Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 364South Africa
Rautenbach v Grundlingh (55926/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 364 (18 May 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Rautenbach v Grundlingh (55926/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 364 (18 May 2022)
Rautenbach v Grundlingh (55926/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 364 (18 May 2022)
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sino date 18 May 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 55926/2017
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES/NO
2022-05-18
In
the matter between:
VAKESHKA
RAUTENBACH
PLAINTIFF
And
ZYBRAND
GRUNDLINGH
DEFENDANT
(Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the judge whose name is
reflected herein and is handed down electronically
and by circulation
to the parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on Caselines. The date of
handing down is deemed to be 18 May 2022)
JUDGMENT
PHAHLAMOHLAKA
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The plaintiff instituted a claim against the Defendant for damages
suffered by her
as a result of the dogs biting her on 22 August 2014
whilst she was at the residence of the Defendant. The
Defendant
is sued on the basis of him being the owner of the dogs at the
time.
[2]
The Plaintiff’s claim is based on the
action de pauperie
on the basis that the dogs acted
contra naturam sui
generis,
alternatively based upon
lex aquilia
contending that the Defendant was negligent in allowing the
dogs to bite and injure the plaintiff.
[3]
At the outset i was requested by both parties that I make an order in
terms of Rule
33(4) of the Uniform Rules that the issues of merits
and quantum be separated. I granted the order as requested and as a
result
the issues of liability and quantum were separated. The trial
is therefore, proceeding on merits only.
THE
LEGAL POSITION
[4]
It is trite that the owner
of a dog that attacks a person who was lawfully at the
place where
he/she was injured, and who neither provoked the attack nor by
his/her negligence contributed to his/her own injury,
is liable, as
the owner to make good the resulting damage.
[5]
On the
acquilian
action the plaintiff must prove that the defendant negligently failed
to take proper precautions to prevent a reasonably foreseeable
and
reasonably preventable attack by the dog.
[6]
In order to succeed on the
action de pauperie
the plaintiff must therefore, prove that
the defendant was the owner of the dogs and the dogs acted contrary
to the natural behaviour
of a domesticated dog. Alternatively, on the
acquilian
action the plaintiff must prove that the defendant
was negligent by allowing the dogs to bite and injure the plaintiff.
FACTUAL
BACGROUND AND EVIDENCE LED
[7]
The following are either common cause or not in dispute:
7.1 On
22 August 2014 at the Defendants erstwhile residence namely, 35
Wisteria Crescent, Centurion, three Rottweiler
dogs injured the
Plaintiff by attacking and biting the Plaintiff and causing her
damage and injury to her left leg, torso, right
arm and right leg.
7.2 The
Defendant was at all material times the owner of the three Rottweiler
dogs.
7.3 At
the time the incident occurred the Plaintiff and Michelle Grundlingh,
the Defendants daughter, were school
friends.
7.4 The
Plaintiff and Michelle Grundlingh would go to the Defendant’s
house after school, where the Plaintiff
would stay until such times
as her mother would pick her up.
7.5 The
front yard of the house is enclosed by a palisade fence, preventing
access from the street, and the back
yard is separated from the front
yard by the house and two gates on either side of the house.
7.6 The
Plaintiff never entered the backyard where the dogs were left in
isolation.
7.7 The
dogs had puppies and the Defendant was in the process of selling
puppies to prospective purchasers.
7.8 On
the day of the incident the Defendant called Mitchell and informed
her that a potential buyer of the puppies
was coming and that she
should show the customer the puppies.
[8]
The Plaintiff’s witness testified as follows:
Vakeshka Rautenbach
testified that on the day of the incident she had visited the
Defendant’s house. It had been a year she
was visiting that
property as she was friends with the Defendant’s daughter,
Mitchel Grundlingh. On that day, the 22
nd
of August 2014
she and Mitchell went to the Defendant’s house after school. On
arrival they made themselves sandwiches sausages
and as they were
sitting Mitchell received a call. When the call ended Mitchell
informed her that her father, the Defendant had
requested them to
take the puppies out because there were clients coming to view the
puppies. Thereafter Mitchell told her that
that they had to fetch the
puppies. They went outside. She enquired from Mitchell if it’s
safe to go out. Mitchell said it
is safe to go out. Mitchell then fed
the big dogs. The plaintiff then picked up a small puppy. One big dog
jumped on her. The other
big one’s attached and bit her.
Thereafter she cannot remember what happened but she later got up and
ran into the house.
Initial made call. She tried to sit on the bench
but Mitchell said she must not sit there for she would smear blood on
the bench.
She then sat on the stairs in front of the house. A
neighbour approached with a towel which was used to cover her leg.
The neighbour
suggested that the plaintiff’s mother be called.
Indeed her mother come to fetch her and took her to Unitas Hospital.
[9]
The plaintiff was put under
cross examination and among others it was put to her that she
went to
the dogs knowing that they were dangerous. It was further put it to
her that she exposed herself to danger because she
was not supposed
to be where the dogs are kept.
[10]
The second witness for the plaintiff was Ester Susana Jansen Van
Rensburg. she testified she
is the plaintiff’s mother. She
confirms that she received a call on the day of the incident that her
daughter had been bitten
by the dogs. She was about 5 minutes away
when she received the call as she was coming to fetch the Plaintiff.
She arrived at the
defendant’s house and found her daughter
injured. She took her to Unitas Hospital
[11]
The Plaintiff closed its case and the Defendant testified in his own
defence and he called twowitnesses to testify on his behalf.
[12]
The defendant, Zybrand Grundlingh, testified that he was the owner of
the three adult Rottweiler dogs and puppies. He said
that he was a
breeder of these Rottweilers and he would sell the puppies thereof.
He knew the Plaintiff as the Plaintiff was her
daughter’s
friend. His daughter’s name is Mitchell. At the time he stayed
at 35 Wisteria Crescent, Centurion. He said
that only he and his son
would feed the dogs and no one else. He said Mitchell was not allowed
to feed the dogs. On 22 August 12014
he called Mitchell on her cell
phone informing her that a buyer was coming to the house. He
instructed Mitchell not to let the
buyer into the property. The
Defendant was cross examined and among others he was asked why he was
comfortable that day to let
his daughter go in there where the dogs
are kept to which he answered that his daughter had to help the
buyer.
[13]
Cheryl Grundlingh testified that she was the Defendant’s wife
at the time the incident
occurred. She was not present when the
incident took place. She was not privy to the conversation between
the defendant and his
daughter, Mitchell.
[14]
The next witness called by the defendant was Mitchell Grundlingh and
she testified that she is the daughter of the defendant.
The
plaintiff was her friend at the time of the incident. On the 22
nd
of August 2014 she and the plaintiff came back from school. She
received a phone call from her father telling her that there was
a
buyer outside the house. She opened the wooden door and saw the buyer
inside his car. She went to the back of the house where
the dogs are
kept. The plaintiff followed her. The male dog jumped on her. She
further says, “I told her to calm down for
the
dog was only
playing
. The dog jumped on the plaintiff again. She screamed. The
female dog hit her. Mitchell hit the dogs with a dog with a mob to
ward
it off. Mitchell opened the wooden door. The plaintiff got into
the house. She said she did not invite the plaintiff. She never
told
the plaintiff her dad said she must go outside. She said the
plaintiff went in first and she closed the door.
EVALUATION
AND CASE LAW
[15]
it is common cause that the plaintiff and Mitchel Grundlingh were
fiends at the time of the incident. It is further common
cause that
on the day of the incident the Rottweiler dogs belonging to the
defendant bit the plaintiff thereby causing her injuries.
It is also
not in dispute that on that day the defendant called Mithcel and made
arrangements that the latter should show the puppuies
to the
potential buyer.
[16]
the defendant and Mitchel dispute the fact that the defendat ordered
Mitchel to request the assistance of the plaintiff to
fetch the
puppies. The plaintiff is adamant that this is the case. In order to
satisfy myslf regarding this aspect I have to evaluate
the evidence
of the witnesses and determine which version is more probable than
the other. In doing so I need to consider, among
others, credibility
of witnesses. On this particular aspect I am of the view that the
plaintiff is a credible witness. Mitchel
testified that after she
received a call from the defendant she never spoke to the plaintiff
regarding the phone call. If that
was the case the plaintiff would
not have known the contents of the conversation between the defendant
and Mitchel. I find that
Mitchel did not tell the truth on this
aspect.
[17]
Mitchel said that she had never gone outside where the dogs are kept
but only went that day because her father said so. She
conceded under
cross examination that she could not handle three adult Rottweiler
dogs. It is therefore probable that the defendant
could have told
Mitchel to seek the assistance of the plaintiff.
[18]
In order to be successful with the
actio de pauperie
against
the owner of a domesticated animal the plaintiff must prove that
injured or harmed a person must establish that the domesticated
animal acted contrary to the nature of domesticated animals in
causing damage to the plaintiff.
[19]
It has been agreed between the plaintiff and the defendant that the
dogs belonging to Defendant
caused damage to the plaintiff. However,
the Defendant denies that the dogs acted contrary to their nature.
The defendant contends
that the plaintiff consented to the injuries
and thus raised a defence of
volenti non fit iniuria.
[20]
in
Waring
and Gillows Ltd v Sherbone
[1]
Innes CJ
outlined
the elements the defendant must prove in order to succeed in the
defence of
volenti
as
follows
:
“it must be clearly shown that the risk(of injury) was known
that ist was realized, and that it was voluntary undertaken.
Knowlwdge, appreciation, consent-these are the essential elements,
but knowledge does not invariably imply appreciation, and both
together are not necessarily equivalent to consent.”
[21]
In
Van
Devents v Botha
[2]
the court confirmed the principles of
actio
de pauperi
and
the following was said:
1.
That the ownership of the dog vested
in the respondent at the time the damage was inflicted;
2.
The dogs was a domesticated animal;
3.
That the dog acted contrary to the
nature of domesticated animals and in particular fogs; and
4.
That the conduct of the dog caused
the appellant’s damage.
[22]
In the event that the animal did not act
contra
naturam sin generis
the
action
de pauperi
will not be available
against the defendant who is the owner of the animal. In this
instance the plaintiff will then have to rely
on the negligence of
the owner in terms of
lex acquilia
.
[23]
Counsel for the Plaintiff referred me to the case of
Van
Meyeren v Cloete
[3]
where Wallis JA quoted with approval the Judgment of Innes CJ
in
O Callaghan Nor v Chaplin 1927 AD310
where the law was summarised as follows: “
By
our law, therefore, the owner of a dog, that provoked the attack nor
by his negligence contributed to his own injury, is liable,
as owner
to make good the resulting damage. The same principle applies to
injuries inflicted by a dog on another animal, and to
injuries
inflicted by any animals falling within the operation of the law. It
is confirmed of course to cases where liability is
based upon
ownership alone, actions may be founded under appropriate
circumstances on culpa, and they will be governed by the ordinary
rules regulating Aquilian procedure.”
[24]
Counsel for the defendant relied heavily on
Van
Meyeren v Cloete
[4]
where
Wallis JA endorsed the principle laid down in
O’Callaghan
NO v Chaplin
[5]
and
the following passage by Innes CJ was quoted:
“
By
our law therefore,the owner of a dog, that attacks a person who was
lawfully at the place where he was injured, is liable, as
owner,to
make goodthe resulting damge. The same principle applies to injuries
inflicted by a dog on another animal, and to injuries
inflicted by
any animals falling within the operation of the pauperian law. It is
confined of course to cases where liability is
based upon ownership
alone. Actions may be founded under appropriate circumstances on
culpa, and they will be governed by the ordinary
rules regulating
Aquilian procedure. The conclusion is satisfactory for two reasons
especially. In the first place it provides
a remedy in case where
otherwise persons injured would be remediless. Instances must occur
where a dog, a bull or other domesticated
animal inficts damage under
circumstances which make it impossible to bring home negligence to
the owner. Yet of two such persons
it is right for the owner, and not
the innocent sufferer, should bear the loss. And in the second place
the adoption of culpa as
the sole basis of liability would inevitably
led ustowards the scienter test….which it is common cause is
not the test which
our law applies in cases of this kind.”
[25]
in paragraph 37 of
Van Meyeren
,
supra
, Wallis JA goes
further and says the following;
“
where
the actions of the victim or third parties are held to exonerate the
owner of an animal from pauperian liability, it is because
those
actions directly caused the incident in which the victim was harmed
in the circumstances where the owner could not prevent
that harm from
occurring. That is why provocation of the animal by the victim or a
third party exonerates the owner.
[26]
The defendant contends that the plaintiff entered the territory of
the dogs and thereby provoking them. This argument cannot
hold
because I accept the plaintiff’s version that she was called by
Mitchel who told her that her father wanted both of
them to fetch the
puppies and show them to the potential buyer. I reiterate that if
Mitchel’s version were to be accepted,namely
that after she
received a phone call from her father she did not inform the
plaintiff about their conversation, then the plaintiff
could not have
known that puppies were to be fetched. I cannot therefore find that
the plaintiff provoked the dogs prompting them
to attack her causing
her injuries.
[27]
I accept that by calling the plaintiff to come and help her fetch the
puppies Mitchel was negligent. Further, by asking Mitcel
to fetch the
puppies, knowing that the dogs are dangerous the defendant was also
negligent. Consequently, the negligence by both
Mitchel and the
defendant caused the dogs to harm the plaintiff. Further, I am
satisfied that the defendant’s dogs acted
contrary to the
normal behaviour of domesticated animals. The defendant is therefore
lible to compensate the plainfiff for the
dmages suffered as a result
of her being attacked and injured by the defendant’s Rottweiler
dogs.
ORDER
[
28]
In the result I make the following order:
(a)
The defendant is liable to pay 100% of the
plaintiff’s agreed or proven damages as a result of the
injuries she sustained
on 22 August 2014 after she was bitten by the
defendant’s dogs.
(b)
The defendant is ordered to pay costs on
party and party scale.
Kganki
Phahlamohlaka
Acting
Judge of the High Court,
Gaueteng
Division, Pretoria
JUDGMENT
RESERVED ON:11 February 2022
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF: Adv S Cilliers
FOR
THE DEFENDANT: Adv JHF Le Roux
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 18 May 2022
[1]
1904
TS 340
at344
[2]
(152/2014)
[2019] ZAFHC 110
[3]
(636/2019)
[2020] ZASCA 100
[4]
2021
(1) SA 59
(SCA)
[5]
1927
AD 3100
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