Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 75South Africa
Simelane v Minister of Police (A3033/22) [2023] ZAGPJHC 75 (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 methamphetamine
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Simelane v Minister of Police (A3033/22) [2023] ZAGPJHC 75 (1 February 2023)
Simelane v Minister of Police (A3033/22) [2023] ZAGPJHC 75 (1 February 2023)
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sino date 1 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: A3033/22
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
NO
1
February 2023
In
the application between:
SIMELANE,
MNCEDISI LUVUYO
Appellant
and
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Respondent
Coram:
Adams
J
et
Turner AJ
Heard
: 26
January 2023
Delivered:
1
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 1 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 methamphetamine
Discretion
arising as to whether or not to arrest once required jurisdictional
facts for arrest without a warrant present –
appellant required
to plead and prove facts to show discretion exercised unlawfully –
appellant failing to show unlawful
exercise of discretion
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
Protea Magistrates Court, Soweto (Magistrate Evans), 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
TURNER
AJ (ADAMS J concurring)
[1]
The Appellant
appeals against the decision of Magistrate Evans sitting at Protea
Court, Soweto in which the Learned Magistrate dismissed
the
Appellant’s claim for damages against the defendant (“the
Minister”). The Appellant (as plaintiff) alleged
that he had
suffered an
injuria
as a consequence of
unlawful arrest and detention by police officers acting in the course
and scope of their employment. His pleaded
claim is for R100,000 but
in the heads of argument before the Learned Magistrate, the sum
claimed was R30,000 plus interest and
costs.
[2]
There were
many factual disputes at the trial but the facts which may be
accepted as undisputed are the following: the Appellant
was arrested
by Constable AS Zwane late on the evening of 1 April 2019 (the
precise time is disputed); and the Appellant was detained
overnight
at Meadowlands Police Station and released at 11h00 the following day
– 2 April 2019, approximately 12 hours after
his arrest.
[3]
The
Appellant’s claim is made under the
actio
iniuriarum
and,
as it is a claim in delict, liability for damages arises if the
plaintiff can show wrongful, culpable conduct by a person that
factually caused harm to the plaintiff that is not too remote.
[1]
To impose liability on the Minister, the impugned conduct must have
been performed in the course and scope of the person’s
employment as a police officer.
[4]
The act of
arresting and detaining a person is an intentional act which would
satisfy the requirement of culpability. Although the
quantum of the
damages may be debated, the nature of the damages claimed –
deprivation of liberty; loss of dignity and humiliation;
inconvenience and discomfort; and contumelia arising from the arrest
– necessarily are causally linked to the impugned conduct.
There is no dispute that Constable Zwane was acting in the
course and scope of his employment as a police officer when he
effected the arrest.
[5]
Therefore, the
sole issue to be determined on the merits is whether the arrest and
detention was unlawful. It is well established
that the onus
rests on the Minister to establish the lawfulness of an arrest :
“
An
arrest constitutes an interference with the liberty of the individual
concerned, and it therefore seems fair and just to require
that the
person who arrested or caused the arrest of another person should
bear the onus of proving his action is justified in
law.”
[2]
[6]
Sekhoto’s
case provides clear
guidance on how the evidence in an unlawful arrest case should be
assessed in order to determine whether the
arrest was unlawful. In
effect, it is a two-stage process :
6.1
First,
the Minister is obliged to establish the jurisdictional facts which
must be present before a police officer may effect an
arrest without
a warrant in terms of s 40(1) of the Criminal Procedure Act.
[3]
6.2
Section 40(1)
of the CPA provides that once those four jurisdictional facts are
present, a police officer
may
,
without a warrant, arrest a person. This means that, once these
jurisdictional facts are established, the police officer has the
statutory power to exercise his discretion on whether the person
should be arrested and detained or not.
6.3
The second
factual enquiry assesses whether the discretion was lawfully
exercised, taking into account all relevant facts applicable
to the
exercise of that discretion, in the context of the particular case.
[7]
In the current
matter, the Minister relies on sub-section 40(1)(h) to justify
the arrest. This sub-section provides (in
relevant part) as
follows:
“
A
police officer may without warrant arrest any person –
(h)
who is reasonably suspected of committing or having committed an
offence under any law governing the making, supply, possession
or
conveyance ..... of dependence-producing drugs .....;”
[8]
To
succeed in this s40(1)(h) defence, therefore, the jurisdictional
facts to be established by the Minister are that, at the time
the
arrest was effected: (i) the arrestor was a police officer;
(ii) the arrestor entertained a suspicion; (iii) the
suspicion was that the suspect was committing or had committed an
offence under a law governing the supply, possession of conveyance
of
a dependence-producing drugs; and (iv) the suspicion rested on
reasonable grounds.
[4]
[9]
The
Minister’s case, supported by the evidence of the arresting
officer Constable Zwane, was that the defendant was arrested
after he
was found by Constable Zwane to be in possession of a
dependence-producing drug – methamphetamine, also known as
“crystal meth”. Although Constable Zwane would not
have known for sure at the time that the crystals which he
found in
the small plastic bag in the plaintiff’s right hand were drugs,
the police officer’s experience allowed him
to recognise the
drugs “known as crystal” which, in my view, established a
reasonable suspicion as contemplated in
Duncan.
[5]
If
the evidence of Constable Zwane is accepted, this evidence would
satisfy the test for the reasonable suspicion justifying an
arrest
without a warrant and the Minister will have established compliance
with the requirements in s40(1)(h).
[10]
The question
to be determined then is whether Constable Zwane’s evidence is
to be believed as the version given by the Appellant’s
witnesses were completely irreconcilable with the version given by
Constable Zwane.
[11]
The key facts
on which the evidence differed were the following:
11.1
The Appellant
asserted that he was approached and arrested inside the house at 11B,
Zone 2, whereas Constable Zwane alleges that
he noticed the appellant
acting suspiciously next to the outside wall of the house at 11B.
This suspicious conduct drew his
attention to the appellant and he
approached, searched and arrested the plaintiff on the street outside
the house.
11.2
The Appellant
asserted that there were no drugs found during the search whereas
Constable Zwane’s evidence was that drugs
were found on the
plaintiff during the search.
[12]
There was also
a dispute over the time of the arrest – whether it was at
approximately 22h30 or 23h40. In my view, very little
turns on this.
[13]
In relation to
the location at which the Appellant was found, searched and arrested,
it is useful to consider the documentation
that was prepared
contemporaneously together with the other oral evidence given at the
trial.
[14]
The appellant
has not suggested any reason (and I cannot see any reason on the
evidence) to suspect that Constable Zwane was motivated
to lie on the
documents he completed at the time of the arrest. On his
handwritten statement, Constable Zwane states that
he “
approached
a suspicious man who was standing next to a wall of house 11B Zone 2
…”
The
statement of Sgt. Mabaso who was with Zwane, but did not give
evidence at trial, records that he saw the suspect “
standing
next to house No. 11B
…”
.
On the printed form “Statement”, the “Scene of
Crime” was identified as being “
next
to house No. 11B, Zone 2
.”
[15]
This
documentary evidence supports Constable Zwane’s version in his
oral evidence. There is also an improbability in
the
appellant’s version, namely that the police officers entered
the house without any cause to do so. Constable Zwane
was asked
whether he knew the accused prior to the arrest and he confirmed that
he did not. This evidence was not challenged or
contradicted by the
Appellant. Constable Zwane’s evidence that there was
“nothing special” about the house
at 11B which would have
caused him to enter that one if the appellant had not been outside
was also not challenged on any credible
basis.
[16]
To add to
these factors, there were minor inconsistencies in the versions of
the appellant’s witnesses, on issues that undermine
the weight
that might otherwise be given to the evidence of two witnesses over
the evidence of one witness. While the two
stories were
consistent on the major points which they concentrated on in their
evidence in chief – such as who was in the
house and that Mr
Zwane was searched and arrested inside the house –
inconsistencies emerged when they were examined on minor
aspects such
as, which police officer arrested Mr Maphike and whether the other
occupants of the house remained present when the
two of them were
arrested. These inconsistencies undermine the reliability of
their evidence and their credibility.
[17]
In relation to
the dispute over whether drugs were found in the search, the
documentary evidence is also relevant. Both Sgt
Mabaso and
Constable Zwane’s contemporaneous statements confirm that the
drugs were collected as evidence at the scene.
The statements
identify the evidence bag reference number 13/414/2019 and
PA4001649632, linked to the case No. CAS16/04/2019 which
was
allocated to the matter. The contents of the evidence bag which was
later inspected in the forensic science laboratory bore
the same
numbers which appeared on the statements.
[18]
The
contemporaneous statements of the police officers, read with the
contemporaneous statement of the officer responsible for receiving
evidence on 1 April 2019 and with the later laboratory report, show
that evidence was collected and submitted by Constable Zwane
on the
night of the arrest and that the sealed evidence bag, when opened and
its contents analysed in the laboratory, proved to
contain “crystal
meth”.
[19]
Although in
cross examination of Constable Zwane, the Appellant’s attorney
noted that the defendants denied he had found drugs
in his search,
the Appellant’s attorney never put to Constable Zwane that he
was being untruthful. Instead, the cross examination
was directed at
the failure to exercise a discretion at the time of the arrest,
notwithstanding the drugs having been found.
[20]
The magistrate
preferred the evidence of Constable Zwane and rejected the evidence
of the plaintiff and his witness on the following
basis:
“
5.1
The evidence of the defendant’s witnesses was clear, concise
and to the point. He did not contradict himself
in any material way.
His evidence was more probable than the plaintiff’s version.
5.2
He also testified that the reason he suspected the plaintiff was
because when the plaintiff saw the police
vehicle he wanted to move
away. He thus had a reasonable suspicion that the plaintiff committed
an offence. This suspicion was
verified by him finding the drugs in
his possession.
…
5.6
As far as the plaintiff’s version is concerned, the court found
his version highly improbable. It is
highly improbable that the
police will arrest the plaintiff and his witness for ‘talking
and knowing too much’.
5.7
The plaintiff’s version also does not account for the drugs
found in his possession. According to him
and his witness nothing was
found in the house or in their possession.
5.8
The plaintiff and his witness also materially contradicted each other
as far as who arrested them. According
to the witness they were
arrested by two different police officers and according to the
plaintiff by the same police officer.
5.9
The sale register on page 43 of Exhibit ‘A’ does not
prove that the plaintiff and his witness
was arrested for the same
offence but they were arrested and detained in the cells on the same
night.”
[21]
In the absence
of some evidence that would suggest that the police officers had
prior knowledge of the Appellant and the occupants
of the house
and/or had a illegitimate reason to go into that house and arrest
those occupants, it seems highly improbable that
they would do so
unless they had seen something suspicious during their patrol. The
evidence given by Constable Zwane, that he
observed the Appellant
acting suspiciously outside the house and that this triggered the
approach appears to me to be more probably
true. I also
see no reason to disturb the findings of the magistrate in relation
to the impression created by the witnesses.
[22]
In the
circumstances, I find that the defendant established each of the
jurisdictional facts to bring himself within s 40(1)(h)
and to show
that
prima
facie
, the
arrest was authorised by the CPA and therefore lawful.
[23]
The
next question involves assessing whether there are facts in evidence
which indicate that Constable Zwane’s conduct in
arresting the
Appellant was nevertheless unlawful because of the manner in which he
exercised his discretion. A plaintiff
that seeks to impugn the
manner in which a police officer exercised his discretion to arrest
without a warrant must plead and prove
facts on which the court might
come to the conclusion that the discretion was not exercised
bona
fide
,
or that it was exercised irrationally or arbitrarily.
[6]
[24]
The
appellant’s ability to undermine the lawfulness of the
discretion is significantly weakened by the credibility of his
witnesses. Having been disbelieved on the key facts about how
and where the arrest took place, the substratum of the appellant’s
attack on Constable Zwane’s
bona
fides
cannot
be accepted as it rests on the same (disbelieved) evidence
surrounding the arrest.
[25]
Further, once
the Court has accepted that the appellant was in possession of
crystal meth and that he was arrested at a location
away from his own
home, Constable Zwane cannot be criticised for exercising his
discretion in favour of arresting the appellant
and detaining him at
the police station until a duly authorised person, such as a senior
police officer, a prosecutor or a magistrate,
made the decision to
release the appellant. Certainly, exercising his discretion in
the manner in which he did cannot be
considered irrational or even
unreasonable.
[26]
Before concluding, I
should deal briefly with the argument made by the appellant’s
counsel
there was no evidence
before the court to conclude that the Respondent's witness exercised
discretion
at all
before detaining the Appellant
because,
so the argument went, Constable Zwane “
admitted
that he did not use discretion before he detained the Appellant
”.
[27]
First, the argument cherry-picks from
the evidence without considering the evidence preceding the extract
relied on.
27.1
The extract relied upon by the appellant
records:
“
MR
KHUMALO: So you arrest and detain without exercising
discretion?
MR
ZWANE: What discretion must I use? When I have
arrested someone I must detain him.”
27.2
But it is preceded by the following
exchanges in relation to the arrest:
“
MR
KHUMALO: So tell me, before you arrest someone the police officer
must exercise a discretion, is that correct, that is one of
requirements for lawful arrest?
MR
ZWANE: Yes.
MR
KHUMALO: So in this case you did not exercise discretion.
MR
ZWANE: Drugs are an offence, that is why I arrested him.
MR
KHUMALO: So my question is that as you failed to ask where he was
staying, what he was doing there, his occupation , failure
to ask
those questions, which means you did not have any information about
the plaintiff therefore you did not exercise the discretion
before
you arrested him, so after you allegedly found those drugs you
immediately arrested him?
MR
ZWANE: I found drugs on him and I arrested him.
MR
KHUMALO: I put it to you that failure to exercise discretion it
results in your arrest being unlawful.
MR
ZWANE: No, what I did was lawful.
[28]
This evidence establishes that the key
fact which weighed heavily with Constable Zwane when exercising his
discretion to arrest
and detain was the seriousness of the crime
involved. The appellant has not identified any other facts that
were or ought
to have been known by Constable Zwane and ought to have
trumped this important fact. In my view, there is no basis on
which
to conclude that Constable Zwane failed to exercise the
necessary discretion or that he exercised that discretion unlawfully.
[29]
Second, the appellant was arrested
late at night on 1 April and it was probably after midnight once his
arrest and the evidence
had been processed at the Meadowlands Police
Station. It was not suggested that Constable Zwane was
authorised to release
the appellant on bail or on other conditions,
such authority rests with others and no case was made that other
employees acting
in the course and scope of their employment acted
unlawfully towards the appellant. In the
circumstances, detaining
the appellant until 11h00 the following day,
when he was released pending the trial, cannot be criticised as mala
fide, irrational
or arbitrary.
[30]
The Minister has been successful in all
respect in resisting this appeal and I see no reason why the costs
should not follow the
result.
Order
[31]
In the
circumstances, I make the following order:
(1)
The appeal is
dismissed.
(2)
The appellant
is liable to pay the respondent’s costs in the appeal.
TURNER
AJ
Counsel
for the appellant: T.
Khumalo (Attorney)
of:
Themba Kumalo Incorporated; Johannesburg
Counsel
for the respondent:
No appearance
Instructed
by:
Date
of hearing:
26 January 2023
Date
of Judgment:
1 February 2023
[1]
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
2021
(4) SA 585
(CC) at [13].
[2]
Minister
of Law and Order and others v Hurley and Ano
1986
(3) SA 568
(A) at 489 E-F; confirmed in
Minister
of Safety and Security v Sekhoto and Ano
2011
(5) SA 367
(SCA) at [7].
[3]
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
[4]
Cf
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
1986
(2) SA 805
(A) at 818 G-H.
[5]
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
(supra)
[6]
Sekhoto
at [31].and [38]
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