Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 356South Africa
Maela-Dipheko v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (28975/2014) [2024] ZAGPPHC 356 (18 April 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Claim for delictual liability. Public legal duty-Passenger Rail Services-SA. Negligence-Reasonable and safety measures not in place-negligence-wrongful. Contributory negligence pleaded. Defendant -reasonable organ of state - negligent-sole cause of the incident and liable for not providing reasonable measures. Liability – not - pure negligence, but legal duty owed to the plaintiff. Costs granted on a party and party scale.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Maela-Dipheko v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (28975/2014) [2024] ZAGPPHC 356 (18 April 2024)
Maela-Dipheko v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (28975/2014) [2024] ZAGPPHC 356 (18 April 2024)
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sino date 18 April 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 28957/2014
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
DATE:
18 April 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
MAELA-DIPHEKO
MAKUPHU ELIZABETH
Plaintiff
and
PASSENGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
Defendant
Delivery
:
This judgment is
issued by the Judge whose name appears herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties /legal representatives
by email. It is
also uploaded on CaseLines and its date of delivery is deemed 18
April 2024
.
Summary
:
Claim for delictual
liability. Public legal duty-Passenger Rail Services-SA.
Negligence-Reasonable and safety measures not in
place-negligence-wrongful.
Contributory negligence pleaded. Defendant
-reasonable organ of state - negligent-sole cause of the incident and
liable for not
providing reasonable measures. Liability – not -
pure negligence, but legal duty owed to the plaintiff. Costs granted
on
a party and party scale.
JUDGMENT
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
AJ
[1]
This is an application for a delictual claim arising out of the
injuries sustained
by the plaintiff because of an incident that took
place at the Pretoria Train Station on 11 September 2012. The
plaintiff suffered
multiple injuries after she was pushed off the
platform following an announcement for the commuters / passengers to
move from platform
8 to platform 2 at the said station. The claim was
for delictual liability for damages due to the Defendant’s
breach of duty
to safeguard the safety of the plaintiff.
[2]
During argument and on papers, the merits and quantum were separated
in terms of Rule
33(4) of the Uniform Rules of the Court. The quantum
was postponed
sine die
. The contentious issue was the question
of liability which was grounded on negligence.
[3]
In the particulars of claim, the plaintiff alleged that the Defendant
and or its employees:
[3.1]
made a late announcement that the train from Pretoria to Oberholzer,
Carletonville will dock on a
different platform other than the usual
one where the plaintiff and other commuters were waiting, resulting
in a stampede and the
plaintiff being pushed from the platform to the
rails.
[3.2]
failed to provide security personnel to ensure the safety and control
of commuters, alternatively,
there were no security personnel at the
platform during the accident to ensure proper control and safety of
commuters.
[3.3]
failed to ensure there are safety measures in place at Pretoria train
Station.
[3.4]
as a result of the incident, the plaintiff suffers from long and
serious impairment which are but
not limited to:
[3.4.1] serious and
persistent headaches.
[3.4.2] loss of body
function, being unable to sleep.
[3.4.3] long term pain on
cold days and after physical exertion.
[3.4.4] struggling with
domestic and daily activities and inconvenienced and has to take pain
killers to relieve the pain.
[3.4.5] experiences
persistent headaches and psychological problems; and
[3.4.5] all amenities
have been negatively affected in that ambulatory activities at home
and in the community are largely restricted
because of her injuries
and permanent disability now.
[4]
The Defendant did not deny the incident itself, however, a bare
denial of liability
based on negligence was argued and or
alternatively contributory negligence was canvassed on the part of
the plaintiff. The Defendant
alleged that the plaintiff:
[4.1]
put herself in danger by illegally crossing the railway line.
[4.2]
got injured while trying to get onto the platform; and
[4.3]
failed to avoid the incident by exercise of reasonable care she
should and would have done so.
In this regard, the
Defendant submitted that all the required safety measures were
complied with and in the event the court finds
in the alternative,
negligence did not contribute to the plaintiff being pushed (out of
the train or dislodged from the train)
(sic) (Causation). If the
plaintiff was pushed, then the latter was contributory negligent, and
damages suffered should be reduced
proportionately in accordance with
the Apportionment of Damages Act 34 of 1956.
Substance of the
dispute
[5]
The plaintiff’s case was that she went with Mrs Ruth
Modukanele, who was familiar
with Pretoria and the said station where
incident took place, from Carletonville to Government Employment
Pension Fund (GEPF) in
Pretoria on the said date. After finishing the
business of the day at GEPF, they went to Pretoria Train Station and
purchased a
ticket at approximately 12h00/13h00 to go back home in
Carletonville. Thereafter, they proceeded to platform 8 to wait for
the
train that was to arrive and depart at 14h30/15h00. The plaintiff
testified that the train destined for Carletonville was late and
at
about 14h40, an announcement was made that commuters on platform 8
should go to board the train at platform 2.
[6]
It was the plaintiff’s submission that it was during this
period of moving from
platform 8 to platform 2 whilst still in
possession of her ticket, that she was pushed from the back to the
rails by an unknown
person as people were running and rushing to get
to latter platform. It was her assertion that she fell on the railway
lines and
sustained injuries on her forehead, legs, eyes, and loss of
hearing as she lost consciousness and woke up at Tshwane District
Hospital.
In conformity with Rule 36(10) of the Uniform Rules of the
Court, 8 photos depicting the incident were presented as evidence in
support of the claim.
[7]
This case became fundamental in the determination of the fundamentals
of the public
law duty for reasonable safety measures that is owed by
the Defendant not only to the plaintiff but to all commuters. It is
also
not for this court to regurgitate what is already in the public
knowledge, but for the purpose of situating the dispute herein,
it
would be imperative not to by-pass the foundations for negligent
conduct in the resolve of this matter.
Framework
[8]
In the present matter, the application of Schedule 1, section
12(1)(e) of the Legal
Succession to the South African Transport
Services Act 90 of 1989, (Legal Succession Act) is of fundamental
importance. The Legal
Succession Act provides that ‘
a person
who occupies a seat in a vehicle enters a part of the vehicle or is
present at a place in a vehicle that he is not entitled
to occupy,
enter or be present in’ … ‘shall be guilty of an
offence and on conviction any competent court may
impose, in its
discretion, a fine or imprisonment, or a fine and imprisonment, or
any other suitable punishment within its jurisdiction
’.
This means that the conduct carries a criminal sanction to be imposed
by the court if found guilty of such an offence of
occupying a
vehicle which is defined as a ‘
train, a passenger coach or
other form of rolling stock, an aircraft, a motor vehicle, a ship or
other marine craft
’, (
section 12(2) of the Legal
Succession Act)
. As noted herein, the definition is extended
to the railway lines that are designed for exclusive use by the
trains. The exclusive
use is of further importance in that the normal
motor-vehicles or buses are not designed as a mode of transport to
use the railway
line. It is in this regard that the plaintiff’s
possession of a valid ticket for her journey was never meant for any
other
mode of transportation except for the train. The Defendant did
not dispute the possession of the said ticket and its intended
purpose.
This meant compliance with the requirements of the
requirements of the Legal Succession Act. The ticket, therefore,
‘
served as a prima facie proof that justified the status of
the plaintiff as a lawful passenger in the train
’, (
Xulaba
v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
(65357/2020)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1847,
para 45
)
. This also
meant that the plaintiff was lawfully waiting to board the train at
platform 8 save for the announcement for the move
to platform 2 that
resulted in her injuries.
[9]
The primary question resulting from the claim is to determine whether
the Defendant
should be held liable for the injuries sustained by the
plaintiff during the fall from platform 8 to platform 2 when people
shoved
and tried to pass each other in getting to the latter when the
call was made. Simply, did the Defendant compromise the safety
precautions
for its commuters in line with the public law duties that
it owes in the carriage and provision of quality transport services
within
the framework of the rail and transport industry? These
questions are linked to the test for delictual liability based on
negligence
in that (i) a reasonable person in the position of the
Defendant as an organ of state would have foreseen the reasonable
possibility
of the conduct causing harm, which requires the (ii)
taking of reasonable steps to avert the risk, and failing which,
(iii) to
bear the consequences for such a failure, (
South
African Rail Commuter Corporation Ltd v Thwala
(661/2010)
[2011] ZASCA 170
,
para 11
). These principles entail
the enforcement of wrongfulness in delictual liability which was
explained by Ponnan Ja in
Home Talk Developments (Pty) Ltd v
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
(225/2026) [[2017]
.
Ponnan JA captured the content of wrongfulness within the framework
of these principles in the holding of the Defendant’s
liability
and held:
conduct is wrongful in
the delictual sense if public policy considerations demand that in
the circumstances the plaintiff has to
be compensated for the loss
caused by the negligent act or omission of the defendant. It is then
that it can be said that the legal
convictions of society regard the
conduct as wrongful. ‘Wrongfulness’, the Constitutional
Court held, ‘typically
acts as a brake on liability,
particularly in areas of the law of delict where it is undesirable or
overly burdensome to impose
liability’. It elaborated:
‘[wrongfulness] functions to determine whether the infliction
of culpably caused harm demands
the imposition of liability or,
conversely, whether “the social, economic and other costs are
just too high to justify the
use of the law of delict for the
resolution of the particular issue”. What is called for is ‘not
an intuitive reaction
to a collection of arbitrary factors but rather
a balancing against one another of identifiable norms, (para 20, all
footnotes
omitted).
This becomes necessary in
establishing the Defendant’s liability, as a reasonable organ
of state, who in the circumstances
of this case, could have exercised
due care in the provision of reasonable measures in protecting the
safety of the plaintiff.
Discussion and
analysis
[10]
In this case, the plaintiff was called upon as the main and only
witness by her Counsel. The
evidence presented by the plaintiff
during the main and cross examinations as a witness, took this court
into confidence about
the sequence of events on the day without
evading the questions asked. The photos depicting the incident were
at the centre of
the examination for both the plaintiff’s
Counsel and the Defendant’s Counsel. It was in these photos
where the plaintiff
had to confirm before this court how the incident
took place. What emerged from the examination for this court was that
the plaintiff,
as they were trying to move from the initial platform
(8), she ‘
felt someone pushing her and she fell on the
railway lines
’. The plaintiff, with the presentation of
photos: P1,3,4;5 and 6) with a visible yellow line painted on the
floor, was acknowledged
with a further confirmation of the people
being prohibited from walking or coming near the yellow line.
Overall, the witness was
honest and reliable, and the Defendant drew
unnecessary inferences from the facts surrounding the incident.
[11]
The Defendant called two witnesses: Mrs Mphaka, the Investigating
Officer who testified that
she investigated the incident that was
recorded in the Occurrence Book at the station. She took statements
as they appeared in
the Occurrence from Mrs Mamushiana to be referred
below and Mr Thabo Paulos Masiwa (who, could not testify as he had
passed away).
There is nothing major to draw any inference from her
evidence except for the confirmation of the statements from the two
Security
Guards and denial of overcrowding and the fact that it was
not a ‘peak hour’ at the station. The Second witness: Mrs
Mamushiana, the Security Guard, who has been in the employ of PRASA
since 2007 and was on duty on the date of the injury. She testified
that she was on platform 4 when the call was made and saw commuters
jumping onto the rails to get to platform 2. She did not see
how and
where the plaintiff was injured but heard about an injured person who
was seated on a bench in platform 5 or 6. I do not
intend to exhaust
her evidence except her confirmation that the situation did not get
out of control, but it was the behaviour
of commuters that made
things to out of control.
[12]
The Counsel for the Defendant attempted to discredit the plaintiff’s
claim due to the time
frame in which the incident occurred-11 years
ago to an extent of even questioning whether the plaintiff was not in
regular contact
and communication with Ms Modukanele who was not
called as a witness by the plaintiff’s Counsel. I am not
inclined to accept
that a lapse of time could have wiped the memory
of the plaintiff regarding the way in which the incident happened.
The communication
of the plaintiff and Ms Modukanele was also not of
weight to this court as any other information that might have been
possible
shared, would not have made any difference without Ms
Modukanele being sworn in as a witness and testify under oath herein.
I am
therefore, not to give substance to this argument as it was
designed to evade the gist of the claim based on the duty owed by the
Defendant to plaintiff, which is also extended to all other
commuters. The Defendant’s witnesses attempting to put the
blame
on the commuters and the ‘no peak hour’
justification of the incident is also not of substance in response to
the main
question raised herein on the legal duty owed by the
Defendant as a ‘reasonable organ of state’.
[13]
The core-content of the claim in this case was that the Defendant
re-directed the commuters from
the platform where they were waiting
in which they were to board the train with the consequent result of
the injuries sustained
by the plaintiff. Without prejudice, it is
public knowledge that the rail service is the main mode of transport
for most South
Africans. It is not the purpose in this case to water
down the experiences faced by many of the ordinary citizens who are
thirsting
for a safe mode of transport requiring the Defendant to
marshal the resources in ensuring a safe transport environment. In
the
context of this case, a provision of more personnel that could
have guarded against and controlled the overcrowding and properly
direct people to the said platform without any danger to the
commuters could have been made. On the other hand, I am also not to
dig into the Defendant’s pockets to determine how many of the
Security Guards that were supposed to have been posted on each
of the
platforms, but the underlying obligation is to ensure the general
safety and security of the commuters.
[14]
I am also not to raise any issue about the credibility of the
Defendant’s witnesses as
they were equally honest about their
role as employees and particularly regarding the incident on the day
in question. They were
not to protect their employer, Ms Mphaka as
the Investigating Officer did not manufacture the evidence from the
Occurrence Book
and Mrs Mamushiana sharing the observations and told
this court that after the announcement, people that were rushing to
platform
2 could not be controlled. In this regard, the posting of
One (1) Security Guard on the platform considering the high number of
people during peak hours was evidenced by the confirmation of being
unable to control people that were trying to get to platform
2. It is
not for this court to justify any impossibility for the Guards to
control the people at the expense of holding the Defendant
for having
faulted in adopting reasonable measures that could have eliminated
any risk associated with the injuries suffered by
the plaintiff.
[15]
I am persuaded by O’Regan J in
Rail Commuters Action
Group v Transnet Ltd t/a/ Metrorail
[2004] ZACC 20
;
2005 (2) SA 359
(CC)
regarding the provision of quality rail services in the transport
industry. The Judge held:
it must be borne in
mind that the [defendant] enjoy, in effect, a monopoly over the
provision of rail commuter services for the
period of the agreement
they have entered into. Moreover, as organs of state they exercise
that monopoly in circumstances where
the spatial planning of our
cities means that those most in need of subsidised public transport
services are those who often have
the greatest distances to travel.
Those people are also often the poorest members of our communities
who have little choice in
deciding whether to use rail services or
not. The rail commuter services operated by the [defendant] are used
by hundreds of thousands
of commuters daily. Another relevant
consideration is the fact that once a commuter enters a train, he or
she cannot easily leave
it while it is in motion. Boarding a train
renders commuters intensely vulnerable to violent criminals who
target them. The applicants
emphasised in argument the double bind in
which commuters find themselves: they generally have little choice
about using the train,
and once on the train they are unable to
protect themselves against attack by criminals, (para 82).
[16]
The above is made distinct by what O’Regan J contextualised as
the primary legal obligations
of the Defendant as the Judge held:
construing the nature
of the obligations imposed upon Metrorail and the Commuter
Corporation, the need to hold these respondents
accountable for the
exercise of their powers is important. Institutions which are organs
of state, performing public functions
and providing a public service
of this kind, should be held accountable for the provision of that
service. It is for this reason
that the Constitution affirms
accountability as a value governing public administration. Metrorail
has the obligation to provide
rail commuter services in a way that is
consistent with the constitutional rights of commuters. In the
absence of a public law
obligation of the kind contended for by the
applicants, there is no way of ensuring that Metrorail complies with
this duty. Nor
could it be argued by Metrorail and the Commuter
Corporation that a public law obligation of this sort would impose
undue burdens
on them that would impair their ability to provide the
service effectively or efficiently. … [Defendant] bear a
positive
obligation arising from the provisions of the [Legal
Succession Act] read with the provisions of the Constitution to
ensure that
reasonable measures are in place to provide for the
security of rail commuters when they provide rail commuter services
under the
[Legal Succession Act]. It should be clear from the duty
thus formulated that it is a duty to ensure that reasonable measures
are
in place. It does not matter who provides the measures if they
are in place. The responsibility for ensuring that measures are in
place, regardless of who may be implementing them, rests with [the
Defendant], (paras 83-84].
[17]
The Defendant is also bound to fulfil the requisites of the Bill of
Rights as envisaged in many
provisions of the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Constitution). Mogoeng-CJ in
Mashongwa v Passenger Rail Service of South Africa
2016
(2) BCLR 204
(CC)
expressed that:
the State and its
organs exist to give practical expression to the constitutional
rights of citizens. They bear the obligation to
ensure that the
aspirations held out by the Bill of Rights are realised. That is an
immense responsibility that must be matched
by the seriousness with
which endeavours to discharge them are undertaken. To this end, the
State, its organs and functionaries
cannot be allowed to adopt a
lackadaisical attitude, at the expense of the interests of the
public, without consequences. For this
reason, exceptions are at
times made to the general rule that a breach of public law
obligations will not necessarily give rise
to a delictual claim for
damages. Absent that flexibility public authorities and functionaries
might be tempted and emboldened
to disregard their duties to the
public. And that could create fertile ground for a culture of
impunity. These obligations cannot
therefore be ignored without any
repercussions, particularly where there is no other effective remedy.
This would be especially
so in circumstances where an organ of state
would have been properly apprised of its constitutional duties many
years prior to
the incident, as in this case, (
para 25
).
[18]
In this case, PRASA/ Defendant, being a state organ of the new
dispensation, having been established
in 2009 as a transformed rail
passenger service with the foundations of the Legal Succession Act
(section 22), is assumed, with
the historic lessons on the provision
of quality rail services which are today grounded by the prescripts
of the democracy, could
not allege to have lost sight of the duties
which are equally envisaged in the Constitution as Mogoeng CJ held in
Mashongwa
. In the present matter, the Counsel for the
Defendant argued for contributory negligence towards the
determination of liability
to sway the undertaking of the primary
responsibility. I must express that the Defendant sought to hold this
court by a ‘
string
’ with the ‘
part to
blame conduct
’ of the plaintiff. I am not to misplace an
insight of the fact that the Defendant acknowledged that the incident
did happen,
and the apportioning of the blame was designed to ‘
strip
the eyes
’ from taking full accountability for the breach of
the legal duty in ensuring not just the safety of the plaintiff but
future
litigants. The issue of contributory negligence was indicative
of an admission by the Defendant that the quality of safety measures
provided to the commuters are not at the level of the deserved status
towards the fulfilment of the public law duty, particularly
its
infusion within the framework of the fulfilment of the rights in the
Bill of Rights.
[19]
I am also of the considered view, that the Defendant did not take the
necessary and reasonable
precautionary measures to protect the
commuters who were returning home that afternoon. With the picture of
hawkers, passengers
and school learners who were heading home around
the time the call was made, O’Regan J mentioned above that the
passengers
are vulnerable, and the Defendant has monopoly over the
rail system. I am not going to assume the Defendant’s
experience
thus, lessons could have been learnt for managing
commuters around the periods, whether it was the afternoon or
morning, when commuters
are heading home or places of work and
prepare for any eventualities that could not have been foreseeable.
Khwinana AJ in
Mthombeni v Passenger Rail Agency of South
Africa
(13304.17) [2021] ZAGPPHC 614
in reinforcing
the Defendants legal duty and went a step further and held the
‘
[Defendant] is under a public law duty to protect its
commuters cannot be disputed. … [and] pronounc[ing] that the
duty concerned,
together with constitutional values, have mutated to
a private law duty to prevent harm to commuters’,
(
para
19
). The plaintiff’s version which was also not refuted
in that a call was made for commuters to move platform 8 to platform
2 became evident that commuters not only the plaintiff were at risk
due to no reasonable safety measures in place to control the
crowd at
the time of the afternoon when most people were anxious to get home.
Another issue, the plaintiff was an eligible commuter
awaiting to
board train to ferry to her place of alighting, Carletonville which
was also not refuted. It was the valid ticket that
justified the
plaintiff’s boarding of the train save for the late
announcement for the move from platform 8 to platform 2
that resulted
in her injuries. This also meant that the possession of a valid
ticket during evidence in chief and cross examination
including the
happening of the incident itself was not disputed. Therefore, the
plaintiff’s awaiting at the station, her
being pushed ‘
by
an unknown person
’ could not have been reasonably
foreseeable. However, what became evident, the Defendant, as a
reasonable organ of state,
attempted to avoid taking responsibility
and account for the incident that happened on 11 September 2012,
resulting in the plaintiff’s
injuries. At the risk of
repetition, irrespective of whether there was no injured person, the
plaintiff was caught up in several
people to the detriment of her
safety that were pushing to get to platform 2.
[20]
I am also not to second-guess the Assessor’s Report in that the
Defendant, through its
employees who were not visible at the
Platforms when the Call was made for the move of people breached the
duty to ensure the smooth
transition of the commuters from platform 8
to platform 2. The Assessor’s Report dated 16 October 2023 from
the Claims Assist
Services after having conducted a comprehensive
assessment of the evidence regarding the claim established that:
[20.1] The
plaintiff was not in control of the situation when she was pushed
from the platform.
[20.2] The
overcrowding of the platform caused by hawkers and a crowd pushing
and shoving was already a dangerous situation
even before the call
was made.
[20.3] The
plaintiff was not negligent in any way as the attempt was to portray
her as such by the Two Prasa Guards. We are
of the opinion that they
did not even see this incident happening.
[20.4] PRASA is
100% to be blamed because they allowed a dangerous situation on an
overcrowded platform with hawkers and commuters
to escalate in this
incident when the train was re-routed to platform 2 from platform 8
after being late.
In essence, having a
security guard, who was called into the scene was indicative of the
fact that there were no reasonable measures
in place to ensure the
safety of the commuters and is a type of a ‘
legal blunder
’
that attracted the Defendant’s delictual responsibility.
[21]
On the basis of the evidence before this Court, not only of the
plaintiff but the Defendant’s
employees who testified about the
uncontrollable crowd at the time the call was made, the rush of
commuters was indicative of an
uncontrollable situation that could
have been, in the position of the Defendant, reasonably foreseeable,
(
Thwala
para 14
). In this case, the Defendant’s
action was not pure negligence but one that was wrong in that no
reasonable safety measures
put in place to prevent any eventualities
during the peak hour at the train station. I am satisfied that the
plaintiff satisfied
this test in proving the Defendant’s
negligence because the overall scheme of the Defendant’s
responsibility is grounded
in the Constitution, 1996 which protects
many of the fundamental rights and responsibilities included therein.
As simply stated,
Mogoeng CJ in
Mashongwa
held that the
Defendants’ ‘
public law obligations attract liability
should the body fail to uphold the duties upon it’
, (
para
21
). Therefore, as the plaintiff was pushed by
an unknown
commuter
during the move from platform 8 to platform 2, the
Defendant must take responsibility for not putting reasonable
measures that
would have ameliorated any risks that were associated
with an uncontrollable situation at the station. This court is not to
attribute
any contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff
regarding the Defendant’s unreasonable conduct for not having
had
an insight and drew lessons from the experience in managing the
flow of the many people during peak hours at the station. It is
also
my view that the Defendant be held liable for the plaintiff’s
injuries. At first, the Defendant barely liability and
subsequently
argued for contributory negligence which is indicative of not being a
reliable organ of state in upholding the legal
duty it owes towards
the fulfilment of the prescripts of the new dispensation. Secondly,
contributory negligence was a frivolous
argument with no prospect of
success by imputing liability on the plaintiff. The Defendant must
also pay the plaintiff’s
reasonable costs of the Assessor that
conducted research and formulated an opinion on the incident.
[22]
Accordingly, it is ordered that:
[22.1] The
Defendant is 100% liable for the Plaintiff’s proven or agreed
damages.
[22.2] The
Defendant shall be liable to pay the reasonable costs of the
Assessor’s fees: Claims Assist Services.
[22.3] The
Defendant shall be liable to pay the Plaintiff’s costs
including the costs for 20, 21 and 22 November 2023.
[22.4] The
Defendant is to pay the costs of this application on a party and
party scale.
[22.5] The
quantum
is postponed
sine die
.
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
ACTING JUDGE, THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Dates
Heard
: 20; 21 and
22 November 2023
Date
Delivered
: 18 April
2024
Appearances
:
Plaintiff
:
Nkuna
Rose Attorneys
231
Helen Joseph Street
Pretoria
Defendant
:
Jerry
Nkele & Associates Inc
35
Pritchard Street
Johannesburg
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