Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1169South Africa
Jansen Van Vuuren v Member of the Executive Council for Health of the Gauteng Province (A39/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1169 (14 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 September 2023
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Jansen Van Vuuren v Member of the Executive Council for Health of the Gauteng Province (A39/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1169 (14 September 2023)
Jansen Van Vuuren v Member of the Executive Council for Health of the Gauteng Province (A39/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1169 (14 September 2023)
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sino date 14 September 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
no: A39/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE:
14 SEPTEMBER 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the appeal between
JANSEN
VAN VUUREN
DILLON
Appellant
And
THE
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
FOR
HEALTH OF THE GAUTENG PROVINCE
Respondent
AMENDEMENT
OF JUDGMENT
THIS
JUDGEMENT HAS BEEN HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO
THE PARTIES BY WAY OF E- MAIL / UPLOADING ON CASELINES.
ITS DATE OF
HAND DOWN SHALL BE DEEMED TO BE __14___ SEPTEMBER 2023
PRETORIUS
J:
After
being alerted to a patent error in the judgement regarding the order
handed down on 14 September 2023, the order has been
amended as
follows in terms
Of
Rule 42(1) (b) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
The
order reads:
1.
The appeal is upheld, but should be:
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
Signed
at Pretoria on this the 15
th
day of September 2023.
C
Pretorius
Judge
of the High Court
THE
APPEAL:
1.
The appellant launched an application for
condonation in respect of the filing of a notice in terms of section
3 of the Act for
non-compliance with the provisions of the Act.
2.
The Notice of Motion accompanied by a founding
affidavit was signed on 4 August 2020. It was served on 6 August
2020. The purpose
of the application was to seek condonation from the
Court
a quo
for
condonation for the late service of the required notice in terms of
section 3 of the Act.
3.
The appellant stated in the founding
affidavit that the purpose of the application is”
fo
r
the failure of the Appellant to present a
complaint statutory notice to the respondent of his intention to
institute legal proceedings
within the time frames prescribed by the
Act”.
This application was opposed by
the respondent.
4.
The statutory notice dated 30 March 2017 was
deemed to have been served
via
registered mail on the respondent/defendant on 31 March 2017. This
notice, by the appellant’s attorney, indicated
:
“We are aware that our client’s aforesaid notice is not
within the 6(six) month period from date of the incident….We
shall be grateful if you would indicate whether or not you are
prepared to condone the late furnishing of the notice to you….”
5.
Special pleas of prescription, as well as
non-compliance by the appellant of the Act, were filed by the
respondent on 14 June 2018.
The appellant
subsequently filed a replication, acknowledging that the statutory
notice did not comply with the provisions of the
Act and was not
delivered timeously. On 10 July 2018 the appellant indicated that the
appellant would apply for condonation for
failure to adhere to the
time limits as provided for in the Act.
THE
APPELLANT’S CLAIM:
6.
The appellant’s claims are, as set out
in the particulars of claim, for previous and future loss of support
,
as well as emotional shock resulting from the
death of his mother.
7
.
His mother had been
treated at the Charlotte Maxeke Hospital, which hospital falls
under
the auspices of the Department of Health, Gauteng.
8.
The appellant’s mother was admitted to
this hospital on 12 September 2011.She was 45 years old at the time
of her admission
to hospital. On 13 September 2011 a femoral
popliteal vein graft was done to her right leg under spinal
anaesthesia. She immediately,
after surgery, complained of loss of
sensation in her lower limbs. She was thereafter scheduled for spinal
surgery which never
took place. She developed pressure sores on her
lower back area and on her hip. These sores became septic, which
according to the
respondent, caused her death. She had suffered of
co-morbidities including hypertension and diabetes.
9.
On 29 October 2011 the deceased was admitted
once more to hospital for a surgical debridement of the sacral
bedsore. On 9 November
2011 she was referred to hospice. On 22
November 2011 she and her husband refused further hospital treatment
at the hospital, despite
advice to the contrary from the doctor and
nursing staff.
10.
Her husband was the appellant’s
biological father. The appellant’s mother was subsequently
taken home where she was
treated at home by the appellant and his
father. Thereafter she was taken to the East Rand Hospice on 12
December 2011 where she
passed away on 22 December 2011. She was
treated at home for approximately 20 days before she was admitted to
the East Rand Hospice.
11.
The appellant was 14 years and 9 months old
when his mother passed away. He turned 15 years of age on 9 March
2012.
12
.
No post-mortem was done. The documents discovered by the appellant
were in the possession of the appellant’s family
since December 2011 or shortly thereafter. The Medical Certificate
issued
noted as” immediate cause of death” of the
appellant’s mother as “
UNCONTROLLED
DIABETES-YEARS”.
13.
since the appellant’s mother’s
death. The family consisting of the appellant’s father, his
uncle, Professor van
den Berg and the appellant had been in
possession of all the hospital records pertaining to the appellant’s
deceased mother.
Apart from the hospital records they were in
possession of the records of the East Rand Hospice, as well as a
recording of the
program Medical Errors wherein the story of the
deceased had been related on TV. The appellant was present when this
program was
recorded. These records also consisted of the views of
medical experts obtained in 2012. The fact that all this material was
available
since 2012 was never in dispute.
14
.
It is thus clear that from, at least since 2012, the appellant had
known what the allegations
of negligence were as set out in the
particulars of claim. This was also available in 2012 and was set out
in the statutory notice
as well.
15
.
The respondent alleged that the appellant
had known the identity of the debtor and the facts, since 2012.
16.
The facts setting out the appellant’s
knowledge, as set out in the opposing affidavit, have not been denied
nor dealt with
by the appellant in his replying or confirmatory
affidavit.
17
.
The founding affidavit was deposed to by the
appellant’s attorney and was not confirmed in a confirmatory
affidavit by the appellant regarding his personal knowledge of the
facts.
18
.
According to the appellant he only became aware of the debt on 28
November 2016 when he consulted
his present attorneys. His submission
is that he was not aware of the identity of the debtor or the facts
from which the debt arose.
19
.
At the hearing of the appeal counsel for the appellant submitted that
it is not necessary
for an application for condonation as the notice
was served within the six-month period. There is no such relief
requested in the
notice of motion, nor was any amendment to the
notice of motion requested at any time to indicate that it was not
necessary for
an application for condonation. This Court will not
entertain such a submission made by counsel during argument as it is
not on
the papers before Court.
THE
LEGAL POSITION:
20
.
Section 3 of the Act provides as follows:
(1)
“
No legal proceedings for the recovery
of a debt may be instituted against an organ of state unless-
(a)
The creditor has given the organ of state
in question notice in writing of his or her or its intention to
institute the legal proceedings
in question, or
(b)
……
..
(2)
A notice must-
(a)
Within six months from the date on which
the debt became due, be served on the organ of state in accordance
with section 4(1); and….
(3)(3)(a) For purposes
of subsection (2)(a)-
(a)
a debt may not be regarded as being due until the creditor has
knowledge of the identity of the organ of state and of
the facts
giving rise to the debt, but a creditor must be regarded as having
acquired such knowledge as soon as he or she or it
could have
acquired it by reasonable care, unless the organ of state wilfully
prevented him or her or it from acquiring such knowledge……”
21.
Compliance with the provisions of section 3
as stated above is to avoid loss of evidence, information, and
documents, such as hospital
records. This is to avoid unreasonable
prejudice to an organ of state if claims are instituted years after
the incident had occurred.
22.
Sections 3(4) (a) and (b) of the Act
stipulates that a creditor may apply to court for condonation for
failure to serve a notice
timeously. The court will grant such an
application if it is satisfied that;
i.
The debt has not been extinguished by
prescription,
ii.
good cause exists for the failure by the
creditor and
iii.
The organ of state was not unreasonably
prejudiced by the failure.
23
.
Section 12(1) (3) provides: “
A debt
shall not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge of the
identity of the debtor and of the facts from which
the debt arises:
Provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have such knowledge if he
could have acquired it by exercising reasonable
care.
According
to section 13(1)(a) (i) of the Act, where the cause of action
occurred at the time that the appellant was a minor, being
22
December 2011, prescription is deferred by one year after the age of
majority of such a claimant
is reached.
24
.
The applicable date in this instance, where
the appellant reached the age of majority was 9 March 2015.
In normal
circumstances this claim would have prescribed on 8 March 2016, a
year after he had reached the age majority.
25
.
There was no attempt by the appellant, his
father or his uncle, Professor van
den Berg, to
claim from the respondent before the appellant reached the
age
of majority. There is mention made of advice received from attorneys
during 2012, but no attempt is made in the founding affidavit
to
explain any of
these actions and there are no
particulars advanced as to who these attorneys were and why these
attorneys did not want to assist
the appellant, his father, and
uncle. This despite knowing the facts of the claim and who the debtor
was since 2011.
26.
The appellant consulted attorneys for the
first time on 28 November 2016. There is no explanation as to why it
took him 20 months,
after becoming a major, to consult with
attorneys.
27.
He had known, on his own version, the facts
of the matter and he had known that the hospital was allegedly to
blame. He was present
during the recording of the program dealing
with medical errors and had known since, at least from 2012, who the
debtor was and
the facts that he relied on for his claim. The facts
from which the debt arose, and the identity of the debtor had been
known to
him even as a minor. Yet he took 20 months after reaching
the age of majority to consult an attorney.
28.
The founding and replying affidavits lack the
averments that can be expected as to what steps the appellant had
taken to establish
the facts of his claim and the identity of the
respondent/defendant from the time he had
attained
the age of majority.
29.
The test has been set out in
Loni
v Member of the Executive Council, Department of Health, Eastern
Cape, Bisho
[2018] ZACC 2.
The Constitutional
Court found that when dealing with section 12 (3) of the Prescription
Act in a medical negligence claim the
knowledge of the facts on which
the claim is based is an objective one and therefore the reasonable
person test is applicable.
30
.
It is common cause that the deceased
had refused further hospital treatment against the advice
of the
doctors and nursing staff. On 22 November 2011.
She
discharged herself from hospital and went home where her husband and
the appellant, aged 14 years at the time, nursed her.
30.
The appellant, during argument and in the
heads of argument attempts to refer to expert evidence which is not
relied upon in the
founding papers. This is wholly inappropriate and
cannot be considered.
32.
To exacerbate his tardiness in requesting condonation
timeously the appellant does not explain the delay from 31 March
2017, the
date that he knew that a condonation application is
necessary, until the application for condonation was launched in
August 2018.
33.
In
Mohlomi v Minister of Defence
1997(1) SA 124 (CC)
Didcott J held at
paragraph 11: “………
Inordinate
delays in litigating damage the interests of justice. They protract
the disputes over the rights and obligations sought
to been forced,
prolonging the uncertainty of all concerned about their affairs. Nor
in the end is it always possible to adjudicate
satisfactorily on
cases that have gone stale. By then witnesses may no longer be
available to testify. The memories of ones whose
testimony can still
be obtained may have faded and become unreliable. Documentary
evidence may have disappeared. Such rules prevent
procrastination and
those harmful consequences of it. They thus serve a purpose to which
no exception in principle can cogently
be taken”.
34
.
The appellant waited 3 years and 5 months
after his statutory notice to bring an application for condonation
for the late filing, and 2 years and 2 months after the special plea
of non-compliance.
35.
The unreasonable prejudice the respondent
will suffer is important in this
matter. The
complete hospital records are unavailable and cannot be found.
Personnel had resigned, cannot be identified, passed
away or retired.
Although the incident took place in November and December 2011, the
respondent was only given notice in 2017 –
6 years later. The
personnel, who was according to the appellant negligent are not
identified. Even if they can be located, it
is quite unlikely that
they will have an independent recollection of the events to testify
and will have to rely on the contents
of documents.
The original hospital
file cannot be found, and this constitutes more prejudice to the
respondent as all the records are not available.
The result is that
the respondent will suffer great prejudice. The staff of the hospital
have either retired, passed away or relocated,
which fact leads to
further prejudice to the respondent. These consequences of waiting so
long to apply for condonation could have
been prevented if the
appellant had not waited a further 20 months after becoming a major
to start instituting legal proceedings.
36.
The appellant approached the present attorney of record
on 28 November 2016, almost 20 months after attaining the age of
majority.
There are no dates or names given of any advisors before
the present attorney was approached. Although the respondent denied
the
allegations that the appellant only became aware of the identity
of the debtor and the merits of his claim on 28 November 2016,
there
was no response to this denial by the appellant.
37.
The appellant has throughout failed to
explain the reasons for the delay as from the time he had to bring
the application for condonation
until it was ultimately done.
38.
Counsel for the appellant argued that it was
due to the legal representative’s tardiness that the
application for condonation
was brought at such a late stage.
Furthermore, suggestions are made in the heads of argument of the
appellant for reasons why previous
attorneys did not proceed with the
case, but no facts are provided. The Court cannot accept evidence
from the Bar, nor from the
contents of the heads of argument if it
had not been set out in the affidavits and there is no such evidence
before Court in this
regard.
39.
The appellant relies on the dictum of
The
MEC for Education, KZN v Shange
95299/11)
[2012] ZASCA 98
(1 June 2012)
where Snyders
JA confirmed the dictum in
Madinda v Minister
of Safety and Security
[2008] ZASCA 34
;
2008 (4) SA 312
(SCA)
in
para 8 where it was held that “
The
phrase “if the court is satisfied” in s3 (4) (b)has long
been recognized as setting a standard which is not proof
on a
balance of probability. Rather it is the overall impression
made on a court which brings a fair mind to the facts
set up by the
parties
”.
The present application
is distinguishable as, in this instance the appellant was a
university student and his circumstances can
clearly not be compared
to that of the appellant in the
Shange case (supra),
who was a
learner in a rural area. There is no affidavit by the attorney or
counsel to set out the circumstances as to the reason
for them to be
blamed for the failure to apply timeously for condonation.
40.
The appellant failed to mention in the founding
affidavit in the Court
a quo
and in this Court that the deceased had declined further hospital
treatment against the advice of the nursing staff and doctors
treating her in hospital. As a result, she was discharged on 22 or 23
November 2011 and was not treated by any employee of the
respondent
thereafter until her death on 22 December 2011.
41
.
The deceased had voluntarily left the
hospital and was cared for at home by her husband and her 14-year-old
son. She received no medical intervention or professional care whilst
at home. The hospice records show that the appellant’s
father
was requested to provide the prescribed medicine for the deceased’s
various illnesses when she was admitted to the
hospice, but he
refrained from supplying it to the hospice.
42
.
The family of the deceased had, since 2012,
on numerous occasions, proclaimed publicly and in the Press
that they
were intending to institute action against the hospital and the
Department of Health, Gauteng. The newspaper clippings
were
discovered by the appellant and were thus in his possession and
within his knowledge since 2012. He waited for 20 months after
becoming a major to consult an attorney as previously
mentioned with no explanation for the time lapse.
43
.
In addition, he claim for previous
maintenance is weak. According to the appellant his Uncle, Professor
van den Berg, supported him and his father until 6 August 2020. There
is no documentation to support this allegation. Discovery
by the
appellant shows that the deceased had not been employed since January
2011. The claim for maintenance is thus not very strong
on merits.
44
.
In a Rule 35(3) request the particulars of
the appellant’s father’s contribution to the appellant’s
maintenance was requested.
Both the appellant and
Professor van den Berg confirmed that the appellant resides with his
father. The appellant, in another affidavit,
alleges that his father
had died in November 2019 and had not maintained the appellant since
2008. Both versions cannot be true
and leaves a question as to who
maintained the appellant. The addresses provided in the two
affidavits by the appellant are different
from one another as well.
45
.
Nowhere does the appellant personally deal with these discrepancies
or explain the discrepancies
.
46.
If this Court applies the test of the
reasonable person, in the circumstances of the appellant, then the
conduct of the appellant
in applying for condonation cannot be
regarded as a serious attempt to apply for condonation. He had known
since 2012 the facts
of the case, although he was still a minor.
Furthermore, he waited a further 20 months after he had attained the
age of majority,
before launching the application, without taking the
court in his confidence as what he had done in this period or
submitting any
information for this period of the delay.
47.
This Court finds that the appellant had the required
knowledge from at least the date of becoming a major to institute a
claim and
that he failed to apply for condonation for his failure,
where a reasonable person in similar circumstances would have done
so.
46
.
The appellant did not request condonation
for the late notice of intention to institute a claim against
a state
organ within the prescribed period. He had not shown good cause for
his failure to do so. The respondent will suffer unreasonable
prejudice should condonation be granted in this instance. This Court
must agree with the Court
a quo
that
the appellant had failed to discharge the onus of proof in this
application for condonation.
47.
In the result the following order is made:
1. The appeal is
dismissed.
2. The appellant is
ordered to pay the costs of the appeal.
C
PRETORIUS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
C
COLLIS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
P
PHAHLANE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: A39/2022
HEARD
ON: 23 AUGUST 2023
FOR
THE APPELLANT: ADV W L MUNRO
FOR
THE RESPONDENT: ADV M BARNARD
DATE
OF JUDGEMENT: ___14___ SEPTEMBER 2023
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