Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1170South Africa
Maribe v Road Accident Fund (66435/2017) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1170 (14 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Maribe v Road Accident Fund (66435/2017) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1170 (14 September 2023)
Maribe v Road Accident Fund (66435/2017) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1170 (14 September 2023)
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sino date 14 September 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 66435/2017
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED
2023/09/14
In
the matter between:
HLORISO
VICTOR MARIBE
Plaintiff
And
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Defendant
JUDGMENT
MOTHA
J
INTRODUCTION
1.
Following a road accident which happened on
the N1 highway, the plaintiff instituted these legal proceedings
against the Road Accident
Fund. Before this court is the question of
liability, as the issues have been separated in terms of Rule 33(4)
of the Uniform Rules
of Court. The plaintiff, therefore, seeks to
hold the Road Accident Fund 100% liable for his damages. The Road
Accident Fund, on
the other hand, opposes this action and maintains
that the plaintiff’s negligence was the sole cause of the
accident.
2.
In 2019, this matter was adjourned to
afford the defendant an opportunity to secure the attendance of its
witnesses. Despite this
court’s indication that it was willing
to hear the defendant’s witnesses, the defendant decided to
proceed without
calling them. This court takes a dim view at the lack
of proper preparation of this matter despite the ample time available
to
both the parties. This court was neither furnished with any
detailed sketch plan, nor any measurements of the road. Not to
mention
the pictures or road traffic signage, nothing. Under these
circumstances, it is the court that is on trial.
FACTS
3.
The plaintiff’s case pivots around his
evidence and that of his friend, Mr. Marumo. First to take the stand
was the plaintiff.
His version is that on 3 April 2015, at
approximately 21h00, he was driving a black Opel Corsa from Pretoria
to Moria for a church
service, in Polokwane, and the road was busy.
He was in the company of three passengers, Mr. Marumo, who was seated
on the passenger’s
seat; and two passengers at the back, to
whom he had given a lift.
4.
The road had four lanes, two lanes to the north and two lanes to the
south. Two yellow lines separated the
roads. In short, a dual
carriageway. Driving on the fast lane on this tarred, flat, straight,
and dark road, without streetlight,
he decided to switch on his
bright lights.
He does not know the speed at which
he was travelling, but it was less than 120 kilometers per hour, the
legal speed limit on that
road.
5.
Within a few kilometers after driving through the
Nyl Plaza tollgate, he saw a motor vehicle on the opposite side of
the road flickering
its lights at him. His immediate reaction was to
dim his bright lights. However, the car did not stop flashing the
lights. He remarked
that the opposite car was, to quote him: “making
me not to see clearly”.
6.
It is also his version that he reduced his
speed as the motor vehicle continued to flicker it's light at him.
He, again, did not
know the speed he was travelling at after the
deceleration. Suddenly, he saw a dark object lying horizontally on
the road, and
he tried to swerve but it was too late. Mr. Marumo
shouted “Phoofolo!”, meaning animal.
7.
He collided with a wildebeest, as they later found
out. Their motor vehicle rolled three times. He sustained serious
injuries for
which he was treated at Mokopane hospital and later
transferred to Military hospital.
8.
In his statement in terms of
s19(f)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act, 56
of 1996
, he did not mention that the other motor vehicle continued to
flicker its lights. He stated that during the time when his lights
were dimmed, he could not see the animal lying on the fast lane until
he was too close to it. He also stated that the animal was
black in
colour and difficult to see in the darkness.
9.
When asked about this, he testified that his statement was just a
general overview of the matter, hence, he
did not mention the
details. Under cross-examination he did not want to commit himself
about how far he could see without the bright
lights on. He just said
not far. Upon being asked about his failure to move to the slow lane
after reducing his speed, he testified
that he did not see the need
to do that. This answer was not satisfactory since he had testified
that there was nothing preventing
him from occupying the slow lane.
10.
Upon being requested by the court to estimate the time it took from
when the two vehicles drove past each other and the collision
with
the animal, he was evasive and tangential. Nonetheless, he confirmed
that when his passenger shouted “Phoofolo”
the flickering
car had already driven past his vehicle.
11.
Next to take the stand was Mr. Marumo. He corroborated the
common cause facts such as the number of lanes on the road,
number of
passengers in the car and where they were headed. In essence, his
testimony is that he was chatting on his phone when
the plaintiff
remarked that the approaching car was flickering its headlight. He
moved his eyes from his phone onto the road and
saw the flickering of
lights. It is his testimony that the plaintiff at that moment
complained that the car was blinding him. Strangely,
he testified
that he went back to his phone to chat.
12.
Suddenly, he felt the car swerving. He shifted his attention
onto the road and shouted “Phoofolo!’’.
Under cross
examination he confirmed that he was the plaintiff’s friend and
colleague. When their vehicle’s head lights
were dimmed, he
could see up to 50 or 60 meters ahead of the car. He estimated the
distance to be about 1 kilometre or 1.5 kilometres
between their
motor vehicle and the flickering car when he first saw it.
13.
Contrary to the plaintiff’s testimony, he stated that there was
a car in front of them on the slow lane, and another car
behind them.
He confirmed that the plaintiff reduced his speed and dimmed the
lights. When he felt the motor vehicle swerving,
he saw the animal
which was about 10 metres away and shouted “Phoofolo!’’.
When asked about the reason he continued
on his phone despite the
danger, he said he was chatting on his WhatsApp. In answer to the
question if there was anything that
prevented the plaintiff from
occupying the slow lane, he answered that he could not tell.
The
Law and analysis
14.
The test
for culpa is well-captured in
Kruger
v Coetzee.
[1]
The court, through Holmes JA, formulated the test as follows:
“
For the
purposes of liability culpa arises if –
(a)
A
diligens paterfamilias in the position of the defendant
(i)
would foresee the reasonable possibility of his conduct
injuring another in his person or property and causing him
patrimonial loss;
and
(ii)
would take reasonable steps to guard against such occurrence;
and
(b) the
defendant failed to take such steps.”
[2]
15.
The plaintiff’s testimony was
punctuated with doubts. He was non-committal on several material
aspects, such as the speed
at which he was traveling before he saw
the opposite car and after the deceleration, the distance between his
motor vehicle and
the vehicle on the opposite end and the distance he
could see with his lights on dim. This is in sharp contrast to Mr.
Marumo’s
testimony. Mr. Marumo was forthcoming with information
and willing to make guesstimates. I found the plaintiff to be very
guarded
in what he was saying, almost like someone who had been
coached. He did not take the court into his confidence. Furthermore,
he
never testified about applying his brakes to avoid the accident.
He only reduced his speed. I did not find him to be a credible
witness.
16.
I found Mr. Marumo reliable, from his testimony,
the court was able to glean various distances. Fair enough he did not
see the speed
at which they were travelling. However, he confirmed
that the plaintiff reduced the speed when the opposite car was
flicking its
lights. Since they were driving on a two-lane road, he
could not tell why the plaintiff failed to move the vehicle to the
slow
lane, following the reduction of the speed and since there were
cars behind them.
17.
It is clear to me that on the date in
question there was a motor vehicle on the opposite end which flicked
at the plaintiff’s
motor vehicle. It is probable that the
flicking was meant to warn the plaintiff of an imminent danger that
was literally lying
ahead. Indeed, it is reasonable that the
plaintiff thought that the approaching vehicle was flicking its
lights for him to dim
his bright lights.
18.
Despite the plaintiff’s attempt
to obfuscate, the court, through the testimony of his witness, knows
that the distance between
the two cars when the flicking started must
have been at the very least a kilometer, if not more. Thence, when
this flicking did
not stop, the plaintiff reduced his speed. Having
reduced the speed, in my view, a reasonable driver would have driven
the vehicle
from the fast lane onto the slow lane. Especially,
against the background of the plaintiff’s testimony that there
was nothing
that hindered him from occupying the slow lane, and that
the road was busy. By this simple action he could have avoided the
accident
in
toto
.
19.
However, this court is mindful of the
possibility that the insured driver, in his or her effort to alert
the plaintiff of the danger,
could have inadvertently caused the
plaintiff not to see properly. Even though the court’s
evaluation is hampered or made
more difficult by the plaintiff’s
inability to estimate the speed at which he was traveling, this court
takes into consideration
that the scene was fluid and fast.
Furthermore, the court is mindful that it is neither the Solomonic
wisdom nor chameleonic caution
expected from the plaintiff.
20.
The
plaintiff referred to the matter of
Mogoelelwa
v Road Accident Fund
[3]
.
This was an appeal that was before a full court of this division. The
facts of that matter are uncannily similar to what this court
is
confronted with. In that matter, the accident happened when a vehicle
on the opposite direction failed to dim its headlights
which were on
bright despite the appellant’s flicking his lights to warn it.
As the vehicle drove past, the appellant suddenly
saw a cow in front
of his car. He applied his brakes, reduced his speed to about 60 kmph
and swerved but to no avail. He collided
with the cow. As in this
case, he stated that there was nothing he could do to avoid the
accident.
21.
However, that matter is distinguishable
from this matter. In this matter the plaintiff had the option of
driving onto the slow lane.
This was not the case in the
Mogoelelwa
matter. Secondly, the court does not know the speed at which the
plaintiff was driving. What this court knows is that he had at
least
a kilometer between him and the approaching vehicle. Finally, the
plaintiff never testified that he applied his brakes to
avoid the
collision.
22.
The
defendant relied on the matter of
Flanders
v Trans Zambezi Express
[4]
:
in
this matter where th
e
court
held that:
“
His
failure in these circumstances to stop or to slow down to the extent
necessary is a 'crucial factor' in holding that he was
negligent. Had
he stopped or slowed down sufficiently after dipping his own
headlights, the collision would not have happened.”
[5]
23.
It is trite that, on a preponderance of
probabilities, the plaintiff bears the onus to prove that the
defendant’s negligence
caused the damages suffered. There is
something to be said for the way both the parties ended their heads
of argument. They both
envisioned an apportionment. The plaintiff
submitted that a 70/30 apportionment in their favor would be a
correct approach, whilst
the defendant argued for an 80/20
apportionment against the plaintiff.
24.
Section 1
(1)(a)
of the Apportionment Of Damages Act 34 of 1956 reads as follows:
“
Where
any person suffers damage which is caused partly by his own fault and
partly by the fault of any other person, a claim in
respect of that
damage shall not be defeated by reason of the fault of the claimant
but the damages recoverable in respect thereof
shall be reduced by
the court to such extent as the court may deem just and equitable
having regard to the degree in which the
claimant was at fault in
relation to the damage.”
25.
This
court has a discretion to reduce the plaintiff’s claim
for
damages suffered. Looking at the issue of apportionment in the matter
of
South
British insurance company Ltd versus Smit,
[6]
the
court said:
“
From
the very nature of the enquiry, apportionment of damages imports a
considerable measure of individual judgment: the assessment
of “the
degree in which the claimant was at fault in relation to the damage”
is necessarily a matter upon which opinions
may vary. In the words of
Lord Wright in British Fame (Owners) v MacGregorv (Owner), 1943(1)
A.E.R. 33 at p. 35 (a maritime case;
but the principle appears to be
equally followed in England in relation to the contributory
negligence act):
“
It
is a question of the degree of fault, depending on a trained and
expert judgment considering all the circumstances, and it is
different in essence from a mere finding of fact in the ordinary
sense. It is a question, not of principle, but of proportion,
of
balance and relative emphasis, and off weighing different
considerations. It involves an individual choice or discretion, as
to
which they may well be difference of opinion by different minds.”
[7]
26.
In evaluating the evidence as a whole and looking at the
circumstances, contradictions, and probabilities, I am in agreement
with both counsel that the facts of this case call for an
apportionment. With some better preparation and presentation, this
court
would have been placed in a better position to rule either way.
In the circumstances, I am of the view that an apportionment of
60/40
in favour of the plaintiff is appropriate.
COSTS
27.
As already stated at the commencement of this judgment, I was less
than pleased with the effort put into this matter, in order
to assist
the court. The defendant will be liable for 60% of the plaintiff’s
costs in this matter.
28.
In the result, the following order is made:
ORDER
29.
The defendant is liable for 60% of the plaintiff’s proven or
agreed damages.
30.
The defendant is ordered to pay 60% of the plaintiff’s costs in
connection with the determination of merits.
M.
P. MOTHA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA
Date of hearing: 1
September 2023
Date of judgement: 14
September 2023
APPEARANCES:
ADVOCATE FOR
PLAINTIFF:
S. HUSSEIN-YOUSUF
INSTRUCTED BY:
NGWANE MAMOD INC.
ADVOCATE FOR
DEFENDANT:
H. SHILENGE
INSTRUCTED BY:
STATE ATTORNEY
[1]
1966 (2) SA 428 (A)
[2]
Supra
page
430
para E-F
[3]
C
ase
number A332/13 30/5/16
[4]
2009
(4) SA 192 (SCA)
[5]
Supra
page 200
[6]
1962
(3) 826 A.D.
[7]
Supra
page 837 paras F-H
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