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[1988] ZASCA 12
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Minister of Law and Order and Another v Dempsey (12/1988) [1988] ZASCA 12; [1988] 2 All SA 278 (A) (11 March 1988)
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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH APRICA APPELLATE DIVISION
In the matter between
THE MINISTER OF LAW AND ORDER 1st APPELLANT
THE COMMISSIONER OF POLICE 2nd APPELLANT
and
ANGELA DEMPSEY RESPONDENT
CORAM:RABIE ACJ, JOUBERT,
VILJOEN, HEFER et NESTADT,JJA. HEARD : 23 NOVEMBER 1987. DELIVERED
: 11 MARCH 1988.
JUDG M E N T
HEFER JA :
This appeal is directed at an order made by
MARAIS J in the court a
quo for the. release of Sister
Harkin 2
2
Harkin, a member of the Dominican Order, from detention. The application for
her release was brought against the ap-pellants by the
South African Regional
Superior of the Order.
How the detention came about is described in the
judgement of the court a quo, reported in 1986(4) S A 530 (C). At the
relevant time a state of emergency had been declared and certain emergency
regulations were
in force throughout the country. (The regulations were made by
the State President in terms of sec 3(1) of thé Public Safety
Act 3 of
1953, and published in proclamation R109 in Government Gazette No 10280.) Reg
3(1) reads as follows :
"A member of a Force may, without warrant
of 3
3.
of arrest, arrest or cause to be arrested any person whose detention is, in the opi-nion of such member, necessary for the main-tenance of public order or the safety of the public or that person himself, or for the termination of the state of emergency, and may, under a written order signed by any member of a Force, detain, or cause to be detained, any such person in custody in a prison."
Sister Harkin was arrested on the instructions
of Captain Oosthuizen of
the South African police, a Force
referred to in reg 3(1). On the day of the
arrest she
and a colleague, Sister Hardiman, attended a funeral
in
Guguletu. Captain Oosthuizen commanded a platoon of
policemen who were
patrolling the area at the time. He
had past experience, so he says in his
opposing affida-
vit, of violent and sometimes murderous rioting
occurring
immediately....4
4.
immediately after a funeral. On such occasions emotions were often fanned by dancing, the singing of songs and the shouting of slogans. That is why, upon being in- formed that a funeral was taking place, he proceeded
with his platoon to the graveyard where he watched the
proceedings from a
distance. After the deceased had
been buried all the cars left except one in
which there
were two nuns. (It later emerged that they were Sister Harkin and
Sister Hardiman). Captain Oosthuizen
says in his affidavit that a procession
then formed
which proceeded on foot from the graveyard, with the
solitary
car slowly driving along. The usual dancing
and singing of "freedom songs",
accompanied by the
"black 5
5. "black power" sign, began. (These are terms
used by Captain Oosthuizen.) He permitted the procession to continue for a while
and
then, in order to prevent the situation from eruptihg into violence, ordered
those who took part in it to disperse. Some of them
obeyed and started to move
away but were called and beckoned back by the nun in the passenger-seat of the
car. Cap-tain Ooshtuizen
ordered.his platoon to disperse the crowd with sjamboks
and while this was going on, Sister Harkin actively interfered by grabbing
the
sjambok of one of the policemen and by assaulting him. Captain Oosthuizen
ordered the policeman to arrest her. He did so, he
says, because, in his
opinion, her detention was
necessary....6
6. necessary for the maintenance of public order or the
safety of the public or the termination of the state of emergency within the
meaning of reg 3(1).
The court a quo found that Captain Oosthuizen had
not properly applied his mind to the ques-tion of the necessity for the
detention, since he never
considered the possibility of arresting Sister Harkin
under the ordinary laws of the land,nor the question whether she, "being at
liberty after the day's events were over,posed any potential threat to the
maintenance of public order or the safety of the public
or the termination of
the state of emergency". These omis-sions were regarded as so fundamental that
they
vitiated 7
7. vitiated Captain Oosthuizen's opinion that the detention was
necessary for any of the stated purposes. The arrest and detention
wére
accordingly declared invalid and the appellants were directed to release Sister
Harkin.
In order to consider the correctness of the judgmentf the proper
approach to applications like the one filed in the present case must
first be
examined. I shall,do so only in so far as it is necessary for the decision of
the appeal.
Reg 3(1) has four essential elements. They
are 8
8. are (1) that an opinion must be formed (2) by a member of a Force
(3) that the detention of a particular person is necessary (4)
for any of the
purposes mentioned in the regulation. (Cf Kerchoff and Another v Minister of
Law and Order and Others 1986(4) S A 1150 (A) at pp 1181 D-E and 1182 G-H.)
It is obvious that no one may be arrested unless his detention is considered to
be necessary for at least one of the stated purposes. It is equally obvious that
the question of the necessity for detention has
in terms of reg 3(1) been left
for de-cision to members of the Forces and to no one else. This is plainly an
instance where
"the statute itself has entrusted to
the 9
9.
the repository of the power the sole and exclusive function of determining whether in i.ts, opinion the pre-requisite fact, or state of affairs, existed prior to the ex-ercise of the power."
(Per CORBETT J (as he then was) in South African Defence
and Aid
Fund and Another v Minister of Justice 1967(1)
S A 31 (C) at p 35
A-B.)
It is trite that it is not the function of
the court in such a case to
enquire into the correctness
of the opinion. In Sachs v Minister of
Justice 1934
A D 11 at p 36-37 STRATFORD ACJ said:
" once we are satisfied on a construc-
tion of the Act, that it gives to the Minis-ther an unfettered discretion, it is no func-tion of a Court of law to curtail its scope in the least degree, indeed it would be quite
improper 10
10.
improper to do so. The above observation
is, perhaps, so trite that it needs no state-ment, yet in cases before the Courts when the exercise of a statutory discretion is chal-lenged, arguments are sometimes advanced which do seem to ignore the plain principle that Par-liament may make any encroachment it chooses upon the life, liberty or property of any in-dividual subject to its sway, and that it is the function of courts of law to enforce its
will In this division, at all events, no
decision affirms the right of a Court to inter-fere with the honest exercise of a duly con-ferred discretion."
The court was concerned in that case with a statute
which authorized the
Minister to prohibit a person from
being in a specified area "whenever the
Minister is
satisfiéd" that the person concerned was promoting
feelings of hostility between different sections of
the inhabitants of the country. At p 37 of the report
the 11
11.
the learned judge proceeded to say:
"Then it was said that the notice was invalid because the Minister's power is limited to such persons as are actively and publicly and directly promoting feelings of hostility. This argument entirely ignores the words "when-ever the Minister is satisfied" which leaves the selection of the individual on whom he serves notice entirely to his discretion. If he is satisfied that such individual is promo-ting feelings of hostility he can validly serve the notice upon him whether in fact he is pro-moting hostility or not. The appellant's con- tention involves an enquiry on, and the deter-mination of, a question of fact which would defeat the whole object of the section and ren-der prompt action impossible. The only question of fact with which the Court is concerned is whet-her the Minister was satisfied." (My emphasis.)
In Winter and Others v Administrative-in-Executive
Committee and
Another 1973(1) S A 873 (A) the relevant
legislation...l2
12. legislation authorized the Administrator of South-West
Africa to
direct the deportation of a person if he (the Administrator) was"satisfied" that
the person concerned was, inter alia, dangerous to the peace, order or
good government of the Territory. At pp 888 D-F and 889 F of the report OGILVIE
THOMPSON CJ said
:
"-------in terms of sec 1(1)(a) of the Procla-
mation, it is the Administrator (i e the
Administrator-in-Executive Committee) who
has to be satisfied that the individual con-
cerned is 'dangerous to the peace, order or
good government of thé Territory if he re-
mained therein'. Provided that the Admini- strator-in-Executive Committee honestly
directed their minds to that question
it is no part of the Court's func-
tion to determine whether a correct decision
was reached the correctness of their
conclusion is irrelevant; the decision is
by .13
13.
by the Proclamation entrusted to that body alone."
The same reasoning applies to the exercise by
a member of a Force of his
power of arrest in terms of
reg 3(1). Once he forms the opinion that the detention
is necessary for
any of the purposes mentioned in the
regulation and an arrest is made, the
correctness of his
opinion cannot be questioned. The validity of the
ar-
rest may, however, be challenged on any of the well known
grounds on
which the performance of his functions by.a
statutory functionary endowed with discretionary powers,
may be
challenged. The grounds on which this may be
done, are listed in cases such
as Shidiack v Union Govern-
ment (Minister of the Interior)
1912 A D 642 at p 651-652
and 14
14.
and Northwest Townships (Pty) Ltd v Administrator,
Trans-vaal and Another 1975(4) S A 1 (T) at p 8.
There is one observation
which I wish to make arising from the description of the grounds for review in
the Northwest Township case. It relates to what COLMAN J referred to as
"a failure to direct his thoughts to the
relevant data", and is this: unless a functionary is en-
joined by the relevant statute itself to take certain mat-
ters into account, or to exclude them from consideration,
it is primarily his task to decide what is relevant and
what is not, and,
also, to determine the weight to be
attached to each relevant
factor.(Johannesburg City Coun-
cil v The Administrator, Transvaal
and Mayofis 1971(1)
S A 15
15. S A 87 (A) at p 99A ). In order not to substitute its own view
for that of the functionary, a court is, accordingly, not entitled to interfere
with the latter's decision merely because a factor which the court considers
relevant was not taken into account, or because insufficient
or undue weight
was, according to the court's objective assessment, accor-ded to a relevant
factor. A functionary's decision cannot
be impeached on such a ground unless the
court is satisfied, in all the circumstances of the case, that he did not
pro-perly apply
his mind to the matter.
Then there is the question of the
onus of proof. The learned judge in the court a quo cited the
decision in Minister of Law and Order and Others v Hurley and
Another 16
16.
another 1986(3) S A 568 (A) in which this court
held
that the onus to justify an arrest is on the person who
made
it or caused it to be made, but, nevertheless,ruled
(at p 534B and G-I of the
report) that the onus to prove
mala fides on Captain
Oosthuizen's part rested upon the
present respondent. (Why the court referred
specifically
to mala fides will appear later.) In this court
respon-
dent's counsel adopted a different approach. He conceded
the
correctness of the court a quo's ruling but stated that
it is not the
respondent's case that Oosthuizen acted mala
fide.in ordering Sister
Harkin's arrest; her case is, he
said, that Oosthuizen failed to apply his
mind properly
to the question whether the arrest was necessary and,
so
he 17
17.
he argued, the burden of proving that Oosthuizen exer-cised
his mind properly rested upon the appellants and was not discharged. He
relied
for this submission on the judgment of TRENGOVE JA.in Kabinet van die
Tussen-tydse Regering vir Suidwes-Afrika en 'n Ander v Katofa-1987(1)
S A 695 (A .).
In Katofa's case there was a difference of opinion
between RABIE CJ (with whom JANSEN JA agreed) and TRENGOVE JA (with whom BOTHA
JA agreed).
The Chief Justice and TRENGOVE JA both proceeded from the premise
that the party who seeks to justify an arrest bears the onus of doing so.
This is in accordance with the de-cision in Hurley's case where (at p 589
D-E) it was
explained 18
18.
explained that
"(an) arrest constitutes an interference with the liberty of the individual concerned, and it therefore seems to be fair and just to re-guire that the person who arrested or caused the arrest of another person should bear the onus of proving that his action was justified in law."
Sec 2 of the proclamation with which the court was concerned in
Katofa,
authorized the Administrator-general to order an
arrest if he was
satisfied,inter alia, that the person
concerned had committed or had
attempted to commit cer-
tain acts of violence or intimidation. The
applicant's
brother, Katofa, was detained (purportedly in terms of
the
relevant proclamation) and the application was for
his release. The
Administrator-general stated in his
opposing....l9
19. opposing affidavit that he had been satisfied at the
time of ordering the detention, and was still satisfied at the time of making
the affidavit, that Katofa was a person as described in.the proclamation. He did
not, however, fur-nish the reasons for his decision.
His failure to do so led to
the difference of opinion in this court which I men-tioned. The Chief justice
held the view (p 735E -
736A of the report) that, in the circumstances of the
case, the Ad-ministrator-general's statement under oath that he was satisfied
that Katofa was a person as described in the proc-lamation, was sufficient to
discharge the onus to justify the detention. TRENGOVE JA (pp 741A-H,
743D-E and 744C-D) opined that it was not. The following are the key
passages 20
20.
passages in TRENGOVE JA's judgment:
"Waar die bewyslas in die onderhawige geval op die Administrateur-generaal gerus het, moes hy, na my mening, in sy beëdigde ver-klaring prima facie bewys gelewer het dat hy met die uitreiking van die lasbrief, in
elke opsig aan die voorskrifte van art 2 voldoen het, en stiptelik binne die bestek daarvan gehandel het. Dit blyk nie uit die Administrateur-generaal se beëdigde verklaring dat dit inderdaad gebeur het nie." (p 741A-B)
"Waar dit egter gaan oor die interdictum de libero homine exhibendo, is dib duidelik dat die instansie wat verantwoordelik is vir die vryheidsberowing van die individu die bewyslas dra om die Hof te oortuig van die regmatigheid van die aanhouding. Daar-uit moet dit volg dat hy ook die behoorlike uitoefening van die diskresie moet bewys,al is dit dan slegs met verwysing na die beperk-te gronde waarop die uitoefening van sodanige diskresie aanvegbaar is," (My emphasis) (p743D-E)
I 21
21. I am in respectful disagreement with this rea-soning. The
practical problems which may arise from cas-ting the onus of proving the
proper exercise of the discre-tion on the party bearing the onus of
justifying the deten-tion, are manifest. This is well illustrated by Katofa's
case. The only material allegation in the applicant's foun-ding affidavit
was that his brother's detention was unlawful. No grounds
were advanced for
thë assertion. In a support-ing affidavit his attorney added that Katofa
was being detained against his will
without being charged with an offence.
(Certain other allegations which he made were plainly irrelevant to the legality
of the detention.)
These then were the allegations which the Administrator-
general 22
22.
general had to meet. He did so by alleging, in his op-posing
affidavit that he had ordered the arrest and de-tention in terms of sec
2 of the
proclamation after satis-fying himself that Katofa was a person as described
therein. This allegation was not disputed in
the replying affidavit.
What is
immediately apparent, is that the Ad-ministrator-general's bona fides in
exercising the dis-cretion vested in him by sec 2 of the proclamation was not
questioned in the applicant's papers. Nor was there
the faintest suggestion that
he had not properly exercised his mind. Yet, the following appears in TRENGOVE
JA's judgment (at p 743E-I
of the report) :
"Dit blyk nie uit die passasies (in the
opposing .23
23.
opposing affidavit) dat die Administrateur-generaal hoegenaamd bewus was van die strek-king, en die kumulatiewe werking, van sub-paras (a) en (b) van art 2 van die proklama-sie nie. Dit is immers 'n voorvereiste vir die behoorlike uitoefening van sy diskresie. Om te sê dat hy daarvan oortuig was, en nog is, dat die aangehoudene 'n persoon was soos bedoel in art 2 van die proklamasie is eint-lik niksseggend tensy dit ook uit sy verkla-ring blyk dat hy presies geweet het wat die strekking van die twee subparagrawe is. Dit is verder 'n voorvereiste vir die uitoefening van sy diskresie, dat die Administrateur-gene-raal oortuig moet wees van die feitlike om-standighede wat in die subparagrawe uiteenge-sit word. Hy mag geen ander omstandighede of oorwegings in ag neem nie. Die Administra-teur-generaal het ook nie in die betrokke pas-sasies die redes vir sy oortuiging, of die gegewens waarop dit gegrond is,verstrek nie. Dit is dus nie moontlik om te sê of die Ad-ministrateur-generaal te goeder trou geglo, het dat die gegewens waarop sy oortuiging
gegrond 24
24.
gegrond is binne die bestek van subparas (a) en (b) van art 2 val nie en of daardie ge-gewens hoegenaamd vatbaar is vir die aflei-ding wat hy daarvan gemaak het nie."
If TRENGOVE JA's view of the onus is correct,
there can be no doubt
that these remarks were apposite.
for, in that event, it would have been
incumbent upon
the Administrator- general to produce sufficient
evidence
to show that there was not a single ground upon which the
exercise of his discretion could be assailed. But,there-
in lies the problem. In Jeewa v Dönges N.O. and Others
1950(3) S A 414 (A ) at p 423D CENTLIVRES ACJ said that
"(the) mere allegation that the Minister has acted mala fide
or
dishonestly is not sufficient to entitle the court
to enquire into the
reasons for the Minister's decision";
and... 25
25. and in Winter's case (supra at p 887G-H)
OGILVIE THOMP-SON CJ ruled that, there being nothing on the papers before the
court to substantiate the appellant's
aver-ments that the respondent had acted
arbitrarily or for an improper purpose, their "unsubstantiated allegations in
that regard
- albeit that appellants sought only inte-rim relief and that
respondents did not see fit to re-cord on oath even a bare denial -
do not
warrant the Court in accepting, or acting upon, those allegations". These
remarks were admittedly made in cases where there
was no onus upon the
respondent,but they were not made without purpose. It cannot be expected of a
respondent to deal effectively in an opposing
affidavit with unsub-
stantiated...26
26.
stantiated averments of mala fides and the like without the specific facts on which they are based.being stated. So much the more can it not be expected of a respondent to deal effectively with a founding affidavit in which no averment is made, save a general one that a detention is unlawful. And if TRENGOVE JA is correct, this is in-deed what a respondent will be obliged to do. Unlike other statutory functionaries, he will in effect be obliged to disclose the reasons for his decision and be compelled to cover the whole field of every conceivable ground for re-view, in the knowledge that, should he fail to do so, a finding that the onus has not been discharged, may ensue. Such a state of affairs is quite untenable.
There 27
27.
There is, however, a more fundamental reason for holding that the onus of proving the proper exercise of the discretion is not on the party bearing the onus of justifying the arrest. I accept, of course, that the onus to justify an arrest is on the party who alleges that it was lawfully made and, since an arrest can only be justified on the basis of statutory authority, that the onus can only be discharged by showing that it was made within the ambit of the relevant statute. Any statutory function can, after all, only be validly performed within the limits prescribed by the statute itself, and, where a fact or a state of affairs is prescribed as a pre-con-dition to the performance of the function (a so-called
jurisdictional 28
28.
jurisdictional fact), that fact or state of affairs must obviously exist and be shown to have existed before it can be said that the function was validly performed. (Cf Roberts v Chairman, Local Road Transportation Board and Another 1980(2) S A 472 (C) at p 476H-477A; S v Ramgobin and Others 1985(3) S A 587 (N) at p 590I-591C.) But what has to be determined in every case is exactly what the
jurisdictional fact i.s. In this regard the distinction
drawn in the
Defence and Aid case (supra) and recognised by this court in
Lennon Ltd and Another v Hoechst Aktienge-sellschaft 1981(1) S A
1066 (A) at p 1076 C-E is of decisive importance. I mentioned earlier that reg
3(1) is an instance where the repository
of the power has
himself....29
29.
himself been entrusted with the function of deciding
whet-
her the prerequisite fact or state of affairs exists. The
result is,
as indicated in the Defence and Aid case (at
p 35 B-C), that
"the jurisdictional fact is, in truth, not whether the prescribed fact, or state of affairs, existed in an objective sense, but whether, subjectively speaking, the repository of the power had decided that it did." (My emphasis.)
It is for this very reason that it was said in the Sachs
case
(supra) in the passage already quoted that "the
only question of fact
with which the Court is concerned
is whether the Minister was satisfied".
Once the juris-
dictional fact is proved by showing that the functionary
in fact formed the required opinion, the arrest is
brought 30
30.
brought within the ambit of the enabling legislation, and is
thus justified. And if it is alleged that the opinion was improperly
formed, it is for the party who makes the allegation to prove it. There are in
such a case two separate and distinct issues, each
having
its own onus
(Pillay v Krishna and Another 1946 A D 946 at p 953). The first is
whether the opinion was actu-
ally formed; the second, which
only arises if the onus
on the first has been dischargedor if it is
admitted that the opinion was actually formed, is whether it was properly
formed. If eg in a case like the instant one the applicant were to admit that a
member of a Force had formed the opinion that the
detention of the person
concerned 31
31 . concerned was necessary for thë maintenance of the
pub-lic order, there can, in my view, be no doubt that the application
will be
dismissed unless evidence is pro-duced which persuades the court on a
preponderance of probabilities that the opinion was
not properly formed.
To hold that the burden of proof on the second issue rests upon the party
alleging that the opinion was
not properly formed, will bring applications of
the pre-
sent kind in line with other applications for the review
of the
decisions of statutory functionaries on the grounds mentioned in the
Shidiack case, except that the resppn-
dent will first have to prove
that the required opinion
was actually formed. It will also be in line with
decisions 32
32
decisions such as Union Government (Ministerof Railways)
v
Sykes 1913 A D 156 at p 169-170 and Johannesburg Muni-
cipality
v African Realty Trust Ltd 1927 A D 163 at p
177 in terms of which the
onus to prove.a so-called neg -
ligent performance of an act
authorized by statute is cast
upon the party alleging that it was
"negligently" perfor-
med.
To conclude the discussion of the onus I wish
to refer briefly to the decision in Radebe v Minister of
Law and Order and Another 1987(1) S A 586 (W) where,in
an application similar to the one brought in the present
case, it was held
that the onus to prove the unlawfulness
of an arrest under reg 3(1)
was on the ápplicant. GOLD-
STONE J 33
33.
STONE J relied for
his ruling on reg 16(4) which, so
the learned judge said(at p 591 D-H), "has
the effect
of transferring the onus of proof to the
applicant".
There is no need to quote reg 16(4). It seems to me
to be
linked to the indemnity against liability in reg 16(1J
and to be applicable
only in that context. However, I
do not express any definite opinion in this
regard. But,
since reg 16(4) cannot have the effect of casting
the
onus to prove "the unlawfulness of thedetention" on
an
applicant, as the learned judge said, and can at best
only have a
bearing on the question of bona fides and not
on other possible
grounds on which the lawfulness of a
detention may be challenged, it does not
assist in the enquiry
in 34
34. in the present appeal.
In the present case, therefore, the onus
to prove that Captain Oosthuizen had formed the required opinion, was on the
appellants. Respondent's counsel conceded that this
onus was discharged
and what remains, is to determine whether the onus to prove that the
opinion was improperly formed, was discharged by the respondent.
Captain
Oosthuizen's version of the events
which led'to Sister Harkin's arrest
differs in very mate-
rial respects from that put forward by the
respondent'.s
witnesses. At the hearing of the application in the court
a
quo respondent's counsel elected not to lead oral evi-
dence or to
cross-examine any of the appellants'. witnesses,
but 35
35-but to argue
the matter on Captain Oosthuizen's version
of the facts. On that basis the
case was eventually decided.
As mentioned earlier, the learned judge found
that Captain Oost-
huizen had not properly applied his mind to the
question
of the necessity of Sister Harkin's detention. His rea-
soning
appears from the following passage in the judgment
(at p 541H-542H of the report) :
"I return to Captain Oosthuizen's explanation of his decision to arrest and detain Sister Harkin. It is plain that his opinion stated in reg 3(1) was based solely and exclusively upon her conduct that day. As he saw it, she had been guilty of unlawful conduct of the kind described by him and had interfered with police action and with the restoration and maintenance of public order. I interpolate here that it follows that she had thus rendered herself liable to arrest in terms of the ordinary law
of 36
36.
of the land and Captain Oosthuizen must be taken to have been aware of that.
His affi-davit is silent on what seems to me to be a
crucial factor in the
circumstances of this particular case, namely why a conventional arrest and
prosecution in accordance with
the ordinary law of the land would not have
served to put an end to any threat to pub-lic order which she may have then
represen-ted.
I can only conclude that he failed to consider it. If he had
considered it and concluded that it would not have suf-ficed, I would
have
expected him to say so and to explain why it would not have suf-
ficed.
Before he could conscientiously conclude that her arrest and detention in terms
of the emergency regulations was neces-sary,
I think that it is manifest that he
would have to consider this obvious alter-native. Certainly resort to that
alter-native would
have put an end to any further participation by her in that
day's events just as effectively as an arrest under the emergency regulations
would have done. As for the future, there is no suggestion in
Captain 37
37.
Captain Oosthuizen's affidavit that he even applied his mind to that question. When I asked Mr Viljoen whether, on Captain Oosthui-zen's version, he had done so, he initially answered that he had not. Upon realising the implications of this answer which was ad-mittedly given without time for reflection, Mr Viljoen qualified it by submitting that it would have been mendacious for Captain Oosthui-zen to claim that he had pertinently weighed up what her conduct in the future was likely to be, but that it was inherent in his decision to arrest and detain her in terms of reg 3(1) that some consideration must have been given to her possible or likely future conduct. Cap-tain Oosthuizen has taken pains to lay his reasoning before the Court and he certainly does not claim to have applied his mind to that question. In the circumstances, I am satisfeid that he did not. Regulation 3(1) obliged him to opine whether her arrest and detention under the emergency regulations was necessary for the purposes therein set out. In forming such an opinion he was required to take account of rele-vant factors known to him and to weigh, not only
whether 38
38.
whether the arrest was called for, but also
whether the
ensuing detention under the emer-
gency regulations was called for. That
neces-
sarily entailed considering whether or not Sis-
ter Harkin, being
at liberty after the day's
events were over, posed any potential threat to
the maintenance of public order or the safe-
ty of the public or the
termination of the state
of emergency. That he failed to consider. So
fundamental an omission, in my view, prevents
his opinion from qualifying as
the kind of opi-
nion which he was required to hold before he be-
came
entitled to exercise powers of arrest and
detention in terms of reg 3(1). His
exercise of the power was therefore unlawful and it falls
to be set
aside."
Although I have certain reservations on which I need
not elaborate in view
of the conclusion at which I have,ar-
rived, I am prepared to accept for
present purposes that,
had Captain Oosthuizen not considered the two matters
re-
ferred to by the learned judge, a finding that he did not
properly 39
39. properly exercise his mind would be justified. But what
has to be determined first is whether the finding that he did not consider
them
is correct. And it is at this level, in my view, that the court's reasoning
fails.
As will be seen from the passage just quoted, the sole reason for the
Court's finding was that Captain Oosthuizen did not explicitly
state in his
affi-davit that he had considered the matters in question. This serves to
emphasize what I said earlier in connec-tion
with the burden of proof and the
necessity of heeding the dicta in Jeewa's case and Winter's
case quoted above. Unless
a respondent 40
40.
a respondent who is alleged to have exercised his discre-
tion improperly knows in what respect or in what manner he is alleged to
have
done so, he cannot deal effectively with the complaint in his opposing
affidavit. A mere allegation eg that he failed to apply
his mind properly to the
matter is of no assistance to him; there is al-ways the risk that, in attempting
to meet such an alle-
gation, he may omit to deal with something which it may
later
be argued he should have dealt with. An adverse infe-rence should,
therefore, not lightly be drawn from a de-ponent's silence in an
opposing
affidavit on points not specifically raised in the applicant's founding
affida-vit and the affidavits filed in support thereof.
It .41
41.
It is said in the present respondent's founding
affidavit that -
"I respectfully submit that the police in arresting and detaining Sister Harkin ac-ted mala fide and from improper and ulte-rior motives. I submit that no member of the police formed an opinion that the ar-rest and detention of the said Harkin was necessary for any of the purposes referred to in section 3(1) of the Emergency Regulations."
It emerges from the affidavit that the respondent was not
present at the
arrest and that she relies for these sub-
missions on the evidence of three
witnesses to whose affi-
davits the court is referred. One of these, Girlie
Joja,
after describing how the arrest came about, says
(again by way of submission) that Sister Harkin was de-
tained, not because any police official had formed an
opinion 42
42.
opinion as envisaged in reg 3(1), but because she had wit-
nessed an assault committed by a policeman on a member of
the funeral
procession. In precisely the same words as
those used by another witness,
Sister Hardiman, she says
that Sister Harkin did or said nothing "which would
lead
any reasonable person, properly and honestly applying his
mind to all
the relevant facts and without misdirecting
himself to form an opinion that
the arrest and detention
of the said sister was necessary for any of the
purposes
set out in section 3(1)". Sister Hardiman adds:
"In the light of the above, I respectfully sub-mit that if any police official arrested and detained Sister Harkin for anything she did or said during the aforementioned period when she was in my presence and/or sight, then such
police 43
43.
police official acted mala fide and from im-proper and ulterior motives in so arresting and detaining her and that in the circumstan-ces such arrest and detention is unlawful."
Captain Oosthuizen's affidavit was obviously prepared on
the basis that what the applicant alleged was (1) that
no opinion as
envisaged by reg 3(1) had been formed and
(2) that Sister Harkin had been arrested mala fide and
for an
ulterior or improper motive. This appears, inter
alia, from the
statement in his affidavit that Sister
Harkin's detention was, in his bona
fide opinion,neces-
sary for the maintenance of public order or the
safety
of the public or the termination of the state of emergency
within
the meaning of reg 3(1), and from his denial that
he acted mala fide
or for an ulterior motive. He describes
the 44
44.
the events on the day of the arrest and the part
which
Sister Harkin played therein, obviously in order to sub-
stantiate
his denial by showing that the facts relied
upon by the respondent are not
correct. In my opinion Captain Oosthuizen's view of the charges made
against
him was correct. He was accordingly not called upon to
deal with
the questions on which the court found his affi-
davit to be lacking. This
being so, there is no justifi-
cation for an inference that he did not
consider a conven-
tional arrest, nor whether Sister Harkin posed a
potential
future threat, merely because he does not say in his affi-
davit
that he did so. The judgment can, accordingly,
not be supported on this
basis, nor on any other basis
that 45
45. that I am able to conceive of.
As mentioned earlier, respondent's counsel in this court disavowed any
inten-tion of relying on
mala fides on Captain Oosthuizen's part and
rësted his argument on the latter's failure to consi- . der the two matters
referred to. But
Oosthuizen.'s failure to do so has not been proved on the
papers, and the oppor-tunity which was available to the respondent to prove
it
was lost when her counsel elected in the court a quo not to cross-examine
Captain Oosthuizen or to lead oral evi-dence.
In this court respondent's
counsel, relying on TRENGOVE JA's judgment in the Katofa case
(supra), sought to justify the court a quo's conclusion by
submitting 46
46.
submitting that the onus was upon the appellant to
show that Captain Oosthuizen considered all relevant factors -including the two
factors mentioned by the
learned judge -and that he acted "exactly and
punctiliously within the four corners of reg 3(1)". (I quote from counsel's
writ-ten
heads of argument.) In dealing with Katofa's case I indicated
why I do not agree with this contention, and
I reject it.
I conclude, therefore, that the court a quo
erred in declaring the arrest and detention invalid and in
ordering Sister
Harkin's release.
The appeal is upheld with costs including the
costs of two counsel. The
order of the court a quo is
set 47
set aside. Substituted for it is an order that the ap-plication is
dismissed with costs.
J J F HEFER JA.
RABIE ACJ ) JOUBERT JA ) CONCUR.
VILJOEN JA