Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 14South Africa
Promise v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (61756/2018) [2023] ZAGPPHC 14 (20 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 January 2023
Headnotes
as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Promise v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (61756/2018) [2023] ZAGPPHC 14 (20 January 2023)
Promise v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (61756/2018) [2023] ZAGPPHC 14 (20 January 2023)
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sino date 20 January 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 61756/2018
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED
20
/01/2023
In
the matter between:
MASHEGO
DUMISANI
PROMISE
Plaintiff
and
PASSENGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
Defendant
JUDGMENT
PHOOKO
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The Plaintiff in this matter instituted an action for damages against
the Defendant
for injuries that he allegedly sustained when he was
robbed and pushed out of an open door of a moving train that was
travelling
from Johannesburg to Pretoria on 25 April 2018. The action
is Defended.
[2]
The trial only dealt with the issue relating to liability.
THE PARTIES
[3]
The Plaintiff is Mashego Dumisani Promise, an
adult male person residing at [....] V [....] Street, [....] A
[....] Accommodation
in the Gauteng Province.
[4]
The Defendant is the Passenger Rail Agency of
South Africa (“PRASA”), a public company established in
terms of the South
African Transportation Services Act 9 of 1989
and trading as Metro Rail, which
inter
alia
provides transport services to the
public. PRASA’s principal place of business is at PRASA House,
1040 Burnett, Hatfield,
Pretoria, 0083.
JURISDICTION
[5]
The Defendant conducts its business within the
jurisdiction of this Court. Therefore, this Court has the power and
competency to
preside over this case.
THE
ISSUE
[6]
The issue to be determined by this Court is
whether the Defendant is liable in delict for injuries sustained by
the Plaintiff.
THE FACTS
[7]
On 25
th
April 2018, between 14:00 and 16:00, the Plaintiff
was allegedly robbed by three other passengers and pushed out of a
moving train
through open carriage doors that were at all times
opened when the train left Park Station for Pretoria.
[8]
According
to the particulars of claim
[1]
and a request for further particulars
[2]
,
the Plaintiff fell between the “rail way track and/or “between
the train and the train platform whereby the train
hit him by the
side”. Further, the Plaintiff stated that he was transported by
an ambulance to Charlotte Maxeke hospital.
[9]
The Plaintiff avers that the incident was caused
due to sole negligence of the employees of the Defendant, who acted
within the
scope of their duty and subject to the control of the
Defendant to promote the Defendant’s business in providing
public service.
[10]
In particular, the Plaintiff alleges that the
Defendant, and/or its employees, were negligent in that they
inter
alia
failed to prevent the incident by
exercising reasonable care and attention, failed to ensure that all
doors of the coach were closed
before departure, and allowed the
train to depart at a time when it was dangerous and inconvenient to
do so.
[11]
As a result, the Plaintiff avers that he sustained
various injuries ranging from head to nasal bone fracture.
APPLICABLE
LAW
[12]
It
is now settled that
the
standard of proof in a civil case is proof on the balance of
probabilities.
[3]
This entails
that the Plaintiff, who bears the burden of proof, must prove that
his version is more probable than that of the Defendant.
Even though
the Defendant has some duty to adduce evidence, the burden of proof
remains on the Plaintiff throughout the trial.
As was correctly
stated by Van der Spuy, in
Salamolele
v Makhado
,
[4]
:
“
It
is common cause that plaintiff bears the overall onus of proof . . .
It may be that defendant has some duty of adducing evidence
in
support of the latter version but the onus of proof in the overall
case never shifts and remains on plaintiff.”
[13]
There are two different versions of this matter.
On one hand, the Plaintiff is adamant that he was pushed out of a
moving train
whose carriage doors were always opened and sustained
injuries as the train approached Doornfontein Station and/or near the
Doornfontein
station. On the contrary, the Defendant is adamant that
no incident occurred at Doornfontein Station on 25 April 2018. It is
apparent
that this Court is faced with two mutually destructive
versions which cannot co-exist.
[14]
The
courts have provided guidance about how to resolve cases such as the
present one. For example, in
National
Employers’ General Insurance Co Ltd v Jagers
,
[5]
when
dealing with two mutually destructive versions, the court said:
“
It
seems to me, with respect, that in any civil case, as in any criminal
case, the onus can ordinarily only be discharged by adducing
credible
evidence to support the case of the party on whom the onus rests. In
a civil case the onus is obviously not as heavy as
it is in a
criminal case, but nevertheless where the onus rests on the plaintiff
as in the present case, and where there are two
mutually destructive
stories, he can only succeed if he satisfies the Court on a
preponderance of probabilities that his version
is true and accurate
and therefore acceptable, and that the other version advanced by the
defendant is therefore false or mistaken
and falls to be rejected. In
deciding whether that evidence is true or not the Court will weigh up
and test the plaintiff’s
allegations against the general
probabilities. The estimate of the credibility of a witness will
therefore be inextricably bound
up with a consideration of the
probabilities of the case and, if the balance of probabilities
favours the plaintiff, then the Court
will accept his version as
being probably true. If however the probabilities are evenly balanced
in the sense that they do not
favour the plaintiff’s case any
more than they do the defendant’s, the plaintiff can only
succeed if the Court nevertheless
believes him and is satisfied that
his evidence is true and that the defendant’s version is
false.”
[15]
Similarly, in
Stellenbosch
Farmers' Winery Group Ltd. and Others v Martell & Cie and Others,
the court held as follows:
“
On
the central issue as to what the parties actually decided there are
two irreconcilable versions, so too on a number of peripheral
areas
of dispute which may have a bearing on the probabilities. The
technique generally employed by courts in resolving factual
disputes
of this nature may conveniently be summarised as follows. To come to
a conclusion on the disputed issues a court must
make findings on (a)
the credibility of the various factual witnesses; (b) their
reliability; and (c) the probabilities…in
the light of its
assessment of (a), (b) and (c) the court will then, as a final step,
determine whether the party burdened with
the onus succeeded in
discharging it”.
[16]
Based on the above, I now turn to consider
whether
the Plaintiff has adduced
evidence on a balance of probabilities, having due
regard to the credibility and reliability of the witnesses, that the
Defendant
was negligence and that his testimony is true and accurate,
and therefore acceptable and that the version of the Defendant falls
to be rejected. To avoid liability, the Defendant must produce
evidence to disprove the inference of negligence on his part, failing
which he/she risks the possibility of being found liable for damages
suffered by the Plaintiff.
# EVIDENCE
EVIDENCE
[17]
This section deals with the testimony of the
Plaintiff and his attorney, Mr. Muhanganei. Further, it also covers
the Defendant’s
three witnesses namely,
Mr. Bhengu, Mr.
Munyai, and Ms. Phaladi.
Mr. Mashego
Dumisani Promise (Plaintiff)
[18]
The Plaintiff is the sole witness who testified
about the events that resulted in his injuries.
He
testified that
on 25 April 2018, at
about 12:00pm, he travelled roughly 45 minutes by taxi from Bosman
Station in Pretoria to Johannesburg to meet
his former girlfriend,
Ms. Maggie Aphane (“Ms. Aphane”) who lived in Soweto. On
arrival in Johannesburg, the Plaintiff
met Ms. Aphane and they bought
food together.
[19]
According to the Plaintiff, there was a strike
on the day in question by members of the South African Federation of
Trade Unions
(“SAFTU union”), and Ms. Aphane supported
the said strike. The Plaintiff testified that Ms. Aphane had intended
to
participate in the strike.
They,
therefore, proceeded to
join the group of strikers who were at
that stage leaving the Anglo-American offices in Johannesburg to
another location. The Plaintiff
testified that, upon arrival of the
strikers, he and Ms. Aphane walked behind them.
[20]
The Plaintiff testified that he was not part of
the strike but had merely gone to see Ms. Aphane who had an interest
in the strike.
He testified that he did not accompany Ms. Aphane to
hand over a memorandum but walked with her up to the Mandela Bridge.
Thereafter,
he left Ms. Aphane with other strikes and took a
different route to Park Station where he arrived after 14:00 but
before 16:00.
At Park Station, he purchased a single train ticket to
Pretoria.
[21]
The Plaintiff testified that he was not a regular
train user but had only elected to use a train on the said day as he
was not in
a hurry. The Plaintiff gave testimony: that he
inter
alia
does not remember the costs of the
train ticket; that the ticket was lost when he was robbed, he didn’t
know where the platforms
were; and that he could not remember the
platform that he boarded the train from. Furthermore, the Plaintiff
testified that he
went to wait for the train towards the end of the
platform where he eventually boarded the second or third carriage
(from the back)
of a train that arrived after 14:00. The Plaintiff
stated that the train entered and left the platform with its doors
opened. The
Plaintiff does not recall the number of the train.
[22]
Further, the Plaintiff testified that inside the
train, he found two other male commuters who were about his age.
According to the
Plaintiff, one of them had a schoolbag and he does
not remember anything else about them.
[23]
The Plaintiff further testified that the said
commuters were seated about 4 to 5 meters away from him and that he
was seated approximately
two meters away from the door of the train
carriage.
[24]
According to Plaintiff, when the train was leaving
Park Station, three unknown men entered the carriage from the doors
between the
carriages. The Plaintiff saw one of these men wearing a
brown shirt and does not remember anything about them as he had his
earphones
on. He further testified that he saw two of these men when
they started searching the other commuters, and the school bag that
one of the commuters had. The man with a brown shirt stood
approximately 1 meter away from the Plaintiff.
[25]
Two other men suddenly approached the Plaintiff
and stood approximately 30cm to 1 meter away from him. This is when
the man in a
brown t-shirt started demanding that the Plaintiff
should empty his pockets and/or enquired about what he had in his
hands. This
was followed by similar demands from other two men. The
Plaintiff refused to accede to their demands and asked who they were
and
what they wanted from him. Consequently, a scuffle ensued, and
the three men assaulted the Plaintiff.
[26]
The Plaintiff then heard the loud noise of people
from outside the train as the train was approaching the next station
which he
later learned that it was Doornfontein which is
approximately 4-5 minutes away from Park Station. The Plaintiff
testified that
people who were making noise also seemed to be
throwing stones at the train. The three men told the Plaintiff that
he knew too
much and then pushed him out of the carriage of the open
door whilst the train was in motion and entered Doornfontein Station.
[27]
As a result of being thrown out of a moving train,
the Plaintiff testified that he became unconscious and could no
longer remember
anything at Doornfontein Station. According to him,
he woke up later at Charlotte Maxeke Hospital with head injuries, and
a broken
nose. He was hospitalized and discharged after 9 days.
[28]
The Plaintiff testified that he did not report his
encounter ON the train to the Defendant or the police but went to
consult with
his attorneys.
Mr.
Muhanganei
[29]
Mr. Muhanganei’s testimony was brief. He
attested that he interviewed the Plaintiff and took handwritten
notes. Post taking
the notes, he
inter
alia
drafted the particulars of claim
and served them on the Defendant without giving the Plaintiff an
opportunity to confirm the contents
thereof.
[30]
Mr. Muhanganei further testified that he
unsuccessfully tried to get legible copies of the medical records. To
this end, he indicated
that the appointment of an assessor did not
yield any positive results. Consequently, he took it upon himself to
inter alia
visit
the offices of EMS headquarters in Johannesburg and Charlotte Maxeke
hospital but also failed. According to him, these are
the reasons
that he did not call the paramedic personnel to testify.
Mr. Bhengu
(Defendant)
[31]
Mr. Bhengu testified that
on
25 April 2018, he was employed by the Defendant as a Protection
Officer at Doornfontein Station. He testified that he reported
for
duty at Park Station at 5:53am for a shift that commenced from 6:00am
to 15h00. According to Mr. Bhengu,
he travelled by train from
Park Station to Doornfontein Station and this took him approximately
3 – 4 minutes.
Mr. Bhengu further
testified that once he is deployed at a station, he cannot leave that
station until the end of his shift.
[32]
Mr. Bhengu testified that he commenced his
shift alone until 07:00am when he was joined by his colleague, Mr.
Munyai. Their duties
included periodically patrolling the premises at
Doornfontein which consisted of four platforms, a ticket office,
station manager’s
office, and a concourse., Mr. Bhengu
testified that it took them approximately 10 minutes to patrol the
entire premises.
[33]
Mr. Bhengu testified that either he or Mr.
Munyai would periodically report the situation at Doornfontein
Station to the control
room via radio, and their report would be
recorded in the Occurrence Book.
[34]
Mr. Bhengu testified that in the case of an
incident occurring at Doornfontein Station such as the one narrated
by the Plaintiff,
he was required to
attend to the incident.
If a person was injured, he had to take down the details of such a
person, establish whether that person
had a valid train ticket,
ascertain the circumstances of the incident if he had not himself
seen it occur, and report the incident
to the control room where it
would be recorded in the Occurrence Book.
[35]
In addition, Mr. Bhengu testified that the incident would in turn be
escalated to
the Joint Operations Centre (“JOC”), which
would also record the event in an Occurrence Book. Thereafter, JOC
would
call an ambulance to the scene of the injured person. Mr.
Bhengu testified that whilst the ambulance was being contacted, he
was
required to remain with the injured person until the ambulance
personnel arrived. According to Mr. Bhengu, JOC is the only entity
that is authorised to call an ambulance.
[36]
Mr. Bhengu further testified that when the ambulanced, he was obliged
to take down
the ambulance’s registration number, the details
of the ambulance personnel, and establish the hospital that the
injured
person was being transported to. Further, Mr. Bhengu
testified that he was required to complete a liability report
recording all
the information as indicated above.
[37]
Mr. Bhengu testified that he was not aware of any incident that took
place on 25 April 2018
at Doornfontein Station during his
shift from 6:00am to 14:45 as he kept reporting to the control room
that everything was “all
in order” during the periods;
08h33, 10h06; and 12h06.
[38]
Ultimately, Mr. Bhengu testified that there was no way that an
incident as described
by the Plaintiff could have occurred at
Doornfontein Station without being noticed either by himself, Mr.
Munyai, customer services
personnel, cleaners, other commuters, and
hawkers present at the station.
[39]
Mr. Bengu left the Doornfontein Station at approximately 14:45 to
knock off at Park
Station at 15:00.
Mr.
Munyai
[40]
Mr. Munyai’s testified that on 25 April 2018, he was employed
by the Defendant
as a Platform Marshall at Doornfontein Station. His
duties were similar to those of Mr. Bhengu. He reported for duty at
Park Station
at 6:47am as his shift was to start from 7:00am to 16:00
at Doornfontein Station.
[41]
Mr. Munyai’s testimony to a large extent echoed that of Mr.
Bhengu in so far
as it relates to traveling time from Park Station to
Doornfontein Station, reporting of an incident such as the one
described by
the Plaintiff, the duty of JOC, and that nothing
occurred on the day in question at Doornfontein Station. Therefore,
it is not
necessary to repeat it except that on two occasions namely,
13:17 and 14:45 where Mr. Munyai also reported to the Control Room
that everything was in order.
[42]
Ultimately, Mr. Munyai testified that he left Doornfontein Station
between 15:50
and 15:55 for Park Station as his shift was to end at
16:00.
Ms.
Phaladi
[43]
Ms. Phaladi testified that on 25 April 2018, she was employed by the
Defendant as
the Station Manager to ensure that Doornfontein Station
generates income. Further, she testified that the Doornfontein
Station
consisted of various personnel such as Access Control
Officers, Ticket Officers, TSA officers, Security Guards, and
Cleaners.
[44]
Ms. Phaladi testified that the Doornfontein Station operated from
2:00am to 20:00;
Access Control, Ticket Officers, and TSA officials
worked from 4:00am to 20:00; Cleaners resumed duty from 07:00am to
16:00; Security
Guards worked from 6:00am until 18:00 and from 18:00
until 6:00am. Accordingly, Ms. Phaladi testified that it was
impossible that
all the aforesaid people could have missed the
incident as described by the Plaintiff.
[45]
Finally, Ms. Phaladi testified that the entrance to the platform or
railway tracks
at Doornfontein Station was only possible through an
access point as the other parts were closed off by a palisade fence.
She further
testified that the ambulance personnel could also only
gain access via the access control point. This part of the testimony
somehow
became unclear but was confirmed via an inspection
in loco
which proved that prior the station was vandalised in 2020,
accessed could only be gained via the access control point.
PLAINTIFF’S
SUBMISSIONS
[46]
Counsel submitted that the Plaintiff was a credible and reliable
witness as he gave
his evidence clearly and without any
contradiction. Counsel for the Plaintiff further contended that the
Plaintiff had an independent
recollection of the events of 25 April
2018 and showed good character in the witness box.
[47]
Counsel submitted that when the Plaintiff was questioned by the
Defendant’s
counsel about his oral testimony which differed
with the information contained in his pleadings regarding how
inter
alia
he fell, the train hit him and got transported to the
hospital, he gave a reasonable explanation.
[48]
Counsel
argued that even though there are inconsistencies in the Plaintiff’s
evidence and what was pleaded, this Court should
not give “undue
weight” to the inconsistencies because the Plaintiff is not the
author of the particulars of claim
and that he did not have sight of
the request for further particulars prior they were served on the
Defendant. According to counsel,
the Plaintiff’s evidence is
clear in that he “does not know where he fell after being
thrown out of the coach and does
not know how he was transported to
the hospital”.
[6]
Instead,
he got to know via the hospital personnel that he was transported by
ambulance to the hospital.
[49]
Furthermore,
counsel submitted that the fact that the Plaintiff did not
inter
alia
remember
the price of the train ticket and/or description of robbers “does
not render his evidence improbable, nor does it
justify a conclusion
that he is fabricating his evidence”.
[7]
Counsel submitted that the Plaintiff should not be faulted for
failure to describe his robbers given the situation at the time
of
the incident.
[50]
Counsel contended that the failure by the
Plaintiff to report the incident to law enforcement officers is not
important because
the Plaintiff followed the advice that he was given
at the hospital to consult with an attorney. Counsel said that in any
event
many crimes occur but are not reported.
[51]
Counsel argued that the Plaintiff’s evidence
that he was thrown out of a moving train that had its doors open went
unchallenged.
[52]
Furthermore, counsel argued that the Plaintiff’s
evidence – that he sustained injuries because of being thrown
out of
a moving train as it entered Doornfontein Station – was
supported by “undisputed” evidence which showed that he
was transported by an ambulance from the scene to Charlotte Maxeke
hospital situated approximately 5km from the Doornfontein Station.
According to counsel, the fact that he was transported to a nearby
hospital renders the Plaintiff’s version that he was injured
at
Doornfontein Station more probable.
[53]
Counsel
further contended that the Plaintiff’s testimony that he lost
consciousness after being thrown out of a moving train
and regained
it approximately after 3 days at the hospital suggests that he
sustained a head injury that can be suffered when one
is thrown out
of a moving train. Consequently, counsel contended that “the
nature of the injury renders the Plaintiff’s
version that he
was thrown out of the moving train more probable”.
[8]
[54]
Counsel submitted that the Plaintiff boarded a
train that left Johannesburg at around 15:00 or 15:20 and that there
is no credible
evidence that any of the Defendant’s employees
were present at Doornfontein Station.
[55]
Counsel
submitted that the Plaintiff’s
version about the incident which took place on 25 April 2018 about
the location, and time
of the incident is credible, reliable and more
probable than that of the Defendant’s witnesses and should be
accepted as
true.
DEFENDANT’S
SUBMISSIONS
[56]
The Defendant submitted that there was no
objective corroboration or confirmation of the Plaintiff’s
testimony with any external
facts such as Ms. Aphane who could have
confirmed the Plaintiff’s presence in Johannesburg, and his
departure thereof via
a train to Pretoria from Park Station around
14:00.
[57]
Counsel for the Defendant further submitted that
even though the Plaintiff discovered the ambulance and legible
hospital records,
he chose not to call any evidence from the
ambulance personnel and/or a supervisor who would have explained
their procedure on
arrival at Doornfontein Station and whether the
ambulance personnel would have entered the said station without
informing any of
the Defendant’s personnel.
[58]
Furthermore,
counsel for the Defendant submitted that the hospital staff who
recorded the information in the medical records were
also not called
to testify before this Court. According to counsel, “such
evidence would not constitute hearsay in that the
probative value of
the evidence would not be its correctness – but rather from
whom the information was obtained”.
[9]
In
addition, counsel contended that such information was crucial in so
far as it related to where the Plaintiff was picked from,
the
circumstances under which he ended up at Charlotte Maxeke Hospital,
and that such a serious crime was not reported.
[59]
The Defendant further submitted that the
Plaintiff’s version involved occurrences that are highly
improbable in that he was
inter alia
assaulted by three unknown men who were about 30cm
– 1m away from him, during the day, and in a confined space but
he can
only describe one of them who wore a brown shirt. This is even
though the said three men prior to assaulting the Plaintiff, had
also
robbed two other commuters in proximity of about 4-5 meters from him
in a confined space. Again, counsel submitted that the
Plaintiff
could not remember the other two commuters except that they were the
same age as him and that one of them had a school
bag.
[60]
Counsel further submitted that even though the
Plaintiff was being assaulted by three men, he was able to notice and
hear the loud
noise of people who were outside the train and who
seemingly, because of the noise, be throwing stones at the train.
[61]
Ultimately,
counsel submitted that the Plaintiff’s evidence of a group of
persons throwing stones at a train, being thrown
out of a moving
train, and being likely transported by an ambulance to the hospital
by necessary implication involves the Plaintiff’s
acceptance of
the proposition that none of the Defendant’s personnel who were
present at work saw it or
inter
alia
recorded
the arrival of the ambulance personnel “past the manned access
control point” and the “removal of the
unconscious
Plaintiff by stretcher from the station via the manned access control
point”.
[10]
[62]
Counsel submitted that the Plaintiff’s
version was fabricated and should not be preferred over that of the
Defendant.
INSPECTION
IN LOCO
[63]
The testimony of Ms
. Phaladi was
interrupted when the Plaintiff’s counsel made an application
for inspection
in loco
of Doornfontein Station as there
appeared to be a difficulty with the description of the entrance that
leads to the platforms.
The Plaintiff’s application was
granted.
[64]
An inspection
in
loco
assists
the court in achieving two purposes, namely, it enables the court to
follow the oral evidence including observing real evidence
which is
additional to the oral evidence.
[11]
At the inspection, Ms.
Phaladi
inter
alia
showed
this Court that three different stairway paths led to the first floor
where the main entrance that leads to the platforms
was situated.
When one comes from the direction of Park Station towards
Doornfontein Station, there are two stairway paths on the
left-hand
side of the road, and one stairway path on the right-hand side of the
road.
[65]
Ms. Phaladi stated that although one can presently access the
platforms from either
side of the road without using the main
entrance, this was not possible during 2018 because the platforms
were fenced with a palisade
fence. However, the palisade fence was
stolen after the station was vandalised sometime in 2020. Therefore,
anyone can access the
station from anywhere without having to go via
the controlled access entrance.
EVALUATION OF EVIDENCE
AND SUBMISSIONS
[66]
The resolution of a civil dispute such as the
present one turns on the probabilities of the competing versions,
coupled with the
evidence presented before this Court by both
parties.
[67]
The
Plaintiff was a single witness regarding the events that occurred on
the day in question. However, this does not necessarily
entail that
the Plaintiff is automatically in a disadvantaged position. His
evidence still needs to be considered holistically
to arrive at an
objective conclusion. The Court, in in
S
v Saulus and Others
,
[12]
correctly found that—
“
[t]here
is no rule of thumb test or formular to apply when it comes to a
consideration of the credibility of the single witness.
The trial
judge will weigh his evidence, will consider its merits and demerits
and, having done so, will decide whether it is trustworthy
and
whether, despite the fact that there are shortcomings or defects or
contradictions in the testimony, he is satisfied that the
truth has
been told . . .”
[68]
This entails that the single witnesses’
evidence should not merely be rejected or discounted because the
witness has an interest
or bias in the proceedings but rather, should
be assessed as a whole and with caution taking into account all the
relevant considerations.
[69]
Regarding the Plaintiff’s testimony in so
far as it relates to the attack from three men who robbed him on the
train, the
other two commuters who were also mugged, that the
assailants were about his age group, the description of one of the
robbers who
wore a brown shirt, and the other commuter who seemed to
be carrying a schoolbag, this Court is satisfied with the Plaintiff’s
narration of events. The Plaintiff cannot be criticised for failure
to recall his assailants given the circumstances at the time
the
alleged robbery occurred. It would be unfair, regardless of how close
the robbers were, to expect any person in a situation
of panic to
remember everything about his assailants let alone about other
objects and/or people that were around. People react
differently to
situations of fright.
[70]
The Defendant seemed to be placing too much
emphasis on the Plaintiff’s inability to also recall the price
of the ticket,
the train number and/or the platform that the
Plaintiff used to board the train. In my view, the Plaintiff did
indicate that he
was not a regular train commuter but had on that day
opted to use a train. Again, one cannot be questioned for preferring
any mode
of transport over the other at their disposal to reach their
desired destination. Equally, I find it difficult to comprehend how
a
non-regular train commuter would be expected to keep records of a
train number that he boarded and/or memorise the platform where
he
boarded his train. The Plaintiff’s testimony in this aspect is
satisfactory.
[71]
Regarding the train ticket, this Court also finds
the Plaintiff’s explanation in that he lost his train ticket
during the
scuffle with the three men who robbed him trustworthy, and
satisfactory.
[72]
Regarding
how the Plaintiff sustained injuries allegedly being pushed out of a
moving train whose doors were open, and being transported
by an
ambulance to the hospital, the Plaintiff’s testimony before
this Court was that he was pushed out of a moving train
as it was
approaching the Doornfontein Station and that he lost consciousness.
He further testified to the effect that he only
woke up in the
hospital approximately 2-3 days and learnt that he was transported
there by an ambulance. However, during cross-examination
regarding
the contradiction between his evidence-in-chief and information
contained in his particulars of claim
[13]
and a request for further particulars
[14]
indicating that he fell between the “railway track and/or
between the train and the train platform whereby the train hit
him by
the side” and that he was transported by an ambulance to the
hospital, he responded that
he
did not know where he fell because he was unconscious. He further
stated that, although he had consulted with his attorney, he
did not
see the pleadings and that he would have corrected such information
if he had seen it before.
[73]
I find the above
contradiction to be unfortunate as it affects several key aspects
that I will refer to shortly.
The
truth of the matter is that this is a material contradiction that
cannot simply be brushed aside. I am mindful of Mr.
Muhanganei’s
evidence, the Plaintiff’s attorney, who was called as a witness
to address the said contradiction. His
testimony was that when he
prepared the particulars of claim and answers to the request for
further particulars, he consulted with
the Plaintiff, took
handwritten notes, typed the particulars of claim and the answers
after the consultation, and served them on
the Defendant without
verifying them with the Plaintiff. This explanation is not
satisfactory. It remains unclear how the handwritten
notes that were
taken during an interview with the Plaintiff suddenly portrayed a
different story when reduced to typing. In addition,
I find it
strange that an officer of the court with a wealth of litigation
experience in the High Court, served a piece of information
without
first verifying it with his client. Further, the information
contained in the Plaintiff’s pleading raises more questions
than answers such as how could have an unconscious person, who only
remembered being pushed out of a moving train, knew that he
fell
between the “
railway
track and/or between the train and the train platform whereby the
train hit him by the side”. In
Molusi
v Voges N.O
.,
[15]
the Constitutional Court held:
“
It
is impermissible for the plaintiff to plead a particular case and
seek to establish a different case at the trial . . . ”
[74]
I find
the above principle applicable in this case. I agree with counsel for
the Plaintiff in that Mr. Muhanganei’s evidence
was not
challenged by the Defendant. But that is not the case that the
Defendant was called upon to answer. It is trite that one
stands or
fall by his or her pleadings.
[16]
Accordingly, it is impermissible for the Plaintiff to make out a new
case at the trial stage and thereby in the process ambush
the
Defendant.
[75]
The
Defendant was, in my view, correct to enquire about the whereabouts
of the
hospital
staff who recorded the information in the medical report because such
witnesses were crucial in so far as where the Plaintiff
was picked
from, how did he sustain the injuries, and the circumstances under
which he ended up at Charlotte Maxeke Hospital. I
highlight this
because a simple perusal of the medical report is in several
instances contradictory. For example, the medical report
inter
alia
states
that the Plaintiff was “pushed onto a rail road”,
[17]
“
assault
to head”,
[18]
“
patient
assaulted during the strike, mainly to head”,
[19]
“
assaulted
physically”,
[20]
“
pushed
off train”
[21]
“
thrown
out of a train”,
[22]
and
“pushed off a train platform”.
[23]
This
Court is placed in a difficult situation about which version to
accept on this aspect. Therefore, the Plaintiff’s version
and
the information contained in the pleadings and the medical reports
paint a blurred picture that contains material discrepancies.
[76]
Regarding the Plaintiff’s version that Mr. Bhengu could not see
an incident downstairs
on the platforms if he was on the first floor
where the offices are situated, Mr. Bhengu conceded but maintained
that he would
have known because someone would have informed him. I
do not see this as augmenting the Plaintiff’s case in any way.
The
inspection
in loco
revealed that there is only one
entrance situated upstairs which leads to the platforms that are
downstairs. This means that even
if an incident had occurred whilst
Mr. Bhengu and/or Mr. Munyai were patrolling upstairs, the paramedic
personnel who had a stretcher
to carry the injured Plaintiff
downstairs would have passed through them (first floor-where there is
a main entrance) on their
way to the platforms downstairs where the
incident had taken place. Post carrying the injured person from
downstairs using a stretcher,
the paramedic personnel would have
still had to use the same route and exit via the main entrance
upstairs. It is difficult to
accept that everyone at the station
could have missed this exercise especially given the fact that
evidence before this Court shows
that Mr. Munyai was still at the
station as he left the station at around 15:50. In my view, an
incident such as this could have
potentially attracted attention from
other commuters and/or other two commuters that were also robbed. I
find it difficult to accept
that in a broad daylight, and at a train
station a huge incident such as this one was missed by almost
everyone including the general
public.
[77]
Why no
medical personnel were called to give testimony before this Court and
help to understand the multiple and contradictory versions
contained
in the medical report remains unclear. Mr. Muhanganei tried to remedy
this by testifying that he
inter
alia
tried
to obtain a legible patient report form and trace the paramedics who
assisted the Plaintiff without success. He further testified
that the
appointment of an assessor (tracer) also did not bear fruitful
results. According to him, he then decided to personally
try to
locate a clear patient report from the fire station at Protea Glen,
Brixton, EMS headquarters in Johannesburg, and Charlotte
Maxeke
hospital without success. As a result, he was unable to call the
paramedics. This does not address the issue of why the
medical
personnel at the hospital were not called to testify.
The
court in
Elgin
Fireclays Ltd v Webb
[24]
stated:
“
It
is true that if a party fails to place the evidence of a witness, who
is available and able to elucidate the facts, before the
trial Court,
this failure leads naturally to the inference that he fears that such
evidence will expose facts unfavourable to him…”
[78]
The aforesaid case is in my view relevant to the
present one. Mr. Muhunganei indicated that he even went to the
Charlotte Maxeke
hospital to try and obtain legible records. I find
this difficult to comprehend. But this does not mean that the failure
of the
Plaintiff to call the medical personnel should count against
him at this juncture. In
Kock v S.K.F.
Laboratories it was stated that:
“…
The
pre-requisite for the drawing of an inference adverse to a party is
that the witness must be available. By that I do not
understand
the authorities to mean available in a narrowly circumscribed
and defined notion such as that he must have
been present in the
precincts of the Court at the time of the trial. It seems to me that
a witness is available if his testimony
in the case could have
been procured by the party against whom it is sought to draw an
adverse inference. …”.
[79]
In
light of the above, a simple reading of the medical record on the day
on which the Plaintiff was admitted, 25 April 2018, has
a doctor’s
name even though that name is not clear. However, a further reading
of the medical report contains visible names
of various hospital
personnel such as Dr. Photolo
[25]
,
Dr. Magasane
[26]
and Sr.
Maluleke,
[27]
and Sr.
Shiaka
[28]
who may have been
of assistance with the name of the doctor who first saw the
Plaintiff. In my view, all these are key witnesses
who could have
corroborated the Plaintiff’s version and/or assisted this
Court. Instead, the medical records contain contradictions
about how
the Plaintiff got injured. Regrettably, all these medical personnel
were never called before this Court. Further, there
is no tracer’s
report whatsoever before this Court stating that they were traced
without success except Mr. Muhanganei’s
testimony. There is
also no suggestion that they are no more. This Court is not persuaded
that sufficient efforts were done to
get the said witnesses.
[80]
Regarding
the counsel’s submission that the Plaintiff’s head injury
can be sustained when one is thrown out of a moving
train, this is
contradicted by the Plaintiff’s evidence. The Plaintiff’s
medical record in some parts reads, “
patient
assaulted during the strike, mainly to head”.
[29]
This
is a material contradiction of the evidence of the Plaintiff.
This
opens another possible inference that the Plaintiff was injured at
the strike. It further contradicts the Plaintiff’s
version that
he did not participate in the strike. This alone raises doubt about
the
Plaintiff’s counsel submission where he stated that “the
fact that he was transported to a nearby hospital renders
the
Plaintiff’s version that he was injured at Doornfontein Station
more probable”.
Additionally,
it also raises reservations as to where the Plaintiff was situated at
the time when he sustained injuries.
This
is where the paramedics, hospital staff and/or Ms. Aphane would have
in my view assisted this Court. Unfortunately, they could
not be
found as per the Plaintiff’s testimony.
[81]
About
the Plaintiff’s submission that there was no one at the station
between 14:50 and 18:00 because Mr. Bhengu had already
knocked off
and that there was no evidence to show that the Defendant’s
employees were present at the station, counsel for
the Plaintiff is
missing the point. Mr. Bhengu’s shift started an hour earlier
than Mr. Munyai’s shift. It was his
time to knock off. In any
event, he was also alone in the morning when he commenced his shift
at 06:00am and was only joined by
Mr. Munyai at 07:00 am.
Consequently, it does not follow that when Mr. Bhengu left the
station it meant that Mr. Munyai also left
his post unattended. It
was clear on evidence that Mr. Munyai’s shift commenced from
07:00 am to 16:00. This is further confirmed
by the Occurrence Book
which is kept at Park Station where they sign in and off duty.
[30]
This entails that he remained at his post and continued working
because he was still on duty even though he was no longer in the
company of Mr. Bhengu. Therefore, Mr. Munyai was still on duty when
the alleged incident occurred at
15:00
or 15:20.
Furthermore,
Mr. Munyai testified that once he was posted at a particular point
for a day, he would not leave until the end of his
shift. In my view,
this addresses all the Plaintiff’s submissions regarding the
absence of all the Defendant’s employees
at Doornfontein
Station when the incident allegedly occurred.
[82]
Mr.
Bhengu clearly explained his duties including how an incident such as
the present one is procedurally handled prior to, and
post being
reported to JOC. He stood his ground that it took them ten minutes to
patrol the entire train station. However, this
Court is mindful that
under cross-examination, Mr. Bhengu failed to explain why entry
number 1845 in the Occurrence Book indicated
that he reported about
George Goch Station when he in fact was posted at Doornfontein
Station for the duration of his shift. Further,
Mr. Bhengu stated
that he was the only one reporting to the Control Room as he had a
radio. However, it later turned out that Mr.
Munyai also had a radio
and had made reports to the Control Room too. This is something that
Mr. Bhengu later changed his position
about and said that he was not
sure whether Mr. Munyai also had a radio. In
S
v Mkohle
,
[31]
the then Appellate Division said the following:
“
Contradictions
per se do not lead to the rejection of a witness’ evidence. …
[T]hey may simply be indicative of an
error. … [N]ot every
error made by a witness affects his credibility; in each case the
trier of fact has to make an evaluation;
taking into account such
matters as the nature of the contradictions, their number and
importance, and their bearing on other parts
of the witness’
evidence.”
[83]
In my view, the aforesaid contradictions are
inconsequential. It does not matter who provided the reports to the
Control Room. I
do not think that a report about George Goch Station
should affect Mr. Bhengu’s testimony because the evidence
before this
Court shows that he was deployed at Doornfontein Station.
He reported what was happening where he was posted. Consequently, he
could not be faulted for having said the entry was correct. Counsel
for the Defendant on this aspect resorted to selective reading
because a glance of entry 1845 in the Occurrence Book also shows a
report about Faraday Deport. It is unlikely that Mr. Bhengu
could
have been able to explain the events that were occurring at Faraday
where he was not deployed at. Overall, I find Mr. Bhengu’s
testimony credible and acceptable.
[84]
Mr. Munyani’s testimony to a large extent
echoed that of Mr. Bhengu and does not need to be repeated except
where it differed.
Mr. Munyai testified that Mr. Bhengu left
Doornfontein Station approximately 10 or 5 minutes before 15:00. This
differs from the
testimony of Mr. Bhengu whose evidence was that he
left at 14:45. According to Mr. Munyai, they were not allowed to
leave their
posts 10 minutes before the knock off time. I do not see
how this helps the Plaintiff’s case as Mr. Munyai also
testified
that he left Doornfontein Station
inter
alia
around 15:50 which is ten minutes
before his actual knock-off time. Mr. Munyai further testified that
they were required to report
hourly to the Control Room, and that he
was required to patrol with his colleague. In addition, counsel for
the Plaintiff highlighted
that there was no evidence led and/or
challenged about what occurred when either Mr. Bhengu or Mr. Munyai
had not yet arrived or
left the station. I have already addressed
this elsewhere – a reading of the Occurrence Book shows that
different people
reported at different intervals without specifically
adhering to the hourly time frame. Further, it cannot be said that
when one
of the security guards has not yet arrived at the post or
has gone to the bathroom, the remaining security guard stops working
because he is only required to patrol with his colleague. Logic
dictates that he continues with his duties until his colleague
arrives at the post and/or returns from the bathrooms. Otherwise,
there will be no need to have one security guard whose shift starts
an hour earlier than the other who will just be on duty for a mere
presence and not work.
[85]
Ms. Phaladi’s evidence also echoed that of
Mr.Bhengu and Mr. Munyai in that she
inter
alia
confirmed that the last shift for
security personnel ended at 16:00 .Under cross-examination, she
stated that she does not remember
whether she was at work or not on
25 of April 2022. The Plaintiff raised a concern about Ms. Phaladi’s
non-recollection of
whether she was at work or not. Consequently, the
Plaintiff concluded that there was no “sufficient, credible and
reliable
evidence that any other person employed by the Defendant,
other than Ms. Phaladi’s evidence that employees are always at
the station”. According to the Plaintiff, Ms. Phaladi could not
give credible evidence about the presence of other employees.
To this
end, counsel for the Plaintiff indicated that the customer service
personnel and cleaners were not called to establish
their presence at
the time of the incident. I agree with the Plaintiff’s
proposition that there is no evidence before this
Court supporting
the suggestion that other employees were present at the station.
However, I do not see the relevance and/or weight
of the presence or
absence thereof of the cleaners and/or customer service personnel
because the people who were tasked with primary
responsibility to
ensure the safety of commuters, patrol the station and report all
incidents occurring at the station were at
the station on 25 of April
2018.
[86]
According
to the Plaintiff, Ms. Phaladi’s evidence indicating that
paramedics could not have accessed the station without
being noticed
as they used one entrance to enter and exit bolsters the Plaintiff’s
“submission that it is highly probable
that the defendant’s
employees were not present at the station when the incident
occurred".
[32]
I have
already addressed this issue elsewhere and
inter
alia
stated
that Mr. Munyai left the Doornfontein Station at around 15:50, a time
that is well within which the alleged incident occurred.
Further, his
knock-off time at Park Station was recorded in the Occurrence Book.
Contrary to what the Plaintiff’s counsel
suggested, I have not
found any evidence which shows that Mr. Munyai also left the station
when Mr. Bhengu knocked-off and/or that
he was no longer active when
he remained alone at the station.
[87]
About the ticket examiners and customer service
personnel, the Plaintiff is adamant that the fact that they did not
see the paramedic
personnel and reported their presence leads him to
conclude that they were not present at the station when the ambulance
arrived
is difficult to appreciate. This is also contradicted by the
medical report which suggests that the Plaintiff might have been
injured
during the strike. Accordingly, it follows that ticket
examiners and customer service personnel could not have noticed
paramedics
who may have attended to a person injured outside the
boundaries of the station. In my view, it is improbable that a huge
station
such as Doornfontein which consists of four platforms could
be left without ticket examiners on a normal day when the manager’s
primary responsibility was to ensure that such station generates
income. I do not see any reason that renders the testimony of
Ms.
Phaladi questionable. In my view, she was a good witness even though
at times she had no recollection of the events.
[88]
In
light of the above, I consider whether the Plaintiff has, on balance
of probabilities, discharged the onus of proof that rests
with him.
In
Selamolele
v Makhado
[33]
, the
court said that the approach to the question of whether the onus has
been discharged was dealt with as follows:
“
Ultimately
the question is whether the onus on the party, who asserts a state of
facts, has been discharged on a balance of probabilities
and this
depends not on a mechanical quantitative balancing out of the pans of
the scale of probabilities but, firstly, on a qualitative
assessment
of the truth and/or inherent probabilities of the evidence of the
witnesses and, secondly, an ascertainment of which
of two versions is
the more probable.”
[89]
Further,
in
Maitland
and Kensington Bus Co (Pty) Ltd v Jenningswhere
[34]
Davis
J said:
“
For
judgement to be given for the plaintiff the Court must be satisfied
that sufficient reliance can be placed on his story for
there to
exist a strong probability that his version is the true one.”
[35]
[90]
I have
already referred to the improbabilities of the Plaintiff’s
version. These improbabilities allude regrettably to material
discrepancies in the evidence of the Plaintiff. He is a single
witness and there is no corroboration to his evidence especially
about how an unconscious person could tell word to word how he got
injured, fell between the rail tracks, and was transported to
a
hospital by an ambulance.
Contrary
to the Plaintiff’s pleaded case, the evidence before this Court
is not conclusive that there is any incident that
occurred at
Doornfontein Station. I need to state that the reading of the
Occurrence Book suggests that there is no specific time
upon which to
report the status of affairs at any of the train stations. Different
people reported at various intervals with the
accounts of the strike
on the 25 of April 2018 dominating the report. In addition, the
Occurrence Book has also recorded various
incidents such as where
four people were assaulted by strikers (entry 1324),
[36]
an injured male at Jeppe Station (entry 1325)’
[37]
and two people were injured at Germiston platform (entry 1327).
[38]
The Defendant has shown that one of its personnel was still at the
Doornfontein Station when the alleged incident occurred. Therefore,
if it had occurred, it would have been reported just like other
incidents that were reported elsewhere.
[91]
On the assessment of the probabilities, logic
dictates that it is not irrefutable that the Plaintiff was injured
when the train
entered (or approaching) the Doornfontein Station.
Whilst I accept that he sustained injuries, the circumstances of this
case especially
the Plaintiff’s testimony, and his pleadings
coupled with the medical report do not constitute objective evidence
that supports
the Plaintiff’s version.
[92]
In
the present matter, I consider that the Plaintiff’s evidence
was adduced in a most haphazard and unsatisfactory manner
– the
medical record not only contradicted the Plaintiff’s testimony
but also less effort was made to bring the authors
of the medical
record to clarify many inconsistencies that are contained there. The
contradictions were material and affected the
overall credibility of
the Plaintiff’s testimony.
[93]
I am,
therefore, of the view that the totality of the facts of this case
does not justify a finding of an act or omission that can
be ascribed
to the Defendant. This is so because of
inter
alia
the
uncertainty surrounding how the Plaintiff sustained injuries.
Consequently, I deem it not necessary to comprehensively deal
with
issues of negligence, wrongfulness, and causation as eloquently dealt
with by the Constitutional Court in a similar matter.
[39]
[94]
In the circumstances, I am not able to find that
sufficient reliance can be placed on the Plaintiff’s version. I
find it to
be highly improbable when measured against that of the
Defendant.
[95]
Therefore, there are no adequate grounds to
satisfy me that sufficient reliance can be placed on the Plaintiff’s
version.
[96]
There
is no basis on which to find that the costs of the action should not
follow the results.
[40]
ORDER
[97]
I, therefore, make
the following order:
(a)
The Plaintiff’s claim is dismissed.
(b)
The Plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs of this
action.
M
R PHOOKO
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered:
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 20 January 2023.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
Adv RM Mphela
Instructed
by:
Mashudu Muhanganei Attorneys
Counsel
for the Defendant: Adv SM Tisani
Instructed
by:
Diale Mogashoa Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
19 September 2022
Date
of Judgment:
20 January 2023
[1]
Particulars of claim
para 5.
[2]
Reply to Defendant’s
request for further particulars paras 2.18 and 2.24.
[3]
See
Pillay
v Krishna and Another
1946
(AD) 946 at 952-3.
[4]
1988(2)
SA 372 (V), at 374.
[5]
1984(4)
437 (ECD) 440 D-G. See
also
Stellenbosch Farmers' Winery Group Ltd. and Others v Martell &
Cie and Others
2003
(1) SA 11
(SCA) at para 5.
[6]
Plaintiff’s
closing heads at para 73.
[7]
Id at para 76.
[8]
Id at para 80.
[9]
Defendant’s heads
of argument at para 17.5.2.
[10]
Id at paras 21-23.
[11]
R
v Mokoena
1932
OPD 79
at 80.
[12]
1981 (3) SA 172
(A) at
180E-G.
[13]
Particulars of claim
para 5.
[14]
Reply to Defendant’s
request for further particulars paras 2.18 and 2.24.
[15]
2016
(3) SA 370
(CC) at paras 27-8.
[16]
Kali
v Incorporated General Insurances Limited
1976
(2) SA 179
(D) at 182A;
Imprefed
(Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission
1993
(3) SA 94
(A) at 107.
[17]
CaseLines 002-41.
[18]
CaseLines 00-24.
[19]
CaseLines 002-5.
[20]
CaseLines 002-9.
[21]
CaseLines 002-10.
[22]
CaseLines 002 -38.
[23]
CaseLines 002-52.
[24]
1947
AD 744
at 745.
[25]
CaseLines 002-9.
[26]
CaseLines 002-10
[27]
CaseLines 002-10.
[28]
CaseLines 002-33.
[29]
CaseLines 002-5.
[30]
CaseLines 001-211.
[31]
1990
(1) SACR 95
(A) at 98F-H, with reference to
S
v Oosthuizen
1982
(3) SA 571
(T) at 576B-C.
[32]
Plaintiff’s
closing heads of argument at para 105.
[33]
1988
(2) SA 372
(V) at 374J–375B.
[34]
1940
CPD 489
at 492.
[35]
It was further stated in
Ocean
Accident and Guarantee Corporation Ltd J v Koch
1963
(4) SA 147
(A), at 157D
that
the evidence present by the burdened party must be such that the
court can say that “
[w]e
think it is more probable than not”
for
the burden to be discharged. However, if the probabilities [in
relation to the evidence of all the parties] are equal, then
the
burden has not been discharged by the burdened party.
[36]
CaseLines
001-193.
[37]
Id
.
[38]
CaseLines 001-194.
[39]
See
Mashongwa
v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
2016
(3) SA 528 (CC).
[40]
Neuhoff
v York Timbers Ltd
1981
(1) SA 666
(T).
sino noindex
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