Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 41South Africa
Masemola v Minister of Police and Another (45121/2015) [2024] ZAGPPHC 41 (19 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Masemola v Minister of Police and Another (45121/2015) [2024] ZAGPPHC 41 (19 January 2024)
Masemola v Minister of Police and Another (45121/2015) [2024] ZAGPPHC 41 (19 January 2024)
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sino date 19 January 2024
I
N THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: 45121/2015
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2. OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
DATE: 19 January 2024
In the matter between:
MMATSATSI MARIA
MASEMOLA
Plaintiff
And
THE MINISTER OF POLICE
1st Defendant
CST MARUMA
2nd Defendant
JUDGMENT
Botha AJ
1
Introduction
1.1
This is an action for damages that arose
from an alleged unlawful assault by the 2
nd
Defendant on a certain Mr Thabiso Joseph Masemola.
1.2
The assault took the form of a shooting
with a firearm to wit the service pistol of the 2
nd
Defendant, and Mr TJ Masemola was hit on his upper thigh-groin area.
1.3
Mr TJ Masemola passed away on 15 November
2014 for reasons totally unrelated to the shooting incident. He was
subsequently substituted
in this proceedings by his mother, Me
Mmatsatsi Maria Masemola as the plaintiff. Mr TJ Masemola will be
referred to herein after
as “the deceased”
1.4
The
Particulars of Claim reads as follows:” On or about the 3
rd
March 2014 at approximately 15h00 and at or near Vezinyayo section,
Magakadimeng, Dennilton, Moutse district, Limpopo Province,
second
Defendant wrongfully, unlawfully and negligently shot Plaintiff using
a firearm.”
[1]
1.5
The Defendants pleaded self defence in
terms of the common law, pleading that 2
nd
Defendant defended himself against an unlawful and unwarranted attack
by the deceased.
1.6
At the onset of the trial the issues of
merits and the quantum of damages were separated and the trial
proceeded on the determination
of liability only.
1.7
In
keeping with the principle in Mabaso v Felix
[2]
that a defendant claiming self defence normally bears the onus in
proving self defence, the parties agreed that the Defendant would
begin.
2
The evidence for
Defendant
2.1 Sergeant Maruma
2.1.1
He testified that on the day of the incident he went to Vezinyayo to
serve a subpoena on a certain Bongani Ngwenya.
He could not find him
and en route to the police station he saw Ngwenya along the side of
the road. He stopped and saw that Ngwenya’s
clothes were torn
and there was abrasions on his face. Ngwenya informed him that
the deceased had beaten him up.
2.1.2 He suggested
that they go look for the deceased to clear the issue up. They found
the deceased close by in the company
of a young man busy
hitching donkeys to a cart.
2.1.3 The witness
alighted from the police van and enquired from the deceased why he
beat and tore the clothes of Ngwenya.
The deceased slapped him on his
face and said that Ngwenya is a criminal because Ngwenya killed his
friend by the name of “Sinki”
and threw the body in the
river. According to the witness the deceased was loud and unruly and
used abusive language.
2.1.4 Ngwenya
denied this allegation and said that the young man in the deceased’s
company is in fact a murderer in
that he killed a man by the name of
“Schoeman”
2.1.5 Being a
police officer, the witness knew that such a murder was reported that
same morning and after he made a
phone call to his superior, Captain
Mukwevhu(as he then was ), he requested the young man to
accompany him to the police
station. The young man was cooperative
and climbed in the back of the police van.
2.1.6 The
deceased approached the witness and again slapped him saying that he
also (the witness), is a criminal and
that he will take his firearm
and shoot him.
2.1.7 On both
occasions of being smacked in the face the witness had forcefully
pushed the deceased away from him. Thereafter
the witness, together
with Ngwenya and the young man in the back, drove away.
2.1.8 After about
70 meter the witness had to make a detour to get to another road
because that day it had rained and there
were big water puddles in
the road.
2.1.9 This
detour caused him to drive past the deceased’s mother’s
house. Outside the house he saw the deceased,
his mother, his
grandmother and his uncle. The mother (Plaintiff) flagged him down
and he stopped in front of the house.
2.1.10 The
Plaintiff started accusing him of assaulting her boy(deceased) and
the deceased forcefully pulled open the door
on his side (driver
side)
2.1.11 The witness
switched off the vehicle and disembarked. The deceased immediately
charged him again and a scuffle ensued
but he was pushed away by the
witness with the help of the Plaintiff. During the struggle the
keys of the vehicle was dropped
and it fell under the vehicle by the
right front wheel.
2.1.12 The deceased
stormed again but this time he tried to grab the firearm of the
witness which he carried in a holster
on his right hip. Another
struggle ensued and the deceased slapped the witness again on his
face.
2.1.13 The family
of the deceased tried to calm the deceased down but to no avail. He
became more and more unruly and abusive.
2.1.14 The witness
managed to call his superior (Colonel Mukwevhu) at the station and
requested back up be sent to the scene.
He reported that he had an
uncontrollable situation on his hands.
2.1.15 Meanwhile
the deceased attacked the witness again and had taken off his
t-shirt. Marumo saw that there were ropes tied
on the upper arms-the
biceps, of the deceased. Apparently , according to tradition, this
practise gives a person more strength
and the witness testified that
it felt as if the deceased was unnaturally strong.
2.1.16 At some
stage the phone of the witness rang. He saw it was his colleague,
Sers Mahlala that probably was the back up.
He managed to shove the
deceased away and gave the address to the Sergeant.
2.1.17 The deceased
charged him again trying to dispossess him of the firearm while
saying he is going to shoot him before
backup arrives . At that stage
the witness realised that he will have to use his firearm to ward off
the attack and to defend and
protect himself.
2.1.18 He drew the
weapon and fired a warning shot into the ground but it did not deter
the deceased. He kept coming towards
him and seconds later the
witness had to fire a second shot which hit the deceased on his upper
thigh and the deceased fell to
the ground.
2.1.19 The witness
testified that the mother initially assisted him in keeping the
deceased at bay but grew tired and retreated.
The uncle also did not
help and so did the onlookers that gathered.
2.1.20 He also
testified that at some stage the deceased attempted to release the
young man from the back of the van and said
that he wants to shoot
Ngwenya also.
2.1.21 He testified
that he was scared and afraid that the deceased might succeed in
getting hold of the firearm and then
he will be killed by the
deceased.
2.1.22 In answer to
a question posed by the court he said that the second shot was meant
to hit the deceased in order to stop
him attacking and because the
deceased paid no heed to his warning shot but kept coming towards
him. He shot the deceased in order
to protect himself.
2.1.23 The witness was
cross examined thoroughly. It was put to him that when he shot the
deceased there was no imminent danger.
It is noticeable that it was
never put to the witness that the deceased never assaulted him or
tried to dispossess him of
his firearm.
2.2 Colonel Mukwevhu
2.2.1 At the
time of the incident he was a captain in the SAPS stationed at
Dennilton police station. He corroborated
Sergeant Maruma with regard
to the calls and the request for back up.
2.2.2 After
the shooting he attended the scene and observed that the
deceased had one bullet wound on his right
thigh.
2.2.3
Thereafter he opened a docket for Attempted Murder and he reported
the matter to IPID
2.3
Bongani Ngwenya
2.3.1 On 3 March
2014 he was at Vezinyayo walking along a road with his girlfriend and
was approached by a group of men armed
with pangas.
2.3.2 The deceased was
amongst them and accused him of killing his friend “Sinki”.
The deceased slapped him and tore
his clothes. He manged to free
himself from the deceased’s grip and ran away. Along the road
Sers Maruma stopped next to
him and questioned him about the state he
is in and why was his clothes torn. He told Maruma and was advised to
get in the vehicle
to go and look for the deceased. They found the
deceased together with a young man hitching donkeys.
2.3.3 The
deceased again accused him of killing Sinki and was stormed by the
deceased. Maruma stopped him and was slapped
by the deceased .
2.3.4 The
witness corroborate the evidence of Maruma with regard what happened
at the donkey cart.
3.3.5 They
drove off and encountered the deceased again who was in the company
of his mother, grandmother and
his uncle. The mother signalled
them to stop which they did.
3.3.6 The
deceased forcefully pulled the door open and the keys fell out of
Maruma’s hand. The deceased started
causing a scene and
attacked Maruma. He wanted Maruma to release his friend from the back
of the van. He testified that the deceased
stormed and slapped Maruma
many times. Some of the blows were warded off by Maruma.
2.3.7 The
mother and uncle assisted initially to try and restrain the deceased
without success. The deceased tried to
get hold of the firearm of
Maruma.
2.3.8 The witness stepped
out of the van with the intention to run away from the scene because
he was fearful that the deceased
might succeed and then he will be
shot.
2.3.9 After a
while of this fracas going on, Maruma fired a shot into the ground
and thereafter a second shot which
hit the deceased who fell down.
2.3.10 After the
deceased was shot he was not assaulted by anyone. He testified that
the deceased made several attempts to
get hold of the firearm and he
also heard the deceased threaten to shoot him (the witness)
2.3.11 The witness
was cross examined but nothing contentious arose. Overall the witness
corroborated the evidence of Maruma.
That was the case for the
Defendants.
3
The Evidence for the
Plaintiff
3.1 Kennith Ratshitali
3.1.1 On 3
March 2014 he was a senior investigator at IPID. He was appointed as
the investigator of the docket for Attempted
Murder.
3.1.2 On 13
March 2014 he travelled to Denniton and collected the docket.
3.1.3 He
wanted to interview Maruma but Maruma was out of town that day and
thus not available. He then got the impression
that Maruma was
uncooperative with the investigation. That was an unjustified
impression because he came to ,Dennilton unannounced
and without
prior arrangement.
3.1.4 His
evidence took the Plaintiff’s case no further.
3.2
Maria Masemola
3.2.1 She is the
mother of the deceased. On 3 March 2014 she was at her mother’s
house. The deceased gave her
the house key and as they walked
out, Maruma was outside the gate in the street.
3.2.2 She
asked him what the deceased had done and Maruma answered that he had
done nothing but that he (Maruma) wanted
to teach him a lesson
because of his cheeky stubbornness.
3.2.3 Maruma
then took out his firearm and fired two shots. The deceased fell and
Maruma went up to him and kicked him
while lying on the ground.
3.2.4 She
grabbed Maruma and pulled him away. Maruma then said to her that he
will shoot her also.
3.2.5 She did
not see the deceased assault the policeman or trying to take his
firearm.
3.2.6 She was
cross examined and it needs mention at this stage already that her
evidence was shockingly bad in quality.
She was argumentative,
evasive, threw tantrums and gave sarcastic answers like for instance
when it was put to her that the deceased
attempted to take the
firearm from Maruma, she answered that the snake was biting his own
intestines.
3.2.6 At some
stage she refused to answer questions. It is not necessary to further
elaborate, the record speaks for
itself. Suffice to find that she was
not a credible and honest witness.
That was the case for the
Plaintiff.
4
Legal principles
4.1 It is
trite that the use of force against another person is under normal
circumstances unlawful but is justified
in defence of person,
property or another legal interest to protect against an unlawful
attack subject to certain conditions.
4.2
The Attack
(i)
The attack must be unlawful;
[3]
(ii)
The attack must be directed against a legal interest for instance
against life and limb, property and or other interests not
now
relevant;
[4]
(iii)
Attack must be imminent or already commenced.
[5]
4.3
The defence must
be directed against the unlawful attack
(i)
The defence must be directed against the attacker. When the defender
injures a third person in the course of repelling an unlawful
attack,
reliance cannot be placed on self defence to justify the act,
although he might rely on necessity.
(ii)
The defence is only justified where it is necessary to protect a
legal interest which cannot effectively ,
at
that moment
,
be protected in another way.
[6]
(iii)
The measure of force used must be reasonable in the circumstances.
The defence must merely be a deterrent and not retribution.
[7]
5
Evaluation of the
witnesses
5.1 Some reference is
already made in regard to the evidence of the Plaintiff Me Masemola.
Suffice to state that even though she
was not a reliable and credible
witness, it goes further than that. Her evidence is totally
uncorroborated and I am of the view
that her evidence even surprised
her counsel also. Adv Netshiozwi appeared to be a good , competent
and able counsel. She will
not neglect to make essential averments
and statements with regard to the Plaintiff’s case to the
defence witnesses. The
only deduction to be made is that she
fabricated the evidence whilst in the witness box.
5.2
On the other hand, Sers Maruma and Mr B Ngwenya testified rationally
and honestly. On all the relevant
issues they corroborated each
other. Col Mukwevhu also corroborated the evidence of Maruma.
5.3 I thus
find that the version of the Defendant is credible and have the
appearance of truth and believability to
it- therefor plausible.
5.4 I find on a
preponderance of probabilities that the events of day in question
occurred as per the witnesses of the Defendants.
6
Facts applied to the
Legal Principles
6.1 The Defendant
in its Heads of Argument argues that there are two mutually
destructive versions before court. I do not
agree. As found above-
the version of the Plaintiff is rejected as untruthful,
uncorroborated and improbable. Therefor , the only
version before
court is that of the Defendant.
6.2 The test for
self defence is objective. The court must place itself in the shoes
of the person claiming self defence.
The court must avoid being an
armchair critic relying on hindsight.
- The questions to be
answered are:-
The questions to be
answered are:-
The Attack
(i)
Was the attack by the deceased on Maruma
unlawful?
A)
Yes
(ii)
Was the attack directed against a
protectable legal interest ?
A)
Yes, the life of Maruma and Ngwenya.
(iii)
Was the attack imminent or already
commenced?
A)
Yes
The Defence
(i)
I find that the defence was directed
against the attacker (deceased) only;
(ii)
The defence was justified to protect a
legal interest which,
at that moment
,
could not been protected in any other way;
(iii)
The measure of force was reasonable- the
deceased was not fatally wounded. He completely recovered from the
bullet wound. I find
that the defence was a justified deterrent.
I therefor make the
following order:
1.
The action is dismissed
2.
The Plaintiff to pay the costs on a normal
party - party scale.
GB Botha AJ
Date
of hearing:
2
November 2023 and 3 November 2023
Judgment
delivered:
19
January 2024
Attorneys
for Plaintiff :
Mphela
& Associates
Groblersdal
Counsel
for Plaintiff :
Adv
Netshiozwi
Attorneys
for Defendants:
State
Attorney
Counsel
for Defendants:
Adv
BT Moeletsi
[1]
CL 001-6
[2]
1981 (3) SA 865(A)
[3]
Ndara
1955(4)SA182 (A);Goliath 1972(3) SA 1 (A)
[4]
Ex Parte Min of Justice:in re S v Van Wyk 1967(1) SA 488 (A)
[5]
S v Van Wyk supra
[6]
S v Van Wyk supra
[7]
S v Van Wyk supra; S v Ntali
1975 (1) SA 429
(A) par 436
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