Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 79South Africa
Minister of Safety and Security v Augustine (Leave to Appeal) (3771/2007) [2024] ZAKZDHC 79 (25 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
25 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Minister of Safety and Security v Augustine (Leave to Appeal) (3771/2007) [2024] ZAKZDHC 79 (25 June 2024)
Minister of Safety and Security v Augustine (Leave to Appeal) (3771/2007) [2024] ZAKZDHC 79 (25 June 2024)
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sino date 25 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWA
ZULU NATAL LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
No: 3771/2007
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF SAFETY AND SECURITY
APPLICANT
and
JULIAN
CLAUDE
AUGUSTINE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
ON APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
S.SINGH
AJ
[1]
The application before this Court was for leave to appeal against the
trial Judgment
and Orders granted against the defendant. who is the
applicant herein, for the plaintiff, who is the respondent herein.
[2]
The application for leave to appeal was opposed by the respondent,
represented by
his trial attorney N.G. Pillay, and the applicant was
represented by a new counsel on M. Govindasamy SC on 25 June 2024 on
which
date the hearing of this application took place and judgment
was delivered with reasons which forms of the records of the hearing
on the said date.
[3]
The application for leave to appeal, after arguments for both
parties, was refused
and not granted by this court.
REASONS
FOR REFUSAL OF APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
[4]
The award of damages as determined and granted by this court is based
on the court's
wide discretion in determining the fair and reasonable
compensation for the respondent which was also commensurate with his
injuries
inflicted, sustained with long term suffering upon and after
the incidents which gave rise to his quantum claims before this
court,
and also regard was had for all the factual evidence including
the pleadings before the court. Previous court decisions with regard
to awards made were also considered as a guide only, as this court
considered the individual direct factual evidence of the expert
witnesses for the respondent in the totality of the evidence which is
solely applicable to the quantum case before this court.
See Minister
of Safety v Seymour
2006 (6) SA 320
{SCA) 325 para 17. In awarding
the quantum damages, consideration by this court went beyond a day of
incarceration which validated
the general damages amount for the
wrongful arrest, detention and malicious prosecution claims, which is
approved by the SCA. See
Motladile v Minister of Police (414/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 274
{SCA) (12 June 2023) para 17, which this court
followed in assessing the quantum damages. The SCA in an unreported
judgment of
Mandleni v Minister of Police dated 24 April 2017 case
number 37539/14 also confirms that where an arrest was malicious a
higher
award of damages would be granted which this trial court
considered and applied in assessing the quantum damages also.
[5]
There were no reasonable prospects of success to grant the
application for leave to
appeal. The trial issues raised by the
applicant were without any evidence to counteract or rebut the
evidence presented for the
respondent at the trial, nor did the
applicant comply with a prior order of court to lead expert
witnesses. Only the respondent
led several expert witnesses who
verified and confirmed his quantum claims sufficiently in their
versions and expert reports. There
is confirmation from the several
expert reports and expert evidence for the respondent of the work
place of the respondent and
the job he had prior to the incidents by
the applicant which caused the respondent's damages claims. Further
his prior education
levels were also supported with documentary
information, as well as the incidents relevant to his merits and
quantum claims, which
caused his severe long term damages issues and
injuries. There was no abandonment of loss of earnings by the
respondent at the
trial, which is also an incorrect argument by the
applicant's counsel. Further there was no Rule 23 exception by the
applicant
prior to the quantum trial or the agreed merits, therefore
the applicant's argument which raises the point that the respondent's
pleadings lack averments to support his claim is also incorrect.
Further there was and is no joint expert report in terms Rule
36 of
the Uniform Rules of Court, so the applicant's argument for same is
incorrect.
[6]
As such, all the issues raised by the applicant's counsel were not
corroborated with
any supportive evidence at all, and accordingly
were of such a nature that the decision sought by the applicant
herein has no practical
effect or result, which entitled this
application to be dismissed by this court and which was done. The
decision sought by applicant
herein accordingly falls within the
ambit of
Section 16
(2) (a) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[7]
The trial only proceeded in respect of quantum which required expert
witnesses to
be provided by both parties to provide insights and
analyses to assist this court in understanding the intricate
scientific, medical
and specialised information. No expert oral
evidence or expert reports were led or presented as evidence by the
applicant in this
case or at the trial. There was thus no rebuttal of
the respondent's several expert evidence at the trial, nor was there
corroboration,
justification or confirmation of the opposition
allegations for the applicant at the trial.
[8]
The mentally, emotionally and physically injured and unfit
respondent, as confirmed
by his expert witnesses and expert reports,
did not testify at the quantum trial. This respondent has previously
given direct evidence
to all his expert witnesses who observed him
directly during consultations with him, saw his severe injured and
unfit state and
obtained direct information required in respect of
his quantum claims and said injured unfit state which was also
recorded in the
relevant expert reports and the quantum trial expert
testimonies. Accordingly the oral evidences of the respondent's
expert witnesses
and expert reports is and was acceptable to
corroborate and justify the quantum trial evidence on his behalf.
There was no need,
therefore for the respondent to testify at the
trial, accordingly and even after all the merits of the respondents
claims had been
conceded to and agreed to by the applicant on the 18
May 2018 in respect of the unlawful arrest, detention and malicious
prosecution
of the respondent. The applicant's previous counsel was
given sufficient time and was never interfered with during cross
examination
of any of the expert witnesses for the respondent at the
quantum trial.
[9]
The applicant's argument that the expert's evidence for the
respondent which was led
at the trial was hearsay or just assumptions
was rejected by this court as it was and is not legally or factually
correct or applicable
to the respondent's several expert witness
evidence and expert reports at the quantum trial. Expert witnesses
are not lay persons
and, as such, expert opinions and assumptions are
factually and legally correct and relevant when proved with direct
information
and direct observations of the respondent provided as
evidence at the trial. The various expert versions including their
expert
reports for the respondent had and has strong probative value
which cast an evidential burden on the applicant to present its' own
experts versions and expert reports which the applicant failed to do.
See Prince v RAF (CA 143/2017) [2018] ZA ECGHC 20 (20 March
2018)
paras. 55, 56 and 59. There was also compliance by the respondent
with Section 15 of the Civil Proceedings Act 25 of 1965
in that the
quantum admissions made in the respondent's pleadings and expert
trial evidence are relevant, legally and factually
validated fully by
his several supportive expert witnesses and expert reports plus
explanatory pleadings which are satisfactory
and were considered
together with the respondent's expert trial evidence, with no
rebuttal by the applicant who never led any quantum
expert evidence.
[10]
The applicant's counsel did accept and agree to the expert evidence
plus expert report of the
industrial psychologist expert and also the
actuarial expert report which was confirmed at the quantum trial by
the counsel for
the applicant.
CONCLUSION
In
the result, there is no evidence to support the applicant's
application for leave to appeal against this court's quantum judgment
and orders.
ORDER
The
following order is made:
[1]
The application for leave to appeal is refused and dismissed;
[2]
The applicant shall pay into the trust account of attorney NG PILLAY
the party and
party costs of this application.
S.
SINGH AJ
Date
of hearing of application:
25 June 2024
Date
of Judgment:
25 June 2024
(Refusal
of Application for Leave To Appeal):
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicant:
M. Govindasamy SC
Instructed
by:
State Attorney KZN
Counsel
for the respondent
N.G. Pillay
Instructed
by
N.G. Pillay and Company
sino noindex
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