Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 864South Africa
Stevens and Another v Road Accident Fund (26017/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 864 (31 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
31 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Stevens and Another v Road Accident Fund (26017/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 864 (31 October 2022)
Stevens and Another v Road Accident Fund (26017/2016) [2022] ZAGPJHC 864 (31 October 2022)
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sino date 31 October 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
LOSS
OF SUPPORT – DAUGHTER’S STUDIES
Motor
collision – Daughter 14 at time of losing father –
Completing initial course to be followed by two years
at
university – Entitled to compensation for loss of support
until age of 24 – Deceased’s partner aged
57 and not
intending to remarry – General contingencies of 15%
including prospects of remarriage.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 26017/2016
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
28
October 2022
In
the matter between:
STEVENS:
SUSSAN CORNELIA SUSARAH
FIRST PLAINTIFF
BOTES:
SHEREEN
SECOND PLAINTIFF
And
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by
the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines.
The date
of the judgment is deemed to be the 31
st
of October 2022.
TWALA
J
[1]
The First and Second plaintiffs sued the defendant out of this Court
for damages arising
out of the motor vehicle accident that occurred
on the 13
th
of
September 2015 in Lambton, Germiston as a result whereof the
deceased, P [....] J [....] B [....], was killed. The first plaintiff
was at the time engaged to the deceased for a period of fifteen years
and were blessed with a girl child who was fourteen years
old at the
time of the accident and is the second plaintiff in this case. Both
plaintiffs are claiming loss of support.
[2]
On the 28
th
of
February 2019 the parties concluded a settlement agreement which
agreement was ultimately made an order of the Court and reads
as
follows:
“
By agreement
between the parties, it is ordered that:
1.
The defendant is liable for 100% (one
hundred percent) of the Second Plaintiff’s proven damages;
2.
The defendant shall pay to the Second
Plaintiff’s attorneys, Leon JJ van Rensburg Attorneys, in
respect of the second plaintiff,
as an interim payment the sum of
R632 988.00 (Six Hundred and thirty-two thousand nine hundred
and eighty- eight Rand) payable
within 14 days after the date of this
order together with interest thereon from 14 days after this order
till date of payment at
the rate of 10% per annum;
3.
…………………………
[3]
Furthermore, it is noteworthy that on the 19
th
of May 2021 the Court struck out the defence of the defendant since
it failed to comply with a Court order and the matter served
before
this Court with the plaintiffs seeking judgment by default against
the defendant. However, to the surprise of the plaintiffs,
counsel
for the defendant appeared in Court not to defend the case but to
assist the Court in arriving at a just decision, so it
was contended.
[4]
It was then agreed between the parties that the actuarial report and
the affidavits
of the plaintiffs including that of the actuary be
admitted in evidence and that the plaintiffs would lead evidence only
on limited
issues. These issues being: (a) the marital status of the
first plaintiff and the deceased at the time they were engaged and at
the time of the death of the deceased, (b) the marital status of the
first plaintiff at this moment, (c) whether the deceased had
other
dependants at the time of his death, and (d) the progress of the
second plaintiff with its education.
[5]
Noting that the Court order of the 28
th
of February 2019 only refers to the second plaintiff, the Court
directed the parties to address the issue of the merits in relation
to the first plaintiff. The parties were ad idem that the issue
relating to negligence and causation has been settled and what
remains to be determined is the issue of the legal duty on the part
of the deceased to maintain the first plaintiff. This issue
was
addressed satisfactorily in the first plaintiff’s affidavit
which has been admitted in evidence. The irresistible conclusion
is
therefore that the defendant is 100% liable for the damages of the
first plaintiff.
[6]
The first plaintiff testified that at the time they got engaged to
each other, she
and the deceased were unmarried. However, the
deceased had a son, John Botes (“John”) from his previous
marriage. She
was aware that the deceased maintained his son John
until he started working and at the time when the deceased met his
untimely
death John was living with his mother and was employed and
completely independent of the deceased. At present John has
immigrated
to the United Kingdom. She is presently not married and
does not have any relationship nor does she intend to get married in
the
future. She further confirmed that she is living with the second
plaintiff who enrolled with CTU Training Solution (CTU) in 2020/21
and is now doing her second year as she is busy with profiles for her
graphic design course. Once she finishes her profiles she
will be
attending a two year course at the University for her graphic design.
[7]
The second plaintiff testified that she knows her brother John Botes
and had a good
relationship with him before he immigrated to the
United Kingdom. John informed her that he was working for CTS Towing
Services.
She completed her matric in 2018 and did not work in 2019
until she enrolled with CTU in 2020/21. She is presently awaiting her
results with regard to the profiles she has been doing in her second
year and once the results are to hand she will apply to the
University for the course in graphic design. She did not know exactly
what the requirements are to be admitted at the University
except
that she has to pass what she was doing at CTU. Furthermore, she
could not explain why she does not have the results by
now being late
in the year. She testified that she did not attend school in 2019 due
to lack of funds and was assisted by the interim
payment from the RAF
– hence she registered with CTU in 2020/21.
[8]
Counsel for the plaintiffs submitted that, although he did not note
an objecting at
the commencement of this hearing, it was improper and
against the rules of Court to allow the defendant to participate in
these
proceedings for its defence has been struck out. His agreement
with counsel for the defendant was only to lead evidence of the
plaintiffs on the points listed above but not to give the defendant
an opportunity to cross examine the witnesses. It was further
submitted that, the Court should not place much weight on the
negative evidence, if any, that may have been elicited under cross
examination. This is tantamount to, so the argument went, being
ambushed by the defendant whom it was not expected to attend Court
let alone to participate in the proceedings when its defence has been
struck out.
[9]
In
Khunou & Others v Fihrer & Son 1982
(3) SA (WLD)
the Court stated the following:
“
The proper
function of a Court is to try disputes between litigants who have
real grievances and so see to it that justice is done.
The rules of
civil procedure exist in order to enable Courts to perform this duty
with which, in turn, the orderly functioning,
and indeed the very
existence, of society is inextricably interwoven. The Rules of Court
are in a sense merely a refinement of
the general rule of civil
procedure. They are designed not only to allow litigants to come to
grips as expeditiously and as inexpensively
as possible with the real
issues between them, but also to ensure that the Courts dispense
justice uniformly and fairly, and that
the true issues aforementioned
are clarified and tried in a just manner.”
[10]
In
Trans-African Insurance Co Ltd v Maluleka
1956 (2) SA 273
(A)
which was quoted with
approval in
Life Healthcare Group (Pty) Ltd v
Mdladla & Another (42156/2013) [2014] ZAGPJHC 20 (10 FEBRUARY
2014)
the court stated the following:
“
No doubt
parties and their legal advisers should not be encouraged to become
slack in the observance of the Rules, which are an
important element
in the machinery for the administration of justice. But on the other
hand technical objections to less than perfect
procedural steps
should not be permitted, in the absence of prejudice, to interfere
with the expeditious and, if possible, inexpensive
decision of cases
on their real merits.”
[11]
I disagree with the contentions of counsel for the
plaintiffs. It has been held in a number of decisions
that the rules
are for the court and not the court for the rules. Moreover, in casu,
the striking out of the defence of the defendant
does not in itself
bar the defendant from participating in these proceedings. The
defendant is entitled to participate in these
proceedings but his
participation is restricted in the sense that it cannot raise the
defence that had been struck out by an order
of Court. It is
therefore not correct to say the defendant was not entitled to cross
examine the plaintiffs after giving evidence.
Furthermore, the cross
examination was on the evidence tendered by the plaintiffs and the
defendant did not attempt to introduce
its own case during the cross
examination.
[12]
Furthermore, there is no merit in the argument that the plaintiffs
have been ambushed by the
sudden appearance of the defendant whose
defence has been struck out since they were only prepared to advance
their case on the
papers. Legal practitioners are always expected to
be fully prepared and must familiarise themselves with the case they
are to
present in Court. Litigants and their legal practitioners
should not assume that if they do not have opponents then it means
they
will obtain the relief they seek. Litigants should always
prepare to prove their case on a balance of probability and satisfy
the
Court on the evidence they present. I hold the view therefore
that the contention of the plaintiffs that the defendant was ‘red
carded’ (language used by counsel for the plaintiffs) and
should not have been allowed to cross examine is a misconception
of
the Rules of Court.
[13]
It is now settled that the approach to be adopted in the
interpretation of a document requires
that from the outset one
considers the context and the language together, with neither
predominating over the other. Context and
purpose must be taken into
account as a matter of course whether or not the words used in the
document are ambiguous.
[14]
In
Novartis v Maphil
[2015] ZASCA 111
which
was recently quoted with approval by Constitutional Court in
University of
Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another (CCT
70/20)
[2021] ZACC 13
,
2021 (8) BCLR 807
(CC);
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC)
(11June 2021)
the
Supreme Court of Appeal stated the following:
“
[27]
I do not understand these judgments to mean that interpretation is a
process that takes into account only the objective
meaning of the
words (if that is ascertainable), and does not have regard to the
contract as a whole or the circumstances in which
it was entered
into. This court has consistently held, for many decades, that the
interpretative process is one of ascertaining
the intention of the
parties – what they meant to achieve. And in doing that, the
court must consider all the circumstances
surrounding the contract to
determine what their intention was in concluding it. KPMG, in the
passage cited, explains that parol
evidence is inadmissible to
modify, vary or add to the written terms of the agreement, and that
it is the role of the court, and
not witnesses, to interpret a
document. It adds, importantly, that there is no real distinction
between background circumstances,
and surrounding circumstances, and
that a court should always consider the factual matrix in which the
contract is concluded –
the context – to determine the
parties’ intention.
[28]
The passage cited from the judgment of Wallis JA in Endumeni
summarizes the state of the law as it was in 2012.
This court did not
change the law, and it certainly did not introduce an objective
approach in the sense argued by Norvatis, which
was to have regard
only to the words on the paper. That much was made clear in a
subsequent judgment of Wallis JA in Bothma-Botha
Transport (Edms) Bpk
v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
[2013] ZASCA 176
;
2014 (2)
SA 494
(SCA), paragraphs 10 to 12 and in North East Finance (Pty) Ltd
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[2013] ZASCA 76
;
2013 (5) SA 1
(SCA) paragraphs 24 and 25. A court must examine all the facts –
the context – in order to determine what the parties
intended.
And it must do that whether or not the words of the contract are
ambiguous or lack clarity. Words without context mean
nothing.
[29]
Referring to the earlier approach to interpretation adopted by this
court in Coopers & Lybrand & others
v Bryant
[1995] ZASCA 64
;
1995 (3) SA 761
(A) at 768A-E, where Joubert JA had drawn a
distinction between background and surrounding circumstances, and
held that only where
there is an ambiguity in the language, should a
court look at surrounding circumstances, Wallis JA said (para 12 of
Bothma-Botha):
‘
That
summary is no longer consistent with the approach to interpretation
now adopted by South African courts in relation to contracts
or other
documents, such as statutory instruments or patents. While the
starting point remains the words of the document, which
are the only
relevant medium through which the parties have expressed their
contractual intentions, the process of interpretation
does not stop
at a perceived literal meaning of those words, but considers them in
the light of all relevant and admissible context,
including the
circumstances in which the document came into being. The former
distinction between permissible background and surrounding
circumstances, never very clear, has fallen away. Interpretation is
no longer a process that occurs in stages but is “essentially
one unitary exercise” [a reference to a statement of Lord
Clarke SCJ in Rainy Sky SA v Kookmin Bank
[2011] UKSC 50
, [2012]
Lloyd’s Rep 34 (SC) para 21].
[30]
Lord Clarke in Rainy Sky in turn referred to a passage in Society of
Lloyd’s v Robinson [1999] 1 All ER (Comm)
at 545, 551 which I
consider useful.
‘
Loyalty
to the text of a commercial contract, instrument, or document read in
its contextual setting is the paramount principle
of interpretation.
But in the process of interpreting the meaning of the language of a
commercial document the court ought generally
to favour a
commercially sensible construction. The reason for this approach is
that a commercial construction is likely to give
effect to the
intention of the parties. Words ought therefore to be interpreted in
the way in which the reasonable person would
construe them. And the
reasonable commercial person can safely be assumed to be unimpressed
with technical interpretations and
undue emphasis on niceties of
language.
[31]
This was also the approach of this court in Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality v Germiston Municipal Retirement
Fund
[2009] ZASCA 154
;
2010 (2) SA 498
(SCA) para 13. A further principle to be applied in a
case such as this is that a commercial document executed by the
parties with
the intention that it should have commercial operation
should not lightly be held unenforceable because the parties have not
expressed
themselves as clearly as they might have done. In this
regard see Murray & Roberts Construction Ltd v Finat Properties
(Pty)
Ltd
[1991] ZASCA 130
;
1991 (1) SA 508
(A) at 514B-F, where
Hoexter JA repeated the dictum of Lord Wright in Hillas & Co Ltd
v Arcos Ltd
[1932] UKHL 2
;
147 LTR 503
at 514:
‘
Business
men often record the most important agreements in crude and summary
fashion; modes of expression sufficient and clear to
them in the
course of their business may appear to those unfamiliar with the
business far from complete or precise. It is accordingly
the duty of
the court to construe such documents fairly and broadly, without
being too astute or subtle in finding defects.’
[15]
The contentions of the defendant that the intention of the parties
when the claim for the second
respondent was settled and the
settlement made an order of Court on the 28
th
of February 2019 was that the claim was settled in full and final is
baseless and has no merit. The Court order is plain and unambiguous
on paragraph 2 thereof where it orders that the defendant shall pay
to the attorneys of the second plaintiff as an interim payment
a sum
of R632 988. I am unable to disagree with counsel for the
plaintiffs’ submission that, if the payment of the sum
of
R632 988 was meant to be in full and final settlement of the
second plaintiff’s claim it would have said so. It is
my
considered view therefore that the wording of the Court order is
clear and unambiguous and it follows that the settlement was
interim.
[16]
It is incorrect to say that the second plaintiff did not know the
requirements of the University
for her to register for the course in
graphic design. The second plaintiff testified that she finalised her
first year at CTU and
that she did profiles for her second year and
is awaiting the results. She knew that she has to pass her course at
CTU in order
for her to be admitted at University for her graphic
design course. Her results for the first year were 67% which is a
good average.
I have no doubt in my mind that the possibility exist
that she will pass her profiles and progress to register for her two
- year
graphic design course with the University. It is my view
therefore that the second plaintiff is entitled to be compensated for
her loss of support up to her reaching the age of 24 years.
[17]
On the issue of contingencies applied by the actuary for the
plaintiffs, counsel for the defendant
submitted that the actuary did
not take into account the prospect that the first plaintiff may marry
in the future – hence
it applied the general future
contingencies of 15%. Furthermore, that the deceased would have
catered or assisted its son John
if a need arose later. I disagree.
The first plaintiff is 57 years old and has testified that since the
death of the deceased she
does not have a relationship and does not
intend to get married nor to have a partner. Much as the deceased
would have assisted
John in hard times, it is my considered view that
the general future contingencies of 15% are meant to cover what
cannot be said
with any certainty will happen or not in the near or
distant future – that includes the prospect of finding another
partner
or remarriage.
[18]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The defendant is to pay the first plaintiff a sum
of R820 204.00 (Eight Hundred and Twenty Thousand and Two
Hundred and Four
Rand);
2.
The defendant is to pay the second plaintiff the
sum of R552 050.00 (Five Hundred and Fifty -Two Thousand and
Fifty Rand);
3.
The defendant shall pay interest on the sums
mentioned in 1 and 2 above from 14 days after the date of this order
at the prescribed
morae rate of interest applicable from time to
time, if payment of the amounts mentioned in 1 and 2 above is not
made within 180
days of this order;
4.
The defendant is to pay the plaintiffs’
costs of the action including costs of obtaining the actuarial
report, which costs
are to be agreed or taxed;
5.
The defendant shall pay the agreed or taxed costs
of the plaintiffs within 14 days from the date of this order, if
payment thereof
is not made within 180 days from the date of taxation
or agreement;
6.
All the amounts payable by defendant to the
plaintiffs shall be paid into the Trust Account of the plaintiffs’
attorneys:
Anton Myburgh Attorneys; Nedbank, Three Rivers Branch,
Vereeniging, Account No: [....] for the credit and benefit of the
plaintiffs.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
18
th
and 19
th
October 2022
Date
of Judgment:
31
st
October 2022
For
the Plaintiffs:
Mr AS
Myburgh
Instructed
by:
Anton Myburgh Attorneys
Tel: 082 312 9323
antonmyb@gmail.com
For
the Respondent:
Advocate M Khan
Instructed
by:
State Attorney
Tel:
071 167 0671
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