Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 206South Africa
Motaung and Others v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAGPPHC 206; 26222/15 (7 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary -RAF –Section 17(3)(a) of Road Accident Fund Act – Section 2A of Prescribed Rate of Interest Act – interest on delayed settlement – when did interest accrue? – parties had precondition of acceptance of offer agreement – interest will accrue ex tempore morae – 7% and 8,25% - capital bears interest –from the date – payment due – following the breach.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Motaung and Others v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAGPPHC 206; 26222/15 (7 March 2023)
Motaung and Others v Road Accident Fund [2023] ZAGPPHC 206; 26222/15 (7 March 2023)
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sino date 7 March 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Numbers:
26222/15;
66316/18;
88788/19
- REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
- OF INTEREST
TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/NO
OF INTEREST
TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/NO
- REVISEDDATE: 07
MARCH 2023SIGNATURE:
REVISED
DATE: 07
MARCH 2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
DAIL
NATHAN JONKER
MOTAUNG;
CELE; PHOKELA
APPELLANTS
and
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
RESPONDENT
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
case lines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 07 March 2023.
Summary -RAF –Section
17(3)(a) of Road Accident Fund Act – Section 2A of Prescribed
Rate of Interest Act – interest
on delayed settlement –
when did interest accrue? – parties had precondition of
acceptance of offer agreement –
interest will accrue ex tempore
morae – 7% and 8,25% - capital bears interest –from the
date – payment due –
following the breach.
JUDGMENT
N
V KHUMALO J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The three (3) matters were set down on the default judgment trial
roll for determination
of the outstanding issues of quantum,
specifically loss of earning capacity. The Road Accident Fund
(“RAF”), the Defendant
in the matter had on the date of
the trial managed in all three matters to settle the different
headings of damages it was being
sued for, except for the issue of
the interest that was payable on the capital amounts the parties had
agreed upon. They mainly
could not agree on the date on which the
interest was to start running following the order of the court on the
agreed amounts.
The contention being on the exact time period that
the RAF was to be allowed to pay the debt before interest will start
accruing.
In each of the matters the parties agreed that the issue
was to be decided by the court having heard arguments presented by
the
parties.
[2]
The Defendant had in all three matters stated, as a precondition of
acceptance of
the offer, that the capital amounts will be payable
within a period of 180 days from the date of the court order,
provided that
on failure to pay within the specific period, it will
be liable for interest
a tempore morae
at the rate of 7%, and
8.25% respectively, payable from the date the 180 days lapses. Its
offer further stated that ‘all
settled offers are captured in
30 days and payment thereof effected in 180 days from date of
settlement or court order’.
[3]
The Plaintiffs on the other hand, although they had agreed on the 180
days period
within which the capital amount is to be paid in full,
and that the amount will not bear interest during that period,
contended
that on failure to pay within the stipulated period, the
date from which interest is to be payable is to be determined
exclusively
by the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 (“RAF
Act”) and no other Act applicable. Further that the Act
prescribes an
tempore morae
of levying interest from the 15
th
day after the date of the court order.
[4]
Sec 17 (3) (a) reads:
“
No interest
calculated on the amount of any compensation which the court awards
to any third party by virtue of the provisions of
s 1 shall be
payable unless fourteen (14) days have elapsed from the date of the
court‘s relevant order.’
[5]
The provision therefore regulates the date from when interest shall
be levied on a
compensatory award. The date is not to be less than 14
days from the date of the court order. The section intends to
prohibit the
levying of interest on the compensatory award prior the
expiration of 14 days after the court order.
[6]
The Plaintiffs argue that as a result of the provision of s 17 (3)
(a) the court cannot
make an order to delay the running of interest
as prescribed, irrespective of the circumstances. According to the
Plaintiffs there
is no provision in the Act that authorises the
ordering of a delayed payment of interest nor is it within the
court’s discretion
to order such in a matter such as this one.
Further that the implication of the provision is that the payment of
the compensatory
amount granted in terms of the Act is to be made
within fourteen (14) days after the date of Judgment.
[7]
The second submission made was that therefore in law the Defendant is
not entitled
to an order that the interest is only payable within 180
days from the date of the order unless the parties agree thereto. The
court is therefore enjoined to grant judgment on the interest against
the Defendant in accordance with the Act.
[8]
It is of significance to note that in all three matters, that of
Motaung, Cele and
Phokela, the issue of the unliquidated claim for
loss of earning capacity was resolved with the parties agreeing on
the capital
amounts payable and the period by when the amount was to
be settled. The parties had agreed on the payment thereof being
effected
within 180 days after the agreed court order, upon which no
interest would accrue on the amount until the agreed due date. The
parties had in fact therefore agreed to a delayed payment and no
accrual of interest during that period. The second submitted argument
is therefore moot.
[9]
Now that the parties had agreed on the capital amount and a specific
date it was due,
whereupon interest was not to be levied, the
contention was only with regard to the mora interest, the date from
which the interest
was to be calculated in case of non-settlement of
the capital amount on due date. The Plaintiffs argued that in case of
default,
interest is to be levied from the 15
th
day of the
order as prescribed by s 7 (3) (a) of the Act, which according to
them is the only Act to be applicable, to determine
the mora interest
in the matters, notwithstanding the agreement on the extended period
within which the amount is to be paid.
[10]
Counsel on behalf of Cele, argued that the Defendant confuses the
date of payment of the judgment
debt with the Plaintiff’s
ability to execute thereupon and entitlement thereto. He submitted,
with reference to the
Road
Accident Fund v Legal Practice Counsel and Others
[1]
that, if the Defendant has some exceptional circumstance, which
entitles it to seek an order suspending the execution steps against
it in terms of the court order, it can approach the court, to grant a
stay of execution.
[11]
The issue has nothing to do with execution. The contention arose only
with regard to the date when
mora will arise in case the Defendant
breaches the agreement, or rather fails to pay on the agreed due
date. The Plaintiffs contend
to be entitled to charge interest not
from the agreed due date but to revert back to the s 17 (3) (a)
provisions, and charge interest
from the 15
th
day of the court order. However, the parties’ agreement that
the Defendant was to pay the capital amount in 180 days during
which
period no interest would be payable created a new due date of mora.
The provisions in the order reads “
on
payment within the stipulated period (due date) no interest will be
payable.
The capital amount is therefore not to bear interest during the
period prior the agreed due date.
[2]
[12]
The Plaintiffs’ stance on s 17 (3) (a) failed to take
cognisance of the fact that on the
parties’ agreement to
settle, the lis between the parties as far as the initial dispute is
concerned, stopped to exist
[3]
.
The
original dispute extinguished,
the
parties’ agreement on the amount of the debt and
the
period within which
payment
is to be made with no interest accruing, that is 180 days from the
date of the order, prevails.
The
issue of interest would then naturally arise on non-settlement of the
capital amount by the agreed due date or as per the court
order; see
Dunn
v RAF
[4]
.
Timeous payment would therefore not result in the charging of
interest. The provisions of s 2 of the Prescribed Interest Rate
would
be applicable.
[13]
Furthermore, it is not correct that the date of accrual of interest
is settled by or remains
in the realms of s 7 (3) (a) therefore
cannot be decided upon by the court. Firstly, as mentioned above, due
to the settlement
agreement, it is no longer within the realms of s 7
(3) (a). If it remains in contention notwithstanding the agreed due
date, the
court can decide on the accrual of interest,
[5]
albeit
in
casu
the offer and letter of settlement intended to settle all issues
pertaining to payment, that is the capital amount, the due date
plus
interest payable thereon. The purpose being to align the payment of
compensation and the interest thereon to the Fund’s
systems and
practical challenges experienced during processing of payments, which
was conceded by the Plaintiffs, except for what
happens in the
instance of non-payment as ordered in the specified period.
[14]
In this instance the date of the capital amount is to bear interest
is to be determined in terms
of common law,
which is a
tempore
morae
,
that is on non- settlement or payment by the specified due date
[6]
.
In terms of the common law, interest can
not
precede the date on which the parties had agreed the capital amount
would become payable. The Plaintiff’s argument of
reverting to
s 7 (3) (a), is therefore a non-starter. The interest is not to be
determined by the date on which the quantification
(or award) was
made, but the due date agreed upon. The distinction between award and
order being imperative, the Act at s 17 (4)
(b) reads:
Where
the claim for compensation under subsection
(1)-
(a)….
(b)
includes a claim for future loss of income or support, the amount
payable by the Fund or the agent shall be paid by way of a
lump sum
or in instalment as agreed upon.’
[15]
The question that also arises generally on these matters is whether
it is fair and just to charge
interest on amounts postulated and
predicted to be a future loss, prior to the specified due date agreed
upon by the parties. Taking
into consideration that accrued interest
is a current liability, it
can
only run on the monetary award only, from the date of payment.
[16]
It is therefore imperative that sight should not be lost that these
are hypothesized exceptional
circumstances, with the extent and time
of the loss being postulated to happen in future. As a result, it is
principle that the
Act would provide for alternative settlement of
the amount by agreement, either in delayed or instalment payment
rather than on
the date of the award. In Dunn v RAF
supra
the
court found the argument submitted on behalf of the Respondent (the
RAF) sensible, that interest would run only upon Respondent
defaulting on payment. Further that the provisions of the RAF Act
contemplate payment in a lump sum or by instalments. He submitted
that the mere fact that payment by instalments is contemplated, it
cannot be construed that interest would run from the date of
the
‘award’, but it should run from the date when it is due
for payment.
[17]
In Land & Agricultural Development Bank of SA v Ryton Estates
(Pty) Ltd & others
supra
the Supreme Court of Appeal held
that mora interest constitutes a form of damages for breach of
contract and ‘the general
principle in the assessment of such
damages is that the sufferer by the breach should be placed in the
position he would have occupied
had the contract been performed
accordingly. The court further held that ‘i
n
awarding
mora
interest
to a creditor who has not received due payment of a monetary debt
owed under contract, the Court seeks to place him
in the position he
would have occupied had due payment been made. The Court acts on the
assumption that, had due payment been made,
the capital sum would
have been productively employed by the creditor during the period
of
mora
and
the interest consequently represents the damages flowing naturally
from the breach of contract.’
[18]
I am therefore of the view that if the parties agree on an amount of
a debt, especially a future
loss and a date on which the mount will
be due for payment, and there is a dispute about the date from which
the interest is to
accrue on failure to adhere to the agreed due date
(which in terms of the Act would not have been earlier than 14 days),
a court
can make a determination on the date the capital amount is to
bear interest after considering the surrounding circumstances and
the
applicable law. The Plaintiff should not be in a better position than
he would have been, had the debt been paid on due date.
[19]
As a result,
ex lege
mora interest arises on default or failure to pay on the agreed due
date whereupon t
he
creditor is entitled to claim interest on the outstanding
capital amount. The
capital
amount can therefore only bear interest
from
the date on which payment was due. The creditor is entitled to claim
even without a specific contractual provision to pay interest.
The
date when interest is to accrue is fixed by the time for payment
agreed upon by the parties.
[20]
In Christie,
[7]
referred to and
endorsed by the court in Land
supra
,
the principle is stated as follows:
‘
When
a debtor’s contractual obligation is to pay money, and he is
in
mora
,
the general damages that flow naturally from the breach will be
interest
a
tempore morae
’,
Requiring
the application of s 17 (3) under such circumstances
goes
against the recognised
mora
ex re
interest.
The parties would have to specially agree to that for it to be
enforceable, absent an agreement, as in casu, the mora
ex
re
applies.
[21]
The following provisions of the PRI Act are relevant:
…
2.
Interest on a judgment debt
(1) Every judgment debt which, but for the provisions of
this subsection, would not bear any interest after the
date of the judgment or order by virtue of which it is
due, shall bear interest from the day on which such
judgment debt is payable, unless the judgment or
order provides otherwise.
(2) Any interest payable in terms of subsection (1) may be recovered as if it formed part of the judgment
debt on which it is due.
(3) In this section
the ‘judgment debt’ means a sum of money due in
terms of a judgment or an order, including an order as to
costs, of a court of law, and includes any part of such a sum of
money, but does not include any interest not forming part of
the principal sum of a judgment debt.
2A
Interest on unliquidated debts
(1)Subject to the provisions of this section the amount of every
unliquidated debt as determined by a court of law … or by
agreement between the creditor and the debtor, shall bear
interest as contemplated in section 1.
(2) interest
on that part of a debt
which consists of
the
present value of a loss which will occur in the future shall not
commence to run until the date upon which the quantum of
that part is determined by judgment, arbitration or agreement
and any such part determined by
arbitration or agreement
shall for this purposes of this Act be deemed to be a judgment
debt.
(4)Where a debtor offers to settle a debt by making a payment
into court or a tender and the creditor accepts the payment or
tender, or a court of law awards an amount not exceedingsuch
payment or tender,
the running of interest shall be interrupted
from the date of the payment into
court or
the
tender until the date of the said acceptance or award.
(5)
Notwithstanding the provisions of this Act but subject to any
other law or an agreement between the parties, a court of law
… may make such order as appears just in respect of the
payment of interest on an unliquidated debt, the rate at which
interest shall accrue and the date from which interest shall run.
(6)
The provisions of section 2(2) shall apply mutatis mutandis to
interest recoverable under this section.
[22]
The Plaintiffs will therefore be entitled, as in terms of the common
law, to interest on the
capital amounts only from the due date of
payment if the Defendant fails to make payment timeously as agreed in
terms of the court
order.
[23]
I, as a result make the following order:
1. On Defendant’s
failure to settle the capital amount in 180 days as agreed upon by
the parties, the outstanding amount will
bear interest at the
prescribed rate ex tempore more calculated from the agreed due date
to date of final payment.
In MOTAUNG v THE ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
case no: 26222/2015
:
2. The
Draft Order that is on case line 0-59-0-62, bar paragraph 3 thereof
that is to be deleted, is by agreement
incorporated to the order
herein and hereby made an order of court.
In CELE v THE ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
case no: 66313/2018
3. The
Draft Order that is on case line 12-1-12-5, bar paragraph 3 thereof
that is to be deleted, is by agreement
incorporated to the order
herein and hereby made an order of court.
In PHOKELA vs THE ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Case no: 88788/2019
4. The
Draft Order that is on case line 12-1 -12-5 bar paragraph 2 thereof
that is to be deleted, is by agreement
incorporated to the order
herein and hereby made an order of court.
NV
KHUMALO
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
In
MOTAUNG v THE ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
:
For the Plaintiff:
J Bisschoff
Instructed by:
KRITZINGER
ATTORNEYS
marinda@lc1181.co.za
For the Defendant:
P S Zwane
Instructed by
:
The State Attorney
dorcasma@raf.co.za
In
CELE v THE ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
:
For the Plaintiff:
C M Dredge
Instructed by:
KRTZINGER ATTORNEYS
Cler1@lc1181.co.za
For the Defendant:
M D Tsweleng
Instructed by
:
State Attorney
DarylT@raf.co.za
In
PHOKELA v THE ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
:
For the Plaintiff:
Van Antwerpen
Instructed by:
WAKS SILENT
ATTORNEYS
c/o
ADAMS & ADAMS
mpumelelo.ndlela@adams.africa
For the Defendant:
K Metswe
Instructed by:
State Attorney
tumik@raf.co.za
Date heard:
27 July 2022
[1]
(58145/2020) [2021] ZAGPPHC 173;
2021 (2) All SA 886
GP (9 April
2021)
## [2]Dunn
v Road Accident Fund(5575/2015)
[2018] ZAKZDHC 43; 2019 (1) SA 237 (KZD) (19 September 2018)
[2]
Dunn
v Road Accident Fund
(5575/2015)
[2018] ZAKZDHC 43; 2019 (1) SA 237 (KZD) (19 September 2018)
[3]
E
ke
v Parsons
2016
(3) SA 37
(CC)
at para 25
## [4]2019
(1) SA 237 (KZD) (19 September 2018)
[4]
2019
(1) SA 237 (KZD) (19 September 2018)
[5]
S 2A at ss 5 reads:
(5)Notwithstanding the provisions of this Act but subject to any
other law or
an agreement between the parties
, a court of law
… may make such order as appears just in respect of the
payment of interest on an unliquidated debt, the rate at which
interest shall accrue and the date from which interest shall run.
[6]
Land & Agricultural Development Bank of SA v Ryton Estates (Pty)
Ltd & others
2013 (6) SA 319
(SCA) para 4.
[7]
H
Christie
The
Law of Contract in South Africa
,
6 ed (2011) at 530.
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