THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case number : 63/04
Reportable
In the matter between :
THE MINISTER OF SAFETY AND SECURITY APPELLANT
and
PEDRO SOUZA DE LIMA RESPONDENT
CORAM : ZULMAN, MTHIYANE, CONRADIE, CLOETE JJA,
MAYA AJA
HEARD : 17 FEBRUARY 2005
DELIVERED : 3 MARCH 2005
Summary: Negligence ─ police ─ charge of assault w ithdrawn against
applicant for firearm licence ─ police negligent in not investigating
circumstances of assault and its w ithdrawal ─ licence granted ─
thereafter applicant shot plaintiff ─ Minister of Safety and Security
liable to compensate plaintiff in damages.
_________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
CLOETE JA/
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CLOETE JA:
[1] On 6 March 1996 and at Goodw ood the respondent was shot with a
revolver by Jose Andrade Dos Santos and he is in consequence a
paraplegic. Dos Santos came into possession of the firearm by virtue of a
licence for which he had applied at the Parow police station on 14
November 1994, which was issued by servants of t he appellant, the
Minister of Safety and Security, on 27 June 1995 and which was handed
over to him at the Parow polic e station on 3 November 1995. The
respondent sued the appellant in the Cape Town High Court for damages.
The trial proceeded on the merits only and the learned trial judge,
Veldhuizen J, found that the police had been negligent in recommending
that a firearm licence be issued and in issuing such a licence to Dos
Santos, and that this negligence wa s a direct cause of the respondent’s
injury. The appeal is with the leave of this court.
[2] The sole question on appeal is whether the police were negligent as
found by the learned trial judge. The statutory framework within which
applications for firearm licences are made and cons idered, the duties
imposed on the police in this regar d and the circumstances in which
non-compliance with the prescribed procedure will constitute negligence,
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have been discussed in detail in t he recent decision of this court in
Minister of Safety and Security v Hamilton 2004 (2) SA 216 (SCA). The
forms used to process Dos Santos’s application were those discussed in
that case. The regulations and form SAP271 had already been amended
by Government Notice R787 in GG 15652 of 22 April 1994, but for the
purposes of the question to be ans wered in this appeal I find it
unnecessary to discuss the differences. It suffices to set out the following
provisions.
[3] Section 3(1) of the Arms and Ammunition Act 75 of 1969 provides:
‘On application in the prescribed manner and payment of the prescribed licence fee in
the said manner by any per son other than a person under the age of 16 years or a
disqualified person, the Commissioner may, in his discretion but subject to the
provisions of subsections (3), (4) and (6 ) and sections 7 and 33(2), issue to such
person a licence to possess the arm described in such licence.’
Regulation 2(1) of the regulations provides to the extent relevant:
‘Applications for licences in respect of the possession or acquisition of arms shall in
the following cases be submitted to a po liceman on duty at a police station on form
SAP271 (set out in Schedule A), completed as far as is applicable in black ink, and on
receipt of which the application shall be noted by a policeman in register SAP86 with a
corresponding reference number on form SAP271:
(a) where the applicant is a natural person, at the police station in the area wherein the
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applicant resides or works…’.
Special Force Order (General) 19B, issued on 24 September 1979 by the
then Commissioner of the South African Police (pursuant to the provisions
of reg 6 of the Regulations for th e South African Police, 1964, made in
terms of s 33 of the Police Act 7 of 1958 and published in Government
Notice R203 in GG 719 of 14 February 1964), wh ich gave rise to form
SAP286 referred to below, requires (in paragraph 15; only the Afrikaans is
available):
‘FAKTORE WAT IN AANMERKING GENEEM MOET WORD WANNEER
AANBEVELINGS GEDOEN WORD
(1) Geskiktheid van applikant
Streng beheer oor die uitrei king van lisensies om wapens te besit, is met die
oog op landsveiligheid van die allergroot ste belang en dit is noodsaaklik dat ‘n
bevelvoerder wat ‘n aansoek om ‘n lisensie aanbeveel, tevrede moet wees dat die
applikant in alle opsigte ‘n bevoegde en geski kte persoon is om die wapen te besit.
Sonder uitsondering moet die applikant aan twee basiese vereistes voldoen, te wete
(i) hy moet ‘n geskikte en bevoegde persoon wees, en (ii) daar moet ‘n
noodsaaklikheid bestaan om ‘n wapen te besit.
(a) By geskiktheid word bedoel dat die applikant fisies en geestelik geskik geag
moet word om ‘n vuurwapen te kan besit; dit wil sê, het hy vorige veroordelings en wat
is die aard daarvan; kan hy en weet hy hoe en wanneer om ‘n vuurwapen te gebruik en
mag gebruik ( sic) , e n i s h y temperamenteel geskik ─ is hy nie opvlieënd van
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geaardheid, geneig tot geweld of losbandig nie…’. (Emphasis added.)
The parties were agreed that the Spec ial Force Order was applicable
between the time that Dos Santos made his application for a firearm
licence and the time that he receive d the licence from the Parow police
station.
[4] Dos Santos was interviewed at the Parow police station by Lance
Sergeant Basson, who completed form SAP271(E) which is headed
‘Application for a Licence to Possess an Arm’, whilst he interviewed Dos
Santos. That form contained the question:
‘4. Have you ever been convicted of an off ence or offences as a result of which
your fingerprints were taken? If so, furnish full particulars of each offence, stating the
date and place.’
Basson recorded Dos Santos’s answer to the question as follows:
‘Yes 1994 assault common at Elsies River (case was withdrawn).’
Basson could not remember interviewing Dos Santos, but explained the
answer in his evidence in chief as follows:
‘In hierdie geval … hoef ek net te geskryf het “nee”, want die applikant het geen
skuldigbevindings nie of klagtes waarvan hy skuldig bevind is nie. Maar uit
volledigheid … wat ek doen is, by hierdie punt waarsku ek die applikant dat as hy vir
my gaan lieg oor oortredings en hy noem dit nie, gaan ek hom krimineel aankla. En
gewoonlik daarna, want hy teken twee plekke daarvoor. As die applikant na die eerste
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keer bly hy nog steeds stil, maar as ek dit ‘n tweede keer noem, dan noem hulle vir my
oortredings waaraan hulle skuldig bevind is. Soos in hierdie geval, ek hoef dit nie neer
te geskryf het nie, want hy is nie skuldig bevind nie, maar nog steeds deur net bewus
te maak en om dit volledig te hou, noem ek dit wel aan Sentraal Vuurwapenregister.
Dit is hoekom ek geskryf het, die saak wa s teruggetrek in hakies, dat die Sentrale
Vuurwapenregister weet dat ek definit ief gekommunikeer het met die applikant
daaroor. Ek sou definitief vir hom vrae gevra het daaroor: wat was die omstandighede,
waar het dit plaasgevind, wanneer het dit plaasgevind; dan ook dat dit teruggetrek was.
Want op die ou einde van die dag, kan ek di t nie teen die applikant hou nie, want hy
was nooit skuldig bevind aan ‘n misdaad nie.’
It is apparent from this evidence t hat Basson did not fully appreciate the
parameters of the duty he was called u pon to perform. The essential
question was not whether Dos Santos had been convicted of a crime. It
was whether Dos Santos was a suitable person to possess a firearm and
in considering that question, the circumstances under which Dos Santos
came to be charged, and the circumstances under which the charge came
to be withdrawn, obviously required clarification.
[5] So far as the charge is concerned , it was submitted on behalf of the
appellant that Basson had acted reasonably inasmuch as only common
assault was allegedly committed by Dos Santos. This argument misses
the point. Of course a charge of, for example, murder would require more
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detailed enquiries. But the circumstan ces under which even a relatively
minor assault was allegedly committed co uld very well indicate that the
person concerned had a short temper , was easily provoked and quickly
resorted to violence. So far as the withdrawal of the charge is concerned,
it was emphasised by the appellant’s counsel that the form only requires
details of previous convictions. That is so, and had Dos Santos simply
answered ‘no’ to the question withou t volunteering further information
then Basson could not, without more, have been expected to have taken
the matter further with him. But where, in the course of an interview of an
applicant for a firearm licenc e, information comes to the attention of the
police officer conducting the interview which could indicate that the
applicant is unfit to possess a firearm, and which should reasonably lead
to further enquiries being made, it is negligent not to make such enquiries.
It is no answer to say that the form did not require this information to be
given. In addition the fact that the charge was withdrawn should not have
ended the enquiry. Any policeman should know that a charge can be
withdrawn in circumstances which do not indicate that the person charged
is innocent (for example, pending further investigation or where the
complainant has died or become untraceable).
[6] It was submitted on behalf of the appellant that it would place too
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heavy a burden on the police to re quire Basson to have made the
enquiries to which I have referred. I disagree. This court held in Hamilton
that there was a duty on the police to take reasonable steps to verify
information provided to them by an applicant for a firearm licence. The
present is an a fortiori case: What was required was not enquiries of third
persons, but a proper interview with the applicant in the first place.
[7] Had Basson conducted a proper in terview with Dos Santos and
asked him how the charge came to be withdrawn then, particularly in view
of the warnings given by Basson and the fact that Dos Santos had even
volunteered information not strictly in answer to the question, the
probabilities are that Dos Santos would have told him the truth ─ namely,
that it had been withdrawn by the senior public prosecutor, Goodwood, on
the strength of written representations made to him by Dos Santos with
the assistance of his attorney. Had this information come to Basson’s
attention it would not have been ne cessary for Basson to have done
anything more than to require Dos Santos to furnish him with a copy of
those representations. It must be borne in mind that it is the applicant who
must satisfy the police that he or she is a fit and proper person to possess
a firearm. An applicant would, to this end, be obliged to comply with any
reasonable request by the police to provide information relevant to the
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performance of their task. Had Dos Santos not provided Basson with a
copy of the representations, his application should have been deferred
until he did. Had Dos Santos indeed provided Basson with a copy, the
following information would have come to his attention.
[8] The representations made to the senior public prosecutor,
Goodwood, read in part:
‘I have been charged with common assault in that it is alleged that on the 10th of March
1994, and on the Elsies River railway station, I assaulted Sias Hugo, thereby causing
him certain wounds and injuries.
My personal circumstances are as follows: I am 24 years of age, and I am single and
my highest education qualification is standard 9.
The incident occurred at our family mobile kiosk, which is situated on the Elsies River
railway station. On the stated day on the charge sheet and at approximately 1h00pm
whilst I was serving customers from inside the kiosk, I noticed a person at the back
door of the kiosk. I noticed the person who happens to be the complainant, move from
the front to the back of the kiosk and start fidgeting with the back door of the kiosk. I
then opened the back door and asked him what he wanted and he told me that he was
looking for a match stick. He started using abusive language towards me and I
became extremely annoyed and picked up a piec e of wood which I used to keep the
inner door of the kiosk ajar, and chased him. The complainant then ran to the entrance
of the Elsies River railway station and ran in the direction of the turnstiles. At the
turnstiles the complainant t hen confronted me and I remember hitting the turnstiles
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with the piece of wood.
I can honestly and truthfully not remember ac tually striking the complainant with this
stick, but on the other hand I must confess that I may have done so, as I was in an
extremely angry state.
…
I have no history whatsoever of any criminal activity and I do not have an aggressive
personality, but sometimes and due to the pressures as I have mentioned before, I
lose control.’
It is quite clear from the passages I have quoted that Dos Santos had a
tendency to lose control of himsel f and on the day in question, did so
completely in the face of what appears not to have been particularly
severe provocation.
[9] If the representations to the senior public prosecutor, Goodwood,
had come to the attention of Basson, he could not in all honesty have said
in form SAP286 (which is headed ‘Report on Application to Possess an
Arm’) in response to the question ‘opmerkings met betrekking tot die
applikant se verlede, karakter, liggaamlike en temperamentele
geskiktheid, kennis van wapens, ensovoorts’, the following: ‘Applikant is
van goeie stand geestelik en temperamenteel geskik om wapens te besit’.
Indeed, he ought to have recommended that the licence should not be
issued.
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[10] I have therefore come to the conclusion that Basson was negligent
in not making further enquiries before recommending that Dos Santos’s
application for a firearm licence be granted. Captain Du Preez, Basson’s
superior at the Goodwood polic e station who supported the
recommendation in form SAP286 and wh o was required to comply with
the provisions of paragraph 15 of the Special Force Order (quoted above)
in doing so, was also negligent in not ensuring that Basson had made the
necessary enquiries (with the result that his own recommendation was not
properly motivated); and Superintendent Van Niekerk, who ultimately
granted the licence, was also negl igent because she merely required
confirmation that the charge agai nst Dos Santos had indeed been
withdrawn.
[11] There is one other matter which must be dealt with. The respondent
brought an application in terms of s 22 of the Supreme Court Act 59 of
1959 to place further evidence befor e this court. The application was
opposed. In the event, it is not necessary to decide it. Minimal time was
taken up during argument in dealing with the application and it pales into
insignificance when considered against the volume of the record on
appeal (over 2300 pages). It suffices to say that the application was not
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obviously without merit and that just ice would be done if the costs of the
application were to be made costs in the cause.
[12] I make the following order:
1. The costs of the respondent’s a pplication in terms of s 22 of the
Supreme Court Act are made costs in the cause.
2. The appeal is dismissed with costs.
______________
T D CLOETE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Concur: Zulman JA
Mthiyane JA
Conradie JA
Maya AJA