Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 784South Africa
Shayimbvu v Road Accident Fund (Leave to Appeal) (039384/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 784 (30 July 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: A claim for loss of earning capacity. The onus to prove on the preponderance of probabilities that a claimant has lost capacity to earn an income 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 she lost her earning capacity. 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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## Shayimbvu v Road Accident Fund (Leave to Appeal) (039384/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 784 (30 July 2025)
Shayimbvu v Road Accident Fund (Leave to Appeal) (039384/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 784 (30 July 2025)
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sino date 30 July 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
Number: 039384/22
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE: 30 July 2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
KHAYIKAZI
SHAYIMBVU
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 30 June 2025.
Summary: A claim for
loss of earning capacity. The onus to prove on the preponderance of
probabilities that a claimant has lost
capacity to earn an income
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 she lost her earning capacity. Held: (1) The
claim for loss
of earning capacity and income is dismissed.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
There must come a time when this Court must
direct the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) to take
serious disciplinary
measures against its professional members who
seek to mislead a Court with regard to injuries allegedly sustained
by claimants
in road accident claims. This Court observes that
injuries not mentioned in the hospital records of the first hospital
that treated
the claimants are manufactured by the professionals who
see or assess claimants’ years after the date of sustaining
injuries.
[2]
This is done in order to opine about
certain sequelae aimed at suggesting to a Court that a claimant has
lost earning capacity.
This Court takes a dim view of this
manufacturing of injuries not mentioned in hospital records. Hospital
records of the first
treating hospital remains the only reliable
source of the injuries sustained in a motor vehicle accident.
[3]
This Court has already remarked that the
loss of earning capacity claim has become the new general damages
claim in an instance
where the Road Accident Fund (RAF) does not make
an election that serious injuries are involved or reject the
seriousness of the
injuries. It just seem illogical, unless some
exaggeration by professionals is involved, that less serious injuries
would lead
to a loss of earning capacity. A time shall and must
arrive where this Court must adopt an approach that where an election
regarding
serious injuries is not made, claims for loss of earning
capacity should not be separately enrolled for trial. The civil trial
roll is unduly occupied with matters where parties seek audience on a
loss of earning capacity claims in the circumstances where
an
election is not made or the seriousness of the injuries have been
rejected.
[4]
Instead of following the bespoken procedure
to challenge the non-election or rejection, claimants without
hesitation swiftly turn
to pursuing a claim of loss of earning
capacity only. Inasmuch as this Court accepts that a loss of earning
capacity and income
is a disparate special head of damages, it is
inextricably linked to presence of serious injuries. Loss of earning
capacity and
income and the seriousness of injuries are, in my
considered view, joined to the hip. Should that time arrive, where
the approach
of refusing separate enrolment is adopted, such will, in
my fervently held view, significantly reduce the burgeoning civil
trial
roll. I take a view that this contemplated approach of not
enrolling separate heads of damages for determination augurs well
with
the once for all rules.
[5]
The action before this Court is one of
those where the seriousness of the injuries has not been accepted by
the RAF. Additionally,
this is one of those matters where injuries
are manufactured when the hospital records do not reflect the
manufactured injuries.
[6]
That said, this is an action instituted by
Ms Khayikazi Shayimvubu (“Plaintiff”) seeking before this
Court an award
of damages for loss of earning capacity and earnings.
This Court must remark in passing that accident involved herein
occurred
at Bizana in the Eastern Cape Province, yet it is not
instituted in the Divisions in the Eastern Cape but in the Gauteng
Division.
This Court must also remark that it is observing a growing
tendency for actions that arose in far flung Provinces being
instituted
in the Gauteng Division. It is difficult for this Court to
fathom as to what accounts for such a growing tendency. As it is
customary,
the RAF failed to appear at the trial of the present
action. This judgment shall only address the claim for the loss of
capacity
and earnings.
Brief factual
exposition
[7]
Owing to the fact that this judgment
concerns itself with the claim for the loss of capacity and earnings,
it shall be obsolete
to punctiliously narrate all the facts
appertaining this action. The salient facts are that on 22 May 2021,
the plaintiff was involved
in a motor vehicle accident. She was a
passenger in the motor vehicle in question. As a result she sustained
injuries and received
medical attention at Greenville Hospital.
[8]
It is of significance at this point to
record what the hospital records reflect. The following was recorded:
“
20
years old female patient warded in OPD brought by EMR’s
Ambulance. Client not on chronic illness RX C/O with a history
of
painful (L) ear have been taken out 1 piece involved in MVA at about
+- 10h00 this late in the afternoon involved by a car +-
16H00 late.
Nil allergies, would clean with normal…
Pain, ATT 0,5mls given…
Panado
[1]
… given
Diclofenac
[2]
75 mg IMI given.
Ceftriaxone
[3]
given
Involved in MVA around
16H00. She was a passenger. O/E Dirty clothes Blood stained. …
Dirty on the … No evidence of
alcohol use.
C/O Lower back
Lt Ear lobe cut off
(picture of the ear lobe drawn depicting a cut at the top –marked
as “missing part”)
No active bleeding.
[9]
Perusal
of the availed hospital records does not reflect any admission at the
hospital. On the available evidence she was attended
to as an
outpatient. On 17 January 2024, more than a year after the injuries,
Dr NL Mabaso assessed her. During the assessment,
Dr Mabaso had, as
recorded in his medico-legal report, in his possession the hospital
records from Greenville Hospital. For reasons
that are not altogether
clear, he reported the injuries sustained as Lower back injury; Ear
laceration; and Head injury. These
injuries are not consistent with
the records extracted above. On 13 April 2024, the plaintiff was
assessed by Dr SS Selahle. Dr
Selahle records the injuries sustained
as left ear injury/partial amputation
[4]
of the ear helix
[5]
.
[10]
On
1 March 2024, the plaintiff was assessed by Dr Segwapa. According to
his report the hospital records he reviewed reveal injuries
as
Head-Partial amputation of the left ear. On 17 January 2024, she was
assessed by Dr Madlabane who reported injuries as lower
back injury;
soft tissue injuries on the right earlobe; head injury; and partial
traumatic amputation of the left pinne
[6]
(sic)/left ear injury. Dr Phakoane assessed the plaintiff on 28 April
2025. He recorded the injuries as soft tissue injuries on
the right
ear (erroneously as the injury was to the left ear). On 15 May 2025,
the plaintiff was assessed by Dr Fakude. In his
report he recorded
injury to the left ear; bilateral knees and abdominal injuries.
Interestingly, she records that the plaintiff
was admitted for three
days at Greenville Hospital. Mr Temane does not record in his report
as to when he assessed the plaintiff,
however he records avulsion
[7]
injury in the left ear.
[11]
According to the report of Ms Ngubane, the
Clinical Psychologist who assessed the plaintiff on 01 March 2024,
the plaintiff reported
to her that she had shards of glass in her
head and sustained a head and ear injury and she could not receive
treatment at the
hospital because she was pregnant.
[12]
Plaintiff started education at the age of 6
enrolled at grade R. At the age of 18, in 2019 three years before the
accident she failed
grade 11 and at age 19, she dropped out of
school. At age 21 she passed grade 12 in 2022, the year of the
accident. At age 23 she
enrolled at a TVET college and dropped out at
first year. She had financial difficulties and had expressed to Dr
Fakude that she
intends returning to the college to proceed with her
Electrical Engineering Diploma. She never returned to college and she
is currently
unemployed.
Evaluation
[13]
In terms of rule 39(1) of the Uniform
Rules of Court, the plaintiff bears the burden to prove that she has
lost her earning capacity.
A judgment shall be given if she
discharges that burden. When regard is had to the injuries sustained
by the plaintiff, this Court
is unable to reach a conclusion that she
had actually lost any earning capacity. She was injured in May 2022
and at the end of
2022, she passed grade 12 with a Diploma pass. The
following year she commenced her studies of Diploma Electrical
Engineering.
She dropped out due to financial difficulties and had
expressed in 2024 her desire to return.
[14]
This Court almost daily is faced with
experts’ opinions which suggests all manner of deficiencies
regarding the earning capacities
of claimants. All the experts in
this case were instructed by the plaintiff’s attorney to
provide an opinion. Their reports
are replete with inconsistencies
regarding the injuries sustained by the plaintiff. The hospital
records reveal no head injuries.
A head injury also known as a
traumatic brain injury (TBI) is any trauma to the scalp, skull or
brain that causes damage or impairment.
An ear, nose and mouth are
body parts attached to the head. But a tear of a nose, mouth or ear
is not a head injury. Such injuries
are incapable of resulting in
cognitive deficits. According to Dr Segwapa minor head injuries are
not expected to result in cognitive
deficits. Cognitive deficits may
be caused by various factors. There can be no doubt that the
plaintiff lost a helix. This Court
is unable to accept that loss of a
helix is capable of directly impacting an ability to hear. A helix
only helps to collect and
funnel sound waves into the ear canal. Its
removal may only affect sound localisation which is an ability to
tell where the sound
is coming from. Only the inner and middle ear
are responsible for the actual processing of sound waves and
transmitting them to
the brain. Regarding the lower back injury, no
details were provided in the hospital records as to the extend of the
alleged injury.
Therefore, the only conclusion to be reached by this
Court is that the injury is not serious to impact on the earning
capacity
of the plaintiff.
[15]
Most
recently, the erudite Mangena AJ in the matter of
Nkosi
v RAF
(
Nkosi
)
[8]
after surveying relevant binding authorities confirmed that a Court
is not bound by the opinions of experts. Similarly, in this
matter
this Court is not persuaded by the opinion of experts that the
plaintiff has lost capacity to earn. It is disappointing
to note that
professional doctors refer to amputation of an ear. When the
plaintiff attended to Greenville Hospital, he already
had a missing
part of the helix. Therefore, it cannot be said that the motor
vehicle accident amputated the helix of the plaintiff.
Such is absurd
in medical parlance. Amputation is a surgical procedure. It is
apparent to this Court that these professionals used
the term
amputation in an attempt to give undue weight to the seriousness of
the injuries of the plaintiff so as to give impetus
to the pursued
claim of loss of earning capacity.
[16]
To my mind, the plaintiff has failed to
discharge her onus contemplated in rule 39(1). Having failed to
discharge her onus, the
plaintiff must in my view fail in her claim.
The appropriate order in my mind is one of dismissing the claim of
loss of earning
capacity and income.
[17]
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 Mosala (Heads drafted by Mr Singo)
Instructed
by:
Sontsele Attorneys, Pretoria.
For the
Defendant:
No appearance
Date of
Hearing
05 June 2025
Date of judgment:
30
June 2025
[1]
Used
to treat pain.
[2]
Nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drug used to treat mild to moderate pain.
[3]
Used
to treat bacterial infections in many different parts of the body.
[4]
In
medical parlance, an amputation is a surgical procedure involving
the removal of a body part, usually a limb, due to injury,
disease,
or infection.
[5]
Helix
is the outer curved rim of cartilage on the ear, extending from the
top of the ear down to the earlobe.
[6]
A
pinna is the visible fleshy part of the outer ear. It is also known
as an auricle.
[7]
Avulsion
is an injury in which a body structure is torn off.
[8]
(4671/2023)
[2025] ZAMPMBHC 46 (4 June 2025)
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