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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 564
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## Andileit v Road Accident Fund (32090/2021)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 564 (14 June 2024)
Andileit v Road Accident Fund (32090/2021)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 564 (14 June 2024)
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sino date 14 June 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 32090/2021
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
3.
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
14 JUNE 2024
SIGNATURE
OF JUDGE:
In the matter between:
MALESA
ANDILEIT
PLAINTIFF
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGEMENT
FLATELA;
J
1.
This matter concerns a claim for damages by
the Plaintiff against the Road Accident Fund (RAF)
for
personal injuries sustained in a motor vehicle accident. The accident
occurred on 05 February 2020 near Apex, Benoni, Gauteng,
and the
Plaintiff, who was a passenger at the time, alleges that the accident
was caused by the negligent driving of one Pitso
Moeketsi.
2.
On 22 November 2023, the matter was
allocated to me on default judgment trial. The Defendant was not
represented. Counsel on behalf
of the Plaintiff informed me that
both
merits and quantum are still in dispute. I was also informed that the
Plaintiff had lodged a claim with the Compensation Commissioner
in
terms of the Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act
130 of 1993 as the Plaintiff was injured in the course
of her
employment. I was also informed that the Compensation Commissioner
had not made any settlement offer at the time of the
trial.
3.
The Plaintiff was the only witness who testified
to support her claim. She also relied on her affidavit in terms of
section 19(f).
An application for an order to have the expert's
evidence admitted on the affidavit in terms of Rule 38(2) of the
Uniform Rules
was made and it was granted.
The Legal Position
4.
The
RAF is obliged to compensate any person for any loss or damage that
such person has suffered as a result of any bodily injury
to
him/herself caused by or arising from the driving of a motor
vehicle
[1]
.
5.
In
Wells
v Shield Insurance
[2]
the Court held that:
“
Two
pre-requisites of liability upon the part of the registered insurance
company for loss or damage suffered by a third party as
a result of
bodily injury are thus laid down. They are (i) that the bodily injury
was caused by or arose out of the driving of
the insured motor
vehicle; and (ii) that the bodily injury was due to the negligence or
other unlawful act of the driver of the
insured vehicle or the owner
thereof or his servant. The decision as to whether, in a particular
case, these prerequisites have
been satisfied involves two separate
enquiries. Broadly speaking, the first pre-requisite is concerned
basically with the
physical or mechanical cause of the bodily
injury, whereas the second is concerned with legally blameworthy
conduct on the part
of certain persons as being the cause of the
bodily injury ('due to' having the same meaning as 'caused by'
-
Workmen's
Compensation Commissioner v S.A.N.T.A.M. Beperk
,
1949
(4) SA 732 (C)
at
pp. 736 - 7). Accordingly, these enquiries may follow wholly distinct
lines.”
[3]
6.
The Plaintiff
bears the onus to
prove that the wrongdoer caused the damages she suffered; She
must create a causal link between the damages
she suffered and the
actions of the wrongdoer.
7.
In
Gumede
v Road Accident Fund
[4]
Bhoolah
J sets out the requirements that a litigant must pass to establish a
delict against the Fund.
8.
The court held as follows, with
reference to liability as contemplated in Regulation 2(d), framed
under section 26 of the Act:
“
23.
By an analysis of the above section, liability of the defendant is
founded upon the principles of delict. Six jurisdictional
facts will
need to be proved by the plaintiff in order for the defendant to be
liable in each claim in respect of the Act and the
Amendment Act
added a seventh jurisdictional fact. These jurisdictional facts are
as follows:
…
23.4
Causality:
The plaintiff must allege and prove the causal
connection between the negligent act relied upon and the damages
suffered. The requirement
that there must be a causal link between
the conduct, the resulting injury or death and consequent damage is
expressed by the phrase
"caused by or arising from," as it
is found in section 17 of the RAF Amendment Act. Grove v Road
Accident Fund
[2017]
ZAGPPHC 757 (28 November 2017). In determining
the causal nexus between the negligent driving of the driver of the
insured vehicle
and the injuries sustained by the plaintiff, Van
Oosten J, in Miller v Road Accident Fund
[1999] 4 All SA 560
(W), at
p 565(i), formulated the inquiry as follows:
“
Two
distinct enquiries arise, which were formulated by Corbett CJ in
International Shipping Co (Pty) Ltd v Bentley
1990 (1) SA 680
(A) at
700E–I as follows:
‘
The
first is a factual one and relates to the question as to whether
defendant’s wrongful act was a cause of the plaintiff’s
loss. This has been referred to as ‘factual causation’.
The enquiry as to factual causation is generally conducted
by
applying the so-called ‘but-for’ test, which is designed
to determine whether a postulated cause can be identified
as a causa
sine qua non of the loss in question… On the other hand,
demonstration that the wrongful act was a causa sine
qua non of the
loss does not necessarily result in legal liability. The second
enquiry then arises viz whether the wrongful act
is linked
sufficiently closely or directly to the loss for legal liability to
ensue or whether, as it is said, the loss is too
remote. This is
basically a juridical problem in the solution of which considerations
of policy may play a part. This is sometimes
called 'legal
causation.'"
The Plaintiff’s
Pleaded case
The Accident
9.
In paragraph 5.1 of the particulars of the claim, the
Plaintiff alleged that:
“
On
February
2020 at all around Apex, Benoni, Gauteng Province, and accident
occurred when a motor vehicle with unknown registration
letters and
numbers there and then driven by Pitso Moeketsi lost control and
caused the accident. At the time of the accident,
the plaintiff was a
passenger of the above motor vehicle with unknown registration
letters and numbers here and then driven by
Pitso Moeketsi
.
”
10.
The Plaintiff pleaded numerous generic
grounds of negligence, including that the driver drove at an
excessive speed, failed to keep
the vehicle he
was
driving under proper or effective control, failed to apply brakes of
his vehicle either timeously, adequately or at all, he
failed to
reduce speed when he ought to and should have done so, he failed to
keep a proper lookout, he failed to take any or adequate
steps to
avoid the accident by exercise of reasonable care and diligence, he
could and should have done so, he failed to take the
rights of other
road users in cognizance, specifically that of the Plaintiff.
11.
Section
19(f)(i)
requires the particulars of the accident that give rise to the claim
to be fully set out. The Plaintiff’s affidavit
lacks full
details of the accident; it reads as follows:
“
On or about 05
February 2020 at or near Apex, Benoni in the
Gauteng Province, I was involved in a motor vehicle accident.
At the
time of the accident, the plaintiff was a passenger of the above
motor vehicle with unknown registration letters and numbers
here and
then driven by Pitso Moeketsi.
”
12.
Importantly, the Plaintiff states that as a result of this
accident, she suffered serious injuries and was admitted to Glenwood
Hospital. However, she was not hospitalised, and the treatment plan
included analgesia, rest, and elevation.
13.
The Plaintiff claims R 1 235 883.50 for loss of earnings.
14.
Moreover, in the Pre-Trial conference attended by both parties on 23
February 2023, the
following questions were put to the defendant:
THE
COLLISION
i.
Does the Defendant admit that the
driver
failed to keep the vehicle he was driving under proper or effective
control?
ii.
Does Defendant admit that the above-insured
driver failed to reduce speed when he ought to and should have done
so?
iii.
Does the Defendant admit that the
above-insured driver failed to keep a proper lookout?
iv.
Does Defendant admit that the
above-insured driver failed to take any or adequate steps to avoid
the accident with the exercise
of reasonable care and diligence? They
could have and should have done so.
v.
Does Defendant admit that the above-insured
driver failed to take cognizance of the rights of the other road
users, especially that
of Plaintiff?
vi.
Does the Defendant admit that the above-insured
driver is solely to blame for causing the accident? If not, what is
the Defendant’s
version?
15.
The line of questions that Plaintiff's legal representatives put to
Defendant's legal representatives
are in line with Plaintiff's
pleaded case that the injuries were a result of the collision.
The
plaintiff's injuries and impact on her earning capacity
16.
The Plaintiff alleged that as a result of the collision, she
suffered the following injuries namely:
a.
Injury on the neck;
b.
Injury on the right shoulder;
c.
Injuries on the chest;
d.
Injuries on the right elbow;
e.
Soft tissue injuries
.
17.
It is further stated that as a result of the injuries mentioned
above, the Plaintiff suffered
damages, the nature, extent, and
duration of which are as follows:
a.
Following the accident, the Plaintiff was
admitted to Glenwood Hospital;
b.
Experienced pain, suffering and discomfort
and will experience same in future;
c.
Experience emotional shock and trauma and
will experience the same in the future;
d.
Required medical treatment and will in
future require further such treatment and will have to incur
expenditure with regard thereof;
e.
she experienced the loss of amenities in life and
will do so in the future.
Evidence
Plaintiff’s
testimony
18.
The Plaintiff testified that at the time of
the accident, she was employed as a security personnel member at
Sinqobile Security.
PRASA appointed Sinqobile Security to guard its
premises in Brakpan. On the day of the accident, the plaintiff was a
passenger
in her employer’s vehicle who was transporting
security personnel traveling from Daveyton to Brakpan. After the
vehicle offloaded
those who were working at Apex station, the vehicle
left with others, including her; they were posted in another post.
The Plaintiff
was seated at the back of the vehicle when the door
suddenly opened; she fell out of the speeding car, landed on the
road, and
sustained injuries. The Plaintiff testified that she does
not know the name of the road, but it was a tarmac road in Apex. The
vehicle did not stop after the plaintiff fell off as the driver was
driving at an excessive speed. The driver made a U-turn to check
on
her; she was lying on the road. Her employer took her to Life
Glenwood Hospital for treatment.
Analysis
19.
In
terms of
Section
16 of the Civil Proceedings Evidence Act
[5]
A judgment may be given in any civil proceedings on the evidence of
any single competent and credible witness. For the Plaintiff
to
succeed in her claim, she must satisfy the Court that, on the
probabilities, her evidence is the truth.
[6]
20.
I am not satisfied that Plaintiff has discharged
the onus on the issue of liability for RAF.
21.
In causation inquiry, the logical starting point is the consideration
of the RAF 1 Form,
section 19(f) affidavit and the receiving
facility's hospital records. These documents constitute primary
records to establish
the accident's occurrence.
22.
As stated earlier, the Plaintiff was the only one who testified
regarding the events that
led to the accident. In these
circumstances, the court may accept her version or reject it as a
fabrication.
23.
The plaintiff testified that she fell from a speeding vehicle
in Apex Road Benoni,
and the injuries she suffered were caused solely
by the negligent driver of his employer, who drove the vehicle at an
excessive
speed and lost control of it. In her particulars of claim,
Plaintiff failed to disclose how the accident occurred. Both in her
particulars of claim and section 19 (f) affidavit, she only states
that she was involved in an accident and or collision.
24.
The Plaintiff’s section 19 (f) affidavit deposed on 25 November
2020, the Plaintiff
stated under oath that she was a passenger of the
motor vehicle bearing unknown registration letters and numbers, there
and there
being driven by Pitso Moeketsi. In her evidence, the
Plaintiff testified that she was conveyed by her employer's vehicle
with her
colleagues at the time of the accident, but she did not
provide the registration numbers of the insured vehicle. In addition,
in
the RAF 1 Form, the plaintiff failed to complete crucial
information regarding the accident. Section 6, which deals with the
registration
number of the vehicle, the driver's physical address,
the driver's contact details were not completed. Instead, the
plaintiff inserted
the words "Not Applicable ."How can this
crucial information be regarded as not applicable? This information
could have
been obtained easily as the Plaintiff was conveyed by her
employer's vehicle to her workstation.
25.
Other crucial information missing from the claim form is the details
of the workman's compensation,
Employment and Employer details and
witnesses. The plaintiff did not provide any information regarding
the workman's compensation,
employment details, or employer details;
instead, she inserted the words "not applicable." Notably,
the details of the
COID were completed in the hospital records,
including the company name, the registration number, the employer's
address, the contact
person and number, and the employer's address.
26.
The Road Accident Fund provides for three main prescribed forms to be
submitted when a claim
is lodged against the RAF. RAF1 form, RAF 3 or
section 19(f) affidavit, RAF 4 if general damages are claimed and
supporting documents.
In this matter, only the loss of income and
future medical expenses are claimed.
27.
The RAF1 deals with general information about the claim. The
Plaintiff is required to complete
it to validate the claim for
substantial compliance.
a.
Personal information of the Claimant (sec 1);
b.
Motor Vehicle Accident details (sec 5): The plaintiff did not fully
complete the motor accident details;
the details of the street number
and name were not provided,
c.
Passengers, Pedestrians & Cyclists (sec 6), the information was
not provided at all
d.
Details of Workman’s Compensation (sec 11); the information was
not provided at all
e.
Witness (sec 12): No details were provided, and the words not
applicable were inserted
f.
Employed details (sec 14); No details were provided, the words not
applicable were inserted;
g.
Employers’ details, (sec15); this section was not completed,
the words not applicable were inserted;
28.
I doubt that the claim against the RAF regard being had to the
information supplied is valid,
but I make no finding in this regard.
Hospital
Records
29.
According to
Life Glenwood Hospital
Clinical records, it is recorded that the plaintiff came in walking,
verbalizing that she fell from a truck, and now has a painful
right
shoulder and arm. The patient's history recorded that the plaintiff
"fell out of a truck while the stationary door accidentally
happened. The injury suspected was the right shoulder and chest wall
pain. The clinical findings were as follows:
a.
The right shoulder was tender, with no swelling
b.
Right elbow was tender;
c.
C-spine + paraspinal tenderness
d.
Chest -tender anterior wall.
30.
The Plaintiff was treated with analgesics, and the treatment plan was
rest and elevation.
31.
The independent sources do not support the Plaintiff's evidence that
she fell off the moving
vehicle that was driven at an excessive
speed.
32.
When I asked the applicant why the hospital records mechanism of
injury differs with the
one she gave on her evidence, the plaintiff
did not explain; she insisted on her version that she fell from a
speeding truck.
33.
There are
material contradictions between the Plaintiff's testimony and the
independent evidence. The Court must consider all the
evidence and
the objective facts in deciding the onus of proof.
[7]
Expert Evidence
34.
The Plaintiff filed the reports and
affidavits of Dr. Kumbirai, an Orthopedic Surgeon; Ngwato, an
Occupational Therapist; Sechudi,
an Industrial Psychologist; and
Minaar, an Actuary.
35.
The primary report put up by the Plaintiff is a report
by
Dr. Kumbirai, an Orthopedic Surgeon who assessed the Plaintiff on 17
February 2022. I will only deal with Dr. Kumbirai's evidence.
Dr Kumbirai
-Orthopaedic Surgeon
36.
Dr Kumbirai recorded that the Plaintiff
advised that she was a passenger in a truck when she fell off because
of the open door.
37.
Dr Kumbirai assessed the Plaintiff’s
whole-body impairment according to AMA guidelines at 0% and opined
that the injuries
have not resulted in non-serious long-term
impairment/loss of body function.
38.
Dr. Kumbirai examined the Plaintiff on her
head, neck, chest and back. He made the following findings:
a.
Neck- No deformity noted.
b.
Full range movement -no pain.
c.
Neovascularity intact—The cervical
spine X-ray done by Dr. Mkhabele and Indunah Diagnostic Radiologists
on 17 February 2022
was normal. The clinical and Radiological
findings =0% WPI (class 0).
d.
Chest –Normal.
e.
Back- No deformity noted; Full
Range Movement (No pain) X-ray of the lumber spine done by Dr
Mkhabele and Indunah Diagnostic
Radiologists on 17 February 2022
shows normal lumbar lordosis. The clinical and Radiological findings
=0% WPI (class 0).
f.
Right Shoulder -No deformity, Full range
movement (no pain), Neovascularity intact – X-ray of the right
shoulder is normal.
The clinical and Radiological findings =0% WPI
(class 0).
39.
Given the scenario painted by the Plaintiff, that she fell
from the truck that moving at an excessive speed to the extent that
the
driver lost control of the car, the Plaintiff’s injuries
ought to have been far more serious than the ones recorded in the
hospital records. The Plaintiff’s expert assessed her
whole-body impairment to 0% and stated that the
injuries have not resulted in non-serious long-term impairment/loss
of body function.
40.
Having considered the evidence as a whole, I found
the Plaintiff’s evidence unreliable and untruthful. I believe
the Plaintiff
was involved in an accident arising from a stationary
vehicle. She would still be entitled to compensation for proven
damages for
injuries sustained even in case a vehicle was stationary.
However, this is not the Plaintiff’s pleaded case, the
plaintiff’s
claim falls to be rejected.
41.
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1.
The Plaintiff’s claim is dismissed with no
order as to costs.
L
FLATELA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is
deemed to be 10h00 on 14 June 2024
Attorneys
for the Plaintiff:
M.H.
P Malesa Attorneys
malesa@mhpmalesa.co.za
012 323
6516
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Adv G
Ramawela
State
attorney for the Defendant:
No
appearance
[1]
Section
17. Liability of Fund and agents.
—(1) The
Fund or an agent shall—
(a)
subject to this Act, in the case of a
claim for compensation under this section arising from the driving
of a motor vehicle where
the identity of the owner or the driver
thereof has been established;
(
b
)
subject to any regulation made under section 26 in the 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,
be obliged to compensate
any person (the third party) for any loss or damage which the third
party has suffered as a result of
any bodily injury to himself or
herself or the death of or any bodily injury to any other person
caused by or arising from the
driving of a motor vehicle by any
person at any place within the Republic if the injury or death is
due to the negligence or
other wrongful act of the driver or of the
owner of the motor vehicle or of his or her employee in the
performance of the employee’s
duties as employee: Provided
that the obligation of the Fund to compensate a third party for
non-pecuniary loss shall be limited
to compensation for a serious
injury as contemplated in subsection (1A) and shall be paid by way
of a lump sum;…
[2]
Wells
and Another v Shield Insurance Co and Others
1965 (2) SA 865 (C).
[3]
Ibid at p867 – 868.
[4]
Gumede
v Road Accident Fund
[2021] ZAGPPHC 568 (24 August 2021) unreported decision
[5]
Act
25 of 1965 as amended.
[6]
Daniels
v General Accident Insurance Co. Ltd
(1992). (1) SA 757 (C).
[7]
City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Council v Ngobeni
(314/11)
[2012] ZASCA 55
(30 March 2012).
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