Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 70South Africa
Hlapi v Minister of Police (A3069/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 70 (1 February 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal – arrest and detention – lawfulness of – s 40(1)(h) of the Criminal Procedure Act and s 4(a) and (b) of the Drugs and Drugs Trafficking Act – possession of dagga – required jurisdictional facts for warrantless arrest present – discretion arising as to whether or not to arrest – standard for exercise of such discretion not perfection, or even optimum, judged from vantage of hindsight – as long as choice made falling within range of rationality, standard not breached –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Hlapi v Minister of Police (A3069/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 70 (1 February 2023)
Hlapi v Minister of Police (A3069/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 70 (1 February 2023)
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sino date 1 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL
CASE NO
:
A3069/2022
COURT
A
QUO
CASE
NO
:
914/2021
DATE
:
1
st
FEBRUARY
2023
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
HLAPI
,
NTONI JACOB
Appellant
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
Respondent
Coram:
Adams
J
et
Turner AJ
Heard
: 24
January 2023
Delivered:
01
February 2023 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by
being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 10:00 on 01 February 2023.
Summary:
Appeal
– arrest and detention – lawfulness of – s 40(1)(h)
of the Criminal Procedure Act and s 4(a) and (b) of
the
Drugs
and Drugs Trafficking Act
–
possession of dagga – required jurisdictional facts for
warrantless arrest present – discretion arising
as to
whether or not to arrest – standard for exercise of such
discretion not perfection, or even optimum, judged from vantage
of
hindsight – as long as choice made falling within range of
rationality, standard not breached –
Arrestee
challenging discretion to plead and discharge evidentiary burden
showing discretion improperly exercised by arresting officer
–
factors to be taken into consideration when exercising such
discretion – whether arrestee was the author of his own
misfortune – court is at liberty to consider factors, which
ought to have been considered by police.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
Vereeniging Magistrates Court (Additional Magistrate C Neyt,
sitting as Court of first instance):
(1)
The appellant’s
appeal is dismissed with costs.
(2)
The appellant shall
pay the respondent’s costs of this appeal.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J (Turner AJ concurring):
[1].
On Friday, 4 May 2018, at
about 19:00 in the evening, two police officers from the Sharpeville
Police Station were busy patrolling
in the vicinity of the Phelindaba
area in Sharpeville, when they were informed by a member of the local
community that, in a shack
at a particular address in the area, there
were persons smoking cannabis, colloquially referred to as ‘dagga’.
At that
stage, there was still a blanket prohibition against the
possession and the use of dagga. On their arrival at the identified
shack,
the police officers, Constables Nsibande and Buthelezi, found
three male persons smoking dagga. One of these three persons was the
appellant – 28 years old at the time, who was also found in
possession of 5 grams of dagga. He was thereupon arrested for
‘possession of dagga’ and detained in the ‘holding
cells’ at the Sharpeville Police Station until Monday,
7 May
2018, when he was taken to court for what would have been his first
court appearance. This, however, did not happen.
Instead, in the
afternoon at about 15:30 on 7 May 2018, after having been detained in
the court cells for the whole morning and
for a part of the
afternoon, he was told that he was free to go and released.
[2].
On the 31
st
of August 2018, the
appellant sued the respondent (‘the Minister’) in this
Court for damages for wrongful arrest and
detention. The said action
was subsequently transferred to the Vereeniging Magistrates Court and
on the 6
th
of May 2022, that
Court (Additional Magistrate Neyt) held that the arrest and detention
were lawful and dismissed the appellant’s
action with costs.
The appellant appeals to this court against the whole of the judgment
and the order of the Magistrates Court.
[3].
In issue in this appeal is
whether the arrest and detention of the appellant were lawful.
Crystalized further, Ms Swart, who appeared
for the appellant,
identified the questions to be considered by this appeal court as the
following: (a) whether the arresting
police officers ought to
have exercised their discretion in favour of not arresting the
appellant; and (b) whether the officers
who processed the
appellant’s detention at the police station, after his arrest,
ought to have released him and not detained
him over the weekend.
[4].
On both questions, it was
argued that the relevant officers, instead of arresting the appellant
on what can be regarded as a ‘trivial
charge’, should
simply have issued him with a summons or a notice to appear in court
in order to face the charge relating
to the possession of dagga.
These issues are to be decided against the factual backdrop as set
out in the paragraphs which follow,
the facts in the matter being, in
my view, by and large common cause. During the trial of the matter in
the Magistrates Court,
the two arresting officers and the
investigating officer, Sergeant Phoofolo, gave evidence on behalf of
the Minister, and the plaintiff
himself gave evidence in support of
his case.
[5].
As
already indicated, on the evening of Friday, 4 May 2018, at about
19:00, the appellant and two of his friends were caught by
two police
officers in the act of smoking dagga at an address in Sharpeville.
They were searched by the policemen and the appellant
was found to be
in possession of 5 grams of dagga. He was thereupon arrested, taken
to the Sharpeville Police Station and detained,
after being
processed. At the time, the use and possession of dagga were still
unlawful and the police were clearly within their
rights to arrest
and detain the appellant in terms of s 40(1)(a) and (h) of the
Criminal Procedure Act (‘the CPA’)
[1]
,
which provides in the relevant part as follows: -
‘
40
Arrest by peace officer without warrant
(1)
A peace officer may
without warrant arrest any person –
(a)
who commits or
attempts to commit any offence in his presence;
… … …
(h)
who is reasonably
suspected of committing or of having committed an offence under any
law governing the making, supply, possession
or conveyance of
intoxicating liquor or of dependence-producing drugs or the
possession or disposal of arms or ammunition;
… … …’
.
[6].
Clearly,
on the undisputed evidence, the appellant committed the offence of
being in possession of dagga in the presence of Constable
Nsibande
and Constable Buthelezi. Additionally, the arrest was justified on
the basis of subsection (1)(h) in that the appellant
was reasonably
suspected of having committed an offence under the law governing the
‘possession … of dependence-producing
drugs’, that
being possession of dagga. The relevant law is the Drugs and Drugs
Trafficking Act (‘the Drugs Act’)
[2]
.
Section 4(a) and (b) read as follows: -
‘
4
Use and possession of drugs
No
person shall use or have in his possession-
(a)
any
dependence-producing substance; or
(b)
any dangerous
dependence-producing substance or any undesirable
dependence-producing substance,
unless-
… …’
[7].
In terms of Part III of
Schedule 2 to the said Act, ‘cannabicyclohexanol’ and
‘Cannabis (dagga), the whole plant
or any portion or product
thereof …’ are listed as ‘Undesirable
Dependence-producing Substances’.
[8].
Clearly, on the undisputed
evidence, the appellant was in possession of dagga in the presence of
Constable Nsibande and Constable
Buthelezi.
Prima
facie
therefore,
the arrest was justified on the basis of subsection (1)(h) in that
the appellant was reasonably suspected of having committed
an offence
under the law governing the ‘possession … of
dependence-producing drugs’, that being possession of
dagga.
What is more is that the police officers caught the appellant smoking
dagga, which, at the time, was also an offence
in terms of the
provisions of the Drugs Act. The evidence of the police officers was
to that effect and this was not disputed under
cross-examination.
Moreover, that was also confirmed by the appellant when he gave
evidence, although he subsequently changed his
version in that
regard. I accept, as a fact, that they were indeed smoking dagga when
the police arrived. The evidence of the plaintiff
initially went as
follows: -
‘
Mr
Hlapi [Appellant]: I
did not want to stress my parents as they are elderly and
they are on
pension. Also what happened, I thought that I was in a secret place
when I was arrested.
Court:
Meaning what? I thought I was in a secret place when I was arrested.
What do you mean, sir?
Mr
Hlapi: I thought I am not guilty for what I
was doing at that time, as I was in a secret place, Your
Worship.
Court:
Oh, okay.
Mr
Pooe [Respondent’s Attorney]: As the Court pleases, Your
Worship. Let the interpreter also finish, there is something that
he
missed.
Court:
You missed something, Mr Interpreter.
Interpreter:
I was in a private space.
I admit that I smoked dagga
. I
thought I was on a secret place at the time.’ (Emphasis added).
[9].
Therefore, on first
principles, the arrest of the appellant by the arresting officers was
lawful. The only question remaining is
whether they properly
exercised the discretion to arrest the appellant, as granted to them
by s 40(1) of the CPA. In that regard,
the question to be considered
is whether there were facts to which the arresting officers ought to
have applied their minds in
exercising their discretion which should
have dissuaded them from making the arrest. Additionally, it should
be decided whether
the detention of the appellant, after he was
arrested, was justified.
[10].
As regards the detention of
the appellant, the evidence of Sergeant Nsibande (the arresting
officer) was to the effect that, after
they arrested the appellant,
they transported him to the Sharpeville Police Station, where he was
processed. This entailed entering
his name into the police cells
register, as well as reading to him his rights in terms of the
Constitution. The appellant was also
issued with a written ‘Notice
of Rights in terms of the Constitution’, which he was required
to sign. Thereafter, he
was detained in the Police Holding Cells and
the case was then handed over to the investigating officer, who
interviewed the appellant
later on that evening and obtained from him
a ‘warning statement’.
[11].
As regards the granting of
bail, Sergeant Nsibande testified that he explained to the appellant,
as part of the notification of
his Constitutional rights, that he is
entitled to apply to be released on ‘police bail’ in
terms of s 59 of the CPA.
He went on to confirm that he was however
not involved in those processes after he had handed the appellant
over to the officer
in charge of the holding cells. He also
emphasised the fact that appellant never indicated that he wished to
apply for police bail.
This was also the evidence of Sergeant
Phoofolo, who testified that he explained to the appellant his right
to be released on bail
as part of the ‘Notice of Constitutional
Rights’. The testimony of Sergeant Phoofolo was also to the
effect that the
appellant did not ask to be released on bail, despite
being advised of his right to do so, and therefore he was not offered
or
granted police bail.
[12].
The respondent pleaded that
the arrest was lawful in terms of s 40(1)(h) of the CPA, which should
be read with the provision of
the Drugs Act, because the appellant
was reasonably suspected of having committed an offence under the law
governing the ‘possession
… of dependence-producing
drugs’, that being possession of dagga. As already indicated,
this averment and the case
pleaded by the Minister are confirmed by
the evidence. Ms Swart, Counsel for the appellant, conceded as much –
rightly so,
in my view. It can and should be accepted that, if regard
is had to the facts in the matter as alluded to above and all things
considered, the Minister had discharged the onus on him of justifying
the arrest on the basis of s 40(1)(h) of the CPA. That is
also what
the Magistrates Court found.
[13].
The point is that not only
was the appellant suspected of having committed an offence of
unlawful possession in terms of the Drugs
Act, but he had in fact
committed such an offence – that much is irrefutable and
uncontested. Moreover, he had in fact committed
an offence or
offences in the presence of the arresting officers – as
envisaged in terms of s 40(1)(a) of the CPA. That then
means that, to
use the words of s 40(1)(h) of the CPA, Constable Nsibande
‘reasonably suspected’ the appellant of having
committed
an offence in terms of the Drugs Act. He was therefore empowered by
the Act to take the appellant into custody without
a warrant. The
arrest of the appellant was lawful.
[14].
That
is however not the end of the matter. The question remains whether
the arresting officer and the other members of the South
African
Police Service properly exercised their discretion to arrest. As per
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto & Another
[3]
,
while the overall onus to prove that the arrest was lawful remains to
be on the Minister, once the Minister has established the
jurisdictional facts required for a defence based on section 40(1),
the arrest is
prima
facie
lawful.
An arrestee (appellant in this case) who contends that the police
officers did not exercise the discretion to arrest lawfully
must
plead and prove facts which show that the discretion was exercised
unlawfully. If the appellant does not do so, the lawfulness
of the
arrest can be confirmed.
[15].
In that case the SCA held as
follows: -
‘
[49]
… … The general rule is also that a party who attacks
the exercise of discretion, where the jurisdictional
facts are
present, bears the onus of proof. This is the position whether or not
the right to freedom is compromised. For instance,
someone who wishes
to attack an adverse parole decision bears the onus of showing that
the exercise of discretion was unlawful.
The same would apply when
the refusal of a presidential pardon is in issue.
[50]
Onus in the context of civil law depends on considerations of policy,
practice and fairness; and, if a rule relating
to onus is rationally
based, it is difficult to appreciate why it should be
unconstitutional. Hefer JA also raised the issue of
litigation-fairness and sensibility. It cannot be expected of a
defendant, he said, to deal effectively, in a plea or in evidence,
with unsubstantiated averments of
mala fides
and the like,
without the specific facts on which they are based being stated. So
much the more can it not be expected of a defendant
to deal
effectively with a claim – as in this case – in which no
averment is made, save a general one that the arrest
was
'unreasonable'. Were it otherwise, the defendant would in effect be
compelled to cover the whole field of every conceivable
ground for
review, in the knowledge that, should he fail to do so, a finding,
that the onus has not been discharged, may ensue.
Such a state of
affairs, said Hefer JA, is quite untenable.
[51]
The correctness of his views in this regard is illustrated by the
judgment of the court below (para 35), where
the court listed matters
it thought the arrestor should have given attention to –
without his having had the opportunity
to say whether or not he had
done so. This amounts to litigation by ambush, something recently
decried by this court.
[52]
One can test this with reference to the rules of pleading. A
defendant, who wishes to rely on the s 40(1)(b) defence,
traditionally has to plead the four jurisdictional facts in order to
present a plea that is not excipiable. If the fifth fact is
necessary
for a defence, it has to be pleaded. This requires that the facts on
which the defence is based must be set out. If regard
is had to para
28 of the judgment of the court below, it would at least be necessary
to allege and prove that the arrestor appreciated
that he had a
discretion whether to arrest without a warrant or not; that he
considered and applied that discretion; that he considered
other
means of bringing the suspect before court; that he investigated
explanations offered by the suspect; and that there were
grounds for
infringing upon the constitutional rights because the suspect
presented a danger to society, might have absconded,
could have
harmed himself or others, or was not able and keen to disprove the
allegations. But that might not be enough because
a court of first
instance, or on appeal, may always be able to think of another
missing factor, such as the possible sentence that
would be imposed.’
[16].
I have quoted extensively
from
Sekhoto
for the simple reason
that the case of the appellant on appeal was primarily based on the
contention that the arresting police officers
failed to properly
exercise the discretion to arrest. It bears repeating that Ms Swart
accepted, rightly so, that
in
casu
the
jurisdictional requirements for an arrest in terms of s 40(1)(h) of
the CPA had been met and there is therefore no need to dwell
on those
aspects of the matter any longer.
[17].
Sekhoto
also held that it
remains a general requirement that any discretion must be exercised
in good faith, rationally and not arbitrarily,
which, in turn, meant
that ‘peace-officers are entitled to exercise their discretion
as they see fit, provided that they
stay within the bounds of
rationality. The standard is not breached because an officer
exercises the discretion in a manner other
than that deemed optimally
by the court. A number of choices may be open to him, all of which
may fall within the range of rationality.
The standard is not
perfection or even the optimum, judged from the vantage of hind-sight
– so long as the discretion is
exercised within this range, the
standard is not breached’.
[18].
It is the case of the
appellant that the police did not exercise the discretion in good
faith. In fact, so the appellant contends,
the discretion was not
exercised rationally, but arbitrarily. In support of this contention,
Ms Swart pointed out that the arresting
officer gave evidence to the
effect that at their Police Station, bail applications relating to
cases involving drugs and drug
trafficking offences were only done at
court and not at the Police Station. He also testified that the
reason why he arrested the
appellant was because he had found him in
possession of dagga and, therefore, he (the appellant) needed to
explain to a Court of
law why he had been in such possession.
[19].
Ms Swart accordingly
submitted that, because the arresting officer regarded arrest as the
only option to ensure the appellant’s
attendance at court, and
because no evidence was tendered to suggest that the arresting
officer considered any other options to
secure the appellant's
attendance at court, the discretion was not exercised properly.
Moreover, so Ms Swart submitted, the arresting
officer made no
enquiries as to whether the appellant was a flight risk and whether
his attendance at court could be secured by
other means. Also, so the
argument continued, no evidence was tendered to confirm that the
arresting officer appreciated that he
had a discretion to arrest
without a warrant or not – no evidence was tendered that the
arresting officer considered and
applied that discretion. In support
of these submissions, the appellant relied on the following extract
from para 52 of the
Sekhoto
judgment:
‘
If
regard is had to paragraph 28 of the judgment of the court below, it
would at least be necessary to allege and prove that the
arrestor
appreciated that he had a discretion whether to arrest without a
warrant or not; that he considered and applied that discretion;
that
he considered other means of bringing the suspect before court; that
he investigated explanations offered by the suspect;
and that there
were grounds for infringing upon the constitutional rights because
the suspect presented a danger to society, might
have absconded,
could have harmed himself or others, or was not able and keen to
disprove the allegations. But that might not be
enough because a
court of first instance, or on appeal, may always be able to think of
another missing factor, such as the possible
sentence that would be
imposed.’
[20].
The reliance on this extract
was misplaced because it does not reflect the ratio or even the views
of the SCA. Instead, in
this passage, the SCA was setting out
the thesis that had been adopted in the Court
a
quo
, which
the SCA rejected in upholding the appeal.
[21].
One of the main contentions
on behalf of the appellant is that the arresting officer, Constable
Nsibande, did not apply his mind
to the matter or exercised his
discretion at all. Therefore, so the contention was developed
further, the court
a
quo
should
have interfered with the exercise of that discretion as it cannot be
said that the arresting officer exercised his discretion
in good
faith and rationally.
[22].
Bearing in mind that the
burden rests on the appellant to plead facts and lead evidence to
prove that the discretion was not exercised
properly by the arresting
officer, I am not persuaded by these submissions. The appellant
did not identify any facts that
were known to the arresting officer
which ought to have persuaded him not to arrest and detain the
appellant, let alone facts which
show that the decision to arrest was
made in bad faith, irrationally or arbitrarily.
[23].
The uncontested evidence on
behalf of the Minister was to the effect that at the Police Station
in question, drugs related offences
were considered serious offences
which required suspected offenders to be arrested. It appears to be
sensible to provide guidelines
to police officers on patrol, which
identify the facts that should weigh heavily when they are deciding
whether to arrest or not.
While the primary purpose of an
arrest is to bring the arrestee to justice (
Sekhoto
at para 30), the
interests of victims, the safety of the community and many other
similar considerations, beyond those personal
only to the arrestee,
are relevant when a decision to arrest and detain is made. In
the circumstances, applying a guideline
which considers and places
emphasis on the seriousness of the suspected offence cannot be
criticised.
[24].
Also, when he was taken to
the Meadowlands Police Station, the appellant, according to the
evidence of Sergeant Phoofolo, could
not be ‘profiled’
because he was not able to provide to him, as the investigating
officer, his identity number. This
then meant, so Sergeant Phoofolo
explained, none of the appellant’s particulars relevant to
whether or not he should be released
from custody, could be verified,
which translated into a higher risk that the appellant would have
disappeared into the proverbial
‘crowds’ upon his
release. This reasoning makes eminent sense to me. Accordingly, I
have difficulty in accepting the
proposition that the police acted
irrationally.
[25].
Moreover, to borrow from
Sekhoto
,
this appeal court can think of other reasons or factors why the
arresting police officers should have exercised their discretion
in
favour of arresting the appellant. Those include the fact that there
could be little, if any doubt that the appellant had committed
a
criminal offence in terms of the Drugs Act – he was caught in
the act. Sight should also not be lost of the fact that the
appellant, who shortly before being arrested had been smoking dagga,
which may have affected his faculties, which in itself may
have been
a reason for the police not to release him from custody. Importantly,
on his own version, the appellant, who probably
realised that he was
caught red-handed in the act of committing a criminal offence, was so
embarrassed that he had been arrested,
that he probably would not
have been able to communicate with members of his family to arrange
for bail. Then, there is also the
fact that the appellant was found
smoking dagga at a ‘secret place’ – and not his
place of residence. This means
that the arresting officer would
probably have considered this factor as a risk factor favouring the
arrest of the appellant.
[26].
There is no reason to
disbelieve the police officers’ evidence that they told the
appellant that he could ask to be released
on bail. This was in
addition to them giving the appellant ‘Notice of his
Constitutional Rights’, which included
notice to the effect
that he could be released from custody. The appellant’s
evidence was that he did not want to tell his
family that he had been
arrested. As a release on bail would have required his family
to make a bail payment, this unwillingness
to tell them of the arrest
is a probable reason why he did not ask to be released on bail.
The police officers’ evidence
that they were of the view that
the appellant would not want to opt to be released on bail was not
challenged. How then can it
be said that they acted in bad faith,
irrationally or arbitrarily? For all of these reasons, I am not
convinced that the appellant
had discharged the burden on him to
prove that the police officers did not exercise the discretion to
arrest and detain properly.
[27].
I conclude that the
respondent has discharged the burden of proving that a warrantless
arrest was permissible in terms of s 40(1)(h)
of the CPA, read with
the above provisions of the Drugs Act. Conversely, I am of the view
that the appellant had failed to discharge
the burden of proving that
the arresting officer exercised his discretion to arrest in bad
faith, irrationally or arbitrarily.
[28].
In the circumstances, the
appeal against the order of the Magistrates Court should fail.
Costs
[29].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there be good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[4]
.
[30].
I can think of no reason why
we should deviate from this general rule. The respondent should
therefore be awarded the cost of the
appeal.
Order
In
the result, the following order is made: -
(1)
The appellant’s
appeal is dismissed with costs.
(2)
The appellant shall
pay the respondent’s costs of this appeal.
L
R ADAMS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON: 24th
January 2023
JUDGMENT
DATE: 1st
February 2023 – judgment handed
down
electronically
FOR
THE APPELLANT: Advocate
L Swart
INSTRUCTED
BY: J
J Geldenhuys Attorneys Inc,
Noordheuwel,
Krugersdorp
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: Attorney
Reggie Pooe
INSTRUCTED
BY: The
State Attorney, Johannesburg
[1]
Criminal
Procedure Act, Act 51 of 1977;
[2]
The
Drugs
and Drugs Trafficking Act, Act 140 of 1992;
[3]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto & Another
,
[2010] ZASCA 141
;
2011 (5) SA 367
(SCA) para 7;
[4]
Myers
v Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455;
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