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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sindor v Road Accident Fund (826432/017)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 917 (5 September 2024)
Sindor v Road Accident Fund (826432/017)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 917 (5 September 2024)
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sino date 5 September 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
,
PRETORIA
1. REPORTABLE : NO
2.OF INTREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED: NO
5/9/2024
Case
No: 82643/2017
In
the matt
e
r
b
e
tw
ee
n
:
Sindor
,
OR
Plaintiff
and
The
Road
Accident Fund
Defendant
JUDGMENT-REVIEW
OF TAXATION
FRANCIS-SUBBIAH
J:
[1]
The plaintiff
dissatisfied with the taxing master's rulings
,
requests a
review of taxation in terms of Rule 48 of the Uniform Rules of Court.
The unopposed
bill of costs
was taxed on 29 November 2022. The taxing master reduced amounts
claimed as disbursements
(expenses) at
items 104
,
139,145
,
146,147
,
154
,
190,285
and 420 of the bills of costs
.
[2]
These items
relate to the costs of a motor vehicle provided by a shuttle service
.
The
taxing master
ruled that the shuttle usage for the plaintiffs travelling costs to
attend medical legal examinations
is
a luxury on a
party and party basis. For this reason
,
she disallowed
the full amount
claimed
for the
shuttle service and instead allowed a fee that she
considered
a reasonable
cost of transportation
.
She ruled that
the travelling costs would be allowed at a rate of R3
,
00
per kilometer in 2018
,
and R3
,
50
per
kilometer
in
2019 to
2021.
[3]
The plaintiff
contends that the taxing master should have allowed the full shuttle
service accounts because of the plaintiff having
a reduced mental
capacity
.
It
was submitted
at taxation that the plaintiff was not able to make use of public
transport and personal family transport. The plaintiff
'
s
attorneys instructed shuttle services to collect the plaintiff from
his residence in Mahikeng and to transport him to and from
consultations at their
office
,
medical
legal
appointments
with the
experts
and
to the virtual
court
hearing at
their offices
.
It was
advanced that the use of the shuttle services to transport the
plaintiff was
both
reasonable
and
necessary
under
the
circumstances
and
for
that
reason
the
items
referred
to
above
where
reasonable
,
proper
and
necessary
and
that
the
taxing master
was wrong in her decision to reduce the claimed amount.
[4]
The cost
award
was granted on
a party and party basis by the court. Party and party costs have been
described by learned authors Herbstein &
Van Winsen
The
Civil Practice of the Supreme Court
of
South
Africa
4 ed
(1997)
at
702
,
as
"...
those
costs
which have
been incurred by a party to
legal
proceedings
and which
the
other party
is
ordered
to pay
him.
They
do
not include all costs
which
a party to suit may have
incurred
but only those
costs
,
charg
es
and expenses
that appear
to the taxing master to have been necessary or proper
for the attainment of justice or for defending the rights of any
party
."
(underlining
is my emphasis)
[5]
Therefore
,
a taxing
master
'
s
function is to ensure that costs are maintained
within
appropriate
limits,
preventing the
allowance of excessive expenses.
It
is
particularly
important
that the
opposing party is
not
unfairly
burdened with unnecessary
costs
.
This view was
elaborated
upon in
Smith
and Others v
MEC
for
Health-
Mpumalanga
2021
(6) SA 532
(ML) at para
32
,
where the
court
held
that the process of taxation is to ensure that winning
parties
are not put
complete
ly
out
of pocket.
At the same
time
,
the
process is to ensure that the
losing
parties are
not ruined by exorbitant
legal costs.
[7]
The discretion
to award such costs as disbursements and make a determination falls
within the
exclusive
purview of the
taxing master
.
The
crux
of this issue
is whether on a party and party basis the full account of the shuttle
service should be granted by the taxing master
because the plaintiff
presented
with
a reduced mental capacity
.
[8]
The taxing
master
'
s
discretion is wide
,
but not
unfettered.
In
exercising it the taxing master must properly consider and assess all
the relevant facts and circumstances relating to the particular
item
concerned
.
It
must be determined whether the cost incurred under
the
circumstances
are reasonable
and proper in
determining
the
reasonableness of the disbursement.
Discretion is
not properly exercised if such facts or circumstances are ignored or
misconstrued
.
[9]
The taxing
master ruled that an attorney is bound to litigate in the least
expensive and most
expeditious
manner
.
Over caution
and fear that
the client will not arrive timeously at any expert appointment cannot
be recovered on party and party scale. The extent
of the reduced
mental capacity was not fully explained at the taxat
i
on
.
She stated
that there was nothing to indicate or mention in the taxation that
the litigant was so incapacitated
that
it required
special intervention
.
From
the
submissions
it
is not made
out that the plaintiff was constrained by having to carry any medical
equipment
that
would require specified and preferred transportation
.
[10]
The taxing
master acknowledges that a practice has developed over the years
where messengers and drivers employed by law firms attend
to the
service, filing of documents and transporting of their clients to
attend medical legal appointments. Clients are transported
from guest
houses and hotels to experts and back at no cost to the other side. A
law firm transporting
its
clients to
various appointments
in
a single trip
to keep expenses down is considered reasonable and appropriate
.
Further, time
spent by a messenger
or driver
transporting a litigant cannot be recovered on a party and party
scale. Similarly
,
the cost of a
shuttle service is a luxury because its rate comprises various
factors
,
making it
expensive. She further stated that the prime duty of an attorney is
to his client and must not incur expenditure which
can be avoided
.
[11]
The applicant
contends
that the use
of the shuttle services was neither luxurious nor over cautious but
vitally necessary to ensure that the patient attended
the medical
legal appointments
and virtual
court hearings in Pretoria
.
A strict
application of the normal transportation principles
applicable to
an able-bodied
individual to
the plaintiff is deemed to be inequitable
.
Plaintiff
submits that the full shuttle costs were reasonably incurred and not
increased
through
over-caution
,
neg
l
igence
or mistake
.
The full
shuttle costs are not luxurious and extravagant so it would not be an
injustice to impose upon the Road Accident Fund.
[12]
Rule 36 of the
Uniform Rules of Court provide for a plaintiff claiming damages or
compensation to submit to a medical examination
for the determination
of their state of health.
The expenses
tendered
shall be on
the scale as if
such a person
were a witness in a civil suit before the court. The cost shall
include such a person
'
s
travelling by motor vehicle
and
,
where
required
,
the
reasonable
cost of a
person attending
upon him
.
[13]
At item 146
the plaintiff claims a disbursement
of R6 240 on
25 November 2019 to travel from Mafikeng to Pretoria and returned
home on the same day
.
On the very
next day repeated the same conveyance back to Pretoria
.
Travelling
some 640 km return on 26 November 2019 and charged a further R 6 240
at item 147
.
Although, a
night accommodation in Pretoria would have been cost effective and
reasonable in the circumstances reducing the travel
costs by a full
return trip
.
The taxing
master
,
however
reduced each of these amounts
and I consider
she rightly did so.
[14]
There is no
legal precedence that deals with a client making use of luxury or
expensive transport
.
However
,
in addressing
the issue of travel expenses, Van den Heever J took the view in
Kruger
v
De Bruyn
1943
OPD 38
at 45 that
,
a witness
travelling
'
elegantly
and expensively
'
when he may do
so inexpensively by public conveyance
,
shall not
recover more from the party condemned in costs than the actual fare
on such public conveyance
,
whether used
by him or not.
[15]
In accepting
the provision of Uniform Rule 36 that the travelling
expenses
for the
client/plaintiff shall be on the scale as if such a person were a
witness in a civil suit before the court. The
observation
in Jacobs and
Ehlers
,
Law of
Attorneys
'
Costs
and
Ta
x
ation
Thereof
1979
Juta
p195
is relevant and expressed as
follows
:
"
Whenever
a witness
makes use of public transport to attend a civil case an
allowance
equal to the
actual cost of such transport for
the
forward and
return journey along the shortest convenient route shall be paid to
him
:
Provided
that
,
if
more than one
suitable means of public transport is available
,
an allowance
in respect of
the
less e
x
pensive
one shall be paid
."
[16]
It is further
noted that GNR 525 of 21 March 1986
:
Tariff of
allowance payable to witnesses
in
civil cases
provides that the rate is R1.30 per kilometer in
the
case of a
motor vehicle. This tariff has not changed and has been used
universally since. When questioned
as
to
how the
rates of R3
.
00
and R3
.
50
was reached
,
the taxing
master provided the following explanation
:
"
It
was
agreed
amongs
t
cost
consultants
,
ta
x
ing
master
and
RAF
dating
back
prior 2020
,
we applied a
reasonable rate since at that stage we relied on Government Gazette
11 April 2008
,
on the Tariff
of Allowance payable to witnesses in civil cases
.
The Regulation
allowed R1
.
30
per kilometre and as the years progressed
,
we increased
it and that is how I got to R3
.
00
and R3
.
50
.
We all
maintained this method through the year
."
[17]
The
circumstances under which a court will interfere with the
discretion
of the taxing
master has
been
studied
extensively. In
City
of
Cape
Town
v Arun Property Development (Pty) Ltd and another
2009
(5)
SA
227 (C) at para 17 the court observed that:
"
The
taxing master
has discretion to allow, reduce or reject items in a bill of costs.
She must exercise this discretion judicially in
the sense that she
must act reasonably, justly and on the basis
of
sound
principles with due regard to all the circumstances of the case.
Where the discretion is not so exercised
,
her
decision
will be subject to review. In addition
,
even where she
has exercised her discretion
properly
,
a court on
review will b
entitled to
interfere where
her
decision is
based on a misinterpretation of the law or on a. misconception as to
the facts and circumstances
,
or as to the
practice of the court
."
[18]
It is
trite
that
a taxing
master
'
s
decision
will
be interfered
with only
when the court
is clearly
satisfied
that
the
taxing
master
'
s
ruling
was
clearly
wrong.
This principle
had
been
established by
the Appellate Division in
Ocean
Commodities
Inc
and
Others
v Standard Bank
of
SA
Ltd and Others
1984
(3) SA 15
(A) and remains a guiding principle to date.
The
court will
only interfere when it is in the same or better position than the
taxing master to determine
the issue and
its view
differs
materially
from the
taxing master
'
s
that it should be held to overturn the taxing master
'
s
ruling.
[19]
The taxing
master assessed the disbursement items in accordance with principles
,
rules and
recognized practices regarding taxation and therefore discharged her
discretion properly and correc
t
ly
.
The full
shuttle accounts do not qualify as a party and party charge even
though the plaintiff may have a reduced mental capacity
.
A reasonable
fee for transportation by a motor vehicle was allowed
.
I therefore
find no reason to interfere with the taxing master
'
s
discretion
.
[20]
For these
reasons I make the following order
:
a)
The review
of ta
x
ation
i
s
dismissed
.
b)
The ta
x
ing
master
'
s
allocatur is confirmed.
R
FRANCIS-SUBBIAH
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
The
judgment
was
handed down
electronically by circulation
to the parties
and or parties
'
representatives
by e-mail and by being uploaded
to Caselines
.
The date for
the hand down is deemed to be on
05
September 2024
.
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