Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 198South Africa
Underwriters at Lloyds of London v Minister of Safety and Security (40975/2016) [2024] ZAGPPHC 198; (2024) 45 ILJ 1339 (GP) (4 March 2024)
Headnotes
vicariously liable for their participation in the robbery.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Underwriters at Lloyds of London v Minister of Safety and Security (40975/2016) [2024] ZAGPPHC 198; (2024) 45 ILJ 1339 (GP) (4 March 2024)
Underwriters at Lloyds of London v Minister of Safety and Security (40975/2016) [2024] ZAGPPHC 198; (2024) 45 ILJ 1339 (GP) (4 March 2024)
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FLYNOTES:
CIVIL LAW – Delict – Vicarious liability –
Criminal
acts by employees – Subrogation – Alleges members of
SAPS knowingly participated in planning, directing
and executing
robbery – Claim not discharged by indemnification from
plaintiff – Whether delict committed as
SAPS employees
sufficiently closely connected to employment – Intentional
criminal deviant conduct of police closely
connected to Minister's
business – Judgment granted in favour of plaintiff.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number:
40975/2016
In the matter between:
UNDERWRITERS
AT LLOYD’S OF LONDON
Plaintiff
And
THE
MINISTER OF SAFETY AND SECURITY
Defendant
Delivered.
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email. The date and time for
hand down is deemed to be 10h00 on
4 March 2024.
JUDGMENT
RANCHOD J
[1]
Almost a decade ago, during the late evening of 27 April 2014 and the
early morning of 28
April 2014, a well planned and executed robbery
took place at the Witbank premises of a company named SBV. SBV
conducts business,
inter
alia
,
by taking custody of cash on behalf of clients in the banking sector
and providing secure cash handling, safekeeping, transport
and
related services to its clients in terms of written service contracts
concluded between it and each of its clients.
[2]
SBV had concluded service contracts with Standard Bank of South
Africa Limited (Standard
Bank), FirstRand Bank Limited (FirstRand),
Nedbank Limited (Nedbank) and Absa Bank Limited (Absa).
[3]
Each of the service contracts incorporated a written service level
agreement (the
SLA). The SLAs would
inter alia
provide to the
relevant bank and to the retail customers of the bank the services
contemplated therein, including cash management
and retail cash
processing services.
[4]
In terms of a policy of insurance, which was in effect at the time of
the robbery,
the plaintiff (the Underwriters) undertook to indemnify
SBV for losses of cash under the control or in the custody of SBV on
behalf
of its clients, including losses sustained due to robbery,
while in transit or at rest anywhere in the Republic of South Africa.
[5]
The robbers broke into SBV’s premises and stole R101 207 456.28
in
cash which had been secured in a vault by SBV on behalf of all its
banking clients including cash deposited by the banks’
retail
customers.
[6]
At all material times Detective Constable Tamsanqa Gladstone Khubeka
(Khubeka) and
Warrant Officer Lekele Reckson Lekola (Lekola) were
employed as members of the South African Police Service (the SAPS) by
the defendant
(the Minister). Khubeka was attached to the SAPS Trio
Unit at the Witbank Police Station – a unit specially
established to
investigate, prevent and combat hijacking, murder and
robbery in the Witbank area. Lekola was stationed at the Witbank
Police Station.
His duties included investigating, preventing and
combatting crime in the Witbank area.
[7]
Plaintiff alleges that at all relevant times before, during and after
the robbery,
Khubeka and Lekola: whilst acting in the course and
scope of their employment and duties as members of the SAPS knowingly
participated
in planning, directing and in executing the robbery and
in preventing the detection and proper investigation of the robbery
as
well as preventing and frustrating lawful attempts to recover the
stolen cash.
[8]
SBV became liable under the service contracts to indemnify each
banking client and
its retail customers for the loss they suffered as
a result of the robbery. SBV duly indemnified each banking client and
its retail
customers in the total sum of R101 207 456.28.
The amount is made up of each of the amounts deposited by the
relevant
banking client and its retail customers that was in SBV’s
custody at the relevant time and stolen in the robbery.
[9]
The Underwriters’ claim against the Minister is in terms of
written contracts
of cessions concluded between them and SBV and its
banking clients. In the alternative, the Underwriters, having
indemnified SBV,
claim against the Minister by subrogation.
[10]
It is the plaintiff’s case that the Minister became vicariously
liable to each of SBV’s
clients who suffered loss due to the
robbery. Alternatively, the Minister became vicariously liable to
indemnify SBV for its own
loss, further alternatively, for the loss
SBV suffered having indemnified its clients and their retail
customers.
[11]
The Minister contends that Khubeka and Lekola were acting on a frolic
of their own hence he could
not be held vicariously liable for their
participation in the robbery.
[12]
Several of the gang of robbers were apprehended, tried and convicted
(including Khubeka and Lekola)
in a criminal trial before Bam J on
various charges in relation to the robbery.
The issues in
dispute
[13]
During oral arguments at the conclusion of the trial before me, I was
informed by the Minister’s
counsel that the Minister does not
dispute that the Underwriters may institute action based on
subrogation. However, the Minister
does not concede that he is
vicariously liable for the delicts committed by Khubeka and Lekola.
[14]
Insofar as quantum is concerned the Minister concedes to an amount of
R93 919 298.47
[1]
and
not R101 207 456.28. The reason appears to be that an
amount of about R 6 000 000.00 was recovered said
plaintiff’s counsel in his opening statement at the
commencement of the trial.
[15]
The plaintiff sought certain admissions from the defendant in terms
of Rule 37(4) of the Uniform
Rules of Court in preparation for trial.
The defendant admitted that both Khubeka and Lekola were each on duty
“at any one
or more time or times before, during and after the
robbery”.
[2]
A number of
other admissions were made.
[16]
One of the plaintiff’s requests for admission
[3]
relates to the judgment of Bam J in the criminal trial. This was in
September 2019 in a second request for admissions. There the
plaintiff requested the following admissions from the defendant in
terms of Rule 37(6)(g) ahead of the second pre-trial conference:
“
Rule
37(6)(g): Plaintiff’s request for admissions:
25.
The plaintiff hereby requests the defendant to make the admissions
sought below concerning
the issues arising in paragraphs 19, 20, 20A
and 21 of the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim (as amended) and
paragraphs 11,
12 and 13 of the Defendant’s plea. The requests
are made to narrow the issues and to curtail the trial and to give
due consideration
to the following facts and circumstances regarding
the complicity of Khubeka and Lekola in the robbery, while they were
at all
relevant times members of the SAPS, with Khubeka further being
a member of the SAPS trio unit in Witbank; the judgment by Bam J
dated 7 February 2018 in
The State v Petra December Nkosi
and
15 others (case number CC212/15) (
the judgment
) in the High
Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division, Eastern Circuit
(Middelburg), (
the Criminal Court
); the findings of fact in
the judgment; the rulings on the admissibility of evidence; the
admissions by the accused during evidence;
and to the further
admissions recorded in paragraphs 4.3(a) to (p) of the judgment that
were made on behalf of the relevant accused,
including Lekola and
Khubeka. Does the Defendant admit that:
25.1
The robbery was executed during the evening of 27 April 2014 and the
morning of 28 April 2014.
25.2
In the course of the robbery, bank notes in the total sum of
R101 207 456.28, alternatively
(according to the admission
recorded in the judgment at paragraph 4.3(a)) in the amount of
R104 440 845.60 were stolen?
25.3
The bank notes stolen during the robbery were secured in the vault by
SBV on behalf of its banking
clients and retail customers?
25.4
Khubeka, Lekola, Accused 3, Accused 5, Accused 14 and Accused 16 were
each convicted, amongst other
crimes relating to the robbery with
aggravating circumstances and of conspiracy to commit robbery with
aggravating circumstances?
25.5
Khubeka, Lekola, Accused 3, Accused 5, Accuse 14 participated at all
relevant times before, during
and after the robbery in planning,
directing and/or executing the robbery?
25.6
Khubeka, Lekola, Accused 3 and Accused 14 were at all relevant times
during and immediately after the
robbery, members of the SAPS?
25.7
Khubeka and Lekola was each on duty at any one or more time or times
before, during and after the robbery?
25.8
Khubeka was ‘on standby duty’ (as recorded in para 27.5
of the judgment) at Witbank Police
Station when the robbery was
executed?
25.9
Khubeka came on duty at the Witbank Police Station at 08h00 on 28
April 2014?
25.10 Khubeka
used cell phone number 0824554177 at the relevant times before,
during and after the robbery to assist
in coordinating and executing
the robbery (as recorded in paras 27.5 and 47 of the judgment) in
communications with others convicted
in the judgment?
25.11 Khubeka
conspired to commit the robbery with other members of the SAPS at the
relevant times of the robbery, including
Lekola, Accused 3 and
Accused 14?
25.12 Khubeka
obstructed and prevented lawful attempts by members of the SAPS to
recover the stolen money, while he
was on duty?
25.13 Khubeka
conspired with other members of the SAPS to do so?
25.14 The
correctness of the finding recorded at paragraph 50 (p83) of the
judgment that Khubeka was ‘actively
involved in the commission
of the robbery’?
25.15 The
admissions recorded in paragraph 4.3 of the judgment were made?
25.16 The
admissions contemplated in paragraph 24 of the judgment were made?”
[17]
The defendant responded later in September 2019 as follows:
“
Ad
paragraph 25 (preface) read with paragraphs 25.1 to 25.16
Insofar as the admissions
sought in these paragraphs are covered by the judgment of Bam J the
admissions are made. If they are not
so covered, the admissions are
not made.”
[18]
The defendant thereafter sought to withdraw the admissions on the
basis that all that was admitted
was that Bam J made a finding in the
judgment at the end of the criminal matter that Khubeka and Lekola
took part in the robbery.
The defendant contended that he did not
admit the fact of their involvement in the robbery, only the fact
that Bam J made the finding
in the judgment following the criminal
trial.
[19]
The attempted withdrawal by defendant of the admissions became the
subject of several applications
by the parties, the details of which
I do not deem necessary to set out in any detail for the purposes of
this judgment. Suffice
to say that ultimately, the defendant did not
succeed in withdrawing the admissions it made. Le Roux AJ who also
dealt with defendant’s
attempted withdrawal of the admissions
held:
[4]
“
25
As a result, I find that the defendant did admit the facts listed in
the requested admissions,
and not only that they are co-extensive
with the factual findings by Bam J in the criminal trial judgment.
The plain language used
cannot accommodate the interpretation
contended for by the defendant now.”
[20]
The defendant’s appeal to the SCA was dismissed and leave to
appeal to the Constitutional
Court also failed.
[21]
In the result, the admissions made by the defendant (referred to in
para 16 of this judgment)
stand in this trial.
Evidence led in the
trial before me
[22]
The first witness for the plaintiff was Mr John Miles who was a
senior cash processing supervisor
at SBV at the time of the robbery.
His evidence primarily related to how the quantum of the loss
sustained by SBV was determined.
In cross-examination he elaborated
on his evidence-in-chief on how the amount of the loss was
established.
[23]
The next witness for the plaintiff was Ms Pamela Bagattini an
employee of SBV at the time of
the robbery but who has since retired.
She testified that she was the National Manager, Support Operations
for SBV. She was also
the industry representative on, as she put it,
‘all the cash forums ... [and] committees ... in the financial
industry ...
[including] the banks, the cash houses as well as the
South African Reserve Bank: She explained that there were two vaults
at the
Witbank SBV one of which was the incoming vault (where cash
came in and which had not been processed or verified yet). It was
known
as vault 2 and it was the one that was robbed.’
[24]
Ms Bagattini testified that she was part of the group that had to
determine the amount lost in
the robbery. She explained the procedure
in some detail. She said it was not likely for any bank or retail
claimant to overstate
their claims for the loss they suffered because
of the controls in place. She explained them in detail. She had
worked with Mr
Miles in determining the quantum of the loss.
[25]
Cross-examination was very brief in that counsel for the defendant
merely sought clarity on how
the amounts claimed by the retail
clients were determined.
[26]
The next witness for the plaintiff was Mr Murray John Stocks. At the
time of the robbery, he
was Executive Head of Corporate Shared
Services at Nedbank and, he was also the Nedbank nominated
non-executive director on the
board of SBV. He explained what these
positions entailed
vis-a-vis
Nedbank and SBV. He confirmed
that SBV had fully settled four claims of Nedbank because of the
robbery, which were then ceded in
favour of the plaintiff. Nedbank,
as host bank, had paid the claims of the other banks and the retail
clients, in accordance with
the arrangements between them once the
claims were substantiated.
[27]
Under cross-examination Mr Stocks confirmed that Nedbank was fully
compensated by SBV and Nedbank
thereafter ceded its claims to the
plaintiff.
[28]
The plaintiff closed its case and the defendant thereafter closed his
case without leading any
evidence.
[29]
It was agreed between the parties that written heads of arguments
would be prepared and delivered
and thereafter oral arguments would
be made.
Common cause facts
[30]
In summary the common cause facts are:
30.1
That a robbery took place during the evening of the 27
th
and early morning of the 28
th
of April 2014 at the
premises of SBV in Witbank;
30.2
The robbers consisted of a gang of approximately 16 persons of which
two, namely, Khubeka and Lekola were
at the relevant time members of
the SAPS;
30.3
Khubeka and Lekola were involved in the planning and execution of the
robbery and Khubeka was on standby
duty during the evening when the
robbery occurred;
30.4 An
employee of SBV, Gift Nkosi, was part of the gang in that she
provided her co-perpetrators with information
about guard duties and
security procedure at the SBV premises and photographs of the inside
of the premises including photographs
of the vaults where the money
was secured;
30.5
That an amount of R101 207 456.218 was stolen from a vault
of the SBV premises;
30.6
That the monies stolen were of banking and retail clients of SBV;
30.7
SBV subsequently indemnified all its banking clients and retail
customers and in turn plaintiff indemnified
SBV in the same amount,
SBV being the insured under an insurance policy issued to SBV by the
plaintiff; and
30.8
The defendant, in his heads of argument says its common cause that
the quantum of damages is R 93 919 298.17.
In plaintiff’s
heads of argument it was submitted that the amount was
R101 207 456.28. However, in its replying
heads, plaintiff
says it seeks judgment for the amount stated by defendant, i.e, R
93 919 298.17.
Admissions
[31]
I have already mentioned earlier that a number of admissions were
made by the defendant regarding,
inter alia,
the participation
of Khubeka and Lekola in the robbery; that they were members of the
SAPS at the time of the robbery and they
were on duty at any one or
more times before, during and after the robbery.
[32]
In the criminal trial Bam J found that Khubeka conspired with Lekola
and other robbers to commit
the robbery, that Khubeka was “actively
involved in the commission of the robbery” and that he
knowingly participated
in the prevention and proper investigation of
the robbery and prevented and frustrated lawful attempts to recover
the stolen cash.
[33]
The banks had ceded, in writing, to the plaintiffs claims they had
against third parties, including
claims in delict against the
defendant.
Issues in dispute
Loss settled –
no claim left to cede
[
34
]
Inasmuch as plaintiff relies on the cessions of
the respective claims of SBV; and SBV's banking clients the defendant
in his heads
of argument says the plaintiff failed to adduce any
evidence that any of the banking clients of SBV had a claim against
the defendant
at the time when the cession agreements were entered
into, or thereafter. By the time of the cessions, SBV had already
fully indemnified
Nedbank, its banking clients, as well as its retail
customers. Hence, so the argument went, none of the banking clients
of SBV
had a claim for damages to be ceded to the plaintiff as they
had been fully paid. Counsel relies on
Brayton
Carlswald (Pty) Ltd and Another v Brews
,
2017 (5) SA 498
(SCA) at paras [12] - [14] where the principle that
nobody can transfer more rights to another than he himself has, was
reaffirmed.
Counsel says the facts in this matter are on all fours
with those in
Brayton
.
[35]
However, counsel for the plaintiff submitted that the reliance on
Brayton
is misplaced. I agree.
Brayton
involved the
cession of a judgment debt after it had been satisfied, whereas in
the present case the banks ceded to the plaintiff
their own claims in
delict against the defendant.
[36]
First, there is a fundamental distinction between a claim for payment
(cause of action) and a
judgment debt. A claim, if disputed, is
discharged or extinguished only if settled or by final judgment,
whereas a judgment debt
is discharged or extinguished on payment.
Accordingly, upon satisfaction of the judgment debt by payment in
Brayton
, the judgment debt was discharged and there was no
judgment debt left to cede.
[37]
By contrast, in the present case when the robbery was executed
Nedbank, as the host bank, suffered
the loss for which it had a
primary delictual claim (cause of action) against the defendant –
as the wrongdoer – and
a contractual claim (cause of action)
against SBV – as the indemnifier. When SBV indemnified Nedbank
for its loss, Nedbank’s
cause of action against the defendant
was not extinguished or discharged. This meant that when Nedbank
ceded its claims (in delict)
against the defendant, that claim
remained valid and enforceable against the defendant by the plaintiff
as cessionary. Secondly,
after SBV indemnified Nedbank, SBV as a
secondary debtor acquired a claim against the defendant to recover
what it paid to Nedbank.
[5]
After the plaintiff indemnified SBV, the plaintiff acquired SBV’s
claims against the defendant by way of cession and subrogation.
[6]
[38]
It follows that SBV’s claim was not discharged by
indemnification from the plaintiff.
[39]
Thirdly, there is the collateral source rule which precludes the
defendant from relying, as a
defence in
delict
, on SBV
indemnifying Nedbank based on its
contractual
liability.
SBV not liable under
Standard Bank and FirstRand contracts
[40]
Defendant contends that the service contracts between SBV and
Standard Bank and FirstRand respectively
provide that SBV would only
be liable to those banks if the loss was caused by the wrongful act
or omission of SBV,
[7]
and that
the plaintiff was not liable under the SBV policy of insurance to
indemnify SBV for the losses of those two banks.
[41]
Plaintiff’s counsel submitted that the defendant misreads the
relevant clauses in these
two contracts. The service agreements
expressly render SBV liable for the loss for any reason, including
liability at common law.
During the trial, plaintiff led
uncontradicted evidence which showed that Nedbank, as the host bank,
was the owner of all the cash
in the Witbank SBV depot.
[42]
Nedbank was the party that suffered the loss. SBV indemnified Nedbank
only – not the other
banks – in terms of the service
agreement between SBV and Nedbank. That agreement expressly provides
(unlike the corresponding
clauses in the Standard Bank and FirstRand
service agreements) that SBV is liable to indemnify Nedbank for loss
incurred for any
reason whatsoever. Quiet clearly, SBV was strictly
liable to Nedbank for the loss that the latter suffered in the
robbery. It was
for this reason that Nedbank settled the claims of
the other banks and the retail clients for all the uncleared deposits
that were
stolen.
Elements of
delictual liability
[43]
In the Constitutional Court case of
Oppelt v Department of Health,
Western Cape
2016 (1) SA 325
(CC) at paragraph 34 it was stated
that it is trite that the elements of delictual liability are
causation, wrongfulness, fault
and harm.
[44]
From the admissions made by the defendant,
inter alia
,
regarding Khubeka and Lekola’s involvement in the robbery as
well as admission of the relevant portions of Bam J’s
judgment
in the criminal case establishes, in my view all the elements of the
delict.
[45]
However, the defendant disputes that the defendant is vicariously
liable in delict.
Vicarious liability
[46]
The plaintiff sues the defendant as the employer of, more
particularly, Khubeka and Lekola who
took part in the robbery, on the
basis that the defendant is vicariously liable for the delicts
committed by its employees.
[47]
The defendant strenuously disputes it. The defendant admits that
Khubeka and Lekola were employed
by him during the time before,
during and after the robbery. However, he contends, that they were
not acting within the course
and scope of their employment but were
on a frolic of their own. In other words, that the requirements for
vicarious liability
have not been established because the following
necessary evidence was not led by plaintiff (and that no findings
were made in
the criminal case by Bam J to support such a finding):
47.1
of when and how Lekola and Khubeka participated in the planning and
execution of the robbery;
[8]
47.2
of what Lekola and Khubeka did while on duty to plan the robbery;
[9]
47.3
that Lekola and Khubeka participated in the planning and executing of
the robbery, whilst they were “officially
on duty”;
[10]
47.4
that the members actively participated in the actual robbery whilst
on duty or that they created any trust
with any individual.
[11]
[48]
The defendant’s counsel also contends that it was Gift Nkosi
(an employee of SBV) who was
the ‘kingpin’ who provided
the robbers with indispensable information. The defendant’s
contention seems to be,
as I understand it, that Nkosi played a
larger role in the robbery hence the defendant cannot be held liable
vicariously for any
role or part played by Khubeka and Lekola. In my
view, Nkosi’s greater (or lesser) role in the robbery is
irrelevant in the
context of vicarious liability. The issue is
whether the delict committed by Khubeka and Lekola as SAPS employees
is sufficiently
closely connected to their employment.
[49]
In
F
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another
,
[12]
the Constitutional Court described the general principles of
vicarious liability as follows:
“
40
Vicarious liability means a person may be held liable for the
wrongful act or omission of
another even though the former did not,
strictly speaking, engage in any wrongful conduct. This would arise
where there is a particular
relationship between those persons, such
as employment. As a general rule, an employer is vicariously liable
for the wrongful acts
or omissions of an employee committed within
the course and scope of employment, or whilst the employee was
engaged in any activity
reasonably incidental to it.
41
Two tests apply to the determination of vicarious liability. One
applies when an employee
commits the delict while going about the
employer's business. This is generally regarded as the ‘standard
test’. The
other test finds application where wrongdoing takes
place outside the course and scope of employment. These are known as
‘deviation
cases.’ The matter before us is a typical
deviation case.”
[50]
In
Booysen
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another
,
[13]
the Constitutional Court accepted the following definition of the
phrase “deviation case”;
“
A
‘deviation case’ refers to a case in which a delict is
committed in circumstances where an employee deviates from
the normal
performance of his or her duties.”
[51]
The test for determining the employers’ vicarious liability for
the wrongful conducts of
their employees in deviation cases was set
out in
Minister
of Police v Rabie,
as
follows
:
[14]
“
It
seems clear that an act done by a servant solely for his own interest
and purposes, although occasioned by his employment, may
fall outside
the course and scope of his employment, and that in deciding whether
an act by the servant does so fall, some reference
is to be made to
the servant’s intention (cf Estate Van der Byl v Swanepoel
1927
AD 141
at 150). The test is in this regard subjective. On the other
hand, if there is nevertheless a sufficiently close link between the
servant’s acts for his own interests and purposes and the
business of his master, the master may yet be liable. This is an
objective test.”
[52]
In
K
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another
,
[15]
the Constitutional Court accepted the above test from
Rabie
and
developed it to accord with the spirit, purport and objects of the
Constitution.
“
44
. . . The objective element of the test which relates to the
connection between the deviant
conduct and the employment, approached
with the spirit, purport and objects of the Constitution in mind, is
sufficiently flexible
to incorporate not only constitutional norms,
but other norms as well. It requires a court when applying it to
articulate its reasoning
for its conclusions as to whether there is a
sufficient connection between the wrongful conduct and the employment
or not. Thus
developed, by the explicit recognition of the normative
content of the objective stage of the test, its application should
not
offend the Bill of Right or be at odds with our constitutional
order.”
[53]
This development of the
Rabie
test
to infuse it with the value of the Constitution was confirmed and
applied by the Constitutional Court in
F
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another.
[16]
[54]
The facts in
K
are apt and may briefly be summarized as
follows. A 20-year-old woman was stranded at a petrol station at 4 am
away from her home.
Three on-duty policemen dressed in police
uniforms and driving a police vehicle, all of whom were unknown to
her, offered her a
lift home. She accepted the offer and climbed into
the car. Along the way, they took a turn in the wrong direction. When
she told
them that they were going the wrong way, a police jacket was
thrown over her head and held tight. Thereafter, the policemen took
turns and raped her, threw her on the ground and left her there. The
three policemen were charged and convicted of rape.
[55]
The Court applied the test referred to in
K
as follows to find
the Minister vicariously liable for the intentional criminal and
delictual conduct of the policemen:
“
50
It is necessary now to apply the test set in Rabie, adapted in the
light of the preceding
discussion, to the facts of this case. As to
the first leg of the test, it is clear that the three policemen did
not rape the applicant
upon the instructions of the respondent. Nor
did they further the respondent’s purposes or obligations when
they did so.
They were indeed, subjectively viewed, acting in pursuit
entirely of their own objectives and not those of their employer.
That
conclusion is not the end of the matter.
51
The next question that arises is whether, albeit that the policemen
were pursuing their
own purposes when they raped the applicant, their
conduct was sufficiently close to their employer’s business to
render the
respondents liable. In this regard, there are several
important facts that point to the closeness of that connection.
First, the
policemen all bore a statutory and constitutional duty to
prevent crime and protect the members of the public. That duty is a
duty
which also rests on their employer and they were employed by
their employer to perform that obligation. Secondly, in addition to
the general duty to protect the public, the police here had offered
to assist the applicant and she had accepted their offer. In
so
doing, she placed her trust in the policeman although she did not
know them personally. One of the purposes of wearing uniforms
is to
make public officers more identifiable to members of the public who
find themselves in need of assistance.
52
Our Constitution mandates members of the police to protect members of
the community
and to prevent crime. It is an important mandate which
should quite legitimately and reasonably result in the trust of the
police
by members of the community. Where such trust is established,
the achievement of the tasks of the police will be facilitated. In
determining whether the Minister is liable in these circumstances,
courts must take account of the importance of the constitutional
role
entrusted to the police and the importance of nurturing the
confidence and trust of the community in the police in order to
ensure that their role is successfully performed. In this case, and
reviewed objectively, it was reasonable for the applicant to
place
her trust in the policemen who were in uniform and offered to assist
her.
53
Thirdly, the conduct of the policemen which caused harm constituted a
simultaneous
commission and omission. The commission lay in their
brutal rape of the applicant. Their simultaneous omission lay in
their failing
while on duty to protect her from harm, something which
they bore a general duty to do, and a special duty on the facts of
this
case. In my view, these three inter-related factors make it
plain that viewed against the background of our Constitution, and, in
particular, the constitutional rights of the applicant and the
constitutional obligations of the respondent, the connection between
the conduct of the policemen and their employment was sufficiently
close to render the respondent liable.”
[56]
The facts in
F
were strikingly similar to those in
K
.
Ms
F
was a fourteen-year-old girl. She had attended a night
club that night, and in the early hours of the morning she needed a
lift
home. She was offered a lift home by a policeman who was on
standby duty and driving an unmarked police vehicle, equipped with a
police radio which
F
noticed before she accepted the lift.
There were two other passengers in the car, one of whom was known to
her. She was sitting
in the back seat, but after the other passengers
had been dropped off at their homes she moved to the front seat, at
the policeman’s
request. There, she saw a pile of police
dockets bearing his name and rank. The policeman drove the car away
and stopped at a dark
place, raising her suspicion about his motives.
She immediately opened the door, alighted from the car and ran away
and hid from
him. After a while, he drove away. She later emerged
from hiding and stood in the road and hitchhiked. A vehicle stopped,
which
turned out to be the same policeman. He offered her a lift home
again, she reluctantly accepted, owing to her desperate situation.
He
then turned off the road again and stopped the car. When she tried to
run away, he stopped her and proceeded to assault and
rape the girl.
[57]
In finding the Minister vicariously liable for the policeman’s
conduct, the Court reasoned
as follows:
“
52
The normative components that point to liability must here, as K
indicated, be expressly
stated. They are: the State’s
constitutional obligations to protect the public; the trust that the
public is entitled to
place in the police; the significance, if any,
of the policeman having been off duty and on standby duty; the role
of the simultaneous
act of the policeman’s commission of rape
and omission to protect the victim; and the existence or otherwise of
an intimate
link between the policeman’s conduct and his
employment. All these elements complement one another in determining
the State’s
vicarious liability in this matter. I deal with
them in the same order below. ...
53
The State has a general duty to protect members of the public from
violations of their
constitutional rights. In grappling with the
question of the State’s vicarious liability, the constitutional
obligations
to prevent crime and to protect members of the public,
particularly the vulnerable, must enjoy some prominence.
. . .
61
These constitutional duties resting upon the State, and more
specifically the police,
are significant in that they suggest a
normative basis for holding the State liable for the wrongful conduct
of even a policeman
on standby duty, provided a sufficiently close
connection can be determined between his misdeed and his employment.
This leads
to the discussion of the trust that people are entitled to
repose in the police.
. . .
80
It is so that Mr Van Wyk was not in uniform, that his police car was
unmarked and he
was not on duty but on standby. But his use of a
police car facilitated the rape. That he was on standby is not an
irrelevant consideration.
His duty to protect the public while on
standby was incipient. But it must be seen as cumulative to the rest
of the factors that
point to the necessary connection. He could be
summoned at any time to exercise his powers as a police official to
protect a member
of the public. What is more, in that time and space
he had the power to place himself on duty. I am therefore satisfied
that a
sufficiently close link existed to impose vicarious liability
on Mr Van Wyk’s employer.”
[58]
Thus, when intentional criminal deviant conduct of the police is
closely connected to the Minister’s
business he may be held
vicariously liable in a delictual claim for damages. In my view, that
is the case here and the Minister
is liable on that basis.
[59]
In all the circumstances judgment is granted in favour of the
plaintiff for payment by the defendant
of:
1.
The sum of R 93 919 298.47 (Ninety-Three
Million Nine Hundred and Nineteen Thousand Two Hundred and Ninety
Eight Rand
and Forty Seven Cents).
2.
Interest on the above amount at the prescribed
rate per annum at the relevant time from 28 April 2014 to the date of
payment.
3.
Costs of suit, including the costs of two counsel.
___________________________
RANCHOD J
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date of
hearing:
11 October and 13
November 2023
Date of
judgment:
4 March
2024
Appearances:
For Plaintiff: Adv
M Kriegler SC & Adv N Nxumalo
Instructed by Norton Rose
Fulbright South Africa Inc
c/o Macintosh Cross &
Farquharson Arcadia, Pretoria
For
Defendant:
Adv MMW van Zyl SC & Adv C Sevenster
Instructed by The State
Attorney
Salu Building
255 Francis Baard Street
Pretoria
[1]
Plaintiff’s
request for further admissions dated 16 September 2021 –
Caselines 004 – 105 para 7.
[2]
Plaintiff’s
request for admissions Caselines 004 – 29 para 25.7 and
defendant’s response Caselines 004 –
42 para 17.
[3]
Plaintiff’s
request for admissions Caselines 004 – 28 para 25.
[4]
Judgment
dated 25 March 2022 para [25]; Caselines 000 – 144.
[5]
Plaintiff’s
written closing argument (“Plaintiff’s CA”), pp 37
– 40 paras 125 – 130.
[6]
Plaintiff’s
CA, pp 31 – 32 paras 109 – 112.
[7]
Defendant’s
heads of argument, p 24 paras 27 – 28.
[8]
Defendant’s
heads of argument, p28 para 34.
[9]
Defendant’s
heads of argument, p28 para 34.
[10]
Defendant’s
heads of argument, p28 para 34.
[11]
Defendant’s
heads of argument, p32 para 41.1.
[12]
2012
(1) SA 536 (CC).
[13]
2018
(6) SA 1
(CC).
[14]
1986
(1) SA 117 (A).
[15]
2005
(6) SA 419 (CC).
[16]
Supra
at
paragraph [52].
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