Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 87South Africa
Motaung v Fidelity Security Services (52325/2012) [2024] ZAGPPHC 87 (2 February 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Motaung v Fidelity Security Services (52325/2012) [2024] ZAGPPHC 87 (2 February 2024)
Motaung v Fidelity Security Services (52325/2012) [2024] ZAGPPHC 87 (2 February 2024)
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sino date 2 February 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
Number: 52325/2012
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
02/02/2024
In
the matters between:-
SIBUSISO
MOTAUNG
PLAINTIFF
And
FIDELITY
SECURITY SERVICES
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
BAQWA,
J
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff seeks order for delictual damages arising from his
having been shot in the
left eye by a rubber bullet which led to the
eye being surgically removed.
Background
[2]
The facts are succinctly outlined in the pleadings where the
particulars of claim
state that:
“
4.
On 21 September 2009 at approximately 15h30 the Plaintiff was
wrongfully and unlawfully
assaulted by a security guard whose
identity is unknown to the Plaintiff, by shooting him with a rubber
bullet.
5.
The Plaintiff was hit in his left eye with the said rubber bullet
that caused
destruction of his eye to the extent that it had to be
surgically removed.
6.
At all relevant times the aforementioned security guard was acting
within the
cause and scope of his employment with the Defendant.”
[3]
The particulars of claim plead in the alternative that:
“
9.
Alternatively
9.1
…
9.2
The injury aforesaid was sustained as a result of the negligence of
the security guard who
was negligent in one or more of the following
aspects:
9.2.1 He
fired the rubber bullet in the direction of the Plaintiff without
regard to the safety of the Plaintiff. “
[4]
The Defendant denies that the Plaintiff was shot with a rubber bullet
fired by a security
officer in the employ of the Defendant and in the
event this court finds that the Plaintiff was shot by a security
officer in its
employ denies that the security officer was acting in
the course and scope of his employment with the Defendant.
[5]
In amplification of its denial the Defendant pleads as follows:
“
6.5
In terms of paragraph 7(1) of the Code of Conduct for Security
Service Providers of 2003 promulgated
in terms of section 28 of the
Private Security Industry Regulations Act 56 of 2001.
‘
A security service
provider must, within his or her ability, render all reasonable
assistance and co operation to the members
and employees of the
Security Services to enable them to perform any function which they
may lawfully perform.’
6.6
As the defendant is a registered security service provider, the SAPS
officers dealing with
the protests and riots called upon the
defendant’s Security Services to enable them to perform any
function, namely to maintain
law and order and to get the protestors
who had obstructed and blockaded the main road between Standerton and
Leandra, to disperse.
6.7
The defendant’s security officers complied with their legal
duty to render all reasonable
assistance and co operation to the
South African Police Services and in so doing subjected themselves to
the command, management
and control of the South African Police
Services.
6.8
At all relevant times when the defendant’s security officers
were rendering assistance
to the SAPS officers and were deployed by
the SAPS, they worked under the management and control of the SAPS
officers, and not
the defendant.
6.9
At all material times when the defendant’s security officers
were working with the
SAPS, they were acting within the course and
scope of their deployment by the SAPS.”
The
Law
[6]
It is trite that the object of pleadings is to define the issues: see
Minister
of Agriculture and Land Affairs v De Klerk
[1]
.
[7]
The purpose and importance of pleadings was further elucidated in
Knox
D’Arcy AE and Another and Agricultural Development Bank of
South Africa
[2]
where it was said “It is trite that litigants must plead
material facts relied upon as a basis for the relief sought and
define the issues in their pleadings to enable the parties to the
action to know what case they have to meet.”.
[8]
It is also trite that the elements of the assault upon which the
Plaintiff bases his
claim are causation, namely the causing of the
violation of a person’s bodily integrity; wrongfulness and
intent which may
be direct or in the form of negligence.
[9]
Put differently, an assault occurs when one person intentionally and
unlawfully causes
physical harm or injury to another.
[10]
In a case where vicarious liability is relied upon such as the
present, the Plaintiff must prove
that the perpetrator was employed
by the Defendant and that a delict was committed against the
Plaintiff and lastly that when he
did so he was acting within the
course and scope of his employment at the relevant time.
See
Neethling
Potgieter & Visser, Law of Delict
[3]
.
Evidence
[11]
The Plaintiff tendered oral testimony at the trial and he called
Patrick “Wanda”
Dladla (Wanda) as his witness.
[12]
He testified that on 21 September 2009 he was in the company of Wanda
when they went to board
a taxi to the Standerton township. The
taxi pick up point was at or near the Early Bird Farm factory.
He walked
past the strikers and protestors standing in front of the
Early Bird factory.
[13]
They proceeded to a position near the police van which was across the
road from where the protestors
were. He was not aware of the
reasons for the protest as he was not participating in it.
There was a road between the
protestors and the police van and
Fidelity Security officers stood in front of the Early Bird factory.
He stated that the
protestors were approximately about 15 metres away
and that he did not see them throwing stones. They were singing
and chanting
freedom songs.
[14]
The Plaintiff stated that the police officers were about three metres
away from him and that
the police were outnumbered by the security
guards. The police were armed with service pistols whilst the
security guards
were armed with shotguns.
[15]
He testified that he heard a gunshot and then dropped to the ground
whereafter he touched his
eye and realised that he was injured.
Other people were also lying on the ground.
[16]
The Plaintiff was taken to a clinic and thereafter to Ermelo Hospital
where his eye was surgically
removed. According to the
Plaintiff the police did not fire any shots and that they merely
acted as observers. The
Fidelity Security guards were dressed
in grey uniforms.
[17]
Wanda confirmed that he was with the Plaintiff at the time of the
incident. He also confirmed
that they were standing on the side
of the road where a police van was stationed together with the police
officers. The protestors
were across the road from them in
front of the Early Bird factory. The Plaintiff was next to him
also waiting for a taxi
to go home.
[18]
He further stated that the protestors were singing songs and chanting
but threw no stones, nor
did they barricade roads or burn objects.
According to him shots were fired five times. The police
officials near him
had service pistols and the Fidelity Security
guards had shotguns.
[19]
Wanda stated that the Plaintiff and three others were injured as a
result of the shots fired.
When he found the Plaintiff, the
Plaintiff was holding two hands in front of his eye.
[20]
Wanda provided an affidavit to the police which was signed before a
Commissioner of Oath.
He confirmed that in the affidavit he
stated that the protestors threw stones. He did not see who
shot the Plaintiff but
he saw that Fidelity Security officers were
shooting towards the place where the Plaintiff was standing.
Analysis
[21]
Notably, the Defendant did not tender any evidence at the trial even
though it disputes the Plaintiff’s
version that the Plaintiff
was hit in the eye with a rubber bullet. The Defendant merely
argues that no evidence was presented
by the Plaintiff that the
Defendant or one of its security officer shot a rubber bullet using a
rifle and that the rubber bullet
caused the injury to Plaintiff’s
eyes. This submission is made despite the uncontradicted direct
evidence by both the
Plaintiff and Wanda that the Fidelity Security
officers were shooting towards the place where the Plaintiff was
standing.
[22]
The Defendant submits that no hospital record or any other documents
were placed before this
court to show that it was a rubber bullet
that injured the Plaintiff’s eye.
[23]
It is common cause that at the commencement of the trial this court
ordered that the trial proceeds
regarding the issue of liability only
and that the quantum issue be postponed
sine die
in terms of
Rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[24]
Absent any evidence contradicting the testimony that Fidelity
Security guards shot in the direction
of the Plaintiff, that the
Plaintiff fell down and that when he rose from the ground he was
bleeding from the eye, the submission
by the Defendant is not
sustainable.
[25]
It is trite that the test applicable in civil trials is proof on a
balance of probabilities.
The evidence of the Plaintiff or
Wanda was not challenged in material respects under
cross-examination. Nor was any version
of the Defendant put to
either the Plaintiff or Wanda to gainsay their evidence regarding the
circumstance under which the Plaintiff
was shot. Further, no
version was put on behalf of the Defendant to either witness as to
how Plaintiff’s injury could
have occurred contrary to their
version.
[26]
The Defendant further submits that no evidence was presented about
where the individual who shot
the Plaintiff was standing or which of
5 to 10 security officers it could have been that pulled the
trigger.
[27]
This action has been brought on the basis of vicarious liability, the
requirements of which have
already been dealt with above. It is
common cause that the Fidelity officers were employees of the
Defendant when the events
narrated above occurred. The evidence
demonstrates that the police officers were merely observers and that
they were not
directing the actions of the security guards. No
evidence has been led to confirm their deployment by the Police on
the date
in question. There is absolutely no evidence in this
regard be it from the South African Police side or from the
Defendant’s
side. The only inference that the court can
draw is that there was no such deployment.
[28]
The mere reference by the Defendant to the provisions of paragraph
7(1) of the Code of Conduct
for Security Services Providers of 2003
in its plea and argument does not exonerate the Defendant from
vicarious liability.
[29]
The Constitutional Court has held that the test for vicarious
liability on the part of the employer:
“
requires a court
to ask whether there is a sufficiently close connection between the
wrongful conduct on the wrongdoer’s employment
… (the)
pivotal enquiry is therefore whether there was a close connection
between the wrongful conduct of the (employees)
and the nature of
their employment.”
See
F
v Minister of Safety and Security
[4]
;
K v
Minister of Safety and Security
[5]
.
[30]
Even if it were to be assumed that the Fidelity Security officers
were called upon to render
assistance to members of the SAPS
(regarding which there is not a thread of evidence), this would not
imply that the Defendant
is not vicariously liable for their acts.
The test in this regard is who is most closely connected to the act
of wrongdoing
in having shot the Plaintiff.
See
Midway
to Engineering & Construction Services v Transnet Bpk
[6]
.
[31]
In light of the above facts and the law it is patently clear that on
a balance of probabilities
the Defendant is vicariously liable for
the acts of the security guards in its employ in having shot the
Plaintiff.
Costs
[32]
The Defendant submits that the evidence presented does not constitute
an unlawful assault for
the reason that there is no evidence to
suggest that the Plaintiff was injured as a result of a rubber bullet
as pleaded and there
is no evidence that the Plaintiff was
intentionally injured.
The implausibility of the
submission is evident from the submission itself. The nature of
the projectile utilised by the shooter(s)
is irrelevant to the issue
of causation of the injury. Further, negligence in the form of
dolus eventualis
is sufficient to constitute delict on which
the action is based.
[33]
The above submission together with the fact that the Defendant
elected not to call any witness
to gainsay the evidence that the
Plaintiff was shot by a security officer of the Defendant and that no
explanation was forthcoming
for the failure on the Defendant’s
part to call any witnesses calls for an adverse inference to be drawn
against it.
The inference is that the defence sought to be put
up was baseless and that the Defendant had acted unreasonably in its
conduct
of the litigation thereby bringing about unwarranted expenses
to the Plaintiff.
[34]
In the result, the following order ensues:
34.1
The Defendant is liable to the Plaintiff for 100% of his proven or
agreed damages arising out of the Plaintiff
having been shot with a
projectile or rubber bullet on 21 September 2009.
34.2
The Defendant is ordered to pay the costs of the action on the scale
as between attorney and client which
shall include costs of senior
counsel.
SELBY BAQWA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: 14 November 2023
Date
of judgment: January 2024
Appearance
On behalf of the
Applicants:
Adv T W G Bester SC
Instructed by:
Loubser Van Wyk
Incorporated
grahambester@gmail.com
On behalf of the
Respondents
Adv P P
Ferreira
Instructed by
Blake Bester
Incorporated
stew@dew.co.za
[1]
2014 (1) SA 212
SCA at 223 G-H
[2]
[2013]
3 All SA 404
(SCA) at para (35)
[3]
4
th
ed (Butterworths 2001) 374-9
[4]
2012
(1) SA 536
(CC) at para [50]
[5]
[2005] ZACC 8
;
2005
(6) SA 419
(CC) at para
[44]
[6]
1998
(3) SA 17
(SCA) at 23 H-I
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