Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 736South Africa
Sibulawa v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (27470/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 736 (31 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 July 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sibulawa v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (27470/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 736 (31 July 2024)
Sibulawa v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (27470/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 736 (31 July 2024)
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sino date 31 July 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIAA
CASE NO: 27470/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
/NO
DATE:
31 July 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
DAVID
SIBULAWA
Plaintiff
and
PASSENGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Mazibuko AJ
Introduction
1
The plaintiff instituted an action against the defendant,
the
Passenger Rail Agency
of
South Africa
(
"PRASA"),
in which he claimed damages for injuries he
sustained in a train incident on 2 December 2019 at Grasmere train
station, Johannesburg.
2.
The defendant
provides rail commuter services within South Africa.
3.
The
plaintiff's case is that he bought a train ticket and boarded the
train. The train was overcrowded. During the duration of his
journey,
the train
carriage
doors remained open whilst the train was in motion.
At
Grasmere train station,
the
jostling of other commuters for space, preparing themselves to
disembark, resulted in the plaintiff being pushed out of the
moving
train.
He
fell and injured his leg.
4.
At
the commencement of the trial, and by agreement between the parties,
the court granted an order separating the issues in terms
of rule
33(4)
[1]
of the Uniform Rules of
Court on the basis that the issues relating to liability would first
be determined and the remaining issues
would stand over for later
determination.
Litigation
history
5.
In April 2024 the matter served before me for trial. The plaintiff
adduced evidence, testified
and called a witness. It closed its case.
The defendant's application for absolution from the instance was
dismissed through a
written judgment under the above-mentioned case
number.
Evidence
Plaintiff's
case
6.
According to the
plaintiff,
the defendant breached its legal duty. Alternatively,the defendant
owed a duty of care to members of the public, including
himself.
Paragraph 6 of his particulars of claim read:
"6.1
The defendant failed to ensure the safety of members of the public on
the train and, in particular,
that of the plaintiff as a commuter;
6.2.
The defendant failed to take any or adequate steps to avoid the
circumstances in which the plaintiff was
injured when, by exercise of
reasonable care, they could or should have done so;
6.3.
The defendant failed to take any adequate precautions to prevent the
plaintiff from being injured in the
aforesaid circumstances;
6.4.
The defendant failed to employ employees, alternatively failed to
employ an adequate number of employees
to guarantee the safety of
commuters in general and the plaintiff in particular, on the commuter
train in which the plaintiff was
travelling as a commuter;
6.4.
The defendant failed to employ employees, alternatively, failed to
employ an adequate number of employees
to prevent commuters and
intended commuters from being injured in the manner the plaintiff was
injured."
7.
In support of its case, the plaintiff testified and called one
witness, Mr Kananelo Rankhoana
(Mr Rankhoana).
The
plaintiff
8.
The plaintiff testified that he boarded a train at Park Station to
disembark at Grasmere
train station. When the train reached Lenasia
train station, it stopped, and all commuters were instructed to
disembark and get
onto another train because of what was referred to
as an
all-change
.
9.
They got into another train as instructed. The train became
overcrowded because of an
all-change
,
and all seats were occupied. Some passengers, including the
plaintiff, stood beside the opened door.
The
plaintiff could not hold to anything in the train, be it a steel bar
or belt normally hanging, as the belts were not there.
Other
passengers stood balancing against each side of the door as the doors
were not closed. The train doors were not functional.
10.
When the train approached the Grasmere train station platform,
passengers moved closer to the doors
and started pushing each other
from behind so they could get ready to disembark. In the process, the
plaintiff, who was standing
next to the doors, was pushed from behind
and fell out of the train, which was still in motion with open doors,
and he sustained
injuries.
11.
Under cross-examination, he was asked whether he knew the capacity of
the number of people the coach
could accommodate to conclude that the
coach's capacity was exceeded and, therefore, overcrowded. He
answered that he did not know.
He testified that the train remained
overcrowded, though commuters were embarking and disembarking in the
three stations between
Lenasia and Grasmere train stations.
No security
guards controlled the commuters' embarking on the train that the
plaintiff boarded at Lenasia train station.
12.
He stated that though he had no technical skill to conclude that the
train doors were not functional.
However, under normal circumstances,
the doors would attempt to close, and commuters would force them
open, and that did not happen
on the date in question.
13.
He was referred to a referral note, referring him from Lenasia Clinic
to Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital
("
Bara
") under
clinic history and examination, where it reads: '
Male patient
pushed off train when disembarking
.' The plaintiff clarified that
he had not completed the referral letter, but the nurse had. He did
not know what they wrote as
he would tell them, and they would
be writing. He insisted he was pushed off the train before it could
stop at Grasmere train
station.
Mr
Kananelo Rankhoana
14.
Mr Rankhoana testified that he boarded the same train as the
plaintiff from Lenasia train station, travelling
to Grasmere train
station. He was standing not far from the plaintiff. The train was
overcrowded. There were no empty seats. The
train remained full, and
so did its doors throughout his journey until he disembarked at the
Grasmere train station.
15.
When the train approached Grasmere train station, passengers came
close to the doors, preparing to disembark,
and the plaintiff, who
was next to the doors, was pushed in the process and fell out of the
train, which was still in motion with
its doors opened. He then
rushed to assist the plaintiff, who was lying down with a broken leg.
Later, together with another passenger,
he took the plaintiff to a
nearby taxi rank so he could be transported to the clinic for medical
assistance. The plaintiff was
taken to Lenasia Clinic, now known as
Lenasia
South District Hospital.
16.
The plaintiff closed its case. As indicated above, the defendant's
application seeking
to be
absolved
from the instance was refused.
Defendant's
case
17.
In its defence, the defendant called one witness, Dr Mokgadi Nobantu
Malika (Dr Malika), the Clinical
manager at Lenasia South District
Hospital.
She testified that as a clinical manager, she
plays an oversight and supervision role for junior doctors. She
oversees the functioning
of the X-ray department and is a custodian
of medical records.
Her
evidence was that the treating doctor completed the referral form.
Under cross-examination, Dr Malika conceded that she assumed
that
what was on the referral letter was what the plaintiff informed the
doctor who was treating him. He was not the treating doctor
who
examined the plaintiff and wrote the referral letter.
18.
The defendant argued that
the train was stationary when
the plaintiff was allegedly pushed by fellow passengers boarding and
disembarking the train. Further,
there are two irreconcilable
versions; during examination in chief, the plaintiff testified he was
pushed from the moving train
with its doors open by passengers who
were jostling for space. Under examination in chief, he stated he was
disembarking the train
when other passengers pushed him.
Issue
19.
The issue for determination is whether the defendant is delictually
liable to
compensate
the plaintiff.
Discussion
20.
To
answer whether
the
defendant was negligent depends on whether its conduct in the
circumstances fell short of that of a reasonable person. The test
for
negligence was set out in
Kruger
v Coetzee
[2]
,
where it was said:
"
For the purposes
of liability, culpa arises if -(a) a diligens paterfamilias in the
position of the defendant – (i) would
foresee the reasonable
possibility of his conduct injuring another in his person or property
and causing him patrimonial loss;
and (ii) would
take
reasonable steps to guard such occurrence; and (b) the defendant
failed to take such steps."
21.
The defendant has a legal duty to protect passengers against physical
harm while using its trains. The
said duty stems from an existing
relationship between the said passengers and the defendant. It is
also said to stem from the defendant's
public law obligations.
[3]
A breach by the defendant of aforesaid duties is delictual wrongful
and may, depending on the circumstances, attract liability
for
damages.
22.
The defendant did not contend with the plaintiff's version regarding
the circumstances under which he
commuted from the Park station until
the accident at Grasmere. The defendant called no witnesses to
challenge the plaintiff's version
in this respect
.
It was not contended by the defendant that the train was overcrowded,
and its doors remained open throughout the plaintiff's journey
whilst
the train was in motion.
The
plaintiff and other commuters
could not hold to
anything, be
it
a
steel bar or belt normally hanging,
as
the belts were not
there.
23.
The defendant, under cross-examination, questioned the plaintiff
about how he knew the train was overcrowded
without knowing its
capacity. The plaintiff accepted that he did not know the capacity
and maintained that the train was overcrowded.
According to Mr
Rankhoana, no seats were available for one to sit in. The passengers
were standing inside a moving train whose
doors were opened.
24.
The defendant did not challenge the plaintiff's evidence that no
security guards were controlling the
embarking and disembarking of
commuters.
25.
The defendant adduced no evidence as to how the plaintiff failed to
heed
the precautionary measure displayed on the
defendant's premises for safe commuting. The evidence of Mr Rankhoana
was that there
were no officials at the station, so he went to look
for them so he could report the accident and be assisted in helping
the plaintiff
with his injuries.
26.
I accept that the train was overcrowded since
people were on their feet, and according to Mr Rankhoana, no seats
were available
for one to sit. I find it probable that due to the
overcrowded train and the opening of the train door, whilst it was in
motion,
the passengers jostled to be by the train door in preparation
for them to disembark. While that was happening, the plaintiff was
pushed out and suffered the said injuries.
27.
The defendant was required to provide a safe train with functional
doors that could close and open when
necessary. The evidence is that
the doors remained open whilst the train was in motion, exposing the
passengers to the risk of
being thrown out of the train whilst in
motion.
I have no basis to accept the defendant's
contention that the plaintiff disregarded lawful instructions by the
defendant's official
for safe commuting as the evidence is that there
were no officials, especially the security guards.
28.
The defendant also argued that the plaintiff gave two versions of how
he was injured: one that he was
pushed off the train when
disembarking and another that he was pushed off the train while it
was in motion. It relied on the medical
referral notes from Lenasia
South
District
Hospital,
which noted, '
Male
patient pushed off the train when disembarking
.'
The defendant did not call the doctor who referred the plaintiff to
Bara, who wrote the notes. No application was made seeking
the
medical notes' admission as evidence in terms of section 3 of the Law
of Evidence Amendment Act.
[4]
The evidence of Dr Malika in that regard remains hearsay.
29.
I find that the defendant failed to ensure that the coach's doors
remained closed while the train was
in motion. The defendant failed
to ensure that commuters and the plaintiff did not fall from the
moving train, as claimed in the
plaintiff's particulars of claim.
Consequently, the defendant was negligent, which was the sole cause
of the plaintiff's injuries.
It
acted
wrongfully and negligently in allowing the train to travel with its
doors open, and such fault was causally related to the
plaintiff's
injuries.
I find that the plaintiff discharged the onus
resting upon him of proving on a balance of probabilities that the
defendant was negligent.
30.
In the premises, the following order is made:
Order:
1.
The defendant is liable for 100% of the
plaintiff's proven and agreed damages.
2.
The defendant is to pay the costs of suit.
N. Mazibuko
Acting Judge of the
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email.
Representation:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Mr NC
Rangululu
Attorneys
for the Plaintiff:
Mashapa
Attorneys
Counsel
for the Defendant:
Mr L
Mgwetyana
Attorneys
for the Defendant:
Ngeno
& Mteto INC
Heard:
26 June 2024
Date of Judgment:
31 July 2024
[1]
Uniform
Rules of Court, Act 59 of 1959.
[2]
[2021] ZASCA 125
,
1966 (2) SA 428
(A) at 430.
[3]
Mashongwa
v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
2016
(3) SA 523
(CC) para 20.
[4]
Act
45 of 1988.
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