Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 130South Africa
Zulu v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAGPPHC 130; 89670/18 (1 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Zulu v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAGPPHC 130; 89670/18 (1 March 2023)
Zulu v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAGPPHC 130; 89670/18 (1 March 2023)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case no: 89670/18
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED.
DATE: 01 MARCH 2023
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
PLAINTIFF
THANDAZANI ZULU
And
DEFENDANT
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
JUDGMENT ON A
POSTPONEMENT
MOGOTSI AJ
Introduction
[1]
This matter was set down for trial on the 24
th
February
2023.Instead of proceeding with a trial, the Defendant moved an
application for a postponement
sine die
as he wishes to apply
for the rescission of a struck out order which was granted against
him on the 8
th
March 2022. The
Plaintiff opposed the application and also wanted
to be
awarded costs on attorney and client scale. For the sake of
convenience, the defendant in the main action shall be referred to as
the Applicant in this matter and the Plaintiff as
the Respondent.
[2]
In the main action, the Respondent is claiming for payment of damages
in an amount of R10m
in terms of section 17 of the Road Accident Fund
Act 56 of 1996.He was involved in a motor vehicle accident on the
29
th
August 2015 in Kwazulu-Natal.
[3]
The Applicant was initially defended by a panel of Attorneys who
withdrew following the
departure of the panel of attorneys’
system. Subsequent to that, the
file was not attended to until the Respondent served the Applicant
with a court order dated 16
th
August 2021.The Applicant
failed to comply with that court order resulting in his plea being
struck out on the 8
th
March 2022.
[4]
The Responded indicated to the court that he wanted to proceed with
the trial but he would
give the Applicant chance to address the court
on a substantive application for a postponement.
[5]
The Applicant moved an application for a
postponement and his grounds were that:
(a)
He got appointed by the RAF only two days before the 24
th
February 2023 (trial date).
(b)
His general approach to these matters, is to start by considering a
settlement before litigation.
However, in this matter he could not do
so because of the following “
serious
”
and “
crucial
”
discrepancies:
(i)
In the proceedings the Plaintiff is referred to as
Thandazani Zulu while throughout the hospital records he is (in 16
instances) referred to as Sibusiso Buthelezi not Thandazani
Zulu.
(ii)
The papers are not consistent on whether the Plaintiff was the
pedestrian, the driver of
the insured motor vehicle or a passenger.
(iii)
The amount of the damages demanded by the
respondent is so substantial that it is not fair and reasonable.
(iv)
The Plaintiff’s date of birth in the
hospital records and the affidavit is not the same.
(v)
Although the Respondent is alleging that the
hospital staff did not write his correct personal
details,
there is no confirmatory affidavit to that effect.
(vi)
Instead, the Respondent filled what is marked “statement
affidavit” which is briefly
a police form completed with hand
writing. Some numbers written on top of others and not eligible and
it reads as follows;
“
I
Zulu Thanadazani Id no 9[...] like to state that on the 29/08/2015; I
was involved in the accident and take me to the hospital.
In the hospital they
use the wrong date of birth. I was born on 198/9(it is not clear if
it is 8 or 9) 2-08-03 not 1995-08-03 and
name are Zulu Nondzani not
Buthelezi
That’s all I
like to state”
Some numbers are written
on top of others. It is not clear as to who may have done that
because the cancelling is not initialled.
It is difficult to make out
what is written there. The document is dated 7/6/2016. The SAPS date
stamp is 2016-07-06.
(vii)
Now that the Applicant is on record, he undertakes to fast track the
matter.
(viii)
The applicant says he has a reasonable suspicion that the
claim is fraudulent and as a results he has referred it
to the
relevant section for investigation.
[6]
He as a result of the above stated grounds
the applicant approached the Responded with a request to
have the
matter removed from the roll so that the issues raised could be
ventilated fully.
[7]
The Respondent is not amenable to a postponement, as a result the
Applicant came to court
and he prays for;
“
1.
Condonation of the late filing of the application
2. Postponement of the
trial set down for the 24
th
February 2023 under the above
case number.
3. Costs in the event
the application is not successfully opposed.
4. Further and/or
alternative relief”.
[8]
The Respondent contended that the application for a postponement
should be dismissed with
punitive costs as the applicant is merely
playing delaying tactics. He has been seized with this matter for
years and he chose
to put it in the shelve and disregard the rules
and practice directives of this court. The discrepancies were
addressed in an affidavit
dated 7
th
June 2016 marked
“
Annexure Z2
”. Furthermore, the Plaintiff is in
court, he has travelled from Kwa- Zulu Natal. He may be called to
testify. The Plaintiff
cannot be blamed for having suffered from
injuries which caused him a memory lapse.
[7]
Of significance is that the applicants defence was struck down on the
8/3/2022 as a result
of non-compliance with a TIC order dated
4/08/2021. Furthermore, it is the defendants conduct throughout the
country to disregard
the court rules, orders and practice directives.
[8]
The issue in this application is whether it will be in the interest
of justice or not to
allow the applicant to proceed and obtain
judgment on an undefended basis with the
kind of the discrepancies
on the papers before court.
As it stands the main
trial has to determine the merits and the quantum of damages (future
loss of earnings and future medical expense).
[9]
In Erasmus, Superior Court Practice, Vol 2, pp D1-552A, the following
is said about postponements
(footnotes omitted):
“
The
legal principles applicable to an application for the grant of a
postponement by the court are as follows:
(a) The court
has a discretion as to whether an application for a postponement
should be granted or refused. Thus, the court
has a discretion to
refuse a postponement even when wasted costs are tendered or even
when the parties have agreed to postpone
the matter.
(b)
That discretion must be exercised in a judicial manner. It should not
be exercised capriciously or upon any
wrong principle, but for
substantial reasons. If it appears that a court has not exercised its
discretion judicially, or that it
has been influenced by wrong
principles or a misdirection on the facts, or that it has reached a
decision which could not reasonably
have been made by a court
properly directing itself to all the relevant facts and principles,
its decision granting or refusing
a postponement may be set aside on
appeal.
(c) An applicant
for a postponement seeks an indulgence. The applicant must show good
and strong reasons, i e the applicant
must furnish a full and
satisfactory explanation of the circumstances that give rise to the
application. A court should be slow
to refuse a postponement where
the true reason for a party’s non-preparedness has been fully
explained, where his unreadiness
to proceed is not due to delaying
tactics, and where justice demands that he should have further time
for the purpose of presenting
his case.
(d)
An application for a postponement must be made timeously, as soon as
the circumstances which
might justify such an application become
known to the applicant. If, however, fundamental fairness and justice
justify a postponement,
the court may in an appropriate case allow
such an application for postponement even if the application was not
so timeously made.
(e)
An application for postponement must always be bona fide and not used
simply as a tactical manoeuvre
for the purpose
of obtaining an advantage to which the applicant is not legitimately
entitled.
(f)
Considerations of prejudice will ordinarily constitute the dominant
component of the total
structure in terms of which the discretion of
the court will be exercised; the court has to consider whether any
prejudice caused
by a postponement can fairly be compensated by an
appropriate order of costs or any other ancillary mechanism.
(g)
The balance of convenience or inconvenience to both parties should be
considered: the court should
weigh the prejudice which will be caused
to the respondent in such an application if the postponement is
granted against the prejudice
which will be caused to the applicant
if it is not.”
[10]
Generally motion proceedings are decided on papers.
Viva voce
evidence may be allowed in exceptional cases. The affidavit statement
does not say that the Plaintiff suffered from a memory loss
as argued
by the Respondent. The inaccuracies
ex facie
the hospital
records and the affidavit prompted the court to give the applicant a
hearing
albeit
he was not properly before the court. It
occurred that the Applicant had informed the Responded about his
intention to bring a substantial
application for a postponement and
the Respondent was not amenable. With the Applicant having a
reputation of ignoring court processes,
the attitude of the
Respondent may not necessarily be faulted. That is how the Applicant
decided to approach this court on the
day of the trial and informally
addressed the court from the bar. This conduct must be discouraged.
[11]
The discrepancies are quite glaring so much that it would have been
wrong for anyone to assume that the
court would proceed and grant an
order on the face of such documents. Having already noticed the
discrepancies in the trial bundle,
the court accorded the applicant a
hearing.
[12]
The trial bundle refers to two different plaintiffs with two
different dates of birth. It is also not clear
whether the Plaintiff
was a pedestrian, a passenger or a driver of the insured motor
vehicle.
[13]
There is prejudice in that the Plaintiff travelled from Kwazulu-Natal
for the trial. The counsel for the
Respondent had prepared and set
aside todays date and that comes with costs. The Responded has
neglected the matter for some time.
The notice of motion seeking a
postponement was uploaded on case lines on the 24/02/2023 that is on
the date of the trial. The
Respondent did not have reasonable time to
reply. Clearly, the rules were once more flouted thus causing further
prejudice.
[14]
In arguing for a refusal of a postponement, the
Respondent said the applicant has laid his bed and that he must
now
lie on it. The same approach is relevant in so far as the Respondent
being aware that there are discrepancies regarding the
identity of
the Plaintiff as well as his position or role in the accident and not
following the correct procedure to remedy the
defects. The Respondent
seems to have taken comfort in the fact that the Applicant’s
plea was struck –off. If there
is no fraud committed in this
matter, then it could be a question of cut and pastes which went
awfully wrong. It is difficult to
follow the Respondent’s
argument which seems to suggest that if the matter was not defended
court would in any event ignore
the discrepancies.
[15]
It is my well-considered view that backlog cases cannot be an excuse
for failing to adhere to the Court’s
rules and it is also,
wrong and reprehensible for the applicant to have ignored the Court’s
rules, practice directives and
orders. However, the court makes a
finding that the discrepancies raised by the Applicant cannot just be
brushed aside.
[16]
The nature of the issues raised by the applicant is such that it is
in the interest of justice that the
court hears from both sides. A
mere calling of a person to come and testify as the Respondents
counsel wanted to do would not have
assisted. It would just have been
evidence of self-corroboration which would not even have been tested
because the Applicant would
not be on record.
[17]
If no settlement is reached, the merits and quantum of this matter
will have to be fully ventilated
for a well informed decision
to be reached. The court makes a finding that this application for a
postponement is made with a bona
fide
intention. Even if it
can be arguable that the application was not made timeously,
fundamental, fairness and justice justify a
postponement. Given the
circumstances of this case, justice demands that the applicant
cautiously be given time for the purpose
of presenting his case.
[18]
The non-compliance with this court’s rules and the below par
preparation on both sides is relevant
in determining the costs. The
Responded argued that there is no guarantee that the responded will
ever respect the order of this
court as the tendency is “just
to shove the court orders in their drawers” and “carry on
with their live”.
He argued that punitive costs should be
awarded against the applicant.
[19]
In the matter between the
Public Protector v South African Reserve
Bank
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC) at para.8
Mogoeng CJ noted that
‘[c]osts on an attorney and client scale are to be awarded
where there is fraudulent, dishonest, vexatious
conduct and conduct
that amounts to an abuse of court process’. The majority
judgment was not read to differ with this. In
the minority judgment
Khampepe J and Theron J further noted that ‘a punitive costs
order is justified where the conduct concerned
is “extraordinary”
and worthy of a courts rebuke. ‘Both judgments referred to
Plastic Convertors Association of SA on behalf of members’ v
National Union of Metalworkers of SA ILJ 2815 (LAC) at para 46
,
in which the Labour Appeal Court, stated ‘The scale of attorney
and client is an extraordinary one which should be reserved
for cases
where it can be found that a litigant conducted itself in a clear and
indubitably vexatious and reprehensible manner.
Such an award is
exceptional and is intended to be very punitive and indicative of
extreme opprobrium.”
As
much as the Responded argued that the applicant has occasioned this
postponement by failing to adhere to a court order, the practice
directives and the relevant rules, his
papers equally so are not in order. There is a confusion
about the
identity of the Plaintiff and the material aspects of his claim, so
much so that the Applicant argues that he has reason
to suspect
“fraud”. The pleadings were not amended. If fraud is
established it would not be fair to award costs to
such a litigant.
[20]
The Applicant was just appointed two days before a trial date and he
seems to be having a sense
of urgency. He may not have filed an
application for rescission of the court’s order but he within
two days of having been
appointed got into contact with the
Respondent and informed him of his decision to make a substantive
application for a postponement.
He however omitted to upload the
application on case lines. He has openly undertaken to expedite the
matter. The Road Accident
Fund may be known for not acting timeously
or in some instances not even attending to their matters but still,
cases should be
individualised in accordance with their merits. A
blanket approach that the organisation is known country wide for
their laxity
may not assist as it cannot always be in the interest of
justice.
[21]
It is on this basis that I conclude that costs should be reserved
until the correct Plaintiff, if there
is any, has been identified.
Under the circumstances, the question is whether costs at a punitive
scale prayed for by the Respondent
is fair or not.
Conclusion
I make a finding that
there are compelling reasons for this matter to be postponed so that
the applicant can file a recession of
the order which struck his
defence down. There is a suspicion of fraud, it would be fair to
reserve the issue of costs until the
legitimacy of the claim has been
ascertained.
In the result I make the
following order:
Order
(a)
The late filing of this application is condoned,
(b)
The trial of this action is postponed
sine die
.
(c)
The applicant is directed to deliver the application for rescission
of the striking out order
within 10 days of the order failing which
the respondent would be entitled to re-enrol the matter for a default
judgment.
(d)
Costs reserved.
D.D. MOGOTSI
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
DATE OF HEARING: 24
TH
FEBRUARY 2023
DATE OF THE RULING:
1
ST
MARCH 2023 (25&26 FEBRUARY 2023 WAS A WEEKEND)
FOR THE APPLICANT:
ADV. MEHLAPE
INSTRUCTED BY THE
STATE ATTORNEY)
FOR THE RESPONDED:
ADV.SHILENGE
(INSTRUCTED BY
MARISANA MASHEDI INC.)
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