Minister of Police and Another v Verster (A166/2022) [2023] ZAFSHC 267 (10 July 2023)

82 Reportability
Criminal Procedure

Brief Summary

Arrest and Detention — Unlawful arrest — Warrantless arrest — Respondent arrested without warrant on charge of assault — Appellant failed to establish reasonable suspicion required under section 40(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act — Court found arrest unlawful — Continued detention post first court appearance — Authority to detain exhausted upon court appearance — Appellants liable for unlawful arrest and detention — Damages awarded to respondent.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


This matter concerned an appeal to the Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein, against a magistrates’ court judgment awarding damages arising from an alleged unlawful arrest and unlawful detention, with an associated claim initially also framed to include malicious prosecution.


The parties were the Minister of Police (first appellant, cited as the first defendant in the court a quo) and the National Director of Public Prosecutions (second appellant, cited as the second defendant in the court a quo), opposing Bollycarpus Petrus Verster (respondent, cited as the plaintiff in the court a quo).


Procedurally, the plaintiff instituted action proceedings for delictual damages in the magistrates’ court. On 1 September 2022, the court a quo found in the plaintiff’s favour and made orders awarding damages against the first defendant alone in one portion of the award, and against the first and second defendants jointly and severally in another portion, together with interest and costs (while dismissing a claim for special damages relating to legal fees). The defendants appealed. The appeal was noted late and was accompanied by an application for condonation, which the High Court granted.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the plaintiff’s warrantless arrest under section 40 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 was lawful, and whether the defendants were delictually liable for the plaintiff’s continued detention after his first court appearance, despite a remand order.


Material Facts


It was common cause that the plaintiff was arrested without a warrant on 17 December 2015 by Warrant Officer Mpata, a peace officer in the employ of the first defendant, on a charge of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm. Following his arrest, the plaintiff appeared in the Petrusburg District Court, where the matter was remanded and it was ordered that he remain in custody.


The plaintiff was then detained at Grootvlei prison pending his next appearance. Although the arresting officer did not oppose the plaintiff’s release, the plaintiff remained in custody until 22 December 2015, when an unopposed bail application was brought and the plaintiff was admitted to bail and released.


On 12 February 2016, the charges against the plaintiff and his co-accused were withdrawn at the complainant’s request.


In relation to the arrest, the trial court found (as a factual premise for its legal conclusions) that Mpata’s suspicion was based essentially on having perused the complainant’s A1 statement and on Mpata’s brief observation of the complainant’s injuries when he had seen the complainant at the police station more than a week before the arrest. The trial court further accepted that there was no J88 medico-legal report available to Mpata at the time, and that Mpata had not interviewed the complainant to ascertain the nature and severity of the injuries so as to support a suspicion that a Schedule 1 offence involving a “dangerous wound” had been committed.


In relation to the post-appearance detention, the plaintiff’s case (as accepted in substance by the court a quo and addressed on appeal) was that the plaintiff remained detained for approximately five days after his first appearance, and that this continued detention was wrongful in light of the conduct of both the police (including omissions relating to bail information) and the prosecution (including charging decisions and the approach to bail).


Legal Issues


The High Court identified that, during argument, the defendants conceded that the trial court made no findings on malicious prosecution. As a result, malicious prosecution did not remain a live issue on appeal.


The central questions for determination on appeal were therefore confined to whether the plaintiff’s arrest and continued detention were unlawful. This required determining, first, whether the first defendant discharged the onus of establishing the jurisdictional facts for a warrantless arrest under section 40(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, including whether Mpata’s suspicion that the plaintiff had committed a Schedule 1 offence rested on objectively reasonable grounds.


Secondly, the court had to determine whether the defendants were delictually liable for the plaintiff’s detention after the first court appearance, notwithstanding the fact that a magistrate had made a remand order. This engaged questions that were not purely factual but concerned the application of legal principles to the facts, particularly principles of legal causation and the extent to which a remand order might (or might not) interrupt liability.


Court’s Reasoning


Condonation


The court addressed non-compliance with the Rules arising from the defendants’ notice of appeal being filed approximately 31 days late. Applying established principles that condonation is discretionary and requires a full explanation for the delay, the court accepted the reasons advanced (including administrative processes in obtaining authorisation and appointing counsel), considered the delay not inordinate, and concluded that the interests of justice supported granting condonation. The court nevertheless expressed disapproval of routine non-compliance with procedural rules.


Unlawful arrest under section 40(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977


The court proceeded from the accepted framework that, where an arrest without a warrant is justified under section 40(1)(b), the first defendant bore the onus to prove the jurisdictional facts: that the arresting officer was a peace officer, that the officer held a suspicion, that the suspicion related to a Schedule 1 offence, and that the suspicion rested on reasonable grounds. It was common cause that Mpata was a peace officer; the appeal therefore turned on the remaining requirements, particularly the objective reasonableness of the suspicion.


Drawing on the approach articulated in Biyela v Minister of Police (1017/2020) [2022] ZASCA 36; 2023 (1) SACR 235 (SCA) (1 April 2022), the court emphasised that the enquiry into reasonable suspicion is objectively justiciable, that the standard is low but requires more than an unparticularised hunch, and that the suspicion must rest on specific and articulable facts derived from credible information available at the time.


On the facts as found, the court was not persuaded that Mpata had sufficient objective material to reasonably suspect that the plaintiff had committed a Schedule 1 offence of the type contemplated (including the infliction of a “dangerous wound”). While accepting that Mpata was not expected to perform medical assessments, the court regarded it as significant that Mpata did not interview the complainant and did not have access to a J88 (with evidence being that such a report was never filed in the docket). The court considered that, in the circumstances, additional basic steps—particularly engaging the complainant and obtaining medico-legal confirmation—would objectively have strengthened or confirmed whether the facts supported a Schedule 1 offence. The court also took into account contextual considerations recorded in the judgment, including that the plaintiff apparently reported to the police station voluntarily, was known to the investigating officer, and was not presented as a flight risk in the manner described.


On this basis, the High Court agreed with the conclusion reached by the trial court that the first defendant did not establish that the reasonable-suspicion jurisdictional fact was met, and therefore failed to justify the warrantless arrest as lawful under section 40(1)(b).


Unlawful detention after the first court appearance and legal causation


The court accepted as correct the proposition that, once an arrested person is brought before court, the police power to detain inherent in arrest is exhausted, and the continuation of detention occurs under the court’s authority and discretion. However, consistent with De Klerk v Minister of Police (CCT95/18) [2019] ZACC 32, the court emphasised that a magistrate’s remand order does not necessarily render subsequent detention lawful merely by virtue of its existence; what matters is whether there was substantively just cause for the later deprivation of liberty.


The court approached the police’s potential liability for post-appearance detention through the lens of legal causation and policy considerations, noting that deprivation of liberty through arrest and detention is prima facie unlawful and that the extension of liability should be controlled through the application of causation principles and context-sensitive evaluation rather than a rigid rule.


On the facts, the court held that there was a direct causal link between Mpata’s wrongful act (the unlawful arrest) and the harm suffered through the plaintiff’s detention for a further five days after the first court appearance. The court rejected the argument that the remand order should operate as a novus actus interveniens that necessarily broke the causal chain. In reaching that conclusion, the court pointed to shortcomings attributed to Mpata after the arrest, including that he did not complete a bail information document that might have guided the bail decision-making process, despite appreciating that a remand in custody might follow.


Liability of the National Director of Public Prosecutions


The court upheld the trial court’s finding that, on the evidence and in the circumstances described, there were concurrent wrongdoers and that joint and several liability for the unlawful post-appearance detention was appropriate. In relation to the second defendant, the court located liability in the conduct of the prosecutor (Mr Mrabe) during and shortly after the first appearance.


The court recorded that, despite the absence of a J88 and other evidential support for a serious charge, the prosecutor charged the plaintiff and his co-accused with attempted murder and sought (and obtained) a remand for a formal bail application weeks later. The court further recorded that, on the following day, despite the plaintiff being requisitioned and present in court holding cells, the prosecutor refused to assist to have the matter enrolled for a bail application. The court evaluated this as a lackadaisical approach falling short of the standard expected of prosecutors, and held that conscientious performance of the prosecutorial function would have avoided the plaintiff’s five-day unlawful detention.


Appellate interference and costs


The court referred to the established limits on an appellate court’s interference with credibility findings and factual evaluations, and concluded that it was not persuaded that the court a quo had misdirected itself on the facts or the law in a manner warranting interference.


On costs, the court applied the general principle that costs follow the result on a party-and-party scale, noted the discretionary nature of costs orders, and declined to grant a punitive attorney-and-client costs order sought by the plaintiff.


Outcome and Relief


The court granted condonation for the late noting of the appeal.


The appeal was dismissed, and the order of the court a quo accordingly remained in place, including the damages awards, interest components, and costs order made at first instance (subject to the first-instance dismissal of the special damages claim for legal fees, which also remained undisturbed).


The appeal was dismissed with costs on the ordinary scale; the court declined to grant punitive costs.


Cases Cited


Rex v Dhlumayo and Another 1947 (2) SA 677 (A).


S v Francis 1991 (1) SACR 198 (A).


National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (CCT1099) [1999] ZACC 17.


Uitenhage Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service 2004 (1) SA 292 (SCA).


Van Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another [2007] ZACC 24; 2008 (2) SA 472 (CC).


De Klerk v Minister of Police (CCT95/18) [2019] ZACC 32.


Biyela v Minister of Police (1017/2020) [2022] ZASCA 36; 2023 (1) SACR 235 (SCA) (1 April 2022).


Patel v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (4347/2015) [2018] ZAKZDHC 17.


Trencon Construction (Pty) Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Limited and Another [2015] ZACC 22.


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, section 12(1).


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, section 40(1)(b) and Schedule 1.


Rules of Court Cited


Magistrates’ Court Rules, Rule 51(3).


Held


The High Court held that the defendants failed to establish that the plaintiff’s warrantless arrest was lawful under section 40(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 because the arresting officer’s suspicion that the plaintiff had committed a Schedule 1 offence was not shown, on an objective assessment of the information available at the time, to rest on reasonable grounds.


The court further held that the plaintiff’s continued detention for approximately five days after his first court appearance remained actionable and was not rendered lawful merely because a magistrate granted a remand, with liability assessed through legal causation and the evaluation of post-arrest conduct. The court upheld the finding of joint and several liability in relation to the post-appearance detention, including on the basis of the prosecutor’s conduct as described in the judgment.


The appeal against the magistrates’ court’s decision was dismissed, and the appeal was dismissed with costs on the ordinary scale.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that, under section 40(1)(b) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, a warrantless arrest requires proof of the recognised jurisdictional facts, including that the arresting officer held a suspicion that a Schedule 1 offence was committed and that the suspicion rested on objectively reasonable grounds.


It applied the principle that the existence of a reasonable suspicion is assessed objectively, that the standard is low but requires more than a hunch, and that suspicion should be grounded in specific, articulable facts derived from information regarded as credible at the time of arrest, as reflected in the reliance placed on Biyela v Minister of Police (1017/2020) [2022] ZASCA 36; 2023 (1) SACR 235 (SCA) (1 April 2022). It also applied the principle that, even where a peace officer has the power to arrest, the officer retains a discretion whether to arrest, and that discretion must be exercised with due regard to the importance of individual liberty.


In relation to detention after a first court appearance, the judgment applied the principle that the police’s authority to detain inherent in arrest is exhausted once the arrested person is brought before court, but that a remand order does not necessarily render subsequent detention lawful. The assessment of delictual liability for post-appearance detention proceeds through principles of legal causation and relevant policy considerations, including scrutiny of whether conduct by officials contributed to continued deprivation of liberty and whether any intervening act should be treated as breaking the causal chain, with reference to De Klerk v Minister of Police (CCT95/18) [2019] ZACC 32.


Finally, in relation to procedure, the judgment applied the established approach that condonation is discretionary, not granted for the mere asking, and requires an adequate explanation enabling the court to assess the delay and the interests of justice, with reference to Uitenhage Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service 2004 (1) SA 292 (SCA) and Van Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another [2007] ZACC 24; 2008 (2) SA 472 (CC).

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[2023] ZAFSHC 267
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Minister of Police and Another v Verster (A166/2022) [2023] ZAFSHC 267 (10 July 2023)

IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE STATE
DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case No. A166/2022
In
the matter between:
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE

1
st
Appellant
THE
NATIONAL DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS

2
nd
Appellant
and
BOLLYCARPUS
PETRUS VERSTER

Respondent
CORAM:
OPPERMAN,
J
et
GUSHA, AJ
HEARD
ON:
17 APRIL 2023
DELIVERED
ON
:
10 JULY 2023. The judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and
release to SAFLII on 10 July 2023. The
date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10 July 2023 at 15h00
JUDGMENT
BY:
GUSHA, AJ
JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Section 12(1) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,
1996 guarantees
the right to freedom of movement and security of a
person.
[1]
This is one of the
sacrosanct rights enshrined in our Bill of Rights. This right, and
indeed others, are steeped in and are hallowed
because of our
country’s past unjust and unsavory history of lack of respect
for, and the often-arbitrary deprivation of
basic human rights.
[2]
The
present case has at its heart the deprivation of the very basic right
of freedom of movement. The germane facts are that the
respondent
[2]
was arrested on the 17
th
of December 2015 on a charge of assault with intent to do grievous
bodily harm without a warrant. The arrest was executed by warrant

officer Mpata (Mpata), an employee of the 1
st
appellant.
[3]
Subsequent to the
respondent’s arrest, he appeared before the Petrusburg District
Court. The case was remanded and it was
ordered that he remain in
custody. He was then detained at Grootvlei prison pending his next
appearance. The incarceration was
ordered notwithstanding the fact
that Mpata did not oppose his release. On the 22
nd
of December 2015, pursuant to bringing an unopposed bail application,
the plaintiff was admitted to bail and released from custody.
On the
12
th
of February 2016 the charges against him and his co-accused were
withdrawn at the request of the complainant.
[3]
It is against this backdrop that the
respondent instituted action proceedings against the 1
st
and 2
nd
appellants for damages suffered as a result of his purported unlawful
arrest, detention and the purported malicious prosecution
against
him.
[4]
On
the 1
st
of September 2022 during the aforesaid proceedings, the court
a
quo
[4]
found in favour of the respondent and made the following order:
[5]
1.
First Defendant is to pay Plaintiff the sum of R15, 000.00 as for
damages.
2.
First Defendant is to pay interest on such damages, at the prescribed
rate of
interest, from date of judgment to date of payment.
3.
First Defendant and Second Defendants are to pay the Plaintiff,
jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved the
sum of R150 000.00 as for damages.
4.
First Defendant and Second Defendant’s (sic) are to pay
interest on such
damages, at the prescribed rate of interest, from
date of judgment to date of payment.
5.
First Defendant and Second Defendants are to pay Plaintiff’s
costs of suit,
by agreement to include the costs of counsel not
limited by the magistrate’s court tariff, including travelling
and preparation.
6.
Plaintiffs claim for special damages for legal fees is dismissed.
[5]
It is this decision that lies at the heart of the appeal before us.
[6]
For ease of reference, the parties shall henceforth be referred to as
they were cited
in the court
a quo
, namely as the plaintiff,
1
st
and 2
nd
defendants.
GROUNDS
OF APPEAL
[7]
The grounds for appeal as reiterated in the heads of argument for the
appellants are
that the Honourable Court erred in finding that:
20.1
The First Appellant failed to establish jurisdictional facts in order
to discharge the onus that rests upon
him in terms of Section 40(b)
of Act 51 of 1977 (hereinafter referred to as “
the CPA
”).
20.2
The First Appellant is liable (jointly and severally) for the
detention endured by the Respondent for a period
of five (5) days
pursuant to his first Court appearance.
20.3
That the Second Appellant failed to carry out its prosecutorial
functions regarding bail as a result thereof,
causing the Respondent
harm wrongfully and malicious.
20.4
The Second Appellant failed to commence and finalize the Respondent’s
release without unreasonable
delay.
20.5    In
the assessment and evaluation of evidence.
[8]
The legal position with regards to the powers of a court of appeal to
interfere with
the credibility findings of the trial court need no
restating.
[6]
[9]
Before traversing the above issues we are confronted with in this
appeal,
I pause here in order to deal with the aspect of
non-compliance with the Rules; the application for the late filing of
the notice
of appeal.
CONDONATION
[10]
The appellants noted their notice of appeal on the 11
th
of November 2022, approximately 31 days out of time.
[7]
In tandem with the notice of appeal, the appellants moved an
application for condonation of their non-compliance with the Rules.

Truncated, the reasons submitted for the non-compliance were that the
delays were not inordinate and that same was occasioned by
the
administration process related to obtaining authorization for and
appointing counsel.
[11]
It
is trite that the court has a discretion
whether
to grant condonation or not. However, equally trite, is that same
cannot be had merely for the asking. It is an indulgence
which a
court can give. A full, detailed and accurate account of the causes
for the delay and their effects must be furnished so
as to enable the
court, when exercising its discretion, to clearly understand the
reasons for the delay and to assess its responsibility.
[8]
[12]
After having heard both parties on this aspect, we exercised our
discretion in favour of the
appellants and were of the considered
view that their non-compliance notwithstanding, the interests of
justice dictate that we
condone their non-compliance.
[9]
I
would however be remiss if I do not remark that the practice of
non-compliance with the Rules is to be frowned upon.
LEGAL ISSUE TO BE
DETERMINED ON APPEAL
[13]
I now turn to deal with the issue at hand, the appeal.
[14]
During arguments the defendants conceded that the trail court did not
make any findings with
regards to malicious prosecution, that aspect
therefore need not detain us any further. Consequently, the only
issue to be determined
is whether the plaintiff’s arrest and
his continued detention was unlawful.
FINDINGS BY THE
COURT
A QUO
Unlawful arrest
[10]
[15]
I now turn to deal with the factual findings of the court
a quo
.
After evaluating the evidence, the trial court found that Mpata’s
suspicion was based exclusively on having perused the
A1 statement of
the complainant and a brief sighting of him more than a week prior to
the arrest of the plaintiff. The court further
found that Mpata
should have ascertained the nature of the complainant’s
injuries before he could form the suspicion that
the plaintiff
committed a Schedule 1 offence - assault when a dangerous wound is
inflicted. The court reasoned further that as
there was no J88 and
Mpata did not interview the complainant to satisfy himself that a
dangerous injury was inflicted, it followed
that whatever suspicion
Mpata harboured, was not based on objectively reasonable grounds.
Accordingly, the trial court found that
the defendants did not pass
muster of the jurisdictional facts as required in
section 40
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
.
Unlawful detention
post first court appearance
[11]
[16]
With regards to the defendant’s liability for unlawful
detention post the plaintiff’s
first court appearance, the
court correctly found that
once
the arrested person has been taken to court, the authority to detain,
that is inherent in the power to arrest, is exhausted.
The authority
to detain the suspect further is then within the discretion of the
court
.
Having arrived at this conclusion, the court was however alive to the
fact and correctly found that not every order by a magistrate
renders
the further detention lawful.
[12]
SUBMISSIONS BY THE
PARTIES
[17]
The parties’ submissions were comprehensively ventilated in
their respective heads of arguments
and before us, for that reason I
am loathe to overburden this judgment by repeating same herein. I
shall therefore only refer to
some salient aspects of their
respective arguments.
[18]
The 1
st
defendant conceded that at trial it bore the onus to prove that the
arrest was lawful. They submitted that Mpata satisfied all
the
jurisdictional requirements for effecting a warrantless arrest. It
was further submitted that he harboured a reasonable suspicion
that
the plaintiff committed a Schedule 1 offence. This suspicion was
based on the information contained in the police docket;
among
others, the statement of the complainant, the weapon(s) allegedly
used,
[13]
the visible injuries Mpata observed on the complainant
[14]
as well as a witness statement that at the time the complainant and
another were brought to the police station; they reeked of
petrol.
[19]
The plaintiff submitted that Mpata arrested the plaintiff based on
the contents of the A1 statement
of the complainant and a brief
sighting of the injured complainant at the Petrusburg police station
a week prior to the arrest.
Further, that at the time of the arrest
Mpata did not possess the medico - legal report,
[15]
thus there was no indication at the time that the complainant
sustained serious injuries. Thus, so their submissions went, Mpata

could not have formed a reasonable suspicion that the plaintiff
committed a Schedule 1 offence.
[20]
With regards to the plaintiff’s continued detention post -
first appearance in court, it
was submitted that the 2
nd
defendant, represented by its employee the public prosecutor, failed
in its duty of care by failing to commence and finalise the

plaintiff’s release without unreasonable delay, especially in
the face of the fact that Mpata did not oppose the plaintiff’s

release.
[21]
The plaintiff submitted that the appeal be dismissed and that a
punitive cost order on an attorney
- and - client scale be awarded.
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
[22]
Section 40
the Criminal Procedure Act, 51 of 1977 (the Act) provides
that a peace officer may effect an arrest without a warrant if there
is reasonable suspicion that a suspect has committed an offence
referred to in Schedule 1 of the Act.
[23]
It is trite that in order to prove that the arrest was lawful the 1
st
defendant had to prove the following jurisdictional facts:
(i)
The arresting officer was a peace officer;
(ii)
the arresting officer entertained a suspicion;
(iii)
that the suspect to be arrested committed an offence referred to in
schedule 1; and
(iv)
the suspicion rested on reasonable grounds.
[24]
In this appeal we need only concern ourselves with three of the
jurisdictional facts as it is
common cause that Mpata, the arresting
officer, is a peace officer.
APPLICATION
[25]
For purposes of adjudicating the vexed issue, I propose to deal with
the three jurisdictional
issues at once as I hold the considered view
that in the circumstances of this case, they are inter - connected.
[26]
In doing so, I can do no better than have regard to the decision of
the court per Musi AJA (as
he then was) in
Biyela v Minister of
Police
(1017/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 36
;
2023 (1) SACR 235
(SCA) (1
April 2022) wherein it was stated as follows:
[33]
The question whether a peace officer reasonably suspects a person of
having committed an offence within
the ambit of s 40(1)(b) is
objectively justiciable. It must, at the outset, be emphasised that
the suspicion need not be based
on information that would
subsequently be admissible in a court of law.
[34]
The standard of a reasonable suspicion is very low. The reasonable
suspicion must be more than a hunch;
it should not be an
unparticularized suspicion. It must be based on specific and
articulable facts or information. Whether the
suspicion was
reasonable, under the prevailing circumstances, is determined
objectively.
[35]
What is required is that the arresting officer must form a reasonable
suspicion that a Schedule 1 offence
has been committed based on
credible and trustworthy information. Whether that information would
later, in a court of law, be found
to be inadmissible is neither here
nor there for the determination of whether the arresting officer at
the time of arrest harboured
a reasonable suspicion that the arrested
person committed a Schedule 1 offence.
[36]
The arresting officer is not obliged to arrest based on a reasonable
suspicion because he or she has
a discretion. The discretion to
arrest must be exercised properly. Our legal system sets great store
by the liberty of an individual
and, therefore, the discretion must
be exercised after taking all the prevailing circumstances into
consideration.
[27]
I now turn to deal with the three remaining jurisdictional facts.
Drawing from the wisdom
supra
it
is crystal that the three jurisdictional facts have not been met by
the 1
st
defendant. Mpata acted solely on information contained in the docket
as well as his brief observation of some injuries the complainant
had
when he saw the latter at the police station. I am not persuaded that
the suspicion Mpata harboured was objectively viewed
based on
reasonable grounds. I hasten to add that I am alive to the fact that
the standard of a reasonable suspicion is very low
and that in order
to establish whether a dangerous wound was inflicted, it is was not
required of Mpata to examine the wounds of
the complainant, he is
after all no medical doctor. I however hold the considered view that
under the circumstances of this case,
Mpata needed a little bit more,
for he neither interviewed the complainant nor had at his disposal a
J88, in fact the evidence
at trial was that same was never filed in
the docket.
[16]
In order to
discharge the onus and pass muster of an arrest without a warrant,
all that Mpata should have done, in addition to
the statement filed
in the docket, was to interview the complainant and obtain the J88,
that objectively viewed, would have established
the reasonableness of
the suspicion he harbored that a Schedule 1 offence was committed by
the plaintiff. The plaintiff reported
to the police station
voluntarily, apparently drove himself to the court and the
investigating officer was well aware of his whereabouts
in town. He
was not a flight risk nor a risk to the community and there was no
indication that he would evade his trial.
[28]
Having found that the arrest was unlawful I now turn to the aspect of
whether the plaintiff’s
detention post his court appearance was
lawful. It needs no restating that the deprivation of liberty through
arrest and detention,
is
per
se prima facie
unlawful.
In
cases like this, the liability of the police for detention post -
court appearance should be determined on an application of
the
principles of legal causation, having regard to the applicable tests
and policy considerations. This may include a consideration
of
whether the post - appearance detention was lawful. It is these
public policy considerations that will serve as a measure of
control
to ensure that liability is not extended too far. The conduct of the
police after an unlawful arrest, especially if the
police acted
unlawfully after the unlawful arrest of the plaintiff, is to be
evaluated and considered in determining legal causation.
In addition,
every matter must be determined on its own facts - there is no
general rule that can be applied dogmatically in order
to determine
liability.
[17]
[29]
In the present case there is a direct causal link between Mpata’s
wrongful act, the plaintiff’s
unlawful arrest, and the harm
done due to the plaintiff’s subsequent detention for a further
5 days, post his court appearance.
The fact that the plaintiff’s
detention post his court appearance was sanctioned by an order of the
learned Magistrate, cannot
and indeed should not render the further
detention lawful and thus act as a
novus
actus interveniens
.
Mpata failed in his duty, notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff
was known to him, he did not have a J88, he did not oppose
bail, and
he fully appreciated that the plaintiff might be remanded in custody
post his first appearance in court and that notwithstanding
he did
not complete the bail information document which might have guided
the decision to formally oppose bail or not.
[18]
[30]
I now turn to deal with the liability of the 2
nd
defendant. In a well - reasoned judgment, the trial court correctly
found that in the present case there are concurrent wrongdoers:
the
Minister of Justice, the Minister of Police and the Director of
Public Prosecutions as represented by the prosecutor and that

accordingly they ought to be found to be jointly and severally liable
for the unlawful post court appearance detention of the plaintiff.

The liability of the 2
nd
defendant is to be found in the lackadaisical conduct of its
authorized delegate, Mr Mrabe, the prosecutor involved in the court

during the plaintiff’s first appearance on the 17
th
of December 2015. Despite the absence of a J88 in the docket and any
other evidence to found a charge of attempted murder, Mr Mrabe

charged the plaintiff and his co - accused with attempted murder and
requested, and was granted, a remand for a formal bail application

some 3 weeks later. Further display of this lackadaisical approach,
on the following day, despite the plaintiff being requisitioned
and
present in the court holding cells, Mr Mrabe refused to assist in
enrolling the case for a formal bail application. The aforesaid
is to
be lamented. Prosecutors, by their very duty, wield a lot of power
and play an important role in our criminal justice system
and this
confidence can only be inspired if they act in the interests of the
community, do not act arbitrarily and possess the
requisite legal
acumen.
[19]
For that reason,
they must inspire confidence in the criminal justice system. They
must act without fear, favour or prejudice.
Clearly Mr Mrabe fell
short of this standard; for had he approached his prosecutorial
duties conscientiously; the plaintiff would
not have spent 5 days
detained unlawfully.
[31]
Consequently, we are not persuaded
that the court
a quo
misdirected itself on the facts and the law. Therefore, this appeal
ought not to succeed.
COSTS
[32]
With regards to what constitutes an appropriate costs order, it is a
well - established principle
of our law that the general rule
regarding costs is that the unsuccessful party pays the costs of the
successful party on the party
and party scale. Equally established is
the principle that the court exercises a discretion when considering
an appropriate costs
order and should, of necessity, exercise same
judiciously.
[20]
We are
however not persuaded that this is a case where a punitive costs
order is warranted.
[33]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
ORDER
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
NG
GUSHA, AJ
I
concur,
M
OPPERMAN, J
On
behalf of the Appellant
Adv.
P. Chaka
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney
BLOEMFONTEIN
On
behalf of the Respondent:
Adv.
GSJ Van Rensburg
Instructed
by:
Loubser
Van der Walt Inc
LYNWOOD
[1]
Freedom
and security of the person
12
(1) Everyone has the right to freedom and security of the person,
which includes the right—
(a)
not to be deprived of freedom arbitrarily or without just cause;
(b)
not to be detained without trial; ...
[2]
Plaintiff
in the court
a
quo
.
[3]
1
st
Defendant in the court
a
quo
.
[4]
Petrusburg
Magistrate’s Court.
[5]
Pages
86 - 87: “Record of Appeal” (the Record).
[6]
Rex
v Dhlumayo and Another
1947
(2) SA 677
(A) at 705,
S
v Francis
1991 (1) SACR 198
(A),
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
(CCT1099)
[1999] ZACC 17.
[7]
Rule
51(3) of the Magistrate’s Court Rules provides as follows; An
appeal may be noted within 20 days after the date of
a judgment
appealed against or within 20 days after the registrar or clerk of
the court has supplied a copy of the judgment in
writing to the
party applying therefor, whichever period shall be the longer.
[8]
Uitenhage
Transitional Local Council v South African Revenue Service
2004 (1) SA 292 (SCA).
[9]
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008 (2) SA 472
(CC) at para
[20]
.
[10]
Pages
71 - 73 of the Record.
[11]
Pages
73 - 82 of the Record.
[12]
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
(CCT95/18)
[2019] ZACC 32
at para 62 the court held that “
A
remand order by a Magistrate does not necessarily render subsequent
detention lawful. What matters is whether, substantively,
there was
just cause for the later deprivation of liberty…”
[13]
A
sjambok and an iron rod.
[14]
A
bump on the head.
[15]
In
official (court and SAPS) parlance often colloquially referenced as
the “J88”.
[16]
Page
236 of the Record.
[17]
Footnote
11
supra
.
[18]
Ibid
at
pages 224 - 225.
[19]
Patel
v National Director of Public Prosecutions and
Others
(4347/2015) [2018] ZAKZDHC 17 at para 27 - 28.
[20]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of
South Africa Limited and
Another
[2015]
ZACC 22
at para 85.