Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 662South Africa
D.W.T obo L.T v Road Accident Fund (6520/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 662 (9 June 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: A claim for loss of earning capacity. The onus to prove that a claimant has lost capacity to earn lies with the claimant. A Court must be satisfied that a claimant has indeed lost capacity to earn. A Court is not bound by opinions of experts who baselessly opine that less serious injuries have affected the earning capacity of a claimant. The plaintiff has failed to discharge the onus that the injured minor child lost her earning capacity and income. Held: (1) The claim for loss of earning capacity and income is dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## D.W.T obo L.T v Road Accident Fund (6520/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 662 (9 June 2025)
D.W.T obo L.T v Road Accident Fund (6520/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 662 (9 June 2025)
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sino date 9 June 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number: 6520/22
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE: 9 JUNE 2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
D[...] W[...] T[...]
Obo
L[...]
T[...]
Applicant
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date
and for hand-down is deemed to
be 09 June 2025.
Summary: A claim for
loss of earning capacity. The onus to prove that a claimant has lost
capacity to earn lies with the claimant.
A Court must be satisfied
that a claimant has indeed lost capacity to earn. A Court is not
bound by opinions of experts who baselessly
opine that less serious
injuries have affected the earning capacity of a claimant. The
plaintiff has failed to discharge the onus
that the injured minor
child lost her earning capacity and income. Held: (1) The claim for
loss of earning capacity and income
is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
In
an action where the loss of earning capacity and earnings is claimed,
the role of a Court is not only relegated to the application
of
contingencies to a claim. A Court must be satisfied on a balance of
probabilities that the claimant has lost earning capacity
as in a
patrimonial loss. In
Road
Accident Fund v Kerridge
(
Kerridge
)
[1]
,
the SCA had the following to say:
“
Indeed,
a
physical disability which impacts on
the capacity to earn an
income
does not, on its own, reduce the patrimony of an injured. There must
be proof that the reduction in the income earning capacity
will
result in actual loss of income.
[2]
The
above legal position was already stated in
Rudman
v Road Accident Fund
(
Rudman
)
[2]
.
It remains the onus of the claimant to prove on a balance of
probabilities that the physical disability firstly impacts on his
or
her capacity to earn and secondly that an actual loss shall follow
due to the impact on earning capacity. Cases involving minor
children
who have no proven record of earning capacity are difficult to deal
with. This becomes a true situation of holding a crystal
ball.
Speculation is the order of the day all round. In this specific
instance, this Court must speculate what twenty years down
the line
would hold for a minor child who sustained minor bruises on her face.
[3]
Involved herein is a delictual action for
damages brought by Ms D[...] W[...] T[...] (“Plaintiff”)
on behalf of her
child Ms L[...] T[...] (“Injured minor
child”). Whilst aged 2 years and 3 months, the injured minor
child was involved
in a motor vehicle accident. It was, on 22 March
2017 that the injured minor child, who was there and then a
pedestrian, hit by
a motor vehicle with registration letters and
numbers B[…].
Injuries sustained by
the injured minor child
[4]
Pertinent to the present action, and
relevant to the issue to be determined by this Court, the hospital
records furnished by Thusong
District Hospital recorded the
following: “minor bruises on the face (cheek)” as
injuries sustained by the injured
minor child in the motor vehicle
collision in question. The key question to be determined by this
Court is whether the injured
minor child had sustained a head injury
in the collision or not. According to Dr Thobejane, a Neurosurgeon &
Pain Interventionist,
who assessed the injured minor child on 2 June
2022, five years after the accident, he opined that the injured minor
child suffered
Traumatic head injury. Medically, a traumatic head
injury also known as a traumatic brain injury is a damage to the
brain caused
by an external force, such as a blow to the head. Regard
being had to the recorded injuries, it is difficult for this Court to
accept the opinion of Dr Thobejane. Minor bruises to the face are
generally not considered to be a traumatic head injuries. Dr
Thobejane also opined that based on those minor bruises, the injured
minor child suffered a severe concussion with neurocognitive
deficits.
[5]
A severe concussion involves a loss of
consciousness lasting longer than five minutes. Nowhere in the
availed hospital records was
it recorded that the injured minor child
had lost consciousness. The availed clinical records are unhelpful
with regard to the
GCS of the minor child on admission. According to
the accident report, the injuries to the injured minor child were
recorded as
being slight. Generally bruises on the face do not lead
to neurocognitive deficits.
[6]
It is important to note that the Clinical
Psychologist (CP) held a clinical interview with the plaintiff on 02
June 2022. It was
the plaintiff who informed the CP that the injured
minor child lost consciousness. However, this fact is not supported
by any objective
evidence. There is no evidence that the plaintiff
was present at the time of the collision. The CP stated in her report
that the
medical records noted head injury, right earlobe injury.
Those reported injuries are not apparent from the medical records
availed
to this Court. The CP placed reliance on the report of Dr
Thobejane who stated that the injured minor child sustained a severe
concussion with neurocognitive deficits. This Court has already
expressed doubt on the veracity of this statement. In any injuries,
the hospital records of the first treating hospital are the most
reliable source with regard to the injuries sustained.
[7]
This Court finds it difficult to accept the
opinions of the CP and Dr Thobejane with regard to the alleged head
injury. This Court
pointed out to counsel for the plaintiff that a
minor bruise on the face is incapable of resulting in the
neurocognitive deficits
alleged in the reports. Counsel for the
plaintiff conceded to the proposition that and injury to any body
part attached to a head
does not equate head injury. This is a
concession well made. It accords with a medical definition of a head
injury.
The alleged
neurocognitive deficits
[8]
Dr Thobejane was informed by the plaintiff
that the injured minor child has persistent headaches, memory issues,
anger spells and
poor school performance issues. A barrage of
incidents were reported to the CP by the plaintiff, which incidents
are on paper associated
with or are known symptoms of
neurocognitive deficit flowing from a head injury. At the time when
those incidents were reported,
the injured minor child was 5 years
old. As at the hearing of this action, the injured minor child was 8
years of age. There was
no evidence presented that the injured minor
child as at the trial date still show those reported symptoms. In
2022, the CP had
recommended that the injured minor child should
attend psychotherapy to assist her in coping with her post-morbid
functioning and
her emotional symptoms. Also, the CP stated that
Cognitive Rehabilitation Therapy (CRT) targeted interventions can
help improve
memory, attention, and executive functioning, aiding her
in managing academic tasks more effectively. Those recommendations
simply
suggests that, even if this Court were to accept that indeed
the injured minor child presented with those neurocognitive deficits,
those deficits were not of a permanent nature and could be managed.
[9]
No evidence was led as to whether those
interventions were made and had failed to improve the alleged
neurocognitive deficits. This
Court finds it difficult to understand
the poor school performance alleged by Dr Thobejane and the CP. Both
of them assessed the
injured minor child when she was in grade three.
On the available evidence, in 2020 the injured minor child progressed
from grade
R to grade 1. From 2021 – 2023, she was enrolled for
grades 1, 2 and 3 respectively and had passed all those grades.
Therefore,
on the available objective evidence, it cannot be accepted
that the injured minor child is performing poorly at school. There is
simply no evidence for that.
The Educational
Psychologist (EP) assessed the injured minor child on 10 August 2023.
At that time the injured minor child was in
grade 3. At that time she
had passed all her previous grades. The available school reports
indicates that the injured minor child
passed all the terms in grade
4. First terms she obtained 52% in home language studies; 57% in
English, 52% in Mathematics; 57%
in Natural Science and Technology;
58% in Social Sciences; and 52% in Life Skills. In term two she
achieved higher percentages
as well as in third and fourth term
respectively. For reasons that are not altogether clear the EP in her
report does not reveal
the percentages achieved by the injured minor
child from grades R up to and including grade 3. Regard being had to
the results
of grade 4, it is difficult to accept a notion that she
is performing poorly. The results of term one grade 5 showed some
poor
marks in certain subjects. At the time of this judgment, this
Court was not placed in possession of term two results in grade 5.
The plaintiff has not presented any other reports that show an
academic decline.
[10]
In light of the current objective
scholastic performance of the injured minor child, this Court fails
to comprehend the following
statement by the EP:
“
L[...]
displayed scholastic deficits are impacting on her classroom
performance. Her deficits will be more evident as she continues
to
higher grades where higher order of learning skills are placed on the
child’s independence.
It is
improbable that she will be able to cope with the demands of
mainstream school system
and pass grade
12 with a Bachelor pass as it was the case with her pre-morbidly.”
[11]
It is unclear to this Court as to what will
make the injured minor child not to cope with the demands of
mainstream school system.
The EP says nothing about the effect of the
recommended interventions made by the CP. It remains unclear to this
Court as to whether
such interventions will make the injured minor
child to cope with the demands of mainstream school system or not.
The opinion expressed
by the EP in her report is not useful to this
Court and is illogical and difficult to comprehend. She stated the
following:
“
I.Q.
deteriorated
. L[...] is post-morbidly
functioning in the average range intellectually. Medical records
stated that the claimant sustained bruises
on the face and reportedly
has right ear discharging purulent material and also painful. It is
therefore,
probable that she suffered a
degree of IQ deterioration
. According
to Dr E.K Thobejane,
she sustained
severe concussion
.
[12]
From the above statement, it is unclear to
this Court as to whether the injured minor child’s I.Q
deteriorated from what to
what and why. Further, it is unclear
whether the deterioration of the IQ is only probable because Dr
Thobejane mentioned that severe
concussion has been sustained. The CP
recommended certain interventions. The EP suggests that the injured
minor child’s cognitive
and scholastic deficits as revealed by
the tests are deemed permanent and there are no remedial
interventions that will effect
significant change academically and
allow her to benefit as she would have pre-morbidly. This is not in
sync with what the CP recommended.
For that reason this Court is
unable to accept the opinion of the EP. It is one that is baseless
and illogical.
[13]
It is difficult for this Court to
understand this postulation. Pre-morbidly, the injured minor child
was still a toddler. That being
so, how would the EP have been able
to assess her academic ability then? In her report she stated the
following:
“
Predicting
the actual level to which L[...] would have progressed if she had not
been injured is
not easy as she was 2
years and 8 months at the time
the
accident occurred, and had not started schooling.
However,
the effect of her injury has probably stunted her cognitive potential
and subsequently her vocational prospects.
[14]
This Court agrees with the proposition that
the prediction is not easy one to make. However, the highly
speculative conclusion that
the effect of the injury probably stunted
her cognitive potential is very difficult to comprehend. Which injury
is she referring
to? The minor bruises on the face? This Court is
unable to accept this proposition. The conclusion that since the
tests reveal
that the injured minor child’s I.Q score is
average range of intelligence, and such is a good indication that she
had sound
intellectual ability pre-morbidly is incapable of
justification. It is unsound and illogical for this Court. It is this
illogical
and unsound postulation that drove her to the following
unacceptable postulation:
“
Educationally
:
L[...]’s pre-morbid estimate of above average intellectual
ability is consistent with functioning at a level where she could
have progressed through the mainstream school system, matriculated
with a Bachelor pass and proceeded to obtain a university degree.
[15]
This postulation is predicated on
nothingness. It is way too speculative. In the family of the injured
minor child, there is no
objective evidence that anyone in it had
achieved that feat. None of her siblings had come close to that
achievement. This Court
is unable to accept this postulation. Regard
being had to the minor injuries suffered by the injured minor child,
this Court is
unable to accept that the earning capacity of the
injured minor child was affected. If, as postulated by the EP, the
injured minor
child will not cope with the demands of mainstream
school system and pass grade 12 with a Bachelor, that would not have
been on
account of the minor bruises she sustained on her face. In
her family, her mother achieved grade 12 and her father achieved
grade
8. There is no collateral evidence to support that her mother
or her one sibling who passed grade 12 did so with good marks. If
she
pass with low marks, it would not be as a result of this minor
injuries. There will be no causal connection between the injuries
and
the alleged damages.
Conclusions
[16]
In
summary, this Court is far from being convinced that the injuries
sustained by the injured minor child would lead to neurocognitive
deficits alleged. On the available medical evidence, the injured
minor child did not sustain severe concussive head injury with
neurocognitive deficits during the motor vehicle accident. The
reported neurocognitive symptoms, five years later, may not be linked
to bruises on the face with no scarring. On the probabilities, the
bruises on the face healed with no complications. Accordingly,
the
plaintiff has failed to discharge her onus of proof. She must fail.
The injuries did not affect the minor child’s earning
capacity
and she will not suffer a patrimonial loss as a result of those
injuries. The evidence of the experts are rejected in
so far as they
suggest that bruises on the face has caused the reported
neurocognitive deficits. This Court fully agrees with the
Court in
P.E.M
obo P.C.M v Road Accident Fund
(
PEM
)
[3]
when it said:
“
[24]
… What may not be ignored is that higher grades typically
introduce more complex and abstract material which
may be challenging
to grasp by any learner who is still developing their ability to
think.”
[17]
The conclusions of the Occupational
Therapist (OT) and Industrial Psychologist (IP) are not useful to
this Court because they are
premised on the illogical and rejected
conclusions reached by the CP and Dr Thobejane. The calculations by
the Actuary must equally
fall away because they are premised on the
wrong conclusion that the injured minor child has lost her capacity
to earn. She, in
my considered view, did not.
[18]
On account of all the above reasons,
I make the following order:
Order
1.
The claim for loss of earning
capacity and income is dismissed.
GN
MOSHOANA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For the
Plaintiff:
Mr
Mchasa
Instructed by:
K
S Dinaka Attorneys, Pretoria.
For the
Defendant:
No appearance
Date of Hearing
06
June 2025
Date of judgment:
09
June 2025
[1]
2019
(2) SA 233
(SCA) para 25.
[2]
2003
(2) SA 234
(SCA).
[3]
(4545/2019)
[2025] ZAMPMBHC 49 (6 June 2025)
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