Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1079South Africa
Road Accident Fund v P.M.M obo R.M.M (18768/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1079 (31 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 October 2024
Headnotes
SUMMARY
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Road Accident Fund v P.M.M obo R.M.M (18768/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1079 (31 October 2024)
Road Accident Fund v P.M.M obo R.M.M (18768/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1079 (31 October 2024)
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sino date 31 October 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case No. 18768 / 2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE 31 October 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
APPLICANT
and
P[...]
M[...] M[...] obo RM
M[...]
RESPONDENT
SUMMARY
Sixteen
months after judgment was granted by default against it, the RAF
finally raised itself from its supine position in
this matter and
delivered a request for reasons for judgment and an application
for leave to appeal. What precipitated this
was that plaintiff had
served a writ of attachment on it, which was necessitated by the
fact that the RAF had failed to pay
the quantum ordered by the
court.
The
plaintiff then invoked the provisions of Rule 30 to set aside the
application for leave to appeal.
Held
:
the application for leave to appeal is set aside as irregular step
as a court order is not appealable until it becomes final,
and it
does not become final if it is capable of recission.
Held
:
that the request for reasons was filed outside of the time limits
set by Rule 49 and that no application for an extension
of time
had been brought. The time periods set out in Rule 49 have an
obvious intention: to ensure that, once lapsed, a litigant
can be
secure (insofar as is possible) in the fact that the litigation
has been finalized. Were a disgruntled party simply
entitled, as
of right, to re-open litigation years after it had been given
notice of an order granted against him/her/it,
it would open the
floodgates: old litigation would be revived, and an already
overburdened justice system overwhelmed with
unmeritorious
litigation. That can never be in either the interests of justice
or in public interest.
Held
:
As a request for reasons forms the basis of an application for
leave to appeal, and as that is to be set aside, so too must
the
request for reasons.
Held
:
that, given the manner in which the RAF chose to conduct itself, a
punitive costs order is appropriate.
ORDER
a)
The application in terms of rule 30 is
granted and the application for leave to appeal and request for
reasons are set aside
as an irregular step;
b)
The RAF is ordered to pay the cost of
this application on the attorney and client scale.
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER, J
[1]
Before me serves the following:
a)
a request for reasons for judgment dated 2
November 2023;
b)
an application for leave to appeal dated 2
November 2023 filed by the defendant (the RAF); and
c)
a Rule 30 application to set aside the
application for leave to appeal.
[2]
Unfortunately, the delays in hearing were
caused by a combination of me being on long leave and
miscommunications regarding the
filing of these documents. The
availability of the parties’ representatives also played a role
in these 3 applications only
being heard on 20 September 2024.
Background
[3]
In order to give context to this matter,
the background is important:
a)
the plaintiff served and filed her summons
on 17 March 2020. She acts on behalf of her minor child who was
injured on 16 January
2014 at the age of 6;
b)
the minor child suffered serious injuries
including a moderate traumatic brain injury. Her overall WPI was 30%.
She also had several
orthopedic injuries. The minutiae of the minor
child’s injuries are not relevant for the purposes of this
judgment;
c)
despite proper service being effected on
the RAF, it failed to enter an appearance to defend;
d)
it also failed to get out of its starting
blocks when plaintiff served an interlocutory application for
permission to set the matter
down for hearing. An order to this
effect was granted by Davis J on 12 January 2022;
e)
the plaintiff filed all her expert reports
and served all on the RAF – these were also met by a deafening
silence;
f)
the Notice of Set Down that was served on
the RAF was similarly brushed off.
[4]
Thus, when the matter served before me in
the Trial Default Judgment Court on 27 July 2022, the plaintiff had
jumped through every
hoop set up not just in terms of the Uniform
Rules, but also the Practice Directives of this division - all of
these were met with
deafening silence from the RAF.
[5]
Thus, on 27 July 2022 after considering the
papers and hearing submissions, I granted an order in terms of which,
inter alia, I
ordered the RAF to pay to plaintiff an amount of
R5 600 129.00 in respect of the loss of earnings component
of her quantum
claim. The order was served on the RAF on 31 August
2022.
[6]
On
3 July 2023 the plaintiff issued a writ of execution (the writ) which
was followed up with a Notice of Attachment on 17 July
2023. On 20
October 2023 an application to suspend the writ was served by e-mail
which plaintiff opposed on 27 October 2023 - but
this application was
never proceeded with. Instead, on 2 November 2023 a request for
reasons and an application for leave to appeal
was served on the
plaintiff - this despite advice to the contrary by the RAF's
attorney.
[1]
[7]
On 20 November 2023, the plaintiff then
served a Notice in terms of Rule 30 to set aside the application for
leave to appeal as
an irregular step. The basis of the Rule 30 notice
is that the order granted by default is not susceptible to an appeal.
On 12
December 2003, when the requisite 10 day period had lapsed, the
plaintiff served her Rule 30 application to set aside the RAF’s
application for leave to appeal.
[8]
Thus, I convened a formal hearing on these
issues.
[9]
I pause to mention that none of the above
facts were placed in dispute by the RAF. Importantly, what was
conceded by RAF in argument
was that:
a)
the RAF sat supine after it was served with
the court order until the Writ was served;
b)
that
despite the RAF imposing a 180 day payment rule, as opposed to the 14
days set out in the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
[2]
,
it took no steps at all until the Writ was served.
[10]
What
is even more puzzling is that, from the bar, I was informed that the
reason that the RAF suddenly sought leave to appeal one
year and four
months after the order was granted, was that the RAF had obtained the
minor child's school reports which indicated
that, despite the
original prognosis
[3]
,
she was doing “well” at school.
[11]
Interestingly
enough, none of this was placed before me in an affidavit opposing
the
Rule 30
application. Nor did the RAF bother to seek leave to
introduce new evidence - this was also, in effect, conceded when it
was conceded
that the RAF's new information was also not before me at
the time that default judgment was granted.
[4]
[12]
Instead,
the RAF sought to rely on the judgment of Wright J in
Road
Accident Fund v Mogorosi
[5]
(
Mogorosi
)
where, in similar circumstances, leave to appeal was granted. But an
analysis of that case reveals two important differences:
a)
in
Mogorosi
,
the RAF initially defended the action “but later chose to stop
defending the action”
[6]
- in casu the RAF's inaction was manifest and deafening;
b)
in
Mogorosi
,
the RAF brought an application for condonation for the late filing of
the leave to appeal in which the latest school reports were
mentioned
(although there was no application for the admission into evidence of
these new documents) – in casu, there is
no such application(s)
before me. Instead, this information was proffered from the bar.
[13]
Thus,
Mogorosi
is distinguishable on the facts.
[14]
The
plaintiff sought to rely on the judgment of Wilson J in
Lee
v Road Accident Fund (Lee)
[7]
where Wilson J set aside the application for leave to appeal as an
irregular step. In
Lee
,
the RAF failed to enter an appearance to defend “despite being
given every opportunity to do so”
[8]
.
It accepted liability for the plaintiffs proven losses but failed to
take any further action with regards to the quantum. It also
failed
to appear at the quantum hearing which saw an order of ±
R13 500 000.00 awarded against it on 3 March 2022.
After
much to-ing and fro-ing between the RAF and the plaintiff’s
attorneys, on 10 February 2023 the RAF filed an application
for leave
to appeal - this was 11 months after judgment was granted.
[15]
After
discussing the judgments in
Pitelli
v Everton Gardens Projects CC
[9]
(
Pitelli
)
and
Moyana
and Another v Body Corporate of Cottonwood and Others
[10]
(
Cottonwood
),
Wilson J declined to follow Cottonwood and followed the
Pitelli
judgment. In my view, that position is correct especially in
circumstances where the RAF has abjectly failed to raise its hand
at
all.
[16]
In
Pitelli
,
a unanimous court held that a court order is not appealable until it
becomes final and it does not become final if it is capable
of
rescission. In my view, this does not mean that it will be rescinded
- it simply means that a rescission application is a competent
process.
[17]
In
Cottonwood
,
the Full Court
[11]
stated that it was not persuaded that the decision in
Pitelli
was correct as a party who “may have been in willful default,
or in great danger of being found to have been so”
[12]
should be allowed to take the matter on appeal rather than explain
their default.
[18]
But
I can put it no better than Wilson J
[13]
:
“
[18]
Pitelli makes it clear that what matters is the availability of
rescission in principle, not whether the party seeking to rescind
an
order is likely to succeed. Whatever view takes of the wisdom
of that approach, it is binding on the High Court. It was
not open to
Gautschi AJ to depart from it simply because he thought it was wrong.
Nor is that cause open to me.
[19]
For what it is worth, though, I think that Pitelli is
correct. It is no argument against its correctness that Pitelli may
make it harder for a party who was in wilful default of appearance to
challenge an order granted in their absence. But I think
the decision
in Cottonwood overstates that problem in any event. It has
long been accepted that, in a common law rescission
application, a
weak explanation for being in default of appearance can be “cancelled
out” by a strong defence on the
merits (Colyn v Tiger Food
Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003
(6) SA 1
(SCA), paragraph 15). Similarly, in an application
under
Rule 42
, an applicant’s wilful default will not save an
order to which the respondent was not procedurally entitled in the
first
place (Lodhi 2 Properties Investments CC v Bondev
Developments
2007
(6) SA 87
(SCA), see especially paragraph 27). The
principles applicable to rescission applications are supple enough,
in my view, to
allow a court to set aside an order that it should
never have granted, even if the applicant’s excuses for not
having turned
up to court turn out to be inadequate.”
[19]
In this case it is clear why the RAF filed
an application for leave to appeal sixteen months after the judgment
was granted: it
was to suspend the operation of the order of 27 July
2022 and thus suspend the Writ and thereby prevent the payment of the
award
to plaintiff. This was to obviate the necessity of bringing an
application in terms of
Rule 45A
to suspend the writ pending a
rescission application in which the RAF would have been obliged to
set out the reasons for not only
its default, but its
laissez-faire
conduct.
[20]
In
Road
Accident Fund v Kruger
[14]
Basson J considered an application for rescission where the RAF
failed to enter an appearance to defend but brought an application
for condonation together with the rescission application. Therein she
refers to
Road
Accident Fund v Ngobeni obo Phelela
[15]
Where the following was stated:
“
[1]
The woes of the Road Accident Fund ('the RAF'), whether it be
financial or administrative, are well known within the legal
fraternity, and probably beyond. They are well documented in several
cases that have been handed down in the recent past. Although
their
exact details are irrelevant, they are easily found by way of a
cursory search. In this division, at least, these have also
been one
of the reasons for an entire revamp of the trial practice directives
relating to matters in which the RAF is involved.
This particular
matter is symptomatic of these challenges the RAF has had to contend
with recently. They have blighted the road
accident litigation
landscape like the bubonic plague of old and, no doubt left a trail
of destruction in the wake.”
[21]
In casu, that is precisely what has
occurred.
[22]
In my view, the
Rule 30
application is well
founded and, given the reasons supra, it should be granted. I
emphasize that the merits upon which the leave
to appeal and reasons
for judgement were sought were not relevant.
[23]
The fact is that the RAF has been dilatory
in every single aspect of this matter, from failing to enter an
appearance, to waiting
for approximately four months after the Writ
was served before filing its application for leave to appeal. The
dilatory conduct
must also follow it as regards the issue of the
reasons for judgment. In this regard,
Rule 49
(1) provides as
follows:
‘
(1)
(a)
When leave to appeal is required, it may on a statement of the
grounds therefor
be
requested at the time of the judgment or order.
(b)
When leave to appeal is required and it has not been requested at the
time of
the judgment or order,
application for such leave shall be made and the grounds therefor
shall be furnished within 15 days after
the date of the order
appealed against: Provided that when the reasons or the full reasons
for the court’s order are given
on a later date than the date
of the order, such application may be made within 15 days after such
later date: Provided further
that the court may, upon good cause
shown, extend the aforementioned periods of 15 days.”
[24]
It
is clear that neither the request for reasons, nor the application
for leave to appeal, were filed within the stipulated time
period. It
is also clear that there is no application for condonation, nor is
there an application for an extension of time. There
is therefore
nothing before this court to consider. In
Lipschitz
NO v Saambou-Nasionale Bouvereniging
[16]
it
was stated that where it was not possible to comply with the time
periods set out in
Rule 49
, an application for extension of time must
be made – there is none before me.
[25]
The time periods set out in
Rule 49
have
all an obvious intention: to ensure that, once lapsed, a litigant can
be secure (insofar as is possible) in the fact that
the litigation
has been finalized. Were a disgruntled party simply entitled, as of
right, to re-open litigation years after it
had been given notice of
an order granted against him/her/it, it would open the floodgates:
old litigation would be revived, and
an already overburdened justice
system overwhelmed with unmeritorious litigation. That can never be
in either the interests of
justice or in public interest.
[26]
Thus, in my view, the request for reasons
must follow the same path as the application for leave to appeal: the
request for reasons
was filed to form the basis of the application
for leave to appeal. That is to be set aside, and therefore with it,
the request
that forms its basis.
[27]
In my view, the RAF’s conduct must be
frowned upon and is deserving of a punitive cost order.
Order
[28]
The order I make is the following:
c)
the application in terms of
rule 30
is
granted and the application for leave to appeal and request for
reasons are set aside as an irregular step;
d)
the RAF is ordered to pay the cost of this
application on the attorney and client scale.
B NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
This judgment was
prepared and authored by the judge whose name is reflected, and is
handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 31 October 2024
For
the applicant
:
Ms K
Sibran
Instructed
by
:
State
Attorney
For
the resondent
:
Adv
MI Thabede
Instructed
by
:
Nkwane
Attorneys Inc
Matter
heard on
:
20
September 2024
Judgment
date
:
31
October 2024
[1]
The State Attorney
[2]
S17(3)(a)
“No
interest
calculated on the amount of compensation which a court awards to any
third party by virtue of subsection (1) shall be
payable unless 14
days have elapsed from the date of the courts relevant order.”
[3]
That
she had cognitive defects as a result of the brain injury, would
obtain a matric and then be absorbed into the work market
and NQF 4,
instead of the NQF 7 pre-morbid postulation
[4]
Bechan
and Another v SARS Customs Investigations Unit and Others
2024
(5) SA 1
(SCA) par 22: “It is a well-established general
principle that this Court decides whether the judgment appealed from
is
right or wrong according to the facts in existence at the time it
was given and not according to new circumstances that came into
existence afterwards.”
[5]
Case No 2020/1067; Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg (16 January
2024)
[6]
Judgment
at para 1
[7]
2024
(1) SA 183 (GJ)
[8]
Lee
at para 2
[9]
2010
(5) SA 171 (SCA)
[10]
[2017]
ZAGPJHC 59 (17 February 2017)
[11]
Per
Gautschi AJ
[12]
Cottonwood
at para 15
[13]
In Lee
[14]
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria case no 46442/21 (13 September 2024).
[15]
(35926/17)
[2022] SAGPPHC 866 (18 November 2021) at para 1
[16]
1979
(1) SA 527
(T): where the judge handed down an order and stated that
reasons would be furnished later, the result of which was that the
appeal could not be noted within the requisite period
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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