Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 553South Africa
Ramatsemela v Road Accident Fund (9483/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 553 (4 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 June 2024
Headnotes
section 23(2) of the RAF Act interpretation, excludes the affected persons from protection against prescription because it limits their rights under section 34 of the Constitution. As a result, the Court set aside an order of the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in which a special plea of prescription was upheld.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ramatsemela v Road Accident Fund (9483/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 553 (4 June 2024)
Ramatsemela v Road Accident Fund (9483/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 553 (4 June 2024)
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sino date 4 June 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 9483/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE
4 June 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
MOSOMA
RAMATSEMELA
Applicant
And
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. The date and time
of
hand down is deemed to be 4 June 2024 at 10:00.
MNISI
AJ
[1]
The applicant, brought an application in terms of which the following
relief is sought:
“
1.
The Applicant’s non-compliance with the provisions of section
23(3) of the Road Accident Fund Act be
and is hereby condoned in
terms of Rule 27(1) and (3) of the Uniform Rules of the court.
2.
The Applicant’s prosecution of the action under the above
case number against the Defendant is
hereby condoned and the
Applicant is granted leave to proceed with the said action instituted
against the Defendant.
3.
Costs of the application to be costs in the action.”
[2]
The respondent did not file any opposing papers. Accordingly the
matter came before
me in an unopposed roll on 29 January 2024.
[3]
According
to the founding affidavit, the applicant, Ms Ramatsela Mosoma (Ms
Mosoma), was injured in a motor vehicle accident
on 13 April
2013. It is further alleged that she sustained the
following bodily injuries comprising of (a)
a
fracture
of the left clavicle, (b) an injury to the neck and shoulder, and (c)
general body pains.
[4]
Subsequent
to the injuries as aforesaid, the applicant lodged her claim directly
with the Road Accident Fund (RAF) on the 15
th
of October 2015. In terms of section 23(1) of the Road Accident Fund
Act
[1]
(RAF Act), the claim
should have been filed within three years of the accident, that is,
by 13 April 2018. However,
section 23(2)(b) and (c) of
the RAF Act protects persons against prescription if they have mental
disabilities, and consequently,
are detained in terms of mental
health legislation or placed under curatorship.
[4]
Acting on the applicant’s behalf, her attorneys of record
issued summons
against the RAF on 1 March 2021, some seven years
after the accident occurred
.
The applicant alleges that the claim
prescribed due to the RAF’s failure to advise her to undergo a
serious injury medical
assessment in terms of section 17(1)(a) and
regulation 3(1)(b) of the Road Accident Fund Act.
[5]
Before this Court, the applicant claims that this matter
in essence implicates
the affected persons’ right of access to
courts under section 34 of the Constitution. Counsel for the
applicant urges me
to extend the application of section 13(1)(a) of
the Prescription Act to the applicant by adopting a harmonious
reading of its
provision with that of section 23(2) of the RAF
Act.
[6]
In support of this argument, the applicant looks to Constitutional
Court jurisprudence on the interplay
between section 13(1)(a) of the
Prescription Act and the RAF Act
.
By
way of illustration, the applicant directs this Court to the matter
of
Phillipa
Sussan Van Zyl N.O v Road Accident Fund
.
[2]
In that case, Mr Koos Jacobs (
Mr
Jacobs
)
was seriously injured in a motor vehicle accident on May Day
2010.
[3]
[7]
As a result of the accident, Mr Jacobs
suffered
severe head injuries that impaired his mental capacity to such an
extent that he was unable to manage his own affairs.
More
particularly, he was unable to
lodge
his claim against the RAF within the prescribed period. Acting
on his behalf, Mr Jacobs’ mother lodged his claim
for damages
with the RAF on 18 January 2017, some seven years after the accident
.
On 28 November 2017,
Mr Jacobs’ mother secured a court order appointing Ms Phillipa
Susan van Zyl
N.O.
(Ms Van Zyl), as his
curatrix
ad litem.
Ms van Zyl instituted an action against the RAF for payment of
damages on his behalf on 8 March 2018.
[8]
There, the Constitutional Court held that section 23(2) of the RAF
Act interpretation, excludes the
affected persons from protection
against prescription because it limits their
rights under section 34 of
the Constitution. As a result, the Court
set aside an order of the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in which a
special plea of prescription
was upheld.
[9]
Additionally, referring to Mr Jacobs’ case, the applicant
argues that the injuries
rendered it impossible for the applicant to
know about the requirement of section 23 of the RAF Act and to act on
her own to lodge
her claim.
[10]
The applicant further argues that she is a layperson and has no
knowledge of the law and procedures,
and that the RAF had a duty to
protect and act fairly towards her in order to protect her claim from
prescription. From the onset,
it is my considered view that the facts
of this case are distinguishable from Mr Jacobs’ case.
[11]
The applicant’s counsel could not direct me to any other
specific authority which
supports this particular argument.
Having regard to the applicant’s submissions above, the
singular issue for determination
is whether Ms Mosoma’s claim
against the RAF can be saved from prescription.
[12]
It is now a well-established legal
principle that people with mental disabilities who are neither
so
detained nor under curatorship, and who are therefore not expressly
protected by section 23(2)(b) and (c) of the RAF Act, will
be
referred to as “affected persons”.
[13]
Unlike the Jacobs’
case,
section 23
of the RAF Act suspends the running of prescription against the
affected persons?
As
pointed out above, it is not what this case is all about. There is
also nothing to suggest that the applicant falls within the
ambit of
‘affected persons’. Instead, she simply blames the RAF
for its failure to advise her regarding the provisions
of section
17(1) and regulation 3(1)(b) of the RAF Act.
[14]
Section 17 of the RAF Act provides
that
the
RAF is liable to compensate persons for any loss or damage suffered
because of bodily injuries or death, caused by, or arising
from, the
driving of a motor vehicle, if such injury or death which was caused
due to the negligence or other wrongful act of the
driver or owner of
the motor vehicle. Section 23(1) and (2) of the RAF Act
circumscribe the RAF’s liability as follows:
“
(1)
Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any law
contained
,
but subject to subsections (2) and (3), the right to claim
compensation under section 17 from the Fund or an agent in respect
of
loss or damage arising from the driving of a motor vehicle in the
case where the identity of either the driver or the owner
thereof has
been established, shall become prescribed upon the expiry of a period
of three years from the date upon which the cause
of action arose.
(2) Prescription
of a claim for compensation referred to in subsection
(1)
shall not run against—
(a)
a minor;
(b)
any
person detained as a patient in terms of any mental
health
legislation;
or
(c)
a
person under curatorship.
”
[15]
The ordinary meaning of the prelude “[n]notwithstanding
anything to the contrary
in any law contained”, is that the RAF
Act supersedes any other law where claims arise for compensation
under section 17.
It follows from the ordinary meaning of the text in
section 23(2)(b) and (c) that the RAF Act suspends the running of
prescription
against persons who are either detained as patients in
terms of any mental health legislation or who are under curatorship.
Section 23(2) is silent about suspending prescription for the
affected persons.
[16]
It is noteworthy that the
constitutional validity of section 23(1) of the RAF Act fell
under
the spotlight in
Road
Accident Fund v Mdeyide (Mdeyide II).
The brief factual
matrix in
Mdeyide
II
was
that he was a poor, illiterate and uneducated man who, for six months
after sustaining injuries in an accident, had no knowledge
of his
rights. Knowledge, as a function in determining prescription,
was the cornerstone of the reasoning in
that case. It
was held that knowledge, set the prescription clock ticking under the
Prescription Act but was ruled to be utterly
irrelevant for
triggering prescription under the RAF Act.
[17]
Unanimously, the Court found that prescription under section 23(1)
of the RAF Act limited
the right of access to courts under section 34
of the Constitution. The point of departure in
Mdeyide
II
between
the majority and minority was whether the limitation was justifiable
in circumstances of a deprived socio-economic reality. The
majority held that it was justifiable, but the minority concluded
otherwise.
Significantly,
the Court observed that there was a real risk that claimants may
explain their lateness by relying on “their
ignorance of the
law”.
[18]
At the heart of this matter lies the question whether Ms Mosoma’s
claim has prescribed because
it was instituted more than three years
from the date of the accident from which it arose. There is no
doubt that the three
years’ limitation on the period within
which she could institute her claim is imposed by section 23 of the
RAF Act.
[19]
The facts are not in dispute. It is accepted that the claim was
instituted after a period
of three years had lapsed from the date on
which the cause of action arose. The question is whether, the
failure by the RAF
to advice the Applicant to undergo any serious
injury medical assessment in terms of section 17 and regulation
3(1)(b) of the Act
constitutes any special circumstances in this
matter. It is my considered view that those circumstances can
only be ascertained
from Ms Mosoma’s state of mind at the time.
[20]
Unlike the Jacobs’ matter as pointed out above, Ms Mosoma’s
does not allege that
after the accident, she has become a person of
unsound mind, neither does she allege that she could not institute
legal proceedings
on her own because she lacked legal standing and
could not instruct others to do so on her behalf due to any kind of
condition,
including
inter alia
, mental condition.
[21]
Section 23 of the RAF Act is divided into five subsections and
subsections (2) to (5) address
exceptions to the extinctive
prescription imposed by the provision in subsection (1).
[22]
The exceptions in subsections (4) and (5) are not relevant to his
case. Section 23
of the RAF Act provides that:
“
(1) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any law contained, but subject to
subsections (2) and (3), the
right to claim compensation under
section 17 from the Fund or an agent in respect of loss or damage
arising from the driving of
a motor vehicle in the case where the
identity of either the driver or the owner thereof has been
established, shall become prescribed
upon the expiry of a period of
three years from the date upon which the cause of action arose.
(2) Prescription
of a claim for compensation referred to in subsection
(1)
shall not run against—
(a) a
minor;
(b) any
person detained as a patient in terms of any mental health
legislation; or
(c) a
person under curatorship.
(3) Notwithstanding
subsection (1), no claim which has been lodged in terms of section
17(4)(a) or 24 shall
prescribe before the expiry of a period of five
years from the date on which the cause of action arose.”
[23]
Section 23(1) informs us that the right to claim compensation from
the RAF in respect of loss or damage
arising from the driving of a
motor vehicle, becomes prescribed on the expiry of three years from
the date of the accident. In
other words, such claim must be lodged
within a period of three years if the identity of the driver or owner
of the offending vehicle
was established. Prescription starts
running under the section from the date of the accident, regardless
of any provision
to the contrary in any other law.
[24]
As pointed out above, section 23(1) has internal exceptions and these
are to be found in
subsections (2) and (3). Subsection (2)
declares that the prescription provided for in subsection (1) shall
not run against
persons listed in it. These are (a) minors; (b)
persons detained as patients under mental health legislation; and (c)
persons
under curatorship. But significantly, the exceptions in
(b) and (c) must have occurred before the expiry of three years from
the date of the accident for them to interrupt the running of
prescription or before the date of the accident, for them to prevent
prescription from commencing to run.
[25]
While subsection (2) prevents and stops prescription from running
against persons mentioned in it,
subsection (3) extends the
prescription period by a further two years in respect of certain
claims. These are claims lodged
in terms of section 17(4) or
section 24 of the RAF Act. These claims become prescribed
upon the expiry of five years
from the date of the accident.
[26]
It is not in dispute that on a literal interpretation of section 23,
Ms Mosoma’s claim
had become prescribed. Similarly, the
Prescription Act cannot save Ms Mosoma’s claim from
prescription because the
Act does not apply to the present matter.
Moreover, in light of the fact that Ms Mosoma does not fall within
the exceptions
in terms of section 23(2) and (3), her claim had
prescribed upon the expiry of the three years from the date on which
the cause
of action arose, therefore her present application falls to
be dismissed.
[27]
In
Mdeyide
II,
the
court stated that f
or
the majority, the country wide prevalence of poverty and illiteracy
yielded to concerns for “the functioning and financial
sustainability of a hugely important public body which renders an
indispensable service to vulnerable members of society”.
The
majority concluded:
“
The
RAF Act was legislated for a specific area and purpose. It
limits the right of access to courts, but the importance of
the
purpose, the nature and extent of the limitation and the relation
between the limitation and its purpose render the limitation
proportional to its purpose and thus reasonable and justifiable.”
[28]
For the minority, the absence of a knowledge requirement for
prescription to start running, or
provision for condonation to
counter the socio-economic realities, rendered the limitation of the
right of access to courts in
section 23(1) of the RAF Act “too
inflexible to be justified”.
[29]
In this
case, I have taken into consideration the principles laid down in
several judgments including
Mdeyide
II
and concluded that the
applicant’s reliance on ‘ignorance of the law’ in
trying to persuade this court to condone
the late filing of her claim
is misguided. Similarly, as pointed out above, the facts in Mr
Jacobs’ matter are distinguishable
from this matter.
[30]
In conclusion, I recognise that the Prescription Act does not apply
to suspend the running of
prescription under the RAF Act. However,
in my view, the common law impossibility and incapacity principles do
not find application
to rescue Ms Mosoma’s claim from
prescribing in this instance. It is clear that the RAF Act
saves the State from exposure
to claims of violating its legislative
obligations.
[31]
I have taken into consideration the recognition of the validity of
the RAF Act and the
rights of the affected persons to human dignity
and to access courts, without over burdening the RAF.
Under
section 23(1), prescription begin to run against Ms Mosoma from the
date of the accident, and there is no doubt that it has
prescribed.
[32]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
Mnisi AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Heard
on:
29
January 2024
Decided
on:
4
June 2024
For
the Applicant:
Ms
Thabethe
Attorneys
for Applicant:
Mojapelo
Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Unknown
[1]
Act
56 of 1996.
[2]
Van
Zyl N.O. v Road Accident Fund
[2021]
ZACC 44
.
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