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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 Ngobeni obo Phelela (35926/17)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 866 (18 November 2022)
Road Accident Fund v Ngobeni obo Phelela (35926/17)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 866 (18 November 2022)
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sino date 18 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
Number: 35926/17
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTERESTTO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
In
the matter between: -
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
APPLICANT
AND
DHEKISWE
JANET NGOBENI obo PHELELA
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' and or parties representatives by email and by being
uploaded to Caselines. The date and time for the hand down is deemed
on 18 November 2022.
1.
The
woes of the Road Accident Fund ('the RAF'), whether it be financial
or administrative, are well known within the legal fraternity,
and
probably beyond. They are well documented in several cases that have
been handed down in the recent past. Although their exact
details are
irrelevant, they are easily found by way of a cursory search. In this
division, at least, these have also been one
of the reasons for an
entire revamp of the trial practice directives relating to matters in
which the RAF is involved. This particular
matter is symptomatic of
these challenges the RAF has had to contend with recently. They have
blighted the road accident litigation
landscape like the bubonic
plague of old
[1]
and, no doubt
left a trail of destruction in the wake.
2.
The RAF has brought an application in
terms of which it seeks an order rescinding and setting aside part of
a court order granted
against it by this court on 3 August 2020. An
order for general damages was made, as well as one for future loss of
earnings and
earning capacity. It seeks only to rescind that portion
of the order relating to future loss of earnings and earning
capacity.
This particular application includes relief to condone the
fact that it was brought some two years after the judgement. Whether
there was any merit in the application to condone the date on which
this application was launched is debatable, but in order to
deal with
the merits of the application I have decided to accept the request to
condone such conduct. For the reasons which follow,
I dismiss the
application.
3.
The court order was granted by way of a
default judgment
in
respect
of
a claim which was instituted by the respondent ('Ngobeni').
4.
The
application
is
based
upon
the
provisions of
uniform
rule 42
and
section 173
of
the
constitution
of
the
Republic
of
South
Africa,
108
of
1996
('the constitution') and the common law.
5.
The order was granted on 31 July 2020
and Ngobeni was represented by Advocates S Guldenpfennig (SC) and E
de Lange. The order is prefaced by the
customary introduction
that
the presiding judge had read the papers filed of record and had heard
counsel in this regard.
6.
I
deal, briefly, with the history of this matter. The dates to which I
refer appear from Ngobeni's chronology of events filed on
29 August
2022
[2]
•
It
was never contended that this chronology is incorrect.
7.
The collision which gave rise to the
claim happened on 14 June 2015 and a summons
was served on 29 May 2017. The various
trial procedures
took
place and on 12 November 2019 the matter was certified as being ready
for trial and the RAF was directed to file its expert
reports by 28
February
2020.
On 22 April 2020 a pre-trial was held and according to the chronology
of events. There were various attempts by Ngobeni to
the RAF to
request it to participate in the preparation for trial and a
settlement process. These
requests
seemed to have fallen, largely, on barren ground.
8.
The trial date, I was advised was 27
July 2020 and on 30 July the matter was allocated to Justice Baqwa. I
was told, from the bar,
by counsel representing Ngobeni that on that
particular day there was an offer to settle from the RAF which was
rejected.
On
30 July 2020 Ngobeni furnished the RAF with its heads of argument. On
31 July 2020 Justice Baqwa made the order to which I referred
earlier
and in respect of which this application relates. It was in the
absence of the RAF.
9.
Subsequent
to that, there were various requests for payment and certain
undertakings were made by an official from the RAF, Mr Dirk
Laurie
('Laurie'). This was followed by a writ of attachment on the RAF's
Absa bank account
and
two applications for a stay of execution of that process. The second
of which culminated in an order handed down on 11 April
2022 by Judge
Molefe in
terms
of
which,
inter
alia,
the
order
of
Justice
Baqwa
was
suspended
pending the finalisation of a rescission application to be instituted
within 20 days of the date of this order. Paragraph
7 of that order
by Justice Molefe
[3]
indicated
that
'costs
of this
application
are reserved'. I
heard
no argument from either party on this particular aspect, an issue
which also only dawned upon me whilst I was preparing my
judgment and
after I had reserved my judgment. I requested counsel to provide with
a written note on what I should do with the
reserved costs and I have
taken their submissions into account. The costs of that application
will follow this one.
10.
The application for rescission was then
instituted on 10 May 2022.
11.
The founding affidavit of the RAF is
deposed to by Laurie, a person who describes himself as a 'senior
claims handler
in
the employ of' the RAF and the person that was charged with the
administration of this particular
claim.
12.
The affidavit contains very little
issues of fact. This is not a criticism but, essentially, is as a
result of the nature of the
application. It
deals, to a certain extent, with the
role that the RAF plays in South Africa and the reason why the RAF
was unrepresented
at
court on the day of the hearing.
13.
Terse and honest the reasons certainly
are. Probably noble too, it but exacerbates the difficulty of the RAF
in this matter, rather
than ameliorates
it.
14.
The judgments to which I have referred
to earlier, in all probability, have had the effect of courts being
more vigilant
than
ever prior to granting orders,
either
by default or by consent, in matters relating to the RAF. This seems
to me to be conceded by the RAF.
15.
The essence of the RAF's case lies in
paragraphs 13 and 14 of the founding affidavit. They read as follows:
'13.1
As a result of this change of focus, the applicant analysed the costs
associated with having its own panel of attorneys and
found that
these costs were too high and detracted from the main focus and
object of the applicant, to pay for unreasonable compensation
to
victims of motor vehicle accidents.
13.2
In November 2019, the applicant did not
extend the tenure of its panel of attorneys. The strategy
was in line with the policy
of reducing costs so that more
money would be available for
distribution for victims of motor vehicle accidents.
13.3
The policy and strategy were also
implemented with the knowledge that the courts, utilising section 173
of the constitution, had
begun exercising a greater duty in judicial
oversight to ensure that any award was fair and reasonable
and justifiable on the facts.
14.
14.1
The short-term consequence of this
policy and strategy is that the applicant is not represented at
court, should the matter proceed
to litigation. The applicant is
relying upon the judicial oversight of the courts in ensuring that
fair and reasonable compensation
is made.
14.2
Further, the applicant's employees are
not officers of the court and do not have the statutory mandate or
other authority to make
any representation at court.
14.3
The applicant's employees have
approximately 800 active claims each at any given time. These claims
are not limited to the province
in which the employee may find
herself and it is practically impossible for the employees
to attend court proceedings and
simultaneously administer the claims.
14.4
At the time that this matter was heard
the applicant had not yet implemented the system whereby state
attorneys are used for RAF
claims for trials.
14.5
Consequently,
the non-attendance by the applicant at any court proceedings is not
willful
or
an
abuse
of
the
process
nor
is
it
aimed
at
frustrating
the
fair, reasonable, and just settlement of any claim. It is for this
reason that the applicant has paid a portion of the claim,
which was
fair, reasonable and statutorily compliant'
[4]
•
16.
Whilst
I accept the submission by Mr Rip that this matter stands on a
different footing to the matter
of
Zuma
v Secretary of the Judicial Commission
of
Inquiry into allegations of State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in
the public sector including
organs
of state and Others
[5]
in
that the conduct of the RAF was not of a contemptuous
nature,
it seems to me that
on
a proper reading of paragraphs 13 and 14 of the founding affidavit,
nevertheless, leads one to the ineluctable conclusion that
there was
still a deliberate policy decision not to attend court. That
decision, it seems, was not directed at this particular
matter but
rather at matters in general for the reasons dealt with in the
founding affidavit.
17.
Nevertheless, the RAF had decided, for
better or worse, not to attend court and to rely on the judicial
oversight of the courts
to ensure that matters were properly
considered and that considered orders were granted. If that were the
policy, there must be
many matters in this court and, as a matter of
fact, throughout South Africa that have suffered a similar fate as
this one.
18.
During
Mr Rip's argument I asked him what I should make of the judgment
referred to by counsel for Ngobeni. It is a judgment of
the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Lodhi
2 Property Investments
CC
v
Bondev Developments
[6]
where
it is stated:
'A
court which grants a judgment by default like the judgment we are
presently concerned with, does not grant the judgment on the
basis
that the defendant does not have a defence: it grants the judgment on
the basis that the defendant has been notified of the
plaintiff's
claim as required by the Rules, that the defendant, not having given
notice of an intention to defend, is not defending
the matter and
that the plaintiff is in terms of the Rules is entitled to the order
sought.
The
existence or non-existence of a defence on the merits is an
irrelevant consideration and, if subsequently disclosed, cannot
transform a validly obtained judgment into the erroneous judgment'.
19.
Mr
Rip then indicated that this particular judgment has the effect that
the RAF can no longer rely on the provisions of rule 42
and that the
case is now confined to the common law. He invited me, because of the
provisions of section 173 of the constitution,
to extend the common
law, if necessary, in order
to
cater
for
the
particular
exigencies
of
the
RAF
and
the
difficulties
which it was experiencing at that particular time. Upon pressing him
further what exactly he meant in this regard and
whether he contended
that the RAF should be treated differently to other litigants insofar
as applications for rescissions are
concerned, he confirmed that this
was his submission. He conceded that if the RAF were an 'ordinary
litigant'
[7]
,
then
there would be no proper case for a rescission of the judgment.
20.
I cannot find myself to be persuaded by
this submission. Not only am I bound by precedent as to what the
requirements are, at common
law, for rescissions of judgment, in my
view it will also lead to enormous uncertainty if different
requirements exist for rescissions
for different organisations. The
flood gates would open. In my view, the RAF should be treated as
every other litigant. I do not
believe that this matter warrants any
development
of
the common law in this regard to cater for the administrative
challenges the RAF has been confronted with.
21.
Whilst
I prefer not to use the rather strong language in the matter of
The
Road Accident Fund v Joanna Elizabeth McDonnell
[8]
,
granting
a rescission in this matter may
well
encourage the development of an environment
where
the RAF would be less than vigilant in handling the claims which it
receives, and applications for rescission might become
the order of
the day, stretching the scarce legal resources even closer to
breaking point. Whilst I have a measure of sympathy
for
the individual
claims
handlers
at
the RAF, who may
or
may not be blameless in the administrative quagmire the RAF currently
finds itself in, an equally persuasive
consideration
is
that it is also in the interests of justice that the claims of needy
individuals who have a good claim should be finalised swiftly
and
efficiently. Just as it is of the utmost of importance that the RAF,
which deals with public funds, should ensure the proper
expenditure
thereof, it is also of
fundamental
importance
to
the administration of justice that the general public
can
take comfort in the fact that a meritorious
claim
will be efficiently settled and, more importantly, that court orders
properly obtained are obeyed. Any situation which fosters
an
environment that court orders are not to be complied with swiftly
should, for the integrity of the court system and administration
of
justice, be avoided. This is such an instance where it is now the
best part of seven years since the accident, and two years
after the
court order, and the plaintiff has yet to receive payment in full.
22.
I
do
not believe that the RAF, under the common law, has made out a case
for rescission,
I
was
referred
to
the
matter
of
Vilvanathan
and
Another
v
Louw
N.
0.
[9]
which
provides
that:
'The
appellate division and the supreme court of appeal have laid down
that at common law 'it is clear that in principle and in
the
long-standing practice of our courts' that there are two 'essential
elements of sufficient cause' for rescission of a judgment
by
default'. These are -
(i)
that
the
party
seeking
relief
must
present
a
reasonable
and
acceptable
explanation
for his default; and
(ii)
that on the merits (i.e. of the action)
such party has a bona fide defence for which, prima facie, carries a
prospect of success.
Both
of these elements must be present'.
23.
As mentioned earlier, honest and frank
as the explanation might be, it is not, I believe a reasonable and
acceptable explanation.
There is also a part of me that feels
uncomfortable
where
a party has stated, after being aware of the set-down date, that
it
will
leave the matter to the
oversight of the courts later wishes, as it were, to second guess
that oversight. This is more so under
circumstances where on its own
version it contends that the courts are currently more vigilant on
these aspects.
24.
Not only does that have a bearing upon
whether or not the explanation is a reasonable and acceptable one,
but it also in my view
affects the reasonable prospects of success.
On face value, argument was presented to Justice Baqwa
on the
evidence
available
to the court
and
on
that
evidence
an order was granted. For a period of
time some assurances were made by the RAF, represented by Laurie,
that the monies will be
paid, only for there to be a change of heart
a considerable time later. It is this same Laurie that has deposed to
the founding
affidavit in support of the rescission. He has done his
credibility no favours and this places a further question mark on the
prospects
of success.
25.
It is also my view, although I
express no final judgment in this
regard, that the correct procedure would probably have been to appeal
the order of Justice Baqwa.
Mr Rip argued that, because the RAF was
not present in court, an appeal would be the incorrect procedure. I
am not convinced that
this is the correct reasoning. The matter is
clearly a final order. But I mention this only in passing.
26.
I was also urged by counsel for Ngobeni
to award a punitive costs order in this regard because of the conduct
of the RAF and its
officials. It was, indeed, a compelling argument
and I was tempted to do so. In the end I decided, in my discretion,
not to do
so. I
am
mindful
of
the administrative challenges
which
the RAF is currently experiencing and the teething process it is
probably going through in this regard. I will exercise my
discretion
against such an order.
Order
Consequently,
I make the following order:
[27]
The
application
is
dismissed
with
costs,
which,
are
to
include
the
reserved costs of Justice Molefe;
[28]
In
both
such
instances
costs
are
to
be
the
costs
of
two
counsel,
where
so
employed.
REINARD-MlCHAU
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing:
14 November 2022
Date
of judgment: 18
November 2022
Appearance
On
behalf of the Applicants Adv
CM Rip
Instructed
by S
Eloff
Malatji
& Co
Email:
seloff@mcinc.africa
On
behalf of the Respondent Adv
JF Grobler SC
Adv
W Coetzee
Instructed
by Kmalao
Inc.
Email:
kmalaoinc@gmail.com
[1]
To adapt a phrase of Justice Harms in South African Football
Association v Stanton Woodrush (Pty) Ltd tla Stan Smidt Et Sons
and
Another [2002] ZASCA142 para 6
[2]
Caselines reference item 104
[3]
Caselines 003·1 - 4
[4]
I mention that, according to the chronology of events, an interim
payment of R1 000 000.00 had been made
[5]
[2021] ZACC 28
[6]
2007 (6) SA 87
at para 27
[7]
And by that I understood him to mean, someone other than the RAF
which fulfills this particular public role in South African
society;
the proverbial Joe Soap off the street, to borrow a colloquialism
[8]
Western Cape Division, Cape Town, case no 13183/2015
[9]
2010 (5) SA 17
(SCA)
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