Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 61South Africa
Kleinhans v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services (28390/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 61 (11 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
11 February 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Kleinhans v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services (28390/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 61 (11 February 2022)
Kleinhans v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services (28390/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 61 (11 February 2022)
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sino date 11 February 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
11 FEBRUARY 2022
CASE
NO: 28390/2015
In
the matter between:
SANDRA
ILOMA KLEINHANS
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Defendant
J
U D G M E N T
This matter has been heard in
open court and disposed of in the terms of the Directives of the
Judge President of this Division. The
judgment and order are
accordingly published and distributed electronically.
DAVIS, J
[1]
Introduction
On 29 May 2015 the plaintiff
slipped on a smooth concrete surface, fell and fractured her right
upper arm in two places. She
alleges that the incident had
happened on premises within the Kgosi Mampuru Correctional Services
precinct in circumstances which
render the Minister of Justice and
Correctional Services vicariously liable. The Minister denies
that the incident had happened
at all.
[2]
Separation
By agreement between the parties, the issues of merits
were separated from those relating to quantum.
[3]
The pleadings and
relevant pre-trial proceedings
3.1
The plaintiff’s
version was pleaded as set out in the above introduction.
3.2
The allege locality of
the incident was pinpointed by way of pre-trial procedures as being
on the veranda (referred to by all the
witnesses as a “stoep”)
outside the entrance to the supply chain department’s offices in
the Kgosi Mampuru prison precinct
in Pretoria. These premises
were at the time accessed by driving through the actual prison area
from the main entrance gate
in Potgieter Street and existing the
prison on the opposite side via another gate before entering the
supply chain area, lastmentioned
which is now only entered via a
separate entrance gate from Dequar road. The access via the
prison yard has been closed in
recent years “due to security
reasons”, as explained by a Correctional Services officer.
The “stoep” and entrance to
the supply chain offices had been
visited in December 2021 by way of inspections
in
loco
by the
parties’ legal representatives and colour photographs had been
produced by them. Although each party had prepared
a separate
bundle of photographs, the locality is the same in both bundles.
3.3
The defendant, being
the relevant Minister as the responsible member of the executive,
pleaded a denial of the incident and, should
the court find that the
incident had taken place in circumstances which rendered the Minister
in his official capacity vicariously
liable, then the defendant
pleaded that an apportionment of the contributory negligence ascribed
to the parties to the incident should
be ordered. This plea was
done by the State Attorney on instruction of the legal section of the
Correctional Services department
without anyone having been in
contact with or having consulted with any of the personnel at the
supply chain department in question.
In fact, the head of the
department only found out about the allegations of the incident and
the plaintiff’s claim, last year in
December at the time of the
inspection
in loco
.
The supply chain department’s asset clerk only found out about the
alleged incident and the plaintiff’s claim last week
(that is more
than six and half years after the incident). These two persons
were the defendant’s only witnesses.
[4]
The plaintiff’s
case
4.1
The plaintiff testified
herself. On the day in question she had been asked by her then
son-in-law to accompany him to Johannesburg
as he did not want to
travel on his own. They went to a supplier of adult nappies in
Johannesburg and, upon their return to
Pretoria, the son-in-law said
they should stop at the supply chain offices of the Department of
Correctional Services as he wanted
to make certain business enquiries
there. They entered the Kgosi Mampuru prison precinct via the
main gate in Potgieter street
and were directed a route to follow to
the other side of the prison, which they did. They exited the
prison perimeter through
a second gate and entered the supply chain
offices area.
4.2
The area relevant to
the incident can be described as follows, as is apparent from the
numerous photographs taken by the parties during
their inspections
in
loco
: as one enters
the premises, there is long stretch of road on the left for vehicular
traffic and where cars park. The offices
are in an equally long
block on one’s right-hand side. Stretching out ahead, and
which separates the vehicle road and the
office block itself is a
raised “stoep”. It is quite wide and, although
primarily designed for pedestrian traffic,
it can accommodate the
width of a single vehicle. It is accessed by a ramp which is
the whole width of the stoep and which
is slightly rough in surface.
The stoep itself has a smooth surface and is kept polished to a high
gloss as is apparent from
its shiny appearance in the photographs.
There was no direct evidence of the length of the stoep, but from the
photographs
it appears to be the length of several cars. Some
distance down this stoep there is a double-door wide entrance into
the reception
area to one’s right. The outside of the offices
is face-brick, the entrance has double-door burglar bar gates which
open
to the outside and can open flat against the wall on each side
of the entrance. To the right-hand side of the entrance, there
are two large pots with plants in them visible on the photographs,
the right-hand plant apparently dead as only the stumps are visible
and the left-hand plant with large foliage. On the ground
behind the two pots is a large green sign with yellow lettering.
At the first pillar on the wall to the right, almost a double-door
width from the entrance, is a recently affixed sanitizing unit
and
directly above it, above head-height, is a triangular yellow sign
which depicts a person slipping and, beneath it, a rectangular
sign
reading “slippery when wet”. These two signs are about A4
paper size each and they are at a right angle to the wall.
The
reception area beyond the entrance is large and square and has a
small table to the right-hand side with a sanitizer bottle on
it and,
also on the right-hand side, beneath a large window with blinds on
the inside, a long black leather and wood couch.
Opposite the
entrance door, at the right hand side of the back wall of the
reception area, is an office and a passage going off to
the right and
deeper into the office block. On the left-hand side of the
reception area is an office with a counter which is
also
burglar-proofed. Apart from issues regarding the outside flower
pots and signs, none of the physical configurations described
were in
dispute.
4.3
On the day in question,
after having parked their vehicle, the plaintiff and her then
son-in-law proceeded up the ramp and proceeded
along the stoep in the
direction of the supply chain offices entrance. Directly
opposite the entrance, on the left-hand side
of the stoep, a person
in an orange overall, later identified as an inmate, was busy
cleaning the stoep with an upright, hand controlled
cleaning
machine. Noticing this, the plaintiff alerted her son-in-law
about it and moved to pass the inmate on the right-hand
side where
the floor was dry. When she was approximately a metre or one
and half a metre from the inmate, just before she got
to the entrance
to the supply chain offices, the inmate moved the machine in the
plaintiff’s direction, causing soapy liquid to
squirt from under
the machine and towards where the plaintiff was walking, causing her
to slip and fall. She bumped her head
against the wall and
badly fractured her right humerus When she found she could not
use her right arm to get up, she called
to her son-in-law who had
walked slightly ahead of her to help her up, which he did. He
then assisted her into the reception
area of the supply chain offices
where she sat down on a couch. Two unknown ladies came across
to the plaintiff and she requested
one to bring her a glass of
water. Someone also bought a “medikit” but her son-in-law
found the contents depleted and too
inadequate to assist the
plaintiff. They then decided to leave and go to the plaintiff’s
daughter who was working in the
reception at a doctor’s rooms.
4.4
After having gone to
the plaintiff’s daughter, they then proceeded to Eugene Marais
hospital. There the plaintiff’s daughter
completed the
treatment form required by the plaintiff’s medical aid. The
description of the cause of the injury was noted
as “
slipped
and fell
” and
indicated the place of the occurrence at “
Tshwane
Correctional Services, Potgieter Street, Pretoria
”
and the hospital staff noted the diagnosis obtained from the treating
doctor as “
humerus
fracture in displacement
”.
The form was signed by the plaintiff. The injury resulted in
internal fixation of the humerus and had certain sequelae
more
relevant to the issue of quantum.
4.5
The plaintiff’s then
son-in-law also testified. His evidence of the day’s trips
with his then mother-in-law, corresponded
with the plaintiff’s
evidence as did his description of the location of the incident.
He also described in very much the
same terms as the plaintiff,
although he was a bit more taciturn than she was, what had happened
after she had slipped and fallen
down. As to the description of
the incident itself, the son-in-law testified that, as the plaintiff
came close to the inmate
operating the machine, it “shot out” a
jet of soapy liquid from under it, causing her to slip and fall.
With the aid of
a blue pen and a copy of one of the photographs
taken during the parties’ inspection
in
loco
, he indicated
that the wet portion of the floor was much closer to the entrance and
the plaintiff’s intended route than in her
description. In
fact, on his description, there appears to have been a portion of the
floor that she had to cross which may
have been wet.
[5]
The defendant’s
case
5.1
The defendant’s first
witness was Ms Mangena. She had been the assistent-director in
the Department of Correctional Services
responsible for the supply
chain department at Kgosi Mampuru prison since 2010. Her office
was the one immediately to the right
of the supply chain reception
area described above, with a window with blinds facing the reception
area. The door to her office
is in a passage going to the right
from the back of the reception area. Outside her door, mounted
on the wall, is a large white
cupboard, containing the section’s
official “medikit”. The key to this cupboard is retained by
her in her office.
She is responsible for some six sections in
her department, such as the procurement office, the asset section and
the accounting
section . She visits these sections every
day to oversee them and to sign the necessary supply chain documents
in each
section. Incidents such as the one described by the
plaintiff would come to her notice and would also be formally
reported
to the Occupational Health Safety (OHS) officer who is at a
warehouse portion of the supply chain offices in an adjoining part of
the building. She denies that the incident, about which she
heard for the first time in December last year, had occurred at
all.
She confirmed having been on duty on the day in question, as
confirmed by her signature in the Z8-register, being a register
kept
in a book form where staff note their daily arrival and departure
from work. She also oversees this and deals with absenteeism
as
reflected by entries in the book.
5.2
Correctional
Officer Mokgethi also testified. He is an asset clerk employed
in the supply chain offices with his office in the
back right-hand
corner of the reception area described above. His office door
faces the entrance. He also denies that
the incident had
occurred. He testified that, even if he had not been present or
not having seen the incident, he and the other
staff would have been
briefed about such an incident, if it had indeed occurred, at the
next morning’s roll call briefing.
Such an incident should
also have been reported to the OHS officer as “claims may be
instituted against the department”.
He recognized the sign
which had fallen down behind the two flower pots outside the supply
chain office entrance. According
to him (although the wording
was largely obscured on the photographs) the sign read
“Administrasie” and “Administration”.
He could not say
how long ago the sign had fallen down. He confirmed the
location and visibility to passers-by of the danger
warning sign
mounted at a right angle to the wall and the fact that the pot plants
had been located next to the entrance since before
2015. Mr
Mokgethi also identified his signature in the Z8 register and that it
reflected that he had been on duty on the day
in question. He
has no independent recollection of the day but confirmed that inmates
clean the floor on a daily basis.
Currently, as also confirmed
by Ms Mangena, this is done by way of buckets mounted on wheels and
mops (which could be seen on the
photographs being in attendance on
the day of the inspection
in
loco
). He was
not asked whether machines had been used to wash the stoep in 2015.
[6]
Mutually destructive
versions
6.1
The principal dispute
is whether the incident had happened at all, or rather, whether the
injury sustained by the plaintiff due to
a fall, had occurred at the
supply chain offices or not.
6.2
There was no evidence
led by any inmate or by the inmate who had washed the floor on 29 May
2015 and there was no evidence by the
OHS officer or presented by way
of any occurrence book. There was also no evidence of how
oversight or control was exercised
over inmates when washing floors
or what the standard procedures were. This is despite the
defendant’s plea, in the alternative
to its denial of the existence
of a duty to members of the public, asserting that the Minister’s
“
officials
complied with the necessary standard of care
”.
6.3
The technique generally
employed by courts in resolving two irreconcilable versions was
described in
SFW
Group Ltd & Another v Martell et Cie & Others
2003 (1) SA 11
(SCA) at paragraph [5] as follows: “
To
come to a conclusion on the disputed issues a court must make
findings on (a) the credibility of the various factual witnesses
(b)
their reliability and (c) the probabilities. As to (a), the
court’s findings on the credibility of a particular witness
will
depend on its impression of the veracity of the witness … .
As to (b) a witness’ reliability will depend, apart from
the
factors mentioned under (a), on (i) the opportunity he had to
experience or observe the event in question and (ii) the quality,
integrity and independence of his recall thereof. As to (c),
this necessitates an analysis and evaluation of the probability
or
improbability of each party’s version on each of the disputed
issues. In the light of its assessment of (a), (b) and (c)
the
court will then, as a final step, determine whether the party
burdened with the onus of proof has succeeded in discharging it
”.
6.4
As to (a), the
plaintiff and her then son-in-law appeared to be credible witnesses.
They answered questions in a forthright
manner, even questions put in
cross-examination and made concessions when reasonably expected.
For instance, rather than deny
the existence of any warning sign, the
plaintiff conceded this and the only dispute was as to its position
in 2015. In similar
fashion, rather than delineating a wide dry
intended path, the son-in-law drew the extent of the wetness of the
floor into virtually
the width of the supply chain office entrance.
Mr Mokgethi also testified in a similar forthright manner and also
conceded
that he could not comment on nor deny things which he had
not seen. Ms Mangena appeared to be a little less forthright
and
refused to make any concessions, even of matters about which she
could not testify.
6.5
As to (b), a person who
has experienced an injury would, as a result of the intimate
knowledge of the incident, generally have a sharper
recollection
thereof as opposed to an office worker who is questioned almost six
years after the event about something in which he
had no direct
participation. At best, the latter could resort to
generalisations. Ms Mangena’s evidence and the reliability
thereof however, suffer from certain deficiencies. She was
adamant about not only her own attendance on the day in question,
but
also that of Mr Mokgethi. Although the factual case was that Mr
Mokgethi had indeed been of duty that day, the method on
which Ms
Mangena sought to prove her point, could not be maintained by her.
She relied on the Z8 register but could not explain
discrepancies
between the number of names typewritten therein and the rows of
particulars to be completed. In the end, she
identified the
wrong signature as that of the Mr Mokgethi, which led her to conclude
that he may have been absent, which was not
the case. In
similar fashion, where she and the plaintiff differed on whether the
pot plants had been present on 2015 or not,
she was adamant that they
were and that the photographs taken last year reflected the scene as
in 2015. Whilst she relied on
these photographs to corroborate
her evidence, she should not identify the sign lying on the floor
against the wall behind the pot
plants. It is a large sign and
is next to the main entrance which she passes daily, on her version,
since November 2010.
She could not explain why the sign was on
the floor, as opposed to Mr Mokgethi who conceded that it had fallen
down but, as he readily
conceded, he could not independently remember
when this happened or whether it had been affixed to the left or
right hand side of
the entrance. All in all, I got the firm
impression that Ms Mangena wanted to defend the defendant’s case at
all costs, rather
than testify truthfully in respect of her
recollection (or absence thereof). Her loyalty raised concerns
of bias and the reliability
and integrity of her evidence is the
least of all four witnesses. I need not make a finding on the
presence of the pot-plants
in 2015 or not as it does not impact
otherwise on the circumstances of the incident.
6.6
As to (c), if the
defendant’s version is to be accepted, that would imply that the
injury (because from the doctors’ and hospital
records the
existence thereof cannot be denied), must have occurred somewhere
else. This would further imply, not only that
the plaintiff and
her then son-in-law had fabricated their version, but it would
further imply that this fabrication was arrived
at or contrived
within the hour after the incident had occurred and was perpetuated
by the plaintiff’s daughter and reported to
the medical aid, the
hospital and the treating doctors. It would also imply that all
these people, even though the son-in-law
has no longer any
connectivity with the plaintiff, were prepared to perpetuate this
scam for many years of litigation, including
oral evidence in court.
Although this may notionally be possible, I find, in the context of
all the evidence, such a scheme
to be improbable. On the
other hand, there is nothing inherently improbable in the fact that
Ms Mangena might have been
on her rounds or performing her duties in
other parts of the building when the incident happened. The
incident was also not
of a long duration and the plaintiff left very
shortly after the incident to be taken to her daughter and from there
to the hospital.
There is, in these circumstances, every
possibility that the matter was and remained unreported. The
same considerations also
apply to Mr Mokgethi’s evidence. The
cursory investigation, if any, by the department after having
received the summons,
confirm that shortcomings in properly dealing
with matters, occur in the department.
6.7
In the circumstances of
this case, I need not find that the defendant’s witnesses had lied,
in order to find for the plaintiff.
It is sufficient to find
that the plaintiff’s evidence appear to be truthful and more
reliable and that the incident had
simply happened in the absence of
the defendant’s witnesses and, accordingly without their knowledge.
6.8
In conclusion, I find
that, on a preponderance of probabilities, that the plaintiff has
slipped on a wet and soapy surface, as a result
of the washing of the
stoep at the entrance of the supply chain department’s entrance at
Kgosi Mampuru prison.
6.9
Clearly, the defendant
exercises control over inmates which it uses to clean and wash
departmental facilities, including facilities
to which members of the
public who has business to do at or with the supply chain department
has access. Once an inmate, in
the exercise of his assigned
duties under the control of staff in the employ of Correctional
Services creates a dangerous or potentially
dangerous situation to
exist or develop and clearly does so negligently, the defendant is
vicariously liable for damages occasioned
thereby.
[7]
Apportionment
7.1
In the event that this
court finds, as I have done, that the defendant is vicariously liable
in the circumstances as set out above,
the defendant has pleaded that
the plaintiff has been contributory negligent to the occurrence of
the incident and that an apportionment
of the parties’ respective
negligence should be made as envisaged in the Appointment of Damages
Act 34 of 1956.
7.2
The plaintiff and her
ex son-in-law said that the “shooting” or “squirting” of the
soapy water happened unexpectedly and in
the wink of an eye and that
there was nothing that she could do. Her ex son-in-law,
however, successfully negotiated the same
path, even when wet when he
picked the plaintiff up. The plaintiff is not a petite woman
and she had alerted herself and her
ex son-in-law of the potential
danger when approaching the scene. Apart from walking on the
drier or unwashed portion of the
stoep, it appears from the evidence
of the ex son-in-law, that this was a rather narrow portion or of a
narrower width than estimated
by the plaintiff. She gave no
evidence that she warned the cleaner of her presence or intentions,
or that she held onto the
burglar bars to her immediate right or even
that she had asked her ex son-in-law for the assistance or to lend a
steadying hand.
Perhaps she thought it was not necessary but,
in my view, to only veer to the right-hand side without breaking
stride after having
identified a potential danger, carries with it a
measure of negligence, albeit not much.
7.3
Deciding on percentages
of apportionment or determining the extent of deviation from what one
would have expected a person in the
situation of the plaintiff to
have done, is never an easy task. See for example
South
British Insurance Company Ltd v Smit
1962 (3) SA 826
(A) and
Thoroughbred
Breeders” Association of SA v Price Waterhouse
2001 (4) SA 551
(SCA).
7.4
In my view, I find the
plaintiff to have been 20% contributory negligent, which means that
the defendant is liable for 80% of whatever
damages the plaintiff may
prove.
[8]
Costs
The issues of merits have not only procedurally been
separated from the issue of quantum, but are also factually
separate. I
therefore find it appropriate in the circumstances
of this case, where there is a clear case of damages having been
suffered which
needs to be determined separately, that a costs order
should be made in respect of this portion of the trial. I also
find,
in the exercise of my discretion, that costs should follow the
event.
[9]
Order
1.
It is declared that the
defendant is liable for 80% of whatever damages the plaintiff may
prove in respect of the incident reflected
in the particulars of
claim which occurred on 29 May 2015 at the supply chain department at
the Kgosi Mampuru Correctional Services
facility in Pretoria.
2.
The defendant is
ordered to pay the plaintiff’s costs in respect of the merits
portion of the trial, including the costs of 9 November
2021
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 3 and 7 February 2022
Judgment
delivered: 11 February 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv J van der Merwe
Attorney
for the Plaintiff:
Gert Nel Inc, Pretoria
For
the Defendant:
Adv A Maluleka
Attorneys for the
Defendant:
State Attorney, Pretoria
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