Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 158South Africa
M.V.N obo T.N v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited (31259/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 158 (11 March 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## M.V.N obo T.N v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited (31259/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 158 (11 March 2022)
M.V.N obo T.N v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited (31259/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 158 (11 March 2022)
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sino date 11 March 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted
from this document in compliance with the law and
SAFLII
Policy
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
11 MARCH 2022
CASE
NO: 31259/2018
In
the matter between:
M[….]
V[….] N[....]
obo
T[….] N[....]
Plaintiff/Respondent
and
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LIMITED
Defendant/Excipient
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
12 February 2016, the plaintiff’s son, then barely five years old,
fell into an 8 metre deep hole dug alongside an electric pole
outside
the Dipere Primary School (also referred to in some of the papers as
the De Beer Primary School). Fortunately, the
school bus driver
pulled him out. He was unconscious, taken to the principal’s
office and from there to the hospital.
Again fortunately, apart
from a scar on his forehead and nose, he has retained very little
impairment from his ordeal. All
this could be gleaned from
reports from a Clinical Neuropsychologist and a Forensic
Psychiatrist, delivered by the plaintiff in terms
of Rule 36(9)(b).
None of the reports however feature in the plaintiff’s particulars
of claim and the defendant has taken
exception thereto on various
grounds as more fully dealt with hereinlater.
[2]
The particulars of claim:
The relevant
portions of the plaintiff’s particulars of claim reads as follows:
3.
“
The
cause of action arose wholly within the jurisdiction of the above
Honourable Court.
4.
At all material
times hereto and more specifically on the 12
th
February
2016 the Defendant had dug a hole in front of Dipere Primary School.
The hole was dug by the Defendant’s personnel
who were at all
material times acting within the course and scope of their employment
and in furtherance of the interests of the
Defendant.
5.
Alternatively to
paragraph 4 supra, the personnel were duly authorised representatives
of the Defendant tasked to fulfill their duties
…
6.
Furthermore, the
Defendant’s personnel owed a legal duty towards the Plaintiff’s
minor child …
7.
The Defendant
owed a legal duty towards the Plaintiff’s minor child to manage and
ensure that any hole dug should have warning signs
that is deemed
necessary …
[allegations are
then pleaded as to the breach of the duties and the actual falling of
the child into the hole]
11.
As a result of
the negligence aforesaid, the Plaintiff’s minor child sustained the
following injuries:
11.1
Head injury;
11.2
Lacerations on the forehead;
12.3
Emotional shock and trauma.
12.
As a result of
the injuries sustained, the Plaintiff’s minor child suffered and
will suffer the following damages:
12.1
Past hospital
expenses
R 5 000.00.
The supporting
documentations is not to hand and the amount claimed is an estimate.
12.2
Past medical
expenses
R 5 000.00
The supporting
documentation not to hand and the amount claimed is an estimate.
12.3
Future medical
expenses
R490 000.00
The supporting
documentation is not to hand and the amount is an estimate.
12.4
Future loss of
earnings
R 500 000.00
The supporting
documentation is not at hand and the amount is an estimate.
12.5
General
damages
R 1 000 000.00
For pain and
suffering, loss of amenities of life and disability.
R
2 000 000.00
”
.
[3]
The exception
In a notice of
exception, the Defendant raised four objections to the particulars of
claim:
3.1
First objection
The defendant
contended that no facts had been pleaded to establish whether the
delict had taken place within this court’s area
of jurisdiction.
In fact, it was argued that maps indicate that the school is in fact
situated in Mpumalanga and that this
court therefore has no
jurisdiction to entertain the action.
3.2
Second objection
The second objection
is formulated succinctly in the following terms: “
The plaintiff
has failed to identify who dug the alleged hole. The plaintiff
did not provide particulars of the personnel that
they allege to have
dug this hole and such personnel or representatives are not included
in this claim. The plaintiff did not
provide the necessary
averments that the alleged personnel are employees of the defendant
”.
3.3
Third objection
This objection is
simply that the plaintiff has failed to attach supporting medical or
expert reports to its particulars of claim
and that “
upon every
interpretation of the particulars of claim the plaintiff has failed
to provide the necessary documentation to support their
(sic) claim
”.
3.4
Fourth objection
This relates to
paragraph 12 of the particulars of claim and the defendant avers that
the plaintiff “
not only fails to justify the said amount but
also fails to indicate as to how the quantum of damages has been
calculated as required
by High Court Rule 18(10)
”.
3.5
In all instances the
defendant avers that the particulars of claim do not disclose a cause
of action and, save in respect of the issue
of jurisdiction, are
vague and embarrassing.
[4]
General principles
The applicable
principles regarding exceptions and the consideration thereof are
trite. They are:
4.1
The purpose of an
exception alleging that a pleading lacks averments that are necessary
to sustain action or defence is to dispose
the leading of evidence at
the trial. Such an exception must go to the root of the claim
or defence. See:
Vermeulen
v Goose Valley Investments (Pty) Ltd
2001 (3) SA 986
(SCA) and
Trustees
for the time being of the
Bus Industry
Restructuring Fund v Break Though Investments CC
2008 (1) SA 67
(SCA).
4.2
An exception is decided
on the allegations of the respondent only and cannot be used to solve
a factual dispute. See:
First
National Bank of SA Ltd v Perry NO
2001
(3) SA 960 (SCA).
4.3
Pleadings must comply
with the Rules of Court, particularly Rule 18(4), requiring clear,
concise statements of the material facts
on which the pleader relies
for his claim.
4.4
In particular, Rule
18(10) provides that, in cases where a plaintiff is suing for damages
for personal injury, he must plead the nature
and effect of the
injuries, the nature and effect of any disability and shall, as far
as is practicable, plead particulars in respect
of how claims are to
be made up. The Rule reads as follows:
“
A
plaintiff suing for damages shall set them out in such manner as well
enable the defendant reasonably to assess the quantum thereof:
provided that a plaintiff suing for damages for personal injury shall
specify his date of birth, the nature and extent of the injuries,
and
the nature, effects and duration of the disability alleges to give
rise to such damages, and shall as far as practicable state
separately what amount, if any, is claimed for –
(a)
medical costs
and hospital and other similar expenses and how these costs and
expenses are made up;
(b)
pain and
suffering, stating whether temporary or permanent and which injuries
caused it;
(c)
disability in
respect of –
(i)
The earning of
income (stating the earnings lost to date and how the amount is made
up and the estimated future loss and the nature
of the work the
plaintiff will in future be able to do);
(ii)
The enjoyment of
amenities of life (giving particulars);
and stating
whether the disability concerned is temporary or permanent; and
(d)
disfigurement, with
a full description thereof and stating whether it is temporary or
permanent
”
.
4.5
A failure to satisfy
the provisions of Rule 18(10) may, in addition to the rules relating
to exceptions, lead to an application for
dismissal of the
particulars as constituting an irregular step.
4.6
The purpose of the
requirements relating to claims for damages for personal injury is to
enable the opposite party to reasonably assess
the quantum for itself
and to be able to reply thereto. See inter alia
Reid
NO v Royal Insurance Co Ltd
1951 (1) SA 713
(T) and
Rondalia
Versekerings korporasie van SA v Mavundla
1969 (2) SA 23
N.
4.7
It is not always
necessary to annex medical reports, provided that the facts
sustaining a particular claim and the computation thereof,
has been
pleaded with sufficient particularity. See:
Thonar
v Union and South West Africa Insurance Co Ltd
1981 (3) SA 545
(W).
[5]
The jurisdiction issue
5.1
Section 21(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provide that a particular division of
the High Court has jurisdiction over all persons residing or being in
its area of jurisdiction
as well as over all causes of action which
arose or took place within its area of jurisdiction.
5.2
In Magistrates Courts
the summons must not only mention specifically that that court has
jurisdiction but sufficient facts to sustain
that allegation must be
pleaded.
5.3
In the High Court it
“
is not necessary
in the ordinary course of events to make specific allegations
concerning jurisdiction, provided that the underlying
facts
establishing jurisdiction are set out
”.
See Harms,
Amler’s
Precedents of Pleadings
under the hearing “Jurisdiction”.
5.4
It was therefore not
encumbent on the plaintiff to have made the averment it pleaded in
paragraph 3 of its particulars of claim.
Now that it had, the
question is whether that rendered the pleading excipiable if it may
not be a correct statement of fact.
The veracity of factual
statements are not to be tested by way of exception and ordinarily
jurisdiction is determined on the pleadings.
See
Gcaba
v Minister of Safety and Security
2010 (1) BCLR 35
(CC).
5.5
However, a plaintiff
cannot merely allege a legal conclusion, it must allege the facts
necessary to establish that the court has jurisdiction.
See
Communication
Workers Union v Telkom SA Ltd
1999 (2) SA 586
(T).
5.6
In the present
instance, had the plaintiff omitted to plead paragraph 3 of its
particulars of claim (as it had been entitled to do),
were the
allegations pleaded in paragraph 4 of the particulars sufficient to
establish jurisdiction based on a cause of action in
the absence of
an address, reference to a town or province? The defendant
argues that, with reference to what it had established,
the school is
in Mpumalanga.
5.7
It is, in my view, not
necessary to debate whether the court could take judicial cognisence
of the address as alleged by the defendant
or not, for even if the
delict had occurred outside the area of jurisdiction of this court,
it still has jurisdiction over the person
of the defendant and the
necessary facts in this regard has been pleaded.
5.8
So, even if the
plaintiff’s unnecessary pleading may factually be incorrect, an
exception thereto would not dispose of the matter
and neither would
it oust the jurisdiction of this court. To uphold the objection
would therefore have no practical consequence.
[6]
The second objection
6.1
The defendant complains
that the plaintiff has not identified the persons who actually dug
the hole. The fact of the matter
is probably that the plaintiff
does not know, save that they work for Eskom. This is often
also the position in, for example,
actions based on unlawful arrest
and detention. See the precedent in
Amler’s
(above) 7
th
Edition at page 49, where the perpetrators are inter alia referred to
as “
various other
policemen whose names and ranks are unknown to the plaintiff
”.
6.2
What the plaintiff has
pleaded in this case, was that “
personnel
”
(thereby implying employees) of the defendant or “
duly
authorised representatives of the defendant
”
(such as contractors, one can imagine) had dug the hole and or failed
to ensure that it was condoned off.
6.3
The plaintiff also made
the averment that those who had dug the hole had been acting within
the course and scope of their employment
of the defendant or have
been authorised to act in tis interest.
6.4
A party who relies on
the applicability of the principles of vicarious liability must
allege and prove that the person who has committed
the delict had
acted in the course and scope of his employment, which encompasses
proof of employment. See
Standsraad
van Pretoria v Pretoria Pools
1990 (1) SA 1005
(T) and
Masuka
v Mdlalose
1998 (1)
SA 1
(SCA).
6.5
The plaintiff’s
particulars allege those elements sufficiently for the defendant to
be able to plead thereto. The actual employment
(more than the
course and scope of employment) might be difficult to prove, but has
been alleged. This is sufficient at the
pleading stage, even if
the particular employees have not been named.
6.6
The individual
employees need also not be joined and the objection of non-joinder
should also fall away. It will be sufficient
for the plaintiff
if the employer can be held vicariously liable.
6.7
This objection should
therefore not be upheld.
[7]
The third and fourth
objections
7.1
I refer to these
objections jointly and because of their inter-related nature.
7.2
The mere listing of the
minor’s injuries is insufficient to inform the reader of the
pleading of the extent of the injuries or their
consequences.
For example, was the head-injury a mere bump or was it a severe blunt
force trauma incident. Did it result
in any loss of
consciousness, what were the Glasco coma scale results immediately
thereafter or at admission to the hospital, did
it result in a focal
or diffuse brain injury or any brain injury? Did any of the
injuries result in permanent impairment and
if so, what? Does
the minor now suffer from any disability? What is it and what are the
consequences, prognosis or treatment?
7.3
The same lack of
particularity is also glaringly absent in respect of the quantum
formulation. There is a non-compliance with
Rule 18(10)
and
this has been debated with coursed during argument. The
argument that, subsequent to the service of the summons the two
reports referred to in the introduction of this judgment had been
forwarded to the defendant, provides no answer. Should the
plaintiff wish to rely on the findings, conclusions or even
descriptions contained in those reports as part of its case, they
needed
to be pleaded or the reports need to be incorporated in the
particulars of claim.
7.4
It follows that these
two objections are good and should be upheld.
[8]
The upholding of an exception,
attacks a party’s pleadings but not the merits of its claim.
Accordingly, the proper approach,
even in those instances where an
exception is upheld, is not to dismiss the claim, but to afford the
offending party an opportunity
to amend its pleading. See
Constantaras v BCE
Foodservice Equipment (Pty) Ltd
2007 (6) SA 338
(SCA).
[9]
Costs
The general rule is
that costs follow the event. In the present instance the
“event” is equally balanced between the number
of objections
upheld and those rejected. Even if the defendant were to claim
that those that are upheld and which would result
in an amendment of
the particulars of claim constitute a substantial success, the
plaintiff complained that the defendant repeatedly
averred that the
particulars of claim were vague and embarrassing. That would
have obligated the defendant to first deliver
a notice in terms of
rule 23(1)
in order to allow the plaintiff an opportunity to remove
such alleged vagueness on embarrassment. This was not done.
Taking all this into consideration, as well as the nature of the
litigation, I am of the view that an order that costs be costs in
the
cause would be fair and just in the circumstances.
[10]
Order
1.
The defendants’
exception to the insufficiency of the plaintiff’s averments in
respect of quantum as contained in paragraph 11
and 12 of the
particulars of claim and the non-compliance with
Rule 18(10)
in this
regard, is upheld.
2.
The plaintiff is
granted 15 court days from date of this order to deliver a notice of
amendment to its particulars of claim to rectify
same.
3.
Costs of the exception,
including the opposed hearing thereof, shall be costs in the cause.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 7 March 2022
Judgment
delivered: 11 March 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff/Respondent:
Adv K Letswalo
Attorney
for the Plaintiff/Respondent: Messrs Maluleke Msimang &
Associates,
Pretoria
For
the Defendant/Excipient:
Adv S Magaqa
Attorneys for the
Defedant/Excipient: Madhlopa Incorporated, Johannesburg
c/o Mahumani
Incorporated, Pretoria
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