Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 850South Africa
Minister of Police v Kekana (A3074/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 850 (27 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 July 2023
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Minister of Police v Kekana (A3074/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 850 (27 July 2023)
Minister of Police v Kekana (A3074/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 850 (27 July 2023)
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sino date 27 July 2023
FLYNOTES:
PERSONAL INJURY – Unlawful arrest and detention –
Drugs
–
Possessing 3 grams of dagga – Should have been released on
warning two hours after arrest – Further
detention unlawful
– Evidence of police was that they did not have authority to
release plaintiff – Discretion
to release Mr Kekana vested
with police – No such discretion was exercised – Mr
Kekana was co-operative and a
first offender – Inability to
afford bail was an additional reason for release on notice –
No grounds set out
for reduction in quantum –
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
,
s 56.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appeal
Case No: A3074/2022
REPORTABLE
OF INTERST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF POLICE
Appellant
and
EDWARD
KEKANA
Respondent
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the 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 for
hand-down is deemed to be 27 July 2023.
JUDGMENT
CARRIM
AJ:
[1] On the morning
of Friday, 9 March 2018, at about 10:30, the present respondent, Mr
Kekana, then 18 years old, was arrested
by the police on a charge of
possessing 3 grams of dagga. He was taken to police cells and
released at court on the Monday morning
three days later. He spent
three days and nights in a dirty cell with a toilet which did not
work. He shared the cell with hardened
criminals. Mr Kekana was a
first offender and could not afford bail.
[2] Mr Kekana
instituted action, claiming R250 000 for unlawful arrest and
detention. During the trial, he conceded that
he was found in
possession of the dagga and that his arrest was lawful. The claim
really proceeded from the premise that he should
have been released
on warning about two hours after his arrest and that his detention
after that was unlawful.
[3] The appellant,
Minister of Police, called three witnesses to justify the detention
between the Friday afternoon and the
release of Mr Kekana at court on
the Monday morning, when the matter was diverted from the ordinary
criminal process.
[4] All three
witnesses were constables at the relevant time. They set out, in some
detail the bureaucratic process they alleged
was required before the
question of Mr Kekana’s release could be considered. According
to them, their junior rank prevented
them from considering the
question.
[5]
In
JE
Mahlangu and Another v Min of Police
[1]
at paragraph
31
the Court held that -
“
[31]
This approach was affirmed in Zealand in which – as in the
instant matter – the focus was on detention. There
this
Court held that:
“
It
has long been firmly established in our common law that every
interference with physical liberty is prima facie unlawful.
Thus, once the claimant establishes that an interference has
occurred, the burden falls upon the person causing that interference
to establish a ground of justification. In Minister van Wet en
Orde v Matshoba, the Supreme Court of Appeal again affirmed
that
principle, and then went on to consider exactly what must be averred
by an applicant complaining of unlawful detention.
In the
absence of any significant South African authority, Grosskopf JA
found the law concerning the rei vindicatio a useful analogy.
The simple averment of the plaintiff’s ownership and the fact
that his or her property is held by the defendant was sufficient
in
such cases…The onus of justifying the detention then rests on
the defendant. There can be no doubt that this reasoning
applies with equal, if not greater, force under the Constitution.”
(Footnotes omitted.)
[32]
It follows that in a claim based on the interference with the
constitutional right not to be deprived of one’s physical
liberty, all that the plaintiff has to establish is that an
interference has occurred. Once this has been established, the
deprivation is prima facie unlawful and the defendant bears an onus
to prove that there was a justification for the interference
.”
[6]
It is trite that for a
police officer to justify an arrest under s40(1)(b) of the Criminal
Procedure Act
[2]
(the CPA), the
following jurisdictional facts have to be present namely (i) the
arrestor must be a peace officer, (ii) he must
entertain a suspicion
(iii) a suspicion that the arrestee committed an offence listed in
Schedule 1; and (iv) the suspicion must
rest on reasonable
grounds.
[3]
[7]
In
Duncan
[4]
the Court held further
“
If
the jurisdictional requirements are satisfied, the peace officer may
invoke the power conferred by the subsection, i e, he may
arrest the
suspect. In other words, he then has a discretion as to whether or
not to exercise that power (cf
Hoigate-Mohammed
v Puke
(1984)
1 All E R 1054
(HL)
1057). No doubt the discretion must be properly exercised.”
[8]
It is
also trite that the suspicion must be objectively justiciable.
In
Mvu v
Min of Safety & Security
,
[5]
the Court found that the fourth requirement i.e. that the suspicion
must rest on reasonable grounds is objectively justiciable.
[6]
[9]
In
Mvu
,
Willis J relying on
Hofmeyer
v Minister of Justice and Another
[7]
drew a distinction
between a claim for unlawful arrest and unlawful detention and found
at para 10
“
It
seems to me that if a police officer must apply his or her mind to
the circumstances relating to a person’s detention.
This
includes applying his or her mind to the question whether detention
is necessary at all
”
.
[10]
In
Hofmeyer
, King J as he then was, held that even where
an arrest is lawful, a police officer must apply his mind to the
arrestee’s
detention and the circumstances relating thereto and
that the failure by a police officer properly to do so is unlawful.
[11]
In
Diljan
v Minister of Police
[8]
the appellant had been
arrested and detained by police officers who were satisfied that she
had committed an offence listed in Schedule
1 (malicious damage to
property). The Court highlighted that peace officers are vested with
a discretion whether to arrest a person,
and then with a further
discretion whether to detain the arrestee
“
[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.
”
[12]
In
Diljan
two
police officers had testified at trial that they had no power to
release the appellant either on a 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.
[9]
[13] The Court found that
both officers who effected the arrest did not know that they had a
discretion, in the first instance to
effect an arrest, and then in
the second instance, to release the appellant, at para [12] –
“
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.”
[14]
Compare
Min
of Police and Another v Sipho Zweni
[10]
,
where it was accepted that the arrest was lawful. In evaluating
whether the initial detention was lawful the court found
at para [6]
that the appellants had produced sufficient evidence to justify the
respondent's initial detention, when the arresting
police officer (a
constable at the time) testified that “
the
alleged offence was a Schedule 6 offence - a very serious offence -
and the police officer did not have the authority or the
mandate to
give the suspect a warning to appear in court that would only be the
court’s decision
”
.
In that case the suspect had been charged with rape of a minor which
is both a Schedule 1 and 6 offence.
[11]
[15] The evidence of both
Constable Mydwe and Constable Molefe was that they did not have the
authority to release the plaintiff.
Both had limited knowledge
of the provisions of section 56, 59 and 59A of the CPA. In
their view had the plaintiff asked
to be released on bail or warning
they would have escalated the matter to the station commander or a
senior police officer. As
peace officers they were unaware of the
discretion vested in them and therefore could not have exercised such
discretion. Constable
Ntsoelengoe admitted that the plaintiff, by
reason of the offence he was charged with did qualify for police
bail. However,
he did not have the power to release suspects on
bail. He testified that had the plaintiff indicated to him that
he wanted
to be released on bail or warning he would have escalated
the request. Thus, the discretion vested in him as a peace
officer
was fettered by the bureaucratic process of the police
station.
[16] As to whether the
station commander had applied his or her mind to whether the
plaintiff should be detained further or at all
beyond Friday 12h00,
no evidence was led by the appellant. The fact that the plaintiff was
held until Monday morning suggests that
no such discretion was
exercised by the station commander.
[17] Under
section
56
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
-
“
56.
Written notice as method of securing attendance of accused in
magistrate’s court.—(1) If an accused
is alleged to
have committed an offence and a peace officer on reasonable grounds
believes that a magistrate’s court, on
convicting such accused
of that offence, will not impose a fine exceeding the amount
determined by the Minister from time to time
by notice in the
Gazette, such peace officer may, whether or not the accused is in
custody, hand to the accused a written notice
which shall—”
[18] An 18-year-old, in
possession of 3 grams of dagga is precisely the kind of person the
Legislature had in mind when enacting
the section. Mr Kekana was
co-operative with the police and was a first offender. Mr Kekana’s
inability to afford bail was
an additional reason for the police to
release Mr Kekana on notice.
[19] In this case, the
police not only had a discretion to release Mr Kekana, but they had a
duty to exercise that discretion in
Mr Kekana’s favour.
[20] In my view, the
detention of Mr Kekana, beyond about 2 hours of his arrest was
unlawful and he is entitled to damages.
[21]
In
Mahlangu
and Another v Minister of Police
[12]
amounts
of R550 000 and R500 000 were awarded as general damages
for assault, torture and eight months and ten days in
detention,
including time spent in solitary confinement. This equates to roughly
R2 200 per day.
[22]
The
learned Magistrate referred to the
Mahlangu
decision but not in the context
of quantum. The learned Magistrate awarded R75 000.
[23]
In
my view, if the amount awarded is properly before us, the correct
quantum in the present case would perhaps need to be
substantially
lowered. The notice of appeal by the Minister seeks to appeal only
the merits of the case and no grounds are set
out why quantum should
be reduced. The heads of argument by the Minister do not challenge
quantum. Accordingly, the quantum is
not before us.
ORDER
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
Y CARRIM
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
I
agree
GC WRIGHT
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT:
Adv
V Mabasa
INSTRUCTED
BY:
State
Attorney Johannesburg
Mr
J Makhubela
011 330
7671/7600
MMotsoko@justice.gov.za
JMakhubela@justice.gov.za
FOR
THE RESPONDENT:
Adv
FF Müller
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Jean
Keyser Attorneys
083 785
2363
jkeyser76@gmail.com
DATE
OF HEARING: 27 July 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 27July 2023
[1]
[2021]
ZACC 10.
[2]
51
of 1977.
[3]
Duncan
v Min of Law & Order
[1986]
ZASCA 24
;
[1986] 2 All SA 241
(A) (24 March 1986).
[4]
Page
818 H.
[5]
2009
(2) SACR 291 (GSJ).
[6]
66113/2019
at para [9].
[7]
1993
(3) SA 131 (A).
[8]
[2022]
ZASCA 103
(24 June 2022).
[9]
At paragraph 3.
[10]
[2018]
ZASCA 97
(1 June 2018).
[11]
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the CPA).
[12]
(CCT
88/20)
[2021] ZACC 10
;
2021 (7) BCLR 698
(CC);
2021 (2) SACR 595
(CC) (14 May 2021).
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