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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Slater v Road Accident Fund (43139/2020)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1971 (28 November 2023)
Slater v Road Accident Fund (43139/2020)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1971 (28 November 2023)
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sino date 28 November 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO:43139/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 28
November 2023
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
ANGELA
SLATER
PLAINTIFF
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
[1]
The plaintiff was injured in an incident
that occurred on 8 October 2016, while she was a passenger in a motor
vehicle. She was
64 years old at the time. Both merits and quantum
are in dispute. Since the plaintiff was a pensioner when the accident
occurred,
the only relevant heads of damages are past and future
medical expenses. The injury sustained does not qualify to be
categorized
as a serious injury.
[2]
The plaintiff testified that she was a
passenger in a courtesy vehicle, a bus, being conveyed between venues
at the Sun City resort.
The plaintiff testified that she was seated
in the shuttle bus next to the door on a seat reserved for the frail
and elderly. She
held onto what she believed was a safety rail. It
transpired, however, that the safety rail was removed and that she
held onto
a pole attached to the shuttle's doors. When the shuttle
reached a drop-off point and came to a stop for some passengers to
alight,
the driver opened the door, and this resulted in her arm
being wrenched backward and her hand being crushed in the door.
[3]
It was put to the plaintiff in
cross-examination that she chose to hold on to the pole. She
reiterated that she was under the impression
that it was a safety
feature to assist the elderly and frail in keeping their seating
while being transported in the shuttle. She
explained again that she
only became aware of the missing safety rail when she and her husband
looked at the other doors after
the accident occurred, saw the safety
rails there, and noted the empty bracket at the door where she was
injured. They realised
that a safety rail had to be attached to the
bracket.
[4]
The plaintiff’s evidence was
corroborated by her husband, who was not cross-examined.
[5]
The relevant part of s 17(1)(a) of the Road
Accident Act 56 of 1996 provides that the Fund shall be obliged to
compensate any person
for any loss or damage that the third party has
suffered as a result of any bodily injury caused by or arising from
the driving
of a motor vehicle by any person at any place within the
Republic if the injury is due to the negligence or other wrongful act
of the driver or the owner of the motor vehicle.
[6]
The
injury
in
casu
arises from the driving of a motor vehicle, in that the plaintiff had
to stabilize herself by holding on to what she deemed to
be a safety
rail to secure her seating while the shuttle was driven from point A
to point B. The wording ‘cause by or arising
from’
denotes the common law requirement that there must be a sufficiently
proven causal link between the conduct (the driving
of the vehicle)
and the consequence of such conduct (the injury). It has been
established that the notions ‘caused by’
and ‘arising
from’ are not synonyms.
[1]
[7]
The
term ‘caused by’ refers to the factual link between the
driving of a motor vehicle and the resulting damages. A
sufficient
link will exist if the conduct is the immediate and direct
consequence of the injury.
[2]
[8]
The term ‘arising from’ refers
to those instances where the driving is the indirect cause of the
injury. Injury will
‘arise from’ the driving of a motor
vehicle where, according to the standard of common sense, the injury
is sufficiently
connected or related to the driving. Although the
injuries in this matter arose because a door was opened to allow
passengers to
alight, the facts of this case distinguish it from the
facts in
Wells.
Other
than in
Wells
,
the ignition of the bus was not switched off, and the driver did not
exit the bus, causing the accident while exiting the vehicle.
In
casu,
the
bodily injury is causally linked to the driving of the vehicle
because, amongst others, the undisputed evidence of the plaintiff
was
that she was obliged to hold on to what she deemed the safety rail to
secure her seating while the shuttle was in motion, and
the driver
was merely allowing passengers to alight before continuing on his
route. For purposes of this set of facts, it is necessary
to note
that the term ‘convey’ is defined in the Act to include
alighting from the vehicle.
[9]
The
subsequent enquiry relates to whether the injuries that arose from
the driving of a motor vehicle were due to the negligence
or other
unlawful act of the driver or the owner. The second leg of the
liability inquiry is often lost sight of because, in most
cases, the
injury is caused by the negligent driving of the insured motor
vehicle.
[3]
[10]
In
casu
the injuries arose from the driving of a motor vehicle, and although
the injuries were not sustained due to the negligent driving,
it is
still due to the negligence of the driver and/ or ’another’
wrongful act of either the driver or the owner. It
was not disputed
that the plaintiff, an elderly lady, sat on the seating reserved for
the elderly and frail. It was also not disputed
that the safety
railing was missing, a fact proven by the photographs admitted into
evidence. The reasonable driver would have
foreseen the possibility
that an elderly or frail passenger occupying the designated seat for
elderly and frail passengers would
have to hold on to a safety
railing, and would mistake the pole attached to the door for a safety
railing and would not have allowed
a frail and elderly person to
occupy a seat where the safety rail was missing. The driver and owner
of the vehicle had the duty
to ensure that elderly and frail
passengers were transported safely, and therefore, they had the duty
to ensure that the safety
railings were properly installed where
seating was specifically reserved for the elderly and frail. Their
omission in this regard
created a potentially dangerous situation and
is wrongful and in itself negligent. In not warning the plaintiff of
the danger of
holding on to the pole, the driver failed to take
reasonable steps to guard against a potentially dangerous situation.
[11]
This
view is substantiated if regard is had to
Road
Accident Fund v Abrahams.
[4]
The Fund was held liable where the plaintiff was injured in a
single-vehicle collision in a burst-tyre accident based on the
owner’s
alleged negligent maintenance of the vehicle.
[12]
I am thus satisfied that the jurisdictional
requirements for a claim against the Road Accident Fund are met and
that the Fund is
100% liable for any of the plaintiff’s proven
or agreed damages.
[13]
As for the past medical expenses, the
orthopeadic surgeon confirmed the extent of the plaintiff’s
injuries and set out the
treatment she received. The schedule of
expenses correlates with the evidence, and the plaintiff proved on a
balance of probabilities
that the past medical expenses amount to R
149 478.66.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
The order marked ‘X’,
dated and signed by me is made an order of court.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
It will be emailed to
the parties/their legal representatives as a courtesy gesture.
For the plaintiff:
Adv. A.R. Van
Staden
Instructed by:
MacRobert
Incorporated
For the defendant:
Mr. M. Sekgotha
Instructed by:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
Date of the
hearing:
31 October 2023
Date of judgment:
28 November 2023
[1]
Wells
and Another v Shield Insurance Co ltd and Others
[1965]
3 All SA 132
(C) at 135.
[2]
Petersen
v Santam Insurance Co Ltd
1961
(1) SA 205
(C).
[3]
Kemp
v Santam Insurance Co Ltd and Another
1975
(2) SA 329
(C) at 331A-C.
[4]
2018
(5) SA 169
(SCA).
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