Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 136South Africa
Ndhlela v Road Accident Fund (78371/2017) [2024] ZAGPPHC 136 (21 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ndhlela v Road Accident Fund (78371/2017) [2024] ZAGPPHC 136 (21 February 2024)
Ndhlela v Road Accident Fund (78371/2017) [2024] ZAGPPHC 136 (21 February 2024)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO:78371/2017
(1)���� REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)���� OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)���� REVISED: NO
Date:�� 21 February 2024
E van der Schyff
In the
matter between:
JS
NDHLELA�������������������������������������������������������� PLAINTIFF
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND����������������������������������� DEFENDANT
�
JUDGMENT
Van der Schyff J
[1]
The plaintiff, Mr. Ndhlela, an adult male
nurse, was injured in a motor vehicle accident. The merits and general damages were
previously
settled. This court is thus tasked with quantifying the plaintiff�s
claim for loss of income. There was no appearance on behalf
of the defendant.
[2]
The evidence before the court indicates that
Mr. Ndhlela suffered serious injuries. He sustained a severe diffuse axonal
brain injury
that was complicated by a focal brain injury. Initially, he was
unable to resume work for almost two years. He needed full-time
assistance. He
is currently functioning independently. He has an increased risk of developing
epilepsy and suffers from behavioral
disturbances. His injuries impacted his
communication skills and contributed to poor thought processes, and he suffers
memory loss.
[3]
Mr. Ndhlela is a qualified Occupational Health
Nurse. He holds a B Tech degree in Occupational Health Nursing, a Diploma in
Nursing
and Midwifery, and various certificates in the medical field.
[4]
He commenced his nursing career in 2011 at Lydenburg
Hospital as a registered nurse. In June 2012, he secured a better opportunity
at Life Occupational Health at Witbank. He was permanently employed as an
occupational health nurse. His manager, at the time,
indicated that he was an
exceptional employee who would have been able to secure a promotion to the
level of Occupational Health
Unit Manager. The Industrial Psychologist opined
that, was it not for the accident, Mr. Ndhlela would have qualified for a promotion
by January 2017.
[5]
The reality of Mr. Ndhlela�s employment history
is that after the accident occurred, he was demoted due to his inability to
perform
on his pre-accident level.� He opted to resign in January 2016. In
March 2016, he started working at ESKOM as an occupational nurse
on a contract
basis for three months with an income similar to his previous employment. He
was unemployed for one month thereafter
and then secured permanent employment
at Life Occupational Health in Mpumalanga. Since May 2019, he has been employed
at Life Occupational
Health in Pretoria North.� His reported monthly income is
higher than when he was employed in Mpumalanga. Mr. Ndhlela�s counsel
submitted
that he is currently employed by a new employer but that he does not want the
Industrial Psychologist to contact his
new employer. According to Mr. Ndhlela,
he left his previous employment due to a bad relationship with the manager. This
was not
confirmed by collateral information.
[6]
Based on the expert evidence, I accept that Mr.
Ndhlela does not qualify to be promoted in future and that he will not be able
to
fulfill managerial functions due to the
sequelae
of the injuries
suffered. The occupational therapist opined that he meets the physical demands
of his current employment. If, however,
he has epilepsy, he will become
unemployable.
[7]
The reality is that, even though the
neurocognitive test results indicate �significant fine motor, attention,
expressive language
and comprehension difficulties, perceptual and
visuo-spatial difficulties and severely impaired memory and verbal learning,�
Mr.
Ndhlela functioned as an occupational health nurse and after his initial
demotion, succeeded in again obtaining employment in his
field. His salary
improved with each move to a new employer. The Industrial Psychologists�s
opinion that Mr. Ndhlela resigned �from
numerous jobs due to difficulty
maintaining satisfactory levels of performance and relational issues with his
superiors� is not
substantiated by any collateral sources. The Industrial
Psychologist referred to collateral information obtained from Ms. Lezaar
and
Ms. Otto. Neither referred to any relational problems with supervisors. Ms.
Otto described the plaintiff as a sharp employee
who mastered a new system and
alluded that Mr. Ndhlela gets frustrated by his team members.
[8]
In the Industrial Psychologist�s updated addendum
report, it is stated that Mr. Ndhlela indicated that he struggles to build
productive
relationships with his managers. Mr. Ndhlela also informed the
Industrial Psychologist that he moved between different employers
because of
his inability to connect positively with management � no specific employers
were identified, and no collateral or documentary
information was obtained
except Mr. Ndhlela�s say-so. From the payslips uploaded, it can be deduced that
Mr. Ndhlela salary again
improved with his lasts move.
[9]
Even before the accident, Mr. Ndhlela moved to
improve his salary. After being demoted initially, he once again improved his
salary
with each move. I accept that he struggles and probably has reached his
career ceiling, but he can do the work he is qualified to
do. Even though he
might be regarded as a vulnerable employee, he secured permanent employment
with different employees after the
accident and cannot be said to be in
sympathetic employment.
[10]
In quantifying loss of future income,
particularly where there is a possibility, even slight, that a plaintiff may
become unemployable
in the future because he might develop epilepsy, a court
has to speculate. Pondering how a plaintiff�s injuries�
sequelae
would,
in the future, impact his employability also entails a speculative exercise. The
evidence of the expert witnesses leads
a court, but also the reality of the
plaintiff�s position when the damages are quantified.
[11]
I accept the foundation basis on which the
plaintiff�s counsel calculated the loss. I accept that Mr. Ndhlela will, in all
probability,
not reach his pre-accident earning potential. I disagree, however,
with the proposed contingency deduction applied to the post-morbid
having-regard-to-the-accident
scenario.
[12]
Does the evidence indicate that the accident
impacted Mr. Ndhlela�s future income by impacting his earning capacity
significantly?
� Without a doubt. Does the evidence indicate that, due to the
accident, the possibility of Mr. Ndhlela becoming epileptic and that
it may
render him unemployable is higher than normal? � Yes. However, the evidence
also indicates that Mr. Ndhlela is currently
physically and cognitively able to
fulfill the functions of an occupational nurse despite the injuries sustained
and their
sequelae
.
[13]
Mr. Ndhlela only has one opportunity to claim
his loss, and despite uncertainties, the court must quantify his claim. Courts
apply
contingency deductions to allow for the discounting of these and other uncertainties
of life. In calculating his client�s loss,
counsel submitted that a 70%
contingency deduction be allowed for the postulated future �having-regard-to-the-accident�
scenario.
This submission is based on the Industrial Psychologist�s opinion
that higher-than-normal contingencies must apply in quantifying
future
post-accident earnings.
[14]
As stated, the foundational calculation for
post-accident future earnings, having regard to the accident, is based on the
assumption
that Mr. Ndhlela will be employed as an occupational health nurse
and only inflationary increases are provided for. Are the uncertainties
that
come into play so extensive that the court must accept that Mr. Ndhlela will,
in all probability, only earn 30% of his proposed
post-accident future income?
Definitely not. Having regard to the normal uncertainties faced by employees,
as well as the context-specific
uncertainties of this matter, e.g., the greater
than normal likelihood of epilepsy, I am of the view that it is just and fair
to
both parties to allow a 50% contingency deduction on the future
having-regard-to the accident scenario.
[15]
I already requested the plaintiff�s legal
representatives to provide me with an appropriate calculation. As far as this
calculation
is concerned, the order granted is based on the updated actuarial
calculation provided, and the plaintiff�s claim for loss of income
is
quantified at R5 491 856.00 before apportionment.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The draft order marked �X� dated and signed by me is made
an order of court.
E van
der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:�
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the electronic
file of this matter on CaseLines. It
will be emailed to the parties/their legal
representatives as a courtesy gesture.
For the plaintiff:����������������������������������������������� Adv.
L Eloff
Instructed by:��������������������������������������������������� PAS
Attorneys
Date of the hearing:��������������������������������������� 15
February 2024
Date of judgment:������������������������������������������� 21
February 2024
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