Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 27South Africa
Selowe v Road Accident Fund (6618/17) [2022] ZAGPPHC 27 (17 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Selowe v Road Accident Fund (6618/17) [2022] ZAGPPHC 27 (17 January 2022)
Selowe v Road Accident Fund (6618/17) [2022] ZAGPPHC 27 (17 January 2022)
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sino date 17 January 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
17
JANUARY 2022
Case number:6618/17
WILLIAM
MUSAWENKOSI
SELOWE
PLAINTIFF
And
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
Delivered: this
judgment was prepared and authored by the judge whose name is
reflected herein and is handed down electronically and
by circulation
to the parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of on Caselines.
JUDGMENT
LESO
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Plaintiff
instituted a claim of damages against Defendant as a result of a
motor vehicle collision that occurred between the vehicle
which was
driven by the plaintiff with the registration number DCM747-MP and
the insured driver at R40, Bushbuckridge on 06 February
2006.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The application to struck out the Road
Accident Fund defence in terms of Rule 30A and in terms of the court
order granted by Ledwaba
DJP on 13 July 2021 was granted and the
matter proceeded on a default basis.
ISSUES IN DISPUTE
[3]
The merits and quantum are in dispute however the matter was set down
to proceed on merits only. Consequently, the issue to be determined
is whether the collision which occurred on 06 February 2006 was
caused by the negligence of the insured driver.
EVIDENCE ON THE
MERITS
[4]
In the plaintiff’s particulars of claim the plaintiff
claims that
on 6 February 2015 at
approximately 02h00 in the early morning on R40 Bushbuckridge/Mariti
road Bushbuckridge, a collision occurred
between a silver Corsa
utility vehicle with registration number DCM747MP being a motor
vehicle driven by the plaintiff and the motor
vehicle driven by an
unknown driver. The plaintiff claims that the collision was caused by
the negligence of the insured driver because
of the following
reasons:
a)
He/she failed to keep a
proper lookout;
b)
He/she failed to
exercise proper or effective control over the vehicle that
he/she driving;
c)
He/she knowingly drove
a vehicle that was not roadworthy;
d)
He/she failed to avoid
collision when by exercising reasonable care he /she could have or
should have done so.
[5]
Plaintiff claims that he was driving from home going
work while
passing the Bushbuckridge Nature Reserve the plaintiff noticed there
was a vehicle approaching from the opposite direction.
Plaintiff
claims that the road was curved and the visibility was hampered by
mist as he noticed that the insured driver was driving
in his lane of
travel. He claims that he tried to avoid a head-on collision with the
other vehicle by swerving to the left and he
lost control and
overturned before his motor vehicle came to a standstill on the left
side of the road. The plaintiff claims that
the other driver did not
stop at the scene.
[6]
On 06 February 2015 a case of reckless and negligent
driving at the
Bushbuckridge police station under case number 44/02/2015 wherein the
plaintiff made a statement. On 06 February 2015.
Ricardo Manzini who
reported to be a constable at Bushbuckridge made a statement and
confirmed that he attended a scene on the date
and place as indicated
by the plaintiff in his particulars. He confirmed that he found that
the plaintiff’s vehicle had been overturned.
I do not wish to
rehash the plaintiff and the witness statements save to state all the
evidence before me has been analysed to determine
whether the
plaintiff’s claim is valid
THE LAW
[7]
S
ection
17(1)
(b)
read with regulation 2(1)(b) of regulations 2008 promulgated in terms
of the
Road accident Fund Act, No. 56 of 1996 as
amended provides that the defendant is liable to pay compensation to
a third party for
damages arising out of the negligent driving of a
motor vehicle where the identity of the owner was not established.
[8]
The applicable legislation dealing with the merits
is
Regulation
299(3)
of the
National Road Traffic Act 93 of 1996
which provides that . . .
‘where the road is divided into lanes a driver may not turn from
one lane into another or across another
lane unless he can do so
without endangering or obstructing other traffic’.
[9]
In the
H.B.
Klopper, Law of Collision in SA 7th Edition
,
pg
73 the author states that If there is irrefutable proof of a
collision on the incorrect side of the road,
such
collision constitutes prima facie negligence on the part of the
driver who was found to be on his incorrect side of the road
at the
time of the collision.
EVALUATION
OF EVIDENCE
[10]
In the heads of argument, the plaintiff’s counsel argued that the
court must determine the issue of contributory negligence. I do not
agree with the counsel’s submission purely for the reason that
there is no defense before me. My finding is based on the application
of the maxim
res
ipsa loquitur,
meaning
,
the
court
can infer negligence from the very nature of an accident or injury in
the absence of direct evidence on how any
defendant
behaved
.
[11]
The evidence in the form of the accident report, 19F affidavit,
police
statement and the plaintiff’s particulars of claim contains
consistent and corroborating statements relating to the facts upon
which the plaintiff relies to prove his claim. I
n
the absence of evidence to the contrary, it must follow that the
collision was caused by the
negligence of the
insured driver who drove in the incorrect lane of travel.
CONCLUSION
[12]
I am satisfied that the plaintiff has made a prima facie case that
the defendant was negligent by committing the following
:
a)
He travelled in the
incorrect lane of travel;
b)
He failed to keep a
proper lookout;
c)
He failed to avoid a
collision by not exercising reasonable care and proper consideration
of the duties of a driver in the same position;
[13]
The evidence before me justify the plaintiff’s claim
that the
defendant is solely liable for the accident that occurred on 15
February 2006.
ACCORDINGLY,
I
MAKE THE FOLLOWING ORDER
:
1]
The defendant is 100% liable for the plaintiff
proven or agreed damages.
2]
The Defendant is ordered to pay the Plaintiff’s
taxed or agreed party
and party costs on the High Court scale,
subject to the discretion of the taxing master, which costs shall
include the costs of counsel.
3]
The quantum is postponed sine die.
.
JT LESO
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Date of Hearing:
19
August 2021
Judgment
Delivered: 17
January 2022
Attorneys
for the plaintiff: Schutte de Jong Inc
Contacts:
012 362 6916
Email:
durrell@sdjinc.co.za
Counsel
for the Plaintiff: Adv Liebel
Contact
No:
084
603 5307
For
the Defendant: Unrepresented
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