(Case no 746
/2021
)
[2022] ZASCA 103
(24 June 2022)
Coram:
Petse DP and Gorven and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and
Makaula
and Phatshoane AJJA
Heard:
16 May
2022
Delivered:
24 June 2022
Summary:
Criminal law and procedure – arrest without warrant –
s
40(1)
(b)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
–
failure to exercise discretion whether to arrest upon existence of
jurisdictional facts for arrest without warrant –
resultant
arrest and detention unlawful – determination of appropriate
quantum of damages.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division
of the
High Court,
Pretoria
(
Collis
J and Phahlane AJ
, sitting as court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and substituted with the
following
order:
‘
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the trial court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
1
The arrest and detention of the plaintiff are declared unlawful.
2
The plaintiff is awarded a sum of R120 000 for general damages
together with interest
thereon at the legal rate calculated from 12
February 2020 to the date of final payment.
3
The defendant shall pay the costs of suit.’
###
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Makaula
AJA
(Petse DP and Gorven and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Phatshoane
AJA
concurring
)
:
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against a decision of the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria
(the high court). The appellant, Ms Avril Edith
Diljan, instituted an action in the Magistrate’s Court for the
District of
Tshwane, (the magistrate’s court), pertaining to a
claim of unlawful arrest and detention, which was dismissed with
costs.
She appealed to the high court, which dismissed the claim on
30 March 2021. The present appeal is with the special leave of this
Court granted on 17 June 2021. The issue for determination is whether
the peace officers who effected the arrest of the appellant,
properly
exercised the discretion vested in them.
Background
facts
[2]
The facts giving rise to the claim are fairly straightforward. On 18
September 2015,
Constables Ntombela and Tsile (peace officers) were
on patrol duty when they received a telephone call from the Community
Service
Centre (CSC) about a complaint lodged telephonically by a Ms
Goliath in Eldorado Park. They proceeded to the address provided to
them by the CSC. Upon their arrival at the scene, Ms Goliath informed
them that the appellant had damaged her carport by throwing
stones
and rubbish through the appellant’s first floor window onto the
top of her (Ms Goliath’s) carport. The officers
inspected the
carport and observed that it was damaged. The officers were unanimous
in their view that an offence of malicious damage to property
had been committed by the appellant. As a result, they
immediately arrested and subsequently detained her in the holding
cells at
the Eldorado Police station.
[3]
Both officers testified that they detained the appellant because they
were satisfied
that she had committed an offence listed in Schedule
1
[1]
of the Criminal Procedure
Act 51 of 1977 (the CPA).
They
further testified that they had no power to release her either on
warning or on bail. They asserted that only members of the
detective
branch and, in particular, the assigned investigating officer were
vested with such powers.
[4]
For her part, the appellant testified that she was arrested on
Friday, 18 September
2015, between 15h30 and 16h00. The officers
asked her to accompany them to the police station under the
pretext that they were to discuss the complaint lodged against her by
Ms Goliath. Upon arrival at the CSC, she was arrested and detained.
She was never advised of the reason for her arrest and detention.
She
was released from custody on Monday, 21 September 2015, without
appearing in court. She testified that the conditions under
which she
was detained were appalling.
[5]
At the conclusion of the trial, the magistrate found that:
‘
the
arresting officer exercised reasonable suspicion as required in
section 40 (1)
(b)
of the CPA on reasonable grounds. There is
no basis for concluding that the discretion to arrest was wrongly
exercised. Consequently,
I find that the arrest and detention of the
plaintiff was lawful.’
[6]
On appeal to it, the high court confirmed the decision of the
magistrate and held
that ‘having given a proper and due
consideration to all circumstances, this Court cannot find that the
court
a quo
, misdirected itself, nor can it be said that the
arrest and detention of the appellant was unlawful.’
[7]
Section 40(1)
(b)
of
the CPA allows a peace officer to arrest a suspect without a warrant
when the said peace officer
reasonably
suspects that the suspect has committed an offence listed in Schedule
1, other than the offence of escaping from lawful
custody.
[2]
The jurisdictional facts required to sustain a s 40(1)
(b)
defence
are: (a) the arrestor must be a peace officer; (b) he or she must
entertain a suspicion; (c) the suspicion must be that
the suspect
committed an offence listed
in
Schedule 1; and (d) the suspicion must be based on reasonable
grounds.
[3]
If these factors are
established, the arrestor becomes vested with a discretion as to how
best to secure the attendance of the
suspect to face the charge. The
peace officer may warn the suspect to appear in court, may summon the
suspect or may arrest the
suspect.
[8]
In the present matter, counsel who appeared for the appellant,
correctly conceded
that, in so far as the appellant’s arrest is
concerned, the jurisdictional requirements in s 40(1)
(b)
were
present. He, however, contended that the issue remains whether the
arresting officers properly, if at all, exercised the discretion
vested in them as required by law.
[9]
Once the jurisdictional facts are established, the peace officer has
the discretion
of whether or not to arrest the suspect. However, if
the suspect is arrested, a peace officer is vested with a further
discretion
whether to detain the arrestee or warn him or her to attend court.
The arrest and detention of the suspect is but one
of the means of
securing the suspect’s appearance in court.
[4]
[10]
In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Another
,
[5]
the principle was explained by Harms DP
in
the following terms:
‘
Once
the jurisdictional facts for an arrest, whether in terms of any
paragraph of s 40(1) or in terms of s 43 are present, a discretion
arises . . . In other words, once the required jurisdictional facts
are present the discretion whether or not to arrest arises.
The
officer, it should be emphasised, is not obliged to effect an
arrest.’
[11]
In applying the principle restated in
Sekhoto,
the magistrate
committed a material misdirection in finding that:
‘
.
. . it is trite that a person arrested has to be brought to court as
soon as reasonably possible and at least within 48 hours,
depending
on the court hours. Once that is done the authority to detain, that
is in the power to arrest is exhausted.’
The
issue of whether the arrestee has to appear in court within 48 hours
of arrest has no bearing on the exercise of a discretion
as to
whether or not to arrest and detain the suspect. Furthermore, the
question of appearing within 48 hours was not an issue
before the
magistrate, and neither litigant had pleaded it. In fact, as
previously indicated, the appellant never even appeared
in court.
[12]
Likewise,
the high court erred when it
reasoned as follows:
‘
I
am alive to the fact that constable Ntombela indicated during his
evidence that he could not warn the appellant or decide on the
issue
of whether to grant bail or not, as a means of securing her
attendance in court. Having said that once the decision has been
made
to effect an arrest and not consider issuing a warning, it cannot be
said that there was no exercise of a discretion. Having
a discretion
simply means having the freedom to decide what should be done in a
particular situation.’
This
statement manifests a misconception on the part of the high court as
to the nature of the appellant’s case. What emerges
from the
record is that both officers who effected the arrest did not know
that they had a discretion. They laboured under the
mistaken belief
that their obligation was to arrest the appellant once it was
reasonably suspected that she had committed a Schedule
1 offence.
Thus, they could not have exercised a discretion they were unaware
of. Constable Ntombela testified that he could not
have warned the
appellant because he ‘did not have powers’ to do so. In
the same vein, Constable Tsile stated the following:
‘[u]nfortunately
we do not have those powers because it is a different department’.
Accordingly, that they did not
exercise a discretion that they
unquestionably enjoyed is beyond dispute. It must therefore follow
axiomatically that both the
arrest and subsequent detention of the
appellant were unlawful. Indeed, counsel for the respondent was
ultimately constrained to
concede as much.
Quantum
[13]
In consequence of the decision reached by the trial court and the
high court on the issue of
liability, the issue of quantum of damages
was not dealt with. Nevertheless, the facts relevant to the
assessment of quantum were
sufficiently ventilated in the trial
court. There was some debate before us as to whether the issue of
quantum should be remitted
to the trial court for determination.
Although this option appeared attractive at first blush, it soon
became clear that to remit
the matter to the trial court for this
purpose would result in a wastage of scarce judicial resources. This
was so because, at
the end of the day, it seemed that this Court was
in as good a position as the trial court to consider the issue of
quantum.
[14]
Though denied in the plea, the damages sustained by the appellant
have not been seriously contested
before us. What remains to be
decided therefore is the quantum thereof. On this score, Counsel for
the appellant, inter alia, urged
this Court to have regard to past
awards in assessing the appropriate amount to be awarded. Counsel
referred us to several previous
judgments, including the judgment of
Lopes J in
Khedama
v The Minister of Police
.
[6]
The plaintiff in that matter had issued summons for unlawful arrest
and detention against the defendant, claiming an amount of
R1
million. She was arrested and detained for a period of 9 days from 3
December 2011 and released on 12 December 2011.
[15]
In
Khedama
,
the court, in large measure, had regard to the appalling conditions
in the country’s detention facilities, such as lack
of water,
blocked toilets, dirty and smelling blankets, sleeping on the cement
floor, bad quality of food, and lack of sleep. Having
considered
various heads of damages, Lopes J awarded damages for wrongful arrest
and detention of R100 000, deprivation of liberty
and loss of
amenities of life of R960 000 (R80 000.00 per day for 12 days);
[7]
defamation of character including embarrassment and humiliation of
R500 000 and general damages in an amount of R200 000. In total,
he
assessed the total damages suffered at R1, 760 000. However, because
the amount claimed was limited to R1 000 000 he was awarded
the
latter
amount.
[16]
The primary purpose of compensation for damages of the kind claimed
in this case was succinctly
stated by Bosielo AJA in
Minister
of Safety and Security
v
Tyulu
[8]
as follows:
‘
In
the assessment of damages for unlawful arrest and detention, it is
important to bear in mind that the primary purpose is not
to enrich
the aggrieved party but to offer him or her some much–needed
solatium for his or her injured feelings. It is therefore
crucial
that serious attempts be made to ensure that the damages awarded are
commensurate with the injury inflicted. I readily
concede that it is
impossible to determine an award of damages . . . with . . .
mathematical accuracy.’
[17]
Thus, a balance should be struck between the award and the injury
inflicted. Much as the aggrieved
party needs to get the required
solatium, the defendant (the Minister in this instance) should not be
treated as a ‘cash-cow’
with infinite resources. The
compensation must be fair to both parties, and a fine balance must be
carefully struck, cognisant
of the fact that the purpose is not to
enrich the aggrieved party.
[18]
The acceptable method of assessing damages includes the evaluation of
the plaintiff’s personal
circumstances; the manner of the
arrest; the duration of the detention; the degree of humiliation
which encompasses the aggrieved
party’s reputation and standing
in the community; deprivation of liberty; and other relevant factors
peculiar to the case
under consideration.
[19]
Whilst, as a general rule, regard may be had to previous awards,
sight should, however, not be
lost of the fact that previous awards
only serve as a guide and nothing more. As Potgieter JA cautioned in
Protea
Assurance Co. Ltd
v
Lamb:
[9]
‘
It
should be emphasised, however, that this process of comparison does
not take the form of a meticulous examination of awards made
in other
cases in order to fix the amount of compensation; nor should the
process be allowed so to dominate the enquiry as to become
a fetter
upon the Court’s general discretion in such matters. Comparable
cases, when available, should rather be used to
afford some guidance,
in a general way, towards assisting the Court in arriving at an award
which is not substantially out of general
accord with previous awards
in broadly similar cases, regard being had to all the factors which
are considered to be relevant in
the assessment of general damages.
At the same time it may be permissible, in an appropriate case, to
test any assessment arrived
at upon this basis by reference to the
general pattern of previous awards in cases where the injuries and
their
sequelae
may have been either more serious or less than those in the case
under consideration.’
[20]
A
word has to be said about the
progressively exorbitant
amounts that
are claimed by litigants lately in comparable cases and sometimes
awarded lavishly by our courts. Legal practitioners
should exercise
caution not to lend credence to the incredible practice of claiming
unsubstantiated and
excessive
amounts in the particulars of claim. Amounts in monetary claims in
the particulars of claim should not be ‘thumb-sucked’
without due regard to the facts and circumstances of a particular
case. Practitioners ought to know the reasonable measure of previous
awards, which serve as a
barometer in
quantifying their clients’ claims even at the stage of the
issue of summons. They are aware, or ought to be,
of what can
reasonably be claimed based on the principles enunciated above.
[21]
The facts relating to the damages sustained by the plaintiff in
Khedama
are largely similar to those in this matter. However,
the excessive amount awarded in
Khedama
cannot serve as a
guide in a matter like the present.
Even
the length of the period during which Ms Khedama was incarcerated,
was overstated and, as a result, she was awarded an amount
which was,
in my view, significantly more than what she deserved.
[22]
I now revert to the facts of the present case. For purposes of
determining quantum, the relevant
factors in this matter are the
appalling circumstances under which the appellant was detained being;
the condition of the police
cell in which she was detained which was
filthy with no hot water; the blankets were dirty and smelling; the
toilet was blocked;
she was not provided with toilet paper, and she
was not allowed visitors. She could not eat the bread and peanut
butter that was
the only food provided to her. She was deprived of
visitation rights by her family, and that resulted
in her not receiving medication for her heart condition.
Furthermore, the humiliation she endured at the time of her arrest,
which
was exacerbated by the presence of the occupants of the
neighbouring apartments (including her children and grandchildren);
she
was also deprived of her liberty for 3 days; her standing in the
community as a community caregiver was impaired. As previously
indicated, her compensation should be commensurate with the damages
she suffered and also be a reasonable amount. Taking into account
all
relevant factors, I am satisfied that a fair and reasonable amount in
the circumstances is R120 000.
Costs
[23]
It remains to say something about the fact that the appellant was
represented by two counsel,
the lead counsel being senior counsel.
This matter is manifestly not complicated. The issues for
determination were crisp,
and therefore
the employment of two counsel was, in my view, not warranted. Counsel
fairly conceded this much on behalf of the appellant.
Therefore,
costs of only one counsel will be allowed.
[24]
In the result, I make the following order:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and substituted with the
following
order:
‘
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the trial court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
1
The arrest and detention of the plaintiff are declared unlawful.
2
The plaintiff is awarded a sum of R120 000 for general damages
together with interest
thereon at the legal rate calculated from 12
February 2020 to the date of final payment.
3
The defendant shall pay the costs of suit.’
M
MAKAULA
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
the appellant:
J Hollard-Muter SC (with L Swart)
Instructed
by:
J J Geldenhuys Attorney
c/o Du Plessis & Eksteen Attorney,
Pretoria
Symington
De Kok, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents: T Maluleke (with L Tyatya)
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney,
Pretoria
The
State Attorney, Bloemfontein
[1]
Schedule
1 lists various offences, one of which is malicious injury to
property.
[2]
Section
40(1)
(b)
provides that:
‘
(1)
A peace officer may without warrant arrest any person –
(a)
…
(
b
)
whom he reasonably suspects of having committed an offence referred
to in Schedule 1, other than the offence of escaping from
lawful
custody’. See also
Democratic Alliance v Speaker of the
National Assembly and Others
[2016] ZACC 8
;
2016 (5) BCLR 577
(CC);
2016 (3) SA 487
(CC) para 77.
[3]
Duncan
v
Minister
of Law and Order
1986 (2) SA 805
(A) at 818 G-H.
[4]
Minister
of Safety and Security
v
Sekhoto
and Another
2011 (1) SACR 315
(SCA);
[2011] 2 All SA 157
(SCA);
2011 (5) SA 367
(SCA))
[2010] ZASCA 141
; para 44 (
Sekhoto
).
[5]
Ibid
para 28.
[6]
Khedama
v The Minister of Police
2022 JDR 0128 (KZD) (
Unreported
case) (
Khedama
).
[7]
The period is actually 9 days as reflected in paragraph 14 hereof.
[8]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Tyulu
[2009]
ZASCA 55
;
2009 (5) SA 85
;
2009 (2) SACR 282
(SCA);
[2009] 4 All SA
38
(SCA) para 26.
[9]
See
Protea
Assurance Co. Ltd v Lamb
1971
(1) SA 530
(A) at 535H-536A-B. See also
Minister
of Safety and Security v Seymour
[2006] ZASCA 71
; [2006] SCA 67 (RSA);
[2007] 1 All SA 558
(SCA) at
para 17. See also the case of
Rudolph
and Others v Minister of Safety and Security and Others
[2009] ZASCA 39
;
2009 (5) SA 94
(SCA);
2009 (2) SACR 271
(SCA);
[2009] 3 All SA 323
(SCA) para 26 where this Court held that ‘[t]he
facts of a particular case need to be looked at as a whole and few
cases
are directly comparable’.
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