Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 921South Africa
D.V.M.T v Minister of Police (2021/51114) [2024] ZAGPJHC 921 (30 August 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Domestic violence – arrest in terms of a warrant – Domestic Violence Act 116 of 1998 – South African Police National Instruction 7 of 1999 – discretion of arresting official.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## D.V.M.T v Minister of Police (2021/51114) [2024] ZAGPJHC 921 (30 August 2024)
D.V.M.T v Minister of Police (2021/51114) [2024] ZAGPJHC 921 (30 August 2024)
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sino date 30 August 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL – Domestic violence –
Violation
of protection order
–
Arrest
in terms of warrant – Discretion of arresting officer –
Arrest only where real danger that complainant
could be at risk of
harm – Police National Instruction 7 of 1999 –
Specific factors for cognizance of arresting
officer –
Factors not considered by arresting officer in this case –
None of factors in Act considered –
Arrest and detention of
plaintiff was unlawful –
Domestic Violence Act 116 of
1998
,
s 8.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2021/51114
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
(3)
REVISED: YES / NO
DATE:
30 August 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
D[...]
V[...] M[...]
T[...]
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF
POLICE
Defendant
Summary:
Domestic violence – arrest in terms of a warrant –
Domestic Violence Act 116 of 1998
– South African Police
National Instruction 7 of 1999 – discretion of arresting
official.
ORDER
1.
The arrest and detention of the Plaintiff by the employees of the
Respondent
was unlawful and the Respondent is liable for any damages
proved by the Plaintiff.
2.
The Respondent is liable for the costs of the action on the scale as
between
party and party.
JUDGMENT
RAUBENHEIMER, AJ
Introduction
[1]
The Plaintiff, a 62-year-old teacher, claims that her
arrest by the
police officers was unlawful on the basis that it was contrary to the
provisions of the Domestic Violence Act, 1998
(Act 116 of 1998).
[2]
The Plaintiff was arrested on 13 September 2019 for contravening
a
protection order confirmed as a final order on 29 February 2016. The
Warrant of Arrest was issued together with the Interim Protection
Order on 25 November 2015.
[3]
The protection order was obtained by her brother S[...],
a
65-year-old retired former soldier and government employee, with whom
she resided on the same property.
[4]
The protection order prohibited the Plaintiff from:
(i)
Committing domestic violence by submitting the
complainant to any
physical, economic, sexual, emotional, verbal or psychological abuse,
harassment or stalking;
(ii)
enlisting the help pf another person to commit the acts
of domestic
violence mentioned in (i).
[5]
The Plaintiff’s brother laid a complaint at the
Randfontein
Police Station on 10 September 2019 that she had contravened the
protection order.
[6]
On her appearance in court on 16 September 2019 she was
released on
bail. The charges against her was later withdrawn for want of
evidence.
Factual
matrix
Evidence by the Plaintiff
[7]
The Plaintiff testified that she is the registered owner
of the
residential property (premises) where both she and her brother reside
and that she pays for the bond as well as all the
utility accounts.
[8]
She is a teacher at the nearby school for many years.
[9]
She has a daughter and a grandchild who sometimes resides
with her
whilst her daughter is elsewhere engaged.
[10]
On the morning of the arrest she was on the premises with her
grandchild.
[11]
It was early in the morning when she was approached by the arresting
officer,
Constable Ntsoelengoe (Ntsoelengoe) together with two other
police officers.
[12]
Ntsoelengoe informed her that her brother had laid a complaint
against her
that she had sworn at him and threatened to kill him. He
informed her that on account of the complaint by her brother she is
under
arrest for a contravention of the protection order.
[13]
Despite her denial of contravening the protection order, Ntsoelengoe
arrested
her and transported her to the Randfontein Police Station
where she was detained until Monday 16 September 2019 when she was
taken
to court.
[14]
Shortly after her arrival at the police station her attorney arrived
to apply
for bail but was informed that the police are not authorised
to grant her bail and that she would have to apply for bail at court
on the Monday when she will be taken to court. She was consequently
not allowed to consult with her attorney.
[15]
Before being removed from the premises she contacted her daughter who
came
and collected her child.
[16]
The conflict between her and her brother originated when their mother
passed
away whereafter her brother started to demand that the house
should be transferred to him. He insisted that he is entitled to the
house in accordance with the will of his mother.
[17]
The Plaintiff indicated to him that the Master of the High Court
confirmed
that no will in respect of the mother had been filed with
the Master.
[18]
Her brother is addicted to drugs, does not work and does not
contribute financially
to the expenditure of the household.
[19]
At no stage during the arrest or detention was she afforded the
opportunity
to make a statement. Her warning statement was only taken
from her on the morning that she was taken to court when she was
informed
that she could either make a statement or tell her story in
court. She elected to tell her story in court.
[20]
She denied that she signed any document evidencing that she was
informed of
her rights in terms of the Constitution and denied that
the document contained in the docket evidencing that she was so
informed
was signed by her on the 13th but persists that she was
informed of her rights on the 16th.
[21]
She never threatened to kill her brother or swore at him. Her
testimony is
that he had no reason to be afraid of her as he is a man
of large stature and a former soldier in the liberation struggle and
a
very brave man.
[22]
After the alleged incident her brother returned to the shared
residence and
stayed there until her arrest.
The evidence of the
arresting officer
[23]
The arresting officer is employed in the crime office at the
Randfontein Police
Station. He joined the South African Police
Service in 2006 and underwent basic training in the same year. At the
time of the incident
he was a constable.
[24]
He received the docket on Friday morning 13 September 2019. The
docket contained
the Interim Protection Order, the Final Protection
Order, the Warrant of Arrest and the statement of the complainant.
[25]
He proceeded to the residence of the Plaintiff and arrived there at
08:45.
[26]
He found the Plaintiff to the back of the premises holding a baby and
informed
her of the charges against her and that he is arresting her
for a contravention of the protection order.
[27]
He arrested her and transported her to the police station in his
vehicle. At
the police station he decided to detain her after which
he processed her and handed her over to the official in charge of the
cells
[28]
He only received basic training on domestic violence and has since he
completed
basic training never received any further training on
domestic violence.
[29]
One of his functions is the executing of domestic violence arrest
warrants
of which he executes between 5 and 10 per month.
[30]
He does not know the contents of the
Domestic Violence Act and
specifically
Section 8
where the discretion dealing with arrest is
contained.
[31]
Ntsoelengoe does not know about the existence of National Instruction
7 of
1999 dealing with the conduct of police officers in dealing with
complaints of domestic violence.
[32]
He performed no further investigations on the matter before effecting
the arrest
and did not give consideration to any factors mentioned in
the National Instruction or the provisions of the
Domestic Violence
Act.
[33
]
He did not consult with the complainant and did not verify the
contents of his
statement or enquired what had transpired since the
complainant had deposed to the statement.
[34]
It was him who made the decision to arrest her and detain her until
Monday
morning and not to take it to court on the Friday so that she
could apply for bail.
[35]
Ntsoelengoe had no interaction with a prosecutor at any stage between
Friday
and Monday to provide such prosecutor with information on
which to decide whether to release the Plaintiff on bail, neither did
he obtain any information from the Plaintiff which could be provided
to the prosecutor to decide whether to release the Plaintiff
on bail.
[36]
He denied that he had at any stage been requested by her attorney
that she
be released on bail.
[37]
According to him, domestic violence is a serious matter and has to be
dealt
with accordingly.
[38]
The factors that he took into consideration in his decision to arrest
and detain
the Plaintiff was the threats of violence and that the
parties resided on the same premises.
[39]
According to him there were no alternative options than to arrest the
Plaintiff
and detain her until she could be brought to court on
Monday 16 September 2019.
[40]
He did not give consideration to any other means of securing the
Plaintiff’s
presence in court, neither did he conduct any
investigation or obtained any information regarding her attendance in
court without
arresting her.
[41]
He has never considered any other options to arrest in a domestic
violence
matter where an arrest warrant was issued for the arrest of
the perpetrator.
[42]
The imminent harm that the complainant stood to suffer stemmed solely
from
the threat uttered by the Plaintiff on 10 September 2019.
The evidence of warrant
officer Mbekwe (Mbekwe)
[43]
Mbekwe testified that he works in the community centre of the
Randfontein Police
Station, and he charged the Plaintiff on Sunday
night 15 September 2019. He was also responsible for taking the
warning statement
of the Plaintiff on the morning of the 16th of
September 2019 before she went to court.
[44]
Mbekwe is not aware of the content of National Instruction 7 of 1999
neither
is he aware of the content of the
Domestic Violence Act.
[45
]
According to him it is normal practice at the Randfontein Police
Station that
a senior member would issue an instruction to a junior
officer to effect an arrest on the strength of a Warrant of Arrest
authorised
in terms of the
Domestic Violence Act.
[46
]
He could not identify the specific instruction to Ntsoelengoe but
persisted that,
that is the way things are done at Randfontein Police
Station.
The
statutory position
[47]
Arrest with a warrant in terms of the
Domestic Violence Act are
dealt
with in
sect 8(4)
of which the relevant portions read as follows:
“
(b) If it
appears to the member concerned that, subject to subsection (5),
there are
reasonable
grounds to suspect that the complainant may suffer imminent harm as a
result of the alleged breach of the protection
order by the
respondent, the member must forthwith arrest the respondent for
allegedly committing the offence referred to in
Section 17(a).
(Emphasis added.)
(c)
If
the member concerned is of the opinion that there are
insufficient
grounds for arresting the respondent in terms of paragraph (b), he or
she must forthwith hand a written notice to the
respondent which
—
(i)
specifies the name, the residential address and the occupation or
status of the respondent;
(ii) calls upon
the respondent to appear before a court, and on the date and at the
time, specified in the notice, on a charge
of committing the offence
referred to in
Section 17(a)
; and
(iii) contains a
certificate signed by the member concerned to the effect that he or
she handed the original notice to the
respondent and that he or she
explained the import thereof to the respondent.
(Emphasis
added).”
[48]
The mere breach of a protection order is insufficient to justify an
arrest.
An additional requirement namely the possibility that the
complainant could suffer imminent harm should the arrest not be
effected
has to be present.
[49]
The existence of imminent harm to the complainant has to be based on
reasonable
grounds. The arresting officer consequently must have had
evidence to the effect that not effecting the arrest would place the
complainant in imminent harm.
[50]
National instructions for the South African Police are issued by the
National
Commissioner in terms of Section 25(1) of the South African
Police Service Act, Act 68 of 1995 and are according to Section 25(2)
applicable to all members of the South African Police Service.
[51]
The National Commissioner issued National Instruction 7/1999 –
Domestic
Violence by Consolidation Notice 5/2006. The Instruction is
a comprehensive instrument dealing with a broad range of aspects in
respect of Domestic violence.
[52]
The purpose of the Instruction is stated in paragraph 1 as:
“
intended
to provide clear direction to a member on how to respond to a
complaint of domestic violence in order to comply with the
obligations imposed upon him or her in terms of the
Domestic Violence
Act.”
[53
]
The Instruction prescribes the responsibilities of a member attending
a scene
of domestic violence in paragraph 5, the securing of the
scene in paragraph 6 and the arrest of a person with a warrant of a
person
who contravenes a protection order in paragraph 11(2).
[54]
Paragraph 5(1) requires a member of the South African Police Service
(SAPS)
attending a domestic violence scene to:
“
first
of all determine whether the complainant is in any danger and take
all reasonable steps to secure the scene as set out in
paragraph 6
(below) and to protect the complainant from any danger.”
[55]
Paragraph 6 deals with the securing of a domestic violence scene and
prescribes
that the police officer attending the scene has to
establish whether the complainant is in any danger and must interview
the complainant
to ascertain whether the complainant is in imminent
danger
.
[56]
Subparagraph 11(2) provides as follows:
“
(a)
Where
a respondent has contravened any prohibition, condition, obligation
or order contained in a protection order, a complainant
may hand the
Warrant of Arrest together with an affidavit, wherein it is stated
that the respondent contravened such protection
order, to any member.
(b)
If,
upon receipt of the Warrant of Arrest together with the affidavit,
referred to in subparagraph (a) (above), it appears to the
member
that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that the complainant may
suffer imminent harm as a result of the alleged breach
of the
protection order, the member must arrest the respondent for
contravening the protection order on the strength of the warrant.
(c)
In
considering whether or not the complainant may suffer imminent
harm,
a member must take the following into account:
(i)
the risk
to the safety, health or well-being of the complainant;
(ii)
the
seriousness of the conduct comprising the alleged breach of the
protection order; and
(iii)
the length of
time since the alleged breach has occurred:
(d)
If
the member is of the opinion that there are insufficient grounds
to
arrest the respondent, he or she must immediately hand a Notice to
the respondent as provided for in Form 11 to the Regulations.
The
member must insert the first court day thereafter as date of
appearance on the form and complete the certificate, provided
for in
the Notice.
The
member must put the duplicate original of this Notice in the docket
which is opened for the contravention. This docket must
be taken to
court on the first court day thereafter.
(e)
…” (Emphasis added.)
[57]
The Warrant of Arrest contains a proviso mirroring the provisions of
the Act
as well as the Instruction reading as follows:
“
Therefore,
you are hereby authorised and ordered to forthwith arrest the
respondent in terms of the
Domestic Violence Act, 1998
, if there are
reasonable grounds to suspect that the claimant may suffer imminent
harm as a result of the alleged breach of the
protection order by the
Respondent.”
Application
[58]
It was stated in
MR
v Minister of Safety and Security
[1]
that as
police
officers have a discretion whether to arrest or not it requires an
arresting officer to weigh and consider the facts and
circumstances
applicable to each specific case and to decide whether an arrest is
necessary.
[59]
The
Domestic Violence Act creates
an arrest regime quite different
from that found in the Criminal Procedure Act, Act 51 of 1977 or for
that matter any other Act
dealing with arrest in terms of a Warrant
of Arrest.
[60]
In terms of the
Domestic
Violence Act a
Warrant of Arrest is issued together with the interim
order
[2]
,
which is issued in the absence of the perpetrator.
[3]
On issuing the Interim
Protection Order the court determines a return date on which the
perpetrator has to show cause why the order
should not become a final
order.
[4]
[61]
The interim nature of the
order has no influence on the validity of the Warrant of Arrest as a
contravention of the Interim Order
could activate the Warrant of
Arrest.
[5]
[62]
Due to the variety of
conduct that could constitute domestic violence the Act provides for
arrest with a warrant only in those instances
where there is a real
danger that the complainant could be at risk of harm.
[6]
[63]
The
Domestic Violence Act
recognises
that the remedies available to victims of domestic
violence as at the time of its enactment was ineffective to protect
the victims.
[7]
[64]
The Act provides for the
protection not only of the victims of domestic violence through the
issuing of an Interim Protection Order
and a Warrant of Arrest but
also the protection of the procedural rights of the perpetrator by
authorising an arrest only in very
specific circumstances.
[8]
[65]
The Act does not create a
blanket right to arrest in terms of a Warrant of Arrest. For a
Warrant of Arrest to be executed an additional
element has to be
present namely reasonable grounds for the existence of imminent harm
to the complainant.
[9]
[66]
The determination of the
existence of the additional element has been assigned to the
arresting officer in terms of the provisions
of the Act.
[10]
[67]
Recognising the
additional responsibility on an arresting officer the South African
Police Service issued the guidelines in the
National Instruction
containing specific factors to be taken cognizance of by the
arresting officer in exercising his or her discretion
whether to
arrest or not. These instructions are peremptory in nature and
contain sanctions for contravention.
[11]
[68]
For the threshold in
terms of Section 8(4) to be met the suspicion of the arresting
officer must firstly be objectively sustainable
[12]
.
It must furthermore entail that not only has a protection order been
contravened but, as a consequence of the contravention, the
complainant is subject to imminent harm.
[13]
[69]
Imminent harm has been defined as:
“…
the danger of harm of
a certain degree of immediacy that activates the protection …
That is to say a harm which is impending
threateningly, ready to
overtake or coming on shortly.”
[14]
[70]
The arresting officer had
a responsibility to conduct an investigation before executing the
Warrant of Arrest. He is only authorised
to effect the arrest after
having obtained information indicating that there was a contravention
of the protection order, and that
the contravention entailed that the
complainant was subject to imminent harm.
[15]
[71]
The arresting officer testified that he was not aware of the
provisions of
the
Domestic Violence Act dealing
with arrest with a
warrant neither did he conduct any investigations to determine the
existence of imminent harm. He was not aware
of what transpired
between the complainant and the suspect in the time lapsed between
the complaint and the time of the arrest,
or that the complainant had
returned to the residence after the alleged incident and remained
there from the 10
th
to the 13
th
without any
incidents. The arresting officer did not consider that the Final
Protection Order was issued already in February 2016
and the
complaint was laid on 10 September 2019 and that no incidents had
occurred between those dates. None of the factors to
be taken into
consideration in terms of the National Instruction was consequently
considered by the arresting officer, he was not
even aware thereof.
Neither was any of the factors mentioned in the
Domestic Violence Act
considered
by him. He was likewise not aware of them.
Conclusion
[72]
The arrest and detention of the Plaintiff was consequently unlawful,
and the
Defendant is held liable for the unlawful arrest and
detention of the Plaintiff.
RAUBENHEIMER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgement is deemed to be
30 August 2024.
Appearances
For the Plaintiff:
L Schreuder
instructed by Gildenhuys Malatjie Inc
For the Defendant:
O Mokoka instructed
by State Attorney
Date of hearing:
21 May 2024
Date of
Judgment:
30
August 2024
[1]
2016 (2) SACR 540 (CC).
[2]
Section 8(1)(a)
of the
Domestic Violence Act
(“DVA”).
[3]
Section 5(2)(b)
of the DVA.
[4]
Section 5(3)
& (5) of the DVA.
[5]
Section 8(2)
of the DVA.
[6]
Section 8(4)(b)
of the DVA.
[7]
Preamble to the DVA.
[8]
Seria v
Minister of Safety and Security and others
2005
(5) SA 130 (C).
[9]
Section 8(4)(b)
of the DVA.
[10]
Section 8(4)(a)
of the DVA.
[11]
Section 18(3)
and
18
(4)(a) of the DVA,
section 25(2)
South African
Police Service Act, 68 of 1995
and Par 13 of SAPS National
Instruction 7/1999 Domestic Violence.
[12]
Greenberg
v Gouws and Another
2011
(2) SACR 389 (GSJ).
[13]
Greenberg
v Gouws
supra
Minister of Safety and Security v M
(CA
350/2012) ZAECGHC 58 (10 July 2014).
[14]
Seria v
Minister of Safety and Security and others
supra
.
[15]
Khanyile
v Minister of Safety and Security
2012
(2) SACR 238
(KZD).
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