Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 760South Africa
Road Accident Fund v D'Alton obo F (86236/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 760 (8 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 October 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Road Accident Fund v D'Alton obo F (86236/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 760 (8 October 2022)
Road Accident Fund v D'Alton obo F (86236/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 760 (8 October 2022)
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sino date 8 October 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 86236/2016
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED.
8
October 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
APPLICANT
/ DEFENDANT
and
ADV
CALYN D’ALTON obo S[....] F[....]
RESPONDENT
/ PLAINTIFF
JUDGMENT
LAZARUS
AJ
1.
This is an application for the
rescission of a judgment granted by Mali J on 10 February 2021
against the Road Accident Fund (“RAF”)
for monies claimed
for the lifelong ongoing support of Miss S[....] F[....].
2.
Miss F[....] is a minor who suffers from
Down Syndrome, a profound mental disability that will require her to
have special care
throughout her life.
3.
The starting point for this judgment is
section 28(2) of the Constitution, which states that a child's best
interests are of paramount
importance in every matter concerning that
child.
FACTUAL
BACKGROUND
4.
Miss F[....]’s mother was killed
in a motor vehicle accident on 4 May 2013. The whereabouts of her
father are unknown. Her
maternal grandmother, Mrs E[....] F[....]
(“the grandmother”) currently takes care of Miss F[....].
The grandmother
appears to be an unsophisticated woman who does not
understand much of the court process.
5.
On 26 November 2014, the grandmother,
acting on behalf of Miss F[....] and on the advice of O Joubert
Attorneys in Pretoria, instituted
an action out of the Gauteng
Division, Pretoria against the applicant for damages for loss of
support (“the Gauteng matter”).
6.
In due course, the parties reached an
agreement insofar as the merits are concerned and a court order
reflecting that the defendant
is 100% liable for the plaintiff’s
proven or agreed damages was duly issued by Ledwaba J on 20 September
2016. All aspects
relating to the quantum were postponed
sine
die
.
7.
Meanwhile, on 7 March 2016, the
grandmother, again acting on behalf of Miss F[....] but this time on
the advice of W.T. Mnqadi &
Associates attorneys in Mthatha,
instituted an action out of the Eastern Cape Local Division, Mthatha
against the applicant for
damages for loss of support (“the
Eastern Cape matter”).
8.
Judgment was apparently granted by the
Eastern Cape Local Division on 24 May 2019 in favour of Miss F[....]
in the amount of R 1
478 840.00 in terms of a settlement reached
between the parties.
I
say “apparently” because only a draft order has been
uploaded onto Caselines, which order has not been signed by a
judge
or stamped by the Registrar. According to the applicant, the amount
of R 1 478 840.00 has already been paid to the grandmother
in terms
of the court order.
9.
Returning to the Gauteng matter, after a
number of thwarted attempts at setting the matter down for trial,
Mali J was finally allocated
to hear the matter on 8 February 2021.
10.
The applicant (as defendant) did not
appoint counsel or an attorney with right of appearance to appear on
that day. Instead, an
employee of the applicant, Ms Rangata (who did
not have right of appearance) was instructed to appear and request a
postponement
of the matter. There is a dispute between the parties as
to whether Ms Rangata actually requested a postponement or not, but
in
any event, Mali J correctly informed Ms Rangata that she was not
entitled to appear as she did not have right of appearance and
was
accordingly only permitted to observe the proceedings.
11.
Mali J stood the matter down until the
following week and the proceedings resumed on 16 February 2021. On
that day, no-one, including
Ms Rangata, appeared for the applicant.
Respondent’s counsel telephoned Ms Rangata, who informed her
that she was too busy
to attend court and that the senior claims
handler had requested Ms Rangata to request respondent’s
counsel to send the applicant
a copy of the court order.
12.
After hearing the respondent’s
counsel, Mali J granted judgment in favour of Miss F[....] in the
amount of R 2 555 199.00
together with certain ancillary relief. Mali
J made provision for the award made in the Eastern Cape matter as
follows:
6.1
The Defendant is ordered to
provide the trustees, Sanlam on/or before 12 March 2021 with proof
that the funds awarded in the Eastern
Cape High Court, Grahamstown
under case number 775/ 2016 have been invested and applied to the
benefit of the minor child, S[....]
F[....].
6.2
Upon receipt of the
aforementioned proof, which shall be to the satisfaction of the
trustees and case manager, the trustees shall
be authorized to set
off that sum against the value of the sum awarded by Mali J.
6.3
Should the Defendant fail to
furnish the trustees with the necessary proof, the full sum, as set
out in paragraph 1.1 hereinabove,
shall be due owing and payable to
the Plaintiff.
REQUIREMENTS
FOR RESCISSION
13.
The applicant applies for rescission on
the basis of the common law, alternatively Rule 42.
14.
Rule 42 is not applicable to the facts
of this case. The purpose of Rule 42 is to correct expeditiously an
obviously wrong judgment
or order. It caters for mistakes in
proceedings, such as the existence of a fact that the judge was not
aware of that would have
changed the judge’s mind about
granting the order if the judge was aware of it. Mali J did not
erroneously grant an order
due to a mistake in proceedings.
15.
A
rescission in terms of the common law requires the demonstration of
good or sufficient cause. This requires meeting three separate
requirements. First, the applicant must provide a reasonable
explanation for the default. Second, the applicant must show that
the
application was made
bona
fide
.
Third, the applicant must demonstrate a
bona
fide
defence,
which
prima
facie
has
some prospects of success.
[1]
To
succeed in an application for rescission, an applicant must satisfy
all three requirements.
16.
In providing a reasonable explanation
for the default, an applicant must demonstrate that the default was
not wilful; i.e., intentional
or deliberate.
APPLICATION
OF THE LAW TO THE FACTS
17.
The applicant admits that by January
2021 it knew the respondent was not interested in further discussions
and was adamant that
the trial proceed in February.
At that point the applicant should have
briefed counsel or an attorney with right of appearance to represent
it in court.
Instead,
it elected to send Ms Rangata to court to request a postponement.
This it did, knowing full well that Ms Rangata did not
have right of
appearance. Ms Rangata also knew full well that she had not yet been
admitted and was thus not entitled to appear
in the High Court. While
it may be excusable for a layman not to know who is and who is not
entitled to appear in the High Court,
the same cannot be said of the
applicant or a person who is about to be admitted as an attorney with
right of appearance –
such as Ms Rangata.
18.
Furthermore, the applicant was well
aware that the respondent was not in agreement with their proposal
that the matter be postponed.
The
applicant must therefore reasonably have known that a substantive
application for postponement would have to be brought and
that it
would need to be argued in court.
19.
But the applicant’s default does
not end there. At the hearing on 8 February 2021, Mali J explained to
Ms Rangata that she
was not entitled to appear as she did not have
right of appearance. Mali J then stood the matter down until the
following week
and the proceedings resumed on 16 February 2021.
20.
The applicant accordingly had a week in
which to brief counsel or an attorney with right of appearance to
attend to the matter when
it resumed on 16 February. The applicant,
however, did not avail itself of this opportunity.
21.
As a result, when the matter resumed on
16 February 2021, there was no appearance for the applicant. The
respondent’s counsel
telephoned Ms Rangata to inquire whether
the applicant was aware that the matter was proceeding on that day.
Ms Rangata responded
that she was too busy to attend court.
22.
It is the response of the applicant’s
senior claims handler that was provided to the respondent’s
counsel, however,
that is the most telling. That response was to
request the respondent’s counsel to send the applicant a copy
of the court
order.
This
response
clearly
indicates
that
the
applicant
was
aware
that
judgment may be granted against it and had reconciled itself to this
eventuality.
23.
I am accordingly of the view that the
applicant was in wilful default of appearance and has no good reason
to offer in explanation.
24.
Since the applicant has not satisfied
the first requirement for rescission, there is no need to consider
the other two requirements.
The application for rescission must be
dismissed.
25.
Returning to the best interests of Miss
F[....], the respondent points out that the expert reports prepared
for the Gauteng matter
more accurately reflect the real cost of
caring for Miss F[....] for the duration of her life than was agreed
upon and made an
order of court in the Eastern Cape matter. The
respondent further points out that Mali J’s provision for the
establishment
of a trust and the appointment of a case manager
provide much more comprehensively for Miss F[....]’s future
care than the
order that was granted by agreement in the Eastern Cape
matter. The applicant presents no evidence as to why the amount
agreed
upon and made an order in the Easter Cape matter is a better
and more accurate amount than that ordered by Mali J in the Gauteng
matter.
The
applicant has no answer to the respondent’s contention that the
difficulties that usually arise when two orders are granted
in
respect of the same cause of action, do not arise in the present
matter as a result of Mali J’s order regarding set-off.
Therefore, even
if
the
applicant
had
demonstrated
good
or
sufficient
cause
for
rescission (which it has not done), there would be no purpose served
by granting a rescission application and referring the
matter back to
the trial court for another trial.
COSTS
26.
Ordinarily costs follow the result.
Since the applicant has not been successful in its application for
rescission, I see no reason
why I should not order costs against the
applicant.
27.
The respondent has prayed for costs on
the attorney and client scale. While there is merit in this request
given the applicant’s
wilful default in regard to appearance at
the trial, the fact that there was a prior judgment given by another
court in respect
of the same parties and the same cause of action,
clouds the culpability of the applicant in the context of the matter
as a whole.
This, in my view, militates against the grant of a
punitive costs order.
ORDER:
The
application for rescission is dismissed with costs.
LAZARUS
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
For
the Applicants: Adv
C. Shongwe
Instructed
by Mashiane,
Moodley & Monama Inc
For
the Respondents: Adv
L. Schreuder
Instructed
by O.
Joubert Attorneys
Date
of hearing: 18
October 2021
Date
of Judgment: 8
October 2022
[1]
Colyn v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003
(6) SA 1
(SCA) at [11].
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