Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 383South Africa
Ras v Road Accident Fund (A156/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 383 (31 May 2022)
Headnotes
a mere two days prior to the trial. The pre-trial minutes expressly states that two vehicles were involved in the “collision”. We now know that there has never been a “collision”. Lastly, the plaintiff testified that there was a pedestrian and that that had caused her to swerve into the right-hand lane. No mention of a pedestrian is made in the particulars of claim nor in the pre-trail minutes. This version only surfaced during her evidence at trial.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ras v Road Accident Fund (A156/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 383 (31 May 2022)
Ras v Road Accident Fund (A156/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 383 (31 May 2022)
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sino date 31 May 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: A156/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
31.05.2022
In
the matter between:
VERONICA
RAS
APPELLANT
V
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
BASSON,
J
[1]
This is an appeal against the whole of the
judgement and order handed down by Ranchod, J on 12 December 2019.
There was no appearance
on behalf of the respondent (the defendant in
the
court a quo
).
For convenience I will refer to the parties as they were in the court
a quo
.
Proceedings
in the court
a quo
[2]
The plaintiff (the appellant in this
application) claims damages for bodily injuries sustained on 29 July
2016 when her motor vehicle
overturned on her way from Centurion to
Krugersdorp in the early hours of the morning. The issue of quantum
was separated from
the liability and the trial proceeded on the
latter issue only.
[3]
Only the plaintiff gave evidence about the
accident in the court
a quo.
The defendant called no witnesses. The plaintiff testified that she
was travelling from Centurion, Pretoria in the direction of
Krugersdorp. At round about 3H00, when she was approaching Diepsloot
and whilst driving in the left lane, someone (a pedestrian)
walked
from her left-hand side towards the right-hand side. She then swerved
into the right lane in order to avoid colliding with
the pedestrian.
She testified that she thereafter remained in the right-hand lane.
When she looked there was a car without lights.
In order to avoid a
collision, she swerved and lost control of her vehicle. She could not
recall what happened after that.
[4]
The court concluded after having considered
the evidence, that the plaintiff failed to prove her case on a
balance of probabilities
and concluded that the
cause
causans
of the accident was when she
swerved to avoid a pedestrian whereafter she lost control of the
vehicle and it overturned. The claim
on the merits was dismissed. It
is against this order that the plaintiff appeals.
[5]
The court
a
quo
was critical of the manner in which
the particulars of claim was formulated. It became apparent to the
court that the pleadings
paid scant attention to the plaintiff’s
basis of her claim. The plaintiff claims in the particulars of claim
that a “
collusion
”
took place which was caused entirely by the negligence of the insured
driver. She pleads in what respects the insured driver
was negligent.
The unknown insured driver: (i) failed to keep a proper lookout for
“
oncoming traffic
”;
(ii) drove at a speed that was “
excessive
in the circumstances
”; (iii)
failed to apply brakes; (iv) failed to keep a proper lookout for
“
oncoming traffic”
;
(v) failed to avoid the collision when, by taking reasonable care,
including but not limited to travelling more slowly, he could
and
should have done so.
[6]
The court
a
quo
was further critical of the
evidence presented by the plaintiff: Firstly, the plaintiff
testified, but only
after
the presiding judge posed questions for clarification to the
plaintiff, that in fact the insured driver drove
in
front of her
in the
same
direction
namely to Krugersdorp. She
herself never testified that she and the insured driver were in fact
travelling in the same direction.
This, the court rightly points out,
is contrary to what she claims in her particulars in claim. There the
plaintiff claims that
the insured driver failed to keep a proper
lookout for “
ongoing traffic
”.
[7]
Secondly, the plaintiff claims in her
particulars of claim that the insured driver failed to apply his
brakes. If the two cars were
in fact travelling in the same
direction, how could she have known that by doing so, the “
collision”
would have been avoided?
[8]
Thirdly, the plaintiff claims that the
insured driver drove at an “
excessive
”
speed, yet in her evidence she was adamant that she was driving
within the speed limit. The court
a quo
rightly points out that, if the insured driver was driving at an
excessive speed he would have been moving away from her, unless
she
was driving faster than the insured driver and caught up with him
rapidly.
[9]
Fourthly, the plaintiff expressly claims in
her particulars of claim that the insured driver failed to avoid a
“
collision
”,
yet no collision took place. In order to overcome this difficulty,
the plaintiff testified that she swerved when she saw
the insured
driver in order to
avoid
a collision whereafter her vehicle overturned. The glaring problem
with this version now tendered in evidence is the fact that
her
particulars of claim refer to a “
collision
”.
This version is also recorded in the minutes of the pre-trial meeting
that was held a mere two days prior to the trial.
The pre-trial
minutes expressly states that two vehicles were involved in the
“
collision”
.
We now know that there has never been a “
collision”
.
Lastly, the plaintiff testified that there was a pedestrian and that
that had caused her to swerve into the right-hand lane. No
mention of
a pedestrian is made in the particulars of claim nor in the pre-trail
minutes. This version only surfaced during her
evidence at trial.
Appellants
submissions
[10]
Before us, counsel on behalf of the
plaintiff submitted that the plaintiff, as a single witness, was a
good witness who did not
contradict herself in any material respects.
It was further submitted that it does not appear from the judgement
that the court
a quo
criticised
the plaintiff’s evidence nor was the finding made that she was
an unsatisfactory or untruthful witness. It was
also not found that
the plaintiff’s version was so improbable that it could not be
accepted.
[11]
This is not a correct assessment of the
court
a quo’s
judgment. The court
a quo
was highly critical of the evidence led by the plaintiff not only
because on the probabilities, her version could not be accepted,
but
also because her version tendered at trial materially departed from
what is pleaded in her particulars of claim. I can find
no reason to
interfere with the court’s assessment of the plaintiff’s
evidence nor with the conclusion reached by the
court
a
quo
that the plaintiff has not proven
her case on a balance of probabilities.
[12]
It
is so that the plaintiff was a single witness. Notwithstanding, it is
trite that she carries the burden of proof of finally satisfying
a
court that she is entitled to succeed in her claim. It does not
follow axiomatically that just because only one version was placed
before the court, the defendant elected not to place contrary
evidence before court, that a court will accept the evidence without
considering the merits and demerits of the evidence tendered by such
a single witness. This is what the court
a
quo
in
the present matter did in evaluating the plaintiff’s evidence.
The court in the well-known decision of
S
v Sauls
,
[1]
explains:
“
There
is no rule of thumb test or formula to apply when it comes to a
consideration of the credibility of the single witness (see
the
remarks of RUMPFF JA in S v Webber
1971
(3) SA 754
(A)
at
758). The trial Judge will weigh his evidence, will consider its
merits and demerits and, having done so, will decide whether
it is
trustworthy and whether, despite the fact that there are shortcomings
or defects or contradictions in the testimony, he is
satisfied that
the truth has been told.
The
cautionary rule referred to by DE VILLIERS JP in 1932 may be a guide
to a right decision but it does not mean
"that
the appeal must succeed if any criticism, however slender, of the
witnesses' evidence were well founded" (Per SCHREINER
JA
in R v Nhlapo (AD 10 November 1952) quoted in R v
Bellingham
1955
(2) SA 566 (A)
at
569). It has been said more than once that the exercise of caution
must not be allowed to displace the exercise of common sense.
”
[13]
I have pointed out in which respects the
evidence of the plaintiff depart from her claims in the particulars
of claim. Most notably
in pleading that there was a “
collision
”
(when in fact no collision occurred); that the insured vehicle did
not keep out a proper lookout for “
oncoming
traffic
” (whereas the two
vehicles were actually travelling in the same direction); and that
the insured vehicle was driving at an
“
excessive
”
speed (which does not tally up with her claim that she was travelling
at normal speed yet she was able to catch up with
the insured
vehicle).
[14]
A
party is bound by its pleadings. The Constitutional Court in
Molusi
and others v Voges NO and others
[2]
stated
that “
[t]he
purpose of pleadings is to define the issues for the other party and
the court. And it is for the court to adjudicate
upon the disputes
and those disputes alone
.”
See
in similar vein:
South
African Police Service v Solidarity obo Barnard
[3]
where
the Constitutional Court highlighted the trite principles applicable
to pleadings:
“
[202]
This is the context in which the question, whether Ms Barnard may
be permitted to raise the new cause of action in this
court, must be
answered. It is a principle of our law that a party must plead its
cause of action in the court of first instance
so as to warn other
parties of the case they have to meet and the relief sought against
them. This is a fundamental principle of
fairness in the conduct of
litigation. It promotes the parties' rights to a fair hearing which
is guaranteed by s 34 of the Constitution.”
[15]
A
litigant is not permitted to plead one case in the pleadings and
another in court. See
Minister
of Safety and Security v Slabbert:
[4]
“
[11]
The purpose of
the pleadings is to define the issues for the other party and the
court. A party has a duty to allege in the pleadings
the material
facts upon which it relies. It is impermissible for a plaintiff to
plead a particular case and seek to establish a
different case at the
trial. It is equally not permissible for the trial court to have
recourse to issues falling outside the pleadings
when deciding a
case."
[16]
It is a trite
principle that a litigant must plead a particular case in the
pleadings and plead the material facts on which it relies
for her
claim. It is not permissible to seek to establish a different case at
trial (except where the pleadings have been amended).
[17]
The plaintiff
in her evidence departed from her pleaded case in material respects.
This, coupled with the inherent probabilities
of the plaintiff’s
evidence resulted in her claim being dismissed. I can find no reason
to interfere with the order made
by the court
a
quo
.
[18]
In the event
the following order is made:
“
The
appeal is dismissed with no order as to costs.”
A.C.
BASSON
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I
agree,
M
KUBUSHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
I
agree,
H
KOOVERJIE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically 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 for
hand-down is deemed to be 31 May 2022.
Date
of hearing
25
May 2022
Appearances
For
the appellant
Adv
JSM Guldenpfennig
Adv
CG Jordaan
Instructed
by
Nel
Van der Merwe Smalman Inc
For
the respondent
No
appearance
[1]
1981
(3) SA 172
(A).
[2]
2016
(3) SA 370
(CC) ad para [28].
[3]
2014
(6) SA 123
(CC) ad para [202].
[4]
2010]
2 All SA 474
(SCA).
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