Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1245South Africa
Z.N obo C.N v Minister of Police (63901/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1245 (22 November 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Z.N obo C.N v Minister of Police (63901/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1245 (22 November 2024)
Z.N obo C.N v Minister of Police (63901/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1245 (22 November 2024)
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sino date 22 November 2024
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No:63901/2021
(1) Reportable: No
(2) Of interest to other
judges: No
(3) Revised: Yes
Signature:
Date: 06 November 2024
In the matter between:
Z[...] N[...]
obo C[...] N[...]
Plaintiff
And
The
Minister of Police
Defendant
JUDGMENT
LESO A.J
INTRODUCTION
1.
The
plaintiff claims damages in her representative capacity as a natural
parent of a minor, C[...] N[...] against the Minister of
Police as a
result of a gunshot injury suffered by the minor. The plaintiff’s
claim is premised on vicarious liability as
she claims that C[...]’s
gunshot injuries after the Police officer fired two warning shots to
disperse the crowd that was
protesting.
BACKGROUND
2.
The
plaintiff's claim is pursuant to an incident of protest action by
community members on 24 July 2020 at or near No:2[...] Ramaphosa
Squatter Camp, extension 5 Boksburg, Gauteng. The plaintiff alleges
that her minor child was shot by the members of the South African
Police when they were acting within the course and scope of their
employment.
3.
The
plaintiff claims that the members of the South African Police force
unlawfully and negligently, discharged a firearm/projectiles
in the
direction of the minor and the community and in so doing, they acted
negligently and unlawfully in that they
should
have known of the presence of the child and that the child could be
struck by the bullet so discharged from the said firearm.
4.
The
plaintiff claims that the members of the defendant were negligent in
one or more or all of the following conducts:
4.1 by discharging a
firearm without establishing whether it was safe and/or opportune to
do so at the time and under the circumstances;
4.2 by failing to take
necessary steps and precautions to prevent the discharge of the
firearm, when, at that stage, it posed danger
to the Plaintiff’s
minor child; and other people within the vicinity;
4.3 by failing to avoid
shooting and injuring the minor child, by the exercise of reasonable
care and skill, the police members
could and should have done;
4.4 by pointing a firearm
towards the direction of the minor child when it was inappropriate;
and not opportune for such.
5.
The
defendant defended the action and denied liability on the basis that
C[...] was not shot by the members of the defendant. The
defendant pleaded the existence of a vicarious relationship with its
employees and denied all other allegations in the plaintiff's
claim.
In the amended plea the defendant contends that that there is no
causal link between the bullet that is alleged to have
struck the
minor to the firearm of the defendant and that there is no objective
evidence connecting the police officer(s) to the
firing of the gun
and the injuries sustained by the child as there were different
number of role players such as members of the
public or members of
the Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department(JMPD) who are not in
the employ of the defendant.
6.
The
parties agreed that the trial will proceed on determination of
liability on merits only.
THE
MERITS
Plaintiff’s
case
7.
The
plaintiff and her husband Mandisi Mariot Mzekwa gave evidence
supporting the plaintiff’s claim as outlined in the background.
8.
Z[...]
N[...] testified as follows: on 20 July 2020 she was sleeping when
the community members were protesting in the street next
to her
house. She heard a sound of a firearm shot around 6:00 am and at
about 8:00 am she heard a second shot. Her child C[...]
ran
inside the house and woke her up crying. He informed her that the
police shot him. She stood up and noticed that the child was
bleeding
and he asked him to lie on the bed to assess the wound. Whilst she
was assessing the child her husband and her father
entered the house
and they informed her that her husband was shot. She informed them
that the child was also shot. Her father got
furious and instructed
them to go outside in the street and confront the police officers
about the shooting incident
9.
The
witness said that they only found the members of the South African
Police outside the yard and the Johannesburg Metro police(JMPD)
arrived later when they were inside the police van going to the
Hospital. She said that the police officers tried to call an
ambulance
for them but it did not arrive and later they were
transported to Bertha Gxowa Hospital by the police officers using a
police van.
The police officers left them at the hospital but they
could not be assisted in the Hospital due to the high volume of
Covid-19
patients. An ambulance was used to transport them to
Charlotte Maxeke Hospital where the child and the father were
admitted and
discharged the same day. She does not know what happened
with the case she opened on behalf of C[...] because she lost her
cellphone
after leaving the police station that day. Plaintiff did
not agree with the proposition by the defence that C[...] was not
shot
by the members of the South African Police Service. She
confirmed that she did not see the child being shot but there were no
other
law enforcement officers except SAPS officials at the scene.
Mandisi
Mzekwa’s Evidence
10.
The
witness testified as follows: on 24 July 2020 he used a taxi from
work to his home. He alighted before his destination because
there
was a protest by the community members on the road next to his house.
From the taxi, he went straight to his yard after passing
the crowd
that was protesting next to his yard. In the yard, C[...] was coming
out of the toilet which was next to the gate and
he instructed him to
go to the house as he was still trying to close the gate. He saw a
white South African Police Service
van
with blue lamps, blue stripes and yellow lines coming from the corner
going straight to the crowd that was picketing on the
street 3 meters
away from his gate.
The
crowd got furious when they saw the police van coming straight to
them and they tried to stop the van by moving closer to it
and
throwing stones at the police van.
11.
The
witness testified that he heard a gunshot sound and when he lifted
his head he saw a police van reversing slowly and a police
officer
opening a door holding a gun. His legs felt numb and he noticed that
he was shot and he was bleeding. C[...] was next to
him but after the
first shot he started screaming and he ran to the house. His
father-in-law came to lift him and took him to the
house where they
found C[...] lying injured on the bed. The plaintiff informed them
that the child was shot by the police and his
father-in-law got upset
and told them to go outside and confront the police about the
shooting incident. They found the police
officers who were standing
next to their yard but they could not talk to them because community
members who had also gathered around
were making noise.
12.
The
witness said that when they were on the other side of the road
confronting the police about the shooting incident he could not
hear
the response of the police officers as he was in pain and the crowd
was making noise. He said that an ambulance was organized
by the
police but they were transported to Bertha Gxowe(Germiston) Hospital
by the police officers using a police van because the
ambulance did
not arrive. He did not know how he got shot and he could not confirm
whether there was a link between the shots fired
and the injuries
they sustained but he confirmed that the members of the police were
the only law enforcement officials on the
scene at the time the
incident happened. He did not agree with the defense that they were
not shot by the members of the defendant
by adding that he saw the
police officer taking out a gun and pointing out to the community
that the Johannesburg Metro Police
arrived at the scene when they
were taken to hospital. He did know what happened to the case which
was opened by the plaintiff
on behalf of C[...].
Defendant’s
case
13.
The
defense called Constable Mutsiri and Constable Motodella to testify
in their defense. I will only deal with the evidence of
Mutsiri
because the other witness testified mostly about the case opened by
C[...]’s father.
14.
Mutsiri
testified that he has been working as a Constable at Brakpan Police
Station since 2017. he was with his colleague when he
noticed that
there was a protest on the street when they were driving to attend to
a complaint at 7h55. When he was about
to drive over the hump,
after passing a traffic circle he saw the protesters carrying weapons
and stones entering the road aggressively
and throwing stones toward
his van. He immediately took his firearm and fired two warning shots
while he was in the van because
he wanted the crowd to disperse.
He
stopped his motor vehicle trying and reversed because the protesters
refused to disperse. He did not reverse before shooting
because he
did not want to bump the people behind.
15.
The
witness did not accept that C[...] was shot by the members of the
South African Police Service by adding that there were other
police
officers from other different sectors at the scene. When the court
asked him whether he knew where the bullet ended after
he fired the
two shots he answered that he did not know. He said that everything
happened fast but he was able to apply his mind.
Mutsiri indicated
that at the time he was still new so he did not know the procedures
to follow after the shooting incident but
he went to the police
station to write a report and he informed his superiors who visited
the scene to check the cartridges but
they could not find them as the
scene was cleared already.
ISSUES
FOR DETERMINATION
16.
Whether
the members of the defendant are liable for the damages suffered by
the minor on 24 July 2020.
ANALYSIS
OF EVIDENCE
17.
Section 1 of the
State
Liability Act
provides
for the liability of the State in cases of unlawful acts or omissions
act of a police officer or another public servant,
that result in
loss or injury to individuals while performing their duties.
The
existence of a legal duty by the defendant in terms of section 1 of
the State Liability Act
[1]
is
not in dispute. The only issue for determination is the alleged
negligence on the part of the police official.
18.
The
plaintiff bears the onus of proving that the defense was negligent in
their actions or non-action on 24 July 2020.
In
National
Employers' General v Jagers
[2]
‘
the
court held that ‘
i
n
a civil case the onus is obviously not as heavy as it is in
a criminal case, but nevertheless where the onus rests
on
the plaintiff as in the present case, and where there are two
mutually destructive stories, he can only succeed if he satisfied
the
Court on a preponderance of probabilities that his version is true
and accurate and therefore acceptable and that the other
version
advanced by the defendant is therefore false or mistaken and falls to
be rejected. In deciding whether that evidence is
true or not the
Court will weigh up and test the plaintiff's allegations against the
general probabilities. The estimate of the
credibility of a witness
will therefore be inextricably bound up with a consideration of the
probabilities of the case and, if
the balance of probabilities
favours the plaintiff, then the Court will accept his version as
being probably true. If however the
probabilities are evenly balanced
in the sense that they do not favour the plaintiff's case any more
than they do the defendant's,
the plaintiff can only succeed if the
Court nevertheless believes him and is satisfied that his evidence is
true and that the defendant's
version is false
.'
19.
The
plaintiff called two witnesses who gave consistent and corroborative
evidence relating to the presence of the police officers
at the time
of the shooting and immediately after the shooting incident. The
witness gave a full description of the police motor
vehicles that
were on the scene and the description of the police uniform that the
police members at the scene were wearing. I
do not accept the other
law enforcement officials who fired the shot that injured the child
except the police member.
20.
The
plaintiff relies on the breach of duty of care that the members of
SAPS discharged a firearm without establishing whether it
was safe
and/or opportune to do so at the time and under the circumstances and
by failing to take necessary steps and precautions
to prevent the
discharge of the firearm, when, at that stage, it posed danger to the
plaintiff’s child and other people within
the vicinity and the
particularity relating to the allegations of negligence was be fully
set from paragraphs 7 to 10 of the plaintiff’s
particulars of
claim.
21.
In
Kruger
v Coetzee
[3]
Holmes
JA found that “
the
existence of negligence or culpa arises if a diligent paterfamilias
in the position of the defendant
-
(i)
would
foresee the reasonable possibility of his conduct injuring another in
his person or property and causing him patrimonial loss
;
(ii)
would
take reasonable steps to guard against such occurrences; and
(iii)
the
defendant failed to take such steps
.”
22.
During
trial the defense witness conceded that he was on duty when he fired
two warning shots to disperse the protesting community
which was
approaching the police van and throwing stones towards the police.
Section 205 (3) of the Constitution of the Republic
of South Africa
defines the functions of the police to include: preventing, combating
and investigating crime, maintaining public
order, protecting and
securing the inhabitants of the Republic and their property, and
upholding and enforcing the law.
23.
The
matter before the court presents the issue of whether the police
officer acted in self-defense or out of necessity when he fired
shots
towards a group of protesters who were approaching a police van and
throwing stones at the police. It is undisputed that
the protesters
were armed; however, the central question remains whether the officer
fired in response to an imminent threat of
harm or whether his
actions were motivated by a different justification, such as an
effort to disperse the crowd.
24.
The question is thus whether in the
particular circumstances, the defendant took appropriate steps to
avoid injury to the community.
Upon reviewing the evidence, it is
clear that the police officer fired shots to disperse the mob, rather
than in direct response
to an imminent threat or danger to his life
or the lives of others. The officer's testimony and the surrounding
circumstances indicate
that his primary intent was not to protect
himself from an immediate threat of harm but rather to control the
situation by using
force to disperse the crowd. While the protesters
may have been armed, there is no credible evidence to suggest that
the officer
was at any point in imminent danger of being attacked.
There is no evidence to the effect that the protesters, despite being
armed,
posed an immediate threat to the officer or his colleagues at
the moment the shots were fired.
25.
The use of force, particularly the discharge of firearms, is only
justifiable under circumstances where there
is an imminent threat to
life or serious bodily harm. The mere approach of an armed group does
not, by itself, constitute an immediate
and pressing danger that
would warrant the use of lethal force. The evidence indicates that
the officer could have taken alternative
measures to manage the
situation, such as retreating to a safer position as he did after
firing the shots. He could have called
for reinforcements or used
non-lethal means to disperse the crowd.
26.
In this case, the officer's actions
appear to be driven by an intent to break up the protest rather than
by a reasonable belief
that his life was in immediate danger. The
decision to fire shots without clear necessity, particularly in a
scenario where less
lethal means could have been employed, suggests a
disregard for the proportionality and reasonableness required in such
situations.
27.
The evidence presented in this case, while indicating that the
protesters were armed and approaching the police
van, does not
support the claim that the officer was acting in response to an
imminent danger. Rather, the officer's decision to
fire shots seems
to have been an attempt to disperse the crowd, which, in the absence
of a clear and present threat to life, constitutes
an improper and
disproportionate use of force. Therefore, the court finds that the
officer’s actions were not justified by
self-defense or the
avoidance of imminent danger, but were instead the result of a
negligent and excessive response to the situation.
28.
Furthermore, the witness’s concession that he could not account
for where the bullets landed is particularly
concerning. Firing
blindly into a crowd, with no control or knowledge of where the
projectiles would land, is not only reckless
but grossly negligent.
Such conduct endangers not only the lives and safety of individuals
within the community but also undermines
the principle of
proportionality and accountability in the use of force by law
enforcement or security personnel.
29.
In
Shabalala v Metrorail [2007] SCA 157 (RSA), Scott JA held that: ‘
It
is now well-established that a negligent omission, unless wrongful,
will not give rise to delictual liability. The failure to
take
reasonable steps to prevent foreseeable harm to another will result
in liability only if the failure is wrongful
’
.
The South African Police Act 68 of 1995 developed and implemented
Standing Order 262 on Crowd Management and The National Municipal
Policing Standard for Crowd Management. Standing Order No. 262,
clearly and coherently, states that the use of force must be avoided
at all costs and members deployed for the operation must display the
highest degree of tolerance. The use of force and dispersal
of crowds
must comply with the requirements of section 9 (1) and (2) of the
SAPS Act. The standing order further puts in place
the procedure(s)
to be followed by the police if negotiations fail in a public
gathering which exposes the lives of people and
property to danger.
At the same time, the standing order also prescribes the requirements
that are to be followed by the police
if the use of force becomes
unavoidable. Consequently, the actions of the police officer under
the circumstances were unlawful.
30.
The
fact that the witness, a member of the defense team, could not
provide any adequate explanation as to where the bullets ended
up,
coupled with the reckless nature of the action itself, leaves this
court with no alternative but to find that the actions taken
were a
clear instance of gross negligence. The defendant’s member
failed to exercise reasonable caution, failed to follow
established
protocols for using warning shots, and, as a result, put innocent
lives at risk.
31.
In light of the above, it is clear
that the defendant acted with negligence on the day in question. The
witness’s testimony
not only confirms the occurrence of the
incident but also substantiates the claim that the conduct was far
below the standard of
care required in such a scenario. Therefore,
the defense of denial is insufficient, and the evidence of negligent
conduct stands
unrefuted.
CONCLUSION
32.
Based on the facts presented, the
court finds that the actions of the defendant's witness on the day in
question were grossly negligent.
The defense's bare denial fails to
counteract the weight of the admission that the witness fired blindly
into the crowd, unable
to account for where the bullets landed. As a
result, the court holds the defendant accountable for the negligent
actions taken
during the protest.
33.
The
child was harmed by members of the South African Police Services when
they unlawfully and negligently fired shots during the
protest.
COSTS
34.
The
only submission made in respect of the costs by the plaintiff was
that costs should not follow the results, no further submission
was
made as to why the court should award costs at this stage.
THEREFORE,
I MAKE THE ORDER AS FOLLOWS:
ORDER
1.
The defendant is liable for the plaintiff's proven or agreed
damages.
2.
Quantum is postponed sine die.
3.
Costs are costs in the course.
J.T
Leso
Acting
judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date of
Hearing:
31 July 2024
Date of
Judgment:
22 November 2024
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff
: T.
Matu Attorneys
Contacts 083 424
3031
Email
matuthabisa@gmail.com
Counsel
Adv
Mxotwa
Contacts
For
the Defendant
:
State
Attorney
Contacts
012 309 1674
Email
IMakhubela@justice.gov.za
Counsel:
Adv Makhubela
[1]
See
section
1 of the State Liability Act No. No. 20 of 1957
and
section 3 of the Judicial Matters Amendment Act No. 8 of 2017.
[2]
See
National
Employers' General v Jagers
1984
(4) SA 437
(E)
at 440D. See also
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd v Martell et cie
2003
(1) SA 1
(SCA)
para 5 and
Dreyer
v AXZS Industries (Pty) Ltd
2006
(5) SA 548
(SCA)
at 558E-G.
[3]
See
Kruger
v Coetzee
1966
(2) SA 428
(A) at 430E-F and
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