Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 26South Africa
Ramokhele v Road Accident Fund (80635/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 26 (19 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 January 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ramokhele v Road Accident Fund (80635/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 26 (19 January 2023)
Ramokhele v Road Accident Fund (80635/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 26 (19 January 2023)
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sino date 19 January 2023
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NUMBER: 80635/2019
REPORTABLE:NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:NO
REVISED: NO
19/01/2023
In
the matter between:
BEN
RAMPETE
RAMOKHELE
PLAINTIFF
AND
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
LE
GRANGE AJ:
[1]
Before me is a claim for damages resulting from a motor vehicle
accident.
[2]
The matter came before me on 16 January 2023 and was rolled over to
the next day to
provide the parties an opportunity to consider
settlement and/or to limit the issues.
[3]
On 17 January 2023, as no settlement could be reached, the following
emerged after
my enquiry as to the readiness of the parties to
proceed with the trial:
(a)
Both counsel confirmed that only the merits are to be adjudicated as
quantum has been settled.
(b)
Both counsel confirmed that the only remaining issue to be decided
(pertaining to merits) was the question
of negligence and
contributory negligence (if any).
(b)
Counsel for the defendant confirmed that nothing came from the
defendant’s investigation (or rather
intended investigation)
into the accident, and possible consequential amendment (as indicated
in the pre-trial minutes dated 14
December 2022).
(c)
Counsel for the defendant confirmed that he had
received,
read and considered
the
plaintiff’s (recently delivered) supplementary- and witness
statements; and
(d)
Both parties are ready to proceed with the trial.
[4]
Both counsel then indicated that they are willing and able to proceed
(not leading
oral evidence but) on the papers before me, myself being
in doubt, I listened to brief oral submissions, based upon:
(a)
The
accident report (dated 13 April 2018);
(b)
The
plaintiff’s initial statement of events (dated 17 January
2019);
(c)
The
plaintiff’s supplementary statement of events (11 January
2023); and
(d)
The
plaintiff’s witness’ statement of events (dated 16
January 2023)
[5]
At this stage, both counsel agreed that the plaintiff’s initial
statement, read
with the accident report leave questions as to the
real cause of the accident (both documents in itself not textbook
examples of
‘how to do it’), the relevant potions of
which reads:
The
accident report of 13 April 2018:
“
Its alleged
both driver A
(the plaintiff)
was
driving from west to east direction & driver B
(in
a “
Daihatsu
”
with registration number: [....])
was coming
west to east direction then driver A was trying to overtake the
truck
that was already turning right
to
enter into the Kingsley Depot then he collided with an oncoming
vehicle and (5) five people sustained injuries.
The
plaintiff’s statement of 17 January 2019 reads:
“
I was driving
in Klipriver. A truck
(“
truck”
)
was driving in front of me
the
truck look as if it wanted to turn into the gate and then suddenly
decided to not to turn right but turned lef
t
I swerved out of the way to avoid a head-on collision but lost
control of my car and collided with the gate.”
[6]
From the above documents (compiled around the date of the collision),
two inconsistent
possibilities could be found:
(a)
The truck drove in front of the plaintiff (on the same lane), its
sudden un-signalled ‘left-turn’
into Kingsley Depot,
causing the plaintiff (in avoidance of colliding into its back) to
overtake the truck on its right, but only
to collide with the
oncoming Daihatsu; or
(b)
The truck approached the plaintiff (oncoming lane), its sudden
un-signalled ‘right cross-turn’
into Kingsley Depot,
causing the plaintiff (in avoidance of colliding into its left side)
to swerve to the right, but only to collide
with the oncoming
Daihatsu.
[7]
I do not find it strange that the plaintiff then deemed it necessary
to clarify the
issues, by filing further statements of the event,
i.e. the plaintiff’s (recent) supplementary- and witness
statements.
[8]
Considering the further statements also, counsel for the plaintiff
(Adv Louw) in conclusion
submitted that the cause of action is now
clear, the plaintiff not being negligent at all, is entitled to a
100% of his claim.
[9]
Counsel for the defendant (Adv Sekgotha) in conclusion, admitting to
the negligence
of the insured driver, however sought apportionment of
30%, based upon the inconsistencies in the statements read with the
accident
report. No reason could be tendered by Adv Sekgotha of how
the 30% was determined.
[10]
Although no reference was made (in argument at this stage) to the
particulars of claim, and averments
therein (dated 6 May 2019), it
needs mentioning that the plaintiff avers (therein) that the accident
(being a collision between
the plaintiff’s vehicle and a
Daihatsu) was caused by the sole negligence of the (driver of the)
Daihatsu, no mentioning
being made of the/a truck.
[11]
For reason of the above inconsistencies, I requested that oral
evidence be led.
[12]
On 18 January 2023, I heard the testimony of the plaintiff, Mr
Ramokhele, a 50 year old black
male who struggled to express himself
in English (his hands all-over), especially when he was confronted
with information on documentation,
but nonetheless left a good
impression on the Court. He’s evidence seemed bluntly truthful
and to the point, which was in
essence
(put in chronological order
by myself)
, regarding the accident specifically, the following:
·
He was in an accident in 2018, the exact date
which he can’t remember nor immediately extract from the
accident report when
shown to him.
·
He drove on the R550, a single road lane, from
Heidelberg to Kliprivier at a speed of between 80 and 100 km/h.
·
There was no car or truck driving in front of
him.
·
When he reached the Kingsley Depot which was on
his lefthand side, and a seemingly farmgate on the right hand side, a
truck and
trailer approached from the front in the opposite lane, and
without any signal or indication thereto, suddenly, cross-turned
right
in front of the him, into the Depot.
·
To avoid colliding into the side of the trailer
of the truck he swerved to his right and went off the road.
·
This is where he collided head-on with the
Daihatsu.
·
This Daihatsu was travelling behind the truck and
overtook it on its left side, when the truck suddenly cross-turned
right into
the Depot.
·
The plaintiff further indicated that he had no
option but to swerve to his right, as he was too close to brake and
swerving left
would cause a collision into the truck itself.
[13]
Cross examination was mostly spent on pointing out the (previously
discussed above mentioned)
inconsistencies. No alternate version was
put to the plaintiff nor was the version of the plaintiff, in this
oral testimony, rejected
as false or not probable.
[14]
During cross examination, the plaintiff was (further) referred to the
fact that the averment
(contained in the particulars of claim), that
the Daihatsu was the sole cause of the accident; and that the truck,
never being
mentioned, now seems to be the sole cause of the accident
according to his evidence.
[15]
I did not find it strange that the plaintiff had no idea of what an
averment or particulars of
claim was and why it said what it did.
[16]
The plaintiff’s simple answer to this was that the truck and
the Daihatsu drivers was both
negligent.
[17]
At this stage of the proceedings the plaintiff’s counsel
applied (from the bar) to have
the particulars of claim amended, to
(not replace but) include the truckdriver’s negligence as being
the cause of the accident.
[18]
The application for amendment was opposed on the basis that:
(a)
It constitute a new cause of action; and
(b)
the defendant is being prejudiced as it is not afforded the
opportunity to investigate the roll of the
truck and its driver, who
would (admittingly by counsel for the defendant) also be regarded (in
law for purposes of a claim against
the defendant), as an insured
driver.
[19]
The application was granted for the following reasons:
(a)
The law is clear: particulars of claim has as purpose, i.e. to
ventilate the issues in order for the
parties to come to court
knowing what to meet (investigation and preparation having been done)
so that a party is not ambushed
with some or other unforeseeable fact
or possibility.
(b)
Referring to the matter of
Pithey v Road Accident Fund
2014
(4) SA 112
(SCA
)
:
-The defendant had
knowledge of the alleged part that the truck played, from the
plaintiff’s initial statement and the accident
report (as
quoted above. See my emphasis) and later the more recent
supplementary- and witness statements, and notwithstanding
decided to
proceed with trial. The defendant knowingly waived the opportunity to
(initiate or further) investigate the accident,
with all the
knowledge at hand, i.e. the truck and its role in the accident. I
reiterate, I specifically enquired from the defendant’s
counsel
regarding the intended investigation into the accident, to know if
the defendant is ready to proceed or whether the matter
should rather
be postponed, which I was informed, came to naught.
(c)
The defendant’s counsel at no stage of the proceedings objected
to any testimony of the truck
being led and the, allegedly negligent,
(sudden emergency) roll it played in the collision.
(c)
The issue of, and the part which, the truck and the Daihatsu played
was well ventilated in the evidence
and was never challenged.
(d)
In the premises, I found it to be in the interest of justice to grant
the application.
[20]
No application for a postponement was then made by the defendant.
[21]
After due considerations of the evidence before me together with the
arguments made, I find as
follows:
As
to the plaintiff:
[22]
I find that he found himself, in a sudden confrontation of imminent
danger, not of his own doing,
when the oncoming truck cross-turned
right in front of him and into the Kingsley Depot.
[23]
I cannot find the plaintiff’s actions being negligent in what
followed, i.e. him swerving
to the right to avoid a collision with
this cross-turning truck, and thereby leaving the road surface.
As
to the truck driver:
[24]
I find his/her actions to be negligent in that it made an inherently
hazardous manoeuvre (similar
to the cases Adv Louw referred me to)
while he/she failed to take the necessary care before doing so.
As
to the driver of the Daihatsu:
[25]
I find his actions to be negligent in that he overtook (or swerved
by/around) the truck on its
lefthand side and off the road.
[26]
This manoeuvre could only have emanated from a negligent act, i.e.
When faced with the imminent
sudden danger of the cross-turning
truck, travelling in front of him, he was either not looking out, or
driving too fast, or too
close to the truck, to stop – which
caused him to swerve around the danger in front of him; or he was
simply blatantly disregarding
road regulations by overtaking the
truck on its left side, on the gravel.
In
the result, the draft order marked “X” is made an order
of court.
LE GRANGE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv. Louw on the instruction of
Brits & Beukes Inc.
Attorneys:
Miss K Clark
For
the Defendant: Adv.
Sekgota
RAF
Claims Officer: Thembisile Ntsele
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