Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1003South Africa
Kunene v Minister of Police (32422/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1003 (7 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 September 2023
Headnotes
the rank of Constable in the South African Police Service and was stationed at the Gauteng Provincial Head Office under the Tracking Team. He says that on 07 August 2013, he was on duty with Sgt Yende. He and Yende were sitting outside the Pick n Pay shopping center having lunch.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Kunene v Minister of Police (32422/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1003 (7 September 2023)
Kunene v Minister of Police (32422/2015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1003 (7 September 2023)
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IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case no.:
32422/2015
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
In
the matter between:
KUNENE IRVIN AYANDA
PLAINTIFF
And
MINISTER OF POLICE
DEFENDANT
Coram:
Dlamini J.
Date of hearing: Date of
hearing: 16 - 23 January 2023, & 17 August 2023.
Delivered: 07
September 2023.
JUDGMENT
DLAMINI J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is a claim for damages brought by the
plaintiff against the defendant for injuries he suffered allegedly at
the hands of the
police officers at a shooting incident that occurred
on 07 August 2013.
[2]
The defendant is opposing the claim. In
their plea to the plaintiff's particulars of claim, the
defendant pleads as follows;
2.1 The plaintiff
intentionally and unlawfully drove his vehicle in the direction of
the police in an attempt to kill and
or knock down one of the police
members on the basis that the plaintiff drove his motor vehicle in
the direction of the police
in an attempt to kill and or knock one of
the police members over, whilst a gunshot was also fired at the same
time at the police
member.
2.2 The member of
the police then lawfully fired a shot(s) back to ward off the
unlawful attack on him in self-defence.
[3]
By agreement between the parties, there was
separation of issues and only the issue of liability was to be
decided by this Court.
[4]
Evidence in this trial was adduced before
this Court from 16 January 2023 to 23 January 2023. The transcript of
the record was duly
obtained by the parties on 07 March 2023.
[5]
It was by agreement between the parties,
confirmed that the defendant will file its heads of argument by 24
March 2023 and the plaintiff
to file its heads of argument on 06
April 2023. The defendant was to file its replying heads of argument
on 14 April 2023. The
matter proceeded for oral argument on 17 August
2023.
[6]
At the hearing of the matter, I made
a ruling that the onus rested on the defendants to prove that they
were acting in self-defence
as they allege they did when they injured
the plaintiff.
[7]
It
is a trite and well-established principle of our law that where
self–defence is raised as a ground of defense, the
onus
then shifts and lies squarely, as in this present case on the
defendant to prove that all the prevailing circumstances gave him
no
choice but to act in self-defense. In
Mugwena
And Another v The
Minister
of Safety and Security
[1]
the
Court at [25] captured this principle thus "It bears noting that
the
onus
rest on the police to prove on a preponderance of probabilities that
the shooting of the deceased was justifiable (
Mabaso
v Felix
1981
(3) SA 865
(A)).
[8]
The defendant proceeded and called Mrs.
Karen Smook, police Constable Mahlangu, and Sergeant Yende to
testify on its behalf.
The plaintiff testified and called his mother
Mrs. Yende and his friend Mr. Bongani Mahungela to testify on his
behalf.
DEFENDANT’S CASE
Karen
Smook
[9]
The essence of Mrs. Smook's evidence is
that she was hijacked on the evening of 06 August 2013, and her motor
vehicle a Ford Fiesta
was taken away by unknown persons. She was not
present during the shooting incident at Pick n Pay, and her evidence
offered no
assistance in this regard.
Constable Mahlangu
[10]
Constable Mahlangu, it should be noted did
not witness the shooting incident. He testified that on the day of
the shooting incident,
he held the rank of Constable in the South
African Police Service and was stationed at the Gauteng Provincial
Head Office under
the Tracking Team. He says that on 07 August
2013, he was on duty with Sgt Yende. He and Yende were sitting
outside the Pick
n Pay shopping center having lunch.
[11]
While seated and eating he noticed a Ford
Fiesta that was parked directly facing him. He said he contacted the
radio command center
to check for any adverse information on the Ford
Fiesta. The report back from the radio control center was that the
Ford Fiesta
was the subject of a hijacking the previous night and was
sought as per Brackendows Police Station in Alberton.
[12]
Const Mahalngu, says that upon learning of
the Fiesta's status, he then called for backup and assistance to the
scene. While waiting
for backup, a white Toyota Corolla drove into
the shopping center and parked behind the Ford Fiesta. The driver of
the Corolla
alighted out of the car and approached the Fiesta. That
person (later on turned out to be Mr. Mahungela), opened the
Fiesta
and got into the driver seat while the passenger of the
Corolla moved into the Corolla's driver seat.
[13]
Both Const Mahlangu and Sgt Yende ordered
the driver to get out of the Fiesta and to lie down. He continues and
says that the Toyota
Corolla drove towards Sgt Yende in an attempt to
knock down Sgt Yende. At the same, he saw the Ford Fiesta
suspect running
away. He says he then chased the suspect and arrested
him a few blocks away from the shopping center.
[14]
As a result of his chase of the Fiesta
suspect, Const Mahlangu avers that he did not witness the shooting
incident between Sgt
Yende and the Corolla
driver.
Sergeant Yende
[15]
In the main, Sgt Yende confirms in essence
Const Mahlangu’s evidence of how they arrived and were seated
at the Pick n Pay
center. He avers that the Toyota Corolla drove
towards him, in the manner that the Corolla wanted to knock him down.
He insisted
that he believed that his life was in danger and
therefore in self-defence, he fired one warning shot toward the
Corolla and thereafter
fired two more shots at the Corolla to ward
off the danger. According to him when he fired the two further short
at the Corolla,
it had already driven past him. It was a few meters
away from him and he avers that he aimed at the tires of the Corolla.
He confirms
that none of his shots hit the Corolla’s tires.
[16]
In summation, the two police officers were
not open and frank in their testimony. They did not come across as
credible witnesses.
Their version was riddled with contradictions and
improbabilities and stood to be rejected. For instance, both
officers gave
different testimonies in this Court of what transpired
at the Pick n Pay vis-à-vis what they testified in their
arresting
statements, at the criminal trial of the plaintiff, and in
their pleadings. Sgt Yende gave a completely different testimony in
his evidence in this Court, completely at odds with his plea that the
plaintiff drove his vehicle towards him in an attempt to kill
him or
knock him over as it appears from his plea. See paragraphs 2.1
and 2.2 above.
PLAINTIFF’S CASE
Mrs. Aria Kunene
[17]
At the outset, it must be pointed out that
the plaintiff's mother Mrs. Aria Kunene was not present at Pick n Pay
where the shooting
incident occurred. She testified that the
plaintiff had an upset stomach on the evening of 06 August
2013. On the morning
of 07 August 3013, she asked the plaintiff to go
buy some fat cakes. Later on that day, she learned that her son was
shot at by
the police and was now paralysed.
[18]
Under cross-examination, much was made of
the fact that Mrs. Kunene could recall the events of the 06 and 07
August 2013 but could
not recall the events and whereabouts of the
plaintiff on any other dates that were put to her during
cross-examination. Further,
she never went to the police to give a
written statement in respect of the alibi of the plaintiff.
[19]
The criticism of Mrs. Kunene in this
regard is unjustified. Her explanation that the date of 07 August
2013 remains patched
in her memory because that is the date she heard
that her son, (the plaintiff) had been injured and paralysed, is
plausible as
any reasonable mother would recall such an event. In any
event, as I have indicated earlier Mrs. Kunene was not present during
the shooting incident and her evidence is of no assistance in that
regard.
A I Kunene (“The
Plaintiff”)
[20]
The plaintiff testified that on the day he
gave his friend Mr. Mahungela a lift and dropped the friend at the
Pick n Pay shopping
center. As he was driving out of the center he
heard a gunshot being fired towards his car. The next moment a bullet
penetrated
his neck, he became numb and his car came to stand still.
He then discovered he could not move and he was now paralysed from
the neck down to his legs. He denies that he attempted to knock down
Sgt Yende nor attempted to shoot the police officer. He insists
that
he does not possess a firearm nor carried one on the day of the
shooting incident.
[21]
Questions
were put to the plaintiff under cross-examination relating to his
previous convictions, the fact that he did not have
a driver's
license, and his relationship with Mr. Mahungela. Nothing turns
on these questions as they were unrelated to the
shooting incident
and the identity of the person who shot at and injured the plaintiff.
In any event, the plaintiff received a
section 174
[2]
discharge for the crime of hijacking the Ford Fiesta and attempted
murder.
Bongani Mahungela
[22]
Mr. Mahungela confirmed that on the day he
had requested the plaintiff to give him a lift and for the plaintiff
to drop him off
at the Pick n Pay center, which the plaintiff did.
However, Mr. Mahungela admits that he did not witness the shooting
incident
as he ran away from the scene and was later on apprehended
by Const Mahlangu. The rest of Mr. Mahungela's evidence offers no
assistance.
ISSUE FOR DISCUSSION
[23]
The question to be decided is firstly who
in the light of all the evidence presented fired the gunshot that
injured the plaintiff.
Once that has been decided, the next question
is whether that person was acting in self-defense or putative
self-defense.
[24]
At the hearing of argument Counsel for the
defendant conceded that taking into account all the probabilities of
the case, the evidence
points to the fact that Sgt Yende is the
person who fired the gunshot that injured the plaintiff. That
conceded, the next question
to be answered is whether Sgt Yende was
acting in self-defense or for that matter putative self- defense.
[25]
The
high watermark of the defendant's submission is that this court
should find that Sgt Yende was acting in self-defence alternatively
in putative self-defence when he fired the shot that paralyised the
plaintiff. For instance, insists the defendant that the situation
was
fluid, that the events on the day were all happening at the same
time, and Sgt Yende had no opportunity to think and plan an
appropriate reaction to the situation. For this submission, the
defendant seeks reliance in
S
v Makwanyane and Another.
[3]
[26]
The principles of putative self-defence are
trite and have been pronounced upon in numerous decisions of our
Courts. The legal requirement
to prove self-defence is a reasonable
belief of immediate danger of death or grievous bodily harm from the
assailant. The pertinent
question to be answered is whether a
reasonable police officer in the position of Sgt Yende would have
acted differently.
[27]
The defendant's submission in this regard
has no merit and stands to be dismissed. There was no evidence
presented to this Court
that the plaintiff drove his vehicle in the
direction of Sgt Yende in an attempt to kill the police
officer. In Sgt Yende’s
testimony, the plaintiff's motor
vehicle had driven past him when he fired two gunshots that according
to him were aimed at the
tires of the plaintiff's car.
[28]
In Yende’s version, the danger (if
there was any and there was none) had already passed when he shot at
the plaintiff's car.
Significantly, the plaintiff did not fire any
gunshot towards the police or Sgt Yende in particular. No weapons or
any firearms
were found in the person of the plaintiff or his motor
vehicle. The plaintiff was shot in the back of his neck whilst he was
simply
driving out of the shopping after dropping off his friend
Bongani who had earlier asked the plaintiff for a lift. The plaintiff
posed no danger to Sgt Yende. Consequently, the defendant's defense
of putative self-defence should not succeed.
[29]
In light of the above, it is my view that
the defendant has failed to discharge the onus that rested on its
shoulders that the police
officer acted in self -defence nor in
putative self-defence as they allege.
ORDER
1.
The defendant is ordered to
compensate the plaintiff for all his proven or agreed damage arising
from the unlawful assault perpetrated
on him.
2.
The defendant is ordered to pay the costs
of the plaintiff.
DLAMINI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
16 - 23 January 2023, &
17
August 2023.
Delivered: 07
September 2023.
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv. M Patel
moepat@mweb.co.za
instructed by:
Mafate Inc. Attorneys
tshepo@mafatelaw.co.cza
for the Defendant
:
Adv. Dawie Joubert SC
dawielaw@clickonline.co.za
Adv. Van Rhyn Fouche
gvrfouche@law.co.za
instructed by:
Gildenhuys Malatji Inc
gerasmus@qminc.co.za
JPearton@gminc.co.za
[1]
2006
(4) SA 150 (SCA)
[2]
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
.
[3]
[1995] ZACC 3
;
1995
(3) SA 391
(CC)
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