Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1010South Africa
Radebe v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (21713/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1010 (15 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Radebe v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (21713/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1010 (15 December 2022)
Radebe v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (21713/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1010 (15 December 2022)
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sino date 15 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NUMBER:
21713/2017
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
15 December 2022
In
the matter between:
VUKUYIBAMBE
STANLEY RADEBE
Plaintiff
and
PASSENGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
Defendant
#####
##### JUDGMENT:
LEAVE TO APPEAL
JUDGMENT:
LEAVE TO APPEAL
WILSON
J
:
1
The defendant, PRASA, seeks leave to appeal against my order
of 31 October 2022. In that order, I assessed the damages sustained
by the Plaintiff, Mr. Radebe, at R1 178 372 (one million, one
hundred and seventy-eight thousand three hundred and seventy-two
rand), and I directed PRASA to pay half that amount.
2
My award was made up of three principal components: general
damages, loss of future earning capacity, and future medical and
related
expenses. PRASA submits that there is a reasonable prospect
that a court of appeal will find that I was mistaken in the amounts
I
awarded for each one of these components.
General
Damages
3
Mr. Sadiki, who appeared for PRASA to argue the leave to
appeal application, submitted that the award I made for general
damages
was not comparable to awards made in similar cases. However,
he did not suggest that I was wrong when I found that the range
established
in the cases for injuries of the kind Mr. Radebe
sustained was between R150 000 and R746 000. He argued
instead that
my assessment of Mr. Radebe’s damages as being on
the upper end of that scale was flawed, because I failed to take into
account
that Mr. Radebe can expect his injury to heal completely with
appropriate rehabilitative treatment.
4
Had that been the evidence, I would agree. But that was not
the evidence. The evidence was that, while Mr. Radebe’s bones
had fused, the injury he sustained will result in a loss of strength
in his right arm, and is likely to result in chronic, if
intermittent,
pain for at least the foreseeable future.
5
PRASA challenged none of this evidence. Mr. Radebe’s
inability to do heavy labour in future was an uncontested assumption
of the evidence given by all of the expert witnesses. It was also
acknowledged in the joint minutes of the orthopaedic surgeons,
by
which PRASA is bound. Given that Mr. Radebe labours for a living, and
given the likelihood of chronic pain in future, I assessed
Mr.
Radebe’s damages in the upper part of the range established in
argument - though not at the very top end, because I was
not
convinced that the consequences of Mr. Radebe’s injuries were
comparable to the most serious consequences featured in
the cases at
the top of the scale.
6
Mr. Sadiki was unable to point to any respect in which the
evidence was in tension with or failed to support this assessment. It
follows that, given the broad discretion accorded to trial courts in
the quantification of general damages, there are no prospects
of
success in an appeal against this aspect of my award.
Future
Earning Capacity
7
Mr. Sadiki submitted that I was wrong to accept the basic
figures with which I calculated Mr. Radebe’s pre-accident
earning
capacity. These figures were based on aspects of industrial
psychologists’ and occupational therapists’ evidence that
were not challenged in cross-examination, and on aspects of the joint
minutes which were, of course, not open to challenge. Mr.
Sadiki
nonetheless suggested that Mr. Radebe had failed to prove his
pre-accident capacity because (a) he was not working at the
time of
the accident and (b) he could not produce documentary evidence of his
pre-accident earnings.
8
It is true that Mr. Radebe had been retrenched from his job
shortly before his accident. But that obviously does not mean that he
had no earning capacity before he was injured. It is in the nature of
a labourer’s work that they will have to endure periods
of
unemployment between contracts. That fact makes no difference to my
assessment of what Mr. Radebe was earning, as a fact, in
the months
and years leading up to his injury.
9
It is also in the nature of the type of work that Mr. Radebe
does that it is seldom well-documented. It is common for unskilled
labourers to be paid in cash. Poor working people in Mr. Radebe’s
position generally find it difficult to provide a precise
accounting
of their income. It was necessary, in these circumstances, for me to
rely on the best evidence available. That evidence
was the
unchallenged contents of expert reports submitted on Mr. Radebe’s
behalf.
10
Had Mr. Radebe’s failure to provide documentary evidence
of his income been raised at trial, or had PRASA led any evidence
to
contradict the figures supplied on Mr. Radebe’s behalf, things
might have been different. But I cannot conclude on the
case as it
was presented and argued that there is any prospect that a court of
appeal will find that I was wrong to adopt these
figures.
11
Mr. Sadiki then suggested that the calculation I performed
using the figures supplied in the expert evidence and joint minutes
was
flawed. However, I was unable to ascertain in what respect Mr.
Sadiki found my calculations wanting. It was said that I did not
follow the steps set out in unreported High Court decision of
Sweatman v Road Accident Fund
(a decision of the Cape High
Court, Griesel J presiding, under case no. 17258/2011, decided on 3
December 2013). Save for my decision
not to apply a contingency
deduction to the figure I arrived at, Mr. Sadiki was unable to point
out in what respect my method departed
from that of Griesel J, and I
could otherwise see none. Griesel J’s decision was later
confirmed on appeal in
Road Accident Fund v Sweatman
2015 (6)
SA 186
(SCA). The Supreme Court of Appeal’s decision appears to
me to be entirely consistent with the approach I adopted in this
case.
12
That leaves Mr. Sadiki’s criticism of my decision not to
apply a contingency deduction to the value I assigned to his loss
of
future earning capacity. However, Mr. Sadiki was unable to say on
what basis I could have applied a contingency deduction, given
that I
heard no evidence on which a reasonable contingency deduction could
have been calculated. Contingency values cannot and
should not be
plucked from the air. Having elected to challenge neither the
evidence of Mr. Radebe’s past earning capacity,
nor the
evidence of Mr. Radebe’s pre- and post- morbid future earning
capacity, it was open to PRASA to lead evidence of
what vicissitudes
of life Mr. Radebe could expect apart from the injury for which it
was partly responsible. On that basis a contingency
deduction could
have been made. But PRASA led no such evidence (indeed, PRASA elected
to lead no evidence at all).
13
In these circumstances, I cannot conclude that there is any
prospect of a court of appeal interfering with my award for loss of
future earning capacity.
Future
Medical and Related Expenses
14
The third and final part of my award concerned Mr. Radebe’s
future medical expenses. There was no dispute that an award of
R20 000 should have been made to pay for rehabilitative surgery
on Mr. Radebe’s right arm. There was likewise no dispute
that
Mr. Radebe would require the assistive devices listed paragraph 4.3
in the occupational therapists’ joint minutes. That
these
devices would have to be replaced at various intervals specified in
Mr. Radebe’s occupational therapist’s report
was likewise
unchallenged. It was also agreed (in paragraphs 4.4.3 and 4.4.4 of
the joint minutes) that Mr. Radebe would need the
assistance of a
handyman at the cost of R3000 per annum, and a gardener, albeit one
whose likely annual cost does not appear from
the joint minutes.
15
The only aspect of Mr. Radebe’s claim that was disputed
at trial was his need for domestic assistance. I dealt with that
dispute
in my trial judgment, and Mr. Sadiki did not suggest that I
was wrong to dispose of it in the way that I did.
16
Ultimately, based on the joint minutes and on the contents of
Mr. Radebe’s expert reports, Mr. Chabane, who appeared for Mr.
Radebe, calculated Mr. Radebe’s future medical and related
expenses at
R228 242. PRASA objects that this
figure was advanced without supporting evidence.
17
It emerged during argument on the
application for leave to appeal that Mr. Chabane had borrowed, in
performing his calculations,
from actuarial reports that were not in
evidence before me. But I do not think that matters. Mr. Chabane’s
calculations were
based on figures and needs that were in evidence,
and which were, as I have pointed out, largely undisputed. Neither
Mr. Chabane’s
calculations nor the figure he arrived at were
subjected to any criticism at trial. In these circumstances, there
can be no appreciable
prospect of a successful appeal.
18
As I pointed out in my trial judgment, once I was satisfied
that loss had been suffered, I was not at liberty to decline to make
an award to compensate Mr. Radebe for it, even if my assessment was
“very little more than an estimate” (see
Hersman v
Shapiro
1926 TPD 367
, 379). There of course has to be evidence to
support the estimate, and the question will always be one of
sufficiency. Where the
evidence permits a reasonable estimate, then
an award should and will be made. Where it does not, the defendant
will be absolved
from the instance.
19
In this case, I was satisfied that the evidence, though not
perfect, was sufficient for a reasonable estimate to be made of Mr.
Radebe’s damages in all the components on which I have made an
award. Having accepted liability for half of Mr. Radebe’s
proven losses, then having declined to challenge much of the evidence
led in quantification of that loss, and then having decided
to lead
no evidence of its own, there are limits to the extent to which PRASA
can reasonably expect to challenge the assessments
I have made on
appeal.
20
In any attempt to do so, PRASA must show more than the mere
possibility that other Judges might have made different awards based
on the same evidence. That is an acknowledged feature of cases like
this one. What PRASA must show instead is some demonstrable
error in
the chain of reasoning I deployed to assess Mr. Radebe’s award
as I did. PRASA has identified no such error, and
its application
must fail as a result.
21
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared and authored by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their
legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be
15 December 2022.
HEARD
ON:
8 December 2022
DECIDED
ON:
15 December 2022
For
the Plaintiff:
VJ Chabane
Instructed
by
Tsiestsi-Dlamini & Mahlathi
For
the Defendant:
KG Sadiki
Instructed
by
Jerry Nkeli and Associates
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