Abstract

The locus classicus and trend-setting decision for the vicarious liability of the state for the rape of a woman by a police official, is certainly K v Minister of Safety and Security. Here the plaintiff (K), a young woman, became stranded late at night. Three on-duty police officials, dressed in full uniform, offered to take her home in a police vehicle. On the way she was raped by all three of them. O’Regan J held that the state was vicariously liable for the conduct of the policemen. According to the standard test for vicarious liability, which was formulated in Minister of Police v Rabie, an employer may only escape vicarious liability if the employee, viewed subjectively, has not only exclusively promoted his own interests, but, viewed objectively, has also disengaged himself from the duties of his contract of employment to such an extent that a sufficiently close connection between the employee’s conduct and his employment is absent. Applying this test as informed by the constitutional Bill of Rights, O’Regan J found that although the policemen exclusively promoted their own interests by raping the plaintiff, a “sufficiently close connection” nevertheless existed between the conduct of the police and their work to hold their employer vicariously liable, for the following reasons: there was a constitutional and statutory duty on the state as well as the policemen to prevent crime and to protect members of public; the policemen offered to help the plaintiff and she acted reasonably by accepting the offer and trusting them; and the conduct of the policemen consisted simultaneously of a commissio (the brutal rape) and an omissio (their failure to protect her against the rape).

Highlights

  • The locus classicus and trend-setting decision for the vicarious liability of the state for the rape of a woman by a police official, is certainly K v Minister of Safety and Security (2005 6 SA 419 (CC); see Scott “K v Minister of Safety and Security 2005 6 SA 419 (CC)” 2006 De Jure 471ff; Neethling and Potgieter Neethling-Potgieter-Visser Law of Delict (2010) 369 fn 143; contra Fagan “The Confusions of K” 2009 SALJ 156ff; Wagener “K v Minister of Safety and Security and the Increasing Blurred Line Between Personal and Vicarious Liability” 2008 SALJ 673ff; and K v Minister of Safety and Security 2005 3 SA 179 (SCA), critically discussed by Neethling and Potgieter “Middellike Aanspreeklikheid van die Staat vir Verkragting deur Polisiebeamptes” 2005 TSAR 595ff)

  • Applying this test as informed by the constitutional Bill of Rights, O’Regan J found that the policemen exclusively promoted their own interests by raping the plaintiff, a “sufficiently close connection” existed between the conduct of the police and their work to hold their employer vicariously liable, for the following reasons: there was a constitutional and statutory duty on the state as well as the policemen to prevent crime and to protect members of public; the policemen offered to help the plaintiff and she acted reasonably by accepting the offer and trusting them; and the conduct of the policemen consisted simultaneously of a commissio and an omissio

  • Vicarious liability is in essence the liability of one person for a delict of another, by virtue of the relationship that exists between them, here the employer-employee relationship

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Summary

Introduction

The locus classicus and trend-setting decision for the vicarious liability of the state for the rape of a woman by a police official, is certainly K v Minister of Safety and Security (2005 6 SA 419 (CC); see Scott “K v Minister of Safety and Security 2005 6 SA 419 (CC)” 2006 De Jure 471ff; Neethling and Potgieter Neethling-Potgieter-Visser Law of Delict (2010) 369 fn 143; contra Fagan “The Confusions of K” 2009 SALJ 156ff; Wagener “K v Minister of Safety and Security and the Increasing Blurred Line Between Personal and Vicarious Liability” 2008 SALJ 673ff; and K v Minister of Safety and Security 2005 3 SA 179 (SCA), critically discussed by Neethling and Potgieter “Middellike Aanspreeklikheid van die Staat vir Verkragting deur Polisiebeamptes” 2005 TSAR 595ff). According to the standard test for vicarious liability, which was formulated in Minister of Police v Rabie (1986 1 SA 117 (A) 134), an employer may only escape vicarious liability if the employee, viewed subjectively, has exclusively promoted his own interests, but, viewed objectively, has disengaged himself from the duties of his contract of employment to such an extent that a sufficiently close connection between the employee’s conduct and his employment is absent Applying this test as informed by the constitutional Bill of Rights, O’Regan J found that the policemen exclusively promoted their own interests by raping the plaintiff, a “sufficiently close connection” existed between the conduct of the police and their work to hold their employer vicariously liable, for the following reasons: there was a constitutional and statutory duty on the state as well as the policemen to prevent crime and to protect members of public; the policemen offered to. Help the plaintiff and she acted reasonably by accepting the offer and trusting them; and the conduct of the policemen consisted simultaneously of a commissio (the brutal rape) and an omissio (their failure to protect her against the rape)

Facts of F
Decision of court a quo in F
1 Introduction to vicarious liability
Conclusion
Full Text
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