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[2023] ZAFSHC 467
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Dlamini v Configen Close Corporations t/a Zero Tolerance Security (5711/2019) [2023] ZAFSHC 467 (30 November 2023)
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Reportable:
YES/NO
Of
Interest to other Judges: YES/NO
Circulate
to Magistrates: YES/NO
Case
no:
5711/2019
In
the matter between
:
XOLANI
THOKOZANE DLAMINI
Plaintiff
and
CONFIGEN
CLOSE CORPORATIONS t/a
ZERO
TOLERANCE SECURITY
Defendant
Registration
number: 2010/160277/23
CORAM:
PJJ ZIETSMAN AJ
HEARD
ON:
14 NOVEMBER 2023
DELIVERED
ON:
30
NOVEMBER 2023
Introduction
[1]
The Plaintiff instituted action against
the defendant for damages
suffered by him as a result of a gunshot wound to his right upper arm
and subsequent psychological shock
and trauma.
[2]
The Plaintiff’s pleaded case
is that on 23 October 2017 a
security official in the employ of the defendant unlawfully and
wrongfully assaulted him on the QuaQua
campus of the University of
the Free State, by shooting him in his right upper arm.
The
issues
[3]
Although the matter came before me
only in respect of the merits of
the plaintiff’s claim, it was not clear from the court file
which of the allegations in
the particulars of claim ought to be
adjudicated separately.
[4]
Accordingly, on the first day of the
trial I made an order that the
issues outlined in paragraphs 1 to 6 of the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim, together with
the corresponding allegations in
the defendant’s plea be separated out in terms of Rule 33(4) of
the Uniform Rules of Court
and that the remainder of the issues
stands over for later adjudication.
[5]
It is further apposite to point out
that prior to the matter having
been set down, the Defendant’s attorneys withdrew as attorney
of record however the notice
of set down was duly served on the
defendant and notwithstanding the defendant was in default of
appearance at the trial.
The matter thus proceeded in the
Defendant’s absence.
[6]
The issues for determination are thus:
6.1
The
locus standi
of the plaintiff;
6.2
The incident;
6.3
Whether an employee of the defendant shot the plaintiff;
6.4
If it is found that the defendant shot the plaintiff whether such
action was lawful.
The
evidence
[7]
Two witnesses, to wit the Plaintiff
– Mr Xolani Dlamini –
and Mr Mpho Radebe testified during the trial.
[8]
It is the Plaintiff’s testimony
that during October 2017 he was
a BA Education student of the University of the Free State at its Qwa
Qwa campus.
[9]
During the evening of 23 October 2017
the Plaintiff and Radebe
studied at the library until approximately 24:00, at which time they
decided to make their way back to
their residence.
[10]
They were aware of the “fees must fall” student
protests
on campus but did not participate in same.
[11]
As they were walking back to their residence the Plaintiff
saw a
group of protesting students and security personnel of the Defendant,
who, according to him, was deployed by the University
to deal with
the protests on campus.
[12]
According to the Plaintiff, he recognised the Defendants’
employees from the camouflage uniforms that they were wearing, but
despite the Court’s questions is this regard he could
not point
out or identify any specific identification marks on the uniforms
which would link the security officers with employment
by the
Defendant.
[13]
As the Plaintiff was walking towards his residence he all
of a sudden
heard gunshots and the next moment is was chaos. People started
running and that was when the Plaintiff realised that
Radebe had
fallen to the ground.
[14]
The Plaintiff tried to help Radebe, but he felt a jerking
sensation
in his right arm.
[15]
Other persons attended to Radebe and the Plaintiff decided
to run to
the nearby female residence to seek help. It was there that he
realised that something was stuck in his arm, that he
had been shot
with live ammunition and that Radebe was bleeding on the right side
of his body.
[16]
The Plaintiff testified further that the security company
blocked the
main entrance and exit gate to the campus. At around 01:00 to 02:00
the plaintiff and Radebe was transported to the
entrance gate where
members of South African Police Services (SAPS), who was also present
on the scene, called an ambulance to
take them to hospital.
[17]
The Plaintiff’s evidence is that he made an assault
charge with
the SAPS, but he was later informed that the prosecuting authorities
refused to prosecute the matter.
[18]
The Plaintiff also testified that a bullet was removed from
his arm
and he was told that it was sent for testing.
[19]
Mr Radebe’s evidence corroborated the evidence of the
Plaintiff
in all material aspects.
[20]
He, too, testified on more than one occasion that he only
heard
gun shots whereafter he fell to the ground.
[21]
Thereafter, he was taken to the nearby female residence –
residence B – and it was there where he realised that he had
been shot with live ammunition because he struggled to breath.
He
further testified that while he was in the female residence he could
hear the security officers shooting at the protesters.
[22]
Like the plaintiff, Radebe also laid an assault charge and
he later
received a letter from the SAPS that informed him that the case had
been “nullified”. However, the said letter
was not
admitted into evidence.
Discussion
[23]
The onus rest on the Plaintiff to prove that he was shot by
an
employee of the Defendant.
[24]
However, there is no direct evidence that an employee of the
Defendant pulled the trigger and shot the Plaintiff.
[25]
The high water mark of the Plaintiff’s evidence is that
he
“heard gunshots” and realised at the female residence
that he had been shot with live ammunition.
[26]
Radebe also only heard gunshots and later realised that he
was shot
with live ammunition.
[27]
Thus, the Plaintiff’s case has to be decided on circumstantial
evidence.
[28]
But the case is not without difficulty.
[29]
First, there is no credible evidence that the persons dressed
in
camouflage uniform were employed by the Defendant.
[30]
Second, neither the Plaintiff nor Radebe testified that the
security
officers were armed.
[31]
It raises the question whether, on the bases of inferential
reasoning, a finding in favour of the Plaintiff can be made.
[32]
Macleod
v Rens
[1]
was an
action for damages in consequence of bodily injuries sustained by a
plaintiff in an accident involving a motor car driven by defendant
where there was no direct evidence as to the accident. The issue of
the defendant’s negligence had to be decided on circumstantial
evidence.
Erasmus
J held, at p 1047F that:
“
[Inferential
reasoning] involves consideration of the sufficiency of the evidence
seen in the light of the rules of law and logic
relating to indirect
evidential material.
In
all civil trials
'(t)he
enquiry then is where, on all the evidence, the balance
of probability lies. If it is substantially in favour of
the party bearing the
onus
on the pleadings he
succeeds; if not, he fails.'
(
Dictum
in
Klaassen
v Benjamin
1941 TPD 80
at 87, referred to in
Arthur
v Bezuidenhout (supra
at 574H).)”
[33]
Erasmus J went on to explain that the court must first identify
the
proven facts and although the relevant evidence might encompass not
only concrete or physical facts, but also such other relevant
facts
which are notorious and not merely the result of personal
observation. The facts so found then forms the basis for the
consideration
of the probabilities.
[34]
In
De
Wett and Another v President Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk
[2]
the court distinguish between presumptions and inferences thus:
“
In
regard to the submission of plaintiff's counsel, the remarks of Lord
WRIGHT in
Caswell v Powell
Duffryn Associated Collieries Ltd
(1939)
3 All ER 722
at 733 appear to me to be apposite:
"Inference
must be carefully distinguished from conjecture or speculation. There
can be no inference unless there are objective
facts from which to
infer the other facts which it is sought to establish. In some cases
the other facts can be inferred with as
much practical certainty as
if they had been actually observed. In other cases the inference does
not go beyond reasonable probability.
But, if there are no positive
proved facts from which the inference can be made, the method of
inference fails and what is left
is mere speculation or conjecture."
[35]
In order to find for the Plaintiff, I have to come to a finding
that,
on a balance of probability, the security officers on the scene were
in the employ of the Defendant and a shot fired by one
of them
injured the Plaintiff.
[36]
I have difficulty to come to such a finding.
[37]
There is no evidence to infer that the security officers
on the
scene were in the employ of the Defendant. The fact that they wore
camouflage uniform without any identification marks to
identify the
Defendant does not tilt the probabilities in the Plaintiff’s
favour.
[38]
But even if I accept that the security officers were in the
Defendant’s employ it still does not tilt the probabilities in
the Plaintiff’s favour because there is no evidence
that the
security officers were armed with firearms in order to draw the
inference that one of them fired the bullet that injured
the
Plaintiff.
[39]
And just like there is no evidence that any of the security
officers
were armed there is likewise no evidence that any of the protesting
students were armed. The confers is also true. There
is no evidence
that the security officers and/or any of the protesting students were
not armed.
[40]
Mr Cassim who appeared for the Plaintiff tried to persuade
me, in his
heads of argument, to have regard to the firearms register, the
warning statements and the ballistic report included
in the documents
discovered by the Plaintiff. He contended that the documents
show that fire arm with serial number T 63[…]
was issued to Mr
MM Nhlapo who was in the employ of the Defendant and who admitted in
his warning statement that he had discharged
the firearm. The
documents further shows, so it was contended, that the said firearm
was ballistically matched to the bullet removed
from the Plaintiff’s
arm.
[41]
The Plaintiff discovered the aforementioned documents in terms
of
Uniform Rule 35(9) but did not tender any evidence as to the
truthfulness of the contents thereof.
[42]
Willis JA
writing for the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Visser
v 1 Life Direct Insurance Ltd
[3]
held at par [39] that:
“
It
is trite that the production in evidence of documents in terms of
rule 35(10) of the Uniform Rules of Court, after these have
been
admitted in terms of rule 35(9), as happened in this case, does not
extend to the truthfulness of the contents thereof. The
documents are
not evidence that the content thereof is true. The contents,
unless admitted as being true, remain hearsay evidence
and therefore
inadmissible unless they qualify for admission under one of the
recognised exceptions to the hearsay rule.”
(footnotes
omitted)
[43]
The
contents of the said documents has not been admitted and are thus
inadmissible on the basis of hearsay
[4]
.
Nor did the Plaintiff apply to have it admitted in terms of section 3
of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1998.
[44]
I therefore cannot take any cognisance of the contents of
the said
documents.
[45]
I also considered the Defendant’s plea.
[46]
As a starting point it must be emphasised that the Defendant
denied
the incident, and in particular that one of its employees shot the
Plaintiff. Thus, to my mind, the plea does not take the
matter any
further.
[47]
However, the Defendant also pleaded over that the protestors
has
caused severe damage to the campus in the proceeding days, hence the
campus was locked down, the uprising escalated and the
protesters
wanted to forcefully enter the campus and unrestrainedly attacked the
security and policing authorities to gain access.
A number of
security and police were present at the venue, amongst others the SA
Police Service, SA Defence Force and other security
companies, a
number of shots were fired out of self-defence by the said security
and policing authorities.
[48]
The Defendant’s plea over does not tilt the probabilities
in
favour of the Plaintiff because it clearly refers to shots that were
fired by the SAPS and “other security companies”
at a
time when the protesters wanted to forcefully enter the campus and
unrestrainedly attacked the security and policing authorities.
[49]
The aforementioned plea clearly does not refer to the incident
as
testified by the Plaintiff and Radebe.
Order
[50]
I therefore find that the Plaintiff has not proved its case
on a
balance of probabilities and the order I make is one of absolution
from the instance.
PJJ
ZIETSMAN AJ
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Adv A
Cassiem
Instructed
by:
Gildenhuys
Malatji Inc
c/o
Bezuidenthout Inc
BLOEMFONTEIN
[1]
1997
(3) SA 1039 (E).
[2]
1978
(3) SA 495
(C) at 500 F.
[3]
2015
(3) SA 69 (SCA).
[4]
See
also
Selero
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Chauvier and Another
1982 (2) SA 208
(T) at 215 F - 216 H.