Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 235South Africa
Lehlehla v Minister of Police (13151/2014) [2022] ZAWCHC 235; [2023] 1 All SA 438 (WCC) (17 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
27 August 2018
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Lehlehla v Minister of Police (13151/2014) [2022] ZAWCHC 235; [2023] 1 All SA 438 (WCC) (17 November 2022)
Lehlehla v Minister of Police (13151/2014) [2022] ZAWCHC 235; [2023] 1 All SA 438 (WCC) (17 November 2022)
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sino date 17 November 2022
FLYNOTES:
NECESSITY AND POLICE RUBBER BULLETS
Delict –
Necessity – Plaintiff injured by police rubber bullet –
Police hopelessly outnumbered and not having
access to other means
of crowd control – Justified in firing rubber bullets –
Plaintiff voluntarily assuming
risk by walking in area of protest.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
no: 13151/2014
In
the matter between:
DIBAKISO
ALLETA
LEHLEHLA
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
Defendant
Coram:
Justice J I Cloete
Heard:
2, 3, 4, 8 August 2022 and 13 September 2022
Delivered
electronically:
17 November 2022
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff claims damages from the defendant of R2.7 million
arising
from an incident that occurred on 10 August 2011 in
Grabouw. At commencement of the trial the merits and quantum were
separated
(by agreement) and accordingly I am only required to
determine the merits at this stage.
[2]
In her
particulars of claim the plaintiff alleged that on the day in
question, at approximately 6.15am, near the corner of Old Cape
and
Industrial Roads, Grabouw, she was ‘
wrongfully,
unlawfully, alternatively maliciously, alternatively further
negligently, and without just or probable cause’
shot in the right eye by members of SAPS
[1]
acting in the course and scope of their employment with the
defendant, and who: (a) failed to handle their firearm(s) with
proper consideration for safety of members of the public; (b) failed
to properly handle a firearm(s) loaded with ammunition
(rubber
bullets); and (c) failed to avoid the shooting of the plaintiff
when by the exercise of reasonable care ‘
he/she/they’
could and should have done so.
[3]
It is common cause on the pleadings – and I quote verbatim –
that at all material times the ‘
said’
SAPS
member(s):
3.1
were obliged by the preamble and s 14 of the South African
Police Service Act (“SAPS Act”)
[2]
to ensure the plaintiff’s safety and security, and uphold and
safeguard her fundamental rights as guaranteed by Chapter 3
of the
Constitution, including her right to dignity, life, freedom and
security, as set out in s 10, s 11 and s 12
thereof;
3.2
were obliged, by virtue of the SAPS Code of Conduct
[3]
to create a safe and secure environment for the plaintiff, to prevent
action(s) which might threaten her safety or security, uphold
the
Constitution and the law, render a responsible and effective service
of high quality, utilise all available resources responsibly,
efficiently and cost-effectively to maximise their use, uphold and
protect the plaintiff’s fundamental rights, act transparently
and in an accountable manner, and exercise the powers conferred upon
them in a responsible and controlled manner;
[4]
and
3.3
accordingly owed the plaintiff a duty of care, pleaded in the
following specific terms: (a) not to abuse
their power(s);
(b) not to act with deliberate or negligent indifference to the
plaintiff’s health and safety; (c) to
exercise control of
their actions; (d) to provide the plaintiff with immediate
medical care; and (e) not to randomly
open fire on members of
the public, including the plaintiff, in a reckless and/or negligent
manner.
[4]
The plaintiff further alleged that ‘
the aforesaid member(s)’
breached their duty of care in one or more of the following respects:
(a) randomly firing bullets at members of the public
including
the plaintiff; (b) endangering her life; (c) disregarding
her right to privacy and dignity; (d) abusing
their powers; and
(e) acting with deliberate indifference towards her health and
safety.
[5]
In the further amended plea delivered on 27 August 2018 the defendant
denied that the plaintiff sustained the injury in question as a
consequence of any conduct by those SAPS members. In the event of
this being proven however, the defendant admitted that the injury was
sustained when the members were acting in the course and
scope of
their employment, but raised three alternative defences. First, that
the SAPS members in question acted out of necessity;
second, the
plaintiff voluntarily assumed the risk; and third, the plaintiff’s
own negligence contributed to the injury she
sustained.
[6]
In a nutshell the defendant based these alternative defences on the
following
pleaded averments. Early that morning at around 3.00am a
group of people started gathering illegally in that particular area,
and
this gathering progressively grew until by 6.00am the crowd had
swelled to over 1000 people. Members of the gathering were armed
with
pangas, knopkieries, sticks and stones; the streets in the vicinity
were blockaded with cement blocks, burning tyres and stones;
and the
flow of traffic in and out of Grabouw was brought to a standstill.
[7]
The gathering became increasingly riotous, people on their way to
work
were intimidated and/or assaulted; and their property as well as
SAPS property was damaged. Efforts by SAPS members to restore calm
and disperse the crowd resulted in stones and bottles being hurled at
them. These efforts included repeatedly, but unsuccessfully,
requesting the crowd to disperse in English, Afrikaans and isiXhosa.
Ultimately the only reasonable means of averting the danger
to both
the public and SAPS members was to fire rubber bullets into the
ground.
[8]
The defendant also pleaded that the plaintiff had knowledge of the
risk
‘
in entering the gathering’
and therefore
consented to the possibility of injury (i.e. the alternative defence
of voluntary assumption of risk); or failed
to exercise reasonable
care (i.e. the further alternative defence of contributory
negligence).
The
evidence
[9]
The parties agreed that the plaintiff bore the onus to prove that the
injury she sustained (which resulted in her losing her right eye) was
caused by the SAPS members and, if she succeeded, the defendant
bore
the onus to prove the defences raised.
[10]
The plaintiff testified and called 1 witness, Sergeant Malekotholi
Matsemela (“Matsemela”).
The defendant called 3
witnesses, Captain Desmond Fortuin (“Fortuin”) stationed
at Grabouw SAPS, Captain David Gideon
(“Gideon”)
stationed at the Boland Public Order Police (“POP”) unit
in Paarl, and Warrant Officer Eddie
Moos (“Moos”) who is
also stationed at Grabouw SAPS. In addition the medical records
pertaining to the treatment received
by the plaintiff after her
injury were admitted into evidence by agreement.
[11]
The plaintiff testified that at the time of the incident she was a
first-year student at
Boland College, Caledon, studying electrical
engineering. She lived in an informal settlement in Grabouw and would
catch the college
bus from Grabouw to Caledon. On the morning in
question she left home with her backpack containing her study books
to walk to the
bus stop. As she exited her home she saw community
members protesting in Old Cape Road. She crossed the road and began
walking
in the direction of the bus stop along the side of that road
when she also saw SAPS members facing the crowd. She had only walked
a short distance when she heard gun shots. Immediately thereafter she
felt pain in her right eye and blood began streaming down
her face.
[12]
She turned and ran back to her home. A relative telephoned Matsimela,
who is another of
her relatives, on her cell phone to assist in
securing safe passage for the plaintiff to the clinic in the area,
which was arranged
through Matsimela’s commander. From there
she was transported by ambulance to hospital in Somerset West, and
later Tygerberg
Hospital, for further treatment.
[13]
It was also her evidence that at the time of her injury she was not
alone on the side of
the road; there were children walking to school
and other people going to work. Prior to hearing shots being fired
she did not
notice any teargas, stun grenades or water cannons being
used to disperse the crowd.
[14]
During
cross-examination she accepted that she is well versed in the English
language. She was referred to the notice in terms of
s 3 of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings Against Certain Organs of State
Act
[5]
despatched by her
attorney to the defendant on 24 August 2011, i.e. two weeks
after the incident, in which it was alleged
that as she crossed the
road on her way to the bus stop, community members came running in
her direction ‘
whereby
she followed as there were gunshots being fired and people running in
all directions… whilst running to safety, she
was shot with a
bullet in her right eye’.
She denied this had occurred and explained it was possible she had
given wrong instructions to her attorney since she had just
been
released from hospital and was still traumatised.
[15]
She was
also referred to the affidavit of Dr Robyn Rautenbach
(“Rautenbach”) dated 13 September 2011 (but
deposed
to on 27 October 2011)
[6]
where the doctor recorded that:
‘
The
patient gave the history that she was shot with a rubber bullet on
10 August 2011
[7]
which
impacted her right side of face and right eye. At the time of the
incident she reported to be walking to school, when she
passed
through a group of protesters in the community nearby. The police had
fired rubber bullets into the crowd in order to disperse
the
protesters…’
[16]
The plaintiff responded that she told Rautenbach she had crossed the
road at the rear of
the crowd, and the doctor might have
misunderstood her. She denied having told Rautenbach that the SAPS
members fired rubber bullets
into the crowd to disperse the
protesters, attributing this to a possible assumption on the doctor’s
part. According to the
plaintiff at the time of the injury she did
not know what was happening at the front of the crowd.
[17]
The plaintiff was also referred to her police statement which,
although a copy and undated,
bears the reference CAS 89/08/2011 and
which, to the best of her recollection, was taken about 9 days after
the incident. In that
statement she relayed that as she reached the
other side of the road, she saw people running and heard gunshots: ‘
I
went back, while I was in the road I felt something hitting my right
eye… nobody pointed or aimed a firearm at me’.
She
responded that she had neither read the statement, nor was she asked
to do so, before signing, but had told her legal team
during
pre-trial consultation that she only started running after she was
injured.
[18]
It was also her evidence that she had not noticed members of the
crowd bearing knopkieries,
sticks, pangas or stones, nor had she seen
any obstacles in the road. She conceded however that this was
possible since she could
only see the back of the crowd. She had also
not heard any appeals for the crowd to disperse. According to the
plaintiff she did
not see any passerby being attacked by the crowd,
or one of them being robbed of his bicycle; nor had the crowd been
retreating
as she crossed behind the protesters. Although she alleged
in the particulars of claim that the incident occurred at
approximately
6.15am, she testified that it happened at around
6.45am.
[19]
In the plaintiff’s view, and despite the concessions referred
to above, there was
no need for the SAPS members to have discharged
their firearms at the time of her injury, since when she was walking
down the road,
there was ‘
no chaos’
. In response
to questions from the Court, the plaintiff’s evidence was that
when she left her house that morning the area
was lit as the
streetlights were still on; it was only a matter of between 5 to 7
minutes after leaving her home that she was injured;
and that she had
already noticed the police facing the crowd as she crossed the road
and starting walking towards the bus stop.
[20]
Although
the plaintiff could not say with certainty what caused her injury,
she again explained that it occurred at the same time
as she heard
shots being fired. She did not believe that the injury could have
been caused by a stone being hurled at her since
she had no other
injuries apart from that to the right eye itself. The doctor told her
that it was probably the result of a bullet.
The EMS
[8]
report reflects that ‘
patient
sustained gunshot wound’
;
the triage report of the hospital reflects ‘
gunshot,
rubber bullet, right eye’
;
Rautenbach’s note refers to ‘
high
velocity injury to eye’
;
and the note from Tygerberg Hospital records ‘
blunt
trauma to the right eye’.
Accordingly, and apart from the reference in Rautenbach’s
affidavit that the right side of her face was ‘
impacted’
,
there is no other medical evidence to indicate that she was injured
anywhere other than directly in her right eye.
[21]
Matsemela testified that she was employed at Grabouw SAPS from 2010
until 2015 and was
then transferred to the POP unit in Faure where
she has been working ever since. She explained that these units
specialise in crowd/unrest
control. At the time of the incident the
two closest units to Grabouw were located in Faure and Paarl, each
about a 30 minute drive
away. She gave fairly detailed evidence about
the steps required for purposes of a legal gathering, but I do not
deal with it since
it is common cause that the gathering in question
was an illegal one.
[22]
She also testified about the Police Standing Order (General) 262
(“SO”) which
was in operation at the time of the
incident. The purpose of the SO is described in paragraph 1.1 thereof
as being ‘
to regulate crowd management during gatherings and
demonstrations in accordance with the democratic principles of the
Constitution
and acceptable international standards’.
Paragraph 14 is relevant for present purposes and reads as follows:
‘
14.
First member(s) at the scene of an unforeseen (spontaneous) gathering
(1)
The first member who arrives at the scene or venue of an
unforeseen (spontaneous)
gathering must seek to preserve the
peace and to protect and help the community.
(2)
The first member who arrives at the scene or venue must follow
the following procedure:
Step
Action
1
Contact the
operational centre and request back-up by personnel trained in
crowd management.
2
Set up a mobile JOC
and notify ACCU who will take operational command on arrival.
3
Attempt to create
an atmosphere which is conducive to negotiations by refraining
from the display of aggression, such as for
instance, the
brandishing of firearms and special equipment.
4
Identify the
leadership element in order to establish communication and to
start negotiations.
5
Set the highest
standards of tolerance and, do not use any firearms against the
demonstrators except in the case of private
defence should lives
be in serious danger.
6
Consult with the
local authorities and authorized member concerning the gathering
and the purpose of the gathering.
7
Bring the contents
of section 9(1)(c) of the Act to the attention of the leadership
element.
[23]
‘
JOC’
means the joint operational centre that is activated at the scene of
an incident or event. ‘
ACCU’
means the Area Crime Combating Unit (now POP). Section 9(1)(c) of the
Regulation of Gatherings Act
[9]
provides that:
‘
9.
Powers of Police.
---(1) If a gathering or demonstration is
to take place, whether or not in compliance with the provisions of
this Act, a member
of the Police…
(c)
may, in the case of a responsible officer not receiving a notice in
terms of section 3(2) more than
48 hours before the gathering,
restrict the gathering to a place, or guide the participants along a
route, to ensure---
(i)
that vehicular or pedestrian traffic, especially during traffic rush
hours, is least impeded;
or
(ii)
an appropriate distance between participants in the gathering and
rival gatherings; or
(iii)
access to property and work-places; or
(iv)
the prevention of injury to persons or damage to property;’
[24]
Also of relevance is paragraph 11 of the SO:
‘
11.
Execution
(1)
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 Act. During any
operation
ongoing negotiations must take place between officers and
conveners or other leadership elements.
(2)
If negotiations fail and life or property is in danger, the
following procedure must be followed:
Step
Action
1
Put defensive
measures in place as a priority.
2
Warn participants
according to the Act, of the action that will be taken against
them, should defensive measures fail.
3
Bring forward the
reserve or reaction section or platoon, that will be responsible
for offensive measures, as a deterrent
to further violence, should
the above-mentioned measures not achieve the desired result.
4
Give a second
warning before the commencement of the offensive measures, giving
innocent bystanders the opportunity to leave
the area.
5
Plan all offensive
actions well and execute them under strict command after approval
by the CJOC.
(3)
If the use of force is unavoidable, it must meet the following
requirements:
(a)
the purpose of offensive actions are to de-escalate conflict
with the minimum force to accomplish the goal and therefore the
success
of the actions will be measured by the results of the
operation in terms of cost, damage to property, injuries to people
and loss
of life;
(b)
the degree of force must be proportional to the seriousness of
the situation and the threat posed in terms of situational
appropriateness;
(c)
it must be reasonable in the circumstances;
(d)
the minimum force must be used to accomplish the goal; and
(e)
the use of force must be discontinued once the objective has
been achieved.
(4)
The following are prohibited or restricted during crowd
management operations:
(a)
the
use of 37 mm stoppers
[10]
(prohibited);
(b)
the use of firearms and sharp ammunitions including birdshot
and buckshot (prohibited); and
(c)
the use of rubber bullets (shotgun batons) (may only be used
to disperse a crowd in extreme circumstances, if less forceful
methods
prove to be ineffective – restricted).
(5)
Force may only be used on the command or instruction of the
CJOC or operational
commander (if appointed). Members may
never act individually without receiving a command from their
commander.
(6)
All members involved in the actions must form part of a
unified command structure, consisting of sections, platoons or
companies.
Members not working in sections may not be deployed. All
visible policing members deployed for such purposes must be trained
in
the management of crowds.
(7)
Common law principles of self defence or private defence are
not affected by this Order.’
[25]
‘
CJOC’
means the commander of the joint
operational centre. The remaining provisions of s 9(1) appear to
be directed at legal gatherings.
The relevant provisions of s 9(2)
essentially empower a police officer with the rank of Warrant Officer
or higher, if he or
she has reasonable grounds to believe that danger
to persons and property cannot be averted, then and only then to take
the following
steps: (a) calling upon the persons to disperse,
and failing which: (b) order the use of force, excluding the use of
weapons
likely to cause serious bodily injury or death. The degree of
force which may be used shall not be greater than is necessary for
dispersing the persons gathered and shall be proportionate to the
circumstances of the situation and the object to be attained.
However
if any participant causes death or serious injury to person or
property, or attempts or manifests an intention to do so,
the police
officer concerned may order SAPS members under his or her command to
take the necessary steps including that, if such
officer finds other
methods to be ineffective or inappropriate, to order the use of
force, including the use of firearms and other
weapons, but only to
the extent necessary. It was Matsemela’s evidence that
‘
defensive measures’
include water cannons as well
as certain uniforms and vehicles to induce fear, but that water
cannons also qualify as an ‘
offensive measure’
, as
do stun grenades.
[26]
It was also Matsemela’s evidence that on the day of the
incident her shift started
at 6am and she arrived at the protest
around 6.30am (she later testified that she arrived there about
6.15am). At the time she
was still working out her probationary
period, and took up her position on the instructions of her
supervisor, Sergeant Nombewu.
She identified her position with
reference to a photograph, indicating that she stood on the verge
opposite the corner of Old Cape
and Industrial Roads, some metres
behind where SAPS members were facing the crowd and close to where
their police vehicles were
parked.
[27]
At that stage she did not notice any damage being caused to property,
but could not exclude
the possibility that this might already have
occurred. She explained that she would not have observed teargas
being used to disperse
the crowd before rubber bullets were fired,
since only POP units are permitted to use teargas. Unlike her earlier
evidence, according
to her the use of teargas, stun grenades and
water cannons – which only POP units are authorised to employ –
are all
less forceful means than resorting to firing rubber bullets.
[28]
She also testified that a local community leader by name of Mr John
Michaels was known
to her as well as to Fortuin as someone who could,
and did, rally community members to protest in their numbers. In her
words ‘
it always happened and there was always an element of
danger, and Captain Fortuin knew him very well’.
[29]
After taking up her position she noticed a large crowd of protesters
as well as stones
and rocks in the road. She estimated the crowd to
be about 500 in total, but conceded that there could have been 1 000
protesters,
who were filling the road. Upon her arrival the crowd was
‘
standing and singing’
and then about 10 minutes
later she saw some armed with what she described as sticks. There
were only about 10 SAPS members
facing the crowd, and most were
armed with shotguns from which rubber bullets can be fired. It was
then that she saw what she described
as the ‘
shootout’
.
[30]
Matsemela’s evidence was further that during the face-off
between the SAPS members
and the crowd she observed children going to
school and people walking to work. According to her, while the
protesters allowed
children and women with infants to pass, they
blocked people who were trying to get to their places of employment.
[31]
Once the police discharged the rubber bullets, the crowd retreated a
few steps back but
then started throwing stones at the police. It was
at that point that Matsemela received the telephone call that the
plaintiff
was injured and was requested to speak to the officer in
charge to arrange safe passage for her to the clinic. She accompanied
the plaintiff to the clinic and it was only between 9.00 and 10.00am
that she saw members of the POP unit on the scene. At that
time there
was still a large crowd of protesters in the road. According to
Matsemela, a rubber bullet can cause serious injury.
[32]
In cross-examination Matsemela’s evidence was that during the
period between the
plaintiff’s injury and the arrival of the
POP unit – which she estimated to be about 3 hours –
the SAPS
members were compelled to fire rubber bullets again since
the crowd repeatedly advanced on them. She conceded that after
initially
arriving on the scene she saw protesters had spilled over
onto the sides of the road, including where the plaintiff and others
had allegedly been walking. She also agreed that, based on her
experience as a SAPS member, police officers may make use of rubber
bullets to protect themselves when being attacked by a crowd of stone
throwers, and where they do not have access to “less
forceful
means” such as teargas, stun grenades and water cannons.
[33]
Although Matsemela maintained that the crowd was not aggressive when
she arrived on the
scene, in the same breath she conceded that
(a) the protesters were actively preventing people from going to
work; (b) they
were armed with knopkieries, sticks and other
weapons; and (c) she could not exclude the possibility that they
had already
thrown stones at the SAPS members prior to her arrival.
She also maintained that Fortuin only appealed to the crowd to
disperse
after the shots were fired, and that she could not recall
any earlier warning.
[34]
She was referred to her statement made, as she recalled, within two
days after the incident,
in which she relayed that ‘
we were
busy dispersing the community that were protesting and throwing the
police vans with stones. Rubber bullets were fired to
disperse…’.
She confirmed this version to be correct, save for the damage to the
police vehicles, attributing it to a mistake since ‘
the
police had already alighted from the vehicles when the stones were
thrown’.
When asked to explain the discrepancy between her
statement and earlier testimony she conceded that stones were first
hurled at
the SAPS members; then rubber bullets were fired, resulting
in chaos; and thereafter the protesters increased their assault on
the SAPS members by ‘
continually’
throwing stones
at them.
[35]
She could not dispute the version of the SAPS members that the
protesters intimidated people
going to work and were warned to
disperse and/or desist, and that only after the crowd proceeded to
throw stones were rubber bullets
fired. She accepted that, given the
circumstances, the SAPS members had no other means available to try
to control the situation
(i.e. by firing rubber bullets) until the
POP unit finally arrived and took over. In her words ‘…
they
had no other means and could not have left the scene because there
would have been greater damage’.
[36]
In the same statement Matsemela relayed that she asked the plaintiff
what happened when
she visited her later that day in hospital:
‘
She
told me that she was crossing the road when she saw a crowd of people
dispersing all over the road, she also tried to run away,
but she
heard a shot into her right eye and started bleeding and managed to
get to the shacks where she was assisted by other community
people
who were also running away. She mentioned that she didn’t see
the police were shooting but she was informed by community
that she
has been shot by the police who were shooting them with rubber
bullets.’
[37]
Fortuin
testified that he has 31 years’ service and at the time of the
incident was the Head of Vispol
[11]
at SAPS Grabouw. He was previously stationed at POP from 1991 until
2000 where he received specialised training in crowd control.
He was
familiar with the contents of the SO. On the morning of the incident
he was contacted at about 3.15am by Captain Josephs
who was working
night shift. Josephs informed him that Michaels, the Chairperson of
the Grabouw Civic Association, had called the
station to say that he
would that day make Grabouw ‘
unbearable,
bring the economy to a standstill, and burn
[Grabouw]
down’.
[38]
After mobilising members of his Crime Prevention Unit, Fortuin went
to the police station.
He and these members arrived at around 3.45am.
Fortuin briefed them, knowing that given Michaels’ support
base, a large number
of protesters would be gathering. The weapons
available to Fortuin and his team were 9mm pistols and shotguns
capable of firing
rubber bullets. They armed themselves with the
latter ‘
because this is how we were trained’
. His
evidence was further that by then Josephs had already notified the
POP unit in Paarl, but was told that it ‘
did not have a
night shift’
and would only be available to assist once the
day shift came on duty at 7am. Contact was made with the Paarl unit
since Grabouw
falls under its jurisdiction (as opposed to Faure).
[39]
At about 4am the team proceeded to the scene in their vehicles and
parked them sideways
across the road to block it. By then chaos had
already erupted. The road was blockaded with fires and concrete
blocks, and a crowd
of about 500 people were singing, dancing and
many were brandishing knopkieries. Fortuin recognised Michaels at the
front of the
crowd and called him over to the police vehicles. He
told Michaels the gathering was illegal and the protesters must
disperse.
Michaels was very aggressive and retorted that the police
could not tell him what to do.
[40]
Using a microphone, Fortuin proceeded to warn the protesters in both
English and Afrikaans,
whereafter Nombewu warned them in isiXhosa.
The warning was ignored. It was repeated an hour or so later at
around 5am and again
ignored. At 5.30am the SAPS members formed a
line facing the crowd. As Fortuin recalled there were only 12 of
them. It was thereafter
that people starting walking along the sides
of the road on their way to work. Some of the protesters grabbed one
of the passersby
and assaulted him by kicking and punching him.
Another passerby approached on his bicycle and was thrown off,
assaulted in a similar
fashion, and his bicycle shoved into one of
the fires.
[41]
It was then that Fortuin ordered his members to advance towards the
crowd. In response
they began pelting the officers with bottles and
stones: ‘
There were a lot, we had to duck and dive from the
stones and bottles which were thrown with force. I was scared but
also had to
protect not only the community but also the members under
attack’.
[42]
Fortuin then gave the order for his members to fire rubber bullets
into the ground so that
they would ricochet: ‘
That’s
how we were trained – not to shoot at the crowd but to the
ground’.
At this point he and his members were positioned
in a line facing the crowd about 5 metres away near the corner of Old
Cape and
Industrial Roads (this is where the plaintiff had alleged in
her particulars of claim she was walking when injured). According to
Fortuin, if a ricocheted bullet strikes a person, it should only
cause bruising, and this is why it was termed a ‘
soft
approach’
. It was also his evidence that he was compelled
to issue this order ‘
to protect life and property because
criminal elements in the crowd were assaulting people and destroying
property’.
In addition the protesters had grown in number
and became increasingly angry since ‘
they wanted to go to
the town and burn it down’.
[43]
The firing of rubber bullets into the ground resulted in the SAPS
members managing to move
the crowd back about 50 to 60 metres,
although they continued to throw stones while running away. With
reference to a photograph
Fortuin demonstrated the distance between
where the police vehicles were parked across the road behind the SAPS
members to the
entrance of the informal settlement where the
plaintiff lived to be about 50 to 60 metres. His evidence was that
the protesters
retreated to that point. Fortuin and his members moved
back to their vehicles and, after reloading their shotguns with
rubber bullets,
moved their vehicles away since the stone throwing
had continued unabated and the crowd was again advancing.
[44]
Fortuin then gave the order for a further round to be fired into the
ground. This sequence
of events was repeated about 5 times over the
approximately 2 hour period that followed when the POP unit finally
arrived, as Fortuin
recalled, some time between 8 and 9am. It was
also his evidence that he arrested Michaels on the first occasion the
SAPS members
returned to their vehicles to reload. He was referred to
his statement in which he had detailed the identities of the members
armed
with shotguns, totalling 10 in all, including Moos, but
excluding himself and Nombewu (presumably because they were the
senior
officers). The statement also records that a total of 460
rubber rounds were fired during the entire period on the scene.
[45]
When asked why he had not used other methods to disperse the crowd,
Fortuin replied that
the only weapons available to them were 9mm
pistols (with live ammunition) and shotguns with rubber bullets. They
had not been
issued with any alternative deterrent methods such as
teargas. The use of 9mm pistols was out of the question because this
could
have caused serious injury or death. There were only 12 members
to manage a crowd of aggressive, armed protesters which swelled
from
about 500 on arrival at the scene to 1 000 about 2 hours later.
He and his members had managed to contain the crowd for
that period,
but when they attacked people and property he had no option but to
order them to discharge rubber bullets into the
ground. In his words:
‘
It was really necessary to act as we did because all our
lives were in danger as were the community and property’.
[46]
Given that Fortuin’s testimony elicited in chief about Josephs
having contacted the
POP unit in Paarl was hearsay, it was surprising
that counsel for the plaintiff did not object at the time. However
the reason
for this became apparent as the trial proceeded, as I will
demonstrate below.
[47]
During cross-examination Fortuin accepted he could not dispute the
plaintiff’s version
(in court) that she was walking along the
side of the road when she was injured since, like Matsemela, he
explained that the crowd
had spilled over onto the sides of the road.
The same applied to children on their way to school and others going
to work.
[48]
He was subjected to fairly lengthy questioning about the call made by
Josephs to the POP
unit. In one of his statements Fortuin had
declared that the events of that day commenced at 2am and ended at
1pm. Apparently working
on the assumption that Josephs was notified
by Michaels at 2am, Fortuin was criticised for not mobilising his
members earlier,
despite his uncontested evidence that Josephs only
contacted him at around 3.15am. The general tenor of this line of
questioning
was directed at the failure of the POP unit to arrive
earlier on the scene, and it was suggested that the Court would be
asked
to draw an adverse inference from the defendant’s failure
to have put this to the plaintiff and Matsemela. Counsel for the
defendant pointed out that it was not necessary for him to have done
so, given that the failure to summon the POP unit earlier
(or its
failure to arrive earlier) was never part of the plaintiff’s
pleaded case. Counsel for the plaintiff then indicated
he would seek
an appropriate amendment to her particulars of claim. I deal again
with this below.
[49]
During further cross-examination Fortuin agreed that, even with a
crowd of 500 people,
the SAPS members on the scene were hopelessly
outnumbered and this made it extremely difficult for them to maintain
law and order.
He pointed out however that the SAPS members had
nonetheless managed to do so for a 2 hour period after their arrival
on the scene,
during which he ‘
repeatedly’
warned
the protesters to disperse and called for calm, despite the growing
crowd, but was ignored. He later added that he had also
tried to
continue negotiating with Michaels to no avail.
[50]
He further agreed that the situation which eventuated could have been
avoided had the POP
unit arrived earlier; and, as was put to him,
given the ultimate size of the crowd, its aggression and hurling of
bottles and stones,
‘
that 10 members can never conceivably
control such a crowd’.
[51]
Fortuin conceded that SAPS members from another 4 stations within a
radius of about 50km
could have been called upon to assist, but
responded that they had a severe shortage of manpower in those
stations with only 2
to 3 members per shift. On his uncontested
evidence this would therefore have amounted to a maximum of a further
12 members who
would then have had to leave their own stations
entirely unmanned. In my view, the concession then extracted from him
that this
would have allowed the plaintiff to move along to the bus
stop unharmed can best be described as unrealistic, both in light of
his testimony as a whole as well as the propositions put to him by
the plaintiff’s counsel himself. (In later re-examination
Fortuin was asked whether he had authority to compel officers from
other stations to assist, and replied that he did not).
[52]
Fortuin was referred to one of his statements in which he relayed
that he gave the order
for his members ‘
na die skare te
vuur’
. He replied that what he meant was to shoot ‘
down
towards them on the ground’.
His evidence was further that
the travel time between Paarl and Grabouw is about 45 minutes to an
hour. He conceded that the POP
unit in Faure could have been
contacted but continued that Faure ‘
is closer but this is
for the Metropole and we fall under Boland’.
[53]
When I raised with plaintiff’s counsel the relevance of this
line of questioning,
given her version that the crowd was calm and
unarmed at the time of her injury, he responded he was testing the
defendant’s
pleaded case in order to establish whether the SAPS
members concerned had utilised all available resources responsibly.
Reliance
was placed on paragraph 6 of the particulars of claim read
with paragraph 7 of the defendant’s further amended plea.
[54]
These refer to the common cause legal duty resting upon the SAPS
members concerned to employ
all available resources responsibly,
efficiently and cost-effectively to maximise their use (as set out at
paragraph 3.2 of this
judgment). It was submitted that this had been
pleaded by the plaintiff in sufficiently wide terms to leave it open
to the Court
to make a finding on the issue. Counsel for the
defendant disagreed, pointing out that what had been pleaded was law
and not fact.
I also deal with this below.
[55]
When asked whether he could exclude the possibility that the
plaintiff was injured by a
ricocheted rubber bullet, Fortuin replied
that he is not a ballistics expert but only trained in crowd control.
He added however
that before 2011 SAPS were issued with ‘
blue
rubber bullets’
but since then only ‘
white’
ones because they are ‘
not so hard but very light’
.
When asked if one of these could cause a serious injury, he responded
that to the best of his knowledge it was possible only if
shot
directly and at close range, not if it ricocheted.
[56]
He also explained that there are 5 such bullets in each single round.
On my calculation
this would mean that, given that 460 rounds in
total were fired by 10 members, it must have occurred closer to 9
times and not
about 6 times as he earlier testified. Although he
conceded he could not say with certainty that none of the members had
fired
at the crowd, he was clear that this had not been his
instruction to them.
[57]
He also testified that after his arrival on the scene he remained in
radio contact with
Josephs who continued to call the POP unit from
Paarl for assistance on his instruction. The consistent response was
that there
was no one on night shift duty. When put to him that ‘
the
SAPS members’
were under a duty to put appropriate measures
in place he replied ‘
yes, that’s exactly what we did’.
In response to the plaintiff’s version (in court) Fortuin
maintained he already gave the order to fire rubber bullets after
the
two passersby were assaulted between around 5.30 to 6am, so by the
time the plaintiff allegedly crossed the road at about 6.45am,
at
least one round of shots had already been fired. He was adamant that
she must have been aware of the chaos on the scene.
[58]
Although Moos testified after Gideon, it is convenient to deal with
his evidence first
since he was also one of the SAPS members under
Fortuin’s command at the scene. Moos testified that he was
contacted by Josephs
at about 3.15am and reported for duty at 4.30am
whereafter he joined the rest of the members on the corner of Old
Cape and Industrial
Roads. There he found a crowd of about 500 people
engaged in an illegal protest. They were aggressive and ‘
under
the guidance’
of Michaels were threatening and swearing at
the SAPS members. Some carried knopkieries and sticks and the
protesters had blocked
the road with cement blocks, tree stumps and
rubble.
[59]
He witnessed Fortuin informing Michaels that his actions were illegal
and that the crowd
should disperse. Fortuin gave 3 warnings, one at
4.30am, the next around 5am and the third and final one at about 5.30
to 5.40am.
It was before Fortuin gave the third warning that some of
the protesters started assaulting passersby on their way to work.
Moos
witnessed the incident with the bicycle about which Fortuin had
testified: ‘
that was when Captain Fortuin gave the third
instruction for us to get ready – we fell in line facing the
crowd next to each
other’.
He later explained that this was
when Fortuin gave the order for rubber bullets to be fired ‘
in
front of the crowd’
.
[60]
It was in response to this that Michaels started swearing at Fortuin
who, with the assistance
of Moos, arrested Michaels and put him in
the back of a police vehicle. The crowd then began to throw stones
and empty bottles
at the SAPS members. The intensity of this assault
was such that the police vehicles had to be moved to avoid them being
damaged.
[61]
His evidence was further that after rubber bullets were first
discharged the line of officers
advanced towards the crowd in an
effort to get the protesters to retreat towards the informal
settlement behind. The crowd would
retreat, gather more stones, and
then advance again, hurling them at the SAPS members. They in turn
would re-advance, firing, it
would seem, further rounds. Moos
recalled that this continued for about 30 minutes, and he feared for
his life as well as those
of the community and further damage to
property. His evidence was that he had not fired any bullets directly
at anyone. He left
the scene when the POP unit finally arrived, which
he recalled to be about 7.30am.
[62]
During cross-examination Moos confirmed that he was ‘
firing
in the direction of the people’
. This was not further
explored, but a concession was extracted from him that, by doing so,
he could have foreseen the possibility
of an innocent person being
injured. He responded ‘
but I didn’t see any innocent
people’.
He agreed that by the time the crowd became
uncontrollable it was apparent that the SAPS members were hopelessly
outnumbered. He
also agreed that when the plaintiff entered the area
it was possible there was still ‘
sporadic stone throwing and
shooting’.
He disagreed however that by the time passersby
were present it was unnecessary for SAPS members to discharge their
weapons, purely
for that reason (this was not put to Fortuin when he
testified either).
[63]
In response to questions from the Court it was Moos’ evidence
that residents of the
informal settlement in the immediate vicinity
must have heard the commotion and firing of rubber bullets, and it
would therefore
not have been possible for the plaintiff to be
unaware of this when she later left her home to walk to the bus stop.
[64]
Gideon testified that he has been stationed at the POP unit in Paarl
since 1993. He was
requested by the defendant’s counsel to
check that unit’s records in order to ascertain whether any
members were on
night shift on 9/10 August 2011. According to these
records there was no shift that night, and the day shift only
commenced duty
at 6am on the day of the incident. He confirmed, as
Fortuin testified, that Grabouw SAPS falls under the Boland
jurisdiction. According
to the same records the day shift was alerted
about the incident at around 6am and arrived in Grabouw at about
7.30am.
[65]
During cross-examination Gideon explained the manpower constraints on
the unit at the time,
resulting in there being only two shifts per 24
hours, the first from 6am to 2pm and the second from 2pm to 10pm or
midnight, depending
on prevailing circumstances. Thereafter only two
to three members remained stationed in the operations room until the
next shift
started.
[66]
His evidence was further that if the operations room was notified of
the need for emergency
assistance the person receiving the call would
have been required to inform the Commander at the time, a Captain
Gray, who has
since passed away. While it was possible for off duty
POP members to be summoned in an emergency ‘
it will take
some time… 2 to 2 ½ hours… because members live
all over the place’.
As he recalled, at the time of the
incident the unit was equipped with teargas, rubber bullets and stun
grenades but no water cannons.
However he later conceded that it must
have been equipped with a water cannon as well since this is evident
from one of the photographs
taken of the scene. When asked if teargas
and stun grenades would have been effective in subduing a crowd,
Gideon replied that
it would depend on its size and the number of POP
members in attendance – the larger the crowd, the more
difficult.
[67]
He speculated that if the POP members had been summoned when contact
was made with the
operations room ‘
probably 18 or less’
members would have been able to be summoned. Had this occurred, and
had they been equipped with a water cannon, then they would
have been
able to disperse a crowd of 500 protesters.
Discussion
[68]
I will assume in the plaintiff’s favour that, given the medical
evidence, she was
in all probability struck by a ricocheted rubber
bullet. I am fortified in this view by her pleaded case that she was
injured near
the corner of Old Cape and Industrial Roads, which is
where the SAPS members were positioned when they fired rubber bullets
into
the ground, as well as the testimony of Matsemela and Fortuin
that the crowd had by then spilled over onto the sides of the road.
[69]
I will also assume in her favour that the version she gave in court
about where she was
when injured was correct since it fits into the
objective facts (despite the differing versions she previously gave
as recorded
in the various statements referred to earlier in this
judgment). I make these favourable assumptions, as opposed to
specific credibility
findings, since as will appear from what follows
they ultimately do not assist her case.
[70]
It is inconceivable that the plaintiff would not have heard shots
being fired before leaving
her home around 6.45am. On the established
facts and inherent probabilities the crowd was far from docile as she
claimed when she
entered the area. While I accept that she would not
willingly have proceeded to walk directly into the heart of the
protest, on
the probabilities she passed at least alongside the
protesters at a time when their assault on the SAPS members was well
underway.
[71]
It was submitted on behalf of the plaintiff that, given the
defendant’s election
to call Gideon to testify, his counsel
clearly foreshadowed that he was required to ‘
close the gap’
subsequent to the debate about the plaintiff’s pleaded case
during Fortuin’s testimony.
[72]
As I see it, the difficulty with this submission is that it overlooks
the specific grounds
upon which the plaintiff pleaded that the ‘
said
SAPS members’
– i.e. those stationed at Grabouw
who were on the scene at the time the plaintiff was injured, and not
the POP unit
– breached their duty of care towards her as set
out in paragraph 2 of this judgment. Ultimately, and given the
evidence
of Fortuin and Moos, the plaintiff was constrained to pin
her case on the alleged failure by those SAPS members to avoid ‘
the
shooting incident’
when by the exercise of reasonable care
they could and should have done so.
[73]
This in turn led to the plaintiff relying on what appears to have
been a dereliction of
duty on the part of the POP unit, but without
seeking to amend her particulars of claim to that effect, despite
this being pertinently
raised by the Court during Fortuin’s
testimony. I agree with counsel for the defendant that the pleading
of law (i.e. the
SAPS Act and Code of Conduct) provided no
factual
basis for the defendant to be alerted to the case he
would later be required to meet.
[74]
Had the plaintiff pleaded reliance on POP’s apparent
dereliction of duty from the
outset the defendant may well have
approached his defence in a different manner; and even if the late
amendment was introduced
and allowed, the defendant would have been
afforded a proper opportunity to deal with it even if this caused a
postponement.
[75]
Summons was issued on 28 July 2014, just under 8 years before the
trial commenced, yet
the plaintiff did not even request trial
particulars or seek admissions from the defendant. It is thus fair to
accept that she
intended all along to place the blame only on the
Grabouw SAPS members who were on the scene on the morning of the
incident. The
fact that the defendant later adduced Gideon’s
testimony does not alter the case he was required to meet, and in any
event
Gideon’s evidence merely supported the main pleaded
defence of necessity.
[76]
Counsel for
the plaintiff placed reliance on
Sentrachem
Bpk v Wenhold
[12]
where the Court in turn referred to
Shill
v Milner
[13]
in which it was stated that:
‘
The
importance of pleadings should not be unduly magnified. The object of
pleading is to define the issues; and parties will be
kept strictly
to their pleas where any departure would cause prejudice or would
prevent full inquiry. But within those limits the
Court has wide
discretion. For pleadings are made for the Court, not the Court for
pleadings. Where a party has had every facility
to place all the
facts before the trial Court and the investigation into all the
circumstances has been as thorough and as patient
as in this
instance, there is no justification for interference by an appellate
tribunal merely because the pleading of the opponent
has not been as
explicit as it might have been.’
[77]
To my mind
however, and for the reasons already given, to “read into”
the plaintiff’s particulars of claim the
case which, seemingly
by dint of fate, evolved during Fortuin’s evidence, would not
only cause prejudice to the defendant
but would also prevent a full
inquiry. This too is evident from the sparse testimony of Gideon
himself. Put differently, as a result
of the plaintiff’s own
choice, this Court does not have before it ‘
all
the materials on which it is able to form an opinion, and this being
the position it would be idle for it not to determine the
real issue
which emerged during the course of trial’.
[14]
I am also unable to agree with the submission made by plaintiff’s
counsel that the following reference in his opening address
was
sufficient notice to the defendant of the case he had to meet:
‘
On
the defendant’s own admission, between the hours of 02h00 and
03h00, the group of protesters were growing larger, and the
SAPS
should have deployed specialised members/units to maintain law and
order, which they failed to do.’
[78]
What is contained in an opening address, if not borne out by the
pleaded case, cannot be
elevated to anything more than that. But in
any event, this submission was not supported by the subsequent
evidence. It was rather
an assumption based on how the plaintiff
viewed the defendant’s case.
[79]
In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Slabbert
[15]
the Supreme Court of Appeal explained it thus:
‘
[10]
The question that arises for consideration is whether the case
pleaded by the plaintiff covers the assertion that the refusal
to
release him into his wife’s care rendered the further detention
unlawful. A perusal of the particulars of claim shows
clearly that
such a case was not pleaded. As stated, the arrest and detention were
challenged on the basis that the police had
no legal justification
for effecting them. As expected, the defendant’s plea addressed
only that issue.
[11]
The purpose of the pleadings is to define the issues for the
other party and the court. A party has a duty to allege
in the
pleadings the material facts upon which it relies. It is
impermissible for a plaintiff to plead a particular case and seek
to
establish a different case at the trial. It is equally not
permissible for the trial court to have recourse to issues falling
outside the pleadings when deciding a case.
[12]
There are, however, circumstances in which a party may be allowed to
rely on an issue which was not covered by the pleadings.
This occurs
where the issue in question has been canvassed fully by both sides at
the trial. In
South British Insurance Co Ltd v Unicorn Shipping
Lines (Pty) Ltd
, this court said:
“
However,
the absence of such an averment in the pleadings would not
necessarily be fatal if the point was fully canvassed in evidence.
This means fully canvassed by both sides in the sense that the Court
was expected to pronounce upon it as an issue.”
[13]
The issue on which the court below relied as a basis for liability
was not fully canvassed at the trial presumably because
it was not
pleaded and the parties’ attention was not drawn to it. It was
fleetingly touched upon during Magoxo’s cross-examination.
The
response elicited was that the plaintiff was still drunk at the time
his wife made the request. The issue was not pursued and
furthermore
the plaintiff’s wife did not testify to support the
contention.’
[80]
In
Crown
Chickens (Pty) Ltd t/a Rocklands Poultry v Rieck
[16]
the same court held:
‘
[10]
But our law also recognises that there are circumstances in which
even positive conduct that causes bodily harm
will not attract
liability. That is so where the harm is caused in circumstances of
necessity, which have been described as occurring
when the conduct is
‘directed against an innocent person for the purpose of
protecting an interest of the actor or a third
party (including the
innocent person) against a dangerous situation.’ It is well
established that whether particular conduct
falls within that
category is to be determined objectively. That the actor believed
that he was justified in acting as he did is
not sufficient. The
question in each case is whether the conduct that caused the harm was
a reasonable response to the situation
that presented itself.’
[81]
Moreover in
Petersen
v Minister of Safety and Security
[17]
it was stated:
‘
[11]
Can it be said that in these circumstances the police action which
caused Justin's injuries does not attract liability
because it was
justified in circumstances of necessity? Unlike self-defence –
also referred to as private defence –
the defence of necessity
does not require that the defendant's action must be directed at a
wrongful attacker. There was therefore
no need for the respondent to
establish that Justin was himself part of the attacking crowd. What
the respondent had to prove in
order to establish the justification
defence of necessity, appears, for example, in broad outline, from
the following statements
in “Delict” volume 8(1) Lawsa
(2ed) by JR Midgley and JC van der Walt, paragraph 87:
'An
act of necessity can be described as lawful conduct directed against
an innocent person for the purpose of protecting an interest
of the
actor or a third party . . . against a dangerous situation . . .
Whether
a situation of necessity existed is a factual question which must be
determined objectively. . .
A
person may inflict harm in a situation of necessity only if the
danger existed, or was imminent, and he or she has no other
reasonable
means of averting the danger. . .
The
means used and measures taken to avert the danger of harm must not
have been excessive, having regard to all the circumstances
of the
case . . .” ’
[82]
The evidence of Fortuin and Moos, supported by that of Gideon, speaks
for itself and objectively
demonstrates that the SAPS members
concerned acted out of necessity when discharging their firearms
containing rubber bullets.
As plaintiff’s counsel himself put
it to both Fortuin and Moos, they were hopelessly outnumbered. Their
undisputed evidence
(supported by Matsemela herself) was that they
had no access to alternative methods to disperse the crowd such as
teargas, stun
grenades and water cannons. Both testified that no
shots were fired directly at or into the crowd. Moreover Matsemela
did not see
them shooting randomly at the crowd and nor did the
plaintiff. There was no evidence that anyone other than the plaintiff
was injured
by a bullet being fired, nor of the distance a fired
rubber bullet can ricochet.
[83]
While I accept there were certain contradictions between the
testimony of Fortuin and Moos
as to the exact timeline and sequence
of events, I do not consider them to be material. Both officers
testified almost 11 years
after the incident and, if anything, the
discrepancies in their versions rather show their honesty and that
they made no attempt
to tailor them to match or to suit the
defendant’s case.
[84]
While I have sympathy for the plaintiff’s plight – an
innocent young woman
trying to reach the bus stop to further her hard
fought for education – I cannot overlook the fact that she also
voluntarily
assumed the risk of injury, whether at the hands of one
or more of the protesters or the SAPS members acting out of
necessity.
For all these reasons I am compelled to conclude that the
plaintiff’s claim must fail.
[85]
The following order is made:
‘
The
plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with costs.’
J
I CLOETE
For
plaintiff
: Adv M Salie SC with Adv R Liddell
Instructed
by
: Adendorff Attorneys (L R Snyman)
For
defendant
: Adv S O’Brien
Instructed
by
: The Office of the State Attorney (Mr L Ngwenya)
[1]
South African Police Service
[2]
No 68 of 1995
[3]
Effective as from 2 December 2010; Annexure ‘
POC2’
to the particulars of claim.
[4]
And that their duties in terms of the SAPS Act and Code
of Conduct extend to the general public.
[5]
No 40 of 2002.
[6]
This was one of the medical records handed in by
agreement.
[7]
Although the affidavit refers to 9 August 2011, the
parties agreed this was a patent error.
[8]
Metro Emergency Medical Services.
[9]
No 205 of 1993.
[10]
Teargas canisters of a certain size.
[11]
SAPS Visible Police.
[12]
[1995] 2 All SA 524 (A).
[13]
1937 AD 101
at 105.
[14]
Collen
v Rietfontein Engineering Works
1948
(1) SA 413
(A) at 433.
[15]
[2010] 2 All SA 474 (SCA).
[16]
2007 (2) SA 118 (SCA).
[17]
[2010] 1 All SA 19
(SCA).
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