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[2010] ZAFSHC 96
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Nienaber v Minister of Safety and Security (A290/09) [2010] ZAFSHC 96 (23 September 2010)
FREE
STATE HIGH COURT, BLOEMFONTEIN
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No. : A290/09
In
the appeal between:
LAMBERTUS
HENDRIK NIENABER
….................................
Appellant
and
THE MINISTER OF
SAFETY & SECURITY
…........................
Respondent
_______________________________________________________
CORAM:
H.M. MUSI, JP
et
MOLEMELA, J
et
MTHEMBU, AJ
_______________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
BY:
MOLEMELA, J
_______________________________________________________
[1] I have had the
benefit of reading the judgment of my brother Musi JP. Although I am
in full agreement with his findings and
reasoning pertaining to the
issue as to who the arresting officer was, I am regrettably and with
respect not in agreement with
the reasoning and findings pertaining
to the two remaining issues,
viz
(i) whether the arresting
officer (Inspector Monyane) had a reasonable suspicion that the
appellant was the culprit and (ii) whether
the appellant’s
detention was justified in view of the alibi he had provided. In
considering these two issues, regard must
be had to the
jurisdictional facts which must exist before the power to arrest
without a warrant can be invoked, as laid down in
the case of
DUNCAN
V MINISTER OF LAW AND ORDER 1986(2) SA 805 (A) at 818F-H
.
[2] The complainant in
this matter was interviewed by Insp Monyane and Insp Deysel,
respectively. The complainant’s statement
was taken down by
insp Deysel as she (insp Deysel) had previously received training in
obtaining statements related to sexual offences.
According to insp
Deysel, insp Monyane was present when she was taking down the
statement. This was vehemently denied by insp Monyane,
who testified
that he was not present as he was doing other duties at that stage.
Both Inspector Deyzel and Inspector Monyane repeatedly
stated that
the decision for Inspector Monyane to arrest the suspect, was taken
before Inspector Monyane left the police station.
According to
Inspector Deyzel, this decision was informed by the fact that the
suspect’s name and address were available
from the computer
after the complainant had provided them with the registration number
letters as well as the colour of the vehicle
of her assailant. I
will, at this stage already, express the view that it is dangerous
to, without more, assume that the fact that
a vehicle that is linked
to the commission of an offence is registered in someone’s name
establishes reasonable grounds to
suspect that the owner is the
perpetrator of such an offence. Now, the real question here is
whether the information at insp Monyane’s
disposal was
sufficient to establish a reasonable suspicion. The salient features
of his evidence will provide us with an answer.
[3] Insp Monyane
testified as follows:
“
I told them
[the parents] that if the child said she is able to go and point out
the place of the ..... the child said she’s
able to go and
point out the residential place of the culprit, I can just help them
to go and arrest the culprit.”
It is thus clear that he
left the police station with the firm intent of arresting the owner
of the vehicle. According to his evidence,
he even arranged for
backup from Inspector Pretorius before he left the police station. He
however later testified that in addition
to the above information,
the complainant had also informed him that she would be able to
recognise her assailant if she saw him
again. He was at pains to
explain that he was directed to the appellant’s place of
residence by the complainant and not on
the basis of the information
obtained from the computer pertaining to the vehicle’s owner.
[4] It must be borne in
mind that it is common cause that the complainant lived in the same
neighbourhood as the appellant. Inspector
Monyane testified that the
complainant lived 50 m away from the appellant’s place of
residence. He further testified that
the complainant informed him
that she had passed by her assailant’s place of residence
several times prior to the incident
and that on one occasion he even
offered her an amount of R200,00 for sexual favours. The elaborate
evidence of how the appellant’s
place of residence was reached
at the instance of the complainant was therefore of no special
significance considering that the
complainant from the onset claimed
to know the person who raped her, indicated that she could actually
take the police to his house
and actually happened to live quite
close to where he lived. I am of the view that the fact that she knew
the registration number
of the vehicle and its colour did not
strengthen the allegations made against the appellant in any way. In
my view, undue weight
was attached to this aspect.
[5]
Courts have in the past laid down that an arresting officer must,
inter alia
,
consider whether the offence could have been committed in the
circumstances alleged and by the person to be arrested. It has also
been stated that a reasonable man effecting an arrest will assess the
quality of information at his disposal critically and will
not accept
it lightly or without checking it where it can be checked. See
NKAMBULE V MINISTER OF LAW AND ORDER
1993(1) SA 848 (T)
;
SERIA
v MINISTER OF SAFETY AND SECURITY AND OTHERS
2005 (5) SA
130
(C)
.
[6] In response to a
question regarding his motivation for arresting the appellant,
Inspector Monyane testified that
“
.....
because at that stage she was in a position to go and arrest the
culprit. She was in a position to go and point out the place
and she
would also be able to show me the place and I was convinced that she
is, I was
convinced
she was raped
and she knows very well who is the culprit.” (my underlining
for emphasis.)
Now, I wonder what
convinced
Inspector Monyane that the complainant was raped.
There was evidence to the effect that the 15 year old complainant’s
parents
had, for the two days and nights during which she was
missing, not reported her as missing as they had decided that they
would
rather wait for her to give an explanation concerning her
absence on her return. Significantly, at the time that Inspector
Monyane
was purportedly convinced that the rape had taken place, the
complainant had no visible physical injuries and had not even been
taken for any medical examination. I am of the view that a suspicion
of commission of schedule 1 offences based only on the
afore-mentioned
facts is simply not objectively sustainable. See
BENTLEY AND ANOTHER V MC PHERSON
1999 (3) SA 854
(EC)
.
I accordingly disagree with my brother’s conclusion that
there was “no doubt” that serious schedule 1 offences
had
been committed.
[7] Inspector Monyane
testified that the complainant’s statement was taken down by
Inspector Deyzel because she has received
training in taking down
statements related to sexual offences, yet he did not bother to read
the statement taken by Inspector Deyzel
before effecting the arrest.
If he had done so, he would have picked up that the complainant
estimated the appellant’s age
as 30 years, when he was in fact
58 years old. This valuable piece of information would no doubt have
alerted him to the possibility
of a mistaken identity. This is
especially so when regard is paid to the fact that the appellant
shared his home with his adult
son who also happened to have access
to the appellant’s vehicle. As an aside, I will mention that
both the appellant’s
and his son’s DNA was forensically
analysed and the results were negative. I state this quite mindful of
the fact that the
latter aspect is not a factor to be taken into
account when assessing the reasonableness of insp Monyane’s
suspicion.
[8]
With regards to the discretion to arrest, it has indeed been held in
a plethora of cases that where the circumstances do not
justify the
more drastic method of arrest, then the arrest would be unlawful. See
RALEKWA v MINISTER OF SAFETY AND
SECURITY
2004 (1) SACR 131
(T)
.
In the case of
MINISTER OF SAFETY AND
SECURITY v SEKHOTO AND ANOTHER
2010 (1) SACR 388
(FB)
at 401 the full bench of this
division had the following to say:
“
Because
deprivation of freedom is
prima
facie
unlawful, there has never been doubt that the burden to prove lawful
arrest in a court of law is on the defendant (arrestor) .....
the
arrestor bears the onus of proving that the arrest was justified in
law ..... The next question relates to the stage of arrest.
When
effecting an arrest, a police official must make
basic
enquiries
to ensure that constitutional rights will not be infringed by an
arrest. … That entails, at the stage
before
arrest,
to
make enquiries whether arrest is necessary
and whether the arrest will infringe upon the arrestees’
constitutional rights.” (my underlining for emphasis).
[9] I would respectfully
align myself with the view expressed in that case. After all,
questioning a suspect before arresting him
/ her is not an onerous
task and does not prejudice the administration of justice in any way.
Where the police are of the view
that the most appropriate method of
bringing a suspect before the courts is by way of an arrest, as
opposed to a notice, summons
or warning, they are in any event not
compelled to effect the arrest without a warrant. They could still
opt for obtaining a warrant
of arrest as contemplated in
section 43
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, instead of arresting such a
suspect without an warrant. It is interesting to note that even in
the pre-constitutional era, Schreiner,
JA remarked as follows in the
case of
TSOSE V MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND
OTHERS 1951(3) SA 10 (A) H
:
“…
What
I have said must not be understood as conveying approval of the use
of arrest where there is no urgency and the person to be
charged has
a fixed and known address; in such cases it is generally desirable
that a summons should be used.”
[10] In
OLIVIER
V MINISTER OF SAFETY AND SECURITY AND ANOTHER 2009(3) SA 434 at 435 F
Horn J remarked as follows:
“
I
am of the view that the time has arrived to state as a matter of law
that, even if a crime which is listed in Schedule 1 of Act
51 of 1977
has allegedly been committed, and even if the arresting office
believes on reasonable grounds that such a crime has
indeed been
committed, this in itself does not justify an arrest forthwith. An
arrest, being as drastic an invasion of personal
liberty as it is,
must still be justifiable according to the demands of the Bill of
Rights”.
In the same case, the
court remarked as follows on p 445 at paragraph F:
“
There
is no doubt in my mind that a trained policeman would have little
difficulty in assessing a situation like this, to decide
when an
arrest without a warrant would be proper and when not- this without
having to make a value judgment.”
[11]
In the case of
MINISTER OF SAFETY AND SECURITY v SEKHOTO
AND ANOTHER
,
supra
,
it was reiterated that in assessing the lawfulness of an arrest made
without a warrant, the enquiry entails
inter
alia
considering whether the arrestor
appreciated that an arresting officer had a discretion to arrest
without a warrant or not and whether
he indeed applied such a
discretion.
In casu
,
it is not evident that Inspector Monyane was aware of this
discretion, let alone him applying the discretion concerned.
[12]
In the case of
LOUW AND ANOTHER v MINISTER OF SAFETY AND
SECURITY AND OTHERS
2006 (2) SACR 178
(T)
at 184 b – c it was held that
an arresting officer must investigate explanations offered by the
suspect.
In casu
Inspector
Monyane did not make any enquiries whatsoever from the appellant. It
was not disputed that immediately after the appellant
was pointed out
by the complainant, the appellant’s constitutional rights were
explained to him by insp Pretorius and he
was then placed under
arrest without any enquiries being directed to him. Shortly after the
appellant’s arrest, he was questioned
by Inspector Deyzel and
Captain Strydom. He informed them that he was impotent and even
provided them with the name of his medical
practitioner for
verification of that fact. He informed them that he was at his place
of employment when the incident allegedly
took place. He provided
them with the name of his supervisor and a colleague who gave him a
lift to the workplace. The two people
concerned were contacted and
despite their verification of the appellant’s alibi, he was
detained.
[13] Having examined the
conduct of the police officers during the incident, I am not
persuaded that any suspicion that Inspector
Monyane or his colleagues
had, rested on reasonable grounds. Even if I am wrong in arriving at
this conclusion, this does not detract
from the fact that the
evidence does not show that insp Monyane applied his discretion as to
the method of bringing the appellant
to court, i.e. whether to arrest
the appellant or not. He hastily decided to arrest him forthwith. In
my view, there was no justification
for that action. With respect, I
cannot agree with my brother that the information at Monyane’s
disposal marked the appellant
as a danger to society. He was a man of
a fairly advanced age with fixed employment and a known place of
abode. He gave the police
his full co-operation. Given the facts of
this case, I find that insp Monyane’s conduct does not pass
constitutional muster.
I am fortified in this view by the guidelines
set out in the cases that I have already alluded to. In my view, the
circumstances
of this case did not justify the appellant’s
arrest. The arrest was therefore unlawful.
[14]
Subsequent to the arrest, Inspector Deyzel and Captain Strydom had a
duty to apply their minds to the appellant’s detention
and the
circumstances relating thereto. (See
MVU
V MINISTER OF SAFETY AND SECURITY & ANOTHER 2009(6) SA 82 (SG).
The appellant offered them an
explanation and although they verified it, they rejected it. In my
view, this rejection of his explanation
was not reasonable under the
circumstances. I would therefore find that the appellant’s
detention was also unlawful. See
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND ANOTHER V HOFMEYER
[1993] ZASCA 40
;
1993 (3) SA 131(A)
; TOBANI V
MINISTER OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
[2000] ALL SA 318
(SE);
[15] With regards to
quantum, it is trite law that the impact of the arrest and detention
on the arrestee, the duration and nature
thereof, as well as the
awards in comparable cases are factors that have a bearing on
damages. I have taken into account the inconvenience,
humiliation,
pain and suffering that a single night of incarceration caused the
appellant. He was arrested in full view of his
neighbours and in the
presence of his wife, children and friends. I must also take into
consideration that his detention was only
overnight. Being mindful of
the remarks made by the court in the case of
MINISTER OF SAFETY
AND SECURITY V SEYMOUR 2006 (6) 320 (SCA)
, I am of the view
that a fair and equitable amount of compensation for the appellant’s
deprivation of liberty arising from
his unlawful arrest and detention
is an amount of R50 000.00.
[16] Having considered
all the aforementioned circumstances, I would make the following
order:
1. The appeal is
upheld with costs.
2. The order of the
court
a quo
is set aside and replaced with the following:
2.1 The defendant is
ordered to pay the sum of R50 000,00 as damages for unlawful arrest
and detention.
2.2 The defendant is
ordered to pay interest on the aforesaid amount
a tempore morae
.
2.3 The defendant is
ordered to pay the costs of this action.
_________________
M.B. MOLEMELA, J
On behalf of appellant:
Adv. N. Snellenburg
Instructed by:
Rosendorff Reitz Barry
BLOEMFONTEIN
On behalf of respondent:
Adv. M.R. Madlanga SC
Instructed by:
State Attorney
BLOEMFONTEIN
/sp