Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 540South Africa
Road Accident Fund v Plaatjies and Another (72939/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 540 (25 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 July 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPPHC 540
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Road Accident Fund v Plaatjies and Another (72939/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 540 (25 July 2022)
Road Accident Fund v Plaatjies and Another (72939/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 540 (25 July 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2022_540.html
sino date 25 July 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No. 72939/2017
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED NO
25 JULY 2022
In the matter
between:
THE ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
APPLICANT
And
LAUREN
PLAATJIES
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE SHERIFF CAPE TOWN
WEST
SECOND RESPONDENT
IN RE:
LAUREN
PLAATJIES
PLAINTIFF
And
THE ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
MILLAR J
1.
This is an application brought by the Road
Accident Fund (‘RAF’) in order to stay the execution of a
warrant, issued
on 20 June 2022, executed upon its Cape Town offices
by the Second Respondent at the instance of the First Respondent
(‘Ms.
Plaatjies’).
2.
The application was brought as a matter of
urgency, having been issued on 24 June 2022 and subsequently set down
for hearing in
the urgent court on 5 July 2022.
3.
Ms. Plaatjies was injured in a passenger
motor vehicle accident on 6 September 2013. By all accounts the
injuries sustained
by her in the motor vehicle accident were serious
with the RAF having settled with her general damages in the sum of
R650 000.00.
When the matter came before court for the
determination of the claim for loss of income on 12 November 2021,
both Ms. Plaatjies
and the RAF were represented before Court.
Various medico-legal reports had been filed, pertinently reports by
both an Industrial
Psychologist as well as an Actuary by both the RAF
and Ms. Plaatjies.
4.
When the matter was considered by the
Court, it accordingly, although only the reports filed on behalf of
Ms. Plaatjies were confirmed
on oath, did have the benefit of the
report filed on behalf the RAF and also such representations as may
have been advanced by
their representative.
5.
The order granted by the Court on 12
November 2021, besides ordering payment of the agreed general damages
and past medical expenses,
also provided for an award in respect of
loss of earnings in the sum of R4 555 800.00. After
the deduction of an
earlier interim payment, the net amount due to
Ms. Plaatjies in terms of that order is R4 607 641.80.
6.
The order also provides, besides various
provisions relating to costs, that all amounts due to Ms. Plaatjies,
both in respect of
the capital and also in respect of the costs which
were to be taxed, would not fall due for payment before the expiry of
a period
of 180 days from when the amounts became due.
7.
In
the case of the capital, the 180-day period commenced on 13 November
2021 and in respect of the costs would commence the day
after those
costs had been taxed or settled. In both instances, no interest
would accrue in respect of any of the amounts
due before the expiry
of the 180-day period, this notwithstanding the provisions of Section
17(3)(a)
[1]
of the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996 (‘the Act’).
Since the order in this regard is directly in conflict
with the
provisions of the Act and operates solely for the benefit of the RAF,
the ineluctable inference to be drawn, absent the
court’s
reasons, is that argument was presented on behalf of the RAF for the
inclusion of such a provision in the order.
8.
Some 150 days after the granting of the
order and on 29 April 2022, the RAF then submitted a request for
written reasons for the
judgment granted on 12 November 2021.
The request was made in terms of Rule 49(1) of the uniform rules of
court and presumably,
and subsequently confirmed in the present
application, only related to that part of the order that had not been
agreed, as in the
case of loss of income or the issue of the deferred
payment argued on behalf of the RAF and subsequently granted in its
favour.
9.
The Rule provides that when reasons are not
given at the time that a judgement or order is handed down, a written
request can be
made for these within 10 days of the granting of such
judgment or order. It is the case for the RAF that it requested
the
reasons as it intends to apply for leave to appeal in due course
against the judgment granted in respect of loss of earnings.
Understandably, this course of action was adopted, the RAF being
unable, since it was represented at the hearing, to make a case
for
the recission of the judgment.
10.
Having requested the reasons after the
150-day period as I have indicated, the RAF did nothing further.
It allowed the 180-day
period to pass on 28 May 2022 and indeed an
almost further 30 days passed before it took any action.
Notwithstanding non-compliance
with the time period set out in Rule
49(1), the RAF did not bring any application for condonation in terms
of Rule 27 for the late
filing of its request for reasons, seemingly
having taken the view that the request for reasons alone was
sufficient to stay any
further action.
11.
The present application was predicated on 2
main basis – the first being that the prospective application
for leave to appeal
would have prospects of success and secondly,
that if the order staying the execution of the warrant, was not
granted, the RAF
would suffer irreparable harm. I propose
dealing with each of these in turn.
12.
Firstly, the RAF accepts that the court on
12 November 2021 had before it reports of two separate Industrial
Psychologists and Actuaries.
Despite the practice directive in
this division relating to trials of this type, it is common cause
that there were no minutes
prepared setting out the points of
agreement and disagreement between the respective experts in their
fields. Inexplicably
the RAF, in the present application, seeks
to rely only upon the opinion of the experts briefed by it and in
consequence of the
amount of the award state that:
‘
The
Applicant’s and Respondent’s Industrial Psychologist
differ substantially, and it is also noted from the reading
of the
order and cross reference between the amounts ordered for
compensation and the reports of records, it does seem as though,
the
court, in making its order disregarded the reports of the Applicant
and based its judgment and findings solely on the reports
of the
Plaintiff.’
13.
It is the case for the RAF that having
regard to what was said in the report of the Industrial Psychologist
briefed by it and the
reasoning set out in the paragraph quoted
above, form the basis for a ‘
good
reasonable prospect of success which is good in law’.
14.
Before
any application for leave to appeal can be brought, in the first
instance, an application for condonation for the late filing
of the
request for reasons must be brought. If this application is
successful, and thereafter once the reasons are available,
an
application for leave to appeal can be brought. Whether such
application would succeed, would depend on whether or not
another
court ‘would come to a different conclusion.’
[2]
The first basis is entirely speculative, dependant on the bringing,
sequentially of a number of different applications each
of which must
succeed before the next can be brought. To my mind, this does
not establish a basis for the granting of the
relief sought.
15.
Secondly, the RAF asserts that:
‘
28.
The applicant is experiencing
severe financial difficulties that have
been exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic and its dire financial
state is a matter of public
record. The applicants’
liabilities continue to grow under a strained economy it has an
accumulated deficit and actuarial
liability of Billions of Rands.
If the applicant’s finances
are not managed properly, there is a real risk of the of the
applicants’ finances collapsing.
This will undermine the object of the RAF Act and the applicant will
not be able to fulfil its statutory object.
29.
The collapse of the applicant’s
finances and the consequent inability of the applicant to fulfil the
object of the RAF Act,
will threaten the constitutional rights of
person that suffer injuries and death pursuant to the driving of a
motor vehicle, including
their dependants.
The rights of such victims and their dependants in terms of Section
9, 10, 11, and 27 of the Constitution will be violated
or seriously
threatened. The security afforded by claims under the RAF Act
ensures the realisation of most of these rights
in respect of victims
of motor vehicle accidents and their dependants.
30.
. . .
31.
The applicant respects
the obligation it has, to pay claims and legal
costs as determined by the court. This application does not
negate this obligation.
This
application is not motivated by any desire by the applicant to avoid
fulfilling its liabilities as determined by the courts.
It is,
however, motivated by the applicant’s need to be assisted by
the courts to manage and fulfil its object and to pay
and reasonable
compensation, which was determined in a just and equitable manner.
32.
The applicant is acutely aware of
the plight of claimants that have to wait for the claims to be met
.
By corollary, the applicant owes these claimants and the public a
duty not to pay monies in respect of claims where there
is a
well-grounded suspicion of possible overcompensation’.
(My
underlining).
16.
It is self-evident that if the RAF’s
finances are not properly managed, that this will have dire
consequences for it.
This is true of any enterprise. It
is however somewhat opportunistic for the RAF to link the management
of its finances,
something peculiarly within its own knowledge and in
respect of which no evidence was placed before the court, to the
constitutional
rights to equality (Section 9), human dignity (Section
10), right to life (Section 11) and health care, food, water and
social
security (Section 27) guaranteed by the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa 1996.
17.
The RAF legislation was not promulgated as
part of the constitutional imperative for the progressive realization
of rights previously
denied to the vast majority of the people in
South Africa. This legislation has its genesis in legislation
passed in 1942
in order to provide for the payment of compensation to
victims (and their dependants) of wrongful and negligent driving.
The legislation fulfils 2 purposes – firstly, by providing a
central authority which administers the system of Road Accident
Fund
compensation and secondly, collects and pools the contribution
towards the cost of the indemnity from drivers of motor vehicles,
through a fuel levy. The persons who benefit directly from the
indemnity provided by the Road Accident Fund are such drivers
who may
drive negligently.
18.
The legislature recognized that
circumstances may eventuate in which the RAF is unable to pay
compensation to victims of negligent
driving and in such
circumstances, they are not without recourse – Section 21(2)(a)
of the RAF Act specifically provides
that in such circumstances, a
victim would be entitled to prosecute their claim for damages against
either the owner or driver
of a motor vehicle or the employer of the
driver of a motor vehicle who was negligent.
19.
It
is unfortunate that the RAF has taken the view that ‘
This
application is not motivated by any desire by the applicant to avoid
fulfilling its liabilities as determined by the courts.
It is,
however, motivated by the applicant’s need to be assisted by
the courts to manage and fulfil its object and to pay
and reasonable
compensation, which was determined in a just and equitable manner’.
In the first instance, it is one of the most fundamental purposes for
which the RAF was established, for it to ‘
investigate
and settle claims’
[3]
.
The legislation specifically provides that, absent a specific
repudiation of a claim, no litigation may be instituted against
the
RAF before the expiry of 120 days after a claim has been lodged with
it. It is during this period that it is required
to conduct
such investigations as may be required, call for any further
information or documents that may be of assistance and
to then make a
reasonable proposal for settlement. Absent a proactive and
positive engagement by the RAF with a claimant
during the 120-day
period, a claimant is left with no alternative but to exercise their
right to approach the court.
20.
The function of the court is to determine
disputes between claimants and the RAF – it is not to assist
the RAF to ‘
manage and fulfil its
objects and to pay reasonable compensation’
.
The RAF like any other litigant when their matter is before the court
must exercise their rights to dispute any evidence
proferred against
them and to lead any evidence that would advance their case. The
view expressed by the RAF is indicative
of an organization that does
not appear to properly appreciate its statutory mandate or how that
mandate should be discharged in
a constitutionally compliant manner.
It is in effect an abdication of its functions as set out in Section
4(1)(b) of the
Act.
21.
The RAF pays lip service to the plight of
claimants who in consequence of RAF’s failure to properly
discharge its mandate,
have to wait years, in the case of Ms.
Plaatjies some 9 years to be awarded the compensation to which they
are entitled.
Then, only to be subjected to further delays.
22.
The RAF asserts that it:
‘
owes
these claimants and the public a duty not to pay monies in respect of
claims where there is a well-grounded suspicion of overcompensation.’
and
that
‘
The
applicant must ensure that the administration of the Road Accident
Fund Fuel Levy is not spent fruitlessly, irregularly, wastefully
or
dispersed where there is a well-grounded suspicion of possible
overcompensation.’
23.
In the present matter there is simply no
basis for any suspicion – the matter came before court.
The RAF was represented
at the hearing and it had professional
medical opinion available to it at the time of the hearing of the
matter which it was entitled
to place before the court. If it
deliberately chose not to instruct its own medical experts to meet
with their counterparts
and deliberately chose not to lead the
evidence of their own medical experts, then their unhappiness and
dissatisfaction is entirely
of their own creation.
24.
To cast any aspersion upon the judgment of
the court, without first having had sight of the reasons for the
granting of that judgment,
particularly where the RAF was represented
at the hearing, is most unfortunate. It seems in the present
matter to have been
done opportunistically with the sole purpose of
preventing Ms. Plaatjies having the warrant executed as she is
entitled to do.
25.
A consideration of the application as a
whole creates the distinct impression that it has been prepared from
a template and has
been brought as a matter of course for no purpose
other than to delay the execution of the warrant. The RAF
itself concedes
this when it states that:
‘
This
application follows a series of applications lodged by the applicant
against inter alia firms of attorneys who were executing,
and are
seeking to execute, on a daily basis, against the applicant’s
assets, including its bank accounts and which conduct
had virtually
brought the applicant’s business to a standstill and threatened
to destabilize the applicant’s operations.’
26.
The RAF states that the attachment and
removal of its assets would ‘
potentially’
have dire consequences. No
evidence was placed before the court as to the actual consequences
that would eventuate.
27.
On
the day when this application was heard, two other urgent
applications involving the RAF were enrolled for hearing. In
one brought by a claimant who had been unable to obtain payment of an
undisputed judgment and taxed costs for over 2 years, the
RAF paid
the capital of that claim 2 days before the hearing and entered into
an agreement to make payment of the costs –
the agreement was
made an order of court by me.
[4]
In the second matter, the RAF was the applicant as in the
present case – in that matter it too reached an agreement
to
pay – in the second matter
[5]
a warrant of execution had also been served at the same RAF branch.
28.
When the present matter was called, I
enquired from counsel who appeared for the RAF whether or not it was
alleged that the RAF
was in fact unable to satisfy the warrant.
He quite properly conceded that nowhere in the application had the
RAF asserted
that it was unable to satisfy the warrant.
29.
It seems apparent to me that the request
for reasons was delivered for no purpose other than to lay a basis to
attempt to avoid
compliance with the very 180-day provision which the
RAF had itself argued should be included in the order of the Court.
Furthermore, no basis other than a plea ‘
ad
miseracordium’
was laid for the
RAF’s contention that its operations would be brought to a
standstill if the order sought was not granted.
30.
My
impression in the present application, having particular regard to
what was said by the RAF as quoted in paragraph 27 above,
is that the
present application was brought for no other purpose than to make an
example of any legal representative who refuses
to accede to the
demands
[6]
of the RAF, even where their client has a legal right to execute and
for them not to do so may cause unnecessary hardship to their
client. When every legal practitioner is admitted to practice,
they are required to appear before court and to take an oath
in which
they swear that they will uphold the law and will discharge their
functions ‘
without
fear or favour’
.
It is salutary when practitioners discharge their oath and shameful
on the part of the RAF that it would seek to cast this
in a negative
light.
31.
For the reasons set out above, I granted
the order that I did, a copy of which annexed hereto marked “X”.
A MILLAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
5
July 2022
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ON:
5
July 2022
REASONS:
25 July 2022
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT:
ADV. L LEBAKENG
INSTRUCTED
BY: THE
STATE ATTORNEY - PRETORIA
REFERENCE: MR.
L EBAKENG
COUNSEL FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT:
ADV. B GEACH SC
ADV. A
LOUBSCHER
INSTRUCTED
BY:
SAVAGE
JOOSTE & ADAMS
REFERENCE:
MR.
J TERBLANCHE
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG 0IVISION,
PRETORIA)
ON 5 JULY 2022 AT
PRETORIA COURT 6E
BEFORE HIS LORDSHIP MR
JUSTICE MILLAR
In
the matter
between:
Case
No: 72939/2017
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Applicant
and
LAUREN
PLAATJIES
First Respondent
SHERIFF CAPE TOWN
WEST
Second Respondent
URGENT COURT 5 JULY 2022
# 12
DRAFT COURT ORDER
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. The application is
hereby dismissed.
2. The Applicant must pay
the First Respondent's taxed or agreed opposed High Court costs on
the scale as between attorney and cl
ient including the costs of two
counsel and the costs of both instructing and correspondent
attorneys.
BY ORDER,
REGISTRA
For Applicant:
The
State Attorney Mr LEBOGANG A L BAKENG
For First Respondent:
Adv
BP GEACH, SC 083 680 6578
Adv A LAUBSCHER 082 658
4112
[1]
The
section provides that ‘No interest calculated on the amount of
any compensation which a court awards to any third party
by virtue
of the provisions of sub section (1) shall be payable unless 14 days
have elapsed from the date of the court’s
relevant order.’
[2]
Section
17
of the
Superior Courts Act 2013
[3]
Section
4(1)(b) of the RAF Act.
[4]
De
Nysschen, Magda v Road Accident Fund- case number: 79198/18.
[5]
Road
Accident Fund v Adv C Cawood obo Lambrechts, & Another - case
number: 17841/22.
[6]
See
Road Accident Fund v Mcdonnell (13183/2015)
[2022] ZAWCHC 116
and
Road Accident Fund v Mokoena (2473/2019)
[2022] ZAFSHC 172
both of
which would appear to fall into what was characterized as the
‘series’ of applications.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Road Accident Fund v Nthosa Madiba Incorporated and Others (22264/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 314 (26 April 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 314High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Road Accident Fund v D'Alton obo F (86236/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 760 (8 October 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 760High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Road Accident Fund v Van Pittius (99426/15) [2022] ZAGPPHC 363 (26 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 363High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Road Accident Fund v Newnet Properties (Pty) Ltd t/a Sunshine Hospital and Another (6088/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 948; 2023 (5) SA 289 (GP) (6 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 948High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Road Accident Fund v H.W. Theron Inc. Attorneys and Others (30076/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 282 (29 April 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 282High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar