Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 529South Africa
Tromp N.O v Road Accident Fund (A295/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 529 (5 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
5 June 2024
Headnotes
as follows:
Judgment
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## Tromp N.O v Road Accident Fund (A295/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 529 (5 June 2024)
Tromp N.O v Road Accident Fund (A295/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 529 (5 June 2024)
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sino date 5 June 2024
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: A295/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
5/6/2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between
ADV.
M TROMP
N.O.
Appellant
(In
her capacity as a duly appointed
curatrix
ad litem
on behalf of Bakkes, Pieter Stegman)
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAHOSI
J
[1]
This appeal concerns an award by Raulinga J in the Court
a quo
to the appellant of R3 100 000.000 for future loss of earnings, and
R1 350 000.00 for general damages suffered due to a motor vehicle
accident. The appeal is before this Court with leave of the Court
a
quo
.
[2]
The appellant is Advocate Mart-Marie Tromp
N.O
., an adult
female Advocate acting as the
curatrix ad litem
on behalf of
Mr. Pieter Stegman Bakkes ("Mr. Bakkes"), a sales manager
born on 22 February 1973. On 14 January 2017,
Mr. Bakkes was involved
in a collision along the N6 route connecting Queenstown and
Jamestown. The incident involved a white Toyota
Quantum motor vehicle
bearing the registration D[...] 2[...] X[...] G[...] and Mr Bakkes,
who was cycling then. As a result of
the accident, Mr. Bakkes
sustained injuries.
[3]
The appellant's action against the respondent was set down for
hearing before the
Court
a quo
on 09 February 2022. The
question of liability was resolved before the commencement of the
proceedings, as the appellant agreed
to accept the respondent's offer
to compensate him for 90% of his damages.
[4]
The appellant also accepted the respondent's offer to furnish him
with a statutory
undertaking for 90% of future accident-related
medical expenses. The parties agreed to postpone the appellant's
claim for past
hospital medical and related expenses
sine die
and proceed only with the claims for loss of earnings and general
damages.
[5]
On 09 February 2022, Adv. Grobler appeared for the appellant. The
respondent's representative,
Adv. P Moonsamie was unavailable. The
Court
a quo
stood the matter down to 11 February 2022 and
ordered that Adv. Moonsamie be prepared to address it. Adv. Grobler
filed heads of
argument, but Adv. Moonsamie failed.
[6]
On 11 February 2022, the parties presented arguments regarding the
future loss of
earnings and general damages. For future loss of
earnings, the appellant submitted that an award of R4 937 794.00
before the 10%
merits apportionment be granted. After applying the
merits apportionment and the statutory cap, the actuarially
calculated amount
was R4 850 873.00. The respondent argued that an
award of R4 036 143.76 be granted.
[7]
Regarding the amount to be awarded for general damages, the appellant
argued that
R2 000 000.00, before the 10% merits apportionment, be
granted. The respondent argued for an award between R1 250 000.00 and
R1
400 000.00, presumably before the 10% merits apportionment.
[8]
Having considered the submissions made by counsel and the reports
before it, the Court
a quo
handed down an extempore judgment
in which it held as follows:
'In this matter the
plaintiff was involved in an accident on 14 January 2017 and
sustained multiple injuries of his upper body in
particular he had
brain injury and comprehensive fractures of the upper part of his
spine and the lumbar vertebrae and other injuries.
I do not have to
go there and it will also be brain scar and of course visual trauma
related injuries.
As a result apparently he
suffers from double vision. It was submitted by counsel for the
plaintiff that as a result of this injuries
the plaintiff continued
to work but he was demoted from being a manager to the so called
recon. I think he was managing the other
part of the employer's
workplace and no longer performing what he was supposed to perform.
However, it seems to me that although
his salary was reduced, it was
not terribly reduced.
I think at the time of
his so called demotion he was earning about thirty thousand rand per
month but one must also take into consideration
the submissions by
the defendant that although the plaintiff suffered serious injuries
there is improvement in as far as his mobility
is concerned and he is
healing well. He can actually go on his haunches and he has no
abnormal reflexes and that if he is exercising
he should actually
slowly recover as well.
What is also interesting
is the issue raised by the defendant that the plaintiff may not go
beyond 55 years of his employment. In
other words, he will have to
retire at age 63 which is an issue that the plaintiff did not
actually mention. But also of interest
is that the plaintiff did not
receive any surgical treatment.
He has got no operations
and he was in hospital for a week and for the person who was
seriously injured as alleged by the plaintiff
I think with his
multiple injuries he ought to have been in hospital even for more
than a month. I will take into consideration
all these factors. When
looking at the facts that after which I will have to exercise my
discretion. I think the plaintiff is now
about 49 years old, and I
think he is supposed to retire at 63 instead of 65.
Having done so, I looked
also at the cases which I was referred to by the plaintiff and also
the amounts suggested by the plaintiff
as well as amounts suggested
by the defendant counsel in her closing remarks and I think I should
come to the following conclusion.
I am just looking at my
notes. In as far as loss of earnings I come to the amount of three
million and one hundred thousand and
fifty and will actually conclude
this proceedings. Counsel are to prepare a draft along this line.
Loss of earnings three million
and hundred thousand. Thank you.'
[9]
Despite the appellant's request for full reasons when bringing the
application for
leave to appeal, the Court
a quo
failed to
furnish them. In its order, the Court
a quo
awarded a net
amount of R3 100 000.00, after the 10% merits apportionment, for loss
of future earnings and a net amount of R1 350
000.00 for general
damages, after the 10% merits apportionment. The appeal turns on
whether the award granted by the Court
a quo
was justifiable.
[10]
The judgment in
Road
Accident Fund v Marunga
[1]
is instructive. It provides that:
"As a general rule a
court which delivers a final judgment is obliged to give reasons for
its decisions. In an article in the
The South African Law Journal
(vol 115 - 1998 pp 116-128) entitled
Writing a Judgment
the
former Chief Justice, MM Corbett, pointed out that this general rule
applies to both civil and criminal cases. In civil cases,
this is not
a statutory rule but one of practice. The learned author referred to
Botes & another v Nedbank Ltd
1983 (3) S.A. 27
(A) where
this Court held that in an opposed matter where the issues have been
argued litigants are entitled to be informed of
the reasons for the
judge's decision. It was pointed out that a reasoned judgment may
well discourage an appeal by the loser and
that the failure to supply
reasons may have the opposite effect, that is, to encourage an
ill-founded appeal. The learned author
stated the following at 117:
'In addition, should the
matter be taken on appeal, the Court of appeal has a similar interest
in knowing why the judge who heard
the matter made the order which he
did. But there are broader considerations as well. In my view, it is
in the interest of the
open and proper administration of justice that
the courts state publicly the reasons for their decisions. Whether or
not members
of the general public are interested in a particular case
- and quite often they are - a statement of reasons gives some
assurance
that the Court gave due consideration to the matter and did
not act arbitrarily. This is important in the maintenance of public
confidence in the administration of justice."'
[11]
In the current matter, the respondent's counsel submitted in its
heads of arguments that the
matter be postponed to enable the Court
a
quo
to provide full reasons. The respondent opined that the
absence of the reasons disadvantages this Court from adjudicating the
matter
properly. On the contrary, this is not a case where the Court
a quo
did not provide reasons. It is just that the attempt is
inadequate. As such, this Court can determine the issues raised by
the
parties on the record provided.
Loss
of earnings
[12]
In considering the damages in respect of future loss of earnings, the
Supreme Court of Appeal
in
Road
Accident Fund Act v Guedes
[2]
restated the applicable principles as follows:
"It is trite that a
person is entitled to be compensated to the extent that the person's
patrimony has been diminished in consequence
of another's negligence.
Such damages include loss of future earning capacity (see for example
President Insurance Co Ltd v Mathews
). The calculation of the
quantum of a future amount, such as loss of earning capacity, is not,
as I have already indicated, a matter
of exact mathematical
calculation. By its nature such an enquiry is speculative and a court
can therefore only make an estimate
of the present value of the loss
which is often a very rough estimate (see for example
Southern
Insurance Association Ltd v Bailey NO.
The Court necessarily
exercises a wide discretion when it assesses the quantum of damages
due to loss of earning capacity and has
a large discretion to award
what it considers right. Courts have adopted the approach that in
order to assist in such a calculation,
an actuarial computation is a
useful basis for establishing the quantum of damages. Even then, the
trial court has a wide discretion
to award what it believes is just
(see for example the
Bailey
case and
Van der
Plaats
v South African Mutual Fire and General Insurance Co Ltd
). As
pointed out by the learned authors Erasmus and Gauntlett with
reference to a number of reported cases, the proper approach
of an
appeal court in appeals against awards of damages has often been set
out, and the principles have been stated in different
ways, some
appearing to favour appellants, others respondents. Some of these
principles which are of application in this matter
are well
summarised, again with reference to reported cases, by the learned
authors in these succinct terms:
'(c)
Where the amount of damages is a matter of estimation and discretion,
the appeal court
is generally slow to interfere with the award of the
trial court - an appellate tribunal cannot simply substitute its own
award
for that of the trial court. However, once it has concluded
that interference is justified in terms of the principles set out in
(d) below, the appeal court is entitled
and obliged
to
interfere.
(d)
The appeal court will interfere with the award of the trial court:
(i)
where there has been an irregularity or misdirection (for example,
the Court
considered irrelevant facts or ignored relevant ones; the
Court was too generous in making a contingency allowance; the
decision
was based on totally inadequate facts);
(ii)
where the appeal court is of the opinion that no sound basis exists
for the award
made by the trial court;
(iii)
where there is a substantial variation or a striking disparity
between the award made
by the trial court and the award which the
appeal court considers ought to have been made. In order to determine
whether the award
is excessive or inadequate, the appeal court must
make its own assessment of the damages. If upon comparison with the
award made
by the trial court there appears to be a "substantial
variation" or a "striking disparity", the appeal court
will interfere." [Footnotes omitted]
[13]
In the current matter, the appellant contends that the Court
a quo
erred by failing to correctly determine the loss of earnings
despite the conspectus of evidence and the available actuarial
calculation
and by not correctly applying the legal principles
relating to the quantification to the proven facts. The respondent
submitted
that the decision of the Court
a quo
should not be
interfered with as it considered all facts placed before it.
[14]
The respondent asserts that there is no evidence that Mr Bakkes was
unable to work from March
2022 or a possibility that he might be
shifted to a lower position as had been done in the past. It further
asserts that nothing
would justify the conclusion that Mr Bakkes will
be unemployable when the evidence placed before the Court is that he
was employed
for five years post the accident. From the above, it
argues that the actuarial calculation that valued nil post-accident
earnings
from 01 March 2022 is baseless.
[15]
The Court
a quo
considered that Mr Bakkes would retire at age
63 and was sceptical about the seriousness of his injuries as he had
no surgical
treatment and was in the hospital for only a week instead
of a whole month. It found that there was an improvement in his
mobility,
and he was healing well because he could go on his haunches
and had no abnormal reflexes. Further, the Court
a quo
found
that if the appellant were to exercise, he would slowly recover and
gain full mobility.
[16]
The evidence shows that Mr Bakkes was 44 years of age at the time of
the collision, married with
two teenage daughters. He was promoted at
work shortly before the collision to the position of sales manager at
a motor vehicle
retail group and was a successful semi-professional
cyclist with a sponsorship, enabling him to ride thousands of
kilometres per
month and frequently compete in cycle races.
[17]
The appellant's attorneys of record obtained reports from the
following 12 experts:
17.1 Dr
JJ du Plessis (Neurosurgeon);
17.2 Dr
M Mazabow (Clinical Neuropsychologist);
17.3 Dr
K Theron (Speech Therapist);
17.4 Dr
K Truter (Clinical Psychologist);
17.5 Dr
C Weitz (Ophthalmologist);
17.6 Dr
T Birrell (Orthopaedic Surgeon);
17.7 L
Randall (Occupational Therapist);
17.8 B
Donaldson (Industrial Psychologist);
17.9 Dr
L Nel (Psychiatrist);
17.10 Dr K
Carpenter-Kling (Ear, Nose & Throat Surgeon);
17.11 C Rule
(Occupational Therapist and Disability Driving Consultant);
17.12 G Whittaker
(Actuary).
[18]
The above expert reports were presented to the Court on affidavits in
terms of Rule 38(2) of
the Uniform Rules of Court and admitted as
evidence with the appellant's and his wife's affidavits.
[19]
Dr Du Plessis reports that the appellant's combined whole person
impairment ("WPI")
is 53%. The injuries sustained by the
appellant included:
19.1 A severe traumatic
brain injury, which comprised of a diffused concussive brain injury
together with focal damage to both frontal
lobes (a C.T. scan
performed during the plaintiffs initial admission to the hospital
revealed an area of hemorrhagic contusion
in the right caudate
nucleus and a lacunar infarct in the left posterior parietal area).
The MRI scan later confirmed the brain
injury;
19.2. A
severe compression fracture to the thoracic vertebra (T12) which has
resulted in a moderate misalignment of
his spinal column and chronic
back pain;
19.3. A
transverse fracture to his sacrum, which has probably caused a
neurological deficit in the plaintiffs right
leg;
19.4. A
compression fracture of the lumbar vertebra (LS - with 50% loss of
vertebral body height) and an injury to the
L4/5 and LS/S1 disks;
19.5
Factures of the left fourth, fifth and sixth ribs;
19.6. A fracture of the
fifth metacarpal bone of the plaintiff's right hand (resulting in a
malunited fracture of the distal aspect
of the fifth radiocarpal with
angulation);
19.7 A
septaI fracture with obstructive nasal airflow;
19.8. A
hemopneumothorax on the left side;
19.9. Either
a fourth or sixth cranial nerve paralysis resulting in double vision;
19.10. Scarring of 10cm
around the distal aspect of the left elbow and a 12cm scar over the
left buttock area;
19.11. Numerous bruises
and abrasions;
19.12 Laceration on his
arm and
19.13. Resultant
depression and anxiety.
[20]
After the accident, Mr Bakkes was transported by ambulance from the
scene of the accident to
Life Queenstown Private Hospital, where he
was admitted. He woke up in hospital, and his wife avers that he was
drowsy and confused
when she visited him in hospital. She further
states that his right leg was weak for the first few days after the
accident.
[21]
The appellant's GCS score of 14/15 was recorded at his arrival at the
hospital. The CT scan report
of his brain showed an area of
hemorrhagic contusion in the right caudate nucleus and a lacuna
infarct in his brain in the left
posterior parietal area. The
appellant was placed in the ICU, and his brain injury was treated
non-operatively. He was discharged
from the hospital on 25 January
2017.
[22]
Dr Du Plessis noted that after Mr Bakkes' discharge from the
hospital, he had experienced a lot
of chest pain. He was drowsy,
slept a lot and took approximately a week before becoming orientated
regarding the week's days. Mr
Bakkes was on sick leave for three
months and struggled with diplopia (double vision) post-accident.
[23]
Dr Du Plessis reported that Mr Bakkes has cognitive difficulties,
chronic back pain, fatigue
and a behavioural change attributed to the
brain injury. Further, his frontal lobe brain injury is associated
with his aggression,
his difficulty in multitasking and his inability
to function under pressure. Mr Bakkes cannot count backwards from 100
in sevens
and can recall only the names of two of four simple items
mentioned 5 minutes before. The accident was a watershed event in Mr
Bakkes' life as he has an increased risk of epilepsy compared to the
average person.
[24]
Dr Mazebow found that Mr Bakkes demonstrated several critical
impairments, and these areas of
deficits include clerical speed and
accuracy; sustained attention and concentration; error-vigilance;
working memory and double
mental tracking; visuo-graphic skills;
non-verbal reasoning and abstraction and concept-formation; verbal
fluency; arithmetic reasoning;
planning; stimulus resistance; rote
verbal memory; and visual memory (recall and recognition). He also
evidenced rapid fatigability
and a tendency to become overwhelmed by
the task demands.
[25]
Dr Mazenbow noted that Mr Bakkes and his wife reported that Mr
Bakkes' cognitive, behavioural
and interpersonal functioning
deteriorated since the accident. His memory and his concentration
have deteriorated, and there are
changes in his speech that resulted
in word-finding difficulty, occasional slurring, reduction in his
information-processing speed
and reaction times. Mr Bakkes has become
structure and routine dependent, fatigable, short tempered,
irritable; unable to
socialise and has become withdrawn because of
his low self-confidence and his tendency to become overwhelmed
agitated by social
stimulation. His fatigability and inability to
cycle in his former club also compromised his social functioning.
[26]
According to Dr Mazenbow, the above cognitive, behavioural and social
interpersonal impairments
are attributed predominantly to the severe
traumatic brain injury sustained in the accident. These
neuropsychological disturbances
would be further exacerbated by Mr
Bakkes' clinical psychological disturbances, chronic pain symptoms
(including back pain, chest
pain and headaches), residual double
vision, photophobia (light sensitivity) and dizzy spells that occur
in the course of his daily
functioning.
[27]
Dr Mazenbow reported that significant and persisting
neuropsychological deficits would be expected
following the nature
and severity of Mr Bakkes' traumatic brain injuries. He found it
unlikely that any further improvements would
be significant and
considered his current neuropsychological status permanent.
[28]
Dr K Truter reported that Mr Bakkes now suffers from an organic brain
disorder with symptoms
of frontal lobe cerebral pathology, anxiety
and depression. According to Dr Weitz, Mr Bakkes' double vision is
trauma-related and
he suffers from either a fourth or sixth cranial
nerve paralysis as a result of the accident.
[29]
Dr Birrel stated that Mr Bakkes has anger outbursts and he is short
tempered, has slurred
speech when he is anxious, experiences
headaches and has difficulty concentrating. These, according to Dr
Birrel, resulted in three
written warnings against Mr Bakkes due to
his department's poor performance.
[30]
Dr T Birrel reported that Mr Bakkes often experiences pins and
needles and numbness in his arms
and hands. Further, Mr Bakkes
presents with a scar of 10cm around the distal aspect of the left
elbow and has a 12cm scar over
the left buttock area, which are
accident related. A full flexion of his knees causes discomfort on
both sides, and he has been
unable to go on his haunches properly
since the accident. The right hand shows a malunited fracture of the
distal aspect of the
fifth radiocarpal with angulation.
[31]
Dr K Carpenter-King found that post-accident, Mr Bakkes chokes at
times when swallowing Further,
when lying and sleeping, he chokes and
feels as if he cannot breathe. When walking and suddenly turning, he
becomes disorientated
and feels like he is falling. Mr Bakkes tends
to wander into objects, has a decreased taste and struggles to hear
with background
noise. He can only sleep on his right side after the
accident. If he sleeps on the left side, he cannot breathe. His nose
has become
more obstructed after the accident, and he has nose bleeds
at times. Mr Bakkes has a settle fracture with obstructive nasal
airflow.
[32]
Mr Bakkes' score of 35 on the Depression Inventory is in the severe
range of depression. His
depressive symptoms currently include
suicidal thoughts, together with chronic sadness, discouragement
about the future and anhedonia
(reduced capacity to experience
pleasure), a sense of failure, guilt and expectation of punishment,
diminished self-confidence,
self-criticism, a desire to cry, a
feeling of restlessness, loss of social interest, difficulty making a
decision, reduced sense
of self-worth, lowered energy, increased need
for sleep, irritability, decreased appetite, fatigue, distractibility
and reduced
sexual interest. These symptoms persist despite the
current use of anti-depressant treatment.
[33]
Mr Bakkes and his wife attribute this chronic depression to his
reduced physical and cognitive
abilities, difficulties experienced in
the workplace, poor financial situation, loss of his ability to cycle
with his team and
his low self confidence and self-esteem. Mr
Bakkes reports fear related to cycling, with generalised anxiety in
the form of
chronic worrying about his financial situation and fear
occurring when he finds himself out of his routine (having become
structured-dependent
since the accident), and he also has developed
social phobia, relating to his low self-confidence. Mr Mazenbow found
that Mr Bakkes'
prognosis for psychological treatment was guarded to
poor, and the plaintiff will likely remain psychologically vulnerable
in the
long term.
[34]
Dr Truter reports that according to collateral evidence, Mr Bakkes
presents with personality
and behavioural changes. Before the
accident, Mr Bakkes was perfectionistic. However, he now finds it
difficult to adjust to his
changes, tends to display social anxiety
as well as situationally inspired anxiety, finds it difficult to
multitask, shows a speech
deficit and cannot function under stress.
The consequences of the accident impacted various spheres of his
life.
[35]
Dr K Theron found that Mr Bakkes displays mildly affected speech
intelligibility due to his rapid speech rate, which has resulted
in
an indistinct articulation. Mr Bakkes reported difficulty with
word-finding and verbal expression, concentration, multitasking,
problem-solving, short-term memory, following a group conversation,
re-reading information to facilitate recall and understanding,
and
fatiguing mentally and physically quicker than before the accident.
His cognitive communication difficulties displayed are
in keeping
with the documented
sequelae
of a moderate to severe brain
injury and with the involvement of the frontal lobes of the brain.
[36]
Dr K Theron reported that Mr Bakkes' cognitive communication
difficulties will negatively influence communication in both
vocational and social settings. Such challenges could make
communication less effective and influence how his communication
partners
perceive him. This, in turn, could negatively impact the
establishment of new interpersonal relationships and the maintenance
of
current relationships and can be regarded as a significant loss in
quality of life.
[37]
The uncontested and undisputed evidence of medico-legal experts
reveals that Mr Bakkes sustained severely debilitating orthopaedic
injuries, which, in conjunction with a severe brain injury, renders
him entirely unfit for employment. The updated medico-legal
reports
confirm that, even though the appellant remained employed from the
date of the collision to the hearing, his employment
situation
deteriorated to the point where he was at risk of being terminated as
soon as his claim against the respondent was finalised.
In other
words, Mr Bakkes is unfit for employment and has only been able to
sustain employment due to his employer's sympathetic
and
accommodating demeanour.
[38]
In light of the above evidence, it is apparent that the Court
a
quo
failed to assess all the evidence placed before it properly.
In so doing, it misdirected itself on the facts, thereby committing
an irregularity. Had it not done so, it would not have been
suspicious of the seriousness of the appellant's injuries. The fact
that Mr Bakkes was admitted to the hospital for a week as opposed to
a month and had not undergone any surgical procedures cannot
be a
measure of the severity of his injuries. The evidence is that his
injuries rendered him unfit for employment. In the absence
of the
respondent's expert evidence to contradict the admitted evidence, the
Court
a quo
had no basis to reject or doubt the appellant's
evidence.
[39]
The Court
a quo
committed an irregularity by awarding an
arbitrary amount concerning the loss of earnings. Had it not done so,
it would have addressed
its concerns by applying contingencies to the
calculations done by the actuary. In the circumstances, this Court is
bound to intervene
with its award. Having regard to all the relevant
factors, this Court considers the contingencies applied by the
actuary as appropriate.
[40]
Based on various assumptions, the actuary calculated that the
appellant's value of income uninjured
would have been R2 116 380.00,
for income injured would be R1 432 226, and the future loss of
earnings would be R8 232 878. He
suggested deducting five per cent
for past loss, fifteen per cent for future income (uninjured) and no
contingency for future income
(injured) as the appellant would be
rendered unemployable.
[41]
After applying the contingencies mentioned above, the past loss of
earnings amounted to R578
334.00, and the future loss of earnings
amounted to R6 997 946.00, making the total loss of earnings R7 576
280.00. As the CAP
introduced by the Road Accident Fund Amendment Act
is applicable, loss of earnings is limited as follows:
Past
loss of earnings:
R 578 334.00
Future
loss of earnings: R4 283 830.00
Total
loss of earnings: R4
862 164.00
General
Damages
[42]
It is trite that while the courts possess broad discretion in
determining general damages and
despite this process being inherently
imprecise and not based on established formulas, the
Court
a quo
must, at a minimum, articulate the factors and circumstances it deems
significant in assessing damages. It should also offer a
reasoned
basis for its conclusions.
[3]
[43]
In the current matter, the Court
a quo
mentioned that it
looked at the cases to which it was referred and the amounts
suggested by both parties and exercised its discretion
to award a net
amount of R1 350 000.00 for general damages after the 10% merits
apportionment. However, it did not state whether
it found any cases
the appellant relied on applicable and which factors weighed most
heavily with it in determining the quantum
for general damages. As
such, the appellant's submissions that the Court
a quo
had no
regard for the conspectus of evidence and failed to correctly apply
the legal principles relating to the quantification
appear well
founded.
[44]
The appellant's counsel referred the Court
a
quo
to
awards made in various matters in which severe brain and orthopedic
injuries were sustained and argued for an award of R2,000,000.00
(before the 10% merits apportionment). In the unreported judgment in
M
Anthony v The Road Accident Fund
[4]
,
a twenty two year old female, who sustained severe head injury, a
bilateral medial orbital fracture, inferior blowout fracture,
multiple facial lacerations and open wounds, bruising to the upper
arm, broken and lost teeth as well as severe scarring and
disfigurement
was, awarded an amount of R1 600 000.00 in 2017. The
current value amounts to approximately R2 270 585.17.
[45]
In
Mafalo
v Road Accident Fund
[5]
,
a thirteen-year-old student who suffered severe head and brain
injuries, which led to poor concentration, mood and personality
changes and inability to participate in all the sporting activities
that he had participated in before the accident, was awarded
R1 200
000.00 in March 2014. The current value amounts to approximately R1
979 437.79.
[46]
In another unreported matter of
Mofulatse
v Road Accident Fund
[6]
theplaintiff, who suffered a brain injury with various fractures to
his legs and the left wrist, which resulted in moderately severe
neuropsychological sequelae and likely knee replacement surgery, was
awarded R1 200 000.00 in June 2014. The current value amounts
to
about R2 055 700.00.
[47]
In
Vermaak
N.O. obo T Nkwana v Road Accident Fund
[7]
a twenty-seven, year old man who suffered a severe traumatic brain
injury with significant and profound neurocognitive, neuropsychiatric
and neuropsychological
sequelae
,
blunt chest trauma, a sprain of the lower back, psychological shock,
and trauma with resultant reactive asthma and reduced lung
capacity
with persistent chronic depression and anxiety with a poor prognosis
to treatment, and an injury to his left hand resulting
in an
inability to use it to carry heavy loads was awarded R1 800 000.00 on
03 December 2018. The current value amounts to approximately
R2 448
872.99.
[48]
Considering all the factors and circumstances relevant to the
assessment of damages referred
to earlier in this judgment and
considering past awards, the amount of R1 800 000.00, as argued by
the appellant, is an appropriate
award for damages. To the extent
that this amount differs so radically from the amount awarded by the
Court
a quo
and the latter failed to motivate its award, it
follows that this Court is entitled to upset the award of the Court
a
quo
.
[49]
In light of the above, the appeal must succeed, and the costs must
follow the cause.
[50]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
Paragraph 1.3 of the order of the Court a quo is replaced with the
following:
'1.3.2
Loss of earnings
R4 862 164.00
1.3.3
General Damages
R1 800 000.00
Total
R6 662 164.00'
D
Mahosi
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
I
agree
A.
Basson
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
I
agree
N.
Davis
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives through email. The
date for hand-down is
deemed to be_ May 2024.
Appearances
For the Appellant:
Advocate J.F.
Grobler
Instructed by:
Adams and Adams
Attorneys
For the Respondent:
Advocate M.H.
Mokale
Instructed by:
State Attorney
Date of hearing:
20 March 2024
[1]
[2003] 2 All SA 148
(SCA) at para 31.
[2]
2005 (5) SA 583
(SCA) at para 8.
[3]
Road Accident Fund v Marunga
[2003] 2 All SA 148
, at para 33.
[4]
[2017] ZAGPPHC 161.
[5]
Unreported judgment of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng
Division, Pretoria, Case No 17806/2010.
[6]
Unreported judgment of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng
Division, Pretoria, Case No 77/2010.
[7]
Unreported judgment of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng
Division, Pretoria, Case No 14728/2009.
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