Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 2038South Africa
V.L obo Herself and Others v Road Accident Fund (A81/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2038 (13 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 December 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## V.L obo Herself and Others v Road Accident Fund (A81/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2038 (13 December 2023)
V.L obo Herself and Others v Road Accident Fund (A81/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 2038 (13 December 2023)
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sino date 13 December 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appeal
Case Number: A81/2022
Court
a quo
Case Number: 23538/12
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
2024/01/9
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between: -
L[...],
V[...] OBO HERSELF,
L[...],
Q[...] S[...] AND
L[...],
K[...] B[...]
Appellant
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Respondent
JUDGMENT
COETZEE
AJ
INTRODUCTION
:
[1]
This is an appeal against the order and judgment by the court
a
quo
as per Makhubele AJ, wherein the Appellant’s claim for
loss of support, in both her personal and representative capacity,
was dismissed. The appeal to this court is not opposed by the
Respondent.
[2]
The
parties
have previously agreed to separate merits and quantum, and to proceed
with the issue of liability first. The Appellant
called two
witnesses in the court
a
quo
being
Seargeant Wanele Booi and Wilma Badenhorst, a reconstruction expert.
The Respondent called one witness, one Alton Phumzile
Mniki (‘the
first insured driver’).
BACKGROUND
:
[3]
On 12
th
of August 2010 at Zipunzana and Bypass near Duncan Village, East
London in the Eastern Cape, one Albert David L[...] (‘the
deceased) who was the driver of a motor vehicle with registration
number N[...] 9[...] G[...] (Volkswagen Caravelle), collided
with
another motor vehicle with registration number D[...] 4[...] E[...]
(Toyota Avanza), driven by the first insured driver and
a third motor
vehicle with registration number N[...] 9[...] G[...] (Toyota Hiace
Minibus), driven by one K. Tshaka (‘the
second insured
driver’).
[4]
The deceased died on the scene of the accident as a result of the
injuries sustained
in the collision. The Appellant has
instituted an action against the Defendant claiming for loss of
support in her personal
capacity and also representative capacity as
the mother of one Q[...] S[...] L[...] and K[...] B[...] L[...].
[5]
The Respondent had defended the Appellant’s action and pleaded
that the deceased
was solely negligent in causing the collision.
In the alternative, the Respondent pleaded that the deceased was
contributory
negligent.
[6]
For
the Appellant to succeed with her claim for loss of support, she only
needs to prove 1% negligence on the part of the first
or second
insured driver. The standard used to assess negligence is
evaluated against the benchmark of a reasonable person.
In
Cape
Metropolitan Council v
Graham
[1]
Scott
JA said:
“
Turning
to the question of negligence, it is now well established that
whether in any particular case the precautions taken to guard
against
foreseeable harm can be regarded as reasonable or not depends on a
consideration of all the relevant circumstances and
involves a value
judgment which is to be made by balancing various competing
considerations. These would ordinarily be
‘
(a) the degree
or extent of the risk created by the actor’s conduct.
(b)
the gravity of the possible consequences if the risk of the harm
materialises.
(c)
the utility of the actor’s conduct; and
(d)
the burden of eliminating the risk of harm’.
If
a reasonable person in the position of the defendant would have done
no more than was actually done, there is of course, no negligence”
.
EVIDENCE
:
[7]
The following was common cause between the parties:
[7.1]
The collision occurred on the 12
th
of August 2010 at
approximately 23:10.
[7.2]
The nature of the collision was a head-on impact.
[7.3]
The road is a two-lane carriageway with a straight trajectory, with
two lanes for traffic in each
direction.
[7.4]
The speed limit is 70 kilometres per hour.
[7.5]
The visibility was unobstructed, with clear weather conditions and no
rain.
[7.6]
The road’s width measures a combined 6.9 meters.
[7.7]
The point of impact occurred near the middle of the road, but within
the lane designated for the first
insured driver.
[8]
The evidence of the Appellant’s witnesses:
[8.1]
The evidence of Seargeant Booi was that on the 12
th
of
August 2010 he arrived at the collision scene around 23:40. He
consulted with the first insured driver who explained that
he was
driving from town towards Mtangani when he observed another vehicle
crossing the middle lane from the opposite direction.
The first
insured driver attempted to slow down, but the collision occurred
about 0.5 meters from the middle line in his lane of
travel.
The second insured driver also provided his account to Sergeant
Booi. He was driving in the slow lane when
he witnessed the two
vehicles colliding. The vehicle of the first insured driver
shifted to his lane and struck his car.
He was travelling “
a
little bit backwards from the Avanza
”. Seargeant Booi
drafted a rough sketch and later created a plan and key to the plan.
The sketch plan verified
several aspects of the collision site, such
as the straight road with four lanes, the divergent travel directions
of the first
insured driver and the deceased, the involvement of a
third vehicle (‘the second insured driver’), the point of
impact
near the centre line, the position of the respective vehicles
after the collision and the width of the entire road.
[8.2]
Ms. Badenhorst testified that the collision occurred on a relatively
straight section, with a slight
uphill for the Avanza (the first
insured’s vehicle) and a slight downhill for the Caravelle (the
deceased’s vehicle).
She opined that the Caravelle left
its lane and entered the oncoming lane of the Avanza, suggesting it
was not a sudden movement.
According to her, the standard
reaction time is 1.6 seconds, encompassing the time to perceive,
identify a hazard, and decide on
a course of action. She
further expressed the view that the first insured driver could have
steered his vehicle approximately
3 meters to the left instead of
braking, thus avoiding the collision. During cross-examination,
Ms. Badenhorst was presented
with the first insured driver’s
account that he slowed down and came to a halt, implying there was
nothing he could do to
avoid the collision. Ms. Badenhorst
indicated that this scenario of slowing down or stopping implies that
the driver had
time to react. In re-examination she testified
that it would have taken the first insured driver 2.8 seconds to
brake to
almost a standstill, which excluded any reaction time.
This implies that he would have had enough time to take evasive
action
to avoid the collision, instead of bringing his vehicle to a
stop. She further indicated that if the first insured driver
reduced his speed as he alleged, he would have been pushed back.
She opined that this scenario, appears unlikely, given that
both
vehicles came to rest in close proximity to the collision area.
This suggest that the vehicles were likely travelling
at similar
speeds, allowing their respective momentums to neutralize each other.
[9]
The evidence of the Respondent’s witness:
[9.1]
The first insured driver testified that he was driving an Avanza in
the fast lane and the lanes were
separated by three solid white
lines. This seems to be incorrect given the photographs
contained in the report of Ms. Badenhorst.
This indicates that
the lanes in each direction are separated by broken white lines,
while the two lanes in each direction are
divided by a triple barrier
line. The first insured driver initially stated that the
Caravelle, also in the fast lane, approached
from the opposite
direction and crashed into him while he was already stationary.
The second version was that the Caravelle
crossed over the barrier
line onto his lane of travel and then the Caravelle rolled. In
this momentum of swirling, the Caravelle
crashed into the bonnet of
his vehicle, and it fell over onto the left-hand side. The
Caravelle, according to the second
version, only hit him after it had
first rolled. In the third version, he asserted that the
Caravelle was not approaching
him. Instead, he claimed that the
Caravelle was on the side of the road and abruptly made a sharp turn
towards him.
[9.2]
The insured driver was unable to pinpoint when he first noticed the
Caravelle’s lights, he was
unable to provide an estimate of the
speed at which the vehicles he had overtaken in the left lane were
travelling, he could not
express certainty about distances, or
determine the presence of vehicles immediately behind him or in the
left lane. Additionally,
he did not hoot or swerve to the left
prior to the collision.
Top of Form
EVALUATION
OF EVIDENCE
:
[10]
Typically, the party carrying the burden of proof can successfully
discharge it by presenting
credible evidence, especially in cases
involving conflicting accounts. The evaluation of witnesses and
consideration of overall
probabilities often play a decisive role in
such situations.
[11]
In
National Employer’s General Insurance v Jagers
[1984]
4 All SA 622
(E) 624 – 625;
1984 (4) SA 437
(E) 440 D-G the
following was stated:
‘
It seems to me,
with respect, that in any civil case, as in any criminal case, the
onus can ordinarily only be discharged by adducing
credible evidence
to support the case of the party on whom the onus rests. In a
civil case the onus is obviously not as heavy
as it is in a criminal
case, but nevertheless where the onus rests on the plaintiff as in
the present case, and where there are
two mutually destructive
stories, he can only succeed if he satisfies the Court on a
preponderance of probabilities that his version
is true and accurate
and therefore acceptable, and that the other version advanced by the
defendant is therefore false or mistaken
and falls to be rejected.
In deciding whether that evidence is true or not the Court will weigh
up and test the plaintiff’s
allegations against the general
probabilities. The estimate of the credibility of a witness
will therefore be inextricably
bound up with a consideration of the
probabilities of the case and, if the balance of probabilities
favours the plaintiff, then
the Court will accept this version as
being probably true. If, however the probabilities are evenly
balanced in the sense
that they do not favour the plaintiff’s
case any more than they do the defendant’s, the plaintiff can
only succeed
if the Court nevertheless believes him and is satisfied
that his evidence is true, and that the defendant’s version is
false.’
[12]
When considering the testimony of Sergeant Booi, it does not
contribute significantly to the
matter. He only arrived on
after the collision. He could however verify the physical
aspects of the collision site
as per his sketch plan, the most
important aspects being that deceased and the first insured driver
were approaching each other
from opposite directions, that the point
of impact was near the centre line, and the position of the
respective vehicles after
the collision. The remainder of his
testimony consisted mainly of hearsay evidence.
[13]
The court
a quo
heavily criticized Ms. Badenhorst for not
interviewing the first insured driver and for treating the Caravelle
and Avanza’s
weight ratios as equal when determining their
speed. Her testimony was entirely dismissed for these reasons.
It remains
uncertain whether interviewing the first insured driver
would have led Ms. Badenhorst to come to a different opinion,
especially
given the various versions he provided regarding the
collision (outlined above). Notably, her assumption of equal
weight
ratios favoured the first insured driver. The Caravelle
was in fact significantly heavier than the Avanza. In reality,
if both vehicles had been traveling at the same speed, the Avanza
would have been pushed back much farther than it was.
Therefore, the logical conclusion is that either the Caravelle was
moving much slower, or the Avanza was traveling much faster for
them
to have come to rest in the immediate vicinity of the collision area,
as confirmed in the sketch plan compiled by Sergeant
Booi. Ms.
Badenhorst made necessary admissions and concessions in relevant
instances. In my view there was no justification
for rejecting
the entirely of her evidence.
[14]
In
Motor Vehicle Assurance Fund v Kenny
1984 (4) 432 EC the
following was stated:
“
Direct and
credible evidence of what happened in a collision must generally
carry greater weight than the opinion of an expert,
however
experienced he may be, seeking to reconstruct the event from his
experience and scientific training. Strange things
often happen
in a collision and, where two vehicles approaching each other from
opposite directions collide, it is practically
impossible for anyone
involved in the collision to give a minute and detailed description
of the combined speed of the vehicles
at the moment of impact, the
angle of the contact or of the subsequent lateral or forward
movements of the vehicles. An expert’s
view of what might
probably have occurred in a collision must give way to assertions of
the direct and credible evidence of an
eyewitness. It is only
where such direct evidence is so improbable that its very credibility
is impugned, that an expert’s
opinion as to what may and may
not have occurred can persuade the Court to his view.”
[15]
The evidence provided by the first insured driver, indicates a lack
of precision in his recollection.
His evidence as a whole does
not bear the imprint of truth. Consequently, in my view, it
should have been disregarded.
In the absence of direct and
credible eyewitness evidence, the testimony of Ms. Badenhorst should
be given due consideration, together
with the common cause facts and
the probabilities.
[16]
It must be noted that, considering the unreliable and substandard
quality of the first insured
driver’s testimony, the Respondent
chose not to call the second insured driver. The latter could
have played a pivotal
role in providing the court with information
concerning the speed of travel and the distances between the
respective vehicles.
[17]
In the matter of
Catamessa v Reinforcing Steel Company Ltd
1940 AD 1
the following was stated:
“
In an action
for damages arising out of a collision between a van and a motor
lorry proceeding in opposite directions, it appeared
that both
vehicles were travelling near the centre of the road, the van
slightly over the centre on its incorrect side. The
course
which the vehicles were taking was such as would lead to a collision,
unless the driver of one of the vehicles took steps
to avoid it by
moving to his left, but neither driver became aware of the danger and
each of them continued on this course.”
“
Held,
allowing an appeal, that assuming the driver of the van had been
negligent, the driver of the lorry had also been negligent
in that
had he kept a proper lookout he could have avoided the collision;
that the collision was therefore due to the joint negligence
of the
two drivers and that consequently plaintiff was entitled to damages.
”
[18]
In my view, the mere fact that the first insured driver was driving
close to the centre line,
if indeed he did so, does not automatically
constitute negligence. Drivers are entitled to utilize the
entirely of their
lane. Negligence on the part of such a driver
only arises if, given the prevailing conditions, a reasonable driver
would
have chosen to drive farther away from the centre line.
For example, this might be the case in heavy rain, impairing the
vision of other drivers (
CF A A Onderlinge Assuransie Beperk v De
Beer
1982 (2) SA 603
(A)); or when it is evident that another
vehicle will encroach while negotiating a curve (
Jadezweni v
Santam Insurance Co Ltd and Another
1980 (4) SA 310
(C).
Depending on the circumstances, merely allowing space from the centre
line might not be sufficient; even failure to
completely get out of
the road may still amount to negligent driving. This maybe the
case where for example one maintains
one’s course despite an
oncoming vehicle clearly traveling in the wrong lane. In the
present case, based on the evidence
of Ms. Badenhorst, it is
suggested that the first insured driver had adequate time to
manoeuvre away from the centre line and avoid
the collision.
The road was straight, visibility was clear, and the weather
conditions were favourable.
[19]
After considering the above, the trial court’s credibility
finding of Ms. Badenhorst amounts
to a misdirection. This is
because her evidence aligns with the common cause facts and is
further supported by the evidence
of Seargeant Booi. In the
circumstances, the court finds that the Appellant had discharged the
onus of proving 1 % negligence
on the part of the first insured
driver. In the result the following order is made:
ORDER
:
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The order of the court
a quo
is set aside and substituted with
the following order:
2.1
The Respondent is ordered to pay 100 % of the Appellant’s
proven or agreed
damages.
2.2
The determination of the Appellant’s quantum is postponed
sine
die
.
2.3
The Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the appeal.
COETZEE,
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
TOLMAY,
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
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 CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be the 13
th
day of December 2023 .
Counsel
for Appellant:
Adv.
D. Combrink
Instructed
by:
A.F.
Van Wyk Attorneys
Counsel
for the Respondent:
No
appearance
Date
heard:
2
October 2023
Date
of judgment:
5
December 2023
[1]
2001 (1) SA 1197
(SCA) at par. 7.
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