Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 328South Africa
Road Accident Fund v McLachlan N.O (5936/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 328 (1 August 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Practice – Pleadings - Amendment – Withdrawal of an admission — failure to allege and prove bona fides and injustice that cannot be put back for the purposes of justice in the same position as the plaintiff was when the plea sought to be amended was filed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Road Accident Fund v McLachlan N.O (5936/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 328 (1 August 2025)
Road Accident Fund v McLachlan N.O (5936/2021) [2025] ZAWCHC 328 (1 August 2025)
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sino date 1 August 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 5936/2021
In the matter between:
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
Applicant/Defendant
and
ADVOCATE
HENRY GERHARD McLACHLAN N.O
Respondent
/
Plaintiff
In his capacity as
curator ad litem on behalf of
LIEZL
BARKHUIZEN
(“The Patient”)
Neutral
citation:
Road
Accident Fund v McLachlan NO
(Case no
5936/2021)
[2025] ZAWCHC 321
(01-08-2025)
Coram:
NUKU J
Heard
:
17 June 2025
Delivered
:
01 August 2025
Summary:
Practice –
Pleadings - Amendment
–
Withdrawal
of an admission — failure to allege and prove
bona
fides
and injustice that cannot be put back for the purposes of
justice in the same position as the plaintiff was when the plea
sought to be amended was filed.
ORDER
1.
The application for leave to amend the
defendant’s plea is refused.
2.
The defendant is ordered to pay the
plaintiff’s costs of the application. These costs shall include
those arising from the
postponement of the application on 24 April
2025, as well as counsel’s costs, which shall be on Scale “B”.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Nuku J
[1]
This matter arises from a motor vehicle collision that took place on
26 November 2005
(collision), involving a vehicle whose driver or
owner could not be identified and another vehicle driven by Ms.
Liezel Barkhuizen
(the Patient) at the time. As a result of the
collision, the Patient sustained multiple bodily injuries. These
injuries include
memory loss. Consequently, she is being represented
by Advocate HG MacLaghlan, who has been appointed as her curator ad
litem,
to pursue her claim against the defendant.
[2]
The Patient’s claim was submitted to the defendant, and a
summons was issued
because the defendant failed to compensate the
Patient. The plaintiff’s particulars of claim made the
following allegations,
which were admitted by the defendant in its
plea dated 17 May 2022, namely:
‘
On
or about the 26
th
November 2005 and at approximately 02h30 and on Muizenberg Main Road,
Muizenberg, Cape Town, Western Cape, a collision occurred
when a
motor vehicle with an unknown registration number (hereinafter
referred to as “the insured driver”), there and
then
driven by an unknown driver, moved over the solid white line and into
the lane of the motor vehicle with registration number
C[...], there
and then driven by the Patient at the time.’
[3]
The pleadings were closed, after which the registrar of this Court
issued a notice
in terms of rule 37A of the Uniform Rules of Court,
informing the parties’ legal representatives that the matter
had been
scheduled for a pre-trial conference on 6 June 2023 before
Samela J.
[4]
A minute dated 31 May 2023, of a meeting held between the parties'
legal representatives
and presented to Samela, J on 6 June 2023,
records that:
‘
1.
The Defendant has filed a Notice in terms of Rule 28 to amend its
Plea by withdrawing
admissions made in the Plea.
2.
The Plaintiff intends to object to the proposed amendment.
3.
The Defendant will subsequently bring a formal application to the
Court to allow
the proposed amendment.
4.
The parties kindly request the above Honourable Court to postpone the
Rule 37A
Conference for a period of 6 months to allow the Defendant
to bring the Application.’
[5]
The pre-trial conference was postponed at the request of the parties’
legal
representatives. A minute dated 6 November 2023, from a meeting
held between the parties' legal representatives in preparation for
the second pre-trial conference, recorded that the defendant had
failed to apply for an amendment despite the plaintiff’s
objection. It was also noted that the defendant reserved its right to
submit such an application.
[6]
The second pre-trial conference was postponed to 9 May 2024, and on
that date, Samela,
J certified the matter as trial-ready only
regarding the determination of liability (merits).
[7]
The compliance certificate signed by the legal representatives of
both parties, included
among the documents submitted to Samela, J for
consideration regarding whether the matter was trial-ready, records
as one of the
issues not in dispute that:
‘
On
or about the 26
th
November 2005 and at approximately 02h30 and on Muizenberg Main Road,
Muizenberg, Cape Town, Western Cape, a collision occurred
when a
motor vehicle with an unknown registration number (hereinafter
referred to as “the insured driver”), there and
then
driven by an unknown driver, moved over the solid white line and into
the lane of the motor vehicle with registration number
C[...], there
and then driven by the Patient at the time.’
[8]
The compliance certificate also noted that the defendant had no
intention of calling
any witnesses. All of this was recorded despite
the fact that the defendant had sought to amend its plea.
[9]
On 10 June 2024, the registrar of this Court enrolled the matter for
the trial to
commence on 12 November 2024, and the parties’
legal representatives were informed accordingly.
[10]
On 29 October 2024, ten court days before the trial begins, the
defendant’s legal representatives
issued a second notice of
intention to amend. The proposed amendment primarily aimed to achieve
two objectives. Firstly, it was
to withdraw an admission that the
insured motor vehicle had crossed the solid white line into the path
of the vehicle driven by
the Patient when the collision occurred.
Secondly, it was to introduce an allegation that there was no
collision with another vehicle,
but rather that the Patient drove her
motor vehicle into a solid concrete wall.
[11]
The plaintiff objected to the proposed amendment on four grounds. The
first was that the amendment
amounts to a withdrawal of an admission
of fact in circumstances where there are no factual or evidential
bases justifying the
said withdrawal of admission. The second was
that the proposed amendment did not raise a triable issue in light of
the absence
of factual or evidential bases justifying the withdrawal
of admission. The third was that the proposed amendment was highly
prejudicial
to the plaintiff and was not made in good faith. The last
was that the defendant seeks to create a fresh dispute and reopen an
issue that had been compromised between the parties.
[12]
The timing of the filing of the notice of intention to amend meant
that the trial could not proceed
on 12 November 2024. The defendant
delivered its application for leave to amend on 14 November 2024. The
defendant’s attorney,
Mr Craig Ian Hindley (Mr Hindley), who
had been dealing with this matter from inception, deposed to an
affidavit in support of
the application for leave to amend.
[13]
The only averments relevant to the application for leave to amend
that Mr Hindley made are as
follows:
‘
7.
I was instructed to draft the Defendant’s Plea dated 17 May
2022, annexed hereto
as annexure “FA2”, and mistakenly
admitted the contents of paragraphs 5 of the Plaintiff’s
particulars of claim
dated 30 March 2021 annexed hereto as annexure
“FA3”, and in so doing mistakenly admitted that a
collision had occurred
between the motor vehicle which the patient
was driving and an unidentified vehicle which is averred to have
moved over the solid
white line into the lane of travel in which the
patient was travelling.
8.
Defendant’s / Respondent’s instructions were to dispute
the merits
and quantum of the Plaintiff’s claim.
9.
It is clear from paragraph 4.2 of Defendant’s plea that the
Defendant considered
Plaintiff to be the sole cause of the collision.
10.
The admission of paragraph 5 was done in error for which I am
responsible; it is in the
interest of justice that the application
for amendment be granted.
11.
I further state that the Road Accident Fund’s prospects of
success are good if Plaintiff
is called upon to prove the merits of
her case.
12.
I respectfully state that the Road Accident Fund will be severely
prejudiced in the event
of the application for leave to amend
Defendant’s plea not being granted.’
[14]
The plaintiff opposes the application and maintains the grounds of
opposition as outlined above.
Additionally, the defendant was
criticised for failing to explain the circumstances that led to the
alleged error and when Mr Hindley
became aware of it. It was also
stated that the defendant had received a witness statement indicating
that the unidentified motor
vehicle crossed the solid white line, and
that the defendant had not provided the plaintiff with any evidence
to support the new
assertion that the Patient’s motor vehicle
collided, not with another vehicle, but with a wall.
[15]
No replying affidavit was filed on behalf of the defendant, and the
application for leave to
amend was scheduled for hearing on 24 April
2025. The defendant’s legal representatives neither submitted
the practice note
nor the defendant’s heads of argument. This
was despite the plaintiff’s legal representatives forwarding a
draft joint
practice note to the defendant’s legal
representatives for their comments. Even more concerning was Mr
Hindley’s unexplained
absence on 24 April 2025, when the matter
was scheduled to be heard.
[16]
Rather than proceeding without Mr Hindley, the plaintiff’s
legal representatives, who were
prepared to proceed on the day, chose
to have the matter postponed to a date arranged with the defendant’s
legal representatives.
This was to avoid delays that might arise from
obtaining a judgment by default, which could be susceptible to
rescission. The application
was adjourned to 17 June 2025, with costs
reserved for later determination. The defendant’s legal
representatives did not
file the defendant’s heads of argument,
despite this adjournment.
[17]
Despite all the apparent shortcomings regarding the application for
amendment, it was submitted
that the defendant has established a case
for the leave to amend to be granted. The contrary was argued on
behalf of the plaintiff.
Emphasis was placed on the defendant’s
failure to provide an explanation for the alleged error that led to
the admission,
which the defendant now seeks to withdraw. It was also
argued that the prejudice the plaintiff would suffer if the amendment
is
granted, is of a nature that cannot be alleviated by a cost order.
Particular reference was made to the witness who had provided
a
statement setting out how the collision occurred and who might no
longer be available. This, in circumstances where the version
of that
witness had been admitted, which dispensed with the need for the
plaintiff to ensure the availability of that witness.
[18]
Plaintiff referred this Court to the decision of the Constitutional
Court in
Affordable
Medicines Trust
[1]
where
the principles governing the granting or refusal of an amendment are
as follows:
‘
The
principles governing the granting or refusal of an amendment have
been set out in a number of cases. There is a useful collection
of
these cases and the governing principles in Commercial Union
Assurance Company Limited and the Waymark NO. The practical rule
that
emerges from these cases is that amendments will always be allowed
unless the amendment is mala fide (made in bad faith) or
unless the
amendment will cause an injustice to the other side which cannot be
put back for the purposes of justice in the same
position as they
were then the pleading which it is sought to amend was filed. These
principles apply equally to a Notice of Motion.
The question in each
case, therefore, is what do the interests of justice demand?
[19]
The plaintiff’s case, in short, was that the application for
amendment was not made in
good faith and would cause an injustice to
the plaintiff that cannot be put back to the same position the
plaintiff was in
when the pleading, which it is sought to amend, was
filed.
[20]
The defendant was warned twice about the basis on which the plaintiff
intended to object to the
proposed amendment. One would have expected
the defendant to address the issues raised by the plaintiff when
objecting to the proposed
amendment, upfront. However, this was not
the case. Instead, the defendant filed a perfunctory affidavit that
did not engage at
all with the plaintiff’s basis of objection.
Conclusions were drawn without the necessary factual material on
which those
conclusions were based. I have reproduced the relevant
parts of the affidavit; they speak for themselves, and it is not
necessary
to repeat them.
[21]
One ground of objection suffices to illustrate the point. It is the
objection that the amendment
sought by the defendant amounted to a
withdrawal of an admission, in circumstances where there were no
factual or evidential bases
justifying such withdrawal. This
objection must be considered in light of (a) the admission, in the
plea sought to be amended as
well as in the compliance certificate,
that the unidentified motor vehicle crossed over the solid white line
into the path of travel
of the patient’s motor vehicle, (b) the
indication that the defendant did not intend to call any witnesses,
(c) the fact
that the plaintiff had provided the defendant with a
witness statement confirming the admission that the defendant now
sought to
withdraw, and (d) the defendant’s failure to respond
to the allegation that the withdrawal of the admission was not based
on any factual or evidential basis.
[22]
This is a basis of objection that directly questions the good faith
of the defendant in submitting
the application for the amendment. The
plaintiff’s lack of response suggests that the defendant has no
valid answer. If the
defendant has no valid answer, the relevant
question is whether the amendment is sought for the proper
ventilation of issues or
to exploit the Patient’s memory loss,
coupled with the possibility that the witness who provided a
statement might no longer
be available. And if that is the answer to
the foregoing in the affirmative, in my view, that would establish
both the lack of
good faith as well as an injustice to the plaintiff
which cannot be put back for the purposes of justice in the same
position as
the plaintiff was when the plea sought to be amended was
filed.
[23]
Moreover, despite the courts' permissive attitude towards amending
pleadings, there is a view
that amending a pleading by withdrawing an
admission is somewhat different from other amendments and is more
difficult to achieve
because it involves a change of stance,
requiring a full explanation to persuade the court of the
bona
fides
of
the party seeking the amendment. As already stated, no explanation
has been forthcoming from the defendant.
[2]
[24]
Additionally, it is also considered that withdrawing an admission is
more likely to prejudice
the other party, who has been led by the
admission to believe that the fact in question does not need to be
proven and may therefore
have failed to gather the necessary
evidence.
[3]
[25]
To summarise, it was the defendant's responsibility, as the applicant
seeking to amend, to provide
a proper explanation for withdrawing the
admission, and the defendant failed to do so. Despite being informed
of the basis of the
plaintiff’s objections to the amendment,
including the injustice the plaintiff would face if the amendment was
permitted,
the defendant did not address all of the plaintiff’s
grounds of objection in its application. Consequently, the defendant
has not demonstrated its entitlement to the amendment, and the
application must be dismissed.
[26]
In regard to costs, I am of the opinion that the costs should follow
the result. Such costs shall
include those incurred due to the
postponement of the matter on 24 April 2025, as well as counsel's
fees on scale “B”.
Order
[27]
As a result, the following order shall issue:
The application for leave
to amend is refused with costs, including (a) costs incurred due to
the postponement of the matter on
24 April 2025, and (b) costs of
counsel on scale B.
L G NUKU
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For Applicant/
Defendant:
Mr C I Hindley
Instructed by:
State Attorney, Cape Town
For
respondent/ Plaintiff:
Mr
C Bisschoff
Instructed
by:
Kruger & Co Attorneys, Goodwood
[1]
Affordable
Medicines Trust and
Others
v
Minister of Health and Others
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3) SA 247
(CC) at para
[9]
[2]
Cilliers
et al, Herbstein and Van Winsen: Civil Practice of the High Courts
and the Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa, 5
th
ed, 2009, at p683
[3]
President-Versekeringsmaatskappy
Bpk v Moodley
1964 (4) SA 109
(T) at 110H–111A.
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