Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 641South Africa
Kruger v Road Accident Fund (27383/2009) [2022] ZAGPPHC 641 (2 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 February 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Kruger v Road Accident Fund (27383/2009) [2022] ZAGPPHC 641 (2 September 2022)
Kruger v Road Accident Fund (27383/2009) [2022] ZAGPPHC 641 (2 September 2022)
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sino date 2 September 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case number:
27383/2009
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
REVISED.
YES
2
September 2022
In the matter between:
P
KRUGER
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Defendant
JUDGMENT –
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
NEUKIRCHER
J
[1]
The
parties are referred to as they were cited
a
quo
to avoid confusion.
[2]
The
judgment and the order were handed down on 14 February 2022. The RAF
delivered its application for Leave to Appeal (LTA) on
6 June 2022,
i.e 22 days late. It was accompanied by an application for
condonation.
[1]
The LTA and the
first application were opposed by the plaintiff who filed an
answering affidavit on 6 June 2022. The RAF then filed
a notice of
intention to amend the grounds of its LTA (the amendment) on 18 July
2022, a replying affidavit and an Application
for Condonation
[2]
for the late replying affidavit, all of which are also opposed by the
plaintiff.
[3]
The
parties were given an opportunity to file Heads of Argument. They not
only filed these, but each also filed Supplementary Heads
of
Argument. All those documents were considered for purposes of whether
to grant or refuse LTA, in addition to the oral argument
presented at
the hearing. The plaintiff’s stance was that he would focus
mainly on the grounds of the LTA, but that he still
opposed both
applications for condonation and the amendment.
[4]
Very
briefly, the amendment pertains to ground 6 of the LTA. In that, the
RAF complained that the court “
erred
in not giving a ruling on nexus and not considering nexus at all.”
Given the content of paragraph 172 of the judgment, this is clearly
incorrect. The amendment seeks to substitute that ground with
one
that the court erred in finding the nexus between the September 2005
accident and the plaintiff’s injuries.
[5]
There
can be no prejudice to the plaintiff were the amendment to be granted
as much of what is argued here is repeated in the other
grounds of
the LTA. The amendment is therefore granted.
RULE 42
[6]
Before
I deal with the condonation and the grounds of appeal there is an
issue pertaining to 2 patent errors in the judgment. I
use the word
“patent” deliberately as counsel for the RAF described
them thus in her argument, but argued that because
of them leave to
appeal should be granted:
7.1
the first is the typographical error which resulted in an award in
paragraph 1 of the judgment
[3]
of R10 561
611
instead
of R10 561
677
.
The arithmetic was explained in paragraph 184 of the judgment but
unfortunately a typographical error crept into the actual order
granted;
7.2
the second is the costs award in paragraph 4
[4]
of the order which
included
the
reserved costs of 29 April 2019 instead of
excluding
them.
It is very clear from paragraph 210 of the judgment that the
intention was to exclude the reserved costs of 29 April 2019
from the
costs of suit awarded to plaintiff.
[7]
These
errors may clearly be corrected in terms of Rule 42 and neither
constitutes a ground of appeal. It will be corrected in the
order I
hand down.
[8]
As
to the condonation: the first application sets out the reasons why
the LTA was late. Inter alia the RAF states:
“
18
This Courts having made such orders it was necessary for the
Applicant to consider the judgment which straddles
about 94 Pages.
This Courts can imagine, the RAF as a juristic entity function
through natural persons and some work from home
and meeting to
discuss this judgment and take legal advice thereafter took some time
more than I anticipated.
19.
Considering the hierarchy and the bureaucratic and red tapes of
public service, all those considerations delayed
the making of a
decision and the taking of instructions by the legal teams involved.
20.
In pursuit of holding a meeting to discuss this matter, the judgment
has to be circulated and various persons
had to study and schedule
meetings thereafter to debate and assess the next step to take and
this occurs in conjunction to obtaining
legal advice on the judgment
and understanding what it really means for the RAF.
21. If
one considers what is stated above, i.e., internal workings of the
RAF the decision to appeal was taken outside
of the 14 – day
period required for the institution of leave to appeal proceedings. I
attach herewith annexure indicating
instructions to counsel to start
with the papers as annexure FA1.
22.
As a result of the delay in decision-making in relation to the leave
to appeal proceedings the institution
of condonation proceedings
became necessary to properly place the leave to appeal before this
Courts and to provide this Court
with sufficient basis to enable you
to exercise the discretion to condone the late filing of the leave to
appeal.
23.
It is common cause that the Applicant is required at the level of law
to ensure that the administration of
its financial affairs is in
order, and this must be viewed in contrast to achieving its object,
which is to fairly compensate the
thousands of victims of road
accidents.
24.
In doing so the Applicant decision sought to be taken, which
inarguably has financial implications, it sensibly
needed to do so
properly and after consultation with everyone obliged to take such a
decision. After I compiled the request for
Approval to Appeal the
Judgment on the 15 March 2022, the judgment was referred to legal for
approval. Approval was granted on
the 30 March 2022.
25.
…
26.
…
27.
The decision to appeal the judgement of her Ladyship Justice
Neukircher was subsequently taken on 30 March
2022. Having taken such
a decision counsel was immediately instructed to prepare leave to
appeal papers and the relevant condonation
for the purposes of
ensuring that the appeal is properly prosecuted.
28.
…
29.
In a nutshell the reason for the delay lies squarely in the
bureaucratic nature of administration of RAF and
because of the
bureaucratic nature of administration within the RAF the decision to
subsequently appeal the judgement was taken
late.”
(sic)
[9]
What
is completely absent from this explanation, is the particularity as
to dates, decisions or persons who took these decisions
or what
occurred between 14 February 2022 until ± 15 March 2022.
[10]
The
second application explains that the replying affidavit was filed
late in circumstances where the answering affidavit to the
condonation application was served on 6 June 2022 and the replying
affidavit only on 21 July 2022. The RAF’s attorney says:
“
5
… having other matters assigned to me on the said date, there
was an oversight on my part
in that in that I unintentionally
neglected to read the answering affidavit and to forward same to my
counsel to attend to. I was
actively attending to other matters
assigned to me for trials and applications between then and the time
I eventually attended
to this matter, which is no excuse in the
circumstances. I consequently forgot about the respondent’s
answering affidavit.
6.
I was reminded of this affidavit when my counsel had phoned me on 13
July 2022 asking for
the Respondent’s answering affidavit. My
counsel Ms Moses only became aware of the respondent’s
answering affidavit
when upon reading the respondent’s heads of
argument for the application for leave to appeal and the condonation
for the
late filing of the application to appeal.”
CONDONATION
[11]
In
Melane
v Santam Insurance Co Ltd
[5]
the
Court in dealing with the issue of whether or not sufficient cause
had been shown for condonation for non-compliance with the
Court
rules of a petition that was late by “several weeks”
stated the following:
“
In
deciding whether sufficient cause has been shown, the basic principle
is that the Court has discretion, to be exercised judicially
upon
consideration of all the facts, and in essence it is a matter of
fairness to both sides. Among the facts usually relevant
are the
degree of lateness, the explanation thereof, the prospect of success,
and the importance of the case. Ordinarily these
factors are
interrelated, they are not individually decisive, for that would be a
piecemeal approach incompatible with a true discretion,
save of
course that if there are no prospects of success there would be no
point in granting condonation. Any attempt to formulate
a rule of
thumb would only serve to harden the arteries of what should be a
flexible discretion. What is needed is an objective
conspectus of all
the facts. Thus a slight delay and good explanation may help to
compensate for prospects of success which are
not strong. Or the
importance of the issue and strong prospects may tend to compensate
for a long delay. And the respondent’s
interest in finality
must not be overlooked…”
[12]
In
Pitje
v Shimbambo and Others
[6]
,
the LTA was filed 7 days late and the applicant raised important
constitutional issues being the right to property, the right
to have
access to adequate housing and not to be evicted from his home
without an order of court made after all relevant circumstances
were
considered. The Constitutional Court found that condonation should be
granted in those circumstances.
[13]
And
in
Turnbull-Jackson
v Hibiscus Coast Municipality
[7]
,
where the record and written submissions were each filed ± 2
weeks late, the court found that the explanation for the delay
was
satisfactory and condoned the late filing of the record but set out
the factors to be considered as follows:
“
[22]
The applicant's counsel takes the blame for the late lodgment
of written submissions. She told the court that she forgot
to
diarise the due date and was only reminded — after the fact —
when the applicant asked for a copy. The municipality
opposed this
application asserting that it had suffered prejudice. It pointed out
that it had to file its argument without the
benefit of seeing the
applicant's. The upshot was that the municipality's argument did not
address that of the applicant. In particular,
the municipality
was in the dark as to the exact nature of the constitutional issue
the applicant was relying on.
[23]
In this court the test for determining whether condonation should be
granted or refused is the interests of justice. Factors
that the
court weighs in that enquiry include: the length of the delay; the
explanation for, or cause of, the delay; the prospects
of success for
the party seeking condonation; the importance of the issues that the
matter raises; the prejudice to the other
party or parties; and
the effect of the delay on the administration of justice. It should
be noted that, although the existence
of prospects of success in
favour of the party seeking condonation is not decisive, it is a
weighty factor in favour of granting
condonation.
[24]
This court has in the past cautioned against non-compliance with its
rules and directions. The words of Bosielo AJ bear repetition:
'I
need to remind practitioners and litigants that the rules and court's
directions serve a necessary purpose. Their primary aim
is to ensure
that the business of our courts is run effectively and efficiently.
Invariably this will lead to the orderly management
of our courts'
rolls, which in turn will bring about the expeditious disposal of
cases in the most cost-effective manner. This
is particularly
important given the ever increasing costs of litigation, which if
left unchecked will make access to justice too
expensive.'
[25]
The explanation given by the applicant's counsel is unsatisfactory.
Where non-compliance with the rules or directions is as
a result of
the fault of a litigant's legal representative, certain
considerations come into the equation. Before I deal with them,
let
me emphasise that an application for condonation is not a mere
formality. This is true whether it is the litigant, the
legal
representative or both who are at fault. The test remains the same:
is it in the interests of justice to grant condonation?
[26]
Courts are reluctant to penalise litigants for the tardiness of their
legal representatives. I do not read this court's pronouncement
in Ferris to say that this long-standing principle no longer
avails. It is more a question of what the facts of a given case
dictate. Courts have made it clear though that in a fitting case
the fault of a legal representative will be imputed to the
litigant.
In the oft-cited decision in Saloojee the Appellate
Division said:
'There
is a limit beyond which a litigant cannot escape the results of
his attorney’s lack of diligence or the insufficiency
of
the explanation tendered. To hold otherwise might have a disastrous
effect upon the observance of the Rules of this Court. .
. . The
attorney, after all, is the representative whom the litigant has
chosen for himself, and there is little reason why, in
regard to
condonation of a failure to comply with a Rule of Court, the litigant
should be absolved from the normal consequences
of such a
relationship . . . .”
[14]
The
RAF has used what it terms the “bureaucratic nature” of
the administration within the RAF and those inefficiencies
as an
excuse to motivate its condonation application. But this is simply an
excuse that has been used constantly in our courts
to excuse the
RAF’s conduct. But it appears that whilst the RAF’s
“bureaucratic administration” is blamed,
what in fact
took place was that a) Mr Pretorius took more than a month to compile
a request to appeal the judgment – no
explanation is given for
why it took from 14 February 2022 until 15 March 2022 to do this; and
b) the RAF then took 11 court days
to approve the filing of the LTA
and thus it is quite clear that, in fact, had the request to file the
LTA been sent at the outset,
it may not even have been necessary to
apply for condonation.
[15]
The
excuse regarding the replying affidavit is no better – that was
filed 6.5 weeks after the answering affidavit was received.
Here the
attorney “forgot” to send the answering affidavit to
counsel and 5 weeks later had to be reminded to do so
on 13 July
2022.
[16]
In
my view, the words of Steyn J in
Saloojee
and Another NNO v Minister of Community Development
[8]
,
as quoted in paragraph 13
[9]
supra, bear particular relevance.
[17]
Furthermore,
the RAF has failed to provide sufficient or satisfactory explanation
for its delay.
[18]
Even
were I persuaded otherwise (after perusing all the papers filed and
after hearing counsel), I am of the view that there are
no prospects
of success on appeal:
19.1 as stated in
the judgment, the issue here is a crisp one and that is whether a
nexus was proven between the 2005 collision
and the plaintiff’s
injuries and sequelae;
19.2 the fact that
several experts testified did not make the matter a complex one;
19.3 there is no
issue of public importance – the fact that the claim is a large
one does not transpose the matter into
one;
19.4 whilst I
accept that the matter is of importance to the RAF the claim amount
on its own does not elevate it to one that
means leave should be
granted;
19.5 all the other
grounds for leave have been addressed in the main judgment and I am
unpersuaded that another court would
come to a different conclusion.
[19]
On
a last aspect, it is important to note that this matter has taken 13
years to finalise and the words of Boiselo AJ (as he then
was) in
Grootboom
v National Prosecuting Authority and Another
[10]
resonate.
[20]
All
these issues being considered I am of the view that, there being no
true reasonable explanation for the delay and the lack of
prospects
of success, leave to appeal should be refused.
The Order
[21]
The
order made is the following:
21.1 The
application for leave to appeal, the application for condonation of
the late filing of the replying affidavit are
all dismissed with
costs, such costs to include (a) the costs occasioned by the
employment of two counsel where so employed and
(b) the costs of the
preparation of heads of argument as directed by the court and (c) the
costs of perusal and consideration of
the application for condonation
for late filing of the replying affidavit, the replying affidavit and
the defendant’s notice
of intention to amend its application
for leave to appeal on the opposed party and party High Court scale;
21.2 In terms of
Rule 42 (1)(b):
21.2.1
paragraph 1 of the order of 14 February 2022 is amended so that
the
amount of R10 561 611 shall read R10 561 677;
21.2.2
the costs order in paragraph 4 of the order of 14 February 2022
is
amended so that the costs the defendant is ordered to pay shall
exclude the reserved costs of 29 April 2019.
B
NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judges whose names are
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 2 September 2022.
Appearances:
For
the Plaintiff
: Adv de Waal SC
Adv
van Wyk
Instructed
by
: Van
der Hoff Inc
For
the Defendant :
Ms Moses
Instructed
by
: State
Attorney, Pretoria
Heard
on
: 22 July 2022
[1]
The
first application
[2]
The
second application
[3]
Under
paragraph 223
[4]
Also
under paragraph 223
[5]
1962
(4) SA 531
(A) at 532 C – F
[6]
2016
(4) BCLR 460 (CC)
[7]
2014
(6) SA 592 (CC)
[8]
1965
(2) SA 135(A)
[9]
Paragraph
26 of the Turnbull-Jackson judgment
[10]
2014
(2) SA 68
(CC) at paragraph 32 in Turnbull-Jackson at paragraph 24
(see paragraph 14 supra)
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