Magoda v Minister of Safety and Security and Another; Mxhego v Minister of Safety and Security and Another (380/12) [2013] ZAECMHC 5 (28 February 2013)

80 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Search and seizure — Unlawful search — Applicants sought to declare the police's search and seizure of their vehicles unlawful, claiming violation of possessory rights under the doctrine of mandament van spolie — Police seized vehicles based on alleged consent from an adult present at the premises — Court found that the applicants failed to prove lack of consent for the search and seizure, as the adult's consent was deemed valid — Applicants' claim for restoration of possession dismissed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


These were two related motion proceedings heard together in the Eastern Cape High Court, Mthatha. Each applicant sought confirmatory and restorative relief arising from the police’s search and seizure of motor vehicles without a warrant, and relied in substance on the mandament van spolie to obtain restoration of possession.


The parties in both matters were private individuals as applicants (Andile Magoda in case no 380/12 and Bebetho Mxhego in case no 381/12) and, as respondents, the Minister of Safety and Security and the Commanding Officer: Vehicle Identification Unit, Group 46, Mthatha.


Procedurally, the two applications were consolidated for hearing because they raised identical issues of fact and law, and the court indicated that a decision in one would apply to the other. The applicants initially also sought an order compelling the issuing of SAPS numbers for the vehicles to enable their use on public roads, but that portion of the relief was abandoned.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the police’s conduct in searching for and removing the vehicles from the applicants’ premises, and retaining them at a police pound, was lawful under the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, and if not, whether the applicants were entitled to restoration of possession and an interdict against further unlawful interference.


Material Facts


The applicants were related and lived in adjacent homesteads at Blackhill Administrative Area, Qumbu. A Toyota Hilux with registration letters and number DWZ 963 EC was alleged to be owned by Magoda, and a Nissan Sentra with registration letters and number WGX 247 GP was alleged to be owned by Mxhego. Both vehicles were found parked at Mxhego’s homestead.


Members of the South African Police Service’s Vehicle Identification Unit searched for and located the vehicles at the homestead. On inspection under the bonnets, the police observed irregularities consistent with tampering. In relation to the Toyota, the chassis number was said to have been cut out and re-welded, the engine number ground off and re-stamped, and the manufacturer’s tag removed and replaced. In relation to the Nissan, the chassis and engine numbers were said to have been ground off and re-stamped (not by the manufacturer), and the manufacturer’s tag removed and replaced (not by the manufacturer). Based on these observed irregularities, the police formed the view that the vehicles could not be lawfully possessed and proceeded to seize and remove them to a police pound.


A central factual dispute concerned who received the police and whether valid consent was given for the search. The applicants alleged that the police were received by Nosisi Mxhego, described as 13 years old, who allegedly could not give valid consent and who was allegedly prevented by police conduct from contacting the owners before the search proceeded. The respondents’ version, through Warrant Officer Marais, was that the police attended on 2 February 2012 after receiving information from an informer about “stolen vehicles” being kept at a homestead at Blackhill; that they were received by Nandipha Somdaka, Mxhego’s wife; and that she granted permission to search, notwithstanding that Mxhego was away working in Johannesburg.


The court recorded that the parties agreed that this conflict would be resolved on the respondents’ version, applying the approach in Plascon-Evans Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints unless the respondents’ denials were demonstrably not bona fide. On that approach, the court accepted that the police attended on 2 February 2012, were received by Mxhego’s wife, and conducted the search with her consent.


After removal, a police enquiry docket (Mthatha CAS 24/02/2012) was opened for further investigation. A confirmatory affidavit from the investigating detective stated that the Toyota was discovered to have been reported stolen on Edenvale CAS 195/06/1998, while investigations regarding the Nissan were continuing.


Legal Issues


The dispute required the court to determine whether the applicants had established entitlement to relief founded on the mandament van spolie, which raised questions of both fact (possession and dispossession; consent) and application of law to fact (whether the dispossession was unlawful given the statutory framework governing search and seizure).


A central legal question was whether the police seizure was justified under the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, particularly whether the vehicles fell within the categories in section 20 and whether the police acted lawfully under section 22 (search without warrant, including on consent). Although the applicants framed the dispute as a warrantless search and seizure, the judgment treated the decisive inquiry as whether the seizure itself could be justified by compliance with section 20 on objectively reasonable grounds.


A further legal question was whether restoration of possession could be refused on the basis that possession of vehicles with falsified identifying features may contravene the National Road Traffic Act 93 of 1996, particularly section 68(6)(b) and the criminalisation contemplated by section 89(ii), notwithstanding the spoliation principle that restoration is ordered without enquiring into the merits or lawfulness of possession.


Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter through the established principles of spoliation. Relying on the articulation in Svetlov Ivanov v North West Gambling Board and 5 Others and the classic authority of Nino Bonino v De Lange, the judgment treated the mandament van spolie as a remedy directed at preventing self-help and restoring the status quo ante upon proof of possession and wrongful deprivation, without engaging the merits of underlying rights. The court noted that the onus to establish the requisites for spoliation ordinarily rests on the applicant, with reference to Runsin Properties v Ferreira.


On the disputed question of consent, the court applied the agreed approach derived from Plascon-Evans Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints. It found the applicants’ version that the police were received by a 13-year-old minor to be internally problematic when considered with confirmatory material describing Nosisi as an adult, and it preferred the respondents’ version that Mxhego’s wife, an adult with capacity, received the police on 2 February 2012 and consented to the search. The judgment therefore rejected the applicants’ argument that the search was unlawful for lack of valid consent by reason of minor status or coercion. The court also held that reliance on Magobodi v Minister of Safety and Security and Another (to the effect that consent must be voluntary) did not assist the applicants on the accepted facts, because the consenting person was an adult with capacity.


The court nevertheless treated the consent debate as not determinative of the lawfulness of the seizure. It reasoned that even where a warrantless search occurs under section 22(a) of the Criminal Procedure Act (consent), the police may seize only where the statutory preconditions in section 20 are satisfied. In that context, the court considered that the applicable statutory scheme required credible justification that the seized items were “concerned in” an offence, could afford evidence, or were intended for use in the commission of an offence, on reasonable grounds. The judgment expressly linked this statutory enquiry to the constitutional protection of privacy in section 14(b) and (c) of the Constitution, emphasising the tension between effective policing and protection against intrusion, and treating that tension as informing the insistence on statutory compliance.


In evaluating whether the seizure was justified under section 20, the court adopted the approach stated in Ndabeni v Minister of Law and Order and Another, namely that the existence of “reasonable grounds” must be determined objectively, and not by reference merely to an officer’s subjective belief that grounds exist. The court then assessed the respondents’ stated basis for suspicion, which was the information allegedly received from an informer that there were “stolen vehicles” being kept at a certain homestead at Blackhill.


The court held that the information placed before it was insufficiently detailed to enable an objective assessment of reasonable grounds. It characterised the phrase “stolen vehicles” as a subjective conclusion rather than a factual description, and found that it did not disclose identifying features or objective content from which the officer could independently assess the basis for suspicion, beyond “transplanting” the informer’s conclusion. In reaching this view, the court accepted as persuasive the reasoning in the unreported decisions Sigwebendlana v Minister of Safety and Security and Hiya v Minister of Safety and Security and Another, which stressed the need for sufficiently detailed information (and, where relevant, an explanation of reliability and the extent to which details cannot be disclosed) so that a court can evaluate whether the statutory threshold is met. Applying that approach, the court found that the respondents, who bore the burden in this respect, had not shown that the vehicles fell within section 20, and thus the seizure did not fall within the statutory purview.


Finally, the court addressed the respondents’ argument that restoration should not be ordered because possession of such vehicles was prohibited under the National Road Traffic Act 93 of 1996. Relying on Sitonga v Minister of Safety and Security and 2 Others, the court held that spoliation relief is temporary and does not finally decide rights of possession; restoration may still be ordered even if the applicant might not lawfully be entitled to possess the article on the merits. The judgment emphasised that the respondents remained free, after restoration, to pursue lawful dispossession using the statutory mechanisms in the Criminal Procedure Act, including seizure pursuant to section 21 read with section 20.


Outcome and Relief


The court granted the applications. It declared the search and seizure of the Toyota Hilux (DWZ 936 EC as reflected in the order) and the Nissan Sentra (WGX 247 GP) unlawful, directed the respondents to release the vehicles forthwith, and interdicted and restrained the respondents from unlawfully interfering with the applicants’ possession of the vehicles.


On costs, the court ordered that the first respondent pay the costs of the applications.


Cases Cited


Svetlov Ivanov v North West Gambling Board and 5 Others (312/2011) [2012] ZA SCA (31 May 2012).


Nino Bonino v De Lange 1906 TS 120.


Runsin Properties v Ferreira 1982 (1) SA 658 (SECLD).


Plascon-Evans Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints [1984] ZASCA 51; 1984 (3) SA 623 (A).


Magobodi v Minister of Safety and Security and Another 2009 (1) SACR 355 (Tk).


Sigwebendlana v Minister of Safety and Security, Case No. 27/94 (Tk) (unreported).


Hiya v Minister of Safety and Security and Another, Case No. 506/99 (Tk), judgment dated 19/11/99 (unreported).


Ndabeni v Minister of Law and Order and Another 1984 (3) SA 500 (D and C.L.D.).


Sitonga v Minister of Safety and Security and 2 Others 2008 (1) SACR 376 (Tk).


Legislation Cited


Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, sections 20, 21, 22.


National Road Traffic Act 93 of 1996, sections 68(6)(b), 89(ii).


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, section 14(b) and section 14(c).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that, even accepting that consent to search was given by an adult occupant, the respondents failed to justify the seizure under section 20 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 because the information relied upon (“stolen vehicles” at a homestead) was not sufficiently detailed to establish objectively reasonable grounds for the belief that the vehicles were concerned in the commission or suspected commission of an offence or would afford evidence of such an offence.


The court further held that the respondents’ reliance on the alleged unlawfulness of the applicants’ possession under the National Road Traffic Act 93 of 1996 did not preclude restoration. On the authority applied, spoliation relief restores possession temporarily and does not prevent the respondents from pursuing subsequent lawful dispossession through proper statutory procedures.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The mandament van spolie is directed at preventing self-help and restoring the status quo ante once prior possession and wrongful deprivation are established; the lawfulness or merits of the applicant’s possession are generally irrelevant to the entitlement to restoration.


In motion proceedings where material disputes of fact arise, and where the matter is resolved on affidavit, the approach in Plascon-Evans Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints applies, with disputed facts generally determined on the respondent’s version unless denials are not bona fide or are untenable.


A warrantless search based on consent under section 22(a) of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 does not, without more, justify seizure. The seizure of an article must independently comply with section 20, and the statutory requirement of “reasonable grounds” must exist in fact and be assessed objectively, not merely by reference to an officer’s subjective belief.


Where police rely on informer information to ground a seizure under section 20, the information placed before a court must be sufficiently specific and reliable to permit an objective assessment of reasonable grounds; bare conclusions (such as that items are “stolen”) without supporting detail may be insufficient.


Even if restoration may result in an applicant being placed temporarily in possession of an item that may be unlawfully possessed on the merits, spoliation relief may still be granted; the respondent remains able to seek subsequent lawful dispossession through appropriate statutory measures.

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[2013] ZAECMHC 5
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Magoda v Minister of Safety and Security and Another; Mxhego v Minister of Safety and Security and Another (380/12) [2013] ZAECMHC 5 (28 February 2013)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
EASTERN CAPE HIGH COURT: MTHATHA
CASE NO: 380/12
Heard on: 01/02/13
Delivered on: 28/02/13
In the matter between:
ANDILE MAGODA
.................................................................................
Applicant
and
MINISTER OF SAFETY & SECURITY
.........................................
1
st
Respondent
THE COMMANDING OFFICER-
VEHICLE IDENTIFICATION UNIT
GROUP 46-MTHATHA
.................................................................
2
nd
Respondent
AND
CASE NO: 381/12
BEBETHO MXHEGO
..............................................................................
Applicant
and
MINISTER OF SAFETY & SECURITY
.........................................
1
st
Respondent
THE COMMANDING OFFICER-
VEHICLE IDENTIFICATION UNIT
GROUP 46-MTHATHA
.................................................................
2
nd
Respondent
_____________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
____________________________________________________________
NHLANGULELA J:
[1] An application was made on behalf of both the
applicants and respondents that these two cases be heard together
because they
have identical issues of facts and law and a decision in
one will apply to the other. I granted such application. Accordingly,
I deal with both matters in this judgment for the purposes of
convenience.
[2] In both applications the applicants seek
confirmatory relief that the search and seizure of certain motor
vehicles by the police,
without a warrant having been obtained in
terms of
ss 21
and
22
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
be
declared unlawful. Further, they seek an order that if the declarator
is granted, the possession of the motor vehicles be restored
to their
possession
status
quo ante;
and that the respondent be
interdicted and restrained from interfering with such possession
unlawfully.
[3] The relief originally sought that the respondents be
ordered to issue the motor vehicles with SAPS numbers in order to
enable
same to be driven on a public road was abandoned by the
applicants.
[4] The applicant in the first application, Mr Magoda,
and the applicant in the second application, Mr Mxhego, are related
to each
other. Mr Mxhego is the uncle to Mr Magoda. Both reside in
homesteads which are adjacent to each other at Blackhill
Administrative
Area, Qumbu. Mr Mxhego is married and he resides at
his homestead with his wife, one Nandipha Somdaka, and a daughter,
one Nosisi
Mxhego.
[5] Mr Magoda is alleged to be the owner of a motor
vehicle which is described as a Toyota Hilux with registration
letters and number
DWZ 963 EC (the Toyota). Mr Mxhego is also alleged
to be the owner of a motor vehicle which is described as a Nissan
Sentra with
registration letters and number WGX 247 GP (the Nissan).
[6] The circumstances which gave rise to the launching
of the applications are these: On a certain day in February 2012 the
members
of the Vehicle Identification Unit, Kokstad who are in the
employ of the State, in the department of South African Police
Service
searched for and found the Toyota and Nissan parked in the
homestead of Mr Mxhego. They inspected these vehicles under the
bonnet
and found that the Toyota had the following features, namely:
(a) The chassis number LN560165339 was cut out from
another vehicle and re-welded.
(b) The engine number 2L1944261 was ground off and
re-stamped; and
(c) The manufacturer’s tag was removed and
replaced.
The Nissan was found with the following features,
namely:
(a) The chassis number M053145 was ground off and
re-stamped, but not by the manufacturer.
(b) The engine number E13S051281D was removed and
re-stamped, but not by the manufacturer.
(c) The manufacturer’s tag number (400) 0034217
had been removed and replaced, but not by the manufacturer.
[7] In the light of the irregularities with the two
motor vehicles so found the police came to the conclusion that the
applicants
cannot lawfully possess such motor vehicles; and they
proceeded to seize and remove them to the police pound.
[8] It is the applicants’ case that the removal of
the vehicles is unlawful to the extent that the police violated their
possessory
rights under the doctrine of
mandament van spolie
.
A reference to the statement made by Mhlantla JA in the case of
Svetlov Ivancmec Ivanov v North West Gambling Board and 5 Others
(312/2011) [2012] ZA SCA (31 May 2012) will help in understanding
the applicants’ cause of action. The learned Judge of Appeal

said at page 12, para [19]:
“The historic background and the general principles underlying
the
mandament van spolie
are well established. Spoliation is
the wrongful deprivation of another’s right of possession. The
aim of spoliation is to
prevent self-help. It seeks to prevent people
from taking the law into their own hands. An applicant upon proof of
two requirements
is entitled to a
mandament van spolie
restoring the
status quo ante.
The first, is proof that the
applicant was in possession of the spoliated thing. The cause for
possession is irrelevant –
that is why possession by a thief is
protected. The second, is the wrongful deprivation of possession. The
fact that possession
is wrongful or illegal is irrelevant as that
would go to the merits of the dispute.”
See also:
Nino Bonino v De Lange
1906 TS 120
at
122.
[9] The duty to prove
mandament van spolie
falls
on the applicant. See:
Runsin Properties v Ferreira
1982 (1)
SA 658
(SECLD) at 669.
[10] The facts alleged by the applicants towards
satisfying the requisites for
mandament van spolie
are not
straight forward. Mr Magoda alleges in the founding affidavit that he
had kept the Toyota in the premises of Mr Mxhego
for safe-keeping
since he had gone away from home. When the police arrived at the
premises they were received by Nosisi Mxhego,
a 13 years old daughter
of Mr Mxhego, who could not have been able to give valid consent for
the search as she was a minor and
who had not been authorized to give
consent for it. Mr Mxhego also made the same allegations with regard
to the capacity of Nosisi
to give consent. Attempts by Nosisi to
supply cellphone numbers of the owners of vehicles were thwarted by
the force exerted by
the police in inspecting the vehicles. After
that they towed the vehicles away to the premises at the Vehicle
Identification Unit,
Group 46, Mthatha. This is a police pound. The
police informed Nosisi that any queries may be made by the owners at
the pound.
As a result on 04 and 08 February 2012 he and Mr Mxhego
proceeded to the pound where they made claims for the return of the
vehicles.
On each of those visits the police obfuscated their efforts
by disavowing knowledge of the circumstances under which the vehicles

were searched and seized and the names of the investigating officer
responsible for the vehicles were concealed. In the circumstances
the
applicants conclude that no search warrant could have been issued had
the police sought one before conducting a search and
seizure of the
vehicles. Nosisi Mxhego confirmed the facts set out in the affidavits
of the applicants.
[11] Admitting as it were that the applicants were in
possession of the Toyota and Nissan, Warrant Officer Jimmy Desmond
Marais
avers in the answering affidavit that on 01 February 2012 he
received information from an informer that there were stolen motor

vehicles which were being kept at a certain homestead in Blackhill
Administrative Area, Qumbu. On 02 February 2012 he together
with the
informer, Constable V. Jiba, Constable K.J. Jantjies and Captain Van
Wyk proceeded to Blackhill. Captain Van Wyk was their
commander. Upon
reaching Blackhill the informer pointed to the homestead of Mr Mxhego
and the motor vehicles which were parked
in the premises of the
homestead. After conducting some investigations, the details of which
were kept secrete, Mr Marais and the
members of his team entered the
homestead. They were received by Nandipha Somdaka to whom they
introduced themselves as policemen
and asked for permission to
conduct a search in respect of the Toyota and Nissan. They were
informed that Mr Mxhego had gone away
to work in the Johannesburg
mines. Nevertheless the wife granted the permission as sought by the
policemen to conduct a search.
Mr Jiba was tasked to conduct a search
in respect of the Toyota. Mr Marais searched the Nissan. Upon
discovering the irregularities
as aforementioned the police towed the
vehicles to Qumbu Police Station, and later on to the police pound.
An enquiry docket described
as Mthatha CAS 24/02/2012 was opened for
further investigation and handed over to Detective Constable Lwandile
Ncapayi, who conducted
further investigations. In the confirmatory
affidavit Mr Ncapayi states that the Toyota was discovered to have
been reported stolen
on Edenvale CAS 195/06/1998. Investigations are
continuing in respect of the Nissan.
[12] The facts in these cases reveal that what triggered
a search and seizure for the Toyota and Nissan was the information
that
the vehicles parked at the premises of Mr Mxhego were stolen
vehicles, the consent given to the police to conduct the search and

the discovery of irregularities on the vehicles and a belief by the
police that they would have obtained a warrant from the magistrate
to
conduct a search and seize the vehicles had an opportunity existed
for them to obtain it. It is on those facts that the applicant
must
discharge onus to prove that requisites of
mandament van spolie
.
But there is a conflict of facts with regard to the issue of consent.
When this was raised by the Court during arguments both
Mr Notyesi
and
Mr Zilwa
, the attorney and advocate who appeared on
behalf of the parties reached an agreement that the conflict should
be resolved on the
basis of the respondents’ version, unless
any denial made by the respondents is demonstrably not
bona fide,
and so groundless that the appellants’ factual averments can be
accepted as stated in the case of
Plascon-Evans Paints v Van
Riebeeck Paints
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 634.
[13]
The allegations made by the applicants that the
police were received by Nosisi Mxhego does not make sense as such a
person cannot
be 13 years of age and at the same time be regarded as
an adult person that Nosisi has alleged in the confirmatory
affidavits to
be. Further, applicants allege that Nosisi received the
police on 01 February 2012. And Nosisi confirmed that date. On the
other
hand the police averred that they arrived at the homestead of
Mr Mxhego on 02 February 2012, and they were received by Nandipha

Somdaka. The rule in
Plascon-Evans
case being applied to the
facts warrants the conclusion that the police went to the homestead
of Mr Mxhego on 02 February 2012 and
that they were received by his
wife who gave the necessary consent for the searching of the
vehicles. Consequently, the contention
advanced by
Mr Notyesi
that Nosisi had no capacity to give consent, either due to
youthfulness or the alleged force applied by the police, has no
merit.
To that end, the reliance on the statement of Miller J in the
case of
Magobodi v Minister of Safety and Security and Another
2009 (1) SACR 355
(Tk) at 360g that the consent given must be
voluntary for a search to be justified cannot assist the applicants
because Nandipha
Somdaka is an adult person having capacity to give
or withhold consent.
[14] In the ordinary cause, it will be observed that the
applicants’ failure to prove that consent was not given for
their
vehicles to be searched and seized would render them unsuited
for the remedy of
mandament van spolie
. However to the extent
that searches conducted in terms of s 22(a) (consent) of the Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977 (the Act)
are permitted subject to certain
pre-conditions listed under s 20 of the Act the statement of law in
Sigwebendlana v Minister of Safety and Security,
Case No.
27/94 (Tk) (unreported) that the question of consent becomes entirely
irrelevant finds resonance.
[15] The provisions of s 20 of the Act read:
“The State may, in accordance with the provisions of this
Chapter, seize anything (in this Chapter referred to as an article)-
which is concerned in or is on reasonable grounds believed to be
concerned in the commission or suspected commission of an offence,

whether within the Republic or elsewhere;
which may afford evidence of the commission or suspected commission
of an offence, whether within the Republic or elsewhere;
or
which is intended to be used or is on reasonable grounds believed to
be intended to be used in the commission of an offence.”
In essence the law recognizes that balance should be
maintained between the rights of the police to conduct searches and
seizures
unhindered by the cumbersome procedural requirements
relating to obtaining a search warrant and the rights of possession
accorded
to citizens under s 14(b) and (c) of the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa, 1996. These subsections provide that
everyone
has a right to privacy, which includes the right not to have
their property searched or their possessions seized. But the tension

experienced in the exercise of maintaining balance of these rights
makes the task of the courts a difficult one.
[16] The Legislature enjoins the respondents to prove by
credible evidence that the seizure of the Toyota and Nissan complied
with
the provisions of s 20 of the Act. That is, the scheme of
Chapter 2 to the Act is such that even if consent to search a vehicle

is obtained the ultimate seizure (dispossession) thereof must comply
with the provisions of s 20 strictly. Failure on the part
of the
police to show that the seizure was in compliance with s 20 will
render the seizure unlawful, and the removal of the vehicles
from
Blackhill to the police pound an act of spoliation entitling the
applicants to restoration
ante omnia
regardless of the fact
that they would not, at the time of search and seizure, have been
entitled to possess them in terms of
s 68(6)(b)
of the
National Road
Traffic Act 93 of 1996
, which provides:
“No person shall – without lawful cause be in possession
of a motor vehicle of which the engine or chassis number has
been
falsified. Replaced, altered, defaced, mutilated, or to which
anything has been added, or from which anything has been removed,
or
has been tampered with in any other way.”
In terms of
s 89(ii)
of the same Act possession of a
falsified motor vehicle is a criminal offence.
[17] In the circumstances it behoves the respondents to
show that the decision taken by the police to seize the vehicles
falls within
the purview of s 20 of the Act. The proper approach to
be adopted in applying the section was considered by Didcott J in the
case
of
Ndabeni v Minister of Law and Order and Another
1984
(3) SA 500
(D and C.L.D.) at 511D-E. The Learned Judge said:
“The second respondent, (that is the policeman concerned) no
doubt thought that there were reasonable grounds for the belief
he
held. That, however, was by the way.
Section 20
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act calls
for the existence in fact of reasonable grounds.
And whether these exist in a given case must be determined
objectively. Milne
J once said “(T)here can only be reasonable
cause to believe…where, considered objectively, there are
reasonable grounds
for the belief... It cannot be said that an
officer has reasonable cause to believe… merely because he
believes he has reasonable
cause to believe.”
[18] Therefore, the facts that informed Mr Marais to
seize the motor vehicles of the applicants must be based on
reasonable grounds.
Mr Notyesi
submitted that there is paucity
of information supplied in the answering affidavit upon which a
belief held by Mr Marais could be
tested, and such information goes
against the grain of authority as seen in the cases of
Sigwebendlana
v Minister of Police,
Case No. 27/94 (Tk) unreported) and
Hiya
v Minister of Safety and Security And Another,
Case No. 506/99
(Tk) dated 19/11/99 (unreported), in which it was stated that the
information given to the police by an informer
must be a sufficiently
detailed information placed before the court on which a reasonable
belief is based. These authorities commend
themselves to me,
otherwise it would be unthinkable that a court could be in a good
position of assessing if the information given
to Mr Marais was
objectively reasonable grounds justifying the seizure of the
vehicles.
[19] I can only see the averments made by Mr Marais in
paragraph 7 of the answering affidavit as being the only information
that
could have given rise to a suspicion on the mind of Mr Marais
that the vehicles were stolen vehicles. They read:
“During the evening of 1 February 2012, I received information
from my informer to the effect that there were stolen vehicles
being
kept at certain homestead and (
sic)
Blackhill Location at
Qumbu in the Eastern Cape Province.”
[20] Inevitably, the debate here must centre around the
words “stolen vehicles”. This, in my view, is a
subjective conclusion
because facts from which it is drawn lack
objectivity. I cannot decipher from those words any descriptive
features that distinguish
the Toyota and Nissan from other vehicles.
What becomes clear is that Mr Marais could not be able to make up his
own mind other
than to transplant the mind of the informer into his
own. And this is completely an undesirable approach to policing one
has regard
to the concern expressed by the Full Bench in the case of
Hiya, supra,
that the information used must be reliable lest
men with axes to grind are permitted to criminalise members of
society unfairly.
In
Sigwebendlana, supra
, at 3, Davis stated
appositely as follows:
“What was required at least was for the sergeant to allege that
the information came from a reliable source and to explain
in some
detail what it was and why it would be contrary to public policy or
the interests of the administration of justice to disclose
more
details. All that he says, in effect, is that it would interfere with
the administration of justice. On this first point then
I conclude
that respondent, who admittedly bears the burden of proof, has not
shown that the vehicle fell within the terms of section
20 of the
Act.”
[21] Based on the cases of
Ndabeni
and
Sigwebendlana, supra,
I find that the belief held by the
police that the vehicles were stolen vehicles was not informed by
objectively reasonable grounds.
Consequently, the seizure of the
vehicles is not one that falls within the purview of s 20 of the Act.
[22] The contention advanced on behalf of the
respondents is that since the provisions of s 89 of Act 93 of 1996
forbid possession
of the vehicles by the applicants, restoration of
possession is not possible. This contention must be given a short
shrift because
the Full Bench in the case of
Sitonga v Minister of
Safety and Security and 2 Others
2008 (1) SACR 376
(Tk) at para.
[37] decided that:
“Whilst it may result in the applicant in spoliation
proceedings being placed in possession of an article he or she may
otherwise not lawfully possess, it should be borne in mind that the
mandament van spolie
affords no more than temporary relief.
The respondent can, subsequent to the applicant having been restored
in his or her possession,
seek judicial dispossession, ejectment or
other appropriate relief. Applied to the facts of the present matter,
it is always open
to the respondents to seek lawful dispossession of
the vehicles in terms of the provisions of section 21 read with
section 20
of the
Criminal Procedure Act.”
[23
] The applicants in both matters have achieved
success in their applications. They are entitled to the costs
thereof.
[24] In the result the following order shall issue:
That the search and seizure of the applicants’ motor
vehicles described as:
A Toyota Hilux with registration letters and number DWZ 936 EC;
and
A Nissan Sentra with registration letters and number WGX 247 GP;
be and are hereby declared unlawful.
That the respondents be and are hereby directed to release the
motor vehicles as aforementioned forthwith.
That the respondents be and are hereby interdicted and restrained
from unlawfully interfering with the applicants’ possession
of
the motor vehicles.
That the first respondent pay costs of the applications.
___________________________________
Z.M. NHLANGULELA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel for the applicants : Mr M. Notyesi
c/o Mvuzo Notyesi Inc
MTHATHA
Counsel for the respondents : Adv PHS Zilwa
Instructed by : The State Attorney
MTHATHA