Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 618South Africa
Mdunjana v Road Accident Fund (52582/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 618 (18 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
18 August 2022
Headnotes
in Road Accident Fund v Mdeyide[4]: ‘[50] There is therefore a clear reason for the difference between the Prescription Act and the RAF Act. The Prescription Act regulates the prescription of claims in general, and the RAF Act is tailored for the specific area it deals with, namely claims for compensation
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mdunjana v Road Accident Fund (52582/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 618 (18 August 2022)
Mdunjana v Road Accident Fund (52582/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 618 (18 August 2022)
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sino date 18 August 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No. 52582 /2020
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED No
18 AUGUST 2022
In the matter between:
MDUNJANA,
SE
PLAINTIFF
And
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT
MILLAR J
1.
The
present matter was set down for hearing for trial on 12 August 2022.
When the matter was called, I was informed by counsel
that the
parties had agreed that the defendant’s special plea of
prescription should be heard first and subject to my finding
on the
special plea, the issues of liability and the quantum of damages
separated
[1]
in terms of Rule 33(4) of the uniform rules of Court with the issue
of liability to then proceed.
2.
After hearing the arguments, in regard to
the special plea, I dismissed the special plea with costs. I
then sought clarity
from counsel for the defendant in regard to
whether the defendant would be leading any evidence in regard to the
issue of liability
or wished to test the version of the plaintiff, as
contained in the affidavit that he had already submitted to the
defendant when
the claim had been filed. I was informed by
counsel that the defendant had no evidence whatsoever and did not
intend to test
the evidence of the plaintiff at all in regard to how
the collision had occurred.
3.
After a short adjournment, counsel for the
parties then presented me with 2 draft orders, the 1
st
relating to the dismissal of the special plea and the 2
nd
relating to an agreement that had been reached between the parties
inter alia in regard to the separation of issues as well as
a
concession of liability. Both orders were made orders of court
and marked “X1” and “X2” respectively.
4.
At the conclusion of the matter, counsel
for the plaintiff indicated that the issues surrounding the special
plea of prescription
were of importance and requested reasons for my
decision. These then are the reasons.
5.
The facts upon which the special plea is
based are common cause and not contentious. The special plea in
regard to prescription
was framed as follows:
‘
1.
The plaintiff’s claim against the defendant is governed by the
provisions of the Road Accident
Fund Act, Act 56 of 1996, as amended
by Act 19 of 2005 and its Regulations.
2.
The alleged accident occurred on 4 April 2018. The claim was
lodged on 3 June 2020.
3.
The alleged insured driver is unidentified. Hence the claim
should have been lodged
on or before 3 April 2020, within the
required two-year period.
4.
Under the circumstances as mentioned above, the Plaintiff’s
claim has become prescribed’.
6.
It is a matter of public record and common
cause between the parties that from midnight on 26 March 2020 and in
terms of the
Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002
and its Regulations,
the Republic was placed in national lockdown in terms of which all
non-essential services were required to
be suspended and a curfew
imposed. The initial level of the lockdown was on alert level 5.
This level of the lockdown persisted
until 30 April 2020.
7.
The alert level was adjusted to level 4
from 1 May 2020, and this persisted until 31 May 2020. It is
further common cause
that the offices of the defendant, as well as
other non-essential services, were closed to the public throughout
the entirety of
alert level 5 and alert level 4 for the period 27
March 2020 until 31 May 2020.
8.
The argument advanced in support of the
special plea was that since the provisions of the Road Accident Fund
Act did not permit
the granting of an extension of the prescriptive
period for lodging of claims, any claim not lodged timeously, and in
particular
the plaintiff’s claim in the present matter, had
become prescribed and unenforceable. This was predicated upon
Section 17(1)(b) read together with Regulation
2(1)(a) which provides that a claim in respect of an unidentified
owner or driver
of a motor vehicle must be sent or delivered within
two years from the date upon which the cause of action arose.
9.
This was the sole argument advanced by the
Defendant.
10.
Two factors prevented the plaintiff from
delivering his claim timeously, at the latest by 3 April 2020. The
first was as a result
of the operation of law and the second, a
consequence of the first, that the defendants’ offices were
closed throughout the
period to members of the public.
11.
The
effect of these two factors impacted not only persons in the position
of the plaintiff but also those wishing to file claims
in respect of
which the drivers or owners of the offending vehicles were identified
– claims in terms of section 17(1)(a)
of the Act and also those
who wished to serve summonses within the 5 year period as provided
for in section 23(3)
[2]
.
12.
It
was not argued and there was no evidence put before me to indicate
that the Defendant implemented or attempted to implement any
mitigatory measure which would have facilitated its continued ability
to receive claims, whether by electronic or other means which
would
not have resulted in a breach of the applicable lock down level and
its Regulations
[3]
.
13.
While ordinarily and in circumstances such
as occurred during the period of lockdown levels 4 and 5, the
provisions of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
would operate to extend
the applicable time periods generally in respect of the enforcement
of debts. This however offers no succour
to persons with claims
against the RAF.
14.
It
was held in Road Accident Fund v Mdeyide
[4]
:
‘
[50]
There is therefore a clear reason for the difference between the
Prescription Act and
the RAF Act. The
Prescription Act regulates
the
prescription of claims in general, and the RAF Act is tailored for
the specific area it deals with, namely claims for compensation
against the Fund for those injured in road accidents. The legislature
enacted the RAF Act – and included provisions dealing
with
prescription in it – for the very reason that the
Prescription
Act was
not regarded as appropriate for this area.’
15.
However,
the fact that the
Prescription Act finds
no application in respect of
claims against the RAF is not dispositive of the matter. The
Constitutional Court was confronted with
such a situation in Van Zyl
NO v Road Accident Fund
[5]
.
16.
This
case concerned a claim brought by a curator on behalf of a mentally
incapacitated person who did not fall into one of the two
exceptions
which cater for the delay in the running of prescription against such
persons in
section 23(2)(b)
and (c)
[6]
of the RAF Act. The majority found that the maxim
lex
non cogit ad impossibilia
was of application in the circumstances.
17.
In
this regard, it was held
[7]
that:
“
[51]
The impossibility principle was recognised, in this court and others,
as the route to take to excuse noncompliance with
the impossible. Its
acceptance in South Africa is not at issue, only its status and
whether it can be successfully and implicitly
excluded by s 23(1) of
the RAF Act. Before we can delve any further, we are enjoined to
consider whether the impossibility principle
is distinguishable from
'any law'.
[52] The
impossibility principle originates as a rule of natural law and
justice. Of natural justice, Finnis writes:
'Principles
of this sort would hold good, as principles, however extensively they
were overlooked, misapplied, or defied in practical
thinking, and
however little they were recognised by those who reflectively
theorise about human thinking. That is to say, they
would hold good
just as mathematical principles of accounting hold good even when, as
in the medieval banking community, they are
unknown or
misunderstood.'
[53]
Grounded in nature, science and reality, the impossibility principle
is an extension of logic. Like Einstein's
laws of gravity and
Pythagoras’ theorem, the impossibility principle enjoys a
natural durability. Fundamental to the impossibility
principle is an
awareness of the human condition, our capacities and, indeed,
possibilities. The impossibility principle flourishes
because it
distinguishes rationality, logic and reasonableness from the
opposite. It extricates what is always reasonable from
what is
reasonable in certain circumstances. Drawing on the writings of
Aquinas, Davitt writes:
'The construction that
a judge will give to a piece of legislation should be guided by
humane discretion, because the best of enactments
cannot possibly
include all the imaginable cases that could arise under it. Hence,
where a literal construction of a statute would
work harsh injustice
in individual cases, the judge's decision should . . . be according
to equity — the intention of the
law.'
[54] For a
law to be applied as law, compliance must be possible. Conversely and
by necessary implication, a law which
is impossible to comply with
cannot be applied as law. It is this which sets the impossibility
principle apart from other principles
of the common law. Finnis
embraced the impossibility principle when he distinguished between
'acts that (always or in particular
circumstances) are reasonable all
things considered impossibility principle when he distinguished
between 'acts that (always or
in particular circumstances) are
reasonable all things considered (and not merely relative to a
particular purpose) and acts that
are unreasonable all things
considered'. The impossibility principle would apply not only to
tasks 'which are absolutely impossible
but tasks which, in the
circumstances, are not reasonably capable of performance'.
[55] This
case is much narrower. It concerns the absolute impossibility to
perform tasks. The impossibility is determined
by objective
conditions, by science, nature and reality. Determining impossibility
in this instance is not an exercise of discretion
informed by
subjective opinions and worldviews. It is this condition that
distinguishes the impossibility principle from 'any law'.
In turn, it
is impossibility that informs incapacity in the context of this
case.”
18.
It
was further held
[8]
that
“
[125]
As it appears in Nichols, the lex non cogit ad impossibilia
maxim is
part of the rule of law, one of the foundational values of our
Constitution. In that way the principle forms part of the
Constitution.
[126] By parity of
reasoning, the maxim equally applies to this matter and, for as long
as the disability arising from Mr Jacobs'
mental condition persisted,
prescription did not begin to run. Under s 23(1), prescription also
did not begin to run against Mr
Jacobs. This is because before the
curatrix was appointed, it was impossible for him to comply with the
section, and upon the appointment
of the curatrix prescription could
not run against him because he was then placed under curatorship in
terms of s 23(2).”
19.
The failure of the Defendant to take any
steps to mitigate, for example by making arrangements for the
electronic submission of
claims or service upon them, the effects of
lockdown levels 4 and 5 meant that for the Plaintiff and indeed
anyone else whose claim
would have become prescribed in the period
starting at midnight on 26 March 2020 and ending on 31 May 2020, even
if they had elected
to breach the lockdown Regulations in order to
ensure that their claim was timeously delivered, would in any event
have found no
one at the offices of the Defendant to receive the
claim.
20.
The plaintiff and indeed every person who
wished to deliver or have documents served upon the RAF during the
period in question
was faced with a true situation of impossibility.
This was not a situation of the plaintiff’s own making, but an
objectively
impossible situation brought about by the confluence of
both the law and the RAF’s closure of its offices without
having
put in place any alternative to physical delivery or service.
21.
It was impossible for the Plaintiff to have
delivered his claim timeously for the reasons set out above. On the
basis that the lockdown
from 27 March 2020 shortened the time within
which the Plaintiff could deliver his claim by 8 days, it is apposite
that the same
period, at the very least, was afforded to him once the
offices of the RAF opened on 1 June 2020 and the impediment to
delivery
of his claim was removed. The claim was indeed delivered
within this period.
22.
It is for the reasons set out above that I
granted the order dismissing the special plea of prescription with
costs.
A MILLAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
12 AUGUST 2022
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ON:
12
AUGUST 2022
REASONS:
18 AUGUST 2022
COUNSEL FOR THE
PLAINTIFF:
ADV
W
BOTHA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
VAN NIEKERK ATTORNEYS INC
REFERENCE:
CVDV/FN2492
COUNSEL FOR THE
DEFENDANT:
ADV T KGOEBANE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
THE STATE ATTORNEY,
PRETORIA
REFERENCE:
RAF2021/3993(560/12878988/321/0)
[1]
The
Defendant in fact raised 3 separate special pleas, 2 in regard to
the plaintiff’s entitlement to claim general damages
and 1 of
prescription. The pleas in regard to the claim for general
damages fall to be decided when the quantum of damages
is heard.
[2]
The
section provides that once a claim has been lodged within the 2- or
3-year period for identified or unidentified claims respectively
then a further period of 3 or 2 years respectively is afforded for
the issue and service of summons before the claim will become
prescribed. The total period in both instances amounts to 5 years
from the date the cause of action arose.
[3]
Section
11(1)(d)
of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
specifically
empowers the board to ‘
approve
internal rules and directions in respect of the management of the
Fund’
.
[4]
2011
(2) SA 26
(CC) at para 50
[5]
2022
(3) SA 45 (CC)
[6]
“
(2)
Prescription of a claim for compensation referred to in subsection
(1) shall not run against-
(a)…
(b)
any person detained as a patient in terms of any mental health
legislation; or
(c)
a person under curatorship.”
[7]
By
Justice Pillay AJ with whom Mogoeng CJ and Khampepe J concurred at
paras [51] – [55] – footnotes omitted. The applicability
of the maxim to circumstances involving prescription was also
approved by the majority in the judgment of Justice Jafta at paras
[114] – [115].
[8]
Van
Zyl supra, The judgment of the majority at paras [125] – [126]
sino noindex
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