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[1989] ZASCA 1
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Minister of Law and Order and Another v Parker (1/89) [1989] ZASCA 1; [1989] 2 All SA 246 (A) (24 February 1989)
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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between:
THE MINISTER OF LAW AND ORDER 1st Appellant
CAPTAIN VAN SCHALKWYK 2nd Appellant
and
RASHIDA PARKER Respondent
Coram: JOUBERT, HEFER, VIVIER, STEYN JJ.A. et VILJOEN A.J.A.
Heard: 1 November 1988 Delivered: 24 February 1989
JUDGMENT JOUBERT, JA :
/Allie Parker
2
Allie Parker in partnership with his wife, Rashida Parker, (the respondent) conducted a printing business under the style and name of Allies Printing Services at premises in Epping Avenue, Elsies River. Captain van Schalkwyk, the second appellant, to whom I shall refer as "Van Schalkwyk", was a police officer commanding the Riot Squad at Bellville. On 12 June 1987 without a warrant of arrest he purportedly arrested Allie Parker at the premises of the printing business "ingevolge Regulasie 3 van die Noodregulasies." By virtue of a written order made out in terms of Regulation 3(1) of the Emergency Regulations Van Schalkwyk purportedly authorised the detention of Allie Parker in Vlctor Verster Prison at Paarl where he was detained. At the relevant time a state of emergency had been declared and certain emergency regulations were in force throughout the Republic.
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On 16 June 1987 the respondent applied
as a matter of
urgency to the Cape of Good Hope Provincial Division for a rule nisi
calling upon the Minister of Law and Order, the Officer Commanding Victor
Verster Prison and Van Schalkwyk as respondents to show
cause why the arrest and
detention of Allie Parker should not be declared unlawful (prayer 3.1) and why
the immediate release of
Allie Parker from detention in the Victor Verster
Prison aL Paarl should not be ordered (prayer 3.2) with costs. Certain other
orders
were also sought but since they were abandoned at the hearing before the
Court a quo it is not necessary to refer to them. The application was
opposed by the present appellants, i.e. the Minister of Law and Order and
Van
Schalkwyk, who relied on a lawful arrest and detention of Allie Parker in terms
of Regulation 3(1) of the Emergency Regulations
made by the State President
under sec 3 (1)(a)
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of the Public Safety Act, 3 of 1953, and published in
Proclamation R 96 of 1987 on 11 June 1987. The Officer Commanding Victor Verster
Prison did not oppose the application. Presumably he abided the decision of the
Court a quo. On 3 July 1987 ROSE-INNES J upheld the application by
granting final orders in terms of prayers 3.1 and 3.2 with costs of suit to
be
paid by the Minister of Law and Order. With leave of the Court a quo the
appellants now appeal to this Court.
It is trite law that where an arrestee
challenges the validity of his arrest and detention the onus of
establishing the lawfulness thereof is on the arrestor or the person who caused
the arrest to be made. (Minister of Law & Order and Others v Hurley &
Another, 1986 (3) SA 568 (A) at p 589 D-E, Ngqumba en 'n Ander v
Staatspresident en Andere, 1988 (4) SA 224 (A) at p 259 C).
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In paragraph 6 of his opposing affidavit
Van Schalkwyk stated the following regarding the arrest and
detention of
Allie Parker, viz. :
"Ek het hom gevolglik ingevolge die bepalings van Regulasie 3(1) van voormelde Regulasies gearresteer en laat aanhou. Ek het h skriftelike bevel onderteken vir die aanhouding van Applikante se eggenoot wat as Aanhangsel "A" by die Beëdigde Verklaring van Johannes Petrus Mouton aangeheg is. Toe ek Applikante se eggenoot arresteer soos voormeld, het ek hom meegedeel dat ek ingevolge Regulasie 3 van die Noodregulasies handel." (My underlining).
Regulation 3(1) reads as follows:
"A member of a security force may, without warrant of arrest, arrest or cause to be arrested any person whose detention is, in the opinion of such member, necessary for the safety of the public or the maintenance of public order, or for the safety of that person himself, or for the termination of the state of emergency, and may, under a written order signed by any member of a
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security force, detain or cause to be detained any such person in custody in a prison."
The main submission on behalf of the
present respondent in the Court a
guo was summarised as
follows by ROSE-INNES J in his judgment:
"The first and main submission for applicant is that at the time of Parker's arrest no facts or grounds or reasons for his apprehension were conveyed to him and at the most he was told that he was being arrested in terms of regulation 3.1. In other words, on this submission, he was not informed of the reasons for his arrest. The submission is that the failure to inform a person who is to be arrested of the cause or reasons for his arrest at the time of the arrest, and his consequent detention, is unlawful according to the well established principles of the common law which, it is submitted, are not excluded by regulation 3.1. If the person arrested is not apprised why he is being apprehended the arrest is irregular, invalid and ultra vires regulation 3.1 because regulation 3.1 does not contemplate an arrest in which the cause
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of arrest is secretive." In this Court Mr Gamble on
behalf of the respondent developed his argument along the same lines.
What is
our common law in this connection ? Unfortunately counsel could not assist this
Court because they neglected to consult our
common law authorities. The same
holds for ROSE-INNES J. who confined his consultation of our common law on
arrest to a passage in
Van Zyl's Judicial Practice of South Africa, vol
1, 4th ed, p 207. The inadequacy of this passage appears abundantly from the
decision of this Court in Ngqumba's case, supra, at p 263 H-264
I.
Let us consult our common law sources on the physical arrest (Beslag op
yemands persoon / prise de corps) of persons. The Roman-Dutch writers
distinguished between various types of arrest. They regard all arrests
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as odious because they deprived an arrestee of his freedom of
movement. See Pieter Vromans (+ 1690), Tractaat de foro
competenti, lib 1 cap 1 nr 25. Unless an arrest was made in accordance
with certain rules of law it was unlawful and could be resisted with
impunity by
an arrestee. (5 Holl Cons c 97 nr 2, Voet (1647-1713) 5.1.62). In footnote 1 to
Van Zurck's Codex Batavus, s v Gevangenis, Apprehensie nr 2, Van der
Schelling (1691-1751) rightly observed that among the most serious grievances
which the
Dutch bore against the notoriously repressive regime of the Duke of
Alva, as regent of the Netherlands from 1567 to 1573, "is geweest
het gevangen
zetten zonder verhooren."
The main types of arrest were the following:
Civil Arrest:
The Dutch word for civil arrest was "arrest"
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which was derived via French from the medieval Latin word arrestum. See Gail (1526-1587), Tractatus de Arrestis, cap 1 nr 1 and Huber (1636-1694), Praelectiones ad D 2.4.1. A Creditor could secure the arrest of his debtor on two grounds, viz.
(a) in the case of a debtor suspectus de fuga, or
(b) to found the jurisdiction of the court (ad fundandam iurisdictionem).
The procedure he had to adopt was to petition the court for a mandament van arrest in order to secure the person of his debtor. In the petition he had to set out the particulars on which he based his claim and the reasons for requiring the arrest of his debtor. According to Voet 2.4.17 civil arrest is rigidissimus vero in jus vocandi modus. The grant of a mandament van arrest by a judge authorised and ordered the Deurwaarder or Bailjuw and his officials to arrest the
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debtor and to bring him without delay before the court. On furnishing a cautio de judicio sisti and/or a cautio de judicatum solvendo the arrestee was released from detention and the civil proceedings continued. According to Van der Linden (1756-1835) 3.1.4.3 the practice in the south of Province of Holland was to serve on the debtor simultaneously with his arrest a civil summons of the creditor's claim against him. In the north of Province of Holland the arrest was made without serving a civil summons on the arrestee. The latter was, however, entitled to demand from the creditor reasons for his arrest. It should be noted that in a case of emergency where there was a grave danger of the imminent flight of the debtor the latter could be arrested without a mandament van arrest. An arrest would be made at the risk of the arrestor should it transpire that it was unlawful. See Huber H.R. 4.31.7; Voet
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2.4.18; Kersteman (1728-1793) Hollandsch Rechtsqeleert
Woordenboek, s v Arresten. According to Groenewegen (1613-1652) ad Cod 3.18
nr 4 the practice of arresting debtors was very common in the Netherlands.
It is
still part of our modern law.
The Dutch practice then as regards civil
arrests was that the arrestee should be apprised of the grounds or reasons for
his arrest
pursuant to a mandament van arrest. Moreover, if he timeously
got wind of his creditor's application for a mandament van arrest he
could oppose it and even appeal against its grant before his arrest. See
Kersteman, loc.cit. The authorities do not discuss the question whether
or not an arrestee had to be informed of the reasons for his ar rest without
a
mandament van arrest. The creditor knew them and presumably he had to
inform the arrestee why he was arresting him.
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Criminal Arrest:
The Roman-Dutch jurists referred to
criminal arrest as apprehensie or apprehensio. Although private
prosecutions of crimes were not prohibited they were not resorted to in the
Province of Holland where all criminal
prosecutions were conducted by the State.
(De Groot (1583-1645) 3.4.5, Van Leeuwen (1625-1682) R.H.R. 5.27.2, Groenewegen
acl Cod
9.1. nrs 3 et 4, ad Cod 9.31.1, Van der Keessel (1738-1816), Jus
Criminale, vol 2 p 577).
Mention should be made of two very important
Placcaten or Statutes which were enacted by Phillip 11 for the Netherlands. The
one is
the Ordonnantie, Edict ende Gebodt op 't stuk vande Criminele
Justitie inde Nederlanden of 5 July 1570 (2 Groot-Placaet Boeck 1007-1042)
to which the Dutch writers referred under a somewhat misleading short title as
Criminele Ordonnantie.
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I shall refer to it as the "Ordinance of 5 July 1570". It regulated inter alia the functions of officials in the administration of criminal law as well as the maintenance and administration of prisons. Its provisions for the humane treatment of prisoners were certainly very enlightened and advanced for the 16th century. The other one is the Ordonnantie aengaende de stijl generael, die men voortaen sal onderhouden ende observeren inde Procedeeren vande Criminele saken ende materien inde Nederlanden of 9 July 1570 (2 Groot-Placaet Boeck 1045-1062). Dutch writers referred to it as Criminele Stijl or Ordonnantie op 't Stijl. I shall refer to it as the "Ordinance of 9 July 1570". It regulated the law of criminal procedure. Van der Linden 3.2.1.6 branded some of its provisions as "onbeschaefdheid van den tijd harer making".
The practice in the Province of Holland
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was to try the more serious crimes for which capital or
corporal punishment coulcl be imposed according to the
extraordinary or
inquisitorial process. The main features
of this type of criminal procedure
are conveniently
summarised by J M VAN BEMMELEN in his Strafvordering,
Leerboek
van het Nederlandsche Strafprocesrecht, tweede
vermeerde druk, 1940, at p
35 as follows:
"Hoofdbestanddeelen van dit proces waren: arrestatie en insluiting, het verhoor van den gevangene, confrontatie van dezen met de getuigen en het aanwenden van de pijnbank, een niet openbaar onderzoek, zonder verdediging, waarbij de gevangene voorwerp van onderzoek was en het onderzoek voornamelijk gericht was op het verkrijgen van een bekentenis. Deze sterke drang om den verdachte tot bekentenis te dwingen was vooral toe te schrijven aan twee rechtsregels: le dat de bekentenis noodig was voor het uitspreken van lijf- of
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doodstraf; 2e dat de bekennende verdachte niet kon appelleeren, confessus non appellat."
Consult on the extraordinary process: Van Leeuwen R.H.R. 5.27.11 sqq.; Voet
48.2.19; Pieter Bort, Tractaet Crimineel tit 5; Kersteman,
op.cit., s v
Apprehensie et Crimineele Zaken; Van der Keessel, op.cit., vol 2 p
579-583; Van der Linden 3.2.2.1-5.
The presence of a suspect or an accused at
an extraordinary process was normally procuréd by means of criminal
arrest (apprehensie). It was the duty of the public prosecutor to
commence his investigations as soon as possible after he became aware of the
perpetration
of the serious crime. He would then place his praecedente
informatien before a judge in order to obtain a mandament crimineel
or mandament van apprehensie, authorising and
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ordering the arrest of the suspect or accused. (Arts 30 et 50 of the Ordinance of 5 July 1570, Art 4 of the Ordinance of 9 July 1570, Pieter Bort, op.cit., nr 17, Van der Linden 3.2.1.8 et 9). Armed with the mandament van apprehensie the Deurwaarder or Bailjuw and his officials would make the arrest and bring the arrestee before a judge within 24 hours after his arrest, or at the latest within 3 days thereof. (Art 6 of the Ordinance of 9 July 1570, Van Zurck, op.cit. nr 4, Voet 48.2.20). The extraordinary process would then proceed until the verdict was given. See Van der Linden 3.2.2. The common law sources make no mention of a duty on the arrestor to inform the arrestee at the time of his arrest why the arrest was being made. It is most significant that in an example of a mandament crimineel issued by the Registrar of the Court of Holland at the Hague on 1 October 1653 to arrest a certain N no
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mention was made of the crime with which he would be charged,
as appears from Pieter Bort, op.cit., nr 19. This view is fortified by
the lack of particulars regarding the nature of the crime in a criminal summons,
as I shall point
out presently.
There was a very important exception to the
rule which required an arrestor to have a mandament crimineel or
mandament van apprehensie in order to arrest an arrestee. This exception
was where the arrestee had been arrested in the act of committing the crime
(in flagrante delicto / crimine, dat hy op 't bevonden is)
or where the arrestee was a vagabond who might take to flight. See Art 50 of the
Ordinance of 9 July 1570, arts 2 et 3 of the Ordinance
of 5 July 1570, art 19 of
the Instructie van den Hove van Hollandt, Zeeland ende Vriesland, 1531,
Van Leeuwen R.H.R. 5.27.11, Voet 48.3.18, Kersteman,
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op.cit., s v Apprehensie, Van der Keessel,
op.cit. pp 579, 613, Van der Linden 3.2.1.7, Wassenaar
(1589-1664),
Practyk Judicieel, cap 27 nr 13. The arrestor could be an
official or any private person. See the Italian jurist Farinacius (1554-1613),
Praxis et theorica criminalis, tom 1 quaestio 21 nrs 138-140, 156. Such
an arrest was made at the peril of the arrestor. It was therefore incumbent on
him to produce
the arrestee within 24 hours after his arrest before a judge to
have the arrest confirmed and approved of as lawful. Compare Van
der Linden
3.2.1.7.
For the sake of completeness I should mention the criminal summons
(mandament van dagvaarding in persoon or citatie) which was usually used
to procure the presence of an accused at a hearing on a charge of a lesser crime
which did not involve capital
or corporal punishment.
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The hearing would be conducted according to the ordinary
process like a civil trial. The criminal summons was issued by a judge and
served on the accused by the Deurwaarder or Bailjuw and his officials. See Bort,
op.cit., nr 43, Voet 48.3.20, Kersteman, op.cit., s v Mandamenten
et Citatie, Van der Linden 3.2.1.10, 3.2.4. 1-3. The criminal summons merely
informed the accused to appear in
person on a fixed date "voor den Hove, ende
aan te hooren alsulcken eysch en conclusie, als den
Procureur Generaal tegen
hem sal willen doen en nemen "
(Bort, op.cit., nr 48). It did not
specify the nature of the crime with which he would be charged. Nor was he given
a copy of the criminal summons.
He was merely given a copy of a document that he
had been summoned to appear in person in court on a fixed date. Van der Linden
3.2.10.
The reason why he was kept in the dark of the nature of the
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crime with which he would be charged is furnished by Bort,
op.cit., nr 49 as follows: " redenen daer van zijnde,
dat hy door
't Mandament niet en werde geinstrueert, van 't geene dan Procureur Generaal tot
zyn laste is hebbende, ende sulckx buyten
de waere gelegentheyt van de saecke
artificielijck antwoorde op de Articulen, hem by den Procureur Generaal,
alvooren eysch te doen,
voor te houden
" This explanation why the accused was not to be
informed of the nature
of the crime before the prosecutor put the charges to him sounds rather
preposterous, but such was the Dutch
practice at the time. Only after he had
pleaded to the indictment could he reguest a copy thereof. It would seem to
follow by the
same parity of reasoning that an arrestee would not be given the
reasons for his arrest before he appeared before a judge and heard
the charges
brought against him by the prosecutor.
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Political Arrest:
Van der Linden 3.2.1.11 mentions arrest made
during a state of emergency as follows:
"Eindelijk heeft men zomwijlen ook wel eens gebruik zien maken van een middel,
bekend onder den naam van Politique custodie of bewaaring - In geval van dringend nood, en tot bewaaring der openbare rust, kan de Lands- of Stads-Regeering zig zomtijds in de harde verpligting bevinden, om zig van deezen of geenen persoon of persoonen te verzekeren; maar het is altijd een gevaarlijk middel, waar van niet dan het spaarzaamst gebruik behoort gemaakt te worden."
These are then the various types of arrests according to Roman-Dutch law. It would appear that in the case of criminal arrest an arrestee was not informed of the reasons for his arrest on being arrested.
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A fortiori would this have been the case where he was
arrested in flagrante delicto, since he was acquainted with the
circumstances in which he was arrested. It was only when an accused heard the
prosecutor putting
the charges to him in court that he was informed of the
reasons for his arrest.
It will be seen from the aforegoing that all arrests
other than civil arrests and political arrests were directed at the prosecution
of accused persons. So much then for arrests according to our common law.
In
Ngqumba's case (supra, p 264 J-265 A) it was pointed out that
pre-Union legislation did not require an arrestee upon being arrested without a
warrant of
arrest to be informed of the reasons for his arrest. It was, however,
held that where an arrestee was arrested pursuant to Regulation
3(1) of the
Emergency Regulations he
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should be informed of the reasons for his arrest (p 265 H). It
was furthermore held that no general principle could be laid down as
to how
fully an arrestee, arrested in terms of Regulation 3(1), should be informed of
the reasons for his arrest since that would
depend upon the facts of each case
(p 266 B-C). At p 266 I the following dictum of OGILVIE THOMPSON JA in
Brand v Minister of Justice and Another, 1959(4) SA 712 (AD) at p 718 C-D
was quoted with approval: "What is required is that the arrested person should
in substance be
apprised of why his liberty is being restrained."
I now turn
to consider the facts of the present appeal. Since. there are disputes of fact
relating to the relevant circumstances in
connection with the arrest of Allie
Parker the correct approach, where no evidence has been led, is to accept the
version of the
appellants, i.e.
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the respondents in the Court a quo, together with the
admitted facts in the affidavits of the respondent, i.e. the applicant in the
Court a quo (Ngqumba's case, supra, p 259 C-I, 263 D). I
draw attention to the fact that no supporting affidavit of Allie Parker was
annexed to the founding affidavit
of Rashida Parker. An affidavit of his was,
however, annexed as Annexure RP 3 to her replying affidavit.
On Friday 12
June 1987 Van Schalkwyk accompanied by a few policemen visited the premises of
Allies Printing Services. On his arrival
he found that a certain Lieutenant
Mostert was awaiting the instructions of his superior officer to attach 9 000
copies of a pamphlet,
the "U D F News". Van Schalkwyk conducted a search of the
premises where he found hot from the press a large number of pamphlets
and
negative printing plates for them. He
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appended six copies of the pamphlets to his replying
affidavit. Annexure "A" to his replying affidavit is a copy of the "U D F News".
Some of the pamphlets commemorated Soweto Day on 16 June 1987. He found the
contents of the pamphlets in general of an inflammatory
nature inasmuch as they
were provocative of public disorder and unrest by propagating acts of violence.
They were in substance subversive
documents intended to be disseminated by
activists. Van Schalkwyk put the tenor of their contents to Allie Parker whose
reaction
was that he associated himself fully with their contents and supported
the objectives set forth in the pamphlets. Van Schalkwyk then
arrested Allie
Parker in terms of Regulation 3 of the Emergency Regulations.
Mr
Gamble submitted in this Court that Van Schalkwyk should have informed
Allie Parker that the
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pamphiets were subversive and that he could be arrested for printing them. In my judgment there is no substance in this submission in the lighL of the particlar circumstances of the case. It overlooks the fact that Allie Parker was caught red-handed (in flagrante delicto) in the very act of printing subversive pamphlets which constituted a security risk during the prevailing state of emergency. He was forthwith confronted with their subversive character by Van Schalkwyk. His arrest was made uno contextu with the confrontation, thereby furnishing the nexus between his act of printing the subversive pamphlets and his arrest. The particular circumstances made it accordingly clear that the reason for his arrest was the act of printing the subversive pamphlets. In the circumstances Allie Parker necessarily knew why he was arrested. Nowhere in his affidavit did he claim not to know why he was arrested. Compare
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apprehensio in flagrante delicto (supra), Brand's case (supra) at p 718 A-B, Christie & Another v Leachinsky, 1947(1) A E R 567 (HL) at p 573 nr 3. It follows that the respondent was not entitled to the relief granted her by the Court a quo.
The result is that the appeal must succeed.
The following order is made:
(a) The appeal is allowed with costs which are to include the costs of one counsel only.
(b) The order of the Court a quo is set aside and the following order is substituted therefor:
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'The application is dismissed with costs which are to include the costs of one counsel only.'
C. P. JOUBERT JA
HEFER JA)
VIVIER JA) Concur.
STEYN JA)
VILJOEN AJA)
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