Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 292South Africa
B.M.M obo D.M v Road Accident Fund (8204/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 292 (28 April 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## B.M.M obo D.M v Road Accident Fund (8204/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 292 (28 April 2022)
B.M.M obo D.M v Road Accident Fund (8204/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 292 (28 April 2022)
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sino date 28 April 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 8204/2014
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
28
APRIL 2022
In
the matter between:
B[....]
M M[....]
Plaintiff
o.b.o.
D[....] M[....]
(previously
cited as
D T[....]
o.b.o.
D
T[....]
)
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email. The date and time of
hand-down is deemed to
be 10h00 on
28 APRIL 2022
.
JUDGMENT
KHASHANE
MANAMELA, AJ
Introduction
[1]
The late Ms D T[....], (the Plaintiff), acting as the mother and
natural guardian
of the minor child D[....] T[....] (the minor child
or minor), born on 13 July 2009, caused summons to be issued against
the Road Accident Fund (RAF) on 4 February 2014 in terms of
the provisions of the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 (the RAF
Act).
The summons by the Plaintiff followed the accident on 24
December 2011 in which her minor child, on foot and on her way to
church
with her grandmother, was hit and injured by a motor vehicle
on an unknown road in Upper Majeakgoro Village, near Pampierstad,
Northern Cape. The motor vehicle was driven by one RR Matlhola (the
insured driver) at the time of the accident. The Plaintiff blamed
the
accident on the sole negligence of the insured driver. Her minor
child sustained injuries, among others, the following: laceration
of
the right ear; skull fracture, and left cerebral tent bleeding. The
Plaintiff claimed on behalf of the minor child the amount
of R2
million in respect of future medical expenses, future loss of income
and general damages suffered by the minor due to the
injuries
sustained from the accident and their
sequelae.
[2]
RAF defended the action and denied liability. But in the course of
time RAF fully
conceded the merits or liability in favour of the
minor child or the Plaintiff. On 7 March 2018 in terms of the order
granted by
Ledwaba, DJP, the issues relating to the general damages
were separated from those relating to the loss of income, with the
latter
issues postponed
sine
die
. In
the same court order the Plaintiff was awarded the amount of R700 000
in respect of what appears to be general damages and
RAF
was also compelled to furnish the Plaintiff or the minor with an
undertaking for future medical treatment and expenses in terms
of
section
17(4)(a)
[1]
of
RAF Act. On 19 November 2021, Motha, AJ, granted an order in terms of
which RAF’s plea and defence of the Plaintiff’s
claim was
struck out. Therefore, this matter thenceforth proceeded towards the
attainment of a default judgment. The amounts in
respect of the
future medical expenses and future loss of income where significantly
increased in terms of an amendment finalised
shortly before the
trial.
[3]
On 26 November 2021, the matter came virtually before me as a trial.
Mr A Nell appeared
as counsel for the Plaintiff. There was no
appearance for the RAF, as RAF appears to have withdrawn the mandate
of its attorneys
and, thereafter, participated in the matter without
legal representation. But in any way no purpose would have been
served by an
appearance made on behalf of RAF, due to the
striking-out order, referred to above. I reserved this judgment after
listening to
brief oral submissions by Mr Nell for the Plaintiff.
Counsel has also filed written heads of argument or submissions, for
which
I am grateful.
[4]
I have noted that the Plaintiff, namely Ms D T[....], the biological
mother and natural
guardian of the minor was replaced by Mr B[....]
M[....]2 M[....] (henceforth referred to as the Plaintiff), the
biological father
of the minor. The late Ms T[....] (henceforth the
replaced Plaintiff) has passed away
on 4 June
2021
. The change in parties, appears to have been effected,
through a notice of substitution filed by the Plaintiff’s
Attorneys
in August 2021.
The minor was 12
years old at the time of trial.
Although, I am not certain as
to whether this approach was proper, due to the fact that the matter
appeared to have already served
before the court with an order,
reflecting the new citation granted, I will accept the conformity of
the substitution or the change
in citation with the rules and
practice of this Court, lest the immediate previous order gets
unravelled, so to speak. I have already
reflected the changed
citation above.
Evidence and
submissions on behalf of the Plaintiff
[5]
As stated above, the issues remaining for determination in this
matter are those relating
to the future medical expenses and future
loss of income. The other issues have been finalised as stated above.
But, in the heads
of argument filed by Mr Nell, he submitted that
there are no past medical expenses and therefore this head of claim
is no longer
pursued by the Plaintiff.
[6]
The evidence in the trial was by way of the reports or medico-legal
reports furnished
by the experts employed on behalf of the Plaintiff.
The experts had confirmed under oath the contents of their reports or
their
opinions therein. This was in terms of the affidavits filed
before the trial. Next, I deal with the pertinent parts of the
reports,
guided by counsel’s submissions.
Ms
Vanessa Gaydon (educational psychologist
)
[7]
Ms Vanessa Gaydon, an educational psychologist, assessed the minor on
8 July 2016.
This was about five and half years after the occurrence
of the accident in which the minor was injured on 24 December 2011.
The
minor was six years and 11 months old at the time as she was born
on 13 July 2009. The minor was then in grade 2. Ms Gaydon assessed
the minor again on 21 August 2020, when he was repeating grade 4 for
the second time.
[8]
Ms Gaydon noted that the minor was admitted at the Pampierstad clinic
after the accident.
She was reportedly unconscious. Thereafter she
was transferred by ambulance to Hartswater Hospital where she
reportedly regained
consciousness. She was further transferred by
ambulance to Kimberley hospital where her injured ear, partially
degloving, was sutured
back. At the time of the accident the minor
was two years and four months’ old, and still attending
preschool or creche.
[9]
The educational psychologist reported that, among others, the minor’s
Glasgow
Coma Scale or GCS was recorded at 14/15 when she was admitted
at the Kimberley hospital. She was described as uncoordinated and
sleepy. The minor was treated conservatively and discharged on 28
December 2011. She was referred back to the Pampierstad clinic.
[10]
Ms Gaydon opined that, although there is no pre-morbid measure of
early educational functioning
and, therefore, it being difficult to
predict future potential, the minor’s early development and the
fact that her mother
managed to achieve a matric qualification and
have further upgraded her skills with very little resources and
education, the minor
is likely to have been able to achieve at least
a matric without the accident.
[11]
The minor’s mother, reported, among others, the following to
the educational psychologist.
Since the accident the minor had a poor
and selective appetite, and suffered from headaches and nosebleeds.
Further, the minor
is said to have had difficulty with her vision at
school and struggled to sleep, apart from having nightmares and
nocturnal enuresis
of about twice a month. And the minor had
underwent an appendectomy in 2014 and hospitalised for just over a
week, but there were
no reported problems or complications.
[12]
Further, Ms Gaydon reported that, following the accident, the minor
returned to creche and there
were no complaints regarding a change in
her behaviour. The minor, reportedly, had difficulties in reading and
writing since entering
formal schooling in grade R which persisted
despite her change of schools in grade 1. At the time of the
interview, she had been
moved to do a grade 2 at a new school at the
beginning of the year. She had reportedly settled well socially at
the new school,
but the teachers expressed concern about the fact
that she struggled with writing and refused to write. Ms Gaydon -
upon review
of the minor’s grade 2 report for the first and
second terms of 2016 - opined that the results suggested that the
minor “may
struggle with learning as she progresses to higher
grades at school”.
[13]
After conducting the relevant tests, the educational psychologist,
among others, expressed the
following opinions. Post-accident, the
minor’s overall performance upon the cognitive assessment,
indicated that she was
functioning between borderline to below
average range of cognitive ability for her age level. Ms Gaydon also
found a strong suggestion
of neurological difficulties, due to
possible traumatic brain injury. The minor’s profile indicates
that she had the risk
of developing specific learning difficulties,
the educational psychologist further opined.
[14]
Ms Gaydon made, among others, the following recommendations. The
minor should be placed in a
specialised schooling environment where
she could be provided with necessary specialised education in order
to address her areas
of cognitive deficits. The reason for this
according to the educational psychologist is that the minor presented
with behavioural
changes and cognitive deficits which placed her at
risk, educationally. She said further that the minor had the risk of
developing
specific learning difficulties and is unlikely to achieve
her pre-morbid potential without specialised support. Further, the
educational
psychologist considered that due to the age of the minor
it is difficult to predict the extent of the risk but research
indicated
that any intervention mitigates best against the long-term
effects of TBI. She also suggested the protection and management of
the funds awarded to the minor due to her age. Ms Gaydon delivered an
addendum
report in 2020.
Ms
Anne Hofmeyer (educational psychologist, with neuropsychology special
interest)
[15]
Ms Anne Hofmeyer, an educational psychologist (with special interest
in neuropsychology) assessed
the minor in November 2017 and again on
25 August 2020. Ms Hofmeyer, among others, noted that the minor was
admitted to the Kimberley
hospital where she was diagnosed after a CT
scan with skull fracture and left cerebellar tent bleed, apart from
the other injuries
noted in the report by Ms Gaydon, above.
[16]
Ms Hofmeyer, among others, further noted that the minor’s
father has a grade 5 education,
but he is now gainfully employed as
an electrician, and the mother had a grade 12 and post-matric (i.e.
diploma) qualification.
She concluded that given the minor’s
family education and background, taking into consideration the fact
that finances were
poorly available to some members of the family to
complete their education, the aforementioned is suggestive of the
minor’s
likely average range level of premorbid cognitive
functioning.
[17]
Further, Ms Hofmeyer concluded against available information as
follows: “it can be concluded
that [the minor’s]
involvement in the accident has brought about long-term
neuro-cognitive, neuro-behavioural and neuro-psychiatric
difficulties
and there is evidence available to suggest occupational choices in
future earning capacity have been impacted by her
involvement in the
accident”.
Ms
Narishca Doorasamy Thandrand and Ms Jolene Allkins (occupational
therapists)
[18]
Ms Narishca Doorasamy and Ms Jolene Allkins, occupational therapists,
assessed the minor on 24
November 2017. Ms Doorasamy re-assessed the
minor on 26 August 2020. In their initial the expert witness reported
that they noted
that the highest educational level of the minor’s
mother was a post-matric “pre-nursing course” and not a
“diploma”
as referred to by Ms Hofmeyer, the educational
psychologist, above.
[2]
As with
the educational psychologist, these occupational therapists were
informed that the minor was of good health prior to the
accident in
2011.
[19]
Under the heading “Residual School Capacity”, Ms
Doorasamy and Ms Allkins made the
following observations. Regarding
physical assessment the results indicated that the minor displays
some “deficits which
impact on her gross and fine motor
abilities”. Further, that “[f]rom a physical point of
view she will be able to engage
in sedentary, light and medium
physical demand work in the future”. She “has retained
the physical abilities to progress
as a scholar”. These expert
witnesses went further and stated that cognitively the minor
presented with moderate limitations
and “demonstrated deficits
in attention and concentration”. They recommended that the
minor be accommodated in a remedial
school environment to continue
with the educational development. This was made against a
consideration of the minor’s age,
education and background. The
experts opined that the minor is not coping well academically in
mainstream schooling with the potential
to fail her current grade.
They are of the opinion that the minor’s placement in a
remedial school will benefit her with
the regular assessment to
identify difficulties she may experience academically and ensure that
she is coping with the demands
of schooling specially as she
progresses to higher grades. She would also be suited to attend an
FET or technical school to accommodate
her learning impairments.
[20]
Ms Doorasamy reassessed the minor on 26 August 2020. She noted that
the minor has repeated grade
4 twice, which she opined is an
indication that the minor continued to struggle with basic literacy
and numeracy. She concluded
that the minor - given her aforementioned
challenges and deficits - will not progress further within the
mainstream school environment
and that she is “unlikely to
benefit from specialized education and will be limited to more
practical training to assist
her to develop some basic practical
skills”. Further, that with individual support, the minor may
achieve a practical qualification
equivalent to an NQF level 2-3.
Ms
Meryll Shein (industrial psychologist)
[21]
Ms Meryll Shein, an industrial psychologist, assessed the minor on 24
November 2017 and compiled
her report on 1 March 2018. The minor was
in grade 3 in 2018, the industrial psychologist noted. Ms Shein noted
the complaints
of the minor as follows: headaches twice weekly;
memory and concentration; aggressive, fights with siblings; sometimes
loses balance
and falls over; nosebleeds and moody. She compiled an
addendum
report dated 5 October 2020.
[22]
Ms Shein expressed the following opinions (against the background of
the given available information
regarding the pre-accident potential
of the minor): “with at least an average cognitive level, it is
likely that [the minor]
would have been able to complete matric and
with a mother who has completed post-matric training and a father
employed as a technician,
she would have been able to complete some
form of a post-matric certification, if opportunity and motivation
allowed”. The
minor would, then, have been able to enter the
open labour market in her field of choice. Ms Shein, further opined,
that the minor
“most probably would have went until reaching
the retirement age of 60 – 65 years depending on a variety of
factors
such as her health status, personal circumstances and
conditions of employment, etc”.
[23]
The industrial psychologist further expressed the following opinion
regarding the minor’s
post-accident potential: “based on
the above reports that [the minor’s] scholastic abilities have
been compromised,
and she will not be able to achieve the same level
of educational qualifications as she would have, had the accident not
occurred”.
Also, that the minor had deteriorated in her
pre-morbid capacity to pursue her education and any future occupation
she might have
wanted to pursue had the accident not occurred, may no
longer be within reach. Ms Shein further stated that realistically
the minor’s
“limited reasoning skills, erratic attention
and difficulty with memory will most probably prevent her from
achieving her
Grade 12”. The same difficulties are likely to
affect the minor’s ability to learn and would furthermore
hamper occupational
performance and progression, the industrial
psychologist continued. The minor would be regarded as a less
competitive and vulnerable
employee when she has to secure and
maintain suitable employment, the opinion continued.
[24]
Ms Shein postulated the minor’s loss of earnings in two
scenarios: a pre-accident scenario
and a post-accident scenario. The
pre-accident scenario is to the effect that had the accident not
happened the minor would have
obtained a grade 12 pass and been able
to move on to some form of tertiary qualification certification.
Further, that when in possession
of a matric qualification, as a bare
minimum, the minor would have entered the labour market at B2
Paterson (basic salary) salary
scheme level. Her earnings with
inflationary increases and career progression would have steadily and
at a fair rate progressed
to C1/C2 (total package) by the time the
minor reached her career peak at the age of 40 to 45 years, and she
would have received
inflationary increases thereafter. Thereafter,
the minor would have been able to work until normal retirement age of
63 - 65 years
depending on a variety of factors, such as a health
status, personal circumstances and conditions of employment.
[25]
Under the post-accident scenario, the industrial psychologist is of
the opinion that even with
placement in a remedial school and the
recommended treatment, the minor is unlikely to achieve her matric
due to neurocognitive
and neuropsychological
sequelae.
Due to
these deficits the minor is suited to an employment environment that
offers support, external monitoring and supervision
based on a below
average learning abilities and difficulties with executive functions.
Without a grade 12 level of education the
minor will only be eligible
for semi-skilled or unskilled work. The industrial psychologist
further opined that as an unskilled
worker with lower level of
education the minor would most probably have been unemployed for
approximately 3 to 5 years post-school.
After finding employment in
the informal sector as an unskilled worker she would have initially
earned between the lower quartile
and median of the informal sector
earnings for unskilled workers, progressed into earnings between the
median and the upper quartile
within 2 to 3 years. She would have
remained at this level earning inflation-related increases until she
retired.
[26]
In her
addendum
report (dated 5 October 2020), Ms Shein, among
others, noted as follows. The minor repeated grade 4 in 2019 and
2020. The teachers
have expressed concern about her difficulties with
concentration and grasping concepts in class. Ms Shein,
significantly, repeated
her findings and recommendations in her
earlier report.
Mr
Namir Waisberg (actuary)
[27]
Mr Namir Waisberg, an actuary, provided a revised actuarial
certificate dated 6 October 2020
along the scenarios postulated by Ms
Shein, as follows:
Future
Loss of Income
But for the Accident
Having
Regard to
the
Accident
Gross
Accrued
value
of income
R 7 265 436
R 536 138
Less
Contingency (15%/30%) R1 089
815
R 160 841
Total
Future Value
of
Loss of Income
R6 175 621
R 375 296
R 5 800 325
Total
Value of Loss
of
Income
R6 175
621
R 375 296
R 5 800 325
Submissions
on behalf of the Plaintiff
[28]
As stated above, Mr Nell appeared at the trial for the Plaintiff and
apart from his oral submissions,
he had gratefully filed written
submissions. Part of his submissions are incorporated in the evidence
from expert witnesses, above.
At the risk of being repetitive, I
reflect the submissions by Mr Nell, below.
[29]
Mr Nell submitted that the matter was originally set down for trial
on 23 August 2021, but due
to an error by the Registrar it was not
placed on the roll. A new date for 26 November 2021 was given to the
Plaintiff for finalisation
of the claim.
[30]
Counsel further submitted that on the clinical notes and medico-legal
reports at hand, the minor
sustained the following injuries:
moderate/severe traumatic head injury; skull fracture with
subarachnoid haemorrhage and intracerebral
bleed; severe
laceration/partial degloving to the right ear; lacerations to the
right forehead, and abrasions to the right leg.
And the minor’s
highest level of education is a grade 3. Also, that the
aforementioned injuries have had a detrimental impact
on the minor’s
future academic prospects, as well as her employment capacity. Ms
Gaydon, the educational psychologist, counsel
submitted, is of the
opinion that the minor had the potential to possibly achieve at least
a matric prior to the accident.
[31]
Ms Gaydon, according to counsel, post-accident, remained of the
opinion that the minor was likely
of average cognitive ability
pre-morbidly and had the potential to achieve at least a matric and
possibly some form of tertiary
education, finances permitting, a NQF
level 5-6.
[32]
Counsel, while continuing to rely on views by the educational
psychologist, highlighted that
the minor’s current performance
on the cognitive assessments indicated that she continued to function
significantly below
the average for her age and cultural group, and
that her functioning has deteriorated in several areas to the extent
that she currently
functions within the impaired range in some areas.
This decline is consistent with a traumatic brain injury and likely
to only
get worse over time. Her deficits are consistent with a
diffuse traumatic injury. Considering the extent of her deficits,
along
with the decline in her functioning, the brain injury is likely
to have been at least moderate, but most possibly severe in nature
[33]
Regarding the actuarial calculations based on the postulation by
expert witnesses, particularly
the industrial psychologist, counsel
made submissions including the following;
[33.1]
for future uninjured loss, a slightly contingency deduction
of 20% is
proposed, due to the minor’s young age, and
[33.2]
for future injured earnings, due to the difficulties faced
by the
minor as discussed above, a higher contingency of 30% is proposed.
[34]
The contingencies suggested or proposed by counsel – after he
labelled them fair and reasonable
– are to the following
effect: a total of R5 437 052.80, as the statutory cap, according to
counsel, is not applicable to
this claim.
Conclusion
[35]
I have noted the opinions of the various experts as contained in the
relevant reports, some of
which are reflected above. Counsel’s
submissions also have been helpful, I should also gratefully add. I
also noted the view
by the educational psychologists that the minor
may – in the long term – benefit from remedial school
education. This
view appears to have been somewhat jettisoned or
downgraded, I think particularly because the minor was repeating
grade 4 for the
second time when she was reassessed in 2020. But the
remedial intervention is significant and ought to be given a
reasonable opportunity,
at least, to gain ground, so to speak. Also,
I doubt that it is of no significance that the minor has been moving
from school to
school, even after the accident, and in some instances
from province to province.
[36]
Therefore, whilst appreciating that the injuries from the accident or
their
sequelae
had left the minor with long-term physical and
neurocognitive impairments, I would apply different contingencies
from those suggested
by the actuary or counsel, as reflected in the
table below:
Future
Loss of Income But for the
Accident
Having
Regard to
the
Accident
Gross
Accrued
value
of income
R 7 265 436
R 536 138
Less
Contingency
(30%/35%)
R2 179 630
R 187 648
Total
Future Value
of
Loss of Income
R5 085 806
R 348 489
R
4 737 317
Total
Value of Loss
of
Income
R5 085
806
R 348 489
R
4 737 317
[37]
On the basis of the above tabulated calculations, I will make an
award in the amount of R4 737 317
in respect of the
estimated loss of income or earning capacity of the minor. To the
extent that the contingencies I applied or
the way I applied them
(i.e. the form or substance), for whatever reason, do not seem
conventional, scientific or arithmetically
accurate, I point out that
I consider the amount of R4 737 317, in and of itself, a
fair and adequate compensation for
the loss of income or earning
capacity suffered by the minor, given the peculiar circumstances of
this matter.
[38]
I will also direct that RAF furnish the Plaintiff or the minor with
an undertaking for future
medical treatment, care and expenses in
terms of section 17(4)(a) the RAF Act.
[39]
Costs would follow the result, as further expanded in the order
appearing below. But I should
mention that I have noted that the
Plaintiff obtained reports from a number of experts in 2015, but, for
reasons I do not find
rational, switched for others most of these
experts later. In some areas more than two experts were instructed on
behalf of the
Plaintiff. I must not be understood to mean that a
party, such as the Plaintiff is constrained from exercising his or
her discretion
in instructing experts of own choice. But such
discretion would indeed – and it ought to be – fettered
when it comes
to the recovery of costs incurred in the instruction of
the jettisoned experts from the opposing party. I would have
disallowed
all costs relating to the 2015 experts and any other
expert which has been duplicated, but I noted that in most instances
there
is cross-referencing to the earlier reports by the later
experts. Therefore, the contents of the earlier reports have not
completely
gone to waste, so to speak. But this does not apply to the
industrial psychologists. Therefore, I will not allow the costs
relating
to P Brits, the industrial psychologist, whose report did
not influence the actuarial calculation or the outcome of this
matter,
in my respectful view.
[40]
Before I conclude with the order, I must say that I have noted that
Ms Gaydon, the educational
psychologist, suggested the protection and
management of the funds awarded to the minor, due to her age. But the
suggestion appears
not to have been considered by the Plaintiff’s
attorneys or counsel in the submissions or draft order proposed for
this matter.
I would, nevertheless, insert, in permissive terms of
course, a term in the order below to the effect of catering for the
possibility
of a reconsideration by the Plaintiff, as he is minded or
advised.
Order
[41]
In the premises, I make the order, that:
a)
the Defendant shall pay to the Plaintiff,
in
his representative capacity as the biological father and natural
guardian to
Ms D[....] M[....] (previously D[....] T[....])
(the minor child), the capital sum of
R4 737
317 (four million seven hundred and thirty-seven thousand three
hundred and seventeen rand)
in respect of the future loss of
income or earning capacity of the minor child due to
the
motor vehicle accident on 24 December 2011
;
b)
in the event of
the amount(s) in
a), and/or e) hereof not being
paid timeously,
the Defendant shall be liable for interest on the amount(s) at the
rate, as prescribed by the government gazette,
calculated from 180
calendar days after the date of the order,
allocatur
or agreement to the date of final payment;
c)
the payment in a) hereof shall be made
into the trust account of the Plaintiff’s attorneys of record,
with the following account
details:
Name
of account holder: Moss and Associates
Bank
Name: First National Bank
Branch
Name: RMB Private Bank
Account
number: [....]
Branch
Code: 250 655
Type
of Account: TRUST ACCOUNT
Ref:
JT599
d)
the Defendant shall furnish the minor
child or the Plaintiff in his representative capacity as the
biological father and natural
guardian of the minor child with an
undertaking in terms of
section 17(4)(a)
of the
Road Accident Fund
Act 56 of 1996
, for 100% of the costs of the minor child’s
future accommodation in a hospital or nursing home or treatment or
rendering
of a service or supplying of goods to the minor child or
related expenses arising out of the injuries sustained by the minor
child
in the motor vehicle accident on 24 December 2011 after such
costs have been incurred and upon proof thereof;
e)
the Defendant shall make payment of the
Plaintiff’s agreed or taxed party and party High Court costs of
the action to date
of this order, including the reasonable costs of
counsel on 23 August 2021 and 26 November 2021; the reasonable
traveling and accommodation
costs incurred to ensure the minor
child’s attendance to all medico-legal appointments and court;
the reasonable costs of
obtaining capital payment referred to in a)
hereof, and the qualifying, reservation and/or preparation fees, if
any, of the following
experts:
i.Dr
T.O Kommal (independent medical examiner);
ii.Dr.
J. Scheltema (neurosurgeon);
iii.Dr
M. Pillay (neurologist);
iv.Dr
B.K Cheyip (neurologist);
v.Dr
S. Wolberg (neurologist);
vi.T.
Mtetwa (clinical psychologist);
vii.Dr
E. Du Plessis (educational psychologist);
viii.Ms
V. Gaydon (educational psychologist);
ix.Ms
A. Hofmeyer (neuropsychologist);
x.Dr
L. Berkowitz (plastic & reconstructive surgeon);
xi.Dr
B. Van Onselen (ophthalmologist);
xii.F.
Ganchi (audiologist & speech pathologist);
xiii.Dr
G. Allan (specialist ear, nose and throat surgeon);
xiv.T.
Ncwane (occupational therapist);
xv.Ms
N. Doorasamy (occupational therapist);
xvi.Ms
M. Shein (industrial psychologist), and
xvii.Mr
Namir Waisberg (actuary consulting).
f)
the Plaintiff
is urged
,
within 3
(three) months from the date on which the capital amount referred to
in a) hereof is paid, to consider taking steps within the
confines of the law towards the protection and/or the financial
management
of the funds of the minor child, including through the
creation of a trust, costs of the creation and
administration
of which are to be paid by the Defendant, whilst
catering for
the immediate and continuous needs of the minor child;
g)
it
is
recorded
that the Plaintiff and the Plaintiff’s Attorneys entered into a
contingency fee agreement.
Khashane
La M. Manamela
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Date
of Hearing :
26 November 2021
Date
of Judgment :
28 April 2022
Appearances
:
For
the Plaintiff
: Adv A Nell
Instructed
by
:
Moss
& Associates Attorneys, Johannesburg
c/o
Hills Incorporated
, Pretoria
For
the Defendant:
No appearance
[1]
Section
17(4)(a) of the RAF Act reads as follows: “
(4)
Where a claim for compensation under subsection (1)
(a)
includes
a claim for the costs of the future accommodation of any person in a
hospital or nursing home or treatment of or rendering
of a service
or supplying of goods to him or her, the Fund or an agent shall be
entitled, after furnishing the third party concerned
with an
undertaking to that effect or a competent court has directed the
Fund or the agent to furnish such undertaking, to compensate
(i) the
third party in respect of the said costs after the costs have been
incurred and on proof thereof; or (ii) the provider
of such
service or treatment directly, notwithstanding section 19
(c)
or
(d)
,
in accordance with the tariff contemplated in subsection (4B)”
.
[2]
See
par 16 above.
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