Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 685South Africa
Mmamothama v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (2024/023448) [2025] ZAGPPHC 685 (29 May 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mmamothama v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (2024/023448) [2025] ZAGPPHC 685 (29 May 2025)
Mmamothama v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (2024/023448) [2025] ZAGPPHC 685 (29 May 2025)
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sino date 29 May 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 2024-023448
Date
of hearing: 30 April 2025
Date
delivered: 29 May 2025
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
.
DATE:
29/5/25
SIGNATURE:
In
the application between:
SENKWE
SIMON MMAMOTHAMA
Applicant
and
THE
HEALTH PROFESSIONS COUNCIL
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
First
Respondent
THE
CHAIRPERSON OF THE
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Second
Respondent
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Third
Respondent
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J:
[1]
This is an application to review and set aside the third respondent's
("the Tribunal")
dismissal of an appeal against the
decision of the fourth respondent to reject the applicant's claim for
non-pecuniary damages
on the basis that his injuries are not serious.
[2]
The applicant was involved in a motor vehicle accident on 12 August
2014, as a result
of which he was injured, allegedly suffering a
head, shoulder and back injury. The applicant issued summons against
the fourth
respondent ("the fund") during 2016. In terms of
s 17 (1) of the Road Accident Fund Act, 56 of 1996 ("the Act"),
the Fund is liable to -
"...compensate any
person (the third party) for any loss or damage which the third party
has suffered as a result of any bodily
injury... caused by or arising
from the driving of a motor vehicle by any person at any place within
the Republic, if the injury
... is due to the negligence or other
wrongful act of the driver or of the owner of the of the motor
vehicle or of his or her employee
in the performance of the
employee's duties as employee: Provided that the obligation of the
Fund to compensate a third party for
non-pecuniary loss shall be
limited to compensation
for a serious injury
as contemplated
in subsection (1A) and shall be paid by way of a lump sum." (my
emphasis)
[3]
The applicant duly issued summons for loss of income and for general
(non-pecuniary)
damages. S 17 (1A) provides that a serious injury
shall be assessed in the following manner -
"(a) ... [by a]
prescribed method adopted after consultation with medical services
and shall be reasonable in ensuring that
injuries are assessed in
relation to the circumstances of the third party.
(b) The assessment
shall be carried out by a medical practitioner registered as such
under the Health Professions Act, 1974
(Act 56 of 1974)."
[4]
S 26 of the Act provides that the Minister may make Regulations to
prescribe any matter
which in terms of the Act may be prescribed,
and, consequently, on 21 July 2008 the Minister caused the Road
Accident Fund Regulations
to be published.
[1]
Regulation 3 prescribes the manner in which an allegedly serious
injury is to be assessed -
[4.1]
The Minister may publish a list of injuries that are not to be
regarded as serious;
[4.2]
If the injury results in 30% impairment of the Whole Person as
provided in the AMA guides, the injury
shall be assessed as serious;
[4.3]
An injury that does not result in a 30% or more impairment may only
be assessed as serious if that
injury:
[4.3.1] resulted in a
serious long-term impairment or loss of body function;
[4.3.2] constitutes
permanent serious disfigurement;
[4.3.3] resulted in
severe long-term mental or severe long-term behavioural disturbances
or disorder; or
[4.3.4] resulted in the
loss of a foetus.
[5]
In conducting the assessment the medical practitioner must apply the
American Medical
Association guides ("AMA" guides). This
method of assessment is called the 'narrative test'. Therefore, if a
third party
does not qualify by reason of a WPI of 30% or more, it
may qualify on the narrative test.
[6]
The applicant was assessed by Dr. PR Engelbrecht, an orthopaedic
surgeon, who completed
the prescribed RAF-4 form. Dr Engelbrecht
assessed the applicant's Whole Person Impairment at 60%. Dr
Engelbrecht reported that
the applicant suffered a soft tissue injury
to the right hip, an injury to his shoulder, thoracic-lumbar spine,
and compression
fractures. In addition, his vision was impaired after
the accident, and he had an injury to his neck at C6 level.
[7]
As a result of the injuries, the applicant suffers constant pain. He
cannot lift his
right arm, nor can he pick up heavy objects, and he
has a loss of sensation in that arm. His right hip pains constantly
and is
stiff. His memory has also been affected, and has a sensory
deficit in his left arm.
[8]
A psychiatrist, Dr D Shevel, conducted an assessment, and similarly,
he completed
an RAF-4 form. He opined that the applicant had
sustained ongoing psychiatric sequelae as a result of the accident.
The applicant
is markedly depressed. Dr. Shevel diagnosed the
applicant with severe pervasive depression secondary to a general
medical condition.
He considered that the applicant had sustained a
20% WPI as a result of the accident.
[9]
The applicant lodged the RAF-4 forms with the Fund on 26 March 2020
and 16 November
2020 respectively. Having considered the reports, the
Fund rejected the RAF-4 on 5 August 2022 on the basis that no
clinical records
from the first treating hospital had been submitted.
[10]
Regulation 3 (4) provides a dispute resolution mechanism when the
Fund rejects an injury as non-serious
-
"(4) If a
third party wishes to dispute the rejection of the serious injury
assessment report, or in the event that either
of the third party or
the Fund or the agent disputing the assessment performed by a medical
practitioner in terms of these regulations,
the disputant shall:
(a)
within 90 days of being informed of the rejection of the assessment
notify the Registrar
that the rejection or the assessment is disputed
by lodging a dispute resolution form with the Registrar;
(b)
in such notification set out the grounds upon which the rejection or
the assessment is disputed
and include such submissions, medical
reports and opinions as the disputant wishes to rely upon; and
(c)
if the disputant is the Fund or agent, provide all available contact
details pertaining
to the third party.
[11]
The applicant duly lodged a dispute with the Registrar that
culminated in the eventual appointment
of four medical practitioners
as the Appeal Tribunal, of which the second respondent was the
chairperson. The Tribunal consisted
of an orthopaedic surgeon, a
neurosurgeon, a psychiatrist and a clinical psychologist. The third
respondent was also presented
with the report of Dr. A Smuts, a
neurologist, and of Dr. M Mazabow, a neuropsychologist. Both of these
reports supported the conclusion
to which Ors. Engelbrecht and Shevel
had come.
[12]
An appeal tribunal has the following powers
[2]
:
[12.1] To direct
the third party to submit himself to a further assessment;
[12.2] To direct
that the third party shall present himself or herself to the Appeal
Tribunal;
[12.3] To direct
that further medical reports shall be obtained by either party;
[12.4] To direct
that the third party's pre-and post-accident medical, health and
treatment reports be obtained;
[12.5] To direct
that further submissions must be made by either party;
[12.6] To refuse to
decide a dispute until a party has complied with any direction;
[12.7] To determine
whether, in the majority view, an injury is serious;
[12.8] to confirm
the medical practitioner's assessment or to substitute it with its
own assessment;
[12.9] to confirm
the rejection of the serious injury assessment or to accept the
report.
[13]
On 7 July 2023 the first respondent advised the applicant's attorney
that the Appeal Tribunal
had considered the matter, and had
determined that the
injury "may be classified as
non-serious
on the narrative test."
The first respondent was requested
to provide reasons for its decision, and on 6 September 2023 the
first respondent replied that
it stood by the decision. It said -
"In light of the
above, the Tribunal is satisfied that the patient's injuries
do
not qualify
as serious in respect of 5.1, 5.2, 5.3 and 5.4 of the
narrative test."
[14]
Noticeably absent from the two letters mentioned above is any
reference to the WPI assessment,
and that Dr Engelbrecht had assessed
the applicant on a substantially higher WPI than the statutory
minimum of 30% which is required
to qualify the injuries as serious.
[15]
The applicant then launched this application, seeking to review and
set aside the decision of
the second and third respondents under the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000 ("PAJA").
There was no
dispute that the decision is reviewable under PAJA. The
first respondent and its appeal tribunal are organs of state, and the
decision
taken by the tribunal is administrative action.
[16]
The material grounds for review are the following (I do not mention
all):
[16.1] That the tribunal
was not authorized to do so by the empowering provision;
[16.2] The action was
materially influenced by an error of law and/or fact;
[16.3] The action was
taken because irrelevant considerations were taken into account or
relevant considerations were not considered;
[16.4] The tribunal
exceeded their powers by usurping the function of a court to rule on
causation.
[17]
In the founding affidavit the applicant pointed out that the tribunal
had not mentioned the WPI
assessment, and had only based its decision
on the narrative test. The applicant also speculated that if the
tribunal had come
to its decision because it considered that the
injuries did not result from the accident, then it exceeded its
powers as the causation
question may only be determined by a Court.
[18]
In its answering affidavit the respondents were at pains to explain
the workings of the tribunal.
Having done so, the respondents
explained the basis of the decision. They say that immediately after
the accident the applicant
did not seek immediate medical treatment,
only doing so the following day. The suggestion seems to be that the
injuries suffered
in the accident were not serious. They discounted
the head injury on the basis that the hospital notes did not record a
history
of head injury, nor of loss of consciousness. The hip and
shoulder injury were ascribed to causes other than the accident. As
for
the spinal injuries, the tribunal was of the view that had they
been the result of the accident, they would most likely not have
been
overlooked, and would have been recorded by the hospital. In short,
the tribunal expressed the view that, although the applicant
suffered
from these injuries, they were not the result of the accident.
[19]
Significantly, the tribunal did not dispute the WPI assessments of
Ors. Engelbrecht and Shevel.
However, the deponent to the answering
affidavit alleges that –
'The members of the
tribunal are, unanimously, of the opinion that the experts arrived at
the WPI ratings of 22% and 60% by including
ratings for impairments
that are not attributable to injuries the patient had sustained in
the accident on 12 August 2014."
[20]
The respondents strongly argue that it is within the tribunal's
powers for it to consider the
nexus between the injury and the
accident, and to opine on whether the injury is related to the
accident or not.
[21]
It is uncertain why the respondents take this approach as the issue
has been dealt with categorically
by the Supreme Court of Appeal. In
Road
Accident Appeal Tribunal v Gouws and Another
[3]
the matter concerned a claim by a pedestrian who was struck down by a
motor vehicle. He was assessed by a medical practitioner
who assessed
his injuries as serious on the narrative test. The Fund rejected the
injury assessment on the incorrect basis that
the injuries had been
found not to be serious.
[22]
An appeal to the tribunal was unsuccessful as the tribunal took the
view that the reported injuries
were not causally connected to the
accident. The High Court (per Tuchten J) held that the tribunal was
not empowered to make a
determination on causation. The learned judge
said -
"The courts have for
decades determined causation. Difficult questions arise in this
regard from time to time. In my view the
courts, duly informed by
expert evidence and argument, are better suited to make this
adjudication than the administrative decision
makers in question."
[23]
The Supreme Court of Appeal approved of this view.
[4]
In respect of the tribunal's assertion that it is entitled to
consider causation, the Court said the following:
"This demonstrates
confused thinking on the part of the Tribunal. When the tribunal
'pronounces' on causation, it must be considered
to arrive at a
finding which would then, in terms of reg 3 (13) be final and
binding. As set out above, the Fund appears to have
considered itself
bound by the tribunal's finding in regard to causation."
[24]
If the Tribunal's approach were to be adopted, consider the following
hypothetical scenario:
The Tribunal concludes that a third party's
injuries are not causally linked to the accident. The Fund adopts
that finding and
refuses to accept the injuries as serious, and the
court is then precluded from considering general damages. The third
party forges
ahead, though, on a claim for loss of earnings and
proves that the injuries were indeed caused by the accident. The
absurd result
is that the third party is not entitled to general
damages based on an incorrect finding by the Tribunal, but succeeds
in proving
damages due to loss of earnings. Such an absurdity cannot
be allowed.
[25]
On whether the Tribunal acted within the boundaries of the empowering
provision, the Court said
the following:
"[36] Having
regard to the authorities and principles set out in [25] above, it is
necessary to bear in mind that the
power given to the Tribunal in
·terms of the legislation is narrowly circumscribed. It is not
of broad, discretionary nature,
which would allow for further powers
to be implied. The Tribunal cannot have the final say in relation to
causation. That is not
provided for."
[26]
It is therefore clear that the tribunal was not empowered by the
Regulations to decide on causation,
and it has acted outside of the
empowering provision. In making the decision the Tribunal took
irrelevant considerations (the possibility
of other causes for the
injuries) into consideration. I have other concerns with the
decision. The Tribunal initially rejected
the RAF-4 assessment as it
did not, in its view, satisfy the narrative test. When the Tribunal
was requested for reasons, it said
that the applicant had not
qualified on paragraphs 5.1, 5.2, 5.3 and 5.4 of the narrative test.
[27]
At no stage did the Tribunal make any reference to the WPI test, nor
did it mention causation
as a factor in its decision making. Only in
its answering affidavit did the Tribunal say that it had been of the
view that the
injuries were not related to the accident. The WPI
assessment by Drs. Engelbrecht and Shevel was not challenged in
itself.
[28]
I accept that simply because a decision maker does not refer to a
specific consideration in its
finding, that does not mean that the
decisionmaker did not consider that aspect. However, in this case, it
seems to me, the Tribunal
was fixed on considering the narrative
test, and likely did not even consider the WPI assessment. In doing
so it ignored relevant
considerations.
[29]
Even if I am wrong on the latter aspect, there is no argument to be
made that the Tribunal acted
within its powers. The decision must be
set aside.
[30]
I make the following order:
[30.1]
The decision of the second and third respondent dated 7 July 2023, to
reject the RAF-4 serious injury assessment
by Drs. Engelbrecht and
Shevel, is reviewed and set aside.
[30.2]
The matter is referred back to the first respondent for the
appointment of a different Appeal Tribunal in terms
of Regulation 3
of the Road Accident Fund Regulations, 2008.
[30.3]
The second and third respondents shall pay the costs of the
application jointly and severally on Scale C.
[30.4]
This judgment shall be disclosed by the first respondent to the
Appeal Tribunal appointed in terms of paragraph
2 above.
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv. H Marais
Instructed
by:
Salome Le Roux Attorneys
Counsel
for the respondents: Adv. M
Moloi
Instructed
by:
Sefanyetso Attorneys
Heard
on:
30 April 2025
Judgment
on: 29
May 2025
[1]
R 770 dated 21 July 2008, published in Government Gazette no. 31249
[2]
R3(11)
[3]
2018 (3) SA413 (SCA)
[4]
Road Accident Appeal Tribunal v Gouws and Another
2018 (3) SA 413
(SCA) at [32]
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