Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 251South Africa
B.N obo obo N.S.N v MEC for Health, Gauteng (21336/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 251 (22 April 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## B.N obo obo N.S.N v MEC for Health, Gauteng (21336/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 251 (22 April 2022)
B.N obo obo N.S.N v MEC for Health, Gauteng (21336/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 251 (22 April 2022)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case NO; 21336/2014
22/04/2022
In the matter
between
B[....] N[....] obo
N[....] S N[....]
Plaintiff
V
The MEC for Health,
Gauteng
Defendant
REASONS
MABUSE J
[1] On the 12th of
August 2021 I granted an order which read as follows:
“
The
Defendant is ordered to pay the amount of R571, 879. 00 to the
Plaintiff in her representative capacity, in respect of the claim
for
past caregiving services.”
Having made the aforegoing Order, I furnished no reasons therefor.
The Defendant now seeks reasons for said Order. These are
therefore
the reasons.
[2] The plaintiff in
the above matter is B[....] N[....], an adult female who resides at
House Number [….]. The Plaintiff claimed
damages against the
Defendant in her capacity as the mother and natural guardian of her
minor son, N[....] S N[....] (N[....]), who
was born on 13 May 2009.
He was four yes ten months old at the time the Plaintiff commenced
this litigation against the Defendant.
[3] The Defendant is
The Member of the Executive Council, Department of Health of the
Gauteng, Provincial Government, in her or his
official capacity. The
head office of the Member of the Executive Council is located at Bank
of Lisbon Building, 37 Sauer Street,
corner Market and Sauer Streets,
Johannesburg, Gauteng Province.
[4] On or about 15
May 2009 the Plaintiff was admitted at Pholosong Hospital in Gauteng.
She was pregnant with N[....]. The purpose
of admitting her at the
said hospital was to assist her to deliver her pregnant baby and to
supervise such delivery.
[5] It is the
Plaintiff’s case that the medical practitioners and nursing staff
(the medical staff), of the Defendant’s said hospital
who were
responsible for the monitoring and management of her labour process
and the treatment, monitoring and management of her
and baby N[....]
before, during and after the birth of N[....] breached the legal duty
which they owed to her and her baby, acted
negligently in many
respects set out in the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim(poc). This
is not in dispute.
[6] It is the
Plaintiff’s further case that, because of the negligent breach of
the legal duty which the medical staff of the Defendant’s
said
hospital had to her and her baby, N[....]:
[ 6.1] the
plaintiff’s labour process was unduly prolonged:
[6
.2] N[....] was born by means of natural delivery in a severely
compromised state on 13 May 2009.
[6.3]
N[....] suffered an acute intrapartum hypoxia hypoxic ischemic insult
to his fetal brain, which was aggravated and or compounded
by, inter
alia, a hyperoxia and hyperthermia.
[6.4]
N[....] developed neonatal encephalopathy.
[6.5]
N[....] suffered permanent severe brain damage manifesting as
epilepsy and cerebral palsy of a profoundly serious degree.
[7] Because of this
severe brain damage and severe epilepsy and cerebral palsy and the
sequelae thereof which the Plaintiff’s baby,
N[....], sustained he
is and would be permanently disabled to the extent that:
[7.1] he is and will
be permanently disabled to the extent that he will require permanent
assistance by skilled personnel.
[7.2] he has
required caregiving from the time of his birth, which was rendered to
him by the Plaintiff, and will require full time
caregiving for the
rest of his life.
[8] Because of the
negligent conduct of the medical staff at Pholosong hospital
resulting in severe brain damage and disablement,
he has suffered
damage:
[8.1] in respect of
the costs incidental to the caregiving services rendered by his
mother from the date of his birth to date at the
cost of R6000 per
month.
[9] Initially the
defendant denied any:
[9.1] negligence by
the medical staff at Pholosong Hospital. He contended that the
medical staff did their best properly and effectively
to manage,
supervise and oversee the birth of N[....]. He contended furthermore
that the Plaintiff arrived at the said hospital 11
hours after her
labour had commenced and thereby subjected herself to prolonged
labour and her unborn baby to prolonged fetal distress
which
manifested meconium.
[9.2] To the extent
that N[....] may be found to have suffered an acute intrapartum
hypoxic ischemic insult or birth asphyxia, epilepsy,
or microcephaly
and or hypoxic ischemia encephalopathy that caused brain damage
manifesting as epilepsy and cerebral palsy of a profoundly
serious
degree, the defendant denied these allegations.
[10] In terms of the
Court Order granted by Pretorius J on 27 January 2020 at the
end of the liability trial, the Defendant
was declared liable for
payment of 100% of N[....]’s proven or agreed damages which he
suffered at Pholosong hospital, as
a result of the management,
monitoring and assessment of the Plaintiff’s labour process and the
delivery by the medical staff of
N[....] at Pholosong hospital
resulting in him suffering severe brain damage manifesting in
dyskinetic cerebral palsy and spastic
quadriplegic.
[11] Now,
considering the condition of N[....] as assessed by the experts,
according to the Defendant's counsel, the issue in dispute
is whether
the plaintiff has made out a good case for an award of damages for
past caregiving, and if so, how much.
The
Plaintiff’s case
[12] In her
particulars of claim the Plaintiff’s claims include, for purposes
of these reasons, a claim for fair compensation for
the caregiving
services she rendered to N[....] from his birth to date hereof by his
mother beyond the amount of care caregiving
which a mother would
normally render to her young child.
[13] The Plaintiff’s
counsel's view is that N[....] is entitled to some form of
compensation for the caregiving that was rendered
to him by his
family, in particular his mother, since birth. In this regard he
relies on the expert’s reports and some comparable
reported
authorities and states that it is clear from the facts and experts’
reports that N[....]’s mother has, in the nature
of things, had to
make considerable additional sacrifices to care for him, given
N[....]’s severe brain damage and disability.
Furthermore, he
referred to some authorities both in the United Kingdom and in South
Africa which confirmed the principle that, in
the circumstances set
out in the experts’ reports,
N[....] should be entitled to a
fair award for the caregiving services rendered to him thus far by
his family. (My own underlining)
[15] The first case
to which he referred was that of
Cunningham v Harrison and Another
[1973] 3 ALL ER 463
(CA) at 469
obiter following dictum:
“
The
plaintiff's advisors seem to have thought that a husband could not
claim for the nursing services rendered by a wife unless the
husband
was legally bound to pay you for them. So, on their advice... an
agreement was signed whereby the husband agreed to pay his
wife 2000
pounds per annum in respect of her nursing services… I know the
reason why such advice is given. It is because it has
been said in
some cases that a plaintiff can only recover for services rendered to
him when he was legally liable to pay for them...
But I think that
view is much too narrow. It seems to me that when a husband is
grievously injured – and is entitled to damages-
then it is only
right and just that, if his wife renders services to him, instead of
a nurse, he should recover compensation for
the value of the services
that his wife has rendered. It should not be necessary to draw up a
legal agreement for them. On recovering
such an amount, the husband
should hold it on trust for her and pay it over to her.”
[17]
The principle set
out in the Cunningham case is that where a person who is seriously
injured, and is entitled to damages, (just like
N[....]), it is right
and just that if his wife (or mother as in the instant case) renders
a service to him instead of a nurse, he
should recover compensation
for the value of the services that the wife or mother has rendered.
It is clear from the above that the
right to be cared for belongs to
the injured person. If the mother becomes the caregiver, she can only
be compensated at the value
of such caregiving services. N[....]’s
loss is the existence for the nursing services the value of which is
the proper and reasonable
cost of supplying the needs.
[18] The principle
set out by Lord Denning MR, Orr and Lawton in Cunningham supra had
already been recognized and established in
Mitchell v Mulholland
(2)
[1971]
2 All ER 1205,
in which the plaintiff, who was
severely injured, recovered substantial damages of 20,000 pounds for
pain and suffering and loss
of amenities and
213504 pounds for
nursing care.
[
19]
Counsel for the Plaintiff also relied on the following South African
cases. These are the cases in which the principle set out
in the
Mitchell case supra was first enunciated and applied in situation
that arose completely in South Africa. I now turn to these
cases.
[19.1]
Klaas v
Union and South West Africa Ins Co Ltd
1981 (4) SA 562
(A) at 566-567
In this case Van
Heerden AJA, having dealt with the topic as treated by Street in The
Law of Damages, in the United States of America,
and having repeated
the law as established in Cunningham v Harrison and Another at page
463 where Lord Denning MR said obiter at
page 469:
“
It
seems to me that when a husband is grievously injured- and is
entitled to damages- then it is only right and just that, if his
wife
renders services to him, instead of a nurse, he should recover
compensation for the value of the services that his wife has
rendered”
cited
with approval the following passage by Megaw LJ from Donnelly v Joyce
(1973) 3 ALL ER 476
(CA):
“
In
the same month, the Court of Appeal delivered judgment in Donnelly v
Joyce (1973) 3 ALL ER 476 (CA). This was the case in
which a
six-year-old plaintiff's mother had given up a part time job in order
to care for her severely injured son after his discharge
from
hospital. Counsel for the defendant (respondent in the appeal)
contended that the plaintiff could not recover anything in respect
of
his mother’s services since he was under no legal obligation to
reimburse her, and that no regard could be had to the mother's
loss
of wages since the plaintiff could not claim in respect of another's
loss. This contention was rejected by MEGAW LJ who said
(at 479-80):
“
We
do not agree with the proposition, inherent in counsel for the
defendant’s submission, that the plaintiff’s claim, in
circumstances
such as the present, is properly to be regarded as
being, to use his phrase, ‘in relation to someone else's loss’,
merely because
someone else has provided to, or for the benefit of,
the plaintiff- the injured person- the money or the services to be
valued as
money, to provide for needs of the plaintiff directly
caused by the defendant's wrongdoing. The loss is the plaintiff's
loss. The
question from what source the plaintiff’s needs have been
met, the question who has paid the money or given the services, the
question
whether or not the plaintiff is or is not under a legal or
moral liability to repay, are, so far as the defendant and his
liability
are concerned, all irrelevant. The plaintiff’s loss, to
take this present case, is not the expenditure of money to buy the
special
boots or to pay for the nursing attention. His loss is the
existence of the need for those special boots or for those nursing
services,
the value of which for purposes of damages- for the purpose
of ascertainment of the amount of his loss, is the proper and
reasonable
cost of supplying those needs. That, in our judgment, this
is the key to the problem. So far as the defendant is concerned, the
loss
is not someone else's loss. It is the plaintiff’s loss.
Hence it does not
matter, so far as the defendant’s liability to the plaintiff is
concerned, whether the needs have been supplied
by the plaintiff out
of this own pocket or by a charitable contribution to him from some
other person whom we shall call the ‘provider’;
it does not
matter, for that purpose, whether the plaintiff has a legal
liability, absolute or conditional, to repay to the provider
what he
has received because of the general law or because of some private
agreement between himself and the provider; it does not
matter
whether he has a moral obligation, however ascertained or defined, so
to do.”
[19.2
] General
Accident Versekeringsmaatskappy SA Bpk v Uijs NO
[1993] ZASCA 58
;
1993 (4) SA 228
AA
at 236-237
In this case,
again Van Heerden AR, as she then was, had the following to say:
“
Die
appellant het in eerste instansie betoog dat nie bewys is dat Van
Huyssteen van gestruktureerd verblyf gebruik sal maak nie, en
dat dit
ondersake is dat dit in sy beste belang sal wees om wel in ‘n
gespesialiseerde inrigting geneem te word. Terselfdertyd
is met
verwysing na Blyth v Van den Heever
1980 (1) SA 191
(A) op 2225-6,
toegegee dat n’ Hof by die berekening van skadevergoeding wel
toekomstige gebeure wat mag plaasvind in aanmerking
kan neem.
Bostaande betoog berus op ‘n verkeerde premisse. In Blyth was dit
moontlik, maar nie waarskynlik nie, dat die eiser se
arm in die
toekoms afgesit sou word.
Hierdie Hof het
bevind dat met inagneming van onder andere die sterkte van die
moontlikheid nogtans ‘n toekenning ten opsigte van
die koste van
die amputasie gemaak moes word. In casu het ons met ‘n ander
situasie te doen. Dit is nie onseker of van Huyssteen
se toestand
verblyf in ‘n gerustruktureerde inrigting verg nie. Al wat onseker
is, s die mate waartoe hy gebruik daarvan sal maak.
Afgesien van die
moontlikheid da hy by tye semi-gerustruktureerde huisvesting mag
vind, is hierdie onsekerheid egter nie ter sake
nie. Sy posisie is
goed vergelykbaar met die’ van ‘n parapleeg wat dag en nag
verpleging nodig het, maar wat moontlik mag verkies
om sover doenlik
snags deur haar man versorg te word.
Nietemin is die koste van
verpleging die omvang van haar verhaalbare skade, oftewel
vergoedingsmaatstaaf (vgl of
Cunningham v Harrison and
Another
[1973] 3 ALL ER 463
(
CA) at 469
). En net so is
in onderhawige geval die koste van die gestruktureerde verblyf van
Huyssteen se vergoedingsmaatstaaf ongeag of hy
al of nie konstant
daarvan gebruik sal maak. ‘n Toelating moet egter gemaak word met
die oog op die moontlikheid dat Van Huyssteen
by tye
semi-gestrutureerde verblyf mag bekom).
[19.3]
Zarabi
v The Road Accident Fund B4-246 to B4-247
In this case it was
argued by counsel for Plaintiff that a claim for past caregiving
services rendered by a mother to her severely
injured daughter was
accepted and granted. Counsel for the Plaintiff pointed out that in
accepting and granting the claim for past
caregiving services, the
Court relied on the Cunningham, Klaas and Uijs cases.
[20] Counsel for the
Plaintiff concluded his argument by stating that there is therefore
sufficient authority in our law for the acceptance
of the claim for
past caregiving services. I agree with him.
THE DEFENDANT’S
CASE
[21] Advocate N
Manaka, counsel for the Defendant, argued in her heads of argument
that, for the following reasons, the Plaintiff’s
claim for past
caregiving services rendered to N[....] since birth is not
sustainable.
[21.1] the said
claim relates to the Plaintiff in her personal capacity, when in this
instant matter she is only cited in her representative
capacity.
[21.2] At the time
she issued summons in her representative capacity, her claim in her
personal capacity had become prescribed, and
she was therefore
non-suited.
[21.3] The plaintiff
had failed, in her personal capacity, to comply with the requirements
of
section 3
of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings Against Certain
Organs of State Act NO. 40 of 2002
. She thereafter submitted that the
Plaintiff’s claim for the past caregiving services should be
dismissed.
[22] In support
Advocate Manaka relied on the full court judgment of
PM obo TM v
The MEC for Health, Gauteng Provincial Government Case No. A5093/2014
(the PM),
which is distinguishable, on the facts, from the
current matter. The matter came before Court as an appeal against
certain parts of
the trial Court’s damages ensuing because of
hypoxic brain injury sustained during the perinatal period leaving
the child severely
disabled by quadriplegic cerebral palsy. The
appeal concerned, inter alia, the disallowance of certain items of
the claim for the
costs of the suit and the dismissal of certain of
the appellant’s claims in her personal capacity, including her
claims for past
and future caregiving beyond the scope of duties of
‘normal’ parenthood.
[23] The trial court
had awarded a sum of R 313190 as damages to the appellant in her
personal capacity in respect of her past hospital
and medical
expenses and in respect of the expenses she incurred in employing a
caregiver to look after TM a sum of R52000. 00. The
issue before the
appeal court was the trial’s Court refusal to award damages to the
appellant personally in respect of her claims
for future medical
expenses, general damages for shock and trauma as well as loss of
amenities and for past caregiving beyond the
scope of duties of
“normal” parenthood. In this respect she had claimed the sum of
R432,000.00 calculated at R4000 per month
for nine years and future
caregiving case management beyond the scope of duties of “normal’
parenthood for which she had claimed
the sum of R600,000 calculated
at R5000 per month for ten years during the child’s adulthood.
[24] In refusing to
award any damages to the appellant’s past caregiving and future
caregiving and case management beyond the scope
of duties of ‘normal’
parenthood, the trial Court had
the following to say:
‘
I
take cognizance of the fact that the plaintiff has made a number of
sacrifices as a consequence of her dedication to [TM]. However,
she
also admirably completed a number of certificates, studied, and
secured full time employment, whilst fulfilling her parental
responsibilities. [TM] was looked after by Pathways in the day as
well as a caregiver, who lives with the family. The defendant
correctly
does not deny being liable for the costs of a caregiver for
the past two years as well as the costs of [TM] attending Pathways
(subject
to my discretion). At a most fundamental level, it is my
view that irrespective of the negligence of the defendant in this
matter,
and irrespective of the quantum of damages awarded to the
plaintiff, the plaintiff cannot to be absolved of her parental
responsibilities
as defined by the law. As such it is my view that
the plaintiff cannot claim remuneration for past caregiving.’
And
further:
‘
Apart
from the notional difficulty I have with a parent being compensated
for “rendering services” to a child, for the reasons
already
given, the plaintiff has a legal responsibility to [TM]. Thus, in the
event that [TM’s] impairments not being casually
linked to
negligence on the part of any person, then the plaintiff would have
been legally obliged to ‘render services’ to [TM].
Moreover, to
the extent that the defendant has admitted liability for the costs of
a full-time caregiver for [TM], as well as cost
of being looked after
at a facility, this claim for future caregiving beyond the scope of
normal parable appears to be duplicated
to a certain extent.’
The Full Court
itself made the following observation:
‘
[73]
I share the trial court’s difficulty with a parent being
compensated for caring for his or her own child, or as it was put
by
the trial court, for rendering services to one's own child, as well
as with the concept of parental caregiving beyond the scope
of
‘normal’ parenthood. The nature and scope of normal or usual
parental obligations in any given situation, I daresay, are
determined
by the circumstances, abilities, disabilities, and the
like, of each individual child, irrespective of the cause of any
disability
or other condition such as asthma, anorexia, obesity, or
substance dependency. The cause of any disability may be congenital,
accidental,
self-inflicted or the result of another’s negligence or
even intent. In substance, the appellant’s claim for the past and
future
caregiving beyond the scope of normal parenthood in this
instance, appears to be rather one for non-pecuniary damages. I do
not believe,
as a matter of policy, that is such a claim, without
more should be entertained. The social burden would also be too
great. The trial
court, in my view, correctly refused these two
personal claims of the appellant.’
[25] The fundamental
differences between the PM case, on which counsel for the Defendant
relies, and the current case are that:
[25.1] during the
day [TM] was looked after, not by the appellant, but by Pathways. No
evidence was produced by the Defendant, in
the current matter, to
show that during the day N[....] was looked after by Pathways or any
other similar agency.
[25.2] in the PM
case, [TM] was also looked after by a caregiver who also lived with
the family. There is no evidence in the current
matter which shows
that, apart from the mother, N[....] was being looked or was looked
after by a caregiver.
[25.3] the court, in
the PM matter, stated, among others, that ‘
the plaintiff,
(referring to the appellant) cannot be absolved over parental
responsibilities as defined by the law.’
It is understandable
why the court made that observation. It is primarily because in the
PM matter the appellant had launched a claim
for caregiving services
in her
personal capacity
and not in
representative
capacity.
The fundamental difference between the PM matter and
the current matter is that in the current Ms B[....] N[....] lodged,
for good
reasons, a claim for caregiving service, on behalf of
N[....], in her representative capacity, in other words, in her
capacity as
the mother and natural guardian of N[....] and not in her
personal capacity. She has not claimed any remuneration against the
defendant
for any caregiving services she rendered to N[....] in her
personal capacity. When one looks at the combined summons one will
notice
that N[....]’s mother has not lodged any claim for
caregiving services she has rendered to N[....] in her personal
capacity and
that no relief is sought by her in that regard. In my
view, she acted correctly by lodging a claim for caregiving services
in her
representative capacity because essentially, N[....], being a
minor, could not do so on his own.
[25.4] in the PM
matter the child’s mother had claimed for caregiving services in
her personal capacity while she herself was not
rendering those
services. In the instant matter, the Plaintiff rendered caregiving
services personally without any assistance
[26] For the
following reasons, there is no merit in the reasons set out by
counsel for the Defendant why the Plaintiff’s claim
for caregiving
services should not succeed. In my view, they are fallacious and
cannot be sustained.
[26.1] The Court
Order granted by this Court on 12 August 2021 makes it abundantly
clear that the sum of R571,879.00 was awarded to
the Plaintiff
in
her representative capacity
. (My own underlining). The
Plaintiff’s legal team carefully crafted the Order. It states as
follows:
“
The
Defendant is hereby ordered to pay an amount of R571, 879.00 to the
Plaintiff in her representative capacity, in respect of her
claim for
past caregiving services.”
[26.2] In the
particulars of claim, there was no personal claim by the Plaintiff to
be compensated, in her personal capacity, for
the caregiving services
she had rendered to N[....]. There was therefore no way in which this
Court could grant an order if there
was no such claim.
[26.3] Again, in the
particulars of claim there was no relief sought by the Plaintiff to
be compensated, in her personal capacity,
for the caregiving services
she had rendered to her son.
[26.4] In paragraph
1.2 of the particulars of claim, the Plaintiff made it clear that in
this matter she was acting in her representative,
as the mother and
natural guardian of her son.
[26.5] Paragraph 5
of the judgment of Pretorius J also makes it clear that the
Plaintiff, Ms B[....] N[....], claims damages on behalf
of her minor
son, N[....] S N[....], of whom she is the mother and natural
guardian. The fact that the Plaintiff claims damages for
caregiving
services rendered to her son does not necessarily mean that she does
so in her personal capacity unless she clearly and
unambiguously
states so in the pleadings.
[26.6] A claim for
caregiving services, is a claim that belongs to the person who has
been grievously injured, like N[....], and not
to the person who
renders caregiving services to the injured person. Clarity for this
view can be found, in my view, in the cases
cited by counsel for the
Plaintiff. That the loss belongs to the person who has been
grievously injured, and not his mother or a
nurse, is clear from the
following statements:
[27.1]
Cunningham
case
The
paragraph cited above which shows that the person who is entitled to
recover compensation for caregiving services is the husband
who was
previously injured and not his wife or nurse.
[27.2
] Klaas v
Union and South West Africa Ins Co Ltd
See the paragraph by
MEGAW LJ cited with approval in paragraph [19.1] above.
[27.3]
General
Accident Versekeringsmaatskappy SA Bpk v Uijs
See paragraph [19.2]
supra where it is stated that:
‘
Nietemin
is die koste van verpleging die omvang van haar herhaalbare skade,
oftewel haar vergoedingsmaatstaf.’
[28] It is clear
from reading the judgment of PM that the authorities relied on by the
Plaintiff’s counsel in the current matter
were brought to the
attention of the Full Court. The is no reference at all by the Full
court to any one of the said authorities.
In the circumstances one is
not perplexed by the absence of any critique of those authorities by
the Full Court. The PM case is,
accordingly, no authority for the
principle that it is the person who is grievously injured who is
entitled to recover compensation
from the person who committed the
delict.
[29] Accordingly, I
agree with Counsel for the Plaintiff, that there is enough authority,
both in the United Kingdom and in South
Africa, that in these
circumstances N[....], and not his mother, should be entitled to a
fair award for the caregiving services rendered
to him so far by his
family.
Has the plaintiff
made out a case for the relief sought?
This is a question
raised by counsel for the Defendant in her heads of argument. She
contends that:
[30.1] no facts
square placed before this court either by way of evidence or in the
experts’ reports referred to in the Plaintiff’s
counsel's heads
of argument.
[30.2] the
plaintiff’s counsel has not explained the scale by which to measure
the amount of caregiving that a mother ‘normally’
renders to her
‘young child.’
[30.3] that the
plaintiff did not testify about what she regarded as caregiving that
goes beyond what a mother would normally render
to her young child.
[31] In response to
the questions posed by the Defendant's counsel, counsel for the
Plaintiff referred to case law that states that
agreements reached
between the experts in their respective joint minutes are binding on
the parties and regarded as common cause.
He informed the court
accordingly that he would rely on the agreements reached between the
experts on the basis that these agreements
are indeed common cause.
He placed reliance on the judgment of Kubushi J in
Malema v Road
Accident Fund [A5075/2015] [2017] ZAPJHC 275 [3 October 2017]
as
well as the decision of
Bee v RAF
2018 (4) SA 366
(SCA)
in
which the SCA had the following to say:
“
..
the joint minute
will correctly be understood as limiting the issues on which evidence
is needed. If a litigant for any reason does
not wish to be bound by
the limitation a fair warning you must be given it. In the absence of
repudiation [i.e., fair warning], the
other litigant is entitled to
run the case on the basis that the matters agreed between the experts
are not in issue.”
“
Unless
the trial court itself were for any reason dissatisfied with the
agreement and alerted the parties to the need to adduce evidence
on
the agreed material, the trial court would, I think, be bound and
certainly entitled to accept the matters agreed by the experts.”
[32] The evidence of
Ms B[....] N[....], read in conjunction with the experts’ joint
minutes cover, in my view, all the evidence
that the Defendant
requires, or thinks is missing. I do not think it necessary for the
purpose of this judgment to recite the respects
in which the evidence
that the Defendant contends is missing, is covered by the experts’
joint minutes. The experts’ joint minutes
have been filed of record
and are therefore available. Quoting them in this judgment will
unnecessarily make it voluminous. The Defendant
has not given ‘fair
warning’ that he will not stand by the experts’ joint minutes.
Based on the judgment of BEE, this court
is satisfied that the
Defendant's counsel’s complaint about the missing evidence lacks
merit. Counsel for the Defendant has not
commented on the BEE
judgment, whether it is not applicable in the current circumstances
or whether it has been set aside or whether
the facts of the said
judgments are distinguishable from the facts of the current matter.
In the absence of any comments on the BEE
judgment by counsel for the
Defendant, this court is entitled to take it into account and to
apply its principle in this matter.
P
M MABUSE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances:
Counsel for
Plaintiff
Advocate JH StröH SC
Assisted
by
Advocate F Pauer
Instructed
by
O
Joubert Attorneys
Counsel for the
Defendant
Advocate N Manaka
Instructed
by
The State Attorney.
Date
of
Hearing
21 August 2021
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