Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 914South Africa
Naicker v Road Accident Fund (A282/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 914 (23 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 November 2011
Headnotes
it is undesirable for this Court to second-guess the well-reasoned factual findings of the trial court. Only under certain circumstances may an appellate court interfere with the factual findings of a trial court. What constitute those circumstances are a demonstrable and material misdirection and a finding that is clearly wrong. Otherwise, trial courts are best placed to make factual findings.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Naicker v Road Accident Fund (A282/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 914 (23 November 2022)
Naicker v Road Accident Fund (A282/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 914 (23 November 2022)
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sino date 23 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No:
A282/2018
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
Date:
23 NOVEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
NARAINSAMY
NAICKER
Appellant
And
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER
J:
1]
On 1 June 2005 the appellant
[1]
was injured in a motor vehicle collision opposite the Springbok Farm
Stall, Gonubie, Eastern Cape. When his motor vehicle collided
with a
truck driven by the insured driver. The plaintiff was the driver of
his own vehicle.
2]
The plaintiff sustained numerous injuries and sued the defendant (the
RAF) for
damages. At the trial, merits and quantum were separated in
terms of Rule 33(4) and the trial proceeded on the issue of liability
only.
3]
Only two witnesses gave evidence – the appellant and the
insured driver.
Judgment was handed down on 1 November 2011 in which
the court
a quo
found that the appellant had failed to
discharge his onus of proving, on a balance of probabilities, that
the insured driver drove
his vehicle in a negligent manner.
Consequently, the appellant’s claim was dismissed with costs.
4]
It is against this finding that this appeal lies.
THE
TEST
5]
“
[147] ... It must accordingly be borne in mind that the
test for permissible interference by a court of appeal with a trial
court’s
factual findings imposes a high threshold. It is, of
course, trite that the powers of a court of appeal factual findings
are limited.
There must be demonstrable and material misdirection by
the trial court before a court of appeal will interfere.
[148]
In Mashongwa, it was unanimously held that it is undesirable for this
Court to second-guess the well-reasoned factual findings
of the trial
court. Only under certain circumstances may an appellate court
interfere with the factual findings of a trial court.
What constitute
those circumstances are a demonstrable and material misdirection and
a finding that is clearly wrong. Otherwise,
trial courts are best
placed to make factual findings.
[149]
This Court has also explained that the principle that an appellate
court will not ordinarily interfere with a factual finding
by a trial
court is recognition of the advantages that the trial court enjoys
that the appellate court does not. These advantages
flow from
observing and hearing witnesses as opposed to reading “the cold
printed word”, the main advantage being the
opportunity to
observe the demeanour of the witnesses. But this rule of practice
should not be used to “tie the hands of
appellate courts”.
It should be used to assist, and not to hamper, an appellate court to
do justice to the case before it.
Thus, where there is misdirection
on the facts by the trial court, the appellate court is entitled to
disregard the findings on
facts and come to its own conclusion on the
facts as they appear on the record. Similarly, where the appellate
court is convinced
that the conclusion reached by the trial court is
clearly wrong, it will reverse it.”
[2]
CONDONATION
6]
Before the appeal may be considered, the appellant has applied for
condonation
for his failure to prosecute the appeal within the time
frames set out in Rule 49. This is so because of the inordinate
delays
his attorney experienced in obtaining a copy of the
transcribed record
[3]
, and also
because the appellant had issues with placing his attorneys in funds
in order to prosecute this appeal. The appeal is
not opposed. I am of
the view that the explanation provided is sufficient and there are
also good prospects of success on appeal
[4]
and therefore condonation is granted.
THE
MERITS
7]
According to the appellant, he was travelling from Mulberry, East
London to Durban
in a Mercedez-Benz Vito motor vehicle with his
cousin, his father and his daughter. He was on his way to Gonube to
collect a package
for a friend which he would then leave in Durban.
8]
The road is a tarred, single carriage-way in both directions with a
gravel verge.
The speed limit was 80kmph and his evidence was that it
was approximately 06h30, a clear day and he was travelling at 50 or
60kmph.
He also testified that the road was busy in both directions
as it was peak hour.
9]
As he was travelling towards Gonube, he saw a yellow construction
vehicle (the
truck)
[5]
in front
of him but to his left travelling on the gravel verge in the same
direction. His evidence was that he noticed it when
he was about 1km
away and then when he was about 2 car lengths from the truck,
opposite the Springbok Farm Stall, the truck moved
into his direct
path in the road. It had no indicator on and it came to a stop to
turn right into the Springbok Farm Stall. The
appellant’s
evidence was that he was unable to veer to the right because of the
oncoming traffic in the opposite direction,
and he was also unable to
veer to the left – his evidence was that there were vehicles
“
coming
and going”
in all lanes. He tried to apply his brakes but he collided with the
insured driver’s truck. The more prominent damage was
to the
front driver’s side of his vehicle.
10]
The insured driver’s version is that he had thoroughly checked
his truck before embarking
on his journey and that everything was in
working order. He was travelling on the same road as the appellant
but had been stopped
(with his indicator on) opposite Springbok Farm
Stall for 5-7 minutes in order to execute a u-turn. He had to stop
because the
flow of traffic in the opposite direction was heavy at
that time of the morning, it being peak-hour traffic. The next he
felt a
collision at the back of his truck. When he went to check, he
saw that the appellant’s vehicle had collided with his truck.
His version was also that the was enough space on the gravel verge
for the appellant to have safely passed him –the inference
being that the appellant failed to keep a proper look-out.
THE
JUDGMENT
11]
The court
a quo
correctly found that the versions of the two
parties are mutually destructive and that the test is therefore
whether, on a preponderance
of probabilities, the plaintiff has
satisfied the court that his version is true and accurate and
acceptable, and that the defendant’s
version is therefore false
or mistaken and falls to be rejected.
12]
“
In
deciding whether that evidence is true or not the court will weigh up
and test the plaintiff’s allegations against the
general
probabilities. The estimate of the credibility of a witness will
therefore be inextricably bound up with a consideration
of the
probabilities of the case, if the balance of probabilities favours
the plaintiff, then the court will accept his version
as being
probably true. If however the probabilities are evenly balanced in
the sense that they do not favour the plaintiff’s
case any more
than they do the defendant, the plaintiff can only succeed if the
court nevertheless believes him and is satisfied
that his evidence is
true and that the defendant’s version is false.”
[6]
13]
In
Stellenbosch
Famers Winery Group Ltd and ANOTHER V Martell Cie and Others
[7]
,
the
test was articulated thus:
“
The
technique generally employed by courts in resolving factual disputes
of this nature may be conveniently summarised as follows.
To come to
a conclusion on the disputed issues the court must make findings on
(a) the credibility of the various factual witnesses;
(b) their
reliability; and (c) the probabilities…As to (c), this
necessitates an analysis and evaluation of the probability
or
improbability of each party’s version on each of the disputed
issues…”
14]
In applying the above principles, the court
a quo
found the
following:
14.1
that the version presented by the insured driver was believable in
that he seemed to be meticulous in giving the details
pre- and post-
accident right up to the point of impact;
14.2
the insured driver’s version is corroborated by the appellant’s
version that the morning traffic from the
opposite direction was
heavy just before the collision; which supports the former’s
version as to why he was stationary for
5-7 minutes opposite the
Springbok Farm Stall;
14.3
that, as a result, the insured driver’s vehicle could not have
been in motion as he would have collided with the
heavy oncoming
traffic;
14.4
that the appellant attempted to bolster his evidence by presenting a
sketch plan to depict the scene immediately prior
to the collision
which shows the truck virtually at right angles to the appellant’s
vehicle, and with its front standing
across the centre line –
but when asked how this could be so in light of the oncoming traffic,
the appellant could not explain;
14.5
that the appellant’s vehicle is (according to the sketch plan)
standing on the left lane facing east yet the appellant’s
version is that he applied his brakes and tried to swerve. But had he
actually have done so, his vehicle would be skewed toward
the left
and he had no satisfactory explanation for this;
14.6
he failed to call any witness, despite the fact that there were other
passengers in his vehicle;
14.7
if the appellant was travelling at 50kmph, he would have been able to
swerve out of harm’s way;
14.8
that the damage to his vehicle was “massive” and his
injuries and the fact that he was found slumped over
his steering
wheel shows that the he was travelling much faster than he admitted
to.
15]
Accordingly, the court
a quo
found that a) the appellant had
acted negligently and b) that his version that the insured driver was
travelling on the shoulder
of the road just before the collision was
“
nothing but a figment of his imagination”
and he
was trying to create an opportunity to impute culpability on the part
of the insured driver, and c) this was a classic rear-end
collision
caused solely by the appellant’s negligence.
16]
The appellant’s claim was consequently dismissed with costs.
THE
APPEAL
17]
I am of the view that the court
a quo
erred in the above
analysis and conclusion as:
17.1
the appellant’s version - that the truck was travelling on the
left hand gravel verge in front of him and when
he was about 2 car
lengths away it moved suddenly into his lane without any indication
and stopped to turn into Sprinkbok Farm
Stall - should be accepted;
17.2
the appellant attempted to apply his brakes but was too late. In any
event, and as counsel submitted, being 2 cars lengths
away from the
truck would have given the appellant a split second in which to
successfully either swerve or apply his brakes –
neither of
which is feasible in the circumstances;
17.3
the photographs bear out the evidence that the appellant’s
vehicle sustained damage across the front with the worst
of that on
the front driver’s side;
17.4
the likelihood is that if the truck had indeed been standing for 5-7
min waiting to turn right, cars would have been
dammed up behind it
(or passing it on the gravel verge) given the fact that it was early
morning peak traffic on a busy road –
there was no such
evidence;
17.5
had the insured driver been stationary for 5-7 minutes, and given the
fact that it is common cause that there were no
other vehicles in
front of the appellant other than the truck, it is highly unlikely
that the appellant would not have seen the
stationary truck as he was
approaching it;
17.6
the common cause evidence was that the truck had stopped on the white
line of the lane in which both it and appellant
were travelling –
this lends credence to the appellant’s version as to where the
truck was stopped in the road.
18]
Whilst I agree that the appellant’s evidence was not
satisfactory in all respects
(for example the sketch plan), in my
view the objective evidence, such as the photographs, and the common
cause facts, tip the
probabilities in the appellant’s favour.
Furthermore, I disagree that the failure to call corroborating
witnesses was either
fatal to, or a factor against, the success of
the appellant’s case.
[8]
19]
I therefore find that the appellant’s evidence that the truck
suddenly moved across
his path from the gravel verge approximately 2
cars lengths away from him, and that it came to a stop at the white
line in an attempt
to turn right into Springbok Farm Stall, is the
more probable version.
20]
I am therefore of the view that the appeal should succeed.
THE
ORDER
21]
The order that is made is the following:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The order of the court a quo is set aside and replaced with the
following:
“
1.
The defendant is ordered to pay 100% of the plaintiff’s proven
or agreed damages
arising from the collision of 1 June 2005.”
B
NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
C
SARDIWALLA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
agree
D
MALUNGANA
ACTING
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 23 November 2022.
Appearances:
For
the Appellant :
Adv HA de Beer SC
Instructed
by
: Shireen Amod
and Company
For
the Respondent
:
No appearance
Date
of hearing :16
November 2022
[1]
Who
was the plaintiff a quo
[2]
South
African Human Rights Commission obo Jewish Board of Deputies v
Masuku and Another 2022 (4) SA 1 (CC)
[3]
Unitrans
Fuel and Chemical (Pty) Ltd v Dove-Co Carriers CC
2010 (5) SA 340
(GSJ) at par 28 – although there is no application to compel
the record
in
casu
,
I am satisfied that the appellant’s attorney did all he could
to ensure timeous receipt of the transcript
[4]
Immelman
v Loubser
1974 (3) SA 816
(A)
[5]
A
7 tonne truck – it’s a “tipper truck”
[6]
National
Employees General Insurance Co. Ltd v Jagers
1984 (4) SA 437
€
at 440E-G
[7]
2003
(1) SA 11
(SCA) at 14I – 15E
[8]
Pexmart
CC and Others v Home Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another
2019 (3) SA
117
(SCA)
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