Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 217South Africa
B.J v Member of the Executive Council For Health, Gauteng (33179/2017) [2024] ZAGPPHC 217 (26 February 2024)
Headnotes
of his evidence to which I now turn: When explaining the nexus between epilepsy and the primary obstetric problems experienced by the plaintiff, the doctor said: ‘The most important link of the epilepsy and the long hospitalisation, is the fact that the epilepsy started very soon after the other illness with no alternative etilological causes for such condition.’[13]
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## B.J v Member of the Executive Council For Health, Gauteng (33179/2017) [2024] ZAGPPHC 217 (26 February 2024)
B.J v Member of the Executive Council For Health, Gauteng (33179/2017) [2024] ZAGPPHC 217 (26 February 2024)
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sino date 26 February 2024
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 33179/2017
DOH: 14 – 17 &
25 August 2023
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
/YES
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
/YES
3.
REVISED.
DATE: 26 February 2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter of:
B[...]
J[...]
Plaintiff
AND
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
Defendant
FOR
HEALTH, GAUTENG
JUDGMENT
THIS JUDGMENT HAS BEEN
HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY WAY OF
E-MAIL AND UPLOADING ON CASELINES.
THE DATE OF HAND DOWN IS DEEMED TO
BE 26 FEBRUARY 2024
Bam
J
1.
This
is a claim for delictual damages arising out of poor management of a
perineal injury. The injury is described in the papers
as a third
degree tear
[1]
.
The plaintiff, Ms B[...] J[...], sustained the tear during a
traumatic birth at Tshwane District Hospital, TDH. She and her baby
were discharged a day following the birth. Four days after discharge,
the plaintiff returned to hospital complaining of faecal
incontinence
and infection in her vaginal area. She was referred to Steve Biko
Academic Hospital (SBAH) where she was informed
that the tear had not
been properly sutured, that her internal and external sphincter
[2]
muscles had suffered damage, and that she had a recto-vaginal
fistula
[3]
.
The remedial work was done by specialist surgeons at SBAH. In a joint
note compiled by the surgeons appointed as expert
witnesses by the
parties, the surgeons could not fault the work done at SBAH. However,
they underscored the delay from the date
of diagnosis of 27 July
2014, to the start of the definitive diagnosis, on 15 September 2014.
2.
The
specialist nurses, the doctors specialising in gynaecology and
obstetrics, and the surgeons, all being expert witnesses appointed
by
the parties, were in agreement that the treatment the plaintiff
received pre-birth, during, and post birth at TDH was substandard
and
thus negligent. The experts further agreed on the sequelae
[4]
arising from the defendant’s negligent conduct, excluding the
issue of epilepsy which is dealt with by the neurosurgeons.
Flowing
from the joint positions of the previously mentioned experts, and
despite initially refuting liability and contesting it
throughout the
trial, the defendant in their heads of argument finally conceded that
they were negligent in their treatment and
care of the plaintiff at
TDH
[5]
.
3.
With negligence having been conceded,
including the sequelae as set out in the expert joint minutes, the
only issue that remains
for determination is whether the epilepsy
complained of by the plaintiff was caused by the defendant’s
negligent conduct.
At the start of the trial, with leave of this
court, the parties agreed that only liability would be determined
while the quantification
of the plaintiff’s damages would stand
over for later determination. Following the agreement, the
court granted the
order separating liability from quantum. The
plaintiff’s case was led through the testimony of six
witnesses. They are, the
plaintiff herself, Dr Sevenster, a
specialist in gynaecology and obstetrics; Professor du Plessis, a
specialist nurse; Dr Goosen,
a general surgeon; Dr JA Smuts, a
neurologist; and Dr Fine, a psychiatrist. The defendant called Dr
Koll and Professor Ballot.
Dr Ballot could not comment on the
question of negligence as she had not been provided with the relevant
records. Given the concession
made by the defendant, the only
evidence that remains for discussion is that related to the question
of epilepsy.
A. The Parties
4.
The plaintiff is an adult female. She
resides in Silverton Pretoria.
5.
The
defendant is a Member of the Executive Council for Health, Gauteng.
They are cited in this judgment in terms of the provisions
of section
2(2) of the State Liability Act
[6]
.
The defendant’s elected address is the Office of the State
Attorneys, 3[...] T[...] S[...] Street, Pretoria.
B. Background
6.
The
following emerged from the plaintiff’s testimony and is common
cause: On the evening of 22 July 2014, at about 18h00,
the plaintiff,
already at term, presented at the maternity section of TDH with
contractions occurring at 10 minutes apart. She
decided to walk up
and down the waiting area as she was experiencing pain. At about
18h30, at her request, the sister confirmed
that she was 4 cm dilated
and that the birth would start after 21h00. There was some issue
about the plaintiff’s request
to the midwife that the latter
rapture her membranes to hasten the birth but the midwife refused.
Apparently the doctor who was
present also asked the midwife to
rapture the membranes but the midwife refused. Nothing turns on the
issue. While standing next
to a bed the plaintiff felt immense
pressure in her abdomen and lower back, followed by a spontaneous
rupture of her waters
[7]
.
She tried to lift her leg to get to the bed but she could not as the
birth had already started, with the baby’s head already
out.
The baby was born at 19h00.
7.
It
is not in dispute that the plaintiff experienced what is known as
rapid or precipitate labour. The doctor who was assisting her
informed her she had suffered a bad perineum tear. She was wheeled to
the delivery room where the midwife sutured the tear, in
contravention of the existing nursing regulations
[8]
and guidelines
[9]
.
The plaintiff and the baby were discharged the following day. On 27
July, four days later, the plaintiff returned to TDH complaining
about faecal incontinence and infection in her vaginal area. After
some preliminary investigations, she was referred to SBAH where
she
was informed that her internal and external sphincter muscles were
damaged and that she had a recto-vaginal fistula
[10]
.
8.
In
the same month, she was informed that she had to undergo a sigmoid
colostomy. The actual remedial work of the anal sphincter
was
eventually carried out on 17 November 2014. The colostomy was
reversed in April 2015. After the colostomy was reversed, the
plaintiff was admitted to hospital for,
inter
alia
,
post operative bowel obstruction and sepsis. These complaints were
attended to at SBAH. The closure of the colostomy was complicated
by
recurrent would infections because, according to the experts, the
procedure is contaminated by bowel content. In September 2017,
the
plaintiff a had a thyroidectomy performed at Dihlabeng Regional
Hospital (DRH
[11]
),
in the Free State. By then she had moved to the Free State on account
of her husband's work. There was no suggestion that the
thyroidectomy
had anything to do with the defendant’s negligent conduct
during evidence. The record suggests that the plaintiff
complained
of,
inter
alia
,
blackouts, mood swings, headaches and dizziness. In August 2019 the
plaintiff was diagnosed with uncontrolled epilepsy, described
in the
record as temporal lobe epilepsy.
Dr
Johannes Albertus Smut
s -
neurologist
9.
Dr Smuts provided an impressive CV. He
began lecturing in neurology in 1994 and as from 2017 to 2019 he was
senior lecturer in neurology
at the University of Pretoria. He has
ran a private neurology practice. He has participated in over 70
clinical trials as principal
and sub-investigator. He has written
extensively on the subject and has delivered numerous papers and
presentations on the subject
of neurology. Although the defendant had
indicated its intention to call Professor Kakaza, also a neurologist,
she could not attend
court. Dr Smuts and Professor Kakaza had
signed a joint minute which records areas of agreement and
disagreement.
10.
Dr
Smuts had consulted with the plaintiff on 25 March 2021. His report
is dated 30 March 2021
[12]
.
He testified that he had noted that the plaintiff had no history of
epilepsy. He mentioned the multiple surgeries as a possible
source of
risk of epilepsy because there was no history of septicaemia. Aside
from the doctor’s brief testimony, he had provided
a summary of
his evidence to which I now turn: When explaining the nexus between
epilepsy and the primary obstetric problems experienced
by the
plaintiff, the doctor said:
‘
The
most important link of
the
epilepsy and the long hospitalisation, is the fact that the epilepsy
started very soon after
the
other illness
with
no alternative etilological causes for such condition
.
’
[13]
He went on on:
'
The primary reason
why it would be difficult to establish a link is that a detailed
review of the course of events in each operation
regarding the
‘potential hypoxemia and or hypovolemia and or hypotension’
would need to be tract and it is doubtful
that such documentation is
available
.’
He further added:
‘
It
is an open question whether many operations and anaesthetic
procedures potentially could lead to epilepsy
.
It is also documented that hospital
onset seizures are different from that (sic) of the general
population.
In closing the doctor
noted:
‘
Finally,
regarding he link to the original problem, is that she developed her
epilepsy problems in a temporally linked fashion and
that there are
circumstantial evidence that link the epilepsy to the prolonged
illness.’
11.
I will in a moment turn to the established
principles pertaining to the evaluation of expert evidence. For now,
I record what I
find challenging about the doctor’s report,
which was not explained at all during his brief testimony. I start by
recording
that the doctor refers to many operations but does not
mention anywhere what he means by many operations. The record shows
that
the plaintiff went through a number of procedures. At no point
was there a statement that each of those procedures account for an
operation. The second difficulty is that the doctor refers to long
hospitalisation in his report. The record suggests numerous
visits
and admissions and not necessarily prolonged hospital stay. For
example, would the seven days for which the plaintiff was
admitted to
do the re-work of the third degree tear be considered a long stay?
These were also not clarified during the doctor’s
oral
evidence.
12.
The main challenge with the doctor’s
opinion is that in the first instance the link between epilepsy and
the obstetric problems
is the fact that the epilepsy developed soon
after the ‘
other illness
’.
Without context to understand what the doctor was referring to by the
‘other illness’, it is difficult for
anyone to understand
what the doctor was referring to. In his conclusion, the doctor
states that the epilepsy problem developed
in a temporally linked
fashion and ‘there are circumstantial evidence that link the
epilepsy to the prolonged illness’.
The question arises, what
exactly did the doctor mean by the ‘circumstantial evidence’?
Again, no care was taken to
ensure that the doctor explains this area
of his report during his testimony. It is noted however, that the
doctor made the point
that it would be difficult to draw a link
between the epilepsy and the many operations. Likewise, he says it is
an open question
whether many operations and anaesthesia may lead to
epilepsy.
The joint minute
signed by Professor Kakaza and Dr Smuts
13.
I now consider the doctors’ joint
minutes. The doctors agree that the patient suffers from epilepsy and
that its history is
complex. They confirmed that the hospital records
note that epilepsy began in 2019. I shall from now on concentrate on
Dr Smut’s
views in the joint opinion since Professor Kakaza was
not called to explain her views to the court. Dr Smuts records that
the link
between the ‘
epilepsy and
the long hospitalisation is the fact that the epilepsy started in
temporal association with multiple hospitalisation
and repetitive
anaesthesia and surgery
. He further
recorded that many factors such as respiratory problems lead to
epilepsy and that hospital onset seizers are different
from that of
the general population. Finally, he notes that the likelihood of a
link between surgery and the epilepsy is possible.
Legal Principles
relevant to expert evidence
14.
The
court is duty-bound to assess and evaluate expert evidence together
with all the evidence adduced by the parties and it must
be satisfied
that the expert’s opinion is based on fact and is underpinned
by proper reasoning
[14]
.
What is required in the evaluation of such evidence is establishing
whether and the extent to which the expert’s opinion
is founded
on logical reasoning
[15]
.
This is particularly so where medical certainty is virtually
impossible, the court must be satisfied that the expert has
considered
comparative risks and benefits and has reached a
defensible conclusion
[16]
.
An opinion expressed without logical foundation can be rejected
[17]
.
15.
Secondly,
experts draw inferences from established facts. The inferences must
be reasonably capable of being drawn, for, in the
event the
inferences are tenuous or far-fetched they cannot be foundation for
the court to make a finding of fact
[18]
.
Thirdly an expert’s opinion does not bind a court. Such opinion
does no more than help the court to itself arrive at a conclusion
in
an area that the court knows little or nothing about based on the
specialised knowledge bearing on the issue
[19]
.
It is also necessary to bear in mind the words of the Constitutional
Court in
Oppelt
v
Head
:
Health,
Department of Health Provincial Administration: Western Cape
,
that logical theories put forwards by experts and not gainsaid by
other experts should not be scoffed at without a basis
[20]
.
Finally, this court is mindful that the standard of proof is not
scientific but proof on a preponderance of probabilities, as
set out
in
Michael
and Another
v
Linksfield
[21]
.
Legal principles on
causation
16.
An enquiry into causation commences with
the ‘but for test’ to determine whether a postulated
cause is the
causa sine qua non
for the damage complained of,
International
Shipping Company (Pty) Ltd.
v
Bentley
(138/89)
[1989] ZASCA 138
;
[1990] 1 All
SA 498
(A) (10 October 1989). The question that must be answered in
these proceedings is whether the epilepsy, the onset of which,
according
to the joint minute between Professor Kakaza and Dr Smuts
can be traced back to 2019, can be causally be linked to the
obstetrics
problems experienced by the plaintiff in 2014? From
reading Dr Smuts’ views as expressed in his report and in the
joint minute,
and based on his testimony, there is no way of telling
whether there is a link between the obstetric problems experienced by
the
plaintiff and the epilepsy.
17.
The manner in which counsel for the
plaintiff approached this aspect of the plaintiff’s case was by
pressing the fact that
Dr Smuts’ evidence stands uncontested.
He further relied on the statement made by Dr Smuts in the joint
opinion that, ‘The
likelihood of a link between surgery and the
epilepsy is possible’ and suggested that the link between the
obstetric problems
and epilepsy had been established. In so doing,
counsel ignored various parts of Dr Smut’s evidence which
confirm Professor
Kakaza’s opinion that: These are:
(a)
It would be difficult to establish a link
[between the obstetric problems and the epilepsy] because to do so,
one would need to
analyse what occured in each of the operations;
(b)
It is an open question whether many
operations and anaesthesia can lead to epilepsy.
(c)
And, in the joint minute, the doctor says
epilepsy can be caused by many factors such as respiratory problems.
18.
Professor Kakaza in the joint opinion
expresses similar views. She notes:
(i)
Epilepsy is a problem that has multiple
causes;
(ii)
There is no evidence of direct or indirect
trauma;
(iii)
The temporal relationship of the onset of
epilepsy and the history of surgery is accepted by this is an
indirect association.
(iv)
Lastly, she says, it is not possible at the
present stage to draw a link between the epilepsy and the obstetric
problems experience
by the plaintiff in 2014.
19.
I have already mentioned my difficult
with the use of the word many with reference to the operations, when
no care had been taken
to state what the doctor Smuts regards as
many. The fact that Prof Kakaza did not testify simply means the
court only has the benefit
of Dr Smuts’ evidence but that too
must still be weighed. This is so because the court does not have the
benefit of Prof
Kakaza’s explanation for her reasoning as
expressed in the joint note. The court is duty bound to assess Dr
Smuts’
evidence to understand to what extent it is founded on
logic and whether the conclusions reached are defensible. The
defendant
was emphatic in their response that the evidence on this
issue lacks logic. Having earlier expressed my difficulties with Dr
Smuts’
evidence on this issue, all that need be said is that
the plaintiff has failed to draw a link between the obstetric
problems of
2014 and the epilepsy diagnosed in 2019.
20.
Were I to adopt a charitable view and
conclude that factual causation had been established, would the
plaintiff succeed in establishing
legal causation? Legal causation is
concerned with remoteness. Justice Theron explains the function of
legal causation in
De Klerk
v
Minister of Police
thus:
‘
[26]
The function of legal causation is to ensure that liability on the
part of the wrongdoer does not extend indeterminately….The
question of legal causation is whether that further harm is too
remote from the initial conduct for liability to be imputed to
the
defendant.
[27]In this way,
remoteness operates along with wrongfulness as a measure of judicial
control regarding the imposition of delictual
liability and as a
‘longstop’ where most right-minded people will regard the
imposition of liability in a particular
case as untenable, despite
the presence of all other elements of delictual liability.
[28]
Legal causation is resolved with reference to public policy. As held
by the Supreme Court of Appeal in Fourway Haulage SA,
although this
implies that the elements of legal causation and wrongfulness will
overlap to a certain degree as both are determined
with reference to
considerations of public policy, they remain conceptually
distinct…’
[22]
21.
The
court in Premier of the
Western
Cape Province and Anothe
r
v
Loots
NO
[23]
further
explained legal causation thus:
‘…
[I]t
has been held by this court that the criterion in our law for
determining remoteness is a flexible test, also referred to as
a
supple test. In accordance with the flexible test, issues of
remoteness are ultimately determined by broad policy considerations
as to whether right-minded people, including judges, would regard the
imposition of liability on the defendant for the consequences
concerned as reasonable and fair.
[18] But, as also appears
from the authorities to which the flexible approach owes its origin
and development, its adoption did
not result in a total discard of
the variety of tests, such as foreseeability, adequate causation or
direct consequences that were
applied in the past. These tests still
operate as subsidiary tests or pointers to what is indicated by legal
policy. Stated somewhat
differently, according to the flexible test,
the existing criteria of foreseeability, directness and so forth
should still be applied,
but in a flexible manner so as to avoid a
result which most right-minded people will regard as unjust and
unfair.
22.
In
Premier
Western Cape v Loots
[24]
,
the
claimant, Ms Erasmus, or more accurately, her curator, had brought a
delictual claim arising from an unsuccessful sterilisation.
The
claim, as the court noted was not for child raising expenses from an
unwanted conception but for the harm suffered by Ms Erasmus
in a
subsequent birth which left her in a vegetative state. It was common
cause that Ms Erasmus had suffered what is known as amniotic
fluid
embolism, AFE, which is caused when the foetal antigens enter the
maternal circulation. AFE, it was accepted by all the experts,
was a
very rare condition which flows from pregnancy. The pregnancy which
flowed directly from the defendant’s negligent
conduct of
performing an occlusion of the patient’s ligaments as opposed
to the fallopian tubes. The point about
Loots
is that at no point did the court of appeal question whether
causation had been established, based on the expert evidence or
rather
the lack thereof, accepted by the trial court. In fact, as the
court found, the evidence of the defendant’s (appellants’)
expert witness who, for some reason had not testified, was congruent
with that of Loots’ expert.
Conclusion
23.
Bearing in mind that the question whether
legal causation has been established calls for judicial determination
based on policy
considerations as informed by our constitutional
values whilst not discarding the traditional factors such as,
foreseeability,
adequate causation or direct consequences, I cannot
say that the theory presented by Dr Smuts helps this court to reach
the conclusion
that legal causation has been established. Epilepsy as
the doctors conceded can be caused by many factors and, it is not
possible
to make the connection between the plaintiff’s
obstetric problems and the epilepsy. Even taking the surgical
history, Dr
Smuts conceded that it is an open question whether
surgical history or has he put it, many operations and anaesthesia,
can cause
epilepsy. As I had earlier said, the theory presented by Dr
Smuts does not even assist in finding factual causation. I conclude
that the plaintiff has failed to establish that the defendant’s
negligent conduct at TDH — which occasioned the obstetric
problems — caused the epilepsy complained of. Thus, this part
of the plaintiff’s case fails.
Costs
24.
The
plaintiff seeks punitive costs. The basis as explained by counsel is
this, after the joint minutes of the various experts were
filed, the
defendant had no more room to wiggle out of the merits. The
defendant, so the argument goes, should have conceded liability.
Whilst the plaintiff argues that the defendant wasted public funds by
engaging in a longdrawn trial, that charge may easily be
undermined
by the need for transparency and accountability in matters involving
public finances. I do not accept these assertions
as being a sound
basis for punitive costs. As was said in
Ferreira
v
Levin
NO and Others
;
Vryenhoek
and Others v Powell NO and Others
[25]
,
the award of costs is in the discretion of the court.
Order
25.
The defendant is liable to compensate
the plaintiff for her proven or agreed damages, excluding liability
for epilepsy which the
plaintiff failed to prove.
26.
The defendant must pay the plaintiff’s
costs.
NN BAM (Ms)
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing:
14 – 17 & 25 August 2023
Date
of Judgment:
26 February 2024
Appearances
:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv
J De Beer
Instructed
by
Surita
Marais Attorneys
Arcadia,
Pretoria
For
the Defendant:
Adv
M.S Phaswane
Instructed
by:
State
Attorneys
Pretoria
[1]
There
was disagreement as to whether the plaintiff had suffered a third or
fourth degree of tear. The defendant eventually agreed
that the
plaintiff suffered a third degree tear and the plaintiff accepted.
All the evidence led during the trial dealt with
a third degree
tear. The plaintiff likewise accepts that she suffered a third
degree tear. See Plaintiff’s particulars
of claim: Caselines
037-2, paragraph 6.
[2]
The
anal sphincter is made up of two sets of muscles called the internal
and external sphincters. The muscles form a ring around
he anus.
When the muscles are working normally, they squeeze the anus shut so
that gas and bowel movements cannot leak out. Definition
simplified
from extracts taken from
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
.
[3]
A
rectovaginal fistula is an abnormal connection between the lower
part of the large intestine — the rectum or anus—
and
the vagina. General definition from National Library of medicine:
www.ncbi.nim.nih.gov
:
accessed on 27 December 2023.
[4]
These
include,
inter
alia
,
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), major depressive disorder,
dyspareunia (pain during sexual intercourse), and depression
[5]
The
defendant conceded that third degree tear was missed (not properly
categorised) Caselines 036-20 paragraphs 25 - 28;
The midwife, as opposed
to an experienced senior doctor or specialist, sutured the tear:
Caselines paragraphs 30-32, and 63 -
64;
The
tear was sutured in the labour ward not in theatre, with adequate
lighting, in clear contravention of the prevailing regulations
and
guidelines.
It is also common cause
that:
The
plaintiff was discharged the following day, which was not
acceptable, with no factual record of clear instructions regarding
the management of the sutured area.
[6]
Act
20 of 1957.
[7]
At
times, I refer to the rapture of membranes in this judgement, which
means the same thing.
[8]
In
terms of the Regulations to the Nursing Act of 1974, which set out
the conditions under which registered and enrolled midwives
may
carry on their profession, in particular, regulation 2488, Chapter
2, Clause 10: in the event of a third degree perineal
tear, the
midwife, shall, subject to the consent of the mother, call in a
medical practitioner or refer the patient to a medical
practitioner.
[9]
The
gynaecologist and surgeon who testified were in agreement that a
third degree tear may be sutured only by an experienced senior
doctor or specialist, in theatre, under general anaesthetic. They
also testified that it was a contravention of the guidelines
that
the plaintiff was discharged the next day.
[10]
An
abnormal connection between the rectum and perineum causing
significant physical discomfort for patients with the chief
complaint
being the uncontrollable passage of gas and faces from the
vagina,
ncbi.nim.nih.gov
;
date accessed 2024/01/04.
[11]
Caselines
007 - 156 - 161.
[12]
Caselines
004:244
[13]
Caselines
04-253
[14]
NSS
obo AS v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape Province
(017/22)
[2023] ZASCA 41
;
2023 (6) SA 408
(SCA) (31 March 2023),
paragraph 16;
M
and Another v MEC Health, Western Cape
(1258/2018)
[2020] ZASCA 89
(31 July 2020), paragraph 17.
[15]
Michael
and Another v Linksfield Park Clinic (Pty) Ltd and Another
(1) (361/98)
[2001] ZASCA 12
;
[2002] 1 All SA 384
(A) (13 March
2001), paragraph 36.
[16]
HAL
obo MML v MEC for Health, Free State
(Case no 1021/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 149
(22 October 2021), paragraph
53.
[17]
Ditto.
[18]
Van
Zyl N.O obo A.M v MEC for Health, Western Cape Provincial Department
of Health
(A138/2021)
[2022] ZAWCHC 133
;
[2023] 1 All SA 501
(WCC) (4 July
2022), paragraph 21.
[19]
MEC
for Health and Social Development, Gauteng v MM on behalf of OM
(Case no 697/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 128
(30 September 2021), paragraph
17.
[20]
(CCT185/14)
[2015] ZACC 33
;
2016 (1) SA 325
(CC);
2015 (12) BCLR 1471
(CC) (14
October 2015), paragraph 44
[21]
Note
15, paragraph 39.
[22]
(CCT
95/18)
[2019] ZACC 32
;
2019 (12) BCLR 1425
(CC);
2020 (1) SACR 1
(CC);
2021 (4) SA 585
(CC) (22 August 2019), paragraph 26-28.
[23]
(214/2010)
[2011] ZASCA 32
(25 March 2011), paragraphs 17-18.
[24]
Note
23.
[25]
(CT5/95)
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996 (2) SA 621
(CC);
1996 (4) BCLR 441
(CC) (19
March 1996), paragraph 3.
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