Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 2039South Africa
Road Accident Fund v De Villiers (21919/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2039 (10 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
10 November 2023
Headnotes
the following (and in summarising that history I shall refer to the parties as in the main proceedings): The plaintiff is a natural person and he was involved in a motor vehicle accident on 12 July 2019.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Road Accident Fund v De Villiers (21919/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2039 (10 November 2023)
Road Accident Fund v De Villiers (21919/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2039 (10 November 2023)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO
: 21919/2021
DATE
:
10-11-2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: / NO.
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
15 JANUARY 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Plaintiff
and
ANDREW EWIN DE
VILLIERS
Defendant
JUDGMENT
DAVIS,
J
:
In
this rescission application, the order under consideration was
granted three months short of two years ago, that is on 8 February
2022. The rescission application itself has caused a further
delay of the implementation of an order which has still not
yet been
complied with, despite only one aspect of it being attacked. In
order not to further contribute to that delay, the
Court shall render
an
ex-tempore
judgment.
The procedural history is
in summary the following (and in summarising that history I shall
refer to the parties as in the main
proceedings): The plaintiff
is a natural person and he was involved in a motor vehicle accident
on 12 July 2019.
Pursuant thereto a claim
was submitted to the defendant, being the Road Accident Fund
(hereafter the RAF) by way of the delivery
of an RAF1 form on 4
November 2020. When the matter could not be resolved pursuant
to the lodgement of the claim, action
was instituted on 4 May 2021
and the summons was served on 11 May 2021.
The RAF failed to deliver
an intention to defend and consequently of course also failed to
deliver a plea. The plaintiff approached
the Court for judicial
authorisation to proceed by way of default judgment and this Court
granted such authorisation on 1 September
2021.
The order granting such
authorisation was served on the RAF on 9 September 2021. Still
there was no response forthcoming.
Thereafter the plaintiff on
26 October 2021 gave notice to the RAF that the matter would be
enrolled for hearing as a default judgment
trial matter on 8 February
2022.
On that date the RAF was
still absent, both in appearance and in respect of any other
procedural step and this Court then granted
an order in favour of the
plaintiff. The order indicated that the RAF was held 100%
liable for the plaintiff's damages sustained
pursuant to the motor
vehicle accident.
The RAF was ordered to
pay R1 495 959 in respect of past and future loss of income
and a further R800 000 in respect
of general damages.
Costs of suit, with certain particulars, were also ordered. In
addition, an order was granted for
the payment of R1 013 448
in respect of future medical expenses.
These medical expenses
had been calculated in accordance with the opinions expressed by
experts employed by the plaintiff and thereafter
actuarially
calculated by way of an actuarial report which also formed part of
the papers before the Court granting the default
judgment.
In addition thereto, the
plaintiff submitted heads of argument wherein reference was made to
the fact that a plaintiff cannot as
of right claim an undertaking as
provided for in terms of Section 17(4)(a) of the RAF Act, unless the
RAF has elected to provide
such an undertaking in lieu of a payment
in respect of future medical expenses.
Reference was made to
case law confirming this and well-knowing this situation, the Court
granted the monetary order for future
medical expenses. The
relevance of this is the following: in the present rescission
application the RAF has no qualm with
the remainder of the order as
granted, save for the order in respect of future medical expenses.
The order for payment for
future medical expenses is therefore which is sought to be rescinded
and set aside. As an alternative
to a setting aside
simpliciter
,
the RAF suggests that the order be varied or substituted by an order
incorporating a direction to deliver an undertaking in terms
of
aforesaid Section 17(4)(a).
The
law regarding rescissions of judgment is trite. An applicant
seeking such a rescission must indicate and explain sufficiently
how
it came about that the order was granted by default and that such an
applicant was not in wilful default. In addition
thereto, such
an applicant must disclose a
bona fide
defence.
The RAF and its deponent
are, if one has regard to the founding affidavit, well aware of these
requirements. In paragraph
35 of the founding affidavit the
RAF's deponent expressly states that she has been advised that in
order for her to show good cause
for rescission, it was incumbent
upon her to show that the RAF's default was not wilful.
She has dismally failed
to do so and the affidavit, although it refers to service of the
summons on 11 May 2021, is devoid of any
explanation why an
appearance to defend had not been entered.
Apart from that, there is
no attempt to even deal with the other instances of service which
subsequently took place, which must
have alerted the RAF that the
matter was going to proceed by way of a default judgment.
The deponent simply
refers to those instances as historical facts, without tendering any
explanation for the RAF’s failure
to react thereto. No
apology for these omission have been tendered and the RAF has not
made any attempt at seeking condonation
for what conduct this Court
has repeatedly in various judgments labelled a serial and repetitive
litigation delinquency on the
part of the RAF.
The RAF has simply not
gotten out of the blocks, let alone cross the hurdle of this
requirement for a rescission of judgment, neither
in terms of Rule 31
or Rule 42, insofar as the RAF attempts to rely on the latter, which
also requires an application to be made
without delay.
Regarding the issue of a
bona fide
defence, the RAF’s deponent states in
paragraphs 28 and 29 of the founding affidavit that it has become the
norm, according
to her, that an undertaking is tendered in every
matter where liability is proven against the RAF. Even if that
might have
been correct, it was not tendered in this instance.
The deponent further
claims that the fact that this Court has granted orders for the
furnishing of an undertaking, in what she calls
“thousands of
cases” where such an undertaking had not expressly been
tendered, confirms that this was a standard practice.
This
statement was made on oath by the RAF's deponent on 5 April 2023.
By the time of the
deposing of the affidavit any doubts as to this alleged practice or
the notoriety of the furnishing of undertakings,
have sufficiently
and finally been dealt with in a decision by a full court of this
Division in the matter of
Knoetze
(on behalf of
Malinga
)
v
the Road Accident Fund and various amici curiae intervening
[2022] ZAGPPHC 819 (2 November 2022).
In that judgment, from
paragraph 16 thereof, the issues as to whether there was at the time
a standard practice in place regarding
the RAF’s election of
furnishing section 17(4)(a) undertakings or whether such a practice
was so notorious that a Court could
take judicial notice thereof or
whether such an alleged practice could have been considered as a
blanket election have all been
dealt with and rejected.
The rejection can be
found in paragraph 24 of the judgment where the various permutations
and indications that an alleged blanket
election (up to that time)
was not so sufficiently in place that a Court could take judicial
notice thereof, were expressly dealt
with.
In paragraph 27 of that
judgment the court noted a formal undertaking made in open court on
behalf of the CEO of the RAF that a
blanket election would henceforth
be applicable and that courts could from that date on take judicial
notice thereof.
In fact, Adv Mullins SC
who appeared on behalf of the RAF in the full court matter, tendered
on behalf of the CEO that a publication
would be furnished to all and
sundry and in particular the legal profession, confirming what had
been said in open court.
To this Court's knowledge, so far such
a publication had not yet taken place.
But there can be no doubt
that the RAF, who the deponent represents in this application, was
aware of that judgment and was aware
of that position and was aware
of the rejection of what the deponent now subsequently tendered on 5
April 2023 in her affidavit
as a purported defence at the time that
the default judgment had been granted.
It
is clear that the purported defence is not in accordance with the
Act, the existing law at the time and the confirmation thereof
by the
full court of this Division. Accordingly, the application for
rescission also fails the requirement to disclose a
bona
fide
defence.
Regarding the issue of
costs, the summary set out above indicates that the RAF has yet again
been delinquent; not only in the failure
to defend the plaintiff's
action, but also in the failure to in any meaningful way contribute
to the finalisation of the litigation.
The RAF has further been
in default of launching its rescission application timeously, which
was only prompted by demands that it
comply with the court order.
It is no use for the deponent to say that she personally only became
aware of the judgment at
a certain date. The RAF as the
defendant had been made aware of the order long ago and had the RAF
been mindful of launching
a rescission application, it should and
could have been done timeously.
A further indication of
the lack of attention to time periods and requirements imposed by the
Rules of this Court to facilitate
a proper hearing of matters, is
that the deponent even in her affidavit explaining why the
application was late, does not even
complete the paragraphs wherein
the calculation of dates had been made. In fact, the paragraph
wherein she would have indicated
what the initial date for launching
of the application would have been, has been left blank.
In considering the issue
of costs, the Court has a wide discretion and it is not necessary for
purposes of this
ex tempore
judgment to set out the
requirements or factors to be evaluated when a punitive cost order is
considered.
That has sufficiently
been done, in particular in the minority judgment in the
Constitutional Court in
Public Protector v South African Reserve
Bank
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC).
In the present matter
initially cost
de bonis propriis
was sought, but Adv de Beer
acting for the plaintiff indicated that his instructions were no
longer to persist therewith, but indeed
to persist only with a
request for costs on the attorney and client scale.
One should also take into
account that what the RAF actually attempted to do by way of its
application, was a seeking of an indulgence
for non-compliance with
time periods regarding its rescission application. Its
rescission application itself was by its nature
an application to
excuse a party for its own default.
If one adds thereto the
delays occasioned in the prosecution of the present application, then
I have no hesitation in finding that
this is an appropriate matter
where the plaintiff, having already secured an order to which he was
entitled to, should not be out
of pocket for any portion of the costs
incurred and that it is an appropriate matter where a court should
display its displeasure
to a party who comes to court without
explaining its previous default and without any discernable defence.
Accordingly, the order is
as follows: the application is dismissed with costs, such costs to be
on the scale as between attorney
and client.
DAVIS, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
DATE
OF JUDGMENT DELIVERED
: 10
NOVEMBER 2023
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