Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 822South Africa
Komako v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (43704/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 822 (21 October 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Law of Delict – damages – plaintiff falling off train and sustaining bodily injuries – he alleges that he was jostled off the train by fellow passengers in overcrowded coach – defendant avers that plaintiff was ‘staff riding’ between coaches and fell off – whether negligence on the part of rail agency established – onus to establish negligence is on the claimant – versions of the parties mutually destructive – evaluation of probabilities.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Komako v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (43704/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 822 (21 October 2022)
Komako v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (43704/2012) [2022] ZAGPJHC 822 (21 October 2022)
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sino date 21 October 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
43704/2012
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
21
st
October 2022
In the matter between:
KOMAKO
,
LEFA VICTOR
Plaintiff
And
PASSENGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
Defendant
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
17, 18 and 20 October 2022
Delivered:
21 October 2022 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14:30 on 21
October 2022.
Summary:
Law of Delict – damages –
plaintiff falling off train and sustaining bodily injuries – he
alleges that he was
jostled off the train by fellow passengers in
overcrowded coach – defendant avers that plaintiff was ‘staff
riding’
between coaches and fell off – whether negligence
on the part of rail agency established – onus to establish
negligence
is on the claimant – versions of the parties
mutually destructive – evaluation of probabilities.
ORDER
(1)
The plaintiff’s claim is dismissed
with costs.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
On Monday, 23 January 2012, at about
07:30 in the morning, the plaintiff (‘Mr Komako’), then
30 years old, was traveling
on a train from Merafe station in Soweto
on his way to work in Newlands. At Croesus station he fell from the
moving train, as a
result of which he sustained serious bodily
injuries. In this action, Mr Komako claims damages from the defendant
(‘PRASA’),
alleging that its negligence caused his
injuries.
[2].
PRASA denies liability. It alleges that
the incident in question was caused by Mr Komako’s own actions
in that he was traveling
unlawfully outside the carriage between
coaches as against inside of a coach. The case of PRASA is that Mr
Komako was ‘staff
riding’, which is a colloquialism
denoting the act of riding a train by hanging onto the outside of a
coach or riding on
the roof or on the space between coaches. PRASA
further alleges that Mr Komako was fully aware of the risks involved
in travelling
outside the passenger carrying carriages, and despite
this knowledge, and whilst appreciating the risk, plaintiff had
embarked
on his journey on the train by travelling between coaches.
PRASA’s defence accordingly amounts to one of
volenti
non fit iniuria
, in addition to
being a denial of any negligence on its part.
[3].
At the commencement of the trial, it was
indicated to the Court by the parties that, in their view, it would
be convenient that
the issue of liability and the quantum be
separated. Accordingly, and by agreement between the parties, I
ordered that the issue
of liability be heard first before other
issues and the trial proceeded before me on a separated basis, with
the quantum of the
plaintiff’s claim postponed
sine
die
.
[4].
The main issue is whether Mr Komako has
established that PRASA was negligent and whether such negligence
caused his injuries. Crystallised
further, the issue of dispute
between the parties relates to whether or not the plaintiff was
travelling legally as a fare paying
passenger in one of the passenger
carrying coaches or whether he was riding the train between the
coaches.
[5].
It is Mr Komako’s case that he was
a passenger in one of PRASA’s trains travelling from Merafe
station to Newclare station,
from where he would have made his way to
work in Newlands. The plaintiff testified that the train on which he
was travelling as
a passenger was overcrowded and the doors remained
open during the trip from Merafe station. The reason for this, so he
explained,
was probably due to the fact that the trains which were
supposed to come before the train he boarded, probably did not
arrive,
which then meant that the latter train had to also cater for
the extra passengers and the overflow from the other trains. At
Croesus
station, where it seemed to him that the train was not going
to stop, he was pushed out through the open door by passengers, who
became nervous by the fact that the train was not stopping at their
destinations.
[6].
The defendant’s version, as
supported by a security guard, who was on duty on the day of the
accident, and who testified that
he saw Mr Komako riding between
coaches when the train arrived at Croesus station, is that he was
traveling not in a coach, but
in the space between coaches. This
version was furthermore supported by the evidence of a Senior
Security Commander, a Ms Mashele,
who was summoned to the
scene by PRASA’s Joint Operations Centre. On her arrival at the
scene, she found that Mr Komako lying
on the space between the
railway tracks and the platform, half under the overhang of the
platform. She confirmed – as did
PRASA’s other witness,
the security guard, a Mr Matsobe – that the train involved in
the incident was what they described
as a ‘one stop train’,
meaning that it was not carrying any passengers and was not supposed
to stop at any of the stations.
She expressed the view that the said
train was probably en route to the depot for running repairs.
[7].
Ms Mashele’s evidence was
furthermore that Mr Komako told her that he had been ‘staff
riding’ when he fell of
the train. She confirmed that he was in
possession of a valid train ticket, which would have entitled him to
travel lawfully on
a PRASA train from Merafe to Newclare stations.
[8].
From
the aforegoing, it is clear that
in
casu
I am faced with two mutually destructive versions of the incident in
question. The question is which one of these two stories should
be
accepted. A tendency generally by courts in resolving factual
disputes of this nature is to be found in the case of
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell and Others
[1]
,
in which the Supreme Court of Appeal (per Nienaber JA) explained how
a court should resolve factual disputes. It was held as follows:
-
‘
To
come to a conclusion on the disputed issues a court must make
findings on: (a) the credibility of the various factual witnesses;
(b) their reliability; and (c) the probability or improbability of
each party's version on each of the disputed issues.
In
light of the assessment of (a), (b) and (c), the court will then, as
a final step, determine whether the party burdened with
the onus of
proof has succeeded in discharging it. The hard case, which will
doubtless be a rare one, occurs when a court's credibility
findings
compel it in one direction and its evaluation of the general
probabilities in another. The more convincing the former,
the less
convincing will be the latter. But when all factors equipoised
probabilities prevail.’
[9].
Also
in
National
Employers' General Insurance Co Ltd v Jager
[2]
,
the court remarked as follows:
‘
It
seems to me, with respect, that in any civil case, as in any criminal
case, the onus can ordinarily only be discharged by adducing
credible
evidence to support the case of the party on whom the onus rests. In
a civil case the onus is obviously not as heavy as
it is in a
criminal case, but nevertheless where the onus rests on the plaintiff
as in the present case, and where there are two
mutually destructive
stories, he can only succeed if he satisfies the court on a
preponderance of probabilities that his version
is true and accurate
and therefore acceptable, and that the other version advanced by the
defendant is therefore false or mistaken
and falls to be rejected. In
deciding whether that evidence is true or not the court will weigh up
and test the plaintiff's allegations
against the general
probabilities. The estimate of the credibility of a witness will
therefore be inextricably bound up with a
consideration of the
probabilities of the case and, if the balance of probabilities
favours the plaintiff then the court will accept
his version as being
probably true. If, however, the probabilities are evenly balanced in
the sense that they do not favour the
plaintiff's case any more than
they do the defendant's, the plaintiff can only succeed if the court
nevertheless believes him and
is satisfied that his evidence is true
and that the defendant's version is false.
This
view seems to me to be in general accordance with the views expressed
by Coetzee J in
Koster Ko-operatiewe Landboumaatskappy Bpk v
Suid-Afrikaanse Spoorweë en Hawens (supra) and African Eagle
Assurance Co Ltd
v Cainer
(supra). I would merely stress however
that when in such circumstances one talks about a plaintiff having
discharged the onus which
rested upon him on a balance of
probabilities one really means that the court is satisfied on a
balance of probabilities that he
was telling the truth and that his
version was therefore acceptable. It does not seem to me to be
desirable for a court first to
consider the question of credibility
of the witnesses as the trial judge did in the present case, and
then, having concluded that
enquiry, to consider the probabilities of
the case, as though the two aspects constitute separate fields of
enquiry. In fact, as
l have pointed out, it is only where a
consideration of the probabilities fails to indicate where the truth
probably lies, that
recourse is had to an estimate of relative
credibility apart from the probabilities.’
[10].
Lastly,
in
Govan
v Skidmore
[3]
,
the Court held that, in trying the facts in a matter, one may, by
balancing probabilities, select a conclusion which seems to
be the
more natural or plausible conclusion from amongst several conceivable
ones, even though that conclusion may not be the only
reasonable one.
[11].
As already indicated, I am here faced
with two mutually destructive versions of the incident in question.
The version of the plaintiff
is irreconcilable with that of the
defendant. Accepting the one means of necessity a rejection of the
other.
[12].
In deciding where the truth lies, I have
to have regard to the probabilities. And in that regard, there are a
number of discrepancies
in the evidence of Mr Komako. So, for
example, previously inconsistent statements by him were highlighted.
His
viva voce
evidence was that the train did not stop at Croesus station, whereas
in his particulars claim, it was stated that the incident
happened
when the train moved off from the said station. Also, in his
narration to one of the experts, he stated that he was in
fact pushed
off the train by another passenger, who had lost his balance. There
can be little doubt that these statements by Mr
Komako – at
different points in time since the incident – are materially
contradictory, the one of the other.
[13].
What is more though is that, all things
considered, the plaintiff’s version seems to me to be an
inherently improbable one.
His version that he was pushed off the
train onto the platform and then inexplicable landed on the space
between the platform and
the railway tracks, makes very little, if
any sense. In my view, this sequence of events is a physical
impossibility, especially
if regard is had to the common cause fact
that there would have been insufficient space between the train and
the platform for
a person to fall onto the floor beneath the
platform. Moreover, his version that he was jostled out of the train
onto the platform
by other passengers, suggests that his momentum
would have propelled him away from the train and not back towards the
train. The
sum total of the aforegoing is that the plaintiff’s
version is inherently improbable and for that reason alone, it stands
to be rejected.
[14].
There are further inconsistencies and
discrepancies in the version of the plaintiff, which, as submitted by
Mr Opperman, who appeared
on behalf of the defendant, do not explain
how Mr Komako was the only passenger in the confusion, who fell off
the train. In fact,
no other commuters were injured in the incident.
And, to add insult to the injury, no one else reported an incident as
described
by the plaintiff.
[15].
Contrast this with the version of PRASA,
which has a ring of truth to it, not to speak of the fact that the
two main witnesses corroborate
each other in all of the material
respects. In any event, to accept the plaintiff’s version
implies of necessity that the
whole story by PRASA’s witnesses
is a fabrication. No such case was made out or could have been made
out on behalf of the
plaintiff. During cross-examination no attempt
was made to even begin to suggest a fabrication by these witnesses.
Both of them
witnesses impressed the Court as honest and forthright
in the presentation of their evidence.
[16].
In my view, therefore, when one
has regard to the probabilities in their totality, then the
plaintiff’s version should
be rejected as false. I am of the
view that, having regard to the evidence as a whole, the incident
probably occurred in the manner
narrated by the witnesses of PRASA
and as pleaded by it. In those circumstances, there is simply no
basis on which to draw the
conclusion that PRASA was negligent. In my
view to impose a duty of care on the said agency in such
circumstances would be casting
the duty wide and impractical.
[17].
For all of these reasons, the
plaintiff’s claim falls to be dismissed.
Costs
[18].
The general rule in matters of costs is
that the successful party should be given his costs, and this rule
should not be departed
from except where there are good grounds for
doing so. I can think of no reason why I should deviate from this
general rule.
[19].
The plaintiff should therefore be ordered
to pay the defendant’s costs of the action.
Order
[20].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The plaintiff’s claim is dismissed
with costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
17
th
,
18
th
and 20
th
October 2022
JUDGMENT
DATE:
21
st
October 2022 – judgment handed down
electronically
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF:
Ms P T Khoanyane
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Matela Sibanyoni & Associates Inc,
Mondeor, Johannesburg
FOR
THE DEFENDANT:
Advocate Francois F Opperman
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Padi Attorneys, Houghton Estate,
Johannesburg
[1]
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell and Others
2003 (1) SA 11
(SCA) at para 5;
[2]
National
Employers' General Insurance Co Ltd v Jager
1984 (4) SA 437
(ECD) at 440D-441A;
[3]
Govan
v Skidmore
1952 (1) SA 732
(N);
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