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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 277
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## Dlamini v Road Accident Fund and Others (7658A/2008)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 277 (20 March 2024)
Dlamini v Road Accident Fund and Others (7658A/2008)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 277 (20 March 2024)
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sino date 20 March 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 7658A/2008
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
20/3/24
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
NHLANHLA
VINCENT
DLAMINI
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
First Defendant
E
A JADWAT &
COMPANY
Second Defendant
ESSOP
AHMED
JADWAT
Third Defendant
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 20 March 2024.
Summary:
A civil action against an attorney for professional negligence. The
plaintiff alleges that he mandated the law firm to
institute a claim
against the Road Accident Fund (RAF) following his alleged
involvement in a “hit and run” accident.
The law firm
disputed the mandate and contended that some unqualified officials
(its employees) took instructions and processed
the claim outside the
knowledge of the sole practitioner in the law firm. It being a claim
where the insured driver was not identified,
in terms of the RAF
Regulations, the claim ought to have been lodged with the RAF within
two years of the accident. The claim was
submitted to the RAF outside
the prescribed two years’ period. The RAF repudiated the claim
on the basis that it had become
prescribed in law.
The
defendants raised, in the main, a special plea of issue estoppel and
contended that this Court had already decided the issue
that the
claim had not become prescribed in law. Over and above disputing the
mandate, the law firm disputed that the claim was
valid in law since
only one vehicle was involved in the accident and no other vehicle.
The plaintiff alleged and testified that
he collided with a trailer
that was towed by a bakkie. The plaintiff is a single witness to this
event. His evidence ought to be
approached with caution. The
plaintiff failed to present any other corroboratory testimony other
than his
ipse dixit
. The plaintiff failed to take all
reasonable steps to establish the owner or driver of the motor
vehicle, contrary to the Regulations.
The
Court is satisfied that the claim has, on the objective evidence,
become prescribed in law. The issue estoppel special plea
is not
upheld. Further, the Court is satisfied that the law firm was indeed
mandated by the plaintiff and the claim prescribed
in their hands.
The plaintiff bore the onus to prove that he had a valid claim
against the RAF – the accident was caused
by the wrongful
driving of a motor vehicle and that he took all reasonable steps to
identify the owner or driver. This Court is
not satisfied that the
plaintiff had a valid claim against the RAF. Having failed to
discharge his onus, the plaintiff must fail.
Held: (1) The
plaintiff’s action is dismissed. Held: (2) The plaintiff must
pay the costs of the action.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
These are action proceedings, in terms of
which the plaintiff instituted an action against the law firm A E
Jadwat & Company
and its sole owner Mr. Essop Ahmed Jadwat. For
the sake of convenience, the law firm and its owner shall
collectively and interchangeably
be referred to as Jadwat. At the
commencement of the action, the Road Accident Fund (RAF) was cited as
a defendant. In due course,
the action against the RAF was withdrawn.
What remained for adjudication was the action against Jadwat for
professional negligence.
[2]
The plaintiff alleged that Jadwat
negligently allowed his valid claim against the RAF to become
prescribed and unenforceable in
law. In defending the action, Jadwat
raised three main defences. The first of which is in a form of a
special plea of issue estoppel.
In terms of this defence, Jadwat
contends that the issue of prescription of the claim was dealt with
and the plaintiff is thus
estopped from contending that his claim had
become prescribed in law and unenforceable in the hands of Jadwat.
[3]
The second defence is that the plaintiff
did not mandate Jadwat. In this regard, Jadwat contends that the
plaintiff instructed the
late employee of Jadwat, one Mr Msibi,
instead of the law firm. The third defence is that the plaintiff did
not have a valid claim
against the RAF, since the accident involved
only one vehicle of which he was the driver.
Pertinent background
facts and evidence
[4]
On or about 21 April 2003, the plaintiff,
Mr. Nhlanhla Vincent Dlamini (Dlamini), was driving a Fiat Uno motor
vehicle from his
home in Dundee heading towards his place of work in
Johannesburg. At around 17h00 and on the R23 road between Volksrust
and Perdekop,
Dlamini was involved in an accident and was seriously
injured. He was airlifted and or transported to a hospital. He
remained in
the Newcastle hospital until 17 June 2003, when he was
discharged. He, however, continued with treatment for the injuries
sustained
in the accident as an outpatient. After some weeks of being
discharged, he enlisted the services of Jadwat and mandated them to
lodge a RAF claim on his behalf. Some three years later, he was
informed that his claim against the RAF had become prescribed and
unenforceable in law. Thereafter, he instructed his attorneys of
record to institute an action against Jadwat for professional
negligence.
[5]
Owing to the onus incidence, the plaintiff
delivered testimony first. The first witness to testify was Mr.
Hamilton Dlamini (Hamilton).
His testimony was effectively confined
to the mandate given to Jadwat. In brief, his testimony was that a
work colleague recommended
Jadwat to him in order to assist his
brother with a RAF claim. He, together with Dlamini, his brother,
visited the offices of Jadwat
in Newcastle. On the first visit, they
were met by one Mr. Gerald Msibi who informed them that Jadwat was
not available to consult
with them. They returned later and indeed
met with Jadwat, who then agreed to accept the mandate to prosecute
the RAF claim on
behalf of Dlamini. During cross-examination, he
remained steadfast that Jadwat accepted the mandate of Dlamini.
[6]
Dlamini himself testified that on the day
of the accident, whilst driving on a straight two-way road, he
observed a bakkie that
was following him using his middle rear view
mirror. The said bakkie began to execute an overtaking manoeuvre. As
it commenced,
with his right hand side mirror, he observed that the
bakkie was towing a trailer. After the bakkie had passed him, the
trailing
trailer collided with the front portion of the vehicle he
was driving. After a loud bang, which bang he could still replay in
his
mind, twenty years later, he lost control of the vehicle and it
capsized. The next thing he found himself at the hospital. He was
unconscious for a period of about a month or so having sustained,
amongst others, head injuries. In due course, Hamilton took him
to
Jadwat.
[7]
On the first occasion, they could not meet
Jadwat. However, on the next occasion, they met him and he mandated
him to institute
a RAF claim on his behalf. Jadwat accepted the
mandate. In due course, he was advised that the RAF repudiated his
claim since his
claim had become prescribed and unenforceable in law.
In light of that, he instructed his current attorneys of record to
act against
Jadwat. In the Court’s view, Dlamini did not
perform well during cross examination. He, without any basis,
disputed the contents
of documents completed on his behalf and
documents containing the assertion that his vehicle was the only
vehicle involved in the
accident.
[8]
Attorney
De Jong testified regarding the issue estoppel defence. She has since
been the attorney of record for Dlamini. She confirmed
that the order
of 19 November 2010 made by the learned Deputy Judge President Van
Der Merwe was an agreed one. In the order, it
was conceded by Jadwat
that the claim of Dlamini against the RAF had become prescribed in
law. She further testified that the findings
by Fourie J that the
claim had not prescribed were based on a noting
[1]
made in the pleadings. No
viva
voce
evidence was led in order to reach such a finding. Other than
insinuating that generally lawyers make bad witnesses, the assertion
that the order of 2010 was made by agreement remained uncontroverted.
[9]
Jadwat was the only witness in his case. In
brief, his testimony is that he never received and or executed any
mandate from Dlamini.
Instead, two of his employees, Msibi and
Khumalo, accepted the instructions of Dlamini and prosecuted his
claim in his office without
his knowledge and authority. When he
discovered the actions of the duo, he launched an investigation and
discovered a myriad of
documents executed through his office. The duo
disappeared without trace thereafter. This Court was far from being
impressed with
the quality of his testimony.
Analysis
[10]
It is important to state upfront that the
action against the RAF was withdrawn. The part of the pleadings aimed
at making a case
against the RAF has since become obsolete for this
Court. Axiomatically, the question whether a proper claim was lodged
against
the RAF by complying with the statutory requirements is now
moot and academic for this Court. Therefore, this Court will concern
itself with the pleadings seeking to make out a claim for
professional negligence. Where a plaintiff sues for professional
negligence,
such a plaintiff must prove (a) a mandate; (b) breach of
that mandate; (c) that she or he had a valid and enforceable claim in
law; (d) and the damages that he or she would have obtained had the
valid claim in law been prosecuted without negligence. The (d)
part
does not feature before me as parties agreed to separate issues.
Therefore, what remains in contention is the first three
issues.
Before this Court considers each of the elements of this claim, it
shall first deal with the remaining special defences.
Those relate to
the issue estoppel and that the claim lodged by non-practitioners is
one that is invalid.
Invalid claim lodged
[11]
This Court was perturbed as to why this
defence was still being pursued. Despite the surprise, Mr Shepstone
baldly informed the
Court that the defence was still being pursued.
This point is bad in law. It is Jadwat who pleaded that the claim was
lodged by
a non-practitioner. The objective evidence, particularly
the lodgement letter, bears the names of Jadwat. When the RAF
responded
by repudiating the claim so lodged, it responded to Jadwat.
At Jadwat, there was only one practitioner. From a barrage of
correspondents,
it became perspicuous to this Court that Msibi and
Khumalo were part of the staff complement of Jadwat who dealt with
RAF matters.
Clearly, as suggested and disputed by Jadwat, Msibi and
Khumalo were not running a practice within a practice. If they did,
they
would have personally paid for the disbursements relevant to the
claim.
[12]
The above notwithstanding, the RAF did not
reject the claim on the basis that it was lodged by
non-practitioners. It rejected the
claim on the basis that it was not
a claim in law anymore when it was lodged. This point is related to
the mandate defence. In
view of the findings on the mandate issue,
this point is academic and moot. Accordingly, it is not upheld.
Issue estoppel
[13]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in
Royal
Sechaba v Coote
(
Royal
)
[2]
confirmed that issue estoppel is nothing but a
res
judicata
.
It considered it to be a more relaxed form of
res
judicata
.
The SCA confirmed that the requisites of a valid defence of
res
judicata
in Roman Dutch law were that the matter adjudicated upon must have
been for the same cause, between the same parties and that the
same
thing must have been demanded. Jadwat contends that the issue that
the claim had not become prescribed was finally determined
by Fourie
J. The Court in
Royal
held that in dealing with an issue estoppel, the enquiry requires an
examination of the judgment as well as the pleadings. As indicated
above, the relevant pleadings are those dealing with the remaining
cause of action – professional negligence. It is by now
trite
that a Court judgment is to be interpreted like any other document,
applying the principles enunciated in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
(
Endumeni
).
[3]
The principles in
Endumeni
received an imprimatur in the Constitutional Court judgment of
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
(
UJ
).
[4]
[14]
In short, the principle is that language,
context and purpose must be considered symbiotically in order to
establish what the document
interpreted means. Regard being had to
context, language and purpose, the findings of Fourie J were directed
to the fictional situation
presented by the special plea raised by
Jadwat. The findings were not directed to the question of negligence
– allowing the
claim to prescribe – an issue pertinent in
the remaining cause of action. Admittedly, before me, in order to
show negligence,
an aspect related to the breach of a mandate,
Dlamini must show that the claim indeed prescribed in the hands of
Jadwat. At this
stage of the proceedings, the issue that requires a
decision is whether the mandate was breached. Failing to lodge a
claim timeously
is the breach, an issue not determined by Fourie J.
[15]
There can be no doubt that Fourie J reached
his conclusions purely on the basis of the pleadings and a submission
from counsel.
No evidence was led with regard to the circumstances of
the alleged prescription. The finding by the learned Fourie J was
made
some 9 years after an order was obtained by agreement, to the
effect that the claim had indeed become prescribed in law. On proper
examination of the undisputed facts, the accident occurred on 21
April 2003. Dlamini was unable to identify the offending vehicle
and
its driver, as such, in terms of the RAF Regulations, such a claim
was supposed to be lodged with the RAF, within two years
of the
occurrence of the accident. Thus, it was to be lodged on or before 20
April 2005. There is evidence that the claim was only
lodged with the
RAF on 5 December 2005. At that time, the claim had long prescribed
and was unenforceable in law. When the pleadings
relevant to this
matter were exchanged, the stubborn fact remained that the RAF had
repudiated the claim not on any other basis
other than that it had
become prescribed when it was lodged.
[16]
In
an instance where the RAF repudiates a validly lodged claim –lodged
within the two-year period, the aggrieved claimant
will have, in
terms of the Prescription Act,
[5]
three years within which to institute an action against the RAF.
Sadly, in
casu
,
the repudiation was for an invalid claim. Differently put, upon
lodgement, the claim was already decayed and there was no claim
in
law due to the two-year lodgement period. In such an instance, there
is no three years’ period to follow thereafter. It
cannot be
correct that Fourie J made a factual finding. A Court makes a factual
finding when facts and not allegations are presented
to it.
[17]
The
allegation made in the particulars of claim that prior to the
institution of the action by way of summons, the claim was timeously
lodged or that there was substantial compliance was factually, an
incorrect one. That which was noted and taken as an admission,
was an
incorrect fact. The issue of timeous lodgement or substantial
compliance was long resolved in the 2010 judgment. It impermissibly
resurfaced later.
[6]
It was no
longer an issue and on the same principle of
res
judicata
,
which commands itself to finality, the issue was finally decided and
could not be decided again. The Court became
functus
officio
on the issue. Accordingly, the findings of Fourie J on an issue that
was long resolved is a
brutum
fulmen
on application of the
functus
officio
principle. Additionally, the submission made by Geach SC was not
binding on Dlamini and was incapable of changing the legal position
that obtained in 2010.
[7]
There
can be no estoppel against the law.
[8]
Accordingly, the special plea of issue estoppel must equally fail.
Was Jadwat mandated?
[18]
This
Court sympathises with the fact that Jadwat is of an advanced age. He
no longer practices law. In most instances, his testimony
was
incoherent, illogical and nonsensical. However, the evidence that his
firm was mandated is overwhelming before me. Dlamini
and Hamilton
corroborated each other on the issue of the mandate. This Court is
acutely aware that Dlamini and Hamilton are consanguineous.
On
aspects where they corroborated each other, this Court has no reason
to suspect any contrive of testimony. Contradictions between
them on
minor details lends credence to the fact that their testimony is not
tailor-made or planned. Their testimony is supported
by independent
empirical evidence of the letters written and received. All these
letters were written on the letterhead of Jadwat.
Any person who has
no knowledge of the inner workings of Jadwat has no way of knowing
that the letters were written without authority
as testified by
Jadwat. The rule in
Foss
v Harbottle
[9]
is still very much part of our law.
[19]
This Court must reject, as false, the
evidence that Msibi was on a frolic of his own when he prosecuted the
claim as he did. Jadwat
was aware and had acquiesced to this
arrangement in his office, hence his office was able to carry the
disbursements of Dlamini
on the prosecution of the claim. Jadwat paid
for the completion of the MMF1 form and for the costs of the accident
report. The
probabilities are overwhelming that Jadwat accepted and
executed on the mandate.
[20]
The fact that he may have impermissibly
used his unqualified employees to prosecute the claim of Dlamini is a
red herring. One of
the documents enclosed in the lodgement letter
was the power of attorney. In the power of attorney signed by Dlamini
on 17 June
2005, Dlamini nominated and appointed Jadwat to do all
that is necessary to finalise the claim for compensation.
Undoubtedly, Dlamini’s
claim prescribed whilst in the hands of
Jadwat. There is evidence that in 2004, Jadwat was busy prosecuting
the claim and this
is almost a year before the claim prescribed and
became unenforceable in law. The irresistible conclusion to reach is
that Jadwat
was indeed mandated. Axiomatically, when the claim
prescribed in the hands of Jadwat, there was a breach of the accepted
mandate.
This renders Jadwat liable for a professional negligence
claim.
Did Dlamini
nevertheless have a valid claim against the RAF?
[21]
In
terms of section 17(1)(b) of the Road Accident Fund Act (RAFA),
[10]
the RAF shall be liable, subject to any regulation made under section
26, in case of a claim for compensation under this section
arising
from the driving of a motor vehicle where the identity of neither the
owner nor the driver thereof has been established,
and be obliged to
compensate any person. Dlamini was unable to identify the driver nor
the owner of the motor vehicle that collided
with him.
[22]
In
order to fall under the parameters of the above section, it must be
alleged and proven that (a) a motor vehicle was driven; (b)
the
identity of the owner or driver of that motor vehicle has not been
established. To the extent that Dlamini alleges that a motor
vehicle
was driven, he bears the onus to prove that allegation. It does not
follow that because a claimant alleges that the identity
of a driver
or owner was not established then a motor vehicle was driven and
wrongfully for that matter. Proving that a motor vehicle
was driven
does not require the
ipse
dixit
of the claimant. What is required is evidence. In law, evidence means
any of the material items or assertions of fact that may
be submitted
to a competent tribunal as a means of ascertaining the truth of any
alleged matter of fact under investigation before
it.
[11]
If the
ipse
dixit
was sufficient, then in all cases, including the fabricated ones, of
“hit and run” the RAF will be obligated to pay.
[23]
As
noted above, this type of a claim is subject to the provisions of the
Regulations. On 25 April 1997, the Minister of Transport
empowered by
section 26 of RAFA published the Regulations. In terms of regulation
2 (1) (b), in the case of any compensation or
any claim for
compensation referred to in section 17 (1) (b) of the Act, the Fund
shall not be liable to compensate any third party
unless – (b)
the third party took all reasonable steps to establish the identity
of the owner or the driver of the motor
vehicle concerned. In dealing
with similar provisions applicable to the Canadian law, the Court
in
Leggett v Insurance Corp. of British Columbia
(
Leggett
[12]
),
per the learned Mr. Justice Taylor stated the following:
“
As
the trial judge recognized,
the
protection against fraudulent claims
is
only one of the purposes of the requirement that the claimant show
inability to identify the other driver and owner
as
a condition of being able to claim under the section
.
In my view the overall purpose of the section is
to
limit the exposure of the corporation to claims brought by persons
who, in the matter seeking to identify those responsible for
accident, have done everything they reasonably could to protect what
ordinarily would be their own interest, and which, by virtue
of the
section, become the interests of the corporation.
The corporation’s exposure under the section is limited to
claims brought by those who could not have ascertained the identity
of the parties responsible. It does not, in my view, extend to claims
by those who have
chosen not to do so.
[24]
This
Court echoes the same sentiments echoed above. Where a claimant
eschews the responsibility to take reasonable steps to identify
the
owner or driver, such a claimant does not have a claim against the
RAF. The Supreme Court of British Columbia was also guided
by
Leggett
when in
Springer
v Kee
[13]
it concluded thus:
“
The
onus is on the plaintiff to establish that she made all reasonable
efforts to establish the identity of the driver
.
Although each case must be decided on its own facts, the authorities
indicate that the
onus is not one easily
displaced, even in the circumstances in which the unidentified
vehicle has fled the scene
. Geopel J.
also notes at para 18, that
the
plaintiff is under a continuing obligation following an accident to
use all reasonable efforts to ascertain the identity of
the driver.
In my view a proper
determination of the efforts which might reasonably lead to
discovering the identity of the unknown driver or
owner must be made
with due regard for the location where the collision occurred and the
circumstances in which the collision occurred.
For an example, a
collision which occurs at a busy intersection of a well-populated
area on a weekday 8:30 a.m., in relatively
slow-moving traffic might
be witnessed by many people who: recognised the car or driver in
question, or noted the licence plate
number…”
[25]
In
an instance where, the negligent driver fled the scene, Kerr J in
Morris
v Doe
[14]
examined the steps taken by the plaintiff to ascertain the identity
of the negligent driver in the days or weeks following the
accident.
As it shall be demonstrated later, Dlamini led no evidence of any
steps he took to identify the driver or owner of the
bakkie. This
failure to take steps is compounded by the fact that it took Dlamini
two years to report the accident. With regard
to the occurrence of
the accident, Dlamini is the only witness, thus the cautionary rule
finds application. Mr Geach SC argued
that cautionary rules only
apply in criminal cases. I do not agree. Section 16 of Civil
Proceedings Evidence Act
[15]
expressly provides that the evidence must be from a credible witness.
[26]
It
is a rule of evidence that traditionally the evidence of a single
witness should be treated with caution.
[16]
The evidence of Dlamini must be reliable and trustworthy. The
question is, is his evidence reliable or not? Dlamini bears the
overall onus to prove that the RAF was indeed liable to have
compensated him. On the other end of the pendulum lies the fact that
Dlamini may have lost control of the vehicle whereafter it capsized
and injured him. In
National
Employers’ General Insurance Co Ltd v Jagers
(
Jagers
),
[17]
the erudite Eksteen AJP confirmed that discharging the onus on the
balance of probabilities simply means that the Court must be
satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that the plaintiff was
telling the truth and his version was therefore acceptable.
The fact
that there is no countermanding version does not necessarily
transmute the uncorroborated version to be true and acceptable.
[27]
Dlamini
bore the onus to show that a wrongdoer caused the damage he suffered.
In other words, he must create a causal link between
the damages he
suffered and the actions of the wrongdoer.
[18]
Dlamini was emphatic that the banging sound when the vehicle he was
driving collided with the trailer was still indelibly edged
in his
mind. However, he could not tell the Court what the colour of the
bakkie was. Ironically, only when the Court enquired,
did he manage
to describe the trailer and its size, details that are too
complicated to remember twenty years later, than the mere
colour of
the bakkie. On his own version, which only emerged when the Court was
seeking clarity, he recalls seeing the bakkie through
the rear view
mirror approaching at a high speed behind him. Such attention to
details would, in my view, simultaneously have drawn
his attention to
the colour of this vehicle driven at a high speed. Hamilton visited
the scene of the accident the very next day
after being given a
location by the police, and the only thing he could encounter was the
radio of the Fiat Uno vehicle. Strangely,
nothing was found related
to the trailer since, on Dlamini’s uncorroborated version, he
collided with the trailer and not
the bakkie.
[28]
All the documents independently generated
points to only one vehicle being involved. The only time, the version
of Dlamini was recorded,
was two years later when he related the
event to the police official who prepared the accident report. To
this, Mr Geach SC submitted
that such recordal being made two years
after the accident lends credence to the fact that Dlamini’s
version was not a recent
fabrication. What remains curious though,
for this Court, is that when he went to consult with Jadwat a month
or so after being
discharged from hospital, he signed a blank
statutory affidavit. That affidavit does not contain a version that
later found itself
in the accident report. The lodgement letter of 5
December 2005 makes reference to an affidavit by the claimant. Such
affidavit
was not availed to this Court. This Court only wonders what
its contents would have been. Such a document was easily obtainable
from the RAF. As to why such an important document was not obtained
and availed remains an enigma. An inference to be drawn is
that the
affidavit may be containing a different version. The available
documents reveal how the accident report came into being.
Below is
the trail leading to the existence of the accident report. On 23
September 2004, the Perdekop SAPS wrote to Jadwat and
stated the
following:
“
The
above accident occurred on 21-04-2003 at approximately 17h00 on the
R23 Volksrust – Perdekop road. Your client
was
the only car involved in the accident
and no case docket was opened…”
[29]
An impression was created that an accident
report was compiled and sent to the Municipality of Lekwa. After the
toing and froing,
it turned out that no accident report was compiled
but an accident register was made. The accident register only
reflects the white
Uno and no other vehicle. Nevertheless, on 17
March 2005, Jadwat wrote to the SAPS Perdekop and stated the
following:
“
Please
advise us whether you need our client to make a statement at your
police station
as to how the accident
happened in order for us to proceed with a third party
claim and/or complete a new OAR accident report.”
[30]
This letter sets the tone as to why a
statement at the police station was required. Subsequently, on 17
April 2005, Jadwat recorded
the following:
“
We
refer to a telephonic conversation with your Commissioner and our Mr
Msibi when it was agreed
that client
should call at your station and compile a new OAR and his statement.”
[31]
It is clear at this stage that whatever
statement was to be given by Dlamini, was to be one that would enable
him to proceed with
a third party claim. In other words, if Dlamini
were to state that his vehicle was the only one involved in the
accident as recorded
by the police in 2004, he would not be able to
proceed with the third party claim. In my view, it is for that reason
that the accident
report recorded the following in relation to the
brief description of the accident:
“
According
to the driver
he was driving from
Dundee to Joburg. On my way between Volksrust & Perdekop the
Bakkie with a trailer overtook my car and
collide (sic) with the
trailer my car lost control and it overturned and I got injuries on
my head as well as my left leg.”
[32]
The
above narration was provided on 20 April 2005. In addition, the
police inspector inserted a sketch which depicts only one vehicle.
Inspector Moloi did not testify before me to explain the sketch which
appears to contradict the version narrated to him by Dlamini.
Upon
enquiry, Mr Geach SC informed the Court, only in argument, that a
subpoena was issued to the police and was not reacted to
[19]
.
The evidence of Moloi was crucial to clear the apparent contradiction
between the sketch drawn by him and the recordal of Dlamini’s
version of the accident. Additionally, the official who entered
information in the accident register would have shared light as
to
whether other witnesses who may have witnessed the accident were
found at the scene.
[33]
The recordal in the letter of 23 September
2004 does not aver that only one car was encountered at the scene.
The officer of the
law positively records that only one car was
involved in the accident. This is certainly a statement of fact. As
to why that police
officer was not called to clarify issues for the
Court, remains a mystery. Curiously, the accident report does not
vaguely suggest
that vehicle ‘B’ was either a truck or a
trailer.
Ex facie,
the report there was only vehicle ‘A’ driven by Dlamini,
which recordal is consistent with the 2004 letter. Surely,
if there
was any credibility in the version of the truck or bakkie in vehicle
‘B’, an inscription would have been made
that there was a
truck or a bakkie.
[34]
A further contradiction arose on 5 December
2005, when the claim was lodged with the RAF. This will be eight
months after the statement
in the accident report. The MMF1 form,
which was signed and initialled by Dlamini, exposes the following
information:
“
2
PARTICULARS OF MOTOR VEHICLE FROM THE DRIVING OF WHICH THIS CLAIM
ARISES:
(i)
Type of body:
Truck
with a trailer
”
[35]
In a matter of eight months, the vehicle
morphed from a being bakkie and trailer to a truck and trailer. This
raises questions as
to whether the evidence of Dlamini is reliable
and truthful with regard to the offending vehicle. When confronted
about the truck
issue during cross-examination, he could not provide
a satisfactory explanation. This Court is not satisfied with the
general tenor
of the evidence of Dlamini on this crucial aspect of
the presence of the offending motor vehicle. In his brief description
of the
accident statement made in 2005 at the police station, the
offending vehicle is actually the trailer. His vehicle only made
contact
with a trailer and not the bakkie. Yet in the MMF1 form it
does seem that the trailer and the truck collided with his vehicle.
On 4 December 2007, Dlamini deposed to another affidavit. Curiously,
this affidavit is dead silent about how the accident happened.
All it
narrates is the following:
“
On
21
st
April 2003 I was travelling home after enjoying my Easter holiday in
Durban when
I was involved in a car
accident
between Perdekop and Volksrust
in Kwazulu Natal.”
[36]
This Court would have expected, in the
above affidavit, at the bare minimum, an assertion that a trailer and
my car collided with
each other. The above assertion lends credence
to the contention that he alone was involved in a car accident. There
is no evidence
that Dlamini ever returned or attempted to return to
the scene of the accident to try and find witnesses who may have
witnessed
the accident. No evidence was led as to whether the road
where the accident happened is in the built up area, where, given the
time of the alleged accident, people could have witnessed the
accident. On the version of Dlamini, he was airlifted from the scene.
Surely somebody must have summoned the airlift. That person could
have given some useful evidence. The identity of that person
must
have been easy to ascertain from the ambulance driver or the
airlifter.
[37]
The material damages to the Fiat Uno were
not presented to corroborate, at the very least, the front portion
collide. As pointed
out, the accident register that was completed by
the Perdekop police refers to one car being involved hence no
accident report
was completed. To this, Mr Geach SC, in argument,
only speculated that the reason for that entry is that when the
police arrived
at the scene, there was only one vehicle and the other
one disappeared from the scene. Given the loudness of the bang as
dramatized
by Dlamini, the trailer or portions thereof could have
been found on the scene. Some debris of the trailer would have
remained
and this would have alerted the police who visited the scene
that it was not only the
Fiat Uno
involved.
[38]
Taken
together with the neutral documentary evidence, the version by
Dlamini that he collided with the trailer is not satisfactory,
reliable and truthful. Regard being had to the conspectus and the
totality of the evidence, this Court is not satisfied that Dlamini
discharged his onus on the issue of the liability of the RAF to have
compensated him. To steal from the words of the erudite Stratford
JA
in
Ex
Parte the Minister of Justice In
Re
Rex v Jacobson & Levy,
[20]
there
is no
prima
facie
proof other than the
ipse
dixit
of Dlamini that there was another vehicle involved. Having failed to
establish this fact, the plaintiff did not have a valid claim
against
the RAF. The issue of
prima
facie
proof becoming conclusive proof was properly explained by the SCA in
S
v Boesak.
[21]
The Court said:
“
[47]
Of course, a
prima facie
inference
does not necessarily mean
that, if no rebuttal is forthcoming the onus would have been
satisfied.
But one of the main and
acknowledged instances where it can be said that a
prima
facie
case becomes conclusive in the
absence of rebuttal is
where it lies
exclusively within the power of the other party to show what the true
facts were and he or she fails to give an acceptable
explanation…”
[39]
This Court is not satisfied that Dlamini is
a credible witness upon whose evidence to give a judgment. His
testimony is not conclusive
and is lacking in material respects as
discussed above. There is no
prima facie
case made by Dlamini that indeed there was another vehicle involved
other than his own vehicle. Having not attempted to take a
single
step towards identifying the driver or owner, is a clear indication
that there was no other vehicle involved. Undoubtedly,
as argued by
Mr Shepstone, this involvement of another vehicle is a fabrication to
have enabled Dlamini to lodge a RAF claim. On
the conspectus and
totality of the testimony before me, this other vehicle magically
arose two years after the accident in the
circumstances where
regulation 2 (1) (c) requires a party to submit an affidavit within
14 days of the accident. Admittedly in
14 days he was still in a
comma, but many fourteen days passed after 17 June 2003 when he was
discharged, yet he chose to report
after two years of the accident.
For all the above reasons, I am constrained to make the following
order:
Order
1.
The plaintiff’s action is dismissed.
2.
The plaintiff is to pay the costs of the action.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For the Plaintiff:
Mr B P Geach SC and
A Jansen
Instructed
by:
Schutte
De Jong Inc, Pretoria
For
the Defendants:
Mr
R S Shepstone
Instructed
by:
Eversheds
Sutherland SA Inc Johannesburg
Date of the
hearing:
11-13 March 2024
Date of judgment:
20 March 2024
[1]
There are various authorities which held that a party who notes an
allegation in its plea, such noting amounts to an admission
of the
allegation.
[2]
[2014] ZASCA 85
at para 10.
[3]
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA).
[4]
2021 (8) BCLR 807 (CC).
[5]
Act
68 of 1969 as amended.
[6]
See
Spamer
v Road Accident Fund
[2018] ZAGPPHC 608.
[7]
Matatiele
Municipality and Others v President of the RSA and Others
2006
(5) SA 47
(CC) and
AZAPO
and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
1996 (4) SA 671 (CC).
[8]
See
Provincial
Government of the Eastern Cape and Others v Contractprops 25 (Pty)
Ltd
[2001] 4 All SA 273
(A) at para 11 and
Trust
Bank van Afrika Bpk v Eksteen
1964 (3) SA 402
(A) at 411 H – 412 B.
[9]
[1843] 67 ER 189.
[10]
Act 56 of 1996 as amended.
[11]
Nagel,
Heinrich and Norton, Jerry. "Evidence".
Encyclopedia
Britannica
,
18 Feb 2024, https://www.britannica.com/topic/evidence-law. Accessed
19 March 2024.
[12]
1992 CanLII 1263 (BC CA).
[13]
2012 BCSC 129 (CanLII)
[14]
2011 BCSC 253.
[15]
Act 25 of 1965 as amended.
[16]
See
Northam
Platinum Mines v Shai NO & others
(2012) 33 ILJ 942 (LC) and
Ntoro
v RAF
[2023] ZAGPJHC 357 (
Ntoro
).
[17]
1984 (4) SA 437
(E) at 440D-G.
[18]
See
Grove
v The Road Accident Fund
[2011] ZASCA 55
at para 7.
[19]
Few days on 13 March 2024 after argument and whilst this Court was
considering its judgment, subpoenas were uploaded onto CaseLines.
The subpoena
duces
tucem
was served onto the station commander. As to why the witnesses were
not in Court, it remains a mystery
[20]
1931 AD 466.
[21]
[2000] ZASCA 112
;
2000 (1) SACR 633
(SCA).
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