Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 998South Africa
Phangwa v Road Accident Fund (27752/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 998 (16 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Phangwa v Road Accident Fund (27752/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 998 (16 November 2022)
Phangwa v Road Accident Fund (27752/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 998 (16 November 2022)
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sino date 16 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 27752/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
16
November 2022
In
the matter between:
EUNICE
NELISIWE PHANGWA
Plaintiff
and
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND Defendant
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email. The date and time of
hand-down is deemed to
be 10h00 on
16 November 2022
.
JUDGMENT
KHASHANE
MANAMELA, AJ
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The plaintiff, Ms Eunice Nelisiwe
Phangwa, was born on 6 December 1999. Towards the midnight of 16
November 2019 and at or near
Paul Kruger Road, Dersley Park, Springs,
she was involved in a motor vehicle accident. She was a passenger in
the motor vehicle
(‘the insured vehicle’). The driver of
the insured vehicle is said to have lost control and hit a bridge.
The plaintiff
sustained bodily injuries from the accident, including
the following: mild diffuse brain injury and laceration on the
forehead.
Further from the injuries, the plaintiff is said to be
disabled, disfigured and to have suffered pain and suffering due to
the
accident. She suffered loss or damages as a result of the
accident. She blamed the negligent driving of the driver of the
insured
vehicle to have caused the accident.
[2]
On 20 May 2022, the plaintiff caused
summons to be issued against the Road Accident Fund, the defendant,
for compensation in respect
of damages she had suffered, in terms of
the provisions of the
Road Accident Fund Act 56 of 1996
. Her claim is
for compensation with regard to past and future medical and hospital
expenses; future loss of earnings or loss of
earning capacity or
employability, and general damages and it was initially in the amount
of just over R3 million.
[3]
On 24 May 2022, summons was served on
the defendant at the defendant’s principal place of business in
Parktown, Johannesburg,
by the sheriff of this Court. The defendant
had 10 (ten) days from date of summons to deliver a notice of
intention to defend the
plaintiff’s claim in terms of the
Uniform Rules of this Court. My calculation as to when the notice to
defend was due places
it on 7 June 2022. But the defendant did not
serve or file such notice until 29 September 2022, when it served
same on the plaintiff’s
attorneys. This was over 4 (four)
months
after
the
service
of
summons
commencing
the
action
proceedings.
Also,
the
failure
on the defendant’s part was despite the courtesy afforded by
the plaintiff in terms of reminders to the defendant
from the
plaintiff’s attorneys. The plaintiff proceeded to bring an
application for default judgment. A notice of set down
of the
application for default judgment was served on the defendant on 22
August 2022. This was notice to the defendant that the
application is
set down for hearing on 4 October 2022, nearly one and half months
away.
[4]
The matter came before me on 4 October
2022 for purposes of default judgment. Mr T Pilusa appeared on behalf
of the plaintiff. He
informed the Court, among others, that the
defendant had fully (i.e. 100%) conceded issues relating to liability
or merits in respect
of the plaintiff’s claim. Further, he
informed the Court that the matter was proceeding in respect of loss
of income and
general damages. There was nothing about the notice of
intention to defend by the defendant. I reserved this judgment after
oral
submissions by counsel in order to further reflect on the issues
for purposes of default judgment.
# Events
subsequent to reserving judgment
Events
subsequent to reserving judgment
[5]
I was in the process of finally
determining the issues in the matter for purposes of an order or
judgment, when I came across the
notice of intention to defend served
on the plaintiff’s attorneys by the defendant. The notice had
been served on 29 September
2022, three court days before the hearing
of this matter, as aforementioned. I was trawling through the papers
on CaseLines, which
the Court ought not to ordinarily do, searching
for proof of the alleged full concession of liability or the merits
by the defendant,
when I came across the notice to defend attached to
or pasted over one of the correspondences between the parties.
[6]
On 7 November 2022, through my erstwhile
registrar, I caused communication to be directed to the plaintiff’s
attorneys drawing
their attention to the following:
2.1
a notice of intention to defend was
emailed on behalf of the defendant on 29 September 2022 to the
plaintiff’s attorneys.
The defendant subsequently requested
that the matter be removed from the roll and tendered costs.
2.2
the application for default judgment was
pursued on the basis that the defendant was in default of delivery of
notice of intention
to defend.
3.
Kindly submit further submissions as to
why the notice of intention to defend was not uploaded at the proper
place on CaseLines;
why the delivery of same was not disclosed to the
Court either in written or oral submissions and why should the
default judgment
be granted whilst the defendant has indicated that
it wants to defend the matter.
4.
Further, kindly furnish proof of the
defendant’s full admission of liability or concession of
merits, alleged in paragraph
1 of the heads of argument.
5.
The submissions requested above should
be furnished by no later than 14 November 2022.
[7]
On 14 November 2022, again through
erstwhile registrar, I received submissions in
response to the communication above, the
material part of which reads as follows:
3.
The Plaintiff hereby confirms that the
notice of intention to defend was served to the Plaintiff on Friday
of the 29th of September
2022 at or about the time of 18:02.
4.
As the matter was set down for hearing
on the 04th of October 2022 this effectively means that the notice
was served two court days
before date of hearing let alone that the
notice was served at 18H00.
5.
At the time of service, the roll was
already finalised and the matter allocated to a Judge and the
Plaintiff didn’t have the
information of the Judge allocated to
the matter.
6.
As per court directive all documents
must be uploaded on caseline five court days before date of hearing
which in this case the
notice was served out time to upload such
document except with the leave of the court.
7.
The Plaintiff replied to the Defendant’s
email on Saturday the 30th of September 2022…
8.
Parties are liable to serve and file by
uploading their own notices which on caseline.
9.
On the 3rd of October 2022 both parties
agreed that they will address the court in the matter if settlement
is not reached on how
to best dispose matter.
10.
The Plaintiff raised few questions with
the Defendant regarding notice to defend served as it has been a norm
that the Defendant
has been filing their notices on the last hour
just for the matter to be removed from the roll with no intention to
properly defend
or litigating in the matter.
11.
It is common cause that the Defendant
has been using only Plaintiff’s experts’ reports to
settle matters as they have
not been appointing experts to give
deferent opinion, the Plaintiff had served at all the quantum
documents to the Defendant on
17 June 2022…
12.
On the 4th of October 2022 the
Defendant’s Attorney was aware that the matter was on the roll
but opted not to attend court
or address the court, by such conduct
the Defendant didn’t object to the court dealing with the
and further claiming that she was not
properly briefed in the matter, and she was of struggling to get
instructions from the handler…
13.
Considering the late filing of the
notice to the defend the and the failure by the Defendant’s
Attorney to attend court it
became practical impossible for the
Plaintiff’s Attorneys to consult with the Plaintiff’s
Counsel as the court had
already started.
14.
The Plaintiff’s Attorneys only
uploaded the email correspondence just to bring to the attention of
the court what has transpired
not that there was any intention to
mislead the court.
15.
It is the duty and responsibility of
both parties to file and upload their respective notices on caseline
and in this matter it
was the Defendant’s duty to file and
upload its notices on caseline and comply with the directives and
rules of the Honourable
Court.
16.
On the 10th of October the email was
received requesting a copy of the order which is a confirmation that
the Defendant does not
have an issue with the court entertaining
which also confirms that the notice was filed for sake of filing not
that the Defendant
intend defending the matter.
17.
The Plaintiff hereby submit that the
Honourable court can deal with the matter despite the served notice
on grounds that the Defendant
only served the notice for the sake of
complying with the rules not that it had intention to defend the
action and the Defendant
has been served with all the settlement
documents on in June 2022, wherefore the Defendant had all the time
to attend to the matter
however it chose not to.
18.
The Plaintiff further submit that the
court has a duty to curb to any form of a prejudice or delaying
tactics, till to date the
Defendant has not filed the plea which
confirms that it does not have defence.
[8]
To put matters in proper perspective, it
is material that it be mentioned that the submissions above, are by
the plaintiff’s
attorney, Mr KC Mamogobo. To understand the
approach taken by Mr Mamogobo to the issues above one need only look
at paragraph 18
thereof, which audaciously reminds the Court of the
so-called ‘duty to curb to [sic] any form of prejudice or
delaying tactics’.
Nowhere, does Mr Mamogobo refer to the duty
of ultimate disclosure to this Court of all material facts at all
times on his part
as an officer of this Court. He does not even
bother disclosing to the Court whether or not he had instructed
counsel in the matter
of the existence of the notice of intention to
defend. With respect, he cunningly skirts the issue by mentioning
that on 3 October
2022 the plaintiff ‘raised few questions with
the Defendant regarding notice to defend’. But yet ‘the
late filing
of the notice to the defend’ made it practically
impossible for him ‘to consult with the Plaintiff’s
Counsel
as the court had already started’. One wonders why it
was impossible from 29 September 2022 to communicate this simple -
but yet crucial - aspect to counsel, when it was possible for him to
hold conference with functionaries of the defendant about the
notice
to defend and possible settlement of the matter. Further, how would
he have been able to communicate any settlement proposal
received
from the defendant to counsel, if the line of communication between
his office and counsel was non-existent, as he would
like everyone to
believe? With respect, Mr Mamogobo appears to have excuses for his
excuses, including that it was impossible to
upload the notice of
intention to defend at its proper place or conspicuously on
Caselines, but yet it was possible to place the
relevant
correspondences on the same platform on 4 October 2022. This was
possible despite his other assertion that ‘[a]s
per court
directive all documents must be uploaded on caseline five court days
before date of hearing’. There is clearly
no sense of
responsibility displayed here and that is disconcerting coming from
the officer of this Court.
[9]
Viewed objectively, what appears above
may constitute professional conduct worthy of an inquiry by the
professional body to which
the involved professional(s) belong(s).
However, I am swayed by the fact that there is some semblance of
integrity in the fact
that the correspondences to which the notice
was attached were uploaded on CaseLines even though the attention of
the Court was
not drawn to this during the hearing or after judgment
was reserved. Also, there is credence to the assertion that the
defendant
equally had a duty to bring its intention to defend the
matter to the attention of the Court, including by ensuring that the
notice
containing same is properly uploaded on the electronic filing
system (i.e. CaseLines).
[10]
On matters of substance, the plaintiff’s
attorneys begrudge the conduct of the defendant, including generally
in other matters.
It is said that the defendant has the tendency to
file notices to defend belatedly in order to delay judgment or
determination
of the matter whilst not harbouring serious intention
to defend the material matters. But this, in my view, does not
detract from
the need to comply with the practice directives and the
Uniform Rules guiding proceedings before this Court by any litigant,
including
plaintiffs in matters where the Road Accident Fund may be
guilty of the alleged conduct. For the letter and spirit of our law,
as borne in this instance by the rules of practice of this Court, are
very clear in this regard.
[11]
The underlying rule in this matter is
Uniform Rule 19 which reads in the material part:
(1)
Subject to the provisions of section 24 of the Act, the defendant in
every civil action shall be allowed 10 days, after service
of summons
on such defendant, within which to deliver a notice of intention to
defend …
…
(5)
Notwithstanding the provisions of subrules (1) and (2)
a notice of
intention
to defend may be delivered even after expiration of
the period specified in the
summons or the period specified in
subrule (2), before default judgment has been
granted:
Provided that the plaintiff shall be entitled to costs if the notice
of
intention to defend was delivered after the plaintiff had
lodged the application
for judgment by default.
[underlining
added for emphasis]
[12]
And this Court’s Judge President
Revised Practice Directive 1 of 2021 of 8 July 2021 is applicable to
the current circumstances
of this matter, including in the following
part:
Where
the
Defendant
is the RAF and
fails
or refuses to file a notice of intention to defend, a plaintiff must
apply
to the
registrar
for a
date
in the
Special
Interlocutory
Court
in
terms of chapter 8 of this directive, to make
application
to
obtain
a
referral by that court to seek
Judgment
by default as contemplated in Chapter 6 of this directive…
[1]
[and]
…
17.
This chapter requires, from a Plaintiff, full compliance with the
duty of disclosure as would be expected in an
ex
parte
application
and any failure shall imperil an Order being granted and may also
result in punitive costs Orders against practitioners,
a referral of
the infraction to the Legal Practice Council and the professional
representative Societies/Associations.
[2]
[13]
It is clear from both Uniform Rule 19(5)
and the extracts from the Judge President Revised Practice Directive
1 of 2021, appearing
above, that the horse does not bolt, so to
speak, upon failure of a defendant, such as the Road Accident Fund,
to deliver a notice
of intention to defend a claim within the
timeframe stipulated in Uniform Rule 19(1). There is a clear
objective why this is so.
The sword of justice cuts both ways in this
regard in protection of the rights or interests of both the plaintiff
and the defendant.
[14]
Obviously, the plaintiff’s
attorneys must have been aware of the above rule and practice
directives. They should be. It appears
to me – with respect –
that they were holding on hope for a settlement offer from the
defendant, but to no avail. Compliance
or observation of the rules of
practice and ethical considerations, in my respectful view, was not
paramount in their minds. The
correspondences from which the notice
to defend was extracted bear this. But this is not the most
concerning part.
[15]
The prime concern is the non-disclosure
of the notice to defend when the matter was heard by this Court. It
appears that, for some
reason, the plaintiff’s attorney chose
to upload the notice to defend on CaseLines on the date of hearing.
It is not clear
whether this was before, during or after the hearing
on 4 October 2022. But, it appears, when I reviewed the material
filed in
the matter a day or so before the hearing when preparing for
the hearing, there was no indication the action has become defended.
Also, counsel appearing did not mention anything about the notice to
defend. This is not surprising as from his instructing attorney’s
explanation, appearing above, he was not instructed accordingly.
There was no time for this, the attorney has explained.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[16]
But it will simply come to this. Default
judgment cannot be granted in this matter under the current
circumstances. And it will
not be granted. What will be granted is
costs of the application for default judgment up to and including 29
September 2022. One
may imagine a higher sanction than this, but such
may only serve to inadvertently countenance the conduct of the
defendant in this
matter, which is equally deplorable. I say this
whilst considering that the plaintiff’s attorneys - to their
credit - tried
to engage the defendant’s functionaries
beforehand but to no avail. I would have meted out an even stronger
sanction as to
costs against the defendant should the notice to
defend have been disclosed to me when it should have, being at the
hearing of
this matter.
[17]
Therefore, I will grant an order in
terms of which the application for default judgment is removed from
the roll with costs only
up to 29 September 2022. I shall also add to
the order that a copy of the order is to be served upon the defendant
within a prescribed
timeframe and, to avoid doubt, that the
application shall not be brought again without compliance with the
prescripts of the practice
directives. One hopes that the plaintiff’s
legal representatives heed what is stated above and henceforth do
their earnest
to ensure the preservation of ethical practice of the
law and open administration of justice, which everyone should strive
towards.
# Order
Order
[18]
In the premises, I make the order, that:
a)
the application for default judgment is
removed from the roll;
b)
the defendant is liable for costs of the
application for default judgment up to and including 29 September
2022;
c)
the application for default judgment
shall not be enrolled for hearing without compliance with the
practice directives of this Court
and proof of service of the notice
of set down of such application on the defendant, and
e)
a copy of this order shall be served on the defendant within 10 (ten)
days from date hereof.
Khashane
La M. Manamela
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Date
of Hearing:
4 October 2022
Date
of Further Submissions: 14
November 2022
Date
of Judgment: 16
November 2022
Appearances
:
For
the Plaintiff: Mr
T Pilusa
Instructed
by: Mamogobo
Attorneys, Johannesburg
For
the Defendant: No
appearance
[1]
Chapter 3 par 5.5 of the Judge President Revised Practice Directive
1 of 2021 of 8 July 2021.
[2]
Chapter 5 par 17 of the Judge President Revised Practice Directive 1
of 2021 of 8 July 2021.
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