Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 187South Africa
Ninteretse v Road Accident Fund (A170/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 187 (24 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 March 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Motor vehicle collision – driver of following vehicle failing to keep a proper lookout and take precautions to avoid a slowing vehicle ahead – maxim res ipsa loquitur of no application – no sudden emergency - collision foreseeable and avoidable had appellant acted reasonably.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ninteretse v Road Accident Fund (A170/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 187 (24 March 2022)
Ninteretse v Road Accident Fund (A170/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 187 (24 March 2022)
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sino date 24 March 2022
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED Ye
s
Case
No. A170/2018
In the matter
between:
NINTERETSE,
FELIX
APPELLANT
And
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Baqwa, Neukircher
et
Millar JJ
Heard on
:
9 March 2022
Delivered:
24 March 2022 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded
to the
CaseLines
system of the Gauteng Division and
by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
10H00 on 24 March 2022.
Summary:
Motor vehicle collision – driver of
following vehicle failing to keep a proper lookout and take
precautions to avoid a slowing vehicle
ahead – maxim res ipsa
loquitur of no application – no sudden emergency - collision
foreseeable and avoidable had appellant acted
reasonably.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
High Court, Pretoria (Raulinga J sitting as Court of first instance):
(1)
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
MILLAR
J
1.
This is an appeal against the dismissal of
the appellants action for
damages brought against the respondent. The court a quo was seized
only with the determination of negligence
and after hearing the
evidence led, dismissed the action with costs. The appeal is brought
before this court with leave having been
granted by the court a quo.
2.
The appellant suffered injuries in consequence
of his involvement in
a motor vehicle collision which occurred during the day on 20 April
2011. The appellant had been riding
a motorcycle in a westerly
direction along Lynnwood Road in Pretoria. The road has two lanes for
traffic travelling in each direction.
He was travelling behind the
insured drivers’ vehicle – a Mercedes Benz sedan. The day was
clear and dry. There was only one
witness who testified in the trial
– the appellant – and this appeal is to be decided on whether the
court a quo’s assessment
of his evidence was correct or not.
3.
The common cause evidence relating to
the way the collision occurred
is set out in the judgement of the court a quo as follows:
‘
8.
On the day of the accident the plaintiff was driving behind the
insured driver’s vehicle
at a speed of approximately 60 kilometres
per hour. When he was about 4,5 metres away from the insured driver’s
vehicle, he noticed
that it was slowing down because the insured
driver had applied brakes. In his mind he thought that the insured
driver was just reducing
speed and he would then proceed with his
driving. In light of this, the plaintiff then reduced the speed he
was travelling at.
9
.
When he was about 2,5 metres away from the insured driver’s
vehicle, he realized that it had
stopped in the middle of the road
without any prior warning to alert other road users. The plaintiff
tried to avoid the accident
by swerving to the right and consequently
his left shoulder hit the right rear end of the insured driver’s
vehicle
.
10.
He also testified that he could not swerve to the left of the road
(“outer lane”) in that there were
other vehicles travelling on
the outer lane towards the same direction and further that were trees
and vehicles parked outside the
road. He took all the necessary steps
to avoid the accident but, due to the negligent driving of the
insured driver who suddenly
stopped in the middle of the road, the
accident could not be avoided.’
4.
It
was argued on behalf of the appellant that the cause of the collision
was that the insured vehicle had ‘stopped in the middle
of the lane
of travel of the appellant without any warning to other road users.
Notwithstanding that the appellant had collided into
the rear of the
insured vehicle
[1]
,
it was argued that the act of stopping, suddenly as it was argued,
had created a situation of sudden emergency for the appellant
and one
in which, had the insured driver been keeping a proper lookout (in
his rear-view mirror) he would have foreseen. It was the
combination
of res ipsa loquitur and sudden emergency that make the insured
driver the party whose negligence caused the collision.
Furthermore, since the insured driver was not called to
testify and no explanation was furnished to the court for this,
the
appellant argued further that an adverse inference ought to be drawn
against the respondent.
5.
Firstly, for the
maxim res ipsa loquitur
to find application:
‘
The
occurrence must be one which common experience does not ordinarily
happen without negligence. How strongly the facts of the occurrence
must point to negligence depends upon the extent to which they can be
supplemented by inferences from the defendant’s failure to
give an
explanation. Less evidence will be necessary when the causes of the
accident are peculiarly within the defendant’s knowledge
and there
is no apparent reason why he or she should not be able to explain
them; more in cases in which he or she cannot reasonably
be expected
to know what happened.
An
inference of negligence from the nature of the accident is
permissible only while the cause remains unknown. Once the cause of
the occurrence is known, the foundation for the reasoning of the res
ipsa loquitur type falls away.’
[2]
5.
The main factor which militates against
the application of the maxim
in the present matter is the evidence of the appellant himself.
Although it was pleaded on behalf of
the appellant that the insured
vehicle with which he had collided was itself involved in a collision
with a vehicle in front of it,
and the primary allegation of the
negligent causation of the appellants collision being made against
this other vehicle, no evidence
was led in this regard at all. The
alternative claim against the insured vehicle was the one that came
before the court.
6.
The evidence established that the insured
vehicle did stop but there
was no evidence led as to why that vehicle had come to a stop. The
appellants own evidence was that he
had been keeping a proper lookout
and travelling about 4,5 metres behind the insured vehicle, a
distance he had considered a safe
following distance, and he had seen
its brake lights and that it had begun to slow down. It follows
that if the insured driver
had been keeping a proper lookout in his
rear-view mirror before bringing his vehicle to a stop that he would
have seen the appellant
at a safe distance behind him with sufficient
time to stop or avoid colliding with him.
[3]
7.
Secondly, the evidence of the appellant
must be considered
objectively and his conduct in the circumstances measured against
that of the reasonable man or diligens paterfamilias
– it was held
in Herschel v Mrupe
[4]
that:
‘
the
circumstances may be such that the reasonable man would foresee the
possibility of harm but would nevertheless consider that the
slightness of the chance that the risk would turn into actual harm,
correlated with the probable lack of seriousness if it did, would
require no precautionary action on his part. Apart from the cost or
difficulty of taking precautions, which may be a factor to be
considered by the reasonable man, there are two variables, the
seriousness of the harm and the chances of its happening. If the harm
would probably be serious if it happened the reasonable man would
guard against it unless the chances of it happening were very slight.
If, on the other hand, the harm, if it happened would probably be
trivial the reasonable man might not guard against it even if the
chances of it happening were fair or substantial.’
8.
The appellant had assessed the situation
as being one in which the
insured vehicle slowed momentarily but would continue without
stopping. By the time that the appellant
realized that his assessment
was wrong, he was only about 2,5 metres from the insured vehicle, and
it was too late for him to stop
safely or avoid a collision.
9.
Accepting the evidence of the appellant that
he had been travelling
at 60 kilometres per hour and had kept a safe following distance, it
cannot be said that he found himself
in a ‘perilous situation that
was not of his own making’ or situation of sudden emergency
[5]
or even that an inference should be drawn that the insured drivers’
negligence was the cause of the collision. The appellants failure
to
properly assess the situation and to act accordingly when he had
sufficient opportunity to do so is the reason for the occurrence
of
the collision
[6]
.
10.
Lastly, for an inference to be drawn against the respondent
for
failing to call the insured driver
[7]
,
the inference sought to be drawn must be available on the evidence
before the court
[8]
.
In the present case, the appellant had sufficient opportunity to
observe the insured vehicle and take action to avoid colliding
with
it.
11.
In the circumstances the appeal must fail.
12.
Accordingly, I propose that the appeal be dismissed with
costs.
A MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
AGREE, AND IT IS SO ORDERED
S
BAQWA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
AGREE
B
NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
9 MARCH 2022
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ON:
24 MARCH
2022
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPELLANT:
ADV. BU MAKUYA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MPHOKANE ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR. B
MPHOKANE
COUNSEL FOR THE RESPONDENT:
ADV THIPE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
THIPA ATTORNEYS INC.
REFERENCE:
MR.
THIPA
[1]
Union
& South West Africa Insurance Co Ltd v Bezuidenhout 1982 (3) SA
957 (A)
[2]
The
South African Law of Evidence, 2
nd
Ed., DT Zeffert & AP Paizes, Lexis Nexis 2007, p.221
[3]
Van
As v Road Accident Fund
2012 (1) SA 387
(SCA), Potgieter v AEG
Telefunken (Edms) Bpk 1977 (4) SA 3 (O)
[4]
1954
(3) SA 464
(A) at 477A-C; see also Santam Insurance Co Ltd v Nkosi
1978 (2) SA 784
(A) at 792B
[5]
Neethling-Potgieter-Visser
Law of Delict, 7
th
Ed., Neethling & Potgieter, Lexis Nexis, 2015; p.156; see also
Brown v Hunt 1953 2 SA 540 (A)
[6]
Goode
v SA Mutual Fire & General Insurance Co Ltd 1979 (4) 301 (W)
[7]
Galante
v Dickinson 1950 (2) SA 460 (A)
[8]
Sampies
v Bay Passenger Transport Ltd
1971 (3) SA 577
(A)
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